Monday, March 31, 2014

Photos From Amboseli

I am still without a camera for a couple reasons. First of all, it's too expensive to fix my camera and I'm being stubborn. But second and most importantly, I have thoroughly enjoyed being without a camera. Instead of seeing something beautiful and watching through the viewfinder of a camera, I've been able to observe each and every moment with my own eyes. I think that this has allowed me to experience moments in a whole new way. Occasionally I miss being able to take my own photos, but someone wise once told me that "there are some moments you just can't capture." So far my time in Kenya, and Amboseli National Park especially, has been a series of unforgettable moments in which a camera does absolutely no justice.

However; enjoy these photos because I'm lucky to be with a group of some great photographers that have done a great job of representing our experiences here so far.

Sam, me and Alex

Lacy and me in the safari car

Grey crowned crane


herd of elephants walking towards Kilimanjaro


African fish eagle

Saddle-billed stork
Goliath heron 

Giraffe sighting outside of the National Park near our resort




View of Kilimanjaro from our resort


Ostrich




 Secretary Bird
Cody, Sean, Connor and me







 one handsome baboon
Our first sight of elephants in Amboseli was in the beginning of our game drive and 
there were about 50 total...amazing!


Thursday, March 27, 2014

Mambo Mombasa

Greetings from Mombasa! I am currently enjoying a week on the Kenyan coast in the outskirts of the coast's largest city. We will be in Mombasa from March 23-29, studying the culture and environment of the East African Coast. The coast has a large population of Muslims and the different historical factors have shaped the coastal society in many ways. We will be visiting the Kaya Rabai Ecotourism Project, Fort Jesus, Mombasa's old town, as well as several museums. This is kind of a working spring break (at least it's two weeks long if we have to do readings/discussions/group presentations while we are here). Experiential learning is really growing on me. It's pretty amazing to be fully immersed in the culture we are learning about day to day. After Mombasa we will return to Nairobi for two weeks of classes before departing on our independent studies (IDS). 

We spent March 17-23 in Amboseli National Park, staying at a beautiful "glamping" (glamour camping) resort. It was an outdoor resort with an amazing view of Mt. Kilimanjaro in the distance. We all stayed in permanent tented buildings, with a metal roof thatched with grass, and a canvas tent hanging underneath. We had 4-post beds and hot water. It was the complete opposite of roughing it. There was also a pool at the resort that we took full advantage of whenever we had free time. 

One day we visited farmers in the countryside and with the help of translators we interviewed several farmers, asking them various questions about different challenges they face on their farms such as land shortage, water access, and wildlife damage to their crops. In the afternoon we visited a cultural manyatta, which is a group of Maasai traditional-style homes where tourists can visit to learn about their culture and traditions. The cultural manyatta is kind of strange, since it is a false representation of modern Maasai life and is fabricated to appeal to foreigners. However touristy this was, we were also able to interview the Maasai people living there to ask them about how their community benefits from tourism and the challenges that exist with distributing and spending the profits among other questions. 

The next day we visited Amboseli National Park, spending the entire day on a game drive in. We traveled in Safari cars with open tops that we could stand and look out of to admire the wildlife. While I made a long list of the many different species of animals we saw, some of the most memorable were the elephant, cheetah, hippo, Cape buffalo, wildebeest, Goliath heron, and saddle-billed heron. I'm currently posting from my iPhone so I don't have many good shots but I will post more photos when I'm back to a computer. 

On Thursday afternoon we embarked on our 24-hour stay with a Maasai family. In groups of two we were dropped off in the middle of nowhere (I now know the full meaning of this term). The home we stayed at, called a boma, had 3 different structures, one made of mud, dung and sticks, and two made of sheet metal. My host parents slept separately in each of the two metal homes and the children slept in the traditional mud hut, my home for the night. My family included my host parents as well as Ntidai, an adorable 5 year old girl, another sister 14 years old (I never learned her name) and Dan, our 18 year old brother. Many Maasai practice polygamy, and my host father, Musa, had 20 children in all; 7 with my host mother, Joyce, and 6 and 7 with two other wives. At our boma he had about 100 cows and 50 sheep, but also kept livestock at his other homes; he was a wealthy man in the community. Although he only had one leg, he had lost the other from the knee down as the result of an infection, he still went out on crutches in the afternoon to heard his livestock back into their pens after a day of grazing. Musa didn't associate much with the females in his family, the women are responsible for the household duties like cooking, cleaning and milking the cows while Musa spent the day relaxing underneath an Acacia tree and herding in the afternoon. We only had one conversation with him during our stay, but were able to ask him questions about the Maasai community and his relationship with Amboseli. Amboseli National Park is not fenced, and the wildlife often leave the park and cause damage to crops in farms nearby the park. Many Maasai appreciate the wildlife and recognize the benefits that tourism have brought to the region, yet are constantly forced to deal with challenges brought about by the wildlife. Kenya Wildlife Service (KWS)  employs rangers to patrol the region to help farmers keep wildlife from damaging their crops, but this isn't entirely effective and in our interviews with farmers we learned that on average about 40% of crops are lost to wildlife damage. Many farmers hoped to be compensated for their losses and for increased assistance from the park rangers to deal with this issue. 

Other activities we did during our stay included fetching water, collecting firewood, repairing the walls of the hut, and herding. To fetch water we walked about 5 minutes to a nearby water source, which we never quite understood where the water came from, but my professor says that it's a government-owned pipeline carrying water from Mt. Kilimanjaro to Nairobi that is broken into by the locals. Either way, the community has access to clean (but untreated) water, whether it is legally obtained or not I do not know. We carried the water in 7 liter jugs, with a leather strap around our foreheads and the jug resting on our lower backs. It was a little uncomfortable at first, but it seemed like a good method for carrying water a long distance rather than carrying it by hand. We collected firewood from a nearby tree, breaking off the dead limbs and carrying them back home in similar style to the water. To repair the home, we took the freshest cow dung from the pen and smeared it on the hut with our bare hands. At first I was skeptical to pick up the pile from the pen, but once I got to smearing it on the house, I forgot about what I was doing and enjoyed mending the cracks on the house. Apparently I had good technique says our translator. During the afternoon we were able to help herd the sheep back home. 

For dinner we ate rice mixed with potatoes. The plate I was served looked like enough to feed 6 people, and I really don't think I'm exaggerating. We had a cup of warm milk after dinner, fresh from the cows that were milked earlier in the afternoon. We slept on a small bed on top of a cow hide laid upon a bed made of sticks. I slept much better than I imagined I would; it cooled down at night which I think helped limit the amount of flys that were in the home. During the day the flys are swarming all over you, at any time you might have 20 or so around you, often landing on your face. 

In the morning we attempted to help make pancakes (a much much greasier version of American pancakes) but the fire inside the house produced so much smoke that we could only tolerate being inside for 5 minute intervals, taking breaks outside in the fresh air. We helped with some chores before joining our host mother and translator underneath the shade of a large Acacia to make some jewelry. We learned how to make some traditional Maasai bracelets, stringing hundreds of tiny beads in a variety of colors onto metal wire. 

The 24 hours with our family went by quickly, and it would have been nice to spend more time with them. They definitely live a very simple and happy lifestyle. A reoccurring theme throughout my time here in Kenya has been opposite extremes. Often we shift quickly from one lifestyle to another, and often there are drastic changes. Leaving the Maasai and returning to our upscale safari lodge was a strange experience, similar to my experience leaving the hunter-gathering Hazda in Tanzania and returning to Nairobi. 
















Monday, March 10, 2014

Karura Forest

I've just completed my second week of my urban homestay. I can already tell that it's going to be difficult leaving my new siblings. Ethan, the 3-year-old, is becoming my close buddy. He follows me around the house constantly, chatting away in Swahili/English/gibberish. I usually can't understand what's he's saying, no matter what language it's in, but I can sometimes pick up different words here and there. It was another good week of classes, we are learning Swahili at a fast rate, and I usually try to practice with the taxi drivers when I can. We have discovered an amazing Ethiopian restaurant near our classroom. I went there two days in a row with friends. In pairs we order a mixed plate of several different dishes. The bottom is a thin layer of a spongy and slightly sour dough that you rip into pieces to scoop up the different dishes that are in piles on top.

On Friday for our weekly activity for our Culture, Environment & Development class we traveled to Karura Forest in Nairobi. Karura Forest is a protected forest in Nairobi that was founded in 1932. Since then, the forest has been challenged by the high rates of development in Nairobi. Today it serves as a protected area where tourists and locals alike will come for a variety of activities and to enjoy the beautiful natural scenery. We met with one of the employees who spoke about their history and about the different ongoing projects. Soon they will be constructing an environmental education center on the property and we got to look at the different plans for the future building. Later we planted 4 indigenous tree saplings, symbolizing the 40 years of St. Lawrence University's Kenya Semester Program. After getting our hands dirty in the soil we walked through the forest to the waterfall, spending some time there enjoying the cool mist and taking lots of photos. Check out this video I found online that shows some of Karura Forest:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WL04LDonD20

Saturday was a pretty lazy morning prior to an afternoon filled with lots of shopping at the Masaai market in the city. Sunday morning I went to church with my family, which to me seemed to be more like a Christian rock concert (not that I know what that would be like). There was lots of singing and dancing, much more energetic than the Catholic masses I'm accustomed to at home. I'm pretty sure i was the only mzungu out of maybe 1,000 people at the service. The church was basically a huge permanent wedding tent, with the ceilings decorated with red and black fabric and over a thousand plastic chairs. The service was also very loud! During the pastor's speech he made quite a few Kenyan jokes, and although he spoke in English, I did not understand why they were funny at all. He also referenced Michael Jackson at one point but I'm not too sure what that was about either.


Also, good news! I have finalized what I will be doing for my independent study (IDS) from mid-April to mid-May. I will be interning at the Kenya Forest Monkeys (KFM) research program, in Watamu, along the Kenyan coast north of Mombasa. KFM researches Sykes monkeys and I will be helping with different ongoing projects. It sounds like I will spend most of my time in the field, observing the behavior of a troop of monkeys, recording their activities and taking fecal samples. Also, my supervisor there has told me that there is a chance that a baby monkey will be born while I'm there, and if so, I get to name it! Don't worry, I'm already brainstorming for some good names.

Connor and Cody at the Ethiopian restaurant
Sean and me

Sean and me
Alex and em

Some childrens' drawings at the Karura Forest

Planting trees

Magic in the forest!












Wednesday, March 5, 2014

Wikendi Iliyopita (Last Weekend)

February 28: On Friday night Sam and I took a taxi to Upper Hill Springs, a local Kenyan bar/restaurant in Nairobi. There we met up with two other SLU friends, Cody and Lacey. Cody's host sister from his urban homestay had invited us to join her for a birthday at the bar. There was a live Kikuyu band playing when we arrived. In perfect Kenyan time, they arrived almost 2 hours after the said starting time. We got a large table and enjoyed dancing to music other party-goers as well as random other people from the bar. The DJ was wearing a Colgate sweatshirt and we found that one of his relatives is a current student there. On the dance floor I met a 40-year-old oncologist that works at a hospital in Nairobi. He asked for my email address so that he could invite my friends and me to come to the hospital to dance with his cancer patients. I haven't heard from him yet but I really hope he gets in touch with me. When they cut the cake, friends of the birthday girl smeared frosting all over her face and hair, which we learned is common at Kenyan birthday parties. Later Sam and I took a taxi into the city center to meet up with a Kenyan friend of Sam's. I was intimidated as we climbed the steps, faced with dozens of Kenyans staring and smiling at us, no other mzungu (white person) in sight. As we entered the bar, we were immediately approached by two Kenyans who asked, "Are you looking for Kevin?" We were shocked that he knew our intentions and laughed as we followed them out to the balcony where Kevin was waiting for us. The two men that had greeted us were friends of Kevin that are rugby players who play in the Kenya Rugby Union. We spent the rest of the night dancing with them to a great mix of American/African music.

March 1: I woke up early to join my host mom and sister on their trip to the hair salon. We had to sneak out of the house so that my little brother Ethan wouldn't be upset that we were leaving him at home for the day. We arrived at the salon and I briefly watched what I knew was going to be a long process as my sister was getting her hair relaxed and my mom was getting a new weave. I stayed for a while before leaving and doing some shopping on my own at the Maasai market across the street. I bought a few things for myself and a few gifts for others, and although I did my absolute best bargaining, I still must have gotten ripped off. I returned to the mall where the salon was located and was a little confused when I realized that I had no idea which salon my family was in, seeing that there were about a dozen other salons in the mall. I went into what I thought was the correct one, walked around making very awkward eye contact with everyone in there, waved goodbye and left. Luckily, my second choice was correct, and inside I met my mom and sister who weren't even close to being finished. My host dad arrived shortly after and told me that we were going to a soccer game in the afternoon. He bought me a ticket on the way to the car, which cost about $12. I left with him and we drove to meet up with Sam and her host father, Max, who happens to be best friends with my host father. We had lunch at Sam's house before heading off to the game. Traffic was terrible since everyone was heading to the game. Gor Mahia was the team we saw, who are the reigning champions in the Kenyan Premier league. My host dad explained that they are the most popular Kenyan team. It was crazy as we entered the stadium, met with rowdy fans who were very excited to see some mzungu attending the game. We had pretty good seats, and were pretty much the only mzungu in the stadium, not including those sitting in the VIP section, who I assume were owners. Raila Odinga, the ex-prime minister of Kenya, also attended the game, yet we could only see him from a distance. It was an exciting game and the crowd was very lively. We were sitting next to the media booths and at one point I was asked to speak on the radio. They asked what team I liked and since I wasn't able to remember the correct pronunciation, I just said, "The green team!" which caused quite a laugh. After the game our host dads brought Sam and I to a nearby sports bar so that they would watch some of the Arsenal game, their mutual favorite team. After a short while Sam and I taxied into the city where we enjoyed a nice Kenyan dinner and another night of dancing at various places in the city.


me with the rugby players



Sam, Gor Mahia's "biggest fan" and me


in the radio booth



Monday, March 3, 2014

Spotlight on HVDC

I'm thankful for technology for many reasons, but recently I've been appreciating technology because it allows me to stay in touch with my friends and family, especially when I'm missing out on some important events. Harry, my older brother and best friend, is a senior at Franklin Pierce University studying fine arts with a concentration in ceramics. He recently updated his art blog with some of his latest work displayed in his senior art show. Please check out his blog to see his latest work. I'm a proud sister.



Sunday, March 2, 2014

Metropolitan Mzungu

I have just finished my first week with my urban homestay family in Nairobi. It has been exciting to experience the life of a Nairobian and I'm looking forward to 2 more weeks with my family. I'm living in a 3-bedroom apartment in South B, a suburb of Nairobi.

Here is my daily routine: Wake up at 6:30am and eat breakfast by myself, usually Weetabix cereal with warm milk (similar to shredded wheat), bread with peanut butter and honey, and chai, of course. At 7:15 my host mom and I leave for our daily commute. It takes us about 1.25 hours to travel about 10 miles to where my classes are held. We usually have 2 classes in the morning before breaking for lunch, when we often walk to the nearby YMCA where you can get a hearty Kenyan buffet lunch for about $3. We then return for more classes or study time in the afternoon until 4 when my host mother picks me up. We then begin our drive home, which takes anywhere between 30 minutes to 2 hours. The commute home is much worse than the morning drive, since it's much hotter and the traffic is often at a stand still. However, I'm usually entertained by the roadside vendors that walk in between cars in traffic, selling a ridiculous range of random items. I've started to make a list of the things sold: newspapers, gum, fruit, kitchen knives, tupperware, hand towels, garden shears, phone chargers, Maasai paintings, jump ropes, beach balls, stickers, purses, hats, sweaters, slippers, ties, exercise equipment, and grilled corn. Upon arriving home, I'm greeted by my 3 year old host brother, Ethan, who excitedly yells "Darlee!" or "Darlo!" (how he pronounces my name) when I walk through the door. For the next few hours I play with the kids, usually crashing toy cars into each other with Ethan or making bracelets with Annabell (7). Before dinner my mom and I go outside and exercise for a while, doing laps in the parking lot while I dodge the kids racing around on their bicycles. One evening I was running by myself and 3 Muslim women ran up to me and said "Let us help!" as they jogged beside me, laughing the whole time. I usually eat dinner around 8, sometimes joined by my host parents if they are both wanting to eat at the same time as me. Our helper, Phyllis, who cooks, cleans, and helps care for the kids, makes delicious Kenyan dinner every night. The kids go to bed around 8, and at that time my host mother and I watch Corazon Indomable, a Mexican soap opera dubbed in English, the same that I watched with my host family on my rural homestay. After the show I usually get home homework done in my room before heading to bed.

On Fridays we have Swahili class in the morning, and in the afternoon we go on group excursions to various spots around Nairobi. This week, we visited Kibera, which is a slum of Nairobi and is one of the largest slums in Africa. Families living in Kibera work to overcome challenges such as poverty, unemployment, poor sanitation, and unsafe water among many other issues. We broke into small groups and visited different projects in Kibera to learn about how individuals are dealing with the challenges in Kibera. My group visited the Sunshine Designers Tie-Dye project, which was started by Mama Sarah, a Rwandan refugee who came to Kenya in 1980. Mama Sarah founded her project in 1988, and through a loan was able to start a fabric design business where she tie-dyes beautiful fabrics and makes clothing which is sold in Kibera as well as other places in Nairobi. She employs two other women and her profits have allowed all of her 5 children to receive a formal education. We walked through the "business district" of Kibera, where her shop is located, and on to find her workshop where all of the fabrics are made. The business district was divided into several different sections: food, clothing, hardware, etc. At her workshop we were able to see how the fabrics are dyed and learn about Mama Sarah's story.

While I was writing this post our helper, Phyllis, came into my room to chat. She had told me before that she had never used a computer and wanted to learn. I opened up a new Word document and showed her how to type. I asked her to write something in Swahili, but instead she wrote, "When you go back to America plz don't forget me." After I showed her some photos of Lake George and my family.

My favorite mural on my daily commute to school. It says, "Kenya is a beautiful country, say no to tribalism and violence"

Annabell and me
shopping for Kenyan garb


Annabell reading my Wildlife of East Africa book (thanks CRS!)

Mama Sarah at her shop