I swore in as a Peace Corps Volunteer two months ago. The ceremony was beautiful. What truly made it special was that my host brother and sister from my training community came to see me off. We exchanged a very tearful goodbye. I miss them so much and will definitely visit them as soon as possible. I’ve had the best luck with host families in Paraguay. My new host family is amazing- they are very good people and the hardest workers I’ve ever met. They are always working, whether that be in construction, fishing, maintaining or harvesting from their chacra, painting, cutting the grass, cooking, or cleaning. And they do it all in flip flops.
A couple weeks after I first got to site, my host family took me out on their boat to one of the islands nearby to work in their chacra where they grow pineapples, melons, bananas, and mandioca. Gliding down the canal between two densely forested islands in their boat, it finally hit me that I’m living in South America. I harvested mandioca with my host brother Kevin by cutting down the plant and pulling out the roots forcefully but carefully so they wouldn’t break off in the ground. Later I helped peel the mandioca with my host dad and brother. In the time it took for me to peel one, they had each peeled three or four.
On Christmas Eve, we had a big dinner (with chicken asado for me), listened to music and danced in the driveway. Then right at midnight, we jumped in the car and went down to the playa to visit my abuelos’ house on the playa where most of the family was congregated (shouting Feliz Navidad! to everyone we passed on the street). Everyone was so happy to see each other when it officially became Christmas. The kids who weren’t fast asleep shot off small firecrackers. Then we visited my great-aunt and our neighbor for a while. With the exception of food (predominantly sopa, a Paraguayan cake-like dish) and a couple gifts for the kids, there weren’t any gift exchanges. On Christmas Day, we all took it easy. This was the first Christmas I’ve ever spent away from my family and I’m so thankful that we were able to talk that morning. While it isn’t easy being away, it was fun to celebrate the Christmas holiday season in another culture.
Have I mentioned how beautiful my community is? There are horses everywhere! Some are in fenced-in fields, but the majority of them roam free through the town (as do the cows and chickens). I’m also surrounded by wetlands. It’s normal to see cows and horses “waist” deep in water munching on emerging vegetation. Cows, chickens, horses, oh my!
My primary contact during my service is the directora, or principal, of the elementary school. I’ll be teaching English in the school to all grades, kinder through sixth, two days a week (40 minutes per grade). I’ll also be teaching about the wildlife and ecosystems in Paraguay, animal classes and genera, the water cycle and aquifers, and local environmental issues as often as I can. My remaining time will be spent forming and doing projects with an eco-club, working with students at the high school, working with the municipality in Ayolas (the main town about 15km away) on trash management issues and recycling, working in eco-tourism, tree planting, composting, gardening projects… and anything else I can do.
Last week, with the help of two of mi compañeros in Peace Corps, Manuel and Susannah, and a local environmental youth group Jovenos Unidos, I held an environmental summer camp for eight to twelve-year-old kids in my town. Each day had a different theme (Animals, Plants, Water and Wetlands, Trash and Recycling) with about 20-25 kids attending each day. We had a hydrogeologist give a presentation with a water cycle model and had 50 trees donated from the Entidad Binacional Yacyreta in Ayolas. It was a success!
Although it’s a bit of a pain getting to the main town, I have a couple of Peace Corps friends here, Que suerte! There’s a panadería in town with actual coffee and decent wifi. I’m currently sitting at a table by the window watching dogs roam around the street and people sitting in chairs sharing tereré outside. It’s hot here. Coming from Texas, I didn’t think the Paraguayan heat would be that different from what I was used to during the Texas summer. But I didn’t think about the how much stronger the sun would be here or about the fact that air conditioning is a rarity.
I’ve had some interesting experiences in my site so far, including getting stuck between the iron bars of our window panes in an attempt to “help” when we all got locked out of the house (and having to be electric-sawed out of said window), and riding a borrowed bike the 15km to the closest town during a rainstorm and then getting a flat tire halfway through my journey. Both were invaluable experiences.
This makes me wonder what people remember about me when I leave in two years. The first volunteer in my site is known for loving her dog so much that she took him back with her to the states when her service ended. They tell me this story and laugh and laugh. Hopefully they’ll remember me as someone who loved animals and nature and not as the girl that got stuck in the window. But we’ll see. I’ve got two years to do other ridiculous things.
(P.S. I wanted to add more photos to this post, but an array of technical difficulties are preventing me from doing that so I’ll leave you with this small glimpse of paradise on the river.)





Our group starting our vegetable garden in our training community.
An incredible chakra (vegetable garden) that’s owned and managed by one of my neighbors and her team. They’re growing lettuce, chard, beets, cilantro, onions, green onions, green peppers, and pretty much everything your heart could desire.
Our Pilar group in front of Para la Tierra with current Peace Corps volunteers Bridgette and Chance.
We were so ready to get onto the river!
Me with a handsome kururu (sapo, toad).
Mi mama is a hair dresser and she made my hair chuchi (fancy) for a fiesta with my host sister and brother.
Mi abuela makes beautiful Ñanduti, which is a traditional Paraguayan embroidered lace.







