Thursday, April 29, 2010

back posting

I haven't been able to update the blog for the past few weeks. So I have posted the last few posts today, but they spanned over the course of a month. We should be leaving Pucon on Sunday. Finally!

slow internet

The internet card has not been working for the last week or so. We have been driving into the town just so we can check our email. We are sitting in the truck as I send this email. Sigh.

We hope everyone had a good Easter! We enjoyed the photos from the Shafer get together. Jake and I spent Easter washing artifacts. We tried to listen to conference online, but the internet card could not handle the streaming audio, so we had to wait a day and download the audio files. So, we heard Saturday’s sessions on Sunday. We really enjoyed conference this year. Jake especially enjoyed Elder Bednar’s talk where he said that archeology can’t prove faith.
For our Easter meal I made chocolate chip pancakes topped with strawberries and whipped cream. I also made Jake some peanut butter cups. He loves Reese’s cups! He ate them all.

Not much else to report. We are still washing, photographing, etc. Hopefully we will finish with it in the next 2 weeks or so. Jake and I are feeling a bit of cabin fever….yeah, I said it. We are really tired and are praying the next month goes by quickly.

So, we are still here. No more earthquakes, at least not this week. No volcanic eruptions. We are still waiting to hear about where we need to take the artifacts when we are done. Jake is waiting to hear from about 5 people on various things and none of them have emailed him back. We don’t really want to lug these artifacts all over the country just trying to figure out where they go!

We are so happy to hear that the Shafer family (Sam, Mary Jane, Bow Harrison, Kate-lin Mae, and Noah) made it home safely! We are sad to miss the big homecoming. He looks so stinking cute! We can’t wait to meet him and see all of you!

Mandy & Jake

FIlling it all back up

Friday of last week we finished up the digging portion of the project. After you finish digging, you have to do what is called “back filling”, which is basically just putting all the dirt you took out back in and packing it down. There were 3 large trenches and one smaller trench. Jake and I filled up the smaller trench by ourselves when we went to the site alone one day last week. The guys that are working for Jake filled up 2 of the large trenches over the space of two days. Then the finial trench that produced so many features was the last one to be filled. Jake was gathering soil samples and recording a few things in that trench up until the last day. Friday morning we gathered some old tree trunks that were piled up on one side of the field we were in. The site is on a cow ranch and they had pulled up a lot of trees when they first started about 30 years ago. We gathered 2 truck loads and heaved them into the trench to compensate for what we took out of the soil and to help pack everything in tightly. It took all 5 of us almost all day to fill up that trench. Jake figured we would be done by lunch time, so I didn’t pack us a lunch… Luckily I had left 4 peanut butter crackers and a smashed Gansito (basically like a little Debbie snack) in the truck and we were able to split that as our lunch. The guys thought it was so funny that I was working as well. They even took photos of me shoveling dirt. I love Jake, but my back and leg muscles were not very happy with him and haven’t been for a few days. We finally finished at about 3:00pm. Even though we have finished this part of the project there is still a lot to be done before we can come home.

The museum in Temuco was assigned by the Consejo (the government department that gave Jake his permits) to take all the artifacts that Jake found. Well, Jake got in contact with the museum to let them know that he was done digging and needed to know what he had to do to correctly submit the artifacts. They told him that due to the earthquake the storage location where they keep all the shard artifacts was damaged and they couldn’t take his artifacts. Everything that Jake found was shards, not a single intact piece. So, Jake contacted the Consejo to see what he needed to do, we are still waiting for them to get back to him. Jake was planning on using the tools at the museum to analyze the artifacts. Now he will have to analyze them here in the cabin and hope that he can borrow or buy the right tools he needs to do so. The Consejo decides where everything that it discovered goes so they may say that the museum in Temuco has to take them anyway. They could say for him to take them to another museum or they could tell him he can take them to the US and analyze them there, giving the museum in Temuco time enough to repair the damage and take the artifacts. We have no idea at this point. For the next 3 weeks or so we will be in the cabin working with the artifacts. Ugh.

We finished the digging at the right time, because the rains have returned in full force! It has rained no stop since Friday afternoon. We will be so happy to return to the states where it will be Spring and hopefully sunny!

Happy Birthday to AJ and Sofia this week! Also, my brother Sam and his family will be traveling to China this week to pick up Noah Benjamin! We pray that they will be able to travel in safety! We can’t wait to meet him!

Mandy & Jake

washing, and washing, and washing

Thursday we took a trip to Temuco so that Jake could talk to the people at the museum and see if he could figure out what was going on with his artifacts. The Conejo told Jake that he should ask if the museum in Valdivia could take the artifacts for a while. The woman who is the director is Jake’s counterpart here. She said that they could take the artifacts for a while, but that they couldn’t stay there for long. When we got the museum in Temuco on Thursday Jake was able to speak to the woman he had been in email contact with. He found out that their shard artifacts were being kept in one particular building downtown, which due to the earthquake was damaged enough that the building is going to be destroyed. The museum will have to find another place to store all their shards, and until then, Jake can’t give them to the museum. They have no idea when he will be able to. The Conejo hasn’t told Jake where they will go for good, but at least he knows they can go to Valdivia for a while.

On a plus side Jake was able to find some calipers and a scale! Yay! Now he can at least get to analyze the artifacts while we wait. While we were in Temuco we had to drop off the truck we are renting so they could change the oil and check it out. They gave us a white version of the truck that we are renting to drive around town. They washed the truck and vacuumed out all the dirt we had tracked in since January. They also polished the rubber floor boards. They polished them so much that they were soaked when we got back in the truck! Oh, the smell was terrible! We were afraid that if we put the mats in the bed of the truck they might fly out so we rolled them up and shoved them into the back floor and rode back to the cabin with the windows down. By the time we got back to the cabin I had one MASSIVE headache and went to bed quit early that night. Ugh!

Since then, we have been washing, photographing, weighing, and measuring artifacts. Oh, and watching “Lost”. Ah, the good times and adventures we will be able to share with our grandchildren someday.

There was a 6.2 earthquake that hit north of Santiago yesterday. Nothing we felt. Still no massive repeat quake that is being expected… yet. That’s a lot of fun waiting around for let me tell ya. The weather had been nice and sunny the last two days, which has been a nice change from the cold and rain.

We enjoyed some French toast this morning. While finding maple syrup is very hard to do in Chile, we did top it with some sweetened strawberries and whipped cream!
Hope everyone will have a good week!

Mandy & Jake

Sunday, March 14, 2010

Funny story

This morning at 2:00am all over the world clocks were rolled either forward or backward 1 hour. Jake and I changed the time on our phones and his watch. We enjoyed the extra hour of sleep and lazily got ready for church this morning. We were quit confused when we saw the meeting was ending when we got there, not about to begin. Turns out that this past week the Chilean government decided to delay the daylight savings time change until April 3rd, 3 weeks from now. The reason in doing this is to help out the people who are still without electricity because of the earthquake that happened 2 weeks ago. Um………ok. Jake and I were not aware of this because the only news we check out online about Chile is to make sure that something hasn’t erupted, no military coup has taken place, or something to that effect. So, even though the electricity has been restored to almost every city (some have been completely destroyed) we have to wait 3 weeks for the time change. Until April 3rd we will be 2 hours ahead of Nashville.

With fingers crossed this will be the final week of the digging part of the project. Jake and I went to Temuco today to get some supplies we can’t get in Pucon. So after missing church we headed out. We went to the Mall to have lunch first and it was in bad shape. There were stores closed all over and the 3rd level was completely closed off. In the food court the only place open was the McDonalds. Some of the stores were closed due to structural damage while some were closed because they had been looted dry. There is a pharmacy by the main floor entrance that was almost completely empty. There were cracks in some of the walls and ceiling tiles missing all over the place. We drove by the hospital but didn’t see any damage to it. Downtown there were a lot of older abandoned buildings that had toppled over or lost big chunks out of the concrete. There were piles of bricks and concrete all over the sidewalks. I am glad we were in Pucon when it happened, I don’t think I would have done very well if we were anywhere else.

After lunch we went to a store called “Easy” which is kind of like a love child between a Home Depot and a Wal-Mart. We wondered all over the store multiple times until we found someone who actually knew where what we were looking for was located. When we were checking out the lady at the register asked Jake for his passport because he was paying with a debit card. We don’t carry our passports around with us and we have never had to show a passport when paying with a card before. Luckily Jake had taken money out of the ATM before we went to the store otherwise we would have had to leave, go get some cash and come back. Very odd, but we had to get the stuff so oh well.

Tomorrow Jake & I will go to the site to finish up recording and digging out the remaining features and site maps. Then starting on Tuesday we will be back filling all 4 of the trenches. There is one more 2 meter by 1 meter pit to dig, but that will be dug and filled back in over the course of a day. After that we will be completely done with the digging part! Maybe by the time we get back home we will have gotten all of the dirt out from under our fingernails!

We are STILL feeling aftershocks! There was one just about an hour ago, and it wasn’t small. I am looking forward to the SOLID ground of TN. Anyway, hope all is well at home!

Mandy & Jake

Thursday, March 11, 2010

a taste of home

Jake and I have been waiting for a package from his parents and one from my Mom. It has been a month since the package from his folks was sent. We figured that the mail delivery was hindered by the earthquake. Well, we got both packages today! My Mom sent her package a day or two before the earthquake which has been about 2 weeks. Don’t know why it took so long for the first package to get here but oh well! We hit the mother load with the packages! Thank you, thank you, thank you, THANK YOU!

From Jake’s parents we got:

A box of brownie mix
2 jars Peter Pan peanut butter
2 jars JIF peanut butter (even though we compromise on some things peanut butter is not one of them)
a bag of Mini Cadbury eggs (my favorite Easter candy)
a bag of Robin Eggs (woppers)
11 Cadbury cream eggs (one of Jake’s favorite Easter Candy)

From my Mom we got:

1 jar if JIF peanut butter
package of sesame crackers (while in the car I opened the peanut butter and crackers…..heaven!)
a package of Almond cookies
6 microwaveable meals
2 Chow Mein microwaveable dinners
2 boxes of Mac & Cheese (ah, mac & cheese finally)
a box of Corn Pops cereal (I hope I don’t eat them all in one sitting!)
2 cans of tuna
1 can of chicken
3 bags of peanut M&Ms
2 bars of soap
a canister of Country Time pink lemonade mix
an Olay body wash (it has almond oil in it and smells really good by the way)
scent free sun block (we are almost out of our current sun block!)
oh, there was a roll of two ply toilet paper, which I think was used for packing material but we will use it!





The packages were too big to be delivered so Jake had to go into the post office. The girls working behind the counter saw the name on the packages "Jacob". In Spanish the letter J is pronounced like the letter h. The girls behind the counter asked "Your name is pronounced Jacob (with the correct j sound) right? Like in the movie?"

Jake said "Yes."

The girls then questioned, "Are you a werewolf?" The movie they were referring to was either "Twilight" or "New Moon", for those of you who don't know these are books in a series about vampires, werewolves, and a teenage love triangle. I will refrain from commenting on their taste in books. Jake replied "Nope, not a werewolf. Thanks for the packages." They asked him "Are you sure you're not a werewolf?"
Jake replied "I'm not a werewolf, I'm too chubby to walk around with my shirt off. I'm just a lowly archaeologist." So, apparently werewolf is higher on the job totem pole than archaeologist. Who knew?

We cannot thank them enough! We love all of it and will surely have enough to eat until we are done here in Pucon! Thanks again!

The work is moving along and we are getting close to the end. We opened a new trench on the other side of the field. This one is going to be much smaller and we should have it finished by Saturday or Tuesday at the latest. We are going to head to Temuco on Monday to get some supplies that Jake has to use for back filling all the trenches. Tuesday we will dig a small 2 by 1 (meters) trench and then start to back fill everything. If all goes well we should be finished by the end of next week or the beginning of the following week!



Attached is a photo of the volcano from a morning this past week! Check out that smoke! Hope all is well at home!

Mandy & Jake

Monday, March 8, 2010

it pays to brush

“Mini” quakes aren’t fun, and neither are aftershocks. We have been feeling them all week. I am ready for this ride to be over so I can get off! Other than that, everything has been going well. The rain has return and is making working a full week hard. There are 3 more weeks before we will be done with the digging part of the trip. After that we will be traveling all over, or at least where the earthquake damage will allow. We have to make a trip to Concepcion, which is near where the epicenter was, so that will be fun.

One day last week a tooth popped out of the dirt Erwin was screening. One tooth, turned into 2, and then 3 and so on. Jake got into the trench with his little dental tools and spent the better part of the day digging out the rest. He found part of a human cranium, crushed and almost paper thin and about 25 or so teeth. The only parts that were left were the teeth, and a few pieces of the skull. There were no other bones found. We don’t know why it is so thin yet. Could be that it is REALLY old, which would be really cool. Could be that the soil effected the bone so much it just decomposed faster. Could have been how it was buried, we won’t know until the bones are tested later this year. The first excavation back in the 80-90’s there were 8 skeletons uncovered, but they mostly intact. Those were found inside the modern fence the landowner had built, but I doubt that 30 years would have done that to the bones, but who knows. Jake doesn’t have any of the notes on those 8 skeletons, and nobody really knows where they are now. There has been some word that they were shipped to a university in Alabama, but no one knows for sure. Finding them will require a little bit of “digging”, sorry about the pun. Anyway, just goes to show that you should really get to the dentist more often!

I am excited for the daylight savings time change on Sunday. With everyone at home springing forward an hour and us here falling back an hour, the time difference will be back to just one hour ahead of Tennessee, and 2 hours ahead of Colorado. It will make communication just a little easier.

It rained all night and this morning so we aren’t working on the site today. I have had a slight fever last night and today, which totally justifies my eating of peach cobbler for lunch. Don’t judge me! Cold, rainy, and sick = peach cobbler for lunch in my world.

My friend Amanda had her baby on Friday the 5th. She was waiting to find out what she was having until she had the baby and she had a little girl! She is 8 lbs 2 oz and 19 inches long. Her name is Brooke Illyana Adcox and they are calling her Lilly for short. She has a full head of dark hair and has cute little chubby cheeks. Congrats!

Hope all is well at home!

Mandy & Jake