30.12.09
wheels man...wheels
26.12.09
trailer trash
18.12.09
Two Weeks (or more) In...
It’s been another week! I still cannot believe that I am here. It is hard for me to recall all the things that I have seen and learned, but I will try and tap into my memory bank…
We have still been camping pretty much every night. We went to Raglan, one of the most famous surf beaches here in NZ. The irony was that there were absolutely no waves to be found. Still, the town was very cute and fun to walk around. It definitely had a surfer vibe. It had about 6 or 7 surf shops within a 10 km radius. Seemed like it could be a cool place for me to find a job…but it might be too small and boring after one week of living there.
Then we made out way to Waitomo to see the glowworms! At first I was skeptical of paying money to see glowworms, but it was TOTALLY worth it. These bioluminescent creatures are spectacular! A tour guide took us cave exploring where we got to see the glowworms in full action. The whole time I was in the cave it reminded me of being on Space Mountain at Disneyland. It was nothing but pitch black and little stars. Definitely one of the coolest things that I have seen in a long time.
Then we were off to New Plymoth. Another “big” city, New Plymoth wasn’t really all that exciting. The cool thing about it was that there was a cool campground that was right on the beach. Our campsite overlooked the ocean!
Then from New Plymoth we made our way to Mt. Egmont. We had EVERY intention of climbing the mountain but mother nature had a different plan for us….it rained ALL night and there was 0% visibility and no chance that we could see anything once (if) we reached the top! The whole point of climing that mountain is for the view from the top. So those hiking plans and ideas of becoming fit again were shot.
Our next stop was Wellington. Wellington is NZ’s 3rd largest city and the capital of NZ. It was a very cool city that had a lot going on. It was our civilized break from camping. We decided that we needed a break and checked ourselves into a hostel. Honestly we didn’t do anything productive while in Wellington. We slept, ate, drank a bit and met some other travelers. It was a good refresher from living in the wild!
Speaking of the wild…camping isn’t exactly the hardest thing to do here in New Zealand. Most of the campsites that we have been staying in are fully equipped with hot showers/toilets/kitchens/laundry facilities and a bar or restaurant. The only really touch part is that we have to sleep on the ground in a tent. We did start finding campgrounds that are free. Those are just grass lots with “Johnny on the spots”. That is CAMPING…we have been staying at those lately trying to save money, only getting showers ever few days (PU!)
Two mornings ago I woke up with a THICK layer of ice on my tent. Luckily my sleeping bag is thick enough to handle the cold temps. Niki’s on the other hand…ugh…he has a summer bag that is only warm enough for summer temps like 17 degrees. So, poor guy has been sleeping in the car for the past couple of nights.
What else? Ah yes. Two days ago Niki and I hiked the Tongariro Pass (20 km). We were under the impression that it was only 12 km and that it was more of a walk than a hike. HA! Nope. It was a HIKE! Not quite as difficult as Half Dome, but none the less exhausting. I am still feeling it today. I will try and put pictures up soon!
So today I am in Rotura, land of the geysers, boiling mud and sulfur hot springs. Downtown smells like rotten eggs. We are staying at a FABULOUS campsite and I am sitting in the café drinking my English Breakfast tea trying to catch up with every email/facebook/blog that I have neglected. Not quite sure where we are going today or what we are doing. I do know that I will be in Auckland for Christmas and have started looking for jobs.
So, I think that I have brought you about up to date. I will get some corresponding pictures up soon!
Until next time mates….SEE YA
4.12.09
wanna see what I see?
http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=2110193&id=35800645&l=e04df318fa
3.12.09
Kiwi Fever, Baby!
I made it home from Mexico City safe and sound with almost no issues. Customs was a breeze (even though I was sweating because I knew that I had a Cuban cigar in my bag), my flight was great because no one sat next to me and I was able to lay across 3 seats and sleep, and even though I had no cell phone to call my parents to tell then when I arrived they showed up almost exactly when I walked outside of the airport! The only thing that didn’t go as planned was my unfortunate case of food poising that I received after eating what I thought were delicious nachos in the airport.
The food poisoning set me back a bit. I spent my first night home hanging my head over the toilet unable to get that good night sleep in my nice comfy bed that I had dreamed while on my travels. My body was so week that I could barely leave the house to do the one million things that I NEEDED to do before I left again. Long story short, thank God I had 3 days to be home and I didn’t fly straight to New Zealand…I think that would have been my definition of hell: food poisoning on a 12 hour flight…ugh!
Sick or not, however, it was great to be home to see friends and family! The timing was perfect to because of Thanksgiving. It was nice to eat something different than beans, eggs and tortillas! The food was great and seeing my friends gave me the rejuvenating force to start my new adventure!
So here I am now. New Zealand. I will say this one time and I mean it with all of my heart…if you have never been here and you have any kind of appreciation for nature, beautiful landscape and friendly people…GET ON A FLIGHT NOW! I have only seen maybe 1/10 of the north island and I am already in love.
I flew into Auckland (probably one of the biggest cities in NZ). Worried about what I was going to see I didn’t know if customs were going to welcome me with my 12 month work visa or hassle me about what my intentions were for my travels abroad and tell me that I wasn’t worthy of staying a whole year in their beautiful land. But alas…I was welcomed with a smile and stamped with my visa! I was also welcomed by a half asleep but smiling German and that is when the adventure began…
We spent my first day walking around Auckland figuring out plans for what we would do about seeing the north island. There are so many options as to how you can get around. You can pay a tour bus company to drive you around to major sights, hoping on and off the bus at your leisure. The tour companies stop in cities where there are hostels, bar and general tourist attractions so that you don’t really have to think much. You just have to make sure you catch the bus and find a hostel. You can also rent an RV, camper van or car and drive around yourself seeing what you want to see when you want to see it. And in doing that you can choose to camp in a tent, in your van or just sleep under the stars.
We decided that renting a car and buying a tent and sleeping bags was going to be the most fun for us and the most economical. So while we were in Auckland we stocked up on camping gear, rented a really classing 1997 Toyota Carolla and hit the 1 North in search for beaches, rolling hills and adventure.
Its been almost a week and we are having a blast. The weather here has been a bit rainy and wet, but it doesn’t subtract from the countries beauty! If anything, the weather has made it more mystical and more intriguing. I am definitely having Lord of the Rings flashes in my head as we drive…
Oh! And about driving…yeah, we drive on the left side of the road here, with our steering wheel on the right. That was a bit hard to get use to at first, but now it feels natural. (Don’t worry mom and dad—Niki is doing most of the driving, but I did have to try it out once!)
Yesterday we went to 90 mike beach (which is only 64 miles long) and to the most northern point of NZ—Cape Reinga—and see the famous light house that is on so many postcards.
That’s all for now. I guess I can’t say ADIOS anymore…so, until next time—SEE YA LATER MATES!
P.S. The internet is really expensive and hard to come by while you are camping….so these posts are going to be more and more difficult to do, but I will try and get one up at least once a week!!
Lots of Kiwi Love!!
24.11.09
coming home
16.11.09
VIVA!!
3.11.09
picturas.
29.10.09
Ruin Me
22.10.09
North Bound
21.10.09
Disappearing Act
16.10.09
New Plan
15.10.09
Local Living
13.10.09
Working woman
10.10.09
Las chicas locas
Alex arrived in San Pedro safely. To my surprise she WAS NOT on a chicken bus. Every chicken bus that drove by that didn’t have her on it made my heart sink…I thought that maybe she had taken the wrong one, or she got off at the wrong spot?! Finally she showed up in a giant, luxury (for Guatemala) shuttle. I was so relieved.
The only time I wish that I had a cell phone was in situations when you kinda need to know where someone is and what the plan is. But then I am reminded that things always manage to work themselves out, and that life existed before technology and people CAN get by without it…
After we got settled in to the hostel we had to take care of some serious business. We had to get Alex a Brahva Extra, pronto (they don’t have Brahva Extra in Xela)….and some chips and guac.
We went out last night. It was invigorating (in the sense that it lifted my spirits and was just the medicine I needed). We laughed. Spoke way too much English (actually we did make the transition to espanol after a few Brahva Extras!). Made new friends. Discovered new places and reunited with familiar ones.
To say the least, it was an awesome night and a much needed reunion. I am very lucky to have such an awesome travel buddy!
Here is a little taste of the action! (click on the facebook link for more pictures!)
Until next time amigios…ADIOS!
X
P.S. did not write this post last night…back to writing my posts the day of…
http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=2105312&id=35800645&l=7bf337c5d
9.10.09
Learning Espanol from gringos
I had a really good day today. Went to school as usual. Elena and I watched youtube videos of her favorite artists (she said that I needed a little Latin musica in my life!). Came home and had some rice and beans for lunch. They were ok. A little bland, but the 10 tortillas that I ate with it made up for the lack of flavor.
After lunch I started reading my book (The Alchemist—pretty much the best book to ready while you are traveling) and took a siesta for about 3 hours. When I woke up I was debating whether or not to go to school and go online and do some homework, or try and find my friends that I had met the day before. So, being the horrible student that I am, I headed down the road to the bar/restaurant that I figured my new friends would be at!
And as I suspected, they were there! So I hung out at the bar from about 5:00-8:40 doing my homework with the gringo bar tender, Tyler, from Missouri. He has been in San Pedro for a while now and his espanol (although in a VERY southern accent) is much better than mine.
I had a lot of fun with them hanging out and meeting other gringo locals. Tonight was the most fun that I have had since I’ve been here. Tomorrow Alex arrives and I am sure that the fun will continue!
Add un litro mas to my total of Brahvas J
8.10.09
No match...Lo siento
Turns out he is originally from Ohio (a buckeye…GO BUCKEYES!) and he moved to Alaska to work as a kayak instructor during the tourist season. He (Brian) and his friend got into Guatemala the same time that we arrived and they are kinda doing the same thing that Alex and I are attempting to do. They aren’t going as far as us, but they are doing the one-way ticket dealy-o.
Hung out with him for a few hours. He pretty much has met every person in San Pedro; which was cool because he introduced me to some nice people around town and showed me a cool bar that is closer to my home-stay than the rest of the bars that I know of. He also introduced me to the owner, Nick, who is from Scotland (I think?!?!) and I got to sit with him and talk a little about San Pedro and diving in Honduras (he has wifi in his bar which is AWESOME…which makes him worth knowing!).
So after we were done talking, they went swimming and I decided to be responsible and go back to school to check my emails, do some homework and pay for my classes this week.
Here’s where my day took a bit of a turn L I paid the girl, Lucy, at the front counter for my first week of class and home-stay with travelers checks. Lucy’s English is not very good and my espanol es no bueno either. Apparently she was asking me if I got the checks okayed with the director and I was saying that my checks were ok. There was a bit of confusions and to make A LONG STORY short, my school doesn’t accept traveler’s checks. UGH. I found this out AFTER I had written them to the school and Lucy gave me my receipt.
So, because they wouldn’t take the checks, one of the directors had to walk with me (up an ENORMOUS hill) to the bank to see if they would cash the checks that I had already filled out to the school. When we asked the bank manager if this was ok, he said (en espanol) “ah, yes it would be no problem except these checks are fraudulent! The signatures no match!”
Apparently the gap between my first and last name on the first line of my travelers checks was bigger than the gap between my first and last name on the second line and therefore he couldn’t cash the checks for me. They looked too fraudulent because of a FREAKING centimeter gap?!?!? The signatures themselves look the same, but because the gap was bigger he said they were fraud…WHAT? Only in Guatemala…
It took everything inside of me not to bitch slap the crap out of the bank manager! If I hadn’t had $300 more in traveler’s checks that I needed him to cash, then I probably would have exploded!
So, in the end, I am going to spend tomorrow getting my travelers checks replaced/canceled so that I can pay for the rest of school…if they are lucky enough to keep me here. If it wasn’t for my awesome teacher, I think that I would have left by now!
The adventure NEVER ends with me. I think that the saying “what doesn’t kill you makes you stronger” is what I am having to learn in San Pedro. I am going to be a really tough broad by the time I get back to the states (I thought I already was, but I guess I was wrong).
At the end of the day I did get some checks cashed. I still haven’t done my tarea (homework) and my family is calling me for another meal fulllllll of tortillas!
Here’s an idea of what else is up…
Bug Bites on my body: 13
Tortillas eaten: 33 (I think 35 is my limit for the week)
Pounds lost: I am thinking about 4 or 5. I have gone down a belt loop…almost 2…
Brahvas Drunk: 7 (these are the small bottles—not the litros—I haven’t quite picked up a drinking problem yet…but I have been pretty bored, so who knows!)
Spanish words spoken: about 10,000 (200 of which have been correcto)
Money spent: 545.87Q (total in Guatemala)
1745.87Q (including my first week of class and homestay)
$218.23 (Quetzels converted to US dollars—total spent)
Rolls of toilet paper I’ve gone through: about 6 (not sure if I just use a lot, if I blow my nose a lot or if I have just had my limit of black beans!?!)
My new mission: find the best mustaches in Central and South America and document them for a flipbook. I think that it will keep me entertained and should be a good read for others! I just have to learn how to say, “You have a nice mustache. Can I take a photo of it?” without sounding like una chica loca! Let me know if this flipbook already exists, or is already in the works J oh, and I need to make some good friends—that aren’t complete weirdoes!
Also, here are also some more pictures per the request of my father!
this is schooooollllll.....
this is my classroom...
view from my "classroom"
my papusa lunch. only 3Q. very tasty!
me enjoying some cominda!
Until next time amigos…ADIOS!!
7.10.09
One more day down!
So I have one more day of school under my belt. I am learning quickly (not anywhere near being fluent…but it HAS only been 2 days!) and am really enjoy spending my mornings with my teacher. Today, when I was wrote the word ano (“year” in Spanish) I forgot the accent over the “n”. Elena (my teacher) started cracking up! I was trying to ask her how many students she taught in one year. I couldn’t figure out why that question was so funny. So, I asked Elena “why are you laughing at me?” She quickly showed me in my Spanish/English dictionary that ano without the accent means anus. I had asked her how many students she teaches in one anus. Oops!
I am learning that there are so many subtle differences in words and pronunciations that you have to be really careful how you say something or you can get yourself I a lot of trouble!
I also met some other students today that filled me in about a free 45 minute session at night where you can sit with other students and an instructors and basically (excuse my expression dad) shoot the shit in Spanish. It is just a cool way to practice with other beginners. Everyone in my little group is leaving at the end of the week. They are all in their late 30’s and 40’s and have no interest in hanging out with me outside of class. So basically I am still having no luck finding cool people to do stuff with.
However, I was invited to go to this bar and watch this Australian guy play the guitar at 9, but it is PITCH BLACK outside and I would have to walk about 15 minutes to get there…call me afraid, but I have had at least 10 Guatemalan men ask me to live with them, or be their girlfriend in the last 3 days… don’t worry Dave…I just laugh and say “lo siento…you tengo un novio…el esta muy guapo!” which roughly means “I’m sorry…I have a boyfriends…he is very handsome!”
So until I move into a hostel I think that I will continue going to bed at 8 p.m…spending my afternoons doing homework and napping…eating the strange food that my host family makes me…and being the loner that I am! I keep telling myself that I will be very well rested!
I will try and take some more pictures of school and the lake…I still haven’t gone for a swim. It has been raining during the day here, so there isn’t much to do. Hopefully it will clear up for Alex so that we can do some fun stuff while she visits!
So sorry for the downer blog post. I am trying to see the upside of it all. Most of the people that I meet tell me that the first week is always the hardest. There isn’t much to do and you are very limited with a homestay! So I am keeping my head up J Until next time amigos…ADIOS!
AH—P.S.—I ate a really odd vegetable today called a Pacaya. It is grown at Volcan Pacaya…it was oddly satisfying. I ate it with a tortilla (duh…that’s all I eat here) and an avocado! Look it up…pretty cool! I will definitely try and find it in the states!
P.S.S. I am writing my blog posts the night before I post them…so if they seem a day off, well, they are! It’s one of the only things that keeps me occupied at night…so pretend that it’s yesterday!
X
6.10.09
San Pedro (not as I remembered it)
I felt awful for my shuttle mates as they had to listen to me panic about making it to school before 6 p.m. or Ramon, the school director, would leave without me and I would be stranded with no place to stay (which isn’t totally true…I could get a hostel very easily…I just have a huge American stick up my ass!)
But to my rescue, Moses, a local tour guide in San Pedro, greeted me when I arrived and got me to my final destination very quickly! He led me to Ramon who then took me to my host family (I didn’t get to choose a family like he had originally told me!) I am living with the Gonzelzes—Cecilia (the mother), Maria Elena (the middle daughter 12) and Hannah (the baby 2)—in my very big room with two beds! Unfortunately my toilet is not big—it is actually outside with nothing but a small curtain separating me and the outside world. And the shower that is by my room only has cold water. The one that they let me use downstairs is supposed to be warm, but I have not yet felt that warmth. I was also told today that the students buy the toilet paper (not too sure how I feel about that!)
My family is very nice and is very patient with me and my lack of Spanish. Unfortunately, there are very few things that we can say to each other because of the language barrier and we tend to end up staring at each other very awkwardly.
I am not too sure how long I will last in this homestay. I am very lonely and they have not been feeding me very well. It is very hard for people in San Pedro, and in Guatemala for that matter, to make any money. I think that they try to get by giving me as little as possible so that they can come away with something for themselves. I can’t say that I blame them.
I had my first day of school yesterday. My teacher, Elana (I think that is her name—I am usually REALLY good with names and I just cannot seem to keep her’s in my head), is very sweet. She is only 2 years older than me and is married with 2 kids! She was telling me all about marriage in San Pedro, how it is totally normal for a girl to marry when she is 15. She has a great sense of humor and will joke with me about everything. I am excited that she is my teacher. I think that I will stick with her! Hopefully she will get me understanding Spanish better in the next 3 weeks. It was all coming back to me as the hours of school went on. I think that I might actually have a good chance of being fluent by the time I return home. Who knows?! It could be wishful thinking! Seeing as I am bored out of my mind I have lots of time to study.
my teacher Elena! she's the best!
As far as staying with my family goes, I am going to give it a week and see how I feel. I am really longing to see Alexandra’s face (I MISS YOU FRIEND)!! She is coming to visit me on Friday. Depending on how the weekend goes I will either stay with my family or I will check into a hostel.
The rain is poring outside as I type. It is low season for tourism in San Pedro so there is not much to do and there are not many people to mingle with. There are a few other students in my language school, but so far the ones that I have met are realllllllllllly odd. I haven’t quite found any that I would fancy to hang out with! So I guess you can say “Raquel es una perdedora” which means “Rachel is a loser”.
So, after one long and drawn out blog post later…if you see me online…talk to me…I’m bored J Until next time…ADIOS AMIGOS!
3.10.09
Magma!
2.10.09
El Gato Negro
The Brahva...we have waited too long! This has been a great pre-school relaxation time of meeting awesome new friends and catching up on our siestas! Tomorrow we will attempt to hike Volcan Pecaya....until next time amigos :)
