Young city, hot city: Leon

The heat. Even the minutes feel sticky, each glued to the one before it. We moved slowly today, acclimating, washing off the gritty hustle of yesterday´s travel.

Our hostel is airy and lush, with brilliantly painted walls and a courtyard shaded with lime and mango trees. The other folks staying here are all less than half our age, though; nice enough young people, but it´s a bit like we´ve been airlifted into a really well-landscaped college dorm.

Last night, the only opening was literally in the dormitory section, in a room with six beds. Bob and I were assigned one pair of bunk beds, so I climbed into the top one and he set up two of the fans so that we each would have one blowing onto our beds while we slept. All the twenty-somethings took off at about 10 pm to start their night, and after they left we happily climbed into our bunks to read. Leon was raucous with celebratory firecrackers and whooping bar-fuls of partyers, since it just won the Nicaraguan World Series for the first time in 5 years.

Tonight we have our own tiny private bedroom (also with bunk beds). We may both try sleeping on the bottom one, since that´s the only one which can get air from the one fan. The showers are basic but refreshing, sluicing off the layers of sweat which accumulate as soon as you move around. There´s no hot water (at least, not anywhere we´ve stayed) but the water isn´t really cold, either. Just on the cool side of tepid, the perfect temperature to stand beneath and feel glorious. And the best part of the hostel (besides the computer) is the fridge of free COLD drinks of all sorts, that you can just take anytime and then add a little tally mark to your tab.

Tonight in the main plaza, el Parque Central, Saturday night was in full swing. The huge cathedral, with golden lights on its ancient facade, was the backdrop to the party atmosphere in the plaza. There´s a small flock of little electric kiddy-cars, which parents pay for their children to have a turn in. The vendors´kids run around guiding the small ones who are driving, so that they don´t crash into a food stand or something. The lush trees are lit with strings of light, and some of the jewelry and toy vendors have their wares hung from the branches. Teenagers stand in clumps and pairs, doing as much as they can get away with in the crowded scene. One couple was earnestly trying to pretend they were all alone, while within two yards of them on either side, parents kept corralling wayward toddlers.

Vendors sell ¨Hamburguesas¨ which I have to confess are not actually half bad. Along with the standard assortment of scary hot-pink cookies, and pizza, and plantains in every conceivable form, and fresh fruit, and deep-fried things. Bob and I have blithely indulged in pretty much any street food that strikes our fancy, and so far we´ve been just fine. Today we went to the big open fresh market, buying tortillas still hot from the griddle, and a HUGE avocado, and homemade salsa in a little plastic bag, and fresh pickles and smoked cheese and peppers.

Tonight, music spilled from bars in all directions, and in one square a block away from the main scene, deafening music poured out of speakers while youngish people in tight blue jeans milled around looking for action in the crowds of their compatriots. A police car stood watchfully by, but nobody seemed inhibited by its presence. People just swarmed by it on all sides, eating and talking and hanging out.

Leon is a university town, a town vibrating with youthful energy. We passed a mural of Sandino with his foot on Uncle Sam´s head, and another of Somoza being crushed. We don´t know how politically active the current young people are, or really much about the current situation here. I had a long conversation with a woman this morning, as part of an informal Spanish lesson she was giving me, and she told me of the hardships that Nicaraguan women struggle with. The men (in a similar pattern to US poverty chaos) tend to engender children with several women, supporting none of them, and the women in the extended family are the ones who hold the generations together. The women support the families, by and large, she said, and jobs are easier for women to get because they´re known to be more responsible than men. Her viewpoint may have been influenced by her own situation as a single mother, but a Peace Corps volunteer from just over the border in Honduras told me that, yes, that does tend to be the social pattern here.

We´re trying to learn about the poverty and the wellbeing, what works and what doesn´t. But I think it´s as Juan back in Flor de Pochote declared: that it would take at least a year here to even begin to be able to know the country. With only about a week and a half behind us, we´re utter novices to the whole scene, just absorbing all we possibly can.

Tomorrow we head to the coast. We don´t know if there´s any computer access down there, so it may be a few days til the next blog post.

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2 Comments

  1. hallie
    Posted January 24, 2010 at 11:37 am | Permalink

    I’m enjoying all your posts, from the airport woman in the wheel chair to the revival of the cold iguana fallen from a tree to the festive night life, to the heat to the comments about people — all of it in fact! thank you! I hope there will be photos to go with.

  2. Posted January 25, 2010 at 7:44 am | Permalink

    Yes, there will be tons of photos. I´m sorry I can´t post them online as I go, but most of the computers in the internet cafes are pretty marginal, and one is grateful they even work at all, let alone connect up to a camera. Nowadays the young backpackers staying in the $7/night dorm rooms often carry their own MacBooks along with them in their backpacks!

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