Wednesday, December 26, 2012

So many things have happened since I last posted that I don't even know where to begin. I had been planning on writing a post about a very unique experience at a funeral, a project at the daycares, baking lessons for kids, Christmas Day, and life in general. Since I have been a slacker on the posts lately I don't have time to write an individual post on all of those topics so I'm just going to give a brief overview of my month and then maybe sometime next year I'll have time to give a few more details. This post is going to be very jumpy and unorganized but it's the best I can do for now.

First of all I know you have all been wondering about Porky so I thought I'd share a picture of him. He is just as adorable and feisty as ever and really enjoys catching his own bugs for dinner.


Last weekend I went to the Chiang Rai Flower Festival with my host family. The following four pictures are all from the festival. We went at night so I couldn't get really good pictures of a lot of the most beautiful areas.



My host mom. I had to force her to smile for this, she is awful at smiling in pictures.


This is made from flowers and banana leaves.


Hmong Hill Tribe girls dancing at the festival.


Christmas Eve my neighbor told me we were doing a ceremony called Suu Quan and said I had to participate. One of my neighbors died a few weeks ago so this ceremony was to bless the house she died in and also to make sure her spirit was not haunting anyone. Apparently they were worried about her haunting me and even following me back to America because I was there and actually touching her when she died. My neighbor asked me for a shirt which she rolled up and placed on a dish in the middle of a circle of people. I had to sit inside a circle of string with other people who were there the night my neighbor died while the village elders chanted, tied string on my wrists, and took the heads off of dead chickens. In hindsight this may or may not have been an exorcism....


My shirt was placed on a plate next to this banana leaf creation and everyone sat inside a big circle of string around it.


Christmas Day my coworkers all wore red shirts and santa hats. When I walked in one of my coworkers started singing Jingle Bells. When I asked her how she knew the words she responded "Kayla! I am very good English! Why you not believe me?"


Christmas Night I had a party at my house for all of the neighborhood kids. I made sugar cookies the night before and had bags of red and green frosting so the kids could have fun decorating cookies. We also cut out and colored paper snowflakes and had Suki for dinner.




All month I've been working on a project at all 9 daycare centers in my village. I spent one day at each daycare distributing soap, soap dispensers, toothbrush holders, and toothbrushes for all of the students to use at the daycare. I did a few activities with the kids to teach them how to wash their hands and brush their teeth using a large model borrowed from a dentist. Each student now has a chart and they get a sticker from their teacher everyday that they spend 2 minutes brushing their teeth after lunch. In one month I'll be going back and distributing prizes to students at each daycare.

Lunch time at the daycare. These kids have to sit on the floor to eat because there are over 50 students and very few chairs.


Having a volunteer come practice brushing her teeth on the model.


Three of the daycares are about a one hour drive away from my home (and yes they are still in my village). We have to go up and through the mountain to get to them so we stopped and took some pictures along the way.



That's all I have time for for now. On Friday I'm heading to the South of Thailand to spend New Years with a few other Volunteers then my parents arrive on January 2nd! Probably won't be able to post again until mid/end of January. Merry Christmas and Happy New Year!


Thursday, December 6, 2012

Loi Krathong

Last week was Loi Krathong, a festival that is celebrated throughout Thailand on the 12th full moon of the Thai lunar calendar. A Krathong is a decorative float that is usually made from banana tree trunks, banana leaves, and flowers found around the house. The night before the festival I spent a few hours with my neighbors making Krathongs that we would float along the river the following night. We bent banana leaves and folded them into different shapes so we could pin them onto the trunk with small pieces of wood. Then we placed flowers around the leaves to make beautiful arrangements. Finally we put incense and a candle in the middle of the Krathong. My first experience at making a Krathong was surprisingly successful and even my neighbors agreed that mine was beautiful.




Dew and Ao making their Krathongs.

Some of the almost finished products.

Showing off our floats.


This one is mine!

The night of the festival we had a huge party on the big field outside of my office. There was a big stage with insanely loud speakers, food carts, trampolines, bouncy houses, and darts. It started around 5pm with a parade. Each smaller village picked the most beautiful woman to ride on a large float and participate in a contest to see which village had the most beautiful woman. After the parade there was a concert, Thai dancing, Hill Tribe dancing, and awards were given out. 

My friend Jam was selected as the most beautiful one in our village so she got to ride on the float.


After the parade we lit hundreds of big lanterns and watched them float up into the sky. This is actually part of a Northern thai festival known as Yi Peng but it is always celebrated simultaneously with Loi Krathong. I thought for sure I was going to catch on fire at some point during this but I managed to escape unscathed. As the lanterns float away we "tamboon" or make merit.







To finish off the night I went to the river to Loi (float) my Krathong. At this point it was around 11pm and I had to climb down this muddy bank in the dark, light the candle and incense, climb on this tiny wooden ladder, and place my Krathong in the river. I have no idea how I managed to avoid falling in. Before you Loi your Krathong you make a wish. I also think you are supposed to imagine all of the stresses or troubles in your life floating away with the Krathong as you watch it disappear down the river... or at least that's what I did.



Loi Krathong was definitely my favorite Thai holiday so far. I hope to sneak a few of the lanterns in my bag to bring back to America.




Wednesday, November 28, 2012

Happy Thanksgiving!

Thanksgiving this year was not full of the usual turkey, stuffing, family, and football but I managed to have a pretty awesome day anyways. It was supposed to be a workday but I was sick with bronchitis so I had the day off to recuperate. I woke up in the morning and made some delicious cinnamon rolls and mocha coffee. By far the best breakfast I have had since coming to Thailand.



After breakfast I spent some time making beads from magazines. I'm working on some bracelets for the girls in my neighborhood.


Then Bye-Boah came over to visit. We danced, sang, read a book, and looked at each other in confusion every time we tried to communicate. 


When Bye-Boah left the dogs came over for a visit. The black one is one of the puppies from several months ago I had on my blog, and the white one is his mom.


After a lunch of noodle soup I spent some time reading on my hammock. Bye-Boah came back over and we were both sitting on my hammock when all of a sudden it broke and we were on the ground. Fortunately it didn't hurt, but unfortunately one of the neighbors saw and within minutes the entire village knew and said I must have gained some weight.


For dinner I made roasted carrots, mashed potatoes, corn on the cob, and apple crisp. 


Some of the neighbors came over for dinner and brought sticky rice and an eggplant and green bean dish. Pii Al wanted to make me american food for Thanksgiving so she made sandwiches of white bread and sweetened condensed milk. She also tried to put sugar in my mashed potatoes, and then decided to dip her sticky rice in the mashed potatoes instead of using a spoon. 


Overall, it was a nice relaxing day, even though I did miss stuffing myself with delicious foods all day and spending time with my family.








Tuesday, November 6, 2012

Happy Halloween!

A few days before leaving for Nepal I casually mentioned to one of my neighbors that Halloween was in October and that I was thinking of throwing a party for the kids. Next thing I know I'm being bombarded with questions about costumes and my house is swarming with kids begging me to make Halloween come quickly. I got home from Nepal and had one week to plan my party, buy supplies, make a costume and get everything ready, plenty of time! But then I got sick and had to hop on a 5 hour bus ride to see the doctor, and had to stay there for four days. I got back home the day before Halloween and the second the kids knew I was back they were running rampant through my house asking me about the party that was supposed to be happening the very next day. I had nothing ready, was not feeling great, and kicked them out of my house telling them the party was postponed until Saturday night. I felt pretty bad about postponing it, so I decided to use the extra time I bought myself and make it an awesome party for my favorite little kiddos.

By 8:30 on Saturday morning I had 5 kids at my house asking me about the party, making my house a mess, and playing game after game of UNO while begging me to play with them. Meanwhile, I was  making them homemade chocolate chip cookies. This might not seem like much of a feat to any of you, but when you are using a small oven that barely fits a 9x9 pan and have to sit on the floor for 3 hours while you cook 4 cookies at a time, you'll understand how much effort it takes to make some simple cookies. Then I spent an hour killing spiders. I do this every Saturday and am actually starting to enjoy it. I get this massive broom and take down spider after spider. I feel kind of bad killing these spiders because they mainly stay up in the corners of the house and don't bother me, but if I don't kill them every week then I'm pretty sure they would take over my entire house. I would guess that this Sunday I killed around 30 spiders without trying very hard. Then I swept, mopped, hand-washed my laundry, made lunch for everyone, and finally sat down to take a break. But of course my break turned into me teaching the kids a new card game (War), and then yelling at them as they ran across the floors I had just finished mopping. After lunch I made spaghetti sauce and hot dogs, got the snacks ready, and made goodie bags for each of the kids coming to the party that night. At 4:30 I kicked everyone out and told them not to come back until 6 so I could shower, cook the pasta, and do my Halloween makeup. By 5:15 they were all back and running through my house like crazy people getting the party started. They shut all the windows and doors, turned the lights off, played some Gangnam Style, and started a dance party. After we were all exhausted and sweaty from dancing, the witches, wizards, ghouls, and ghosts plopped themselves on my floor and began munching down on some cookies and snacks while making jack-o-lanterns by coloring scary faces on balloons. Then we all enjoyed some homemade spaghetti and I gave them each a hot dog (hot dogs are for rich people in Thailand so most of the kids never get to eat them but they LOVE them). After dinner we played pin the tail on the black cat followed by a game with a blind fold where the kids had to say Happy Halloween in a scary voice and the blindfolded person had to guess who was speaking. Every time someone "won" a game I added an extra treat to their goodie bag. The kids had a blast and I'm pretty sure they are already looking forward to Halloween next year. They also want to know when the next holiday is. Hopefully by Thanksgiving I can work up the energy to throw another party.









Thursday, November 1, 2012

Namaste! Adventures in Nepal

While we waited at the Bangkok airport to check in for our flight we noticed that we were the only people who didn't have at least two flat screen TVs with us.


 After 48 hours of not sleeping due to an overnight bus ride on Friday and 1am flight on Sunday we finally arrived in Kathmandu! Getting out of the airport we bargained for a taxi and eventually found one that wasn't trying to take too much advantage of us. On the ride to our hostel we hit a woman with our car. We just tapped her lightly and the driver didn't even stop or say anything. My friends and I just sat there in shock staring out the windows at the dusty dirt roads full of people, pollution, animals, and taxis. An entirely different world from Bangkok! 

The next morning we woke up bright and early and headed to Pokhara, a smaller town about 8 hours from Kathmandu. The ride was full of honking horns, crazy mountain roads, and amazing views.


We spent that afternoon/night wandering around Pokhara, enjoying the peace and quiet after Kathmandu, and eating lots of vegetarian momo which might just be my new favorite food. The area was beautiful, colorful, and full of awesome things to buy.



 We then finished the afternoon with some delicious Himalayan Tea.


The next day we visited a waterfall and a Tibetan Refugee Camp.





We also got to see some pretty spectacular views of the Annapurna Mountains from our hotel.



The next day we got up and headed out for a 3 day rafting trip on the Kali Gandaki River. We ended up signing up with a company that caters to Israeli people. We realized this when out of 20 people only 5 of us didn't speak Hebrew. It was really awesome to meet so many people from Israel and hear about their experiences, talk politics, and talk about Peace Corps and life in Thailand all while enjoying the amazing scenery in Nepal. The three days of rafting were full of awesome Nepali food, star gazing, swimming, flipping the raft, camping on white sand beaches and Nepali dancing and music next to a bonfire. Those three days were by far my favorite part of the trip.





After rafting we spent a bit more time in Pokhara enjoying the sites then headed back to Kathmandu. We spent a few days visiting temples, ancient cities, shopping, eating even more Momo, and enjoying being able to speak English to everyone we met.

The street our hotel was on.


 Durbar Square

 Freak Street

 Eating some Dal Bhat, traditional Nepalese food.
 Durbar Square

 Fresh King Curd
 Boudha Stupa


Our second to last day in Nepal we took a Mountain Flight to see Mount Everest. We got to the airport before 6am, eager to board our plane. The flight took off at 6:30am and I think we were all a bit nervous being on such a tiny plane so close to the mountains. After the first glimpse of the Himalayas in the distance all nervousness vanished and I couldn't peel my eyes away. It felt like we were right on top of Everest. On the way back and I even got to go into the cockpit and talk to the pilots as they told me the names of the different mountains we were passing. It was incredible.








In the afternoon on our last day I went to the store next to our hotel to refill my water bottle and started talking to the guy who owned the store. He invited me to sit down for a cup of tea. After about 30 minutes he asked me if I would stay in his store for about 20 minutes while he went to run an errand. I had nothing to do so I agreed to help him out. After he showed me where he kept his money and explained the prices of water, candy bars, and some of his better selling items he left and I was in charge! Fortunately people only bought water and candy so I was all set, although it took me a while to figure out the Nepali coins to give change. After he came back he gave me some more tea and we chatted about his family, his home, and life in Nepal. Quite the way to end the trip!



I've been back in Thailand for about 2 weeks now and just returned from a little unplanned vacation to Chiang Mai for some medical appointments. Now life is slowly returning to normal and I'm getting back to work on new projects. It helps coming back from vacation and having this as my backyard...