I spent a long weekend in the Dominican Republic in March visiting the capital city Santo Domingo - a 7 hour bus ride away from Port-au-Prince. My agenda was pretty simple - walk a lot, visit a museum or two, go to church and buy a pair of bling, bling sandals. Was successful on all fronts - with the added bonus of eating peach-raspberry-strawberry yogen fruz - twice. You can see a few photos mostly from from the lovely Zona Colonial here. Even after seeing the other side of Hispanola for myself, I have a hard time believing that the extreme differences in infrastructure, environmental degradation and overall economies I saw between the DR and Haiti are for real.
G and I left Haiti for the USA on the same Saturday afternoon. She returned home to Nashville and I started a two-week journey that took me through 5 cities in 4 states via 4 different modes of transportation. (My itinerary was PAP-JFK-ITH-PHL-MSY -HOU-CLT-MIA-PAP. I traveled by plane, bus, taxi and my trusty Nissan Sentra) The primary motivation for the trip was to present a poster about our research at the annual meeting of the American Society for Nutrition in NOLA ...but I also managed to fit in a lot of quality time with some of my lovely friends and their families in Manhattan, Ithaca, Philadelphia and Houston.
I've been back in Haiti for a week now but am already counting down the days until I leave again. Will be spending the first two weeks of June in Southern Africa - visiting two sites doing similar work in Malawi and presenting another poster at a conference in Nambia. An even bigger countdown is well underway - the countdown to the end of this 2-year season living in Haiti. The plan is too return to Ithaca in early August to start writing up my dissertation - with hopes of graduating between May-August 2010. While I'm sure I'll be back to visit Haiti at least once during that time, home will definitely be NY.
On that note...better go get to work!
**Start here to learn more about the massive fortress The Citadelle and the Versailles-like Palace San Souci built by Haiti's only king Henri Christophe in the early 1800s - just after Haiti won independence from the French through an impressive slave rebellion. At that time, the country was divided into a northern Kingdom and a southern Republic.
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