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My
name
is
Brendan
Davitt
and
I
am
a
freshmen
attending
Champlain
Valley
Union
High
School.
During
the
last
week
of
January
I
traveled
to
Tela,
Honduras
to
participate
in
a
service
program
called
Hands
to
Honduras
which
is
organized
yearly
by
the
Shelburne/Charlotte
Rotary
Club.
This
trip
gave
me
a
first-hand
perspective
on
Third
World
countries
and
made
me
realize
how
fortunate
I
am.
This
trip
was
filled
with
many
first-time
encounters.
Here
is
one
I
would
like
to
share
with
you.
I found much of the food that we were
served
in
Honduras
fascinating.
For
most
of
the
time
we
were
there,
we
were
on
our
own
for
dinner.
Throughout
this
tiny
town
on
the
coast,
there
were
many
places
you
could
eat,
from
Italian
Pizzerias
to
Chinese
food.
Although
there
were
many
types
of
food,
seafood
ruled
dominant
overall.
One
night
out
to
dinner
on
our
trip,
we
went
to
a
restaurant
and
ordered
a
seafood
platter.
When
this
mountain
of
food
arrived,
I
can
still
remember
everything
that
was
on
it:
there
were
four
soft
shell
crabs,
a
½
pound
of
conk,
a
½
pound
of
plantains
(which
are
the
greatest
food
ever)
a
pound
of
shrimp,
and
some
other
weird
looking
fish
-
overall
it
was
great.
Another
aspect
of
my
food
adventures
in
Honduras
that
I
will
never
forget
-
one
night
after
another
day
of
hard
work,
my
mom,
and
two
of
our
other
friends
from
Williston,
Niles
and
Joy,
and
I
went
out
to
dinner
at
a
Chinese
restaurant.
When
we
were
seated
we
were
waited
on
by
a
12-year-old
girl
and
her
11-year-old
brother.
The
funny
thing
about
all
of
this
was
that
these
two
kids
spoke
English.
So
as
I'm
sitting
there,
this
is
what
I
was
thinking:
we
traveled
2,200
miles
to
the
Central
American
country
of
Honduras,
we
go
out
to
dinner
at
a
Chinese
restaurant,
and
find
that
everyone
in
the
restaurant
spoke
English!
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