Thursday, December 31, 2009We’ll be spending New Year’s Eve with the family tonight.
Joel takes Ramiro to the market with a list of items to buy. Nena takes me later and we walk through the many lanes with fresh vegetables, fruit, meat and fish. Everything looks so good and is so cheap.
The strawberries are $4.00 a kilo, How can I not buy any? We also buy fresh corn, squash and chicken for a casuela Nena is going to make for lunch.
Nena takes us to a juicebar at the market for a fresh, blueberry and strawberry shake with walnuts before we go home. No sugar added, that’s rare here in Chile but that’s the way I like it.

We need some time alone and drive to San Pedro to the lagoon, hoping to find a Geocache. We find a lake filled with hundreds of swans, but no cache.
We’re expected home at 3:00 pm for the Casuela, a soup in which large pieces of meat are cooked, together with whole potatoes, and large chunks of corn and squash. It’s quite good.
I think it may be a good idea to take a little nap, it could be a late evening tonight.
Family starts to arrive around 7:00 pm and everyone helps with something, (well almost everyone, some just watch) cleaning shrimp, barbecuing sausage preparing salads or setting the table. But first we have Onces, which is coffee or tea with bread or cake. I settle for just tea knowing we will eat again later.
The new years eve meal starts with avocados stuffed with cooked shrimp, beets and mayonnaise on a bed of lettuce, followed by BBQd beef a variety of sausages, accompanied by various vegetables and cooked potatoes. For dessert there is Citrus sorbet with Strawberries.
We are accompanied by Nena’s daughter Tanya, who lives in Santiago. Nena’s sister Patty and her daughter with husband Rodrigo , his sister and their two little children and of course Joel. Aide and Manual have left to visit his family.
When everything is cleaned up and the dishes are done at 11:00 pm, we take two vehicles to drive to the harbour area to watch the fire works. Rodrigo takes the Champagne in his car and we take Nena and Tanya.
Thousands of people are lined up along the bridge. There are cars everywhere. We hardly move and after 30 minutes still have not found a place to park.
We keep on losing Rodrigo’s car, at a traffic light or congestion area.
It’s 11:55 we’re still driving around. We continue across the bridge to San Pedro and have lost Rodrigo all together. It’s 11:58 We find a place to park, but will we be able to see anything of the fireworks from here? The moment we get out of the car, the fireworks starts. It is midnight. We exchange New Year’s wishes to each other and watch the fireworks, which lasts for 20 minutes.
Having a vague idea of the cost of fireworks, I can’t help but think about all the poor people who could have been helped with all this money going up in smoke.
We finally get to do our Champagne Toast when we get home at 1:00 am. The rest of the family has gone home to take the little ones to bed.
Of course we think of all our family and friends in Canada, Holland, Spain, United States, Mexico, Chile or where they may be, and via this blog wish them all a new year with happiness, peace, health and lots of love.



















































