







#1 The Moon Over Camp
#2 View at the Top of My Run in the Mountains
#3 Bad Picture in the Only Bar with Good Beer in Leon(and possibly all of Spain)
#4 Groovy Train Ride into Leon from Camp
#5 Where I Sit at the Entrance to Kitchen With Best WiFi Connection for Blog/Skype Calls
#6 Part of the Walk to "Town" From Camp w/ TEFL Course Friends
#7 Cabins Full of Dust Where We Try to Sleep After Late Nights Drinking
#8 Something I Ordered Without Having Any Idea What I Was Going to Get
This post is dedicated to the day to day experiences of the last couple of weeks. As I prepare to go back to Madrid on Sunday, I realize that there are a thousand little things that make life here quite interesting. I still haven't taken a picture of the storks that populate this area and make huge nests on top of poles and ruined churches. I can't explain the strange mechanical sound they make that comprises an integral part of this camp experience. You haven't seen the comical array of computers that scatter the cafeteria as we fight for bandwidth to skype call our friends and family back home. It's difficult to believe how much beer and wine just 16 students can throw back on a nightly basis.
All this is about to end as we wind down the Leon/camp section of our TEFL training. Many of us will be staying at the same hostal back in the city, but I'm guessing the party schedule will slow down a bit as we slam out the last assignments and study for the dreaded grammar portion of the final exams. It's true that I am amphibious in that when I'm in the city I long for the open skies and green of the country, but am equally excited to return to the city where I can have my delicious cafe con leche on demand and soak up the beautiful architecture and unique style of Madrid.
I've got wifi where I'm staying for at least the next week, and then I'm off to a remote town about an hour and a half south east of Madrid called Ucles where I'll be teaching four weeks of summer camp in what looks like a monastery straight out of Harry Potter. I'll be thankfully very busy planning lessons and dealing with spoiled Spanish children so that I won't miss home so dreadfully much(I'm aware that this is a lie, but shhhhhhh, I'm trying to trick myself). I really appreciate the great comments I've been getting on my posts. It helps me feel less lonely as I try to sort through the complication that involves living in two worlds: home and here. Keep up the communication so I'll be motivated to snap more pictures and share what's going on.