I have recently been able to get my pictures off my camera and uploaded here to my blog, so I added them to my previous posts. Check 'em out! Also, here are the 4 of us on the team. This picture was taken in front of the Lima Temple the first week we were here in Peru. From left to right: Carly Chambers, Chelsea Brothers, myself, and Cameron Nelson.
A blog. For me. I think we all know what these are for nowadays. Read on.
Wednesday, June 11, 2008
Sunday, June 1, 2008
Jauja
We started on Jauja, our third city, on Monday, May 26 during the day. It's about 45 minutes north of Huancayo. We returned to Huancayo to finish that evening, then moved up to Jauja on Tuesday to stay for a few days. Jauja was interesting...the work has progressed just fine, but we've had a couple of interesting experiences, especially Wednesday night and Thursday. First, our hotel (if we want to call it that) said it had hot water, but we found it to be a lucky moment if the water was turned on at all. Second of all, the shower had no curtain and was rather ghetto looking to begin with. I just won't let anyone in on the fact that I didn't shower for two days because of that... I took a video with my camera...
This is a picture of my door at our second hotel. So, different hotel, but amusing just the same.
Some of our typical transportation in the city.
Or outside the city. They're both motorcycles, or at least the front half. The back part has a seat for 2 (or 3, squished).
Our adventures continued when we went out to a city about 30 minutes away last night, and didn't find the woman because she wasn't home. And this is after we hiked out into the countryside for 15 minutes. So we trekked back and then went to a city on the way back to Jauja called Huertas, and began looking for a woman there. (It was dark by the time we got there, and usually we try to finish up by dark, though it's tricky since they don't do daylight savings time here and it's dark by 6:00 pm.) No one in the small city plaza knew who it was, but one man volunteered to take us to look for her and her street. After walking about 20 minutes away from the main road, we arrived at a smaller plaza where there were some more people. No one there knew who the woman was that we were looking for either, but our friend rode his bike off the the home of someone in the community who knew most everyone. Meanwhile, I called our PRISMA contact in Jauja to ask, and he said, "Oh, you'll never find her by yourselves." I then wondered why on earth he told me earlier that day that I could find her that afternoon... When our friend came back, he still didn't have information about the woman, but said that there was someone else by the same last name, so we could check there. So after another 10 minutes of walking (away from the main road), we knocked on the house, and it so happened that the woman that answered was the one we were looking for! So it was a stroke of good luck. After we finished the survey, however, we realized how dark it was at 7:40 there, and we were also startled by a man who began approaching us. It turned out that he was really only going to the house that we had just left, but we hurried down the street anyway, watching our backs. After wandering in the direction of the main road, but only finding roads darker than we wanted, we changed directions and walked until we found a small store. The woman there gave us directions to the main road, where we could grab a car back to Jauja. I asked her if there was any danger to walking there at 8 pm, and she said, "No, not until at least 9 or 10." My slight worry was not soothed... But in the end, we did make it back to the road and then to Jauja without a problem. In Jauja I dropped the dozen or so rocks that I had put into my sweatshirt pocket just in case of something unexpected. :)
The next adventure I shall mention is simply that my partner Chelsea didn't feel all so well on Thursday, and ended up losing her lunch (actually, the one from the day before) while we were interviewing a PRISMA client. Fortunately, he was very understanding and helpful!
We were able to finish up Jauja Friday morning. Which reminds me of one more story I could mention: our PRISMA contact in Jauja, while very nice, was also a bit of a flake with time. Thursday, we were supposed to meet at 6:30 am at our hotel to head out to 3 cities, where we had a food security survey (15 min) in one and an in-depth interview (45 min) in each of the others, and José (the contact) had said himself that we should get there early in order to catch them before they went out to their chacras (fields). Well, at 6:40, I called José and he said he was on his way. At 7:15, he rolls up and asks if we're ready to go. "Yes, quite," we think to ourselves. So we headed out. We ended up only finding two of the clients and only having time to do the short survey with each of them. One of them said, "If you had come earlier, I would've had plenty of time for the interview!" Yeah, I know. We didn't find the other man we were looking for because he had already left for his chacra. Such is life! But the story continues. We invited José to eat lunch three times: once Wednesday and twice on Thursday, and he skipped out each time either to play soccer or eat somewhere else. Oh well, his loss! And lastly, we were to meet at the PRISMA office in Jauja at 9:45 am on Friday to go meet a group of clients at 10:00 and do our last focus group for the Jauja area. José was a no show. So we got the city location and the names of the clients from the receptionist, and headed off on our own. We found the city, and fortunately the group as well, without too much trouble. We introduced ourselves and asked them if we could have a discussion with them as they waited for José, who was already 30 minutes late. They were happy to start. We had a wonderful discussion and then shared some refreshments with them, and then said goodbye and good luck at 11:45. José's whereabouts were still unknown. If anyone knows exactly how Peruvian time works, do let me know! Though the client group seemed to like the "on-time" idea...
Anyway, that's it for Jauja. Here are a couple of pictures.
The first is of the church in the main square of Jauja. To the right you can see a yellow sign. That was our first hotel.
Here is some landscape a little ways outside of Jauja, but a typical small town in rural Peru, and a typical plant of the area.
This is a pile of charcoal burning, and they cook a food called Pachamanca in there. I never actually tried it, but people said it was great.
The next adventure I shall mention is simply that my partner Chelsea didn't feel all so well on Thursday, and ended up losing her lunch (actually, the one from the day before) while we were interviewing a PRISMA client. Fortunately, he was very understanding and helpful!
We were able to finish up Jauja Friday morning. Which reminds me of one more story I could mention: our PRISMA contact in Jauja, while very nice, was also a bit of a flake with time. Thursday, we were supposed to meet at 6:30 am at our hotel to head out to 3 cities, where we had a food security survey (15 min) in one and an in-depth interview (45 min) in each of the others, and José (the contact) had said himself that we should get there early in order to catch them before they went out to their chacras (fields). Well, at 6:40, I called José and he said he was on his way. At 7:15, he rolls up and asks if we're ready to go. "Yes, quite," we think to ourselves. So we headed out. We ended up only finding two of the clients and only having time to do the short survey with each of them. One of them said, "If you had come earlier, I would've had plenty of time for the interview!" Yeah, I know. We didn't find the other man we were looking for because he had already left for his chacra. Such is life! But the story continues. We invited José to eat lunch three times: once Wednesday and twice on Thursday, and he skipped out each time either to play soccer or eat somewhere else. Oh well, his loss! And lastly, we were to meet at the PRISMA office in Jauja at 9:45 am on Friday to go meet a group of clients at 10:00 and do our last focus group for the Jauja area. José was a no show. So we got the city location and the names of the clients from the receptionist, and headed off on our own. We found the city, and fortunately the group as well, without too much trouble. We introduced ourselves and asked them if we could have a discussion with them as they waited for José, who was already 30 minutes late. They were happy to start. We had a wonderful discussion and then shared some refreshments with them, and then said goodbye and good luck at 11:45. José's whereabouts were still unknown. If anyone knows exactly how Peruvian time works, do let me know! Though the client group seemed to like the "on-time" idea...
Anyway, that's it for Jauja. Here are a couple of pictures.
The first is of the church in the main square of Jauja. To the right you can see a yellow sign. That was our first hotel.
Here is some landscape a little ways outside of Jauja, but a typical small town in rural Peru, and a typical plant of the area.
This is a pile of charcoal burning, and they cook a food called Pachamanca in there. I never actually tried it, but people said it was great.
Huancayo
Thursday (May 22) morning we made our way back to Huancayo, and then that day we split into teams of two. Chelsea and I stayed in Huancayo while Cam and Carly headed out to Tarma, about two hours north. And the work continued. Things went really well for us in Huancayo, and we got a good deal done very quickly. Also, our professor Roger Dixon arrived Thursday and was with us for about two days. He accompanied us while we surveyed and interviewed people on Friday afternoon, and was able to make it to a focus group the next morning as well.
We nearly finished by Saturday around noon, so we took the rest of the day to rest and went and did some shopping in a nearby artisan market. I got a beanie and gloves with llamas on them! Also, a nice colorful scarf. Monday we coordinated with the PRISMA director of the Huancayo area, and were able to finish everyone we needed that evening. Probably the most interesting experience we had here was eating guinea pig on Sunday... One of the women that we interviewed asked us to come eat dinner at her house, so we did. She had a small farm and raised, among other things, cuy (guinea pigs). It tasted a bit like rabbit, which I had occasionally in Spain in paellas.
Also, we made good friends with a taxi driver, because we used him 4 days in a row, and some of the trips were several hours. I told him he was officially a PRISMA expert, or at least an expert at looking for people that are difficult to find! We did a few more interviews on Monday evening, after we had spent the afternoon in the next city, Jauja, getting a jump start there. Overall, things went fairly smoothly and we learned a good deal. Here's a photo of some landscape of the Valle de Mantaro, where Huancayo is situated.
Pampas
Pampas is a smaller town situated in a small valley in the northern part of the Huancavelica province. We arrived on Monday morning, May 19, and got to work right away and found a few of the short surveys in the afternoon. In the evening, we travelled to a small town on the other side of the mountain range and did another one. We took these pictures on the way there. It was a steeeep mountainside!
The next day, we woke up at 4:00 am to travel to a couple of towns about 2 hours away where we had approximately 8 short surveys and 2 longer interviews. So we left at 4:30 and arrived at the first town around 6:15. We split into teams of two, and one of the girls and I went to survey one woman while the others went to another. After the survey, I walked a few feet away from the house and saw a vast valley in front of us filled with clouds, and the sun was just coming over the mountains opposite us. It was breathtaking. The picture doesn't do it justice... After we had finished the surveys, we loaded back into the car and headed off to another town where we had 5 names. Unfortunately, when we got there, not a single one of the women was there! Despite the fact that we had gotten up so early to get there before they leave for their fields! Oh well. Since we had travelled so far, we ended up surveying several other women from the same village who had also taken out loans and were in the same group. We also did two longer interviews and a focus group as well! So it was productive, even though it didn't go as planned. And even though it isn't ideal, we will use the information we gathered there. After returning to Pampas (on crazy mountainside roads) we rested and then did some more work for the rest of the day.
The next morning, Chelsea and I woke up at 5 and travelled to a town about an hour away, and high high high in the mountains (4000 m) called Pacchapata. It was very small, only around 20 people, and it was cold. There was frost everywhere. But we found the people we were looking for, so it was great.
And for the rest of Wednesday, we tried to finish up in Pampas. It didn't end up being perfect, but we did our best and it was a good first run as we got our bearings and figured out what we needed to do. Wednesday night, we went up onto a mountainside looking for a woman in a smaller village, and she never ended up arriving. But we saw the stars, and there are way more than I've seen for a long time! There's not nearly as much light pollution here, high in the Andes, so it was a brilliant sight. I'm going to try and look at the stars some more while down here.
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