Thanksgiving was surprisingly excellent. In the morning some of us went to the City Center where they served a giant Thanksgiving lunch. There were a ton of volunteers there so the only thing we ended up doing was putting cups on the table, and in the end I served 2 plates of food. For the rest of the time we were able to stand around listening to the entertainment they brought in, which was a bunch of "southern music." They had a few jazz groups, which were awesome. One of the guys played a mean trumpet, and had a wicked jazz voice, and the rest of the performers were awesome, and really embodied New Orleans (I thought). Irma Thomas (I think is her name) was a grammy winning vocalist, and she performed a few numbers during lunch. There was also a gospel choir that performed. The whole event was really really fun and exciting. That night about 6 or 7 of the teams in the gulf area got together and had a pot luck thanksgiving. Originally we were worried that there would not be enough food for so many people (because estimating proportions for ~70 people on a tiny budget is pretty difficult), fortunately we were very wrong and there was plenty of turkey, mashed potatoes, green beans, pumpkin and pecan pie for everyone to be stuffed and bring some home. It was also really great to be able to see some former Pod 18-ers, and other friends that I have been missing since the end of CTI. Gold 2 went to bed pretty early after Thanksgiving, because we had to be on the road at 6 o'clock the next morning for our playground build.
I signed up to lead a group of volunteers on Friday in building tree benches and goal posts. I was a little nervous because I had no idea how to build a tree bench or a goal post. Fortunately the directions were thorough and the volunteers were patient and actually listened to me--everything went very smoothly, and in the end the benches held me up when I sat on them. The process was a lot of fun, and it was crazy to see how quickly the playground went up. Everything was pretty much in place by 2 o'clock, and all that was left was to fill in the mulch (bleh). After most of the mulch had been cleared off we tried to take the rest on the one giant tarp that it was dropped off on, we did not realize how heavy that stuff is. It was probably hilarious to watch about 50 volunteers huddled together trying to move a massive tarp of mulch. At 2:30 the playground was done and we took some ceremonial pictures, but we weren't allowed to play on it because the cement still had to dry...how anti-climatic.
Even though the playground build was done, AmeriCorps still had to work cleaning everything up and putting away tools at the recovery school district. Our day actually lasted from 6-6, and when we were done, we were exhausted. Some of us were troopers though, and headed back to bourbon street. Fortunately we just used it as a guide to get us to Frenchman St, which had a much more local feel, was a lot more interesting, and smelled a lot less like booze, horse sh*t, and vomit.
The hostel is now decorated for Christmas, and I will be home in just a few weeks!!!!