Sunday, November 7, 2010


linn(Norwegian nurse), isabelle (Luxembourgian optician), rhona (english doctor), floor (dutch med student)
burundi drummers

lake of stars

This weekend was a big music festival at the lake so we got tickets and headed down. it was in monkey bay and it was a very good thing that it was at the lake because it was really really hot this weekend. Friday was a public holiday (mother’s day) so after a ward round (rhona sees the patients and tries to discharge them if she can) we packed up and took off. Leaving nkhoma around noon with a quick stop in dedza for a bank and some groceries. Down one of the steep windy roads called the galimoti road which on a clear day gives great views of the lake and surrounding countryside…right now it is too dusty to see the lake and everything is brown and dry but still beautiful. And the temperature rose as we descended the hill.

Arrival at Nanchengwa lodge where we set up our tents and decided on a swim (ok no decision really just the next step). Weedy but the water was cool and therefore worth it all. I even thought I didn’t need to go to the festival…I was at the lake…I’m good. But then of course we had to check it out. Another large group had arranged a bus to go and we would all just split the cost and we could even arrange for it to pick us all up again at the end of the evening. So on we went and away we go another 15kilometers to the festival grounds.

Things we found strange (but good):
 The food prices were not inflated as at home—we could get fish and chips for 600kwacha ($4) or curry for 800K ($5.50) and drinks-$1 for soft drinks and <$2 for beer.
 Once you paid for parking it was for the whole weekend…not day by day.
 Advertised shuttles didn’t actually exist. Well I guess that isn’t too strange we are in Africa. (and not so good)

The music was good. Lots was African along with some british…Oliver Mtukudzi was a great performer…really loving the energy and dancing. There were Burundi drummers who put on a great performance as well. Also heard were Tinashe, Marko Sadiki, AlyKeita, Nomfusi and Khethi, Peter Mawanga (rasta xylophone player) and many more. It was a great atmosphere right on the beach and music going on all night. We didn’t know that and weren’t prepared (mentally) so we packed up and headed back to our tents and sleep each night. We didn’t really get to sleep in though as many people came back in the early morning hours and made lots of noise. There were also some dogs who didn’t like the “intruders” and the sun that heated up the tents to saunas by 730. only one bad sunburn between the 7 of us and it was a very bad sunburn (she fell asleep on the beach and was awakened by concerned strangers offering sunscreen).

i love my mom because of my family. my family is kind


monday

ABC (African Bible College-private school in Lilongwe where most of the azungu children go) is on their midterm break and so the Ter Haar older children and the Veitch children are home for the week and they often come in to the school to help in the classes. I had one each day in the room to help. It keeps the kids attention better as they are something new and since they know the information maybe it is relevant and they should learn it. one of the new things we learned or are in the process of learning is the doubles +1 facts. Something I’d never really heard of and when I read about I thought that it sounded much more confusing than just learning it but maybe that is because I already know the info. so we’re learning addition…slowly but surely and we have timed minute tests on 25 problems every day. So far we have done the +0, +1, +2 and doubles (4+4, 2+2, etc). so doubles +1 is taking 2+2 and making it 2+3. that is one they can already do but when you get to 7+8 they have problems. The strategy I’m supposed to teach them is to find the smaller number, double it, and then add 1. this seems very odd and round about to me but I’ve noticed that it does work as the kids mostly know their doubles. And it is faster than counting your fingers. Though on Thursday I also noticed that on occasion they were not picking the small number but doubling the big one and adding one. More practice needed…

Saturday, November 6, 2010

watermelon on the floor before rhona's party
in our malawian suits