Sunday, June 21, 2009

Week 1 in the bag.

So heres whats been going down the past few days. I flew out of Detroit for Philly and met up with the other volunteers to go through staging. Everyone here is great and gets along just fine. There are 32 of us all together (half girls ed half secondary ed with a few random IT guys).



Philly was a great time. and I had fun getting to know everyone; and afterwards we went out and ate a fairly extravagant dinner (seafood risotto oh yes) on uncle sams per diem money. We woke up early in the morning the next day and got immunized for yellow fever and were given our first dose of malaria prophylaxis.



We flew to Paris on an uneventful flight and waited in Charles De Gaulle where we met another volunteer on her way back to Burkina from a vacation in the US. We were supposed to refuel in Niger but the plane got grounded there and I got my first taste of Africa. The first I noticed stepping onto the Tarmac in Niamey was the air. It is so thick and hot here and has the slightest smell of charcoal. The sun was hanging low and lazy over a flat orange and red horizon.



We were put up at a hotel in Niamey by Air France and had even more opportunity to get to know each other. However the bus ride in the morning back to the airport was an eye opening one. Niger is extremely impoverished. Children run up to passing busses trying to sell bread, mango, and peanuts. Villages made of mud brick are scattered everywhere behind buildings made of corrugated metal.

Our stay in Niger was very brief but still something that I wont soon forget.

Moving on... We landed in Ouaga about an hour after departing from Niamey. Its hard to describe my first impressions of the city without sounding negative. I was, and still am extremely happy to be in Burkina. Ill save the detailed descriptions; do a google photo search or something.

Since then our time has been very regimented. I moved in with a host family in the village of Bogoya (8k bike ride from Ouahigouya) and they have been extremely generous and hospitable. Im currently taking language classes in French and Mooré and am progressing well. Everyone in my village speaks Mooré so Ive learned a few greetings ( very important to greet EVERYONE). Im still healthy as can be unlike some of the other volunteers, and plan on staying that way. Also Im 10 days smoke free.

Anyway I have to bike back to village and I need to beat the heat, It should be around 100° today.

5 comments:

  1. Congrats on getting settled in.
    Hopefully that malaria vaccine does the trick.
    Stay safe buddy, and congrats on being smoke free.

    Good man.

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  2. Stay healthy, breathe deep. We love and miss you.
    Dad loved the Father's Day message. Love, MOM XOXO

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  3. 3:48 a.m. Can't sleep. It's too darn quiet around here. Might have to go visit Alex O. @ Caribou later on....

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  4. Good to hear you got there safe and sound. Keep on writing.

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  5. Rebtel worked great .....23 cents a minute!
    Cell phone # 00 226 75273611

    ReplyDelete