Monday, May 28, 2012

En El Norte--Mines, Ranches, Deserts

Yesterday morning at 6:30 I was returning from my nine day adventure to the north with my parents and roommate to see my Papá's brother, sister, and brother-in-law. It was a great nine days and there are definitely lots of things to blog about (hopefully I can do it in one post). So I wouldn't forget what we did each day I decided to make a note on my phone and thank goodness I did! Okay, so about those nine days in the north....

We left Valpo on Friday the 18th at 10:30ish in the morning. The cheapest way to travel in Chile is usually on a bus line so that's how we went--twelve hours in a tour bus. I have ridden on bus rides that long before with my ISA crew and stuff but having our parents there sure was nice. Mama had packed lunch and dinner sandwiches for us and it just reminded me a lot of how we traveled when I was a kid. This day was also special because I tried horse for the first time--it was in a jerky, but nevertheless I ate it, and no--I don't like it. Anyways we had a couple of detours on the trip there one was because we couldn't get through the main road in one of the towns we were going through (protest or something I think) and so we arrived in Copiapó sometime around eleven that night. My uncle picked us up from the bus station and we drove about twenty miles to this little ranch they were building in the desert. We had all sorts of food and wine, danced the night away (well Papá and I at least), and then went to bed. This is the place we stayed on all but two days of the trip:


The next morning I woke up and at breakfast Papá and his brother decided to make a beer drink that was so delicious! I can't tell you the secret of what was in it but...yumm they were right about it being tasty. That same day we went out to a big rock that was a monument (I think) and we could look out over all of the desert.






That afternoon we kind of just hung out around the ranch and read our books. It is very cold in the north at night (like Valpo) so we started sleeping with hot water bottles in our beds for our feet...you wouldn't believe the difference they make!

Sunday was our beach day! We went down to a little beach town that would've been destroyed if there ever was a tsunami and then started off-roading until we came to the end of the trail. We got out of the pick-up and were on the edge of some cliffs with the most beautiful beach below! The whole day was spent on this little piece of heaven. There was also a mural of Neruda and John Legend painted into one of the caves. It was a fun and relaxing afternoon.










Monday, the following day, was a slow day in the Atacama--I hung out in a hammock under the northern sun reading Allende's House of the Spirits. There were many times on this trip that I was very thankful to having grown up in a small farm town where the days are long and the noise in the air is the chickens in the coop and wind blowing through the trees.

On Tuesday we left the ranch and headed to my tia's house where we were able to check our emails and let our parents know we were all right. We had lunch and then headed to El Salvador where my uncle lives. All in all the trip was about three hours on the road. At my uncles house we were able to shower with hot water (the water on the ranch was very cold) and had a nice dinner.

We woke up the next morning and went all around the city of El Salvador which is basically a small mining town (most of the towns in the north are). There was a shrine to the Virgin Mother over looking the whole city. We went to the market and bought groceries for lunch and then after lunch left the house for an adventure through the desert. In the hidden hills of the desert we looked out over the edge of a cliff at one of the mines, came across an abandon cart, saw the Incan trail, a river filled with salt, and yelled at the empty mountains letting our voices echo from end to end of the vast expanse of earth.

Chilean elliptical--they are everwhere

We are in mining country baby!

Shrine to Our Mother



Papá cheering on the soccer team...



Stranded...

Los hermanos

See all the salt on the edges?

“Someday, somewhere - anywhere, unfailingly, you'll find yourself, and that, and only that, can be the happiest or bitterest hour of your life.” -Neruda


This is where he is trying to convince me that this rock is a meteor.

Mine

Start to the Inca Trail


Yelling at a plane overhead to help us

The yellow markers mark all of the trail.


The next afternoon we headed back for the ranch to meet up with the rest of our family. My uncle's daughter and her novio were there and we had a big dinner with good wine. The next morning we went to the flea market in Copiapó where we bought things for the late lunch we would have.

My cousin's novio is a great cook and we all hung out drinking imported beer and Chilean wine, eating and talking, dancing and having a great time at the outside table from about three in the afternoon until late in the evening hours.



Locos--so tasty

The next day we hung out at the house and my tia's son came out for an asado in the afternoon before we left. We got on the bus around eight at night and slept until we pulled into our home city which had been taken over by a sling of rainy days. It was a wonderful trip to the north and I am thankful that I was able to experience another piece of this amazing country.


Wednesday, May 23, 2012

9 Days in the Desert

Hey all! I am currently in the far north of Chile in the Atacama Desert! I haven't had internet except for five minutes and spotty wifi. I get back Sunday and will fill you all in on my adventure then!

Monday, May 14, 2012

Day 82

For mother's day we went to my sister's apartment in Viña and celebrated with fondue and a day of family fun. We did this on Saturday and Sunday we had an asado complete with ribs..yum! I was happy to celebrate with my family here and my Mama definitely deserves a day of celebration in her honor but I was also wishing that I could have been home giving my own mother a big hug as well. I know I won't understand how my mom feels about me being in Chile until I am a mom as well but I do know that me being here has made our relationship even stronger. Being so far away from people I love forces me to learn to communicate effectively in the moments that I can. I am not always connected and not being to tell my mom the exciting things that are happening in my life at they happen--it makes me appreciate our conversations where we get to skype...or in today's case when I was pretty much in tears from excitement and had to call her at work on my Google phone. Don't get me wrong, I really am enjoying my time here in Chile, and this isn't the longest time I've been away from my family, but it sure will be great to come home to all of their hugs--and my loving little dogs of course. 

We are into the middle of the fall season here in Chile and it is dark after five o'clock and cold as soon as the sun goes down. It is weird for me to think that in Austin the sun is blazing high into the nineties. I am also excited that when I get home the Olympics will start--basically my favorite time in the sports world.

I also helped out one of the girls in my program who teaches English to a group of adults here. I had the best day helping her and am hopefully going to start helping out every Thursday. I love finding people who are just as passionate about learning a language as I am (especially considering they are beginners as well).

This week we leave for the north of Chile to go and see our parents' family. I am very excited to be going--our parents have told us that we are going to the mines, salt flats, and hopefully will get to see some flamingos! It is going to be a great trip.

I also have my second and third Spanish tests this week.


Wednesday, May 9, 2012

Free My Soul

I can't remember exactly when music became such a huge part of my life--probably when I started singing on the tractor with my dad when I was little or when I was ten and picked up my first set of drum sticks--that was a magical moment. I definitely have always felt like drum sticks are just an extension of my hands. When I was little I also picked up a guitar for about a month when I was seven--it didn't do the same thing for me. I picked it back up when I was sixteen and after playing for a while I could play my basic chords and play along fairly easily--I can still play most of the basics on the guitar but the comparison between the two instruments varies greatly when they are in my hands. Somewhere in Jr. High I started having the song of the day. People would hear me singing (terribly) up and down the hallways until I graduated high school. Everyday there was a different song. This past summer I was asked to compile a playlist of my life--what a fun project! I started going through my iTunes (which is very large) and compiling a playlist. Oh yeah this song makes me think of this and that and yada yada yada. It was great for me! I have a fairly bad memory most of the time and it was amazing how much I remembered when I listened to my music. When I started college I started sending my friends songs of the day according to their specific likings--it was fun and I still do it once or twice a week. Just for the fun of it--here is some of my music:

My freshman fall at college I walked to Jones every morning listening to this song and this song. 

When my oldest brother graduated from high school I listened to this song every single morning the next year. Also this one...I don't think my mom could ever listen to Elton John again without crying--sorry mom.

When mom and I moved me to college this is the only song I listened to in my car.

When Parker and I would leave school our senior year to get Cjs for everyone we regularly listened to this song in his truck.

My senior summer, I listened to this song all the time.

I have been listening to this song since one of my friends put it on a CD for me like three or more years ago--I don't know if I ever get tired of it.

When Ali passed away I listened to this song for months.

I found MGMT in high school sometime and this immediately became my favorite song of theirs.

My grandparents took us on a cruise and I listened to this song the whole time.

All of my sophomore year of high school--this song.

And my junior spring...

Working at the El Vaquero with Charlotte it was this song. 

Ski trip before I went to National Jewish for a week.

Every time Payton and I drove back from Torch together--this song.

Taking my senior pictures it was this song. 

As for Chile

This
This
This
This
This
oh...and this.


I honestly could do this for most anything in my life. I have a whole list of songs that when I hear them this summer back in the states I know that I will immediately think of Chile. I love music and what it does for my life. I definitely like to put what I want to say to people in song lyrics--makes life more fun. This was all just kind of for fun because my Chilean playlist is getting rather long at this point. There had also been a post started on our group wall about new jams so it got me to thinking about how big of a role music plays in my life. Give me the beat boys.


Monday, May 7, 2012

Stop for a Minute and...Smile

Many things have happened since my last post--I didn't realize how behind I was until last night when Papa told me I needed to put our adventure from last night in my blog. Okay--hopefully my memory won't fail me.

I only had two days of school this week because of the holiday on Tuesday--it is similar to Labor Day in the US. My friends and I walked around the Cerros and then saw what seemed to be a protest beginning. That is what all the pictures are from--that day. They weren't the education protests but some sort of history walk from what I understand. I went to school on Wednesday and Thursday. Thursday night I wasn't feeling well (it had gotten pretty cold and I was having some trouble breathing). Luckily, I have the best parents ever and Papa put the heater in my room for a little bit so it would be warm when I went to sleep--I am so blessed by them everyday.

On Friday I went to different history museums in Santiago where we learned about what happened during the reign of Pinochet. It is crazy for me to be here and know that it is still so recent. Many people here remember everything--it is something that I haven't ever seen before. I went to the Holocaust Museum in D.C. and that was also very sad but it isn't as fresh so to me it doesn't seem as real. In Chile, it is very real and very fresh--it's just shocking to think that these terrible things were happening here just thirty something years ago.


Each of the trees lies in the middle of a four by four square where the cells were. Four people were kept inside of these cells (SO TINY) and were only let out to go to the bathroom and be tortured.

Names of all the missing.

Just some of the missing people.

This is where the people were taken just before they were put on planes and then went missing. After the war was over it was discovered that the people were tied to railroad tracks and thrown into the ocean that is a few miles from where I live. In the museum they had some of the train tracks that had been found at the bottom of the sea=there was a button stuck to one of the tracks.

The grave of Pinochet's right hand man.

The graves at this cemetery were all above ground. 

Allende's family grave.



Missing on the left--dead on the right. 
It was definitely a heavy day--the history of this time in Chile is still very prevalent.

Saturday was definitely a lighter day! We decided to celebrate my good friend's birthday on the rooftop of our other friend's apartment. It is easy to rent out the rooftop that comes complete with a sitting area and place to grill. It didn't take much planning--just creating a Facebook event and buying food. We had decided on Mexican food which was great considering it was Cinco de Mayo (the Chileans we were with wondered why we celebrated a Mexican holiday in the US). From the rooftop it is so easy to see all of Valpo and celebrating a birthday makes for a great night with good company!

Jack Jack :-)

The other LeeAnn

The hills are alive...

Yesterday we went to Quilpué to celebrate both of my Chilean nephews' birthdays. There were a few other kids there and of course family! It started raining yesterday at about one so we walked in the rain which wasn't too bad and celebrated with cake, pizza, gifts, and a piñata for the kids.

Martinnnn-I love this little guy!

Andres blowing out his candles.

¡Dulces!

All the little kidos

Hermanas y hermanos

Santo hefe hormigo

Like I said, it was a good day with family and friends. Oh! On our way home the micro broke down and we had to get on another one--that's what papá had said would go in the blog haha--just another day in Chile!

Today I am just catching up on homework and reading for school. Tomorrow I have to go to school bright and early--it's okay though because we're studying Neruda and it makes it worth it (hopefully I'll be saying this tomorrow at seven).

As for the SOTD...