Tuesday, June 10, 2008

Group fun

Monday, June 9th:
Happy Hero’s Day. The schools have the day off, so I’m at home taking care of some things I would have done this weekend had I been around. I really like being on placement lately.

Last weekend involved a lot of socializing and going out to eat. We had a going-away get-together for Darcy on Saturday at the campsite. It’s really sad to see her go but we had a fun time partying as a group. The first half of Saturday was frustrating; I spent a long time in the internet cafĂ© watching my connection go out every time I had almost loaded something, and being caught in the middle of conversations between the new batch of AVs in town. If anyone doing Africa Venture reads this, or if your little sister is in it or something, I’m sorry. But they are terrible. AV is a gap-year company that sends rich British 18-year-olds into Uganda to terrorize Jinja in beachwear and annoy everyone. As far as I can tell, anyway. They also work in schools so they get compared to SPW a lot, which we all enjoy. It was a rainy and crappy afternoon, but by the time we got to the campsite everyone was ready to have a good time and we had a really fun last night with Darce.

On Sunday a bunch of us went to the Lubani placement, where Jack had organized a community football tournament. It was pretty impressive! Sixteen teams had signed up, including one made up of SPW volunteers. I didn’t stay until the finals but did have a really good time seeing the games, people-watching, and listening to impromptu karaoke over the PA system. It was Jack’s birthday and he had bought a goat for us to feast on in the evening – it was delicious! Thanks Jack! The prize for the winning team was also a goat.

We’re within two months now. Time’s ticking.

Also: if anyone is planning to send post while I’m out here, try to do it in the next week or so – some things take about six weeks to get out here, and I won’t be getting things from the office the last week I’m here.

It’s back to the office tomorrow. I think we have been averaging two trips a week since mid-placement training. Dance4Life is coming to two more of our schools this Thursday, so I have to pick up some materials for that and – fingers crossed – actually get the money for our proposals that have been lost three times now. Lucy and Wilber have a model farm visit with the women’s group tomorrow. It should be a hit!

We’ll miss you, Darcy!


SPW All-stars in action:

Tuesday, June 10th:

The kids all laughed at me in our lesson this morning because I coughed while listing STDs. Punks.

I'm back at the office... will today be the magical day we get our event money? Nobody knows...

Saturday, June 7, 2008

Boring stuff

Wednesday, June 4th:
We’re back to teaching now. Last term our most of the lessons with the primary kids were on HIV/AIDS, puberty, and reproductive systems. This term we’ll probably spend most of the time on drug abuse, STIs, and gender. We can do more of the life skills topics like relationships and decision-making with the secondary kids, but the young ones seem to have a lot of trouble grasping those lessons.

There’s some sad news around Magamaga this week. First, the daughter of one of our parishioners was killed by a car as she was crossing our paved road on Sunday. She was five months pregnant. Thankfully Lucy, Dennis and I weren’t around when it happened – I wouldn’t have wanted to be there for the accident scene. Kagoma Primary lost a P4 student to tetanus on Monday. She had missed the school vaccination day a few weeks ago.

And, less drastically but closer to home, Darcy is leaving Uganda this weekend. Since her antimalarials don’t seem to work and she reacts badly to quinine, it’s not safe for her to be here and she’s going back to Canada. She made it back from Dubai for a week to say goodbye. We are all really going to miss her.

On a happier note, Dennis and I had a good lesson at Kalebera this afternoon and our proposals have been approved, so Lucy’s women’s group will be having a model farm visit and we’ll be setting up a youth resource center, hosting two video workshops, and making talking boards at Kagoma as a group this month.

Lucy and I just had a nice training session on the field with Kenneth. Just two months to shed this African tummy before I get home!


Friday, June 6th:
Shockingly little to report this week. Dennis and I had a really good lesson at Muguluka Primary this afternoon, on abstinence and drug abuse. We did a “myth or fact” game with the P6 kids (Coffee, tea and sodas contain drugs. Alcoholism is a disease. Smoking will hurt a pregnant woman, but not her baby. Etc.) which the kids were massively competitive about.

Lucy went in to the office today, but they didn’t have our proposal money for some reason. So there will likely be another trip to Jinja in the near future.

This weekend should be fun. We’re having a last night with Darcy at the campsite on Saturday, and Jack’s having a birthday party at his placement on Sunday. Those of us leaving on the first flight have two months left now. I’m excited about going home. Every time I look around I think of people and things that I am really going to miss, but home is home. The prospect of a beach trip the week after I get back has got me pretty revved up.

Some dancing flower girls from a wedding last weekend:

Sunday, June 1, 2008

Kitchen gardens

One of the practical lessons that our livelihoods volunteers teach is how to make a kitchen garden. It’s a dirt mound with a cylindrical space in the middle to put your food waste; the food decomposes and fertilizes whatever you plant in the dirt surrounding it. Nice, huh?

Man, stuff grows here! Here’s our personal kitchen garden under construction about a month ago:

When we left for the holiday, the dirt was piled up but we hadn’t planted anything yet. Come back two weeks later, and here’s what you find:


Massive plants! That we didn’t even plant! And better yet, it’s dodo, an edible fibery green that Dennis happens to be pretty good at cooking up. I love it.

Lucy and Wilber started a kitchen garden with their Kalebera farmers’ group before our break, and when we went back today they had not only finished building it, but had been using it for their kitchen waste. This is the same group that was generally rude and took any excuse not to turn up for meetings just a few months ago. Now they’re friendly and seem to be taking the lessons to heart. A little SPW success story.


The kids were around too, of course, and they wanted to make sure the baby’s head was turned my way for a picture. Poor baby.

The most wonderful time of the year

Well, the holiday was wonderful. Seeing everyone was the best part. Getting to check out some really beautiful places and having new adventures was a blast too. It was so much fun to live as a tourist for a couple weeks, and get share first experiences of Africa with Jason, Jen, Tom, and Grace.

Tom and Grace got here on Monday the 12th, but since the rest of my placement parted on Friday I spent the first weekend of our vacation doing a little exploring on my own. I spent a boring night in Jinja, then caught a taxi into Kampala. I’m not a big fan of Kampala; it’s busy and dirty and kind of unpleasant. Still, I had to relish the opportunity to go to a movie theater (I saw Made of Honor, which was standard romcom cheesiness), get Japanese take-out, and have a room to myself with a private bathroom and double bed. The next morning I rolled into Entebbe, which is lovely – palm trees and nice houses and views of Lake Victoria. I checked into a hostel and spent the afternoon at the Entebbe Botanical Gardens. The entrance fees for the gardens had been hiked because there was – get this – a rally car race going on. So I had a nice stroll of the park and got to see the occasional import car fly by.

The next morning I woke up early and had the “transport officer” from the hostel give me a ride to the airport to meet up with Tom and Grace! It was kind of overwhelming to see Tom and kind of felt like I’d seen him yesterday. We spent the morning napping and waiting out the rain on the couches at the hostel, then split for the 3-hour ferry to Buggala Island.

The Ssese Islands were beautiful, relaxing, and quiet. We stayed at a campsite called Hornbill Camp that was pretty bizarre. It’s a collection of brightly-painted wooden buildings reminiscent of a hippy summer camp run by an eccentric middle-aged German couple. Tom, Grace and I pitched our tents near the beach and had a couple days full of swimming, exploring, fish dinners, stray dogs, beer and campfires before Jason and Jen joined us on Wednesday. We camped another night at Hornbill as a fivesome, then spent our last night on the islands at Panorama Lodge, which wasn’t on the waterfront but had nice self-contained cottages and a very helpful waitperson named Arnold.

Then it was off to Mbale, near the Kenyan border. Everyone piled off the ferry and into their first matatu. We stopped in Kampala to change money and get snacks and be overwhelmed for a few minutes, then rode for another four hours or so. Our taxi stopped at the rest stop where vendors swarm the car and poke bouquets of meat on a stick and drinks and fried bananas through the windows, which came as quite a surprise to sleeping Jason and Grace. We spent that night at a basic hotel in town and had some tasty Indian food.

The next morning we stopped in at the Uganda Wildlife Authority office to plan our next few days, deciding on a couple nights at Sipi Falls with a night camping on Mt. Elgon in the middle instead of a three-night summit trip, which we didn’t really have the gear for. Sipi was gorgeous. We made the Crow’s Nest our home base, which is a rustic collection of cabins set opposite a valley from the waterfalls. We hiked down to the main waterfall on our first afternoon, and were aided down the last muddy slope by a bunch of little boys that appeared out of the bushes like oompa loompas. The biggest fall is long and skinny, and really pretty to look up at from the base.

Mt. Elgon is a long and flat mountain, so hiking around seems to be just as cool as reaching the actual highest peak. We hiked in about ten miles to Tutum Cave, passing through farmland, rocky mountainside, bamboo forest, and lush jungle on our way in. The cave was loaded with bats and it was pretty creepy to shine our lights onto the ceiling and see thousands of swinging orange eyes glowing back at us. We had two rangers with guns with us, and we all had a nice bonfire before a very cold and damp night. We saw a few monkeys, a chameleon, and lots of large biting ants during the hike (Grace even saw them in her pants). It rained for a while on our way out. We took shelter at an empty primary school for a bit but ended up braving the drizzle and extreme mud when we realized that the sky was pretty solidly gray. Patrick, our helpful boy-guide, requested something waterproof and walked back inside Grace’s pack cover.

We had another night at Sipi, which featured very welcome hot showers and hot food, and then arranged a ride back to Jinja. We shared a vehicle with a guy from the Netherlands named Shuldth or something who was pretty nice. The five of us got dropped at Backpackers, the favorite SPW haunt, then went out for dinner at the lovely Ginger on the Nile. We sat under a big grass umbrella on the banks of the Nile, had cocktails, and watched some monkeys. Then it was off to the campsite at Bujagali Falls for a night of hanging out and then being kept awake all night by rats in our dorm room.

The next morning, we caught the shuttle truck back to Backpackers, where Jason, Jen, Grace and I got the prep talk for our day of Grade 5 rapids and Tom rented a mountain bike and had a day around town. Rafting was awesome! We flipped our boat in three of the rapids, and the times we didn’t turn over we were definitely on the edge. We did a lot of swimming. It was scary and exciting and fun. We relived it all on the projection screen at the campsite and then I did what I typically do when out with Grace, which was to get a bunch of free shots and act like a fool.

By then it was Thursday, and Jason and Jen left for Murchison Falls National Park (where I went over Easter) and Tom, Grace and I visited my placement, got dinner and souvenirs in Jinja, and rolled back to Entebbe to get some sleep before their early morning flight on Friday. It was rough seeing them go, but saying goodbye for 10 weeks is a lot easier than seven months.

I made the trek back to Jinja and snuck in late to the last couple days of our mid-placement training. It was pretty uneventful: sharing ideas, relearning Dance4Life (again), clarifying some policies. It was nice to see everyone and hear about people’s holidays. The other international volunteers set off to Rwanda, Kenya, Tanzania, etc. and everyone had a pretty good time with the exception of maybe Lucy and Darcy, who both fell ill with malaria during the two-week break. Lucy got the malaria meds pretty early on but spent some time in the hospital in Kenya with a secondary stomach infection. She’s back to her old self now. Darcy is still in Dubai. She had a bad reaction to quinine and was in intensive care for a few days. It sounds like she’s past the dangerous point but I think they’re still keeping an eye on her liver and making sure it’s safe for her to come back. Everyone really misses her.

After training Lucy and I got to spend a day with Jason and Jen in Kampala on their way back from their safari time. We had an awesome meal (with the first real espresso I’ve had since January) before they set off to the airport with some Texans they met up at Murchison. Lucy and I stayed in Kampala for the night and saw the new Indiana Jones movie. It was silly. We had a great time.

So now it’s back on placement, and back to work until the end of July. Returning to Magamaga was happy. There was quite a chorus of “Welcome back! You are most welcome! You are lost!” etc. the first time Lucy and I made a trip to the trading center. I’m sad that the holiday is over, but it’s nice to be home and unpack, wash my clothes, and see everyone. The student turnout is always pretty low the first week after a break, but I did a lesson on Gender at Kagoma this week and will probably have a couple classes tomorrow.

One exciting tidbit from the mid-placement workshop was that our debrief has been moved up a few days so that we’ll have a week off at the end of the program to travel. I think I’ll be headed to Rwanda with Lucy and Katie and I’m excited that I’ll get to go. We did quite a bit on the Rwandan genocide in Core 350 at Whitworth and I’d really like to visit the genocide museum and see the area, plus it’s supposed to be a really beautiful country with a lot better infrastructure than Uganda. So it’ll be a nice educational/relaxing wrap-up to the trip.

Holiday pictures

Ssese swimming

Lizard.
Me, Tom, small puppy.
Tom, large puppy.
Me, monkey.
Grace, dog. Dog.
Sunset from Hornbill Camp
Everyone's here!
Kampala frenzy
Sipi Falls
Pempe sandwich!
View from Crow's Nest
LadiesGents
Mt. Elgon area

Chameleon!
Tutum Cave, where we slept with many bats
Grace's camp shower
From inside the cave

Patrick's impromptu raincoat
Lots and lots of mud
sibs
Sunset at Bujagali Falls
Ready to raft!

Friday, May 9, 2008

Vacation has arrived!

Yay!!!

I'm in Jinja, gradually making my way to Entebbe to meet the Chappells at the airport on Monday morning. What a feeling. A visit from my favorite people and an action-packed holiday all in one... what more could a girl ask for?

Really, I can't think of anything.

It was a little sad to say goodbye to Magamaga and Lucy this morning (her 15-hour bus ride to Nairobi should have just departed), but I think the next couple weeks will be the refresher we've all been waiting for.

Let the fun begin.

Wednesday, May 7, 2008

Almost vacation, really

Monday, April 28th:
Well, life’s a bit slow. The kids are out on break, so there are no SRH lessons to teach. I’d like to get going on setting up a youth resource center tomorrow, but it’s not really the same as having class time on the schedule.

The power at our house has been out for the last three nights, but Teddy got the electrician (a big fan of the “red to red, and black to black” principle) over here tonight and he got it working again. Success! I can see my food, and use my laptop!

Dennis is in Jinja for a few days, and Peter never came back from the Be A Man conference that ended last Wednesday. He’s sent me a couple text messages saying he’s sick. So Lucy and I have had the house to ourselves for a while, and it’s been pretty fun despite a little loneliness. We’ve enjoyed planning our meals, and it’s easier to cook and clean up after two, even if there are less people to help.

Today for lunch we had a “turkey egg vs. chicken egg” omelet competition. I’d say the turkey eggs won out. Lucy’s aunt and uncle had sent cheese and crackers for her birthday (awesome), and having a little emmental in there was simply delicious.

Yesterday we were startled to discover baby rats crawling out from under the door of the locked storage room. They were pretty gross – still with their eyes closed and no fur. I got them to creep back under the door and blocked up the crack with sticks. We got Paul to come around with the key this morning so we could clean out the nest, but the peeping mound of rat babies appeared to have disappeared during the night. Where have they gone? We’ll probably hear them chewing under our beds at night in a few weeks. Lucy and I had quite the struggle shooing a rat out of our room last night in the dark.

We spent last Friday night up in the Kamuli district at Hannah and Jen’s placement. They live in Nawansaso, which seems like a really great community that had a lot of SPW success last year. They have a big house – four rooms! – with electricity, and a trading center that has lots of cheap food available in the evenings. It was really fun to see them and catch up. Since I skipped out on rafting last weekend, I feel like I haven’t seen the other volunteers in a long time. Jen and Hannah's place:

Our room has smelled funny for the last couple of days, and yesterday I discovered a decaying lizard in the nonfunctioning sink at the foot of my bed. Gross. Another lizard replaced it in a matter of hours, but I got that one out of there before it croaked.


Thursday, May 1st:
Today is Labor Day in Uganda. Apparently, the way to celebrate Labor Day is to hang around my house saying that you’re hungry. This has been the overwhelming theme of our visitors this morning.

Dennis and Peter both got back yesterday. Peter has been kicking around quitting for a good month or so and seems closer to making a decision. He said he’s going to talk to the office on Friday. I hope he stays, but I’m ready to have some resolution either way.

We had a couple guys from the SPW office here yesterday to complete a survey for NOGAMU (National Organic Agricultural Movement of Uganda) seeing if our farmers would be able to provide produce for an organic store NOGAMU wants to open in Jinja. The survey was about ten questions long, mostly yes/no, and it took about five hours to complete it with the Kalebera Farmer’s Group and then Sister Claire, who runs the women’s groups that make crafts. So that kept us busy yesterday. The SPW guys also brought a letter saying that all event proposals for June had to be in this Friday (tomorrow), so that should give us something to do today.

I knew this to some extent already, but the last few days have taught me that I am much happier when I have something productive to do. Waking up with a completely blank calendar looking me in the face is not something I like, especially when I’m in Africa and have little access to entertainment.

We have M&E (monitoring and evaluation) forms due on Friday, and I’ll probably be the one to head in to the office in Jinja. Getting off placement for the day should be pretty nice. It’s also less then two weeks until Tom and Grace get here! And then Jason and Jen! This is keeping me pretty excited despite my many hours of downtime. I think the time after the holiday is going to be good, too. There’s a lot I want to do in the last couple months, and the kids are back in school at the end of May. It should go pretty quick. Then it’s back home, and ten days later, grad school starts!


Wednesday, May 7th:
In Jinja once again. Despite being equally uneventful, the last few days have been less boring than last week. Highlights included playing with piglets, spending a night at Bujagali Falls for Darcy's birthday, spending some time with Sister Claire, and getting awesome packages from my mom and grandma. I now have a french press and Starbuck's coffee. Ahhh.

I'm at the internet cafe so I'll keep it brief. I still want to go in to the office today and possibly to a clinic since I've had a string of strange and annoying symptoms this last week. Today's new thing is feeling like there is something stuck in my throat.

TOM AND GRACE GET HERE ON MONDAY!!! That's pretty much all I'm thinking about at the moment.

Here's a little "too cool for school" moment from Dance4Life a couple weeks ago: