Besides the "Power Sex" tea, I've pretty much eaten everything that I've been served. For dinner twice now I've had "meat" but I'm pretty sure one time it was liver and the second time it was the udder part of a cow. I don't think too hard about things that I'm eating. One thing that I couldn't eat was undercooked soft boiled eggs for breakfast. The night I arrived, my host mom asked me if I drank coffee. I told her that I do occasionally but only a little bit. I soon realized that the Spanish word "cafe" which I thought meant coffee is also used to refer to breakfast. I have since then asked her for a little bit more to eat in the mornings, and that mistake has been corrected :) For breakfast I've eaten large bowls of fruit: apples, papaya, and banana. The other day my host mom bought Guaba for me. I don't know what this is in English. However, it's shaped like a giant pea pod the size of my forearm. Once split open it looks orange and white with fuzzy texture. One more interesting little detail... it's common to put popcorn in certain types of soups. The popcorn is served separately from the soup, so the first time this happened I started eating the popcorn by itself.
| Guaba |
The Escape of the Chicken:
After English classes on Wednesday, Alexis and I saw a chicken escape a small boy (about 3 years old). Alexis chased the chicken back to the child, then the boy smacked the chicken in the face and grabbed it by the feathers on its neck to bring it back home. Funniest thing I saw that day.
Random updates:
English classes seem to be going well. The first day we only had one 7 year old boy show up. Our program coordinator, Maria, came to Lumbisi to check-in with us. She saw that there was only 1 kid so she said she was going to go get more. More indeed. Maria drove around town and picked up kids and brought them to us. There were about 10 more kids that came back with her. More than half of them were related in some way.
I'm still working on making Ecuadorean friends. I failed at getting a conversation partner yesterday, partially because I asked the wrong people. A staff member gave me his coworker's phone number because he wants to practice speaking in English. I probably will not call Juan, lo siento senor.
Yesterday was the first time it rained (downpour) since I've been here. My host family kept telling me that before I arrived it rained a lot in Lumbisi. What can I say? I bring sunshine with me wherever I go... But this morning the view from my window was pretty cool:
They serve popcorn with soups here sometimes too! The beer cheese soup at the brewery comes with popcorn and it is delicious... om nom.
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