Wednesday 19 October 2011

Rainy season........Salvadoran style


I cannot believe it is August since I last blogged, and the topic of conversation is still the same.....rain!!!


We are now into our 11th consecutive day of almost non stop rain. There we were thinking that the rainy season was almost at an end and could only get better! What our friends here have told us is that last year was unusual, in that not enough rain fell, and that the end of the rainy season is generally worse. Indeed, it is certainly going out with a bang!


President Funes declared a national state of emergency, and all schools have been closed since last Thursday. We had to go into school to do paperwork on Thursday, and Andy was in yesterday and today for a couple of ours to see the kids from his IB and IGCSE classes, but apart from that the kids have been receiving work via email, to complete at home. I had to go in this morning but got told to go home at 9:00.


By having the kids come into school, on the pretext of bringing in supplies to be distributed to those who have lost everything (and having timetabled contact time with their teachers whilst in school), I think the school has come under criticism from the government, and apparently made the local tv news.
Indeed, the Ministry of Education website (which has become a favourite to read) says:

 "To all public and private education system, from kindergarten to higher education institutions, please abide by the suspension of classes, made ​​by the President, Mauricio Funes, through an Emergency Ordinance Nacional. Given this Decree all, without exception, are subject to decisions taken by the President, who is the highest authority of the Civil Protection System....."


We have just received notification that school remains closed until Monday 24th October (at the earliest) and the email that we received from our school principal made us chuckle:
"please note staff are free to come to school or work from home. We will NOT be opening this Saturday and are not planning to use the Half Term holiday as make-up time."
Hmmm, let me think.....when he proposed lessons this Saturday from 7:00-12:30 there were murmerings......if he had cancelled half term I think there would have been a riot!!!!


I have become an avid reader of local newspapers (online, with Google assisting my limited Spanish) and blogs from fellow expats in different parts of the country.


Voices El Salvador tells of the problems caused by the water being discharged from the September 15th dam.....
"The September 15 Dam just upriver from the Lower Lempa has been releasing as much as 12,000 cubic meters per sec..... 2500 cm/sec is cause for extreme alarm. As of an hour ago, the river remains 10.5 meters (34 feet) above normal."


That is very hard to comprehend.....but 34 feet of water is a lot no matter how you look at it.







According to LaPrensaGrafica, a national newspaper, there are now 32 people dead and 2 missing, and 48,723 people housed in 566 shelters, out of a total population of just 5,744,113.


El Salvador's Minister of Environment and Natural Resources, Hernan Rosa Chaves explained:


"On Wednesday a cold front is expected, which will displace the rains in the country. She said that with the cold front will begin the country's transition period from the wet season to dry, and she reminded us that the hurricane season ends on Nov. 30th . She added that during the early hours of Thursday it will rain more intensely in the country, but during the day, the cold front will begin to enter the territory of El Salvador and by Thursday will have the full influence of the phenomenon. The authorities have called on people to shelter the children and elderly people, the population more susceptible to autoimmune diseases. Temperatures could drop to 14 degrees Celsius in the highlands of the country."
The extra rainfall is not going to improve an already dire situation, and the cold temperatures, along with the damp, and cramped living conditions in shelters is likely to cause health problems. 
 "The majority of queries served in shelters diseases are repspiratory, with a total of 3,664 cases, while gastrointestinal illnesses rank second, with 228 cases. Other common causes of medical consultations are skin diseases and disorders of anxiety and depression."
It is difficult to comprehend how much loss and devastation the country has suffered. Where we live life goes on pretty much as normal. We have a roof over our heads and a cupboard full of provisions. we are dry and safe. The roads are not too bad, shops are still open, and we can still go about our daily lives. Our thoughts and prayers are with those who have lost what little they had.

Corps relief workers in Ciudad Arce, by the overflow of the river San Carlos.

Corps relief workers in Ciudad Arce, by the overflow of the river San Carlos.
Closed section of road to the port of La Libertad, due to landslide at km 17, as the last few hours of rains wreak havoc nationwide.

The picture aboveshows Carolina Tatiana Saavedra, 17 days old, being carried by her mother Laura Dalila Garcia, 28 years, who along with her other daughters Alexandra and Yesenia, aged 3 and 12 respectively are also sleeping in the Gym Adolfo Pineda.
Residents of the village of San Antonio in Comasagua, remain in the Gym Adolfo Pineda of Santa Tecla, after they were evacuated.



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 remain in the Gym Adolfo Pineda of Santa Tecla, after they were evacuated. 

Tuesday 30 August 2011

Rain rain go away......

We are half way through the rainy season, and it seems to have stepped up a notch. Officially the rainy season lasts from June until November.

Last year the weather was really wet before we arrived, and we got more of the same. Washed clothes stayed damp for days and began to smell, meaning they had to be washed again - it seemed like an endless cycle of washing. We had washing hanging on a line where the hammock should have been, hanging from the stairs, trying to catch the sun from the curtain pole!






This year it didn't seem as bad. We have been here over the summer, and the rain seemed to come mainly at night.I almost began to think that I had remembered last year as being a lot worse than it was. Last week we received an email offering a tumble drier (secadora) for sale (see below, the machine on the right). We considered it, and very nearly decided against it, due to the high cost of electricity here, but we decided it could be $75 well spent!






We very nearly didn't get to view it: it was a typical Salvadoran addresses that was not where Google maps said it was. I refused to give up, like a beagle on the scent, I went once more around the block, in the shadow of the Trade Centre, took a random left turn, found house number 6, rang the bell and asked for the Senora.......and to my utter amazement  the muchacha (maid) who answered the door said "Si!"

The secadora is now a member of the family. Sunday it rained all day, I did my washing, and in half an hour it was dry. No more smelly wet washing. Result!

Saturday 20 August 2011

1st week at school

We have just completed our 1st week back at school.......this is our 3rd year of teaching in the tropics, but it still feels wrong to be going back to school in August! it doesn't matter that our holidays started in June.....for English people, August is about holidays!!!!

It was very tiring getting up at 5am again.......Monday to Wednesday wasn't as bad, as we didn't have to be at school until 730am, but the children were back on Thursday.....and we were at school for 6:20am!!!!! Luckily for me I only had one day, because Friday is my day off.....but I was still awake at 5:00!!!!

We have had a few nights of really bad storms this week. Tropical Storm Greg is heading away into the Pacific, but blowing across from the Caribbean is Tropical Storm Harvey. The Bay Islands off the coast of Honduras and Belize will get the full force of it, but we are still experiencing some amazing thunderstorms. I cannot recreate the noise on here, but the thunder is so loud it sounds like a bomb exploding, and it sets of car alarms.......not entertaining when it happens in the middle of the night!!

I am sitting on the verandah as I write this and it feels positively chilly, despite the thermometer telling me that it is 26 degrees! The sky is getting dark, there is the distant rumble of thunder and the air definitely feels like something is blowing in!!

We have had a bat living in a fruit bowl outside our front door. The maid was hysterical the other afternoon, and she managed to explain to us that when she had been dusting the shoe cupboard that is in the passage opposite our front door (the passage would have been outside originally, but when they built a garage on the front of the house, it got covered over) a bat flew out of the fir cone filled fruit bowl that sits on the top of it! She was very disturbed, as was I, and I was trying to get her to tell me which direction the bat had flown in......towards the garage, where it could escape to freedom, or into the house!!! She pointed towards the garage, so I am keeping my fingers crossed! She told us that placing a garlic clove in the fruit bowl would keep the bat away! Old wives tale???? We put a garlic clove there anyway, a couple of days later there was bat-poo on top of the cupboard......but since then the garlic smell has been more pungent and we haven't seen any more traces of bat life! The joys of living in the tropics!

Talking of animal life......we seem to have got the kitchen ants under control, with continual spraying of nasty chemicals, but the bedroom ants appear to be a lot hardier. I don't like it when I wake up and can feel and see super fast little ants running across me! Andy pulled the bed away from the wall and sprayed the wall, floor and bed legs a few days ago, and still they were back this morning! I have taken the bedding off and we have sprayed the mattress and the room again. We will not be beaten!!

I didn't think that El Salvador got much in the way of wildlife, especially in the cities, but in the past couple of weeks one friend has had two coral snakes in her garden and another friend has had a coati  in his garden. I am just hoping to attract some humming birds to the garden. Apparently they are attracted to red flowers, and we have quite a few read and orange flowers......I'll let you know if we get any.
The picture above is a coati......also known as a Brazilian Ardvaak.

Here comes the rain......it is strange that as the sky lightened it has started raining.....you would expect the opposite!! It is coming down like stair rods....!!!!


This is a very short video I just took with my phone.....I will try and take some better videos if we get a storm later!!

Ok, I need to relocate indoors as the rain has started to blow into the verandah........

Adios amigos........hasta luego xx

Sunday 14 August 2011

new plants for our garden

Yesterday I went shopping with Janet, a new biology teacher from school - I have been assigned as her mentor during her first few weeks in El Salvador.


After we had done the weekly shop in Walmart and had a welcome skinny latte at Coffee Cup we stopped to look at the plants that were for sale on a little market stall in the middle of the mall. I often stop and browse the plants...... hortensias (hydrangeas), orchids...... but Andy always protests and I have never bought anything.........until today! I picked a very nice Peace Lily ($12 - £7.32) and a hanging basket with a strawberry plant ($4 - £2.44) .... and a few juicy looking strawberries. The Peace Lily did not come in a pot, just a black plastic growing bag, which was ok, as it gave me chance to look for a nice pot.

Today, after lunch Andy and I went shopping to Freund, which is like a smaller version of B+Q - it sells almost anything you could ever want for DIY, household and garden......but has far less choice than you would get in the UK. I headed straight for the garden centre, if you can call it that, a room at one end where all the plants are. I bought two plain terracotta pots and saucers, one of which was for the Peace Lily, and I bought a shrub with orangey-reddish flowers for the other one. Andy chose chives, mint, dill, parsley and rosemary, and while he wasn't looking I sneaked two terracotta tortoises into the trolley, and pink dianthus' to put in them.

In total we bought:
and the grand total came to $31, which translates as £18.90!!! What would £19 get you in a UK garden centre? Not much!!

Watch this space for updates on whether they thrive or die in our garden!!

Update:We have ripe tomatoes on our plants. Can't wait to eat them with a yummy salad!!



A new home for our blogging....

I initially tried very hard to post regularly on our old blog, but it was very difficult to notify people when there was a new post, and I eventually gave up trying.


It seems a shame not to have somewhere where we can share the exciting things that happen in our lives, and the things that are not so exciting to us, but may be of interest to you.


We will try to keep this blog updated regularly (or at least more often than the last one).


Hasta luego mis amigos.