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Friday, December 30, 2011

Life (ours and the critters') this week


What a Christmas vacation! Our slow, easy days have been filled with playing Go Fish!, tennis, and Frisbee; swimming; jaunting to the mercadito for water, tortillas, and produce; washing dishes; making up games to play in the house (like tag with your arms folded or various relay races that involve running from one end of the house to the other while making motorcycle noises); visiting with the neighbors, Fernando, Sarita, and Evelyn; and avoiding the intermittent waves of smoke from the other neighbor’s daily plastic fires. The weather is pleasant all the time, and we sleep with the windows open. Last night as we looked at the moon and Jupiter’s moons through Fernando’s telescope, I was glad I had put on long sleeves.

Yesterday I was happy to do laundry all day long in our new washer. I hung it on the line and we ran past it in our game of Kitty Wants a Corner.

There are little glitches like there always are when you move to a new home. Some are fixable, like the plumbing problem in the master bathroom; some we’ll live with, like the fact that our new fridge is too tall for the kitchen cabinets. We’ll keep the fridge in our dining/computer/craft table/library/living room (where, incidentally, we discovered and hopefully exterminated a colony of gigantic ants setting up house in our wall). That room gets a lot of use.

Each day we seem to meet new representatives of Honduran fauna, some outdoors and some indoors. Apparently the pesticide bomb that the landlord used before we came has about a one-week efficacy, and we’ve been in the house for just over a week now. In the last couple days, creatures have appeared, including those giant ants, teeny tiny crumb-sized ants, a huntsman spider (about the size of Aspen’s palm, a flat, skittery spider that stays on walls and ceilings), a cockroach or two (the big ones have only been outside so far), and an unidentified but now captured 10-legged friend with noticeably large mandibles. If we had come to Honduras before Stuart’s PhD studies in entomology, I don’t know if I could have handled life with so many critters. But they all make good food for the geckos. The boys found one in the room the other night, and it chirped them to sleep. We found a teeny baby gecko in our doorway this morning. It was about an inch and a half long.


Outside, we have seen spiders the size of my palm. They are common garden spiders and make their yellow webs in our mango trees. Our neighbors had a tarantula on their bodega wall. A flock of parrots swooped and chattered over the houses last evening. During a drive on campus, we saw a half dozen large lizards (iguanas or monitors?), turtles, herons, and a turquoise-browed motmot. (That’s one you should look up.) Large cockroaches, large leaf-footed bugs, millipedes, centipedes—what you would expect. Flocks of vultures soar overhead constantly, and we now know from firsthand experience how true the statement is that where the vultures are gathered, there will the carcass be. All these observations we have made with no real effort or searching; so many more wonders await!

Sunday, December 25, 2011


Merry Christmas!

This is our first, weekly on Sunday post.

We arrived on Tuesday 12/20/2011. Our house wasn’t furnished enough (no beds, no stove-oven, no fridge) when we arrived to actually stay there. We stayed at a small hotel on campus for 2 nights. It was very nice and had cable TV with movies in English with Spanish subtitles (Tangled, Toy Story)!

We moved into our “new” house on Thursday. We had a LOT of help from Arie, Namiq, and Oliver to get all the stuff into the house. Stuart made two trips into Tegucigalpa to buy stuff and spent a lot of money getting bare essentials…(still no fridge, washer & dryer until Wed) Ranae kept the troops happy on those days and then moved our massive stuff into the house.

We have had a few observations on Honduras since we arrived:

Henry: Very nice people, a lot of stray animals, like dogs, horses, cows (apparently), and donkeys. Mucho coconuts—we even have a tree in our front yard. I ate a coconut. We saw a giant moving billboard. A famous guitar player was “playing” the guitar on a huge billboard promoting cell phones. We went swimming on Christmas Eve eve at the pool behind the house. There are lots of fires.

Jack: VERY loud trucks pass by our house regularly. People seem more prone to kiss you than in California. We saw a sign for a cockfight, lots of guys riding in the back of pickups. We have a lot fewer raw materials like paper, etc. It is not very Honduran, but very American. “I think I am in culture shock about how much not culture shock I am in. I thought there would be a lot more stuff in Spanish.” There are a lot of people riding motorcycles.

Aspen: I like it. What surprised Aspen was that Honduras was so nice. It looks really nice…I didn’t think it would look that nice.

Ranae: There are a lot of pine trees in the area where we are. I was surprised that I could have conversations (simple) in Spanish. I love the white-stone buildings from the local quarry with the dark mahogany wood it has a classic Spanish look.

Abe: I don’t know.

Stuart: We’re in a dry tropical forest, so we are surrounded by pine forest mixed with broad-leaved trees. Lots of bananas growing around, plus airplant growing on the myriad power lines. We took our annual family Christmas day hike in the back of our house into the mango/avocado orchard. April will be mango time and I am very excited for that. My Spanish is coming back nicely. Traffic in Teguc is unbelievable. I'll try to post something about that later. Our neighbors, Fernando and Evelyn are great and are letting us use their internet and fridge until we get ours next week.

Tuesday, December 20, 2011

Miami Airport

We are here in the airport, about to fly to HONDURAS!! Its about 11:00, but it feels like 8:00 because of time zone differences. This is a link on Youtube for the airport.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AU_LEpmyY_A&feature=related
Notice the plane is an American Airlines plane. We are flying American Airlines, so this is somewhat how it should be. We might post a video of our landing, if we remember to take one. Adios, mi amigos
Jack Wooley


Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Address...don't know if mail will make it here...

We'll live in a compound at
Casa Cuatro
km 27 carretera a Danli
Aldea del Pedregal de Cacalutepe
San Antonio de Oriente, Honduras.

I think this is right. It is off our rental agreement, that also includes mahogany furniture in the kitchen....Cool.

Final preparations

We're preparing to go. We're mostly packed and Stuart is finishing up work at school...one final to give tomorrow.

We hope we have tied up loose ends...here.
We have a house and someone will meet us at the airport. We won't have a fridge until a week after we arrive.

We'll post more as we find out what happens!