"I started coming here when
I was 8 years old to visit the Candelilla (harvesting) fields, and I liked it
here. I liked it and then I continued visiting every three to four months. I
wasn't married and I didn't have a family yet, but I liked it and I had to keep
coming to put my foot in (on the property) because lands here are won through
claiming them," Hernandez told the Hernandez told the International
Business Times,
The home, made of sun-dried
bricks and cement, has a dirt floor, a wood stove, and no plumbing. Electrical
service is said to be unreliable. A nearby stream supplies fresh drinking
water. In winter, though, the water source freezes over.
"It gets very cold here and
we struggle to get food. We have to work hard here on the Candelilla (fields).
That's the only job we have. That's what we live from," said Hernandez.
The couple have seven children,
six of whom are married and live nearby.
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