Three weeks ago, internships began for the students. We dropped off students at their homestays and internship sites, gave instructions on how to get to and from their home and work places and left them to experience the next week on their own! The students all came back to the Nab during the weekend, so the first week I stayed at the Nab and finished up odds and ends for work. It was great to spend time with Derek and Ashley (the directors) who were also around the whole week, and the other staff who were in and out throughout the week. I went on a cooking frenzy with Ashley, and tons of time cooking and baking for breakfast, lunch and supper to satisfy some of our food cravings for favorite recipes from home that we don't eat here. The first week of internships also brought temperatures of over 100 degrees F. Afternoons became too hot to do anything but go to the river and sit in the cool water and talk, so that's what Ashley and I did.
The students all came back on the weekend, and it was great to hear all of their stories and hang out with them in a relaxed way, because I wasn't planning too many activities!
On Monday morning of the next week I left early in the morning to catch a bus and headed down south to a Mayan village near Punta Gorda. After I finally arrived in the village I asked around to find the village leader and walked to his house. Jorge was the man who brings people upriver in his traditionally made dugout canoe. Then I enjoyed an amazing dory ride upriver during the early evening. I visited and relaxed at a Maya Mountain Research Farm, which is a permaculture farm that is 30 minutes upriver from the village via dory, or a 45 minute hike. Permaculture is a method of sustainable agriculture which is based off of ecological principles. So a permaculture farm in Belize seeks to model a forest system, while producing food and products for human use. The benefit of this model is that it is a stable system, as natural systems stabilize and add to the soil instead of degrading and eroding the soil.
During the week I read up on permaculture, helped the other interns who were studying at the farm cook over the wood fire, and got to know the stories of the other interns. It was great to be in a different community of people my age, as we swam at the river and had all sorts of discussions with them about their ideas about environmental issues and solutions and what their hopes and dreams. I was also in love with the area, being very remote and surrounded by forest. I drank pure spring water the whole week and also drank in the beauty of the trees, birds and the river. Coming back to the Nab on Friday, I felt the most relaxed that I have all semester, which was great because I jumped right back into work with community events, and TAing. Last week I was the TA for a pretty intense class, Sustainable Community Development 2. We had three days of fieldtrips, and so everyone was worn out at the end of this week!
The great thing about this week was that our professor was Robert Pelant, who runs Pacific Rim Institute, where I will be volunteering this summer! So I got to talk with him more about where I'll be living, what I'll be doing, etc.
Pacific Rim is on Whidby Island in Washington, and used to be AuSable Pacific Rim. I will be primarily helping out with their restoration projects, which includes prairie restoration. I will also be helping out with some of their on going research projects and collecting data. The first half of the summer I'll be working full time with the restoration and research, and the second half of the summer I will (in the process of registering for) be auditing an Au Sable class while also working. I hope to take Alpine Ecology, and it will be awesome to study this ecosystem through a field biology course! I will be on Whidby Island from the second week in June through the middle of August. At this point, I plan to fly home from on May 27, and then probably leave for Washington on June 6 or 7.
So those are my summer plans! I hope to see some of you this summer!
Love,
Joelle
ps- have a blessed Semana Santa. I was really blessed by a Palm Sunday service at the local Catholic church. The Benque church has both a Spanish and and English service but because of the holiday the service this week was only in Spanish. Somehow I managed to understand most of the sermon and was blessed by the service which included singing with marimba and guitar music.