San Blas 09:19:60N 78:15:20W

Tuesday in Mulatupu - we had lots of
visitors in their ulus (dugouts) come to see us - some to say hola and some
just to look! We were invited by one man (Mr. Green) to go with him to the
village in the afternoon - he took us first to see the chief who gave us the
official welcome to their village then charged us $5! We then had a quick
tour of the village - mainly huts made of reed walls and thatched roofs - all
very neat and tidy - each house has 2 rooms and a 'bano' which is a small
cubicle (some appear to be directly over the sea). No furniture except a
wooden bench and table and a couple of plastic chairs and hammocks to sleep
in. Mr Green took us to meet his family and shared their dinner with us -
coconut rice and bananas. In exchange we gave the women some of the
reading glasses we had brought and despite what it says in the books they
wanted photos taken but they first went to put on make up and their best
'molas'. They are quite small - Matt took one of me with 2 of the women and I
look big! My Spanish is improving daily - although most of them speak
Kuna language which is quite different from Spanish, some of them do speak
Spanish and it's much easier to understand them than true Spanish speakers.
Wednesday we had a visit from one of the school teachers who teaches English
and visits again from some of the children - we were explaining to them that
the boat was called Superted after the bear - which they thought was great! It’s
great to see them paddle their huge ulus - one little boy of 11 came out the
first time by himself - his boat handling skills amazing - they never let their
ulu bang into the boat - even the tiny ones of 4 and 5 are told by their
friends to keep the ulu off the boat (we now have hundreds of little hand
prints on the side of the boat). They are always smiling. One little girl keeps
asking to see Superted (the bear) and giggles like mad as she takes off his
skin. The little ones go to school at 7am and finish at 11am then the bigger
ones go at 12 until 5pm - about 600 pupils and 40 teachers in total. Wednesday
afternoon we went for a canoe down the river to the cemetery (small huts on the
hillside)- Matt was on the windsurfer and we came across a crocodile - I've
never seen him move so quick (Matt not the crocodile)! I only saw a small
splash but did see something crocodile looking on the way back at the same
place. Thursday - I took the canoe into the jetty this morning at 7am to
get bread but had to wake the baker up! So no bread. Rained hard all
day. Friday sailed to Mamitupu about 20 miles away. Very
traditional island with strict rules – the congresso meets every day at
5pm – all the men must attend – if they don’t they have to
spend 2 days in a small shelter at the end of the island checking the boats in
and out (they check in their days’ haul of coconuts and bananas
etc). Quite by chance met one of the local expert mola makers –
Abeila and bought a few molas – beautiful work. Sunday sailed to |