Ian:
came to my site yesterday. He BIKED here. I could not do that. For sure. He said it took 2 hours and 40 min with some long breaks. Which doesn’t seem like very long. But he is in better shape than I am, to be sure.
We spent the day mostly trying to get water! The water issue is huge at my site. Water is FAR and it’s difficult for me to get. In the end we ended up getting two big bidons and one small bidon from the pump with the help of a young dude from my village and his wheelbarrow. But it took all day.
We also went down to one of the changols so Ian could have a bath and I gave the dog a bath. When we were walking down there, I had Yogi in my tote bag and he was like, “Hey LA! Way to bring dogs in bags to Africa.”
After, we walked through the marche a bit. There were tomatoes! And eggplants! And sweet potatoes! This is the first time I have seen any of those things in my marche and I bought all of them. Oh, and hard boiled eggs, which we enjoyed for lunch on French bread with Laughing Cow cheese. I can’t wait for avocadoes to show up in my marche. That will be awesome.
We decided to make rice and sauce for dinner with our standard pasta sauce (we were too snobby to make pasta since we had made pasta when I was at his site last Sunday) which consists of olive oil, onions, garlic, tomatoes, tomato paste and fresh piment. It’s tasty.
We stayed up until like 1am listening to music and chatting. He left this morning about 9am, hope he made it back to his site ok! There’s no way for him to inform me if he got home ok other than sending a bush note which would take a day or two to arrive. So here’s hoping!
After he left I went to my reseau spot (about 20 min away by bike) to try and reach John to make sure he was going to be at his site this weekend but his phone was off. So I sent him a text message telling him I was coming and if he has decided to leave town I will just buy a place in a returning taxi right away before I do my shopping so I’m guaranteed to get home the same day. I have a whole list of stuff to buy.
Friday, February 27, 2009
Tuesday, February 24, 2009
First Loss For Real
Well, the SP’s secretary general took me to the reseau spot today. It is about 2-3k away kinda in the middle of nowhere. It looks down into a big valley and the mountains beyond. You can get an unreliable one bar there. Actually there are two spots. At the first one it kept dropping the call but at the second one it hung on pretty well. Of course, the second spot is harder to get to.
So I talked to Jake for a little while and he told me that Dave really did call it quits this time and is already gone . You better eat that burrito for me, boy! With EXTRA sour cream!!! We’ll miss you and your Spaceballs bike helmet. Stay in touch!
RIP Dave (Jessica, Dave, Me):
I was also shown the spot where a nice gardener has been kind enough to donate a piece of land for me to cultivate. It is across from the schools and down a path, it has a water source right there which is great. The gardener said I could cultivate the whole field if I wanted to (it’s probably half an acre) but I think I’ll stick with maybe a 25x25 foot space close to the watering hole. At least to start ::wink wink::. The forgeron is working on making my dabas so once I have those I will go down there and start tilling it up (it’s got grass and stuff all over it right now, but that’s a good sign, because it was green grass that obviously no one had been watering so plants should grow well there). I also think I will dig myself a compost pit. I have lots of kitchen scraps.
OH! Somebody ate Melvin’s corpse! Nene said it was probably a goat. As I was tossing water or some food scraps or something over the side of the porch I noticed that the rocks I had put him under had been moved and his body was nowhere to be found. So I guess I don’t have to worry about it stinking! Somebody got a good meal out of it. Come to think of it, maybe it was the cat that seems to live in the rock pile outside my bedroom window. Bet he thought Melvin was delicious! Also, I am starting to suspect that there is a second mouse in my house because I have seen a few more poo pellets and I thought I had cleaned all of Melvin’s out. Hmm. Time will tell.
Tomorrow morning I have to be at the pepiniere at 8 (which means leaving my house at 7:30) as some chef is coming to town and the whole groupement will be there. Something tells me I will be the first one there.
Finally, my poor puppy is sick. He had been scratching and whining all day so I decided to give him a bath in the insecticide before going to bed so I did and he’s not scratching as much anymore but after the bath he shivered for a long time (like he always does, even if I bathe him in the hottest part of the day) so I wrapped him up and laid him on my chest to keep him warm. Then after awhile he started gagging so I put him on the floor and since then he has thrown up probably about 10 times. I’m not sure why he is vomiting. It could be from stuff he ate in the yard, like the rotten eggs I threw out today (the eggs I bought at Ian’s site were ALL rotten – beware!). I saw him chewing on some egg shells and there were egg shells in his puke. So who knows. I just hope he feels better in the morning.
So I talked to Jake for a little while and he told me that Dave really did call it quits this time and is already gone . You better eat that burrito for me, boy! With EXTRA sour cream!!! We’ll miss you and your Spaceballs bike helmet. Stay in touch!
RIP Dave (Jessica, Dave, Me):
I was also shown the spot where a nice gardener has been kind enough to donate a piece of land for me to cultivate. It is across from the schools and down a path, it has a water source right there which is great. The gardener said I could cultivate the whole field if I wanted to (it’s probably half an acre) but I think I’ll stick with maybe a 25x25 foot space close to the watering hole. At least to start ::wink wink::. The forgeron is working on making my dabas so once I have those I will go down there and start tilling it up (it’s got grass and stuff all over it right now, but that’s a good sign, because it was green grass that obviously no one had been watering so plants should grow well there). I also think I will dig myself a compost pit. I have lots of kitchen scraps.
OH! Somebody ate Melvin’s corpse! Nene said it was probably a goat. As I was tossing water or some food scraps or something over the side of the porch I noticed that the rocks I had put him under had been moved and his body was nowhere to be found. So I guess I don’t have to worry about it stinking! Somebody got a good meal out of it. Come to think of it, maybe it was the cat that seems to live in the rock pile outside my bedroom window. Bet he thought Melvin was delicious! Also, I am starting to suspect that there is a second mouse in my house because I have seen a few more poo pellets and I thought I had cleaned all of Melvin’s out. Hmm. Time will tell.
Tomorrow morning I have to be at the pepiniere at 8 (which means leaving my house at 7:30) as some chef is coming to town and the whole groupement will be there. Something tells me I will be the first one there.
Finally, my poor puppy is sick. He had been scratching and whining all day so I decided to give him a bath in the insecticide before going to bed so I did and he’s not scratching as much anymore but after the bath he shivered for a long time (like he always does, even if I bathe him in the hottest part of the day) so I wrapped him up and laid him on my chest to keep him warm. Then after awhile he started gagging so I put him on the floor and since then he has thrown up probably about 10 times. I’m not sure why he is vomiting. It could be from stuff he ate in the yard, like the rotten eggs I threw out today (the eggs I bought at Ian’s site were ALL rotten – beware!). I saw him chewing on some egg shells and there were egg shells in his puke. So who knows. I just hope he feels better in the morning.
Monday, February 23, 2009
First Trip to Ian's Site
Well, though we lost Melvin today, a lizard moved in when I opened the latrine door and I couldn’t chase him back out. I dunno where he is now, but he’s in here somewhere. I’ve named him Iggy.
So yesterday I went to wait for a taxi first thing in the morning, thinking it shouldn’t be more than an hour before I’d get one going one direction or the other, especially since it was marche day at John’s site. So I commenced to sit and read Eat, Pray, Love. NOT ONE TAXI came by and I was still sitting there after 1pm, and finished the rest of my book (another one down!!). Then, a blue SUV drove into town, headed Ian’s way, and stopped a ways down the road. I decided to just wander down there and see who it was. Turns out it is this dude who is from Guinea, but lived in the States for nearly 20 years and is just now moving back and building a house in Conakry. He was taking his friend to Ian’s site to visit family in his car (which came complete with driver). He spoke great English, having lived in the States so long, and I told him I had been waiting for a taxi ALL FRIGGIN DAY and then he offered to drive me to Ian’s site with them. I was like sweet!! So I grabbed my stuff and we took off and of course Yogi was a total pain until they had me sit by the window and he stuck his head out. THEN he was just fine. I am definitely dosing him with Benadryl before I try to take him to Labe.
So about 5K outside of Ian’s site, we broke the car. This is my first break down and we were lucky that we were so close to where we were going so we just walked the rest of the way and left the driver to deal with the car trouble. The dude took me right to Ian’s house (apparently everyone knows that house because it is Bogart-ing a pump) and said he would have my backpack sent over when either the car was fixed or he could find someone with a moto to go back and get it (it showed up like an hour later). It was awesome, because I got a free ride to Ian’s site AND they gave me a Fanta and some prawn crackers!
So Ian was surprised/happy to see me, as he has been REALLY excommunique up there and we chatted for awhile about what our first couple of weeks at site were like and then he showed me his groupement’s community garden and we diagnosed one woman’s plot with a fungal problem and told her how to fix it (difference made?). Then we ate some good peanut sauce at his rice and sauce lady’s place and brought half back for Yogi.
For dinner we decided to make an eggplant-tomato pasta sauce with macaroni and banana chips (MAN I love banana chips!!) and invited his neighbor to eat with us. As Ian was preparing the sauce, I cleaned (more like organized) his hut. I mean, the man is truly a bachelor, the place was a WRECK. I just couldn’t stand it anymore so I started putting things away. Laundry here, toiletries there, sachets for pepinieres in a pile over there, books together, etc, etc…it looked MUCH better when I was done and I gained a bit of sanity from doing it. I’ve never considered myself to be a neat freak, but maybe I am? Or maybe it was just REALLY BAD. I mean, he had used gauze pads and medical tape strewn over the floor from when he cut his foot the other day – FOUL! (As Yogi was chewing on them, he said not to worry, there’s only a LITTLE bit of AIDS in them LOL)
So we ate our dinner out on the patio-thingy under the stars with his neighbor and I got like 7 mosquito bites (I haven’t gotten ANY mosquito bites at my site). Then we had baths and played with the dog and chatted until probably midnight or so (considering that we go to bed at like 9 under normal circumstances, midnight is way late!).
In the morning we dragged ourselves out of bed early (like 6am) and ate leftover pasta for breakfast then headed to his favorite boutique where I bought 10 (kinda expensive) eggs. But hey, I need eggs, man! I just ate the last two of the ten eggs I bought at John’s site last Sunday today, so ten eggs for a week is about accurate. And hey, you know what’s awesome? You sooooooo don’t have to refrigerate eggs. I mean I bought those eggs over a week ago (by one day) and they were still good today (always test them in a cup of water – if they sink, they’re good).
We found a taxi going my way (an SUV, yay! The SUVs go a lot faster than the Peugeot station wagons so if you manage to get put in an [ancient] Land Cruiser or an SUV, you have hit the jackpot and will spend your whole bush taxi ride passing Peugeots that left way before you), and I took off. Yogi was a DEAR the whole way. And even though I was seated at a window, my window did not roll down. But he was no problem at all. I think it was a combination of several factors: he hadn’t slept too much (midnight to 6am as opposed to like 8-8), I played with him in the morning to wear him out, he had eaten and drank and peed just before we got in the taxi and it was morning so it wasn’t hot yet. This is like, the perfect convergence of circumstances and I don’t expect it to be replicated often so I’m thinking Benadryl is my new best friend and I’m sooooo glad I decided to bring a box of it with me to Africa.
When I got back to my site, people were happy to see me and salue-d and after depositing my stuff at my house I decided to start getting out there and DOING stuff (I was inspired, or maybe shamed? By Ian’s progress at his site and decided it was time to start getting stuff done). So I went to the tailor to have my wrap skirt repaired (and he did it for free as a cadeau for me, isn’t that nice?), I bought an onion from my friend’s sister for the first time (my new strategy is to not buy onions on marche day and every day go to her little stand to buy an onion for my eggs as it gives me a chance to get out of the house to do something, make a friend, and be out in the community), and then I went to the Sous-Prefet’s office with it in my head to ask him the million questions I had been putting off.
I found out so much stuff! First of all, you CAN buy eggs at my site on marche day and they are CHEAP (he said 3 for 1 mil, just today I paid a mil EACH at Ian’s site – at John’s site they are 800 each). Hoodia is supposed to show me where to buy them this marche day (Thursday). He is thinking of a person who would be a good French and Pular tutor for me (someone “serious”), as PC gives a small reimbursement monthly to pay for language tutoring at site and I really want to take advantage of that, especially since everyone here keeps telling me how bad my French is and I want to have the blank stare less when people talk to me in Pular. I figured out the dude who is in charge of the youth, found out who the president of the women’s groupement is, discovered that there are something like 23 groupements in my Sous-Prefecture, got the ball rolling on having my dabas (hoes) made, found out that there are THREE places to get phone service in our Sous-Prefecture, one of which is only 2k away and easy to get to albeit unreliable (the other two I would either have to take a bush taxi to get to or climb up a big mountain in the bush and he doesn’t want me to do that), finally found my high frequency radio (going to try to call PC Conakry on it tomorrow), figured out who to ask for a little area to have a garden close to water (and not far away, either, just by the marigot), discovered you can get egg sandwiches at the CafĂ© and got the carpenter to come to my house and measure for screens for my windows and front door.
He said my screens will be ready tomorrow. I was like, “awesome”. He is also going to make me something to store my clothes on which will be great. But really, just having the screens will be great. For several reasons. One is that I will be able to leave the windows open after the sun goes down to let it cool off in here without fear of a million insects flying in (but this will also require me to fashion curtains to deter prying eyes). Another is that a screen door (with a latch!) will prevent people from just walking into my house and allow me to leave my door open for light and airflow.
So basically I finally got some stuff done today! In addition to fighting off petites (seriously, you need to stay on the porch, can’t wait for that screen door!) and sitting at the SP’s house for awhile watching them tune up his motorcycle to get away from all the petites. I also told the SP to spread the word to the groupement presidents to come introduce themselves, tell me about their groupement and when they meet so that I can start doing my Etude de Milieu, which I will commence using the PACA tools to assess the community’s needs and discover what cool places there are in my site that I don’t yet know about.
Tomorrow the SP’s secretary general is going to take me to the locations of the garden and the closest reseau spot, my screens should be installed and the three teenage boys that come by to greet me every other day or so are going to teach me to make rice and peanut sauce (peanut sauce is my favorite of the sauces).
Starting to feel like a real volunteer!
So yesterday I went to wait for a taxi first thing in the morning, thinking it shouldn’t be more than an hour before I’d get one going one direction or the other, especially since it was marche day at John’s site. So I commenced to sit and read Eat, Pray, Love. NOT ONE TAXI came by and I was still sitting there after 1pm, and finished the rest of my book (another one down!!). Then, a blue SUV drove into town, headed Ian’s way, and stopped a ways down the road. I decided to just wander down there and see who it was. Turns out it is this dude who is from Guinea, but lived in the States for nearly 20 years and is just now moving back and building a house in Conakry. He was taking his friend to Ian’s site to visit family in his car (which came complete with driver). He spoke great English, having lived in the States so long, and I told him I had been waiting for a taxi ALL FRIGGIN DAY and then he offered to drive me to Ian’s site with them. I was like sweet!! So I grabbed my stuff and we took off and of course Yogi was a total pain until they had me sit by the window and he stuck his head out. THEN he was just fine. I am definitely dosing him with Benadryl before I try to take him to Labe.
So about 5K outside of Ian’s site, we broke the car. This is my first break down and we were lucky that we were so close to where we were going so we just walked the rest of the way and left the driver to deal with the car trouble. The dude took me right to Ian’s house (apparently everyone knows that house because it is Bogart-ing a pump) and said he would have my backpack sent over when either the car was fixed or he could find someone with a moto to go back and get it (it showed up like an hour later). It was awesome, because I got a free ride to Ian’s site AND they gave me a Fanta and some prawn crackers!
So Ian was surprised/happy to see me, as he has been REALLY excommunique up there and we chatted for awhile about what our first couple of weeks at site were like and then he showed me his groupement’s community garden and we diagnosed one woman’s plot with a fungal problem and told her how to fix it (difference made?). Then we ate some good peanut sauce at his rice and sauce lady’s place and brought half back for Yogi.
For dinner we decided to make an eggplant-tomato pasta sauce with macaroni and banana chips (MAN I love banana chips!!) and invited his neighbor to eat with us. As Ian was preparing the sauce, I cleaned (more like organized) his hut. I mean, the man is truly a bachelor, the place was a WRECK. I just couldn’t stand it anymore so I started putting things away. Laundry here, toiletries there, sachets for pepinieres in a pile over there, books together, etc, etc…it looked MUCH better when I was done and I gained a bit of sanity from doing it. I’ve never considered myself to be a neat freak, but maybe I am? Or maybe it was just REALLY BAD. I mean, he had used gauze pads and medical tape strewn over the floor from when he cut his foot the other day – FOUL! (As Yogi was chewing on them, he said not to worry, there’s only a LITTLE bit of AIDS in them LOL)
So we ate our dinner out on the patio-thingy under the stars with his neighbor and I got like 7 mosquito bites (I haven’t gotten ANY mosquito bites at my site). Then we had baths and played with the dog and chatted until probably midnight or so (considering that we go to bed at like 9 under normal circumstances, midnight is way late!).
In the morning we dragged ourselves out of bed early (like 6am) and ate leftover pasta for breakfast then headed to his favorite boutique where I bought 10 (kinda expensive) eggs. But hey, I need eggs, man! I just ate the last two of the ten eggs I bought at John’s site last Sunday today, so ten eggs for a week is about accurate. And hey, you know what’s awesome? You sooooooo don’t have to refrigerate eggs. I mean I bought those eggs over a week ago (by one day) and they were still good today (always test them in a cup of water – if they sink, they’re good).
We found a taxi going my way (an SUV, yay! The SUVs go a lot faster than the Peugeot station wagons so if you manage to get put in an [ancient] Land Cruiser or an SUV, you have hit the jackpot and will spend your whole bush taxi ride passing Peugeots that left way before you), and I took off. Yogi was a DEAR the whole way. And even though I was seated at a window, my window did not roll down. But he was no problem at all. I think it was a combination of several factors: he hadn’t slept too much (midnight to 6am as opposed to like 8-8), I played with him in the morning to wear him out, he had eaten and drank and peed just before we got in the taxi and it was morning so it wasn’t hot yet. This is like, the perfect convergence of circumstances and I don’t expect it to be replicated often so I’m thinking Benadryl is my new best friend and I’m sooooo glad I decided to bring a box of it with me to Africa.
When I got back to my site, people were happy to see me and salue-d and after depositing my stuff at my house I decided to start getting out there and DOING stuff (I was inspired, or maybe shamed? By Ian’s progress at his site and decided it was time to start getting stuff done). So I went to the tailor to have my wrap skirt repaired (and he did it for free as a cadeau for me, isn’t that nice?), I bought an onion from my friend’s sister for the first time (my new strategy is to not buy onions on marche day and every day go to her little stand to buy an onion for my eggs as it gives me a chance to get out of the house to do something, make a friend, and be out in the community), and then I went to the Sous-Prefet’s office with it in my head to ask him the million questions I had been putting off.
I found out so much stuff! First of all, you CAN buy eggs at my site on marche day and they are CHEAP (he said 3 for 1 mil, just today I paid a mil EACH at Ian’s site – at John’s site they are 800 each). Hoodia is supposed to show me where to buy them this marche day (Thursday). He is thinking of a person who would be a good French and Pular tutor for me (someone “serious”), as PC gives a small reimbursement monthly to pay for language tutoring at site and I really want to take advantage of that, especially since everyone here keeps telling me how bad my French is and I want to have the blank stare less when people talk to me in Pular. I figured out the dude who is in charge of the youth, found out who the president of the women’s groupement is, discovered that there are something like 23 groupements in my Sous-Prefecture, got the ball rolling on having my dabas (hoes) made, found out that there are THREE places to get phone service in our Sous-Prefecture, one of which is only 2k away and easy to get to albeit unreliable (the other two I would either have to take a bush taxi to get to or climb up a big mountain in the bush and he doesn’t want me to do that), finally found my high frequency radio (going to try to call PC Conakry on it tomorrow), figured out who to ask for a little area to have a garden close to water (and not far away, either, just by the marigot), discovered you can get egg sandwiches at the CafĂ© and got the carpenter to come to my house and measure for screens for my windows and front door.
He said my screens will be ready tomorrow. I was like, “awesome”. He is also going to make me something to store my clothes on which will be great. But really, just having the screens will be great. For several reasons. One is that I will be able to leave the windows open after the sun goes down to let it cool off in here without fear of a million insects flying in (but this will also require me to fashion curtains to deter prying eyes). Another is that a screen door (with a latch!) will prevent people from just walking into my house and allow me to leave my door open for light and airflow.
So basically I finally got some stuff done today! In addition to fighting off petites (seriously, you need to stay on the porch, can’t wait for that screen door!) and sitting at the SP’s house for awhile watching them tune up his motorcycle to get away from all the petites. I also told the SP to spread the word to the groupement presidents to come introduce themselves, tell me about their groupement and when they meet so that I can start doing my Etude de Milieu, which I will commence using the PACA tools to assess the community’s needs and discover what cool places there are in my site that I don’t yet know about.
Tomorrow the SP’s secretary general is going to take me to the locations of the garden and the closest reseau spot, my screens should be installed and the three teenage boys that come by to greet me every other day or so are going to teach me to make rice and peanut sauce (peanut sauce is my favorite of the sauces).
Starting to feel like a real volunteer!
Second Death in Africa
Upon my return from Ian’s site today I was dumping my old dishwater into another bucket of dirty water when suddenly a carcass appeared.
RIP Melvin:
I’m not sure why it makes me kind of sad that Melvin drowned, probably because I had named him Melvin. Just before I went to dump the water, I was by the latrine door and noticed about two evenings-worth of Melvin-poo pellets by the door (where they always are) and had the thought that my little mouse friend was doing well and wondering again where he hides all through the day. He must have drowned just this morning when I was on my way back from Ian’s site, judging by how much poo there was.
At first I just pitched him over the side of my porch with all the food scraps but looking down on him it didn’t seem right (and also seemed like it would STINK very soon) so I tried to dig a hole with a stick but that didn’t work so I opted for putting him under a rock up against the house. This still might stink, but I don’t have a daba (hoe) to bury him. Maybe I will try to find one tomorrow.
So moral of the story: if you want to kill the mouse in your house in Africa, train him to think there is food in buckets by leaving a bucket with veggies in it on the floor (turns out he WAS eating some of my food, namely, avocadoes), then take that bucket away and leave out a bucket of dirty dish water.
RIP Melvin.
RIP Melvin:
I’m not sure why it makes me kind of sad that Melvin drowned, probably because I had named him Melvin. Just before I went to dump the water, I was by the latrine door and noticed about two evenings-worth of Melvin-poo pellets by the door (where they always are) and had the thought that my little mouse friend was doing well and wondering again where he hides all through the day. He must have drowned just this morning when I was on my way back from Ian’s site, judging by how much poo there was.
At first I just pitched him over the side of my porch with all the food scraps but looking down on him it didn’t seem right (and also seemed like it would STINK very soon) so I tried to dig a hole with a stick but that didn’t work so I opted for putting him under a rock up against the house. This still might stink, but I don’t have a daba (hoe) to bury him. Maybe I will try to find one tomorrow.
So moral of the story: if you want to kill the mouse in your house in Africa, train him to think there is food in buckets by leaving a bucket with veggies in it on the floor (turns out he WAS eating some of my food, namely, avocadoes), then take that bucket away and leave out a bucket of dirty dish water.
RIP Melvin.
Saturday, February 21, 2009
Melvin and Bush Notes
There’s a mouse in my house. I know this because I just saw him with my own eyes. As I was brushing my teeth after enjoying a dinner of spaghetti alla olive oil, onion, garlic and tomato, I heard a noise in the living room/kitchen area and went to investigate. At first I didn’t see anything and just as I was about to turn around and go back to my room, I saw him! He came from behind the table that holds my stove and skittered along the wall. He stopped in the beam of my headlamp and for a moment I considered swatting him with the broom, but what was that really going to do? You can’t kill a mouse with a broom. You can’t even kill one of those weird red butt-bugs that are all over my house with a broom. Then he ran off under my big bookshelf-thingy. I have suspected his existence for awhile now, especially when I’m sweeping little pellets of mouse poop out the door every morning, but now I have confirmation. I don’t really know what to do about it. He hasn’t been eating my food. There are no such thing as mouse traps in Guinea. So, I named him Melvin.
In other news, I did not make it to Ian’s site today because my counterpart knocked on my door this morning and told me we were going to the pepiniere. So that’s what I did. And basically sat around watching people work except for the ten minutes where I helped fill a few sachets with dirt for some orange seeds.
Afterwards, I went to the President of the Groupement’s house and he showed me a picture of the last volunteer (second person to show me a picture of her, she was popular) and then we ate rice and sauce. And THEN he took me across the street to his little plantation where he grows all KINDS of stuff: manioc (of course), pineapples, avocadoes, mangoes, LETTUCE, tomatoes, bananas, oranges, other stuff I am now forgetting. I asked if he sold this stuff at market and he laughed and said “No! It’s for my kids!” He has a big family. There was one pineapple that is almost ready to pick and he said, “That pineapple is for you. Come back in maybe 2 months and I will give it to you.” That’s a HUGE thing because pineapples take 18 months to grow. I said thank you. Then we went back over to his compound and he showed me some trees the last volunteer had planted for him (including some Moringa, but apparently she didn’t explain to him what it does because he looked at me quizzically when I said it was really good for eating and for the soil and all kinds of stuff…or maybe my French is that bad? Who knows.). If I understood him correctly, the last volunteer lived in his compound but they didn’t want me to live there because it is too far from town (and it is pretty far, right next to the pepiniere and river).
Also, I got my first bush note today! (a bush note is just, well, a note, that one sends with a bush taxi to the town they intend and hope someone figures out where the person lives and delivers it). Just before I was fixing to leave for the pepiniere a woman I didn’t know with a huge plate of bananas on her head walked into my yard and up to my porch and said some stuff in Pular and handed me a little folded up piece of paper. I looked at it and saw that it was addressed to “Dorian” and so I said, “::name of Ian’s site removed::?!” And she nodded. So I said thank you and she walked away. And then I read the note and it made me laugh out loud and was a nice start to the day.
It said:
“20 Fevrier 2009. Dorian, Where the fuck were you last Saturday? You better come to my marche day this week. So my counterpart still hasn’t shown up in town, and I can’t get a response from anyone over the HF radio. Have you gotten through? If so, tell Sue I want the following: gauze pads (3 packs), Beta-Sept (2 bottles), sunscreen (2 bottles), insect repellent (3 bottles), medical tape, Band-Aids and a fucking partridge in a god-damned pear tree. But I didn’t need to waste that precious space because you ain’t gonna pansy-out on me tomorrow, are you? I can tell you all this and more over the din of my village’s weekly foray into intensive mercantilism. Bon (and I can SOOOO hear him saying “Bon”). I want to make a trip your way in a few days, maybe Thursday I’ll strap my bike to a bush taxi and ride it home at the end of the day. By Jesus, this is an incredible way to communicate with the world. I hope to God I don’t get sick out here. Later, Ian”
So it kinda made me feel bad that I didn’t make it to his site today as I had intended, but hey, the travail called and I had to answer. My plan for tomorrow is to go to the “taxi gare” in the morning and get in the first taxi that has a free seat. This could mean I will go to Ian’s site, to the North, or to John’s site, to the South (market day is tomorrow at John’s site). It all depends on which taxi has a free seat. If I don’t go to Ian’s site tomorrow, I will for sure go next Saturday (inshallah!) and send this bush note to him:
“Ian ::Last Name Here:: -ou bien- Ousmane Bah (Porto) ::name of Ian’s site here:: 2/21/09 Dearest Ian, I am sorry that I did not come to see you today or last Saturday. I’ve had every good intention of coming, though I admit last week it was laziness that precluded me from voyaging to ::Ian’s site::. Today, however, I woke up with the intention of going to the “taxi gare” to wait for a ::Ian’s site::-bound car but before I left my house, my homologue “conk-conked” and told me I had to go to the pepiniere today. Je suis desolee. However, tomorrow (Sunday), I am going to go sit at the “taxi gare” and get in the first taxi that stops with a free seat. Granted, the first taxi with a free seat could be going to ::John’s site:: in which case I will attempt to go your way next Saturday and you will receive this note. But it’s not all bad news, I can relay your list to Sue while I am in reseau. If you do come to visit on Thursday, bring any books you have finished reading, please! I still have not even located my HF radio, let alone attempted to use it so I have no info for you there. I also hope you don’t get sick up there because I did not receive your bush note until this morning, though you sent it yesterday. If you do fall ill, please put yourself on a taxi, not just a note! <3, Dorian P.S. Come quick, I am being attacked by a mob of angry petites!”
Bush notes are fun. Seriously, this is what my life has become. It’s a frigging highlight of the week to get a random note on a bush taxi. I think I might start sending bush notes just for the hell of it. Like maybe I’ll try to send one to Scott, which would have to change taxis at John’s site before getting to his site and would be quite the experiment. In fact I could send one to John and see if it gets there because he lives in a bigger city and not everyone knows him the way they do in small villages like mine and Ian’s. I could even try to send one all the way to Haute! Ok, seriously. This thought pattern is getting pathetic.
One last thing. When I told the President of the Groupement that I had a puppy he immediately asked if I would give it to him when I went back to the States. That way he could tell everyone that it was my dog, kinda like he tells everyone about the trees the last volunteer planted. I said maybe. I said it’s possible I will love him too much and want to take him with me but we’ll see. So I think I will use him as my dog-sitter when Yogi gets bigger (he is too small to defend himself or take care of himself at all, really, so I just take him with me as of now), as a sort of test-run. If I do leave Yogi in Africa, I want him to be somewhere he will be happy.
Well, wish me luck on finding a taxi tomorrow!
In other news, I did not make it to Ian’s site today because my counterpart knocked on my door this morning and told me we were going to the pepiniere. So that’s what I did. And basically sat around watching people work except for the ten minutes where I helped fill a few sachets with dirt for some orange seeds.
Afterwards, I went to the President of the Groupement’s house and he showed me a picture of the last volunteer (second person to show me a picture of her, she was popular) and then we ate rice and sauce. And THEN he took me across the street to his little plantation where he grows all KINDS of stuff: manioc (of course), pineapples, avocadoes, mangoes, LETTUCE, tomatoes, bananas, oranges, other stuff I am now forgetting. I asked if he sold this stuff at market and he laughed and said “No! It’s for my kids!” He has a big family. There was one pineapple that is almost ready to pick and he said, “That pineapple is for you. Come back in maybe 2 months and I will give it to you.” That’s a HUGE thing because pineapples take 18 months to grow. I said thank you. Then we went back over to his compound and he showed me some trees the last volunteer had planted for him (including some Moringa, but apparently she didn’t explain to him what it does because he looked at me quizzically when I said it was really good for eating and for the soil and all kinds of stuff…or maybe my French is that bad? Who knows.). If I understood him correctly, the last volunteer lived in his compound but they didn’t want me to live there because it is too far from town (and it is pretty far, right next to the pepiniere and river).
Also, I got my first bush note today! (a bush note is just, well, a note, that one sends with a bush taxi to the town they intend and hope someone figures out where the person lives and delivers it). Just before I was fixing to leave for the pepiniere a woman I didn’t know with a huge plate of bananas on her head walked into my yard and up to my porch and said some stuff in Pular and handed me a little folded up piece of paper. I looked at it and saw that it was addressed to “Dorian” and so I said, “::name of Ian’s site removed::?!” And she nodded. So I said thank you and she walked away. And then I read the note and it made me laugh out loud and was a nice start to the day.
It said:
“20 Fevrier 2009. Dorian, Where the fuck were you last Saturday? You better come to my marche day this week. So my counterpart still hasn’t shown up in town, and I can’t get a response from anyone over the HF radio. Have you gotten through? If so, tell Sue I want the following: gauze pads (3 packs), Beta-Sept (2 bottles), sunscreen (2 bottles), insect repellent (3 bottles), medical tape, Band-Aids and a fucking partridge in a god-damned pear tree. But I didn’t need to waste that precious space because you ain’t gonna pansy-out on me tomorrow, are you? I can tell you all this and more over the din of my village’s weekly foray into intensive mercantilism. Bon (and I can SOOOO hear him saying “Bon”). I want to make a trip your way in a few days, maybe Thursday I’ll strap my bike to a bush taxi and ride it home at the end of the day. By Jesus, this is an incredible way to communicate with the world. I hope to God I don’t get sick out here. Later, Ian”
So it kinda made me feel bad that I didn’t make it to his site today as I had intended, but hey, the travail called and I had to answer. My plan for tomorrow is to go to the “taxi gare” in the morning and get in the first taxi that has a free seat. This could mean I will go to Ian’s site, to the North, or to John’s site, to the South (market day is tomorrow at John’s site). It all depends on which taxi has a free seat. If I don’t go to Ian’s site tomorrow, I will for sure go next Saturday (inshallah!) and send this bush note to him:
“Ian ::Last Name Here:: -ou bien- Ousmane Bah (Porto) ::name of Ian’s site here:: 2/21/09 Dearest Ian, I am sorry that I did not come to see you today or last Saturday. I’ve had every good intention of coming, though I admit last week it was laziness that precluded me from voyaging to ::Ian’s site::. Today, however, I woke up with the intention of going to the “taxi gare” to wait for a ::Ian’s site::-bound car but before I left my house, my homologue “conk-conked” and told me I had to go to the pepiniere today. Je suis desolee. However, tomorrow (Sunday), I am going to go sit at the “taxi gare” and get in the first taxi that stops with a free seat. Granted, the first taxi with a free seat could be going to ::John’s site:: in which case I will attempt to go your way next Saturday and you will receive this note. But it’s not all bad news, I can relay your list to Sue while I am in reseau. If you do come to visit on Thursday, bring any books you have finished reading, please! I still have not even located my HF radio, let alone attempted to use it so I have no info for you there. I also hope you don’t get sick up there because I did not receive your bush note until this morning, though you sent it yesterday. If you do fall ill, please put yourself on a taxi, not just a note! <3, Dorian P.S. Come quick, I am being attacked by a mob of angry petites!”
Bush notes are fun. Seriously, this is what my life has become. It’s a frigging highlight of the week to get a random note on a bush taxi. I think I might start sending bush notes just for the hell of it. Like maybe I’ll try to send one to Scott, which would have to change taxis at John’s site before getting to his site and would be quite the experiment. In fact I could send one to John and see if it gets there because he lives in a bigger city and not everyone knows him the way they do in small villages like mine and Ian’s. I could even try to send one all the way to Haute! Ok, seriously. This thought pattern is getting pathetic.
One last thing. When I told the President of the Groupement that I had a puppy he immediately asked if I would give it to him when I went back to the States. That way he could tell everyone that it was my dog, kinda like he tells everyone about the trees the last volunteer planted. I said maybe. I said it’s possible I will love him too much and want to take him with me but we’ll see. So I think I will use him as my dog-sitter when Yogi gets bigger (he is too small to defend himself or take care of himself at all, really, so I just take him with me as of now), as a sort of test-run. If I do leave Yogi in Africa, I want him to be somewhere he will be happy.
Well, wish me luck on finding a taxi tomorrow!
Friday, February 20, 2009
It's Raining!
Hey! It’s raining! Weird! It’s about 10pm and I awoke to hear a noise on my tin roof that I hadn’t heard before – rain! This is very bizarre as it is the dry season, but I’ll take it! I got out of bed and put a couple of buckets outside in the latrine to catch whatever does fall, though I’m not confident it will be much. But hey, even a little is better than nothing!
And now I shall fall back asleep to the sound of raindrops on this parched African earth.
And now I shall fall back asleep to the sound of raindrops on this parched African earth.
Thursday, February 19, 2009
Prefet's Visit
Well, today was a whirlwind. As promised, I showed up at the SP’s house at 8am to commence the cooking. We didn’t actually start until nearly nine. I mostly just helped Madame Fofana with this beef-onion-potato stew which was actually DELICIOUS (I even ate a tiny piece of beef just to try it, but the potatoes were friggin’ amazing).
She made it by first boiling potatoes, then peeling them, slicing in thirds, then frying them in oil and a little water with a couple of pieces of onion which she later tossed out of the marmite (pot). Then she used the same oil to lightly fry the chunks of beef, then added a bunch of water and let it boil for a long time. Oh, she seasoned the beef before frying it with piled (crushed) black pepper and garlic and a couple of Maggi cubes (a must-use in every Guinean dish, it’s just MSG I think…I forget why MSG is supposed to be bad for you). So she let it boil for a long time until the liquid started to make a sort of gravy, then she added a bunch of chopped onion to it and let it boil some more, then finally threw in the potatoes.
All this was done on a three-rock “stove” with firewood. Basically, three rocks hold your marmite over three sticks of firewood that meet underneath the marmite. This is the standard way in which cooking is done here and is the basis for one of our AgFo projects: mud stoves, which basically improve this design by enclosing the rocks in mud to allow the use of less wood, create less smoke, and cook faster. We have plenty of cow poo (necessary ingredient for the mud) in my village so eventually I am sure I will be building some mud stoves.
So they gave me the covered calabash (sort of a wooden bowl) with Kola nuts on a bed of uncooked rice and told me what I would say to the Prefet when I presented it: “Monsieur le Prefet du ::Name of Prefecture::, ko saadi, ko toli.” It means something like, “eat this.” I don’t really know. It’s Pular. Once they told me this I spent the rest of the time saying it over and over in my head so I wouldn’t mess it up when it was show time. I was really nervous about messing it up, even though I knew the Prefet wouldn’t care (he is a cool dude, I’ve met him before), I knew my village would care and wanted to make them proud. So I nervously said it again and again and the ladies kept telling me to practice with them over and over so I wouldn’t mess it up. I did not mess it up. However, I did forget that the Sous Prefet told me that once I presented the nuts, the Prefet would do a cheek-kiss thing and so that ended up kind of awkward but now I know!
Let me take a petite repose here and explain who the Prefet is. The Prefet is a government-appointed position. I’m not sure how many Prefectures there are in Guinea but I would guess about 40, maybe. It is located in a bigger city and is comprised of several Sous-Prefectures, in one of which I reside. Actually now that I think about it, the Prefet might supposed to be elected, not appointed…hmmm…I know the Sous-Prefets are appointed and the Prefets right now are appointed with the new government (all are higher-ranking military officers). I don’t remember if they were appointed or elected with the last government or not. Hmm. Anyway. The Prefet is in charge of his Prefecture. Granted, I don’t know EXACTLY what they do, but I don’t know exactly what a mayor does in the States, either, so it’s kinda like that (although there is also a mayor in addition to the Prefet). It’s kinda complicated! Anyway, my Prefet is new (the one we met at site visit stepped down to take the job of head of the gendarmerie in Conakry, or so I hear) and he looks like Laurence Fishburne.
The Prefet didn’t show until about noon, I think. I don’t really know what time it was. But it certainly wasn’t ten. There was a lot of pomp and circumstance (read: music, dancing, introductions) and everyone in the village was dressed in their best outfits, all the elders and the women’s groupement were there (the women’s group was all dressed in the same complet – cute!). I was very confused most of the time and people were just pulling me this way and that. I sat in the palm frond enclosure thingy with the Prefet, the Sous Prefet, the President of the CRD, other important people. It’s kind of awkward to be treated differently than everyone else, but I ended up glad to have a chair because it was hot and the speaking went on for awhile. I’m not sure exactly what was said. There was a lot of “Vive le CNDD!” The CNDD is the new military government headed by now-President Moussa Dadis Camara. The Prefet delivered his address in Pular, so I REALLY didn’t understand what he said, but the SP told me at one point he was talking about me, and he motioned towards me, but I don’t really know what he said. Man your first few weeks at site are confusing and awkward! But as some PCVs advised, just perfect the art of the “smile and nod”.
One kind of interesting thing is that when the Prefet and his wife and the Secretary General and everyone sat down in the thingy, some people danced in front of them until he threw money at them. I thought that was kinda interesting. Also, they kicked up a lot of dust, but the Prefet was just like, “C’est pas grave” and covered his mouth with a cloth. He also had the Sous Prefet’s son Mamadou sit in his chair with him. Like I said, he is a cool dude.
After all the speaking, we went to the SP’s house to feed the Prefet and the other important people and outside the door there was lots of music and dancing. I danced in the hall a little bit with some of the girls and then Madame Fofana had me sit at the table and that’s when I ate the bomb potatoes. I was like a little kid the whole time, wide-eyed and polite and smiling everywhere. Every now and then the Prefet would catch my eye and see my goofy face and smile. I think smiling is key. I think I wrote that in one of my essays on my Peace Corps application.
Anyway, after food Madame Fofana had me go dance for the Prefet with her, which felt very silly but I did it anyway. Basically the two of us just danced in front of the table for a couple of minutes, much to the amusement of all the Guineans. The Prefet asked me how long I would be in Guinea and I said, “Deux ans, Inshallah!” and he laughed and then he got in his SUV and left.
Then I sat with Rama and Madame Fofana for a bit until Madame Bangoura called us into her room and we ate more of the stew (by this point I was pretty full but I took a few bites, anyway) with our hands from a plate on the ground.
After all this I felt pretty good, pretty accepted by my village and went strolling through the market, where several people called out salutations to me (by name, too, not just “porto”!) and one lady made me wait while she peeled an orange and gave it to me to drink. I only bought four cans of sardines for the dog. There really isn’t anything in my market that I want to buy.
No vegetables, no eggs. Those are really the only things I need, plus dog food. That’s why I will have to regularly visit John’s site to stock up on that stuff.
OH the other thing was I finally asked Madame Fofana if she knew Mr. Diallo, who is the guy that Balde wrote the note to about the water and she didn’t but she asked this other dude and he knew him and took the note. Then when I was at home, the dude showed up with Mr. Diallo and I explained that Balde had sent the note with me, then he read the note and said that after the market was over he would come get me and I would see his house. I was like ok!
Then I took a nap on my couch. And had the weirdest Mefloquine (Malaria prophylaxis) dream I’ve had in awhile. It was all Peace Corps people and we were in Guinea and we were watching them make charcoal (which they do by burying wood in a big pile, covering it with dirt and setting it on fire) when all of a sudden there was an explosive volcanic eruption that filled the whole valley with lava and kept on rising and rising and killed all of us. At one point as we (me and Ashley) were running up the top point, she said something like, “Nikki (I think Nikki from LA, which is weird because she wouldn’t know Nikki) said Ben already posted a picture!” And the caption said something like, “Where’s Jean Claude van Damme now??” Bizarre. In the end it was me and Ashley hanging on to the very top pillar of the Peace Corps house and the lava came up and burned us to death. I woke up very hot and disturbed, like my legs were on fire! Very vivid. I hope to not experience death by lava in real life.
Anyway soon after that Mr. Diallo came and I went over to his house and was given a bajillion oranges (I don’t think I will EVER have to buy oranges!) and ate about seven of them while I was sitting there. He said that he would send someone every day to get me water and wash my floors. Finally the water problem will be solved! Yay! Although I think washing the floors every day might be excessive. But maybe he didn’t mean every day for the floors. Point is, I will need to buy some more bon-bons to give whenever they come.
A little before 8, he and two of his kids (I think they were his kids? Familial relations are very indistinct here) walked me back home and I was so full of oranges that I didn’t eat any dinner. Plans for pasta thwarted again!!
My big plan for tomorrow is to wash my hair (long time coming!). Saturday I want to go up to Ian’s site for a visit.
One last thing, today I noticed that there are white worm things in my puppy’s stool. It makes me really regret not going to the vet in Conakry, who had de-wormer and all kinds of good stuff and waiting for Boke, where all he had was the Rabies shot. I don’t really know where to get de-wormer now. Maybe there is a vet in Labe who will have it, or maybe I can get Kate to get it when she goes to Conakry for her monthly regional capital visit…or maybe even Kristine (APCD) will bring me some when she comes to visit at the beginning of the month. Next time I’m in reseau I will call her and ask.
All-in-all it was a very good day full of good food, good friends and good news (except for the worm part).
She made it by first boiling potatoes, then peeling them, slicing in thirds, then frying them in oil and a little water with a couple of pieces of onion which she later tossed out of the marmite (pot). Then she used the same oil to lightly fry the chunks of beef, then added a bunch of water and let it boil for a long time. Oh, she seasoned the beef before frying it with piled (crushed) black pepper and garlic and a couple of Maggi cubes (a must-use in every Guinean dish, it’s just MSG I think…I forget why MSG is supposed to be bad for you). So she let it boil for a long time until the liquid started to make a sort of gravy, then she added a bunch of chopped onion to it and let it boil some more, then finally threw in the potatoes.
All this was done on a three-rock “stove” with firewood. Basically, three rocks hold your marmite over three sticks of firewood that meet underneath the marmite. This is the standard way in which cooking is done here and is the basis for one of our AgFo projects: mud stoves, which basically improve this design by enclosing the rocks in mud to allow the use of less wood, create less smoke, and cook faster. We have plenty of cow poo (necessary ingredient for the mud) in my village so eventually I am sure I will be building some mud stoves.
So they gave me the covered calabash (sort of a wooden bowl) with Kola nuts on a bed of uncooked rice and told me what I would say to the Prefet when I presented it: “Monsieur le Prefet du ::Name of Prefecture::, ko saadi, ko toli.” It means something like, “eat this.” I don’t really know. It’s Pular. Once they told me this I spent the rest of the time saying it over and over in my head so I wouldn’t mess it up when it was show time. I was really nervous about messing it up, even though I knew the Prefet wouldn’t care (he is a cool dude, I’ve met him before), I knew my village would care and wanted to make them proud. So I nervously said it again and again and the ladies kept telling me to practice with them over and over so I wouldn’t mess it up. I did not mess it up. However, I did forget that the Sous Prefet told me that once I presented the nuts, the Prefet would do a cheek-kiss thing and so that ended up kind of awkward but now I know!
Let me take a petite repose here and explain who the Prefet is. The Prefet is a government-appointed position. I’m not sure how many Prefectures there are in Guinea but I would guess about 40, maybe. It is located in a bigger city and is comprised of several Sous-Prefectures, in one of which I reside. Actually now that I think about it, the Prefet might supposed to be elected, not appointed…hmmm…I know the Sous-Prefets are appointed and the Prefets right now are appointed with the new government (all are higher-ranking military officers). I don’t remember if they were appointed or elected with the last government or not. Hmm. Anyway. The Prefet is in charge of his Prefecture. Granted, I don’t know EXACTLY what they do, but I don’t know exactly what a mayor does in the States, either, so it’s kinda like that (although there is also a mayor in addition to the Prefet). It’s kinda complicated! Anyway, my Prefet is new (the one we met at site visit stepped down to take the job of head of the gendarmerie in Conakry, or so I hear) and he looks like Laurence Fishburne.
The Prefet didn’t show until about noon, I think. I don’t really know what time it was. But it certainly wasn’t ten. There was a lot of pomp and circumstance (read: music, dancing, introductions) and everyone in the village was dressed in their best outfits, all the elders and the women’s groupement were there (the women’s group was all dressed in the same complet – cute!). I was very confused most of the time and people were just pulling me this way and that. I sat in the palm frond enclosure thingy with the Prefet, the Sous Prefet, the President of the CRD, other important people. It’s kind of awkward to be treated differently than everyone else, but I ended up glad to have a chair because it was hot and the speaking went on for awhile. I’m not sure exactly what was said. There was a lot of “Vive le CNDD!” The CNDD is the new military government headed by now-President Moussa Dadis Camara. The Prefet delivered his address in Pular, so I REALLY didn’t understand what he said, but the SP told me at one point he was talking about me, and he motioned towards me, but I don’t really know what he said. Man your first few weeks at site are confusing and awkward! But as some PCVs advised, just perfect the art of the “smile and nod”.
One kind of interesting thing is that when the Prefet and his wife and the Secretary General and everyone sat down in the thingy, some people danced in front of them until he threw money at them. I thought that was kinda interesting. Also, they kicked up a lot of dust, but the Prefet was just like, “C’est pas grave” and covered his mouth with a cloth. He also had the Sous Prefet’s son Mamadou sit in his chair with him. Like I said, he is a cool dude.
After all the speaking, we went to the SP’s house to feed the Prefet and the other important people and outside the door there was lots of music and dancing. I danced in the hall a little bit with some of the girls and then Madame Fofana had me sit at the table and that’s when I ate the bomb potatoes. I was like a little kid the whole time, wide-eyed and polite and smiling everywhere. Every now and then the Prefet would catch my eye and see my goofy face and smile. I think smiling is key. I think I wrote that in one of my essays on my Peace Corps application.
Anyway, after food Madame Fofana had me go dance for the Prefet with her, which felt very silly but I did it anyway. Basically the two of us just danced in front of the table for a couple of minutes, much to the amusement of all the Guineans. The Prefet asked me how long I would be in Guinea and I said, “Deux ans, Inshallah!” and he laughed and then he got in his SUV and left.
Then I sat with Rama and Madame Fofana for a bit until Madame Bangoura called us into her room and we ate more of the stew (by this point I was pretty full but I took a few bites, anyway) with our hands from a plate on the ground.
After all this I felt pretty good, pretty accepted by my village and went strolling through the market, where several people called out salutations to me (by name, too, not just “porto”!) and one lady made me wait while she peeled an orange and gave it to me to drink. I only bought four cans of sardines for the dog. There really isn’t anything in my market that I want to buy.
No vegetables, no eggs. Those are really the only things I need, plus dog food. That’s why I will have to regularly visit John’s site to stock up on that stuff.
OH the other thing was I finally asked Madame Fofana if she knew Mr. Diallo, who is the guy that Balde wrote the note to about the water and she didn’t but she asked this other dude and he knew him and took the note. Then when I was at home, the dude showed up with Mr. Diallo and I explained that Balde had sent the note with me, then he read the note and said that after the market was over he would come get me and I would see his house. I was like ok!
Then I took a nap on my couch. And had the weirdest Mefloquine (Malaria prophylaxis) dream I’ve had in awhile. It was all Peace Corps people and we were in Guinea and we were watching them make charcoal (which they do by burying wood in a big pile, covering it with dirt and setting it on fire) when all of a sudden there was an explosive volcanic eruption that filled the whole valley with lava and kept on rising and rising and killed all of us. At one point as we (me and Ashley) were running up the top point, she said something like, “Nikki (I think Nikki from LA, which is weird because she wouldn’t know Nikki) said Ben already posted a picture!” And the caption said something like, “Where’s Jean Claude van Damme now??” Bizarre. In the end it was me and Ashley hanging on to the very top pillar of the Peace Corps house and the lava came up and burned us to death. I woke up very hot and disturbed, like my legs were on fire! Very vivid. I hope to not experience death by lava in real life.
Anyway soon after that Mr. Diallo came and I went over to his house and was given a bajillion oranges (I don’t think I will EVER have to buy oranges!) and ate about seven of them while I was sitting there. He said that he would send someone every day to get me water and wash my floors. Finally the water problem will be solved! Yay! Although I think washing the floors every day might be excessive. But maybe he didn’t mean every day for the floors. Point is, I will need to buy some more bon-bons to give whenever they come.
A little before 8, he and two of his kids (I think they were his kids? Familial relations are very indistinct here) walked me back home and I was so full of oranges that I didn’t eat any dinner. Plans for pasta thwarted again!!
My big plan for tomorrow is to wash my hair (long time coming!). Saturday I want to go up to Ian’s site for a visit.
One last thing, today I noticed that there are white worm things in my puppy’s stool. It makes me really regret not going to the vet in Conakry, who had de-wormer and all kinds of good stuff and waiting for Boke, where all he had was the Rabies shot. I don’t really know where to get de-wormer now. Maybe there is a vet in Labe who will have it, or maybe I can get Kate to get it when she goes to Conakry for her monthly regional capital visit…or maybe even Kristine (APCD) will bring me some when she comes to visit at the beginning of the month. Next time I’m in reseau I will call her and ask.
All-in-all it was a very good day full of good food, good friends and good news (except for the worm part).
Wednesday, February 18, 2009
Courrant
Today was one of those days I did not want to leave my house. I have now been at site for a week and it seems to have gone by rather quickly. If I had managed not to leave my house today, it would have been the first day that happened. However, life had other plans.
I was productive in the morning before the heat hit and did some cleaning, put up some things on my walls, stuff like that. I read Allen Ginsburg’s Howl and started in on Eat, Pray, Love which my cousin Maggie gave me to read here when I visited her in Brooklyn last June. I have already completed two other books just since being at site: Sundays at Tiffany’s, which Amy’s mom sent me (thanks again, Mama Urban!!), and Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe, a novel about Nigeria at the start of colonialism.
I had some visitors today, as I do every day, including but not limited to the Sous Prefet, who told me I have two jobs for the Prefet’s visit tomorrow: one is to be at his house at 8am to help the women prepare the rice and the other is to present the calabash of Kola nuts with two young girls to the Prefet when he arrives. Both are doable and I am happy to be included. Nene also stopped by a couple of times and hung out for awhile.
For lunch I made two fried eggs with onions, avocado, vache qui rie (Laughing Cow cheese) and piment sauce. It was tasty and filling.
Late in the afternoon, like 4ish, I did decide to leave the house and go down to the chango (the mystery water) to wash my dishes and the dog, who hadn’t had a bath in like 3 days. I forgot that I had wanted to wash my hair, which is unfortunate.
As I was on my way back from the chango, Nene met me on the path and said the Sous Prefet wanted me to come to his house right away. So we deposited my things at my house and went to his house. There was a group of about 8 women sitting on the porch with him and he explained that this was a meeting to discuss the preparations for tomorrow. Almost all of it was in Pular, so I didn’t understand most of it, but basically he was just giving the women the money to buy the food.
The meeting was interrupted when a shiny silver truck pulled up to the house and three men got out and went into the house to talk to the Sous Prefet. When they emerged the Sous Prefet announced that courrant (electricity) was coming to our village. The women yelled and clapped and danced and continued to do so in bursts for the next couple of hours.
So what my village is getting is called a Platform Multifunctionalle, which is like a big gas-powered generator from what I gather. It is a project done by the UN (their symbol was on the truck and also on the poster describing the machine). I came to understand that they knew this was coming and the women’s groupement had been raising the money for it: 1.5 million Guinean francs or about $600 US. At first I had thought this was the first they had heard of it but that was not the case.
The men went about some sort of business, finding other men, I think touring possible locations for the machine and talking logistics. I was hanging out with the women, though, who were singing and dancing so I don’t really know what the men were doing. They were walking around and talking.
Apparently this is going to bring courrant to the village Centre, which has about 300 residents, including myself. I’m not sure exactly how it is going to work: what hours, if they will be hooking up powerlines to have power in people’s houses or if it will just be the government buildings, how they will pay for the gas, etc… But I DID happen to have the thought that this would be great for the Centre de Sante because I remembered that the doctor’s medicine fridge had been out of gas during site visit and regular courrant would keep the vaccinations at the proper storage temperature. (This also brings up another point – where are they going to get a regular petrol supply?)
One of the men told me that they would start working on it on Saturday and that it should be up and running in 2-3 months. Also I don’t know if this means my village Centre will be getting reseau soon or not because one of the women held a cell phone up to her ear and pretended to call me and we went through all the French salutations before dissolving in laughter.
The hub bub was concluded when the sun went down and it was prayer time and I watched about 20 men pray in the Sous Prefet’s front “yard”, led by the President of the CRD and all the women went inside to pray separately.
Then people started to disperse and I ended up at the SP’s house for awhile longer waiting for someone to walk me home (we are not supposed to walk by ourselves at night: Peace Corps policy) and ended up eating rice and soup sauce with the family for dinner. That scrapped my plans to make spaghetti with olive oil, onion, garlic and diced tomato, which I had been planning on since reading all the stories about food in Italy in this new book (thanks A LOT for sending me off with a book that makes my mouth water for food I can’t have, Maggie!!!).
It’s always good to eat with a family, though, and it is bien integree.
So instead of staying in my house all day I ended up out and about with a lot of different people from about 4-8:30 or so. Tomorrow I go to the SP’s house to help with the food at 8. The Prefet is supposed to arrive at 10 (we’ll see if that happens) and then hopefully I will still be able to hit the marche in the afternoon. Saturday I am going to try to go up to Ian’s site to check out his marche, see his site and steal some books that he’s inevitably finished reading.
Tuesday I think I will go meet with the groupement doing the pepiniere and get them started on finding Coyah sachets and seeds for the kinds of trees they want to plant.
Just another day in Africa.
I was productive in the morning before the heat hit and did some cleaning, put up some things on my walls, stuff like that. I read Allen Ginsburg’s Howl and started in on Eat, Pray, Love which my cousin Maggie gave me to read here when I visited her in Brooklyn last June. I have already completed two other books just since being at site: Sundays at Tiffany’s, which Amy’s mom sent me (thanks again, Mama Urban!!), and Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe, a novel about Nigeria at the start of colonialism.
I had some visitors today, as I do every day, including but not limited to the Sous Prefet, who told me I have two jobs for the Prefet’s visit tomorrow: one is to be at his house at 8am to help the women prepare the rice and the other is to present the calabash of Kola nuts with two young girls to the Prefet when he arrives. Both are doable and I am happy to be included. Nene also stopped by a couple of times and hung out for awhile.
For lunch I made two fried eggs with onions, avocado, vache qui rie (Laughing Cow cheese) and piment sauce. It was tasty and filling.
Late in the afternoon, like 4ish, I did decide to leave the house and go down to the chango (the mystery water) to wash my dishes and the dog, who hadn’t had a bath in like 3 days. I forgot that I had wanted to wash my hair, which is unfortunate.
As I was on my way back from the chango, Nene met me on the path and said the Sous Prefet wanted me to come to his house right away. So we deposited my things at my house and went to his house. There was a group of about 8 women sitting on the porch with him and he explained that this was a meeting to discuss the preparations for tomorrow. Almost all of it was in Pular, so I didn’t understand most of it, but basically he was just giving the women the money to buy the food.
The meeting was interrupted when a shiny silver truck pulled up to the house and three men got out and went into the house to talk to the Sous Prefet. When they emerged the Sous Prefet announced that courrant (electricity) was coming to our village. The women yelled and clapped and danced and continued to do so in bursts for the next couple of hours.
So what my village is getting is called a Platform Multifunctionalle, which is like a big gas-powered generator from what I gather. It is a project done by the UN (their symbol was on the truck and also on the poster describing the machine). I came to understand that they knew this was coming and the women’s groupement had been raising the money for it: 1.5 million Guinean francs or about $600 US. At first I had thought this was the first they had heard of it but that was not the case.
The men went about some sort of business, finding other men, I think touring possible locations for the machine and talking logistics. I was hanging out with the women, though, who were singing and dancing so I don’t really know what the men were doing. They were walking around and talking.
Apparently this is going to bring courrant to the village Centre, which has about 300 residents, including myself. I’m not sure exactly how it is going to work: what hours, if they will be hooking up powerlines to have power in people’s houses or if it will just be the government buildings, how they will pay for the gas, etc… But I DID happen to have the thought that this would be great for the Centre de Sante because I remembered that the doctor’s medicine fridge had been out of gas during site visit and regular courrant would keep the vaccinations at the proper storage temperature. (This also brings up another point – where are they going to get a regular petrol supply?)
One of the men told me that they would start working on it on Saturday and that it should be up and running in 2-3 months. Also I don’t know if this means my village Centre will be getting reseau soon or not because one of the women held a cell phone up to her ear and pretended to call me and we went through all the French salutations before dissolving in laughter.
The hub bub was concluded when the sun went down and it was prayer time and I watched about 20 men pray in the Sous Prefet’s front “yard”, led by the President of the CRD and all the women went inside to pray separately.
Then people started to disperse and I ended up at the SP’s house for awhile longer waiting for someone to walk me home (we are not supposed to walk by ourselves at night: Peace Corps policy) and ended up eating rice and soup sauce with the family for dinner. That scrapped my plans to make spaghetti with olive oil, onion, garlic and diced tomato, which I had been planning on since reading all the stories about food in Italy in this new book (thanks A LOT for sending me off with a book that makes my mouth water for food I can’t have, Maggie!!!).
It’s always good to eat with a family, though, and it is bien integree.
So instead of staying in my house all day I ended up out and about with a lot of different people from about 4-8:30 or so. Tomorrow I go to the SP’s house to help with the food at 8. The Prefet is supposed to arrive at 10 (we’ll see if that happens) and then hopefully I will still be able to hit the marche in the afternoon. Saturday I am going to try to go up to Ian’s site to check out his marche, see his site and steal some books that he’s inevitably finished reading.
Tuesday I think I will go meet with the groupement doing the pepiniere and get them started on finding Coyah sachets and seeds for the kinds of trees they want to plant.
Just another day in Africa.
Monday, February 16, 2009
Grand Marche
So yesterday I bit the bullet and went to John’s site for his grand marche day, which is Sundays. When I ventured out of my house about 9, there was already a taxi stopped by the orange ladies so I went over and asked if there was an available seat and there was, so I went to tell the SP that I was going to John’s site for the day (and maybe the night depending on availability of a taxi back – also Peace Corps policy to tell someone in your village where you’re going and for how long plus it’s polite). Then I grabbed my backpack and Yogi and went out to wait for the taxi to leave. You never know when a taxi is going to leave. There isn’t much rhyme or reason to it. The chauffer had said to go tell the SP “vite vite!” so we could leave but then I ended up sitting around for like 45 min waiting to leave. But one thing I discovered while sitting waiting is that there is a rice and sauce lady across from the orange ladies and Yogi likes rice and sauce! A dude sitting next to me gave Yogi a couple of spoonfuls and he gobbled it up (it was leaf sauce). So that’s a relief because I can just go down with a Tupperware and buy some rice and sauce every day or two for like 2 mil and mix in some sardines and Yogi will have a pretty balanced meal that’s a lot easier and cheaper than what I had been doing before.
On the ride to John’s site I saw my first (wild) monkeys! Two of them sprinted across the road in front of the taxi and I got a kick out of it though I think everyone else in the taxi thought I was crazy. Yogi did not travel very well on the way there, he was very fidgety and just wouldn’t sit still! But on the way back I discovered that if I hold him up to the window and let him stick his head outside he is a much better traveler. All dogs love sticking their heads out of car windows – all over the world.
So when I got to John’s site and into reseau I called him and said, “Hey! Where you at??” And he was like, “Uh…at my house?” And I was like, “I’m at your site! Stay there I’m coming over!”
So then I tried to get through the marche and MAN is it crowded and crazy. Got to John’s house and interrupted his busy reading-and-cleaning routine and made him go to the marche with me, which he was actually grateful for because he wouldn’t have gone if I wasn’t there.
There was so much good stuff at the marche!! We found avocadoes FIVE FOR A MIL! The most I have paid for an avocado here has been 2.5 mil, so getting FIVE for only ONE mil was pretty exciting (granted, the sizes of the avocadoes I have bought have varied greatly, in fact today I bought two ripe avocadoes before leaving John’s site and they were 700 each, so yeah, prices vary). Also, there was LETTUCE – AND – FRESH CORN!!! I nearly died when I saw the fresh corn. All told I bought tomatoes, lettuce, fresh corn, potatoes, avocadoes, eggs (10 of them!), condensed milk and sardines for Yogi, a bucket, a goblet and steel wool for my marmite. It was productive. Oh and today I bought a plastic kettle, which is what they use to clean themselves when they use the bathroom so I can stop using toilet paper at home. Toilet paper is expensive, rare, and better used to clean up Yogi’s messes.
I did not manage to find a chew toy for Yogi, though, but I did take my mom’s advice and tie a knot in a sock that had no partner and Yogi is liking that. He sort of uses it as a pillow. One thing I was sort of disappointed about was I didn’t find any cucumber which I actually thought was kinda weird. The only other vegetables they had that I didn’t buy was okra, piment (hot peppers), eggplant and leaves for leaf sauce. Oh and there was this leaf powder, and I wondered if it was Moringa powder but I didn’t end up asking because I don’t know the Pular word for it. But I am going to figure it out and ask next time I’m there! Because if it IS Moringa powder I would definitely buy some and sprinkle some in every meal because it is SOOOOOOO good for you. Speaking of Moringa I really need to plant my Moringa seeds. I want a Moringa forest in my yard so I always have leaves to eat.
So after the marche we went back to John’s house and dropped off all of our stuff and then went back on ville for rice and sauce for lunch. He has a good rice and sauce lady but she never has the peanut sauce when I am there so we always get leaf sauce. It’s still tasty but I want some peanut sauce, man!! We had some left over so we filled a Coyah sachet (water bag) with it and I brought it home for Yogi. People thought I was crazy. The concept of a doggie bag has now made it to West Africa.
So then we went to the taxi gare and sometimes it’s really hard to figure out who the dude is! The “dude” being the guy you ask to buy a ticket for a taxi from. Once we found him he said the last taxi for my village was full and I’d have to wait for tomorrow. This didn’t really shock me as it was already like 4pm and that’s about when I would expect the last taxi to be leaving.
So I stayed the night at John’s. We went down to his water source to get water and it’s the same as the mystery water in my village (in Pular it is called a “chango”) and everyone laughed at me again for only taking half a bucket (John took a full bidon and as he says that’s a better workout than you’d ever get at any gym in NYC). The path to his water source is pretty much the same as mine. It’s about half a kilometer away, over and through fences and down a hiking trail. Pretty similar. But he lives in a pretty big city so there is always a line for water (we use the term “line” VERY loosely, really there’s no such thing as lines in Guinea). In my village I hardly have to wait at all to get water.
Then there was a wedding in the middle of John’s sort of neighborhood so we watched that for awhile and talked to his neighbors. John’s neighbors are freaking awesome. One of them, Balde, turns out is also my neighbor in my village! He works for this NGO that trains people to use grinders, I think? I dunno, my French is still only ok. But the point is that he comes to my village often enough that he has a house here, and it’s the house right next to mine that has always been locked up and I had been wondering who lived there because it seems to be a pretty well-kept house but no one is ever there! Mystery solved. He said he is coming to my village in 2 weeks so I’ll get to sit and chat with him while he is here.
But the best part about Balde is that he wrote a note for me to give to one of his friends here in my village to find petites to get my water!! Tomorrow I’m going to figure out where the guy lives and drop the note off and then hopefully my water problems will be solved! And some petites will be enjoying Runts, Nerds, Laffy Taffys and fun sized Baby Ruth bars daily. Anyone out there sending care packages: send me single-sized American candy!
The other awesome thing about Balde is that he told me where my reseau spot is!! It’s one of the other villages in my sous-prefecture and he wrote down the name for me and said it is maybe 5-6k away. Tomorrow I am going to look on the map in the SP’s office and have him point me in the right direction, get on my bike and check it out! It will be good to finally figure that out so that I can warn John when I am coming to his site instead of just surprising him, call Dr. Traian when I have medical questions, receive calls from the US and gossip with Jake on a regular basis.
Basically Balde is the best.
So this morning Yogi was a terror and robbed me of hours of sleep and then we went to the taxi gare and I bought a seat for my village. Interestingly enough, the car was an (ancient) Land Cruiser! Which meant the ride only took an hour! It can take twice as long in the Peugeots. Also, they didn’t stuff the car completely full. There were two dudes in the front seat plus the driver, three adults (including me), a petite and my puppy in the middle seat and then the back seats are those kind that face each other and I think there were just three adults and a petite back there. And randomly some dudes on the roof here and there, but that was actually not a full taxi! They could’ve fit like 3-4 more people in there. So that was a pleasant surprise.
Right when I got home I made lunch: 2 fried eggs with onion, tomato, avocado and piment sauce. For dinner I had a taco salad: lettuce, tomato, avocado, onion, my dehydrated concoction (black beans, beefish bits, corn, bell peppers), topped off with a Laughing Cow triangle and piment sauce. It was an awesome day for food.
Later on, Nene came by to say hi on her way to the pump and I told her I’d go with her and fill up my petite bidon (I think it’s 10 L) so we took off for the pump which is “loin” (far) at almost a K from my house. I asked Nene why the pump was so far away from where all the people live and she said that there are actually three pumps but that a bandit had stolen some parts from the other two so they aren’t working. A-ha! Mystery solved. I thought this might turn out to be a good PC project: raising the will and funds to fix the other two pumps. I carried my bidon back on my head all by myself and lots of people got a kick out of it. I think I need to buy a couple more petite bidons because I can pretty easily manage those and it’s not as funny as it is when I just fill half a bucket. However, I can NOT balance it on my head and I have to steady it with one of my hands which Nene teases me about.
After that we went to the marigot (creek-like watering hole thingy I bathed in during site visit) and had some bien integree bathing down there. The way I look at it is, if they don’t think it’s weird for me to do it, then I don’t care, either. Boobs don’t mean anything here, though a lot of PCVs would tell you white boobs mean something but I really don’t think they do among the women and petites (the only people you find at the water sources). And when it comes down to it, bathing in the marigot and the chango is what they do, and the whole point is that I’m supposed to be integrating into the community. So there you go.
Next weekend I think I am going to go up to Ian’s site on Saturday for his market day and to see his site and then assess if I want to go to John’s site once a week or every two weeks for veggies as a routine. The only thing about it is that it is kind of expensive to take the taxi (30 mil round trip) and that might be a lot to do every week. But at the same time, I don’t spend any money in my village, so maybe it isn’t so bad. OH! AND I bought wire to extend my shortwave radio antennae! It’s basically speaker wire and it was cheap but it allowed me to listen to a couple of hours of Dutch news pretty clearly on my shortwave tonight. So I know a little bit about what’s going on in the world! Still having trouble tuning in BBC and VOA, but hey, the Dutch don’t give a bad newscast (in English!), either. Also, I saw this tote bag with Obama’s face on it that I am seriously considering buying next time I am at John’s site. Gotta love all the Obama swag.
On the ride to John’s site I saw my first (wild) monkeys! Two of them sprinted across the road in front of the taxi and I got a kick out of it though I think everyone else in the taxi thought I was crazy. Yogi did not travel very well on the way there, he was very fidgety and just wouldn’t sit still! But on the way back I discovered that if I hold him up to the window and let him stick his head outside he is a much better traveler. All dogs love sticking their heads out of car windows – all over the world.
So when I got to John’s site and into reseau I called him and said, “Hey! Where you at??” And he was like, “Uh…at my house?” And I was like, “I’m at your site! Stay there I’m coming over!”
So then I tried to get through the marche and MAN is it crowded and crazy. Got to John’s house and interrupted his busy reading-and-cleaning routine and made him go to the marche with me, which he was actually grateful for because he wouldn’t have gone if I wasn’t there.
There was so much good stuff at the marche!! We found avocadoes FIVE FOR A MIL! The most I have paid for an avocado here has been 2.5 mil, so getting FIVE for only ONE mil was pretty exciting (granted, the sizes of the avocadoes I have bought have varied greatly, in fact today I bought two ripe avocadoes before leaving John’s site and they were 700 each, so yeah, prices vary). Also, there was LETTUCE – AND – FRESH CORN!!! I nearly died when I saw the fresh corn. All told I bought tomatoes, lettuce, fresh corn, potatoes, avocadoes, eggs (10 of them!), condensed milk and sardines for Yogi, a bucket, a goblet and steel wool for my marmite. It was productive. Oh and today I bought a plastic kettle, which is what they use to clean themselves when they use the bathroom so I can stop using toilet paper at home. Toilet paper is expensive, rare, and better used to clean up Yogi’s messes.
I did not manage to find a chew toy for Yogi, though, but I did take my mom’s advice and tie a knot in a sock that had no partner and Yogi is liking that. He sort of uses it as a pillow. One thing I was sort of disappointed about was I didn’t find any cucumber which I actually thought was kinda weird. The only other vegetables they had that I didn’t buy was okra, piment (hot peppers), eggplant and leaves for leaf sauce. Oh and there was this leaf powder, and I wondered if it was Moringa powder but I didn’t end up asking because I don’t know the Pular word for it. But I am going to figure it out and ask next time I’m there! Because if it IS Moringa powder I would definitely buy some and sprinkle some in every meal because it is SOOOOOOO good for you. Speaking of Moringa I really need to plant my Moringa seeds. I want a Moringa forest in my yard so I always have leaves to eat.
So after the marche we went back to John’s house and dropped off all of our stuff and then went back on ville for rice and sauce for lunch. He has a good rice and sauce lady but she never has the peanut sauce when I am there so we always get leaf sauce. It’s still tasty but I want some peanut sauce, man!! We had some left over so we filled a Coyah sachet (water bag) with it and I brought it home for Yogi. People thought I was crazy. The concept of a doggie bag has now made it to West Africa.
So then we went to the taxi gare and sometimes it’s really hard to figure out who the dude is! The “dude” being the guy you ask to buy a ticket for a taxi from. Once we found him he said the last taxi for my village was full and I’d have to wait for tomorrow. This didn’t really shock me as it was already like 4pm and that’s about when I would expect the last taxi to be leaving.
So I stayed the night at John’s. We went down to his water source to get water and it’s the same as the mystery water in my village (in Pular it is called a “chango”) and everyone laughed at me again for only taking half a bucket (John took a full bidon and as he says that’s a better workout than you’d ever get at any gym in NYC). The path to his water source is pretty much the same as mine. It’s about half a kilometer away, over and through fences and down a hiking trail. Pretty similar. But he lives in a pretty big city so there is always a line for water (we use the term “line” VERY loosely, really there’s no such thing as lines in Guinea). In my village I hardly have to wait at all to get water.
Then there was a wedding in the middle of John’s sort of neighborhood so we watched that for awhile and talked to his neighbors. John’s neighbors are freaking awesome. One of them, Balde, turns out is also my neighbor in my village! He works for this NGO that trains people to use grinders, I think? I dunno, my French is still only ok. But the point is that he comes to my village often enough that he has a house here, and it’s the house right next to mine that has always been locked up and I had been wondering who lived there because it seems to be a pretty well-kept house but no one is ever there! Mystery solved. He said he is coming to my village in 2 weeks so I’ll get to sit and chat with him while he is here.
But the best part about Balde is that he wrote a note for me to give to one of his friends here in my village to find petites to get my water!! Tomorrow I’m going to figure out where the guy lives and drop the note off and then hopefully my water problems will be solved! And some petites will be enjoying Runts, Nerds, Laffy Taffys and fun sized Baby Ruth bars daily. Anyone out there sending care packages: send me single-sized American candy!
The other awesome thing about Balde is that he told me where my reseau spot is!! It’s one of the other villages in my sous-prefecture and he wrote down the name for me and said it is maybe 5-6k away. Tomorrow I am going to look on the map in the SP’s office and have him point me in the right direction, get on my bike and check it out! It will be good to finally figure that out so that I can warn John when I am coming to his site instead of just surprising him, call Dr. Traian when I have medical questions, receive calls from the US and gossip with Jake on a regular basis.
Basically Balde is the best.
So this morning Yogi was a terror and robbed me of hours of sleep and then we went to the taxi gare and I bought a seat for my village. Interestingly enough, the car was an (ancient) Land Cruiser! Which meant the ride only took an hour! It can take twice as long in the Peugeots. Also, they didn’t stuff the car completely full. There were two dudes in the front seat plus the driver, three adults (including me), a petite and my puppy in the middle seat and then the back seats are those kind that face each other and I think there were just three adults and a petite back there. And randomly some dudes on the roof here and there, but that was actually not a full taxi! They could’ve fit like 3-4 more people in there. So that was a pleasant surprise.
Right when I got home I made lunch: 2 fried eggs with onion, tomato, avocado and piment sauce. For dinner I had a taco salad: lettuce, tomato, avocado, onion, my dehydrated concoction (black beans, beefish bits, corn, bell peppers), topped off with a Laughing Cow triangle and piment sauce. It was an awesome day for food.
Later on, Nene came by to say hi on her way to the pump and I told her I’d go with her and fill up my petite bidon (I think it’s 10 L) so we took off for the pump which is “loin” (far) at almost a K from my house. I asked Nene why the pump was so far away from where all the people live and she said that there are actually three pumps but that a bandit had stolen some parts from the other two so they aren’t working. A-ha! Mystery solved. I thought this might turn out to be a good PC project: raising the will and funds to fix the other two pumps. I carried my bidon back on my head all by myself and lots of people got a kick out of it. I think I need to buy a couple more petite bidons because I can pretty easily manage those and it’s not as funny as it is when I just fill half a bucket. However, I can NOT balance it on my head and I have to steady it with one of my hands which Nene teases me about.
After that we went to the marigot (creek-like watering hole thingy I bathed in during site visit) and had some bien integree bathing down there. The way I look at it is, if they don’t think it’s weird for me to do it, then I don’t care, either. Boobs don’t mean anything here, though a lot of PCVs would tell you white boobs mean something but I really don’t think they do among the women and petites (the only people you find at the water sources). And when it comes down to it, bathing in the marigot and the chango is what they do, and the whole point is that I’m supposed to be integrating into the community. So there you go.
Next weekend I think I am going to go up to Ian’s site on Saturday for his market day and to see his site and then assess if I want to go to John’s site once a week or every two weeks for veggies as a routine. The only thing about it is that it is kind of expensive to take the taxi (30 mil round trip) and that might be a lot to do every week. But at the same time, I don’t spend any money in my village, so maybe it isn’t so bad. OH! AND I bought wire to extend my shortwave radio antennae! It’s basically speaker wire and it was cheap but it allowed me to listen to a couple of hours of Dutch news pretty clearly on my shortwave tonight. So I know a little bit about what’s going on in the world! Still having trouble tuning in BBC and VOA, but hey, the Dutch don’t give a bad newscast (in English!), either. Also, I saw this tote bag with Obama’s face on it that I am seriously considering buying next time I am at John’s site. Gotta love all the Obama swag.
Saturday, February 14, 2009
Bien Integree
Is it Valentine’s Day today? That just occurred to me. I think it is. Is it February 14 every year? I dunno. Hmm.
So the fact that water is so freaking far away and down a mountain has caused me to start bringing my stuff to the water instead of the water to my stuff. Today I did bring back half a bucket of water to my house, much to the amusement of all the women down at the water source because they would NEVER take just half a bucket but let’s be honest. There’s no way I can bring a full bucket (20 liters) up that path.
So yesterday I washed my dishes, hair and the dog down there and today I washed my dishes, dog and clothes AND almost took a vrai bath…I was wearing a sports bra and shorts but I lathered up and got all wet.
I was toward the end of my laundry when one woman down there took it away and did the rest herself. Because evidently I suck at it. In my village people don’t use washboards, they wash on the concrete/rocks around the water sources, which is fine with me because I think I suck worse with a washboard.
People get a kick out of me bathing the dog each time. I don’t think they would EVER bathe a dog. I don’t think the thought would even cross their minds. Dogs aren’t pets here. They’re protection and they’re strays and that’s it. It is VERY rare to find a well-maintained/treated dog, but there were a couple in Forecariah.
So doing all my stuff down at the water source is bien integree (good integration). That’s what they do, so that’s what I should do anyway. And it’s a hell of a lot easier than bringing all that water to my house.
I REALLY need to find a petite to bring me at least one bucket of water a day, two would be ideal, even with doing most stuff at the water source because to have a real bath I need to do it here and for cleaning and washing hands I need water here as well. That’s just one of a million things I still need to figure out.
Like where the heck my reseau spot is. Kristine and my homologue have both said that there is a reseau spot somewhere. Oh AND people at Ian’s site said the same thing. But today I asked Nene to take me to it and it seemed like she said she would but I think a lot gets lost in translation here because she never ended up taking me and when I asked Madame Bangoura if there was a reseau spot she said there wasn’t. I am so confused.
Also, it must have been a fluke that I saw eggs during site visit because there are no eggs. There are onions, peanut oil, and maggi cubes and that’s about it. I am seriously starting to think I am going to need to make a once a week or every two weeks trip to John’s site to get food and make phone calls. Luckily the Sous Prefet told me that all the taxis stop here (I guess for bathroom and snacks aka oranges and bananas) so I don’t have to wave one down, I just hang out by the orange ladies and when one stops I ask if they have an open seat. Not as easy as having a vrai taxi gare but not as difficult as trying to wave one down on the side of the road.
Also, stuff here is really expensive (the few things they DO have). Like, I paid six mil for a can of condensed milk today. It’s like 2.5 mil in Forecariah. And then when I got home it was SWEETENED condensed milk which made it useless because it was for the dog! Then I paid 15 mil for a jar of mayo! Granted, I don’t know how much mayo costs elsewhere but COME ON. Also, peanut oil is 2.5 mil for about half what you would get for the same price in Boke. The only things that are cheaper are oranges and bananas because they are ubiquitous here. 5 big oranges are 500 francs, in Forecariah it was three small oranges for the same price. I think I paid 2 mil for 4 bananas on market day but I don’t really remember. Oh and today I found bread (there wasn’t any yesterday) and it’s a little bit cheaper but it’s also not as big, so…
Really if I wanted to eat exclusively what I can find in my village, I could have peanut butter and banana sandwiches for breakfast with fresh squeezed orange juice, and onion and tomato paste sandwiches for lunch and dinner. Unless I wanted to start eating sardines. Which I am not rushing to do (I’ve been feeding sardines to Yogi recently and even HE isn’t very interested in them). I would say really the only things you find on market day that you can’t find at the boutiques all the time are dried fish, rice, dried corn and garlic.
Today the Sous Prefet’s family gave me a big bag of oranges to bring home with me so I am STOCKED on oranges for awhile. Looks like it’ll be fresh squeezed orange juice for breakfast this week.
I need to find someone to tutor me in Pular and start studying it more on my own. There are a lot of people in my village who speak at least a little French, but the vast majority speak only Pular and even those who speak French speak Pular better. A handful of people know some English words and phrases, which I get a kick out of sometimes. Luckily Peace Corps has an allowance for tutoring which isn’t a lot by US standards but here I bet it would buy me a couple sessions a week. I have to ask around and see if anyone is interested. Preferably someone who also speaks some French.
There’s still a lot to do around my house but I am still just trying to get into a routine. Petite a petite, as they say.
So the fact that water is so freaking far away and down a mountain has caused me to start bringing my stuff to the water instead of the water to my stuff. Today I did bring back half a bucket of water to my house, much to the amusement of all the women down at the water source because they would NEVER take just half a bucket but let’s be honest. There’s no way I can bring a full bucket (20 liters) up that path.
So yesterday I washed my dishes, hair and the dog down there and today I washed my dishes, dog and clothes AND almost took a vrai bath…I was wearing a sports bra and shorts but I lathered up and got all wet.
I was toward the end of my laundry when one woman down there took it away and did the rest herself. Because evidently I suck at it. In my village people don’t use washboards, they wash on the concrete/rocks around the water sources, which is fine with me because I think I suck worse with a washboard.
People get a kick out of me bathing the dog each time. I don’t think they would EVER bathe a dog. I don’t think the thought would even cross their minds. Dogs aren’t pets here. They’re protection and they’re strays and that’s it. It is VERY rare to find a well-maintained/treated dog, but there were a couple in Forecariah.
So doing all my stuff down at the water source is bien integree (good integration). That’s what they do, so that’s what I should do anyway. And it’s a hell of a lot easier than bringing all that water to my house.
I REALLY need to find a petite to bring me at least one bucket of water a day, two would be ideal, even with doing most stuff at the water source because to have a real bath I need to do it here and for cleaning and washing hands I need water here as well. That’s just one of a million things I still need to figure out.
Like where the heck my reseau spot is. Kristine and my homologue have both said that there is a reseau spot somewhere. Oh AND people at Ian’s site said the same thing. But today I asked Nene to take me to it and it seemed like she said she would but I think a lot gets lost in translation here because she never ended up taking me and when I asked Madame Bangoura if there was a reseau spot she said there wasn’t. I am so confused.
Also, it must have been a fluke that I saw eggs during site visit because there are no eggs. There are onions, peanut oil, and maggi cubes and that’s about it. I am seriously starting to think I am going to need to make a once a week or every two weeks trip to John’s site to get food and make phone calls. Luckily the Sous Prefet told me that all the taxis stop here (I guess for bathroom and snacks aka oranges and bananas) so I don’t have to wave one down, I just hang out by the orange ladies and when one stops I ask if they have an open seat. Not as easy as having a vrai taxi gare but not as difficult as trying to wave one down on the side of the road.
Also, stuff here is really expensive (the few things they DO have). Like, I paid six mil for a can of condensed milk today. It’s like 2.5 mil in Forecariah. And then when I got home it was SWEETENED condensed milk which made it useless because it was for the dog! Then I paid 15 mil for a jar of mayo! Granted, I don’t know how much mayo costs elsewhere but COME ON. Also, peanut oil is 2.5 mil for about half what you would get for the same price in Boke. The only things that are cheaper are oranges and bananas because they are ubiquitous here. 5 big oranges are 500 francs, in Forecariah it was three small oranges for the same price. I think I paid 2 mil for 4 bananas on market day but I don’t really remember. Oh and today I found bread (there wasn’t any yesterday) and it’s a little bit cheaper but it’s also not as big, so…
Really if I wanted to eat exclusively what I can find in my village, I could have peanut butter and banana sandwiches for breakfast with fresh squeezed orange juice, and onion and tomato paste sandwiches for lunch and dinner. Unless I wanted to start eating sardines. Which I am not rushing to do (I’ve been feeding sardines to Yogi recently and even HE isn’t very interested in them). I would say really the only things you find on market day that you can’t find at the boutiques all the time are dried fish, rice, dried corn and garlic.
Today the Sous Prefet’s family gave me a big bag of oranges to bring home with me so I am STOCKED on oranges for awhile. Looks like it’ll be fresh squeezed orange juice for breakfast this week.
I need to find someone to tutor me in Pular and start studying it more on my own. There are a lot of people in my village who speak at least a little French, but the vast majority speak only Pular and even those who speak French speak Pular better. A handful of people know some English words and phrases, which I get a kick out of sometimes. Luckily Peace Corps has an allowance for tutoring which isn’t a lot by US standards but here I bet it would buy me a couple sessions a week. I have to ask around and see if anyone is interested. Preferably someone who also speaks some French.
There’s still a lot to do around my house but I am still just trying to get into a routine. Petite a petite, as they say.
Friday, February 13, 2009
Sick Dog
Starting at about 3am this morning, Yogi is sick:
Well, actually he vomited about midnight or so but it was around three that he started whimpering nonstop. He has been whimpering all day and it’s about noon now.
He hasn’t lost interest in food and has had cow’s milk, sardines and some pita bread today, but he is in some sort of pain and I don’t know where or how to help him. I even gave him a quarter of a pill of Ibuprofen but I don’t think it helped at all.
His hind legs are weak and seem to have been getting worse as the day goes on. This morning he was hobbling around but now he can’t really walk anywhere. At this moment, he is actually asleep and quiet which gives me hope but deep down I know when he wakes up he will be whimpering again. I’m not sure if the problem is with his legs or with his stomach. His belly is pretty bloated which leads me to believe he has gas and he’s so small that a harsh gas pain could affect his ability to use his hind legs. At least, I hope it’s just gas.
It’s breaking my heart because I don’t know what to do for him and there aren’t really any veterinarians in Guinea and the ones that there are wouldn’t know how to diagnose or fix him. If he doesn’t get better I think I am just going to have to find somebody to put him down. Which will probably entail slitting his throat. I don’t even want to think about it.
I just want him to get better.
EDIT: After his nap, Yogi woke up better. He is walking around fine now and not whimpering and this afternoon I even took him down to the mystery water and gave him a bath, much to the amusement of all the women and petites down there bathing and doing laundry. Right now, about 9pm, he is sleeping under my bed. He lives to see another day.
Well, actually he vomited about midnight or so but it was around three that he started whimpering nonstop. He has been whimpering all day and it’s about noon now.
He hasn’t lost interest in food and has had cow’s milk, sardines and some pita bread today, but he is in some sort of pain and I don’t know where or how to help him. I even gave him a quarter of a pill of Ibuprofen but I don’t think it helped at all.
His hind legs are weak and seem to have been getting worse as the day goes on. This morning he was hobbling around but now he can’t really walk anywhere. At this moment, he is actually asleep and quiet which gives me hope but deep down I know when he wakes up he will be whimpering again. I’m not sure if the problem is with his legs or with his stomach. His belly is pretty bloated which leads me to believe he has gas and he’s so small that a harsh gas pain could affect his ability to use his hind legs. At least, I hope it’s just gas.
It’s breaking my heart because I don’t know what to do for him and there aren’t really any veterinarians in Guinea and the ones that there are wouldn’t know how to diagnose or fix him. If he doesn’t get better I think I am just going to have to find somebody to put him down. Which will probably entail slitting his throat. I don’t even want to think about it.
I just want him to get better.
EDIT: After his nap, Yogi woke up better. He is walking around fine now and not whimpering and this afternoon I even took him down to the mystery water and gave him a bath, much to the amusement of all the women and petites down there bathing and doing laundry. Right now, about 9pm, he is sleeping under my bed. He lives to see another day.
Thursday, February 12, 2009
First Full Day At Site
I have become a master of water management already. Today I did the following with one bucket of water by reusing it over and over: took a bath, washed all my underwear, washed all my dishes, cleaned the giant bookcase/”built-in”/thing in my living room (no small feat) and Hoodia washed my bedroom floor because Yogi peed on it last night. I think that was it. There could be more. But that is no small feat. That’s a lot of stuff to do with one bucket of water, especially considering in Forecariah I went through one bucket just bathing and using the toilet every day. In Guinea nothing goes to waste: water is reused several times before you throw it away (and even then I will be throwing it onto my plants or compost pile), goats and cows eat all your kitchen scraps, petites eat your leftover food, old scraps of plastic are used to carry home salt from the market (I’m going to start bringing Tupperware containers for stuff like that, why waste their bag when they could use it on someone else).
Speaking of the market, it is kinda overwhelming. In fact, this whole day was kinda overwhelming. I went to the market about noon (it starts up about 11-12). There were a lot of people there and I just salue-d everyone I could. There really aren’t any vegetables in my marche. Just garlic and onions. And the garlic was expensive! I was also a little perturbed that I didn’t see any peanut oil, just palm oil. I mean, palm oil is good for some stuff but you can’t make French fries with it! Well, there aren’t any potatoes so I guess I wouldn’t be making French fries, anyway, unless I bought potatoes at John’s site, but still!
For lunch I had the two tomatoes and cucumbers I had brought with me from Boke on a pita bread from a Leb store with onion and two triangles of Laughing Cow cheese. It was actually pretty good. Tomorrow I am going to try to find eggs. I don’t see eggs in my marche but I think I have seen them at the boutiques when it’s not market day. I also need a jar of mayo.
Saturday I am going to try to go up to Ian’s site because it is his market day and there will be a lot of cars going between. That way I can see his site and see if his marche is any better than mine vegetable-wise to get a bead on what my food situation is really going to be like.
I am so glad I have all that dehydrated stuff I brought with me and my mom sent me in care packages. For dinner last night and tonight I made beefish bits, black beans, corn and red/green bell peppers spiced with cumin and garlic salt, finished off with piment sauce and a triangle of Laughing Cow. YUM! So easy to make. Just boil it up! However, it’s not sustainable but at least it’s going to get me through until I figure out a better food routine.
Anyway, back to today being overwhelming. People just walk into my house. I leave my door open (everyone does) and people just walk into my house. I don’t know how to say “where are you going?” in Pular so I sort of just follow them to see what they’re doing. They’re just looking around, but I don’t like it. In fact I closed my door later in the afternoon so people would have to knock and I could stand in the doorway so they couldn’t just walk in. It’s concerning because other volunteers and my Sous Prefet have said not to let people into my house, but I don’t know how to politely do that. So for now, I think I’ll be leaving the door shut a lot.
After being at the marche I didn’t want to leave my house again so I didn’t. There are just TOO MANY people around when the marche is going on and I live right behind the marche on a heavily traveled path. I already met too many people and just didn’t want to deal with the world again. I still had quite a few visitors and some petites who stood on my porch staring at me cleaning but I think that will slow down once the novelty wears off.
I definitely had some moments of almost-panic today. Just the idea of being alone in a sea of people: the only American amongst all these Guineans, my inability to effectively communicate for the most part, my need for wire to extend the antennae on my shortwave radio so I can listen to BBC and Voice of America, the vegetable/proper nutrition thing, the no reseau thing so I feel very cut off from what has become my support system – all of it is kind of overwhelming. I just keep thinking back to my first few days in Forecariah and just realizing that I felt the same way then. As time goes on I will be able to communicate better, I will make friends, I will find a routine, I will figure out where the reseau spot is, everything will fall into place. It’s just that at this moment, it feels like there is A LOT that needs to fall into place and I know it’s going to happen slowly.
Speaking of the market, it is kinda overwhelming. In fact, this whole day was kinda overwhelming. I went to the market about noon (it starts up about 11-12). There were a lot of people there and I just salue-d everyone I could. There really aren’t any vegetables in my marche. Just garlic and onions. And the garlic was expensive! I was also a little perturbed that I didn’t see any peanut oil, just palm oil. I mean, palm oil is good for some stuff but you can’t make French fries with it! Well, there aren’t any potatoes so I guess I wouldn’t be making French fries, anyway, unless I bought potatoes at John’s site, but still!
For lunch I had the two tomatoes and cucumbers I had brought with me from Boke on a pita bread from a Leb store with onion and two triangles of Laughing Cow cheese. It was actually pretty good. Tomorrow I am going to try to find eggs. I don’t see eggs in my marche but I think I have seen them at the boutiques when it’s not market day. I also need a jar of mayo.
Saturday I am going to try to go up to Ian’s site because it is his market day and there will be a lot of cars going between. That way I can see his site and see if his marche is any better than mine vegetable-wise to get a bead on what my food situation is really going to be like.
I am so glad I have all that dehydrated stuff I brought with me and my mom sent me in care packages. For dinner last night and tonight I made beefish bits, black beans, corn and red/green bell peppers spiced with cumin and garlic salt, finished off with piment sauce and a triangle of Laughing Cow. YUM! So easy to make. Just boil it up! However, it’s not sustainable but at least it’s going to get me through until I figure out a better food routine.
Anyway, back to today being overwhelming. People just walk into my house. I leave my door open (everyone does) and people just walk into my house. I don’t know how to say “where are you going?” in Pular so I sort of just follow them to see what they’re doing. They’re just looking around, but I don’t like it. In fact I closed my door later in the afternoon so people would have to knock and I could stand in the doorway so they couldn’t just walk in. It’s concerning because other volunteers and my Sous Prefet have said not to let people into my house, but I don’t know how to politely do that. So for now, I think I’ll be leaving the door shut a lot.
After being at the marche I didn’t want to leave my house again so I didn’t. There are just TOO MANY people around when the marche is going on and I live right behind the marche on a heavily traveled path. I already met too many people and just didn’t want to deal with the world again. I still had quite a few visitors and some petites who stood on my porch staring at me cleaning but I think that will slow down once the novelty wears off.
I definitely had some moments of almost-panic today. Just the idea of being alone in a sea of people: the only American amongst all these Guineans, my inability to effectively communicate for the most part, my need for wire to extend the antennae on my shortwave radio so I can listen to BBC and Voice of America, the vegetable/proper nutrition thing, the no reseau thing so I feel very cut off from what has become my support system – all of it is kind of overwhelming. I just keep thinking back to my first few days in Forecariah and just realizing that I felt the same way then. As time goes on I will be able to communicate better, I will make friends, I will find a routine, I will figure out where the reseau spot is, everything will fall into place. It’s just that at this moment, it feels like there is A LOT that needs to fall into place and I know it’s going to happen slowly.
Wednesday, February 11, 2009
Installation
Today I was installed at my site. When we got up this morning, Ian and I went to the Senegalese cafĂ© at John’s site for omelettes for breakfast. The dude put sliced tomatoes on them which tasted awesome and could give us giardia later but hey, you gotta get sick sometime.
We packed all of our stuff onto the Land Cruiser and this time it fit a lot easier without John’s stuff. Then we went to see the Prefet. It is a different Prefet than the one we met at site visit, so he’s only been the Prefet for like 2 weeks or something like that. His outfit was really cool and he seemed like a nice guy. He kinda resembles Laurence Fishburne. Then we went to the gendarmerie and met with the head honchos there, who said they would go talk to the fou (crazy dude) that has been bothering John. Then I bought Kola nuts (culturally appropriate to give to your officials and the elders when you move in) and we were on our way.
The drive on the road from John’s site to my site is not fun, it’s like a neverending amusement park ride. Like, it is a Hummer commercial but it goes on for hours. Actually today it went really fast! We think it only took like 45 min using the Land Cruiser and it takes an hour and a half to two hours using a bush taxi, including the part where you have to get out and walk down/up a mountain (which we didn’t have to do in the Land Cruiser). This could be because bush taxis are Peugeots from the 70s (no joke) and a Land Cruiser is meant to drive on that kind of terrain.
When I arrived my Sous Prefet Bangoura was happy to see me, clapping as he and the President of the CRD walked towards me. He took me to his office to officially sign me in as a resident of my village.
Then we went to my house. Honestly, it isn’t as bad as I remember it being, and there is a nice latrine built just outside my back/side door that has a cover over the toilette and everything (this was a very welcome aspect as Julie told me a story about two of her puppies falling down her latrine and having to listen to them for three days before they finally died – I don’t want that to happen to Yogi so having the cover over the hole is GREAT). It has a nice stick and leaf fence around it that is like 7 feet tall which is a good height (petites can’t look over it). At night the stars are brilliant overhead.
The President of my village's CRD, my Regional Coordinator Daffe, me, Sous Prefet Bangoura:
I asked to have a couple of things done including fixing the front door so it closes properly (which got done within the hour as the dude who does that stuff just happened by on his moto and we called him over). A carpenter got started on putting a gate on the entrance to my fence to keep animals out of my yard. Just today there were a ton of cows and a couple goats who ventured into my enclosure to look for food. It will be good to have the gate so that I can have a garden. I have a huge yard that some planting would do good for, but water is far and that will be difficult during the dry season. I also asked them to point me in the right direction of a carpenter who can make me a screen door and screens that open for my windows. I have the actual grillage, but I need someone to make the frames and put them on.
So after all the pomp and circumstance, the Peace Corps car pulled away and left me alone (I did not have the famous urge to run after it, but I took a photo anyway):
Then I set to the task of cleaning. No one has really lived in this house for a long time so it is pretty filthy. I am so glad I bought a broom at that Leb store in Kamsar. It has already gotten a ton of use. Oh AND the kitchen towels. In fact I wish I had more. One has turned into the Yogi pee towel (I use it every time he pees on the floor which is several times a day…trying to train him to go outside!!). After awhile Mamadou and Nene showed up with water on their heads which was awesome because there was plenty to be done with it! Nene actually mopped all my floors including the porch (by mopped I mean used a towel and scrubbed with her hands) and when Hoodia came over she cleaned my bidons (big yellow jugs that used to hold vegetable oil that everyone uses to hold water, in my case, drinking water from the pump), which was awesome!
People would stop by to say hello, I had no idea who most of them were and still don’t. When they would see me doing something, they would take away the cloth or the broom and do it themselves but in all honesty I was being VERY thorough and eventually it just got to be annoying, but hey it’s the thought that counts!!
Late in the day SP Bangoura sent a dude off on his moto to get me two bidons of pump water and Nene brought my other small bidon back with pump water when she was done studying for school. So I have enough drinking water to last for awhile. While we were waiting for him to arrive back at my house, I started going around my yard picking up trash and putting it into the burn circle to eventually be burned once I make my way through the whole yard. Hoodia was looking at me like I was crazy and all I kept saying was, “C’est pas jolie! C’est pas jolie pour ma maison!” In Guinea there is trash everywhere and there is rarely an effort or desire to clean it up.
Once we had used up the water Nene and Mamadou brought from the well, Hoodia, Nene and I ventured down to this other water source. It’s not the pump, it’s not the well, it’s this pipe that just constantly spews water from a concrete block. But it’s pretty clean water, the villagers drink it straight from the pipe so I think it’s somewhere between well and pump water. There were women down there bathing their kids, washing dishes and laundry and filling buckets and bidons to take home. We filled two buckets and one petite bucket that I was planning to carry but Hoodia only let me get like 10 feet up the hill before she took it away (there is this big dangerous path up this hill through the woods that you have to traverse to get to said water source, I have NO idea how the women get up and down that balancing a bucket on their head, baby on their back and stuff in their hands. Unbelievable!). She only let me carry it another 20 feet once we got to the flat path before taking it away again. I mean, I could have carried it (I had it on my head but had to also balance it with my hands), but it wasn’t easy and it was a small bucket! The buckets they were carrying were twice as big. The conclusion I’ve come to is that I am not going to be able to get my own water, which makes me feel pretty useless. But I figure I can give some young girl a job fetching me water daily for a couple mil and some bonbons. Maybe Hoodia or Nene or maybe any of the other thousand petites in my village.
We packed all of our stuff onto the Land Cruiser and this time it fit a lot easier without John’s stuff. Then we went to see the Prefet. It is a different Prefet than the one we met at site visit, so he’s only been the Prefet for like 2 weeks or something like that. His outfit was really cool and he seemed like a nice guy. He kinda resembles Laurence Fishburne. Then we went to the gendarmerie and met with the head honchos there, who said they would go talk to the fou (crazy dude) that has been bothering John. Then I bought Kola nuts (culturally appropriate to give to your officials and the elders when you move in) and we were on our way.
The drive on the road from John’s site to my site is not fun, it’s like a neverending amusement park ride. Like, it is a Hummer commercial but it goes on for hours. Actually today it went really fast! We think it only took like 45 min using the Land Cruiser and it takes an hour and a half to two hours using a bush taxi, including the part where you have to get out and walk down/up a mountain (which we didn’t have to do in the Land Cruiser). This could be because bush taxis are Peugeots from the 70s (no joke) and a Land Cruiser is meant to drive on that kind of terrain.
When I arrived my Sous Prefet Bangoura was happy to see me, clapping as he and the President of the CRD walked towards me. He took me to his office to officially sign me in as a resident of my village.
Then we went to my house. Honestly, it isn’t as bad as I remember it being, and there is a nice latrine built just outside my back/side door that has a cover over the toilette and everything (this was a very welcome aspect as Julie told me a story about two of her puppies falling down her latrine and having to listen to them for three days before they finally died – I don’t want that to happen to Yogi so having the cover over the hole is GREAT). It has a nice stick and leaf fence around it that is like 7 feet tall which is a good height (petites can’t look over it). At night the stars are brilliant overhead.
The President of my village's CRD, my Regional Coordinator Daffe, me, Sous Prefet Bangoura:
I asked to have a couple of things done including fixing the front door so it closes properly (which got done within the hour as the dude who does that stuff just happened by on his moto and we called him over). A carpenter got started on putting a gate on the entrance to my fence to keep animals out of my yard. Just today there were a ton of cows and a couple goats who ventured into my enclosure to look for food. It will be good to have the gate so that I can have a garden. I have a huge yard that some planting would do good for, but water is far and that will be difficult during the dry season. I also asked them to point me in the right direction of a carpenter who can make me a screen door and screens that open for my windows. I have the actual grillage, but I need someone to make the frames and put them on.
So after all the pomp and circumstance, the Peace Corps car pulled away and left me alone (I did not have the famous urge to run after it, but I took a photo anyway):
Then I set to the task of cleaning. No one has really lived in this house for a long time so it is pretty filthy. I am so glad I bought a broom at that Leb store in Kamsar. It has already gotten a ton of use. Oh AND the kitchen towels. In fact I wish I had more. One has turned into the Yogi pee towel (I use it every time he pees on the floor which is several times a day…trying to train him to go outside!!). After awhile Mamadou and Nene showed up with water on their heads which was awesome because there was plenty to be done with it! Nene actually mopped all my floors including the porch (by mopped I mean used a towel and scrubbed with her hands) and when Hoodia came over she cleaned my bidons (big yellow jugs that used to hold vegetable oil that everyone uses to hold water, in my case, drinking water from the pump), which was awesome!
People would stop by to say hello, I had no idea who most of them were and still don’t. When they would see me doing something, they would take away the cloth or the broom and do it themselves but in all honesty I was being VERY thorough and eventually it just got to be annoying, but hey it’s the thought that counts!!
Late in the day SP Bangoura sent a dude off on his moto to get me two bidons of pump water and Nene brought my other small bidon back with pump water when she was done studying for school. So I have enough drinking water to last for awhile. While we were waiting for him to arrive back at my house, I started going around my yard picking up trash and putting it into the burn circle to eventually be burned once I make my way through the whole yard. Hoodia was looking at me like I was crazy and all I kept saying was, “C’est pas jolie! C’est pas jolie pour ma maison!” In Guinea there is trash everywhere and there is rarely an effort or desire to clean it up.
Once we had used up the water Nene and Mamadou brought from the well, Hoodia, Nene and I ventured down to this other water source. It’s not the pump, it’s not the well, it’s this pipe that just constantly spews water from a concrete block. But it’s pretty clean water, the villagers drink it straight from the pipe so I think it’s somewhere between well and pump water. There were women down there bathing their kids, washing dishes and laundry and filling buckets and bidons to take home. We filled two buckets and one petite bucket that I was planning to carry but Hoodia only let me get like 10 feet up the hill before she took it away (there is this big dangerous path up this hill through the woods that you have to traverse to get to said water source, I have NO idea how the women get up and down that balancing a bucket on their head, baby on their back and stuff in their hands. Unbelievable!). She only let me carry it another 20 feet once we got to the flat path before taking it away again. I mean, I could have carried it (I had it on my head but had to also balance it with my hands), but it wasn’t easy and it was a small bucket! The buckets they were carrying were twice as big. The conclusion I’ve come to is that I am not going to be able to get my own water, which makes me feel pretty useless. But I figure I can give some young girl a job fetching me water daily for a couple mil and some bonbons. Maybe Hoodia or Nene or maybe any of the other thousand petites in my village.
Tuesday, February 10, 2009
Moving to Site Tomorrow
Well, we left Boke for John’s site this morning and it took 6 hours to get here in a Peace Corps vehicle, which is faster than a bush taxi. We don’t even know if bush taxis take the road we were on because all we saw were trucks and land rovers and even then it was only a handful in the whole 6 hours. We are thinking we will have to go the other way to get to the regional capital, which is the route the mail run takes and probably takes 8-9 hours or so. Which is about the same to my site as my site is still another hour and a half – two hours away from here.
The PC Land Cruiser with all of my, Ian and John's junk:
I really want to see how long it takes to get to Labe. If that’s easier, I’ll take it!
After that ordeal of a journey, we sat in John’s office for a little while as they found his keys and did some paperwork. Then we made our way to the house. Poor John had to deal with the clutter of all of our junk all over the place in his living room but luckily it was only for one night.
John and Ian went to fetch water (they are hardcore, Ian came back carrying TWO buckets in his hands!) and I talked to Scott on the phone for a few minutes about his first day (he was installed today). He not only has reseau, but several carriers in his village! And gets service INSIDE HIS HOUSE…grumble grumble.
We went to John’s rice and sauce lady for dinner and had leaf sauce. She gave us free bananas for dessert which was awesome.
I don’t really have a lot of nerves about being installed tomorrow. Really I am just super excited to finally fully unpack. Also, I know my house is a bit of a fixer-upper, but I have moved on from being distraught about that to excited for the possibilities. Peace Corps is a rollercoaster of emotions.
The PC Land Cruiser with all of my, Ian and John's junk:
I really want to see how long it takes to get to Labe. If that’s easier, I’ll take it!
After that ordeal of a journey, we sat in John’s office for a little while as they found his keys and did some paperwork. Then we made our way to the house. Poor John had to deal with the clutter of all of our junk all over the place in his living room but luckily it was only for one night.
John and Ian went to fetch water (they are hardcore, Ian came back carrying TWO buckets in his hands!) and I talked to Scott on the phone for a few minutes about his first day (he was installed today). He not only has reseau, but several carriers in his village! And gets service INSIDE HIS HOUSE…grumble grumble.
We went to John’s rice and sauce lady for dinner and had leaf sauce. She gave us free bananas for dessert which was awesome.
I don’t really have a lot of nerves about being installed tomorrow. Really I am just super excited to finally fully unpack. Also, I know my house is a bit of a fixer-upper, but I have moved on from being distraught about that to excited for the possibilities. Peace Corps is a rollercoaster of emotions.
Sunday, February 8, 2009
Housing Woes
Today we came to Boke, our regional capital. When we got here, Yama said she needed to talk to me and took me into the courtyard to chat. It was about my site. My house, more specifically.
I am going to be living in the same house I stayed in for site visit. The only differences are that the old woman has moved out and the village has built me a latrine in the back yard. When I first heard this news I was very distraught. I really did not like that house and wasn't comfortable there at all. I had also mentally prepared myself to live in the OTHER house that they told me I would be living in and in that preparation didn't buy several things I should have bought in Conakry to prepare for this. Like screens.
I have moved from anger and disappointment to acceptance and am trying to think of all the ways in which I can try to improve my situation. I can use bamboo mats to replace all the ceiling tiles with water stains on them Or maybe just cover the whole ceiling in colored pagnes. I can get Sajay to come and draw outlines for murals on my walls and paint them in with brilliant colors. I can ask to have a couple more windows knocked into my walls (I really hope I can make this happen). I can get a cat to kill the carpentry rat. I can have a gate put on the entrance in the fence. I can use Neem to kill all the insects living in my house. I can buy a huge bottle of bleach to douse the whole place. I can daba (hoe) the heck out of my yard and start planting right away. I can build a star-gazing area in my backyard. I can do this.
I am SO GLAD to have my dog to help me through this. Taking care of him and having him as a companion will be very important especially in the face of what I feel is a momentous task ahead of me in making myself comfortable in my own house.
What doesn't kill you makes you stronger. I didn't do this because I expected it to be easy. I didn't do this because I WANTED it to be easy. I wanted it to be hard.
And it is.
I am going to be living in the same house I stayed in for site visit. The only differences are that the old woman has moved out and the village has built me a latrine in the back yard. When I first heard this news I was very distraught. I really did not like that house and wasn't comfortable there at all. I had also mentally prepared myself to live in the OTHER house that they told me I would be living in and in that preparation didn't buy several things I should have bought in Conakry to prepare for this. Like screens.
I have moved from anger and disappointment to acceptance and am trying to think of all the ways in which I can try to improve my situation. I can use bamboo mats to replace all the ceiling tiles with water stains on them Or maybe just cover the whole ceiling in colored pagnes. I can get Sajay to come and draw outlines for murals on my walls and paint them in with brilliant colors. I can ask to have a couple more windows knocked into my walls (I really hope I can make this happen). I can get a cat to kill the carpentry rat. I can have a gate put on the entrance in the fence. I can use Neem to kill all the insects living in my house. I can buy a huge bottle of bleach to douse the whole place. I can daba (hoe) the heck out of my yard and start planting right away. I can build a star-gazing area in my backyard. I can do this.
I am SO GLAD to have my dog to help me through this. Taking care of him and having him as a companion will be very important especially in the face of what I feel is a momentous task ahead of me in making myself comfortable in my own house.
What doesn't kill you makes you stronger. I didn't do this because I expected it to be easy. I didn't do this because I WANTED it to be easy. I wanted it to be hard.
And it is.
Saturday, February 7, 2009
Swear-In
Well, I am officially a PCV!! Hard to believe. I get installed at my site on Wednesday and commence 2 years of service to two nations: my own and my new home, Guinea.
The swear-in ceremony was fun. Lots of people we didn't know, lots of fancy outfits, bissap juice and the recitation of the same oath Joe Biden took when he became Vice President of the United States a couple weeks ago. Our country director quoted our new President in his speech and it brought tears to many of our eyes. We are proud to be serving Barack and have a real sense of purpose. OH and I bought a big poster of Barack from a kid on the street yesterday. He's everywhere in this country!
We gave speeches in Susu, Pular, Malinke and French. Katie did Susu (it went over really well!), Sasha did Pular and Mike did Malinke. I gave the French speech which was only a little bit nerve-wracking and I have to say the best part was when I got halfway up to the podium, remembered I had gum in my mouth and stopped to slap it onto my program. I'm high-class.
Thursday night my APCD Kristine had AgFo and SED over for a Mexican feast. I about died. It was sooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo good! THERE WAS SOUR CREAM! I was like WHERE DID YOU GET THIS??? Apparently there is one store here in Conakry that sells it. It's not real sour cream, it's called creme fraiche, but it sure as heck tastes like sour cream and DEFINITELY hit the spot. We all entered a food coma directly after consumption. I will definitely be purchasing creme fraiche and making myself a nice Mexican meal every time I make it to Conakry. Thanks Kristine!
Yesterday we went swimming in Dan's (country director) pool and it was REFRESHING. Today he is having a barbeque for us with hamburgers! That means a lot to some of us but being a vegetarian the novelty is a bit lost on me. However, I did eat real pizza last night at the beach bar!! It was AWESOME!!! And today Corinna, Scott and I made the bombest guacamole ever for breakfast with the most flavorful avocados I have ever had...ok maybe not ever, but they were DELICIOUS.
So basically what I'm saying is that I think I have probably gained back 5 of my lost pounds just from swear-in week.
What an awesome week.
Thursday, February 5, 2009
The End of PST
Well, I can hardly believe it, but PST is over!! It is a bittersweet moment for everyone – we are all really excited to get to site and get our houses set up and stop living out of suitcases, but at the same time we were all sad to leave our host families and part ways with our fellow stagiares.
So, just kidding about Dave. He changed his mind! This means that our ENTIRE stage, all 29 of us, will be swearing in together tomorrow morning. This is a pretty big deal as it is common to lose at least one person during training, especially in West African Peace Corps countries. So all you parents out there – you did good! You raised a tough bunch of nuts here in Guinea and we are all chomping at the bit to get to site and get started.
In my final language interview, I was rated at Intermediate High. This is awesome, as when I came to Guinea I knew only a few words of French, most of which I learned singing Lady Marmalade. I can now say that I speak English, Spanish, French and “seeda seeda” Pular (small small). Every day I feel I get more comfortable with French and while I still recommend learning as much as you can before you come, the language training Peace Corps provides is pretty kick-ass.
Also, I have acquired my first pet: a dog. Well, we think it’s a dog. Personally I think he is part wolverine =). The night before we were leaving Forecariah, Corinna called me and asked if I wanted a dog. She had found a tiny puppy being abused by a petite and took it away. I went over immediately and scooped him up. Within moments I had already named him: Yogi Bear. Cause he kinda looks like a bear! He can’t be more than a couple weeks old and he is a motley brownish black. He was CRAWLING in bugs when we found him but after a bath and some TLC most of the bugs have gone away though his skin has a lot of scabs and sores on it, possibly from the bugs, possibly from some sort of skin condition.
At first he was very scared, very introverted and weak. But now, he has gotten much more lively, loves to eat (especially tuna and hard boiled eggs) and looks healthier. When we were cleaning him that first night we really didn’t know if he was going to make it. Katie said, “if he makes it, he will be a great survival story”. I am going to try and take him to the vet here in Conakry before we leave on Sunday to get him checked out and get him some shots.
Today we went shopping in Conakry in some Lebanese stores and the market. The Lebanese stores are awesome because they have all kinds of stuff that you can’t find anywhere else – like canned mushrooms and black olives, bags of black beans and baby lima beans, olive oil and VRAI CHEESE!!! The cheese is really expensive though so I did not buy any. But I did buy the rest of what I listed, plus some tuna for my puppy and some other stuff.
At the market I bought ten wheels of Laughing Cow cheese (a soft, non-refrigerated cheese) which gives me 80 triangles which should last me until IST in three months. I am pretty excited about this. I also bought two kilos of dried corn kernels, though I am not sure if you can actually pop them or what. But I sure am gonna try!! What else? Oh yeah, Obama flip flops (Obama is ALL THE RAGE here in Guinea and in Africa in general). And three bottles of the piment sauce we have all grown to love, adore and rely on to spice up our food (mostly eggs!). Those were my most exciting purchases, though there were others. Having all the money for the settling in and living allowances now that we are about to be PCVs is awesome. In fact, I had mint chocolate chip ice cream today. And it was fabulous.
Also, just to tie up some loose ends – while my site visit has been the brunt of many jokes here in our G17 stage, really in retrospect it’s just a great story. My counterpart ended up being a really cool guy who spoke French and seemed genuinely interested in everything being covered during Counterpart Workshop. My village seemed full of genuinely nice people who are happy to have me there. I have confidence that my sous-prefet has found me more suitable accommodations. It is a beautiful area of the country and I am really excited to get back there and get to know people, set up my house and start working.
I have lost 20 pounds since arriving in Guinea, which doesn’t surprise me at all as when I arrived I was at the top of my weight range and had just come off of a six-month food and drink binge, stuffing every American confection I could into my body since I knew it would be a long time until I would have it again. I REALLY miss sour cream. Like, A LOT. I might try to make some using Amy’s cheese-making technique.
So I think that from here on out I should have access to the internet about once a month when I travel to my regional capital (if it’s working – inshallah). And one more time, a plead for letters. Today I received my first letter and it was from my friend Megan. And it was AWESOME! So thank you Megan, you get the gold star.
Wish me luck!!!
I now go…into the bush.
So, just kidding about Dave. He changed his mind! This means that our ENTIRE stage, all 29 of us, will be swearing in together tomorrow morning. This is a pretty big deal as it is common to lose at least one person during training, especially in West African Peace Corps countries. So all you parents out there – you did good! You raised a tough bunch of nuts here in Guinea and we are all chomping at the bit to get to site and get started.
In my final language interview, I was rated at Intermediate High. This is awesome, as when I came to Guinea I knew only a few words of French, most of which I learned singing Lady Marmalade. I can now say that I speak English, Spanish, French and “seeda seeda” Pular (small small). Every day I feel I get more comfortable with French and while I still recommend learning as much as you can before you come, the language training Peace Corps provides is pretty kick-ass.
Also, I have acquired my first pet: a dog. Well, we think it’s a dog. Personally I think he is part wolverine =). The night before we were leaving Forecariah, Corinna called me and asked if I wanted a dog. She had found a tiny puppy being abused by a petite and took it away. I went over immediately and scooped him up. Within moments I had already named him: Yogi Bear. Cause he kinda looks like a bear! He can’t be more than a couple weeks old and he is a motley brownish black. He was CRAWLING in bugs when we found him but after a bath and some TLC most of the bugs have gone away though his skin has a lot of scabs and sores on it, possibly from the bugs, possibly from some sort of skin condition.
At first he was very scared, very introverted and weak. But now, he has gotten much more lively, loves to eat (especially tuna and hard boiled eggs) and looks healthier. When we were cleaning him that first night we really didn’t know if he was going to make it. Katie said, “if he makes it, he will be a great survival story”. I am going to try and take him to the vet here in Conakry before we leave on Sunday to get him checked out and get him some shots.
Today we went shopping in Conakry in some Lebanese stores and the market. The Lebanese stores are awesome because they have all kinds of stuff that you can’t find anywhere else – like canned mushrooms and black olives, bags of black beans and baby lima beans, olive oil and VRAI CHEESE!!! The cheese is really expensive though so I did not buy any. But I did buy the rest of what I listed, plus some tuna for my puppy and some other stuff.
At the market I bought ten wheels of Laughing Cow cheese (a soft, non-refrigerated cheese) which gives me 80 triangles which should last me until IST in three months. I am pretty excited about this. I also bought two kilos of dried corn kernels, though I am not sure if you can actually pop them or what. But I sure am gonna try!! What else? Oh yeah, Obama flip flops (Obama is ALL THE RAGE here in Guinea and in Africa in general). And three bottles of the piment sauce we have all grown to love, adore and rely on to spice up our food (mostly eggs!). Those were my most exciting purchases, though there were others. Having all the money for the settling in and living allowances now that we are about to be PCVs is awesome. In fact, I had mint chocolate chip ice cream today. And it was fabulous.
Also, just to tie up some loose ends – while my site visit has been the brunt of many jokes here in our G17 stage, really in retrospect it’s just a great story. My counterpart ended up being a really cool guy who spoke French and seemed genuinely interested in everything being covered during Counterpart Workshop. My village seemed full of genuinely nice people who are happy to have me there. I have confidence that my sous-prefet has found me more suitable accommodations. It is a beautiful area of the country and I am really excited to get back there and get to know people, set up my house and start working.
I have lost 20 pounds since arriving in Guinea, which doesn’t surprise me at all as when I arrived I was at the top of my weight range and had just come off of a six-month food and drink binge, stuffing every American confection I could into my body since I knew it would be a long time until I would have it again. I REALLY miss sour cream. Like, A LOT. I might try to make some using Amy’s cheese-making technique.
So I think that from here on out I should have access to the internet about once a month when I travel to my regional capital (if it’s working – inshallah). And one more time, a plead for letters. Today I received my first letter and it was from my friend Megan. And it was AWESOME! So thank you Megan, you get the gold star.
Wish me luck!!!
I now go…into the bush.
Monday, February 2, 2009
First Loss and the End of Training
Well I am sorry to say that we have had our first loss from our stage. It was pretty impressive that we made it this far before losing one and a lot of us were betting we would make it to swear-in before our first loss. Unfortunately, yesterday Dave decided he’d had enough, packed his bags and left for Conakry without a real goodbye (not really his choice, it’s Peace Corps policy to get you out ASAP when you decide it’s time to go). We are all very sad and will miss Dave a lot!! Keep in touch dude and eat that burrito for me (don’t forget the sour cream)!!
At the same time, all of us are packing for our departure to Conakry on Wednesday for swear-in. I can’t believe training is over but I am definitely glad to be moving on to the next phase of my service.
Wednesday we have our farewell ceremony here in Forecariah with our host families and the local officials. Right after the ceremony we board the bus (a new bus, it’s pretty sweet!) and head off for Conakry. I’m not going to lie, I will probably cry a little bit as we pull away, as I have become rather close with my family here and will miss them a lot.
Friday we have swear-in in Conakry and I am giving the French speech in Dave’s stead. That night we are going to have a theme party: movie characters/celebrities. I am going as Victoria Beckham in a paired effort with Scott, who is going as David Beckham. There will be many amusing pictures to be had, I am sure.
After four nights at the Peace Corps Frat House we will all head to our regional capitals on Sunday which for me is Boke. Then we will have a couple of days to shop and whatnot and then we will start to be installed at our sites on Tuesday or Wednesday. It’s very exciting and nerve wracking.
And kinda depressing. We have all made very good friends here and in general are a close-knit group. The fact that we all have shared interests and goals and are in this very unique situation has brought many of us closer to others than we had anticipated. I certainly wasn’t expecting to get so close to some people so fast and I will miss them terribly when we are no longer together. As of now, my closest friends have a different regional capital than I do (though Ian, John and I will assess the feasibility of switching if it turns out it’s easier to go to Fouta than Basse Cote), so I will not be seeing them for a long time. I guess that means frequent hikes to my reseau (cell service) spot.
Today Scott, Jake, Juliann, Caitlin and I went to go see the mother of the little girl who died and give her some money (culturally appropriate in Guinea when someone dies). She still looks miserable (with good reason) and the look on her face whenever I see her breaks my heart. We sat with her for a few minutes and watched a bright green chameleon amble by across the ground. Today my aunt told me that they thought the little girl died of Typhoid Fever. This is an all-too-common occurrence in Guinea and I know this will only be the first of many deaths I will experience during my service. Somehow that thought doesn’t really take the edge off.
Tonight as I took my bucket bath I couldn’t help but think that tomorrow will be the last one I take at my family’s house. Today my complet came back from the tailor and it is pretty. My family laughed and applauded as I strutted around the porch and modeled it for them. Oumou is going to braid my hair tomorrow and I will look truly Guinean for the goodbye ceremony. The piece of basin fabric (very expensive here) that my mama gave the tailor for the accent on my complet works really nicely and every time I look at it I will think of her and what a great cook she is. My mama is a very stern woman who rarely smiles so in my time here I have made a point to be so silly to make her break into smiles. Deep down I know she thinks I am funny and has been happy to have me here and I am so grateful for all her hospitality and sacrifice while I have been here. Tomorrow I think I will buy her a chicken to say thank you.
At the same time, all of us are packing for our departure to Conakry on Wednesday for swear-in. I can’t believe training is over but I am definitely glad to be moving on to the next phase of my service.
Wednesday we have our farewell ceremony here in Forecariah with our host families and the local officials. Right after the ceremony we board the bus (a new bus, it’s pretty sweet!) and head off for Conakry. I’m not going to lie, I will probably cry a little bit as we pull away, as I have become rather close with my family here and will miss them a lot.
Friday we have swear-in in Conakry and I am giving the French speech in Dave’s stead. That night we are going to have a theme party: movie characters/celebrities. I am going as Victoria Beckham in a paired effort with Scott, who is going as David Beckham. There will be many amusing pictures to be had, I am sure.
After four nights at the Peace Corps Frat House we will all head to our regional capitals on Sunday which for me is Boke. Then we will have a couple of days to shop and whatnot and then we will start to be installed at our sites on Tuesday or Wednesday. It’s very exciting and nerve wracking.
And kinda depressing. We have all made very good friends here and in general are a close-knit group. The fact that we all have shared interests and goals and are in this very unique situation has brought many of us closer to others than we had anticipated. I certainly wasn’t expecting to get so close to some people so fast and I will miss them terribly when we are no longer together. As of now, my closest friends have a different regional capital than I do (though Ian, John and I will assess the feasibility of switching if it turns out it’s easier to go to Fouta than Basse Cote), so I will not be seeing them for a long time. I guess that means frequent hikes to my reseau (cell service) spot.
Today Scott, Jake, Juliann, Caitlin and I went to go see the mother of the little girl who died and give her some money (culturally appropriate in Guinea when someone dies). She still looks miserable (with good reason) and the look on her face whenever I see her breaks my heart. We sat with her for a few minutes and watched a bright green chameleon amble by across the ground. Today my aunt told me that they thought the little girl died of Typhoid Fever. This is an all-too-common occurrence in Guinea and I know this will only be the first of many deaths I will experience during my service. Somehow that thought doesn’t really take the edge off.
Tonight as I took my bucket bath I couldn’t help but think that tomorrow will be the last one I take at my family’s house. Today my complet came back from the tailor and it is pretty. My family laughed and applauded as I strutted around the porch and modeled it for them. Oumou is going to braid my hair tomorrow and I will look truly Guinean for the goodbye ceremony. The piece of basin fabric (very expensive here) that my mama gave the tailor for the accent on my complet works really nicely and every time I look at it I will think of her and what a great cook she is. My mama is a very stern woman who rarely smiles so in my time here I have made a point to be so silly to make her break into smiles. Deep down I know she thinks I am funny and has been happy to have me here and I am so grateful for all her hospitality and sacrifice while I have been here. Tomorrow I think I will buy her a chicken to say thank you.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)