
Thursday, July 30, 2009
Lemomo and his pink outfits

Wednesday, July 29, 2009
Our little man....Dickson

Monday, July 27, 2009
Thought for the day....
Sorry, I have been pondering this for a while...I either have too much time on my hands or too little adult conversation....I know it cant be the time thing as I have no time on my hands!
New cooking facilties at Shule or School



These are two water purification tanks recently installed to ensure that the kids are drinking filtered water everyday...at least at school.
Shule or School
Below is an example of an older classroom and a picture of one of the newly renovated classrooms.

Wednesday, July 22, 2009
Godwin

Sunrise, Sunset...



The medical clinics are back in full swing!



Dr. Frank Artress or Dr. Frank as we all call him, has a medical clinic in Karatu and a foundation called FAME. TCF and RVCV actively support FAME and Dr. Frank’s great work in this region. With 69 kids now we routinely send a car to the clinic several times every week!
Sunday, July 12, 2009


Filling our last house!

Last week we went to Mongola to pick up a little 6-year-old girl named Neema to bring her back to live with us. The area is hard to describe…it is a desolate and depressing area. Deforestation has lead to the loss of all topsoil so the dirt is like red baby powder. Scrubby trees are peppered around, sagging mud houses and skinny cows and goats search for water. This is our cold season where it can be in the 50's at the Children’s Village, however, it was in the low 90's in Mongola! I can't imagine what it is like there during the hot season. Many of our new kids come from this area. I only wish we could get more children out of such a hopeless environment! The area we live in is the complete opposite of Mongola. We are in the mountains and surrounded by rain forest and coffee plantations. As I sit at my desk I can see the peak of Mt Oldeani and the Ngorongoro Crater rim. In the early mornings it is so beautiful, it brings tears to my eyes. The people who live near us are just as poor and struggle daily to survive, but somehow with so much beauty in our natural environment, we don’t lose hope.
Sunday, June 14, 2009
A few pictures of the kids

These are three of my favorite volunteers, Kat holding Lucia, Caroline with Gabriella and Taylor with Mica. They all just left and it hasn't been the same without them! They were all here when I arrived and we shared three great months together!
Tuesday, May 19, 2009
Sunday...a day of lesisure? HA!
6:30am wake up – We get to “sleep in” because it is not a school day. HELLO?!!! Sleep in?? 6:30am is not exactly my idea of an ideal wake up time. After I roll out of bed, I go wake up all of the kids in my house and then remembered I had promised to make them French Toast for breakfast. They had never heard of it before so I thought it would be fun while I still have access to a kitchen. First I gather the eggs from the pantry (apparently you don’t need to refrigerate eggs in TZ??) I then “make” the milk from powder where the instructions are in Swahili so I just keep adding powder and water till it looks like a cross between whole and skim milk. I then grate a cinnamon stick (never have done that before!), reach for the Blue Band (TZ’s version of margarine, which by the way they don’t refrigerate either) whip it all together and serve! It was a hit needless to say.
7:15am strip all of the beds, gather all backpacks, shoes and clothes and then dump them over the railing into the grass which is actually mud now due to it being the rainy season. This begins the washing of the clothes etc…which honestly takes hours in buckets of water outside. Each kid washes their sheets, clothes, shoes and backpacks. Once every two weeks they wash their blankets. It is amazing anything lasts very long as they scrub the hell of each article of clothing. No wonder I have holes in all of my clothes!
8:00am After everyone has their clothes/sheets in the buckets to soak, they change clothes and go to church in the Rec hall. I go up the hill to the office to check in with everyone. There is a flurry of activity with Mamas wanting to sign forms and get money for the days off, drivers wanting money for shopping, sick kids everywhere needing to be looked at and the Minister who needs his weekly “donation” for the Sunday service. After an hour and a half in the office, I walk back home to rest and relax for a while. As I slowly approach the house, I start to smell something awful, the closer I get the stronger it gets. In fact it is an overwhelming stench of discusting proportions a cross between rotten meat and carrion. At this point I cover my nose and mouth with my shirt and rush in the house. The kids are doing their chores with their hands over their mouths. I keep screaming “What is it, what is that horrible smell??!!” The cook/housekeeper is nowhere in sight, but as I enter the kitchen, I start dry heaving, the stench is so bad.
Dare I look in the pot on the stove that is boiling? Of course I do and it is apparent that we are having goat stew for dinner. (I use the term “we” loosely as I am not about to eat goat stew) The skin of the goat is still on this nasty ass meat boiling in water not to mention it is ROTTEN! I scream out the door for Catherine (the cook) barely able to catch my breath, the kids at this point are all gagging literally. Catherine runs up the stairs and I tell her to take this nasty meat and throw it away, and I mean AWAY. Over the hill and over the fence. Nowhere near this house. She starts gagging at this point, so I have a feeling she understands my point. Not sure how the meat got in the pot without her noticing the horrible stench, but clearly when you boil rotten meat, it festers and really becomes disgusting.
I then volunteered to cook dinner for the kids. I decided to make something easy like spaghetti and meatballs with red sauce and garlic bread. HA! I have made red sauce from “scratch” before, but I realized that my definition of from scratch and the TZ way of scratch is two totally different things.
I went to the garden and picked a ton of tomatoes, fresh basil and then proceeded to chop up the tomatoes for the sauce. Finally got the sauce on the stove after an hour of slicing and dicing. I started to make breadcrumbs from scratch, so I thought I would toast the bread. Riziki a wonderful 13 year old girl in the house had been helping me and she offered to light the oven. About 10 minutes later I opened up the over and it wasn’t hot, so Catherine came over to light the stove and as she is striking the match she says “ Oh, the gas has been on already” Just as I scream NO! DON’T STRIKE THAT MATCH!!! She does and WHOOOOMMMP! This massive fireball blew out of the oven. Ahhhhhhhhh! It was over in a second, I am asking Riziki and Catherine are they Ok? Are they hurt? Riziki just was standing there with her hand over her mouth in shock. Catherine’s response was “Oh my lord” Luckily everyone was fine, a few lost eyebrows, but not much else. The rest of dinner was pretty uneventful, took forever to cook, but tasted great and the kids loved it.
When the day was over, I hadn’t read a page, nor had I taken a nap, but I had a great day! A few minor catastrophes, nothing major and we all made it through, however relaxing is just about the last adjective I would use to describe it…but fun and fulfilling....definitely!
Wednesday, May 13, 2009
Passing the time....Tanzanian Style!
The other game is a modified Jacks type game, they dig a little whole in the ground and place pebbles in the whole, they then throw up another stone and take stones out of the whole as fast as they can before the stone they threw falls down. Again….hard to explain, but very creative. The girls will play this game for hours literally on the weekends when there isn’t any school.
Tuesday, May 12, 2009
Smiling Children :)

The other children really laugh and play a lot. I feel that they are so grateful to have such a wonderful life after coming from such traumatic backgrounds that everyday is a good day. We have a couple of 13 year olds who are starting to show teenage behavior, but even then if you say to them “Why are you pouting, come on give me a smile” they usually will crack up.

Most of the children are very tough and very resilient. The boys’ soccer team had a game in Oldeani a few weeks ago and they walked there which is a two hour walk, played the game which was about 2 hours then walked home. Most of them had forgotten to bring their water bottles and it was hot as all get out, but I didn’t hear one complaint, whine or protest from one child out of 40. It was amazing! I do not know of any children in the US who would have made the two hour walk without complaining, much less play a soccer game and then walk back another two hours in the dark.
So…the answer is YES, these kids actually do love to smile and they do smile a lot! I am so grateful to be part of an organization that nurtures and takes care of the children so well that they are happy most if not all of the time and even if they become upset it never lasts very long. I personally have laughed and smiled more in the last three months than I have in years, it is totally contagious and I love it!
So here are some pictures of the happy kids at the Rift Valley Children's Village...not posed, just having a great time!
Monday, May 11, 2009
Safari at lake Manyara
Wednesday, April 15, 2009

Taylor and the tooth fairy


Tuesday, April 14, 2009

Believe it or not, Obama is huge here. They even have Obama Kangas (the outwear/skirts that women wear) This is a picture of a truck I saw in Karatu.
The Rainy season is here and there is no doubt about it. I had quite the experience yesterday on my trip back from Karatu. This is the little town that is about 45 minutes away on a good day, on a day like yesterday it took us about one hour and 15 minutes. Part of the delay is due to the horrible condition of the roads due to wash outs and mudslides. We nearly slid off of the side of the mountain. Fortunately, we had stopped and picked up 4 male teachers, two female teachers, 3 kids, a pregnant woman, two Masai warriors, 2 chickens and a goat. SO….even if I wanted to look out of the car, I couldn’t because you couldn’t move much less see through the windshield or side windows. Tanzanian B.O. nothing like it in the world. We finally made it to the village and I am not sure I am going to be going anywhere soon, I take my life in my hands enough just by walking around with the Elephants, Black mambos and Cape Buffalo, but the muddy roads are just about to do me in! LOL
Monday, April 6, 2009
My new digs
Sunday, April 5, 2009
Cutting grass


Well today I watched three Fundee’s (casual labor) cut the grass with modified machete type swords. We are on 7 acres and they are cutting the entire place by hand! It is amazing. I tried and couldn’t cut one blade of grass and the Panga (machete thing) was heavy as hell. So here are a few more pics of this great place...
Slip and Slide Saturday

Friday, April 3, 2009
A few pictures of my room and Volunteer House



The ceilings of all buildings are made of Sisal wood and the roof is made of corrugated tin, no insulation in between the wood and the tin, hence the bats, rats and loud noise when it rains. LOL

Thursday, April 2, 2009

The corn fields surrounding the village have really taken off, which is great. The people who planted for the “short rains” i.e. Feb and March lost all of their crops as we didn’t have the rains, but now the time of “long rains” is here and looks like it may actually happen. I basically have mud on me from head to toe every day and am at the point of taking a shower in the morning and then one again in the evening. Thank god for running water!!!
I have moved down to India’s house for the rest of the year. She has turned the “Present room” into my room with a bed, side table, lots of shelves, hanging rod (yeah!), overstuffed side chair and a desk and goat chair. I have to walk outside and down a few feet to the bathroom, but I am in heaven. It only gets a little scary at night when the hyenas are out and you can hear them, but not see them. I am totally in heaven. I told her she may never get rid of me now. My view is unobstructed of the valley and coffee fields as her house is at the bottom/back of the compound.
She even put a little chair outside of my door so I can sit and view the scenery.
We have 3 new volunteers this week and a 4th coming tomorrow. All are in their early 20’s just out of college or staying here before they go to grad school. We are fully booked for the summer and the fall is nearly full too. It should be interesting over the long run to meet so many people from so many diverse backgrounds. It is perfect now that I am no longer in the volunteer house because I can socialize when I want or go home and read/sleep.
A few more kids have Malaria. Evidently this is an unprecedented number of cases here. India seems to think it is climate change as it is happening all over Eastern Africa. Who knows, I have now been bitten at least 15 times, but so far have escaped getting Malaria. The preventive is too hard on the body to take for any length of time, and the cure is so easy and only three days, I figure I will do as the Tanzanian’s do and just treat it as no big deal.
I would love to hear from everyone when you have time. My yahoo email is tterrill1@yahoo.com
Monday, March 30, 2009
End of the month payroll...Tanzanian style

Saturday, March 28, 2009
Our children and surroundings cont....

