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Monday, July 2, 2012

All Critters Great & Small

As much as we are pet lovers we are resisting the the temptation to adopt any cats or dogs while we are here in Mexico!  But I do want to share some photos of some of the more tame and wild critters we have run across so far.

As cat people, by far our favorite animal so far was our host mom Rosi's lovely little cat Matias:


And just down the road from Rosi's house, there is a corral with 10-15 cows and calves.  We never figured out how come, but sometimes you see a cow wandering down the road unattended, or patiently waiting outside the corral to be let in:




















And up at our bus stop coming from CIMAT center there is this really sweet friendly girl dog.  She seems to belong to one of the people who lives up there.  I had a conversation with a woman one day who said that she was her dog, so hopefully that is true.  I think the dog has a sweet spot for me though because one day I saw her with a piece of twine tied tightly around her neck.  It was broken off as if someone had tried to tie her up and she had gotten loose.  I managed to cut the twine off of her neck which had really been bugging her, and now whenever she is around at the bus stop, she comes over to say hi:




















Many times she is joined by goats and sheep who also wander by from close to the old mines:



















Last but not least we have to show you a couple of the unwelcome and dangerous critters we have seen:

In our house we have now seen (and killed) 3 alacranes.  An alacrán is related to a scorpion. Supposedly the small black ones like you see trapped here are not too dangerous-like a bee sting.  If stung, you need to take an antihistamine and put ice on the sting and you should be fine unless you have  a very strong reaction.  But there are lighter colored ones with strong venom.  Supposedly all our friends say they only live in Leon, but I bet all the folks in Leon tell the volunteers there that those ones only live in Guanajuato!  In any case, we try to be very careful-we shake out our shoes and we check our stucco walls often in the house-so far that is where we have found all 3-clinging to walls.  But I guess that is better than stepping on them!
















Finally, on our way to work from the bus stop after a rain we ran across a tarantula! Hard to tell from the photos, but this sucker was BIG!  So while we don't have lions to watch out for like the volunteers in Zambia, life in Peace Corps Mexico definitely has a thrills of the animal variety!





1 comment:

  1. It’s never too early to think about the Third Goal. Check out Peace Corps Experience: Write & Publish Your Memoir. Oh! If you want a good laugh about what PC service was like in a Spanish-speaking country back in the 1970’s, read South of the Frontera: A Peace Corps Memoir.

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