Sunday, April 29, 2012

Visiting Vicunas, Alpacas and Llamas


I now know the difference between all three. Upon leaving Arequipa for the Colca Canyon/ Valley with a tour group of 16 arranged by a friend of Tanya´s who is a tour guide, we visited the preserve for Vicunas, they are wild and were going extinct until the government of Peru created a reserve and set big financial penalties for killing them for their wool, it is very very fine and of the highest quality. As you can see from the picture there is not much to eat here for the vicunas and they are very lean and graceful, they run very fast. They like this area because there is water from a recent rain. We could just see the vicunas from the road, no entry is permitted on to the reserve.



In front of the National Reserve for Vicunas.



This formation reminded me a little of the Grand Canyon, the colours are different.



A very barren landscape, nothing grows here, the vicunas live on very little. A beautiful sky above.


A field of alpacas found some green and a little water. They are domesticated animals and used for their wool and their meat is found on menus in restaurants as well.


Some llamas here as well, the llamas are bigger and are used for carrying loads. The poeple who live in this area depend on the alpacas and llamas for their livlihood and are very poor, the conditions of life are very harsh and it gets very cold at night at this altitude.


 Snow on top, all in a day´s travel, lots of contrasts, that is the story of the geographic landscape of Peru.


Women selling their wares along the highway, chalinas/ shawls, knitted goods and weavings.

Saturday, April 21, 2012

My visit to Arequipa

Arequipa is the third largest city in Peru and is also the city closest to Colca Canyon where the Condors are. I decided to travel at night, it is a 10 hour trip from Cusco to Arequipa. It is typical here on those long distances either to travel very early in the morning like 4 a.m or leave at night and arrive in the morning, those are the choices. I left Cusco at 8p.m. and arrived in Arequipa at 6 a.m. The Plaza de Armas in Arequipa at 6 a.m. very quiet, it was also Good Friday and most of the shops were closed.
Tanya, Aida and Kinkulla´s daughter lives in Arequipa and she met me at my hotel and we walked all over the city. Mario Vargas Llosa, who won the Nobel prize for literature in 2011 was born in Arequipa and made a dedication of this new library to the city, it is a great cultural addition.

This is the oldest part of the city and is built with volcanic rock and the homes are passed down through the generations, it is called La Nazarene.
This is the original Plaza de Armas de Arequipa, you can see how small it is compared to the present Plaza. It is near the La Nazarene above.
A popular plaza for taking a picture to get a view of the city, however the day was slightly overcast so the view is limited.

Friday, April 20, 2012

The Newsletter and the start of the school year

One of the things I came here to do was to help with marketing and fund-raising for Living Heart, I helped to write the newsletter which was e-mailed the end of March. One of the things I feel Living Heart does really well is keeping in touch with supporters on a consistent basis, if you would like to read the newsletter here is the link: http://hosted.verticalresponse.com/912975/9741d36d45/TEST/TEST/


April is the beginning of the school year here for the children in the highland communities, they do not go in March because their parents keep them at home to help with the harvest. I visited one of our highland communities where we provide  a hot lunch and dinner to the children as they are malnourished, very small for their ages. We brought the food for two weeks, rice, cereal and fresh vegetables and in two more weeks more fresh produce.

Rita the nurse who works for Living Heart is measuring and weighing all the children, this is done at the beginning of the school year and  again at the end of the school year to see how their development has progressed. Peter a volunteer dentist from England is checking all the children´s teeth and Living Heart plans to invite dentists to treat the children´s dental needs.

We decided to go see the high altitude lake since we were quite close and it was worth the visit, the lake is at 12,000 feet.
The team, myself, Fani (staff), Suzanna, a photographer from England and the daughter of Sonia, the founder of Living Heart, Rita (staff), Peter, a volunteer dentist from England and Martin our driver.
Martin does very well on these roads, they are not paved and there are lots of curves.