July 18th, 2012. One year ago today we touched down in a plane in a
completely different world. It’s
hard to believe how much we’ve experienced since the moment we stepped foot on
the tarmac of a distant land called Zambia.
Before re-capping some of the highlights and lowlights of
our service so far (15 months to go!), I wanted to take this time to thank
Scott for his sense of adventure that brought us here in the first place, his
endless patience with all frustrations that come with living in the rural
Zambian bush, and his resourcefulness in making our hut truly a home. This is truly an experience the
two of us have shared that has shown us so much about one another and about the
important things in life. I would
also like to give a special thanks to the people back home who have taken care
of things in order to let us live this extraordinary adventure: Adam, Eric,
Mell and Rachael to name a few. We
also have enjoyed the countless pictures, letters, and packages from family and
friends that have given us those so-important reminders of life in America. We
deeply appreciate all that you do!
Life has been in full swing with village projects
lately. Scott is working on a
contest to motivate his fish farmers to better manage their ponds as well as
designing and supervising the digging of new ones. In his spare time, he has a huge hut-improvement project
underway that involves making a bike storage shed and an outdoor bathing
shelter out of mud bricks molded from the nearby anthill (aka Home Depot of the
bush). I’ve been busy working on a
community health volunteer training, mosquito net distribution, HIV drama group
contest, and community-based child nutrition program.
We’re so excited to take our FIRST official vacation in
September with visitors Brad, Jane and Julie. It’ll include Victoria Falls, the chief’s ceremony near our
village, Chimpfunshi Wildlife Orphanage, wildlife watching, hot springs, and
Lake Tanganyika. We have been busy
with a few weekend getaways, including this last one at Nyambwezu Falls:
Zambia Lowlights July 2011-July 2012:
-
After 6 months of preparing in the Spanish
language, the original disappointment in hearing the Latin American program of
our nomination was cut due to budget cuts and we’d instead be going to sub-Saharan
Africa.
-
The stress of learning our departure date was
bumped up from September to July, giving us exactly 6 weeks to quit our jobs,
pack up our house, sell our car and most of our stuff, apply for visas and say
goodbye to family and friends.
-
Living in separate towns for 3 months, and
seeing each other weekend for Peace Corps training
-
Some kids in the village afraid of us when they
first met us.
-
Struggling through learning an entirely new
language.
-
The awkwardness of people in the village asking
for money or things that we cannot give.
-
The village bore hole breaking and countless
meetings with government and NGO’s who refuse to fix it.
-
Multiple programs cancelled because different
government officers and NGO’s couldn’t or wouldn’t travel to our bush village.
-
Getting soap stolen from our bath shelter
-
Scott accidentally dropping our kitten on the
head (he survived just fine)
-
Staring, staring, and more staring from our
villagers. In a village without
televisions, we never cease to be the entertainment.
-
Scott’s fish farmers having massive fish kills
and losing most of the fish in their ponds due to low oxygen levels
-
Gina witnessing a small child die of malaria
fever and the mother’s anguish that followed.
-
Watching villagers suffer from various medical
ailments that would have been easily prevented/treated in the states
-
Cooks for certain programs skimming food and
money
-
Watching blatant bribery at bus checkpoints,
especially when the bus is overcrowded
-
Gina crossing a river carrying a bicycle over a
flooded bridge thigh-deep in water just to get back from a medical outreach
site.
-
Gina having to travel 6 days to Lusaka just to
get her work permit, which was misplaced at the disorganized immigration
office.
-
Solwezi dust
-
Scott getting spat at by a cobra while walking
in the the bush, which incapacitated him for the remainder of the day (the
highlight is that the cobra slithered away rather than biting him)
-
A 5-inch deep lake in front of our house before
we dug a furrow in early rainy season
-
Some of our fellow Peace Corps volunteers
showing disrespectful behavior that affected the entire group of volunteers
-
Marital misunderstandings that get especially
magnified when you’re living in a 2-room hut far from the usual social supports
-
Gina’s broken pinky toe at the end of training
-
Gina walking home with a broken bicycle in the
pouring rain.
-
Ants and termites EVERYWHERE (what do you expect
when your house is made of an anthill?)
Zambia Highlights July 2011-July 2012
-
Stepping off the plane to meet an amazing group
of Peace Corps staff who gave us a warm welcome into this country
-
Scott living with a host family who had never
before had contact with Americans
-
Dancing, drumming, and hula-hooping with the
host family children
-
Gina helping her host brother with
range-of-motion stretches for his CP
-
Visiting other volunteers-in-training on
brand-new Treks in Chongwe and Chipembi
-
Seeing dika, warthogs, and giraffes whenever we
visited each other on weekends during training
-
Waking up at 1am to jubilation when election
results were given after 3 days of tensely waiting for the new president
-
Scott visiting Kariba Farms crocodile farm with
his fellow trainees
-
Salsa dancing and clubbing in Lusaka
-
***Eating a feast of game meat and other Zambian
delicacies at the State House along with President Sata for Scott’s swear-in***
-
Taking our host from a bush village to see a 3D
movie in Lusaka
-
Jerry can drumming and watching villagers play a
makeshift guitar
-
Being in a crowded Lusaka bar the night
Chipolopolo won the Africa Cup of Nations and witnessing the subsequent national
pride
-
Watching the players and coach parade through
the streets the next day in front of thousands of enthusiastic fans
-
Scott being an honored guest at our neighbor’s
wedding meal
-
Interesting and colorful caterpillars, spiders,
beetles, grasshoppers, and lizards in our very own backyard
-
Sitting under our thatch-roof kitchen watching
lightning in all directions, and then being perfectly dry under sheets of rain
-
Making and delivering Christmas cookies to see
our neighbors’ faces light up.
-
Making treats over a charcoal brazier (thanks in
good part to our Bush Baby cast iron pot) that we never possible: cinnamon
rolls, pizza, pumpkin pie, and gingerbread to name a few
-
Gina watching the successful delivery of our
next-door-neighbor girl Priscilla’s baby in the clinic with very competent
birth attendants
-
Seeing the clinic bore hole get up and running
so patients no longer had to drink and wash in river water
-
Setting up an HIV counseling and testing program
at the clinic where before there was none.
-
Scott’s first fish-farming training, which
attracted over 45 villagers
-
Swimming and lounging in the Zambezi rapids near
Ikelenge
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Waterfalls, waterfalls, more waterfalls, and the
Zambians’ amazement that we can actually swim where we can’t touch the bottom.
-
Our first formal visit to the chief with the
villagers followed by a second, less formal visit where the chief invited us
into his living room, invited us for a drink, played the guitar for us and sat
down for a nshima meal with us.
-
Awesome hitches on roads where transportation is
usually difficult: notably an organic honey distributer, a Chinese cell tower worker,
an American president historian, and a South African woman with a dog
-
Zambian smiles
-
Scott meeting our next door neighbor at a remote
bus stop 300k from our house and being invited for lunch at her sister’s house
-
Palm Sunday procession down our road complete
with the spiritual singing and carrying of palms
-
Discovering amazing bush trail shortcuts on our
mountain bikes
-
Rasmod’s singing for joy in the mornings with no
particular audience
-
Scott teaching math to people truly interested
in learning
-
Seeing the pride in 8th and 9th
graders writing letters to America
-
Finally reaching semi-proficiency in the Lunda language
as shown by the village women telling Gina “you speak Lunda very well” and
Scott being able to sustain a 10-minute conversation
-
Sunrises, sunsets, rainbows, countless stars,
and full moons (what more can we say?)
-
The chief coming by our house and commenting on
how much he liked our solar dehydrator made of bush materials
-
Gina’s homestay with an amazing embassy family
in Lusaka
-
Meeting Brother Joe and hearing stories of him
hunting elephants in our neck of the woods before Zambia was Zambia
-
Joyfull dancing, clapping and singing at church
or whenever a new baby is born in the village.
-
Thanksgiving and Easter dinner feasts at the
Solwezi house, with subsequent dance parties that followed
-
Turning on our phones and finding that network
coverage was in our hut!
-
Both of us being malaria-free for 1 year
-
Friendly greetings by name from various
compounds as we ride our bikes up and down the dirt road in front of our house.
-
Valentine’s dinner at the Golfview Hotel in
Lusaka
-
Opening up surprise care packages, especially
from unexpected people like Stephanie and Nick’s mom
-
Gina teaching yoga to teenage boys at camp ELITE
-
Watching the villagers implement some of the
projects we encouraged, like perma-gardening and giving health talks at
antenatal clinic
-
Fresh cowmilk tea, good conversation with Brits,
and a beautiful view from our front porch veranda on a weekend getaway in
Nyangombe
-
An exhausting bike ride to a remote waterfall
where the villagers happily greeted us, brought us to their headman, and cooked
us a chicken
-
The warm, welcoming, hardworking yet easygoing
attitude of the Zambian people coupled with being constantly surrounded by
natural beauty which has captured our hearts and made us realize there’s no
place in the world we’d rather be right now than Zambia!
Here’s to a great year behind us and 15 more months of
meaningful work and play in the country we have come to call home!
This is an amazing adventure you are on. Thanks for sharing it with us.
ReplyDeleteThose lows sounded pretty hard but I am so relieved that the list of highs is much longer. You two are amazing!
ReplyDelete