Friday, July 11, 2014

The things I'll miss

Well my dear readers, we come to the end of this blog. Something I've liked a lot about keeping it, has been watching the statistics to see where my readers live. I've had people from all over the world read and come back, and I'd like to thank you: Germany, the UK, Australia, Ukraine, Finland, Russia, Poland, Mexico, Canada, Latvia, Spain, Denmark, Argentina, Cameroon, France, Indonesia, China, Brazil, Turkey, South Korea, Taiwan and of course, Chile and the USA!
Thank you for reading, and if any readers have questions, you can get in touch with me at: carquette@fsmail.bradley.edu

There are many things I'll miss about being in Chile-and of course, some things I won't miss. As you can see, there are many, many more things that I will miss than those I will not.

Miss:                                                     Won't miss:
My students                                           - All their absences  


                                 






Panque de Naranja                                
-The calories I consume with each bite

Living 1 kilometer from the sea           -Cold vaguada coastal (marine fog)

Street dogs
-Dog poop on the sidewalks, and the dogs' pitiful condition 









Earth quake excitement  -Earth quake excitement
Living in a Spanish speaking country
-Feeling like an idiot most of the time because of my limited language skills                                  Buying fish at Portales                        
-The smell of the fish market

Having transportation right outside my building
-The noise of Alvarez street

Rain in a dry land                                
-Street flooding due to poor drainage infrastructure













The view from the top of my building
-Apartment life in general

My colleagues

Learning new things
The kindness of strangers
Valparaíso art

Watching the ships

Lots of small, family owned stores in walking distance
Fresh bread from the corner bakery
Palta on toast
Shopping at the feria
The view from the hills
Ascensors
Watching sea lions, Cerro Castillo,Yummy chorillanas
The stunning beauty of the country

Please look at the link on the left, A Story for Tomorrow, which will lead you to a video that summarizes the loveliness of this wonderful country.
¡Gracias, Chile!

Wednesday, July 9, 2014

Riot, Protest or Parade?

Strikes and protests are common in Chile. If you've been reading this blog from the beginning, you'll have read about how there have been significant student strikes for education reform since 2011. I was told at the beginning of the semester that this was supposed to be a very active strike year for the university students. This because the students were not happy about Bachelet's election-they didn't trust her promises about educational reform, since she'd made others that weren't fulfilled in her first term. Luckily for me, as well as my students the first semester came and went with only a couple of  one-day strikes so students could march over in Valpo at the main campus of PUCV.
Something I was warned about by the US State Department at intervals via emails was when protest marches were planned in Santiago, and to stay away from them. Often when marches are held in the capitol, there would be other protests in support around the country, so the emails applied to where I lived as well.

In my last week in Chile, fishermen in Portales (where we would go for fresh fish), marched on Congress, which is in Valparaíso, not in Santiago. They were protesting a law from last year that set quotas on certain fish. Well, when the police moved in to break up the march, which was not sanctioned, it turned into a riot at the Portales metro station. Things were set on fire, kiosks were pushed over and used as barriers against water cannon, and the battle spilled over onto the metro tracks and into the station. Rocks were thrown, tear gas, the whole nine yards. The metro was closed between the stop outside of my apartment over to the port for two days, as things were cleaned up. When I took the metro out to the port on my last weekend, I saw no sign that anything had happened two days before.

But this is what I got to see that day instead. A sanctioned protest!
I heard a band, and saw a crowd of people in the square by the Iquique battle memorial and went to take a look. I'd seen lots of people doing dance performances in recent weeks, so that's what I thought it was at first. When I got there, I realized it was the beginning of a protest. I knew it was sanctioned, because there were a few police on motorcycles blocking traffic from the planned route.
 There was a real festive air about the proceedings:

 The marchers were protesting how funding is distributed to public colegios (secondary schools).
This group's sign says they want higher quality and more subsidies:
 No to substandard nationalized education:
 There were many schools and towns represented-this banner says San Antonio was present for the right of parents to choose.
Yes, I know, I was supposed to stay away from protests. But there were families and kids marching, so I wasn't worried.
I don't know if this march was replicated in other parts of the country that day, but it was very well organized in Valpo. Later I talked to some of my colleagues about why they thought there were so many protests and marches in Chile. They confirmed what I thought-that due to the repressions during the dictatorship, people now exercise their rights with exuberance. But things must be done properly: you need to follow procedures, not do anything in an impromptu way. Even so, sanctioned protests often do turn ugly, which is why it is a good idea to avoid them...so after the march passed, I went on my way up on my last ascensor ride, where I saw a dog get off, then on again-it curled up, rode to the top and left with the rest of us.

Tuesday, July 8, 2014

Giant Chilean Hummingbirds

I never got a picture of one of these, but they are HUGE for a picaflor. It was quite common to see them in large groups, flying around a  red-blooming succulent (aloe succotrina, native to South Africa),which I saw in many places around Viña.
 Well, I decided to look up "giant hummingbird" today, after I got home (I'm back in Peoria, as of about 6 hours ago-nice to be warm again!). And I found out that the common name for patagona gigas is indeed the giant hummingbird.
I saw them more frequently in the winter, perhaps because there were fewer flowers out, and thus the birds were more concentrated around the flowers in bloom. Like humming birds I've observed in North America, they are quite aggressive, darting around and chasing off others that come to feed in the same local. They made similar sounds to the hummers I know up here in the north, which is what first caught my attention. Then when I first saw them, I was really surprised at their size-as big as a sparrow, or bigger, but not as chunky. They are not very showy in terms of coloration, but are pretty stunning because of how big they are.
I'm just speculating here, because I haven't seen anything about this in my brief research...but I wonder if their size has something to do with the colder climates where they are found. Perhaps they need to be bigger to be able to come out of torpor each morning in this type of climate?