Sunday, October 15, 2017

Sunday in Tijuca

It cooled off considerably last evening from the hundred degrees we had during the day. Nice for sleeping. When we woke this morning, it was raining. That meant less traffic headed for the beach when we headed to church at A Communidade Presbyteriana de Barra de Tijuca. It's a small building in a residential neighborhood.


People were friendly. Worship was lively with tunes I recognized from English. Actually, I found that disappointing; we need our friend Marcus Rodrigues writing more Brazilian praise music. But the preaching was good. Vicente, a once-and-future pastor, meets regularly in an accountability group with these and other pastors from the area and beyond.


I regretted as we left the crowded cafe where we lunched that I hadn't taken a picture of the table loaded with rice, farofa, French fries and grilled meat. Afterwards, it was home to naps and football American-style with Brazilian commentators--Vikings vs. Packers--the ultimate conflict of our home territory.


Saturday, October 14, 2017

Old Friends in Rio

Queila entered our lives when she was thirteen. (Somewhere I have a great picture of her and our neighbor striking fashion model poses.) She entered our home the week Erika was born, just before Queila's fourteenth birthday, and has been part of our family ever since. Her dad was a pastor in an interior town, and she came to live with us in Campo Grande to attend a better school. Two-year-old Katie had trouble accepting that Queila really had another family. Eventually, she came to Cambridge to live with Steve's parents and finish high school there. She married Vicente in college and their son Natan is in grad school.


They live in an apartment in Zona Norte, but we drove to the chique Zona Sul, where the beaches are.  There we climbed to the Monastery of St. Benedict.



The inside is covered with gold in the manner of seventieth and eighteenth century churches. This is not just a mueum; Mass will be sung tomorrow at 10.




I love green spaces in the midst of big cities. When she worked in this area, Queila used to bring her lunch to the garden in front of the church and listen to the music while she ate.



Our next stop was the Olympic Plaza, which Queila and Vicente say was always full during the Olympics. They were full of stories of the excitement of being part of the crowd and getting to see some incredible Para-Olympic events in person. Sadly, a lot of that enthusiasm in the city of Rio has disapated as life returns to violent crime and corruption. You can see the Monastery of Saint Benedict in the background of this Museum of Tomorrow. Those "ribs"are solar panels and can be repositioned to best catch the sun.


Afterwards we took the elevator to the top of the newly expanded Museu de Arte do Rio where we could sit in the shade under a concrete "wave" with a great breeze and talk. We had a wonderful view of the Olympic Plaza. In this panorama shot you can see the Museum of Tomorrow in the center with the Niteroi Bridge beyond, the naval port and the monastery to the right.


Friday, October 13, 2017

Farewell to Dear Friends

I was reading my Bible app in this wonderful swing this morning when Rosalee asked if I wanted my picture taken. 

 It is their “quintal”(back yard) that I will miss the most of their house.

This little birds make a racket to draw attention if the pan for their bath is empty.

We went for a drive to see more of the beautiful countryside of Espirito Santo. “Agritourismo” is a big thing here—farms, many of them organic, designed to attract tourists, selling things like these incredibly sweet strawberries.



Or this pasta colored with beets, wine, spinach, or coffee.

The Carnielli farm specializes in the Italian foods of the early immigrants to the area.

This weekend is the Polenta Festival. Note the stuffed mascot.


Coming from Italy in 1888, the Carnielli family has worked this land since 1921. They grow coffee and produce cheeses and jerked pork loin, although calling it “jerked pork” sounds really course compared to the gourmet food that it is. They gave out lots of free samples and complimentary cafézinho (demitasses of strong Brazilian coffee). We tasted the three-month-old cheese (Steve remembers mozzarella, I remember Provolone) and the two-and-a-half-year-old version. The difference was tremendous. (I refrained from telling them that Burnett Dairy does a five-year-old Cheddar.)



We met Eunice and Marcus for lunch at a restaurant across the road from a waterfall. Not as much water was falling as usual due to the draught, but it was still a lovely place. At the end of lunch, it was hard to say good-by. Who knows when we will be together again? Old friends are the best to my mind. You share so many memories and don’t have to explain. David dreams of seeing snow someday. I promised him that if he works hard on English, we will find him a family to stay with in Webster as an exchange student so he can spend a whole winter with snow!


Thursday, October 12, 2017

Celebrating Children's Day

Our day did not end with the water slides at China Park this morning.

Lúcio and Rosalee moved here in 2010. They have become involved in the local bairro (neighborhood) and helped organize a neighborhood association. This year Lúcio suggested they could put on their own party for Children's Day instead of waiting on the city government. I would say it was a great success.

The street was decorated and ready for activity when we arrived about 2:30.

The owner of a local snack bar had offered her place free of charge. The food was donated by various grocery stores and other local businesses--popcorn, cotton candy, watermelon, cake.

Games were organized in the street and the kids lined up for turns on this trampoline.


We left Eunice and Marcus and family to enjoy the party and took off to explore Domaine Île de France, an organic farming area with restaurants and lodging. Lúcio and Rosalee have been complaining of the drought that has cut down on the usual desplay of flowers at this time of year, but we found some beauties.


The party was winding down when we return and went for supper at Eunice and Marcus's house, on a steep dirt road with a fabulous view. 

The kids were excited to show us their rooms. David has his own balcony although this view is from the outside of his parent's room.

Lugar de Gente Feliz (Happy People Place)

An outing this morning to China Park--Lugar de Gente Feliz--a resort nestled in a near-by valley with lakes, sports facilities, hotels and water park. Beautiful, and we were certainly all happy to be there.


They have a variety of water slides. With David and Sara I tried all except the frog, wishing my own grandkids could join us.



Condominiums and chalets are for sale, and you can arrange to have them rented out when you aren't there. Very tempting in this lovely climate if it weren't for the cost of the flight to get here.

We lunched in a place on site where you fill your plate and pay by the kilo. Delicious. Something like the cold buffet at Fogo do Chão, and qually hard to make sure you don't get carried away. This one is not included in the price.

I loved these creative benches scattered around.


They are cute empty, but better filled with friends.




Wednesday, October 11, 2017

Old Friends

We arrived in Vitória last night “sem problema,” as we say in Brazil. (I’m finding it difficult to think in English here.) The airport is on the far side of the city. By the time we got to the shopping center at the base of the mountain, we were ready to stop for supper. The “shopping,” as it is called in Portuguese, is just like any mall you would find in Minnesota or Seoul or Johannesburg, except that the signs are in Portuguese. They have a food court where we could have gotten McDonalds, Subway or Burger King, but opted instead for Girafas where we could get a plate of arroz, feijão preta, faroffa, bife e salada (rice, black beans, toasted manioc flour, steak and salad) for five dollars.

I wasn’t watching the time, but it was still a couple hours to get to our friends' town of Pedra Azul on a winding road that sometimes included a passing lane. It is the main highway to Bela Horizonte in Minas Gerais. It's much less travelled after dark, which it was for us, so we didn’t get stuck behind slow vehicles very often, although the speed limit was only 60 kph (less than 40 mph) so I guess we were all slow traffic. 

The guys talked non-stop. There's a lot to catch up on when your relationship goes back more than three decades. We first got to know the Guimarães family in Mozambique in 1985. Their little girls were the same age as ours, plus they had a little boy. We were fast friends and prayer partners. Our lives have intersected constantly since, as they later taught at our old seminary in Mato Grosso,  even marrying into one of the families we knew best! 

Rosalee and I talked, too, but did stop eventually as I was falling asleep. My tongue gets tangled up from time to time with the language that is almost, but not quite, there, but I am pleased to understand most of what is said to me and mostly be able to communicate what I want to say.

It was dark when we arrived, so the view that greeted us this morning from the bedroom window was a surprise.
This place is delightful! And SO Brazilian. It is a large, steeply sloped property almost at the end of a dirt road, planted here and there with fruit trees, pineapple, orchids, roses, whatever, in tin cans, plastic pails, pop bottles, discarded tires, etc. The property backs up onto state park lands, and the trees Lúcio has planted on the upper part are specifically to attract wildlife. The floors of the house are all tiled, including the wide verandas with hammocks, chairs, table, an extra kitchen sink and more plants. 


No screens interrupt the flow from indoors to outdoors and back again; the door stands open from kitchen to veranda; this part of Brazil doesn’t have mosquitoes like our Northwoods.


David and his Grandpa built this backyard fort that doubles as a shed for firewood below.
Lúcio and Roselee bought this property when they first returned from South Africa and added verandas, an enlarged kitchen and a master suite (where we are sleeping). Eunice (the same age as our daughter Erika) and family settled near-by when they returned from being missionaries in South Africa. David (age 9) has allergies like Simeon, including ones that do a number on his skin, and the mountain climate has been good for him. Sara was a newborn when we last saw them in Cape Town six years ago. They came over for lunch. There were times when we were all talking at once, and I found myself grinning from ear to ear. I would have said I liked this family, but I truly had forgotten how much!

David and Sara in their fort.

Marcus is worship pastor in a local church. It was fun to hear stories of how that church has changed in the past three years as they learn to reach out to a very traditional Catholic community with music and children’s programs that feature Christian values without attaching the name “Baptist Church.” It’s a small city; everyone knows it’s the Baptist Church that puts on the spectacular Christmas program in the praça and sponsors the children’s activity tent at the local festival. Attendance has tripled; baptisms are approaching monthly. People are coming to church who previously would never have considered associating with evangelicals. Very exciting. Of course, there are evangelicals who want nothing to do with these “liberals” and forbid their members to attend so called “Christian” services in worldly venues like the praça. Reminded me of Handel’s Messiah that was scandalous for being performed in concert halls.

It's good to be "home."

The "Blue Rock" for which the town is named. Note the "lizard" climbing up the side and the claw marks of the panther that tried to get the lizard.

Tuesday, October 10, 2017

Getting There...at Last

Steve was at the gate to meet me when I got to Atlanta. As we approached the gate for our departure, I found I had a huge smile on my face. Just hearing Portuguese with strong Brazilian accents was enough to bring back so many happy memories of living here from 1978 to 1982 and again 1984-85. The plane was not full, and after take off I moved over so we each had a couple seats to sprawl out in. I still didn’t sleep very well, but that’s the way it goes, sitting upright.

In Rio Steve got our connecting flights changed so we will bet to Vitório a bit earlier even though it means a layover in São Paulo. We hadn’t had lunch so we got salagdinhos in the airport—kibe, coxinha, pão de queijo. Patty will remember as will the girls. And, oh, yes, Guarana.


Lúcio’s didn’t get the word until late, so they drove the three hours to the airport yesterday to meet us. Then again today. As the South Africans say, “Shame.”

Saw something interesting in the São Paulo airport that I never saw before--a custodian using Rollerblades to get around more efficiently.