Friday, December 29, 2006

well here i am again after a few more weeks of being here. right now i am enjoying the new years festivities on a tropical island in the caribbean (what a suprise), it is only a hop skip and a jump from where i live. the only difference is the tourist and the partying, which i must admit is a nice change of pace. this blog has several pictures that i really liked and have some comical and asthetic value. this one with me and the little girl is in my families house before dinner, she is the cutest little thing and she loves the camera. the next one as well i like a lot because she loves to play with my arkansas hat and i figure it cant hurt spreading the hog nation. her name for now is chi chi which means little baby. it is interesting because they usually dont give a really small child a name until they are a little older because they are never sure if the child will survive the younger years of their lives.
i am sure that yall are sick of seeing the sunset pictures, but the thing is that they are so increadible here, i dont know if it is being so close to the equator or what but the are amazing down here. this one was taken from the kitchen of my families house, not bad view for washing dishes huh.



this village that you see is called cayo de agua, it is a small island about a twenty minute boat ride from my house. it is a small sleepy village of about ten or fifteen houses, there is no electricity and no running water or sanitation. i am thinking about getting a project started over there if we can get the funding, if nothing else just go over there and relax every once and a while. as you can see from my host dad taking a nap in the afternoon after lunch there is not much going on over there but really that is how they like it, and i think that i agree with them. it is a lot like my site in that everyone gets around in canoes and lives off fishing.


this next picture really makes me laugh when i see, not because this girl is funny because she is not, if anything she is rather serious and shy, but i think that is only around me. this the girl that they (the people in my village) proposed that i take on as my "wife" what ever that entails. they felt bad for me because i had no one to cook, clean and wash my clothes for me. she is really nice but i kind of felt bad for her being put in that position, but i really dont think she cares because i would provide the home and all meals which really isnt a bad deal. but people in the past, volunteers that is, have had a lot problems with relationships gone wrong. it is not like home where you can slip away into the masses, here everyone knows everyone and their business, so it can be really damaging to my work the have a sour relationship in the community. it is no big deal because there are plenty of other places to go for women if one is so inclined.


The last photo is my favorite, one because of the sun burn and two because this is the girls father. he is the local shaman/priest, he saw me with my sun burn and started laughing really hard because he said i looked like a boiled lobster. so he disappeared off into the jungle for a while and came back with some thing for my burn and it healed right up the next day. he is a really resourceful guy like that, maybe it wouldnt be so bad having hi, as my "Uuhh" which is father in law, he could come in hany from time to time.

















anyways that is about all for this time, i will post something else before i leave. so until then have a good new years and i want to see a big win out of the hogs.
tuchi

2 Comments:

At 1:48 PM , Anonymous Anonymous said...

Hi Jackson,
I am the person who interviewed you for my story on the Peace Corps when you returned from Bangladesh in March. We are doing a follow-up on some of the year's profiles and the Peace Corps story was one so I looked you up to see what you were up to so I could include it in the roundup. I also downloaded one of your Panama photos to use with the blurb. I hope you don't mind.
I am jealous that you are in Panama. Both of my parents and one set of grandparents grew up in the now defunct Panama Canal Zone. Mom and Dad reluctantly returned stateside for college after Carter announced plans to relinquish control of the locks. They have amazing stories about going to the beach every day, eating bananas right off trees and spearfishing. Sounds like heaven. Hope you enjoy your time there.
Sincerely,
Cassie Huffman

 
At 11:42 AM , Anonymous Anonymous said...

I am an RPCV from Bocas and will be in town Jan 19-21. Email me if you will be in Bocas or nearby islands. I'd love to hear the scoop on the Bocas scene, although it sounds pretty much the same from your blog.
Holly

fuzzyllama88 hotmail com

 

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