Hi Everyone!
We spent the last week trying to get settled into our new house. I wish I was able to post pictures of it, but we've had a hard time uploading them, so let me describe it. We are about 30km from Salima, our closest city. Although we are only 2km off of a paved road that runs North-South on the lake shore, we are in a rural area. Our school campus is actually on a CCAP Mission (Central Church of African Presbyterian). As teachers hold a higher status in the community, we are in a teacher's house which means it is brick with a tin roof. Other villagers around the campus live in mud huts with straw roofs. The irony is that the brick houses with tin roofs actually work like ovens which is not exactly what we are looking for when we are living in extreme heat and humidity. Oh well, it will only make us appreciate MN winters more I suppose. Anyway, our house has 4 rooms- two that are kind of like bedrooms, a kitchen and a living room. Our furniture is minimal, but more than some other volunteers. We have a bed (actually two twins pushed together to make a king!), two tables and 4 chairs. A lot of stuff is on the floor right now. Our backyard has a brick fence around it. Enclosed in the fence are our chim (pit latrine), bafa (place to bath) and real kitchen (for fires). We also planted a garden in the back with some seeds that Amber gave us- sweet corn, green beans, carrots, cucumbers, bell peppers, jalapeno peppers, watermelon and a Malawian variety of Maize. We also hired someone to start building a bin for our compost.
Our other news is that we got a kitten. He is orange and white and we named him Moto, which means "fire" in Chichewa. Hopefully he will help with keeping away unwanted pests. By the way, some of the wildlife that we share our home with include: mice, bats, lizards, spiders and scorpions. I was actually bit by a little scorpion that crawled into our mosquito net the other night!
We also hired just hired a girl to carry water for us. We don't have running water, so we need to get it from the borehole which is about 100 meters from our house. Drawing water and carrying it on my head is probably my least favorite job in Malawi. Brian doesn't really like it much either, but more than me. Typically carrying water is considered women's work so it looked weird when Brian was carrying it this last week. All of the kids were laughing and chanting "Brian is carrying water!" in Chichewa. Although this may be good for the villagers to see gender equality, it actually reflects poorly on me because "I'm not taking care of my husband." The solution is to hire someone. Plus it will help her pay her school fees. We only hired her to carry water, but so far she has insisted on mopping our entire house and sweeping our entire yard (Malawians sweep dirt yards all the time).
As we've had nothing but time on our hands we have been able to cook some interesting meals. We cook on a paraffin stove. At first we made some guacamole and rice because we had avocados from Lilongwe. Then we tried some Italian pasta. We've had pancakes, eggs, fish (fresh from the lake), bean, popcorn, and curry. We'll probably be eating eggs or beans and rice most of the time though. Bananas and mangoes are readily available as well.
Well, that is about it for now.
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3 comments:
Your place sounds quite spacious. I'm sure it will hold us all when we come for Spring Break in '09. Can Phoebe and Moto be pen pals?
Wow, what do you do about a scorpion bite? Hopefully it's not as bad as it sounds. You'll have to let us know how your produce turns out. There's one piece of sculpture/art that I think you need to bring home at the end of all this - a woman carrying water on her head! How perfectly it would encompass your early days (struggles) in Malawi! Keep the details coming, I love your word pictures. And someday maybe you'll be able to download photos too! Love you both.
loving the commentaries about your malawian adventures. how dare you neglect your husbands needs!! Jay and I are rockin' our winter break in Costa Rica and loving the chill vibe of Tamarindo. Today we fed white faced monkeys bananas and chicken to crocodiles. The food and beer is excellent. very caribbean flavors. The accomodations and restuarants similar to open air grass huts. Unfortunately we do not get to carry water on our heads. Feliz Navidad and Feliz ano de nuevo. Karen and Jay
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