Wednesday, February 29, 2012

Wishing Cute Dogs Didn't Have Rabies

It’s been one and a half weeks at homestay. Things have been going really well. Every once in awhile I get frustrated by the miscommunication and I wish I could ask my family deeper questions about their lives but sometimes I can only scrape the surface. Also over the weekend it was a free weekend with our family and I did some data collecting for our midterms but also found myself yearning to speak to someone in English.

Some homestay highlights:
-          I really enjoy learning Swahili in my classes, I’ve always enjoyed learning languages and this may be the easiest one (very few rule exceptions)
-          When my mama told someone “Yeye si mzungu, jina lake Jennifer” or in other words “she isn’t just a white person, her name is Jenny”
-          Going on walks with my little brother Ema, and one of the local kids named mika, playing with bubbles and making random sounds
-          Making Tanzanian-flag colored bracelets with my sister Suzie and having her do my hair in cornrows (but it was tight and I took them out)
-          Watching very strange soap operas (on a TV) and laughing with my family
-          Trying to help cook but it’s different trying to things over the fire and over a gas tank (and then getting bumped to sweeping and cleaning the floor duty)
-          Trying to learn the name of foods and sometimes saying inappropriate words instead
-          Getting downtime at the center where we learn Swahili and playing soccer and Frisbee with other students, and finding some time to read
-seeing cute homestay puppies and wanting to pet them but avoiding them because they could have rabies

A few downsides:
-the bathroom
-the miscommunication with the family
-thinking I had appendicitis and trying to figure out who could take me to the hospital a country away because Tanzanian can’t do internal diagnosis (false alarm, I felt better after the day)
-somehow managing never to get enough sleep
- the roof leaking onto my things when it rains
-handwashing my clothes in the river when the spigot stopped producing water and having my mom take over because I still don’t do a good job

Although there may seem to be a lot of downsides, I would say overall the experience is so positive. We are finally interacting with Tanzanians regularly (I don’t count Safari) and I really feel like I’m being shown Tanzanian culture every moment. I’ve truly been analyzing why I’m here and putting things into perspective much more efficiently. We have midterms next week and I have lots to do. I am thinking I may even put clips of my papers on here if it helps explain how I am feeling effectively. I’m hoping for a great rest of my time at homestay, no more sickness and picking out great gifts to give my family upon my departure. Hope all is well with those who are reading this! 

Wednesday, February 22, 2012

The Death of Three Alarm Clocks

I'll start by saying that of the three alarm clocks purchased for this trip, none of them have survived. The one that I got in America before I left stopped working in the airport, the one I got during my Amsterdam layover broke within the first week and a half and the most recent alarm clock purchased in Arusha in Tanzania fell on the floor and shattered to a point I could not fix.

I would not mind so much if I didn't feel as though I had to wake up at 5:00a.m. with my homestay mother to manage the cows and clean. Nevertheless, I have decided to use the option that makes the most sense, and use my pay-as-you-go-phone as an alarm.

Today is my fourth day of homestay. It goes well. I have a homestay Mama, a 20 year old sister Jackline, a 15 year old sister Susan, and a 11 year old brother Emmanuel. There is another teenager that was living with us, her name was Aisha, but Aisha and Jackline left this morning for Nairobi. There are also a number of other children from the area that hang around and many other mamas and their babies that come around during the day.

One thing I was not expecting was that our house has electricity, although it turns on and off throughout the day, and during rainstorms (which happen frequently in Bangata, where we are staying). Although it is not very reliable, there is a TV and my first afternoon, I watched a lot of Tanzanian music videos. I have my own room, the others share the other two rooms. There is a bathroom hut, which has dirt floors and a hole, and when I looked to closely I noticed the walls were lined with moth-like flies. So I have stopped looking, and although it sounds bad, it really isn't the worse thing in the world.

As mentioned before, I get up early in the morning to try and help out the family with cleaning and do cow business. I tried milking the cow yesterday but I was quickly shooed out of the way for my failed attempt. We eat Tanzanian cuisine such as chapati and rice and beans and ugali (eaten with your hands) and I have not gone hungry yet. Although breakfast is just tea.

Jackline speaks a little English but rarely understand me when I speak. I do a lot of motioning with my hands. Although we have Swahili classes everyday, and my Swahili is improving, there is definitely still miscommunication. I've made friends with a few of the local kids because they love to play frisbee with my custom-made one from Illinois Wesleyan. My walk to school is about twenty minutes uphill and I get easily lost (no road signs), if my homestay brother can't walk with me, these other kids will help me get there.

Interestingly enough, this family has had SIT students before, they have a lot to teach me and I believe I can still teach them a few things about American culture or at least about myself. I feel as though I'm actually spending times with Tanzanians because on Safari we are surrounded by other American kids and our camp crew that speaks English.My family is warm and welcoming and I believe the next three weeks will go smoothly. I will try and update this the next time I get to Arusha!


Friday, February 17, 2012

A Cheetah, Hippos, and Bird Poop

We just spent the last week in Tarangire National Park and then Mto Wa Mbu which is in a tourist town. We stayed at the public campsite in Tarangire and we had visitors throughout the week. We broke up our half of the group into three teams there was a non-ruminants, ruminants and a bird group. This described the animals that we would be watching in the mornings. In the afternoons, we had presentations, reading to do and then around four we got to be tourists and go on game drives in Tarangire and then at Lake Manyara. We even got to swim in the pool at Tarangire Lodge.

Highlights:
-seeing a tortoise, then fitting a bunch of us into a tree an elephant had devoured a hole into, and then having it rain in Africa for us for the first time (and as we all started dancing in the rain and tour guides started to look at us like we were crazy wazungu (white people))
-seeing a cheetah in Tarangire a few feet away and hippos at Lake Manyara
-as always, watching the sunrise and sunset (but my group had to get up early to watch birds and were up an hour before the sunrise)
-studying birds and identifying over 100 different species with the help of an expert
-bargaining relatively successfully for some paintings and carvings as souveniers/ gifts
-swimming in the pool in Mto Wa Mbu and coming back and swimming at night after going to the ‘disco’
-getting my fortune read by a Maasai spiritual healer: who had over 25 wives and more than 100 children and grandchildren
Not so fun moments:
-getting attacked by tsetse flies
-birds pooping all over my rainfly in the second campsite and having no way to clean it

Pictures will be coming soon, I hope. Also, I hope I’m doing a good job giving my two cents about the trip. The journal I’m keeping is getting every tiny detail and I don’t want to overload the blog. So I hope that this explains the trip well since I don’t have access to electricity or internet very often.

Moving into my homestay for three weeks the day after tomorrow! Wish me luck.

A Place More Mountainous than Illinois

It has been awhile since I have blogged because there hasn’t been that much time to do it. I said that I would be reporting on Arusha, but only having had four full days in Arusha up until this point and I would like to have more information to share.

Briefly, I will say that of I thought I had trouble getting around at school or in Chicago, then I was mistaken. Arusha is more difficult because you are operating through a language barrier, keep an eye out for pick-pocketing, tell hagglers you don’t want to buy your things at the same time you are trying to figure out how to get to where you want to go. Then there are dala dalas, an assortment of taxis that are safe and not safe and bargaining which I still haven’t mastered.
We spent the second week of our time in Mazumbai Forest Reserve in the Usambara Mountains. It was beautiful up there, we camped out on the lawn of a Swiss Chalet, got to shower often, and we got to hike up the mountain and study trees for a few days which was unlike anything I’ve experienced before. Illinois does not have mountains like them, I was surprised by the incline, mildly taken over by the elevation but loved every minute of it.

Examples of assignments of Masumbai:
-greet the forest separately and be back when the sun is above your head (and the last day, say goodbye to the forest)
- study the forest stratification horizontally and vertically by measuring DBH, canopy cover, identifying tree types
-going into the villages to ask the locals about ethnobotany, agroeconomy, firewood, and gender relations
-read readings
-optional: Baba Jack boot camp

Other activities:
-Showering
-eating mangoes
-playing cards, mafia, and soccer
-playing celebrity and chatting
-studying Swahili and solving riddles
-going on walks
If I’m making it sound less exciting than it was, the area in incredible and so was the week. Furthermore, the area is being conserved very well with only a few people, regardless of the pressure from local villages. It was a great place to spend a week and I am even considering returning there for my independent study project.

Thursday, February 2, 2012

1.5 Degrees South of the Equator

Hello! Mambo! This is my first access to electricity and internet since I left for my trip. We just spent the last week camping in Ndarakwai, Tanzania, it is beautiful. I am currently in Arusha, which is the fourth largest city in the country, although it doesn't look anything like Chicago.

Shortly after arriving, our directors gave all of the girls kangas, they are a traditional Tanzanian piece of cloth that women use to cover up they are in town, we use them when we are around Tanzanians and it is also handy as a towel which never fit in my luggage. The boys got something different. The passage on mine says, "Jipe Moyo Utashinda" or "Take heart and you will succeed" which I hope comes true throughout my trip.

I would like to introduce two of our teachers:
Baba Jack: program director, retired dead head and very philosophical
Babu Liki: just like rafiki from the lion king, sounds like him and is equally as wise
And there are more I plan on introducing to you later

This past week as been:
-One week camping and very comfortable sleep
-3 meals a day and 3 tea times a day
-bird watching, hiking, looking at plants and tracking animals
- watching the sunset come up over Mt. Kilimanjaro and watching it set behind Mt. Meru.. it is incredible and I wish my camera did a better job capturing it
- meeting new people- all 27 I have found to be very friendly and I think we bring our own dynamic to the program
-trying to learn swahili and the culture

Some of the animals I've seen:
-giraffes
-elephants
-anteaters
-hyenas
-many birds
-spring hares
- wildebeest
-impalas
-water buffalo
-SO many zebras
- three types of monkeys
-and more that I must be forgetting and others I can't identify

Interesting Africa/Tanzania Facts:
-Tanzania has the highest and lowest points in all of Africa (highest: Mt Kili and lowest: the bottom of Lake Victoria)
-There are only two paved roads in Tanzania (and we haven't been driving on them)
-Africa has 8 out of the 10 most poisonous snakes (so be careful)
-zip your tent up at the top so that the scorpions and snakes and lizards don't get in (I've seen all of the above but I've kept them out of my tent)
- don't leave your shoes outside of your tent because monkeys will probably take them.. but they are also handy with zipper so it may not matter
-kilawakatiniwakatiwachai (everytime is tea time)
-There are only two things that the British Colonists got right 1. tea time and 2. land rovers (vehicles that won't tip over at 45 degree angles that we are usually standing in)
-you will always be dusty
- watch out for some of the trees because they have developed defense mechanisms that come in the form of giant thorns that will create festering wounds if you get them and try and pull them out

Anyway, it is obvious that I have already learned some things, some are facts and other things are harder to explain. Its hard to decide what to put in and what to leave out. Tanzania is beautiful, there is nothing like it... one week here is an eternity and I miss everyone but I know that I need to be here. I will keep you updated on Arusha.. which involves getting ripped off, driving in dala dalas (there is always room for one more) and trying to communicate with the locals.

Just know that I am happy and things are going well and I have a lot to tell you about! Talk to you soon!