Sunday, May 25, 2008

A bit of an update (Jess)

We realized that we have still posted more from our two-month trip in Patagonia than our 8 months here. That is partly because it's easy to stop writing about things once they seem normal and our life here in Iquitos seems full and busy and, well, normal now. Nevertheless, it might make more sense for you guys reading back at home if we filled out the picture a little bit with the less flashy parts of what we're doing these days (i.e. not just the trips out to the villages).

A lot of our time recently has been devoted to working with our friend Pam organizing a volunteer program for PROCREL where recent graduates from environmental programs at the university here in Iquitos get placed in the communities around our proposed conservation areas for 4-month stints. The idea is that they will get important experience working on conservation initiatives in the field and interacting with rural communities (a TOTALLY different world than the city of Iquitos that many Iquiteños don’t actually have much exposure to) and they will help strengthen PROCREL’s relationship with those buffer communities while learning about the communities’ needs and activities. This last part has been Andrew and my pet project since Christmas, though it has evolved a lot since then. We are trying to adapt and design a plan for gathering and storing information about what forest resources people use, what areas are economically or culturally important, what are people’s perceptions about their quality of life, where their income comes from, how they feel and what they know about “conservation”, what they consider to be the strengths and weaknesses of their communities, and a whole range of other themes. This kind of information will be important for PROCREL and any other organizations working in the area in the future as they try to make a master plan for how the conservation area will be zoned, what sorts of programs will be developed, what their priorities should be, and how they can include local people in the protection of the area’s resources. This has been fun and challenging since Andrew and I don’t have any anthropological training, only have a few months’ experience in the area, and have less than perfect Spanish. However, we’ve been able to explore the ways that other conservation organizations have approached the problem and have received generous help from people working on social assessments in Parque Nacional Cordillera Azul (we get to go visit and watch them in action next week!).
We are using focus groups, household surveys, interactive maps, and various other exercises to get villagers talking about these things, and the volunteers are documenting all their responses in this first pilot round to test out how well the questions Andrew and I have written and chosen work. Meanwhile we are trying to make a database where we can put all the information that they are gathering, and we’re also going out to check on them periodically to make sure that everything is going alright. Hopefully, when we end our time with PROCREL in early July, we will leave them with an accessible database, a field-tested set of tools, and an adaptable methodology that they can use for doing the social assessments in the rest of the buffer-zone communities. I have heard that some communities are just about sick of being socially assessed because every organization that comes to work in them does their own version and then they don't share the information with the other organizations, so we are trying to be sensitive to this and not re-invent the wheel and use any available information already collected and make our data accessible to others, but we are kind of new to this, so hopefully we won't make too many unfixable mistakes.

Getting this ball rolling, keeping up with the logistics of having six volunteers currently in the field, and lending a hand with the projects of other PROCREL staff members has led to some long days in the office recently. Weeks when we are teaching English classes at night are even busier (classes have been fun recently- we showed an episode of Planet Earth to an appreciative audience of biologist students and talked about the English "nature words" that are used in it.) Then there is also the time spent looking for and applying to and worrying about jobs and other opportunities for when we return home not too long from now. Fortunately for my stress level, there is an AWESOME juice stand on the way home where we stop for fresh delicious juice (I prefer cocona, maracuya, and sometimes uva, Andrew’s favorite is toronja) which comes in a plastic bag with a straw if you get it “to go”, and a giant piece of warm pound-cake. This costs 1$ for everything. I will miss it terribly when we leave.

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