San Jose de
Maipo, city, is a community of about 6-8,000 people, but the area of the Branch
covers several smaller villages. The whole area is called San Jose de Maipo.
All included there are about 15,000. There is the Maipo river that flows down
this canyon and the city is located along this river. In total the area is
about 10 miles long and ½ mile wide. It is really pretty. I will try to
attach pictures. We are now in fall but the weather is beautiful. The nights
get about 45 degrees but the days warm up to about 80. Clear skies every day.
It is quite nice.
We live in
a house that is circular in shape. It is 36 feet in diagonal. It is about 1000
sq. ft. if I remember my math. It is bigger than the other temple, etc.
missionaries apartment. There is one nice size bedroom, and office, a
bathroom and a big open area for living room and nice kitchen area. We have all
new appliances (refrigerator, califont (tankless water heater), washer/dryer,
stove/oven, and microwave) and cabinets. I am including picture if I can figure
it out. We have all wood floors and a wood burning stove that will heat the
whole house easily. The first night we were here it was cold and they had
turned on the stove and the house was quite toasty. The house is up on the side
of a hill overlooking the city. It is a dirt road but quite driveable, with
some hairpin turns to get up. We will take a video and send it to you. It takes
about 2 minutes to get up the one lane road that is used by two lanes of
traffic.
We have a
large yard with fruit trees, 4 plums, 1 lemon, 1 orange, 1 apple, 1 walnut, and
one other we do not know. I don’t know if we will be able to get fruit. It
depends on our time, but it will be fun.
We have our
car. All worked out very well for us with the car. It is a little four door
car. The sisters have been in the back and it is comfortable, but if I were 6
foot + it would not be comfortable. It has plenty of power. It is a manual
shift and fun to drive.
Our biggest
challenge has been to get internet service. If we wanted to have TV, telephone,
and internet we could get it easier than to only want internet, but that is all
we need. The real problem is in the Chilean system. In order to buy anything
that requires a contract you have to have a carnet. It is like a Social
Security Card. When you arrive you apply and it takes about 3-4 months to get.
The cards last for a year and then you apply for renewal. (This is what Scott
had to do for several months of his mission in Panama). So you get your first
card and it is temporary. You get your second card and it is also temporary.
Then for your third it is a permanent resident card. When you enter into a
contract, like an internet or phone service for a specified price for 6, 12, 18
months you have to have a permanent carnet, or you have to prove employment
with a salary check, or have some type of proof of paying bills. We do it
somewhat similar in the states but it is much more difficult here. This is
almost like applying for a mortgage to get internet service. I have been to two
locations to understand it (no luck) and then I took our office senior
missionary (but since his carnet was temporary and could not prove income- no
luck) and then to the central office downtown and through church offices and no
luck. So what we can do for now is to have a pay as you go service. It is more
expensive but it gives us internet. We have to pay for each device separately,
so we will have it for our notebooks but not for the Apple equipment. Not Apple
because they have their own plugs (not USB) and I have not found a converter
for them yet. So we use the Notebooks for internet uses and Skype, and IPAD
etc. for scripture study and apps we have already downloaded. We will make it.
Not the most efficient but we are making progress.
Some other
things we have noticed:
The dog to
people count is almost equal. Dogs all over the place. But they do not sniff
all over you or jump on you. They don’t enter into stores, but they bark at
night. In our area there is an opera sometime each day or night of dogs from
all over the area. They are not together in one place but they are talking to
each other.
Lines on
the street and speed limit signs are only guidelines not anything fixed.
Horns are
meant to be used so they use them. “you are in our way”, “I see you coming”,
“you are slower than I want you to be”, etc., etc. You just don’t know exactly
what the horn is for.
The police
and fire always have their lights going. It is like advertising. Only when the
sirens are going are they in a hurry.
The people
are all very warm and kind. They are glad we are here and the members love the
missionaries.
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