Tuesday, August 23, 2011

1 Week Left

What we've done so far -

Chennai - Still hate it. A lot of walking. Officially tired of rickshaw drivers. - good food hard to find

Mamallapuram - delightfully surprised. Didn't expect to enjoy it. - Food pretty good

Pondicherry - Hot. A repeat. Lots of walking - Food pretty good.

Thanjavur - Awesome. Hot - discovered Dad like Butter Chicken Masala

Trichy - A repeat. Hot. - food ok

Madurai / Farm - Hot. Flooding. Lots of getting lost and walking. Dad has a cold. - Food ok

Bangalore - Cooler. Lots of getting lost and walking. Caught in the rain. I have a cold. - Hard Rock Cafe!!!!!!!

Goa - Awesome. Warm, humid. - Food decent.

Still to come -
Wed night - Sat morning - Jaipur
Sat evening - Mon morn - Agra
Mon afternoon - head to Delhi
Tues afternoon -  Fly - Dad to Chennai, Me to Madurai
Wed evening - head home






Thursday, August 11, 2011

Link to photos

https://profiles.google.com/LuGrMc/photos

Chennai, Dad, Caught Up


July 30 – First Full Day – Chennai
Chennai  is not one of my more favorite cities. I don’t find it tourist friendly or foot friendly. It’s dirty and smells.  I am going to be here for at 5 days so hopefully it will get better. Tove and I started our day with the buffet that is included in our hotel stay. We didn’t eat much. The “fresh” juice tasted like cough syrup and the coffee is the worst we have had yet in India. That is saying a lot. We have had some really bad coffee.  Then after a few arguments with rickshaw drivers we were off to see the Smurfs. So much fun.  It strikes me as a movie Ian would write. After the movie we decided to check a mall that we had driven past. Just curious what a mall would look like here. It looked like a compact version of malls back home. So many stores.  All very small. It was a combination of bazaar shops mixed Levis and Lee type stores. We were very excited to find a cookie shop. They looked good. They didn‘t taste good L  We fortunately found a good lunch which was a nice pick up for the day. Later in the afternoon we decided to go and find Georgetown. It was quite a walk but it was nice to walk. I wouldn’t call it a “nice walk”. This is not a pretty city. We did get a good look at the city and saw some buildings that were nice at one time. Most people just looked at us like we were crazy. Pretty sure we ended up in some areas of town were not many foreigners are ever seen. Saw some slum areas. Got an interesting picture of the city. Looking forward to going to a few of the more tourist centered sites tomorrow. Also moving from the hotel tomorrow to a guest house.

July 31-present
The Guest House/Apartment was awesome. It was clear across town, but in a rather quiet area and close to the train. It was huge and next door to a good place to eat so we life got as easy as it could. Tove and I decided to explore the train lines and do some shopping as she had specific things she wanted to get before heading home. We found another mall which was much nicer and had a movie theatre; we also found a good coffee shop and a Levis store that I got into trouble at. Oh, and there was a Gloria Jean’s Coffee shop inside the mall which was surprising to find. Tove found the gifts she was looking for, we got the movie schedule and I bought skinny jeans.  

August 1st my Dad arrived. Tove and I spent the day walking over another part of the city. We decided to head to find the beach thinking it was much closer than it was. It was quite the walk. Fortunately it was in the shade. The beach however was not in the shade. It would have been a rather nice beach if it wasn’t for all the trash and the fact that most of the people living on or near the beach used it as a toilet. It is a joy to turn around and see someone taking a dump. I have gotten use to people, usually men, peeing on the side of the road, and you regularly see where people have relieved their bowels, but not usually something you “get” to watch. That evening we decided to head out to see Cowboys and Aliens to kill time before meeting my Dad at the airport. Talk about a random movie. My Dad was not pleased with me for seeing it here without him. We may try and see it in Bangalore.

It was great to see him and to get his perspective on how Chennai has changed. We stayed up rather late catching up on basic things then passed out for the night. The next day we hit the ground running. Introduced Dad to a classic Indian breakfast then headed out to the Government Museum. Got lost getting there.  We started on the train then got lost on foot. The museum was housed across several British built buildings. A handful of them were no longer safe to enter. The buildings themselves were worth a look at. What they housed was not displayed well.  Dim lights, some were out, made it difficult to see what was displayed. There was a good archeological collection spanning the major South Indian periods, a Chola bronze collection of  Shiva, Parvati, and Ganesh, and we went into the National Art Gallery. There were many large paintings of previous Governors  of Chennai . It made me wonder what they had done wrong to land themselves within this collection. Aside from being British. The collection of paintings ranged from pretty cool to fresh from an art class. Again nothing was lit well or cared for. For a museum that boasts that it’s Chennai’s Best – I was hoping for a bit more. Tove headed for the airport after the museum and Dad and I passed out early.

The rest of the time in Chennai Dad and I spent between trains and foot. A lot of walking and getting lost in random areas of the city. We went to Fort St. George, had to walk 2 km to get to the entrance. All the rickshaw drivers thought we were insane for walking in the heat. The fort was pretty cool as was the museum.  At this point in the trip I am missing my glasses however and Dad is realizing he needs to get real glasses. There was a lot to this museum and we tired-out when we got to the coin collection. From there we decided to continue our tour around the outside of the Fort. Turned down a few random streets and kept walking. We eventually ended up in George Town and then found our way out. Exhausted and very hot we found a good place to eat with very friendly staff. Dad got a fan aimed at him. For some reason we are deciding to be stubborn and walk around till we find the Central Train station that is beautiful from outside and walk until we find the train station we need to head back to our accommodation. I am getting a good workout on this trip.
The next day we went to San Thom Cathedral. A huge Roman Catholic Church originally built by the Portuguese in 1504, then rebuilt in Neo-Gothic style in 1893, containing the tomb of St. Thomas the Apostle (Doubting Thomas), who it is said brought Christianity to the subcontinent in the 1st century. From there we walked down the coast till we were tired and hot enough to find a train station and head back. When transferring lines we saw a couple of people try and get themselves hit by an oncoming train. The emergency brakes were hit and all was well.

After Chennai we headed to Mamallpuram. I don’t know what I was expecting, but this was a hip little beach town. Similar to Pondicherry in that it had a bit of a French twist, but we were easily able to find western food. Happy day, I got oatmeal J, lasagna, and pizza. There were a number of western tourists there, mostly French and I could actually wear a tank top. First time out of doors in four months. Experiencing this was not half as cool as the sites Mamallapuram had to offer. The Shore Temple, 5 Rathas, and rock carvings and caves were awesome. Most  of what we saw dated back to the 600 and 700’s AD. Pictures really tell all.

Our next stop was Pondicherry (Puducherry). My second time here.  Again pictures really tell all. The French Quarter is what is worth seeing. Greater Pondicherry is just a cluster of what India tries to make into a big city. It was interesting to see now that its tourist season for the westerners, the town was much busier and louder than when I was here is May. I was also here during elections so locals were also missing. We spent most of our time wandering around just looking at architecture. We did see a few Catholic churches.  I have found that all Christian churches in India are overdone. They are huge, extravagant, and gaudy; lots of rope lights, plastic flowers and crystal chandeliers’ to top them off.

Next Dad got to experience truly what it is like to travel in India. 6-7 hours on a semi-crowded bus with a stop and transfer in Chidambaram heading to Thanjavur. Thanjavur was well worth the stop. Not much in town but the Brihadishwara Temple and Fort which is spectacular. For all the temples I have seen so far, I have seen nothing like this. See photos. The guide book says you should come twice. Once early in the morning and once in the evening to view it in the different lights. We didn’t. We went in the middle of the day when it was hot. But I could easily understand the suggestion. Even in the middle of the day when the sun was directly overhead, the colors were stunning. After the Temple and a bottle of water each, we headed to the Thanjavur Royal Palace and Museums. More walking in a direction that we hoped was correct. Nothing hugely spectacularly there. Mostly you could tell that at one time it was a site.

And now we are in Trichy. It is Thursday, the 11th of August. We got here this morning and after a short rest we went walking around town. I am now finally caught up with my writing. We will see how long that lasts.

Friday, July 29, 2011

Train to Chennai - last post for a while

This morning Tove and I got up bright and early to caught a train for Chennai. This is the way to travel in India. Assuming you made the arrangements far enough in advance to have a real seat. Fortunately we did. It was a real nice comfortable trip. So now we are here. Haven't done much as of yet. We did find the local movie theater. We have tix for SMURFS 3D tomorrow morning. We are not excited about this city. Hoping when we start to got see some sites that we get more excited. Currently, not so much. 

Kochi, Munnar, Kumily

As you have already seen from a previous post, Kochi was filled with food, coffee and Harry Potter. It was great to reconnect with Tove after leaving the farm. I took a night bus to Kochi, Kerala and arrived at 5:30am. Fortunately Tove and her friend Hanne arrived earlier Thursday evening and already had a place for us to stay. Poor Hanne, she was kept up for the next 2 hours while Tove and I caught up. We finally decided we should get a few more hours of sleep at around 7:30. Kochi was as I remembered it, but now I had more time to relax and enjoy it. We did a lot of wandering around and shopping. We went to the Mattencherry Palace (Dutch Palace) which was really very cool. We learned a lot about Indian history and that none of us knew. We tried to go to Jew Town, yes that is what it is called, and go to the Pardesi Synagogue but it was closed both times. A bit bummed out about that. We took a back waters tour. We were expecting this to amazing and beautiful. Hoping to see some villages and different ways of living. Well, it was beautiful. Tove and I have decided that we are not meant for boat tours. They keep turning out to be horribly boring. The tour guide barely told us anything. We saw how rope was made from coconut and how they burn clam shells with charcoal to make calcium nitrate, but that was basically it. It was a 7 hour boat ride / tour.

Next we headed to Munnar.  The bus ride into town and out of town was out of this world. The Western Ghats are amazing. I have a few pictures but they just don't cover it. By the time we head to Munnar I have a cold. Munnar is very cold and less than welcoming. Neither of us feel any love for Munnar itself but we don't regret the bus ride in and out of town. We just stayed on night. I have not worn so much clothing in India as I did there. Loved my rain jacket and scarf.

We quickly moved on to Kumily and set up camp where we stayed a month ago when there. It was a great week of basically doing nothing. We read a lot and watched an amazing amount of rain fall. The idea was to relax and that is what we did. The weekend trip for the projects abroad volunteers happened to be to Kumily the weekend that we were there so I was able to catch up with Denise and Jacqueline from the farm and introduce them to Tove. It was great to see them again and get updates on the farm and the village.

My birthday was spent in Kumily. Tove was awesome and woke me up with breakfast and tea and we had a bit of a spa day as well. It was as good as a birthday could be away from home. Our last day in Kumily we went for an Elephant ride. It was great fun. I haven't been on an elephant since I was little with my mom at Marine World I think it was.

Our next stop was Madurai before we headed to Chennai. Tove had to pick her stuff up from the office there and I had some repacking to do. Since we were so near, we decided to make a side trip to the farm to see Raisa and the host family. We couldn't have picked a better day. We got to see everyone and we went with Raisa and the volunteers to one of the orphanages that they had been working at to do a presentation on farming. At the end we were treated to a dance performance from a bunch of the kids. It was so much fun. I am sore today from playing and throwing the kids around yesterday.

Last Week at the Farm

So apparently there is a reason why one should keep up on their writing / blog...to help remember. I am having a hard time remembering everything I have done in the past few weeks. hmmmmmmmmmm

My last week at the farm is a bit of a blur at this point or really it probably was at the time as well. I remember not feeling the need to actually dump cow urine on Henry's head because he decided to do a little bit of work. We had another trip to CCD. It was a repeat trip for me only. All the the others had never been. I was a bit disappointed that this new set of volunteers didn't find it as interesting as the group of us did the first time I went. Oh well. I learned that I am a total nerd and have been geeking out over various aspects of the farm. I gave a couple of tours of the farm to Projects Abroad Staff members.Really I am a geek. We had a group of young children from a government school come to the farm for an outreach program. This was a lot of fun. the kids were very young and didn't know much English at all so we mostly played games. I had a couple of them playing with worms. And I finished all my charts and they are hanging in our office and are on the computer for Raisa to print and hand out. Woo!

It was a very sad goodbye for me. I have grown very attached to the Village and the Host family. Everything and everyone was so amazing there. It really started to feel like home. I was also bummed because there were a few volunteers that had just started a week or so before that I was just getting to know and really liked. Lets see how good facebook is at keeping up the contacts.

The night before I left we had a nice dinner with the host family as normal and Raisa made pudding for everyone as a sort of going away treat for me. It was a really nice night. Various members of the extended family stopped by and there was a lot of laughter and goofing around. The next day was the hardest. Raisa said I had to say my goodbyes. I was really hoping to ignore the fact that I was leaving. Kind of like I did at home. No such luck. I was very glad to have my sunglasses. My one saving grace was knowing that I plan on going back with my Dad.

Saturday, July 16, 2011

Project Complete - Oats, Fruit, Coffee, Black Tea, and Harry Potter

So, I am now out on my own. My project is complete and am now in Fort Kochin with Tove. Aside from being a bit tired and in total denial that I am done at the village things are great. My first breakfast was oatmeal and fresh fruit with an amazing cup of cold coffee. Later in the day I had orange cake and black tea. Happy food! Then that night I went to see Harry Potter. I need to see it again to decide how I feel about it. I will wait til I get home for that.

Friday, July 8, 2011

Books Read So Far

Pride and Prejudice - Again
Water For Elephants - 1st Time
Harry Potter 3 - Prisoner - Again
Dead Reckoning - Sookie Stackhouse - 1st Time
A Time To Kill - 1st Time
Midnight In The Garden Of Good And Evil - 1st Time
A Village By The Sea - 1st Time
The Glass Castle - 1st Time
Hunger Games - 1st Time
Catching Fire - 1st Time
Mockingjay - 1st Time
Brida - 1st Time
The Secret Garden - 1st Time
The Lost Symbol - 1st Time
The Reader - 1st Time

At least that is all I can remember.

Thursday, July 7, 2011

I have worked with 16 volunteers at the farm so far

This past week has been pretty regular. I am on my way out. Finishing up projects and helping with getting the new volunteers up to speed. One week left. I am off to Kochi this Thursday night to meet up with Tove for a lazy-ish couple of weeks.

Last weekend I spent in Madurai with Lyndsey, Tove and Roberta. It was the last weekend before they all left their projects. We found a less than exciting place to stay in Madurai after we first found the Domino's. This was the first time any of them had been there. Yay for pizza! We met up with a few other volunteers from other projects as well as with Hovard and Hadrian  from the Farm. Hadrian and Hovard were heading to Pondicherry for the weekend.  After pizza we all headed in our separate directions and headed for bed. The next morning we had breakfast and ran a few errands before heading back to you rooms. More new clothes made. I had two new pants and a couple of shirts made. These are my favorite so far.

Saturday evening we said our goodbyes to Lyndsey. She headed home to Arkansas Sunday morning. We were very sad to see her go. Roberta headed back to the farm for the rest of the weekend leaving me and Tove a nice quiet Sat evening and Sunday.

After saying a short good-bye to Tove on Sunday, glad I'm planning to see her again, I headed back to the farm with two new volunteers. Denise and Jaqueline. Sisters from Toronto. We now have have 5 Canadians on the farm. Woo! I really like these two. They are fun and energetic and open to being here. We are now up to 8 volunteers.

Monday morning brought everyone back from their weekend trip to Pondicherry. Two of the boys got arrested. Fortunately they made friends with the officers at the police station and were able to leave. They got caught riding motorbikes without international licenses. Oops! Oddly it wasn't Henry that got into trouble.They all took a night bus back to arrive Monday morning so they were all exhausted and were then off to Dindigul for an Ayurvedic outing. Since I have already done this I stayed back at the farm and worked on my chart project for Raisa. It proved to be a very long day for them.

Wednesday we went to a market hoping to by some vegetable seedlings but were not successful but it was still fun to see all the volunteers wander around as they have never been to a market here before.

Thursday we worked on a local farmer's banana plot and Henry actually did some work. I think Raisa had a few words with him or the rumor got out that I was going to dump cow urine on his head. He worked both Wednesday and Thursday with little complaint. So much for me needing to turn evil.

Thursday morning Roberta started her journey home. She was not ready to leave. She fell in love with India and was ready to stay. She loved the farm and the village. She would go for long walks early in the morning and after work daily. She is 6'3" and was quickly noticed by all in the nearby villages. She made friends with a number of them and was invited in for tea or coffee daily. We are now down to 7 volunteers.

Thursday afternoon we went to the orphanage that I had gone to my first week at the farm. We created another plot. This time with vegetables. We were wishing that these kids would come to the farm and help us. I think we might have done a 1/3 of the work. The kids did almost everything. Very enthusiastic. It was great to go back. A few of the children remembered me and I was very proud of myself for remember them as well.

So now we are at Friday. I am working on various projects and starting to get things in order to leave on Thursday. I am staying in the village this weekend while the rest of the volunteers head to Moonar. I am not ready for another volunteer's weekend. Figure I may go into Madurai for a day or might just read all weekend.

Thursday, June 30, 2011

Back at the Farm - 6/13-30


Being back at the farm has been great. I came back last Monday afternoon after picking my things up from the orphanage. I had a great welcome. I had kids running up to the car when I arrived and a few very surprised volunteers. Raisa knew I was coming and didn't tell the others. They knew I was hoping to come back but didn't know I actually was. The host family was also very welcoming and it was nice to be back on familiar ground. There was also a new volunteer added to the group, Roberta from Vancouver Island. We are now 4 girls and no male volunteers.  I was back to my normal routine by Tuesday morning.

Thursday we had an outing to see a Development Campus. The organization is called CCD or Covenant Centre for Development. We had an hour lecture covering what the organization was about and then a tour of most of their facilities. Basically they are like us at the Farm but on a massive scale. They work to help small village farmers develop relationships with larger traders in the cities, educated farmers on better practices, rent equipment at reasonable prices, and train women to manage the finances and work to bring in their own income to the home. That is putting it simply. They also have a recreated medicinal farm. They have taken seeds from plants and trees in the Ghats, mapped out their placement and relation to each other and have created their own farm to harvest from for Ayurvedic medicines all organic. They also have a herbal nursery created and run by Village women containing useful herbs that the families in the village can use in their home for basic medicine. This helps them save on money for a doctor's visit that isn't really needed. A local English school has been build for the Village kids. Giving them a competitive chance with city children. 
Above is their web address if anyone is interested in more detail of what they are about.

Friday we headed to Kumily in the state of Kerala. We had a hard time convincing ourselves to come back. Lyndsey, Tove and I went and met up with Manon and Emily another volunteer working with Manon at her orphanage. Kerala in general is like another world compared to Tamil Nadu. Kumily was lush and green. It was raining and a bit chilly which was welcomed. It reminded us of some of the scenes in Avatar. Can't really believe I am making that comparison, but it was truly beautiful and peaceful there. And cheap. We spent 2 nights there. The three of us stayed in one room which was very nice and we each paid $10. It was great. The weather was cool enough that we were able to and wanted to take hot showers. Tove and I went twice to get Ayurvedic Massages. The first one we got was pretty bad. The second was awesome, though still very different from what I get back home. We were aiming for a quiet and peaceful weekend and found it. We found some amazing spice shops and good food. We got rained on a lot which suited us just fine. Saturday afternoon we went to Periyar Wildlife Reserve to take a boat ride tour. That part was actually boring as it is basically a slow ride around a lake hoping to see wildlife down by the water. We saw a couple of Deer, which is apparently a big deal here. We also saw a few boar and a King Fischer bird. On our way out of the reserve we saw a number of monkeys. That was fun. They were very interested in collecting food that someone had dropped.

When we got back to the farm on Monday it was time to catch up with Raisa. She spent Thursday afternoon and most of Friday in Batlagundu dealing with getting the Farm registered. She has been working on this since December. Getting anything done in this country is a great chore. Later Monday afternoon I accompanied Tove to the local hospital. She had an infected bite or a heat sore as all the locals believed. Either way, it was infected and it hurt to walk. The doctor who was useless didn’t say either way what he thought it was, just that it was infected due to the heat. He gave her antibiotics and sent us on our way. When we got back I got to chase 3 turkeys around the farm. We needed to give them some medicine. They don’t like us anymore. My day ended with a migraine that lasted till Wednesday afternoon. Woo!

Tuesday - Migraine - Henry arrived – new volunteer from Quebec City, Canada. He is a moron. It didn’t take long to learn this. I am also not the only one that feels this way so it is not me just being mean.

Wednesday – Still have a migraine but try to participate in an outreach program to a local school. I made it through all the planning and last half way through the actual event. We were focusing on the hazards of plastics. The kids were very receptive. The real fun was in the morning before we went to the school. Tove and Henry almost ran into a cobra. First alive snake siting since I got here. Glad it wasn’t me who actually saw the snake. Apparently it was rather large around and over a meter and a half long. It went away on its own.  It was also Lyndsey’s last day on the farm. She headed to a teaching project in Madurai for a week. We are back to 4 volunteers.

Thurday – We arrived to the farm to witness a fight between the two female turkeys. They wouldn’t leave each other alone. It was very comical. We couldn’t get them apart. Mr. Panea eventually picked them up to separate them and he threw one of them back into its cage to keep them apart. We also learned that day that both of our ducks are male. Usually you can tell a male and female apart by their back tale feather curling up or not. The second duck’s tale feather decided to curl up a bit late. I have no idea how else to check for male/female on ducks, but this was rather funny to discover. We were wondering why there had been no eggs and the ducks were getting rather aggressive with the other birds. We are buying 3 more ducks and making sure that they are female. Mr. Panea also finds and kills another snake hoping that it was the one Tove and Henry saw. It wasn’t. It was too small. We aren’t happy about the number of snakes suddenly showing up on the farm.
Friday is our half day. It’s a rather mellow morning. We do the watering on the highway then come back to cut down a field of sesbania with a sickle. Tove and I got through about a quarter of the plot in 20 min and we were slowing down fast. Kumar then comes over and we’re done with the whole field in 15 min. It was rather depressing but I wasn’t going to argue with the help. We found out later that he was instructed to babysit us. There was/is still a worry about snakes. Yay.

Friday afternoon we head to Kodai Kanal. I started out liking this town. It’s beautiful, foggy, I took lots of pics. So many colorful flowers. Tove and I managed to get a serious sugar high off of Baskin Robbin’s ice cream, coffee, tea cake, and them some samples at another bakery. The samples beat out everything before. They were so good even though we were full. We hit the giggles and were practically running up the hill to our accommodation. It was a freezing night. Not just cool. Freezing. We met up with Lyndsey there and I shared a room with her and Tove. The other option was a dorm room with 30 other volunteers. That wasn’t going to happen. The room was so cold that Tove, who had opted to sleep on the floor jumped into the double bed with Me and Lyndsey. This did nothing to warm me up. I didn’t sleep. We were lucky enough to have hot water the next morning which is more than the volunteers got in the dorm. It was a bucket shower though and the bathroom was rather cold. It was still better than nothing. The morning we spent wondering around the town looking at shops and vendors. The street vendors sell donated sweaters from the 1980’s from $100 rupees or $2 plus dollars. Its very funny to see locals running around wearing sweaters from the 1980’s over their sari’s and dhoti’s. a number of the volunteers also bought sweaters. Some of them were really bad. The afternoon was spent on a bus going sightseeing. It was pretty much a wasted trip. We saw a pine forest. Not really impressive for a girl from CA. and most of the viewpoints were obstructed by fog. We did learn however that Henry had managed to hook up with another volunteer. Quick moving for a boy who has been in the country for less than a week. The rest of the weekend was rather uneventful. Learned that the French speakers (there are a lot of them right now) have no interest but to speak to each other in French and party, and that Saturday night was just as cold as Friday.

Was very happy to return to the Farm Sunday night for dinner. We had 2 more volunteers show up. Melinda from Vancouver and Horvard from Norway. We’re up to 6 volunteers now. I really like Horvard; very nice and good natured.

Monday - more bureaucracy bull shit - we now have bore wells in the back yard of our accommodation and on the farm. It’s been decided that the farm is a commercial business. A neighbor in the village hates the owner of the farm and therefore hates us and is trying to make everything we do very difficult. I have been getting glimpses of this ever since I got here. So life on the farm was rather distracting the first half of the week.  We have learned by now, meaning by Monday, that Henry has no interest in farming or conservation. He pretty much cries and whines at everything we do. He has started to use my work gloves which I have never used because his hands hurt. Boo L He hates every task he is given. Apparently he just wants to party and that’s why he came to India. Really, who comes to India to party?

Today, Thursday we walked down the main street of the village to find some sort of structure being built at the end near the Church. Then when we got to the farm music and drumming started. We asked Raisa what was going on and she told us it was either mourning or celebrating. We asked why and what was going on. She mentioned that a villager had just been released on bail for attempted murder. Awesome….. So some people could be celebrating and others could be mourning.

We later found out that the structure was covering about a 1/3 of the length of the street and that all the music was for mourning. People were flooding into the village. Apparently it was for a funeral. The mother of the guy who was let out on bail died the night before of natural causes. It’s amazing how quickly these sorts of things can be set up and the numbers who show up on such short notice. It was an all-day event starting first thing this morning and going till late in the evening. People mostly just sitting. Music was going most of the day. This evening we got another volunteer. His name is Handrae. He is from France. He seems very sweet.

This week I have started another organization project. Raisa is possibly the most scattered person I know. Too much going on in her head. Too many projects to handle on her own and she doesn’t have an assistant like all the other managers/supervisors. So I am working on charts for her lessons  to the volunteers. I have sat through multiple lectures about the same things as she gives them to all new volunteers. Not one has been the same. Everyone is given different pieces of information. So I am making large poster sized charts as well as matching charts on the computer so she can hand out the information to interested volunteers. I am a nerd. I love doing this and I get to do research.

So that is pretty much it so far. Tonight was Tove’s last night. She leaves for Madurai tomorrow afternoon. Lyndsey and I are spending the weekend with her then she is off for Bangalore and Lyndsey heads back to Arkansas. I meet up with Tove on the 15th of July in Kochi for two weeks of travel with her then off to travel with my Dad in August. Super excited.

Monday brings 2 more volunteers and with Tove gone, I get to lead. I am not excited. I have already started channeling my stage management self, back in college. This is not good, though will probably be funny to the observer. Tove is really sad that she is going to miss me losing my temper. The pace of at least half of the current volunteers is drastically slower than it has been over the past two months. I have little tolerance for people who come to volunteer in a foreign country and just want to goof off and not work or whine about it. As I am now. Coming to work on a farm and freaking out about the smell of cow dung and urine and blisters on your hands from plowing doesn’t work for me. I am pretty sure a volunteer may be wearing some of our organic fertilizer next week. I will take great pleasure in this. J

Sunday, June 12, 2011

Various pics from the week

 Tool Market Madurai - Buying some hand tools for the farm
 Farm my last day
 One of my kids - bright and happy little girl
 Very sweet little girl - never left my side - deaf and mute
 good spirited kid
 Also one of my 21 kids I was looking after
 They crowd for the camera

Saturday, June 4, 2011


 Tumerin Tree
 Sunflower Field
 Sunflower
 Nature's Barbed Wire
 9th Century Temple
 Baby Buffulo
 Pandi Climbing Coconut Tree
 Tove, Lyndsey, Manon, Me - Maduria
Movie Theater

Last Week on the Farm

My last week on the farm was a pretty mellow one. Raisa was in Chennai over the weekend till Tuesday checking out the Hospice opening there to see if the Conservation project could go there to help them set up a garden and a small vegetable/lentil plot. That left me with Lyndsey and Tove at the farm to complete a few tasks left for us as well as my huge excel project that I needed to finish before I leave. I finally finished it Thursday afternoon. Raisa was very happy with it. Now hopefully she will use it. IT was nice once Raisa got back on Tuesday afternoon. I was able to use her computer to finish the project, being that it kept crashing my computer. It was awesome :/ Aside from that, we went on an Ayurvedic Medicine outing on Wednesday. This was fantastic. We met with a husband and wife. I don't have their names, but the husband is a lawyer who happens to be working on his doctorate in Ayurvedic Herbs. He showed us a number of native trees and herbs with medicinal properties. This was all very cool, but the morning was not cool and there was very little shade where we were hiking. We So nice to get fresh fruit and jack fruit is amazing. After a short nap we were taken to the wife's office. She is a practicing Ayurvedic Doctor specializing in infertility and skin conditions. This was a great visit. She gave a solid background on this form of herbal medicine and showed us a few video clips of some of the common practices. Some of it is a bit strange to western ears. Leeches are used. A couple of use may spend a week with her at the end of July for a stress relief / rejuvenation treatment.   If we do this we will be staying with her family and have yoga classes in the morning and evening and have ayurvedic treatments during the day.

This weekend has been another quiet one. I am again in Madurai, in a rather filthy hotel with the girls. The price was right. They were needing a quiet weekend. It was rather gratifying to catch up with them last Sunday afternoon after they got back from their weekend and hear that the weekend was a frustrating one and theat they needed a break. So we are in Madurai. I took the girls to the Tailor's Market yesterday so they have all had clothes made now. We are going to pick them up later. I am making the local tailor's a lot of money and a few shop owner's I keep taking people there. Yesterday afternoon we went to see a movie. We were planning on seeing XMen. Then were told that it isn't out till next weekend. So we headed out to see Little Big Soldier???? Jackie Chan. We were wanting to see a movie in English and thats what we thought we were getting. No such luck. Jackie Chan in Tamil. We were able to follow some of it. It was a very strange experience. There were only tow other women in the theater aside from me, Lyndsey, and Tove and they were with husbands. Everyone else was male. We felt very out of place. People were having conversations with each other and on their phones. The phones kept ringing though out the movie. Their was a guy behind us that couldn't seem to convince the person on the other end that he loved them enough. He was talking in English so it was very funny to over hear the conversation. Last night we managed to find ritz crackers and  peanut butter. We bought a watermelon and some bananas and camped ourselves out in front of the tv in our room and watched the Sorcerer's Stone. It was a good night.
Today I just a have a few errands to run to find some gifts for the Host family and the farm and then I will be ready to go onto my next project tomorrow morning. I am in a bit of denial about leaving. 

Saturday, May 28, 2011

Weekend to Myself

So far I am having a great weekend. Friday, the Netherlands boys left to travel for two weeks then they are off for home. They were the last of my original group when I got here. It was a very sad goodbye for so many of the village kids and our host family. We had a family dinner on Thursday night which was great. The whole family sat and ate with us. This never happens. We had to ask for them to join us. Usually we are just served by a couple of the women in the family, but they never eat with us, so it was nice to have the whole family with us. The boys bought gifts and brought a cake. The Grandma  fed us each a bite of our dinner with her hand and the boys were also fed cake by Grandma. This is a tradition. A good number of the men in the family ended up wearing cake.

Friday I went with them into Madurai and hung out with them until they caught their bus. I was planning on spending the weekend in Madurai on my own instead of heading out with the other volunteers so this was easy for me. We spent the found the one Domino's Pizza in Madurai. We have been looking for it for the past month and a half so it was nice to finally get there. It was in an area of town we had never been so no real surprise that we never found it. We had to call Raisa to have her talk to the rickshaw driver to tell him where to go. The pizza was surprisingly good. And not just good because I have been craving it. It was actually really good and the place was clean.

The boys were on their way after that and I headed to the hotel. I splurged this weekend. A lot. Decided that since I was on my own I wanted to be in a nicer hotel. Breakfast and dinner were included in the price and bottled water so I haven't had to worry about food or water this weekend. I have a nice (for India) bathroom, a/c and HBO/STARS. Plus really good internet connection. Saturday I spent shopping for a new wardrobe as my clothes I brought with me have pretty much been destroyed at the farm and are too heavy. I am getting two pairs of pants, a long skirt and two shirts made. I also have bought a few gifts for the kids in the village and still have a few more to buy today for the host family. I am at a bit of a loss as to what I should get them.

It has been great to finally have some of my own space and a chance to get everything together before I head to my next project. I think I will do a few more weekends like this.

India Photos Online

https://profiles.google.com/LuGrMc/photos

Above is the link to see all the photos I have taken so far. I haven't done much weeding of them so there are a lot of random pics. 

Sowbhagya Illam Children's Home - My Next Project - Starting June 6



 
Name of Institution:Sowbhagya Illam Children's Home
Address:Sowbackya Illam Children's Home,
Gandhigram Trust, Gandhigram,
Dindigul District
Tamil Nadu,
India

Your Supervisor:Ms. Neela SubramaniamSivam
Job Title:Superintendent
Email:ggmtrust@sify.com
Role of Supervisor:Your supervisor is your main contact at your work placement and should always be available to help you with any problems and answer any questions you might have.

OVERVIEW:
Sowbackya Illam is run by the Gandhigram Trust. This trust also runs other institutions like a University, a primary school, a creche and an old age home. Between the hours of 8:30am and 4:30pm the majority of the children attend local schools. You are expected to help the children get ready in the morning and then the majority of your work with the children will be from 4:30pm until they go to bed.

Note: April and May the children's number will be less due to the usual summer vacation.

LOCATION:
The home is in Gandhigram, 10kms to the south of Dindigul and about 65kms to the north-west of Madurai. There is a post office and a bank on the campus and an internet cafe just across the main road. There is a train station in Dindigul which has a computerised reservation facility.

To get to the Projects Abroad office in Madurai, you have to take a bus from Gandhigram to Arapalayam bus station in Madurai and then from Arapalayam take a direct bus to Thirumangalam. You have to get down in Baikara bus stop from there our office is 5 minutes walk towards thirumangalam direction.

KEY FACTS:
No. of people cared for174
Age Range in institution2+ to 17
Age range cared for2+ to 17
Av. Group SizeN/a
Hours of work/day6
No. of staff12
Type of institutionOrphanage
Other typeBaby care & Adoption centre.

YOUR ROLE:
On our care placements it is important that you show the initiative and enthusiasm to immerse yourself into the job and spend your time productively. Your role is essentially as an extra pair of hands, and where children are involved, the more help available the better!

Flexibility, on both sides, is the key to all our placements. As long as you are prepared to work hard and do the best you can no-one will insist on you doing something you are not happy about.


Project Structure:
Help is needed from 6am until 8.30am when the children need to be woken up, washed, dressed and fed before school. In the afternoons when the kids are back from school, you can help them with their homework, improve their conversational English skills, teach them about hygiene and play games with them.

During the period when the kids are at school you can either spend your time helping in the baby care centre or to the other staff members maintain the home or you can go to a local school and help with the English classes.

Other Activities:
You will always be welcome to help with administrative tasks and with the purchasing of essential commodities for the home.

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Elephant Blessing and Head Shaving

Being blessed by an Elephant in Trichy
People come to the Temple to have their head shaved with a straight razor as an offering for either good luck for the family or because they need something. The people in Chinnupatti will do this for luck. Its a Hindu tradition that crosses over to the other religions and into Indian culture. Usually you see children, boys and girls running around with shaved heads. Many of them are seen crying during the process. Its not uncommon to see adults also with their heads shaved. Teh pic above shows the blessing after. The process starts with the head being shaved, then a bath in the river. Mustard powder covers the head to protect from the sun. Then the blessing in the temple. I am sure their is more too it but this is what the guide told us and  what we heard from our host family.

Farm, New Volunteers, Bangalore, Next Project


We had another volunteer arrive last week,  Manun. She is very sweet. She is from France and speaks very little English. This seems to be the trend for the French volunteers. Tove and I have been trying to be her personal dictionary.  We now have three girls to match the three boys. Other than that nothing hugely exciting has happened this week. Our outings have slowed down a bit so we are working on the farm a lot more. I made the mistake of offering to get the farm organized on paper. I was thinking I would put together a few charts in excel and that would be good. Not the case. I have been given the task of organizing the entire farm. A chart for every animal, three charts dedicated to seeds alone, a plot watering sched, blah, blah, blah.  It’s been fun and has gotten me out of the sun a bit. The less than thrilling part is that I have found that Indians do not think linearly. There is no order to their lives or their brains. Raisa will come out with 3 conflicting thoughts in one brief sentence. This makes it very hard to figure out the needs of the farm. I know what I believe is needed and what would make our lives as volunteers easier. But I am not the one that will have to make sense of it in the long run.
This weekend we went to Bangalore, which is now being called Bangaluru officially. It was a very long night bus ride there. It should have taken 8 hours, it took 10.5. This time we were on a semi-sleeper bus. I would say this is much preferable to a sleeper bus except my seat was broken so it didn’t recline all the way. Oh well. We did very little site seeing while we were there. We spent maybe 20 min at the Botanical Gardens, which were beautiful, but everyone just wanted to go find a bar instead. The theme of the weekend outings seem to be maybe see some sites, but mostly go find the bars and western food. This has worked well enough for me being that is gives me a glimpse of what I want to see when I go back in August. Oh and we also went to the Bangalore Palace. Bangalore is the first real city I have seen here. Madurai is technically a city but Bangalore being the Tech Capital of India looks like a functioning big city. It was also multi-cultural. We spent both nights there at the Hard Rock Café. I think we were all on the verge of tears when we were brought the nacho plate. It was amazing. No I am not drinking that much. I am actually feeling rather boring for not drinking, but I really hate King Fisher beer and I am not that comfortable with what they call a mixed drink. I did however drink at the HRC. Nice to see alcohol I recognize.  We had a great time and seeing a group of Indians get up on stage to perform YMCA was a fantastic topper to the night.
Monday was back to normal at the farm. Tuesday we had a new volunteer from Arkansas start. Her name is Lindsay. WE now have 4 of us in one small space. This will only last through this week. Manun leaves on Monday for her next project then I leave the following Monday, 6/6 for my Care Project.
I finally received all the details of my next project. I will be 10km outside of Dindigul. That is the larger town near the orphanage. I am still about 65km outside of Madurai. The orphanage has 174 kids ranging from 2+ to 17. My day starts at 6am getting the kids up and dressed for school at 8:30am. They return around 4:30 when I will help them with their homework, set up activities and help them with their spoken English. I have them till they go to bed. During the time the kids are at school I will be working at the adoption center with the little ones. I am really hoping I have another volunteer there with me to help me wrangle that many kids.  I am ready to leave the farm so this will be a nice change of pace for a while.

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

St. Joseph's Hospice for the Dying Desolate

Monday morning we were pick up in Madurai for a scheduled Project's Abroad Volunteer "Dirty Day". This means that a bunch of the volunteer usually go an orphanage to paint, clean or help pick lice out of the kids hair. What we were told this time around was that we were going to a home for the elderly to help them wash. We had no idea that we were going to a hospice. This was a bit of a shock. This experience was incredible. Its hard to explain. I was close to tears at the lunch break. Not because I was sad, but mostly overwhelmed. There was so much to take in.

The man who started the hospice, Father Thomas, is an Indian who spend most of his years in England. He came back to India after his health started to cause him problems and he needed the climate here. He was working with various charities when he started noticing the number of helpless people on the streets, sick, dying, or mentally compromised. He was able to get funding to start this hospice from many of his followers in England.

The facility houses 300 people all picked up off the street in various states health. Some close to death, some have gone crazy due to blood poisoning from festering wounds. There are usually 4-15 deaths a month depending on the season and up to 5 brought in a week. Most of the patients are from broken families, have been left at government hospitals, or have families who can't afford to take care of them. The government hospitals will throw any patient who doesn't have a family member to take care of them out in the street. The hospitals are so understaffed and funded that they require family members to take care of the patient in the hospital.

There are 75 mentally compromised patients, a number are crippled and can not walk, about 50 who do not have bladder or bowel control, and many are blind. When at patient is brought in their head is shaved their clothes burned and replaced and they are thoroughly washed. They are given a bed, a fan, clean drinking water and three good meals a day. Many of them still during the day sit outside on the ground and nap. They feel comfortable there despite having a bed and shade inside.

I saw the wounds of some of the patients being dressed. They were huge and deep. The descriptions we were given of the conditions many of these people are in when they are brought in were horrifying. Many die within days of being brought in, others live 3-4 years depending on their condition. The facility becomes aware of the patients from calls from shop owners who have someone on their stoop that they think might be dead or dying, people passing by hospitals that see injured people on the front steps, or taxi drivers have even dropped people off that they have picked up on the side of the road. The hospice also has people looking on the streets.

The patients have no family, no visitors, just 3 nurses working, and volunteers. They are the lowest of the low on the caste system. There is a doctor that comes in once a week to check on the patients and adjust meds as needed. It is currently being run by two Priests and a Sister. Despite there being a chapel, there is no religion imposed on the patients. Their practice is to give aid to the needy. Currently there is another facility being built near Chennai. 16 acres were donated and this facility will hold up to 500 people. The Conservation/Farming project may go to Chennai to help set up the grounds in June or July.

The volunteers for this "Dirty Day" were the Conservation/Farm project and the Medical project. About half of the Medical volunteers washed the hands and feet of the patients and clipped their nails and the other half and the Conservation volunteers dusted and mopped. The day still hasn't settled for me yet. 

Time is flying

Last week seemed to disappear. I think Monday was a pretty mellow day at the farm. Tuesday we had to be up and ready to go by 6am to climb a mountain. (The power just went out. No fan or light and its really hot.) This was awesome and really stupid all at once. Kumar, the head farmer came with us and brought a friend who is familiar with the mountain range we wanted to climb. Or really the boys really wanted to climb. We were first led up the smaller mountain. The boys complained. They were determined to get to the top of the tallest one. So we made out way across to the other mountain. There was only a goat trail to follow. We got 3/4 of the way up at which point the guide told us we should stop and we could go no further. We went further. The rest of the hike was rock/boulder climbing. It was insane and great fun. We were really hoping there was going to be another way down because we couldn't have gotten down the same way we went up. I have cuts, scratches, thorn punctures and no sunburn. Yay me! I did all this in my sandals. They are amazing. My feet are too swollen to fit into my shoes. We did find another way down. This actually proved to be harder than climbing. The weeds were waist high and there was no path so we couldn't see where we were stepping. It was also bloody hot at this point. By the end I was really glad we started at 6am. It was easily 100F on our way down. We took the rest of the day off.

Wednesday we went to the market and bought five chickens and passed out some flyers to local farmers about organic farming. We got some positive responses and have one appt set up to visit a village near by. This is good! At some point I will post a pic of our five chickens hanging out in a bag being carried around the rest of the market.

By the time Thursday came around I was tired, it was hot and the end of the week. So of course we did the most work that day. We tended to three local farmer's farms. We need a bicycle with a cart attached. Carrying two gallons of liquid fertilizer on my shoulder a half mile multiple times in the heat really wasn't working for me. Especially since the the container is open at the top. I was in great need of a shower a lot sooner than I got one.

We left Thursday night for our weekend trip. We took the night bus to Pondicherry. This weekend was a disaster waiting to happen, though overall wasn't horrible and mostly comical with the right frame of mind. On the local bus taking us to the bus station that we were catching a bus to take us to the night bus station there were a few goats. Never thought I would see goat on a bus, but hey, its India. Anyway, while Tove and I were standing talking to the boys we felt some wet splatters on our ankles. I didn't get too much on me but enough to notice that something was maybe spilling. Tove seemed to get most of whatever it was that was hitting the floor and splashing. Yay for goats being on a bus and peeing. We were in hysterics once we figured out what was happening. We couldn't stop laughing or move. The bus was packed. Fortunately my backpack was on my back and not the floor.

There are two main reasons why most of the volunteers want to go to Pondicherry. There are bars open till 6am and there is steak that is safe to eat. Pondicherry was a French Colony so most of the architecture is French. It does not look like India at all until you go into a bathroom. It is very clean and quiet. Its also the first town I have been to here that I have seen locals who are westerners. It was a very nice break. We found really coffee and donuts. I think we spent 3 hours in the bakery.

Now for the reason it didn't go as planned or was considered a disaster. We didn't plan very well and went on a weekend that the results of last months elections came out. What this means is that we weren't supposed to be out on the streets in case of rioting on Friday afternoon. We learned from a few locals that this was true, not just something Projects Abroad was being overly concerned about.  We spent the afternoon on the beach. This was great fun and slightly annoying. The beach was filled with mostly men on the younger side. THey were all running around in their bikini or boxer briefs. this was more than any of us needed to see. There were a few that kept parading back and forth in front of us. At first this was pretty funny, after a while they kept blocking our view of the water. I might post a couple of pics of our view.

The other bummer about the election is that no alcohol is served and a number of the shops were closed. So Friday night we went to a restaurant looking for beef and beer. There was no fillet available because they had run out. Due to the election, their distributer of beef was closed. The chef was very nice and was able to make another dish with smaller cuts of beef that made everyone happy. I had chicken. It was very good. No beer, wine, or mixed drinks. Hooray for Election Day and Friday the 13th. We spent most of Saturday just wandering around town until we had to catch the night bus back to Madurai. The return bus home was terrible. Most of us had beds on the bus, but the ride reminded me of the knight bus in Harry Potter. It was moving that fast and was that bumpy. There was no sleeping and the whole first half of the 6 hour rid eI really needed to use the toilet. It was terrific.

We spent Sunday in Madurai basically moving from one a/c location to another. I wasn't feeling so great. My body has finally decided to reject India. It took it a month and a half to make this decision. I have developed a sensitivity to most of the food, so my digestive track is a little angry. I love my genetics.


New Volunteer, Rotary Club, Falling Down Stairs,The Wild West Bar, and The Great Bombay Circus

May has hit. My first month is done and I am starting to feel settled. Periodically I forget that I am in a foreign country. This is usually followed up by a child screaming in my face "What is your country?" or "What is your name?" I quickly remember that I do not speak Tamil and that I am a Westerner surrounded by people fascinated by me and wanting to touch me.

This past week started off slow. Had a sore throat over the weekend followed by a mild-ish migraine on Monday and Tuesday. Tove, a new volunteer from Denmark arrived on Tuesday. She is great. She is studying Public Health in school and this is her first of three internships she has to complete. She is already horrified. Its been fun this week to see her experience India. We sat in the very front of the bus this weekend on our way to Trichy; she was ready to freak out. Since then we have been on multiple rickshaw rides squeezing far too many of us in one so she is getting acclimated to transit in India.

 Wednesday we went to check out a coconut/banana farm. The owner wants to try converting a small section  to a Organic or Natural Farm. We sat and talked with him, his lead farmer and his friend, Raj Kumar for a while and when we were getting ready to leave they invited us to the local rotary club meeting that evening where the District Governor would be speaking. We decided to go. It was a great opportunity for the farm. Raisa was introduced and got and a spoke about the farm and why all of us were there. It was a neat experience. Very disorganized, though we have come to expect that. The only well spoken people there seemed to be Raisa and the District Governor. He was speaking in Tamil most of the time but was still interesting to watch. The meeting went on far to long considering it was all in Tamil so we had no idea what was going on aside from a number of awards and recognitions handed out. When the meeting was finished we headed into an adjoining hall for dinner. We were over fed. All the food was good but they kept heaping food on our plates. One our way out we were swarmed as always and asked about where we are from, what we are doing here and what brought us here. We received a number of invites to tour local businesses, hospitals, and farms. It was a great experience, I was glad to go home at the end of the night.

This past weekend we went to Tiruchappalli or Trichy as its commonly called. It is one of I think five Temple Cities in Tamil Nadu. It was a cool place. Tourist friendly, though not  western tourist heavy, so people were still watching us or coming up to us where ever we went. Shortly after we got there I fell. Slipped down a flight of stairs at the hotel and hit my forearm rather hard on the steps. Fortunately I hit the fleshier part of my arm. Once I got over the shock and had determined that I had not  broken my arm, I was fine. I have quite the bruise to show for it though.

Saturday morning we went to Sri Ranganathaswamy Temple (Great Temple). With outer walls that are more than 2 miles long and incorporating a village within it, this is India's biggest temple. We paid for a guide to take us to the areas of the temple that non-Hindus are allowed. I missed most of what he was saying but the temple was quite impressive. Had to walk barefoot foot. The ground is very hot on western feet. I got blessed by an elephant there as well. Pictures to come later.

The same guide took us to the Cauvery River. There is a small temple there where people come to have their head shaved as an offering. Usually done on small children sometimes adults as well. When a family has a problem or are in need of something they will come here, have their head shaved with a straight razor, bath in the river, have yellow sandal paste put on their heads to protect from the sun and then be blessed in the temple. Its a Hindu tradition but crosses into the other religions here as well. It also seems that its not just for a problem, its also done for luck for a family. A number of the children in Chinnupatti have done this. Boys and girls all running around with shaved heads.

Saturday afternoon we went to the Wild West Bar that we had read about in our tour book. It was really funny. Pictures to come. One of the better bars that we have found. They even had all the makings for the mixed drinks that they had on the menu. I am tired of King Fisher beer. Had a whiskey sour. Didn't taste like a whiskey sour but it was good. We also saw a famous Tamil movie star there. Woo!

Saturday night we all went to The Great Bombay Circus. That is really all there is to say about it. We were all really excited to go. Hoping to see animals. And we did. An elephant that could hit beach balls with a cricket bat, a bunch of parrots that could do tricks but preferred not to, five dogs that liked to send their trainer running in circles instead of doing the tricks requested by the trainer, and three camels that could walk in a circle. That was it for animals. The circus lasted for 2.5 hours. The rest of the time was filled with acts that given a month of training I could have done most of them. When I was twelve and in gymnastics, my skill level and ability to perform was by far much better. For those people who have seen me perform, or pretend to perform, you get the picture. Most of the performers looked bored or irritated that they had to be there. A little depressing to think about why they are with the circus in the first place. Most of the people involved really had no talent at all. Most of the audience really seemed to enjoy it though.

Sunday morning we got up to go to the Rock Fort. This was pretty amazing. I really enjoyed this outing. We did have to get up rather early so we would be finished before noon as it gets really hot and we had to check our sandals at the entrance. I didn't lose them this time. We had a guide take us around the Fort. He didn't really tell us much about the Fort but did give us a good background about the Hinduism. It was a good time. From there we stumbled upon a Christian church. It was huge and well cared for. There was a service or sorts going on which was basically all singing with a line of prayer in between songs. Everyone was standing and clapping, a couple of people were playing the tambourine. We looked in and then were invited in. It was cool. I have no idea what was being sung as it was all in Tamil???? I think.

The weekend was concluded with possibly the worst bus rides yet. Too many people crammed into a very tight space. Passengers were hanging onto the outside of the bus. Very happy to get back to the farm.
  

Saturday, April 30, 2011

RAIN

Dry lightening is rather common here. I see it a lot. Its great when it is followed by winds, thunder and finally rain. The temperature drops 20 degrees. Granted it is still warm at 70 degrees. But much nicer than 90. Unfortunately the temp only drops outside. My room is still hot and stuffy. There is little to no air flow even with the windows open. The other side effect of this kind out weather is the power outages. When the power is on its at 1/4 power. I have one dim light and a slow spinning fan. I also have a handful of lizards that have found their way in out of the rain.  

Friday, April 29, 2011

Afternoon at the Orphange

 Lentil crop we planted for them. Built a fence around it to keep the cows out. I am going back with Raisa and a new volunteer on Monday to check out the growth. We were at this orphanage my first week here.
 Me with a few of the orphans. They are asking questions about where I am from. Most of them have never heard of America. They are also trying to teach me words in Tamil. I am hopeless.
Raisa - Supervisor for the Eco Project and Model Farm - She is great.

Cattle Market - 1st week here


These were taken before we were threatened for having cameras, Not sure what they thought we were going to do with the pics...but we quickly put the cameras away. Raisa thinks its due to competition with other Markets. Cameras in general were not allowed. She was also told off for taking a pic. The guy running the market did not seem happy to have westerners there in general. These were taken at the entrance to the market. Many more cows and some goats inside. 

My Host Family - They are awesome

I believe this is three generations. I still do not know most of their names. I believe there are 3-4 houses that they are all split between. We always eat at the same house. It belongs to the oldest brother, Mr. Anthony. 

His wife and two of his brother's wives usually serve us. They stand watching us to see how we are liking our food and to make sure we are taken care of.  They do not eat with us.  It is very odd to be watched so closely while you eat. I have mostly gotten use to it. They provide all of my meals during the week and on the weekends that I stay local. 

With seven volunteers we have taken to eating on the floor. We didn't all fit around the table and there were not enough chairs. The floor is much easier. We usually have Mr. Anthony's two kids running around either trying to help or play while we are there. 

Some nights the tv is on and we get glimpses of Tamil films or regular tv. The commercials are random. Its fun to try and figure out what they are advertising at the beginning of it. Its rarely what we guess. There are some American products advertised. Hair dye, oreos, and shampoo are all that I have recognized.

Lime Quarries



Wed, Thurs, Friday, and the weekend off - Its been 1 Month

So the hotel we stayed at in Madurai, I would never stay at again. Truly scary. But I was able to sleep and had to get up far too early Thursday morning to get ready for the wedding and catch the train. I am really glad I didn't have to wear a sari. Those girls had to get up much earlier and get help to get ready. I am not sure how I feel about the train yet. I wasn't particularly comfortable in the seat, but the ride was much smoother and quicker. I tried to nap a bit but wasn't very successful and every time I looked up the same guy was watching me. He wasn't subtle either. Its been interesting to see how bold some Indians are and how scared others are. There have been times when a few of us have been sitting done eating, or waiting for a bus and someone will just walk up to us a stare like we are animals at the zoo. It doesn't matter where we are. Then there are other times when they will run away or children will hide behind their parents.

The wedding wasn't very long but the process was. We got there at around 8:45am. Breakfast was provided, but none of us were really hungry at that time. All we wanted was coffee and biscuits. No starbucks or coffee shops to be found. Only one coffee shop found in Kerela and I'm am taking my dad there for the chocolate cake. I think I may have said that before. The Wedding that was suppose to start at 10am started at 10:45am. Yay Indian time. Nothing ever starts on time. 5 min usually means 15min. By this time I was hungry.  The hall that the wedding was held in had some 500+ people crammed in. I think about 40 volunteers were there. Most of the girls were wearing saris. Again I am glad I wasn't. I would have fallen and would have had no prayer in the bathroom let alone an Indian toilet. The ceremony lasted about 45min. I have no idea what was going on until the vows. that was obvious. It was all in Tamil. From the wedding we were supposed to head back to Madurai and catch a a bus to a University that we had an appt at. With lots of running we still didn't get back to Madurai in time to catch the bus. As it was we didn't get back to Madurai till after the appt was suppose to start and the University was another hour bus ride. We just headed back to the farm. I got stuck next to a rather large Indian man who I couldn't figure out if he was a creep or just really didn't have enough room. Thinking possibly a bit of both. He didn't fit in the seat at all and his shoulders were wide enough to pin me back in my seat. His elbow spent a good portion of the ride back jabbing into my breast every time we hit a bump. Bumps come multiple times a minute. Once I changed my position he decided to go to sleep and kept leaning into me. I didn't not enjoy this ride home. Usually men will not sit next to a woman on a bus unless they are married or family. Yay for being a westerner.

Thursday was another day at the farm. This was a nice change of pace. It has become a very relaxing place for me. At least when the children aren't all over the place wanting to play or help. Usually play. Thursday morning was the start of a series of lessons and projects we are including the kids in while they are on holiday. We started by finding out explaining conservation and went on to discuss why plastics are bad for the environment. They all sat on the steps with their notebooks and pencils ready to take notes. They seemed to understand with translation all we were trying to get across. When asked if they enjoyed the lesson they said that they did. We'll see if they come back next week. At the end they asked us all for our autographs. Printed and signed.

The plan for the weekend was suppose to go to work Friday morning on the farm then go on another Projects Abroad planned volunteer weekend.  I have decided to stay on the farm for the weekend. Need some quiet time and need a break from travel. I think I actually get to sleep until 8:15 tomorrow. Breakfast is at 8:30am. I am usually up at 6:15 so this is sleeping in. Anna and Ashok left today so I have the room to myself which is nice during the day. Like having a roommate at night. There is another girl starting on Monday so I won't be by myself for long.