Saturday, January 22, 2011

Saturday, 22nd January, 2011

We've had a crazy week filled to the brim with trips to town, classes at SEGA, and planning for India. It has been very productive to say the least! We have managed to come up with a basic itinerary for India and booked some of the longer train tickets to alleviate some of the stress that goes along with traveling. We have planned for some amazing adventures including a week up to the Pakistan border, a relaxing beach holiday in Goa and a three week ramble in Rajasthan. It's all very exciting! We will be very sad, however, to leave our girls in Morogoro and are looking forward to one great last week with them! This Wednesday saw the arrival of the new non-formal class, and after some very nervous introductions, each girl was taken by the hand by a Form One student and given a tour of the school. Smiles were abundant and everyone had a good time taking pictures and getting to know their new sisters. As they toured, we were busy reading A Cat In A Hat by Dr. Seuss to the Form Twos and discussing the importance of communication. This new school year has brought on a whole new level of focus for most of the students, and everyone seems to be motivated to learn and study hard. Later that day we went out to town with Fran to celebrate her daughter Gemma's birthday but when we arrived at Ricky's cafe, it had just shut! Instead we headed to Oasis to have a cocktail but were informed that we couldn't have cocktails until after 7pm! We settled instead for chocolate milkshakes and a cold Tusker beer.
On Thursday we had a lovely day with the Form Ones singing a song they had made up about the New Year to send to the girl scout group Global Girls Unite in Pennsylvania. We then gathered all of the girls into the new cafeteria and taught recorders. The new students took to the recorders very quickly and we managed to play Hot Cross Buns all together and sing it! Mary Had A Little Lamb is coming along, but we still find it hard to get the girls to understand and remember the line "whose fleece was white as snow"!
Friday was spent in town - we finally managed to get to Ricky's cafe to have real ice cream and a lovely lunch of "tomato, cheese and onion melt" which turned out to be every vegetable imaginable wrapped up in an omelette - not quite what we had imagined but good nonetheless! We managed to post our letters and also made a trip to the sokoni to stock up on fruit and veg. We also managed to find a CD shop that had Tanzanian music - so we bought some to take home with us! We arrived back home at around 4pm and found that we had no power. Again. It seems to be a new pattern of the power going off mid-afternoon and coming back on for breakfast. This means we spend most nights cooking or reading by candlelight and without much to do. Yesterday we'd had enough - we had to do something! We decided to head down to the bar down the road and have a cold beer. We had walked past there at night earlier in the week and had noticed that they had installed a projector and speakers to play Bongo Flava music videos. We each ordered a Safari baridi and waited for the videos to start up. Soon after our arrival, we were joined by the bar man who had decided we needed company, and spoke not a word of English. It took us a lot of smiling and nodding before we managed to get him to speak pole pole (slowly) and we could actually grasp some of what he was saying. It turns out he is a DJ for one of the clubs in town and was responsible for the video projector. We managed to get him to turn on our favourite music and he even lent us one of his CDs of local music that you can't get anywhere! We came home, ecstatic with our new music acquisitions and spent a good time dancing around and eating popcorn!
We have spent some time today in town and are now relaxing before going to SEGA with Polly to have a sleepover with the girls. We are bringing a lot of things to do - movies, music, arts and crafts, and a lot of popcorn for our movie marathon. We can't wait to see the girls!
Eating Chicken Tikka Masala with Fran and Renee at Oasis

The road to our house when it rains = muddy feet

Our little Kahawa

Before his trip to the vet

Watching Global Girls Unite Video

The girls after receiving photos from Sandra

We babysat Mustafa's kid Abdul

The girls in their dorm

Fran teaching the non-formals

Friday, January 14, 2011

Our Girls Moving In

So last Sunday our girls moved into their new dormitory and they are still ecstatic about being able to sleep at the school! We have had a great couple of days with them teaching and have been getting them to listen to songs and then given them the lyrics with gaps which they have to fill in correctly. We have heard Justin Bieber sing 'Baby' about a hundred times today alone. The girls love it though, and the Form Twos have really enjoyed listening to I Gotta Feeling by the Black Eyed Peas. We even managed to upload the video to Baby to show the Form Ones today which made us very popular indeed! Yesterday was our halfway point of the gap year, and we can't believe a) how quickly it has gone by, and b) how much we have done! Anyway, here are some pictures of the girls moving in...
Some very excited girls and their new dorm

Tuesday, January 11, 2011

Because our internet works...

The SEGA girls in the sea on a field trip to Bagamoyo

Cooking something off a website. No clue why the face paints are there. Food colouring?

The graduating class with headmistress Salome, Dec, 2010.

A quick shot during one of our promo video shoots while waiting for the wind to die down

Our house!

SEGA school, Mkundi.

We made them Congratulations posters for their Graduation

Teaching in action...!

Jumanne. Tuesday.


Morogoro Bus Station (courtesy Elena's Dad)


Elena, Camilla and Babu Jona
So our first day teaching we were supposed to only teach three classes (we say only, but it’s actually quite a lot). We ended up with five.  We arrived in time for tea break and managed to wolf down a peanut butter roll, and a mug of deliciously sweetened chai before settling down to meet with a new member of the staff, Naomi. We are lucky to have two new staff with us at SEGA this year – a guidance counsellor, Pauline, and a communications and library teacher, Naomi. We were supposed to help set up the new sponsorship program and library with Naomi, but were called in at last minute to sub for one of the classes as the teacher was caught up in a meeting. We were subbing as Kiswahili teachers. If standing in front of the class trying to jumble a few Swahili words together while they’re all fluent isn’t nerve-wracking, then we’re not sure what is! Somehow we managed to come up with an impromptu lesson plan, though, and got them to write about New Year’s Promises (we didn’t know the word for Resolution in Kiswahili). It seemed to work out, and pretty soon the girls were busy crafting sentences about how much they want to learn English, or help the new girls at SEGA, or study all the way to graduation without any interruption. We then asked them to come up with three mwisho or goals, that could help them build up to their eventual ‘promise’. This is where things got a little mixed up. Some of the girls knew exactly what to do, and some of them ended up with sentences like Nakupenda Helen na Camel – I love you Helen (Elena) and Camel (Camilla) and Baadaye nitaenda kula ugali – later I will go and eat ugali. Well, at least some of them got it! After a quick lunch of ugali and sauce in the brand new cafeteria, we got back to work on creating a library sign-out book and organised the craft supplies. Later we had a double block with the Form Twos and made postcards about our holidays to remind them of their English. Tomorrow is a public holiday, which is very welcomed in this household – Fran has been working non-stop and is tired and Elena and I have a lot to organise as well. We will, however, still make a special visit to the school to make friendship bracelets with them as we know how much they love doing it and we just got new supplies!           
Sokoni - the Morogoro Market
Our lil puppy Kahawa

Road to the tailors
            

Monday, January 10, 2011

Back to School!

Well, we don't have lovely new outfits, but it's back to school for us! School officially started today, and yesterday we watched thirty ridiculously excited Form One girls each carry a new mattress and pillow to their new dorm room. We almost wanted to move in with them - they made it look like so much fun! We are still teaching a lot of classes for our last three weeks - around four hours of teaching a day. It's great! We had a really good time with our families these past two weeks - Elena headed to Jambiani in Zanzibar for Christmas, and then a safari in the Serengeti and Ngorongoro Crater, and Camilla did the safari first then went to South Africa for New Years. We both had a really good time on safari and saw so many animals up close, and we even got to radio chat each other when our safaris overlapped! But now, after the luxury tented camps, heaps of delicious buffet food and taxis (thanks mama na baba!), it's back to the real world of budget travelling. Our power is out, our showers are cold and we have cockroaches. But we're still very happy to be in Morogoro and home again. We are planning our trip to India and trying to tackle the Lonely Planet while still in holiday mode. We managed to get our Indian visas after much trouble with the embassy. Basically they leave a forty-five minute window in which to pick up your passport, and they arrive half an hour late to that. And the dalla-dallas don't care that you have an urgent appointment and insist on taking ridiculous routes and taking the time to squeeze as many limbs into the bus as possible. The trouble with the Indian visas did, however, bide us time for a (not really) well-earned beach holiday in Kipepeo (butterfly) beach for a few days. We stayed in a tent on the sand with just a mattress and both spent the entire time reading and lounging in the shade. We had expected to swim but both managed to get stung by jellyfish and spent more time running out of waves screaming than enjoying the ocean. Nevertheless, it was relaxing. We also got to spend one last day with our friends Sadie and Belle before their departure back to Vancouver (we'll miss you!) We went khanga and kitenge shopping (big mistake seeing as our bags are already full) and went to a sugar cane juice stand. After a long (8 hour when it should have been 2.5) journey back to Morogoro, in which we saw an overturned bus due to the storm (eee scary), we are ready to embrace our last three weeks in Morogoro. Bring it on!

Friday, December 17, 2010

Graduation


The atmosphere at Sega on Graduation morning was full of excitement. Everywhere we looked there were pre-formals, soon to be form-ones, running around in their scrubbed clean uniforms and polished shoes, with huge smiles on their faces. The new canteen was decorated beautifully, in maroon and white, the colors of the pre-formal’s uniforms. We gathered with the pre-formals in their classroom, and presented them with the graduation gift we had been working on with Fran. We had made three big posters that said “Congratulations, Graduation 2010” and decorated them with pictures of the girls and drawings. The girls are very enthusiastic about photos, so they had a blast searching the posters to find their faces and the faces of their friends. As the guests began to arrive the excitement mounted. The guest of honor, a generous patron of the school, arrived dressed in a beautiful orange and gold kitenge dress fit for a queen. The graduation ceremony was lovely, and Polly introduced special guests from Teach a Man to Fish, a company who support self-sustaining schools like SEGA. This was followed by speeches from Salome, the headmistress, the guest of honor, some of the graduating students, a parent representative, and the chair of Nurturing Minds, Clark. The Form-one girls performed beautiful dances to traditional African drumming and to popular bongo flava songs. Of course, the butt-shaking was included! We were thrilled to see that in one of their dances they incorporated both the Macarena, which we had taught them, and a special dance move that came from the movie Seventeen Again, which we had shown them! In the pre-formal’s performance, one of the girls, Rose, led the chorus with her high, beautiful voice, and the rest of the students echoed her. We had no idea she had such an incredible voice – just one of the hidden talents so many of the girls have! The parents were all very enthusiastic, and during the performances they ululated loudly, and some even went up on stage and started dancing in between the rows of performing girls! When it was time for the non-formals to get their graduation certificates, they were called up one by one to the head table. It is a tradition that after the girls get their certificates their families come up and place a taji (sort of like a colorful Hawaiian lei) around their necks, and often give them gifts of soda and sweets. After the ceremony there was a delicious catered lunch, with bottles of Sprite and Coke for everyone! The girls especially seemed to enjoy the chicken dish, and they all begged to have pictures taken of them tucking in! Everyone was in a giddy mood, and we had a great time shaking our butts to Bongo flava with Fran and the girls; even the Maasai guard, Babu Jona joined in on the dancing and was congratulating the girls as he did so! Eventually the time came when we had to say goodbye to the girls. It was very sad because we have become really close to them, but we gave them all our phone number so that we can meet up during the vacation!

The Snows of Kilimanjaro




Proof that we reached the highest point in Africa!
It looks like the moon!
The sunrise over Stella point
Well, we made it to the top of Mt. Kilimanjaro! And it wasn’t as easy as it sounds! We started at the Machame gate, the beginning of the Machame route. From the gate until the sixth and final day, it poured with rain, hail, and snow, leaving us frozen for the majority of the trip. The first day was spent weaving our way through forest (in torrential rain) up to a level of about 3000m above sea level. There were sections that were relatively flat, and there were also stair sections that left us feeling sorry for our eight (yes, eight) porters, who had to carry everything up on their backs and heads. Our first night was spent in Machame Camp. We had some good views of the surrounding forest, and our camp was right on the border of the moorland region. Our guide, Eligius, was really fun and we had a good time talking with him in the evening over a huge amount of delicious food that was cooked for us. The portions they gave could have fed a family of five, but they were still shocked when we couldn’t finish them! The next morning, still soaked, we headed up to Shira Camp, at 3,900m above sea level. The trekking was very enjoyable despite the rain, and we took refuge in several caves we found along the way. The biggest cave, Shira’s Cave, was located just further up the mountain than our camp, so we did a little trip out there to take a look at it. Due to our frozen state, we piled on all the clothing we had (it was still only raining at this point, however) for our walk. Eligius nicknamed us Mama and Bibi (grandmother) because we looked like such idiots in headscarves, huge woolen jumpers and waterproof trousers. Fair enough.  Day three consisted of a not-too-difficult climb to Barranco Hut, made more difficult by an acclimatization detour around the 4,600m above sea level detour to Lava Tower. Most of the day had been spent walking through what looked like an endless moon landscape – piles of scree and rocks shrouded in a heavy mist was pretty much our only scenery for several hours. It didn’t take much imagining to pretend we were on the moon, and we had a good time reenacting Neil Armstrong’s famous speech, much to the confusion of Eligius. Lava Tower was, in fact, just another big rock that was covered in mist. It was snowing and hailing so hard that we had to huddle under a different rock to eat our packed lunch. On the way back to Barranco Hut, we took a path that had been replaced by a freezing cold stream even though it looked as if we could have walked on perfectly dry land on either side of the path. We thought that maybe the guide had decided to test the waterproof-ness of our boots. Well, they ended up soaked, along with the guide’s, and stayed that way for the remainder of the trip. It was that night that our guide decided he wanted to try and sell us for some Konyagi (a hard alcohol they drink here).  After we had been offered around to various other guides and companies, and we were unwanted with our wet shoes and grandmother-esque clothes, Eligius resorted to just paying for the Konyagi himself. It seemed rather an extensive joke, but most Kiswahili humour is lost on us! The morning of day four was spent scaling the Barranco Wall which involved rock climbing and some pretty dangerous games of Twister on daunting rock faces. It also involved many flailing walking poles, especially from the French group behind us who hadn’t quite mastered the whole hold-them-both-in-the-same-hand thing. It took us a couple hours to reach the top of the wall and by that time we both had very sore legs. Eligius had vaguely told us that from now it was another six hours of up-down-up-down-up-very up, as if we were somehow going to remember the amount of up and downs. It basically meant another four hours of walking in moon landscape up a gradual scree slope that killed your calves. It was also getting slightly harder to breathe as Barafu (snow) Hut, our next stop, was at 4,600m asl. Once we passed Karangu Camp, one that we were not staying at, it was supposed to be another three hour walk from there. We walked for two hours up the same landscape. To distract ourselves, Elena created a bucket list in her mind, and Camilla was trying to find countries, vegetables and colors that started with every letter of the alphabet. It was a challenge to keep coming up with things to think about, and so at one point we pulled out the ipod and sung along to Christmas songs. After two hours of walking, Eligius thought that it would be funny to tell us we still had another four hours to go. As we said – the humour is lost on us! We arrived at Barafu Hut, and true to its name, it was snowing. A lot. We sat in our tent for a little in the puddles that had gathered, freezing to death, then decided to move into the lunch tent. We were lucky that we had a table and fold up chairs, and we drunk chai and ate popcorn. We went through 50 tea bags in six days that’s how full of caffeine we were. We took an early night to bed as we had to wake up at midnight. After only a couple of hours of frozen sleep, we woke up, drank more tea and had some porridge then put on literally every piece of clothing we had. We were both wearing at least twelve warm jumpers and five pairs of pants. We wore our headlamps, and in the middle of the night while it was snowing, we started our ascent to the summit. It sucked.  Every couple of steps we had to stop and try to regain our breath, and we hadn’t been drinking enough water. Elena felt dizzy and was having trouble not fainting due to dehydration. Camilla had altitude sickness and was feeling like a truck ran over her, and was also having trouble not falling asleep. On top of that, Eligius had it in his mind that we had to overtake the other streams of headlights who were going too ‘pole pole’ – slow.  We actually enjoyed their pace, but had to keep up with Eligius. As we were nearing Stella Point, six hours later, the sun broke through the clouds and the snow turned bright yellow. It was gorgeous and lifted our spirits just enough to get us to Uhuru Point. Uhuru (freedom) point is the highest point in Africa at 5,895m asl, the highest peak you can reach without oxygen equipment, the world’s highest free standing mountain’s highest peak, and basically just awesome. We spent a while there with the sign, taking pictures and trying very hard to breathe and not freeze at 7:30am. We then started our long descent down, still feeling very sick, and not wanting to spend another eight hours walking. We did, however, and arrived in Mweka Hut (3,100m) with bruised feet and droopy eyes.  The next day was our official get-us-the-f-off-this-mountain walk to the bottom of Mweka Gate. We’d had enough. We were cold, still wet and our legs were so sore we couldn’t walk up the steps to the registration hut. After three hours of hiking, we made it to the bottom and had a Kilimanjaro beer with our guide and porters. We’d done it! We received some pretty spiffy certificates and got a ride back into Arusha, where we showered, ate pizza, then got onto a bus headed back to Morogoro.