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While Martha, with her daughter Jessica Sangoquiza, sitting on the wheel, making their order of 3,000 enchanted pots or better known as piñatas, Diego takes the earth with effort in wheelbarrows and places in a large bag lying in a corner of this workshop. He also has a bucket of water that serves to mix the process of "dancing".

Juan Pablo Olmos, Martha's brother, comes to greet everyone, takes off his leather shoes, folds his trousers at the height of his knees barefoot laying his feet on the ground that briefly absorbs water: "We were expecting uncle, we had no one to make us dance," says Jessica, to whom answered briefly: "I was where the neighbor" danced "the mud

Juan" dance again and again on earth. After an hour and a half, which is the estimated duration of this process, a dough forms like bread or empanadas. Juan's feet are covered with mud. A little tired and agitated remarks that he has finished his work.

Meanwhile, Diego takes some of this mbad and hits it with a smooth stone, giving it the shape of a flat circle, like a pizza, so that his mom and sister continue with the preparation of pots.

Finished utensils are dried on the outside and then enter the "burn" process. In a wood oven for an hour, the clay melts so that it is hard and takes a yellow-orange color, very much like brick.

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