Limpiador de calles. Street Cleaner

“Crunch”

The Balboa beer can flattens under my foot, and I scoop it into a plastic bag with the other aluminium pancakes. I scan the streetside for my next targets. Cans go in one bag, everthing else – plastic bottles, styrofoam cups, candy bar wrappers – goes in another. I fill them both over my one-hour shift.

Rotten mangos and a stray dog, but no trash on my side of the strip!

Mondays, at 7am, El Valle’s “Green team” meets in front of the Hong Kong ferreteria. The hardware store serves as the gathering point for a small group of locals and gringos who fan out on foot, in golf carts, and trucks for a power hour of basic garbage collection, toting bags and hand-held pickers. The trash is taken to the municipal waste dump.

There is a sisphean satisfaction in doing menial work as the Calle Principal comes to life. Uniformed kids lining up in their school courtyard, safety-vested labourers starting road work, trucks and buses slowing for the speed bumps. Stray dogs dozing, shops opening. Nothing really disgusting to report yet. The sickly-sweet rotting mangos under their tree – is it garbage? – I leave.

El Valle does collect waste, just not off the ground at public roadsides. I’m told it was way worse before locals decided to do something about it. Now, progressively, people here are learning to hang on to their trash just a little longer until they can find a proper receptacle. I can’t count this modest effort as planet-saving. But for me it is doing what you can, where you are, with what you’ve got.


Temprano de lluvias. Rainy season


“I know it’s everyday for you
I ain’t from ‘round herrre”

Those Mark Ronson lyrics have been in my head these last days. It’s about to get rainy for weeks to come. So far, here in El Valle, this has meant at least one hour a day of warm, intense, might-as-well-be-standing-in-the-shower downgush. Drops hammer on the leaves and roof and you don’t hear much else. Even the wildlife, normally so vocal, pipes down while the sky’s taps are turned on.

Most of humanity, heck most living things that have ever existed, experience some form of this weather. Rainy seasons, monsoons, are facts of life in most of Asia, Africa, and the Americas. But, other than a few heavy summer storms, I’ve never experienced this type of precipitation pattern.

So I’m allowing myself to be fascinated by a phenomenon that’s commonplace from Mombasa to Mumbai, Bangkok to Bogota. If tourists in Toronto can get excited experiencing a white Christmas or spotting a gray squirrel in Queen’s Park, then I can get behind (and under) this weather.