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<title>gordowilly&#x27;s Homepage</title>
<link>http://www.zorpia.com/gordowilly</link>
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<pubDate>Mon, 21 May 2012 07:17 EDT</pubDate>
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<title>New prospects for 2006</title>
<link>http://www.zorpia.com/gordowilly/journal/1461103</link>
<description>Dear Family and Friends,&#x3C;br /&#x3E;&#x3C;p&#x3E;&#x26;nbsp;&#x3C;/p&#x3E;Again Happy New Year 2006 and all the best to the small and youngest as well as to the older and wiser. 2006 is a brand new adventure for all of us in school, College at work etc...Let&#x26;#39;s hope it all works according to the plan and to our great hopes for this new year...I mean it.&#x3C;br /&#x3E;&#x3C;p&#x3E;2006 has started in San Juancito as well!!everyone has now recuperated from their New Years celebration and slowly but surely gets back to work on the field in this warm and humid time of the year. I was happy to spend New Years&#x26;#39; in the city where life is soooo different and contrasts the harsh life for the countrymen and women on the countryside. So going back to San Juancito after enjoying the fireworks and the night life in Santa Cruz is really a magic moment that inspires to work harder and do my best with the community for 2006.&#x3C;br /&#x3E;&#x3C;/p&#x3E;&#x3C;p&#x3E;My English classes are going just fine every class follows a different rythm and that I really enjoy. The little kids are the most enthusiastic to learn a new language...they see it more as a new game to play with the gringo in town as they most probably don&#x26;#39;t realize yet that spanish is not the only language spoken on this earth.The other classes are also doing great and we have finished now the alphabet the phonetics and basic sounds of the english language and have now started the year with some new exercises about &#x26;quot;is this a pen?&#x26;quot; No it is not a pen it is a pencil...or is this a lake? no it is house...one of the next steps could be &#x26;quot;yes it is a lake, do you want to go fishing with me?&#x26;quot; Who knows...but one thing is clear I DO want them to see some IMMEDIATE results in their learning process as new tourists flow into San Juancito for 2006...I am starting to work on their immediate surrounding environment&#x26;#39;s vocab so that they can use it as much as possible.All the kids now greet me in English at different times of the day and ask me how I am doing...it is quite repetitive to say I&#x26;#39;m doing fine like twenty or 25 times a day but it&#x26;#39;s important to make them realize that speaking English could and will become an important tool in San Juancito to communicate with the tourists if or when we develop the tourism potential. &#x3C;br /&#x3E;This is yet another issue in San Juancito for 2006...I do take advantage of that base I have with the kids to encourage them to work on the eco tourism potential of the village. We did launch this week the community map comptetition with the kids and they are now going to draw the map of their community with all the important activities and sites of the village. We want the tourist to look at that map that will be painted on one of the walls of the center to have a general overview of the village, its activities fishing swimming canoe riding, horse back riding, milking the cows, soccer playing, cooking your own bread, discovering the jungle/forest and the crops beans, peanuts, cajou nuts, papaya, corn, cofee beans, banana and sooooo much more. The best three maps will be rewarded with a set of QUALITY school materials. All participants will also get a pen for participating in the game...think of the olympics the most important is to participate...it doesn&#x26;#39;t really matter who wins the competition and they do understand that; what it really means is that THEY will participate together to work for their community and ultimately in the next coming years increase the village&#x26;#39;s income from eco tourism...They are BUILDING something.&#x3C;br /&#x3E;I am having a semi hard time with the older tourism group of 6 to develop that potential...and that has brought me to question my mission here in San Juancito...Do people (the tourism group) really want to develop that eco tourism potential...? Do they want to increase their income through tourism...do they just not realize the eco tourism &#x26;quot;paradise&#x26;quot; they live in?Or do they not understand the steps we could/should follow to develop it some more. Would they be ready to bear with the changes(positive and negative) that might come with an increase of tourism in the village...etc....do they really want all of this? A lot of questions indeed. I now understand the Peace Corps philosophy that we are here to help them do the projects that THEY want...and not the projects that WE wantor that we see could be beneficial...it&#x26;#39;s their community and I have to let THEM take the decisions they want for their village.So after this community map, of which the kids DO realize the importance, I think I will let some time go by and wait and see what they are looking for and what THEY envision the place to become...and there are many different ways you can develop a site...you could turn San Juancito into a commercial eco tourism site with little huts with a view on the lake and your private canoe as well as all the fruit and food you would like along with all the activities...the other way around of doing things,you can also keep it low key and have the eco tourists stay with host famililies and have bread with tea for dinner as well as fish soup or corn tamales for breakfast cooked in the fireplace/kitchen...and have them live exactly as the community lives, do what they do, live with and around them...So there are two different philosphies of eco tourism...what do we want San Juancito to be like?...I personally like the more roots version where you get to live with the people, eat their food, so different to ours, participate in the family&#x26;#39;s activities on the fields etc...but there is also the market for those eco tourists who want their private space and their western standard comfort and commodities...So there is the dilemma...and we really have to be very careful in taking either paths as some mistakes MIGHT be hard to fix...&#x3C;br /&#x3E;Overall I am very happy with the progress so far...I feel I have integrated pretty well ot the communuty and that thanks to the kids...what would I do witout them it really wouldn&#x26;#39;t be as fun and rewarding.I still have to go out more often to the chaco and work my a%% off and sweat for more than 20 minutes under the hot tropical climate.That is a BIG challenge for me and my body.I&#x26;#39;ll build up some more muscle for 2006 grandpa!!! I&#x26;#39;ll work on it!!&#x3C;br /&#x3E;&#x3C;/p&#x3E;&#x3C;p&#x3E;&#x26;nbsp;&#x3C;/p&#x3E;We&#x26;#39;ve had two eco tourists traveleers visit San Juancito these last days...Pablo from California who teaches environmental education in different national parks and sites in Latin America and Alex from Holland a tall Dutch guy who admits and prouds himself of traveling through France with his caravan and spending the least money as possible IN France. (he even buys his tomatoes in Holland!!)..Well their are moving on in their projetcs...Pablo&#x26;#39;s (california guy)is heading next to Chile...Quite smart chap...definitely sees a great potential in San Juancito to develop eco tourism as an alternative to the chaqueo (slash and burn) practices that they are engaged in...San Juancito could also sell the nature of their site to tourists and in that way preserve it better than by cutting down the different trees and...doing the global warming thing...there is also what we call rotation crops which is a less intensive agricultural technique that gives the earth time to recover from the last crop...some plants like beans are also great because they catch the nitrtrogen in the air and send it back into the soil through the roots and through this regenerate the soil...etc...THere is SO MUCH one could do in San Juancito in so many fields...I don&#x26;#39;t really have the competence to teach environmental friendly agricultural practices but I could teach some basic environment classes to the kids with some resources I can get my hands on. I will have to talk to the teachers as soon as they come back to see if I could teach some more after the vacation (I enjoy it and it keeps me busy) and if so what I could teach them...tourism English or maybe even environmental science basic biology...etc...&#x3C;br /&#x3E;&#x3C;p&#x3E;Alright I think I have spent enough time for the day in front of this computer and telling you guys all this stuff that you might not be interested in. I guess you are the victim of the Internet and this great tool to communicate across boarders...I enjoy the news from you guys as well don&#x26;#39;t forget that.&#x3C;br /&#x3E;&#x3C;/p&#x3E;&#x3C;p&#x3E;Alright that&#x26;#39;s it for today...Aunt Margy again thanks for that new material you sent me last week...gotta run everyone not only do I have to move out of my hotel but I also need to run after the bus for San Juancito at three thirty in 45 minutes!!!OoOOOoops,&#x3C;br /&#x3E;&#x3C;/p&#x3E;&#x3C;p&#x3E;talk to you soon,&#x3C;br /&#x3E;Willy&#x3C;/p&#x3E;</description>
<category>Personal</category>
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<pubDate>Sun, 08 Jan 2006 15:00 EDT</pubDate>
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<title>December 21st. update</title>
<link>http://www.zorpia.com/gordowilly/journal/1456054</link>
<description>&#x3C;p&#x3E;Dear Family and Friends,&#x3C;/p&#x3E;&#x3C;p&#x3E;Many thanks again for your emails. It means alot to us volunteers to get support from family and friends. So please keep it up.It&#x26;#39;s been two weeks since the last mass email from Bolivia and alot of things can happen in two weeks of time and DO happen.Though sometimes this can mean that nothing happens but the way nothing happens works in a way that makes it interesting. I told you that the gringas were coming to San Juancito right? Well I also told the entire village that they were gonna come and that we needed to organize ourselves to provide the horses, the guides, the donkeyz for eventual transport to the fields,clean&#x26;nbsp;the rooms, the food&#x26;nbsp;and just about everything possible that tourists need to have and know about the place. Nothing happened. Well they did get drunk that night so they probably forgot on the next day what&#x26;nbsp;we tried to tell&#x26;nbsp;them. The Podemos party campaigners had come to the village for the presidential election&#x26;nbsp;propaganda, donated a battery for some light and brought a couple of gallons of trago which they mix with orange soda and drink till they drop...That is how they win the votes in this country with promises,a battery and liquor. It works and politicians do what they need to do right? Alright so nothing really happened during the week except for my older students whom I had to ask to help me sweep the center, clean the rooms, find some sheets for the beds, clean the bathroom...and thanks to them it did work. The tourism people were drinking some more on that day Friday&#x26;nbsp;and celebrating some local Virgin Mary and didn{t really care...until the tourists actually arrived with a cag of beer they all rushed to the center and played music and danced with and for them.&#x3C;/p&#x3E;&#x3C;p&#x3E;The experience was pretty good except maybe for the horse issue..a stud (male horse??) kicked one of the horses that Lenna was riding and almost hit her own leg...the other horse just randomly went into the bushes and Anna hurt her finger in fending off a branch. Well everything else was great they LOVED the breakfast local papaya mango bread, margarine, milk, coffee and limonade. (have pictures will send them soon)Everything from the village exceept for the margarine.That was a continental breakfast and would probably cost like ten bucks in our countrries but this is something that we offer with the night{s stay. THose are the services that we try to develop among other things to get a reputation.Papa you tought me this. Word of mouth is the best propagande.Well the tourists&#x26;nbsp;brought 115 Bolivianos to the village (15 dollars)&#x26;nbsp;and profits were of 81 Bolivianos. We had a meeting with the tourism people and I asked them what we were going to do with the money 15 boilivianos each? they all said yes!! but none of them actually did any work at all to clean the center and&#x26;nbsp;THAT was&#x26;nbsp;funny.I convinced them about the need to save the money and invest in something for the center and we came up with the most urgent need to build a solid fence around the center to keep the pigs donkeys chicken and all the rest away from the tourists&#x26;#39; space. So I am going to&#x26;nbsp;LOAN them some money (15,20 dollars)so that they can&#x26;nbsp;call on&#x26;nbsp;a Minga, a collectivist system that gathers the whole village to&#x26;nbsp;do some work and in exchange they get breakfast and lunch. So that is&#x26;nbsp;planned for January.&#x26;nbsp;We also need the fences&#x26;nbsp;to protect the plants&#x26;nbsp;(delivered but not planted yet)&#x26;nbsp;from&#x26;nbsp;the donkeyz.We did plant with the kids&#x26;nbsp;some flowers that we found in the forest/jungle but the donkeyz got in there one night and ate them all. That{s how it works and we anticipated that to happen but we also wanted the place to look nice and tidy for the tourists stay. SO there is no point in having the alcaldia to donate trees and plants and flowers if the roaming donkeyz are gonna eat them in one night. This is something that we need to work on before planting the trees, make sure the community takes care of them.and this is what&#x26;nbsp;we call&#x26;nbsp;SUSTAINABLE development.It takes time to convince the people about avocado trees and flowers etc...they have no clue no experience&#x26;nbsp;of how pretty and useful all of this COULD be...hopefully the center will be an example for many and will inspire the community.&#x3C;/p&#x3E;&#x3C;p&#x3E;&#x3C;br /&#x3E;Soooo many things have happened in these two weeks. IT works somehow step by step and I do have good hopes of achieving results in these two years. Some gringos have told me that they would come to San Juancito to go night fish with the machete so that&#x26;#39;s good and we&#x26;#39;ll have to plan better this time for them and organize the services that we can provide.&#x3C;/p&#x3E;&#x3C;p&#x3E;The English classes keep me busy and motivated at all times. The exams went ok...like in any school in the world you have to good students in the front row the&#x26;nbsp;lazy ones in the back the noisy but smart on the chairs or throwing erasors and the teacher that sends&#x26;nbsp;them home when they misbehave. One of those kids Wilbert is pretty wild and noisy but he did score a high gradee so there isn&#x26;#39;t much I can say. One of the kids had a mini stroke during the exam and was able to finish it and still&#x26;nbsp;scored 47/50 the highest grade of all of my classes. Crazy isnt it? and that is rewarding. AUnt Margy I have a special gift for you but will not send it in this email this time.its a picture of&#x26;nbsp;the chalk board&#x26;nbsp;The when two vowels go on a walkin the first one does the talkin&#x26;#39; Rule worked just GREAT. They all laughed and now remember the rule. Cuando dos vocales van caminando la primera es la que se queda hablando (they can&#x26;#39;t do it yet in English). I used the word boat and drew a boy with the O and a girl with the A...then joked about how the girls are usually the ones who do the talkin...Good times.Thanks&#x26;nbsp;Aunt Margy again.As I told&#x26;nbsp;you,&#x26;nbsp;I think you would&#x26;nbsp;do a great job with the kids in the&#x26;nbsp;Peace Corps.Lots&#x26;nbsp;of experience and great results:)&#x26;nbsp;One of the challenges with the English classes is to keep the students in each class all at the same level...some kids don&#x26;#39;t study at all and don&#x26;#39;t know the alphabet yet so we have to wait till they get through that to move forward.I think I will charge 5 boilivianos for the next course so that the parents push them to study. We&#x26;#39;ll use the money for some class material or some soccer balls. The other problem is class participation the older students starting 11 are the shyest kids ever IN the classroom and during the five goals soccer breaks they are the wildest!! So I do have a class participation policy now too.&#x3C;/p&#x3E;&#x3C;p&#x3E;There we go. Gotta move out my stuff from the hotel before they charge me an other night. Back to San Juancito tonight. Election day is tomorrow and the senate will elect the president from the first two candidates in January.Absolute majority is needed for the candidate to win the election at the polls otherwise the senate elects him.&#x26;nbsp;We fear unrest in the countrry (not is San Juancito!! rather la Paz and Cochabamba)&#x26;nbsp;in these next weeks&#x26;nbsp;and this could threaten Peace Corps presence.Also the favorite presidential&#x26;nbsp;candidate, Evo Morales is a strrong opponent to&#x26;nbsp;the the &#x26;quot;american imperialism&#x26;quot; and campaigns for the nationalization of Bolivia&#x26;#39;s&#x26;nbsp;natural resources. He gets his funding from VEnezuela&#x26;#39;s Hugo Chavez&#x26;#39;s petrodollars...we{ll see. There is the news.Grandpa and Papa, to answer your questions I get my potable water from a pump. Have to carry the water to my house every day for my dishes and my food.building&#x26;nbsp;up some muscle&#x26;nbsp;Grandpa!!They all tell me I need a woman in San Juancito at&#x26;nbsp;least for the water. The&#x26;nbsp;women do the household duties.&#x26;nbsp;I do my cooking and some of my neighbors bring me mangos and papayas and occasionally even chicken with rice. So I do eat ok...I bathe in the lake with the rest of the community at least three times a day.Great exercise a lot of swiming and integration with the community.Papa I don&#x26;#39;t think they need Stanley tools. We try to avoid donations unless it is really necessary and that they are unable to pay. SOme italian NGO donated a battery last year and they didn&#xC3;&#xB1;t take care of it and broke...so if THEY want something they have to want it really and take care of it.sustainable deevelopment.Besides they seem to share their tools and have all the necessary. Thanks though.What you can do to help is give teach them a course on something when you come. Tourism class or something they need to understand some things.The other question the older members of the community do speak chiquitano an indigenous language that survived the spanish conquest and the Ignacio de Loyolas education in school.Very&#x26;nbsp;few people speak it.&#x26;nbsp;But the kids don&#x26;#39;t learn it anymore which is too bad. They are learning English now the universal language.I do have to walk for half an hour to get to the road and catch any transportation available to get into San Ignacio 20 km down the road. SOmetimes it&#x26;#39;s a bus sometimes a pick up truck etc...sometimes you have to wait for ages (two hours)&#x26;nbsp;till someone stops and gives you a ride. But its worth the effort and the chilled beer here in San Ignacio just tastes better.OTherwise there is transportation very early in the morning but I never catch that since I have my classes during those times. I think that this is the longest email I have written in my whole life. Just have a lot to tell. Hope ur still awake. I like the news too and the pictures. I will get some pictures to you soon after Xmas. THe connection here is slow and very expensive to do some picture uploading. Xmas in San Juancito fishing swimming and eating papayas. I bought myself a Stanley Collins machete that daddy was in charge of making back in the day in Colombia. Very proud and I use it for the night fishing and the jungle. THose machetes are good tools. Stanley helps you do things right!!&#x3C;/p&#x3E;&#x3C;p&#x3E;Alright gotta go for sure!!!Merry Xmas to all of you.Lots of love family and presents, right?&#x3C;br /&#x3E;Take care,&#x3C;/p&#x3E;&#x3C;p&#x3E;Willy&#x3C;br /&#x3E;&#x3C;/p&#x3E;</description>
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<pubDate>Sat, 31 Dec 2005 08:45 EDT</pubDate>
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