Thursday, October 24, 2013

Take our Daughter to Work Day

Here is a paper I wrote for a PC newsletter of an event I did about a month ago.



     I live in the Northern Region of Ghana in a small village (of about 600 people) called Yapalsi. In Yapalsi there is no female graduate of an SS. I know of only one 35+ year old mother who had some small amount of primary school. By and large I (like too many of us) live in a village of completely illiterate mothers.
     This has always troubled me. I want the next generation, this generation, to be different. I want my girls to be informed, I want them to be confident, I want them to be happy, I want for them what I never had to fight to get- higher education.
     So upon reading the GYDlines I got motivated to do a TODTWD. I spent one week running around my district capital finding different contacts, making awkward phone calls (“Heyyy friend! Long time… like 1.5 years long…), getting brownie points by going to church to further discuss TODTWD with a speaker, wearing my Ghanian wear, talking to headmasters to pull my kids out of class an hour early on Friday, and in general, preaching all about the importance of educating our youth to any who would listen.
     Friday arrives and I pick up my 4 JHS kids at school (a 7km walk one way from my village), take us to the nearest taxi station and pay for a drop to go to our first stop- the District Assembly.
     Now, even before reaching the DA I realize from that I’m in trouble. The woman I set everything up with had traveled to a conference 5 hours away. Somehow it escaped her mind to tell me that when we met 2 days ago. However I had two interviews lined up here and go to my next in line.
     This turns into a bit of a teeth pulling routine. The woman is not interested in motivating my girls (though she sure seemed it on Wednesday) and gives us very perfunctory answers. This was such a disappointment. I leave feeling really let down, but what makes everybody feel better? Food.
     After the DA we go to get some chop and I pay for their food and get them the *big* pieces of meat. As everybody starts eating I begin phase 2 of TODTWD, talk about my own experiences. Maybe it was the fact that my girls were eating meat for the first time all month, maybe it was just because we were out of the DA, but whatever the reason they were very engaged in my discussion of why higher education is extra important for women.
     Phase 3 of TODTWD- Bring my girls to the local radio station (90.5 Mah-mah-mah MIGHT FM). This visit goes spectacularly. Patience, the woman broadcaster, is very engaging and very motivational. She explains her hardships and triumphs. She has everybody’s full attention and keeps it for her entire hour long discussion. Leaving on a high note, she even gives my four girls a shout out on live radio. Smiles all around =)
     The last and final phase- Go to the Veterinary College to talk with the animal rearing professor, Madam Fostina. I’m excited for my girls to talk to Fostina because she was born and raised in the Upper West Region and I believe there is a big north/south split where Ghanians from the North sometimes feel inferior or more handicapped just by being born and going to school in the North. Madam Fostina is able to prove to my kids that if you work hard you can become a “big woman” and succeed regardless of region.
     I believe the four JHS kids I brought around took a lot away from our day of travels. I hope that they were inspired and will try harder to finish their schooling. At the very least I know my girls had an overall fun day seeing different successful women and will take away from this experience that women can and do succeed. Now, it’s just left with time to see if they will believe and live the thought that “I am a woman and I can succeed.” 


Monday, September 9, 2013

COS conference

This past week I went to my "close of service" conference. COS conference is a chance for PC staff to tell us important information about reverse culture shock, the perks of being a RPCV (returned peace corps volunteer), and to give us a chance to be say goodbye to each other. It's been nearly 2 years since I've set foot in Ghana and I can hardly believe it.

I got to see all my dear friends (some whom I haven't seen since the first 3 months in country, back when we were still Peace Corps "Trainee's") and that sure was amazing. It's so strange to think that in the next 3 months most of my closest friends will be leaving and going back to the states.

The conference was held at an amazing hotel in the Volta region of Ghana. There was a pool, supermarket, and even peacocks which walked around. It was a little unsettling at first and I realized just how much of a shock America is going to be.

But it's going to be be put off for a year because I've chosen to extend for a year. I'm still working on the Moringa project with my women's group and I want to finish that project before I leave. I also just couldn't leave my kids yet either. I mean, could you leave these faces?

It was a difficult decision but I really just couldn't say goodbye yet. I felt incomplete. So here is to another year! 

Some of Yapalsi's children all dressed in their best outfits (in celebration of Ramadan)

Rukaya and Nafishetu, two of my house girls

Peace corps October 2011 group.

Thursday, July 11, 2013

Moringa Project

Hey everybody here is some photo's of the moringa project!
(If you want to see the pictures larger just click on them)

Our nursery trees started back in April
Building our garden
 

Ran with me on the back of the bike carrying our 3 month old Moringa Trees. Trip 1 of 7.


Planting the seeds of the intensively grown trees

The nursery trees in their new homes

Women's group

Friday, July 5, 2013

Happy July 4th

For July 4th I met a bunch of people at a PC sub office where we grilled sausages and made a potluck of random foods. I wish I had a single picture to show you guys as proof, however it was a frenzy to get at the food so in interest of my hunger I decided to go for the food rather than my camera. We had mashed potatoes, coleslaw, popcorn, sliders, lo mein (I had a craving for it so I decided to make it haha), cheese cubes, rice and fish, fruit bowl, chips and salsa, and lots of drinks. It was a really fun way to celebrate America. We read the declaration of independence and sang lots of songs. All in all we celebrated the fourth in a very American fashion I believe.

I have planted the Moringa Trees at my village. Last Friday my women and I met up and planted nearly 500 trees. So hopefully I'll have pictures for you guys soon of that fun day.

Everything else here is going quite well.

Happy Fourth!

Monday, June 3, 2013

Camp Time

It's almost time for the Northern Region Food Security Youth Camp! Aka a camp for 30 lucky middle school/high school kids to learn everything from better food storage practices, diversifying foods, improving nutrition and much more. The camp (renamed Camp GLAD- Growing leaders in Agriculture Development) begins Thursday and finished Tuesday. I'll let you all know how it goes!

As for the Moringa going on in my village it's been going slow. We've had a drought for the last two weeks so we were unable to transfer the seedlings to their permanent location. It was very lucky that we didn't plant the moringa though because the drought would have definitely killed much of the moringa. Hopefully this drought will end soon though, for all the farmers sake!

I'm training for a Marathon that will be held in the capital of Ghana (Accra) at the end of September. In order to get a good idea of how far I'm actually running Ran and I measured out 3 miles using a 100m tape measure. So in case you were wondering how we pass time here sometimes.... I still need to measure out 4 more miles. Wish me luck.

Thursday, May 9, 2013

Updates

It's been a busy last few weeks, lots of meetings, floor pounding, and building!

My village is nursing 120 Moringa trees currently with plans to plant 100 more by rainy season. We've had weekly meetings and are fast underway with the construction of the garden fence. So far the Moringa project is continuing at a smooth steady pace... oh except that one time a bag of cow dung that had been soaking in a barrel of water for two weeks split and splashed me and my foot quite thoroughly.

Now is the time for floor pounding and it never gets old. The amount of work that goes into flattening the compound floor always surprises me. What never gets old though is the singing, pounding, and dancing. I had a JICA (Japan Peace Corps) come visit and my village loved seeing two white people who spoke completely different languages haha.

Also I just returned from a training event hosted by Peace Corps about the care and conservation of Shea Trees and am happy to report we have been passing on the skill of grafting Shea Trees to the women of my village. Slowly but surely. It takes 20 years for a wild Shea tree to fruit, but by grafting (combining an older Shea tree with a younger one) the trees can fruit in 6-8 years.

All in all everything here is going well. In my spare time I am still reading and still talking Dagbani. Things have been rolling along very well and soon we'll all be running out to the farms to start planting crops. The future holds more organic fertilizer training and Moringa training.

Sorry the posts become shorter and fewer in time but I will try to make an effort to be more diligent about posting and keeping you guys updated.




Friday, March 29, 2013

Back from Vacation

Hey everybody I just got back from Vietnam and it was such a fun trip! For 1 month Ran and I traveled up the coast of Vietnam and also made a side stop in Cambodia to see Angkor Wat. It was a great trip and vacation but there's nothing like coming back to Ghana and feeling like you've come home.

The welcome back to my community was so uplifting, I mean, it's pretty hard not to break out into a big smile when 40 children are running over to you screaming "Madam Weeeeelcome! Madam Weeeelcome!!" Haha jeeze.

So after being gone a month the rabbit project I've been working on for the past year seems to be continuing in a sustainable manner. The rabbits seemed healthy and even 1 house's rabbits gave birth while I was gone. So far so good!

In a 2 weeks we'll be going to "All Vol" our annual all volunteer conference where every PC volunteer in Ghana will be meeting up. How interesting it will be to see everybody again.

Current projects:
Starting the tree nursery and the women's group to be associated with the nursery.
More world map lectures.