Saturday, February 12, 2011

Third Time's A Charm

Now done with the third week of class, on to the fourth and final week of 1001. Some of these pictures are from last weekend, some are from last night! The weather continues to be consistently perfect. Went and sold baked goods with my host mother the other day at a business park which was kind of exciting (obviously I just stood there selling the products with my stunning good looks while my host mother did all the talking). Just got back from my host sisters volleyball game which was outdoors..and not everyone was wearing knee pads (only a few scrapped knees). Fun fact of the day: When you turn 18 in Mexico and you need to go to declare which party you are in (an obscure one, the PRI, PRD, PAN, or none). If you do nothing, when elections are held and you don't vote, the person tallying the votes gets to decide which party/candidate your lack of vote goes towards! Pretty crazy.

My roommate, his intercambio (conversation partner) Manuel, and me

Some delicious food...I think it started with a B or a P...

These are part of rememnants of a temple site in Mexico City. This is an old steam house which you would be able to sit in, sweat, and then be comfortable with a freezing cold bathing experience. Instead of heating up water, they would just heat up rocks and then place them inside (the roof is missing fyi).

These are just a small view of the immense slums and squatter settlements on our way to Teotihuacan. These go on for miles..and miles and miles. 

Now I tried to upload another photo, but it wasn't working, to show wires that stick out of almost every house (you can see this on the right hand side of the shot I posted of my host home). This is just preparatory work so when people get money they can buy brick, cement, then hire labor and so on. The concept of saving in Mexico is minimal since many banks invest with peoples savings on the stock market, which meant people really were really hit when the stock market plummeted a few years ago. Rather, people spend their money on projects on something substantive...like concrete.

Another interesting thing we learned is that you better watch out if you have land. When there is a squatter's settlement, usually they will appear literally over night. Apparently it is not uncommon to have land completely empty be filled with homes the next day. What constitutes a home is a roof and four walls. Once it is up, it seems you basically loose the land rights.

This is me in Teotihuacan. I am standing on the moon temple, with the sun temple in the background.

My friend Jennifer and I energizing ourselves by touching the center of the sun temple on it's top. (if you can't tell, my arm is not the slender one with the hair band, rather the hairy, palish one :P)

On top of the sun temple.

Picture of the new Basilica of Our Lady of Guadalupe, located in Mexico City. According to our tour guide, who is also the owner of the school and a walking encyclopedia, this is the most visited site of Catholicism. Even more so than Vatican  City. Now wikipedia says it is second, but my gut feeling tells me to go with Charlie (our tour guide).

Another picture, there was a really cool sun set.

Apparently a rare shot since our our tour guide had never seen them both the Old (in the middle) and the New (on the left) Basilicas lit up at the same time. If you can see at this angle (if not, google it) the old basilica is sinking. Mexico City was built on a lake, so everything is sinking. Except for the new basilica. The architect took into account Archimedes' principle of buoyancy that if something will not sink if it's displacement is more than its weight.

Another photo of the New Basilica.

The actual cloak of Juan Diego with the image of the Lady of Guadalupe. This is in the New Basilica.

There are moving stairs below the cloak, because otherwise it would be filled constantly with no movement. 

My roommate Nate and I in el centro.

Myself, Manuel, and Nate


Manuel, Kevin, Nate, Jessica, Sai, Monica, and Myself out near the lake south of Cuernavaca last night.

Hope all is well. Again, feel free to ask if you have any questions!

Saturday, February 5, 2011

Second Week Completed

After 2 weeks of Spanish classes, starting to be able to pick up a lot more in conversations than when I started. It was actually cloudy yesterday and is today. I'm not complaining though, it beats the cold :)

This is just a picture of my classroom...quite basic. My roommate and I are the only two in the class. Probably only about 8 students in total at the school right now. This is the slower season for them, plus with the travel warnings to Mexico, not as many people are coming. The University of Wisconsin system actually cancelled its study abroad program to Mexico.

This is the view from my classroom.

This is the view from my balcony. There is a trampoline on one level and a pool on the level below. Logistically we've determined that the pool would not be deep enough after bouncing off the trampoline from the balcony...tests are in progress.

This is also from my balcony. Barbed wire is a very popular defense measure and look.

This is the view from down by the pool.

My host sister took me on a tour through the black market and the market market...it was either taking a picture with this or intestines.

Other students at the school; Kevin, Nate (roommate), Jenny, and Sara

This is a Michelada. It is a popular chili like beer they have in Mexico...it was...interesting.

A very authentic Mariachi Band.

These little critters were a the top of a mountain in Tepoztlan. They were friendly (if you had something to give them). Can't remember the name for them though...

This is at the same place as above, overlooking the city of Tepoztlan.

This is the pyramid at the top of the mountain. It is a "small temple to the Aztec god Tepoztecatl, a god of the alcoholic pulque beverage"(wikipedia of course).

This was the treck all the way up the mountain...just rocks...many many rocks.

We were at a mall and I got a kick out of it. Pun intended.

Going out with some locals tonight, should be a fun time (especially since the speak about as much English as I do Spanish). Tomorrow we go to Teotihuacan. "At its zenith in the first half of the 1st millennium AD, Teotihuacan was the largest city in the pre-Columbian Americas." & "is an enormousarchaeological site in the Basin of Mexico, containing some of the largest pyramidal structures built in the pre-ColumbianAmericas." (thanks again wiki)


If anyone whose reading has a specific question or requests, just comment or let me know some how! Hope all is well :D