Entreamigos San Pancho Community Center

Non Profit Entreamigos in San Pancho community had amazing  Summer Success!
Entreamigos, located in the San Pancho community (San Francisco, Nayarit)  is an amazing non profit organization that offers recycling, gardens, art, a store, a restaurant and classes. Stop by to browse or for breakfast.
Its a great way to give!

Entreamigos Summer Workshops

It was entreamigos  biggest summer ever with 215 kids participating in events and 98 volunteers! Woo HOO!  Now that’s rockin! Four weeks of summer fun for the San Pancho kids all of ages in a variety of classes with the ages of children ranging from 4 to 14.  They had crazy adventures like Xtreme sports, paddle boarding, art, swim lessons and just about everything in-between.   There were more than 45 classes all taught by volunteers who  joined them from Canada, United States and all over Mexico.  These programs would never have made it if not for all of these amazing volunteers! Kudos to all of you who made this possible for the kids of San Pancho!
This summer 18 University students from the prestigious private Mexican Universities, Iberoamericano, located in Mexico City and ITESSO located in Guadalajara came to volunteer.  They joined  entreamigos to do their 480 hours of practical social service required for graduation.  This amazing and diverse group of kids brought their skills in product design, marketing, architecture, engineering and education to work on ongoing and new entreamigos projects.   These kids made a fun video about their experience. This video really shows off  all of the aspects of entreamigos, and volunteers at work. Check it out!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l8HgSIDpKN8

50 SAN PANCHO KIDS VISIT CIRQUE DU SOLEIL!!!!
A HUGE THANK YOU goes out to Gilles Ste. Croix and Monique Voyer for inviting 50 San Pancho kids to see the preview showing of the Cirque du Soleil show, Varekai, that just opened in Guadalajara. What an amazing treat for these kids. The kids took a deluxe bus to Guadalajara, many visiting Guadalajara for their very first time.  They enjoyed front row seats and pizza afterwards.  It was an amazing opportunity!

Back to School
In Mexico, school started in August and the kids are back in school.  This year, thanks to the many, many donated backpacks and school supplies donated to entreamigos. These donations were able to help nearly 200 kids get a fun, fresh start to the year! So many brought in school supplies, and special thanks go out to Dream Trips volunteers from World Ventures, who have donated nearly 100 backpacks in their recent visits! Way to go Dream Trips!

The Scholarship Program…The Best Part for the Entreamigos Team
There has been given 71 Scholarships for students, and now 9 are attending Universities!
These programs would have never made it if not for all of the donations, and the time and energy of the amazing volunteers!

A special thanks to the director of entreamigos, Nicole Swedlow, who had a vision back in January of 2006, and continues to put in endless time and energy for entreamigos children and adults alike.
A Fun Journey  Started With a Vision
Nicole Swedlow began teaching arts and crafts on her old kitchen table in the street in front of a little storefront that she had rented. Her idea was to invite local artists to sell their crafts in the store and in turn for a reduced commission rate on sales, and in return they would be asked to teach an art class to children or adults in the San Pancho community.

The store sat empty and was not getting off the ground a cash gift of a friend, John Arner helped buy inventory to make the store look more like a store. This and “the project” began to attract visitors, artists and began to gain more interest.

In the summer of 2006, entreamigos had two breakthrough events with the start of the Summer Workshops and their first Planta San Pancho reforestation day.   In 2007 Indira Santos and Plantate Baronio joined entreamigos and together they expanded the upstairs of their storefront to create a small library. The Recycling program and the Recicla Parque initiatives took off, the Scholarship program was launched and by the end of 2008, it was clear that the activities of entreamigos could no longer be contained in the small space or the street. In April of 2009 the State Government granted entreamigos the use of a giant abandoned warehouse. With the amazing response from the community, along with funding of the Three Swallows Foundation, the building was remolded and has expanded into the San Pancho Community Center it is today.
April of 2009, when the State Government of Nayarit granted entreamigos the use of a giant abandoned warehouse (bodega). A resounding and generous response from the community coupled with the funding impulse of the Three Swallows Foundation, provided the resources necessary to remodel the building.

Entreamigos continues the work that began with Nicole back in 2006, seven years ago! They enjoy teaching what they know to others, and all are invited to join in. Although there are many ways to donate, like sponsoring a child in summer, or a scholarship student or a special project, the truth is that all of those things wouldn’t exist without the everyday, normal hard work of the entire entreamigos staff.
What a wonderful success for the San Pancho Community!
Their hours are: Monday to Friday    9am – 6pm and Saturday  10am – 2pm
Special events and classes may have different schedules.

If you would like to help with a donation, please click here or paste into your browser:
http://entreamigos.org.mx/get-involved/donate/

Discover the Entreamigos Community Center in the San Pancho
community on the Riviera Nayarit in Mexico today!

 

Saving Turtles in San Pancho Mexico

In San Pancho Mexico, (also known as San Francisco Nayarit), the  San Pancho Mexico Turtle Project began  on April 16, 1993, when theLogo Grupo Ecológico de la Costa Verde, A.C. received official recognition by the MexicanNursery Government to become the first environmental non-profit civil association of the region with the special interest in the protection of the marine turtle.  Through the Mexican Government, SEMARNAT (Secretary of the Environment and Natural Resources) the Group was granted permission to continue its work along the neighboring beaches. The board of directors was created to carry out the objectives and goals via voting, with the officers now in standing; Frank D. Smith as Director, Maria Elvia Garcia Palmera, Secretary, and Rocio artinex Ocegueda as Treasurer.

They and the volunteers work day and night protecting the turtles by removing the eggs form the nests so poachers can’t collect them, usually at night. They have had terrific success! Frank also writes a monthly newsletter, and you can sign up for it here.

http://www.project-tortuga.org/contact.htm

Being a completely non-profit organization in San Pancho Mexico, they need your support, whether its you time, money or equipment. there is always a way to help out.

Nests Saved in San Pancho Mexico
The Number of nests recorded by the end of July came to 108, (down 16 nests from last July.)  Around 96 were placed in the box nurseryOlive Ridley, 5 were left in place on the beach and, unfortunately,  7 nests were taken by poachers. I suppose that is pretty good odds considering! All seven species of sea turtles are endangered worldwide and all are protected by law. Turtle meat, eggs, leather or shells are illegal to own or to sell and the penalties are very severe.
This year the almost extinct Leatherback turtle nested in San Pancho. There is a huge difference in the size between the Leatherbacks and the Ridley species. The leatherbacks are truly amazing giant turtles! They did not see the mother turtle on the first  nesting, but got to release those little darlings, helping to ensure the species survival. Most of the turtles laying eggs on the Riviera Nayarit are of the Ridley species and the Pacific Green Turtle. 

They rely on volunteers, and this July 2013 they are: Joslin, Starlie and Summer Bertrand, Kristen Barbour, Patricia Dombrowski, Megan Ewald, Lisa, Carly and Annie Hoffner, USA and Amalia Sedlmayer, Germany, Manuel Murrieta, México, and Lisa Fisher, Canada.
These volunteers not only take care of the nurseries, and collect the eggs at night, but also clean up the trash on the beaches. Did you know that turtles eat jellyfish? Now, there is a happy thought, if you have ever been stung by one!
Well, the turtles also mistake plastic for food! The plastic holders that hold the bottles can also get wrapped around animals bodies, necks and faces. Please, don’t litter, and help pick up the trash when you can. This San Pancho Mexico Turtle Team is AWESOME!

When to see a Turtle Release
The turtle releases in San Pancho Mexico are at the sunset hour, down in front of the restaurants on the San Pancho beach. The hatchlings look for the subtle light reflecting off the surf and waves to direct them towards the sea.Hatchlings Other forms of  lighting can point them in the wrong direction, and wandering about on the beach can lead to almost certain death. Even hatchlings that eventually find their way to the water can be too exhausted to swim – becoming easy pickings for fish. The lights from houses and restaurants play a large role in the disruption of nesting sea turtles and they can get lost or confused, and also confusing to the hatchlings.Olive Ridley

There has also been some concern with the heavy rains and flooding, as the beach nursery could get washed away.  The turtle nests need to remain dry for the first 12 days of incubation.  When eggs drop from the nesting turtle they are soaked in a antibiotic water solution, glossy, cream-white in color.  At the point when the eggs hit the sand its shell must quickly turn a dry, chalk-white color.  This transformation will allow the eggs to shed water, sand and bacteria, and most importantly, it will allow it to exchange carbon dioxide for oxygen.  Although white eggs may die if they receive heavy rain or flooding waves anytime within the first twelve days of incubation.

How do the Turtle Eggs breathe???
How do eggs breathe under eighteen inches of damp sand??? Its all about the tide coming in and out.  As the tide goes out, a large amount of water under the beach will go out with it. This allows air to be drawn down through the sand and around the nest.  As the time come in, it pushes carbon dioxide up and out of the next to the surface, much like an air bellow. And…this is how they can breathe…its so amazing! Thanks for all of the terrific information Frank!

If you have information on the location of a nests or a nesting turtle, or someone poaching a nest or capturing a turtle, please contact Frank and the gang at 045-322-191-1475 or 258-4100.
 Joslin has created their new and fun facebook page :

https://www.facebook.com/pages/San-Pancho-Turtles/179273792083463?ref=hl

These folks in San Pancho Mexico have really helped save the turtle population here on the Riviera Nayarit.
Find out more on their website at
http://www.project-tortuga.org/newsletters/nwsltr137.html, and how you can help, or come out out to San Pancho Mexico, down on the beach at 8:30pm for a hatching release. If you have never experienced this, you will find that it opens your heart with joy, and it is a great experience for all the kids.
Thanks to Frank and the San Pancho Turtle Project team for the information and the fun photos!

Enjoy the experience of a turtle release on the beach with the San Pancho Turtle Project  on the beautiful Riviera Nayarit in San Pancho Mexico.

 

© 2012 Riviera Nayarit Fun Suffusion theme by Sayontan Sinha