Saturday, January 25, 2014

Our trip to the Bolivian Amazon and the end of summer break

     In the last couple of weeks, we have seen many wondrous things, and learned some too! First, if your windshield is fogging up and your defroster isn’t working, put shampoo on a damp cloth and wipe down the window. A spot the size of a quarter will do the trick, and it lasts more than 3 hours! We learned this when we were heading to La Paz to go see Tiwanaku, the pre-Incan temple site on the Altiplano. These ruins are not as old as were originally thought when Susan and Jeff saw it the first time. We were told 13 years ago that they were maybe 20,000 years old. Recent theory now puts them at around 5,000 years old. The excavation at this site has now exposed more of the pyramid, and even more artifacts. We took a BUNCH of pictures, so be sure and look at the picture album! (Click on this link or copy and paste into your browser’s address bar:  http://tinyurl.com/p2pvjhl Double-click on the first photo on the top left to see a click-through slideshow. Captions will be to the right.) One photo that sticks in my mind is the one that shows a dirt altar in the middle of the raised temple. The reason this is memorable that I didn’t know that the Aymara people still use the site for their holy days. The picture shows ashes on the altar from their Summer Solstice ceremony held in December. We also learned that Delaney enjoys mocking 5,000 year old stone faces! Really don’t know where she gets her sense of humor…
     Our trip to the Bolivian Amazon earlier this month was definitely a QBE. Let us start by thanking the people of St. Andrew’s Episcopal Church in Waverly, Iowa, for sending us on the trip of a lifetime. The three of us started our journey in a cab to Yolosita. Yolosita is the town that sprung up at the intersection of the existing valley floor road and the new road from La Paz. This is where you can catch the bus that continues onto Caranavi, and beyond. We were informed that the trip was around 16 hours. If the trip had gone according to plan, it would have been right on the money. Unfortunately, first, the bus was over an hour late, then we experienced an two-hour traffic delay 10 minutes into the trip, an hour delay for a flat tire 6 hours into the trip, and an over 3 hour delay due to a bad detour onto a one lane road that resulted in getting stuck twice. When we finally pulled into Rurrenabaque, we were more than 6 hours later than planned and had missed our tour departure. Luckily, they allowed us to go the next day (they didn’t have to!) The next morning, we were on time and saw us arriving on the banks of the Beni River to begin our Amazon adventure! We met the crew and loaded onto the 30 foot canoe to head up river to the camp. Along the way we saw towns and villages near the river and children playing along the banks. Canoes similar to ours were pulled up in front of thatched huts or trailheads, just like we would park our car in our driveway. We also saw families headed to town in their boats, presumably for market day. Some boats were heavily loaded with freshly cut bananas and/or plantains.
     An hour into our trip upstream, we entered Madidi National Park, the largest protected area in the Amazon.  We saw a stow away lizard, several macaws (red parrots), a caiman (alligator), a capybara (a type of rodent similar in looks to a small furry hippo), and some truly awesome scenery. Please check out our photos here: http://tinyurl.com/p2pvjhl
     Two hours farther upstream, after following a smaller tributary river for a while, our canoe pulled up to a half-submerged sandbar, we jumped out into shallow (piranha-infested!) water, grabbed our gear, and followed our boatman on a 30-minute hike into the jungle to our camp. Our feet received a lovely spa treatment courtesy of the warm, knee-deep mud that greeted us at every low spot on the trail. Suddenly our guide’s bare feet made sense, and after the first mudhole, we followed suit, slopping through the goop in bare feet, covered in slippery red mud. It was DEFINITELY an experience to remember!
     Once we arrived at our camp, we cleaned up while the camp cook fixed a totally excellent lunch, then we all rested for a while. Later that afternoon, we went on a 45-minute hike across the jungle to a nice deep fishing hole, where Jeff caught the first, and largest, red piranha of the day! Many fairly large sardines were caught by members of the group, plus a few smaller yellow piranhas. Our guide tossed them all in his pack and hauled them home for supper. They were delicious, gutted with the heads and skins still on and gently fried. YUM! Our cook was no slacker, all the food she prepared us was absolutely delicious. On the way home, we stopped and watched the troop of capuchin monkeys that was following us through the canopy. It was dusk, so none of our pictures came out very well, sadly, but there were at least a dozen of them, and we could clearly see and hear them, even if the cameras could not!
     That night, it rained all night, but we were snug as a bug in a rug in our thatched, stilted hut. J
In the morning, it was still raining. We all decided to go shoeless, as the camp was now a muddy, puddly swamp. It was warm, so this wasn’t as unpleasant as it sounds! At breakfast, we decided, with our guide, that it was too muddy to go out into the jungle, so we would take a break and just hang out for the morning. This was nice, as we all sat and chatted in the dining cabin for awhile, then napped or read in our sleeping cabin until lunch. After lunch, it was still raining. So, we all went over to the cabin with a front porch, and made jungle-based jewelry from nuts, dried berries, some cotton string and some nifty weaving and knots that our guide showed us. His name was Sinom, by the way, and we really got to know him much better during our jewelry-making. He had a wonderful sense of humor, and took great delight in Delaney, giving her a hard time and spoiling her rotten. She bought right into it and was a good sport, and it was obvious she liked Sinom, too. She kept bugging him about wanting to go swimming, and it finally stopped raining while we were working away on necklaces, so he caved in and we all changed into swimsuits and hiked off to the swimming hole. (Or, actually, just the wide area in the stream under the log bridge of the trail out to the river. Whatever. It was fun! There were sardines and tiny piranhas swimming too, and they kept nibbling on us as we swam. It tickled, but they weren’t big enough to actually bite us!) Then we had supper, and decided not to go on a night hike because it was still too wet and dangerously slippery to go out in the dark. On the way back to our cabins, Sinom showed us the tarantula that lives in the tree in the middle of camp (he’s nocturnal, so we had to wait till after dark to see him hanging out, looking for his breakfast), and then he stopped stock-still in surprise as we passed an old stump, also in the middle of camp, and he saw a snake wriggling in there. It turned out to be a poisonous one, and so he sent us skittering off to our cabin with unhappy thoughts about the fact that we were barefoot! LOL! Jeff got some good pictures after he slipped his shoes on and he and Sinom went back over to take a better look.
      The morning of our third day was sunny and hot and we took off after breakfast for a three-hour hike. It turned into four hours, though no one minded because we got onto the trail of a herd of wild boar after only about 15 minutes, and we followed them into the jungle for a couple of hours before they circled back around to within only about 200 yards of our camp! A few times, we were so close we were able to see them clearly, although their stench carried for probably a quarter mile through even the thickest vegetation. Ugh! Seeing them up close, and then spotting the troop of howler monkeys on the way back in, three hours of slogging through the mud, water, bugs, and another poisonous snake (we were wearing shoes this time!!), plus Sinom having to hack his way into the bush with a machete, made for a completely authentic and satisfying trip to the Amazon jungle. It was awesome!
      We had lunch, slogged back out to the river landing barefoot (having learned by now to carry our shoes over the knee-deep mudholes), loaded up, and zoomed down the now rain-swollen river back to Rurrenabaque, where our hostal had not reserved our room, but the tour operator , who could not have been more helpful, got us great rooms in another hostal and free passes to the swimming pool at the first one (it’s the only one in town during the rainy season, and they have a tame parrot named Polly and a tame toucan named Tuki), so we relaxed poolside. We had a nice dinner, played some pool, and collapsed in our beds for the night.
     Our bus trip home was uneventful, and 8 hours shorter. It did NOT include the detour, and it didn’t really rain most of the way, which helped a lot.
We have more to share with you all about things that have happened since we returned. All of us got back sick, of course. Summer colds suck in the jungle, too! Jeff went to La Paz, and got stuck there. He spent the entire night vomiting, then had to wait on a street corner with a shoe-shine boy for company, while we figured how to get him home. Thanks to the angel who rescued him!!  Good times!
      This coming week is the last week of break before registration on Saturday, February 1. Those of you who feel moved to donate for school supplies, they will be needed again soon. Susan has a faculty meeting in La Paz this Tuesday, so she could do some shopping then. Jeff will be along as well, doing some research for his design to remodel the upper campus library. Needs for students/classes include notebook paper, poster-making supplies like colored paper and markers, white-board markers, Post-it pages, and a new CD/USB music player for the upper campus, plus at least one flash drive. Total funds needed should be about $25. Since the English department does not have funds now, Susan will also need to pay for copies, so if anyone is interested in starting a copier fund, it cost roughly $30 last semester to make all the copies needed (many of the activities in the textbook are reproducible activity sheets).
     Finally, we have begun exploring our trip home. As many of you know, when we purchased our round-trip tickets last May, we could only purchase them out through mid-April, even though we need to stay until at least June 17. So, we will have to pay a $230 fee per ticket to change them, plus whatever the difference in airfare is. Right now, the total for the three of us is around $1400, although we will be working to find the same sort of great deal that got us here, so it may be less when the time comes. We have about three months to get that organized, but we thought it might be good to let everyone know that now, in case anyone has any ability to help with that. Much as we love it here, we do want to come home, so getting our tickets changed will be an important focus in the coming weeks.
     For now, we love you all, we miss you all, and we will be praying for you all. Please pray for us, too! J
Blessings,
The Cornforths

Saturday, January 4, 2014

Happy New Year!!

Hi everyone!

We hope you are all having a wonderful new year, and that your holidays were delightful. We will be thinking of our St. Andrew's family as we have our Epiphany celebration Sunday evening.

Our New Year's celebration was a lot of fun. Jeff and I went into Coroico to get some last-minute groceries and we kept seeing bright red, yellow and pink underwear for sale EVERYWHERE. We later learned that these are traditional for luck - for luck, wealth and love in the new year. Also, we saw many people we knew in town, and they clued us in that it is traditional to eat pork, so we bought some pork chops for our dinner, a luxury in which we do not usually indulge (they are quite expensive and very fatty here). It was nice to have a treat!

We also bought some small fireworks to set off at midnight (fireworks are part of EVERY celebration here, so at least some noisemakers are sort of obligatory). We had some 3-snap firecrackers, bumblebees and small bottle rockets, which all three of us enjoyed immensely. The campus dogs, not so much...

Jeff made some homemade Bailey's, so we toasted the new year with that over ice, and ate some dark chocolate to top the evening off. By the way, it was a balmy 65 degrees or so, and every star in the sky was out at midnight when we went outside to set of our fireworks. It was very pleasant not to have to bundle up!

This weekend we are in La Paz for two reasons. Today, we went to Tiwanaku, the ancient pre-Incan religious site out on the Altiplano. Here is a link to our Facebook Photo Album:

Tiwanaku Photo Album

It was a nice day -- the Altiplano is at over 12,000 feet, so it is cold and rainy there most of the time (especially in the rainy season, as we are right now), and when the sun is out you burn VERY fast because of the thin air. Today it was cloudy and about 60 degrees - very pleasant and no sunburn!

Tomorrow we will head to the market in El Alto -- this is the HUGE outdoor market we told you about a couple of months ago. It is one of the largest in the world, and is the perfect place for us to find a few items we need for our trip to the Amazon jungle coming up on Wednesday.