Showing posts with label family. Show all posts
Showing posts with label family. Show all posts

Saturday, January 9, 2010

Portabelo

Lilly lazing on the hammock in Portabelo.
















Shells for sale. $5 for the large conc shells. I used to buy these in Key West in about 1955 for $.50















Clay learning fishing from his Dad.


















John with Linda and Doug in front of the Church of the Black Christ. It is a carving of Jesus, shown as black. It is quite famous.













Our house where we stayed in Portabelo.















The bay in Portabelo, which was discovered by Columbus on one of his later excursions.














Portabelo was a significant fortification. Gold from the slave trade was stored here. The escaped slaves' descendants account for the darker skinned Panamanians on the Caribbean coast.














Lonnie and Stacia in the fort.




















Caribbean Trip and More of December Holidays


I managed to make it to the dock and sit down before my timer took the picture. We are on a dock just outside a house we rented for two days near Portabelo, on the Caribbean coast. We planned to do some snorkeling in the clear water, but there was an ongoing light storm which stirred up the water, and we didn't get to snorkel. We did see fish and sting rays from the dock, and our family tried a lot of fishing,






We did a zip line for the first time. Very exciting and fun, but not a way to see nature.

















Us, dressed up for a Christmas party. I wore my new $12 Panamanian shoes, not shown.
















Clay taking to horseback riding on the beach like a regular cowboy.












The movie is of Lilly riding on the beach. The zip lining did not phase her, but she was concerned about the horse.

Sunday, January 3, 2010

Family Visit, Embera village

Our older daughter and her family were here in Panama from December 13 to 31st. We had a great time, but did not have time to blog. I'll do some catching up.

One of the best things we did was to take a trip
to see an Embera village of indigenous people. About 10% of Panama's 4 million people are indigenous. One quarter of these are Embera.

The indigenous people seem, in many ways, to have a better life than indigenous peoples in the US or Australia, two cultures we have had some exposure to. They are still caught between preserving their culture and joining the dominant culture. They seem to want to maintain their culture, which the tourism dollars helps them do, and begin to send children on to higher education. We heard of two advanced students who wanted to return to the village as teachers. The tribe is very family and child oriented.




The Embera use extensive, temporary tatooing. Tatooing a newborn from head to foot is a good luck omen. Here Lilly and Jayne are having their arms tatood.







Anne was our initial contact. Next to her is her Mother in Law and a Brother in Law who gave us a talk on the basics, and answered any questions. Anne met her husband while filming a movie at the tribal village.








Our trip to the village was about an hour in a dugout canoe, which had followed an hour car ride to the area near Colon. The traditional dugout canoe had an outboard motor. Otherwise, the hour ride would have taken a full day of paddling.














The children greeted our dugout canoe when we arrived. The men had a band playing for us.












The film which I have uploaded shows the men playing their traditional instruments and the women dancing a dance of healing.