Sunday, May 2, 2010

wrapping up

Today is the last day for many things..

Last day of DR
Last day of the entire group being together
Last fire pit
Last volleyball games

So about 15 people are leaving to National Park Site a day early tomorrow because their flights got changed.. but the other half of the group has to stay back and stay at Kilimanjaro Bush Camp for another night. When we leave KBC to head over to NPS, the other group is going to be leaving NPS to head to the airport. Such a strange system, but I guess it kind of makes sense..

Still can't believe it's been over 3 months since I've arrived in Africa!! I have no idea where the time has gone, I still clearly remember the day that I left for Africa-- I spent the day with my mom going around and buying last minute things for my trip, and I had chicken wings from that korean wing place as my last meal in America. I'm really excited to go back home, but at the same time I really don't ever want to leave! It'll be weird driving down the road and not seeing giraffes or zebras on the side of the road.. and not seeing the 30 other students that I've been living with for the past 3 and a half months. But still excited to leave SFS and have freedom in Africa for a few days! And also for our night in London!!

Yesterday was pretty our 'last dinner' because today we're having community presentations for our Directed Research projects that will last all day. He made us an amazing dinner, all of our favorites! He made tacos, burgers, veggie burgers, bbq chicken, anddd he set up a burner and made carne asada! And for dessert, he made us a great cake and even bought 3 cases of ice cream!! We've only had two opportunities to have ice cream here so it was a real treat.

Probably won't have time to update until I get home! Leaving for Moshi in 3 days, climbing in 5, back in America in 14!!!

Friday, April 30, 2010

6 days

only 6 days left with SFS. I can't believe how quickly the program went! It's pretty sad- I can remember the first day that we all met each other and how awkward everyone was.

but with 6 days left in the program, that means only 6 days till we head down to Moshi Town to start climbing Kilimanjaro!! So the plans to climb are finalizing-- sample of our schedule so far:


May 5th: leave Kilimanjaro Bush Camp and head to NPS, the site that we spent our first night in Africa- how appropriate.

May 6th: leave SFS, say goodbye to the non-climbers, and head into Nairobi to catch a 13 hour shuttle to Moshi Town, Tanzania.

May 7th: Rest day, gathering rental equipment, meeting the guides, and preparing for the climb!!

May 8th-May 14th: Conquering Kilimanjaro.

May 14th: Spend a night in Moshi, celebrate our victory.

May 15th: Leave for Nairobi, bright and early.

May 16th: Catch a morning flight to London! Spend a night in a real city for the first time in 4 months!!! ++ indian food.

May 17th: Wake up early for a flight back to Los Angeles!


I'm getting really anxious to come home, but I still have a lot in front of me before that happens.

So I haven't updated on what's been going on recently, so very briefly since I have to finish up my research paper:

We had a Christmas Celebration that was a hit. We had a secret santa gift exchange and everything! I"m definitely going to miss how everyone likes to participate in all of these spontaneous events.
For the gift exchange I had Sarah- since she loves elephants so much I got her a little elephant collage made out of banana leaves. I also made her one of those people paper chains but of elephants (yes I know how to make people paper chains- product of being bored and having nothing to do in Africa).

Hannah had me for secret santa and gave me a gift that was great because of its simplicity. Before dinner she had Molly come in and give me a flower arrangement that was very impressive and well arranged for the flowers that grow around camp (more like weeds). For the gift exchange she made me a puzzle box within a puzzle box, that was filled with pressed flowers that she picked up throughout our time in Kenya! Very creative and thoughtful gift!

Some other cool gifts that people got were handmade 'elementary science fair' volcanoes, hand stitched stuffed animals (a cool bird and a wildebeest), a personal letter from Lady Gaga, candy, and dishwashing services.


And right now, we're in the middle fo the Cook Crew Cook-Off 2010!!! Which is getting very intense.

So to fill you in, when we got to Africa we were put into groups of 6 groups of 5 and each group is named after a tribe found in Tanzania and Kenya. Everyday one of these cook crews has to wake up an hour before breakfast, and make the breakfast with the kitchen staff. And after dinner of the same day, they have to clean the pots, pans, and serving dishes used to prepare the meal.

A few people came up with the great idea of having a breakfast cook-off. Judging is based on 5 criteria: Quality, quantity (not too much or too little), creativity, presentation, and logistics (timeliness, dryness of plates, etc. ) Everyone votes on teh chalkboard, and the scores are averaged and totaled. So far the scores are:

Iraqw: 39.09
Sonjo: 38.80
Mang'ati: 45.55
Hazabe (MY CREW!!)
Maasai
Chagga


Tomorrow morning is our cook crew's turn!! I'm super excited, we've come up with a great idea. We're planning on a Harry Potter themed breakfast, hopefully no one here reads my blog so it'll be a surprise.

We're going to have a hat with the names of the different houses (Hufflepuff, Griffindor, Slytherin, and Ravenclaw). People will pick from the hat and sit at their respective table, which will hopefully be decorated to match the house. We're going to change up the food serving by putting family style dishes on each table, and when the food runs low there will be a magic wand at each table that people will wave along with a magic spell (our cue to go and refill their dishes). We're trying to incorporate some kind of house point system so it's more interactive, but haven't come up with an idea yet..

hopefully it'll be great and we'll win the cook-off!! or at elast get 100% for creativity, presentation, and logistics.


And about Directed Research-- today is the last day!!! Everyone's getting pretty tired of DR and are ready for it to finally be over! I'm finishing up some editing and I'll be done soon, hopefully.
My research topic is on the current roles of tourism in the Amboseli Ecosystem and the effectiveness in meeting the expectations of the local people. My findings are that the people aren't benefiting as much as they would like to, or should. And that there needs to be changes to dissolve the barriers that prevent the local community from participating in and benefiting from tourism (financial barriers, education/skills barriers, and accessibility to the market. and how financial leakages and the limited tourism market are issues that need to be addressed. It's pretty straight forward, and a lot less focused on innovation then I planned- but this is because we couldn't collect the data that we wanted. but whatver we'll be done in a few hours!!!


Sadly tomorrow is our last non-program day. We're heading over to Mada Lodge, the lodge that Sateesh and I went to to collect data for our research! I'm not sure if I'll get the buffet, but I'm for sure going swimming. That pool is too cool to pass up.

I'll hopefully post a few more posts before I head home, but don't know what the situation will be like for the next few days.

CAN'T WAIT FOR AMERICA!

Thursday, April 15, 2010

best NPD ever

After two and a half months we finally, finally, finally, FINALLY!!! SAW A CHEETAH!!

We've all been waiting to see a cheetah since our expedition in Serengeti, where we were told that we had the greatest chance of seeing one! The other group of students saw about 4 cheetahs, and even saw one hunt an impala down, but we finally got to see our own!!

We saw it at Amboseli National Park yesterday on our non-program day. We passed by another safari car that stopped us and told us where it was, very nice of them.

It was just hangin out in the shade of a little bush, getting up every once in a while to stalk a herd of impala a couple hundred yards away. It was amazing. I feel kind of bad though because I think we scared off its meal.. But by scaring the meal we got to watch the cheetah walk around a bit







Today was our 6 day of data collection for directed research. On Thursday we finally finished with our local community interviews!! It was interesting to hear the views of the locals on tourism based industries, but after 5 days of 12 interviews a day, it started to get reallll old. Today we went to lodges to interview tourists, drivers, and lodge managers. By far the best day of data collection so far.

Sateesh and I were assigned to go to Mada Lodge, right at the entrance to Amboseli NP. Right when we walked in a worker gave us warm towels to wipe away the dust and ice cold glasses of juice. The receptionist told us that the manager was currently in a meeting and directed us to the buffet by the pool to eat until he was done! the buffet was great and the pool was by far one of the coolest pools I've ever seen. It was a giant shallow pool with a raised deep pool in the middle of it, with bridges that lead into it. The dessert at the buffet included cream puffs and a real chocolate cake!

While we waited after we ate, we interviewed a few drivers but got no interviews from tourists (they were too busy relaxing to let us interview them..) There was also this big spiral staircase in the middle of the dining room that went to the top of the building. It gave us a beautiful view of Kilimanjaro and Amboseli park.

We then met with the lodge manager to ask about the lodges involvement with the local community. He said that all of their staff is local, and they occasionally buy local products from farmers when they run low on produce. Also, the owner of all of the Mada lodges in Kenya is an Indian family that has lived in Kenya for years. Pretty interesting.. Our interview with the manager was cut short when he had to return to his other meeting. So it was a pretty bad day data collecting wise, but a great day of relaxing!

Saturday, April 10, 2010

halloween in april

Before I talk about the great halloween night that we had 2 days ago, I'll put up some pictures from the Tsavo expedition...

laval flows that we drove through on our way to Tsavo West NP - view of chyulu hills in the background.


Mzima springs- saw some crocs here


Driving through the serene chyulu hills


hikinh up a cloudy hill in chuylu


The elephant that tried to charge our car!


So two nights ago, the wonderful social committee put together a festive halloween party, to celebrate finals being over, DR starting, and to just bring everyone's spirits back. The event was actually a brain child of Caroline and me; when we're bored we sit around and think of random themed days that we could have- in Tanzania we had Blue Day where we played depressing music at breakfast, put blu food coloring in all of the breakfast food, and made morbid/depressing place mats for everybody (it actually turned out to be a really sad day - we had an extra hour and a half of ecology class with the bitchy Dr. Wallis, and our amazing swahili teacher quit to start a new job in Dar es Salaam.)

Anyways, halloween started at dinner, where everyone was obligated to show up in a costume. I was so surprised at how everyone participated and how creative people managed to be with such limited costume resources! After dinner we had a costume parade down the middle of the chumba, and an awards ceremony to give out medals to the most creative, most africa appropriate, most awkward, sexiest, funniest, most ecologically destructive, cutest, smelliest, most magical, best cat walk, and a few others I can't recall.. Oh and the whole time we played the nightmare before christmas soundtrack.


Columbian drug load, pirate, and velma.


Everyone lining up for dinner in their awesome costumes.


Award winners!



Yesterday was our fist non-program day in weeks! it was amazing! we started the day late, at around 9:30, with a hike down to a beautiful gorge in the middle of nowhere. We drove for about 45 minutes to a random field of corn. We got out, hiked through the corn fields for about 30 minutes (corn stalks are a lot taller than I imagined ~10-15 feet) and descended a slippery hill into a tropical gorge filled with gigantic viney trees. At the bottom of the gorge was a waterfall and stream that separated the side that we hiked down and a giant rock cliff. The cliff was covered in huge loose roots that hung down all the way from the top of the cliff to the bottom of the gorge. We crossed the stream, with the help of Molly, and hung around on the roots for a while. Then we had a nice relaxed lunch by the waterfall and headed back up to the cars.













After we drove into Loitokotok town and stopped at an HIV clinic and then went into town to look around. I, along with a few others, skipped the clinic because I felt a little weird going in.. and just went straight to the town. It was nice to have the freedom to just walk around and cross streets without having to ask permission. We walked up and down almost every street looking through the different shops and market stalls. After about an hour we got back into the cars and went to a few curio shops with the whole group.

After some souvenir shopping at the curios we went to Club Kimana again for a few drinks!!

TODAY!! was our first day of data collection for our directed research! My group, environmental policy, went out to Entonet, a small town at the base of kilimanjaro, to interview the locals on the tourist industry and their economic background. We got some pretty interesting answers, and a lot more people were involved with the tourist industry than I thought. Being in the tourism industry here is a pretty big deal; it's a solid and stable source of income and it pays much more than agriculture or pastoralism.

One household that we went to was extremely friendly! they let us into their home, allowed us to eat our packed lunches in their living room, and even bought cokes for us! They turned out to be our translators family friend, so the exceptional hospitality wasn't that surprising. When we left they even gave us bracelets as a thank you for taking interest in their worries.

Now that DR has started things are going to get pretty busy.. I have data collection for the next week and then write up for the week and a half after that. During data collection we get to go to more local communities to interview farmers, lodges to interview tourists/lodge managers/tour guides, and we also get to have discussions with Group Ranch managers and government officials (Kenya Wildlife Service.)

so excited!! and after we finish with our research reports we get to present our findings to the community!

wooo

Sunday, April 4, 2010

easter sunday

Happy Easter!!

Easter in Kenya was surprisingly festive. For dinner we had tacos, a rare delicacy, and someone even decorated the tables with flowers and candles. And as we speak someone is whacking away at a pig pinata, in replacement of the easter ham, filled with candies and rehydration salts. Pretty fun easter!


Yesterday we got back from our 5 day expedition to Tsavo West National Park! It was a lot of fun, and really different from our expedition to Serengeti NP. One difference is that there were nearly no animal sightings. We did see a leopard eating a klipspringer, but other than that nothing very exciting. But the park itself was really beautiful. On our drive in we passed through a huge field of lava flows. It was pretty cool driving down a little road and being surrounded by black lava remains from hundreds of years ago.

We also got to go on a hike up the Chyulu hills, probably my favorite part of the expedition. It was a pretty short hike, but we had an amazing view. We first ascended a little hill, crossed a ridge, and then hiked up another connecting hill. All around us we were surrounded by green hills shrouded in clouds and covered in trees. At the top we had a lecture for environmental policy.

The last day of our expedition we went to a rhino sanctuary in the morning and then to the Serena Lodge again! weeee.
The rhino sanctuary would have been a lot better if we actually saw some rhinos.. the sanctuary was a 90km sqrd inclosure within Tsavo West. It only had about 60-70 rhinos, and we only drove through it for about an hour and a half, so it's not surprising that we didn't have a rhino sighting.

The Serena was a little disappointing, compared to the other lodges, but who am I to complain when I come to africa to study wildlife management/policy. The food was great, had pork steaks with mustard sauce, a turkey carving station (kinda unique), spicy veggie curry, lots of cakes, and a pasta bar. The pool was pretty small and didn't have a view like the other lodges did.. but the dining area had a landscape view of the park to make up for it.

We left early sunday morning, per usual, and got back to camp at around 12pm. We rested for the rest of the day, the first rest time we've had in what feels like weeks, and then went to bed early!

Tomorrow is my last final!! It's a combined test for all three classes, so it should be fairly easy and short. After the tests are over I just have a few papers to turn in and then we start our directed research!!!!! Finally! I've been waiting for this for a long time. I hope I get my first choice of Environmental Policy DR because it seems the most interesting and beneficial. If I get that DR topic, versus wildlife management or ecology, I get to interview locals, government officials, tourists, and lodge managers about the tourist industry and its implications on wildlife conservation. The other ones are based on habitat assessment and group ranch locations.. We'll see. We submit our top choices for DR tomorrow so I should know by Tuesday!

I realize I didn't post pictures for this post-- kind of tired and not up to it so I'll do it tomorrow maybe.

Thursday, March 25, 2010

KBC

long time no post..

I've arrived safely at Kilimanjaro Bush Camp in Kimana, Kenya! The long anticipated transition went smoothly and the Olympics against the Kenya group was a lot of fun!

My last few days in Tanzania were amazing. After finals ended, about a week and a half ago, we had about 3 days of free time fun time. The Sunday after our last final we went back to Watoto Care Orphanage and built the children a swing out of logs and rope. It was great and looked a lot cleaner than I expected.



The next day was another Serena Lodge day! It was comprised of buffet and swimming, also me breaking my 8 day streak of vegetarianism. Such a great day to become normal again!

Then on Tuesday, we got a goat from the market for the goat roast. He was tied to the satellite dish next to the kitchen, we named him Bucket after my future goat pet. Kind of morbid, I know.



At around 2pm we took him down to the fire pit to be slaughtered. I don't think I should post pictures of that, don't know who might freak out. While he was cooking a group got together to go down to Zebra Handcraft, a local curio shop with a bar! We all got a little silly and came back to camp for Bucket! He was pretty tasty.

The next morning we said our goodbyes to the Havennature staff :(, then left for Kenya. On our way we stopped in Arusha to get some milkshakes and to go to the grocery store. A REAL GROCERY STORE! I spent about $40 USD on 6 kit kats, 4 snickers, toothpaste, 2 boxes of cookies, apples, and a white chocolate bar.

A few hours later and we were at the Kilimanjaro Bush Camp!!! The other group was ready in the parking lot to greet us.

The next day was the Olympics! Here are some pictures of the games:





In the end we won more than Kenya, giving us the title as the Olympic champions!

Now about the KBC site. It is a lot bigger and better suited for our program. The library is larger, there are more bathroom facilities, the chef is an ex-Serena Lodge chef!!, the Bandas (huts) are roomy with 4 beds and 4 dressers, there is a field in the middle of the site for playing games and sports, and the running track gets a view of Kilimanjaro! There's actually a view of Kilimanjaro from pretty much anywhere in camp!







A few days after our arrival, we got the opportunity to do a Maasai home stay. I paried up with Sateesh and we both were paired with a Maasai warrior. We went to his Boma early in the morning and stayed until about 5pm. Even though it was only about 10 hours, it seemed like a longlonglong time.

We started by helping our Maasai herd his cows out to graze. We both got sticks and guided the cows out for about an hour, turned them around and brought them back. After, we came back and our Maasai's wife made us some hot tea with biscuits! After we cut down some spiky trees to help fortify the Boma. At around 12 we had a tasty lunch of Ugali and Cabbage! After lunch we rested and worked a little more on the Boma! It was an amazing experience and


Wednesday, March 17, 2010

Kenya!!

So today we crossed the border into Kenya! We woke up early to say our goodbyes to the staff at Havennature :( and got into the trucks and left.

We stopped in Arusha, Tanzania on the way to go to the grocery store (A REAL GROCERY STORE!!!) and to get milkshakes!!!! and sandwiches!!! It was all so so so delicious. At the store I bought: 6 kit kat, 4 snickers, 2 boxes of cookies, a can of pringles (salt n vinegar), nutella, apples, and toothpaste. After, I got a chocolate milkshake and a chicken, pesto, avacado, mozzarella sandwich!!

We drove a total of 8 ish hours and finally got to the camp! the other group of students greeted us at the entrance and welcomed us to our new home.

After a short welcome session, we got our tent assignments, moved in, and played some volleyball. Dinner was great! the chefs here are really good. We had chapati, chicken, guacamole, soup, mashed potatoes, kale, and real penne pasta!

The duka (snack shop) here is a lot better than the one at havennature. they have cold sodas, a huge stock of candy, t-shirts (kinda weird), and postcards! pretty convenient.

ANd tomorrow is the big day! The Tanzania (us) v Kenya (them) olympics start at 8am! Hopefully I'll kick some ass and win a gold medal for ultimate ninja!

I'll post more updates soon with pictures of the site and of my final days at Havennature. The mosquitos here are killing me so time to go to tuck my mosquito net in and go to bed!