Wednesday, August 26, 2015

Road Block on the Estate

Life on the tea estate will be very different than anything I could have imagined. It is a one hour walk to the nearest store (I do not have a car so if I want to go anywhere, I walk, and nothing is close!), there is very limited internet access (which means fewer blog posts than I would like), and I must learn to share the road with cows (I sure hope they can't smell fear like dogs can, because they totally freak me out!).I've been on the estate for a week now and all is fine. My house is still not ready so I am in a guest house. I have kitchen staff catering to my every need. It is very nice, but I am ready to settle down and unpack my bags. I'm told, maybe next week. Once I am in my house, I will post before and after pictures. I don't want to show pictures of my house as it is now, because it's quite a mess. They are replacing windows, the front door, the flooring, fixing the roof and replacing the ceiling (yes, it was leaking and there was terrible water damage), tiling the bathroom, building a kitchen (original cooking area was outside), and painting.  A lot if work! Thank goodness   they did not plop me down in the house "as is".

There is not much to report on the work front. I am just visiting villages and observing the daily happenings at the clinic. I'm not quite sure what my role will be... feeling a little inadequate at the moment, but once I'm truly settled in, I'm sure I will be up for the job. The first three months are suppose to be observation and assessment anyway. In November, all of the volunteers will regather for another week of training, and then we are expected to start work. 

I must practice patience! 

Wabale kusoma. (thanks for reading) 
Which reminds me, I start with a language instructor next week so I'll have more Rutoore for you! Actually, my instructor is a teenage girl, maybe 16, 17, I'm not sure. She has finished Senior 4 (10th grade for us) and does not have money to continue her education. So, as far as I can understand, she has returned home and does odd jobs to earn money. She speaks ok English, but we may have difficulties understanding each other at first. The Peace Corps will pay a tutor up to five hours per week at 6000 shillings per hour. That's about $10/wk. Not much in US standard, but here it will easily buy a weeks worth of groceries, so not bad for five hours of work. I would like to find out what the tealeaf-pickers make, just to compare and to understand a little more about how they manage. Once I start teaching in the villages, I'll have pictures and stories from the workers for you. 

1 comment:

  1. I wish I could teleport and walk the hour to and from the store with you! I'm sure those cows are much more intimidating in person, especially with those horns, but they look like they are much more interested in the foliage on the forest edge than in you. It reminds me of the time we went horseback riding in the woods and Olympia's horse wandered off into the woods (with her on it) to nibble on the leaves. Is the man behind them a cowboy?

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