Throughout the past ten months, I’ve had time to reflect on my household chores, and the similarities and differences to my previous life and life here in Nicaragua.
Sweeping & Mopping vs. Vacuuming
- In Boulder, I always vacuumed our whole apartment because we had carpet. It was fast and easy with noticeable results!
- Sweeping is a daily task that most women partake in. In attempts to “fit in” and clean up, I regularly sweep off my front porch and stoop outside. I actually did this a lot in Boulder too, but here I find (almost daily) chip bags, juice boxes, mango or jocote pits (when in season), plastic water bags, candy wrappers and such that kids drop behind our wall as they go to and from school. We live on the same street as the grade school so there is A LOT of kid traffic on our road!
- Additionally, there are always a variety of bugs to sweep up daily—dead or alive they go outside! We have also noticed “seasons” of bugs, whether it is ants with wings, beetles or crickets.
- With tile floors, a broom and dustpan is all one needs to get the job done! Although the quality is lacking in the brooms here since I've broken two already. But there always is mopping to do if you want to really get things clean! This is much more time consuming and tiring than vacuuming. It happens in our house, but not as often as people here tend to mop. Many mop their houses daily!! I can’t imagine, it’s hard enough mopping every other week!
On Water
- In Boulder I had houseplants that started overtaking our living room. It was a weekly chore to water them all and make sure they were all happy and healthy. Plus in the summers, we had a garden, which needed nightly watering at times.
- In Teustepe, I don’t own one houseplant! I know, it’s quite sad but true. We do plan to have a garden, but as of yet we are still planning. So no watering as of yet!
- In Teustepe, we always need to consider is our water supply. We have two huge plastic barrels in our shower to save water, and several water jugs in our kitchen to fill and save for when our water turns off. Sometimes we just don’t have enough pressure to take a shower. We always keep our water filter full for drinking, and keep all receptacles full just in case! Something we never had to think about in Boulder.
- When it’s really hot, keeping up with our ice supply turns into a daily chore!
Dishes
- In Boulder, dishes at times got seriously out of hand (and we didn’t have a dishwasher either)! Two days of dishes meant two sinks worth of dirty dishes that typically extended themselves out onto the counter or even the stove. Nate and I had to tally who did dishes last, because the task at hand was often overwhelming.
- Since our water supply fluctuates, and bugs are persistent, we usually try to do dishes immediately after a meal. This makes the quantity of dishes less when you’re doing them more often, so disputes on who’s turn it is to wash dishes are fewer. Plus, we don’t have a kitchen sink with a drain; we just have a dishpan, which we have to dump outside, so we use less water doing dishes here.
Laundry
- In Boulder, we had access to a washer and dryer in our apartment unit. With enough quarters on hand, I could do all our laundry until my heart was content! Washed, dried and folded within three hours!
- In Teustepe, we have a lavendero or pila, which we hand wash some of our clothes on. I know we’ve mentioned this before, so I won’t go into more detail. It’s a lot of work, so we have a tendency to haul our laundry into Managua to wash at the MCC office in a washing machine. No dryers though! All laundry is hung up outside to dry, and in the rainy season you have to find enough space under a roof to hang it all. It can be a couple days till it dries when it’s really rainy and cloudy outside.
Dusting
- In Boulder, I attempted to dust every week or every other week. There were always lots of surfaces to cover, things to move around and get under—definitely not my favorite thing to do!
- In Teustepe, when it’s not the dusty-dry season, dust isn’t all that bad! Maybe I choose to ignore it! During the dry season, we were wiping off surfaces every thirty minutes if we were going to eat or work on the computer. Otherwise, it was a lost cause trying to keep things clean.
Bathroom
- Cleaning bathrooms is equally un-fun no matter what country you’re in! Our bathroom in Teustepe doesn’t get quite as shiny white as it was in Boulder. Again, a chance to lower standards and overlook areas.
Random Chores
In Boulder—
- Mail always seemed to accumulate in piles on our dining room table. It became a weekly chore to deal with it all! Most headed to the recycling bin!
- Trash—we always had a dumpster at our apartment, so we could take out our trash whenever we needed. We accumulated a lot more trash and recycling in the states then we do in Nicaragua. And we honestly didn’t have more than one kitchen-sized garbage bag of trash in Boulder!
- Grocery shopping—I usually tried to do one big trip to several places about every week or ten days. It usually took about two hours including the drive.
- Errands—I would always use our car to get around and locations could be all over Boulder and perhaps not even completed in one Saturday! So I split my errands up and prioritized them to do the most important ones first. Plus I always devised an order of where I would go first, second, etc. so I would make best use of travel time!
In Teustepe—
- Mail, what mail? We don’t have any piles of junk mail to wade through here! Yet it still amazes me how random piles of papers can still accumulate here even though we don’t have incoming mail!
- Trash—since there is no trash service here in Teustepe, Nate is now the proud trash-burner of our household. Recycling, what’s that? We save recyclables and haul them into Managua to be (hopefully) recycled there. We also find creative ways to reuse plastic bottles. In the near future, they will house our seedlings for our vegetable garden.
- Grocery shopping—in Teustepe, it consists of one of us walking around the corner to buy milk, eggs, or other basics. Not very far to go, and shopping is done in about ten minutes!
- Errands—in Teustepe every place has their specialty, or they are a pulpería, which means they have a little bit of everything. So when I want tortillas, cuajada (a cheese equivalent), cooked beans, and a fresco (juice) for dinner, I would go to four different locations to buy each one. The nice thing is every place is within three blocks from our house! So all errands are by foot and still don’t take very long!
- When it’s really hot, carrying a fan to whatever room I am in becomes a chore! It’s like a new and necessary appendage!
- During the rainy season, there are more frogs around (both tiny and large). We catch them and put them outside, where they should be, and not in our shower or living room!
- Mosquito swatting! Nate has personally taken it upon himself to kill as many mosquitoes as possible on any given day! He’s perfecting the mid-air/one-hand kill, but those buggers still bite!
- Killing ants! Additionally, Nate has a mission to kill colonies of ants that lurk in the cracks of house! Boiling water (sometimes mixed with detergent) is what wards them off best!
Here in Nicaragua, my priorities have changed a bit in regards to household chores. My house in Teustepe will never be as “clean” as my apartment in Boulder, and with this realization, my standards have dropped and my priorities have changed. I don’t really feel like this has been a “bad” thing in my life; really it was a necessity to preserve my sanity (and Nate’s). Additionally, it has been a healthy release of my OCD tendencies towards cleanliness.