Sunday 21 September 2014



ABERDARE WEEKEND
Nice getaway...





We had a great trip out to the Aberdare Park last weekend, with a group of friends mostly from Sweden and Denmark.   It was a new place to discover and our friend, Patrick, planned the trip which made it easy for us.   We had never been there so it was great just to follow along with his recommendation.   We hope that his idea of starting a new venture - Last Minute Safaris - takes off!

We drove in a caravan of 3 cars, which made it simple to follow the directions and once we got off the crazy Thika Highway with all the traffic and pedestrians dodging in between, we were driving through the hills and valleys of Aberdare country.

Sam was a bit disappointed because there were no sellers of "roasted corn" on the side of the road as in other adventures heading out to the Rift Valley.   These folks were mostly selling bananas and the banana fields were visible as far as the eye could see....

Once we arrived and had a nice lunch - all of these places out of town supply food and catering for the whole trip - we set out on a really nice hike down to the Mathoiya River, where most people went swimming...





But some of us hiked for a few hours through the tea fields along the river.   What a beautiful place with tons of hills!





When we arrived backed to the camp, we had happy hour/sundowners in the open field next to the camp with a great bonfire and lots of sheep and goats:).





There were about 30 of us who ate dinner together along side a nice indoor fire...No real stars to gaze upon because a bit of a cloud cover came over the camp but it was beautiful and peaceful anyway.

On day 2, we hiked in the opposite direction of the river, which meant up the hills, through more tea fields and we saw lots of different farms and even a few villages.   The church/library area was pretty cool and of course central to village living.




It was a bit hot and dry, so we all stopped by the local convenience shop and had some refreshments:).




After lunch on the second day most of those who were staying for the second night went back down to the swimming hole in the river and had a little more fun, but my favorite place was the "grass" bench, a great place to relax and read a book!



My friend Stine on the grass bench:   She was a little nervous that there might be some critters in the bench but we inspected before we sat down:).



And of course Jeanette was relaxing with her buddy, Max.   The village kids loved him and I don't think they ever saw a cute little dog before because they kept asking what it was... But Max went on all the hikes with us and had a grand ol time....He of course was dog-tired at the end!



Lily and her friends Josephine and Matilda went swimming in one of the rapids, but found some interesting friends in the water...They were quickly covered by some kind of ant/worm form so they removed themselves very quickly....But the water was peaceful and gorgeous for the most part....



We met a few interesting critters, cows and kids along the way.....








And our kids were happy to get out of town:).





Here is where we had breakfast....in the treetops!



And more shots of the Aberdare cottages...




We didn't make an appointment in advance with the chief, but we probably could have stopped in...



We had a relaxing weekend, but the car over heated on the way home so just as we were getting into town - had to divert our course because of student "protests" on Thika Highway - city life and all that it entails came back in a hurry....but until then we were all smiles:).



Can't wait for our next adventure...Amboselli?   

Monday 21 April 2014

Trying to post leopard video from Maasai Mara....April 19, 2014...



Here goes...






Trying to see if I can actually post a video....from safari.





Lily has written some notes on her life since the Xmas holidays...Thought I would share.   She just won a poetry and photography competition.   I will post her poem and photo later but here is a pic of Lily with her trophy!






Over the Christmas holidays, some Connor....... cousins came and visited us from the US! They are on my moms side, two kids. Both are grown up, one is in college and the older one is out of college and living in Kuwait running a basketball academy! They stayed with us in Nairobi for a few days, and we showed them around everywhere. We went to the malls, and also we went to the national park. In the beginning, the park trip was fairly uneventful, because the zebras and other animals had migrated to places with more water during the dry season. When it got to be evening, however, it became interesting! (well, more interesting than a national park in Kenya is normally!) We saw a mother rhino and her baby hanging out with a herd of buffalo! After it started to get dark, we saw a LION walking 3 feet away from our car! It is really rare to see the lions in the National Park, and we were lucky enough to see one at the time our cousins were with us! 

After they were with us in Nairobi for a couple days, We went out to the coast of Kenya. This was the North coast I believe, where we only been to the south coast. It was a town called Diani, andit was really REALLY nice! We stayed in this resort called Forest dream resort. It was so cool because there are these monkeys and baboons running around everywhere just hanging off trees and stuff. We got to stay in a big villa called the Sultan Villa and had a pool and just like at the coast normally it had a personal chef at our house. He would make us food for any time we want, breakfast lunch and dinner! We get to choose whatever food we want and we can make up the menu beforehand.
Also, one day we went on a nice boat excursion on a thing called a dhow. (pronounced without the “h”). You boat around for little while, then you go to the big coral reef and you’re really close to the border of Tanzania. You can actually see Tanzania from the boat! After you sit on the beach or snorkel for a while, they take you again on the boat to an island to a restaurant that they own. There, you get served traditional Swahili food. Swahili food is the name for the food that is traditional on and around the coast of Kenya. They also have a very nice saltwater pool right near the restaurant with some very nice lounging areas around it so Sam and I swam around and stuff while the grown-ups rested after a big meal. Since it was getting late, we went back on the boat to the dock. That was a really long day, and everyone got really sunburned. It was so much fun though!
Wait a second, I totally blanked on telling you about my school play! It was called Around the World in 8 Plays. It is based on a group of gypsies who make a living by telling stories on the street. The play is made up of different narrators telling these 8 stories, and the actors acting out the stories with the narrators. I had two roles. One was named Julia, the other Isabel. Isabel is the lead female role in the play, the wife of the head storyteller, Bernardo. Hector, (the boy playing Bernardo) and I narrate 2 stories, the first and the last. We also come on between almost every story, to add more comedy with our extremely dysfunctional relationship. Julia, however is a character in one of the stories, called The Story of the Yara. It is a love story, I am in love with a man named Alonzo. We are engaged, but there is a monster trying to take him through mind power. It all ends happily, of course. The play was not taken seriously by anyone really until the last minute, which resulted in a lot of panic. In the end, the play was a success, and while not as popular as the ones at Wheeler, it still generated some positive buzz. 
Well, now the basketball season has ended for us MS girls, and it is on to either soccer (football here!) or field hockey. Field hockey is played by a lot of guys here, it is very aggressive and violent! As is rugby, but that is a whole different story. I am on the girls A-team, and I am goalie! It is a huge amount of pressure during games. I love it, but I have started to hurt my wrists more often because of it. We have an undefeated record so far, we are all really proud after our disastrous basketball season! I played one game that I am especially proud of, I let in only 1 goal out of probably 35 shots. I even saved a penalty shot! I was really sick that day, I had a fever all day but couldn't go to the nurse or risk missing the game. That was definitely my best game ever!! We only have a few more games, and a big tournament against Rift Valley Academy, one of our two main rivals. 
I don't know if you have heard, but recently Sam and I have been skyping with the 2nd (sometimes 3rd too) grade at Wheeler about one wednesday a month right after their community meeting, 4:30 our time. It is so much fun talking to them! They are learning about Kenya in Aerie right now, so their questions are really interesting! I think it is weird for them, seeing someone from their school that they have probably seen or met before living in a totally different continent!
In the middle school at ISK, the librarian has started a book club! I am in it with my friends Yasmien and Ellie, and the other girl in it is named Anna. So far we have read two books, the first one was not good or memorable, but the second one was spectacular. It was a graphic novel, but full of content and very well written. It is called Maus, by Art Speigleman. Have you heard of it? It is about the Holocaust and WWII. We are learning all about WWII right now in social studies, going very in depth. Last month, we had a guest speaker who's mother is a survivor of the Nazi holocaust. It was amazing to hear her story, so different than reading about it in a book! She was a very moving speaker, and it really brought a new perspective to the events for me. 
In English right now, we are reading a book called The Power of One. Have you read it or heard about it? It is about an English boy growing up in South Africa in the times of the Apartheid. He faces prejudices and racism, but he is still a genius. He is also a boxing star, and the book is about his journey from scrawny boy who was the constant victim of bullying to a star boxer with ambition to become world champ. It is a really interesting book, with themes of racism between English and Afrikaans, and white and black. It is set around apartheid, so there is also a sense of history with it. We also just finished studying WWII in Social Studies, we went way more in depth than we did last year. It was really interesting because there are some native German kids in our class, and we go to hear their perspective, which was that it was not all germans who were on hitler’s side, and that it was only the nazis. 
Since my birthday is in January, In the US I have to have inside parties because of the cold and snow. Here that was not a problem!! I got to rent a big inflatable waterside, and invite a bunch of friends over! In our yard there is a hill, so we put the start of the hill right at the end of the slide and continued on even after it ended. Once it started to get colder, because the sun had gone behind the trees, a hired henna artist came and did henna on all of our hands! We took a really cool picture of all of our hands in the middle of the circle with the henna on it. We watched 2 movies, (The Princess Bride and Moonrise Kingdom) and all around did sleepover stuff with pizza and birthday sundaes.
I’m really excited for next month, because the MS chorus is going on a trip to Tanzania, to Dar es Salaam! We will be staying in houses of kids from the International School of Tanganyika. (Tanganyika is the original name of Tanzania, who knew?) We have roommates from our chorus that we get to choose, and we get paired with a host family. I can’t wait to get to know all these new people, and to go by myself to a different country! 

THANKS LILY!    

Sunday 2 February 2014



CHILDREN'S GARDEN AND HOME SCHOOL
NAIROBI KENYA


This school, garden and home is typical of many places where children are educated, fed and housed around Nairobi.   There are over 200 children that live here, all coming from circumstances that are difficult and sometimes tragic.    It is a place filled with laughter, education, animals, music, dancing, sports, gardens and poverty.   

We found this place through the International School of Kenya's service program.   Each student at ISK from grades 6-12 must complete at least one semester of service, and there are over 20 programs from which they can choose to participate.   Sam chose this project because he heard they were planting a vegetable garden and he also knew there was an opportunity for playing some soccer.   

I decided to volunteer for this program in order to find out more about what is going on in other places around town and to get out of the "bubble" of ISK as well.  I really wanted to work with children and this was a good start to find out about the community outside where all the "expats" live.  About 20 ISK students get on a bus on Wednesday afternoons - early dismissal on Wednesdays! - and head out to the school, which is about 20-30 minutes away.   We drive through farmlands and villages and even the U of Nairobi agricultural school campus to get to the school.

On first glance, it looks like an apartment building.   There is a car wash outside along the side the road, as well as a little farmer's market and corn mill.     You really don't notice that there is a school.   But once you get behind the building where all the children sleep - see photo above - you can see the rest of the school environment.   

When we first arrive each week, we usually spend about 30--40 minutes reading to the kids....Sam and I both had our favorites!   


Helen and Antony were both very good students and they would love to read with us.   Antony especially liked to hear stories about other parts of the world and he told me he wanted to travel a lot when he grew up.   He would love to come to America to see Washington DC.  He worked very hard on the word puzzles that we would bring and he loved his pencils to be very sharp.  Only the best behaved of the 200 kids were able to join us on Wednesdays, and Helen and Antony were always there.   They really have so little but they have an amazing intelligence and aptitude, and Helen would like to grow up to be a scientist.   Their warmth is surprising, engaging and a little contagious!...They both made Christmas cards for Sam and me....
Antony!

Helen and Antony


 After we were done with the reading portion, we would usually help plant a piece of the garden....

Planting mango trees
Field of Dreams


By the end of the semester, this garden was full of spinach, tomatoes, kale, corn, beans and peppers!  But I wonder if you can guess what this plant is below.....   It was hard to recognize at first but it is one of the best fruits in Kenya....

Beautiful bananas with flower on bottom!


Also, at the school, there are several animals living among the children.   They have cows, rabbits (we brought a few dozen with us one week and it was fun to see the kids' reaction), dogs, etc.   The kids take care of the animals as part of their daily chores.   This poor dog was hit by a car the day before one of our visits...We were not sure how it was going to do but he healed pretty well, and he had a ton of love from the kids!


On one of our first visits, some of the older students, Beth and Boniface, gave me a tour of the entire compound.   I was really impressed with all of the environmentally friendly and sustainable projects  they are doing.   They never throw anything out and they use everything and re-purpose everything that is used at the school.   They have this fabulous "community cooker", where all their trash is put in a huge container and they burn it, but the heat from the fire is channeled into a system that heats their stove and the water that they use for showering.   

I was surprised to hear that none of these high school students had read the "Harry Potter" series of books.   They had only seen one of two of the movies.....So, I couldn't help it and had one of our friends that was visiting from the US bring a set of the books.   The head librarian at the school was almost in tears when we gave her the books and the kids were really excited to sign up for reading them.   I am hoping to have a book club with the older kids next semester to discuss Harry Potter....It would be a treat for me and hopefully a good experience for them.


Beth and Boniface

Community Cooker dedication..
The Community Stove



So, sometimes after planting the kids just dance!   We have had several dance parties where some of the Kenyan kids show the ISK kids the traditional tribe dances and they are very serious about their dance moves.   Then, the ISK kids join and it is truly amazing to watch!


  
Sam's dance moves:) And Lily joined us too!


Another cool project for the kids was the tomato planting project.   A donor from China gave them a greenhouse, and the kids put together a tomato growing project.   As the semester wore on, I took photos of how the tomatoes were growing.   The kids started out with 2 bags of seeds that cost around 700 Kenyan Shillings (about $8.25).   Now, in January they have a whole greenhouse filled with tomatoes and plants - apparently you grow tomatoes alongside hot peppers and garlic to keep the bugs away.   They will be able to use some of the tomatoes and sell the rest for quite a profit.   This money will go toward food, clothing and books for the children.   Very enterprising!



Simlaw Seeds are the best!

The seeds planted in September


The seeds have sprouted!

Now filling the greenhouse!


This Children's Garden school is very different from ISK, where Sam and Lily go every day to school, but the kids are much the same.   They are smart, and they really want to learn.   They are amazed by the littlest of things that we take for granted.   On one of our visits, some of the smaller boys were fascinated by Sam's watch.   They were practically climbing all over him to play with it because it "made noises".   It was just a watch alarm, but they were so curious and were asking so many questions.   It was an interesting experience for Sam, who is unaccustomed to all that attention, but he understood it was a big moment for the children of the school.....

The kids love Sam's watch!!!
If you want to learn more about the Children's Garden Home School, you can check them out at www.childrensgardenhome.org.   It may be worth the click!