Day 7.1 – Not a Chill Day

Remember that chill day I mentioned? Yeah, didn’t happen. Let’s just say the hiking trails in Ecuador are a little different than the United States. 
We started out by going to a presentation of condors in a wildlife park here, but then we made a somewhat bad decision to take a “trail” to the waterfall in Peguche. Unfortunately, the trail was a little overgrown and indistinguishable . Parts were divided into forks and you couldn’t always see far ahead of you due to the cliffs, so a few groups got lost…
Yep, lost in a forest in Ecuador.
We tried calling Dr. Lenk and started out on our own with directions on how to get there, asking people from time to time if we were going the right way. We did find it with the helped of a young girl we found playing with her dog. And of course we took another picture, but by this time it had gotten dark 
So we found a nice guy named Luis (Loo-eese), and he called a taxi for us. Turns out, everyone was waiting for us at the Hostel. Crisis solved.

Day 7 – Chillin’

Today is a chill day. After this hailstorm of a week we finally had some time to take a breath. We took some time to visit the local market and visit the waterfall in Peguche, a town near Otavalo. A picture of that is coming, but for now I’ll leave you with a picture we took with Gualberto Espinoza, a town leader of Santa Ana and athropologist, before building the playground set.
Nick Bratcher

Day 6 – Una Minga

Today marked the greatest day of the program so far as we constructed the playground and had great success with the computer lessons in Santa Ana.
The computer project went much smoother today (pictured above). Despite the many technical problems yesterday, the computers functioned perfectly today. The instructors in our group became accustomed to the foreign programming and felt at ease in explaining their lessons. All of the attendees were able to make their own email addresses and learned to operate Google. Many of them created Facebook accounts or learned to improve that experience. I know many of the kids here have already received emails from many of the residents of Santa Ana. That correspondence further cements the bonds of partnership that have already been created in our time here. Both sides have gained so much through this experience.
We’ll be making our third and final trip to Santa Ana Sunday to present them with the computers that we brought with us. The training has taken place in nearby Concepcion because the furniture company wasn’t able to deliver the proper equipment to hold the lessons in Santa Ana. However, next week, after we have returned to Quito, the town will be able to fully install the computers that the city of Bowling Green donated and Gene Iglehart programmed for them.

As for me, I had one of the most humbling days of my life.

First, I should make it clear that we didn’t just make a park today. I played with the kids there for hours. We played tag and I realized how out of shape I was after I remained sucio (dirty) for five minutes, unable to tag someone to become limpio (clean). They also enjoyed wrestling…

before
after

We took off around 7 a.m. this morning to greet the construction workers from Technowsiss. Once we got to Santa Ana, we immediately began unloading the truck with many pre-assembled pieces. Then we started digging in order to erect the two towers that came with the playground set. I know I’m supposed to act like it was easy work with the motivation of an entire town behind us, but those towers were certainly heavy and those holes were particularly deep! It was well worth it though as piece by piece fell into place, especially with Wade Haga making sure everything remained level.

Wade Haga
Hand in hand, the men of Santa Ana and our team for the park project worked to erect this park that had existed in only our minds for months. There is an old word that dates back to ancient Andean culture for this called una minga. It means community work. 
My favorite interaction is when one of the local men offered us some trago de caña, otherwise known as moonshine, to speed the process along. 
trago de caña, Ecuadorian moonshine
As we hammered nails and screwed in screws, I couldn’t believe how tangible our dream had become. All the nights spent worrying about failure and all the scrapped plans seemed so distant as the kids started jumping on the columpios (swings) and resbaladeras (slides). It was impossible to believe this started as an idea to smuggle pieces of wood in our suitcases to build a couple of benches.



Hand in hand, the men of Santa Ana and our team for the park project worked to erect this park that had existed in only our minds for months. There is an old word that dates back to ancient Andean culture for this called una minga. It means community work. My favorite interaction is when one of the local men offered us some trago de caña, otherwise known as moonshine, to speed the process along. As we hammered nails and screwed in screws, I couldn’t believe how tangible our dream had become. All the nights spent worrying about failure and all the scrapped plans seemed so distant as the kids started jumping on the columpios (swings) and resbaladeras (slides). It was impossible to believe this started as an idea to smuggle pieces of wood in our suitcases to build a couple of benches.



Before we left, one of the men thanked us for coming and partnering with them. He told me that it meant so much to Santa Ana to have this opportunity. He closed by saying, “Siempre, las puertas de Santa Ana están abiertas a ustedes.” (Always, the doors of Santa Ana are open to you all.)

He has no idea how thankful I am for the opportunity to help, though it didn’t stop me from trying to explain.

There is a beautiful phrase in Spanish for all my hopes for the community of Santa Ana:

Ojalá que la gente de Santa Ana disfrutare este parque por siempre. [God willing, they will enjoy this park forever.]


Nick Bratcher

Day 5 – Santa Ana: Projects Kick-off

We finally travelled to Santa Ana today to begin our projects! We were greeted by all of the leaders of the community and government as they ushered us into a briefing room to thank us for all our work . Each leader took turns expressing his optimism for the future of this partnership as well as sharing their culture with us.

Then we split into two groups, one to do workshops on using the new computers we’ve supplied them and one to measure off the space for Santa Ana’s new park.
To describe what occurred with the computer group, I spoke to Austin Warren , a WKU student
“The computers were slow, so people were on different parts of the lesson,” he said. “Gmail thought we were running some sort of pyramid scheme, so we had to call to verify the accounts but didn’t have phones. The computers were programmed differently, and we didn’t get everything done the way we wanted.”

“But we know what to do for tomorrow’s lesson. We worked well today despite the problems. We learned how to adapt, and everyone was helping. We did really good considering all the problems.”

Even with the rough patches, Kyla Gwyn, a student at MTSU, said the day was a definite success for the weekend on the whole.

“We built relationships that will help us more than anything tomorrow. I know I got a lot more accomplished today towards the end when the people started feeling more comfortable with me, and I got to know them. We have two days, so really, today turned out great.”

My group went to locate a specific place to build the playground set we ordered from Technoswiss tomorrow. We went alone with no interpreter, so my Spanish skills quickly sharpened as I met community leaders willing to help and conversed with the local kids in Santa Ana’s elementary school to get them excited about their new playground. Many of us played soccer or climbed on whatever we could find with them.
We also received a tour of their new Centro de Cultural (Cultural Center) They will be putting the computers that we’re donating into that building as well as throwing a cultural festival for us in the building on Sunday. I look forward to seeing the abuelas (grandmothers) sing for all of us and sharing their culture in many unique ways. One thing is for sure, I can’t wait to play with these little guys.
Nick Bratcher

Day 4 – Otavalo: Bread and Roses

First and foremost, this bread was amazing. It was super buttery and warm, and we had it with some with a type of cheese called queso de hoja. Era sabroso. (It was delicious!)

We started the day with a tour of a rose farm. I couldn’t believe all the different kinds of roses. It was unbelievable. The operation is extremely efficient and our tour guide, the owner of the farm, was so nice . He informed us that bad relations between Ecuador and the US in recent years has strangled his business. The tariffs on imports in the US from Ecuador have increased and now the people are forced to deal with the repercussions. Even with the increased cost, I know when the time comes I’ll be getting my roses from Ecuador.
tour guide and rose farmer (left)

We kept travelling north from the rose farm to Otavalo. On our way, we stopped in a small town called Pijal. We learned loads about traditional Ecuadorian herbal medicine from our tour guide there . She also shared with us a huge meal and the story of her cousin that was taken to Australia because her lack of education left her vulnerable. Unable to read, she struggled to escape the control of the woman that had taken her there from Quito. Finally, in a manner only capable by God to our guide, a woman freed her and took her to the United States and has taught her how to read. Now she is a very happy and visits Ecuador from time to time. Our guide looks at her cousin’s story as a source of inspiration and treated us to a dinner in her house to demonstrate her ambition to employ the people in Pijal . She makes complex embroideries and enjoys her work very much.

Finally, we ended the day in Otavalo, a small city in Northern Ecuador. It’s really nice here, especially our hostel. Tomorrow we’ll be heading to Santa Ana to start the work on our park project there as well as a project to supply computers to the entire village there that another group is doing. We hope to speak to the kids in the school about celebration the grand opening of the new park next week and invite parents to help us build the playground that we bought from Technoswiss. I hope it all goes according to plan!

Nick Bratcher

Day – 3 Playground Planning

Margarita Columba
Today we met with Technoswiss (a Swiss-originated company that works with enviornmentally sustainable playgrounds here in Quito, Ecuador) to decide on what playground equipment to get for the village of Santa Ana. Even with the expertise and help of Margarita Columba, the deliberations took about three hours and several drafts considering what we could afford and what the people of Santa Ana would want most.
Finally, we decided on a very nice playground set that will provide the families of Santa Ana a place to call their own and enjoy for many years to come. We were very happy to be finished
Thanks to generous donations from many parties, including McDonald’s and the Badinger family of Louisville, Ky., my group was able to purchase this great playground set complete with slide, swings (both for babies and older children), cargo net, fireman’s pole, rings, and suspension bridge. I’m so amazed with all that we have been blessed with and the opportunity to help the people of Santa Ana. It’s a humbling experience to work alongside all the other college-aged kids in my group. I could not have done it without them and the donations from their families and schools.

A special thanks must also go out to the Alive Center at WKU. We could not have done this project without your grant and help.

Nick Bratcher

Day – 2 Exploring Quito

Since I talked about it in the last post, I figured it would be best to start off with a picture that includes the backdrop of the city. I’m not sure the picture illustrates it as well as I’d like, but the city really does swim through the Andes mountains. It’s truly a sight to behold with all the buildings sprawling out like a rushing river through the valley. It also helps to see it from the top of a monestary roof here in Quito  It may have been a bit dangerous climbing up there, but the view was worth it
We did all of this as part of a tour of the historical part of Quito. It has such a rich history that our tour guide, Patricia, shared with us. She was the one that got us behind the scenes and on top of various roofs in Quito. The views were always amazing and the amazing amount of cultura (culture) never ceases to overwhelm me. I did manage to grasp a bit of it though as we visited a boutique that sold Panama hats. You may be wondering why Ecuador is selling Panama hats… It’s actually because those hats originated in Ecuador but were shipped out through Panama, thus giving them their misinformed name.
We finished off the night with some great food and a round of drinks at a local bar named Chelsea (Yeah, I know, not very Spanish-sounding, but I didn’t name the bar.) We met a fellow American student originally from Puerto Rico there and he shared with us a few other places to see while we’re in Quito and where the hotspots are for night life. It was fun to just hang out with my KIIS classmates and get to know some people on a more personal level. I can tell it’s going to be very hard to say goodbye to them, and it’s only our first full day here!
Nick Bratcher

Day 1 – Quito

I can’t believe I’m finally here in Quito! This city is absolutely beautiful, with tons of different colored houses and its weaving landscape. It’s not like a U.S. city in which everything shoots up and overpowers the senses in a condensed concrete jungle. The city sprawls out through the mountains’ valleys and practically screams its foreign strangeness. The only drawback I’ve found so far was the disaster we had to survive going through customs. Some planes were delayed, so several huge flights arrived at the same time. It was a mess with people yelling and pushing to get to their luggage and through the customs station. The loud buzz of Spanish really helped Ecuador sink in, giving me a bit of culture shock as I stood out like a sore thumb.
Overall, the first day was a success. We spent a lot of time waiting around in airports and getting to know each other. I’m sure I’m going to make some really great friends in this adventure. I can’t wait to see what we can do for the people here as well as what we can experience and learn from all Ecuador has to offer.
A huge thank you to McDonald’s, especially Beth Lunsford and my local McDonald’s owner Vince Tanner, for its huge donation to the people of Santa Ana, Ecuador. Words can not express my gratitude for your contribution to my project.

Ambato and Canoa

On Sunday, February 13, our friend Leonardo drove us to Ambato, where we had been asked to join Lexington’s Dr. Henry Vasconez and his group of about 80 doctors and nurses. Their team would be performing plastic surgeries all week, and we would be applying fluoride varnish on kid’s teeth. Also, we had planned to go to the women’s prison. (When we were here with Beau Haddock and The Highland Rim in 1996, one facet of our program and video had been a report on this prison. Unless things have changed, when a woman with small children is imprisoned here, she must bring the children with her, then depend on family and friends to feed them. We had hoped to apply fluoride varnish and provide toothbrushes and beanie babies to these women and little ones).

After much confusion, we were able to find the team at a local hospital, where they were interviewing prospective patients for surgery. This group does a great service, performing surgeries for free on only the worst cases, daylight to dark, for one week. But, upon arrival, I was informed by Henry’s sister that all our dental supplies had gone missing. With no material there was nothing for us to do, so we returned to Quito. About 30 minutes outside of Quito it began raining, and the temperature dropped dramatically. Our spirits began to flag, also.
Several weeks prior to this, we had met an enthusiastic young gringa from Lowell, Mass. at Cafe Este. She had told us she was volunteering as an ESL teacher in a kindergarten in Canoa, only having come into Quito to renew her visa. We had had no plans to go to this beautiful surfer’s paradise town, but she said her kids would really benefit from any dental care we could provide, and we had told her we would try to get to her town at some time during our stay. The colder and damper it became on Sunday evening, the more we thought about the coast. I decided to go to the airport the next day for tickets to Manta, knowing we would then have two bus rides before we could reach Canoa. On the way to breakfast the next morning, we ran into Leonardo and told him our plan. He said with the new multi-lane highway, he could put us in Canoa in 5 hours, about 1/2 the time it would take us to fly, then catch those two buses. Right after breakfast, we were off to the beach!
The drive to Santo Domingo took us through the beautiful sub-tropical cloud forest. After Santo Domingo we headed west to another city, El Carmen, then directly west on a new highway to Pedernales. This entire area is tropical farms with houses several miles apart. Population is sparse and we went through several small villages with perhaps 80-90 people, and with names such as Humidity, Dry Town and Slow Horse. (Sounds like some of our towns in rural Kentucky). I was amazed to find that the mountains here extend all the way to the coast, and the views were breathtaking. Upon reaching the coast, we hung a hard left and were off toward Canoa. This area of coastline had almost no development and was completely rural and most folks were getting around on horseback.
When we arrived in Canoa exactly 4 hours and 50 minutes later (that Leonardo is simply the best!), we checked into Hotel La Vista, where our room faced the ocean, with a balcony and a hammock and two chairs. We would spend every evening there watching the glorious sunsets. (Sunsets are something which we have rarely witnessed in Ecuador, as right on the equator the sun pretty much rises at 6:00 A.M., and sets at 6:00 P.M., end of story).

Canoa is a small fishing village with a great beach and waves which break perfectly for surfing, drawing a lot of gringos here. When we say small, we mean about six blocks square. It would be impossible to get lost here. There are cliffs behind the town which are used by parasailers and hanggliders. Along the beach are many great restaurants and funky bars. Our two favorites were the Costa Azul (for great shrimp, calamari and ceviche), dinner for two with drink $9.50; and La Flor, a gringo restaurant, where the bartenders are both from Michigan and one and perhaps both (we were unsure) are married to the beautiful daughters of the owner-cook. The owner and the daughters are not Norteamericanas, but we were also unsure if they are Ecuadorian. In the event, the place is very eclectic, with cool music, a great vibe, terrific food, and they disinfect all the fresh veggies, so we could actually eat everything on the plate. And, is it good! Yum. Canoa is famous for having more hammocks per capita than any other place in Ecuador, so after a hard “hammock day”, (and after having had our luncheon calamari at Costa Azul), we would escape to the caring arms of La Flor.

One night at La Flor, we met a really nice guy from, of all places, London, KY. They told us he had come down for a visit 7 years ago, and just never went home. Like many Kentuckians, he hated winter there and felt he had found paradise. Is he wrong? I think not. His name is Greg Gilliam, and he is building a beautiful new hotel right on the beach, just at the end of the town’s development. He asked us to bring him an Ale-8-One next time we visit, so that is on our agenda. Also, the bar at La Flor sells whiskeys from the U.S., including Jim Beam. I said “But, I always heard that Jim Beam drinks Makers Mark”. So he showed us the now-empty bottle of M.M., the only evidence of how popular it  truly had been, so we will definitely gift them with a bottle next year. Hey, we want all these folks to jump in and help with the fluoride varnish, and we learned a long time ago, that it is wise to “grease the wheels” in Ecuador; this will be money well spent.

We met with Elizabeth Stark, who owns a hotel next to La Vista and works with the James Dean Byrd Foundation, where she places volunteers to teach English and other subjects. She arranged for us to visit the local health clinic, where we trained the local dentist to place fluoride varnish and treated several kids and adults there. We then went to a government-run day care center and treated all the kids and adults there. (Had our large supply of varnish and brushes not been lost in transit to Ambato, we’d have had much more material to work with). We also handed out beanie babies and neon-colored  bracelets with “Happy Molars” printed on them (we would  occasionally see these throughout the town later) and school supplies.

Leonardo came on Saturday to spend the night, so we could get an early start back on Sunday morning. After dinner, we took a drive to San Vicente and then across the longest bridge in South America, just completed last November, to Bahia de Caragues. The trip to Bahia from San Vicente used to take 1 1/2 hours, as Bahia is located on a peninsula separated by the Chone River. Bahia is one of the cleanest towns in Ecuador and in 1999 declared itself an “Eco-City” because of its efforts to promote recycling, conservation and environmental awareness. This entire area from Canoa to Bahia is not to be missed.

The next morning, after a great breakfast at La Vista, we were off again, to be thrown back into the real world. Our memories will have to sustain us until we once again, hopefully this time next year, lie in that hammock and watch the beautiful, changing colors as the sun sets again over the Pacific.


Rankin and Ruthi

Futbol Fever


Estadio Olimpico Atahualpa, Quito

It was Sunday morning, and I awoke with butterflies in my stomach. One big difference in the cultures of South America and our home is that everyone here is passionate about futbol (soccer). They don’t so much like it, they seem to live for it. Leonardo, his 14-year-old son, his nephew and I had scored tickets for a playoff game for the national title between Nacional and Liga de Quito at the Estadio Olimpico Atahualpa. Even though we arrived two hours before game time, we still had to park about 2 miles away. Upon arrival at the stadium, I came to realize the fans are segregated according to their team of choice. In the end zones are the fanatics, with painted faces, everyone attired in their team colors. They have their own bands and spend the entire game dancing up and down in unison, singing and blowing whistles. It is hard to explain the excitement which accompanies a game like this; think the  South African fans. As soon as we entered the stadium, we felt the electricity in the air. We arrived very early, but the stadium was already about 80% filled. By game time, there wasn’t a seat in the house. Just imagaine—the end zone gangs had everyone worked into a frenzy, and there were 45,000 screaming fans. 




The game actually started on time and right away I saw some of the best passing I had seen since the World Cup. The play was excellent and the defense was vicious. There were a total of 8 yellow cards. With 8 minutes left in the first half La Liga scored and the crowd went crazy. Of course, this got the opposing team started with the trash talk; we won’t get go into great detail about this as this blog is rated for a family audience. 


Halfway through the second half La Liga scored again. Now, the crowd began threatening the referees’ very life, along with the usual descriptions of his manhood (or lack thereof).     
              
A note: One thing of interest is that the air currents from the mountains seem to interrupt the flight patterns of many, many birds. All during the game, great flocks of birds would swoop down very low over the playing field, then sort of swirl around the stadium and swoop right back out again. 

About ten minutes before the game ended, a swat team marched into the aisles between the two groups of fans. This is the only area of the stadium which is not surrounded by fences. The swat team shows up in full regalia—bullet-proof vests, helmets, shields and night sticks. These guys mean business! Each of the groups of fans had to exit the stadium through separate doors; then there were more cops outside to keep things calm. I have never seen such passion for futbol and felt privileged to have been to this game.  I believe it was Vince Lombardi who said “Winning isn’t everything; it is the only thing”. Perhaps had he been born in most any other country on the planet, he might have been like that soccer coach in England who said (something like) “Futbol isn’t a life and death thing; it is much more important than that”. 

Rankin and Ruthi