Sunday, July 15, 2012

ViequesPRico2012



Testing this direct blog post picture thing. Technology is a bit over my head these days. I prefer the days when there were floppy disks and the biggest challenge was pretending to drive a wagon on a digital Oregon Trail :)

Hopefully the link in my photos page will also function as access to pictures of mine!

Kate

Sunday, July 8, 2012

Today I write about my cheese incidence from the other day. Happy belated Independence Day and birthday to my Grandpa!

So the other day we had a break in training and a few trainees and myself played a game of fotbol with some local kids. Its alot of fun, the kids are really good and its nice to show them that a girl can actually play sports half way decent. Just like in the states, its super hot here too so we went through alot of water and took two breaks from playing. On one break I went to the outhouse next door (the field is in the "city center" next to the bus stop, store, bar and little restaurant) that is probably publicly wayyy too overused but that's not what this story is about... When I stepped out of the outhouse a girl my age was smoking and wearing a uniform for work/ cashier vest that they wear next door. She was super friendly and was trying to understand my broken Romanian and I went back to the field pretty excited that I made a new friend my age. I thought she was working this little drink stand thats right outside the Magazine (shop) where all the locals buy this kinda gross tasting iced tea drink called "Cvas." I think its the countries favorite and or official drink of choice. These stands are set up everywhere, especially in the capitol. Not thinking, I said, "I made a new friend, I think she works at the Cascaval stand!!!" Instead of Cvas, I said cheese, and I totally realized it a minute too late when everyone started cracking up. So that is the story how the girl from Wisconsin in the group got the nickname cheese girl. :) Oh the irony in life....

Hope all is well! Today I hit the north road up to my future work site in the city of Rezina! I am very excited about the NGO I will be working with as it sounds like they work in eco-tourism, small business, rural business and other earthy fun stuff. The website is http://www.habitat.md/ and it is in English so go check it out! I will post pictures of stuff next time including my future home!

"Respond to every call that excites your spirit." Rumi

Kate

Monday, July 2, 2012


Buna Seara!

This country keeps me laughing and learning. I have seen Russian ketchup and mayo come out of massive packets instead of squirt bottles, more house wine than what the state of California probably produces in a year, dogs eating chicken bones and not choking to death (sorry Carharrt, I should have trusted you), noodles and butter on my plate for breakfast and ham omlets for lunch, Cognac and Coke served in a martini glass, the freshest lemons that would have put the lemons used at work in Vail to shame and more than one women drunkenly sing Ava Maria or well, the first line over and over again as if they were Italian superstars.

So much has happened since I posted last so I will try and catch everybody up... My host family, the Padures and I went to to the padure (the forest) for a family picnic. Besides us, about 10 other relatives showed up and roasted chicken with a bunch of veggies and pineapple for desert. Although I had no idea what they were staying it was still awesome. I am so glad my host parents take me along to their social events instead of leaving me in the house to study, they laughed when I said "The Padures in the Padure" and enjoyed the attention of my fancy little camera.

Last week I passed into my 23rd year of existance and the celebrations started at about 6:30 in the morning when I was sleeping, topless in the hot summer morning. My host parents flung open my door, threw rose petals all over my room and handed me a small boquet of roses picked from the garden outside and gave me a necklace and perfume as gifts. It was sweet even with the ackwardness of clutching my bed sheet around my body as I registered what was going on an hour before I was supposed to wake up.. Haha I loved it. At school my language teacher also suprised me with roses, they all sang happy birthday in English and Romanian and some of my coluges even hooked up a cake for us to split at lunch. As a kid I got to avoid ackward birthday celebrations in school because of being a June baby but I am not complaining about recieving a delicious piece of chocolate cake in class this time around. This fiesta may or may not have continued after class with a bit of cold Moldovan beer in the pubic cow grazing field outside of town...

This past week went by so fast, we went to the capitol, Chisinau three times last week, once for lectures, once for an agriculture meeting and one time for an evening piano concert. Want to guess how much I paid to see four different pianists and a mini orchestra play for about an hour and a half? Less than the cost of bus fare in the states, 15 lei. Our language teacher caught wind of the concert sponsored by the French embassy and was nice enough to invite us on her evening adventures into the big city. This adventure also allowed us to avoid meat and potatoes for dinner and indulge in Andys Pizza, a pizza chain in Moldova (it was alright pizza but a great change of pace).

This Thursday we find out where our permanent work site will be and we are all super excited!!! I hope mine has horses and a river near by.... I will find out and let you know soon!!! :)

Tuesday, June 19, 2012

Hey Hey Hey


Buna Ziua!
Yet again I have relocated. I could have made my blog title be "Where in the World is Kate Van Oostburg? but it just dosn't sound right. Plus, for the next two years I know I will be residing in the Republic of Moldova, a former communist, former Soviet country near the Black sea no bigger than the size of Maryland. I took an opportunity to volunteer here with the Peace Corps and so far, after about a week of struggling through daily language lessons, I have absolutely no regrets.

I realy do have an addiction to being in transit and traveling to a completely new, unaquainted area and I have met 67 other volunteeree people with the same mentality or atleast part of the same mentality. Its realy cool how different our backgrounds, reasons for joining and goals while in service really are. Getting to Moldova took a long time to travel to, I think we were traveling for about 48 hours straightish but I wasn't a complainer...I would say the top three things during the march to Moldova include:

1. Completed homework for a NY Lambert Airport security guard with another PCT, he was nice.. I think there is a picture of us somewhere I will try and get...
2. Peoplewatching and sampling just about every kind of perfume/ colonge known to man in the huge duty-free shops in Istanbul's airport with a fellow PCT (because we had so much time to kill, not because we are smell snobs) and mooched samples of just about everything else we could get our hands on (Uzo= gross, Turkish delights and Kinder chocolate= delightful).
3. Talked instead of sleep throughout the flights with fellow volunteers who were just as excited as I was to make new friendships (when I really should have slept).

Alrighty, so I am here. But where is really here!?!

For the next two months I will live with Vera (age 51), Miheal (53) and Miheala (17); my awesome host family in my training site where I will try and learn Romanian and more about my job as an Agri-Business Rual Business Development volunteer. Life is good here. Besides being overly suprised that I don't squat over a hole outside to do my 1's and 2's and bathe in a bucket, I live in a house where the daughter speaks English, the back yard is one big fruit and veggie garden and its not a far walk to and from my language/training classes. My town has a bar, small market, Russian school and regular school, an auto service shop, a party place where people are always getting married, a hospital, and not much else. And goats. There are goats that hang out and eat the grass behind the school, goats on the side of the roads and goats in this town field thing. The people are nice and the kids are pretty curious about our strange group. I would say this is more like a vacation from reality but to be honest, if my brain could burn calories with how much it worked, after one week of classes I think I would look like I have exercise-induced anorexia.

Its not every job that you get paid to learn a second language and live with a host family that thinks you need to eat up. I gotta say, Moldova so far is pretty sweet. I hope to speak Romanian well enough soon that its not wierd if I try and play soccer with the boys in town. My mentality towards not being able to learn the language? Study, practice, get used to being completely out of my English speaking bubble. Not showering daily? Enjoy the musk and get used to it. Noisey dogs and roosters screeching 24 hours a day including the neighbor "guard" dog who's location conveniently echos directly into my room and the constant I-will-eat-you-lunge of dogs chained behind fences as I walk through my town? Learn how to sleep through just about anything and have some hot dog from my lunch saved as sacrifice and deal with it. 



Homeworkman in NYC
The countryside outside Chinsinau

Thursday, May 17, 2012

At Home and Lazyish... For Now!

"Oh let the stars beat down upon my face, stars to fill my dream. I am a traveler of both time and space, to be where I have been..."


Right now I am "packing." By "packing" I mean sitting on my bed next to my snoozing dog, Pandora on blaring Kashmir by Led Zeppelin, Facebook on a tab (just in case) with about every inch of my room cluttered with clothing, shoes, cds, books and things I either want to take with me when I leave for Moldova, pack up in storage, or never see again. How many days do I have to pack again? About 17. Plenty of time for a procrastinator like myself to get everything ready that I may possibly want for living in a multi-weather/four season country for two years...and be less than 100 pounds. 


Piece of cake, piece of crumb cake. Or is it?

My confidence might be my demise but it hasn't phased me yet. I still have time (spoken like a true procrastinator). The best part of being home I will admit is my eating habits. Call me Porky the Pig but I have been pigging out on whatever I feel like. You never know when I'm going to eat Cousin Subs, Culver's cheeseburgers and Ben & Jerrys  again right? As excited as I am about trying my next country of residence's food, this is pretty cool.


The second to last day in Vieques (off the coast of mainland PR), I jumped on a ferry for two bucks and headed to Old San Juan for the night. With live music, an art fair and a guest house/hostel right in the heart of it, I was all set as a happy camper. This wouldn't have been quite as exciting if I hadn't met two friendly swimmers on the Blue Beach (also the coolest beach) on Vieques. They convinced me to head to San Juan a day early and we spent the night shopping, eating and exploring Old San Juan. Its amazing how easy it is to make friends. One shop we stopped in had a guy in dreadlocks behind the counter wearing a cool red t-shirt with Jimi Hendrix on it. One classic rock conversation led to another and it turns out he took my guest house reservation for his Mom that owned the guest house I was staying at! He showed us the view of Old San Juan from the roof of the guest house, and site of his newly built roof-room-home before going through and showing us all of his artwork. We loved it. I hope his hard work and eye-catching designs will cover many touristy shirts, posters and other memorabilia for many many moons.


Last week I flew home from Vieques, Puerto Rico and couldn't be more relieved. Don't get me wrong, the beaches= beautiful. The culture= crazy, just how I like it and the chance to see Puerto Rico with someone who lived and breathed it for 15 years was a great way to see it. AND, ANNDDD there were horses running around and grazing on the sides of the road everywhere! How cool is that?!? It felt like the Hispanic version of Misty of Chincoteague. Anywhere I can sleep and hear the gait of a Paso Fino running down the street at night and get stopped in a mini traffic jam because of some mares and foals in the street is a good enough place to check out. But, it is nice to finally get home, off the road for a little breather with the family before shippin' out.

Now I have my sights set on cleaning my car... You can never have too many projects to tackle, right? Wrong. I'm up to my ears in them! Where are those organizing freaks of nature on HDTV when you need them!?! :)-Kate

Saturday, March 31, 2012

The Wheels are in Motion...

Want to know my secret to happiness recently? Here's what I did....
1. Move 500+ miles away from anywhere near what you are used to. Move somewhere that moooves you.
2. Get a job. Not a serious job if you are looking to relocate soon. Go serious if you have it in you and will stick around longer then a typical tomcat...
3. Never let homesickness or loonies talk you out of your little adventure. Stay away from drugs and boozin and you should be able to budget just fine on your own... If not talk to a financial planner seriously..
4. Keep the "Yes Man" mentality up in everything you do, who knows what you'll miss out on...free snowmobiling tours, ski rentals, a chance to meet a celebrity, sushi, concerts... you never know!!! These little connections, freebies, whatevers are what make my world go round. I sit back and think, there is no chance I would have done this stuff this week had I lived at home still!!!
5. Take whatever friends you can get. Mine rock and roll. Without them my experiences wouldn't have been much of anything and I owe it all to them.

That being said, my spontaneous move to Vail, Colorado has been a great decision. Community sponsered free concerts? Hook-ups all around the valley because of where I work or who I know? People my age who like to have fun at night and outiside just like me?!? Nice people and good vibes are what little towns in Eagle County are made of.

Colorado has me converted into a mountain women but my time here is coming to an end. My paitence for goverment hoops to jump through has worked and I have been accepted into the Peace Corps. I about sent myself into diabeitic shock when my parents told me a letter from the PC came and said they wanted to send me to Moldova if I was down. Moldova! I could write a blog on me geeking out about Moldova but that will definately happen on its own for the next two years of my life. Of course I said yes and will be leaving early June as a rural business/agri-business chick!

More to come... hopefully sooner then later on my travels... Next up, Wisconsin and Puerto Rico!

Tuesday, November 15, 2011

Reflections on the Road, Providence RI

G'Day Mates!
Today I write from a friends house in Providence, Rhode Island. Rhode Island = pretty groovy. It's teeny weeny, fun-size and cute enough to try and sneak home in your front pocket if you want my travel critic opinion :)

Yesterday I toured and putzed around Newport, Rhode Island; home to beautiful mansions on Ocean Drive, lovely beaches and historic Fort Adams to name a few of its beauties. :) If you took the nice shops of Mequon and Cedarburg, added it to Port Washington's lakeside downtown, added 20,000 people and mixed the classic, rich and traditional east coast culture, you have Newport. Go vacation there. Bring a sand castle kit, all your nautical clothes and a big appetite for fresh seafood and local microbrewed beer and you will have a great time.

It's funny how being a Packers fan can come in handy no matter where you are in the World. In Ireland I sat down in front of someone wearing a Packer hat and also a Wisconsin native. This week I was sitting in an awesome Irish bar (next to the Tennis Hall of Fame, I forget the name) watching the Packers beat up on the Vikings with a friend and had a great time chatting with locals who also liked the Packers and Wisconsin. Right now is a great time to be a cheesehead!

Before chillin' like a villian streets away from the ocean and Brown University, I worked an expo horse geeks call the Equine Affair. It's an annual yeehaw horsey shopping spree held in Springfield, Mass. The East has alot of money, alot of english riders and enough strip clubs and seedy men to go around the world twice (ok compared to the midwest it does, I might be a little facetious when I say seedy men and strip clubs but there were alot by us!). What a cool place to travel to though, the area is so old and historic! It was crazy seeing all the tree damage along our scenic drive to our hotel every day, the houses were so old and rustic I wanted to take the view and put it in a snowglobe.

Before the East Coast I spent a month in Columbus, Ohio, home to the American Quarter Horse Congress. If you ever get the chance to go, do it! My favorite week is probably the first one with the reiners. With plenty of cowboy butts in wranglers and French speaking Canadians, you will be highly amused both during the day and at night. Quarter horse people like to work hard and play hard, making the Corral, a round bar located on the showgrounds a common stomping ground. Its amazing how much horse people vary, horse lovers come in all shapes and income sizes...

Tomorrow I'm off to Mt. Vernon, Ohio and then to Chicago where another small expo will be held right before I head toThanksgiving in Wisconsin. This year without my Granny K is going to make for a strange holiday. Its wierd how you move on after death but you think and miss someone daily,  more so then what I miss my little redheaded dog right now. My friend here has a silly slightly neurotic cat that I'm trying to love in replace of him but its not working...Maybe I'll teach it to fetch....

Hope all is well and groovy in your neck of the woods,
Kate