November 11th is
Cartagena’s Independence Day. But why celebrate for one day when you could for
two weeks?
Beauty pageants are one of Cartagena's most infamous events. There are two. The"Reyna Nacional" includes ladies from around Colombia, usually from very affluent families, and the winner continues onto the Miss Universe pageant. The second is the "Reyna Popular," where ladies from Cartagena's various neighborhoods and socio-economic strata compete. Gorgeous people takin’ over!
I think that pictures describe my experience best. I, however, managed to take zero photos, naturally. Photo credit: Random neighbors, Kristy Ellis, Samantha Merkle
In October, as queens were
selected for the "Reyna Popular" pageant, neighborhoods threw massive parties with hundreds of people, concerts, fireworks, and drinks.
So, for Halloween Nicole
and I represented winners from our respective neighborhoods: Miss Los
Calamares and Miss Escallon Villa. We borrowed a neighbor's dresses, found
crowns and fake eyelashes, made sashes... and BAM!--after caking on some
make-up and molding some fake boobs and badonkadunks, the resemblance was
uncanny. Needless to say, I received more cat-calls that night
than any prior thanks to the 15-odd tshirts I shoved into the back of my
shorts.
Yes, we did consider "political correctness"; however, all fears were
put to rest when the host family/neighbors thought it
was hysterical.
We also celebrated Halloween in several of my classes, although I opted to not come as Senorita Escallon Villa. One can only do so much cultural integration at a time...
Classes were out the week
of Carnival (November 2-12). In the days prior students came to school, but
classes were replaced by pre-carnival celebrations.
Teachers in Colombia colors
Carnival season begins at school
For the "Reyna Nacional" pageant, events were underway the entire week.
There were parades
Getting interviewed on TV with my partner in crime for the week, Kristy. Check out her Cartagena tourism website: ticartagena.com. It's fantastic! Needless to say, Kristy knows everyone and everything about the city and let me tag along as her +1 to some pretty awesome gigs.
Fancy dinners
Nightlife and dancing
Sammy came all the way from Santa Marta to celebrate my birthday/carnival!
Costumes galore
Fireworks, foam and water being thrown AT people (seriously scary--I do not like this aspect of Cartagena's carnival). In my neighborhood this also included urine, paint, and bags of water. Gross.
And finally...
turning 25!
I spent the day at my
house with Colombian and ex-pat friends and family...ate some food, plowed our
way through 3 cakes, drank some beers, and watched a parade pass by. That night
we went out of dinner, avoided "busca-pies" or the firecrackers that
explode at people's feet as we meandered our way through crowded
streets, and eventually ended up at a salsa bar.
The cake Lila, a teacher from school, brought over
Some of the family/neighbors
Three US friends and Edith, one of my Colombian grandmas... welcome to my world
In all: great people, great times. I caught myself laughing as the Peace Corps, jungle, hut-dweller image I initially envisioned faded as I took another bite of shrimp and looked out from the rooftop onto the beauty pageant parade below. However, writing this from the comfort of my little neighborhood, I can say it's good to be back. As crazy and disorganized as my Peace Corps lifestyle is, Cartagena's carnival just raised the bar. It's all about getting a new perspective anyways, right?
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