Hi everyone!!

You can email me at kirsten@blueventures.org.

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Sunday, June 28, 2009

24 hours after touchdown



I arrived in Tana yesterday around 11 am, and promptly headed – with ALL my baggage will wonders never cease -- to a pizzeria with Al (my boss/host) and Nick (who is running the field expeditions in Andavadok). The 39 hours in transit were as painless as they could be - including 8 hours on a bench in London Heathrow, where I slept for a while clutching my precious backpack. I wasn't the only one waiting the whole day for a plane, so some of us bonded as we occasionally awoke to loud announcements (and watched each others' luggage for trips to the loo). Another long flight, another layover in Nairobi, and I was on my final plane (hurrah!). I loved the layover in Nairobi – fours planes were all departing from the same gate, but you could tell who was on each plane: one for Oman, one for Sudan, one for somewhere else I’d never heard of, and ours.

I jumped right in to the NGO/development community here. Al and Chris (or Kris? his BBC-correspondent girlfriend) brought me along to all their social events. After a much needed shower and nap, we headed downtown to meet friends to see Home, a French film with wonderful aerial images of the earth and French-language narration explaining how we are f***ing it up. Needless to say, I fell fast asleep (nap #2). We then went out to dinner at a French restaurant. A couple of glasses of red wine and a full belly of soup later, and guess what? I was ready to go back to sleep.

Miraculously, I slept for 7 straight hours before the sounds of the street in front of my room roused me. After a cuppa tea, Al, Chris and I drove in their Toyota 4x4 to another part of Tana to meet up with a large group of runners. The host, Eric, looks like all he ever does is run, and when I realized the truck’s engine was straining to reach his house as the top of a mountain, I knew my sorry self was in trouble. He explained “la route” which took us about 6 km across fields to “La Panoramique”. Never a good thing to hear when you haven’t run in months, you are suddenly at altitude after having sat still for 2 days: La Panoramique. I made it back to the house, but barely. Luckily, a very nice French embassy staff hung back with me (trying to convince me that running in small steps was better to keep your heart rate up than my walking – exactly the point, I replied: my heart is about to jump out of my body!). And the view we got was worth the struggle, as was the journey there, through villages and flood-irrigated fields. Upon return, there was an incredible spread of breakfast (and COFFEE!!!!), including croissants and pain au chocolat and, shockingly, tiramisu (who can eat that after a 10 k run?!?).

It is a holiday weekend (Independence Day) so the streets and stores have been relatively quiet. Tomorrow I plan on walking down the very long hill from Al and Chris’ house to wander the streets, stop in some markets to see what’s what, and get myself a cell phone. I borrowed a street map and now that I know what hill to climb to get back, I am excited to explore. In terms of safety, there is still of course a political crisis going on, but it is far from the minds of most locals here who are focused on their daily lives. I haven’t stopped at many street stands, yet, to see what is in season, but I’ve noticed piles of papayas, a very lovely sight. (Although the piles of meat sitting in the sun are less delightful.)

Tonight I am having dinner at a friend’s, someone I used to work with in Peru. I’m really looking forward to catching up with him and his family.

I am off to make myself some lunch; I’m trying to eat at appropriate times to thwart the worst of jetlag. Love to everyone! I can receive email for the next week, so feel free to email or comment here (I can read those too for now). Love, K

Tuesday, June 23, 2009

2 Days to Lift Off!



Tom sprayed my clothes with nasty chemicals to keep malaria away. Everything I would like to bring is laid out. Now I just have to cull the masses of books that I was hoping to bring with me. Its hard to imagine not having my bookshelf, full of old friends, a desk-chair swivel away. What if I want to look up how someone else did a survey? Or how to make sure my interviews are reliable and valid?! Sigh. I guess I'll have to rely on my wits. And the last 6 years of education.

My plane leaves SFO 3 pm on Thursday the 25th. I arrive in Tana at 11 am Saturday. Stops in Minneapolis, London (7 hour layover!), Nairobi. What does that mean -- something like 35 hours of travel. (I don't want to know the real number!) I have two books, 3 audio books, and 1/2 a dozen theory books with me. And I'm banking on good plane movies. And lots of wine.

It's now hitting me that I am going to be gone from my very comfy California bungalow for over 3 months! I'm going to miss my men (Tom plus Boris and Percy the cats) very, very much. And I'll miss talking to my Oma on the phone, but I'm going to make that hike up the nearby hill to call on a regular basis.

Next time I post, I'll be in MADAGASCAR! Woohoo!