Decided to give up on WWOOFing in Tarija and head on to Cochabamba. We were both excited about spending some time in Cochabamba, interested in this city's rich history of social movements (most famously, the
Water Protests of 2000).
Well, we got a fitting welcome to this town, with transit worker strikes blockading the only street into town! Our bus from Tarija was stopped 20 km short of the city center, and we had to get out, walk through the street blockade, and find our way into the city. Luckily, another bus headed to La Paz was had to turn around on the other side of the blockade and head back to the Cochabamba bus terminal. They were kind enough to pick us up and bring us to the terminal with them! So we arrived at the bus terminal as planned... only on a different bus!
Next day we enrolled in Spanish classes and arranged a home-stay with a Bolivian family! We moved from our hostel to the homestay Friday morning, and started classes that afternoon. It feels great to be brushing up on spanish... reviewing some things, learning new things, and having very interesting conversations with our professors in 1 on 1 classes.
Our host family is really cute. Aurelia, the mother, tries her best to cook vegetarian meals for us - though she has no experience doing so! Her youngest son Guillermo is the only one still home. He is slightly younger than us and goes to college in the city. Also two cats and three fruit trees!
Another interesting development... KidWind (my job) has asked me to head back south to meet with some folks in Puerto Varas, Chile! Interestingly, Puerto Varas is only a 5 hour bus ride across the Andes from Bariloche, where we were a few weeks ago... But unfortunately we did not have our ducks in a row until now. So, we are flying from La Paz on March 8, spending about 5 days in southern Chile, then heading back to La Paz to continue north into Peru.
On our way to La Paz next week we are planning to stop in Oruro on March 5 for Bolivia's biggest party - Carnaval. Looks like a blast...