4/28/18 Hello again from Tanzania. I have been at my site for about a week now. Getting settled and continuing to try to learn Swahili. We had our graduation ceremony on the 19th, and left for the closest city to our site the next day. We spent a few days in the city buying the big essentials: bed, bicycle, stove etc.. and came to our site on Monday. Now I am trying to get adjusted and meet the local village people. I start at the dispensary next Monday, start with a swahili tutor next Tuesday (a retired teacher), and will visit a women's empowerment group meeting that same night. Things are busy, especially trying to figure out how to live - the power has been out in the village for a couple of days, no phone, no electricity (I don't have electricity at my house anyway). The nights are long and dark here, but I don't mind. It's a lot like backpacking. I'm going to have to really change my cooking and eating habits though. Still trying to work through that. Thank god for Ramen and peanut butter and jelly.
A titantic battle occurred in my house yesterday - I kept hearing a box move, so I looked and found a gecko battling a scorpion. I waited until it was quiet then moved the box and the gecko came running out - my new best friend! Photos: my host family at the graduation ceremony with our matching clothes, my kitchen (I have a table coming today), my new wheels. I have lost a lot of weight, but that doesn't mean I'm in good shape. Those hills are a challenge.
Saturday, April 28, 2018
Monday, April 9, 2018
4/9/18 Hello again from Tanzania.
Been a real busy week. The end of training is approaching so we have many projects and assignments due. Today we took our second Kiswahili exam. It was tough, but I think I did ok. I hope so anyway. We move out of our host homes in less than a week and back onto the training post for a week until graduation, then its back to our site for the next two years. I figured I'd give a little more details of my house for any of you thinking about visiting me.
It's a a two room little house with an attached storage room, toilet, and room for bucket bathing. The inside needs some painting and mosquito screens on the windows. The little courtyard is good for privacy but not much else. I hope to start a little garden, and my neighbor has offered me a chicken. Not sure if I'm ready for that yet. I will be purchasing furniture and solar power when I get there, and a bike is absolutely essential. Everything is about 2 kilometers away, not a bad walk, but boy does that sun get hot. Well, I'll let you know how I did on my test, and my next post will hopefully have graduation ceremony photos. Talk to you soon!
P.S. I came out to use the toilet at night and I saw something move down there. Oh well, it seemed to move slowly so we can probably outrun it!
Been a real busy week. The end of training is approaching so we have many projects and assignments due. Today we took our second Kiswahili exam. It was tough, but I think I did ok. I hope so anyway. We move out of our host homes in less than a week and back onto the training post for a week until graduation, then its back to our site for the next two years. I figured I'd give a little more details of my house for any of you thinking about visiting me.
P.S. I came out to use the toilet at night and I saw something move down there. Oh well, it seemed to move slowly so we can probably outrun it!
Sunday, April 1, 2018
Well, I made it back from my site visit. It has been a long week and it's good to be back. Let me tell you a little about my site - it's close to Shinyanga which is a pretty but town. It takes 12 hours by bus to get to Shinyanga, then another 45 minutes by smaller transport to my village. this is a semi arid region that gets very little rainfall, but we are currently in the rainy season. My little house is on a government agricultural site where they run a thresher almost constantly for sorghum, which along with sunflowers and a few other drought resistant crops are the main crops up here. The land is very flat and dry, but there is a river close by where they get their water during the dry season. I got a look at the river and it is more like a small creek, and remember this is the rainy season.
My house has two rooms, no running water or electricity. The nights I spent in the house were just fine, it doesn't get very cool here (although it is 5-10 degrees cooler than here in Morogoro), and it is about 50 feet from the closest (and only close) neighbor who is actually my host. This experience was very much like backpacking for those who have done it, living out of my backpack while moving between the site and various guest houses. One thing they have plenty of here is sun, so I will be purchasing my solar panel as well as all my furniture and a bicycle as soon as I come to stay in a few weeks. I forgot to mention, I actually have a little walled in compound with an attached storage room and chop (toilet hole/shower). It is a decent enough set up, and it definitely has potential.
My host Mshamu introduced me to the various dignitaries in both villages. This included the police, the magistrate, the doctor at the zahanati, the principal at both the secondary and primary school, the village leaders from both villages, and the Economic Development Council from my village. Everyone was very welcoming and I got to practice my Swahili greeting over and over again (I need a lot of work).
My photos: my home, the Economic Development Council, the zahanati, the secondary school.
Well that's it for the edition. I'll write more as time allows.
Until next time!
My house has two rooms, no running water or electricity. The nights I spent in the house were just fine, it doesn't get very cool here (although it is 5-10 degrees cooler than here in Morogoro), and it is about 50 feet from the closest (and only close) neighbor who is actually my host. This experience was very much like backpacking for those who have done it, living out of my backpack while moving between the site and various guest houses. One thing they have plenty of here is sun, so I will be purchasing my solar panel as well as all my furniture and a bicycle as soon as I come to stay in a few weeks. I forgot to mention, I actually have a little walled in compound with an attached storage room and chop (toilet hole/shower). It is a decent enough set up, and it definitely has potential.
My host Mshamu introduced me to the various dignitaries in both villages. This included the police, the magistrate, the doctor at the zahanati, the principal at both the secondary and primary school, the village leaders from both villages, and the Economic Development Council from my village. Everyone was very welcoming and I got to practice my Swahili greeting over and over again (I need a lot of work).
My photos: my home, the Economic Development Council, the zahanati, the secondary school.
Well that's it for the edition. I'll write more as time allows.
Until next time!
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