Leidy (secretary), me, Jaime (TNC), and Kennedy (CIIFEN) |
Wednesday, May 30, 2012
Here is a pic of the team in Manglaralto. Jaime is my direct supervisor from The Nature Conservancy, but I will mainly be working with Kennedy who is from CIIFEN (International Center for Investigation of the El Niño Phenomenon). Everyone is super nice and very relaxed... a wonderful combination!
Sunday, May 27, 2012
Iguana Park, aptly named. |
Who's that on the church roof? |
Yet another childhood experience that American kids will never enjoy, sigh. |
A lily among thorns. |
This town is sponsored by Lily Pulitzer. |
Our cellphone numbers are: 09-186-6416 (Marshall) and 08-885-1706 (Trinity).
We hope all is well and will post more pictures of Manglaralto!
Tuesday, May 22, 2012
This is my (Trinity's) first post, and I must let you all know that I am not nearly as well-written and creative as my dear husband. But I'll do my best....
Marshall and I are making final preparations for Ecuador, and I get a new email everyday from my supervisors Jaime and Silvia. So far, here's the news...
1. Apparently my name is strange and the people I work with will have a hard time saying it. Having spent 2 years in Colombia (Ecuador's northern neighbor), I'm surprised that my name (pronounced TREE-NEE-TEE) is so hard to say in Ecuador since Colombians had no trouble with it. So, I'm thinking of changing my name to Trilili to make it a bit easier...
2. Since I will be interning with The Nature Conservancy, my supervisor Jaime sent me a plan of work which says....
I don't really understand what this means, but apparently I'll be doing a lot of supporting which I think I'm pretty good at...
3. We get to Guayaquil on a holiday, so we'll be heading to a nice hotel for two days to rest and gear up for our move to Manglaralto. It's only two days, and I don't know about Marshall, but I'm going to treat it as a second honeymoon :)
So, that's about all the news I have for today. Four days to go until Ecuador!
Un abrazote,
Trilili
Marshall and I are making final preparations for Ecuador, and I get a new email everyday from my supervisors Jaime and Silvia. So far, here's the news...
1. Apparently my name is strange and the people I work with will have a hard time saying it. Having spent 2 years in Colombia (Ecuador's northern neighbor), I'm surprised that my name (pronounced TREE-NEE-TEE) is so hard to say in Ecuador since Colombians had no trouble with it. So, I'm thinking of changing my name to Trilili to make it a bit easier...
2. Since I will be interning with The Nature Conservancy, my supervisor Jaime sent me a plan of work which says....
-
Support the
development of a climate change adaptation strategy with local communities in
the dry forests
-
Support in the
organization and development of workshops with local communities in the dry
forests
-
Support the
implementation of climate change adaptation activities with local communities
in the dry forests
-
Support in
compilation and systematization of relevant information regarding climate
change adaptation

3. We get to Guayaquil on a holiday, so we'll be heading to a nice hotel for two days to rest and gear up for our move to Manglaralto. It's only two days, and I don't know about Marshall, but I'm going to treat it as a second honeymoon :)
So, that's about all the news I have for today. Four days to go until Ecuador!
Un abrazote,
Trilili
Wednesday, May 16, 2012
Here are some helpful tidbits as we get to know this wonderful country of Ecuador.
- Population as of 2010: 12,646,068 (who were those 68 people?)
- Capital: Quito (1.6 million)
- People group breakdown: Spanish-speaking (59%), Quichua (39%), Lowland tribes (1%), Other (1%)
- Main exports: oil, flowers, shrimp, bananas (the world's largest exporter; good thing I like bananas!)
- 82% Catholic, 5% Protestant, 8% Unaffiliated, 5% Other
- Amazon jungle in the east, high Andean Sierra in center, coastal plain on Pacific Coast, Galapagos Islands 1,000 km off the coast.
- Information taken from Operation World
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I found this photo online; apparently it was taken in Ecuador. Have you ever seen this many bananas?! |
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