Tuesday 17 March 2020

A model railroad in the Amazon jungle?



Here's something a bit more lighthearted than quarantine and contagion:  At long last we have our in-house model railway up and running around 90 feet (30 meters) of track in our living room that may one day be a cafe.

When we lived near Cusco we would sometimes go to Paddy's Irish Pub (at around 10,000 feet above sea level it is billed as the highest Irish pub in the world) which had a model train running around just under the ceiling.  I always liked it so upon building my own house in Sauce I planned to put one in in similar fashion.  We bought the Hornby brand track and trains last time we were in the UK in 2014 at a model shop in Salisbury but it took until recently to get the whole thing installed and in operational mode.

The photo above taken from our stairs shows our 'Flying Scot' steam engine from the 1950's pushing a yellow track maintenance car backwards.  This is a real track-cleaning wagon that I send around every few days to keep the rails clean. It is a way better method than cleaning the rails by hand. The other train has Thomas and Percy pulling some wagons with gnomes in them as well as a pullman dining car all suspended by chains about 8 ft (2.5 meters) above the floor.

Martial law comes to Sauce.

As of yesterday we are under martial law here in Sauce with troops on pátrol in the streets, all tourism stopped and only food, medicine and patients allowed to be transported in and out.  All businesses are closed except food stores and pharmacies. Meanwhile the closest coronavirus case is hundreds of kilometers away in Iquitos.


It felt slightly edgy taking this clandestine photo this morning.  The armed soldier with facemask was the only living soul on the plaza de armas.

The population has been ordered to stay in their houses with only one family member allowed out to go food shopping or buy from the pharmacy.

The good side is that the lake is totally quiet with no boat traffic so our resident mermaid is getting a nice break from the incessant boat motor noise.

Our 2 volunteers from Germany, Tara and Johanna have been ordered to go back to their home country but as there are no flights they are staying at our house for the present.  Estrella de Sauce is obviously closed.

Sunday 15 March 2020

Escuelita repairs



Many thanks to the Waldorf worldwide outreach organization Freunde der Erziehungskunst Rudolf Steiners (Friends of the art of Rudolf Steiner education) out of Berlin and Karlsruhe in Germany who have underwritten needed repairs on our Waldorf after school enrichment program called Estrella de Sauce based here in the small lakeside jungle community of Sauce near the city of Tarapoto in northern Peru.  Some of the repairs were necessitated by the 8.0 earthquake that hit us last May and others just from wear and tear.  We have a football court right behind the facility and over time the roof back there had become quite damaged and leaky from all the footballs landing on it.

Walls were cracked in various places but we were quite lucky as other older structures made of earth collapsed completely during the earthquake.

In front we had to put on a new palm-frond ridge cap as the old one had disintegrated due to sun and rain.  The white plastic skylight had sustained a 2 inch (5cm) hole.  What made that I wonder, could it have been a falling meteorite?  Perhaps more likely a kid with a slingshot. The photo above shows me fixing it with our volunteer Johanna holding the ladder.

The white notice-board on the wall was infested with termites so we have put up a new one that is quite nicely color coordinated with the flowers and plants.  It is made of metal this time so should be termite-proof.



 Wall repairs following earthquake



Football-damaged roof repaired, new palm-frond roof cap can be seen behind


Book published in Spanish

'Largo Camino a Chavin' is now available worldwide from Amazon.com in both paperback and Kindle versions.

Many thanks to Jorge Andrés Ayllón for doing the translation and to Alejandro Morón Escobedo for editing the spanish text.


I wrote the book in response to the often repeated questions: Why did you move to Peru?  How did you meet Lourdes? And many others...
One frequent one here in Peru has been, when are you going to put it out in Spanish?  It took 2 years but here it is.
If you want the English version it is called 'Long Road to Chavin' published 2018 on Amazon.com in paperback and Kindle editions.

Mast back up

Our trimaran 'Estrella del Lago' now has its mast back in the vertical posicion after needing some repairs with epoxy and fiberglass cloth.  Also new cross-trees, the horizontal pieces up the top that hold the support wires known as stays or shrouds away from the mast.  It's a slow laborious job raising the mast with a couple of chain hoists, but reasonably safe.

As you can see I have put a new roof on the starboard (right) side.  The port side roof still remains to be changed as does the small roof in the center over the steering station.  I modified the starboard side roof so we will not bang our heads when entering from the aft deck.  I plan to do the same on the port side as well.
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