Wednesday, November 23, 2011

Raunchy Radio Talk Shows, Perverts, Anything Goes- thats Light matatu Riding!



"The Light Side of Matatu Travel"
(Certainly every VW bus you ever saw in America is now in use in Kenya!)

A matatu is like a traveling melting pot of smells.
From the drivers cheap cigarette to the "conductor" who looks and effuses an air of
being up all night, to the occasional weird fellow who wants to let his feet breathe, all made worse by the cologne wafting through from the smartly dressed guy in the corner seat. Yet Kenyans must travel with all the windows broken shut, irrespective of how hot or "close" the matatu is.

It’s no wonder that nowadays some of the driers who have had enough of this torture employ an oversized sticker, usually in bright red, announcing "tafadhali, usitoe viatu ndani ya gari" (keep you shoes on). Not all stickers are eco friendly though. Some are calculated to frighten the life out of you! (The driver is insane! Don't bring stress here!) They are not joking because they carry enough crude weapons to mount a credible assault on the Al Shabaab militia.

At 60mph with every sharp bend he leans hard on you. With every pothole the vehicle hits, he generally smears you with some of the perspiration. But until you hire a private driver one has to put up with the very public nature of the matatu. These include the endless chatterboxes who try to interest you in stories you care nothing about --like Mr. Preacherman on how the devil personally invented computers to spread his influence on earth. Why can't they just listen to the blaring radio and let me look out with every lurch or jolt - in peace.

Speaking of radios -and let’s not get into the fact that you could be perched on the top of a refrigerator sized speaker and each thunderous decibel scatters your innards -- you can be minding your own business, or next to an elderly person, when the FM radio launches into a raunchy bedroom story, told by a female caller in shrieking voice, "I'm cheating on my husband because he's useless! He finishes in three minutes she shamelessly rants to the radio hosts raucous laughter/ You can't laugh and squirm at the same time.

Every ones praying the darn thing shuts off. The mobile phone is another thing altogether in close proximity. Ironically, its those who hold the loud conversations in matatus, quoting astronomical figures, say, I'm selling the plot next to the petrol station for ks9 million!, are usually the shabbiest and smell of old banana skins. Then there are the femmes fatales who plot office coups on the phone. But then you realize the gossip was an angel when you have on the other side a passenger who chats loudly for a mind boggling 45 minutes in their mother tongue!

What of the wide loaded passenger consuming 80%of the seat and leave me to perch on an eighth of my cheek on the remaining space -- considering we're both paying the same fare! Others are known to travel with their entire family yet they only want to pay for two seats, because the kids and luggage pieces are too small to be charged.

Woe is me if I end up there. And not a good plan for long journeys.
A few kilometres down the road one of the children will start wailing endlessly, waking up another toddler. Without consultation I am asked to take the baby dumped in my lap for me to rock gently. A few minutes later the child may go thankfully quiet and reward me with a warm liquid trickling down.

But what can we say about the farmer Joe, the hardworking small scale shamba guy from out of town? He will have a dirty raffia bag in his lap caked with red earth at the bottom.

Mindful of every available space, there will be several jerry cans of fresh mild, easily discernible by the rich scent, packed protectively around his feet. To complete the diet, an assortment of vegetables will be spread liberally around him, not to mention the squealing piglet propped up between his legs.

If the condition of the road or the excessive swerving of the driver makes him lean a bit, his gumboots will re-dye your shoes or hem as the sap seeping slowly from the bananas in his sack stains whatever you're wearing.

But at least you will have learned that he hails from Kitale, has six acres of maize ready for harvest and his brothers’ eldest daughter, who is a single mother of three, is about to wed a church elder is a widower whose wife died "just like that."

Next time, the big bus ride with nine goats to Kaoleni!

Monday, October 31, 2011

Marine Tour off Mobasa Reef


With breezes blowing, Ihad just resurfaced from the coral, angel and zebra fish off Mombasa Reef!

Sparse but one corner Nyumbani


this is my one room apt/ Nyumbani, flooded with the recent short rain season

Thursday, October 13, 2011

Jambo, Leo habari yako..?


There was a picture posted of the long limbed greeters I found on arrival at the office. There are always the playful monkeys too, but that day was a surprise. I was worried about being too far away from the animals down here on the coast, but the birds and marine, caribbean style fish are beautiful too. I do enjoy somewhat experiencing my native Miami home again. Limestone cottages, breezes, birds, and nice winter weather. In March I will hate it.


As you know, I'm assigned to EcoEthics, a maritime conservation NGO started in 2000. Am involved in reworking the ECO Club curriculum in 52 schools, redesigning the latest membership cultivation piece, and working through some administrative issues with the board. Okeyo, the director, is a PhD marine fisheries conservation guy, working alongside a few more Kenyan ecologists and toxic waste mgt"experts" ...O may be late 40's, trained in Africa, Germany and England, the others are around my kids ages.

work life is noint the bush, but we have challenges everyday getting tasks done.... no wifi, fax or copiers, all material is 'paper free' so shared with staff through flash drive, electricity may be out part if the time, etc etc. Poor records to fall back on, in the sense that most files are in different places. Nevertheless, my non-profit years, plus last decade at PBS will help me guide them in certain areas, improving grant writing skills etc. Great guys, and they laugh hysterically when I put pili pili hot sauce on the polenta-like national dish, ugali, (making it 100 times more edible)

I start the typical day by listening to BBC News (by crank radio or solar charged, when I can baby sit the process during clothes washing by hand on a Sat... since I'm conserving on batteries for now)... I hope for water from the shower... really my bucket baths were more dependable! Then, I quickly put on one of my old sundresses from the 80's embellished up by local leso..tied in some fashion over shoulder or wrapped, whatever seems to be working... and head scarf. I try to look as Kenyan as possible and continue with the struggling Kiswahili.... for credibility....

...then I walk to matatu stand 12 minutes for commute (in Denver, quick to downtown from my house..this takes abo 40 min). The matatu is exhausting, like bumping along at high speed in a packed sardine can,,,
I return the same way, depending on the route I decide best suits my mood, fascinated by the maneuvering of the traffic snarls, sort of a cross between Rome and Bombay I think!

Weekends, I try and swim somewhere without the beach boys bothering me....I can be misinterpreted as a "shikamoo", or rich European mama needing entertainment. Its all true, of course but I don't have the budget of an old European divorcee!!
I don't know many people yet, so I try and keep busy, going to library, beach, old town dukas.... there is a nice, upscale area called Nyali Beach where there is a decent market, great coffee shop etc... or, look for places like the Bambolulu Cultural Center (they have great website www.bamboluluculturalcenter.com) to learn about amazing Kenyans making crafts and special bikes for and by the disabled.The roads here are terrible other than the main thoroughfares and Moi Avenue bank sidewalks..... the rest are and rutted out shoulders, somewhat trash ridden.So the handicapped wheelchairs with "SUPER" tires are making mobility possible for some. My "Keens" ugly, keep me looking like a PV vol, but upright at least...

SO, keep dropping in on me once in a while..I miss everyone

Friday, September 9, 2011

Some more pictures from PC Training & Swearing In


Ambassor to Kenya House


US Ambassador's front door to welcome press and 50+ new volunteers August 23, 2011


Swearing In Dutch Ambassadors foyer


Our PC training team, health and business, cultural and language


Favorite Businesstrainer at PC, Timothy Kibet - Former CEO in public health


Cupcakes Wa Kenyan


More Ambassador House Reception


Leaving my favorite baby girl in Loitokitok


Leaving Training Centre at Outward Bound


Graduation Day

I take this photo with me, taken before I left for Africa

Saturday, August 20, 2011

US Ambassador to Kenya Scott Gration


...with my Peace Corps trainers in small business and Kiswahili. At his residence for our searing in celebration!


Ambassador Residence Nairobi

Monday, August 15, 2011

Dutch’s assignment with the Peace Corps



Eco-Ethics International, Mombasa, Kenya, Maritime Conservation
http://www.ecoethics-kenya.org/index.html


To write to Dutch:

Dutch Hodges PCV
US Peace Corps
PO Box 698 - 00621
Village Market
Nairobi, Africa

My Life In Kenya

During the last 10 weeks of Peace Corps training I have visited and interviewed many community health and business projects around the country – western province…in Kakamega and Kisumu, Bondi; the central area communities of Lake Naivasha and Nyanza, Rift Valley and Nakuru; the eastern area around Garessa, and finally the beautiful coastal communities of Mombasa, Kilifi and Malindi. The trainees are here to learn, help with business plans, evaluate operations, and to assist in measuring the effectiveness of each project. The process will help us to prepare for our permanent site assignments. The trainers are Kenyans from over a dozen different tribes. I‘ve worked with Kalajans ( area which contributes all the renowned runners), Kukuyus (real entrepreneurs) Meru, Luos, and Kamba and wonderful American staff from all over the US. The Peace Corps efforts here are coordinated in conjunction with the Kenyan government and the national plan to strengthen education and reduce poverty. (Everyone working, from school teacher to the agribusiness professional working in a shamba with a farmers is here to learn, but also to leave knowledge behind…where there is a more educated, employed Kenyan there is less spread of AIDS and other serious illnesses. The training of women is also a priority, they are motivated, work more hours in a day than I can handle, and want to pay the school fees so their children can continue to qualify for secondary school.

General Economics
The average Kenyan earns 100-150 shillings a day, a little over a dollar. A PC volunteer earns $200 per month, so he or she still makes more than a teacher or techie working for a NGO. Rent in the city can be 1500 shillings so for the head of the family making 6-7800 shillings a month with a wife and three kids that doesn’t go too far.
Here’s another context. Steve Jobs probably has 76 billion in his checking account on any given day –The Kenya national budget is 28 billion ($) I visited several villages in the north where the death rate for children under 5 years is incredibly high at 20%. If we can help develop projects and train the locals to make a living, there are many solutions to reduce loss of life.

Types of Projects I have been exposed to…
Bee Keeping – Apiaries are being built by local fundis, constructing the frames, learning to handle the bees, harvest, and clean the equipment, all by hand. Beekeeping is flourishing Kenyans are eager to be taught and are good at it. We visited at night when the bees were docile! Challenges where PC business volunteers can help include:
- All work is manual even the capping of the frames and extraction centrifugal process!
- Keeping the equipment clean in this kind of environment without running water or electricity critical
- Protecting honey from critters
- Sources for equipment and transport to market
- Only 10% of what is harvested is making a profit

Fishing, Lake Victoria, Lake Nguru and the Coast
There is a Scandinavian NGO overseeing a large project with the Ministry of Fisheries to improve fishing practices and safety. Between 2000 and 3000 fisherman are lost annually due to drowning. The boats are not very seaworthy, mostly dugout canoes with sails constructed from burlap rice sacks or other materials fashioned to a eucalyptus mast. Even the expert boat builders from Mombasa who are training the regional craftsmen build their boats by hand, down to the drilling of holes. The boats are beautiful and strong but take many months to complete. Between the Swedes and other volunteer workers these challenges are being addressed
- getting the fish to market
- environmental waste management of by projects (one of the programs of my
organization, Eco Ethics International)
- education and training with fishmongers who work in pairs when the seasonal fishermen are living on the beaches. Instead of trading sex for fish they are learning
to make nets and crafts in to make a living

Fish Farming/Ponds
A good business for HIV sufferers since less physical labor is required.
Papyrus and Sweetgrass Furniture Making
Stronger than rattan, I can decorate my whole house for about $20! It takes four days to make a chair, and ¾ of an acre to earn 1000 shillings for the fundi. He is also expanding his business to make ropes, and woven area rugs, baskets etc

Common Stereotypes
-American like war
-The Indians take over Kenyan business and resources
-British are not popular due to the colonization however Kenyans love British products in the cities
Chinese are hardworking but not good teachers, impatient

Peace Corps Stressors
-Christian radio 24/7
-staying clean (a relative term)
-language (using Kiswahili only since third week here)
-making food edible (ugali, like our polenta from maize is tasteless, but pili pili hot sauce helps! I eat kale, chapatti (tortilla), potatoes, rice, beans and cabbage mostly)
-isolation
-Privacy, being stared at, called “muzungo” means traveler
-health symptoms
-too many local ladies hitting on the guys
-missing family
-wanting mail
-traveling on the matatus
-sore feet
-no sex
-not having enough TP or forgetting it

PC Rules We Hate
-No riding on piki pikis
-curfew for safety
-health rules and education (a morass of information)

We have had great training about integrating into our communities through the books and teaching of Gudy Kunzet and Kim, Communicating With Strategy (cutting through the layers of messaging, and cultural mores of people) and Everett Rogers, a British author who had dedicated years of study to addressing innovative decision process within our minds.








Thursday, August 4, 2011

Jambo!

My tests are this week and next are for small biz practices, language etc... The kids follow us everywhere! I am doing well, but very hard work visiting farms, boat builders, other NGO biz sites..Love D,

Wednesday, July 20, 2011

From Mary Canada

Hi All - thought you'd like to see some of the fabulous animals. For my birthday I went to Amboseli National Park. Not the great herds of Masaii Mara, but still beautiful to see several kinds of giraffe (there are nine in all..!)hippos, eles, zebras, secretry birds, a hyena, the antelope, diks diks and flamingos roaming in their own environment.
I've recently been to Mombasa with a few other trainees to see some business sites that support HIV centers. The Ministry of Health in Kenya does work with the UN on AIDS education and treatment but the US provides 83% of the medicine and maintenance treatment ABR's and training for the Kenyan medical teams.
More on that later. The trip to Mombasa was especially exciting because I may be placed there after I complete training (with ECO ETHICS, an environmental maritime conservation organization with three offices throughout Kenya). What a beautiful harbor with carribean blue water and a expansive coral reef surrounding. Vasco De Game first came here with his Portuguese sailors in 1498 to establish an east African base but they were met with hostility from the locals and moved up the coast to Malindi. The natural harbor here soon attracted the Turks who build Ft Jesus in the mid 1500's. The Portuguese prevailed however, taking Mombasa back and expanding on the fort in the 1590s. Completing the rectangular shape of the fort to resemble Christ on the cross (since they regarded themselves as representatives of Christendom first rather than Portugal) this fortress lies tranquilly in the sun. But it was not always so. Ft Jesus has suffered a history of murder, seige, starvation and treachery that makes our modern world of hi-jacking and thuggery seem tame. Every sail that appeared on the horizon must have caused nerve racking hours of anxiety to the small colony of around 100 men separated from home by six months of sailing.
This amazing place is a long clear vision into the past.

More soon, but here I am at the waters edge of the fort and then again looking out from an original canon portal to the harbor.

Lots of love Ma and Dutch




Report from training in Taveta, Kenya

So far I am in training and there is no internet. I forward these messages to Billy to post. My training is in Taveta south of Lotokitok doing business visits for HIV projects, a farm, water purification plant, fish ponds,

I am in classes all day, how to market products better, culture, health, 4 hours daily of language...packed. 4 more weeks of training to go.

I have classes all day, I may get to Mombasa where I can write a narrative but hard to do from phone.

This is a fascinating time to be in Africa with Lybia, Egypt, Ruwanda, ect

Some people were worried because of reports about the humanitarian crisis is Dadaab Kenya. I am not near the 10 million Somalis on eastern border, and the unrestful Turkana tribes in NW. Below is an insert about Taveta….

Feeling stronger everyday...

More soon
XO’D

______________________________________________________________________
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Taveta is a town in the Taveta District of Coast Province in Kenya. The town has an urban population of 11,500 (1999 census ).
Overview
The town of Taveta is wedged into a projection of Kenyan territory bordered on the north and west by Tanzania. The irregularity in the border was created c. 1881 when Queen Victoria gave Mount Kilimanjaro away as a wedding present to her grandson, then Crown Prince of Prussia and later Kaiser Wilhelm II of Germany. Subsequently, the border was adjusted so that Kilimanjaro would fall within the boundaries of the German colony of Tanganyika instead of the British protectorate of Kenya.
Taveta thrives as a point of commerce between Kenya and Tanzania, with a twice-weekly outdoor market especially large for a town of its size. The market is fueled in part by Taveta's distinctive rail connection through Voi with the Mombasa-Nairobi-Kampala line, built by the British during the era of the Kenya protectorate and celebrated in the 1996 film The Ghost and the Darkness. Large numbers of people walk across the border from socialist Tanzania to buy and sell wares in Taveta; smuggled goods such as Tanzanian rubies and coffee are occasionally available there.

Source
Description above from the Wikipedia article Taveta, Kenya, licensed under CC-BY-SA full list of contributors here. Community Pages are not affiliated with, or endorsed by, anyone associated with the topic.

_______________________________________________________________________

Here is a link that will gives you good general information and maps about Kenya;
http://www.kenya-advisor.com/kenya-map.html

________________________________________________________________________

Saturday, July 9, 2011

The Market

Masaii blankets at market day!
The cabbage "Duka" at sat market day..
The Masaii prepare it as "sumukawiki"
With garlic, onion, karoti, and spinachi.
I don't care if I see another cabbage!
Dozens of Kukuyu and Masaii vendors..selling everything from flip-flops to cilantro. Avocados are practically freebut no crank canopeners governing in Loitokitok!

Mt Kilimanjaro from Dutch's backyard


We cannot hike Mt Kilimanjaro now while in training. Darn border regulations!

Tuesday, June 28, 2011

colors of the houses, the vivid clothes


Kids coming home with me from school!
I say "Nipe Tano" or Hi Five and they laugh hysterically!

I think everyday that I could never have imagined the colors of the houses, the vivid clothes, the sights and sounds of this country......my new "home" in Kenya. The differences are experienced from both sides of the relationship! Africa has greeted me with a vengeance however.
Training is rigorous, another 8 weeks of Kiswahili, cultural and biz practices, medical ad nauseum,plus all the work in getting around on tightly packed, rutted red dirt paths, sometimes 6 mi per day on foot. All fascinating but exhausting. Then there are elephants moving slowly through the bush. We'll see if am really a hearty Coloradan. Kenyan and American staff, other trainees are amazing people. Several couples and strays my age, and all that youth too...to keep us going.
Several marriage proposals too, but i don't have enough goats to make the dowry requirement.
(and yes everyday I ask "what am I doing here!" Hoping to enjoy living in another culture wasn't it?)
Dutch

Saturday, June 18, 2011

Riding the Mattatu or local taxi


Sardine Can! Hold on!

Dutch's family in Kenya


Sofia, my Mama runs a small cafe, Alvin is 3 yrs, Tasha 10 yrs, does everthing including helping me with Swahili, SoshaSosha (grandma) Love Ma

En Route from Nairobi to Tanzania border


Saturday June 11 - En route from Nairobi w staff and other vols, to Tanzania border, 31/2 hrs in sardine bus! We went to mall in Nairobi for new phone cards with armed guards...but am at home with Acacia trees, and the wonderful Kenyans...

Sawa, sawa....
D

Sunday, May 22, 2011

My Address as of June 6, 2011 in Kenya

Dutch Hodges PCV
US Peace Corps
PO Box 698 - 00621
Village Market
Nairobi, Africa

Fed Ex Works but is very expensive for a small package.

Monday, May 16, 2011

My work at the Dupres House

My Work at Brenda Dupres House

There’s a sign in the yard at the house where Brenda Dupres Grew up that says “Roots Run Deep Here”

For Brenda whose father built their home on Gordon Street in the Lower Ninth Ward in the year she was born, it couldn’t be truer. Both sides of her family – her father’s as  brick layers and her mother’s as  teachers were deeply rooted in the Lower Ninth. So when Katrina flooded the house with 15 feet of water in 2005 (they were rescued on the roof after 3 days) Brenda just didn’t lose the house she had been living in after her parents died; she lost her sanctuary and her father’s legacy (the African American families tend to live in the same house, same block for generations) and her tightknit community.

Brenda and her son and grandson left the area for a while, but were worried about people’s claiming destroyed properties.

Seven weeks after the storm when Brenda returned, it was a scary sight. “Everything was gray” she recalled, two large pines, were down, but the brick foundation still intact. “The houses around the corner were demolished and in the middle of the street.” The entire neighborhood was uninhabitable. Brenda had friends who helped her find places to stay, and she finally found a FEMA trailer but suffered illnesses she believes were caused by it.

Brenda received money from Road Home, but not enough to cover a complete rebuild. She was also afraid of becoming another victim of contractor fraud. She tried to find a reputable contractor and began work on the downstairs of the house, but did not have enough to finish the job. This is when the St Bernard Project comes in. They said yes to her application and she now pays for the materials with her remaining grant.

Every week of my month here new teams of people from around the country arrive to be volunteer workers. Church groups, families, couples, and co-workers with me grab hold of the sheet rock, drill, sand, put on texture, prime, paint, and install windows, and doors. Work on Brenda’s house began in

October and I will see it completed when I leave here May 11. It’s a good thing they are not paying me by the hour, but I’ve managed to become a pro at Uniline laminate flooring, love to use the roto zip drill to trim drywall, and put an Erwin Quick grip on my Christmas list!

The “Gulf Bags”!

In addition to keeping time with a woman called Katrina, I have been working two days a week in wetlands restoration. In the area situated at the southern end of the Mississippi delta are the marshes of the Delta National Wildlife Refuge, an area of bayous, islands and river canals which include the Channel Islands and Breton (one of the oldest designated National Wildlife refuges by Teddy R). Dominated by migratory birds and the important flora and fauna which provide the aquatic habitat for the needs of numerous shellfish and fish species, (redfish, plain ole mullet and the blue crab shrimp) the dynamic landscape has suffered from manmade damage (levees, oil spills) and no longer serves as a natural protector to New Orleans and other coastal communities.  New “speed bumps” on the ocean floor are being created by teams of volunteers (that be me) who are hand crafting crevasses or cuts in the floor of the Mississippi and in the channels near the Gulf. This allows the salt laden river water to spread to ponds, water passes and the open water.






The process also includes the planting of our “gulf bags”.  We put a quart of root zone humus or mulch full of oil digesting molecules created from cow manure (including everything from mucus and intestinal fluids) phosphate and other amalgam ingredients into non-toxic jute. This mixture has been “cured” at certain temperatures for two years and joins a little cork grass to take hold as a stabilization strategy that is now serving as a remediation effort around the world. The eco ecoli doesn’t like the root humus but any remaining oil on the plants and sandy bottom does. And the soil is nurtured  by the new grasses.

Friday, March 18, 2011


Dear Friends,
I have had a little trouble getting out of the country….( I always knew housework wasn’t healthy – 2 days before staging for Namibia was to begin I was the recipient of a spider bite that dragged me to St. Lukes).   I am in the process of being re-deployed to Kenya as a member of the Peace Corps, Small Enterprise Development Team.
In the meantime I am all better and this Spring I am working with ‘Katrina’ efforts to rebuild the community in New Orleans.  I will be leaving for Africa again in early June.  Here is the current information about the St. Bernard Project, until then – Stay Loose!
calamity Dutch


The St. Bernard Project has rebuilt homes for more than 350 families with the help of 32,000+ volunteers. With thousands of families still unable to afford to rebuild the homes they own, and with 200+ families in New Orleans still residing in FEMA trailers, SBP is determined to finish the job.  Since Mardi Gras is all about tradition and family, we ask you to donate and "Get on the Float" with St. Bernard Project so we can continue to restore the traditions of our deserving families and bring them home.