Our future Windhorse Cafe site has been fortunate to be the host site of the English book exchange in Cuenca. Ex-pats that are now living in Cuenca come every Thursday morning or once in awhile to meet others, share conversations and to exchange a book they´ve read for another. I´ve just started using the event to share my baked goods. Today I made brownies and although they were less than perfect, they disappeared. Baking anything with chocolate at high altitude is still a challenge for me. Coffee is also shared. Folks are eager for us to get our cafe up and running but also encourage us to continue the book exchange as a weekly event. Used books are not cheap in Cuenca so an opportunity to trade something that one has read is a great opportunity.
Thursday, October 20, 2011
Thursday morning book exchange
Our future Windhorse Cafe site has been fortunate to be the host site of the English book exchange in Cuenca. Ex-pats that are now living in Cuenca come every Thursday morning or once in awhile to meet others, share conversations and to exchange a book they´ve read for another. I´ve just started using the event to share my baked goods. Today I made brownies and although they were less than perfect, they disappeared. Baking anything with chocolate at high altitude is still a challenge for me. Coffee is also shared. Folks are eager for us to get our cafe up and running but also encourage us to continue the book exchange as a weekly event. Used books are not cheap in Cuenca so an opportunity to trade something that one has read is a great opportunity.
Saturday, October 8, 2011
Aspire to offer Shambhala teachings in Ecuador
So some of you might wonder why Lucy and I decided to move to Ecuador. A big reason for us was the state of the U.S. economy contributing to the lack of opportunity for people of our ages (59 and 60) and millions of other Americans. With job opportunities so scarce, we were drawn to Ecuador by the chance to try being in business for ourselves with the possibility of becoming self-sufficient income with a much smaller investment than would be needed in the U.S. That possibility became concrete when we found and purchased a small adobe building in the historical center of Cuenca which we shall turn into Windhorse Cafe (pics in earlier blog). Still working on our residential visas and having to put in a working kitchen is teaching us even further patience.
Another dream of mine is to bring the Shambhala teachings as taught by Chogyam Trungpa Rinpoche, to Ecuador in a way that many Ecuatorians can find accessible. These secular teachings can be found in the book Shambhala: Sacred Path of the Warrior but are best experienced as a series of training levels that include extensive meditation instruction and practice. Shambhala training has been a great help to tens of thousands all over the world who have been searching for a way to find more peace and compassion in their lives. Cuenca, I feel, is at the stage of development where people are looking for an authentic spiritual path that addresses the lack of spirituality people are feeling in the modern world, yet does not ask to believe in something that is outside the world that we perceive with our senses.
So I shall see who is interested in studying the teachings and learning to meditate. If there is enough interest at some point, perhaps Shambhala training levels can be offered here in Cuenca. As our Tibetan prayer flags send wishes for happines for all beings we say:
May all beings enjoy profound, brilliant glory! KI KI, SO, SO!
Wednesday, September 28, 2011
We are moved in- the dogs too!
We have been straddling two cultures for the last year and a half. Now we are back in Ecuador and have moved into the house we purchased. Thanks to our friends in Ridgeland, Wisconsin who helped make this possible. The house was empty when we arrived so we are busy buying all the necessary household items necessary for middle class life in Ecuador. We have been here 8 days so far and the last two nights sleeping in a bed. We are thankful for what we have and each day seems a little easier as we find the things we need. Our dogs, Toky (native of Ecuador) and Boca, are settling in now. We would like to give them the run of our quarter acre yard but alas, the back fence is in need of repair. So we walk them almost every day on a leash while they are greeted by every dog in the barrio.....numerous and none on a leash. We like our barrio as it is very mixed with some people having plenty of money(beautiful houses anyway) and others of modest incomes. We still have plenty of chickens and cows around. None of the streets are paved. We can walk two blocks to the bus going downtown where the Windhorse Cafe is. More about the Windhorse later. For now we are concentrating on getting settled into our home. In another blog we hope to post all we have learned about taking two dogs to live in Ecuador. It was complicated but went off with nary a hitch. Here you see Lucy with the two dogs by our fireplace and some views from our house as well.
So stay tuned. We hope to see some of you here in Cuenca.
Tuesday, May 3, 2011
Back in Ecuador




Dear Friends, Lucy and I are back in Ecuador living in our little building in the historical center of Cuenca. We love our little adobe building which we are planning to turn into a breakfast/ lunch cafe. Lucy will specialize in pies (not the spanish word¨pies¨ which means ¨feet¨). Upstairs there is great space for yoga

Craig
Friday, July 24, 2009
Milk for Kids is a GO!!
Greetings to all. Lucy writing this time. We just learned today that "Milk for Kids", our project that we spent so much time researching and writing up last fall is fully funded and we can begin bringing it to fruition. Thank-you, thank-you to our numerous friends that have made donations and also to those that helped tell others about it. Our upcoming blogs may very well have photos of goat stables in progress, a training workshop, and GOATS!
Since school has been in recess, our activity has slowed a bit also. However, using our creativity we have found a variety of things to do. One, we hired a local metal worker to make us a small wood stove to heat our house in the chilly evenings. Folks from the community have been stopping by to see it and they all want to know how much it cost and who built it. One comment from an older man was, "Wow, that would work great for roasting guinea pig" (translated from his Kichwa/espanol). Now we have the additional job of hauling and splitting firewood. I´ve included a photo of the outside of our house . . . maybe you can see the tall smoke stack.
In the upper remote village where I taught English every Monday morning, we have organized Monday afternoon "educational game" time for all ages. We teach all ages to play checkers, chess, puzzles, and read numerous picture story books in Spanish. This has turned out to be very popular and the school classroom where we hold the session is full. A few adults, as well as teens and many elementary kids are attending. We may try sneaking in some environmental activities in the weeks to come.
The Foundation that serves youth and their families has been in a bit of recess also for the summer but a small group has been building an earthen block building for housing laying quail. The market for quail eggs is good in Ecuador. They say they are cholesterol free. So, Craig and I have gotten involved in the construction and I´ve included three photos. Can you find me, hoeing the dirt and water mix? Notice the two men up in the mold for the rammed earth block. Fun to watch them jumping and dancing up there.
Another photo is of "Marta", with her Mom, little brother and Craig on the day of her graduation from high-school. She was one of two girls to graduate this year thanks to scholarships they were awarded by the Gender and Diversity Commitee of Peace Corps. Craig and I nominated 6 girls for scholarships for the upcoming school year and all 6 were accepted! It really is a boost for them and their families.
Craig has been hauling his drill all over town, to drill a hole for the L.P. gas line so families can get their gas tank outside the house. He also has been using the drill to help install kitchen shelving. He is often thanked for his effort with a bag of potatoes, "oca" (a potato like root vegie), "habas" (lima beans, I think), and once we received honey.
Craig wants to add for all interested in his last entry about the small mystery animal that he identified it as a member of the wolverine family. . . "tayra" in English and "cabeza de mate" en espanol.
Friday, June 26, 2009
Sadness and Joy
Hi folks. It's been awhile hasn't it? Memorable events here for me have been: 1)moving into another house which has running water (usually) and more room for visitors to sleep, 2) a fantastic 2 day bike trip of more than 100 kilometers with our son Louis thru Sangay National Park, and 3) the arrival of a yet un labelled animal caught by a member of our community.
Life here is like life everywhere I suppose in that it (if you are truly alive and somewhat awake)often feels like you are standing under a shower with two simultaneous streams, of joy and sadness. The genuiness and resilience of the people here are a constant source of joy for me. At the same time there is sometimes and ignorance and even cruelty sometimes exhibited towards nature and things wild. One example of this was the capture of the yet un-named animal in the photo. When I came across it, it was hanging on exhibit in a tiny cage on the grounds of the foundation we work at. It was suffering greatly from thirst and fear, nearly dead. I naturally took it and put it in a bigger more comfortable container and tried to get it to drink. It drank a little and revived a little. I noticed a lot of blood in the water and found out later that those who had captured it had beat it with sticks, struck it with stones, and cut part of its tongue off. For this reason, by the next morning its tongue was so swollen it could hardly breath or drink and died a few hours later.
Somehow the death of this little (but feisty) animal became symbolic of all that humanity is doing to our planet. the sadness for me was all encompassing and I could hardly sleep. I told community members that only humans are truly capable of killing for diversion, to see another being suffer. Somehow this combination of ignorance and agression is killing us all. I still cry to think of how that little animal suffered. May we all cry for the thousands of beings that suffer in the same way each day.
In the photos you will see a couple of the bike trip. The "animalito" in the photo is now dead and stuffed. Carmen along side accompanied me in caring for the animal before it died and along with a number of other village members, was quite saddened on hearing it had died.
The last photos are of orchids in an orchidea garden we visited in Puyo (near the fast disappearing rain forest). We were honored to meet the man who started this wonder of nature. 30 years ago he bought desnuded and compacted cow pasture and started planting native trees and plants of all kinds. Now the beauty and biodiversity of this refuge is indescribable. Nature is totally in balance in his refuge and was an inspiration as to what one person can do to reverse the process of specie destruction and monoculture humans are inflicting on our sacred planet. May the Great Eastern Sun be victorious!
Tuesday, April 21, 2009
A year's gone by
I know we've lost many of you since we don't update this blog regularly. We've been at our site in San Bernardo, Ecuador for a year now. Our son, Louis, is now living in Ecuador too. He's teaching English at the IndoAmerica University and living with Miguel, our former foreign exchange son who lived a year with us in Glenwood City. The picture of Louis and me above is with our tennis partner, Nelson and his girlfriend on the court in Riobamba.
Below that is a group of young people who went out with Lucy and I to collect trash and recyclables on the streets of San Bernardo. The kids really got into it. Now if we could only motivate the adults!
The two bottom pics are of the composting toilet we built with funding from Farmer to Farmer. We are using it and really like it. After every time we go to the bathroom, we add a measure of wood shavings. As you can see, the composting takes place in the plastic barrel in which all the waste drops into. Obviously, when the barrel fills up, we take it out and replace it with an empty one. We got the idea after staying at a luxurious (by Ecuadorian standards) eco-lodge called the Black Sheep Inn: www.blacksheepinn.com Check them out!
The upper right picture is of a very sweet older Kichwa couple who have a great little farm and are very proud of it. This picture of them in their corn shows their pride and dignity.
The one year anniversary of our arrival in this Kichwa community is this week. We have learned to be comfortable here and look forward to one more year. Our garden is producing amazing red, Romano, and some head lettuce, swiss chard (a favorite of people here), cilantro, carrots, leeks, arugala, cabbage and brussel sprouts. Some WOOFERS from Alaska that we met here came out and stayed with us 4 days and helped to build a fence around the garden. What a big improvement to the garden to not have dogs fighting on top of the plants and it has kept the pig out too! We would love to have more of you visit in the upcoming year. Our service ends in April of 2010. Love, Craig and Lucy
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