Monday, May 31, 2010

Summer Library Sprucing!

Two weeks ago 10 eager college students arrived to live in the Manna House (yes, there are currently 19 people living all together in the Manna House) and work with us on our programs and do things us PDs just simply never have time to do.

Haley and I have 2 awesome girls helping us with Adult English and they are already planning and teaching part of the classes. Our awesome students have of course welcomed them with open arms and it's definitely a load off of us during a very hectic time of the year! But it's going great and Sonia and Jenni (our TA volunteers) are doing a fabulous job.

Sonia and Jenni teaching vocabulary!

I also have some volunteers helping me paint the very worn down clinic at Aliñambi. But more will be told of that in a few weeks when we finish, so stay tuned.

One of the biggest changes as happened in the library. When Tulane was here for Spring Break, they painted an amazing mural on one of the walls in the library. Tulane left it up to the PDs to fill in/paint all the bubbles....well it never got done. So we recruited the summer vols to finish it for us and within 2 days, it was transformed! It looks fabulous all completed!

The completed mural! (I painted the Ecuador flag :) )

Apparently finishing the mural wasn't enough and some decided to take on a new project of painting other parts of the library as well. The library really needed some color on its ugly pale yellow/tan walls and its getting the star treatment! It is really starting to look like a library with continued book donations and character being added by short-term volunteers and a wall now devoted to the kids reading club. Its incredible to see what we been done since we arrived last July.

Jenni and Claire working on the 
plant/outdoor themed Adults Corner!

I am sure there will be more to come of the library space with these vols around and a new group coming in in a few weeks so I can't wait to see what else springs up!

Disfrute,
Krysta

Friday, May 28, 2010

The Next Food Network Stars!

With the start of June, we will be heading into our 4th and final month of our pilot Nutrition Education Program at Aliñambi. I can't believe it. We have completed all our cooking classes and garden classes with the kids and are now onto more difficult curriculum here in the last month.

In the kitchen we cooked 5 meals including Honey Chicken with Rosemary, Fruit Salad, Rice Salad with Spring Vegetables, Acelga Soup with Vegetables and the always-a-hit Zucchini Bread. As those recipes were just the tip of the iceberg. Needless to say we cooked up a storm with these kids and they all seemed to love it! Each week we assigned ingredients to each kid that they were responsible for bringing. We wanted them to start to gain a sense of responsibility in the kitchen and start them on the track towards self-efficacy in their nutritional lives. Many didn't know what a lot of the ingredients were so by having them have to search and discover new fruits and vegetables, they will *hopefully* now start to realize the healthy variety available to them!

Cooking with Valeria, Sasha, and Jose!
(I apologize for the scary looking black eye 
I'm sporting...soccer)

Jackie did a great job with the kids in the garden. Group 1's plot is sprouting some carrots, lettuce, and herbs beautifully, though much to the regret of Group 2, whose plot isn't looking too hot. Jackie taught them about the negative effects of pesticides and how they effect our health as well as about composting and she even took on the carbon cycle!

Group 1's flourishing garden on the right, 
Group 2, not so much :(

Many days with this project we get overwhelmed and frustrated. Needless to say we have learned a lot about Ecuadorian school systems and discipline and even a few cultural clashes here and there. One day in the kitchen when we were almost at our whits end after suspending 5 kids from the kitchen the week prior, something amazing happened. I was talking to Jennifer, one of our best students, while she was eating the beautifully prepared meal for the day. In the midst of talking she informed me that she made Potatoes with Rosemary (one of the first recipes we did with the kids) in her house with her dad for Mother's Day. She said she cooked and helped her dad and her whole family loved them! I was so excited and so touched, I was at a loss for words. That day made the entire past months of hardships worth it. If we are even affecting the lives of one of these kids, than it has all been worth it. That piece of news Jennifer gave me made me again step back and appreciate why I am here and how amazing it all really is.

Jennifer giving her stellar interview!

Today was the first Friday on non-kitchen and gardening activities. On Tuesday, I taught the kids how to give an interview and how to professionally conduct themselves. Today, we went out into the community and each of them conducted interviews to food-store owners. Despite their nervousness, most of them did fabulous and it was great to see their sense of accomplishment when they were finished. This is just the beginning of a serious of activities we have planned for the kids in their quest towards self esteem and self efficacy in their lives.

So, only one more month until we wrap up this pilot program and assess its success and possible future. Yikes! I will keep you posted upon its end!

A warm Ecuadorian embrace,
Krysta

Sunday, May 9, 2010

One-of-a-kind Interview!

Hey all,
So after much anticipation from many people, my PD interview is finally posted on the Manna blog!  So I'm awkward and don't do too well with public speaking and so interviews on cameras are right along those lines as well. But I did my best to answer everyones questions, which thank you all of those who sent some in! Thanks to fellow PD Sarah for an awesome edit job, I hope you like it and perhaps learn something about me!

Check it out at http://openhandsdirtyfeet.blogspot.com/2010/05/after-many-weeks-of-anticipation-i-am.html!

Enjoy!
Krysta

Thursday, May 6, 2010

A Travel Back in Time

About 2 months, Jackie started an annex program for Agriculture in which monthly, she would take kids on paseos (adventure outings) to various museums, parks, etc to give the kids opportunities to experience the agricultural/science side of Ecuador a little more. They have been very successful and this past month we took a very excited group of 15 kids to an interactive Dinosaur museum in Quito, and lets just say, it was so horribly awesome. This interactive "museum", and I use that in the lightest sense possible, was more of a gloried life-size Jurassic Park puppet show (complete with the Jurassic Park soundtrack playing in the background).

The 25 minute tour included a guide that walked us through different scenes of dinosaurs and mega-beasts with varying moving parts and features. I didn't take the whole "interactive" part seriously. When we first walked in, we were standing around listening to a recording about dinosaurs and I was busy watching over the kids and not really paying attention, when all of a sudden a foam boulder came flying at me that a puppet dino flung from over a wall. I screamed louder than any 5 year old there. Needless to say we quickly learned that these larger than life dinos moved and sprayed water, scaring the **** out of many of the kids. As we moved from set to set, kids were hiding behind all of the profes and one girl, Leslie, refused to take her fingers out of her ears the entire time (see pic below).

Overall the outing was great. I personally thought it was so horribly awesome and wouldn't trade that day for anything haha. But after the tour, they had 2 dinosaur rides that the kids throughly enjoyed for the better part of an hour. Here a few snippets of our awesome kids and the awesome museum...

This dino sprayed water at us...didn't see that one coming!


Cowering from a giant moving relative of 
Sharp Tooth (The Land Before Time anyone?)

Our favorite, and one and only, set of twins, Ronny and
 Samantha, fearlessly riding the dinos

Samantha being eaten by her dino!

Exhausted on the bus back home! 
(One's faking, can you tell?!)

Only 3 months and 1 day left of Manna....pretty crazy/scary! It's going to be so hard to leave these kids!

Until next post,
Krysta

Wednesday, April 28, 2010

Home away from home

In March (yes, I am a month late on this one), I did a home-stay with a member of our community. Back in January we decided to start a home-stay program in which Manna PDs would live with community members for about a week. We wanted to present ourselves with the opportunity to get to know community members outside the Community Center setting and on a more personal level, while at the same time offering community members a chance to get to know us as individuals rather than simply as part of the Manna team or as Profes (what the kids call all of us at the library). Many people have already lived with families and more are to come in the following weeks before our summer volunteers get here. So far for everyone that has done a home-stay, it has been a great experience being able to be part of an Ecuadorian family within our community and see how they live their everyday lives.

The family I stayed with is a family of 4 with 2 kids, Ivan and Emilia, that are frequent visitors to our library and previous students of English class. Emilia also happens to be the smartest 4 year I have ever met. She can read in both Spanish AND English and can put things together that no 4 year old should be able to. For example, one night in home-stay, I was talking about my family and how I had an older brother who was 2 years old than me. Irina (the mom) asked how old he was and I said 26 (because he is almost 26) and then Emilia asked how old I was and I said 23. Emilia's response..."He isn't 2 years old than you, he is 3. If he was 2 years older than you, you would be 24." I stood corrected, by a 4 year old. 

It was an awesome experience to live within the community and see day to day workings. I even got a chance to spend the weekend with the family and experience a typical family involved Saturday with numerous extended family members living in the area. There are so many community members that we are close to and I just wish I had more time here to get to do another home-stay, but unfortunately, Summer Volunteers arrive in just about 2 weeks and then the day they leave in July, the new Program Directors arrive! Scary how fast time flies! But, I wish cherish the time I did get to spend living in the community.

Emilia and I showing off her 
splatter paint work of art!

Ivan in the process of creating his
one-of-a-kind!

Hope all is well and everyone's getting excited for summer (or in my case the dry season...its been down pouring continuously since last night here)!

Saludos,
Krysta

Monday, April 12, 2010

What have you always wanted to know about me?!!

Hey everyone,
If you have been keeping up with the Manna Ecuador Blog, you will have noticed that over the past few weeks Sarah has been interviewing PD's and giving family, friends, and blog readers the opportunity to get those burning questions answered by the Ecuador 2010 PDs. Well, this coming Friday, Sarah will be interviewing yours truly!! So she needs you all, and I need you all, to send in questions for me to answer to Sarah before Friday (email to sarah.scott@mannaproject.org)! They can be questions about my Nutrition work I have been doing, the amazing things one of my English students asks me in class everyday to translate, life in the Manna House, what life's like being a gringo in a foreign country, what color the walls are in my Ecuadorian room....ANYTHING!!

Sarah has some great suggestions as well about types of questions so click on the link below to find you where to send the questions and to read some other great question ideas!
Thanks in advance for sending in your questions! I look forward to hearing from you guys and answering your questions!

Manna Ecuador Blog- Krysta's Interview Questions! <------ Click me!

Check back soon for an update on our Nutrition Program and my last 4 months in Ecuador!
besitos,
Krysta

Monday, March 22, 2010

Getting in the new grove of things

Now that we are about to embark on our 4th week of the Aliñambi Nutrition Program, and I have finally started working at the Selva Alegre Subcentro clinic, I am starting to get into a weekly grove of things. With things constantly changing and programs starting and finishing, a routine is something that is greatly valued down here, though doesn't happen too often for me. But with our nutrition program going strong and a great consistent English class, I can relax a little and get down to working on things I have put off these past few months.

I am currently working on a rather extensive grant from the Coca-Cola Foundation to fund the Aliñambi Nutrition Program for this year and future years (as we want it to be a yearly education program for the students at Aliñambi) as well as funding for our community cooking classes and nutrition charlas. All-in-all it will be taking up most of my free time, but fingers crossed it will all work out for the best as we really need funding for our Nutrition programs! Eek!

After 2 weeks of failed attempts at finding the subcentro (a small branch of the main Sangolqui Hospital in a small village), I finally found it and started working there last week. I am there for about 4 hours in the morning helping out the 1 nurse and 1 doctor in a small one room shack clinic giving vaccines, contraceptive shots, and other medical treatments to the people of Selva Alegre, a small barrio about 45 minutes away from my house. The people I am working with are awesome and so sweet and just plain excited to have the extra help. And in return I am stoked to be working so hands-on in a clinic and to be given opportunities to administer shots and other medical procedures that I wouldn't dream of doing in the states until after PA school. Slightly scary at times the amount of freedom I have in the clinic but the chances to learn are infinite.

So here is an example of my typical week:
Monday: Monday Morning Meeting, lunch, Adult English Class
Tuesday: Aliñambi, lunch, Women's Exercise
Wednesday: Working at the clinic, lunch, Library
Thursday: Working at the clinic, lunch, cooking dinner for the crew
Friday: Aliñambi, lunch, Library
*and throw in some grant writing and class preparation in there and you've got the daily life of Krysta!

Finally, starting tomorrow, Tuesday, I will be moving out of the Manna House for a week to live with family in our community. We are doing homestays with community members to take the opportunity to get to know them better outside the setting of our library and classes as well as to give them the chance to know us more intimately and understand who we are a little bit better as individuals rather than just part of a group of 9 gringos. So I will update you next week on how this adventure goes!

Until next post!
Krysta