Well, 2 weeks in Ouaga, 1 week getting situated in Mahadaga, and 1 week of actually getting down to business, makes this October 10th! It has been one month since I left home and it is 2 months til I land back in the states. Craziness. It doesnt seem like its been that long.
I mentioned on Facebook about going to the cliffs, and here they are! About a 30sec walk in the opposite direction of the main road puts you in view of this pretty amazing rock wall! It stretches for miles pretty much parallel to the main road through Mahadaga. I don't think any picture can really do them justice, its a pretty great sight. In between the cliffs and the edge of the trees (where I took the photo) are fields of millet, corn, soybeans, cotton, okra, and probably a lot of other things. Like I said, its the end of the rainy season so everything is really green! There are also a ton of donkeys (some tied up, some with a rope around their neck that is no longer tied down) that are pretty evenly spaced grazing throughout the fields.. I need to get a picture of 3-4 of them in view!
Today I got the chance to go to a pretty awesome waterfall a few miles from home. Its so cool how the water falls down each level one-by-one! And the water was nice and refreshing, but not too cold!! Perfect way to relax on a Sunday afternoon.
We were going to take the Johnson's rhino (same thing as a john deere gator), but it wouldnt start, so instead Daniel and I took this:
This ballin 250cc Honda is Dale's bike and has been my mode of transportation to the center and back for the past week! Its pretty sweet. And big compared to all the bicycles and mopeds here. I'm getting more used to driving it but this was the furthest I had driven, and there were 2 of us! Driving on the (albeit bumpy) road wasn't too bad, but then we turned onto a back path to the waterfall. The path was either loose sand or channels where the dirt was washed away, neither good for driving. Fell over a couple times but no harm done..Anyhow yeah Daniel is an awesome dude I've been hanging out with recently. Hes a 20 yr old in his last year of high school (not that they call it that here!). He wants to learn more English and I badly need to learn more French, so hanging out is mutually beneficial.
We then went and played soccer at his school. It was a lot of fun. Most were better than me (especially a guy named Emmanuel who works at the Handicap Center) but I managed to get the first goal! We still lost 3-1. The craziest part of the game was the weather going on around us. SERIOUS storm clouds were rolling past, but everyone was confident the storm would miss us. And they were right, but I saw some pretty crazy streaks of lighting while we were playing! The storm set the mood for the game... it was like this pick up game was a clash of titans!
So that was a good Sunday. It made up for an unfortunate Saturday. A lot of what I have been working on here so far has been fixing the network set up between the mission station, the handicap center, and the CSPS dispensary. There are 60ft antenna poles at each of these 3 locations that transmit the WiFi between networks. Things have been improving, and its really gratifying to be able to help around here where so many good things are happening.
Yesterday Dale and I decided that we needed to take down the pole at the station, because one of the antennas was not working properly. But the trees around the tower have grown since last time!! While trying to get the pole around the trees, the tower fell from about 40 feet!!
Oh oh hey. Everythings fine. Just wanted to run in here like that. Yah you know that antenna pole? Well you know how like its arm usually, usually it bends like that? Yeah its not bendin like that right now.
Luckily no one was hurt. But we figured out the antenna was our problem.... or at least it is now that its in 3 pieces....!
So now were working on getting the tower back up, and we think we've found a way to rearrange the antennas so that we'll have even better signal than before... even though we have one less antenna. We'll see how that goes.
I've finished reading People in Rural Development and have moved onto Small is Beautiful. More than a book about development, Small is Beautiful is a book about world economics, conservation, peace, and prosperity.. and I'm only on chapter 2! I was gonna put a good quote, but it doesn't really work out of context. Just read it yourself if you like.
Oh and Happy 10-10-10 day!