Thursday, January 20, 2011

Stopping in the Dominican Republic

On Monday, January 17, we spent twelve hours in the air on 3 planes to travel from Salt Lake City, by way of Dallas and Miami before we finally arrived in the Dominican Republic. In Santo Domingo, a city of 3 million people, we participated in 2 additional days of training on the Perpetual Education Fund before heading to our final destination in Trinidad.

The DR is considered a 3rd world country due to widespread poverty. However, it has some amazing natural beauty, including unique flowers and trees and a splendid shoreline. The people are friendly and helpful. The city's skyline is filled with high rise buildings and the church is beginning to have a real presence here with 10 stakes, dozens of branches and a beautiful temple on a hill overlooking the city.

The most interesting memories of our time in the DR include toilets which don't always flush, frequent power outages, and driving city streets where there are no rules!!! No kidding . . . no one stops at stop signs or street lights. Drivers turn left from the far right lane . . . right from the far left lane and everyone takes whatever place on the road where they can stick the nose of their car. The biggest . . . or the most aggressive driver always wins! Driving in Santo Domingo can best be described as a cross between bumper cars at a county fair and a national game of “chicken” involving every driver on the road. This is one experience you have to have for yourself, because there really is no way to describe it in words. I kept my eyes closed much of the time, because driving in Santo Domingo is what we used to describe as an “E-ticket” ride at Disneyland!!!

3 comments:

Kaytee Postma said...

That would give me every reason in the world to walk everywhere. Holy cow! No thanks!

Unknown said...

I laughed when you said "a national game of chicken". That's a perfect visual. Looks like all is going well so far! What an adventure.

Dean and Elaine said...

I thought South Africa was the only place where stop signs, street lights, and road closures didn't mean a thing. This is also a very scary place to be on the roads. The kombies (taxis) go wherever and whenever they want and you better watch out! We have yet to travel anywhere where all the robots (street lights) were working. The power here is crazy!