Thursday, April 15, 2010

It's been a year

It's been a while since I updated this ol' blog (man, has it really been two months?) and I wish I had an interesting reason why. If anything, I guess I can chalk it up to really settling into a routine here in Bamako. A few weeks ago I celebrated my one year anniversary of moving here from Kinshasa and what seemed new and fascinating at the time has now become pretty ordinary over the past few months. Unbearable heat, friendly Malians, misadventures with the French language, the ever-present dust... it all seems like part of the routine now. That said, in the next few weeks I'm going to try to get some entries on here that show a bit more of what day to day life is like around here.

Over the past few months, I've been working a bit from home and also getting called in to sub at the American school a few times a month. I've taught math, science, English, geography, and even Spanish and French. For those two language classes, I was pretty much responsible for putting in a DVD and pressing play, since my French is nowhere near the level it would need to be for me to teach a class and I've all but forgotten most of the Spanish I've learned.

I've still been mountain biking on the weekends. Last Saturday's ride was canceled due to rain which is very unseasonable in April. We're into the hot season and while mango showers are not uncommon here in Mali, it poured on Friday night and Saturday morning. The weather here has been pretty strange all year, from an almost non-existent cool season to the early onset of the hot season, and then a genuine it's-raining-cats-and-dogs thunderstorm last weekend.

A few weeks before that I went on a ride with my friend Tim. We attempted to find a connecting trail between two routes we already know just outside Bamako. When we left around 8am, the temperature was already in the mid 80s. The ride was only supposed to be around 18 miles and things started off normally, but we soon found ourselves pushing our bikes up the side of a rocky hill with no clear trail before us. Fortunately, a couple Malian guys were pushing a motorcycle up the same hill so we followed them. Tim speaks a bit of Bambara, the local language, and he asked them if they were headed towards the road to Kati. This is the road that would take us back to Bamako. I think they misunderstood us because instead of taking us to the road to Kati, they led us all the way to the village of Kati itself. Kati was the complete opposite direction of the way we wanted to go. This added another 10 miles onto our ride.

The guys who led us out of our way were really nice and had a lot of questions about us. Malians are pretty interested in what expats are doing in their country, and our Camelbaks are pretty fascinating as well. En route with our new Malian friends, we stopped in a village so one of them could greet his sister. While waiting around during his visit, we saw this kid who was playing with a dead mouse. The people in the village didn't seem to think to much of it, so I'm not sure if it's something this kid does on a regular basis or else it's a stand-in for a regular plush toy.



I've also started playing ultimate frisbee again with a few people on Sunday mornings. It's good to play again, although we have to play in the street since lush fields of grass are almost nonexistent in Bamako. We have to pause for automotive, pedestrian, and animal traffic and avoid the open sewers that run alongside the road. Thank goodness it's dry season and there's nothing in them right now. We can only manage about an hour or so of play until the heat and the sun get to be too much.

Oh, and I completed my one hundred push ups challenge in mid-March. I'm glad I did it, and especially glad I finished it before the hot season really got going. I'm taking a sabbatical from push ups for the foreseeable future.

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

Some biking pictures

I keep forgetting to take my camera with me when I go biking on Saturdays. I grabbed a bunch of photos from my friend Tim's Flickr collection - he's the one who usually organizes the rides and heads up the group of mountain bikers.

These first shots are from a long ride my wife and I went on a few weeks back. The ride was beautiful. After an incredibly tiring ascent that seemed to go on forever, we rode on a boring and rocky plateau for several miles until starting our descent back down towards where we began the ride.

Here's some of the group taking a breather after the climb (my wife and I are in the middle of the frame - why is almost everyone wearing white shirts and black shorts?)...


and here's the beginning of the long descent back down into the valley to the left...


Once at the bottom, there was a treacherous crossing over a muddy creek on some old boards...


...and finally, here's Olivier, a very nice French guy, with a bunch of village kids in the background looking on.


Who knows what the locals think about all these crazy white people who breeze through their little corner of the world on a Saturday morning, riding their fancy bikes and wearing shorts.

On a ride back in January, we rode through a dump...


...and then through a minefield.


While seeing the "DANGER MINES" sign threw me for a bit of a loop, I wasn't too worried. There were lots of families and houses in the area and I think that all the kids and dogs running around would have set off any landmines years ago. Don't worry, Mom, I stayed on the trail anyway.

On last week's ride, we crossed the Niger in a hired boat, along with all of our bikes. Cost for seven people plus their seven bikes: $2.


These Saturday rides have been a great way to get out and see the city and some of the surrounding area, and I've gotten to know a few of the other riders as well.

Over the past month, I've been relatively busy with all kinds of different things. I ended up getting called in almost once a week to sub at the American school, at least until I caught the strain of strep throat that had been going around. That put me out of commission for a few days. Last week I taught middle school math plus middle and high school science for the entire week. It was fun, although I didn't have to grade any papers or give out any tests which made things a lot easier.

Since mid-January, I've also been following the one hundred pushups program. As you might guess, the goal is to get to the point where you can do a set of one hundred pushups. I used to have a regular routine of pushups and pullups when I lived in the states, but I'd fallen off the wagon after moving to Africa. While at home, I picked up a set of these Perfect Pushup thingies from my brother, who was tossing them out. I don't know if there's anything all that sensational about them. At the very least, it's a gimmick to get me inspired in the mornings. So far so good - I'm just over halfway done with the program and I hope to hit the one hundred mark before the hot season really kicks in, around mid-March. Let me tell you, it's already plenty warm at 6:15am when I get out of bed and start my day.

Friday, January 8, 2010

Newsflash - Mali is still hot

Boy, I really do miss cold weather.  I got back from the US on Monday night and temperatures here are in the 90s during the day, although it's been as, ahem, cold as the low 60s here at night.  Even the expats are talking about how chilly it's been.  I don't buy it.  In Chicago I very much enjoyed the crisp cold air and I wish I would have taken the time to go out for a jog or two while I was home.  It still feels at hot as ever to me here.

Anyway, it was good to be back home again.  This time at home it wasn't as hectic as our last trip.  We had less shopping and doctor visits and it was easy to see friends and family since there were so many get-togethers due to the holidays.  This meant a lot less time driving around and a lot more time relaxing and hanging out with people.  Some of the highlights of my time in the states:
  • I didn't go as crazy as last summer when it came to eating.  I still enjoyed Giordano's, White Castle, Wendy's, Russell's bbq ribs, Dunkin Donuts, and had an excellent burrito from a local Mexican restaurant.  There was a lot of good home cookin' to be had, too.
  • My father in law took me to the Penguins-Senators game at the fabled Mellon Arena.  I've never seen an NHL game outside of Chicago, and it was cool.  The Pengiuns pounded the Senators 8-2, and Evgeni Malkin scored a hat trick.
  • I played hockey once, which is better than not playing at all, I guess. 
  • My cousin Nora got married the day before we flew back to Africa, and it was great to be there as well as see some of my relatives who I haven't seen for a while.  Congrats to Nora and Tim!
  • I got a lot of good gifts from Santa this year - mostly bike stuff and a few odds and ends for my computer.
Accompanying my wife and I back to Africa was a large box containing a bike and an extra set of wheels.  My brother gave me his Specialized mountain bike:


I also picked up the spare parts I needed to get the Trek frame I have here up and running again: 


Over the past few days I've worked on cleaning up the bike and getting it together.  I still need to install the chain and find a cable for the rear brakes.  I'm told there's an area of the local market where used bike parts are available and I'll be making a trip over there soon.

Big, big thanks to Kevin Dean (even though he doesn't want to be acknowledged) for helping me box up the bike and all the spare parts.  Big thanks also to my cousin Patrick for giving me a set of tires, a saddle, and a jersey.  And of course, thanks to my brother for giving me his bike.  I was riding it around the neighborhood yesterday and a security guard went out of his way to tell me it was très jolie (very nice).

Unfortunately, my substitute gig for the fifth grade fell through at the last second.  I was called in to sub for the high school english teacher on Wednesday, and that was fun.  I was battling jet lag and a few roomfuls of students who weren't too excited for their first day back at school, but it was a lot easier than trying to muddle my way through math.

Friday, December 18, 2009

Coolin' off

Tomorrow night my wife and I board a plane to head back home for the holidays.  We're both really looking foward to our time home, though neither of us can really put a finger on the reason why.  We don't have a lot of things to buy in the states, and we saw most of our friends and family just a few months ago when we were home in August.  I think we're just looking forward to a change of scenery from Bamako, plus it will be nice to be with our families for Christmas this year.  Last year we were in Arusha, Tanzania on Christmas morning and I remember wandering around town, looking for something to do.  I'm excited for cold weather.  Seriously.  People keep talking about how cold it is here, but I still sweat like a toilet during the day.  In the morning it's approaching decent temperatures, at least by my standards.

For the past few weeks my wife and I have been busy with our day to day lives here.  I've been contracting and have a few different projects going right now.  When we come back in January, I'll be subbing again at the American school for a week and a half.  This time, it's for the fifth grade class and I'm already sure it will go a lot better than my last go-round of teaching.  To begin with, I got to meet with the teacher before taking over and he gave me the rundown of his class, some lesson plans, and answered every question I could come up with.  And of course, this time around I'll actually be comfortable with the subject matter.  Rather than fumbling my way through geometry, I can (somewhat) confidently talk about fractions.  Plus, I'll get to teach some science and language arts, too.  I'm looking forward to it.

Anyway, happy holidays to all.  I've got to finish packing.

Monday, November 23, 2009

Can cows swim?

My wife and I took a trip outside Bamako this weekend to witness the annual cattle crossing at Diafarabe.  It's a pretty big event for the Fulani people, who are one of the major tribes of Africa.  They're nomadic herders and traders who live throughout most of the continent. For the Fulani in Mali, the cattle crossing at Diafarabe is a huge event on their social calendar.  People come from all over to watch the crossing as they move their herds across the Niger river to the south side for better grazing lands for the dry season.  There's a ceremony with local dignitaries, music, dancing, and they even have a cow-judging contest.  I guess it's kind of like the African version of a county fair.

Our journey began early afternoon on Friday, when we met up with three missionaries who were also interested in going.  We started the long drive out towards Segou, which is about a three hour drive northwest of Bamako.  The drive was uneventful, as far as drives in Mali go.  You have to watch out for stray cattle or sheep on the road, the occasional huge pothole, and any daredevil bus or truck drivers.  At least the roads here are pretty smooth, which was something we never enjoyed in Congo.  We made good time getting to Segou, checked into a hotel for the night, and had dinner at a restaurant on the Niger. 

The next morning we left around 5:30 to drive the rest of the way to tiny town of Diafarabe.  The first half of the drive was on paved roads until we got to a village and were directed, by way of a GPS and a local villager, down what looked like someone's back alley.  This led us to a long, rough road which was pockmarked with lots of hoofprints and had plenty of clouds of dust.  After an hour or so of teeth-rattling and butt-numbing off-roading, we arrived at Diafarabe. A tent had been erected on the south bank of the river, near where the cattle would be going ashore, and a few dozen people were already starting to gather.

We paid a guy to take us across the river in his boat.  I'm sure he made out like a bandit that day, since he spent most of his day transporting tourists back and forth across the river.

Here's a shot of us approaching the bank - the water was very deep on this side of the river, well over eight feet.  The lady with her back to the camera handled most of the driving for the trip, Judy "Crash" Miller.  I was very glad to not have to handle the driving since it's pretty tiring.  To the left, you can see the tent that was put up for all the dignirities to sit under, and on the right you can see people who have already started to gather for the crossing. 


Once we got ashore, we staked out a place to sit and then hung out and listened to musicians playing Malian music, and watched the women dancing as part of the pre-crossing ceremonies.


Girls of all ages were taking part in the dance.



As the time grew near for the crossing to begin, the crowds started to grow.  Everyone claimed a spot on the riverbank. Note that the riverbank on our side was pretty steep, with a drop of a good six or eight feet to the river below.  On the other side of the river, where the cattle were starting from, there was a more gradual slope into the Niger.


One thing that was kind of weird about the event was that the locals were sectioned off from the tourists such as ourselves who came to watch.  Malian security guards were there to keep people in their own sections.  The "white person" section ended just past the white people you see below.


If any locals came up and sat next to us, a guard came over and shooed them away.  I wasn't really fond of this setup, to be honest. The locals were extremely nice and they just wanted to see what was going on, same as us.  In talking to a few people at the event, it seems that things were set up this way out of respect for the tourists, and not because they wanted to keep the rabble away from us.  Still, it was weird and kind of disturbing.  We did our best to let people stay by us, but we also didn't want to cause problems with security.

Here's a shot of our traveling companions - myself along with Alison, Rita, and Judy.  These people know how to travel in style.  They brought camp chairs, a giant cooler, some Twizzlers, Fig Newtons, handi-wipes, plastic tableware... all kinds of great stuff.  Heck, I never traveled this well-prepared in America.


Here's a photo from our vantage point, looking across the river at the cattle getting ready to cross.



The crossing began around 11am or so.  Fulani would gather their herds of cattle on the northern bank of the river and each herd would wait their turn to make the crossing.  Each group would wade in, cattle and herders together, and they would drive their cattle into deeper and deeper water until they were all swimming.  The river's current would carry them downstream and they'd eventually land on the banks near where we were sitting.

Here's the first group in the water - notice other herds lining up behind them on the banks.



The men in the boats would help drive the cattle across, but the guys in the water were doing most of the hard work.



In this photo below, you can see a couple of Fulani in the water with their cattle.  A lot of Africans don't know how to swim, and I would imagine that being a cattle herder provides one with even less opportunities to learn how it's done.  Yet these guys were in there, swimming their way across a river, being careful to not get crushed/kicked/gored by a cow, and they also had the wherewithal to beat the cows with one free hand in order to keep them all swimming in the same direction.

Finally, they made it ashore.  I have no idea why the cow on the right has a blue ribbon around its neck. I'd like to think it was to show that he won the prettiest cow competition, but I learned that was held after all the cattle had crossed the river, so who knows what it was for.




The cattle all made their way up the side of the bank and past the assembled crowd.  They didn't seem too worse for wear beside some annoyed-sounded mooing, and at least they all got a good rinsing out of the trip.







From here it was on to greener pastures, further south.




This little guy was too small to make the trip through the water, so he got to ride over on a boat with one of the herders.  Next year, pal. Just wait till next year.  We'll see how easy your life is when you're swimming across the Niger while a crazed Fulani beats you with a stick.


Finally, here's what I consider one of the best pictures taken of me in Africa.  This little girl had a million questions for us about our cooler, chairs, and who knows what else. I don't speak the local language, so we communicated with a lot gestures.  We took out the camera to get a picture of her but she wasn't too interested in looking at the lens.  Booger, though, who was standing behind her, looks like he's about ready to kill somebody.


We only stayed until about 1:00 - we had a long, long drive back to Bamako and there were still several hundred cows who needed to cross the river.  It was a six hour drive back home (three hours to Segou, and then another three back to Bamako) and we got home just after 7pm. 

In other news, my gig as a high school math teacher is finally over after three weeks.  The school found a retired math teacher who will come in and teach for the rest of the school year.  This week, it's back to looking for contract work online as well as getting ready to come home for Christmas.  It's hard to believe, but I'll be getting on a plane three weeks from Friday.  I'm excited.

Friday, November 13, 2009

Again, I ask myself "How did I get here?"

Over the past few weeks, I didn't have much to talk about.  Apart from working more hours than I usually have, most of my life was the usual day to day routine of running during the morning, seeing friends, making innumerable trips to the store, attempting daring culinary experiments, etc.  I always get a little nervous when life here gets that way because it means that some crazy turn of events is about to come my way.

Indeed it did, although it was in a way I never would have expected.  On Sunday, November 1st, I got a call from the American school in Bamako asking me to be a substitute teacher for the week.  The high school math teacher had returned home to the US and they needed someone to cover his classes for at least the week, if not longer.  I said sure.  Every so often, I like the change of pace that substitute teaching gives me although I was a little wary about teaching math for a week, especially high school math.  In all honesty, I have a hard time remembering how to do long division.  I distinctly remember walking out of the last math class I ever took during the first semester of my freshman year in college and thinking, "Never again, math.  I'm done with you forever!"

And yet here I was, sixteen years later - living in Africa, preparing to teach at least a week's worth of Algebra I and II, Geometry, Calculus, Liberal Arts Math (sort of a "practical applications of math" course), and Economics.  The first day or two was rough because the teacher who left didn't provide any lesson plans or hint of where the classes were at their books.  Usually when I sub, there's a lesson plan or basic outline of what's going on in the class.  On Monday, I had to ask every class what they had just learned and if they knew what they were supposed to be working on next.  Some classes knew what was going on, some didn't.  Once I figured out where we were in each book, I tried to figure out exactly what I was going to be teaching for the upcoming week.  I understood some of what I thought I should cover, but who can remember all those geometry theorems or algebra proofs?

My week was filled with math homework each night as I tried to remember the perpendicular bisector theorem, or how to simplify algebraic equations, and then each day I did my best to make it appear as though I knew what I was talking about in class.  The other teachers at school were a great help, and I even got off the hook for Calculus which was huge since it was a course that I've never actually taken.  My first day in Calculus, I just had the students work through some old exercises on their own to review what they'd covered already this year.  After about ten minutes of quiet study, one kid raised his hand and said, "Mr. Moore, do you know anything about derivatives?"  With a blank look, I said, "No.  No, I don't know anything at all about derivatives.  I'm sorry."  He nodded understandingly and asked one of his classmates instead.

By the end of the week, the school had figured out a way to cover four of the five periods of classes I was teaching, and they asked me to stay on to teach two classes until they found a full time replacement to take over.  By this time I had gotten my legs under me and it was a lot easier to handle teaching two classes that I kind of understood, Liberal Arts Math and a remedial math class for some students who needed extra help.  The other day I found out that a replacement teacher from the states has been hired and he should be here in a week or two.  So, my time as a high school math teacher will be drawing to a close soon. 

I've been doing some mountain biking lately as well.  I don't have all the parts needed to get my current bike project going, but since we're going home for Christmas I'll get what I need there and take it back to Bamako in my luggage.  In the meantime, a friend of mine here has very kindly let me use his bike since he's been busy lately.  There's a regular group of guys who go on Saturday mornings so I've joined up with them to see some of the trails in and around Bamako.  I'm very sorry that I don't have any pictures to show.  Every time I've gone I forget to take my camera.  The riding has been good.  Some of the rides have been more difficult than others but they've all been a lot of fun.  I think the highlight is seeing all the village kids.  Smaller kids are fascinated by seeing a white person, but man, watching a bunch of white people on bikes barreling past their huts?  They just about lose their minds.  As our small group made its way through various villages, kids would come running from all over and start chanting "Toubabo!  Toubabo!  Toubabo!" ("White person! White person! White person!") while jumping up and down, reaching out their hands for high fives, or chasing our bikes.  Some even have songs they sing about us Toubabos.  After we've passed through a village, I could still hear them chanting even though we're no longer anywhere in sight.

My wife is continuing to work her way through the variety of diseases Africa has to offer.  She's away on business this week, and called me yesterday to let me know that she has typhoid.  She's receiving treatment (antibiotics) for it and in talking to her this morning she already sounds a lot better.  I can't help but think of a band I used to be in, and how were were considering potential band names.  We had a bunch of names taken from the game Oregon Trail, and one strong contender was "Zeke Has Typhoid."  In case you're curious, here's the list:
  • Zeke Has Typhoid
  • 99 Pounds Of Meat 
  • Stop To Hunt
  • Caulk The Wagon
  • Lose Three Days
  • Jenny Has Cholera 
  • Ford The River 
  • Lose Two Oxen
  • Wagon Tongue
  • Find Berries
  • Reach Fort Kearney
  • Four Feet Deep
  • Buy Bullets
  • Trading Post
  • Mighty Columbia
  • Broken Axle
  • Hit A Rut
  • Headstone
All nostalgia for my rock and roll past aside, my wife is feeling better and better and she should be coming home the day after tomorrow.  It will be good to have her back home.

Monday, October 5, 2009

Blood in the streets

It's been a busy few weeks for me here in Bamako.  A few weeks ago (September 20th, to be exact) it was the end of Ramadan, which is marked by a huge feast to commemorate the end of a month of fasting.  Everybody gets dressed up in new clothes that they have made for the fête (French for "party"), and they visit friends and family and share a gigantic meal. I guess you could compare it to Christmas in the States in terms of importance.  Seeing as my wife and I aren't Muslim, it didn't hold a lot of significance for us although she was given Monday off, and Tuesday was Malian Independence day.  Hey, four day weekend for her.  It was cool to see everyone celebrating around town.

The most memorable thing from the weekend was the mass slaughtering of cattle that took place on the Saturday before the end of Ramadan.  Everyone is expected to sacrifice a cow for the feast.  Driving around town that day was a pretty wild scene.  There were people out everywhere slaughtering their sacrificial  cow.  It seemed like every few blocks a couple of guys were chopping up a cow with great vigor, and as the day went on I think I was literally able to smell the stench of death in the air.

It's pretty expensive to buy your own cow, so people will pool their money to buy a cow and then share the sacrifice.  At my wife's office, they were passing the hat so she threw in a few bucks as a show of solidarity.  Of course, that bought us a few pounds of fresh beef for ourselves.  My wife went to the office to pick up our beef mid-day on Saturday and came home with a plastic shopping bag full of our share.  Bear in mind that when they slaughter a cow for food, they use everything.   Some pieces were really, really tough, and we also got a piece of the heart, which we opted to give to our neighbors as I'm sure they appreciated it more that we would have.  We marinated some cuts and grilled them later that night.  The meat was tough, even after some tenderizing and a few hours of marinating, but it wasn't bad.  I can say with confidence that it was the freshest beef I've ever had.

The next day my wife's boss invited us over to his house for the big feast on Sunday.  My wife stayed at home with his wife and family while she prepared the meal, and her boss drove me around the neighborhood to greet various people that he knew.  It was fun, although a little strange.  My French is coming along a bit, yet that was no help since everyone was speaking to each other in Bambara, the local language.  We'd show up at somebody's house, exchange greetings in French, and then I'd sit down and listen to them talk for twenty minutes about whatever until we left and went to the next person's house.  Everyone was super nice and I really felt welcomed in each home.  The meal, which we had later that day, was excellent as well.  They slow-cook the beef in a pot for hours so it's very juicy and tender, and the rice and sauce that go with it are spectacular.  It's like pot roast to the nth degree.

For the trip to her boss' house , my wife got dressed up in a boubou - check it out:



I wore a button-up shirt and khakis.  No picture was taken.

In some exciting personal news, I've started working.  Finding work locally is just not happening, so I've turned to the internet to help me find contract work as a technical writer with some success.  It's a bit strange to be working on a project with someone whom I never see or actually speak with.  The work has been really interesting and a bit challenging.  I'm still trying to figure out how full my schedule actually is, since I'm paid on an hourly basis and and when I finish a project, or part of it, I don't have anything to do until I hear more from whoever I'm working for.  That makes for some short workdays at times, but on the whole I've been enjoying it thus far.

I've also started playing bass with a few other expats.  I brought my bass guitar back with me after home leave, figuring I'd have the time to work on my skills and maybe find some opportunities to play.  The group I'm playing with is made up of a German drummer and alto saxophonist and a British pianist.  They want to play jazz which means I've had to dig into an old instructional book I have on playing walking bass lines.  I've never really learned how to play bass that way and it's something I've always wanted to do.  With my current situation, I have the time to practice and a good group of musicians to practice with.  So far we're playing some pretty basic songs ("Take 5," "Georgia On My Mind," "The Chicken," and "Caravan") which is fine by me since I have a lot of work to do to get my chops in order.

Finally, I was able to get a bike, or at least most of the parts of a bike.  Thanks to a connection I have here, I got the frame and most of the necessary components of a Trek 820 mountain bike.



The bike is in solid shape, so I just need to find a way to get the parts I need together and have them shipped over here.  Quality bike parts simply can't be found here, so if I can get some decent-level stuff off ebay or craigslist, that will be fine.  It'll cost a little bit to get what I need shipped from the States, but it's no biggie since it will be great to have a bike to get around town with.  There's a group of guys that go mountain biking on Saturday morning in the hills outside of town, too.  I'm sure I'll be able to sell the bike for whatever cost I put into it whenever we leave here.  You just can't find decent-quality bikes in Bamako.

Oh, and today I picked up a package from my Aunt Noreen in the States.  Ah, the delicacies that were found within!  Cheez Wiz, spices for making Italian beef, a box of macaroni and cheese, and a few popular culture magazines such as "People" and "The National Enquirer."  Thanks, Aunt Noreen!