Foto del día
March 9th, 2010 by DavidVisiting Caral
March 8th, 2010 by DavidTwo weekend ago, I visited the ruins of Caral with my friend Roger. The ruins received their name from the nearby village of Caral, which is located in an aesthetically spectacular river valley called Supe about 100 miles north of Lima.
The history of the ruins and the story of their discovery are both remarkable. Peruvian archaeologist Ruth Shady only popularized the site in the mid-1990s when she revealed the magnitude of the ruins: A city of pyramids in the Peruvian desert, with an elaborate complex of temples, an amphitheater and ordinary houses. Before the mid-1990s, even local Peruvians were unaware of the site’s existence; they thought the pyramids — covered in millennia of sand — were merely sand dunes.
What was surprising was not only the size of the archaeological site at Caral but also its age. It turned out that Caral was inhabited between roughly 2600 B.C. and 2000 B.C., making it the most ancient city in the Americas and possibly even the entire world. Amazingly, it was essentially unknown until twenty years ago and continues to be low on the radar of Peruvian and foreign tourists alike. I suspect that in ten or twenty years, after more archaeological excavation has been completed, Caral will be one of Peru’s most famous destinations.
Here are a few photos:
I’m not trying to say that snakes can read
March 6th, 2010 by DavidThis passage is from Sarity Colonia Comes Flying by Eduardo Gonazález Viaña and found in The Peru Reader. A group of friends attempt to rid themselves of a snake that is at the command of an evil sorcerer.
* * *
Don Guillermo’s remedy for scaring away the snake consisted of boiling heavily salted water in twenty cans. To know if there was enough salt, one had to put a potato in the water and see if it floated. Then we were supposed to dump the salty water on the land around the house. That way, the snake would think he was at sea. Being a land animal, he would never return.
I guess the snake didn’t buy this little ruse, maybe because he already knew about the trick. As you know, Don Guillermo is a journalist in Huancayo and writes a famous column on home remedies. I’m not trying to say that snakes can read, but that at least some of them know how to float.
Foto del día
March 5th, 2010 by DavidFoto del día
March 4th, 2010 by DavidDoctors in Peru battle increasingly drug-resistant TB
March 3rd, 2010 by DavidAn article about Socios En Salud and drug-resistant tuberculosis from the Washington Post. The saddest part:
Ángel Serrubio, who lived in the jungle town of Iquitos, said his condition was made far worse by inexperienced doctors, who gave him potent but erroneous medications that had painful side effects. He grew so sick that he told his friends he was planning to hang himself. But after being confined to bed for nine months, “I was not strong enough to commit suicide,” he said.
Foto del día
March 3rd, 2010 by DavidPeru’s fight against tuberculosis
March 1st, 2010 by DavidThis beautiful video comes from Washington Post digital reporter Francine Uenuma, who over the course of three days visited many of the project sites of Socios En Salud in Lima, Peru. I was able to accompany Francine for much of her visit, and I’m impressed with how well she explained the overall problem of MDR-TB while at the same time detailing the lives of patients.
The original video comes from this site:
http://www.internationalreportingproject.org/stories/detail/1506/















