This is a photo of calves less than a week old! The following are also photos of the farm and the family who own this farm:
Andrea is shown here as she prepares to place the cookies she's made in the oven. The photo below shows the milking equipment on the farm.
The photo below is taken of Charo's daughter Marianna and her cousins. We all walked out to the farm together on the second day of my visit:
While visiting Monte Plata, I had the opportunity to visit with a number of the wonderful host moms whom we all loved so much during training. The following is a photo of Plancha, my favorite Grand Matriarch in the Dominican Republic:
And this photo taken in Monte Plata shows Charo shopping for fruits and vegetables. As with most Dominicans, every errand is a joy with Charo, and she never misses an opportunity to chat and joke with everyone in her day:
This photo was taken on Noche Buena with Marianna, Reini and myself. I brought gifts of artist's sets of pencils and paints from Ikea for the girls:
The week after the Navidad, I joined several Peace Corps friends who invited me to join them on their trip to Puerto Rico. We shared expenses, including food, rental car and hotel costs. We stayed with relatives of one of the volunteers as well as at two different hotels. One of my favorite days during our trip was to El Yunque, a rainforest in Puerto Rico:
Thanks to the encouragement of my young friends, I did a considerable amount of hiking that day, and climbed to the top of a look out tower at El Yunque:
My friends are seen hiking out to the water falls in this photo:
I particularly valued this message from the US National Forest Service:
We stayed on a coffee plantation high in central Puerto Rico for 2 days:
Also, I really appreciated an exhibit on masks on the lower floor of the museum. All were made by children ages 11-13, and they are splendid. I'd like to make masks with the children I work with:
I loved all of the masks yet felt this one merited a photo of its own:
The last day in Puerto Rico, I took a ferry to Vieques, and that was my favorite day. The ferry ride took an hour, and then I took a public transportation across the island to Esperanza. I enjoyed a hamburger and beer at Bananas Restaurant:
The following photo shows one of the views I enjoyed on the slow side of the Virgin Island of Vieques:
I paid the young man in the next photo to take me out on his canoe. He had grown up in Vieques and knew the reefs intimately, and shared his knowledge while we went snorkeling together for several hours. Besides many gorgeous varieties of sea life, this man showed me all kinds of urchins, lobsters, lion fish, that I didn't notice on my own! It was one of the best afternoons I've enjoyed in years.
The following photo is a house on the coast of Vieques which I found particularly beautiful:
And this photo is taken of photos grazing across the road from this home:
The following photo was taken of Peace Corps friends and myself taken New Year's Eve. We were staying together in Hotel Bolivar in Santurce:
And here we are sitting on the steps in front of a sandwich shop in San Juan:
On return to Santo Domingo, there is much I appreciate about being here. Puerto Rico is terrific, yet there is not a very good public transportation system there. The Dominican Republic is vastly superior in this respect. Also, Puerto Rico is very costly. During my trip I felt I obtained a valuable perspective on the different Caribbean nations and their respective strengths.
Here is a photo of one store I'd appreciated while living in California, yet forgot I missed until we went shopping there. We all went in the cost of our food together for the whole week, cutting down on expenses during our trip:
And this photo brings back poignant memories of our driving around the island of Puerto Rico:
Immediately on return to my community in Villa Mella, I moved to my own apartment. Here is my moving crew on the front steps of my new digs! It was hot, and I can see from this photo that these guys were tired, too. They were a wonderful help, and I really appreciated them that day:
This is the front of my new apartment building. I live in the apartment on the upper left.
Here is a view from up the street:
These two men kindly loaded my new bed into my bedroom. That was a happy day!
And the following photos are of my neighbors, a couple who has helped me in so many ways to settle in. They have lived in Europe and other countries, as he is a musician and has worked abroad. He had a stroke recently and both have been suffering due to new limitations in their lives after his disability. I try to be as supportive to them as possible and hope I can return some of the kindnesses they have shared. I love that they know everyone on the block and one of my Peace Corps Community Contacts lives in the next block, so I feel I am safe in my neighborhood.
This kindly couple invited me over to lunch on the day of my move.
And below are several photos of the young men in the neighborhood who fixed the wiring in our apartment house so that I can share the electricity with my neighbors. They charged 200 pesos to "pasa la luz" for which I am eternally grateful. I am continually impressed with Dominican ingenuity.
The neighbor downstairs posed for me for the following photo. Of course, it helps that the neighbor below is a police officer and frequently parts his car out front:
While I am posting photos of helpful Dominican guys, I''ll post this one of some fellows in the neighborhood who posed for me as I was walking down the street next to mine the other day:
I am very much enjoying being in my community, which is a poorer subdivision of Villa Mella known as El Tamarindo. And it's terrific to be back at the Hogar Renacer, now that it has reopened. The staff and their families had Almuerzo together right before the Navidad, which was a beautiful event.
And we all spent a day at a Catholic retreat site together. Here are many of the staff leaving on their way home at the end of the afternoon. I'll close this blog posting with this photo. Happy 2013 to all!
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