Monday

Tasting Colombian snacks & sweets



Join me for my first taste of Colombian sweets on this episode of Emmy Eats Colombia on Emmymade in Japan. Big thanks to Mr. J for sending me these treats and for making this episode possible. New videos every Monday, Thursday, and Saturday!

Juan Valdez coffee
Pabderitos Kist
Galletas de cocos con café
Achiras del Huila
Nucita
De la Provencia manjar blanco
coconut manjar
guava rolls
Brevas
Cocoadas

Signs You're Colombian


Do you have a certain taste for yellow, blue, and red? Would you dive across the room to save a falling empanada? These are just a few signs that you might be Colombian, Karla Solarte has a few more to add to the list!

Geography Now! Colombia



an educational and entertaining video of the geography of the Republic of Colombia

Traditional Dancing Cumbia, Cartagena Colombia





Cumbia is a music style that originated in Colombia's Caribbean coastal region. Cumbia began as a courtship dance practiced among the African slave population that was later mixed with European instruments and musical characteristics. Cumbia started in the northern coast of South America, what is now Colombia and Panama, mainly in or around Cartagena during the period of Spanish colonization. Spain used its ports to import African slaves, who tried to preserve their musical traditions and also turned the drumming and dances into a courtship ritual. Cumbia was mainly performed with just drums and claves.




Colombian Meals Taste Test

Colombia visit, you must try these delicacies

1. Colombiana Soda
2. Patacones * Twice-fried plantains **Also Popular in the Caribbean
3. Buñuelos * Fried dough & cheese
4. Chorizo con Arepa * Sausage With Corn Bread
5. Lengua de Res * Beef Tongue
6. Obleas con Arequipe *Wafers With Arequipe


there are many more, have to venture to sample the delights..

Friday

6 Reasons to Visit Colombia, South America


When friends heard I was going to visit Colombia several of them asked, "Isn't it dangerous?" "What about the drug trade?" Other people I met who had traveled to Colombia recently said that Bogota was interesting, and Cartagena was a wonderful resort city partly wrapped in an ancient wall.
I had trepidations but kept them to myself - and after a week-long visit to this South America country I have to agree with the travelers who've visited Colombia in recent years.
Sitting in an open-air bar atop the wall surrounding Cartagena's oldest section, now a UNESCO Heritage Site, we watched the sun turn the clouds into flames as it sank into the sea. Turning our heads we caught the rosy afterglow lighting up streets lined with Spanish Colonial buildings. I was glad I got on that plane.




Biking in Suesca near Bogota, Colombia - Sergio Caceres Sanchez/Bogotá Bike Tours
Biking in Suesca near Bogota, Colombia. Sergio Caceres Sanchez/Bogotá Bike Tours

1.  Hiking & Biking Adventures in Colombia for Active Travelers

Rugged and dramatic terrain for hiking, biking, climbing and other outdoor adventures await active travelers to Colombia. You can bicycle around coffee country and visit organic coffee fincas, go climbing in tumbled rocky terrain near Suesca, or hiking among the towering Quindio wax palms in the Valle de Cocora. More »
Enjoying the sunset at a cafe on Cartagena's City Walls - © 2012 Lois Friedland
Enjoying the sunset at a cafe on Cartagena's City Walls. © 2012 Lois Friedland

2.  The Walled City of Cartagena is a Popular Vacation Spot

Cartagena, a UNESCO World Heritage site because of its walled center city and Spanish Colonial buildings, has long been a vacation spot for South Americans.
You can walk, bike or dine on the wall for spectacular views of the Caribbean. Stay in the heart of the city in hotels, such as the Santa Teresa that was once a convent, and wander along narrow streets where bougainvillaea spills over the second-story balconies above shops and apartments. More »
Diving in Colombia with Cartagena Divers - Cartagena Divers
Diving in Colombia with Cartagena Divers. Cartagena Divers

3.  Scuba Diving & Snorkeling Off Colombia's Coastlines

Colombia has miles of coral reefs and sunken wrecks in the Caribbean's warm water on one side. Off the country's Pacific Ocean coastline, you'll also find reefs, large fish and even humpback whales part of the year. More »
Gold ornaments in Gold Museum in Bogota, Columbia - © 2012 Lois Friedland
Gold ornaments in Gold Museum in Bogota, Columbia. © 2012 Lois Friedland

4.  Gold, Gold, Gold

You might want to wear sunglasses looking at some of the displays in the Banco de la República Gold Museum, or you'll be blinded by the glitter of so much gold.
This museum in Bogota has an astounding collection of pre-Hispanic goldwork that reveals much about the lives and beliefs of societies that lived on the land that is today called Colombia. More »
Bogota, Colombia, is built on a plain in the Andes - © 2012 Lois Friedland
Bogota, Colombia, is built on a plain high in South America's Andes. © 2012 Lois Friedland

5.  Why Visit Bogota

The capital city of Colombia - home to some eight million people - sits at 8,646 feet above sea level, on a high plain in the Andes Mountains.
The sprawling city is a hodgepodge of communities. The city encompasses chic zones where upscale families reside, areas where modern buildings stand side-by-side with colonial churches, and historic zones housing food markets to trendy restaurants. Driving on some of the steeper roads between the various zones, you catch glimpses of some of the original inhabitants in this region still farming small sections of land and tending to their cows. More »
Beach at Punta Faro, off the coast of Colombia - © 2012 Lois Friedland
Punta Faro, off the coast of Colombia, Caribbean Island Resort. © 2012 Lois Friedland

6.  Caribbean Island Resorts in Colombia

Waves so gentle they roll onto the sand, without a sound. Snorkel around coral heads right off the shore, scuba dive in deeper water, or just lounge on a beach chair in the sun.
Take a boat ride from the docks in Cartagena and within two hours it's easy to escape to an island resort for a day or overnight. We stayed at Punta Faro, a low-key, casual environmentally friendly resort on Isla Mucura. More »

7.  Find Information & Trips to Visit Colombia

The official tourism Web site for Colombia is a good place to start. The site is easy to navigate and offers insights into place to visit if, for example, you're interested in a hiking, biking or adventurous vacation; simply sightseeing, or want to spent your time on the water.
You can book a variety of activities, from city tours on foot or by bike, to horseback riding, mountain biking and hiking on Viator.
G Adventures runs a Colombia Coffee Trails trip. G Adventures also runs a Colombia Highlights tour. More »
Enjoying the sunset at a cafe on Cartagena's City Walls - © 2012 Lois Friedland
Enjoying the sunset at a cafe on Cartagena's City Walls. © 2012 Lois Friedland

8.  U.S. State Department Warning About Colombia

I enjoyed the visit to Colombia and - thanks to local police and national guards in abundance in all of the places we visited, I felt safe. But, keep in mind that the U.S. government does have a current travel warning out for this country. You'll find it at Colombia.
Source: adventuretravel

The Human Cost of Your Mother's Day Flowers


All photos by Juan Arredondo. All names (apart from Beatriz Fuentes) have been changed to conceal identities
Lorena never wanted to work in the cut-flower industry. But when she gave birth to the first of two daughters at the age of 19, she understood she needed the money. In the region of Colombia where Lorena has spent her entire life—known as the Bogotá Savanna—cut flowers are king. “There’s no other work, no other industry here,” she told me when I visited her this spring. As a single mother, Lorena had few alternatives but to enter the vast farms and factories, where she cut, trimmed, and arranged carnations, alstroemerias, and roses for export to flower-hungry US consumers.
Almost 20 years later, Lorena’s two daughters have managed to avoid working with flowers—one is a student, and the other does missionary work—but Lorena still works in the same plantations, pulling a minimum-wage salary of $333 per month. Years of difficult and dangerous work have wracked Lorena’s body, leaving debilitating injuries in their wake. Lorena traded her youth and health to support her family. “I don’t want the same for my daughters,” she told me.
The National Retail Federation estimates that this Mother’s Day weekend, Americans will purchase more than $2 billion worth of flowersAlmost 80 percent of those flowers come from Colombia, where impoverished mothers like Lorena toil long hours to produce tokens of affection for more fortunate mothers elsewhere. While the provenance of the peonies we buy last minute at gas stations, supermarkets, and corner store bodegas remains a mystery for most Americans, for the women that produce these bouquets the cut-flower industry is a harrowing reality, and Mother’s Day is a cruel joke.

The Elite Flower, a major plantation on the outskirts of Facatativá
Work in the cut-flower industry is notoriously dangerous. Flowers are fickle and sensitive to pests and disease. To protect their investments, companies pump highly toxic pesticides and fungicides into the greenhouses where flowers are grown. Twenty percent of these chemicals are so toxic and carcinogenic that they’re prohibited in North America and Europe. As a result, workers often suffer from rashes, headaches, impaired vision, and skin discoloration. Women, who make up 70 percent of the cut flower workforce in Colombia, report substantially higher instances of birth defects and miscarriages.
In the high season between Valentine’s Day and the summer wedding season, work conditions deteriorate as companies cut corners and rush to get their flowers to market. During these months, women oftentimes wake at three of four in the morning in order to finish chores and prepare meals for their families. By dawn, they are already at the plantation, where a workday can last from 16 to 20 hours. After a few hours of rest, the marathon starts over again.
In early March, I traveled to Facatativá, Colombia, to meet Lorena and others workers responsible for our Mother’s Day bouquets. Located an hour and a half outside Bogotá, Facatativá is a sprawling, dusty city that sits in the heart of the Savanna. Thousands of acres of flower farms, blanketed under gray plastic tarps, stretch from the city’s borders like spider webs.

Discarded bouquets in the Facatativá cemetery
When I met Lorena in front of her home, she was visibly nervous. If her employer found out that she’d spoken out against the industry, she said, there could be serious consequences. Just over five feet tall, Lorena has the petite build of a young girl. But her body, she laments, has been broken by countless hours of huddling over flower beds, trimming stem after stem. Years of cutting, bunching, and arranging bouquets in massive factories. She rattles off a list of injuries: tendonitis, carpal tunnel syndrome, a spinal column disability, a torn rotator cuff. Though the company provides minimal health care, Lorena has to fight to see a doctor. “Every time I go they say there are people with more serious problems, and they push me to the back of the line.”
Does the company where she works offer any precautions to protect her and her colleagues from the dangerous pesticides sprayed on the flowers? “Yes, they give us masks and gloves,” she told me as we sat in the living room of her cinder-block home. “But you can still feel it on you when you come home. Whenever anyone falls sick, the company investigates it thoroughly, attempting to shift the responsibility from the company to the workers.” Lorena recounted the story of a co-worker who’d recently collapsed in the middle of his shift, his face turning purple. “The company says that it was just a heart attack. But there’s a rumor that he’d succumbed to the chemical sprays.”

Carlos, Alejandra, and their daughter at home
Given the arduous conditions I asked why she continued to work in the industry. Lorena nodded toward her daughter, flitting between other parts of the house. “The most important thing,” she said, “is to have a home for my family.”
A week later, I attended a meeting to discuss the role of women and labor rights within the industry. “What we’re looking for is to form and organize the flower workers' sector,” Beatriz Fuentes, one of the event’s organizers, told me afterward. Fuentes worked for years in the cut-rose plantations before becoming a union leader.

Workers listen to speakers during a meeting to discuss the rights and roles of women in the cut-flower industry.
“Women are chosen to work in the flower industry because they have agile hands—they can go through the motions smoother and more efficiently,” Fuentes explained. “Their hands aren't as heavy, and so they can manage the flowers and arrange the bouquets faster.”
But in exchange, they’re often taken advantage of. “Women are regularly paid less than men for the same jobs,” Fuentes said. Because of limited alternative employment—Colombia regularly has the highest unemployment rate in Latin America—female workers are hesitant to assert their rights. Companies commonly require female employees to take pregnancy tests in order to weed out workers who might be eligible for maternity leave. A 2008 International Labor Rights Forum report suggested that more than half of all women in the industry have suffered from sexual harassment.
As the meeting wound down, I struck up a conversation with Alejandra and her husband, Carlos. Between the two of them, they’ve spent almost 50 years on the plantations. Like Lorena, both Carlos and Alejandra have torn rotator cuffs—Carlos in both arms. Because of her injury, Alejandra can no longer work. Carlos, only 53, walks with a cane. He can only work sitting down.

Carlos, Alejandra, and their daughter at home
The next day, I came to their home for a cup of coffee. The couple have two daughters—Camila, who’s just a child, and Mariana, who’s of high school age. Mariana wants to escape the industry and go to college in Bogotá, but the family can’t afford the $5 it costs for her to travel to the capital and back each day. Now she’s picking up spare shifts on the plantation.
Carlos and Alejandra are involved in an effort to unionize flower workers for better conditions. It’s an uphill battle, they say. Increasingly, companies are veering away from permanent employees in favor of temporary, three-month contracts brokered by employment agencies. Known as tercerización (or third-party hiring), the practice is illegal but rampant.
“With an indefinite contract, you have much more security—I can plan on taking care of my family,” Carlos said. Unlike the younger generation of hires, he still has a permanent contract.  “If my job wants to get rid of me, they need to do it for a just cause, like showing up to work drunk. But with these temporary contracts, they can work you to the bone and toss you aside.”

A dumpster's worth of discarded flowers and wreaths in the Facatativá cemetery
Carlos called his 25-year-old neighbor, Sofía, to come over and testify to life as a temporary contractor. “In the farm where I work,” Sofía said, “no one works for the company—everyone works on contract. The companies keep track of whether we’re good or bad workers. If you’re bad, they won’t hire you. And if you’re part of a union, they won’t hire you either.”
Without stronger labor rights and greater visibility, Carlos and Alejandra believe the conditions in the cut-flower industry are unlikely to improve. Meanwhile, the backbreaking work and long hours are having a destructive ripple effect throughout the community.

Flower beds in the Elite Flower plantation
“There are so many mothers in this industry who have to work all day and can’t take care of their children,” Alejandra told me, her young daughter cradled on her lap. “Kids go to school and get out at 1 or 2 in the afternoon, and their parents don’t come home until 1 in the morning. So what do these kids do during that time? How can our kids grow up and be cared for when their parents are gone?”
“In the United States,” Carlos added, “people love flowers. But they have no idea what goes on here. A husband might give his wife a bouquet of flowers, and it’s a beautiful gesture. But he doesn’t know about the pain it took to get it there. People in the United States just don’t think about all this.”
Source: Vice.com

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