We got off the bus from Quito in a dusty supply town called El Carmen. The first thing to hit us was the heat – a palpable, equatorial wave that announced our arrival in the subtropical basin of Ecuador’s Manabi province. We hefted our duffel bags past street vendors hawking coconuts and flapping roosters, and asked four or five times where to find this kind of bus called a “ranchera.”
After winding our way through an open air market, we arrived at a street corner occupied by a few squat, side-less vehicles spray-painted gold, blue, and green and held together with industrial sized nails, with locals starting to squeeze their way into the six rows of long wooden benches. A ranchera.
We approached one ranchera and naively asked, “Is this the bus to the Bramadora?” A man who looked to be in charge squinted at us, “La
Bramadora? Sí, sí, sí, La Bramadora, hurry up, hurry up, let’s go!” We slung our bags up on the roof next to a goat and climbed inside the ranchera, the only gringos in sight. Fifteen minutes later, still baking in the dusty heat, we decided to double-check the ranchera’s destination with our fellow passengers. No one was exactly sure when the ranchera would leave, but it was definitely going to La Bramadora – albeit the long way around; the ranchera parked in front of us was the one that would get there in one hour instead of three. So we climbed down from one ranchera and up into another, reminding ourselves to never trust a local Ecuadorian bus driver’s promises of route, destination, or expected time.
After spending much of the year in Ecuador’s mountainous and frigid
highlands, our third and final school visit brought us to the 3,000 person town of La Bramadora – located in the middle of banana plantations and jungle halfway between the mountains and the coast. Here are a few postcards from the experience:
Living in the Tropics with Lots of Kids
Due to La Bramadora’s rural location, Fe y Alegría operates a “Casa Hogar” – or boarding house – for students who live too far away to commute every day to school. The kids go home to spend weekends with their families and return
to the Casa Hogar Sunday night – many of their commutes totaling 3 or 4 hours, involving long walks and multiple ranchera transfers. When we arrived at the Casa Hogar for the start of the school year there were less than a dozen kids to greet us. As the weeks passed more trickled in, and by the time we left they were a crew of over 50, mostly between the ages of 11 and 17.
While the kids lived in 20-to-a-room dormitories, we were given a room in the second floor of a wood frame house that was just large enough for a bed,
its mosquito net and two plastic folding chairs. While our room was unbearably hot for the middle eight hours of the day, around sunrise and sunset we would catch a breeze along with rays of light that gave the banana leaves outside our window a silhouette of gold. A hundred meters below our house, a mud-brown river provided bathing when the town’s water ran out, and gave rise to a greater quantity and variety of insects than we ever care to see again.
The mid-day heat in La Bramadora was unlike any heat we have experienced. During the 2:00 to 6:00 window even in the shade we dripped with sweat, and along with the rest of the town we could feel our walk, our work and our
neurons slow into a sluggish haze. Unlike in Jahuapamba, a cold shower here – a head-level faucet dripping a weak stream of cold water – was very welcome (though the giant beetles that made their homes in the shower were not so welcome…nor was the translucent yellow frog that Jen once found on the toilet in the middle of the night). We noted that when we showered in the afternoon the cold water on our heads turned warm as it ran down our arms, and was fully hot as it slid off our fingertips.
However, in our second week in La Bramadora the town’s water ran out, and stayed out for our remaining weeks. As we were leaving, there were rumors in the street that the water would be back “any day now – if not tomorrow,
maybe the next day…or possibly Friday at the latest.” Right. With no water, the kids of the Casa Hogar bathed in the river in gender-segregated shifts, clothes were washed in the river, and the older boys were charged with hauling large buckets of water up to the house to boil for drinking, cooking and flushing toilets. As guests, we had the privilege of standing in the shower and dumping buckets of cold river water over our heads.
As with any living situation, we adjusted over the weeks to the water, the bugs, and the heat, enjoyed our exotic views of banana trees in every direction, and took the opportunity to get to know the kids with whom we lived.
They were shy at first, but began to warm up after a few days – especially
when they learned that we were from the United States and spoke English. After school we began to hold “English Class” on some picnic benches shaded by a palm frond roof (picnic benches that one day were stalked by a tarantula – not my favorite day). As much as we tried to be good English teachers and pay some attention to grammar and sentence structure, the kids (the 13-year-old boys in particular) mostly wanted to learn to say, “my motorcycle is cool,” and “you are beautiful.” Wherever the country, kids will be kids.
School Will Begin on April 1st April 8th When You Arrive
As we mentioned, we arrived in La
Bramadora for the beginning of the school year. Because winter runs from January to March and brings rain and flooding so intense that roads are washed out and nobody can travel, the school year begins in early April. We knew this. What we were not prepared for was just how long it would take for school to actually get going – of the approximately 270-student high school, barely 70 students showed up for the first day of class. The teachers explained to us that since school started on April 1st (a Wednesday) and since the following week also had only three days thanks to Easter and “Semana
Santa,” parents saw this as an opportunity for their older children to work in the fields two extra weeks during harvest season, and earn a little extra money rather than going to school for only six days. We watched in the following weeks as enrollment doubled, and then after the Easter holiday nearly all the students had reported for the third week of school. While this made our three-week school visit a bit frustrating (with 6 kids in a classroom one week, 23 the next, and 52 the third, teaching was a constant repeat and review), it was also a fascinating glimpse into the reality of life in this region.
The physical setting of the school was as novel to us as the setting of the Casa
Hogar. Kids and teachers alike arrived on rancheras, on foot, and by motorcycle. The high school complex, as well as the adjoining elementary school, was surrounded by banana trees and wild vegetation. As we sat observing classes, we sometimes felt like there was a jungle just outside the room.
Despite the slow enrollment – which the teachers took as a matter of course –
we instantly felt a camaraderie and coherence among the staff that hadn’t been present at our other school visits. The first day of school happened to be the high school principal’s daughter’s 15th birthday – a big deal. After school he invited several of her classmates along with all of the high school and elementary school staff (including his wife who taught at the elementary school) to celebrate with cake and apple soda. This cordial social interaction – and the banter about soccer that drifted into the afternoon – set the tone for the professional interactions among staff during our visit as well.
Compared to the other schools we visited, this school had the basics under control. The Director was sharp, earned the trust and respect of his faculty, and delegated responsibility to each one of his teachers almost to a fault. The

Parent meeting
school had a large administrative staff for its size, including an Assistant Director in charge of academics, an administrator in charge of discipline and school climate, and an organized Secretary. Although planning and curriculum is much less structured country-wide in Ecuador than what we’re used to in the U.S., the Director and Assistant Director worked well together and facilitated relatively robust processes for planning, teacher training, and learning exchange. The Secretary had an intimate knowledge of the family and economic situations of the school’s students, knew which students were on full or partial scholarships, and which families truly couldn’t pay the monthly $12 tuition. She also confided to us that the school was losing some of the poorest students because there was not enough scholarship money to go around, and some were leaving for state-run schools – which by law must be tuition-free as of this year – or leaving school altogether.
While the school still had its challenges, having these core elements in place facilitated a different type of professional experience for us on our final school visit. It was something of a relief not to feel like our recommendations had to respond to four-alarm fires; instead we could bore into the details and focus on objectives like teacher-to-teacher observations, blackboard configuration, and inductions for new students and teachers. In other words, the stuff that can bring an already-good school to the next level.
Small Town Life and the Priest on his Motorcycle
The walk from the Casa Hogar to school traversed the length of La Bramadora
– a walk of no more than five minutes from beginning to end past tiny convenience stores selling the same few snacks and drinks, three hole-in-the-wall restaurants, and an assortment of concrete homes. The small stretch of main street was
paved, while all the other streets in town were lined with gravel and uneven stones that made for an awkward and sometimes treacherous walk. We left the Casa Hogar each morning just in time to see the 7:30 ranchera idling on the main street next to some posted donkeys, slowly filling up with locals headed into El Carmen to do their shopping for the week.
During our first few days we turned heads. We were the only foreigners in the town and people wondered if we’d gotten lost. But they were friendly and
inquisitive about our presence. We would stop to buy a popsicle or cold drink, and the store owners would begin to ask us about who we were and what brought us to La Bramadora. We would ride the rancheras and strangers would strike up a conversation for the duration of the ride. After a week people began to wave and greet us as we passed by on our way to and from school. All together, La Bramadora was the perfect size for a small town experience – about 3,000 residents: small enough that everyone knows each other but large enough to buy a coke and even find a place to access the internet (which we found after several days of looking, and turned out to be a few computers in the first floor of someone’s house – the only wired place in town).
As with many small towns, La Bramadora came together around religion. Nearly all residents were Catholic, and the couple to runs the Casa Hogar invited us to mass with them and 10-or-so kids for “Sábado de Gloria” before
Easter, during which their grandson would be baptized. We accepted grateful for the invitation, but with a little bit of trepidation. Many of our introductions to townsfolk had included “Are you Catholic?” as a conversation starter (usually followed up by “Are you married?” “Do you have kids?” and “Why not?”). We’d met the local priest a few times, and he unfortunately seemed to draw much of his inspiration from the 16th century (except for the part where he greeted us while gunning it down main street on his motorcycle). Still, we were glad to be included in the festivities, and while the mass went on for literally three and half hours, it was interesting to experience the coming together of this tight-knit community. We saw several teachers at the church – the high school principal, his daughter, the religion teacher named Ulises

Nothing to do with church - boys on donkeys delivering beer to the town
who looked like elderly Marlon Brando and was also a motorcycle buff – and the baptized baby’s godmother turned out to be the principal of the elementary school. As we left the church, a full 20 people piled into the back of the pickup truck headed back towards the Casa Hogar.
A few days later we packed our bags. The kids at the Casa Hogar organized a surprise goodbye party, and did their best to embarrass us with singalongs and dancing with 12-year-olds. While we don’t miss the heat and the bugbites have yet to fade, we look back on the experience as one of our fondest in Ecuador. 
For more photos of La Bramadora, visit: picasaweb.google.com/jvorse