House and Cacti in Burkina Faso
Sunday, September 30, 2012
Burkina Faso Adventure
Saturday, September 22, 2012
Family Album
Just a little meet the family moment (while I have internet and time on my hands)...
Mariama |
Farfala |
Comfatty |
Aramita |
Ba/Tia |
Bamusa |
Isatou, my namesake |
For korite, the kids get new outfits and walk around village visiting everyone. |
Pabi is a growing soccer star, my village won the tournament that they played against 6 other villages, home town pride! |
Neighborhood best friends |
Friday, September 21, 2012
Wednesday, September 12, 2012
Cheers
A fellow volunteer did a summary of his time in numbers, and
because I liked it..I’m going to be not creative and borrow the idea.
Time living in Africa: 6 months. Holy mackerel, I really can’t
believe it.
Time living at site: 3.5 months.
Longest period of time staying at site: 30 days…It was a rollercoaster
as always but well worth it.
Books read: 21 (will publish list later)
Longest
book: Anna Karenina by Leo Tolstoy
Shortest
book: The Secret life of Bees by Sue Monk Kidd
Times crossing the ferry (not on PC transport): 3 times
Longest
ferry: 1:28 hour
Shortest
ferry: 30 minutes. (this is not the
norm- I get extremely lucky)
Birthday Parties thrown with Family: 4
Number of times I cooked popcorn for my family: 3
Number of letters written: 26
Dance Parties: probably around 50
Rain Dance parties: 1 (a perfect day) everyone needs to let
themselves go, at least once, and dance, uninhibited in the rain. Please
please.
Ramadan days fasted: 24 of 30
Times I wanted to die in frustration on a gelle gelle: a lot,
but in the positive there have been some gelle trips that did go smoothly.
In America..
Number of weddings missed in America: 1 (Congratulations
Sierra and Peter)
Number of births missed: 1
Number of engagements: 1
Number of times I missed the SAC loves: countless
In Gambia:
Number of weddings I attended: 2
Number of births/ naming ceremonies: 4
IST (in-service training) has just finished. The most valuable part was the counterpart
workshop where my counterpart from site, Musa, traveled to Kombo and trained
along-side the volunteers for two days. For one of those days, the environment volunteers
went to BeeCause. A beekeeping organization that is very active and effective
here in The Gambia. It was inspiring to see the combined excitement of
volunteers and counterparts as we learned the techniques behind beekeeping
together. We put on head to toe suits
with mesh faces, rubber gloves, and boots, and headed to the hives to get some
hands on work with African bees. As it is rainy season, the bees are pretty
docile and no one was stung but my hear t was racing a little bit as the first
hive was opened and swarms of bees started bouncing off of everyone’s mesh
covered faces. My suit was orange and white stripped and I looked like an
escaped convict, the pictures are fantastic but not on my camera, so they will
come later. Later we learned how to process wax and honey. I am looking forward to heading back to site
to begin an apiary with the men of my village; they are interested in making
hives out of bamboo, because it’s natural and plentiful to the area. I’m
excited that they are excited, and that it will be tapping into an income
generating venture that has not yet been explored. Good Things are happening
here in The Gambia.
I am so happy to see everyone from my group again. Africa
has been good to everyone, it has challenged us, pushed us, lifted us up,
taught us, and spit us back out together in Kombo (the land of food and drink)
where we can feel how much each of us has changed. But I also miss the bush.
The people grow on you, they have become my people, they aren’t just my host
family anymore, and they feel like family. We laugh and argue like family, they
tease me for my oddities and I do the same back to them. I don’t know when this happened but it did and
that’s the beauty behind these people, they give to you unconditionally.
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