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Service Above Self - to our community and the world |
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Lindsey Alcocer
Lindsey is living in Quito, Ecuador from 2007-2008.
August 22, 2007 Hello Everyone!
October 2, 2007 Dear Family and Friends,
2. This last Friday was the last day of my two week course of Spanish lessons with all the exchange students in Quito. It was so much fun. I met about 40 exchange students from all over the world and each one of them was so different from the next. In the classes we got divided up in to how much Spanish we knew already. I was in a group with a boy from Switzerland, a boy from Canada and another girl from the States. We were that group that made the most noise, but had the most fun while we learned. Everything we did turned into a game which also made us competitive, which made it even more fun. It’s a bummer that its over now but all of us decided that we are going to try to get together at least once a week. They are getting together tonight but I don’t think I will be making it because I am pretty sick and sound like a dying rabbit every time I open mouth. So it doesn’t look like I will be doing any thing for a while.
3. This Saturday a couple of Exchange students and myself went to Las Cascadas which is the waterfalls and I had a great time. We had to walk up a really steep mountain to get to them, but it was so worth it. We walked through a river for about two hours. I don’t know how many times I almost fell, but the system they had definitely worked. There was a girl in between every guy and every time you slip there is some one there to catch you in front or behind you. They would help you get up a cliff or help you jump down off a rock, so it was very nice having someone there. They would even carry bags. I felt kind of bad because I had a lot of stuff in mine but they wouldn’t take no for an answer. I met a lot of new people on that trip and I am glad I did. We climbed through pitch black caves, and walked through really cold water, but the waterfalls were so beautiful and so worth every scratch along the way.
4. The week before school started Carlos Antonio took me to a remade Colonial home in South Quito called San Lucas. It was exactly how I want my future home to look like. It was three stories high and I had Carlos take a picture of me on the 2nd story. We took the public buses because it is probably the quickest way of transportation and ofund that Carlos and I were at least a head taller than everyone else standing on it. Also on that trip to South Quito we visited one of the most beautiful churches in Quito called the Compania. It was amazing how everything was so perfectly painted in gold from the ceiling to the floor. There wasn’t aloud any pictures so that was a bummer but I will find some post cards. The next day my Rotary Counselor, Edgar Yanez, took me and his grand daughter Daniela to the middle of the world! I got to have each leg on both the northern and the southern hemisphere. There was also a museum in the park about all of Ecuador and the history Quito. There was also a show in the middle of the park of the traditional dance of Ecuador which was very beautiful to watch. After that park Edgar took me to a restaurant built on an old volcanic crater. That restaurant is supposedly a very famous restaurant where a lot of South American presidents go to eat and the when they do go to eat there the security is so high that the valley below it is swarmed with military and the sky is filled with helicopters. I took a picture of the boards that held all the signatures of the many presidents that visited “El Crater.”
5. Two weeks before school started Carmen’s Father and his wife took me and Carlos Antonio to Santo Domingo de Los Colorados with them for 3 days. It was so much fun. It took about 3 hours to get there but the trip went so fast and getting to see all the changes in climate as you went up and down mountains getting closer to the coast. When we got there it was night so I couldn’t see much, but I could definitely feel the humidity of the jungle and right then I almost started drinking the mosquito repellent. There weren't any windows in the house we stayed in, only screens so the next morning I woke up to the sound of the roosters at sun up and dogs barking at the chickens. After we had breakfast, Mr. Brown ( Carmen’s father) took Carlos Antonio and I down to a jungle tour sort of thing and dropped us off. Our guide greeted us with a snake wrapped around his wrist to his elbow. He asked if we wanted to hold it and right when I went to hold it he followed with “it only bit me a couple times” and laughed as I jumped away. W the then he took the snake off his other arm I could see that he wasn’t lying about it biting him. After I was a little weirded-out from that, he took us into the jungle and my camera was on the entire time. I saw some monkeys, owls, termites and a lot of bugs. After Carlos Antonio saw the tarantula he made me walk in front of him and every time he got scared he grabbed on to my shoulders and asked me if I saw any thing coming or if the coast was clear, so I was laughing the entire time. You didn’t really notice how humid it was in there until you got out and realized your clothes were drenched. After our tour of the jungle Carlos and I had to walk back to the house which was a really nice walk because you got to feel the breeze of the cars that flew pass you on the road. A little after we got back we had lunch and then went on another journey to some farming fields and down to the river that ran through the property. At one of the farms we had to get some Papaya to bring back home with us. They were actually a chore to get because f how high the trees grow and how heavy the fruits are. It was a job for three men so I had to watch as they took a 15 foot stick with a plunger looking thing tied to the tip of it so its easier to break the fruit from the tree. The other two had to try to catch the 10 pound fruit without letting it fall and break. We ended up with about 10 good fruit and left about 15 smashed. Other than those few trips, we mostly stayed on the paragola which is a really big canopy almost hanging over a cliff with a great view of Santo Domingo.
6. I also have attended three Rotary meetings. The first one was just to meet the Rotarians in the club, the second was to have an official introduction and the third one was the presentation of a boy from New York named Andrew. He and the girl from Belgium named Cecile are he only exchange students in the club and we will all be trading houses and host families in the first or second week of January.
That is it for this entry so until next time…hope you like the pictures. Feel free to e-mail me. I would love to hear what is going on in all of your lives. My e-mail is lalco@hotmail.com. Miss you all,
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