Monday, April 25, 2011

The Beginning of the End


4-25-11

I realize its been a while since I blogged and I didn’t even post the beginning of my last blog, but I’ve been really busy with not that great of internet. We have started our Directed Research projects which are basically a thesis that you have to do research, and write in 3 weeks or less than present your findings and solutions to the community. It is very stressful and we are working all the time. Last week we spent every day collecting data. My group, environmental policy, is researching water management and usage in the Amboseli Ecostyem and its effectiveness. This means that we have two forms of data collection: a GPS group that goes out and walks along the rivers and maps all the farms that utilize this river and a questionnaire group that interviews farmers at random intervals. I was doing GPS for the first three days and it was so painful. I walked at least 45km in three days, that’s a lot of miles. For those who have working google do the conversion and let me know how many. Then on the fourth day I was in charge of inputting data. It is such a pain, we don’t have a cord to connect the GPS to the computer so we have to input by hand every single coordinate into the computer. It takes forever, and at every GPS point we recorded different information which also needs to be inputted. The questionnaires go by faster because there are less numbers. While out GPSing I’ve fallen in two rivers, waded through a knee-deep swamp full of dung-water, gotten the worst farmers tan of my life and walked really far. Its kind of worth it and cool that we are doing this because this is the first time its ever been done. No one has mapped the water usage before in this region or have farmers been interviewed to this extent. We are also interviewing officials that control the water management which I can’t wait for. We had to write a proposal as a group, but the rest of our paper (over 30 pages, in the past has been 60 pages on average) will be written as individuals. Our proposal is 9 pages single spaced. This DR has consumed my life to the extent that I barely have time to blog. I also have such terrible internet that I have for the most part given up on writing blogs.  I guess I should continue describing Tsavo. That will be another time and place though. For now I will describe Tsavo as a great camping experience, but I was disappointed by the wildlife. Since it had recently rained a lot and the vegetation as super dense we barely saw anything. No man-eating lions, no rhinos in the rhino sanctuary, not even snakes. I did kill a scorpion ready to strike by the fire. Oh and my flashlight and headlamp are both broken and the flashlight died while walking to the bathroom the first night. Austin had a light that we shared, but it is a lot harder to do things without a light. I think I am cursed with flashlights. The light I was borrowing from him is now broken, we thought it was just dead batteries but even with brand new ones it won’t work. Then back at camp I borrowed Christina’s extra flashlight and now that won’t work…. WHAT IS WRONG WITH ME?? I’ve been using my cellphone’s flashlight and I can only hope that doesn’t get broken either.

Yesterday was Easter, and we also had a non-program day. Will organized a 5k for the Aids clinic that we visited a couple weeks ago and we raised a couple hundred dollars for it just from student donations. Sarah raised money by doing chores and errands for people for money. She raised over $150 that way. So impressive. We did the race around the camp. Our camp has a mile perimeter that includes a running trail, so we raced along that. I am terrible at running and finished around 34min., but the fastest person finished in 23:19. Afterwards we had an awards ceremony and the two people that raised the most money got Nutella as a reward (all the way from Nairobi) and the fastest people got their choice of fruit that Will was given while interviewing farmers. Then we all showered and changed into church attire and most of us attended a church service hosted by one of our guides. My group has this guide that leads us around while doing GPS, his name is Pastor Peter and he is this short, very round man with a metal wire glasses that look very tight on his shaved head. He walks SO FAST!! Its incredible, everyone who knows me knows I walk fast, he walks ten times faster than me. It was painful to keep up with him. But he invited us to his church for Easter in Kimana so we all wanted to go. We showed up with 26 white people and completely filled the church. He and another pastor led the service. It was really intense, they were super emotional, but the singing and dancing was so much fun. They get so into praising the lord that they are all dancing with all of their heart. It was really fun. After church we returned back to camp for lunch. While everyone else was eating Christina, Sarah and me hid easter eggs. Christina had filled 70 plastic eggs with candy from town the night before and she recruited me to help her. We hid them ALL over camp and then at 1pm we released everyone to go look for them. It was hilarious, people were running and fighting over eggs and looked really comical searching. Only 60 eggs were found, so ten are still out there. LOL After the egg-hunt some people went into town to the bar and the rest of us stayed and did beading with some Maasai women. They are called Mamas and they taught us how to make beaded jewelry, SO COOL! I made an anklet, a bracelet and two rings. I will probably make this my new hobby since it is so much fun and really easy. We were beading straight till dinner. Dinner was so good, Christina and Sarah had baked red-velvet cake for Easter with yummy frosting. And Molly had made no-bake cookies which are made of melted butter, sugar and milk, then mixed with cocoa powder, oats and peanut butter. I had lots of sugar yesterday; I even had a sugar crash from it because I haven’t had candy, cake, soda, and lots of chocolate all in one day in MONTHS. Then I watched homeward bound, so cute, with my friends and went to bed. Overall a good day. Today will be dedicated to DR work. AHHH. So if you don’t really hear from me in the next two weeks it’s because all my time is being dedicated to writing a 30-60 page paper. 

Read my other post right before this (posted the same day)! Wish me luck on my DR. 

I'm home in three weeks!

-Julie

No Man-eating Lions for me


4-13-2011

Tsavo West National Park

The day begun really early, and as M.O.D (modafunsi of the day or student of the day), I was in charge of wrangling up all the students to load up the cars, eat breakfast and help prepare to leave camp. Once in the jeeps we headed towards Tsavo. Normally only a 2.5-3 hour drive we made several stops along the way for travelling lectures. My car was Erica, Courtney, Mikayla, Greg, Nicky, Jess, and Alice with Daniel driving us and mama J (a cook) in the front seat. The first stop was a hill with a beautiful view over Kuku group ranch near a secondary school. Shem, our Wildlife Management teacher lectured us for an hour. Shem is my favorite teacher, although I’ve heard he is a very hard grader, and he has a very dry sense of humor. He looks like Bill Cosby… and when he wears a sweater it is unreal how canny the resemblance is. Elliot has this plan of bringing Shem to D.C., going to Ben’s Chili Bowl and trying to pass him off as Cosby so we get a free meal. Shem already agreed to the plan LOL.

After the lecture we got back in the jeeps and headed towards the national park. 30 minutes away from the hill we stopped to pick up our armed guards. The government requires that every tourist/white person travelling to and in the park must have an armed guard per car. This requirement is a result of lots of armed raids against tourist cars and to protect tourists from wildlife in the park. At the site to pick them up we were sitting in the jeep waiting, minding our own business and we were bombarded by people selling carvings, beaded jewelry, knives and so much more. They come up to you in the car, and god forbid your window is open because then they actually stick the object and their arms through your windows and grab you or force you to hold onto the item, and harass you. They are yelling prices and just trying to get your attention and if you show them the slightest interest, even if it is just looking at them they won’t go away until your car drives away. I had no intention of buying anything, but then I saw this beautiful carving of a hippo and I just had to have it. I bargained it down from 8,000 KSH to 1,000 KSH= $12 and he handed it over. The hippo was so heavy that I dropped it on my lap which really hurt and my first thought was, how on earth will I get this home with me? I’ve decided I’m going to leave my school books here and that’ll equal the weight of the hippo. Then I saw a rhino and I also had to buy it. Normally the carvings look very cheap and not worth my time, but these two were something special. I made friends with the carver, his name is John, and Jess asked him to make her a lion for when we returned on Saturday. I also normally am strongly against buying carvings just because they illegally harvest wood from the forest and it is very unsustainable. For example ebony: Ebony trees take 80 years to grow and reach maturity and in times of stress, such as drought, it can take them 100 years. But it only takes one person five minutes to cut it down for their own purposes. Ebony is a beautiful black wood, but not worth knowing I just endorsed the destruction of a 100 years worth of growth. Ebony trees are also very important for their environments, so it’s devastating to the forests to lose these trees. Ebony has become so rare that they now make carvings out of other trees. My rhino is rosewood and he wouldn’t tell me what the hippo was made of but it’s very clearly painted black so I’m not worried about it being ebony.

I had perfect timing, because after I paid for the rhino we sped off towards the lava fields. Tsavo West National Park and Chyulu Hills are composed of many dormant volcanoes, with the most recent explosion 500 years ago. The last lava flow is still very visible and it covers the whole landscape with hardened black basalt. We were driving surrounded by bushes and trees and dust under the hot sun when we rounded a corner and as far as we could see there were black lava fields. We stopped for 15 minutes and walked all over the dried lava, it was unreal. The rock is very hollow, but has razor sharp edges. Daniel, our Maasai program assistant who drives and helps organize our events, compared it to the sharp edge of a Machete. Of course I was stupidly wearing flip flops that day so I had to be super careful walking over the dried lava. I took pictures, but of course it can’t compare to seeing it in reality. I took an Archaeology of Pompeii class where we learned how the city was covered in ash and lava… It was so easy to see this lava and picture it covering an entire city. It was creepy too knowing the volcanoes are only dormant and could go off at any time. We got back in the jeeps and stood up for a game drive. That is why I was wearing flip flops, because when we do a game drive we lift off the hatches of the roof and stand on the seats, and we have to be barefoot so we don’t ruin the seats. We saw these adorable animals jumping and climbing all over the sharp rocks, klip springers, they are little antelopes that are really agile and their heads are so cute and look like baby foxes. After struggling to climb over the lava myself it was so cool to see these springers just hop and run so easily across it.

At this point we were almost entering the park and we all got really excited. We couldn’t wait to see the maneless, man-eating lions and rhinos in the rhino sanctuary. We all stood up out of the hatches with our binoculars and cameras at the ready. I kind of assumed before getting here that I would never use my binoculars… little did I know how useful they would be. The only thing I can think to compare it to in order to properly explain the difference it makes would be wearing glasses. When I don’t wear glasses everything far away is really blurry and I can usually only see outlines, but when I put glasses on every detail is sharp and clear. This is the same with binoculars, you’re probably thinking DUH, but when you are looking at an animal like a cheetah that is really far away and your camera can’t focus on it and you’ve lost all hope of seeing it, having binoculars is a life-saver. Being able to see the cheetah’s tear-drop face is SO COOL or every detail of a hippo’s mouth when it yawns, indescribable; especially now that I can successfully identify sex, age and species of most large mammals in Tanzania and Kenya.

Immediately after we entered the park, around 11am, we reached the Mzima Springs. Remember the hippo video I watched before leaving where I saw hippo infanticide? Well these springs are where those hippos live. Most of the water I’ve seen in Africa is dirty, not clear, and looks really gross, but these springs are completely pure. They come from Chyulu Hills, a huge water catchment, and it is pumped so fast (totally naturally) into the spring that the water is purified by the pressure. It enters the springs by a small hole in the ground on one side and on the other side it exits the spring and goes underground through another small hole. Very cool! The springs are home to hippos and crocodiles. So when we got there we expected to see hundreds of hippos, little did we know that the severe drought of 2009 wiped out almost the entire population and only 5-10 remain. We ate lunch surrounded by begging vervet monkeys, which can be really aggressive although they look super innocent (one jumped through the hatch into a jeep where Elliot was sitting and we had to scream at it to get out). After lunch we had to walk as a group down to the springs where they have this lovely stone trail from one of the springs to the other end with funny signs on trees. One sign said “please do not engrave your initials on my trunk”. It was really nice to hear the sound of rushing water, and to see water that was actually clear, but we didn’t see a lot of animals. Farther down the trail we stopped at what looked like a small hut resting on the water, turns out it has an underwater looking point where you can see everything that is in the water. The water is so pure that you can see quite far, I imagine when the springs have lots of hippos this spot must be really cool. All I saw were fish… But upon exiting we looked across the spring to the other bank and saw the fattest crocodile ever. It looked like it had just eaten a zebra, it was that fat. That was awesome. Finally at the very end of the trail on the other side of the springs we saw hippos really far away so basically all we saw were their ears and nostrils. What I really liked, and I usually see at every tourist stop, is the skulls of different animals. At the springs they had hippo skulls which are huge and as big as half my body.

Our game drive began again and we headed towards our campsite in the park. Unfortunately we didn’t see any animals, a huge disappointment after our Serengeti expedition, but the landscape was beautiful. Since we are in the wet season, and it has been raining despite the drought, all the animals have dispersed outside the park because resources are more abundant. While the lack of animals sucks, the landscape was really gorgeous. Everything was green and there is just more vegetation than in Serengeti. It’s also harder to see the animals because it’s mostly very dense bush on either side of the road. The road itself was cool. It kept changing colors from black dirt, to grayish dirt to bright red dirt. In the park where we did game drives the road was a bright red color, which meant that after every game drive we all got out of the jeeps covered in red dust and completely filthy. We reached the campsite after a very uneventful but beautiful drive and set up the tents. Of course my tent was right on top of an ant hill so every time we left anything outside our tent it was immediately swarmed by ants. At least they weren’t safari ants; those were near the bathrooms and one bit Austin’s big toe because he got too close. After we put up the tents we got back in the jeeps and went to the top of a hill and watched the sun set over Chyulu Hills, so gorgeous. In the car while waiting for the sun to set my car played riddle and logic games. I think being in Africa has taught me so many games. I need to write them all down before I forget them. 


Will tell more later,


-Julie 

Saturday, April 9, 2011

Kilimanjaro Bush Camp


4/4/2011

UPDATE: I just got back from Tsavo and was unable to post this before my camping trip because I didn't have internet. If you emailed, facebooked or sent any technological communication to me I was unable to open it or even respond. Please stop telling me to watch youtube videos, etc... because I rarely have access to internet and then sporadically to certain websites. I'll have a Tsavo blog soon!

This past week has been a whirlwind of activities. We have had a full week of classes, papers due, travelling lectures, community service and volleyball tournaments before our Directed Research Projects begin. We are leaving tomorrow for Tsavo West National Park where we will be camping for a week, similar to Serengeti I will have no technology for a week and again won’t be showering. Tsavo means Place of Slaughter because the Maasai killed so many Kamba back in the day. It is well-known for having man-eating lions and male lions without manes. And we will be camping in the middle of the park. Molly, our Student Affairs Manager now that we are in Kenya, says that every year animals come through the camp while we are sleeping and one time a pride of lions was hunting a group of girls walking to the bathrooms but a car driving nearby scared them away. Terrifying! But as long as I stick with the askari and armed guards I’ll be safe.

Pause: We are in the middle of watching a video about the hippos in the springs of Tsavo and it was super cute showing us the baby and its mother swimming around. The baby is so small in comparison to the mom and it was really cool. Then it began to discuss the male hippos and how aggressive they are and how they practice infanticide (killing of the babies). So when the mother is introducing the baby hippo to the dominant male who is also the father the male KILLS the baby. They showed the whole horrible chase scene and how he used his massive jaws to clamp down on the baby and you could hear the screaming and then after it died the mother comes up and nudges it to try and wake it up. Then she tries to lift the baby to the surface to breathe because she can’t believe it is dead. I’m so horrified and traumatized.  That was literally the worst thing I’ve ever seen and I hope I never see it again.

I guess I should describe where I’m living. I have moved to Kilimanjaro Bush Camp, in Kimana, Kenya, the other SFS site where I will be doing my directed research for the next month. From my banda I have a view of Kilimanjaro every day and it is literally the most beautiful thing I have ever seen. When you see the sun rise and set over the mountain it just makes you want to cry it is so stunning. The bandas have these high pointed thatched roofs that look stereotypically African and every banda has a view of Kilimanjaro. When we shower, communal showers, you can see over the door a cool view of the mountain. Well if you are taller than 5’4” you can, unfortunately I am shorter than that but if I hop I can see it. LOL The camp is much larger than Moyo and feels much more like a research center. There is a mile long track only the perimeter that my friend Jess and I run every morning. At least we were until the past couple of days where we have had to leave really early every day for lectures and transects. There is a volleyball court, soccer field and a forest in the camp. It is beautiful here and since it has been raining everything is awesome and green. We are surrounded by wildlife too. There is a troop of baboons that live behind my banda, we have vervet monkeys, bush babies (which are the cutest little animals EVER and have the largest eyes), friendly local dogs, and elephants sometimes break through the fence and browse on our trees. But we haven’t had to deal with that yet. There are bad things here too, rats in my banda, black mambas (one the most poisonous snakes), red spitting cobras and very poisonous scorpions. I’ve so far only seen two black mambas, both after they had been killed and I killed a scorpion in the bathroom yesterday. Overall this camp is amazing, the library is huge and the food is much better (although still the same) and I really like the chumba (classroom/cafeteria). A huge issue is how bad the internet is. We only have power from 6:30pm to 11pm from the generator. In the day it is solar, very unreliable. And our internet is a satellite dish that sucks. Like right now, I can open up google but can’t open facebook, my emails, or any school websites. It makes it really hard to communicate or apply for jobs.

Two days ago we went to Amboseli National Park, famous for its thousands of elephants, but we only saw a group of ten elephants, two hippos and a cheetah the whole day. After Serengeti it was very boring and couldn’t compare. All the animals leave the park after it rains and it had rained for the past three days so no wonder it was boring. There is a lodge in the middle of the park that has been abandoned for the past ten years and it is very creepy looking. There are two really nice lodges immediately nearby that look so bizarre next to these abandoned rundown buildings overrun by monkeys. We hung out at the Oldupai lodge for an hour after our lecture in the park and it was really nice.

Last week we went to this gorge and hiked down to a beautiful waterfall that is only flowing after heavy rainfall and we are in the wet season (but still in a drought). The hike looked very much like America and we all forgot we were in Africa because there were corn fields and trees that looked very similar to East Coast trees. One side of the river was Tanzania and the other side was Kenya. So we were hopping back and forth joking about being in different countries. Afterwards we went to Loitoktok to this AIDS support clinic that does free testing and is a support group for people with AIDS. We had these women from the clinic talk to us about how they found out they were positive, what their families did to them, how their lives have changed and what they are doing now. These women were so inspiring and so strong. We all bought all of their jewelry and souvenirs they sell at the clinic to raise money for medications and testing. The stuff I got was so cool and unique and cheap, I felt bad so I gave them more money than they asked for because the work was really good quality.

I need to pack for Tsavo because we leave really early. I will update you again after my weeklong camping trip. Cross my fingers I come back in one piece! Hehe

The funny thing is I probably won’t be able to post this until after Tsavo because I have no internet and have had none this whole day.

Baadye,
Julie

Thursday, March 24, 2011

Last Day in Tanzania


3/23/11

I am currently sitting on my bottom bunk in Simba A banda surrounded by suitcases, spending my last night in Tanzania with my roommates. We have spent the past two hours packing up everything and cleaning our banda. It feels so surreal that I’m moving to Kenya. Strangely this place has become my home and I don’t want to leave Tanzania. I’m nervous for Kenya, but really excited. Apparently the wildlife is much more abundant and close to the camp and it is much more isolated from everything. Our technology is even more limited than here in Tanzania. We will have only cold showers, communal bathrooms outside and all our electricity is from generators which only operate at certain hours and our internet is only in the classroom. We will be “unplugged” as Okello our center director puts it. We have all new staff and a new Student Affairs Manager, Molly. I really don’t want to leave all the amazing people I’ve bonded with here. Paulo, Charles, Yohanna, Aschum, Boora, Moses, Kioko, Erica, Safari, Yuri, Gerald, Arthur and many more staff members have made Tanzania unbelievably awesome! We had dinner and then had reflections and said goodbye to the majority of the staff, it was sad and no one wants to leave. We may get to meet the other group that we are switching with tomorrow as we cross the border. Maybe I should explain what is happening with my program. As part of SFS Kenya and Tanzania it means that we spend half the semester in Tanzania and then switch to Kenya for the second half. But while my group of 29 students has been in Tanzania, there have been 30 students in Kenya. So we are switching places with the other group. They don’t want to leave Kenya either. It will be a 6 ½ hour drive to the Kenya camp. About 4 hours to get to the border and then we have a lot of chill time at the border depending on how busy it is. That is when we may get to meet the other group. I don’t know how I feel about them. They are taking our places at Moyo Hill which is not alright. The Kenya camp is a lot more isolated and very different from Tanzania. Apparently elephants break through the fence sometimes, and there are lots of snakes and scorpions so we always have to have closed toed shoes; which is very different. The only wild animals at Moyo are dik diks and feral cats and dogs. I’ve never seen a snake or scorpion here either, but we do have a pet leopard tortoise that some staff rescued a year ago and now it wanders around the camp. Tomorrow should be a very interesting and long day. Our new camp will be located between Mombasa and Nairobi. 

I guess I should tell you all about Serengeti… Honestly it was the most amazing trip of my life. I camped for an entire week in the middle of Serengeti National Park in the Seronera area. We were camping during the wildebeest migration into the park for the wet season and there were so many! There is a total of 1.4 million wildebeest that migrate into the park and our campsite was right alongside their migration route. Every night I fell asleep listening to them grunting and hoping they weren’t going to stampede our campsite like how they did in Lion King. We were so centrally located that wild animals were everywhere. Hyenas wandered through our campsite and monkeys tried to steal our food, one vervet monkey succeeded in stealing Joshie’s chips off of his bag. The monkey stole the bag of chips, ripped it open and then proceeded to eat the chips directly out of the bag as if it were human. It was hilarious and horrible.

 Although we had wild animals wandering freely through our campsite, we had excellent security measures. Boora, our security guard (in Swahili askari), patrolled the camp every night, and one night he actually hit some hyenas with his long stick. He is a former military man from the Tanzanian army and he is hilarious. He does these animal impressions that are priceless. His impression of hyenas is hysterical. He will look at you and his eyes will get really big, then he will scoot towards you slowly and tilt his head and get a crazed look with his tongue out. Then he will start making cackling noises and reaching towards you as I can only assume a hyena would. Then right as he grabs your arm he makes a chomping noise and then says “Boora come” and the hyena cowers away and stops eating the delicious students. It is so funny and he does it all the time. In order to go to the bathroom at night we had to have Boora accompany us to the toilets. So there would be these huge groups of girls headed to the bathrooms and he would walk ahead with his huge flashlight and shine the light into the woods looking for eyes. As we walked we could hear lions roaring in the distance (their roar can travel as far as 15km so they were most likely nowhere near us), and there were buffalo or impala eating grass behind the bathrooms. We also had to be on the alert for elephants because apparently they like to knock the water towers down behind the stalls. (Even though there was water and no elephants knocking things over none of us showered) It wasn’t until the fourth day that some of us went swimming and showered at the lodge we had lunch at. The lodge was unreal. I’ve never seen such a beautiful hotel in my life. It’s the Seronera lodge and it costs $500 - $700 a night to stay there, which may not be as expensive as some hotels in the states that are considered top quality but in Africa that is very expensive. Everything about this place was beautiful and the pool was sublime, although cold. The showers felt so good after 4 days of grime and sweat. Sorry to gross you out! The all you can eat buffet, cost $20 and included showers and swimming, was delicious!! Totally worth all that money! I bought a beautiful handmade leather journal with recycled paper there that I fully intend on using the rest of the trip.

Every day in Serengeti was a game drive through the park. We had numerous field exercises where we observed elephants for 2 ½ hours or bird watched for 2 hours or had a guest lecture from the Chief Ecologist of the Serengeti or even had a lion lecture from an American grad student. We ate lunch one day on Pride rock, the actual rock that inspired the rock in the movie Lion King where baby Simba is displayed to the animal kingdom. I’ve never seen so many amazing and unique animals in my life. I saw a leopard every day for the first three days. I saw one cheetah and mating lions on the 4th day and on the last day as we did a game drive out of the park we saw 6 cheetahs total. Three at once, then ten minutes later a different two cheetahs and an hour later one cheetah hunting along the border of the park.

We went to a hippo pool, which was foul smelling and full of hippo feces. Pretty much all hippos do during the day is sleep in the pools, socialize and poo/pee. The worst part is that their pooing/peeing is not just for necessary waste disposal but for social interactions. There were baby hippos which were adorable. Oh and hippos are the loudest animals ever! They make so many grunting and farting noises when in water, but when on land they are completely silent as they graze at night. I saw crocodiles in the hippo pool too, but they were sunning themselves. I learned how to identify at least 20 different birds, out of 540 bird species in Serengeti. I saw a serval cat, many hyenas, buffalo, tons of zebras, wildebeest and three huge herds of elephants.

When we were doing our field exercise to observe elephants and focus on one individual elephant’s behavior for 2 ½ hours, we saw something really interesting. My jeep of all girls (the boys decided to have a man car that day on St. Patrick’s day), had been observing a family herd of 10-15 elephants with lots of adorable little babies less than a year old when the adult females started freaking out. They were in the middle of crossing a very steep dried up river bed when the adults started trumpeting and their ears were lifted as if listening to something and they started rushing the babies out of this steep ditch. The matriarch elephant pushed an adult female out of the way by putting her tusks on her back and pushing her. Then once they were out of the ditch the elephants rushed to circle the babies and the matriarch stood off in the distance with her ears listening and trumpeting into the distance. It was an amazing sight! The babies were so surrounded that I couldn’t even see them! I would love to know what scared these elephants, they have excellent sense of smell and hearing but they can’t see very well. I didn’t see anything extraordinary except for five minutes before their freak out two male Topi (large antelope with ugly coloring) came bolting across the road in terror, but when that happened the elephants didn’t even freak out. I guess I will never know but it was an experience I’ll never forget. I took a video of the tail end of the freak out but I don’t believe that will post with my internet! Remind me someone when I get home to show you!

That’s more than enough for now. I have many more stories to share but seeing as I have a long day tomorrow with a very early start I need to go to bed! I posted a few photos on facebook that most of you have already seen I’m sure but if not check them out! There are three of lions, elephants and a hippo.

I hope I have strong enough internet to blog in Kenya! UPDATE: I am safely arrived in Kenya and the internet is strong enough at certain times to blog and email and facebook. But we only have electricity (generator) form 6:30 pm till 11pm and during the day we use solar power which is quickly drained. I love it here but it is completely different!

Hakuna Matata,
Julie

Sunday, March 13, 2011

Battle of Wills


3-13-11

(PHOTOS at the end)

This may disturb some but a slaughter of crickets has just taken place in my banda. They are so loud and always chirp right as you are trying to sleep. This morning after class (where we watched a movie about Serengeti) Erica pulled her bag out from under the bunk beds and a horde of crickets emerged. Erica ran screaming out of the room and Courtney and I grabbed hiking shoes and whacked away. The gore was horrifying and the only things left of the crickets are their smashed remains. I literally have a war wound, a scratch on my finger that looks all bloody. I have never been so grossed out and as we whacked with the shoes Courtney and I screamed a LOT. I’m sorry if this offends some people, but it was a necessary war. We’ve allowed two daddy long legs (or as Austin says a woodsman spider) to reside in our banda, one next to the front door and another in the corner of the shower and we’ve named them both Henry. We also have an ENORMOUS unidentifiable spider in a hole in our bathroom that Erica named Eragog (misspelled) from Harry Potter. Living in Africa is a frequent battle with the insects. Thank goodness for bug spray!

I leave for Serengeti tomorrow for five days. I will be unreachable with no technology. And the showers there are normally broken so I may not be able to shower either. The showers always break because the elephants think its fun to tip the water tanks over and off their perch above the bathrooms. LOL I wanted to post this blog since I’ll be unavailable for a week. Apparently we will be woken up by lions roaring and elephants grazing near our camping ground. I’m so excited!! I have to go help pack the rhino truck with our water and food. Later today we have to pack for the trip, and I have a paper due tomorrow morning. Oh and we leave at 6:30am. EARLY!!! Before we reach Serengeti we are going to the Olduvai Gorge where the first human was found! LOL so cool!!

Yesterday was our day off and Jess, Christina, Liz and I all went to Mtu Wa Mbu to paint. We went to this tourist souvenir shop and in the back where they do all their painting they will show you how to do it and let you paint. Of course it costs money but it was a blast. We learned how to put the canvas on the wooden frame and then using their traditionally painting knives and acrylic we painted whatever we wanted. Afterwards we walked through the town and ate some cool local food (don’t worry all of it was boiled and cooked).

My painting of jumping Maasai


PROM: our 80’s themed prom took place last night and it was a blast! LOL we all dressed up as crazily as we could! A couple days ago I bought bright pink skinny jeans at the market for 5,000 shillings (basically $3) and I wore a leopard print dress I have but tucked in with my jeans belted so I looked really 80’s or at least early 90’s. Everyone had bought clothes from the market, and everything is so 80’s there, that we all looked ridiculous. All the girls borrowed makeup from the select few who actually brought it. Although none of us have makeup remover so today the remnants are still there LOL. Courtney and Will were voted prom queen and king and they were so cute. They had fake crowns and did a slow dance. Erica and Boora (a security guard or askari) did the worm. Everyone was there and it was so much fun. Our teacher Kioko was dancing even though he told us he wasn’t going to come. I had a blast and even though it was really similar to middle school dances it was better because we are all so comfortable with each other. After Serengeti we will be even more comfortable with each other. Five days with no showering, in tents of 6 people and no alone time. I can’t wait!! We have to put our bags in the Rhino truck or lorry tomorrow morning at 5:30am. AHHHH.

Christina and I before prom (she was my date)


I’ll keep a journal while in Serengeti so that I can blog about my trip. I’ll miss talking to everyone! Oh and its really weird they don’t do time change here so instead of being 11 hours ahead of home I’m now 10. I thought that was cool!
Two Maasai warriors and a child herding cattle with the first part of the crater in the background


As much of Ngorongoro Crater as would fit in my camera lens


Two male lions at Ngorongoro Crater
Austin on our grass transect near Lake Manyara found a whole skeleton, this is just a part of a spine of some animal probably a cow or buffalo



The moon at sunset from Moyo Hill Camp

Peace,

Julie

Wednesday, March 9, 2011

Food is where the home is

3-9-2011

My life has been so busy and that is why I haven’t blogged, sorry! I also felt bad that my last blog post was so long that everyone deserved a break! I have today to study, then Wildlife Ecology final tomorrow, then on Friday I have Wildlife Management and Environmental Policy finals. Saturday is our day off then we pack on the 13th for Serengeti. And we are going to one of Erica’s friend’s high school graduation at Shalom Orphanage where he is throwing a fundraiser for the orphans. His name is Innocent and he is so cool. He is an artist that designs shirts and cool shoes. He has been volunteering at the orphanage for the past year and loves working with kids. On the 14th we leave for Serengeti and return the 19th. I will have no internet or means of communication during those five days, so no one worry if you don’t hear from me!!

For lunch we are going to this Art Gallery that has these beautiful paintings and statues for tourists (really expensive but actually unique). It also has amazing food and real ice cream! I’m splitting a pizza with Christina and strawberry ice cream. What I’m homesick the most for is real food. I want sushi and seafood a LOT for some reason, considering I really don’t eat that all the time at home. I want to go to an Italian restaurant and eat pasta and breadsticks. What I want the MOST is to go to a movie theatre, see a movie with large buttery popcorn, a huge soda and candy!! I don’t actually miss soda because our duka sells bottled sodas that are cold. So I’ve had coke and fanta, hehe. I miss chocolate a LOT, but they sell Bounty (European version of Mounds) that has chocolate and coconut so I’m happy.  I am so hungry all the time for real food. I’m well fed and I should stop complaining but I WANT to be able to eat whatever I want whenever I want. I miss that freedom. 

If I see ugali one more time I’m going to start a food fight. Ugali is this ground maize that’s white and thick and has NO flavor. Locals LOVE it! When I was at my homestay we had ugali and no silverware so we had to eat like the locals. Basically you use the ugali to pick up other food and eat it with your fingers. It is good every once in a while, but every day!!?????!!!! I’m going to hurl it at Arthur the head cook next time I see him. For Joshie’s birthday a bunch of the girls cooked a traditional southern meal with fried chicken, mashed potatoes, potato salad and sweet iced tea. It was as close to the real thing as we will get here, but it still tasted different, and it was delicious. The staff refused to eat most of it and pretty much only ate the ugali and fried chicken which they thought was good. We teased them for not trying American food when we eat their food all the time. When they saw the cake with frosting they ran away LOL I’m excited for Courtney’s birthday on the 25th, we are going to make Italian food and it’ll be our first real day in Kenya. Hehe or at least we’ll try, we don’t know how the kitchen stuff works there and it will never taste authentic.

Erica taught the staff how to make mac and cheese so that is awesome!! They don’t have cheese here. The staff thinks it’s the weirdest texture ever! We have to go to Arusha, a long drive away, to buy it and then by the time it gets here it’s pretty much all melted. But it’s delicious! They also put onions in EVERYTHING! I love their solutions to leftovers. When there are leftover pancakes from breakfast they cut it up into small pieces and put it in the spaghetti. It’s hilarious and doesn’t taste half bad either.

We all make breakfast every morning and alternate cook crews, who also have to do the dishes from the entire day at night. I’m cook crew tomorrow. We are called Iraqw after the local tribe. My cook crew is legit, we always finish breakfast ten to 20 minutes earlier than other crews and we finish dishes super fast too. Breakfast is the same thing EVERY DAY! We have toast, pancakes, scrambled eggs, oatmeal, sausage, potatoes and fruit every morning. Except NOTHING tastes the same as when we are in American. We make the toast by heavily buttering both sides of a slice of bread and then putting it on this pan to toast, most people burn it so it looks and tastes charred. The butter here I’m pretty sure is just lard and fat so it is really thick and heavy. The oatmeal is from a large packet and tastes really bland so my cook crew usually puts cinnamon and brown sugar in it to add some good flavor. The fruit is fresh every day and is always delicious, although I found a bug in the Mango the other day, icky!! To make scrambled eggs we have to crack three dozen eggs so there is enough for all the students and staff. It could be more than that, it’s a LOT of eggs regardless and takes forever. Then we put in pepper, onions, maybe even tomato and mix it all together. Then we put it on this large metal bowl on the stove and stir it until it is hard enough to eat. The pancakes are so thin they are more like crepes, and on our day off we are going to make crepes with chocolate syrup and fruit! The potatoes we peel, but the staff cooks fry those in oil. And the cooks also do the sausage. We get to chop the fruit which is fun. I now know how to cut a mango, pineapple, water melon and bananas.

As you can see I am obsessed with food. Right now I can honestly say that is what I miss the most. Sorry Patrick and family, just kidding! LOL I have not studied at all, I need to do that now before I go to lunch!

Oh, apparently I slept walk last night. I sat up in bed and was mumbling about Timbuktwo and being tired while I poked my toes. A little while later I was walking around the banda talking to myself. Erica, my banda mate, officially thinks I’m an alien; aliens are her worst fear. Courtney and her both were asking me what I was doing and why I was walking around until they realized I was sleep walking. I’m a little worried I’m going to sleep walk in Serengeti and get eaten by a lion. I told Erica, the SAM, and she said they’ll tie a bell on me LOL. I think she was kidding, I hope she was.

I am actually going to nap because my sleep walking adventures have made me exhausted. I can't wait for FOOD!!! I have two new blog posts, one posted before this, so read both!!

I probably won't blog again until after Serengeti! Miss everyone tons and tons!

-Julie 

Stung


3/4/2011

I HAVE NO FACEBOOK!! If you are trying to contact me on facebook send me an email instead!! SFS Headquarters blocked facebook, youtube and flicker because it kept crashing our internet. Although we still don’t have internet all the time so it was a little pointless! LOL I don’t really miss facebook, except for being able to talk to everyone, so please email me!!  

Right after lunch, while I was hanging out in the duka (the store at our field location) I got stung by an African wasp. Not kidding. I was standing there talking to Moses and some others when all of a sudden I felt a stab on the side of my right foot. I look down and see a bug, I assumed it was a Nairobi fly and freaked out and brushed it off of me. Nairobi flies are really bad because if you squish them they explode acid that can burn you really badly. I realized it was not a Nairobi fly when I saw a stinger in my foot, I don’t think I pulled it out because I brushed my foot again and the stinger came out. It was HUGE! My foot felt tender for the rest of the day and I was so shocked that I was stung! I didn’t even do anything to the freaking wasp; I was standing there minding my own business when it stung me! The next day I awoke to a slightly swollen foot which was very itchy. I restrained from itching it, but the swelling just got worse and worse. When we went on a field exercise to do grass transects next to Lake Manyara my foot was killing me. It hurt really badly to wear sneakers and socks, I had loosened the shoe as much as possible and it still made no improvement. Plus it was around 2pm under the hot sun so my feet were really hot and sweaty which I think aggravated it even more. By that night my foot looked unrecognizable. It was stung right above the arch of my foot, but the swelling extends on the top of my foot all the way to my toes, under the large toe, and above my ankle bone. It looks like I have a deformity or crippled foot. It doesn’t really hurt, but it itches really badly sometimes (I don’t itch it I promise) and feels super tender, plus it bothers my ankle to have it so swollen. I have been taking Benadryl, but it makes me really hyper so I was up really late last night as a result. It was worth it to have some of the swelling go down. Because of this stupid foot I am not going to do our non-program day activities. Almost everyone is going into Mtu Wa Mbu to do a bike ride tour to the lake, or learn how to paint and go shopping for really cool souvenirs. UPDATE (3/9/11): I went to the clinic two days ago where they gave me stronger anti-histamine and my foot is almost a 100% better today.

Besides my freak wasp sting, a lot has happened since Tarangire National Park. Yesterday we were driving through Mtu Wa Mbu after our grass transects and Erica pulled off the road and started driving on the sidewalk. She then explained that there is a baboon named Hominid that walks upright and can open doors and chase human women, who lives in the town. So we drove on the sidewalk following his troop but we couldn’t see him. Then she talked to a local, who was staring up at the trees, “where is hominid” and he said that Hominid was in the tree he was looking into. The locals call hominid Tuesday instead of hominid, I don’t know why. Then he explained how he had a slingshot to scare away Hominid and he would try and get hominid out of the tree for us. We spent ten minutes watching this man look for Hominid, but the baboon is as smart as a human and had disappeared. Erica says we will look for him another time. We got off the sidewalk and drove back to camp.

The other day we went to Ngorongoro Crater, the largest crater in the world and a national park. It was a volcano thousands of years ago that exploded and collapsed in on itself. Now it has so much wildlife and is very lush. I saw 9 lions, a black rhino, spotted and striped hyena, mating Koori Bustards, zebras, wildebeests, buffalo, antelope and gazelles, an elephant, and so much more. I’m bummed we didn’t see a leopard or cheetah even though they are known to be in the region. Nothing happened like in Tarangire! But it was a blast!! It is SO beautiful there! It rained while we were eating lunch which is a good thing because it kept us in the cars. Apparently the baboons and birds are so used to humans that they will take your food from your hands. Last year Erica got a bloody nose from a Kite bird snatching her PB&J. This year Joshie had an orange stolen by a baboon and Kim lost her sandwich to a Kite bird but was only scratched a little bit.

On one of our travelling lectures we stopped at a major agricultural site in Mtu Wa Mbu and interviewed the head farmer. After explaining to us that the rivers dried up after the canals were put in he then told us that the water was drying up because of climate change and not their intensive irrigation. He then proceeded to tell us that their water comes from the Nile and not upstream. The Nile not only is really far away, but it flows in the other direction!! We all just stared at him and then asked more questions. I’m probably only think that is crazy because I’m an environmentalist, but it is amazing the misconceptions locals have here. 

There are other misconceptions that are appalling. Mwamhanga, our environmental policy teacher, told us in class after I asked about population control not working with polygamy that polygamy stops people from cheating on each other and that they have no divorce here but it is rampant in America. When asked why only men can remarry after their wife dies and women can’t when their husband’s die he said that it is because if the women and men both remarried the family lines would get too complicated. Then he told us that men need to remain the dominant ones because if women and men were equal there would be mass civil unrest. His father had six wives and 50 children… There is a nearby primary school that was built by a man for his 167 children. There is another misconception that was really upsetting. Moses was asked what he thought about rape and he said it is the woman’s fault. She should call for help or fight him off. When asked if he would feel the same way about his daughter being raped he said that she should know better and that it probably won’t happen to his daughter. A secondary school we visited was purposefully built so that girls in the region have a shorter walking distance to school so that there are fewer pregnancies. These pregnancies are from being raped on the walk to school. I love Africa, but there are things about Tanzania that are so different from America that I can’t wrap my head around it.

More later!

-Julie