So we finally made it to the “big” supermarket in San Pedro
Sula. We’ve been to this big city about
a dozen times since we arrived, but never alone with time to shop. So we finally got the chance! It was basically your typical US grocery
store, not a super Wal-Mart but your normal Kroger/Etc. We found nice bagged lettuce, Swiss miss hot
chocolate, Lipton tea, canned pumpkin, chocolate chips, salad dressings,
Fritos/Cheetos/snacks, Kaleb’s Mt. Dew and snickers, M&Ms, candy, etc. Most things were about the same as the US
prices if not a little more, which is a shame and the reason we won’t shop
there every week, but it’s great to know it’s an option! Kaleb is very easy to please, and I’m
thankful but I do know he is missing his Mt. Dew and Snickers every now and
then.
Kaleb enjoys his first Mt. Dew in 2 months with good friend Luis Lopez!
Some things we may try to bring
with us from the states or ask people to bring when they come because it’s just
crazy expensive here since it’s imported.
We’re looking forward to borrowing someone’s oven to bake some chocolate
chip cookies and maybe even a pumpkin roll toward Thanksgiving. Looks like with the help of this store I’ll
be able to make a great Thanksgiving Dinner for the 2 of us, since no one else
here celebrates it. It’s nice to have the
option on baking someone a birthday cake or have a few snacks stored up for the
last 3 PSU games that we try to watch online.
We won’t even go into the mess on PSU’s campus right now – I yi yi. Anyway, even though it’s not NEAR as
convenient as it is in the States, we do have some foods within and 1 and ½ hour drive of us. This super market is also
on the same drag as a string of familiar restaurants, so after shopping we
stopped in for a Subway Sub! Haven’t
smelled the store (PS smells the same and stays on your clothing, just like the States) or eaten there in a while. Shout
out you all of you fellow Subway workers – you could move to Honduras and do
the same thing! If we lived in the city
our lives could look a lot similar to the States in regards to living
accommodations, food, and convenience.
But, you couldn’t pay us enough to live in such a dangerous city with
all of its gang and drug related violence. Plus, that’s not where the poor of
Honduras are.
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