Saturday, June 27, 2015

Amazon Medicine Man🌱

Like every day from here on out, today started with 6am boat birding and this time - it really is named appropriately. Today, we saw 18 different species of Amazon Teradactyls - many spotted by the #perucrew - I am starting to think some of these kids might be secret birders!πŸ™ˆ The students have really fastened their explorer hats tight and are embracing their inner Dr. Sattler. (On more than one occasion, they have referred to the Rainforest as Jurassic World - one wrong move and the T-Rex gate opens.)😳


After breakfast, we boarded the boat and set off for Pink Dolphin hunting! One hour later, we had front row seats to a show that rivals the splash zone at Sea World! Our guides beemed ear to ear as they cheered for every siting, took pics for the kids and shared legends and personal stories of The Amazonian Pink Dolphin! It was awesome for the kids to see two adults truly loving their day to day work - and impossible not to smile while watching the kids respond to great examples of people following their hearts!πŸ’—πŸ‹

We finally made it to the ExploroNapo lodge - this place holds a special place in my heart as it was the first lodge I visited last summer...and the location of the infamous bathroom Bat siting! This lodge is more primitive than the last - outdoor Bathrooms and showers, no electricity in the rooms and no screens on the windows - it is Jungle living! (The kids have had to make some adjustments with a couple close run ins with Rabies...but overall, they love it!) After lunch, we headed to the Shaman for a dose of traditional medicine. He spoke about medicinal plants, ritual cleanses, ties to modern medicine and everyone's favorite - Iawaska! Then, he performed a cleansing ritual on any willing students.😳 Of course, they jumped right up and wanted to do it all! A lot of them purchased Dragon's Blood - a cure all Amazon mixture that I'm currently using on my Chigger bites (I'll spare you that picture). Our time with the Shaman was incredible. After hearing what limited healthcare Dr. Smith can provide, the students really understood the Shaman's value and started to question our system in the United States. Let me tell you - we are hitting on some heavy issues down here - this trip is not just all monkeys and hammocks (though that is a big part of it).πŸ™ˆ

We then had some free time where I got to see just how brave some of these students are! We're on the Napo River now, which is a tributary of the Amazon and has a weak current...if you get where this is going! I'm proud to say that some of my students can now say they've swam South of the Border...and they have the GoPro videos to prove it! Sorry parents - that's why we got all those shots, right?πŸ’‰πŸ˜

As I sit here in my room listening to the sounds of the Jungle and the kids growing closer and closer every day, I'm going to bed with T-Rex size smile on my face! It's hard to believe it,  but I think tomorrow will be even better with our community service project - one of my favorite days in the Jungle!

Before signing out, I forgot to give a shout out to all of my friends who donated clothes for the Yagua Trading Day - thank you! There are some lovely Amazonian hand made crafts coming back atcha!❤️ 

Thursday, June 25, 2015

A different way of life!✌🏻️

As expected, my heart was smiling all day long!πŸ’“ We started with 6am birding - apparently, watching the sunrise from a boat on the Amazon River is something teenagers will get out of bed for...first hour at Mountain Pointe High School, not so much.😳 With our experience this morning, Wildlifing is a much better title.  We saw lazy sloths, jumping fish, 8 legged freaks and a few birds flying around. Coupled with a picturesque sunrise and Rainforest stories from the guides, the kids easily started to fall in love with the Amazon. 


Our morning continued with an overview of Yagua culture and lifestyle, presented at our lodge by the natives themselves. The students had the opportunity to paddle a dug out canoe, perform native dances, sample local foods and drinks, build a thatched roof, experiment with natural dyes from plants, play with a machete😳 and shoot a Blowgun!🎯 They went all Yagua in - so much so that I thought I was going to have to institute a dress code for the rest of the trip!😁 After lunch, they visited the Yagua Trading Center and picked up a boatload (literally) of souvenirs - all handmade in the Amazon.  Some may say that teenagers are close minded to things they don't know - they haven't met the #PeruCrew (the official Jungle hashtag)! They shook the hands of the Yagua presenters, learned how to say thank you in their native tongue, willingly volunteered to dance/paint their faces/try new foods - all with a smile on their face! They're not afraid of different - they embrace it (real world Mp style)! It didn't even cross their minds to be or do anything else, and everyone affiliated with these students (family, friends, MP) should be bursting with pride right now, just like I am! We have a community service day with the Yagua soon - better get the box of tissues out now for those happy heart tears!πŸ˜‚ 


We also found time to meet with Dr. Linnea Smith today. She is the American doctor from Wisconsin who came on a trip similar to mine, fell in love with the magic of the Jungle and never looked back...sound familiar?✌🏻️ She spoke with them about healthcare in the Amazon, the differences in America and perspective. To be wealthy means many things, but to the doctor, it's having clean drinking water, a plumbing system and a little bit of perspective. My trip to the Jungle put my world in focus. The reflection time we had with the students at the end of today showed me this trip is already helping them find their own pair of glasses. πŸ‘“πŸŒŽ 

We finished with a very brave night hike that brought out the Indiana Jones hiding inside all 16 kids - and ended with a glowing red eyed...moth? Good thing the guides have our back! The kids continue to amaze and inspire me with every activity we do. Tomorrow, I'm certain will be just as Oscar worthy with a visit to the Shaman and more wildlifing! Thank you to everyone who's following our Jungle journey and commenting/sharing my thoughts - the #perucrew appreciates it more than you know! We are moving to a lodge with weaker Jungle wifi and a collection of monkeys known to chew up in bandwidth.πŸ™Š If the lines go dark, please wait patiently - the day tripping resort of Ceiba Tops is on the horizon and has guaranteed postable wee-fee!πŸ“² Thank you!😍


Wide Eyes, Open Hearts!❤️

Three flights, one bus and one long boat ride later - we are in the Jungle! These 16 kids deserve a Kanye West sized shout out for their 23 hours of travel to get to the jungle, and only a couple grumpy cat faces directed my way in the process! I'm so proud of them, for this and so many other reasons so far.😍 Here are some pics of the eager bunch, earning their passport stamp in Iquitos!🌎

After getting the room assignments and having 30 short minutes to take a "relaxing" cold shower, they finally got to sample the Amazon fish dinner and began the wildlife exploration! You'd think these kids would be tired...instead, their inner Steve Erwin came out and before I knew it, we had racked up a giant snail, a snake that could eat you,🐍 a toad as big as my Sasquatch sized foot, a pink toed tarantula (she's a lady) and a handful of frogs, butterflies and spiders...and that was before we got on the boat! Our first night boat ride was magical and can be summed up in one sentence, "It's only been one day and most of my fears have already been conquered," Lauren, a 2015 MP grad. Sorry Lauren, you sit next to me on the boat, you get quoted in the blog.😁 She was referring to her fear of the unknown and trying new things - a teacher's *dream come true* - I can retire now. How can it possibly be only Day 2?πŸ’“


Today, as I listened to their expectations and fears for the trip, I realized I was feeling so grateful. My trip to the Amazon last summer changed me - it opened my eyes wide to the magic in travel, the magic of the Amazon - my "happy!" (Please see the AmazonMerd blog 1.0.) I have the awesome opportunity to not only relive my adventure, but also help 16 students find their own eyes wide open to whatever it is they're looking for. Like I did, I hope everyone here leaves the Jungle with a new wide eyed perspectiveπŸ‘€, a desire to see the world, and with a little bit more "happy." And I think we're off to a pretty good start! ✌🏻️

On the docket for tomorrow - a day of visits with many inspirational people in the Amazon. Speaking of inspirational, I was reunited today with Christa, the director of Amazon Workshops at EcoTeach. She's here with me in the Jungle and I am over the moon excited to be here with her again - who knows what she'll talk me into next!😍 

Tuesday, June 23, 2015

Amazon 2015 Take Off ✈️


June 23. It's finally here! 16 teenagers and I just said our (tearful) goodbyes in Phoenix and are off to see the world! I know this trip to the jungle will be very different for me from last year and I'm already starting to realize just how magical it will be. This is one student's first ever plane ride. Seven of the sixteen have never left the U.S. None of them have ever seen the Rainforest.🌱 Over the next ten days, they are about to see places, meet locals and have experiences that most only dream about. I am so grateful to be able to share this time with them and see the world through their wide eyes!😍 Their excitement is infectious, their desire to see the world is inspirational and their big open heart's make me smile! I'm bursting with pride...and it's only Day One!πŸ’“

With enough Malaria and anti-diarrhea pills to cure Ebola😳, and enough portable chargers to survive a zombie apocalypseπŸ“² our Amazon journey begins! Thank you for following along with our Ms. Frizzle🐊 adventure! Stay tuned for jungle updates as we take chances, make mistakes and get messy! πŸšŒπŸπŸ™ˆ


Thursday, October 9, 2014

Rim to Rim in the Grand Canyon & Amazon 2015 - Everything was Inspiring


It's been a hot minute since I posted on my blog, but now I'm back with a bushels of good news that's kept me smiling from ear to ear.πŸ’— This quote by writer Robert M. Drake pretty perfectly describes me at this moment.

"Then, she began to breathe, and live, and every moment took her to a place where goodbyes were hard to come by. She was in love, but not in love with someone or something, she was in love with her life. And for the first time, in a long time, everything was inspiring."

As promised, I have been on the hunt for a lucky group of MP students who are willing to let me take them to the Jungle next summer. The October first deadline approached at warp speed✈️, and I am over the moonπŸŒ™ excited to report that 16 brave souls have booked their tickets to adventure land. When I think of the trust they have in me and what our 10 days in the Rainforest will mean to all of us, I'm overwhelmed with gratitude - my heart is so full, it might actually burst.πŸ’“ In just 8 short months, they'll be counting down the minutes to take off, fully equipped with enough vaccines to last a lifetime, charged camera batteries surrounded by desiccant packs, hiking boots with very flattering tear away pants to match, and a set of binocs that could spot a Pippa chameleon🐊 buried in the Las Vegas meadows. There will be more posts about this bold group as we start the fundraising and bonding activities. For now, here they are - may the odds be ever in your favor (just kidding parents)!



This past weekend, another notch was marked off the bucket list.✅ I had the opportunity to live out loud in our state's very own backyard. With 3 (now) great friends, I hiked 23.9 miles from Rim to Rim in the Grand Canyon.πŸŒ„ We hiked 13.9 miles down from the North Rim on Saturday, spent the night in the cutest little lodge, Phantom Ranch,⛺️ and hiked 9 miles up the South Rim on Sunday. We saw the sunset when we arrived at the bottom and the sunrise as we hiked up to the top - there is something very special about being outside when a day starts or ends. A little piece of the Amazon Rainforest magic from Dr. Linnea Smith exists in the Canyon (and we have the filtered pictures to prove it). I knew this experience would be meaningful and breath taking. I knew it was going to be one for the books that I couldn't wait to tell everyone about. But it wasn't until I took those last steps up on to the South Rim that I knew the impact of these 2 days. The canopy walkway in the Amazon, the top of Machu Picchu in Peru, the plane ride back to Phoenix on July 16 and now, the last steps of a 23.9 mile rim to rim Grand Canyon hike - I want to do more, see more, inspire more...live more!πŸ’š
"I only got one life, I want it to mean something," Dallas Buyers Club.