sábado, 28 de marzo de 2009

Pico Duarte


The tallest mountain outside of the Rockies-Andes chain sits right here in the DR – Pico Duarte. At 3,087 meters, over 10,000 feet, Pico Duarte towers at the center of Hispaniola and the Cordillera Central, or central mountain range, of the DR and Haiti. Begging to be conquered, Pico Duarte has received intrepid PCV trekkers as long as we have been on the island. Climbing this mountain is requisite as one of those activities to be accomplished before close of service. Early spring is supposed to be, and usually is, a drier time of the year, and so four PCVs, a Stateside visitor and I took the bait and climbed Pico Duarte last weekend. We choose the shortest and most populous route, beginning at a small mountain valley village called La Ciénaga. There, we picked up our guides (a middle-aged man, who was recently a host father to an area PCV, and his 13-year-old son), mules (one pregnant) and provisions and set on our way.
Being not the especially outdoorsy type, I lacked the necessary tools for the hike. Luckily for me, my fellow hikers were more prepared, or at least thought that cold weather was possible here. And as it is really, really tall, Pico Duarte is cold. Really, quite cold. Such that I live in a sea level valley on a tropical island, I own here one sweatshirt and a jacket with holes that I have used only during hurricanes and a few times in December-January. So, having good and sensible friends, I was lent some sensibly warm clothing and sleeping gear.

The first day, we left in good spirits, as the trail starts off warm, wide and flat. By the time we stopped for serious calorie intake, however, the wind turned chilly, the sky gray, and my stomach rumbled. Hopped up on peanut butter, we set off again. The gray sky lowered itself over us, bringing stinging drizzle and ankle-deep mud. This was certainly the coldest I’d ever been in coutry. No matter. At 5 p.m. we arrived at the campsite, having climbed 1300 meters. Exhausted and freezing, we found that we were sharing a large camping lodge with eleven Norwegians who live in Cabarete and were studying physical education and an American couple on honeymoon who had met in the DR.

The next day, we set out early and with sun. The campsite sits only five kilometers away and 600 meters below the actual peak. We reached the summit by ten a.m. to a stunning view of the surrounding mountain range and imminent rainclouds. On the very top rose a bust of Duarte himself and a slightly tattered Dominican flag with a number of fading plaques below deeming it a place of import and proclaiming international friendship.


Sure enough, it was raining by the time we arrived back at the campsite. In the afternoon, a sort of international incident transpired between the Americans and Norwegians when one group apparently took firewood, a limited resource, from another group’s pile. Nasty glances ensued and each party went to bed on separate sides of the room.

The next morning, the Norwegians took their leave early as yours truly spent some quality time in the conveniently located bathroom (use purification tablets next time). We made it down the mountain by mid-afternoon in a soaking rain. Muddy, exhausted, and highly pleased with ourselves, our party of six finished hiking 2000 meters in altitude and 23 km in distance, each way, and with time to spare for a little celebratory Brugal.

Holidays

Before starting: I have a new place for my pictures on the Internet, on my Picasa site.
As I have written here before, holidays are very significant, and very common, in the DR. Holidays, regardless of origin, import, level of sacredness or impiousness, all tend to mean the same thing here – the kids are home from school, work of any kid grinds to a halt, and alcohol consumption increases, often exponentially. Equate them with Sundays, minus the whole church thing (usually). Since I like to put my own twist on things, last week I celebrated two holidays I enjoy that are celebrated by but a few people on this populated island: Purim and St. Patrick’s Day.
Purim, for those not in the know (or of the Tribe) is a Jewish holiday poetically simple in its founding – the Jews of Persia, in danger of being massacred by fiat of the king’s evil advisor, were saved by the recently chosen queen, herself Jewish, and her clever and sincere uncle. Jews across the world celebrate once again cheating death by the skin of their teeth (see: Hanukah, Passover) with a party that includes storytelling and general merriment. In the case of Santo Domingo, another Jewish Volunteer and I went to the new Jewish Chabad House, where we were among the small but functional international Dominican Jewish scene, speaking a confusing and yet comforting cacophony of Hebrew, Spanish and English. In addition to traditional Purim food, we were surprised to find that dinner consisted of, yes, Kosher Chinese food. Leave it to us to have Kosher Chinese for Purim in the DR. A good evening, indeed.

As for St, Patrick’s Day, well, that was a different story, but with a few similar themes. First, I have always found the similarities between the DR and Ireland compelling – Catholic and populous, they share a small island with another nation that differ in language, religion, culture, and history, and have been overrun by their neighbor. Sure, the DR has taken its just desserts and more out on Haiti, and Ireland is just recently raising its Celtic Tiger head, but still. Anyway, St, Patrick’s Day is celebrated by a select few here in the DR (although there were far more people at this party than at the one for Purim). In Cabarete, a crowded tourist beach town on the North Coast, a bar, aptly and certainly creatively named José O’Shay’s and very popular with Volunteers, hosts a raging St. Patrick’s Day party right on the beach. They have green giveaways (though, disappointingly, no green beer), a parade led by the Irish flag, Irish dancing, and of course bagpipes. Sure, you might say, bagpipes are Scottish; but on this side of the Atlantic, it’s all the same. Being the good cultural Ambassadors that we are, a number of us volunteers headed up to Cabarete to participate in the best, and as far as I know, only St. Patrick’s Day celelbration on the island. We were not disappointed. The beer flowed, painfully fake Irish brogues were bandied about, and we all enjoyed the day at a decidedly non-Irish coast.