As I am fighting a cold I have received some bright news to help me get through the day (besides cough drops and endless amounts of hot tea). Besides this personal blog I also contribute to the DiscoverHope blog together with Maggie Miller, the founder of DHF and my super supporter boss. Our DHF blog got voted as one of the Top 100 Social Entrepreneurship blogs by the Daily Reviewer. Those of you dedicated blog followers will find that the DiscoverHope blog (Titled: Adventures in Hope) is very similar to this Live Light blog (minus the personal juice stuff and plus the Directors Point of View) Check it out: http://thedailyreviewer.com/top/social-entrepreneurship/2
Who - hoo!
Tuesday, September 29, 2009
Top 100! Whoa!
Monday, September 28, 2009
City Tour!
I toured Cajamarca's tourist sites with some of our village bank women this weekend. The office of tourism invited us to participate in free guided city tours to celebrate World Tourism Day. The women had a fabulous time. Many of them had never been to any of Cajamarca's tourist sites, although they have lived here all their life. It was an honor for me to walk the historic sites with them and a joy to see their faces full of interest and surprise. They loved seeing pictures of how things were in the days of the Inca in the archeological musuem, and compare with their lives right now, as there are some similarities. Many of the women that went on the tour are also part of our literacy circles. They walked around with pencil and paper taking notes because their teachers are going to quiz them next week. A class field trip - a total new experience for them! Pictured below are is one of the groups I toured with this weekend; We are pictured in front of the "Rescue room" - the historic capture of the Inca king Atahualpa by the Spaniards that changed the face and course of Cajamarca and made it into the colonial city it is today.
Friday, September 25, 2009
Art in the Plaza
Holidays, Events, Festivals, anything kinda BIG in Peru...I always hear about it the day beforehand. That was the case with this long-weekend Art Festival. Hugo found out about it only days before too. Starting Wednesday through Sunday there is Art in the Central Plaza; paintings, sculptures, photographs....Hugo put two sculptures on display - here you can see us playing around with his Nail Chair sculpture.
Wednesday, September 23, 2009
Cake Bake Break

So we had two semi-cooked cakes on Tuesday when we finished our bakery course. One of the cakes fell in the middle and the other one was lacking some "fluff." We decorated anyway. Blanca, our new bakery teacher, was excellent at giving step by step instructions and actually giving the students the bakery tools so that they could practice and get the feel of the different decorating techniques. Although we had some baking issues the women were satisfied customers at the end of class as they each got to taste the 2 cakes. Delicious! Perfect! But, the comment that I enjoyed the most: "This class was like baking at home, better than when we went to the restaurant for (bakery) class, here it is like we are family and we are cooking together."
Despite the oven break, missing bakery tools and electricity shortage - it is better to bake in the Hope House compared to other kitchens. There you have it folks!
Tuesday, September 22, 2009
House Work
My weekends have turned into just another weekday filled with work, not DiscoverHope Fund work, but house work....and lots of it. I can't recall when my Sundays turned into work days, but then again I can't recall when I had a free, relaxing Sunday. All this work has to pay off right? Here are some pictures of new things that have been built, planted, created in the past month-ish.
This past Sunday was an all-out planting party in the burning sun. Papaya, avocado, orange and berry trees are now (hopefully) taking root in our front yard. There was lots of weeding, transporting good soil and just all out physical labor going on the past 2 Sundays. The construction workers built an entry way into the country house complex and put a rooftop on the 'extra bedroom' room that is located next to the entry way of our apartment. It is a lot of chaos and noise and cement and change. With each week I feel like we are getting closer to having a really special wedding spot....it is just so much more sweat than I had imagined. But, come January there will be no more sweat, just bliss!
Friday, September 18, 2009
Who else is having a bad week? Just knit!
Yesterday I brought my own knitting project to our scarf crochet class since it was a relaxed class and it gave me a chance to chat it up with our women. I found out everyone was having a bad week filled with bad luck. On one hand it comforted me that I wasn't the only one dealing with some disappointing and frustrating things, on the other hand my heart ached for our women.
Andrea, who milks cows and daily sets her milk in front of her house in her 50 litre steel containers, was robbed. Her two milk containers that cost $100 each have to be replaced and she has to pay for it. Lizeth and her husband have a combi and provide public transportation for daily income, but the combi van broke this week and needs more than $1,000 of repairs on the motor. Money which isn't easy to come by, especially when her children have been sick and in the emergency room this month. Nancy has three girls, all with chicken pox. Socorro parents are aging and ailing and she needs to find money to take care of them.
And so the conversation went...but slowly it turned into advice and jokes and laughter and our problems were put in the back of our minds. Everyone was concentrating on their scarf. In another world. And there wasn't a problem in the room.
Thursday, September 17, 2009
Peruvian Planning
The energy that goes into Peruvian planning far surpasses planning I have ever had to do in the U.S. These past couple of weeks I have been working diligently to plan a trip for our women to the famous (tourist) co-operative Granja Porcon. Porcon is known for many community elements: reforestation, yummy milk products, textiles and above all of this the ability to run a community co-operatively. A number of the village bank women in town have commented about the desire to form a business together and rent a space to jointly sell their goods. So I thought what better place than the Granja Porcon to take our women on a field trip? Exchange experiences with the Porcon women and get a sense of the steps they need to take to jointly work together.
I worked on a number of official letters (oficios) - the only slow way to get things done around here - this month. One of the oficios I personally took up to the Granja (1 hr. north of Cajamarca) to hand deliver to the General Manager to ask for a group discount for entrance fees. After a month of back and forth Oficios we got our reply - YES, we were welcome, come, visit!
So I called yesterday to confirm that our educational encounter with the women was being set up and we could exchanges experiences and have time to ask questions with these savvy co-op women. The reply I got, contrary to previous replies throughout the month, we can not attend to you the day you want to come up. Pedro, the 2nd guy in charge, is out of town and so are all of his back-ups.
I kept my cool and tried not to yell to much at Pedro. Could he not have told me this in the beginning of the month? Before I signed up more than 30 women for this trip? Alast, my heart sank as I couldn't fight with the forces that be in peruvian planning. I had made a good faith effort, but this time my effort wasn't going to lead to a field trip to Porcon.
On a positive note, my dear friend and DHF rescue worker Vicki, came to our rescue. Vicki works in the office of tourism and she offered to let our women take advantage of World Tourism Day next weekend (when we were planning our Porcon trip) and take a free city tour of the tourist sites around the Plaza de Armas. It's not Porcon, but it will have to due for those that have their heart set on site seeing.
