title photo

title photo
collecting our moving crates from long-term storage

Monday, December 31, 2012

Hi everyone -

We hope everyone has had a very Merry Christmas and Happy New Year.  Jon and I had the best Christmas present when Jonathan came to visit us for the holidays.  After his 16-hour flight from the US, we put him on another plane the next day for 4 hours when we all flew to Mauritius for Christmas.  Mauritius is a small island on the eastern side of Madagascar.  Click here if you would like to read a little more about the island from a tourism standpoint.

Mauritius has quite a history, beginning in 1638 when it was first colonized by the Dutch.  It has since been under French and British rule and has been an independent stable democracy since 1992. You can click here if you would like to read more about the history of the island.

We spent 5 nights in Mauritius in a beautiful resort on the east side of the island, called Belle Mare Plage. It was literally picture postcard beautiful - white sand, crystal water, giant palms.  It rained Christmas Eve and Christmas Day but the beach was still beautiful and Jonathan and I, as well as other tourists, flopped on our beach chairs under our tiki shelters and read, listening to the waves crash.

This is the first time I have ever spent a Christmas away on vacation, and while we did thoroughly enjoy ourselves, I am looking forward to being back in the US for Christmas 2013.


Hotel Lobby
View from our lunch table

Santa even comes to Mauritius



A beautiful evening, an almost full moon
Christmas evening and like every other dad,Jon is
wondering how he is going to pay for this come January!
Christmas Eve, Mauritius 2012

Friday, October 19, 2012

A Tough Day Today


I watched a man die today. I couldn’t do anything to help him. I watched as he bled from his nose and mouth and head, his eyes half open, glazed over. I watched as his body involuntarily twitched, his shallow breaths coming at greater intervals. 

I haven’t updated this blog in months. To be perfectly honest we just haven’t done much that seemed to warrant an entry. Jon and I have fallen into the same old routine – home to work and home again. Yesterday I had a doctor’s appointment at a nearby hospital which has a wing of doctor’s rooms, as they are called here.  I got there to find the power was out, and so I completed my new patient paperwork by lantern.  It didn’t seem to bother anyone, least of all the doctor, who simply pulled two chairs up to the closest window in his office to examine my hand.  I called Jon at work and told him about this funny little episode. He laughed and said, “Now there’s your next blog entry - another ‘welcome to Africa’ moment. “

It has been such an incredible adventure for Jon and me here in Africa. Our blog’s subtitle even reflects that. We are planning to return home in June next year and lately I have become torn about leaving.  Though the first year here was excruciatingly difficult for me, both Jon and I have come to like it here more and more. Yes, there have been lots of “Welcome to Africa” moments, those silly little incidents when we are reminded we are not living in a first world nation. We watch the news and read the papers daily and there is no doubt that South Africa is a “rough neighbourhood.” Our friends and family worry about us. Currently there are over 20,000 SA miners on strike. There have been protests, violence, riots and dozens of deaths. But we live a long way from these mines so it doesn’t affect us. There has been a trucking strike for the last few weeks. Violence and protests between strikers and those truckers who cross the picket lines left us with some empty grocery shelves, but nothing more serious. Closer to home, two more houses in our complex were robbed a few weeks ago. That makes four in a year. We are reminded by security to keep our doors and windows locked and closed, unless they have bars. We are told to stop when we come through the entrance gates so no one can tailgate in behind us. People here shrug off the corruption in government, steer clear of the growing illegal settlements, and turn a blind eye to the street hawkers and beggars. They blow their horns and gesture with their hands when seas of taxis disrupt traffic flow, create roads from medians, shoulders and sidewalks. Everyone knows they are a necessity for carrying hundreds of thousands of native Africans wherever they need to go. I’ve talked about the taxis here before, how there are gazillions of these rickety old tin cans on the road in Jo’burg, and all over Africa as well. The taxi drivers are callous and careless. They must meet a daily minimum in cab fare each day. Once the minimum is met the driver gets to pocket all the overage. This incentive has created an army of drivers who regularly run red lights, pass illegally, speed recklessly and behave rudely. But other than making me a much more careful and defensive driver, I have learned to ignore them, just like I do with the street hawkers and the beggars.

Taxi accidents are a daily occurrence. Fender benders, side-view mirror taps and paint scrapes are the norm. Occasionally the wrecks are catastrophic, with dozens hurt or killed. Two weeks ago Jon and I watched a taxi T-bone a Jeep, flipping it on its side. The taxi’s windshield was shattered and as Jon and I pulled over to help, we watched several women crawl out of the taxi, crying.  We stood with them, talking and hugging.  No one was seriously injured and so eventually we drove on, chalking it up to one more crazed taxi driver who should have his license revoked.

And then, there’s today. I dropped Jon off at 5:50 this morning at the nearest bus station where he catches the bus every morning for his ride to work. I always then head north for my 40 minute commute to Pretoria. While I was waiting at the light, second in line behind a van, I heard the crash. I looked up to see a white taxi and a blue car that had collided violently, a third car hit peripherally. The man in front of me and I jumped out to help.  The people climbed from the crumpled taxi; there were women’s shoes in the street, a car speaker, other car parts and glass. An older black woman about my size was clutching her head and literally fell into my arms. She was dazed and crying. I held her and guided her to the curb to sit down, rocking and talking to her. The sidewalks on either side filled with onlookers but no one came to help.  When the woman seemed to be okay, I ran to the blue car, the most damaged of the three vehicles, to see if I could help the man. I was crying and yelling for someone to help, but no one came. I felt like I was in one of those strange post-apocalyptic movies; it was eerily silent even though by now, there must have been 50 people standing on the sidewalk. I didn’t touch him because I wouldn’t have known what to do for him anyway. I just wanted to comfort him or do something to help. But I didn’t, remembering the high HIV population here. The man who was driving the van in front of me came over and looked in on the driver as well. He just shook his head when I asked him what he thought. And on this surreal Friday morning, I came to the realization that, for me, Africa no longer feels like an adventure. Today I know I am ready to come home.

 

 

Monday, June 11, 2012

The Elephant Sanctuary

The day before the last day of school we took the middle school students to visit The Elephant Sanctuary, about an hour's drive north of us.  You can visit the link to read more about the program but basically the three sanctuary locations are places to shelter elephants needing care. They are eventually released back to the wild or stay on at one of the sanctuaries as teaching elephants. It is a very interactive program where you learn all about the elephant's anatomy, get to feed the elephants and even pet them and receive a little peck on the cheek.  After having experienced that first hand, I can tell you elephants are slobbery, smelly creatures whose aroma stays with you long after you wash your face and hands! Other surprising facts I learned about elephants- they have incredibly long eyelashes, their skulls look like a honey comb on the inside. A solid skull would be too heavy for an elephant to hold up. An elephant's trunk has 100,000 muscles units in it and elephants use their trunks as a nose, a mouth and a hand. Without their trunks, elephants could not survive. Elephants use their tusks to scrape bark off trees to eat and will do this with only one tusk. If the right tusk is shorter, then the elephant is right-tusked and uses the right tusk for scraping. If the left tusk is shorter, the opposite is true. 


One of my smallest students feeding one of the biggest elephants!

Wednesday, May 23, 2012

GRADUATION DAY 2012!

What a spectacular day on Sunday, 20 May!  Four years in the making and it went off without a hitch! It was a whirlwind trip for both Jon and me. He flew in to DC on Wednesday night and I arrived on Thursday morning from Jo'burg. We met Jonathan on Friday afternoon in Charlottesville where we feasted on Mexican food at Guadalajara, Jonathan's favorite Mexican restaurant. Tex-Mex is about the only food you can't get in SA and we miss it so much. Saturday Bonnie and Brook (Jon's sister and sister-in-law) drove over from DC and Jonathan took us all on an extensive fact-filled walking tour of the campus that included a stop at his frat house. Yes, Animal House is alive and well.  We all had a nice dinner that evening, joined by Jonathan's girlfriend Ally.

Sunday we were up bright and early to stake out our lawn seats.  Families of graduates get only three tickets to watch the graduation from the Lawn. Other members have to watch from remote viewing locations. Big Jon bought two lawn chairs for Bonnie and Brook and set them up under a tree to listen from loud speakers. Ally and I grabbed 3 seats along the processional line in hopes of seeing JB, which we did.  There were an estimated 35,000 people in Charlottesville for graduation and the excitement (and traffic and parking nightmares and short tempers) was evident.  Jon joined us as the processional began. The colored banners representing each college came by with the degree candidates behind them. Many of the graduates carried balloons and had decorated their mortar boards with funny sayings or thank yous.  The procession went on for almost an hour as the more than 6,000 degree candidates(undergrads, grads, PhDs, MDs, JDs) began at the Rotunda and worked their way down the Lawn.  Katie Couric was the graduation speaker and she did a fabulous job. Each college was recognized and asked to stand by the dean of the college, the President conferred their degrees upon them and so on. Jonathan found his way to us eventually where we snapped a few pictures before Bonnie and Brook headed back to Lewes, DE where Bonnie was being sworn in on Monday as the newest Lewes, DE councilwoman!

Jon, Jonathan, Ally and I had a wonderful dinner and a beautiful country club just outside Charlottesville. It was the perfect way to end the day, celebrating JB's accomplishments and talking about his future. His future is somewhat certain - law school for sure. He is just not sure where. He has had several acceptances and is still on a few waitlists.  William and Mary is at the top right now, where he is assured a spot and has been offered some scholarship money.  He is still hoping to clear the UVA waitlist, which is his top choice.  We will wait and see. In the mean time, he has sublet an apartment in C'ville for the summer and looking for a job.

It seems like yesterday when he got off the bus after his first day of kindergarten in Gainesville, GA and told me his first day of school sucked.  Never did I think it would all go by so fast!


Ally straightening Jonathan's mortar board
Jon, Jonathan, Bonnie and Brook
outside JB's frat house, Chi Phi


Ally, Jonathan and his friend Gavin

Sunday, April 29, 2012

A visit to the cheetah preserve

This past Friday (April 27) was Freedom Day here in RSA. This year marks the 18th anniversary of the new democracy.  With a long weekend, Jon and I spent Friday doing a little work (grading papers for me and answering emails for Jon), a little shopping and caught a movie (The Avengers).  Saturday we drove about an hour north of Jo'burg toward Hartebeesport Dam and to the Ann van Dyk Cheetah Centre. You can visit the link to learn more about the Centre's work.  The Centre began over 40 years ago with a woman who turned her family's vegetable farm into a safe haven for cheetahs and other local wild animals who were being wiped out by farmers trying to protect their livestock.  It has since become a renowned centre for rehabilitating specifically cheetahs, wild dogs and several types of birds - mostly cranes and vultures.  We spent four hours there watching the cheetahs run in a specialized area where they can stretch their legs.  It was an incredible sight!  They are the fastest creatures on earth, hitting speeds of 120 km per hour (75 miles per hour). We then toured the facility, learning so many interesting facts about all the wild animals on the preserve and how saving them from extinction is vital to the eco-system. 

One of the most important missions of the Centre is their education program.  They have a 9-year-old cheetah named Byron that they estimate has been petted by over 100,000 children in SA. Byron travels to schools who cannot afford to come to the Centre and acts as a ambassador teaching children the importance of conservation.  We got to pet Yates, Byron's replacement, who is currently in training.  We got to pet him and you cannot believe the purring!  It was so deep and his whole body rumbled.  It was an amazing experience!

Petting Yates, an ambassador-in-training


the beautiful markings on one of the wild dogs

Sunday, April 15, 2012

Entabeni Game Reserve for Easter

View from our cabin porch. Those are warthogs in the photo.
We hope everyone had a wonderful Easter holiday. Here in SA Good Friday and Easter Monday are public holidays so Jon and I both had a long weekend to enjoy some time together.  We spent the weekend at a place called Entabeni Game Reserve, a private game reserve about 2 1/2 hours north of Jo'burg.  It is a beautiful place in the mountains with incredible views and amazing animals.  We were lucky enough to see three of the Big 5 animals - lions, elephants and rhinos - along with a host of others. The lodge was romantic and secluded. Our stay included 2 game drives per day with a ranger, one at 6:30 in the morning and one at 4 each afternoon. It has begun to cool off with typical fall temps, cool each morning and night.  We would return to the lodge in the mornings to a fire and big breakfast. Evening drives ended with hot cider or sherry and then a 3-course dinner.  It was a perfect getaway.

A crocodile sunning himself in the middle of the track. We
had to back up several hundred yards to go around him.

A mother and her calf take a stand against unwanted
advances from a male rhino.  Right after this photo they got
in a fight. The baby even tried getting between them to defend his mom.

The female won this round. The male ran right past our
vehicle with a wound to his head and some blood
dripping down his face. The ranger says the male will try
again next month to win the female's affections.

We could hear the elephants before we saw them.  They make
incredible noise tromping through the bush.

Lion cubs (about 8 months old)

The cubs play and dad yawns. They woke him up and he let them know
he wasn't happy with a growl and a swat of his paw.

We drove to the upper escarpment (the top of the mountain)
with our ranger one morning and saw giraffes among other animals.
The cabins

The lodge at dinner time

Tuesday, April 3, 2012

Adventure Team-Building with My New Middle School

We survived the first obstacle course!
Our middle school students and teachers recently spent 4 days out in the bush at an adventure team-building camp. We crawled through muddy obstacle courses, learned to cook eggs by burying them in the ground, practiced rescue skills like building rafts and making stretchers with minimal resources, and "stalked the lantern" by crawling silently through the bush at night, looking for the single lantern acting as a beacon for the teams.

It was so much fun, not to mention dirty and exhausting and bug-ridden and hot. I was cleaning dirt out of my ears for at least 3 days after I returned!

After our first obstacle course - just a little dirty

Our rafts didn't float too well


Navigating one of the courses
The bunkhouse-complete with thatched roof
Roasting marshmallows on our last night

A mother and baby giraffe sighted in the bush