Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Archive for the ‘hiking’ Category

I’ve been in that catch-up-with-normalcy phase that happens after your mom makes a whizbang journey across the earth to see you.  I feel like I used up all my language skills on my mother and for the last week or so can’t seem to construct a full Armenian sentence.  I’m feeling the weight of my current state, the missing of mom added to the pressure of work projects mixed with the swirl of information concerning my grad school search sweetened by the idea of visiting friends all floating on an under current of Oh How I Love My Life and Won’t I Be A Total Mess In Less Than Ten Months When I Have To Leave.

It’s true.  Already I’m feeling the fear of leaving, the dread of saying goodbye to this beautiful place full of beautiful souls.  Let’s examine, for instance, the past weekend.

It begins Friday night with a simple canning lesson.  Serine, the sweet landmom of mine, comes over to show me what’s up with that favorite Armenian past time.  There’s an actual word for it in Armenian, but up in my marz, people just use the word pakel which means ‘to close’.  So here we are boiling tomatoes for closing, with Serine’s daughters (pictured here) watching Finding Nemo on my computer.

The next morning I wake to banging on my front door.  Serine has come to close the tomatoes, so just like that we’re up and boiling, the smell of parsely and red pepper and tomatoes quickly filling the cottage.  With merely a few spins of the zakat, I have before me five jars of chunky tomato sauce chilling by the window.  I also have within me the fever, a revelation tindered by my friend’s canning spree and sparked to flame by this tiny canned success.

All the sudden, recalling that I have recipes stowed and a helpful landmom, I am in flight to the shuka to by kilos and kilos of eggplant, red peppers, green peppers, spicy peppers, onions and more tomatoes.  With a pile of veggies on the floor, I chop and dice and follow a recipe in our Peace Corps cookbook for chunky salsa.  I finish up Finding Nemo on my own.  After almost every Dori line I overlaugh, high perhaps on tomato fumes and sun rays from the window.

Later, while the jars of salsa boil in a steamy bath, Serine comes over to teach me to cook one of my favorite Armenian foods, bdrijani khaviar.  She bakes and peels eggplants while I send all the rest through a grinder and into the kettle.  Herbs are chopped and tossed in and all of it boils while we listen to a mix of Pete Yorn, The Temper Trap, Local Natives, and the like.  Sweet aroma swirls with savory smells.

In the midst of stirring, a bell rings from the road, and Meri comes running to tell her mother that the vegetable man has come.  We leave everything steaming, and head to the street finding a truck full of figs, roughly $1.30 a kilo, and both of us buy a bag full and plot a jam.

By the end of the day I have 17 jars full of sauces and a pot full of slowly gelling figs.

The next morning I head out with The Europeans, An and Kristine, two great new friends who enjoy a sunny day or a warm cup of tea as much as I do.  We take an avtobus out to Kurtan, a village on the edge of a canyon.  After saying hello to some friends of mine there, we walk out the muddy road to the cliff edge.  We sit on a rock, our toes hovering some hundred feet about the ground, and consider the expanse.  The sky is a calm blue and the colors of fall are just beginning to peek out at the tips of branches.  A river winds it’s way from around a cliff corner and brushes past a centuries old church perched on a small hill.  After a while we pick up and hike down into the gorge on wet, craggy edges.

Down in the gorge, we dip our feet in the river; I feel the sun on my back.  We try to catch a fresh water crab the size of a silver dollar.  We name it Louise, making up a story about how Louise is a female crab trapped in a male crabs body, a transcrab.  Perhaps, we say, that’s why Louise is being so shy, why Louise keeps running under the rock where we can’t ask Louise which pronoun Louise prefers.

We picnic on the bank sitting barefoot in the shade, eating that homemade khaviar with tomatoes, bread and cheese.  And thanks to Autumn, I fall in love with those cinnamon-sweet persimmons all over again.  After eating,  I climb around on the creek stones, collecting, working my way back to shore holding bunches of freshly picked wild mint in my hands.  Finally when the clouds start rolling over the canyon, when an unwelcome thunder starts to rumble through, we pack up and head back the way we came.

Right before the climb up, the one we’d been considering as possibly dangerous, we meet again two Armenian village men who had helped us hike down from the top.  While we were picnicing, they were collecting walnuts from canyon trees. Their fingers are stained black from peeling the rinds.

“The rain is coming,” they tell us.

“You’ll wait here then,” I ask.  They are sitting by an abandoned domik, someone’s old canyon home made of plasterboard and tin.

“Until the rain ends.  Then we’ll head up.”

“Can we wait with you?” I ask.

They nod, hands still busy cracking open walnuts, chewing a reply, “Of course.  Why not?”  And before we know it, there we are sitting in the dank cabin playing Durak, each eating from the offered walnuts.

After only twenty minutes or so the rain lets up, and we wait for the men to sweep up the husks and gather their filled bags before we head out of the cabin and up the cliffside.

On the hike back we pause to see a rainbow and later to pet the goats who are making their way down the trail we’re taking up.

Back at my cottage, two more of The Europeans come over, and we make a pizza while An so kindly reboils the fig jam so we can seel it in jars.

So, you see, this place seems now to just be day after day of A Damn Good Life. All in all the weekend turned out twenty cans of yum that will give me a much tastier winter.  And what’s more I spent time with good friends enjoying fall weather that couldn’t have been sunnier.  Right before The Europeans left my house for theirs, a new friend came to visit.  I picked up the tiny thing who graciously posed for a photoshoot.  It was as if, just when the weekend was over, she showed up to say, “Hey, don’t think because your party’s ending the goodness needs to stop.”  Indeed.


Read Full Post »

Some World Vision coworkers and I have been working on a Youth Leader Small Grants project, teaching Armenian village students about project design and management and, through a series of steps, awarding some of these village kids with small grants to do projects in their communities.  In one small village, Yaghdan, the students applied for furniture and supplies for their new youth center.  The first thing they wanted to do with these new supplies was a small weekend camp.  So, after World Vision supplied the furniture, myself and another Peace Corps volunteer went to the village with a couple days of summer camp planned.

The camp was inspired by a project called Little Drifters (check it out at the killer creative blog,  BOOOOOOOM).  The two of us PCV’s expanded the idea to a two day workshop exploring creativity and nature.  The kids made journals, wrote nature poems, and discussed how creating art that explores nature helps protect nature by helping others come to value it.  We made posters out of their poems to hang on their youth center walls, and just before sunset we hiked up to a hill peak above their village.  Most of them, including the Youth Center Director, had never hiked up the hill; they watched the sun go down with the excited chatter of kids discovering.

The next day we discussed litter, wrote more poems and then talked about creating found art using examples of garbage art and the boats pictured at BOOOOOOOM.  Then the kids went out to collect garbage from their village fields and likewise picked up natural refuse to create their own Little Drifters.  We waded out into Yaghdani Get to let the boats go, splashing at the boats and each other and ignoring the blazing sun.

Enjoy the pics below from our Little Drifter creation:

My Armenian friend teaching about volunteering to protect the environment.

Yaghdan’s very supportive mayor, one of the few woman mayor’s I’ve met

Below: Collecting, building, and sending off our Little Drifters.

Read Full Post »

In the last five days I have:

-Hosted an American-Armenian friend whose language skills betray the second part of the title but who’s dinosaur shirt and blue tights screamed the first.

-With said friend*, munched gobs of fresh fruit in the crumbling form of an old bathhouse at the 1000 year-old ruins just outside of town.

-*Commited to hitching back from said ruins.  Surprised at the first takers: a couple bouncing along in their horse and buggy.  The metal shell of the the buggy had clearly held manure not too long ago.  But what’s a little manure between friends?

-*Made incredible beer-batter pizza which became less incredible the next morning after sitting in a freon-spewing fridge.

-*Hauled spewing fridge outside.

-*Took an old bus out to Gyulagarak and hiked the remaining three miles to the famed Dendropark.  Collapsed, after the 90degreeF hike, on a bridge that held us over a stream.  Munched more fruit. Napped.  Awoke to an invitation from a family of Armenian strangers to join in their picnic.  Gabbed in Armenian.  Grabbed at khorovats, homemade sourcream on grilled peppers, homemade-baked clay-oven bread, and vodka shots.

-*Learned after talking with Strange Family, that we’d actually spent the entire afternoon on the bottom of the mountain on which, half a kilometer up, was the real Dendropark.

-*Enjoyed the real Dendropark for all of thirty minutes before it closed.  It was kind of amazing.  An Alice-In-Wonderland-Meets-Jurrasic-Park kind of garden with sections of roses becoming all the sudden a dense, blanket of barely waving ferns under tall, weepy pines.

-After said friend took off for Lake Sevan, met New Sitemates (!!!!!) and their organizations at the river near Agarak.  Swam.  Khorovatsed.  Danced.  Swam some more.  Got a sunburn (first, maybe only, of the summer).  Let sunrays, water, and new-and-year-old friendships wash over me.  Felt damn good.

-Directly after river time, helped landfamily clear the garden.  IE, hacked away at 7 foot weeds for a few hours with a scythe.  A SCYTHE, people.  Grim reaper style, even.

-Next day celebrated landsister’s 5th birthday with more khorovats, more dancing, more new and old friends, more carrying around landsisters on shoulders, etc.

-Discoverd, with New Sitemates, that my town’s park turns into a carnival at night with lights, ferris wheels, cage rides, and lots of the best ice cream ever churned.  Met. More. People.

-Woke up the next day to texted announcement that My Friend Completing His Peace Corps Service and Therefore Leaving in a Week (MFCHPCSTLW) would be coming into town for a visit.

-Finished Season 9 of Friends.  Mourned the fact that you only watch Friends for the first time one time.  Made commitment to treasure the yet unseen 10th Season.  (I know, I know.)

-Welcomed MFCHPCSTLW and made way back to 1000 year-old ruins to hike the gorge peninsula on which they stand (factoid: Lori Berd, in-post known as ‘the 1000 year-old ruins’, stands on the point on which two sides of the gorge form an elbow.  The elbow was chosen by some really old dude as a secure location for the silk-etc merchants to build an outpost on the Silk Road.  The secure location was later conquered by the Turks.  And the Persians.  And the Georgians.  And the Mongols.)

-Munched on fruit again in the 1000 year-old bathhouse, this time with MFCHPCSTLW.

-Hiked down into the gorge to the 1000 year-old bridge.  Felt like I was in Lord of the Rings.  Checked for hobbits.  Found discarded vodka bottles.

-Ran into Armenian friends who pointed out to us an area in Gorge River (actual name of the river) in which stirred warm water.  Investigated.  Swam in ice cold water.  did not believe.  Investigated further.  Found warm water along with warm waterfall.  Hoped it was natural-spring warm and not sewage warm.  Disregarded fears. Enjoyed swim while staring in wonder at the close canyon walls.

-Attempted to hike Gorge Elbow.  Found what seemed like miles of stinging nettles.  Figured that Turks and Persians and Georgians and Mongols probably didn’t have to deal with stinging nettles.  Nettles probably only developed sting in the last 1000 years.  Or maybe I should just never be expected to conquer anything.

-Turned back for home. Walked in the rain.

-Made killer pasta.  Died twice while eating.  Filled tummy to brim.

-Woke the next morning to eyes glued shut by eye-boogers.  Blamed river water.  Thought the gluing-phenomenon was actually kind of cool.  Enjoyed cracking eyelids apart.

All-in-all:

Visitors hosted: 4
Surprises yeilded by my town:  6
Khorovats eaten: 3
Town pride: a lot
Overall happiness: pretty dang high.

Read Full Post »

You know when you email someone you haven’t seen in a while, and you have one million things to say.  You end up writing something that sounds so disjointed but filled with all the things you would try to bring up in conversation when you saw them.  This is one of those kinds of emails, to you.

1. The Clooker should NOT hack up a lougie in front of my window. So we’re clear.

2. I just read/listened to this interview done by an Armenian newsite with one of my fellow PCV’s. It’s wonderful and makes me wonder what I would say about living in my little town.  But if you read this often, you know that interview would likely include the landfamily, the water schedule, head-cheese, Sanity and the Chicken, and something on chocolate-chip cookies.

3. I’ve been cooking. Not only am I eating so many bean burritos I could shoot myself to the moon (too much?), but I am perfecting a pasta sauce that is currently ranking “Fairly Delicious”.  I’m hoping to reach “Damn Good” by the end of the summer.

4. I’ve been hiking. I told you this already, actually, but I say it again to say that I’ve got some killer pics of the surprisingly-photogenic Spring Chicken.  Once you finish reading, feel free to slide into a that-is-just-too-adorable trance.

5. I’ve been listening to Radiolab. Y’all, this is Bill Nye, the Science Guy for adults.  I generally clean or cook while listening to this podcast, and almost always have to stop and collect my jaw that’s  dropped on the floor.  I just finished the latest “Famous Tumors” and despite being totally freaked out by the Tasmanian devil face tumor that is a CONTAGIOUS CANCER, I kept listening and almost wept by the end of the tumor story that led to all-together touching moment with the daughter of Henrietta Lacks, the woman who’s tumor cells provided the basis of a cure for polio, the first cell cloning, and an unbelievable amount of research into EVERY DISEASE EVER.   When you can start by totally grossing/freaking me out and end with me having to sit down to collect my emotions, you are one of my favorite things.  (If you really do check this out, please listen to “Lucy”.  Blew. My. Mind.)

6. I’ve been taking pictures. See:

From left: SC, Gita (landsister), Kristi (neighbor), Meri (landsister)
All of the above: adorable.  And the youngest, Gita, is the least afraid of the puppy.  She carts her around, reminiscent of a tiny cousin of mine.


From left: Davit, Liana, Arman
All of the above: coworkers, counterparts and three major reasons why my life in Armenia is awesome.


The beginning of a good hike. Please note the abandoned bus of that previous hiking post (linked above).

And now, what you’ve really been wanting, the puppy photos, because really, Spring Chicken bounding through daisies at dusk = GOLD.


The Chicken surveys the area.  (Please note: I have never seen so many daisies in my entire life.)


The Chicken bounds.


The Chicken bounds again.  And stretches out her tongue some more.


The Chicken is tuckered out.


The Chicken contemplates life.  Also daisies.


The Chicken wants you to know she loves you.

Uvsyo.

Read Full Post »

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 38 other followers