Wednesday, June 25, 2014

Our Video Debut


Fruits in Belize from Heidi King on Vimeo.



There are many more fruiting trees we have discovered since thanks to our great guide, Wilson! Hope you enjoyed! - Heidi, Addie, Ryland

Friday, June 20, 2014

Not So Anonymous

We are approaching three months in and this life is starting to feel less like someone else's and more like my own.

  • The produce man, David, has started to know me and always offers me a free taste of some sort of fruit that I am unfamiliar with.  
  • We have become casual friends with many of the business owners like the wonderful French and Italian owners of Tutti Fruitti, a serious addiction of ours, and are warmly greeted with a smile and a familiar nod or wave.  
  • We know many of the children's names that run around town and several have just shown up on our porch from time to time anxious to play with the kids.  
  • We have scoped out the local only spots to buy fish (still a feat though...I feel compelled to do an exposĂ© "where did all the fishermen go?").  
  • We have been invited over for dinner, taken on a lovely sailing excursion, and been given a lesson or two on how to fish without a pole.  
  • We feel extremely comfortable being nearly the only white people that come to the local fĂștbol games in town at night.  
  • It's still a joy to ride our bikes everywhere and makes me feel less like an outsider (though this is far from the real reason we would or wouldn't be considered one).
  • We finally scouted out where to get $.25bz (12 cents US) "ideal" or "milky way" (frozen milk, sugar, and flavor...I think) in a little baggie that you bite off the corner of, another nice cool treat and easy on the envelope budget!!  
  • I know where in town to go to borrow tweezers to pull out the barbs of a sea urchin when needed.  
  • The kids have scouted out, with the help of some friends, many of the edible fruiting trees (stay tuned for a fun video tutorial from them).  
  • We know which local crazy guys to keep our distance from when they haven't had their meds.  
  • We have several people we would call if we are in a pinch or need a favor...and would be honored if we were on their list as well. 
  • More than once people have let us come back to pay for something when we didn't end up having the cash on us...always an indication of some familiarity and trust.  
  • We know not to touch the green caterpillars, that mango sap is like poison ivy, that there is a good dentist in town that can fix a chipped tooth, that banana tree sap/milk from the trunk will cleanse and heal a wound in a hurry, and that scorpions like damp dark places.  
  • We have seen a form of bioilluminesence in what we think were glowing jellyfish off of our dock, a spotted eagle ray, a manatee (only Addie saw that one), a blood moon, many tropical fish and coral, lots of iguana, and we haven't even gone on any excursions yet. We are waiting for YOU to come visit for a good excuse for us to go together! 
doing school on the pier

iguanas aren't so bad

best bread in town only BZ$2

best gelato you've ever had - Tutti Fruiti

fresh ingredients - Tutti Fruiti

Lorenzo, one of the nicest people around

All this to say that it's nice to know our way around this little piece of earth.  It's nice to not be so anonymous anymore.
-Heidi

Tuesday, June 10, 2014

Sailing by Addie

I'm so sorry I have not posted a blog in a long time. It's been really busy here, especially when we were sailing. The sailing has been really fun and interesting!! I love it!! If you keep reading then you can find out more!

Sailing The Optimist

So you know we started sailing. It's been great and we really love it!  We use these boats called optimists. To use them you steer with the tiller which is attached to the rudder. Plus, you have to keep pulling in the main sheet to go faster or slower. You are supposed to put the dagger board down in deep water and put it up in shallow water so it does not hit the ground. This diagram will help you.
                                                                                 

The Regatta

  In the sailing club you have a regatta. It's when all of the sailing clubs in Belize get together and have a big race called the regatta. It is really cool!! I really like it!! Anyways, the coaches can pick as many people as they want from their team to be in the regatta. The kids have to get a boat out in the morning at 7:30 and sail it to the beach to get ready for the race. First they have a meeting and see what the course is. Then they get breakfast and get their boats ready. This year my friend Olivia is sailing in it and a lot of other kids that their names would be too long to list right now. So the regatta is really long.  It is two days long. The first day takes 5 hours and 5 races.  Then on the second day it was 2 hours long and there were 2 races. After the regatta there were the award ceremonies and of course San Pedro wins because they practice every day and have pro coach. Well maybe some day I will be in the regatta and I will write about it!!!!


  
The Big Boat

That is me steering
So about 3 days ago Mr. Paul, the sailing coach, asked us if we would want to go on his big boat with him and we said yes. We were supposed to go on Friday but it rained :( ... ok, thats all.  We did not get to go...bye.

I'm just kidding.  If you fell for that I'm sorry but this is more interesting. So we decided to go on monday instead. It was a long weekend because I was so excited. Anyways, I woke up really early this morning even if we didn't have to. We packed up a lot of food and left the house. When we got to the boat it was really big and had really big sails. It was called a trimaran which is like a catamaran.  The boat had a little cabin and it had two seats in the back and that was where you steer.   It also had two little bench like things in the front of the boat.  We set sail and headed for an island.  While we were heading there Mr. Paul asked if I wanted to steer, so I steered the boat about half of the way.  It was way cooler than sailing one of the optys.  When we got to the Caye we got out and started to snorkel.  We saw lots of star fish and big angel fish.  There were lots of coral where we were and I really loved snorkeling there.
After that we swam to the island and looked around.  I saw a humungous iguana and saw an old man who lived on the island canoeing in an old row boat up to his island. We said hi and talked to him for awhile. He was really interesting and said he has lived on the island for 55 years and raised 3 children there. After, we swam back to the boat and had lunch and I got to sail back home. I had a really great time and maybe will go again some day!!



- Addie

Tuesday, June 3, 2014

The Cool Experiment by Ryland

Last week we did this awesome experiment...we made a plastic bag explode!  It was really cool. You should have seen it.  I'm going to show you how it's done.
What you need:  
Sandwich-size bag, Paper towel, Measuring spoon, 2 Tablespoons baking soda, Measuring cup, 1/2 cup white vinegar, 1/4 cup of warm water


First, fill the bag with warm water. Next, make sure it has no leaks in it. Then add vinegar. Once your done get a paper towel and fold it in a envelope and add baking soda in it.  Once your done with that fold it into a tinier square.  Go outside and put it in.  Then seal it quickly. Then shake it up and throw it on the ground to watch it explode! I hope you get to do it.  It's really fun to watch this chemical reaction.

The first time we did it outside.  This time we did it in the sink.
- Ryland

Friday, May 30, 2014

A Night in Red Bank



We had our first true Belizean experience a couple weekends ago.  We were invited by Ruffina (who lives downstairs) to come to her Mayan village for a day and meet her family.  Unfortunately Richard could not come with us because of some prior engagements (sadly that is why I hardly have any decent pictures to document the trip), but the kids and I set out for this adventure.  We start the journey with a 15 minute ride on the "Hokey Pokey" (fitting name) little water taxi.  This taxi runs in the lagoon behind our house and across the water to the larger village of Independence.  This is where a lot of the people who work in Placencia live as it is much less expensive.  Then we take a 5 min. taxi to the bus station and a 20 min. bus ride to the village of Red Bank.

As we ride along (standing room only) we can see the mountains rise in the distance and slowly grow as we near the village.  They seem to just petrude out of no-where almost like large bolders stacked up on flat ground and covered in a lush layer of greenery.  Skinny pine trees rise awkwardly along the road flanked in low growing weeds and a few palm trees.  We come to a dirt road that would surely be missed if I were driving myself.  It is unmarked and doesn't have enough ware for me to think that this is really the only road to Red Bank. The bus turns in and continues another 10 min. down the dirt road.   I begin to see several thatch roof houses and a cute hand painted sign "Welcome to Red Bank" signifying our arrival.  I see Ruffina ahead of us running out towards the moving bus.  The bus driver sees her as well.  I grab my stuff and riffle through my purse to find change...only $2bz ($1US).  We have Wilburt's (Ruffina's baby) walker in hand (as she had asked us to bring) and run to greet her.   She leads us back to her parents' house.  It is more of a small compound than just a house.  The kitchen is outside on a dirt floor covered by a thatched roof.  There are several hammocks and a few plastic chairs...this is where much of their time is spent together (understandably).  A small concrete house sits just adjacent.  It has two bedrooms with sheets hanging as doors and one large rather empty room.  One hammock hangs from the rafters here, a small shelf, a tv with a blanket hung over it, a table filled with bowls and dishes, a bench, refrigerator, and an unused oven is in the corner.  Water is piped in to their compound by one single pipe that is outside somewhere between the kitchen and house area. This is where they do dishes and laundry (if they aren't taking it to the river to wash).  They also have a outdoor shower set up here in a little wood structure.  The outhouse is a ways from all of what I just described and is a wooden structure with a dirt floor and two cement holes that go into the ground.
helping with dishes


roasting cocoa beans
Ruffina's mom grinding the cocoa





ground cocoa
Ruffina's mom is there to greet us...she welcomes us with a warm smile and hug.  I love it already.  The kids run around chasing hens and little baby chicks that run freely everywhere.  They scope out the mango trees and pick a few green mangos to munch on.  Lunch is already cooking in a pot on the mud hearth under the thatched roof.  After some chatting and baby holding a large plate of lunch is served....it is DELICIOUS and the kids gobble up every bit of it (rice and beans and a piece of chicken).  This has to be the most flavorful rice and beans I have had to date while here.  We walk around the village seeing mostly thatched roof houses and visit some friends that we had made previously.  Afterwards we get a lesson on the cocoa bean (eating the sweet tangy flesh around the bean, roasting and grinding the cocoa, and then making a sweet chocolate drink).  We all pile in the back of a truck and ride through the jungle to a beautiful large river, some waterfalls, and plenty of swimming holes.  The water is cold and refreshing and we have a blast swimming, jumping off rocks, and racing across the water. It feels like the mountains of Western NC a little and makes me thankful for a common ground (in many ways).  We return and should be jumping back on the bus to return home at this point, but it doesn't take much convincing to talk us in to staying the night.  At this point I still don't know where we will sleep, but we are "all in" and so grateful for the generous offer of hospitality.


Once again we gather around the hearth but this time to get a tutorial on making corn tortillas.  They can't really understand why my mother or grandmother didn't teach me to make tortillas and perplexed out how we have gotten by this long without this knowledge (Mom, a complete oversight on your part!!).  My favorite question of the night came from Ruffina's sweet father who asked, after finding out that we were staying the night, "How will your husband eat if you don't go home?"  I LOVED it...the realization that we live in two totally different worlds.  Sharing a meal with them was so precious to us all.  We can't wait to return.  We were given one of the two beds that night and felt so cared for and went to sleep listening to a little radio playing sweet church music in their Mayan language.   I hope the kids remember this forever...I will!


- Heidi

Saturday, May 24, 2014

I Am Small

I have a nearly completed post drafted about our beautiful experience in a sweet mayan village with Ruffina's family.  It was precious and we didn't want to leave, but I will save that for the next time.  

Tonight I just had something else on my mind.  It has been an interesting week. One of mixed emotions and a realization that life follows you wherever you go.  I started back into some old ruts and trivial thought patterns.  I began to think about all that I am not and overwhelmed by all of those that are.  There are so many amazing, brilliant, inspiring, world changing people out there and I began to feel the emptiness from being average. I can hear the reaction to this...some will want to rescue me from what they think is despair and convince me that I am not average, that I am "woman," full of beauty and strength, some will role their eyes (Jeremiah) and just think that I am looking for edification by using a sort of reverse psychology, and some will identify and liken to the feeling.  But I am honestly just being honest.  I am not great.  I yell at my kids.  I get lazy.  I seek out fulfillment in the wrong places.  I am mediocre at most things...in fact all things, but the story doesn't end there.

I sat tonight on the roof of our house in anticipation of the meteor shower and I felt infinitely small.  I looked at the magnificent sky as the clouds began to roll back as if putting out on display their finest jewels and I sat there in awe.  And there it came.  As if on the wind, this peace blew in.  The peace in knowing that I am small and insignificant in this big world...but I am known.  I am a sinner, but am forgiven.  I am a spec, but a spec that has the very breath of God in it.  I am ill-equipped for my job here, but I am trusted with the task.  I am lost, but I am found. I am utterly incapable of changing the world (I wouldn't even know where to start).  But I don't have to.  God has got this.  He created the stars and put to motion the workings of the universe.  His plan is bigger than the place that I live or the breadth of my time here.  He knows the future and the past.  No mystery is unsolved to him...he is the author.  Sometimes we just need to feel small.  Take it in.  Enjoy the privilege of watching the world from our particular vantage point wherever that may be...and love each other. Show grace, see the best in people, place others before ourselves, give even when we feel we have nothing, and be grateful.  Tonight I am grateful...that I happened to look up, that the clouds rolled away, and that my vision was corrected and my focus adjusted.  This life right now is not about me finding my purpose (that sounds so privileged and first world when put it in the light of my surroundings), but to love God and love others. period.


P.S.  I gave the kids a week off of writing their posts so look for them this coming week!  Also...I promise not to always write heavy reflective posts!!  We are loving it here and have so many awesome stories to share.  
-Heidi

Thursday, May 15, 2014

The Boom


The Boom

I assume
I'm going to get hit by the boom
Because I was going zoom zoom
And I didn't have enough room
I swept the broom
And I went shaboom
I just knew I was doomed

by Ryland