Blog 3 – 3/21/2008

March 25, 2008 by agirlintheworldblog

hi All,

finally i got to a ‘normal’ internet cafe and there is electricity as well. :)

it’s been 3 weeks that im here in Ghana – i cant even believe it. work is good – every day is pretty much the same thou. get up around 7am, have some breakfast then go to the orphanage. i started to get to know the kids so it’s nicer. unfortunately i cant remember names – they all have super long African names. Around 8am the kids have breakfast, then get ready for daycare. everything here is a process – Ghanaians never rush things – they def take their times. getting ready for school/daycare can sometimes take 45min. some of the kids still have diapers so they need to be changed and some go and sit on the potty. one of the first days i walked into the bathroom where they all go. there are little pots on the floor and they are sitting next to each other and hang out. it’s pretty funny to see like 10-15 little kids sitting on the potty talking and stuff. when some of them are done they start looking at each others and start pouring pee on the floor or on each other. it was gross. so now i try not to go in there too much only to pull the kids out of there and try to dress them. HA!
so around 9-9:30 we walk over the day care. once everyone gets there we teach them for like an hour, then play and around lunch time we feed them. feeding the kids is pretty interesting as well. we have to feed the little ones while the older ones can eat alone. i usually feed 3-4 kids at once. i get a bowl of food – whatever that day they have which is usually some kind of soup or sauce with banku or fufu. they both look like a dough but fufu is made of kasava and plantains mashed together in huge balls. banku looks the same to me but its more sour and it made of something else. So anyway, we have to feed the kids by hand. i take a small amount of fufu dip it in the sauce and put it in their mouth. they are so cute, they sit there with open mouth like little birds. sometimes the food is so hot that i can hardly put my finger in the soup. ha.
after lunch they take naps and we go home too and have a break for a couple of hours. Since its so hot outside – sometimes we dont want to move at all bc we sweat like crazy.
then we go back to the orphanage around 3-3:30, play with th kids, feed them again, and help to give them baths. we usually finish around 6pm or so then we go home.
in the evening we just have dinner, take our bucket baths and hang out at home. after dark its not too good to go out – the roads are so dark and its a dirt road so its really hard to walk around. we’ve been going to bed around 8:30-9pm almost everyday. but we get pretty tired b/c of the heat and all that sweating everyday.
so last week i started to get a cold but it was not going away. i had a slight temperature for days and i couldnt sleep at nights then on top of that my eye got all red and looked like it got some infection. So i wasnt feeling well at all. i had to get some eye drops somewhere so they sent me to the hospital. when i got to the hospital – i had to get an ‘ID’ card – which was a hand written piece of paper with my name on it and i had to pay $2 for it. then i went in a room where they sat me down by a desk on a broken chair where a nurse took my blood pressure and my temperature. while she was doing that – she was on her cell phone the whole time. then they sent me out to the waiting room where i waited for an hour to get called in. i went into the same room again with the desk but now a doctor was sitting there. i sat down on the chair again, the doctor asked me a few questions about how i feel and what my problems are – and then he gave me prescription for my cold – some antibiotics, a cough syrup and some eye drops. on the way out there was a small pharmacy where i got all these meds for $4! Haha. but i cant complain – i do feel better and my eyes arent red anymore. :) . I really hope thou that i wont get really sick here and i wont have to go to the hospital again.

so this weekend – bc of the Easter break we took a trip to Cape Coast – which is right on a beach a cute town with a castle and close to a national park. we actually met here with some of the other volunteers i had the orientation with on the first week and we all stayed at a same hostel. we went to the Kakum National park where we had to walk thru a canopy that was about 200 feet high above the forest. it was fun but pretty scary. then we went to see the caste – which was actually a slave castle back then. it was pretty sad to see and hear the slavery stories and what happened in this caslte back in the days. then for the rest of the weekend we hung out on the beach and had good food in restaurants.  this is def a tourist town – we met many white people here and there is a cool resort/restaurant right on the beach that’s full of tourists. i’m actually still here in cape coast – this is where i found this amazing ‘fast’ internet.

we are planning on traveling on some the weekends if we can – since there is a lot to see in Ghana and everything is relatively cheap. the hostel we’ve been staying is super cheap but the bus rides and the food can get exp.
unfortunately i still couldn’t get any pictures uploaded to the internet – the connections are very slow here as well as the computers. but i’ve been taking pictures and i will show them when i get home.

hope all is well. i miss everything and everyone and def miss the hot showers and fresh vegetables and different food. all we are eating still is rice and fish stews – maybe some yam – oh and bread. so all carbs. im def not going to lose weight in ghana. I’ll try to go running this week in the mornings and see how i’ll do in this heat.

write me!

talk soon,

Blog 2

March 8, 2008 by agirlintheworldblog

After 5 day orientation it was time to leave Accra. Everyone in our group was very excited to go and meet their host family and see where we are staying. I found out that one of the girls from Holland got the same project and she is going to stay with the same family in Mampong. We took a 5 hour bus ride to Kumasi where we meet an organizer from SYTO. After lunch someone from our host family came to get us and take us to our new home. They told us that we are taking a tro tro bus to Mampong and the driver was going to drop us off by the bus. We drove into this crazy busy market place – full of vendors and people walking around carrying stuff on their heads. Our luggages were so big we couldn’t carry them alone and def not in the dirt road. Our host family member Yvonne called two girls over to help us with our luggage. They put those crazy heavy luggages on their heads and carry them to the tro tro. i felt so bad bc they were really really heavy and one of the girls even had a baby on her back. We just stood there shocked and just followed them. It seemed normal to them and supposedly they can carry more weight than our luggages. Although they were very happy for 2 Ghana cedis we tipped them for their help. The tro tro ride wasn’t bad – took us like an hour to get to Mampong. The house we are staying is big and looks better than anything I’ve ever seen. Our room has big beds and we have our own bathroom. There is no running water but we have a toilet in there and a bathtub. We also have a huge container of water what we use for taking baths and flushing the toilet. It is very interesting and very new to us. But I did feel clean and fresh after our bucket shower. Ha-ha. The family is huge; I still don’t really get who lives there and who is there just to visit. It seemed like a lot of people are coming over at dinnertime since our host grandma – Mama Tess makes a lot of food. The dinner was delicious too – we had some fish stew with rice. Saturday we went to check out the Mampong Babies Home where we are going to work starting Monday. It took us like 10-15 min to walk there. The Babies home was big and there were like 50 little babies and kids there. They were giving them a bath one by one when we got there. All the kids were so cute. When they saw us they ran to us and they all wanted to be picked up and held and just be by us. They didn’t let us go and they were fighting for us and tried to be hanging to us the whole time. They def need help in there – there are so many babies and toddles there and maybe 5 people were working. The babies are adorable and you just want to hold them and not let them go and they would let you.

2/25/2008 – 1st blog

February 25, 2008 by agirlintheworldblog

Hi All,

Here is my 1st blog ever!!

I’m leaving very soon and I wanted to share some details with you all. First of all I want to thank everyone’s support and all the donations I received. I really appreciate it. It feels great to have so many good friends who care about me and help me with this amazing trip.

My flight is on Saturday – March 1st at 10PM from JFK. I’m going to switch planes in Amsterdam and fly another 6 hours to Accra, Ghana. Someone from the organization will be waiting for me at the airport and take me to a hostel where I’m going to stay for a 5-day orientation. I just found out that there is a couple from NJ is going to volunteer in Ghana at the same time and we are flying with the same flight.

After the orientation in Accra, I will take a bus to Kumasi which is the second largest city in Ghana. It’s a 5-hour bus ride – supposedly in an air-conditioned bus! There I will meet a counselor name Helen who will take me to the family where I’m going to stay for 8 weeks. The town I’m staying called Mampong – 1 hour from Kumasi. Here is a map so you can see what I’m talking about.
http://maps.google.com/maps?f=q&hl=en&geocode=&q=Ghana&ie=UTF8&z=7&om=0

Here is what I know about the family I’m going to live with. They are an 8-member family – 5 males and 3 females. They are farmers and live in a compound building in Mampong. I will have my own room; the house has a kitchen, a main living area, bed rooms, and a bathroom. Not sure about plumbing but looks like they have electricity :) .

I will be walking distance from the orphanage I’m going to work at. The orphanage called Mampong Babies Home. There are about 50 children – ages between a day old and 4-5 year old. I will be helping to maintain children by giving them the necessary care and attention as their mothers would have given them. I will help with feeding, bathing, and ensuring general cleanliness of the children. There are only 6 staff members working at this orphanage – it does look like they need help all the time.

My town, Mampong has an internet café, a bank, some stores and a bar! I’ll have access to email probably everyday and since my weekends are free I can travel and explore as much as I want.

I’m very excited but I’m also getting a little nervous. I can’t believe it’s coming up so soon!
Thanks for reading and I will write again shortly!
Agi

Hello world!

February 25, 2008 by agirlintheworldblog

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