Sunday, March 16, 2014

It is still raining in Moshi!



Baby Jonathan is growing!  Here with Babu
Week 4 in Moshi
Neither John nor I can believe that another week has passed by so quickly and we are finished with our fourth week here.  As usual, there has been nothing normal about the week. 

It started with a bang not a whimper.  The Archbishop of Uganda made a surprise visit to our church and reported that he had done his Clinical Pastoral Education Training at KCMC and was here for KCMC Days.  I leave readers to imagine my response to this visit, but let us just say that it really started off the week and John kept me from leaving church. 

The rain continues unabated.  With the rain we have experienced more power outs, and my seeming inability to plan when to have my computer charged and when to have to charge it.  Same with my phone.  Poor next-door neighbors on Friday morning as I traipsed to their house with dead computer and cell phone in hand to charge at their house. I apologize here in public for waking them all up! Inexplicably, they had power and we did not.  Running is an act of pure terror as so much mud has poured onto the streets, that the cars and we runners are having a hard time staying out of one another’s way.  Needless to say, the cars and lorries and boda boda’s (motorcycles) will always win this one, so we are spending as much time looking behind as in front of to stay safe.
the ever sticky window ledge (and my nasty feet)

I made one of those fateful decisions with a great idea gone bad this week.  I bought a mix of materials that were to make a nice polyurethane seal for our rotting wooden window ledge and somehow the mix simply won’t dry.  It looks good, but over 5 days out and it remains as sticky as it first did.  The problem of course is that we cannot put our curtains down or they will stick to the mess.  So now I am going to have to find some fundis who will come to sand it down and we will have to try to find something else that can seal the wood.  What a mess.  (probably should never allow me to speak about “woodworking” projects again).

Lake Chala from the Bar & Restaurant
The highlight of the week was our visit to Lake Chala.  I had never gone and this was to be a camping trip with our friends The Emmanuel’s both senior and junior.  Because of the awful break-in the seniors had the previous week, they decided they were just not comfortable leaving the house this early since the break-in and thus stayed behind.  They did however provide more than half of our supplies in proper fashion and we were really grateful for that.

candelabra trees from road

view of lake and bar from tent area

orphanage near the lake
Storms are coming in
We had a blast.  We were uncertain of the direction. Thank you Greg for getting us there.  Nearly as soon as we started taking equipment out, Nikoli dropped the watermelon and suddenly the baboons appeared almost as if we had called them to come for a shack.   

Baboon looking for food

Baboon waiting

Sneaky baboon
The manager immediately told us that these baboons would not go away as long as we had matunda (fruit) or Mkate (bread) out of the car.  He was right except that we were able to take it under the veranda where the big fireplace was and the baboons eventually left.  It rained right after we started setting up tents, of course.  
 
Girl guide Terrie figures out how to set up tent

We have a manager setting up our fab tent

 But the verandah was nice, we walked to the amazing overlook.  Serious beauty at the lake below, the bar and dining area were beautiful, and we could see that the luxury tents were fabulous.   
Friends enjoying their drinks and dinner
Back at our camp, we started charcoal and soon had pork, potatoes and onions going on the fire.  Delicious food, topped off with more serious birthday cake for John, wine, beer, gin.  Yuum.

working on the fire
We all slept incredibly well, had a little rain in the morning, but not so much that we couldn’t head down to the base of the lake and try to fish.  John caught a rock, we saw some little fish, Nikoli had to swim to the bottom of the rock to get the hook out for John, and that was about the excitement of the fishing expedition.  Any hopes that I had of a coffee bar down at the base were dashed as I saw that you even had a wooden platform (not a sandy beach) to stand on in order to be able to cast out for the fishing.  It was STEEP.

We needed sticks to get the fire going...we got a branch

finally we work our way towards breakfast
Greg and Nikoli
John enjoying the morning
We scrambled back up, managed to make bacon and eggs and delicious coffee for breakfast despite the lack of charcoal, and headed out for another walk on the rim of the lake.   
lake from the rim1

lake from rim2

lake from rim3

lake from rim4

This was absolutely breath-taking as you could see so far into Kenya and the Taita Hills on one side the the spectacular lake on the other. 

Hikers on the rim of Chala
weird spiny cactus

Taveta Kenya

Kenya
Our goal--and we made it
Amazing blue birch tree
With lots of elephant dung on our path, and beautiful trees, we carefully picked our way along until we reached a relatively high place and turned around so that we could help Nikoli make a date with a tree nursery guy in Moshi. The adventure on the way back was taking Rombo road, which was a much longer and more isolated choice.  Good to have the comparison.  So, now we have checked another Tanzanian beautiful spot off.  Lake Chala.  We saw no crocs, or elephants but lots of beauty.
We returned to Moshi to find that more rain had fallen, making the trajectory into the compound really hard. But nothing could have prepared us for the hash this Sunday.  Our friend Bob had set the hash out near the airport.  It was pretty exciting because we had never participated in one near there.  As we started our run, we had little spots of rain but it was boiling hot.  We were thrown off pretty quickly as the flour path kept turning and we kept having crosses to keep us slightly off key.  By the time we were returning to go up the hill, the rain had been started coming down. 
wet hashers
more wet
Masai boys hoping for food and standing in the rain
We all thought this was nice for about 10 minutes but we started getting cold and yet we kept seeing the rain sweeping across this plain near the airport.  We managed to have one beer before it seemed that the rain was settling in.  Thinking that we would just hop in our car and start for home was however insane as we had only drive a few feet before we realized that we had a full flat.

Uck, rain and a bad jack
A pastoral scene, or two guys trading misery
The rain was pouring down, the wind was blowing, and thunder loud.  John and John worked feverishly with a really bad jack, and finally got the spare on.  OMG, it was nearly flat.  We determined that the only chance we had was to drive to the nearest gas station to fill up the spare.  This of course assumes that we are not in Tanzania.  We drove to 5 different gas stations—not one had air for the tire.  The rain is still pouring down.  Finally a real hole in the wall in Boma N’gombe appears as we are limping home.  We see a big oxygen tank…Really!!!  We pull in and a wonderful crusty old man waves us over.  Without a word, with about 5 other men looking on in the pouring rain, he calmly fills our tire, looks at the one on the back, shakes his head, and we head off to Moshi.  The tire held, we got home, John and John filthy, muddy and cold, me just cold and soaked.  But thank heavens we got home.  The message we know is that you never ever leave your car.  Whew.  The week gone by.!


Sunday, March 9, 2014

Good Times & Tragedy

Third Week in Moshi


It was the third week in Moshi and though not without disturbing issues, generally it was good, and I am so grateful for my life here with John (most importantly) and friends nearby.  We had another big rain on Ash Wednesday so the yard is incredibly green, our chickens are happy, and flowers are blooming.  Very unusual for this time of year!  Hopefully the rains will continue for the farmers.  We don’t want to say to Chrissy and Julia, “eat your heart out” as I show the pictures of the avocados weighing down the tree…starting to fall, again quite early, the passion fruit ready for plucking and having Rose’s famous passion juice, the garden plowed and nearly ready for planting sweet corn, & the lime/lemon tree so full of fruit that we cannot drink either enough gin and tonics, eat enough guacamole, freshen and dress enough salad to keep up with them all. 
Avocados are nearly ripe

Some have started falling already!

Garden needs only manure

Lemon Tree

Passion fruit flowers


Passion fruit

New hiring in the MEPI offices gave us the opportunity to go to dinner at Mkulima, which is a highlight for me.  And this night was no different.  I realized that the world is really belonging to young people now as I looked around the table.  I told Ahaz that even he is a Babu now! In particular big thanks go to Able & Ndmongwa who dealt with orders and bills.  I just ate! 

John and his lovely women

some of the guys (and Guido's head)

Able hams it up

Ndmongwa and Freddie and Amani wow, the young people!

Now what is Able doing?

Eat your heart out Charles.  It was the best ever!

John, happy at Mkulima!
We said goodbye to Guido but not before he handed over a microscope to the Health Care Dispensary which is nearly spruced up and ready to go with paint, plants, rooftops, new washer dryer that soon patients will be flocking in I believe.  Of course as American products are, this one was a 110 volt, and needed a stabilizer and surge protector, and once again my friends at Cotya Umeme store had just what I needed.  It is so great to have people who will be patient and help out when you need them.

Guido and Puly and staff

Guido and Puly in the garden

opening the box with the microscope
And I had to make a quick run to a paint store, and needed advice so who did I turn to?  Well Cipa of course and who should be there but little Faradja with her favorite gift from her American sister, Lyriella, a puzzle.  Cipa tells me that she sleeps with the puzzle, takes it to school, and won't let it out of her hands.  Would that all our children would cherish things so much.

Faradja and her puzzle (put together over and over by her own hands
And that reminded me to return to post marathon quickly to highlight our car mechanic (fundi) Deo, who is standing with our friends Nikoli and Terrie Emmanuel!  Deo had to come to pick up the car yet again when we had only bright lights and were blinding everyone in the compound and on the roads at night, and told me that he had run part of the ½ marathon with John…. What fun.

Nikoli, Deo and Terrie
John’s birthday was quiet but nice.  Next week we will have more of a celebration at Lake Chala…hopefully.  An amazing thing happened on Saturday.  We went to our friend's Coy and Casey's house to see an artist exhibit.  What a great thing those guys are doing, helping aspiring artists to show their work!  And there was old Barney.  Now quite old.  But clearly he recognized us and greaeted us.  I nearly wept!

Thinking of you Russell and Kay-John and Barney

Barney loves to rub!
We found terrible news at Church this am.  Our dear friends’ Nic & Sylvie’s farm office was broken into by 10 thugs with all kinds of weapons.  They beat up the askaris terribly and made off with a gun.  This is terrifying for us all but mostly for Nic & Sylvie, Greg, Terrie and Nikoli who find sanctuary in this beautiful farm.  For all who read this blog please keep them in your thoughts and prayers and hope that the thugs will be brought to justice before they can do more harm.
Nic Sylvie Nikoli and Greg in happier days

Nic sports his own fabulous lettuce to William at "high" tea