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Arriving in Asuncíon at night is unsettling. We can't see any of the city except for the brightly lit shops illuminating the run down shacks next door. It seems to be a hodgepodge of new, old, rich, and poor. Its hard to get a grasp on the real city that late and sleep deprived though.

The morning brings shopping and pandemonium, as we walk through the streets shopping, looking at graffiti and taking it all in. We're introduced to the mate culture. Literally EVERYONE drinks mate, from the policeman on the street corner to the young girl tucked between her parents.

I'm really just anxious to get to the Aché to see what its going to be like. The day in the city seems never ending, and we're all taxed as we check out of the Superseis, some odd Vons-esqe store, and head back to the Acunsíon Palace Hotel. The next day we're up early and ready to go, the excitement is palpable as we speed through the roads of the city on our way.

Its an intense welcoming. After eight hours on the road we finally arrive. Kids swarm our safari van, their innocent eyes peering in. The parents are warier, hanging back and staring stoically from their homes. In the fading light I can make out simple wood homes, many people, and trash. Its a sad sight. The dark drops on us quickly and soon we're unloading and making camp only by the light of our flashlights and headlamps. I'm exhausted, but we manage to make a simple dinner of bread, cheese, and meat, washed down with more mate before we all head off to bed.

Camp is very different in the light of the morning. We eat yet more bread and dulce de leche, a type of caramel spread, for breakfast. The day's plan is to settle in, already children line the fence we have separating Guayakí's property from the rest of the village. We're like an exhibit at the zoo, the children watching to see what the new exciting animals are going to do. If we wander outside of our fence line children grab at our hands, attempt to climb our legs, and beg to be picked up. They can't get enough of us, and its overwhelming. We each have our own personal entourage. The week looks to be very promising.
 
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Settling in for me was settling into the seat of a Copa Airlines flight at 6 a.m. Most of the group never went to be the night before so we've all rolled into LAX sleep deprived and less then enthused to be carrying out man sized packs on our backs in the line for our boarding passes. But we're getting somewhere, and that's what is important. We look like a bit of a ragtag bunch as we get through security and onto our flight.

Although we've all gone to school together, we've yet to have that 'trip bonding' to really unite us as a team, but it's soon to come. I'm excited for the planes take off and to finally see what Asuncíon is like, and more importantly the Aché Village. The bugs are worrisome, and if any of our bags get lost in the shuffle of planes from Panama to Paraguay we're not in great shape. We've all packed in a few tents and cooking gear among the seven of us, and its necessary for the comfort and survival of our little troop. My worries are unnecessary though as we land safely in Paraguay after two luckily uneventful flights.

Our guide Mario or 'Super Mario' picks us up after we manage to make it through customs with all of our gear and a large box of solar panels. Its late, the streets are foreign and our van looks like it drove up out of the last Indiana Jones movie. The adventure has begun.