Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Get L'eau Koum! Island traveling...

Water Source before.....

Water Source Afterwards!

Proud members of the Water Committee in Koum!

At the schools we have continued with our first crop of soy and moringa to prepare for our larger planting cycle coming up in March with the beginning of rainy season. With the gardens I started a hand washing program using rainwater collect from a large barrel and soap that UNICEF had provided. I’ve been dropping soap off on a weekly basis only to the schools that always had it available to the students (there were issues with corruption in the past) and have started ‘WASH’ clubs at each school that consist of 5 older students who are responsible for making sure all the students are washing their hands and know why it is important to do so. Its been a lot of work but the Parents, Teachers and Students have all been excited to work together on it , which has made the work a lot easier to implement.
Hand Washing Field Trips
With the community members I’ve been working on creating Water Committees to make sure that potable is always available in the villages. Each villages has a board of about 10 members- A president, Vice President, Secretary, 3 treasurers, 2 technicians and 2 board members who are allowed to vote on the issues. We’ve worked together to discuss how much they need to collect from each family in order to start a savings account for if and when their water source fails in the future. They decided times that water would be available to the community and who would be responsible for locking it up and opening it everyday.  In the East people are known to be very…. Aggressive. Most of these meetings were about 2 hours long and mostly consisted of people pointing fingers at each other and yelling- a total catfight hahaha.  But, all in all they have been working out and we just successfully repaired a Forage in Koum with the help of UNICEF and are beginning another in Messamena Village thanks to grants I received from USAID and UNICEF. At the end of these 2 water projects, over 900 people will have access to potable water.
This has all been a lot of work- but I have really been enjoying it! My day to day life is never the same and I like that mix. But- after a few months of this I was lucky enough to be able to take a vacation—to Cape Verde--- just in time for Carnaval!
My good friends Joe and Amanda were on board for the trip so although it was difficult to book the tickets, we made it work! We got to spend a few days in Senegal, 2 weeks in Cape Verde, then back to Senegal for another few days before returning to Cameroon.
Joe, Me  and Amanda headed out of Cameroon
Senegal was awesome- we were all so stoked to take a little break from Cameroon and explore. Since there is Peace Corps in Senegal we were able to stay at their boarding house while we were there and even use their bikes to cruise around Dakar. Dakar is a very pretty city- I was jealous of the Volunteers in Senegal because when they come to their capital they are minutes from beautiful beaches, plenty of clubs, paved roads and tons of restaurants (where you can even find sushi). One night we even went bowling… at a bowling alley. Dakar is a big city and was such a change from Yaounde. The one frustrating thing was that our Central African French was not understood by many people at all- turns out French isn’t spoken by much of the population at all.
Street Parade in mindelo
Then we headed over to Cape Verde- and I was so excited. Everything reminded me of Brasil which is all I wanted out of the vacation J But Cape Verde really blew me away and was above my expectations. The islands were spectacular, the people were so friendly, Carnaval was a blast, the fresh seafood was delicious and most importantly- the coffee was awesome! It was awesome to hear all the music, to practice portugues de novo and be with good friends. It was so fun to hop from one island to another and see how different each one was- there are 10 islands and they are all so different from eachother- including the local language and the peoples attitudes.
Carnaval Float in Mindelo
In Cape Verde we arrived on the Island of Santiago and headed to the capital, Praia, where we were staying with a couchsurfer, Emanuel. We met him and he immediately took us to a local bar to watch the soccer match with all his friends. 5 hours of food, music, dancing and laughing later- we left that bar. It was an awesome way to be welcomed into Cape Verde! One of the dancers on Amanda’s dance team in Boston had family in Cape Verde so we got to meet up with them and made more friends and we grabbed some drinks and watched the sunset- it was incredible. Then we ended up taking a 20 hour boat ride to the top of the islands to Sao Vicente where we arrived in Mindelo. There we met our next couchsurfers, Nelson and Marina who just moved from Portugual and we had great dinners at their place and late night swims in the ocean. We spent a few days relaxing on the beach and eating some fresh fish and drinking tons of good coffee. We had a few days before carnaval was about to start so we took another boat to the island of Santo Antao… it ended up being the most beautiful island I’ve ever seen, full of huge valleys and cliffs right up to the edge of the world with beautiful blue ocean below. Amanda and I took a 7 hour hike along the cliffs and got ourselves lost into one small village where we walked into a crnaval parade. It ended up being an old Peace Corps village so we made some friends and they let us stay at their place and made us dinner… it was awesome! We then made it back to Mindelo and Carnaval was starting. This time we were staying with another couchsurfer, Kiso- an awesome guy who knew so much about the island and introduced us to some how his friends who just came out with their 4th CD and another guy who was filming Carnaval as part of his world tour career. It was so much fun! Carnaval was a blast, as expected… dancing in the streets, awesome costumes, samba music all around and everyone livin’ it up. The whole trip was such a blast… it was a like a slice of heaven to me… boarding the plane to leave Cape Verde was depressing, I did not want to leave (Duh).

Traveling thru the jungle is not easy... but it's beautiful
Beaches of Dakar




The boat we took for 20 hours to get from Santiago to São Vicente

Cidade Velha, Santiago- Cabo Verde

Dancin' it up

Beaches in Dakar

Fontaininhas, Santo Antão

Wowzas!

Kick off to Carnaval

Late Night Swims in Mindelo with out couchsurfers

! Santo Antão!


The past 2 months has been really busy with work and have been very exciting for me. The first months at my post were all set up for me to get to know everyone in my village and start small programs and write up grants for projects I wanted to do with UNICEF… but now I am at the point where I get to implement projects that I have been writing grants for the past few months.
Hiking in Santo Antão
But.. Im back in Cameroon and refreshed. It is another struggle to readjust to crazy jungle life, but I’m in the home stretch right now and have some exciting projects coming up. San Francisco and my motorcycle are just around the corner J
Biking in Dakar