Monday, August 31, 2009

Drop Off

Today we woke up and ate with the majority of our group in our hostel. We spent ime getting to know names and faces. After breakfast we had some boring orientation safety and cultural awareness lectures. We set our minds on autopilot as the topics became more dry. Then out of no where we were given our first assignment: the drop off. Essentially what happened was we were given 10 dollars, a business card with the address of our hostel and a photocopy of our passport and then were told to get on a certain bus and not to get off of it for 20 minutes. Then once off the bus find lunch, explore, start a conversation with a local about environmental problems in Quito, buy a pair of rubber boots for our time in the amazon and make it back to our hostel in 4 hours. We had no map, no idea where we were or where we were going, no idea of how the bus network works, and we had to do all of it on a budget.

What I learned: buses do not start or stop when you get on or off, they will slow down and then you jump. Also food is extremely affordable. My lunch (a bowl of soup, rice, chicken, a salad, juice and a potato dish- $2)

We have almost all fully adjusted to the altitude, however we still have trouble sleeping (waking up and feeling as though you have just run 5 miles. My roommate got up and tried to drink some water and last night and fainted in the bathroom)

We have one more day of orientation tomorrow, more academic rather than cultural, including spanish placement.

But all in all, life is good: no stomach parasites (yet), I am happy, healthy and safe. Much love to my friends and family. I miss you all

1 comment:

  1. Teddy,
    It sounds like you won't have to worry about eating. How far did you travel by bus before you had to jump off? Where you able to converse with the locals? Did you find a pair of rubber boots? Where you intimidated by the experience?

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