06 October 2000,  Managua, Nicaragua

Early mornings before sunrise the kittens over my head wake up and start
meowing, beating my alarm clock to the punch by thirty minutes.  They're the
second litter of kittens that's been born and raised on top of my roof since I
moved to Managua, and these fuzzy little guys are driving me just as crazy as
their predecessors did back in June.  But not much else is new in Managua, so
I've been escaping weekends and holidays to wander my way through the
Nicaraguan countryside in search of a little peace and to remember why I stayed
on in Central America.
 
Before the seasonal rains began to fall in earnest I traveled to a little
fishing town on the Pacific shoreline called El Transito.  Over two years ago a
Peace Corps friend of mine had been a volunteer in that quiet little corner of
Central America and had I visited it when Steve was still there perhaps I'd
have seen it with different eyes.  But instead I traveled to the coast with a
Nicaraguan family, and was able to experience El Transito not from my own
American point of view from theirs.  The currents were too strong to encourage
swimming in the open Pacific that weekend, but we spent our time instead
scrambling over the rocks looking for crustaceans and taking dips in the tide
pools that fill in behind an enormous volcanic seawall that runs parallel to
the coast.  There, instead of striking the beach, the waves strike the rocks
and then thunder up and over them, drenching you in a frightening roar of sound
and a sudden  burst of water.


Not long afterwards, Ericka and I took advantage of the two Nicaraguan
independence days (celebrating independence first from Spain and then from the
short-lived Central American Union) to venture south to Costa Rica.  This trip
was my third to Costa Rica, but Ericka's first, and again I was fortunate
enough to experience the country through the eyes of a Nicaraguan.  Although
the Costa Ricans are no fans of Nicaraguans their economy is based largely on
cheap Nicaraguan labor, and physically the two peoples are indistinguishable
from each other.  So the Nicaraguans in Costa Rica are everywhere, but they
remain unobtrusive.  Not until I talked loudly about living in Nicaragua and
how much I loved it, could I coax any of them out of hiding.  Costa Rica We
stayed with Latin American friends of Ericka's in a little apartment painted in
the colors of the ocean, venturing downtown to look in the store windows and at
the National Museum's collection of pre-Columbus gold figurines.  Farther out
of town, we visited Volcán Arenal, Central America's most active volcano, which
on most nights glows red with lava and hot magma in a frightening reminder of
how liquid the earth is beneath our feet.  That same evening at the nearby hot
springs we unwound from a long day on the bus and watched the moon rise through
the clouds.

For the next few weeks my vacationing days are through, as the hurricane
Mitch program grows in intensity and my days fill with hydropower dam
inspections, road designs, and erosion equations, but I can't complain.
Nicaragua is where I want to be for the moment, and if the kitties ever let me
sleep in, I'll be content.

Peace and strength, Randy