An American in Lima

slices of my life in Peru

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Supermarket Cowboys

July 7th, 2009 · 1 Comment · Daily Life in Lima, Festivals, Sacred Rituals, Religion

elchalandewongperu

Peru’s biggest supermarket chain – Wong – plays up Fiestas Patrias in a big way, sponsoring patriotic events and featuring the “flavors of Peru” during the month-long season. The store’s colors are red and white, the colors of the Peruvian flag, but to celebrate the Independence Day spirit during July, some employees wear outfits distinctive to Peru. The young men who bag your groceries wear these white ponchos with red scarves and big straw hats – the traditional costume of “el chalán,” the horse trainer or cowboy from northern Peru.

Peru is such a service-oriented country that the Wong bagmen will walk you home with your groceries, free of charge (they’re probably glad to escape temporarily from the store). We live two blocks from a Wong and usually go there on foot. It’s invigorating to step into a busy Lima intersection flanked by a guy dressed like an expert horse wrangler, his white cape fluttering as he and you dodge the suicidal combi buses. (Toro, toro.)

El Fotógrafo, El Híjo and I moved from Florida to Peru in July 2007. I was clueless about Fiestas Patrias then; my main focus was adjusting to the shock of its being winter in July. My memories of that first month are of being horribly cold and buying lots of alpaca sweaters and gloves and talking nonstop about la clima en Lima. I had sympathy for old people and empathized acutely with one of my husband’s elderly relatives, an 80-year-old woman who huddled in a wheelchair during family gatherings and was always complaining about “el frío.”

I hear you, sister, I’d be thinking.

In addition to stocking up on more chompas than I had room for in my tiny closet, I also spent time at Wong browsing for ingredients to make hot chocolate – anything to thaw my blood. That first month, I assumed the Wong bagmen wore these outfits all year round.

It was a letdown in August when the baggers switched to their standard uniforms. The button-down shirts and trousers and red caps looked so drab. I missed the cowboy getup.

Now it’s July again. Viva Fiestas Patrias!

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1 response so far ↓

  • 1 Junior // Jul 13, 2009 at 9:13 am

    I think the women also wear something similar, but I have failed to notice. I can’t wait for the big Wong parade they have on Larco Av in Miraflores the weekend before Fiestas Patrias. Quite a show. Other than that, people travel and the city is pretty much a ghost town.

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