On Saturday, I went to Cusco to
spend the day with Vanessa and her family.
Vanessa, her husband Saul, and her daughter Sharmley all speak English,
so it was really nice to spend the day with a Peruvian family and be able to
speak English. Sharmley, is 19 and I
spent the morning walking around Cusco with her and her boyfriend,
Rodrigo. First, the three of us went to
the public university where Sharmley studies anthropology (she and Rodrigo
study law at the private university).
Unfortunately, we could not go into the buildings of the university
because it was a holiday (when we heard this, Sharmley rolled her eyes…even the
Peruvians get sick of celebrating the saints so frequently - it seems like
there is always a party for one saint or another). We walked around the outside gate of the big
university, made up of big white, square, ugly buildings and Sharmley pointed
out which school each building contained.
The building that stood out to me held language and tourist
schools. Sharmley said that the most
popular language to study is English and every student is required to take a
minimum of one year of basic English. Sharmley,
however, learned English through a private program where she took classes in
Cusco when she was younger. She also
said that the tourist school trains most, or maybe all, of the guides for Machu
Picchu and is a very popular school.
After seeing the university, we went
to a neighborhood of Cusco called San Blas.
San Blas is a Spanish colonial neighborhood, so whereas other places in
Cusco feel both very Incan and Spanish, San Blas does not have any Inca history
present. We went into a Spanish house
that has become a museum where we saw paintings and statues of various saints,
Jesus, and Mary, all with elongated necks.
San Blas is on the mountain side, so we had to walk up steep staircases
to get to the museum, but we were able to see beautiful views of Cusco.
Next we walked back down to the
plaza de armas and then went in the other direction up steep stairs to San
Cristobol. At San Cristobol there was a
huge Spanish church and to one side of it an Incan wall with niches in it like
I have seen at many ruins. Here there
was another beautiful view over Cusco.
After all this walking, we went to
meet Vanessa, Saul, and their 2-year-old, Inti, at a typical Peruvian
restaurant for lunch. It was a fun
restaurant - there were very few tourists and there was traditional
dancing. I ordered the trucha frita
(fried trout) even though Sharmley tried to get me to order something more
adventurous. She made me try her cow
tongue though and I enjoyed watching Saul eat his pig feet. We also ordered two pitchers of chicha, the
Peruvian fermented corn drink. Saul kept
telling me to drink the chicha and pouring me more, saying it was completely
natural, there’s no alcohol. Between him
saying this, having his two year old son drink the chicha, and having had chicha
before, I didn’t think there would be any problem. Boy was I wrong. But, after I fainted three times, threw up,
and drank four cups of coca tea, I felt a lot better.
Besides my chicha adventure, it was
a great day!
On Saturday, Vanessa told me that
she had left the party at the school on Friday at 4:30, but it was still going
strong, with the teachers from other schools and the parents starting to
drink. Unfortunately, they did not clean
up after themselves, so when we opened the classroom doors at 8:30 this
morning, the classroom stunk, had full bottles and glasses of beer on the kids
tables, and had soda and beer spilled on the tables, chairs, and floors. It was disgusting. Vanessa and I had the kids stay outside while
we cleaned up and another teacher wiped down the tables and mopped the floor.
That was the most exciting part of
my day at school today. And the most
exciting part of my afternoon was when I was shopping at the market (again!)
this afternoon and was bargaining with a vendor. When we finally agreed on a price, he asked
me where I was from and when I said the U.S., he looked surprised and said my
Spanish was really good! He said he has
friends in Oregon who sell his jewelry.
Abby, another wonderful adventure. I am sure you have many wonderful photos to go along with your stories. Sorry to hear about the chicha! That doesn't sound like fun.
ReplyDeleteYour Spanish must be quite good if a native speaker thinks so. Good for you.
The Wooster students have finished classes and are heading into exam period. The campus is quiet and chilly with temperatures around 37 degrees and snow flurries.
Peg