After classes ended on Friday, the whole U of I group, along with some other students from other U.S. universities and one student from USFQ, met in front of USFQ around 2 p.m. We all loaded onto a yellow bus along with Patricio, a student from USFQ who is from the jungle community we went to, and Kleber, a USFQ employee who is from the Oriente as well.
We had been told that it would be about an 8 hour drive so we all stocked up on food and had a pretty good picnic on the bus. At first the bus was really hot as we headed out of Cumbaya, but then as we headed up into the mountains (why we went up is beyond me), it cooled off pretty quick.
Eventually we started heading down into the jungle and the vegetation (what a fun word. It kind of makes me want to eat a salad.) changed from scraggly bushes to lush trees.
After about 4 hours of driving, we arrived at a gorgeous hostal where we ate a delicious dinner. After dinner we heard that there were monkeys in the area, so some of us went out to look for them. By this time it was pitch black, so we wandered somewhat aimlessly down a dark path, monkey-hunting. We didn’t find any, but we did find a huge cage with some crazy birds in it!
Eventually the path ran out and we decided it was probably best to head back to the hostal than try and forge a path through the jungle. I almost expected Tarzan to come out of the bushes to meet us, but I guess he was too shy. Well, maybe next time.
So when we got back to the hostal, we all loaded onto our trusty yellow bus (not to be confused with yellow school busses in the States. While these yellow busses are often used as school busses, they are quite a bit smaller and have individual seats. They’re pretty classy and do a wonderful job attacking mountains). It turned out that some of the other students had found the monkeys and befriended them. I was a bit sad not to have a monkey buddy, but I guess it’s just as well I didn’t become attached.

Inside the school house where most of our group slept on the benches
After we were all on our bus (which should probably have a name, but it doesn’t), we continued to drive deeper into the jungle. After about 45 minutes of more driving, we ended up in the la Comunidad Villano, the indigenous Kichwa community that Patricio is from in the Amazon in the Province of Napo.
The community has about 30 families, or about 150 people. The mostly make their living off of agriculture, but they are trying to start in the business of tourism and we were their first “tourist” group!
So we all stepped off of the bus into a grassy field and pitch darkness plus a lot of fog. I was surprised how happy I was to have humidity! That was one thing I didn’t think I’d miss from the U.S.
SWEET DREAMS
Anyway, we got all our stuff and were led into a large one-room schoolhouse/community building. The building had concrete floors and lots of wooden benches. We had been told to bring a sleeping bag if we had one, but I didn’t bring one to Ecuador (I wish I had) and my host family didn’t have one, so I was sleeping bagless! It turned out that out of the 27(ish) of us, about 5 didn’t have sleeping bags.

Megan, me, and our tent in the jungle
However, there were three tents, and the ground outside was pretty squishy (much softer than Tijuana gravel!). Not that many people wanted a tent, so Megan (who was also sleeping bagless) and I got to claim one! It was missing a rain fly, so we kind of rigged one from another tent that didn’t have any poles. We also used that tent as a ground cloth since it had a built-in ground cloth and ours didn’t have any.
By the time we had pitched our tent (with the help of Malorey and Jorge), we were set for bed. I got to use the outhouse, complete with a force-flush toilet, and brush my teeth outside. I forgot how much I love brushing my teeth and being about to spit anywhere! You so don’t have to aim for the sink.
By this time we were all exhausted so we climbed into our tent and brought in most of our clothes and our towels for blankets. Haha, a few minutes after we lied down, it started to rain (I guess we were in the rain forest). The rain fly we were using was too small for our tent, so we curled up so we were under the part that the rain fly covered. However, the tent stayed amazingly dry, and though it got a little cold, it wasn’t a bad night for sleeping.

I tried to label this picture, but it didn't turn out so well...our tents are on the left and the schoolhouse is on the right (in case you weren't sure which were tents and what was the schoolhouse)
¡BUENAS DÍAS!
The next morning we woke up early to the sound of kids shouting and animals making noise and the sun beating on our tent. We got up and ate a delicious breakfast of food that Malorey and Klevar had picked out at SuperMaxi, a major supermarket chain here. On a side note, I found out last Tuesday that there are two different types of shopping carts at SuperMaxi, a smaller one for the parking lot and one like the ones in the U.S. for inside the store. I got chased down by security, reprimanded, and had my cart taken away for using the wrong one inside the store. Whoops.
However, I think Malorey and Klevar used the right shopping cart, and they had bought lots of fruit, yogurt, nuts, green beans, and granola to feast on. So we had a quality breakfast and then hopped on our loyal yellow bus and headed into Tena, a larger jungle town where tourism is pretty common.
WE'RE GOING TO THE ZOO, ZOO, ZOO
In Tena, we crossed a swinging bridge into el Zoologico del Tena (Tena’s zoo) where there were lots of animals, some in cages, some wandering around, and tons of crazy plants. We were given a guided tour and met some quality animals, many of which I had never seen before. Some of the hog-like animals I thought were really cute until the guide said that they would attack you to eat you if you entered their cage. Then I thought they would be better as ham. Lol, okay, not really, but I did decide not to try and pet them.

the ostrich that just wandered the zoo and his fellow bird friends