Hola mis amigos! Wow! I just returned from Fuentes Georgina`s in Zunil, Guatemala. Donde esta you ask? Yo will tell you!
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Classic Juan con Louro |
Zunil is near Xela (pronounced Shela) and is in the western highlands of Guatemala. Xela is right around 2500 meters (for those non-Candaians, that´s around 7500 ft! Take that Denver!). So we are literally in the clouds up here. Storms roll in with lightning quickness (pun intended) and can last all day or 15 minutes. There is a lot of geothermal activity here, mainly focused around the local active volcano. Xela is the 2nd largest city in Guatemala and is subsequently full of people on motorbikes and chicken buses (refer to last post) and microlets (vans with the sliding door open that people hop on and off of!). It has a huge variety of street markets and restaurants and schools. The people continue to be much smaller than I am, which was thrown into stark contrast when I attended the Catholic mass at the cathedral in the central park. We all stood to sing the opening hymn and I am head and shoulders taller then everyone else. I did however receive a nice compliment today that I look like I´m from Spain. Considering Spain just won the UEFA Cup, I´ll take it! I was sad to inform him that I still only speak a poco amount of espanol.
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Just getting artsy |
For those travelers that may or may not be considering a trip to Latin America I´ll give you some small deets on prices and accommodations. I´ve been paying about $11 per night for a few different hotels with my own double bed and a shared bathroom. The 4 hours bus ride from Guatemala City to Xela is about $8 and if you want to ride the local bus around town it`s 25 cents. Meals have gone from $3 for tortillas and some bomber soup full of shrimp and mussels to $10 for a fantastic pizza with sun dried tomatoes, mushrooms, bacon, onions with a pesto base, plus 1 Liter of the local beer. Last night was my favorite but most expensive meal- I got a plate of mussels, shrimp and delicious fish and shrimp lasagna with a Tom Collins-esque drink for $12. Ok, no more dinero talk.

As I mentioned earlier, I just got out of the back of the pickup truck that took me and 14 (yes 14 people in the back of a pickup - we had to stand) about 45 minutes through some unbelievable farm land and up some scary switchbacks to some hot springs that put New Zealand hot springs to shame! Georgina´s fountain was probably around 112 degrees Fahrenheit in the spot closest to the spring and cooled down to 100 in the lower pools. The hottest and largest pool is about the size of an Olympic pool and has a huge misty, cascading waterfall at the far end. I went with a group that was organized by the language school whom I´m studying with this week-Projecto Linguistico Quetzltenango.
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Fuentes Georgina´s - Muy Caliente! |
What´s unbelievable about the farmland that we traveled through is the angles of the fields! Imagine Jurassic park style jungle with the peaks shrouded in cloud and greenery that puts North Carolina to shame (you know I love you NC!) and then clearcut some of those gigantic trees (not enough to make it look non-jungley) and slap a radish patch on the side of a mountain. Now multiply that by a few dozen and string PVC pipes across huge gorges and you start to get the idea. I am amazed at their ability to turn seemingly impossible land into arable land (side note: it reminds me a lot of what I read about the Jews doing in Palestine in the early 1900´s as they turned desert into farmland, from
Exodus by Leon Uris, read it!).
Sorry I don´t have a picture, I was holding on for dear life in the back of the truck!
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View from the springs |
The language part of my journey continues to go well. There are a ton of students at this school and the instructors are all quite professional. There is much more structure here then there was in Antigua, so it actually feels like school - there are good things and bad things about this, but on the whole it´s good. Mi maestra will help me with anything that I ask her to and will cater to my learning style as much as she can based on feedback I give her. For the most part we chat in basic Spanish and she corrects me where she needs to, we learn new verbs and she fills in other vocab as I ask about it. Es muy bueno. We shall see how things progress.
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Jurassic Park |
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View from my room |
One last quick story - my first full day in Xela I was a bit overwhelmed. Things were slightly more expensive then I expected and I was worried about the cost of the language school. Since it was a Sunday lots of things were closed. I went to mass en espanol thinking that I could at least understand what was going on based on my Anglican history but I was a little daunted by how little I could understand even after 15 hours of intense classes. I couldn´t find the cheap lunch that I was looking for and so after eating 2 baby loaves of bread, uno con queso y jamon, I went to sit in the park. I was sitting in parque de central listening to some music and a young man approached me. Alejandro turned out to be a student who lives in Xela with his 2 brothers and parents. He has not learned as much English in school as he wants and suggested that we practice Spanish together. Unfortunately, my initial response was that he was going to try and rob me. But I think he was equally nervous to be hanging out with this crazy American dude! So we met twice during this first week and we just hung in the park and chatted in very basic Spanish and English for a few hours. He is such a nice kid and I was amazed that he had the guts to approach me. I´m thankful that I was open enough to say yes. I hope more opportunities like that continue to come my way!
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