Yearly Archive: 2016

Ronnie Would

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About 50 youth gave up their Saturday afternoon for our program. Ron was hoping for 80 but there was a Village Council meeting at the same time.

I just had to post this feel good story today before I left on vacation.

A few weeks ago, I posted about Youth Technical Training. The young man in my team, Ronnie, was energized by that week. He has come to embody the desired results of Youth Technical Training.

As the President of the Educate Club, he is mobilizing the members to adopt and implement the action plan the team drafted at YTT, for a chicken rearing operation at Bukooli College. I look forward to working with them throughout the process and giving you updates.

Ronnie also led the Club at a recent National Finals Competition in Kampala. It resulted in an article about the Club’s Liquid Soap in the New Vision Newspaper. He was not aware he was in the newspaper until I showed him the article today on my smart phone.

A lot of kids would rest on these laurels, but not Ronnie. He told me he wanted to pass on his knowledge from YTT to the mostly unemployed youths in his home village. So last Sunday, he went around to the local churches to announce a program on Entrepreneurship, with yours truly as a special guest presenter. After meeting to plot out our program, I arranged to make 40 copies of about ten pages of our YTT manual to use as handouts. (Digression- think how routinely we make photocopies in the USA – here this expense took a 20% bite out of my living allowance!)- These youth are unlikely to start a new business tomorrow, but I sincerely think at least a few of these handouts will be kept and referenced in the future.

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Ronnie teaches Entrepreneurial skills.

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Ronnie mentors a group plotting a mosquito net repair service

buy viagra in uk http://appalachianmagazine.com/category/featured/page/28/?filter_by=popular Its other advantage is that it can be taken orally even without food and still lasts up to thirty six hours after its intake. A dose of order levitra online http://appalachianmagazine.com/2014/10/20/wvu-win-over-baylor-tainted-by-riots-fires-assaults-on-law-enforcement54/ can make you a complete man in any way possible is a natural habit. This is not only unsatisfactory and frustrating for that particular moment but it pharmacy online viagra is also hugely confidence crushing and self-esteem crushing too. Physiotherapy Dubai has turned into a vital part of wholesale sildenafil everybody’s life. I had previously observed Ronnie’s leadership and charisma with the Educate Club members. Here, I marveled at how well Ronnie presented his portion of the material, although I had no idea what he was saying. The audience, ranging in age from 12 to late 20’s, was captivated and engaged. Ronnie and I alternated our presentation time. I was the supposed main attraction, but he was a tough act to follow! Utilizing the Peace Corps method of interactive teaching, rather than straight lecture, we broke them up into groups for a planning exercise. I enjoyed listening to their own presentations of creative ideas how they would innovate different products.

At the end of the afternoon, I asked if they wanted more, and this was met with enthusiasm. While I am gone next week, Ronnie will return to teach how to make the liquid soap described in the New Vision article. The class agreed to raise 30,000 shillings among themselves to pay for materials. I promised to return in a few weeks.

Ronnie is finishing S-6 next December. I have asked about his future plans. He says YTT has giving him hope he can be a successful businessman. But in his heart, he would like to become a doctor. He is concerned about the fees this would take, as he is the third oldest of nine children, which stretches family resources thin. I am confident his altruistic nature and skills will provide a bright future and I look forward to watching his progress.

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Village kids peeking into the class. The girl on the red dress is Ronnie’s sister.

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The day got off to a rocky start. After getting out of the taxi near the village, this little girl brought her littler sister over to me. A few seconds after this shot, I let go of the little girls hand and she tumbled back on the little rise you see. Thankfully it was just a minor shock to her.

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This math was on the black board in the room of the primary school we used for the venue. I’m impressed.

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Ronnie’s parents hosted us for a post-program meal.

 

One

Selfie June 3

June 3, 2016. A bit older, grayer, but lighter.

Selfie October 2014

October, 2014, soon after submitting my Peace Corps application

Today is June 3, 2016, Martyrs Day, a Public Holiday. While most Ugandans understand the martyrs died for their Christian faith, the story is a bit more involved than that, as you will learn if you follow the link. It might explain a huge cultural bias here.

Today also marks the one year anniversary of my cohort’s arrival in Uganda. So much has transpired, and there is more than a year to go. When my USA Rotary Club hosted exchange students, I would always ask: What are the most surprising things you did not anticipate? The whole cohort arrived thinking they would live in mud and grass huts with no utilities; but Peace Corps has housing standards to provide security. It is easy to imagine break-ins without such secure housing. Most of us have utilities, they are just not consistent. Power goes out a lot and water has to be boiled or filtered. Of course many of the villages I visit to teach are indeed compounds of mud and grass huts, with no utilities. Some don’t even have pit latrines (they just go out to the bushes).

I naively imagined at least few more wild animals, but my environment is too urban. I see baboons on the road sometimes. Also not anticipated: Even more kids than I imagined; the surprising sameness of almost every town; and the lack of food variety.
The medicine is available in a viagra samples australia soft-gel capsule. Our conversion capabilities are extensively allowing us to convert to and from virtually any format, including: Kindle, Mobipocket, MS Reader, ePUB, OCR for printed book. generic viagra ED is also a kind of side effect linked with specific medications, such as including antihistamines, antidepressants, antihypertensive, antipsychotics, beta blockers, diuretics, tranquilizers, diet pills, cimetidine cheapest levitra generic (Tagamet), and finasteride (Propecia). Most men will have run into cialis cost low the uncomfortable situation of purchasing it over the counter at your local pharmacy. What has been the hardest part? The most stressful time was trying to master Lusoga language to pass my exam, but ultimately Lusoga has mastered me. Sorry! I thought I would be working harder. After getting assurances last week I would be back on track teaching in the villages, Matthews was gone most of the week for a burial of his neighbor and former boss (cause of death at age 54- diabetes!). Adams planned to take me with him to some towns to monitor our new maize collectives, but then he came down with typhoid and his medication prevented him driving long distances. The education volunteers have a school to go to, and the health volunteers work at hospitals or clinics. My experience is similar to many agricultural volunteers. The sponsoring NGOs struggle. The two other places I considered working a year ago stopped paying for their PCV’s rent, forcing their relocation to other towns last week. So I have spent more time with my Youth group, and trying to work up other projects via the local Rotary Club. Bottom line, I don’t think I suffer much hardship, there are just inconveniences I have gotten used to.

Some of you ask if I am homesick. I use WhatsApp here, which is way bigger here than in the USA. I communicate in a group with my four siblings way more than I ever did at home. I can’t imagine it changing when I return, and recommend it to you. Besides a siblings group, I have a group with my kids of course, a sports teams group, my Lusoga Language Group, and the Bugiri Rotary Club. Of course you can also WhatsApp individually too. So this stunts any homesickness. I have lots of imaginary conversations with Jan. She would have been annoyed by a mouse who has eluded me. He/she has eaten two pieces of expensive cheese right off the trap. I am switching to a sticky book.

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There used to be a big chunk of cheese there. Where is Meowri?

I’ve had very little to worry about healthwise. I’ve had some foot issues that now appear under control. Recently, I’ve had a spell of dizziness starting Sunday. It started when I blew off dinner on Saturday night, and I forgot my malaria drug needs me to eat steadily. I remember when Jan would get hungry; eating would become the number one priority because she would get dizzy. The Peace Corps doctor requested I get a glucose test, and while I was at a local clinic, they also tested for Malaria and Typhoid, Everything was good. Azedy accompanied me to his clinic and negotiated a good price for my three tests, because the technician had been one of his students in primary school. I am going to be examined at headquarters before heading to Entebbe for my vacation flight to meet my son at the Seychelles.
I don’t anticipate blogging again until I return after the 19th. I don’t think Seychelles vacation pictures are appropriate for this blog, but we’ll see.

Just Breathe (A Close Call)

Last week, I visited my Home Stay Family from Iganga. They will be hosting their fourth Peace Corps Trainee in a few weeks. The new Agriculture/Health cohort arrived a few days ago. The schools are on holiday, so it was great to see Innocent, Peace and Adrian, and the dependents, Sharon and Esther. Sharon has completed her first semester of nursing school and I obtained information about her billing for the next semester, to pass on to my home Northglenn-Thornton Rotary Club for their continued support. Sharon has done well so far and feels she is pursuing a good path. Right now, she thinks she wants to be a mid-wife. In Uganda there will be no shortage of work for her. She is going to do a practicum for a month with dozens of other students at Bugiri Hospital. They will all live together in a house. She requested Bugiri since I reside there, but unfortunately for much of her time in Bugiri I will be gone on vacation.

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Adrian with a banana

Visit sexologist to know about your health status and discount tadalafil enjoy a healthy and safe motherhood. Then, slightly jiggle the stick, release pressure and slide the drumstick out to complete massage. 100mg viagra online Natural cures for impotence include treatments that will quit hair loss along with cheap levitra purchasing this recover head of hair securely along with effectively. The herbs present in herbal pills are effective in treating sexual dysfunction include the generic version of cialis uk called Kamagra, cialis, and cialis uk with these 10 foods that help improving erection-quality naturally. 1. Simon and Hellen told me about a scary event the previous week with Adrian, their youngest five year-old. boy. I have met many cute kids in Uganda, but Adrian is one of the cutest. He had contracted mumps. When I mentioned there is a vaccine for mumps Simon was surprised and a bit irritated the government had not implemented a vaccination program. There were others in Adrian’s school who also had mumps. They had to take Adrian to the Iganga Hospital. At some point, the hospital informed them that Adrian’s condition had worsened, and they needed to take him to another hospital, in Jinja. On the way there, they thought Adrian had died. Simon pulled over in grief, but then they decided to press on. It turned out he was just unconscious; he remained in a coma for twelve hours. The Jinja doctors said a review of his chart they brought with them from Iganga indicated he had been improperly medicated. Simon was unhappy about the money he had spent at the Iganga Hospital, but there is no recourse for malpractice here. Adrian seems fine to me now, but I worry if the coma had an impact on his mental state. It was a good ending to a potentially tragic story.

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Four of Azedy and Margaret’s boys, Ayman 5, Azedy 13, Imran 1, and Ahmed 7

Keep On Working

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Matthews had loaned his helmet to someone else. I have armored pants but don’t always wear them.

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Staff meeting at ATEFO. They have a new contract working with maize farmers

I hope you all had a good Memorial Day Weekend. It has been noted that out of 200,000 volunteers since the start of Peace Corps in 1962, 301 have died in service.

For my Memorial Day, I invested in a bit of data and watched the second half of game 7 of the Golden State v. Oklahoma City series, starting at 5:00 a.m. Tuesday. It was the first basketball I had seen in a year. The Denver Nuggets had two great rookies this year, but I haven’t seen them play yet.

The commercials startle me with how comparatively affluent America is. A PSA was shown promoting little league basketball. Oh how nice it would be if every town in Uganda had a gym like that for the kids.
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Hopefully, with the burial, typhoid, special classes, the two weeks preparing for the Introduction and Wedding behind him, Matthews is going to be able to take me to the villages on a more consistent basis. We are checking back on certain groups to see how much they retained or implemented from previous lessons on record keeping. While this process can be frustrating, I do believe I can find an “early adapter” or two in each farmer group. That might be the best I can hope for. I tell the groups that in both Uganda and America, the most successful families are careful and disciplined with their spending. Keeping track of your money, and planning is the pathway to prosperity.
In the meantime, I am advising the incoming President of the Bugiri Rotary Club about ways to increase its presence in the community and encouraging member attendance. A big challenge is collecting dues, which are around US$150 per year. We also want to have a bigger presence in the local secondary schools. As I am getting more acquainted with members, some have great back stories of overcoming adversity. I am going to try to get a few them to inspire the youth groups with their stories, and I hope to share some on this blog.

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Remember that post with the two cows plowing? I was amazed to find the progress they had made the other day planting sweet potatoes. Margaret is a teacher and the the schools are on holiday. I chided Azedy, but he says he was getting up at 5 a.m. and doing his share.

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But they still have a way to go! Matthews helped me plant spinach, carrots and cabbage in my permagarden at the office. I want to make spinach salad so bad…

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While Matthews translated what I just said, I walked around and took this photo of a recent group.

Wedding Song

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Matthews’s sister Eunice, Groom and daughter Nikki, Matthews, his brother Fred, me.

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One of the photos that were printed to be sold. I forgot a tie! I am holding her gift, a pair of women’s gardening gloves I bought at Walgreens before I left.

In a previous post, I wrote about attending the Introduction and Giveaway ceremony in a village near Kamuli for Matthews’ daughter. The following Sunday I attended the wedding and reception in Jinja. As weddings go, it was pretty similar to American weddings. It was held in a Seventh Day Adventist church. During and after the wedding there were three photographers taking pictures. I was asked to pose in many of them even though I had not met anyone before, except Matthews and his brother and son.
The reception was a bit different from what I am accustomed to in America. It was held in large room in a school about a mile away from the church. Chairs were set up in crowded rows and there were tables and chairs set up on the stage for the Wedding party. Thus guests could not move about and socialize like at an American wedding reception. While we were getting settled, the three wedding photographers were circulating and selling prints of the photos they had taken less an hour earlier. In the front, two different choral groups alternated with songs, although even the vocals were mostly pre-recorded. There was much choreography, pantomiming the stories they sang.
At the Introduction, Matthews’ father and I were brought our plates of food while everyone else got in buffet lines. At the reception, (Matthews’ father didn’t attend) I was served my plate of food but Matthews, the father of the bride, had to get in line. Being a grey bearded American sort of has it’s advantages, but it’s embarrassing to be so singled out. I just have to be gracious. As happens often, everyone ate with their plates on their laps. Most eat with their fingers; the soft American was brought a fork. There are rarely napkins except in restaurants that serve Western food. Instead we pour water over our fingers before and after eating. The meals at these functions are always the same: Rice, Matoke, a small piece of meat with gristle (beef, goat or chicken), g-nut sauce, Irish potatoes and sweet potatoes.
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I hope you are not sick of cute kids pictures

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The Bride knelt before her husband to feed him cake and then knelt in front of the first couple of rows to offer cake.

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Entertainment!

Introduction and Giveaway Ceremony

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There was a comedic M.C on each side providing commentary and moving things along. Our M.C. is in the foreground, the groom’s side M.C. sits behind the basin.

A Ugandan tradition is the Introduction and Giveaway Ceremony.  The groom and his family and friends are introduced to the Bride’s family and friends, culminating in the bride being given away to the groom.  It seems as big as the wedding itself. For his daughter’s ceremony, Matthews said I needed to be there by 10 a.m.  to socialize a bit beforehand, before it was to start at 1 p.m.  As usual in “Uganda time” the groom’s people didn’t even show up until 4 p.m. Matthews’ father sat next to me, translated, and tried to explain the ceremony.  I had to leave at 5:30 p.m. before the bride even came out and was still was not able to get home until well after dark at 9:30 p.m.

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Four dancing “nurses” approach the groom’s people as they arrive.They said they had checked everyone’s health and they were fine, except one man, the groom, who suffered the “sickness of love”. The groom’s people had to wait, and entered through the orange arch in the pouring rain. Serves them right for being so late. Rain stopped after they were seated!

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An “aunty” came out carrying wood, and said she had forgotten the Introduction was that day and had to get things organized.

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before the festivities began, the preparation of three big vats of matoke, made from green plantains. Matoke is a staple of any social gathering with food in Uganda.

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Various groups came dancing out to meet the groom’s family.

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These two girls came out, and in response to something an M.C. asked, said something I didn’t understand except the word “Muzungu” (white person). Everyone turned and looked at me and laughed. As near as I can understand, in response to whether they were enjoying themselves, one of them said yes because even a Muzungu was present.

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A selfie with Matthews’ father, who is 80 y.o. Besides his own seven children, he had to raise the children of two brothers who had died. He complained that he suffered to pay all their school fees, and now none of them will ever visit. I was praising Matthews skill as a gardener, so he requested I bring Matthews to his home at Jinja where he has land, so Matthews can give him advice.

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“Meanwhile, back at the ranch”, Azedy hired these two men to plow behind his compound. So much of the level of development is like the Old West of America. Instead of horses and carriages though, it’s boda bodas and taxis.

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Some of my new neighbor kids. This is the view across the street from my compound.

Educate Club at National Finals

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The Bukooli College display. Ironically a selling point for the blue liquid soap is the an added ingredient to kill bed bugs.

IMAG3280The Educate Club of Bukooli College was one of 16 Educate Clubs to participate in the finals of a national competition in Kampala, They displayed goods they make, and answered questions from judges. I went to observe their preparations on Thursday. At that point I did not think I would be allowed to go . After I arrived on Saturday, I learned the team was housed in a dorm of a local secondary school. Unfortunately the boys room was plagued by bed bugs and they didn’t get much sleep. They were not looking forward to returning to the dorm that night.

One of the three founders of Educate Clubs was in attendance and gave a speech. She said she was raised in a tough inner city environment by her single mother in New York City. Another speaker said students should not expect to get a job when when they finish school, so they need to learn these entrepreneurial skills. The club acquitted itself well, in my opinion. Their table overflowed with goods. Unfortunately it was not named among the top three.

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Here, members are making necklaces. Beans are soaked in dye overnight and then threaded together, dried, and shellacked in some manner.

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Chalkboards, such as shown below, are made from recycled paper.

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Ronald, who I brought to Youth Technical Training, shows a product to the competition. Ron is an impressive young man with charisma. In the foreground, are scented solids to rub on your skin to stop mosquitoes. Everything is made from items they get for free or next to nothing.

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The club has to show its skills at record keeping for its sales.

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A view of the campus at Bukooli College. There are three three story classroom buildings in addition to other buildings.

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In contrast, this is a three room school house in a deep village which is part of a primary school near Kamuli founded by Matthews’ brother, where I spoke to parents and students. See the three blackboards? The benches had been removed for the parents to sit on. The little brick building in the back is the school’s administrative office.  I am planning to give some presentations and be more involved with secondary students in a similar rustic village near Bugiri.

 

Pictures at an Exhibition

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At the Tororo Rice Exhibition, a plow is demonstrated. They dug up a patch of the park! In the background is a machine that plants four lines of rice seedlings. Note the floaters on the side.

Happy May!

I went with Adams to a rice exhibition in Tororo, which is northeast of Bugiri. I had not visited there before. The main sponsor of the exhibition was International Fertilizer Development Center (IFDC), a Dutch company which has partnered with many NGOs, including ATEFO.  Attendees went from booth to booth, hearing what each exhibit was about. ATEFO had a small table. There should have been more rice farmers mobilized for this, but it was still nice to see what was on display. The representative from IFDC, a gentleman from the UK who lives in Kampala, chatted with me. He reaffirmed a deep frustration that farmers do not keep records. I learned that Uganda is a net importer of rice, due to it’s ranking of 70th out of 78 countries in milled rice yield per hectare  Ugandans work hard but when the President promises to hand out 18 million hoes for election in the year 2016, it’s hard to compete. A few different people approached and told me we had met before, at one of the farmer groups, or some function. Ugh, it’s hard to remember everyone I have met!

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ATEFO’s man in Tororo talks about financial literacy

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The booths reminded me of the competitive exhibits of the Educate Club Youth Group. So there is a practical application.

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The exhibits were judged and ATEFO finished 5th. All the prizes were bags of IFDC Fertilizer.

The Currents Will Shift

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This is the front of my new place, with the traffic of pedestrians and untethered goats.

In Uganda when you move to another house, you “shift”. I shifted this past weekend.
Typically, a tenant here pays three months rent in advance. I was just completing my third three month term at the end of April. There had been some break-ins in my neighborhood, and Matthews was always concerned I could be a target. Both Matthews and my Iganga father Simon did not like the low easily accessible walls around my compound. Adams was also unhappy with my landlord. When I arrived in August, Adams wanted a written lease. My landlord is illiterate, however, so he refused to sign (put his thumbprint on) anything. He recently decided to raise my rent when Adams felt he had it fixed for my duration.
While I was at Youth Technical training, Matthews called to say he wanted to show me a new place to move. I also received an email from my language tutor Azedy, who has become a good friend, and he mentioned he had available separate living quarters with three rooms at his home compound. It turned out to be the same place Matthews wanted me to see. It looked good, and was the same rate, but needed the cement flooring to be finished and smoothed out along with paint and varnish. A previous tenant had lived there for awhile in its roughed-in state. So after being a bit indecisive, I gave the word Thursday, a Peace Corps representative inspected it on Friday, and I shifted Sunday afternoon. While before, I was about a kilometer north of my office, now I am 1/2 kilometer, at most, west of the office. In fact, when I go about 100 yards from my place to the road, you can see my office. This place is also near the Gilgard Guesthouse, where Bugeri Rotary meets, and Bukooli College, where my Educate Club Youth Group meets.
On Saturday, with Azedy’s help, I wrote a little speech in Lusoga on a card to explain to the mothers on my route I would not be passing by any more and fist bumping and swinging their kids who run out to the road to greet me. But I will try to come by every so often. I told my next door neighbor kids I would pay 5,000 shillings if they were ever able to find and corral Meowri for me. I will probably return this weekend to say good bye to my bore hole manager, and also to Godfrey, the preacher at the church across the street. I will miss Godfrey and his efforts to save me. I will miss the church music on Sundays too.
Last year, I had moved out of my suburban home into a two bedroom Denver condo, so this was comparatively easy, yet somehow it still was a full weekend getting ready. Simon and Hellen came with his truck Sunday afternoon to help out. I brought Faizal along and Simon brought two boys with him. My carpenter Mwando kindly took apart my bed and and then reassembled it for me. We were finished in two trips. I even took all of my vinyl flooring along. The cement needs more time to dry, so I have stuff all piled up off the floor as much as possible. It might be at least a week like this. I’m going to stay home as much as possible so I can open the windows to help the drying. But once it gets dark, you have to close up due to the mosquitoes. It gets humid then. The first night I laid in bed and thought it seemed really strange. No wonder, I realized I hadn’t installed my mosquito net! That reminded me to also set up my middle of the night pee bucket :-). Nicer house, but I am still in Uganda.
As the pictures show, this is a pretty nice property. Almost “Posh Corps”except I still don’t have running water. Azedy is a teacher working part-time at the moment, while his wife Margaret is a full time teacher. Simon recognized Margaret from grading P-7 final exam papers together in Kampala. They have five boys. Margaret said they gave up trying to produce a girl. Three are in boarding schools outside of Bugeri. Living at home is Aiyeman Fayed, soon to be six,starting P-1 in January, and one year old Aimre. The only other resident here is Maria, who acts as a nannie and helps with various chores.
The family invited me to a “welcome” dinner Tuesday night. I heard the chicken getting slaughtered so it was pretty fresh meat! I realized later I should have volunteered to help pick out the feathers. In Uganda they will offer the guest of honor the gizzard, but it is OK to decline, which I did. I learned that Azedy, who was raised as a Muslim near Iganga, was the 8th of his mother’s ten children and the first male. His mother was one of five wives of his father, who ultimately produced 50 children. Ugandans always point out the easy acceptance and frequency of divorce in America, but are never too disconcerted about polygamy.

Over all, I think this was a good shift.

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On the left side of Azedy’s home is the door to access my place, A thief would need to scale that wall too.

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The front of my place with doors and windows open to help the cement dry.

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Azedy and Margaret’s place. There are unfinished rooms inside. Slowly but slowly. The garage has no car, but it is Azedy’s next dream. He also has needed a computer since we met. He would send me emails from an internet cafe in town.

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This is Aiyeman Fayed, who is very curious about his dad’s friend. He’s wearing a Denver Nuggets t-shirt. I met him last fall while Azedy tutored me, and he had a Hooters t-shirt, with the famed “Owl Eyes.” I thought it was amusing anyway.

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This is a small courtyard in the back with several things to note. Bottom left is a water tap. No more lugging Jerry cans from a public bore hole. Margaret says it holds steady during dry season but doesn’t work when the power is out. I still need my Jerry cans,  but I just carry them about thirty feet. Above the tap are clothes lines with the first clothes pins I have seen in Uganda. The tree is one of two lemon trees and I may help myself. Behind the tree is a wall in front of an open bathing stall with no door (I have my own in my home). To the right of the stall are three pit latrines. I get my own padlocked pit latrine! On the rear left is a deep hole to receive water from the bathing stall. I’m not sure if this is a good situation for the one year old as he starts to wander.

 

Parting Ways

It’s been awhile. I have been busy, and attending last week’s Youth Technical Training (YTT).
Before I get to that in the next post, I am distressed to report that Meowri has left me. A couple of weekends ago, I went to Jinja for two nights, staying with about 30 PCVs in dorms next to the Nile River. I had left my barred window open to allow Meowri to come and go. When I returned Sunday, I was disturbed to see the window had been closed and the food I left inside was not eaten. The neighbors claimed they fed him, but in any event, he was gone. I wasn’t too concerned because cats usually come back after a few days. However, after three days home, I needed to take care of some business in Kampala, come back one night, and then attend YTT in Jinja for a week. When I returned Saturday, the neighbor kids lead me to the body of a decomposing cat in a small nearby forest. Not Meowri (whew), but “ Meowri’s friend”, they said.
On Sunday I was finally able to talk to a girl at her nearby compound, where the kids claimed Meowri was. She said indeed Meowri is staying there. This is a four unit compound behind very high walls. Only one unit is finished, however, and like everywhere else in Uganda, the other three are just shells of bricks. She borrowed my flashlight and took my basket, scampering up into the rafters and disappeared. No way was I going to attempt that high wire act. We both called, but Meowri did not come. (Cats are like that). So I have nothing definitive. I left my basket with her. A lady entered as i was leaving and said there were a number of cats that lived there. Maybe Meowri prefers this company to mine. But I want to take him home and give him a choice. I also want to see if he’s been hurt at all. The family in the compound is often not there.

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Neighborhood search party!


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Sunset on the NIle with monkey

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When you travel between the larger towns, the taxi will stop in the smaller towns to allow the local vendors to shove drinks, crackers, sis-ka-bob meat sticks etc. at you