So, I just checked out the link for this Mike Adams, and I've got to say, his
site is filled with rose colored statements that really beg further
investigation.
First, he says that the water supply in Vilcabamba is secure. Vilcabamba has had
a long history of water problems. I remember a couple of years back when it
rained so much for so long that the water supplies were either contaminated or
off altogether, and the manager of the Jardin Escondido (a hostal in town) had
to divert water from the Jacuzzi just so that guests could take short showers.
Adams' statement that it rains for short periods, usually at night, is also "all
wet." It can rain for days on end - sometimes torentially.
Much of the food in Ecuador IS NOT organic. As has beens stated in the past on
this forum, there are still pesticides being used here that have been illegal in
the States for quite some time. Although the new codex alimentarius guidelines
which are supposed to go into effect at the end of this year will allow these
pesticide residues into your food worldover.
Homes in San Joaquin (where he apparently lives) are NOT affordable to most
middle class Americans. Do you have $250,000 to $350,000 to spend on a home in
Ecuador? And then pay the association fees, etc. each month? I don't. Nor would
I. It is a little American suburbia there. The 600 acres he brags about (largely
vertical) has had double the original number of homes built on it than were
planned and promoted, so that now many residents are check to jowl. And now a
high end hotel and spa is being completed on the property. How many
contradictions can one gated community tout?
Paying someone $12 a day to do your dirty work is shameful. Especially if you
can afford to live in San Joaquin. If you pay them on a full time basis, this is
allowable by minimun wage standards (provided you pay their taxes too, as
required by law), but it is not a reasonable standard of living. Especially in
Vilcabamba, where prices have been driven up by the $350,000 homeowners.
Consider that this amounts to $1.50 per hour for an eight hour day. So an hour
of hard work (cleaning, gardening - the things we don't want to do)will barely
buy them one of the cheap almuerzos we are all so tickled by. They'd have to
work almost two weeks to afford one night's accommodations at Montesuenos (Brain
O'Leary's place that he quotes as being rented for $100 per night). There are no
buses to San Joaquin, so how much does it cost them just to get to work? A taxi
from town up there costs at least $1.50-$2.00 (there goes an hour). Or, of
course they could walk the mile or two uphill, and many likely do. Costs are
going up and worker salaries are not keeping pace. We should know the drill -
it's why many of us (at least in part) moved here - for a lower cost of living,
because we couldn't keep our heads above water either. But to brag about how
little we can get away with paying someone to break their back for us is a sad
commentary. I have a housekeeper come once a week for half a day and pay her
$12. In exchange, I get a spakling clean apartment, a smiling face and someone
who sings the entire time she is here working. And I don't worry about my things
disappearing because someone needs to convert them to cash just to get by.
Back to organic produce...If you have the space and ability, grow it yourself if
you really want to know what's in it. Otherwise, there are places that
specifically sell organic only produce. There is one here in Cuenca on Doce de
Abril, near Av. de las Americas, and there is a fairly large organic section to
the market in either Cotacachi or Otovalo (sorry, I can't remember which).
MAZ