Found this gem of Nino Jesus' act from last years Noche De Talentos. This years' is coming up soon but not sure what's planned yet!
http://www.youtube.com/cdlnperu#p/u/13/Ys7538YxdKc
Thursday, 13 October 2011
Friday, 7 October 2011
Teteras y anticuchos
The flat's starting to look like a place where people actually live, not just a box! We've been hunting for furniture and stuff to fill it up a bit, we've managed to collect a small thing with drawers, i dont even know what the name for it is, a little dining table and a kettle, which has opened up an array of culinary delights ... noodles, boiled eggs, cups of tea, that kind of thing.
A couple weeks ago we met up with Evie's friend Charlotte who was travelling in Peru. We were both working but at different times, I didn't finish till half two and Evie was meeting her at one so I got my first bus on my own! We just met in Barranco and walked down to the beach then went for a couple drinks. Me an Evie walked back to the other girls' hostel with them because we saw our bus drive past and we asked the lady at reception which side of the road to catch the bus back to San Juan from. She told us to get a taxi because it wasn't a safe area but we said it was fine, we get that bus a lot because we live and work there. She couldn't believe it, literally she was stunned. Two young gringa girls living in San Juan.
We had our talk with Hugo and the rest of the volunteers a couple of weeks ago! He seems pretty flexible about us having time off, and as a rough guide we're planning to take three weeks at Christmas, a week in March to see Mum then four weeks at the end. To be honest as long as we don't take the piss, I think he'll be fine with anything. He said we shouldn't be working weekends either so now we only work monday to friday and then getting the boys ready for mass and tea on sundays, which is a lot better! The volunteers might be getting a washing machine as well, which would definately be an improvement on hand washing.
Last weekend we organised having a volunteers BBQ, there´s 9 of us in total at the moment but that´ll change as some come and go, although all of them are long term volunteers and here for one to one and a half years. Two German volunteers, five american volunteers then me and Ebay. We used the grill outside for the first time and had fajitas. Then later on me, Evie, Laura and Christoff went to use the voucher for tea we won at the Te De La Experanza. It just said grill and sangria so we didn´t really know what to expect, but it was so posh and the food was amazing. Everything was so expensive its a good job it was free, it was14 soles for a side portion of chips. We had so much food it was enough to feed all four of us ... two beef steaks, a pork steak, chicken breast, kidneys, black pudding sausage, pork sausage, beef sausage and two beef heart skewers. I wasnt sure how the beef heart skewers were giong to be, but they were honestly the nicest thing I´ve ever eaten! I love anticuchos!
Adios,
Moffy xxx
P.S. plez dont write Ciudad de los Ninos on letters etc because then they take longer to get here!
A couple weeks ago we met up with Evie's friend Charlotte who was travelling in Peru. We were both working but at different times, I didn't finish till half two and Evie was meeting her at one so I got my first bus on my own! We just met in Barranco and walked down to the beach then went for a couple drinks. Me an Evie walked back to the other girls' hostel with them because we saw our bus drive past and we asked the lady at reception which side of the road to catch the bus back to San Juan from. She told us to get a taxi because it wasn't a safe area but we said it was fine, we get that bus a lot because we live and work there. She couldn't believe it, literally she was stunned. Two young gringa girls living in San Juan.
We had our talk with Hugo and the rest of the volunteers a couple of weeks ago! He seems pretty flexible about us having time off, and as a rough guide we're planning to take three weeks at Christmas, a week in March to see Mum then four weeks at the end. To be honest as long as we don't take the piss, I think he'll be fine with anything. He said we shouldn't be working weekends either so now we only work monday to friday and then getting the boys ready for mass and tea on sundays, which is a lot better! The volunteers might be getting a washing machine as well, which would definately be an improvement on hand washing.
Last weekend we organised having a volunteers BBQ, there´s 9 of us in total at the moment but that´ll change as some come and go, although all of them are long term volunteers and here for one to one and a half years. Two German volunteers, five american volunteers then me and Ebay. We used the grill outside for the first time and had fajitas. Then later on me, Evie, Laura and Christoff went to use the voucher for tea we won at the Te De La Experanza. It just said grill and sangria so we didn´t really know what to expect, but it was so posh and the food was amazing. Everything was so expensive its a good job it was free, it was14 soles for a side portion of chips. We had so much food it was enough to feed all four of us ... two beef steaks, a pork steak, chicken breast, kidneys, black pudding sausage, pork sausage, beef sausage and two beef heart skewers. I wasnt sure how the beef heart skewers were giong to be, but they were honestly the nicest thing I´ve ever eaten! I love anticuchos!
Adios,
Moffy xxx
P.S. plez dont write Ciudad de los Ninos on letters etc because then they take longer to get here!
Friday, 23 September 2011
Just some day to day stuff
Just wanted to put some pics on of around Ciudad! Getting into the routine of things a bit better - we've got to know one of the ladies at the market and she gives us free fruit now when we goo! The hermanas took me to the market yesterday to have my haircut as well, which was cool and we had some chaufa while we waited for it to open up. I cracked into my rocoto olive oil I bought at the market where Ciudad were selling their stuff as well. The boys got their school reports the other day - they all work really hard at school so generally get really good marks! They had to have a really formal collection of them though with the director which was kind of weird. It was nice to congratulate them, but they were expecting 3 - 6 year old boys to sit in silence for almost an hour while they waited for them all to be called up. They got a toy car each though and a bike, but I don't know how 26 boys are expected to play with one bike.
Yesterday we had our first hermanas meeting at Niño Jesus - just me, Ana Maria, Elisa and Tania - to go over what was going well and stuff. They're so sweet, saying we're a family and a team - starting to feel like I'm part of a community which is nice. Also, felt our first earthquake this morning! Not a big one, but I definately felt movement!
Chau, Moffy xxx
Yesterday we had our first hermanas meeting at Niño Jesus - just me, Ana Maria, Elisa and Tania - to go over what was going well and stuff. They're so sweet, saying we're a family and a team - starting to feel like I'm part of a community which is nice. Also, felt our first earthquake this morning! Not a big one, but I definately felt movement!
Just ouside the door to our apartment and you can see part of the farm
Some of the boys playing in the trees on the olympics day
Nino Jesus boys walking back from lunch
Niño Jesus' pabellon
Chau, Moffy xxx
Time's a flying!
I know we're only just over three weeks in but time's going by so fast! On the 10th & 11th Cuidad had their Olympics, which is like sports day in England, except here it was a much bigger event. So the week leading up to that weekend I worked 90 long hours preparing for it! I made a massive flag with writing on, and went to into central Lima during two of our breaks to pick up things for the blue team - blue wigs, vuvuzuelas, blue face paint, two smurf outfits, blue hula hoops, ID cards for the kids, just about anything and everything we saw that was blue we bought. Then on the day I dressed up as the girl smurf, Daisy, and am still getting people asking if my name is hermana pitufina! The blue team ended up winning though, wooo! Although I have to say the highlight of the whole weekend was definately Evie's sunburn - she had go faster stripes in green facepaint and now has them tattoed on her face. Hehehe.
Then on the Monday after the Olympics was the XI Te De La Esperanza which is Ciudad's big fundraising dinner they do every year. It was in San Isidro at The Westin Hotel, literally the poshest builing I've ever seen, and the tallest building in Peru at 32 floors. Hermano Hugo said they were hoping to raise around $25,000 which doesn't even cover a months costs at Ciudad! So many of the women there were so scary looking though, me and Evie were playing spot the bad facial surgery until we realised it'd probably be better to play spot the women without bad surgery. They're so blunt here as well - there was a big raffle at the Te (me and evie won tea at a restaurant in chorillos!) and one of the prizes was a bikini. They called out the number for the winner to come up and as soon as she did she just laughed and said 'but she's fat, when is she going to wear this!?' There were a few bands there as well who are apparently famous here, San Jose did a dance and so did Nino Jesus, so cute! Hermano Hugo took us for lunch as well to a Chifa - Peruvian, Chinese food - which was nice, and for a maccys after! We didn't really do that much, we put lots of leaflets on the tables and helped usher people in, but the day started as normal at 5.40am and we didn't get back till 11.00pm so me an Evie felt pretty delirious after that.
Probably the biggest thing that's happened though was our trip down south! I found out last Thursday that we were going to have a longer weekend than usual - the boys leaving for their salida at 3.00 Friday instead of Saturday. Me and Evie had spoken a bit about travelling down to Huacachina so as soon as I found out I went and okayed it with Hugo and emailed Samina to say we were going! Thankfully Evie wanted to go as well. So we spent a couple hours Thursday plannaing and after work we Friday we hopped on a bus to Pisco. We stayed at a hostel we'd booked over night then Saturday morning got another bus to Ica then a taxi to Huacachina. I was a bit worried it wouldn't live up to memory, but it was so much prettier than I remembered! Once we got there we had a quick look around, had a go on the pedelos and then went on our sand dune tour and sandboarding. We got back to the hostel just in time for a shower then happy hour and we had tea and some drinks with the people we met on the sand dune tour, and an american couple we met along the way. Our latest night by far yet, got in at half one - unfortunately I can't sleep in anymore so woke up at half six. After breakfast we headed over to Bodega El Catador, which was a pisco vineyard in Ica. We had a free tour and pisco tasting, then had some lunch and headed back. It was a lovely weekend!
The German volunteer that's staying with us arrived here about a week ago as well - she's called Laura and when she's finished her language course she's going to be working with Evie in Sonrisa as well as living with us so they'll be spending a lot of time together. Nothing much else going on - work is same as usual. I bought a broom the other day though, and now we have a kettle! We have a date for our meeting with Hugo about time off finally - next Monday we should find out when we can travel and it should be the same for next years volunteers as well.
Love to you all, Moffy xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Us smurfs
Blue team woo and the flag I made
Blue team
Then on the Monday after the Olympics was the XI Te De La Esperanza which is Ciudad's big fundraising dinner they do every year. It was in San Isidro at The Westin Hotel, literally the poshest builing I've ever seen, and the tallest building in Peru at 32 floors. Hermano Hugo said they were hoping to raise around $25,000 which doesn't even cover a months costs at Ciudad! So many of the women there were so scary looking though, me and Evie were playing spot the bad facial surgery until we realised it'd probably be better to play spot the women without bad surgery. They're so blunt here as well - there was a big raffle at the Te (me and evie won tea at a restaurant in chorillos!) and one of the prizes was a bikini. They called out the number for the winner to come up and as soon as she did she just laughed and said 'but she's fat, when is she going to wear this!?' There were a few bands there as well who are apparently famous here, San Jose did a dance and so did Nino Jesus, so cute! Hermano Hugo took us for lunch as well to a Chifa - Peruvian, Chinese food - which was nice, and for a maccys after! We didn't really do that much, we put lots of leaflets on the tables and helped usher people in, but the day started as normal at 5.40am and we didn't get back till 11.00pm so me an Evie felt pretty delirious after that.
San Jose boys doing their dance at Te De La Experanza
Nino Jesus boys doing their dance at Te De La Experanza
Hucachina
Sand dunes and buggy
Sunset at Huacachina
Huacachina
Bodega El Catador
Bodega El Catador
Lots of pisco at Bodega El Catador
The German volunteer that's staying with us arrived here about a week ago as well - she's called Laura and when she's finished her language course she's going to be working with Evie in Sonrisa as well as living with us so they'll be spending a lot of time together. Nothing much else going on - work is same as usual. I bought a broom the other day though, and now we have a kettle! We have a date for our meeting with Hugo about time off finally - next Monday we should find out when we can travel and it should be the same for next years volunteers as well.
Love to you all, Moffy xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Saturday, 3 September 2011
First Week!
All the Peru girls at the airport
Me and Ebay
Lima - taken from the top floor of British Embassy
We left for our projects on Sunday morning around 6.00am, which was a bit scary. As soon as we got there we just dropped off our bags, had breakfast with the boys and then had a grand tour from Hermano Hugo. Ciudad is massive, it´s more like a city than an orphanage. There´s roughly 300 boys there at the moment, who are split up into houses depending on their age. I´m working with Niño Jesus, which is boys aged 3-6 and Evies working at Sonrisa, which is boys aged 7-9. They´re so cute, I love them all already, but they´re obsessed with my watch and keep fiddling with the buttons so I´ll never know what time it is again. On site at the orphanage though there´s a church, a farm with pigs and chickens, a bakery, a cobblers, a babers, a carpenters, an amplitheatre, a tuck shop, a school with 1,000 pupils, housing for all the boys and a big dining hall. Me and Evie are staying in an apartment, which is quite nice, a lot better than I expected. We have a living room that doesn´t look lived in at the moment, but I´m sure it will after time, then a bathroom and a bedroom. There´s three bunkbeds in it, but at the moment it´s just me and Ebay staying there. Apparently there´s a German girl coming soon who´s going to live with us for most of the year.
Our monday to friday routine starts at 5.40am when I go to Niño Jesus for cleaning before breakfast, then breakfast, finish off cleaning, take the boys to school, then to morning mass. We get from around 8 - 1.15 for free time, then lunch, cleaning, folding washing, homework, showertime, naptime, dinner, mass then finish work around 8/9ish after they're all tucked in and have finished their homework. Saturdays we have free and then we´re back to work on Sunday at 5.00pm to get the boys ready for mass. Genearlly for breakfast we have two or three breadrolls and sweet coffee, or a runny porridgey type thing. Then for lunch it´s a sweet fruit drink, a soup and pasta, rice, beans or lentils usually with meat for main, and the same thing for tea minus the soup. The hermanas are really nice at Ninos Jesus! Anita is really keen to learn English so we´ve decided to do some lessons. A couple of boys have got something like chicken pox at the moment though, we haven´t figured out exactly what it is yet, so they´re pretty exhausted at the moment, but so lovely.
Tanya, one of the American volunteers that´s working at Niño Jesus has taken us under her wing and shown us how to do things properly and taken us to the market kinda thing. I think it was the third day we were here when we walked up to the local market. I thought we were staying in Miraflores but it turns out San Juan de Miraflores is a completely different area, and is one of the most dangerous in Lima, Lonely Planet advises travellers to avoid it! Feeling like a bit of an idiot! But to be honest, I´ve not seen anything dodgey at all and all the people have been really lovely so far. Touch wood. Everything´s pretty cheap, and DVDs are only 2.50 soles each! We got our first mototaxi back as well which was pretty exciting. We caught the bus up to the supermarket and bought some bits and peices - some bread, loo roll, that kind of thing. Then today, me and Evie caught the bus to Barranco for lunch. We´ve just had our first plate of Cerviche, which was yum yum, then later we´re going to a bar round the corner for some cervezas y pisco sours to celebrate our birthday!
Had a bit of a run in with Hermano Hugo on one of the first days here. He´d been on my facebook and seen I´m 'in a civil partnership' with Sammy and said it was inappropriate and could I please remove it - he said if I kept if on, it may give Ciudad a bad reputation and people would start to talk if they saw it. He didn't even stop to ask me if I really was in a relationship with her, just immediately that I had to take it off. I was pretty upset and shocked by that, because I´m just not used to that kind of unacceptance towards gay people. There's a fine line between a difference in culture and just being homophobic. I told him he´d offended me, but that I understood, which in retrospect was probably a bit bold as he´s the director, I´d only just started, and I should respect the cultural differences, but I couldn´t just say nothing. So not too sure what I´m going to do about that yet!
I´ve not really got this whole being abroad and successfully contacting home thing down yet, but will try and sort that out. Was planning on sending letters to keep in contact with people but it's 7 soles just for a light letter or post card and the postal service is really unreliable here! If you do want to send anything here, my address is:
Hannah Moffatt
Ciudad de los Ninos
Av. Pedro Miotta 180
San Juan de Miraflores
Lima
Peru
Bottoms up to anyone who´s read up to here in my ramblings! Lots and lots of love, Moffy xxxxxx
Sunday, 17 July 2011
Training week and Ciudad de los Ninos, Lima
Got back off our training week a couple of days ago, which was ace! Met all the Peru girls, and a few others, and they're all lovely! It was just rammed with lessons on spotting abuse, running a club, bereavement, child to child, politics, sex, drugs and alcohol, what to do if there's a natural disaster etc. We had some time to chill out a bit in the evenings and get to know the rest of the volunteers as well- Evie, Shannon, Kirsty, Harriet, Rosanna, Alex, Aneesha, Emily, Louise, Frances and Wendy are the Peru girls and Alex, Jack and Helen are going to Bolivia. Also, got our dates for leaving - we fly out on the 26th of August, which is about 40 days away now!
Our new project is called Ciudad de los Ninos and is in San Juan de Miraflores, Lima. It's an all boys orphanage and is broken up into houses based on the kids' age i.e. 3-6 year olds, and we'll each be assigned to a house. We'll work 6 days a week starting at 6am to get the boys up, fed and to school and ends around 8/9pm, but we should get some breaks inbetween. It's run by Capuchin monks and nuns and the kids are all very religious, which will be interesting. We'll get paid around 200 soles a month for our work a month and live in an apartment (with a shower and flushing toilet!). We get two months holiday from December - mid Feb while the boys are off school when we can travel, which I'm really looking forward to! I'm feeling a lot better about the new project now we've got more information about it and actually can't wait to go! Just got some (a lot of) last minute things to sort out now before we go away!
Adios amigos,
Moffy xxx
Our new project is called Ciudad de los Ninos and is in San Juan de Miraflores, Lima. It's an all boys orphanage and is broken up into houses based on the kids' age i.e. 3-6 year olds, and we'll each be assigned to a house. We'll work 6 days a week starting at 6am to get the boys up, fed and to school and ends around 8/9pm, but we should get some breaks inbetween. It's run by Capuchin monks and nuns and the kids are all very religious, which will be interesting. We'll get paid around 200 soles a month for our work a month and live in an apartment (with a shower and flushing toilet!). We get two months holiday from December - mid Feb while the boys are off school when we can travel, which I'm really looking forward to! I'm feeling a lot better about the new project now we've got more information about it and actually can't wait to go! Just got some (a lot of) last minute things to sort out now before we go away!
Adios amigos,
Moffy xxx
Thursday, 7 July 2011
Original project's fallen through
Unfortunately, I got a phone call last night saying that the Arequipa project has fallen through. Apparently the orphanage is prioritising spending money on construction rather than funding overseas volunteers. I'm pretty gutted because I was really looking forward to the Arequipa project but on the bright side, Project Trust have managed find us another project in Peru! It’s in Lima this time, the country’s capital, and it’s much more central so travelling will be made easier. The orphanage holds 300 kids, and they’re all boys! It was only a brief phone call so I didn’t get much information, but I also found out its run by monks and they go to church twice a day, which will be new as I'm not even slightly religious. It's all a bit confusing at the moment because it's a new project and only started in March '11 so PT don't know too much about it and the current volunteers haven't heard anything about construction so we'll just have to see what happens. Hopefully we’ll get a chance to get some more detailed information this weekend at our training. I’m still really excited about going to Peru; it’s just something slightly different to be excited about. Really excited about training as well and meeting the other volunteers going to Peru!
Moffy xxx
Moffy xxx
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)