Saturday, October 8, 2011

I'm a Fan

I'm constantly amazed at God's creativity, especially among all the neat-o plants and animals here in Kenya.  Just about everyday I see something that is straight out of a Dr. Seuss book.  Did he live in my backyard to get those ideas for crazy trees? 


Anyway, here is one such plant, the fan palm.  The trunk is practically braided together.


The branches fan out from side to side.  It's flat!  And it's really tall! 

I'm a fan.

Thursday, September 29, 2011

Report to Casualty

Everybody has a few stories that define the embarrassing and hilarious side of life.  These stories somehow come up over and over again, sometimes with the benefit of making someone else feel better about whatever embarrassing and stressful situation they are currently in.  I have my fair share of said stories.  How the dachshund I was pet-sitting ate the enormous parrot I was also pet-sitting.  How I gave myself a whopping black eye with a student's trombone three minutes before our Christmas concert started.  How I broke my wrist doing synchronized zip-lining for a Lake Olympics competition when I was a chaperon at a junior high camp.  And now, why I had to report to casualty and get my rabies vaccine.

I hope you read my previous post Monkeying Around.  If not, you should read it now, just so this post makes sense.  See, I was hanging out with some monkey friends and one bit my thumb.  Not hard, not viciously, just enough to draw a little blood and release the corn I was hoarding.  But it was still a monkey bite.

Richard and I have read and heard from very reliable sources that these monkeys are regularly vaccinated by volunteer vets.  No worries!  But we just thought we'd get a stamp of approval from our doctor.  We called up.  "Ummm...a monkey bit you?  Was it wild?  Maybe you should just check in with the hospital right across the street and see what they say."  Way to pass the buck.

So we drive literally across the street into the parking lot of Aga Khan Hospital.  It is a very nice hospital with a very good reputation.  We come in a back entrance and ask the information desk lady who we should see to tell us if I even need to be seen.  "I'm sending you to casualty.  Take two lefts and check in there."

Excuse me? CASUALTY?  But I'm not DEAD! This is way worse than I thought! I assumed casualty was the Kenyan word for morgue.  Turns out it's the emergency room.

We checked in, took a number, paid for the doctor's visit before we saw her ($13), went to Triage Room 1 where the nurse nearly laughed when I told her I was bitten by a monkey, waited a bit more and then was called back to see the doctor.  She had never been to visit the monkeys in City Park, and looked a little incredulous that any person in their right mind would choose to go near a monkey, vaccinated or not.  Then she declared that since the money had not been carrying his rabies vaccine papers with him at the time of the incident, I was to get my rabies vaccine and a tetanus booster (which by the way, was the most painful part of the whole process).

A nurse named Perpetual gave me my jabs, as they are called here, and told me I was brave.  I guess that's one upside to this whole monkey business.  I made a date with Perpetual to give me my next jab in the rabies series on Saturday, then I go back Wednesday and finally Wednesday week.


The good news is, I can go back and feed those monkeys till they are round has barrels if I want, because I've got immunity.

And if a monkey ever bites you, let me know.  I've got your back on making you feel better about it.

Monkeying Around


Yesterday, Richard and I went to City Park.  We heard through the grapevine that a group of vets take care of the monkeys there and that we could feed them.  We have seen pics of other care-free visitors doing this very same thing and and wanted to give it a whirl.  Who doesn't have a secret desire to hold a monkey?


The monkeys were everywhere, and adorable. 

See how this one is holding his own feet?


You could get up close and personal. 


They were very sweet and just a little pushy when they realized you had more corn in your hand than you were letting on.


They would jump on your back


and ride on your shoulder


and they were very well behaved.


This one, being such a well-behaved monkey, just nibbled my thumb to ask me to open my hand with the corn in it.  I obliged.  Unfortunately, I also bled just a little bit.  Enough to make us ask, so what does one do when one is bitten by a monkey in City Park?  Stay tuned for the answer.

Thursday, September 22, 2011

Traditional Fun


This is a video of Class 6 performing their own composition. The words are in Kiswahili and were originally a poem.  The class teacher, Mrs. Mugo, and the class made it into a song with all the parts.  Two of my piano students figured out their parts on the keyboard on their own and are accompanying the class.  Watch the two middle girls for good dancing and fun, and watch the boys because they are being so boyish about dancing.  I don't feel so badly about the way I jive anymore. This is the style of traditional Kenyan music, so enjoy!

Wednesday, September 21, 2011

Descriptive Writing

I started a unit on descriptive writing in class 5 last week by having each student trace their hand on a sheet of paper, or what we call a foolscap.


Then they each got a piece of candy.


The candy made us rack our brains for the right descriptive words


of how it sounded when it hit our desk, looked inside and out, felt in our hands and mouths, smelled, and finally tasted.  Some tasted better than others.


We wrote out our descriptions, using the five fingers as planning spaces for the five senses.


We worked hard.


It's amazing what a piece of candy can do for a class!


Sunday, September 18, 2011

When Smiles are Words


Hey, Guys!  What are you doing?

(Smiles.)


Are you enjoying your new chairs?

(Smiles.)


Should we take these into the classroom and use them as our new desks?

(Smiles.)


Are you having fun?

(Smiles.)


(Smiles.)

At least I know they are happy, even if I don't know why.

Tuesday, August 23, 2011

Sugar, Sugar


I am showing you this picture because:
A) Kenya is out of sugar.
B) This is all the sugar I have left in my house.
C) I am a confirmed sugar lover and baker and eater. Coffee is just an excuse.
D) All of the above.

Bonus points awarded to anyone who can appropriate a 2 kilo bag of sugar.

Monday, August 22, 2011

Mr. Onditi


This is Mr. Onditi, Class 2 Teacher, Extraordinaire.


During PE,
he coaches his students on the finer points of football from the sidelines.


Then he jumps in and schools them on the field.


They always ask him to go first in every game,
and if a student tries to jump in line, the others are indignant.


Then they follow in his footsteps, every fiber bent on doing their best.


They give it their all.


They do it with style.


They say imitation is the greatest form of flattery.

I would have to agree.

Sunday, August 7, 2011

Wednesday, August 3, 2011

Kitengela Hot Glass


One weekend, Richard and I visited the studio of "hot glass" artists (mother and son) whose work is well known in Kenya.  After two wrong turns and more pot holes than road, we knew we were finally getting close when we passed this huge cow sculpture


and this beautiful stained glass wall perched in the grass.


Taa-daaa! Kitengela hot glass!


Inside the workshop we watched a well-coordinated team of men create beautiful glass products.  The man sitting in the far back corner was given a pipe with molten glass on the end.  He would blow it and hand it off to another guy who would bring it


to this furnace to be heated again. He would then hand it off to


one of these guys who would open and shape the bubble with tongs or thick newspaper dipped into water to help cool it.  Notice each of the "shapers" has another man handy to keep the glass moving along.


The glass would then be spun to make a floppy olive dish,


or stretched with pliers to make an unusual vase,


or shaped into any number of these beautiful products.  All of the glass is from recycled glass like windows, windshields and mayonnaise jars.  They colour it with a powder made for tinting windows that you might see in a high-powered office building.


Every window was made of stained glass,


every shelf had glass curios,


and every suitable place had an enormous glass decoration just for fun.


We meandered through a separate workshop and discovered the source of all the stained glass.


There was a room with cubbies, organized by shade and colour, full of glass sheets ready for cutting and placement


into a work of art.