Thursday, April 12, 2007
Home Sweet Home
Wednesday, March 21, 2007
Only a few days left
I'm almost out of time, so I'll post this quick, hope it works this time. Back to Canada within a week, talk to you soon!
Friday, March 16, 2007
Tuesday, February 27, 2007
Pole Pole
So this was our first glimps of the mountain, flying from Ghana to Tanzania. We landed at Kilimanjaro International Airport on the 18th. A cool little airport, in between two towns. For anyone whose impressions of Africa were based upon the Lion King, this area delivers. Although I havn't seen the wildlife (yet), we were well removed from the city feeling.
Pole Pole (slowly slowly) is the climbers mantra for Kilimanjaro, and for life in Tanzania (or Africa) in general. Swahili is a very different language to Twi, so I'm having to learn that. We stayed in a place before climbing with a great view of the mountain (www.kilicam.com).
The climb took 7 days, summiting on the 6th. I'm glad Canadian winters prepare us for the cold, as we were above the treeline after day two. Our high camp was 15 000 ft., and we left at midnight for our summit. A storm hit that night, and there was lightning below us all around. The winds were incredible, they sucked the air from your lungs and pushed you around, freezing you to the core. At 19,000 ft. I'm told the oxygen level is 1/2 that of sea level, and although I havn't confirmed that yet it is damn hard to exert yourself. We kept passing groups turning around, but our guide pushed on, and we reached the true summit around 07:30.
We climbed together with Jocelyn's uncle Ken from Winnipeg, but unfortunately the summit picture with all 3 of us is on his film camera (my batteries died), so I'll post it once I get a copy.
Now we're back in Moshi, resting for a few days before carrying on. We've changed our minds about heading to Kenya for a bunch of reasons, and have decided to explore this area more. We plan on doing a safari, and then we might be able to do some more volunteering around the town here with the porters from the mountain.
Hope all is well with everyone, I'll keep updating...
Friday, February 16, 2007
Leaving Ghana
Tuesday, February 06, 2007
Beach Getaway
So the time in Ghana is coming to a close, and we're lining up our next adventures. We decided to take friday off to head north, had a big plan to go north to Kumasi. Left thursday afternoon, 4 hour bus to Takoradi, showed up at the train station for the overnight train and no lights were on. Someone said "the train runs everyday...but not today. Come back tomorrow". The next day we went, no train, no bus, had to change our plans. (Incidentally, apparently we're not the first to fall for the train the guidebook talks about, and it hasn't been running for over a year!)
Oh well, we were on the coast, took advantage of it. Went to a beach guesthouse, and relaxed all weekend. Swam in the ocean, no one else around, good times. A nice getaway.
Works been slow, so I've been jumping around between other projects. Started doing some stuff with a local orphanage, got swarmed by kids when I visited. Went yesterday to two schools to teach HIV / AIDs awareness, got some interesting questions. It got hotter this week, didn't think that was possible, and am having a hard time adjusting!
I'm almost out of time, I'll write more later. tata!
Monday, January 29, 2007
Air conditioning....it's great but I'm frozen!
Monday, January 22, 2007
Swedru!
Jocelyn finally arrived on tuesday night, and we spent the next few days in Accra with her doing her orientation. We left on Saturday to Swedru, a smaller town (100 - 200 000) west of Accra.
Staying with a family outside of town, several brothers / sisters around, all older (19 +)
Water shortages are no longer an issue, as there's no running water in the house. A tap near the school gives water to bath, and a hole nearby for, well, everything else. It's quite a neat place, lizards running all over the place.
There's a school next door, sat in on a class today, and got up and talked about Canada. Kids in North America are spoiled, I'll say that for sure.
Slow computer, blurring screen, I'll put pics up when I find a better one. Hope all is well, I'll be in touch!
Start work tomorrow....
Saturday, January 13, 2007
O'Brunei!
the Ghanain equivalent of 'farang' or 'gringo', meaning white person, sometimes it is all you hear when people are shouting at you. It's not derogatory, more the announcement of a fact.
Still in Accra, a city full of noise. Taxi drivers communicate by blowing their horns to clear people out of their way. Pictured are 'tro-tros', pretty much any kind of vehicle that you can cram a lot of people into, a great (and cheap) way to get around. Most are old vans with various seating configurations, driven by a fearless driver racing through traffic as the 'mate' hangs out the window / door announcing the next stop.
Plans changed, I will now be hanging out for another week. Lots of markets to explore, always an interesting and great way to converse with locals and practice my 'twi'. "Wo ho te sen?" (How are you) "Me ho ye, na hon te swe" (I'm fine, how are you). I only know a bit more, enough for a basic repetitive conversation, but people get so excited.
Hope everyone is well, I'll keep in touch. Oh, and I have a favor to ask of everyone. Next time you're taking a shower, brushing your teeth or simply doing the dishes, think about how fortunate we are to be able to turn on the tap and have a clean, reliable source or water. I say this because we are now on day 3 of no water, and even the city well close by is dry now. This morning someone from the house had to take a taxi to the next district to fill a green garbage bin and several 5 gallon containers, paying both for the cab ride and for the water (A luxury most people in this town cannot afford). Conserving that water is a priority (last night I washed myself with a faceclothe, a bar of soap, and about two cups of water), as we still have several weeks before the dry season is over....
Food for though, but I know I'll think long and hard next time I can drink out of a tap....
Internet is too slow, I'll upload pics later.
Thursday, January 11, 2007
Made it to Ghana
The country is great, albeit very different living conditions. Accra is 2 million people, the capital of Ghana, and there are 'lights-off' once every 5 days (2 since I've been here), random water shortages (we ran out of water today in the tank, so we're rationning it now for bathing, toilets, etc.) and open sewars along the streets that drain into, you guessed it, the Atlantic! The food is unique, lots of rice dishes, some interesting doughy stuff you swallow without chewing (hard not to gag I find!), and the other day supper included a bowl of fish heads, tails, and bodys. Lots of chicken, and with the amount on the streets you know it's fresh (though I watched a hen and her chicks walking / eating in the sewar drain this morning!).
The people are great so far, and I've met some cool locals. I'm here for another few days before heading of to my work placement in a town not far from here, although the town doesn't show up on most maps so....
I'll post pictures when I get a chance, and a fast computer with a good internet connection and a reliable power supply...