Sunday, December 30, 2007

some Kenya pics

Alright, so here's some pics finally!!!

This is our view of Mount Kenya from the back porch of where we were staying
















This is our host family in Kenya:


















Our students at Jubilee, loving the toothbrushes we gave them!















Me and an adorable baby at the NuLife orphanage




















Letting a couple of the kids listen to my Ipod, they loovvvee dancing!















The schoolyard at St. Mary's



















Me getting an authentic Kenyan tattoo





















Stay tuned for Ugandan and Parisian ones :)

Tuesday, December 18, 2007

La vie en Paris

Bonjour!

We've been here in Paris for a couple days now and, as one can imagine, it's quite a shock after Africa! I had nearly forgotted what being extremely cold felt like - I remember even vaguely looking forward to the sensation of frost-bite while squished in the backseat of an overcrowded Ugandan taxi with sun burns covering my body... but my feet have suffered a painful reminder that being frozen is not good either. We started our visstay in Paris with a chilly visit to Versailles, the Dali Museum, and a tour around the sights of Montmartre, but last night we did the sensible thing and went shopping for coats, hats and gloves, and our experience has been much more comfortable ever since.

We visited the Eiffel tower today and it was; of course, breathtaking but we've resolved to revisit it at night when it's all lit up to get the full effect. We also went to Notre Dame cathedral and climbed the 400 steps up the increasingly narrow spiral staircase of the main bell tower to where Quasimodo and the gargoyles hang... not the most enjoyable hike for one with claustrophobia but decidedly less painful than scaling the Statue of Liberty, and well worth it once you get up there for the view of the city alone. The cathedral bit was very beautiful and impressive - especially all the stainedglass windows.

I think I may want to live in this city at some point, even though it is huge, it's still so charming with all its sloping cobble-stone streets and the metro system is so easy to use that everywhere feels like only a hop skip and a jump away... and, more to the point, there are bakeries everywhere and the pastries are out of this world.

Well I'm off to rest up for another full day (a week in Paris is not much time!). Tomorrow we tackle the Picasso Museum, L'arc du Triomphe; Centre Pompidou of modern arts, and most importantly the LaDuree pastry shop, which according to exhaustive research is supposed to be the best in the world...why do I get the feeling this new year's resolution will involve the gym?

Friday, December 14, 2007

Last Post from Africa!

We have just returned from a one day vacation on Ssese Island to soak up some final rays of equatorial sunshine before we head off to Paris tomorrow morning! I'm a bit worried about the climate shock as we have no coats, and very few warm clothes, but one of our first stops will be the biggest flea market in Paris, so hopefully we'll have a bit of luck there.
I am a bit sad to leave Africa... I think i'll miss the scenery, children, rafting, and pineapples most, possibly in the reverse order. I'm not all that sad though as I hear Paris is at it's most beautiful around this time of year, and there are several nasty contagious things floating around Uganda at the moment... Ebola being the biggie, with the bubonic plague, typhoid, and as always malaria. I got one really wicked bout of sickness the other night, where I really started to miss Canadian bathrooms... by 4am I had woken everyone in he house up, and there was talk of bringing me to the hospital. Luckily it didn't come to that and whatever it was it seems to be over now so off to Paris I go! Hopefully they don't decide to stop letting ppl from Uganda in because of the ebola outbreak... I think it might be hard to work up a good holiday spirit spending Christmas in quarantine.
We've got a jam-packed itinerary for Paris so I'm not sure if I will be posting again, but it is my goal to get some pics up here at some point!
Au Revoir!

Tuesday, December 4, 2007

Extreme Weekend in Jinja!

Hello again!
Well we just got back from Jinja yesterday, and luckily we have done so with our bodies fully intact! Rafting down the Nile was so much fun.. we caught some class 5 rapids, which were scary but awesome :) It was a 30 km distance that we covered, with enjoyable lazy stretches in between the rapids where we could bail out of our rafts and just lazily float along in the nice warm (slightly crocodile-inhabited) water of the Nile and enjoy the scenery and a slice of pineapple. The scariest part of the trip was the final rapid - we were meant to paddle past the class 5 rapid, aptly named The Bad Place, as the water levels were low that day, and aim instead for a neighboring class 4 rapid. Unfortunately, as we had to pick up two stranded tandem kayakers without paddles, and the importance of paddling as hard and as fast as humanly possible was not sufficiently emphasized, we all (unknowingly) entered the class 5 rapid, which caused our raft to do a huge flip, giving us all some air time before we got sucked under. Yours truly was caught under water in what's known as the "washing machine", which spins you around in circles so fast you don't know which way is up. I was seriously scared because it felt like i was down there forever and i almost ran out of air. Luckily when i did manage to surface, a safety kayaker grabbed me and took me to shore.

Having survived rafting, next on the agenda was bungee jumping into the nile! It seemed like a good idea until they made me hop to the edge of the ledge (because my feet were tied together) and gave me a countdown. You have to overcome all your natural survival instincts and convince yourself that jumping off this ridiculously high precipice is a good idea. They say 3... 2.... 1...bungee! and you better jump the first time or you psych yourself out and it's even worse. I managed to do it and gave the most blood curdling scream as i went down! which luckily was caught on camera and hopefully i can upload it on here soon! It was beyond scary, but a lot of fun once i realized i wasn't going to die :)

Another adrenaline-filled first this weekend was that magz and I took our first bota bota rides. A bota bota is one of the most common means of transportation here.. second only to the taxis. It is a motorcycle and there are no helmets. At first i was so scared I think i left bruises on my driver but by my third ride my biggest fear was falling asleep on it.

The annual kayaking competition that was taking place was really impressive, as kayakers from all around the world showed up. The first day's event was freestyle tricks and they did things like "double helices" and "air blunts" and "pistol flipping" and a whole lot of other tricks that i don't fully understand the details of but were quite impressive none the less! The second day was a long nile race, and the third day was a short nile race, followed by a bota bota land race back to the camp, where there was an obstacle race made from upturned rafts which both the kayaker and their bota bota driver had to go through, and then both chug a bottle of Nile Special beer.... and those were the actual requirements of this reputable competition! Ugandan won in the men's division, which made the locals really happy and there was a huge celebration.. mind you, everynight at the camp was a celebration, with everyone including competitors staying up until at least 4 in the morning - I'm not sure how they managed to go extreme kayaking in the morning but there you have it! and they organized their own extreme events at night like fire dancing and one guy, supposedly one of the best kayakers in the world, had injured his ankle from flipping backwards off a table in the bar and so they made him a cast out of an old waterbottle, plastic bags and some tape and he still competed.

The only downside of having been there during the competition is that the people who normally put together a tape of the rafting expedition were competing so we don't have a dvd of the day... so I want to go again next weekend as a re-run is only half price and it's so hard to explain what the rapids there are like - it's supposed to be the best rafting in the world.
My body is happy to be back to the teaching routine in Lugazi as it replenishes its adrenaline and alcohol dehydrogenase stores.

Oh, and if you hear about the current ebola outbreak in Uganda, fear not - I'm aiming to avoid those areas... thanks to Jinja i've had enough adventure for one trip.
=:0)