30 November 2009

Thanksgiving in Cuenca

Right now, it's Sunday night and I'm up late in our hotel room (that's actually a cabin) just outside Otavalo where we've had a wonderful weekend that I'll write about in my next post. I'm nursing a fire that I've had to build with wet wood and I can't sleep because Leslie and I accidentally took naps this afternoon. So I figured I'd get out my laptop and write about our Thanksgiving experience in Cuenca.

There is no Thanksgiving in Cuenca. Most of the people in the city have never heard of it and almost none of them have ever experienced it. It's so far off the radar that not only did we have to work all of Thanksgiving week, there were parent-teacher conferences scheduled for Thanksgiving night and the American director of CEDEI told us that sometimes you've just gotta go without celebrating American holidays. Well fortunately, those parent-teacher conferences got rescheduled off of Thanksgiving and since Leslie wasn't going a full year without celebrating Thanksgiving we decided to host a Thanksgiving dinner party at the Coloma's house for the CEDEI School staff. All the other American teachers were really excited and all wanted to bring a dish or help out in some way and the Ecuadorian staff was excited as well although they had no idea what to expect. In fact, I don't think as many of them as came were planning to come until I started advertising the party by talking about how much time Leslie and I were spending cooking all the traditional dishes.

We started dry-goods shopping on Monday, Leslie having decided on the menu at least a week in advance. We were going to cook a turkey (15-lb. because those things are expensive down here, a couple varieties (four casserole dishes) of dressing, green-bean casserole (2 dishes), real macaroni and cheese (2 dishes), mashed potatoes (big serving bowl), sweet potato casserole (1 dish), biscuits (like a ton) and pumpkin pie (3 pies). And Livia made two incredible corn casseroles as well. Jen also came and made some Ecuadorian fruit juices and we invited people to bring wine or Coke if they felt the need, because dinner parties in Ecuador are almost always pot-luck parties. And after at least five shopping excursions, six hours of cooking on Wednesday night (because we had to work Wednesday) and five more hours on Thursday of cooking and getting the downstairs ready and the music together right up until the party started (because we had to work on Thanksgiving day as well), we had 21 people come to the party plus us two plus the Colomas who only got a chance to try the food before they left for their own party. They were very gracious about letting us use the house for our party (after all we are paying them to live in the house) and Nellie even helped us clean all the dishes after everyone had gone. Angel said that Leslie's cooking (because in all honesty she really did all the cooking) was so good that he couldn't appreciate the food they were served at the party they went to.

All-in-all, the party was an incredible success and definitely worth all the labor that went into it. Even cleaning until 1:30 in the morning on Thanksgiving night, because we couldn't leave the cleaning until Friday (because we had to go to work) and because there's no dish-washer in the Coloma's house. Fortunately, we used almost exclusively plastic plates, cups and utensils and all of our baking dishes were aluminum Reynolds-style disposables so we avoided a lot of cleaning that way. All the food was delicious, including the purple sweet potato casserole that ended up being purple only because that's the color sweet potatoes are in Ecuador. I hope to be able to post pictures from the party soon so that you can see how much fun everybody had; unfortunately I can't do it right now because I'm at our hotel in Otavalo that only has internet in the lobby and only when the internet feels like letting you connect. The pictures will be up soon.



Everybody enjoying the food.




Trying to pose for a picture.




A good group photo of most of the people who came for the party.




The more chill last-minute crowd. We just hung out, drank wine and listened to '70s rock music for a couple hours.

18 November 2009

A Few New Things

So Leslie and I ended up having a great time this past weekend. Friday night we had our dance class, and since we're the only teachers who attend it (even though it's free) we get to spend some time learning how to dance together. What that really means is that Leslie is learning how to follow instead of lead when we dance. On the whole I don't agree with machismo, it does provide a few advatnages that I'm not yet quite willing to give up.

After our dance class, we grabbed a bite to eat from Betu's place and went and got in line for the Friday night free party bus. There is a company, Pazhuca Tours, that does a two-hour double-decker bus tour of Cuenca two or three times a day. The tours cost fives bucks and (if you're thinking like a tourist) it's definitely worth it, especialy because the bus takes you up to Turi. Every Friday night at 8, the six-o-clock tour gets back and there's a long line of people of all ages – little kids with their parents, people our age, grandparents, etc. – waiting to get on for free and take a one-hour bus ride around downtown with party music and canelaso and balloons. Leslie and I got on to the top of the bus and had a great view of everything going on both on the bus and around us. After the first round, which lasted around an hour, Leslie decided she was to tired to stay out with us (some other international teachers and some student teachers from the US came with us) and ended up getting a taxi home. I made her text me from Skype when she got home so that I'd know she was safe. And she was. The second time around we took a longer rout around downtown, we played louder music, we drank more and we had a lot more fun. It was also around 95% people our age on the bus, which was definitely helpful. We all got off on Calle Larga (gringo-friendly bar and club area) and ended up getting some schwarma and going to Once, a bar next to one of the CEDEI buildings. None of the drinks were two-for-one, so I ended up getting the chocolate one (that's made with ice cream) just to see how it would be. It was pretty good, and I wasn't trying to get drunk so I didn't mind that it was weak. After Once, we all just went home.

On Saturday I did abslutely nothing. Leslie had been invited to one of her kindergardener's birthday party, so she went there in the morning and I just stayed in bed. The only thing I really did all day, aside from eat and rest, was listen to Arkansas pound Troy in football. That may not sound too significant to you all, but we became bowl-eligible and the spread was only 14 points; we beat them by 36. It was a great Saturday.

Sunday was loaded with things to do. We decided to sleep in again, so we didn't end up leaving the house until 1pm – having made and eaten breakfast and showered and gotten ready for the day – when we headed down to the Mall del Rio. It was Leslie's first time going to the mall, which is incredibly boring because it's almost exactly the same as any small-town mall in the states. Except that the food court has more interesting options. We were there fo a fund-raiser event, FASEC's international food festival. FASEC is a cancer research group that puts on the festival every year, and since Nellie had made and served the Dutch food for them a few years ago she recommended we go and told us it wouldn't be too expensive. Apparently, something had changed since she worked the event because we had to pay just to get in and all the plates were four or five dollars. For five dollars both Leslie and I can get soup, bananas, fruit juice and a plato fuerte (main dish) at a Colombian restaurant with nice owners and incredible food. The Dutch table ended up, in my opinion, being the only one with food we tried that was really worth what we had to pay. Leslie and I shared a plate of incredible Dutch mashed potatoes made with bacon and cheese and enough butter (even enough for mommom). The mashed potatoes, which filled the plate, also came with some decent Dutch sauage. The plate was four dollars: still on the expensive side of eating here, but definitely worth it. We also tried something from Taiwan, which I won't attempt to explain except to say that they were balls of fried something, we had sushi made by cuencanos who are training to be professional chefs, we got a slice of strawberry cheesecake from the USA table that serves almost every traditional dessert we have back in the states, and we had paella from “Spain.” I saved the paella for last because it was horrible. A plate of paella, which came from a gigantic vat oh which I hope to have a picture for you soon, was five dollars. And when I asked the people who were working the booth they al claimed to be “half-Spanish” which, after trying their paella, I just cannot believe. I've lived in Spain. I've eaten real paella. So yeah, maybe I'm biased, but even Leslie didn't like it. That shit was disgusting.

We went straight from the mall, where we learned that Deportivo Cuenca will be playing in the national championship at home in the next couple weeks (I'll be going, you can be sure of that, and I'll be sure to post about it too), straight into downtown to La Universidad de Cuenca (La U) to meet up with a couple guys from work. An interesting note: in Cuenca, “el centro” (downtown) is the entire area in the center of town that has cobblestone streets. Once you're on a cobblestone road, you're officially in “el centro.” Leslie came to La U with me to do some exercise swimming while I played racketball with Pepe and Jonatan. I'd like to note that is was the second time I'd ever played and that Pepe has been playing for years and Jonatan was a tournament competitor a couple years ago. Yeah, not gonna write about how racketball went.

We were going to go to Mark Odenwelder's (CEDEI director) house to watch an NFL game after racketball, but he ended up being too busy to have us over. So we ended up getting Indian food on Calle Larga instead and just going home. The game ended up being on cable, so I watched the Spanish commentator version as I went to sleep Sunday night.

Monday's classes went well, but the important thing that happened on Monday was that I played in a soccer game Monday night that I had been invited to at Once on Friday night. A really cool guy, a cuencano named Javier who teaches English at a high school and always wants to practice with me, picked me up from my neighborhood and took me down to his father's canchas sinteticas (turf soccer fields) to play with his friends. It was a lot of fun, especially because I didn't suck all that much. I was a defender and I made several good plays. At the very beginning of the game, when my head was still spinning from trying to take in everything going on around me, I gave up the first goal of the game because I wasn't aware of what was going on around me. After that I was okay. The other guys on my team kept telling me that I was doing well, making good stops and good passes, even when I didn't think I was getting the job done. In the end, what it really comes down to is that when my opponents had the ball they respected me because they knew I could steal it if they didn't act fast and I'm pretty sure they'd all be fine with me playing every Monday night with them. To them I wasn't just some random gringo who sucked at soccer and was only trying to play because I'm living in Latin America, I was just another guy who was a little worse than them. That's the respect I was hoping for and I can't explain how glad I am that I got it.

I think that's all I wanted to say in this blog post. I'm not quite sure right now why I wanted to title it “A Few New Things,” except that I've finally found a weekly soccer game to play in. Anyways, I'm sorry it took me so long to put another post on my blog and I hope to eventually have enough time to finish the Vamos Ecuatorianos posts. Between work and class and saxophone lessons I really don't have much time or energy left for my blog, though I do consider it a major priority and try to write on it as often as I can. I hope y'all're enjoying reading about how my life is going.

08 November 2009

The New Schedule For Daily Life

Monday:
We get up every day around 6am to be ready to go to school a little after 7. We take two city buses to get to school and arrive around 7:30-7:40 to be ready to teach at 7:50. On Mondays, I teach 3rd- and 4th-grade English and 5th-grade gym class. We get done every day around 1:30, and Monday through Thursday we take another bus into downtown, eat lunch at one of a few restaurants and one of us has Spanish class. On Mondays, Leslie has class so I either hang around (like I'm doing right now) and use the internet or go home. Spanish classes are from 3pm to 5pm. Normally on Mondays I go home while she's in class to rest before my saxophone lesson at 6. Although I think it's getting bumped up to 5:30 which is great because I'm paying (five bucks) for hour-long lessons and the conservatory closes at 6:40 every day. That's pretty much it for Mondays.

Tuesday:
Same morning routine, except that I start the day teaching 2nd-grade English and spend the rest of it in gym class. On Tuesdays I have Spanish class, and right now Leslie almost always sticks around for the internet because she's in the process of applying to grad schools. The three places we normally go to eat are Moliendo Cafe, a Colombian place a couple blocks down from the CEDEI building where we take our classes (great coffee), Mambos, a sandwich place run by our Cuban friend Betu. He makes the only real batidos in the city, so we end up there very often. Batidos are like milkshakes, but made with fruit and not nearly as bad for you. The third place we usually go is the market 10 de Agosto. Food there is good and cheap and the goodness and the cheapness make up for the fact that we stand out so much not only for being gringos but for obviously being of at least the middle class here. Cuencanos with money are way to class-ist to eat in the market, regardless of how good the food is. School and class are pretty much it on Tuesdays.

Wednesday:
Wendesday is pretty much the same as Monday, the only difference being that I only have to teach two class periods and they're both gym. Every other day of the week I have five periods, which makes Wednesday an incredible day at work. Also, I should note that for one reason or another the saxophone lesson gets canceled about once a week, which is fine because we move really fast and sometimes I just need more practice before I'm ready to move on.

Thursday:
Thursdays are pretty much the same as Tuesdays, except that I teach four periods of English (to 2nd and 4th) and only one of gym. My stress and energy level really aren't affected by the gym classes, and we do the same things in all the gym classes (tuned to the physical abilities of the students, of course), so it really doesn't matter which classes I teach gym to any day except sometimes on Friday. The other interesting thing about Thursdays is that they are the official night for partying in Cuenca. Sometimes we go out on Thursdays, but we never stay out too late (we always get really tired at 10 because that's when we go to bed on school nights) and we never drink enough to be affected by it in the morning.

Friday:
Friday I teach English to 3rd grade in the morning and end the day, and the week, with three straight gym classes with the three oldest grades in the school (3rd, 4th and 5th). This is only particularly stressful when we have a free day in class, because that means all three classes want to play a game of Tio Slocomb vs. everyone soccer. And since these three classes come right after the second recess (the day's big soccer match for the kids, in which I play whenever I can to even out the teams and remind them that you can't win without playing defense), some Fridays I end the day with three and a half straight hours of soccer. Thank God we get to go home after school on Friday. We usually go to La Fornace, a pizza place with good ice cream and usually a good deal on a personal pizza, ice cream and a coke. Friday is also payday, but only once a month. There's a bank right next to La Fornace where we can cash our checks without any fees, so we always go there whenever we get paid. After lunch, we try to rest as much as we can before our dance class at 6pm downtown. We've been learning the bachata and the merengue so far and will be moving on to salsa as soon as the instructor thinks we're ready. It's an especially nice dance class because Leslie and I are almost always the only people who go (it's provided for all the international teachers at the elementary school), so we actually get to learn and practice dancing together.

Weekends:
We are going to try to travel a lot on the weekends, seeing all the Ecuadorian sights we can this year. When we're in town, Pepe Luna and I play racquetball for a couple hours either on Saturday or Sunday. We really don't go out to party all that much, but when we do we prefer to got with Pepe and his friends because they drink less and dance more and go to places that aren't full of gringos.

Special Notes:
There's really only one. One thing that has majorly affected our schedules recently is the power outages around town. We're in the rainy season right now, and it hadn't rained in over three weeks until just now after I started typing this blog post (it's Monday afternoon btw, even though the post says something different). I was so excited when I realized it was raining, that I interrupted Leslie's Spanish class to inform them it was raining. Everyone was really excited, because hopefully they'll stopp cutting the power now. The electrical grid in Cuenca is powered by the rivers the run through the city, and the rivers have been running so dry that they've had to cut off power to different neighborhoods at different times during the day in order to not have a complete system failure. They announce in that morning's paper which barrios will have their electricity cut off when so as to inconvenience the people of the city as little as possible with these necessary power cuts. We're hoping they won't have to cut the water supply. Also, when there's no power there're no street lights, which is a major problem right next to where we live and it really messes up the city bus schedules. We've been getting to school late every once in a while because the streets the buses come in on are so backed up.

So this didn't end up being all that happy a post, but that's life here sometimes. There's a reason why countries like Ecuador are referred to as developing.

An Afternoon in Paute / El Hornado

Sunday afternoon Leslie and I decided to take an afternoon trip to Paute, a small town to the north in Cuenca's province. We had heard that the best hornado in the world, a traditional Ecuadorian dish I'll talk about in a minute, could be found in Paute so I was on a mission. We took the city bus over to the terminal terrestre, which cost us $.25 each as usual. The terminal tax was ten cents, and the hour-long bus ride to Paute cost us $.75 each. It helps that Ecuador produces its own petroleum. When we got to Paute, we checked out the Sunday market, which was interesting even though there weren't too many people there. Paute is a vacation house spot for middle-class Cuencanos, who all went on vacation last weekend so I think the normal Sunday crowd in Paute was still in Cuenca this time.

We made change for a 20 in a CD/DVD store, where I bought 12 hours on merengue music on an mp3 cd for a dollar. Then we headed over to "La Plaza del Hornado."



Hornado means two things here. One thing it means is pulled pork, pulled directly from a whole roasted pig. Hornado is also a traditional dish: hornado served with mote (a kind of corn), a tomato-onion salad, a piece of the pig's roasted skin (which tastes like pork-flavored extra crunchy cheese-it), and llapingachos. Llapingachos are fried potato balls; I'm not sure how they're made. This lady was kind enough to let us take our pictures with her and her hornado. While we were taking the pictures, she said "Hornado is so cute, isn't it?" to which I replied "Of course it is." That makes a lot more sense in Spanish, but it's a lot funnier in English. The lady also tols us that she has sisters who live in the United States and that she would tell them that we took her picture and put it on the internet. At the end of this post, I'm going to put a list of keywords so that her sisters will be able to find this post if they do end up looking for it.

After eating a couple different plates of hornado from a couple different booths in the plaza, and yes they were definitely worth the trip, we got some salchipapas (a plate of french fries served with a little sausage, mayonnaise and ketchup) and ice cream and Leslie did some vegetable shopping in the market and we came home. Paute isn't really a site the needs to be seen like some other towns around Cuenca, but it was definitely worth the trip to try the best hornado in the world. If any of you reading this ever plan to come visit us down here, we probably won't spend an entire afternoon going to Paute but I'd love to take you to a market in Cuenca to give it a try.

(Hornado - Paute - La Plaza del Hornado - mercado de paute - señora que vende el hornado - mujer que vende el hornado - llapingacho - that should do it)

07 November 2009

Pacific Paradise: Playas Villamil / Cuencan Independence

So this past week we had both Monday and Tuesday off from school for the celebration of Cuenca's independence. We decided, instead of stay in town and party for 5 straight nights until well after sunrise (how all our young cuencano friends spent the weekend), to go to the beach and relax and rest and eat good food and wake up whenever we wanted. We didn't end up leaving town until Sunday, initially because we wanted to do a little partying with our friends here in Cuenca, but we ended up just being too tired to do anything Friday or Saturday night. I actually called in sick on Friday because I was too fatigued to teach. I woke up really early, not by choice, to go to the bathroom and by the time I got back to bed I was exhausted. I spent the day laying in bed trying to sleep, eating high-calorie food and writing on my blog.

So back to the fun stuff. First, I would like to thank Uncle Joe and Aunt Susan for paying for Leslie's and my weekend at the beach. When Joe gave me my graduation gift, I told him it would be enough for Leslie and me to spend a weekend at the beach in Ecuador and that that was what I'd do with it. So thank you very much for last weekend in Playas. I hope my description of the weekend is enough to let you enjoy last weekend with us. We left Sunday morning, having to go through Guayaquil to get to our eventual beach town, Playas Villamil. We decided to take a van from a private tourism company into Guayaquil, because for $12 each (instead of $8.50 per person on a public bus) our ride would be faster, more comfortable and more scenic. We didn't realize nearly how much faster, more comfortable or more scenic it would be until we had to take a public bus from Guayaquil to Playas. We lucked out as well, because we ended up getting the van to ourselves and the driver was a great guy named César from Machala who loved explaining to us all of the different agricultural plants we were seeing and where all the best views of the mountains are from the road. The road itself was built over the old Incan trail from Cuenca to the coast in the '80s. The Incas preferred to live in up in the mountains but they needed to go to the coast for commerce, so they cut themselves a trail through the mountains that would be both fast and simple for them. From the Cuenca side, the trail starts by cutting and winding through Cajas, the National Park and arguably the most beautiful place in the Andes. I'm sorry I don't have any pictures of the mountains here, but you can see them in the post about our camping trip in Cajas.

After going through Cajas we passed a place we had heard about, a restaurant called "El Mirador de Los Andes" that is apparently (it was apparent just from seeing them from the van) the best place to stop and drink mate de coca and take in the view. It's located at an incredible spot, from which you can see both the blankets of clouds below and above you and also several unfolding green mountain ranges. We didn't stop, but I plan to take my parents there when they first get to Ecuador.

After crossing through the lower blanket of clouds, which seems way more dangerous than it really is the first time you do it, all of a sudden we saw flat earth. By that, I mean a place where the earth was flat. Even flatter than Ohio there were mountains and the there was flat not even hills just straight flat. We had to pass through several kilometers of heavy vegetation before we saw anything humanized: which were small highway towns and the agricultural fields surrounding them. We saw banana fields, cacao fields (cacao is the plant, cocoa is the fruit, chocolate is the product), sugar cane fields and fields for other plants I can't remember off the top of my head. I remember the banana fields because you could see the huge stalks with bunches and bunches of bananas hanging from the trees. I remember the cacao fields because come on it's chocolate of course I remember the cacao fields. And I remember the sugar cane fields because César explained to me that it takes almost three months to completely grow a crop of sugar cane and you can do it four times a year. No wonder sugar cane is the plant they make their liquor from.



This is a picture taken of a cacao field from the van. If you can see them, admittedly they're really blurred, there are purple shoe-size pods hanging from some branches. That's where the cocoa is.

In the little towns we passed through (Ecuador's version of one-stoplight towns) there were tons of little set-ups where people were selling their fruits, and veggies, freshly picked from their fields and gardens that morning. We didn't stop, so I can't attest from personal experience to how cheap it all is, but Angel once brought home a bunch of oritos (about 50, check Strange New Fruits) that he said he'd bought for a dollar at one of these places. The following picture, also taken from the van and unfortunately blurred, is of one of these set-ups.



Needless to say, the ride into Guayaquil was incredible and beautiful. The van company's Guayaquil office was just a couple blocks from the "terminal terrestre,"
so we walked downto pick up a bus to Playas. The whole place was packed. And when I say packed, I mean packed in a way you can only experience in "developing" countries. These people almost never believe in lines, they just believe in big bunches. And it definitely didn't help that we had a suitcase with us that either had to be rolled or carried; we decided that the next time we have to take public buses here we can only take with us what fits in our backpacks. So if I want to take a jug of water or if Leslie wants to take a purse they have to go in the backpacks too. We finally got our tickets bought, and finally got to the place where our bus would show up, and there was a mob of people waiting to get on the buses. What happens is, as soon as the bus shows up (it's already empty praise the Lord, and I'm serious about praising the Lord people would be crushed if the mobs were trying to get both on and off the bus at the same time) a mob of people try to shove their way onto the bus and the driver and the bus manager and a terminal manager try to only let the people with tickets on to the bus. When all the people with tickets are on the bus, they let the rest of the mob try to fill the empty seats. The bus doesn't leave the terminal until there's one person for every seat and only one person for every seat on the bus. We were fortunate enough to see another bus before ours go through this process before we had to dive in. One nice thing about mobs of Ecuadorian people is that all Ecuadorian people are considerably smaller than me, which makes maneuvering through mobs of them considerably easier. Es como si fuera yo un oso. Me llamaría un gorila pero ellos no tienen barba como yo. We finally go onto the bus, into our assigned seats (thank God we were sitting next to each other. And I'm serious about thanking God, especially that I had the aisle seat, I'll explain), and eventually the bus left the terminal.

I tell you what, riding public inter-city buses in Ecuador deserves its own blog post. Our first time, on the way to Playas from Guayaquil, a couple women had their dogs with them on the bus. Granted, they were little dogs that could be easily carried in both arms, but they were still living breathing dogs. All the buses pick up people off of the street, and charge them a little less than the full fare to go wherever they need to on the route. I think that's how the bus drivers and managers make enough money to do their thing and I personally to blame them or complain because it's their way of getting by. Eventually, the bus manager will come by and check your ticket or your money (for some inter-city buses, you don't pay until after you're on the bus. Ojalá que tengas el suelto propio.), and they come back through every twenty-ish minutes to collect from whoever they've picked up off the street. But not only do they pick up extra passengers, they pick up street vendors too. And the street vendors are selling all different kinds of things. From iced-down coconut juice, to coconuts themselves, to fried potatoes and plantains to cds and dvds. They just hop on the bus, sell whatever they have, and get off at a later stop. I'm pretty sure they must have some system, especially because we saw the same guy on both trips, to and from Playas, selling grapes on both buses. It's gotta be some sort of organized commerce. And it's acutally failry common for the passengers on the buses to buy the food for the ride to wherever they're going. Maybe next time I'll try to make sure I'm hungry when I need to take an inter-city bus.

Eventually we got to Playas, which is a definitely mainly a resort-y beach town designed for Ecuadorian vacationing. Fortunately, our hotel was in the middle of everything. It was two blocks from the bus station and it was on El Malecon (Spanish for sea-side road) so we were right up on the beach as well. We were solo un pasito from everything we wanted to do. Unfortunately, we didn't have a view of the beach from our room. Just a view the bars behind the hotel and the loud music they played all day and all night. As soon as we had our room, which had air-conditioning for which we had to pay a little extra, we put on our beach gear and headed out. Unfortunately, we didn't take any pictures of the restaurants on the beach, but there were tons and each of them had a woman kissing and waving at you to get you to eat in her restaurant. From outside they just look like shacks but we ended up letting a hisser lead us to her restaurant, through the middle of another restaurant, so we got to see what the kitchens looked like and the shack-like buildings are actually permanent structures with cement and mortar and the whole shebang. There were also other restaurants, ciruclar and up on poles a couple feet above sand-level. They were more official-looking and we ended eating in one of those too. I'll talk about that later.



The beach was packed; it looked like that the whole time we were in Playas, at some times even more full of people. Fortunately, we never felt like we had to fight anybody to have some space to ourselves on the beach. Sunday afternoon, we just hung out out there for a couple hours so we didn't do or eat anything too serious. We just sat on our towels and at one point I got up and got us encebollado. I'm not quite sure how to explain ecebbollado. It's probably a soup, because it's served in a bowl-like dish and there's enough liquid in it that everything else is always submerged. The liquid is some kind of vinegar-onion-tomato-cilantro concoction, and it had mote, fried potato, fish and a couple other indecipherable solid food things in it as well. I'm not quite sure what all was in it because I only had a couple tastes. I don't really do vinegar, and like I said everything else was submerged in it.

Sunday night, we went out to a dinner with some of our US friends from Cuenca, and we ended up drinking and hanging out with them in their hotel that night. I still think our drinking games are superior to the Ecuadorian ones I've tried.

The next morning, well I don't know when we woke up because it was whenever we felt like waking up. We got our stuff together and headed out to the beach. We ate breakfast in one of the shack-looking places, which was nothing to write home about, and then we headed to the beach. We got there later than most, but early enough to snag a beach umbrella with a couple chairs. There are people on the beach who own the setups and charge five dollars to use their umbrellas and chairs, but as soon as you pay the five bucks you've got a spot to yourself until you leave. So we posted up right there for over six hours, basically until Leslie got too cold and wanted to go back to the hotel and get ready for dinner and a walk along the beach. Whenever we wanted something, we left one at a time. We could have left our stuff under the umbrella and gone and done stuff together, but we had a cell phone and a book and cash and other things that we didn't feel like leaving and it was never too great a burden for one of us to get whatever we needed or go back into town by ourselves.



So that's pretty much what I did all day. Every once in a while, I'd go get in the water and ride or jump over or swim under some waves and come back to our spot and dry off and tan and



drink beer. I also drank beer pretty much all day, relaxing under our umbrella eating various beach foods. There was a Pilsener vendor who would walk by every fifteen minutes or so seeing who all needed more beer and she'd bring us a liter-bottle of Pilsener and two cups with ice (Pilsener is one of those [cheap] beers that has to be really cold to be enjoyed) for a dollar twenty-five. Normally a liter of Pilsener only costs a dollar, but somebody had to haul those bottles and bags of ice down to the beach and she was bringing them straight to us so we were glad to pay the extra quarter-a-piece. Back to the beach food. Maduros fritos are fried breaded plantains that we ate ever single time somebody walked by that was selling them. They taste like the richest moistest densest most flavorful pancakes you've ever eaten, they're about the size of two bananas and they cost between forty and seventy-five cents each, depending on how good your Spanish is and how much you can cut your words to sound like a coastal Ecuadorian. I also went into town and brought back a ton of empanadas for lunch. They were phenomenal, completely filled with things like cheese, chicken and veggies, beef and veggies, the napolitanas had cheese, tomato, olive oil and oregano, and we had some that had shrimp and cheese and oil and oregano. They were incredible.

Okay, so it's about time I do this. Here's a list of potential slogans I've thought up for Pilsener. They're all particularly appropriate because they're all true. Maybe one day I'll translate them and submit them for official use:

Pilsener: It's only a dollar!
Pilsener: It's what you do after Sunday mass.
Pilsener: It's what you do after anything.
Pilsener: It's also what you do before anything.
Pilsener: Hell, it's what you were doing anyways.
Pilsener: One for the walk home from the bar. (That's legal here.)
Pilsener: For when you wake up drunk. Every Friday.
Pilsener: It's better with ice!
Pilsener: Because you don't want to remember that your country sucks at soccer.
Pilsener: Official sponsor of Ecuadorian burps and farts.

Back to the weekend. Tuesday morning (we're not going in chronological order anymore, just talking about the stuff we did while we were chilling on the beach all weekend) while we were at the beach, I was in the water and I kept stepping on these smooth rock or shell-feeling things and I had no idea what they were. A dad was out there with his probably 9-year-old son and I watched him pull out of the water what looked to me like a sand dollar, except that it was the wrong color. He explained to me, in Spanish of course, that that's what it was, except that it was still alive.



This is what their shells look like. This is the side of them that faces up, the side I kept stepping on.



This is the side of them that is actually alive. Thousands of little prickly things that move around. Leslie thinks there must have been a storm the night before, because I brought over twenty of these living sand dollars back to shore to show Leslie the differences in their sizes and shapes and the ways their little star patterns look. I threw them all back, of course, and continued to feel more under my feet but didn't worry with picking them up after that.



Leslie wanted to make a sand castle Tuesday morning while I was out collecting sand dollars (that I threw back because they were living creatures), so while I was on the shore I took a few pictures of her making her castle. I posted this one because I timed it just right to capture the truck full of Ecuadorian military passing by as they patrolled the beach. Normally there were just pairs of navy-looking guys with billy clubs strolling the beach together, I assume just being a presence, but for some reason this morning there was a truck full of guys in cammo and kevlar and helmets. I guess they were just doing drills.

We really didn't do much more than relax and take in the sun and eat great food and drink, well, cheap beer while we were at the beach. We didn't do banana boats or anything like that; we just took in the sun and enjoyed being where we were.

Monday evening, during the hour sunset and the hour after, Leslie and I went for a walk down the shore. We collected several cool-looking shells, which eventually we plan to make into a wind chime like the ones we saw at all the little stalls where people were selling all sorts of touristy beach stuff like shell bracelets and shell wind chimes and big hats and dresses and sunglasses. We didn't buy anything, because there are plenty of places in Cuenca that have all that stuff for significantly cheaper.



This is a picture of me in the water while we were on our walk. Leslie wanted us to take pictures of each other at the shore because it was our last night and we hadn't been taking pictures of ourselves yet.



This is the best of the pictures I took of Leslie because I finally caught her when she wasn't posing. I had to get her to walk backwards into a small wave without looking so that she wouldn't be ready when it got to her feet.

We ended up on one end of the beach, where there were a bunch of people partying on the beach as it was getting dark. There were bars and dance floors and everything over there: too bad we hadn't gone earlier. Leslie and I both got a cocktail and continued on our walk, back towards our hotel. We ended up getting dinner ate one of the bigger more official-looking restaurants on the beach. We got there just as they were closing up shop, but they were happy for our business. I got a beer and we split a ceviche as an appetizer. Ceviche is a seafood soup, another vinegar-based soup, though I really liked this ceviche despite the high concentration of poison. Leslie was still on a shrimp thing, so she ordered some shrimp thing and I ordered "Arroz Marinero" after the waiter told me it was fried rice with a ton of seafood names and a "cangrejo completo." I figured it'd be a winner.



So it turns out cangrejo means crab. And my dinner came with a complete crab. It also had shellfish, scallops, shrimp, some fish, and some other stuff whose flavors got lost in the flood. It was an incredible dish and I was definitely completely satisfied when I finally finished it. Leslie and I went walking all around El Malecon and Via Data (the two main roads in town, both of which follow the shore), looking at all the touristy stuff that was being sold. We eventually ended up back in our room, tired and ready to fall asleep through whatever noise was coming in our windows. We got up Tuesday morning in time to head to the beach for a couple hours, take showers, get checked out of the hotel, go get a ton more empanadas for lunch, and pick up the next bus into Guayaquil. We got back into Guayaquil in time to get on a van to Cuenca in time to arrive just in time to head downtown for the last major event in celebration of Cuencan Independence, after going home to change back into cold-weather clothes of course.



It turns out President Correa was in town giving a speech in a building on the central square. All I lreaned from his speech, though I understood everything, was that he loves the sound of his own voice. This is a picture of him on a balcony watching the pyrotechnics stuff going on on the square.



After the speech and the two-story tower that was paraded around with all sorts of little things on it exploding, Leslie and I hit up a restaurant on the square for dinner. THe only notable thing that happened there was that they served us Colada Morada con un Guagua de Pan. Colada Morada it that purple drink that's very thick and very sweet and made with tons of different kinds of fruits. A Guagua de Pan is a bread baby. It's a tradition for All Souls Day. I have no idea what it has to do with anything, just that it's a traditional sweet food eaten after Ecuadorians commemorate their dead ancestors by visiting them in the cemetery.



After the Colada Morada and Guagua de Pan we went over to the stage, where a bad was playing traditional Cuencan music. We heard "Por eso que te quiero Cuenca" for the first time. It's one of the most famous and most popular of the traditional Cuencan songs. A lot of our friends told us we'd have to hear it at some point before leaving the country.

I'd like to close this long blog post by thanking Joe and Susan again for their gracious graduation gift. I hope this blog post allows me to share the wonderful experience Leslie and I had this past weekend and I hope it fully expresses my gratitude to you.