16 March 2011

n-pelpuo



this is n-pelpuo. he is a fantastic artist. this boy never ceases to amaze me with the magic he is able to produce. just give him a piece of paper and a pencil, and no guidance whatsoever, and he will make a masterpiece.
n-pelpuo is a little bit shy. he's not one of those children who shadow me everywhere i go (and i am appreciative of that). he hovers in the background, and when you talk to him he kind of looks away timidly. it's sweet. he's in p6, which is a notoriously truant class, but he loves art, so he's always there as soon as he sees me coming.
i'm trying to encourage his natural talent by helping him with the resources he needs. at the end of last term, i gave him a small sketchbook and box of crayons to take home so he could keep drawing.
he's one of my favorites.

13 March 2011

things have changed

in america.
and this will be very evident to me when i return (in five months!). but i am curious as to exactly what has changed. some things i guess i'll expect (i've heard about a singer named lady gaga?) but others will certainly surprise me.
so i've been asking some friends lately what they think will be the biggest surprises to me when i return. their answers have been funny.
my friend janet says that the phones will be the surprise to me. that they have become very high-tech and that people are overly dependent on them. she says she can even deposit checks using her phone!
my friend jessi told me that the economy/job market will be a noticeable change. she says it's still really hard to get jobs and that people spend a lot less money now than what they used to.
and she said the other thing that would surprise me is the curly lightbulbs that congress has mandated everyone to use.
the curly lightbulbs are also popular here, but they are not required by the government. and jessi told me about the special instructions in case one breaks, that you should evacuate the room, don't vacuum it, etc.
this was funny to me, because when one burns out in ghana, you just throw it as hard as you can into the adjoining field, so it WILL break. and then the little barefoot children walk through that field...
so perhaps the surprise to me will be just how regulatory america is, at least in comparison to ghana.
anyway, this is a topic that's very interesting and entertaining to me. what do YOU think will be the most surprising way that i will notice america has changed?

07 March 2011

it's not possible to exit a trotro gracefully

i used to feel self conscious getting on and off trotros. trotros are the main source of transportation in ghana, old beat up vans packed to the max with people, chickens, yams, babies, goats, etc.
in the south, a seat that is meant to hold three people actually holds three people. but in the north, a seat meant to hold three people sometimes holds five or six. so this, combined with all the market purchases and other random everything that people carry, makes it difficult to get on or off without sitting on top of someone, sticking your butt in their face, an elbow on their side, or stepping on feet.
i used to feel bad about this, but then i realized that they all do it to me too. oh well!

05 March 2011

larabanga and mole national park

this weekend some friends and i went to mole national park. it is one of the best places in west africa to see wildlife.
mole is just outside the village of larabanga, which is home to the oldest mosque in west africa. it is mud and stick construction, originally built in the 1400s in the sudanese style.
in mole now...animals!
right outside our hotel we discovered this family of warthogs sleeping. notice the little babies nursing!

this is the sunset over the watering hole.
more warthogs!
the ripples of a crocodile.
antelope.
our guide, guarding us from all those mean animals.
elephant footprints...though no elephants for us that day.
bushbuck.

02 March 2011

"how's the heat?"

that's the favorite greeting that the teachers at my school like to ask me. because they know i'll roll my eyes and say how miserable i am, and that makes them laugh every time.
yesterday--the first day of the month--one teacher told me that we are now in the hottest month of the year. while this is true, it was a terribly discouraging thing for me to hear, when i still have 30 more days to survive!
"how's the heat?"
and then they say "we pray for rain."