Monday when I got off the plane from Puerto Maldonado (the first jungle) with my uncle, I called my friend to double check the time we'd be leaving to go visit her family in a different jungle. I was expecting the answer to be 4pm but it ended up being 1pm. Considering it was 12:55, I saw that as pretty much impossible. So, my uncle and I rushed home, unpacked and repacked, stuffed some lunch down our throats and we were off in different directions, him the airport to return to the States, and I went to catch a ride with my friends in a later van than the 1:00 bus. I went with my friend, Wendy, the 2nd grade teacher I work with, along with her brother (Uri), sister (Nilda), niece, and family friend, (David). We took a 6 hour van ride to Quillabamba and it was extremely nauseating, the whoooole time. I sat in the back row with the girls and 2 of them got sick on the way. We wound around mountains until finally we drove straight, but the rest of the time was on unpaved, very bumpy roads. We stayed the night at Wendy's aunt's house and woke up early the next morning to take a 5 hour busride to the jungle, where Wendy and her family used to live on a farm. When we got to the main city, we had to take a taxi up a mountain and the taxi dropped us off in the middle of nowhere. It turned out with all of our luggage that we had to hike down a hill to get to a river. There was some sort of cable car the family owned that took us to the other side of the river and there we landed at their cousin's farm. They have a type of bird that make nests that hang from the tree, rather than sit on the branches. Look at the picture. Its really neat. It was a really good experience to go and live with Peruvians, ones that live in the jungle none the less. They weren't any sort of tribe people. You can see in the pictures, they look just like the rest of the Peruvians, but the cool thing is, they live almost entirely off of their land. They grow all kinds of fruits, bananas, plantains, oranges, lemons, sweet lemons (they call them the poor man's lemon because you can make lemonade without sugar), some other sort of citrus fruit, coconuts, and papaya. They also grow coffee beans, cocoa, other beans, some sort of Chinese potato, and plenty of yuca. As for animals, they had turkeys, chickens, ducks, guinea pigs, pigs, and goats all living on their property, along with dogs, but they don't eat them. They had a really cute pet monkey too. Their family lives on a really huge farm and you need to hike or take some trails to other family members houses so they have their own privacy, but at the same time, everyone's close, physically and relationally.
We headed back to Quillabamba, but not empty handed. It's a tradition they have to give a lot of gifts when they leave so we left with 3 HUGE sacks of oranges and other citrus fruits, a bushel of plantains, and 3 hens. We stayed in Quillabamba for a couple of days and hung out with their cousin who works at a sandal store. We kept her company one night as you can see in one of the pictures. It was an 8 hour busride back to Cusco, 2 hours longer than the van, but no one got nauseous that time. That left me a day and a half to recooperate before heading back to school on Monday!
It was a beautiful place and I'm so grateful that Wendy invited me. That's an experience that not many people get to have and I had a really great time.
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