Saturday, August 9, 2008

El 10 de Agosto: a night for celebration!

Old buildings line a street in El Centro
Tonight was Wonderful!
El 10 de Agosto is the Ecuadorian Day of Independence from Spain--and interesting fact, Ecuador was the first South American country to become independent. Next year is the 200th anniversary...I am sad to have missed that, after experiencing this last week of celebrations.

Tonight Lali and I took the Trole, the Ecuadorian version of the cable car featuring twice as many people in half the space, to the historic district of El Centro. This is the heartbeat of Quito, and walking down any of the hundred narrow cobbled streets(being two to five hundred years old) you find a plaza with a large fountain or statue or both, making it feel spacious, surrounded by a flourish of blooming trees and plants, making it feel cozy. And probably there are one or two enormous and elaborate churches around the plaza, perhaps a museum, and a library, and government buildings all reminiscent of the "Painted Ladies" of San Francisco. The streets were closed off to cars in about a one mile radius from the Presidential Palace, the main plaza for the events this evening.


Presidential Palace

Lali reminded me of dad tonight, because every few minutes as we walked around El Centro, she would find a gaurd or a vendor or a cameraman to talk to and ask questions. I think this is more common in Ecuador, everyone loves to talk with strangers. Lali took me away from the crowds down a narrow but lovely old street called Calle Ronda, to a little adobe building called La Casa de las Geranias. (House of Geraniums). Here we got big hot chocolates and Huge empanadas--kind of like a pocket-shaped biscuit with cheese in the middle. We put sugar on top, like I do with Cele's crepes at home. It was delicious and I loved the atmosphere--we even had a sort of mariachi band come play for us. After "Besame Mucho", they asked "Te gusta la cancion?" But before Lali or I could respond they spoke in broken Rnglish, "You like the song?" Haha! Lali has darkish blonde hair, and as Lali explained later (laughing a lot), they thought she was a gringa! There were many european looking people tonight, at least more than usual, so it was a reasonable assumption. But Lali doesn't speak a word of English and when they asked that, she just looked really confused, then asked, "Perdon?" It was amusing. (Plus I enjoyed pretending I too am an Ecuadorian who just happens to have blonde hair.)

The main event of the evening was an hour long presentation of music and slide shows and traditional dances celebrating their independence, finished off with a spectacular fireworks show. Probably 1,000 white plastic chairs were set up in the plaza before the main stage, set on the steps of one of the older churches around. Of course, much of the time the crowds were too busy waving towards the balcony at the presidential palace to enjoy the show. There stood Rafael Correa, their extremely beloved (very leftist, arguably socialistic) president, with his family and a crew of uniformed men lounging over the railing and enjoying themselves. One of my favorite things was hearing the whole crowd sing the national anthem, which they did twice, at the beginning and the end--swaying and smiling and all very picturesque.

Another shot of the plaza in daylight

Walking back was quite the adventure--I was laughing the whole time because the crowd was the densest I have ever experienced. If we had been any closer we would have chemically bonded and become a sort of people-liquid. As it was, we moved (with a struggle) in little currents until we were a couple blocks out of the plaza, when the crowds finally dispersed a little. Took the trole home, and here I am, wishing I had pictures to share...but alas, I was advised not to take even a purse to the celebrations due to the crowds and crowds. The first picture is taken from the presedential palace, and it's only one corner of the whole plaza. Just imagine all of it, with everything lit up and extremely crowded with people....

Wednesday, August 6, 2008

Growing on me



Here is a picture from the top of one mountain, where a huge statue of El Panecillo stands. It is the thing that I love most about Quito--the feeling of being a tiny detail in a giant oil-painting. My first days here I was repulsed by everything reminding me Quito is a big city--along with a lot of noise, the buses let out big black clouds of exhaust so at the end of every day my nose feels like an exhaust pipe. Also, I walk through the great big Parque Carolina twice a day on my way to or from school, and this bothers me more than the traffic, because the whole park is filled with litter. Aren't parks supposed to be a sanctuary from the busy roads and outside world? In my mind I call the trees here Boo Radley trees, because every one big enough to hold a mysterious piece of trash, does. I saw two diapers in one the other day. And then there are the guys, the machismo, the whistling and clicking and stares and greasy smiles. The little boys pausing from their futbol game to whisper "Mira, la gringa! Gringa!" The older men in business suits turning 180 degrees. Grr.

I am only writing about these things because I have good news--Now I am noticing all kinds of things I love about Quito, things I did not notice at first. Like how all the trees here have great big colorful flowers! How every place that has any kind of vegetation, is blooming and gorgeous. Walking through the park now I realize that not every whistle is for me, and my head is not looking down long enough to notice all the trash so I notice the blooming trees. Things are looking up.

Maybe this changed because of my visit to Papallacta this last weekend. It is one of the most beautiful places I've ever been to, and I think it may have changed my idea of Ecuador a bit. Set at the top of a not-extremely-active volcano at maybe 10,000 feet, Papallacta seems to be swathed in the bitter-cold of garua, Spanish for a type of fog or mist that just stays for months. But it has natural hot springs, which makes the cold worth it--and it has lovely views. My host mom Lali took me to meet up with her eldest daughter's family--so it was Mari-Aulalia, her husband Mauricio, their 12 year old son and two 11 year old boys visiting Ecuador for a month long summer camp. Here is a site to some pictures of Papallacta: http://s336.photobucket.com/albums/n349/arwalton/?albumview=slideshow

!Ciao!