|
Weekly Edition Newspaper: July 13 - July 19, 2007 | San José Costa Rica
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||
| Volunteer
Programs Offer Enriching Way to Experience Southern Caribbean |
|||||||||||||||||||||||
|
By Ann Antkiw |
|||||||||||||||||||||||
Volunteering can be a life-enriching experience whatever age you are. Immersing yourself in another culture while sharing your time, expertise and love with those less fortunate can be the adventure of a lifetime. A recent visit with Tropical Adventures, based in the southern Caribbean beach community of Puerto Viejo, was a fascinating and eye-opening experience. Executive director Scott Pralinsky, director Isaac García and volunteer coordinator Laura Palomo took two days out of their busy schedules to show this Tico Times contributor a variety of projects and allow her to observe the volunteers working at their daily tasks and meet their host families. Tropical Adventures was founded in 2005 and is a subsidiary of Casa Milagro, a nonprofit foundation in the United States and Costa Rica that is also funding two projects in the Central Valley. The organization offers volunteer tour packages for individual travelers, families and groups interested in exploring the culture, contributing to the communities, learning the language and exploring the natural beauty of Costa Rica, according to Pralinsky. Volunteers receive an orientation and training program before being placed in projects best suited to their interests or special skills.
“Finding the volunteers is not a problem, but finding suitable homestays and materials for them to use for their projects can be difficult,” Pralinsky said. “We really appreciate it when volunteers bring their own supplies, especially books in English.” Palomo, a city girl from San José, arrived in Puerto Viejo eight months ago and never stops working. Riding around town on her bicycle with cellular phone in hand, she keeps close tabs on all the volunteers, deals with problems that arise, communicates with host families and schedules meetings and Spanish classes. “We provide all our volunteers with cellular phones and bicycles; it makes my life much easier,” she said with a smile. “One has to realize that many volunteers need special attention at first,” Palomo added. “They are adjusting to the cultural shock of coping with a very different lifestyle; however, most of them settle down quickly and love the experience.” Sunday was the volunteers' day off, and gave us the opportunity to meet a few at home with their host families. We visited Veronica Gordon-Crooks, who runs a small, Caribbean-style vegetarian restaurant in her home and has been hosting volunteers for 20 years.
New arrivals Eva Jannotta and Tzipora Wagner, high school students from Washington, D.C., are working on two projects: teaching English at the Puerto Viejo elementary school; and helping at the Iguana Farm on the Keköldi Indigenous Reserve, a few kilometers outside of town. They also help with beach cleanup, mandatory for volunteers. Casey Riesing shares Jannotta and Wagner's large, airy, upstairs bedroom with private bath. A high school senior from the U.S. state of Wisconsin, she is in Puerto Viejo for three weeks after searching the Internet for volunteer programs. All three were happy campers and said they loved Gordon-Crooks' delicious food. We also met Ashley Rhea Labonté, a student at Northeastern University in Boston, Massachusetts. She bubbled with energy and enthusiasm about her host family, Gerardo Taylor, Idalia Solano and daughter Wendi. “They are wonderful people,” she said. “Idalia makes the best bread in Puerto Viejo. I can't get enough of it.” Some volunteers prefer to stay at the comfy, homey volunteer house, which offers shared bedrooms and a communal kitchen, while others pay for their own accommodations in town. Anthropology student Megan Conners, also from Massachusetts, works at the day care and nutritional center in Puerto Viejo, helping with 25 children, ages 2 to 5. “It's a wonderful experience,” she said. “They love playing games and coloring. I also teach them how to eat at table, wash their hands and clean their teeth.” The government-managed center, a blessing for working mothers, has one paid teacher and a cook, but always needs help and welcomes volunteers. The center monitors the children's nutritional needs and provides two meals and two snacks a day, as well as monthly nonperishable food packages for families in need. At an orientation at the Iguana Farm, Jannotta and Wagner soon realized their job had its hazards. Their chores included cleaning the iguana's cages and were told rubber boots and insect repellent were a must when foraging in the jungle for the iguanas' food. The breeding and rescue center was started 17 years ago on the Keköldi Indigenous Reserve by Bribrí women Gloria Mayorga and Juana Sánchez. “We wanted to protect and breed iguanas native to the area as they were being killed for eating and depleted by deforestation,” Mayorga said. “Once they're fully grown, we release them back into their natural habitat.” A tour of the Iguana Farm, a day hike or an overnight stay at the remote indigenous community on the reserve helps provide income for the families, as does revenue from sales of locally made handicrafts at the Iguana Farm's small gift shop. Back in town at the elementary school, Labonté organizes educational activities for second-graders, and slow learners get special tutoring in Spanish and English from Nick Miklowski of the U.S. city of Atlanta, who is taking a month's vacation to volunteer. Aisha Rowe, on vacation from England, has decided to stay and help tutor indefinitely. Other projects include working with the Bribrí and Cabécar indigenous communities in the Talamanca Mountains, where volunteers assist in community development and educational support. They also help market local chocolate products made by Bribrí women and promote rural tourism projects (see sidebar). For those interested in conservation and wildlife, opportunities include organic and medicinal plant farming, reforestation projects and turtle watching in the Gandoca-Manzanillo National Wildlife Reserve. Volunteers must be prepared to work at least 20 hours a week. Program durations are unlimited, but have a minimum of two weeks. The cost for two weeks is $1,195, and each extra week is $195. This includes project placement and training, accommodation with a host family, three meals a day and round-the-clock, in-country emergency services. Volunteers receive a letter or evidence of volunteer service hours. It's helpful but not essential for volunteers to have a working knowledge of Spanish. Spanish classes are available and range from 16 to 32 hours ($160-320). For more information, visit www.mytropicaladventure.com, or call 862-2336 in Costa Rica or 1-800-832-9419 toll-free in the United States and Canada.
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Go to: The Tico Times | Tropical Adventures | Banana Azul | Puerto Viejo Satellite Map, News and Info |
|||||||||||||||||||||||