Wednesday, April 27, 2011

Data, Data, Data


After 161 interviews with local people living along the river, each translating into 50 different variables, we have collected a substantial amount of information for our community perceptions portion of the directed research project.  This part of the project is focusing on water quality, quantity and conflicts in terms of local people’s perceptions on the Noolturesh River in Kenya.  My spreadsheet in our statistical software program looks like the beginning of the Matrix, with millions of numbers scrolling down the screen.  I’ve even had dreams the past few nights about entering data. 

It’s interesting to hear the peoples’ points of view through these interviews, then speak with government officials a few hours later.  The people express frustration and despair about the poor water situation and the local government acknowledges that the people are getting typhoid from the water and that there is not enough to bathe sufficiently or water their crops, but there is a disconnect in terms of getting help and any money is pocketed by corrupt officials. Progress is extremely slow-moving and it is upsetting when you realize that it is going to take a LOT of changes to fix these issues.   

To take a break from data entry and analysis, we headed into Kimana yesterday for market day.  I stopped at the ATM first to withdraw some money and put it out of service.  I only withdrew the equivalent of about forty dollars. 

On market day, the town is flooded with people who set up stalls and sell everything from old nail polish to fresh fruit.  It’s literally a sea of red because the area is heavily settled by Maasai, who wear predominantly red.  Since arriving in Kenya, I have been fascinated by the culture here that was not apparent in Tanzania, in particular relating to the junior warriors of the Maasai tribe.  I was finally able to get a picture with them for free after one of our friends, a local guide for our research project, convinced them in Swahili that “friendship was more important than money.”  Lately it’s been near impossible to upload any pictures in Kenya since the internet is so much worse, but this one is necessary:




Tomorrow we have an off day and are going to Amboseli National Park to swim at the pool, gorge on the buffet and drive around observing the animals.  I feel so guilty every time we go to the tourist lodges because just the day before we interview people who said they go a day without drinking water or walk several kilometers to get twenty liters per day while I am swimming in a huge swimming pool right near their home.  At the same time it is so satisfying to spend the day relaxing and feeling as though I’m in America again and eating food that is similar to what I eat back at home.  I had potato salad the other day and I ate so much of it it almost made me sick.   

There’s only a couple weeks left in Africa now though.  It’s sad to think I’ll likely never again see this many stars in the sky at night or wake up to the sight of Mt. Kilimanjaro.   I’m ready to go home, but I really want to come back someday soon.

Sunday, April 24, 2011

Fieldwork and Easter Festivities


In the past few days, we finished up fieldwork for directed research.  I continued GPS mapping the coordinates of the Noolturesh River.  The landscape was mostly jungle, with a few banana plantations mixed in.  Here are the highlights:
Biting ant count: 5 
Huge, poisonous spider count: at least 10 (whose webs I practically walked through)
We were told that you needed to be near a hospital if one of them bit you.  We weren't.  Some were the size of my palm and all kinds of warning colors, reds and yellows. 
My water bottle fell in a river that certainly has typhoid bacteria in it.
Then I fell in it.
I got chased by some cows and slid down some more muddy ravines.
Took GPS waypoints 50 feet above the river standing on a cliff.
And found a poacher’s snare for dik dik (they’re kind of like baby deer).

Back at camp, it’s been pretty typical.  My mosquito net collapsed on me last night because the rat chewed threw the rope tying it to the wall.  I also played peek-a-boo with a bushbaby (a type of very small and curious monkey) yesterday while I was waiting for the shower.  He jumped down from branch to branch to get a closer look at me and then repeatedly hid and then poked his head back out, even mimicking me if I turned my head to the side.  Would anyone mind if I brought one home with me?

We went to church this morning on Easter Sunday, the Church of Pentecost in Kimana.  It was in a small cement building with a tin roof and little benches.  It was no bigger than my room at home.  As soon as we entered the choir started singing the most exuberant song I’ve ever heard in a church.  The only instruments they used were drums.  After the song ended everyone raised their arms and closed their eyes and each person was shouting their own prayer.  It was so loud and chaotic. Then we all clapped to praise the Lord.  We did this many times throughout the service. 

The pastor welcomed us several times and had us introduce ourselves in Swahili.  The sermon itself was in both English and Swahili since there were more of us there than local people.  It ended in shouting and prayers for our school and our research.  The pastor worked up such a sweat that he whipped out a cloth in the middle of his speech to wipe off his face.  It was so hot I thought I might faint.

After the service, which lasted two hours and ended only because the next one was about to start, we piled into the LandCruisers and went back to camp.  Some of the students organized an Easter egg hunt!  They even found some candy to fill the eggs with.  It was a fun way to celebrate several continents away from home. 

We’re conducting more interviews tomorrow then starting data analysis and write-up of our research paper.  I’m just hoping the rat doesn’t come again tonight, but I wouldn’t mind a few more bushbabies.  Happy Easter!

Monday, April 18, 2011

Ants in my Pants


The first two days of directed research involved sliding down a few ravines, falling in some irrigation canals and learning how to use a GPS to map the Noolturesh River for purposes of measuring human encroachment and water use by the local people.  Little did I know that I would be trekking through the African jungle with vegetation so dense I could barely see through it and thorns scratching me all over.  There are these really annoying plants that stick to you and chafe your legs through your pants. You know it’s pretty bad when the local guide looks at you and says “You bush.”  They’re called Forget Me Nots.  I told the guides that the American version of Forget Me Nots are little blue flowery plants.    

But the craziest part was the safari ants that literally climbed all the way up my legs beneath my pants, biting all the way up.  I had to stop a few times to get them out of my underwear.  This really happened.

Despite all that it’s still a really cool experience.  The area is beautiful, with palm trees and Sykes monkeys scattered along the river, and the people are really friendly even though we’re trespassing on their property.  There are no trespassing laws in Kenya though, so there’s nothing to worry about.  I think they really appreciate seeing people who look like they might do something to improve their desperate water situation.  We’ve tromped through numerous tomato patches, corn fields and banana plantations to map this river that ranges from a mere trickle to wide with a current.

Tomorrow we start interviews based on water usage, everything from how close their farm is to the stream to how often they get sick from the river water.  I’m excited but a little nervous because you never know what might happen during an interview:  a mother breastfeeding her 3 year old, one of the many flies at the bomas going up your nose or a donkey causing such a disturbance that you can’t even hear the response.  Just another day doing research in Africa.

Friday, April 15, 2011

Kibaki comes to Kimana



Yesterday we heard that the Kenyan President, Kibaki, was coming to our town to do a ribbon cutting for the new paved road and give a speech.  After class today we headed into Kimana and over to the tents set up for his speech.  It was a good setup, with lots of shade for the audience and a legit sound system with tribal dancing while everyone waited for him to arrive. 

We ended up waiting three hours before he finally came in an entourage of Mercedes station wagons.  He got out and was surrounded by some security guys in suits.  All of the students in my group were standing along the side of the road, dying of heat stroke and waiting for him to cut the ribbon and proceed in to give his speech.  All of a sudden we realized that one of the guys in the group was heading onto the road with a group of Kenyans.  He apparently told them that he was part of the press, since he had a voice recorder and camera.  For whatever reason they believed him and he was several feet away from the President, documenting the entire event.  They even ushered him into the arena to some VIP seating for the actual speech part.  At that point we had to leave and head back to camp so he was able to get away. 

It wasn’t all it was cracked up to be, since I only saw him for a few seconds, but we did get to interact with the locals quite a bit.  At one point I was sitting down waiting for the President to arrive in the midst of the crowd and was completely surrounded by African children 10 and under who were stroking my hair and clinging to me.  We also got to see some of my favorite Maasai, the junior warriors, decked out in beads and weapons with long dyed-red dreadlocks. 

That was pretty much the highlight of the day and tomorrow we start all kinds of statistical work for direct research.  I’m working on water usage and human encroachment in the Noolturesh river system, which should be pretty interesting considering how important water is to the community and its scarcity.  Hope all is well back at home!

Tuesday, April 12, 2011

The Tsavo Man-Eaters


The story of the Tsavo man-eating lions begins in the late 1800s when a railroad was being built to divide Tsavo National Park in southern Kenya.  The project was lead by an English general and was well underway when something went horribly wrong.  By night construction laborers were attacked and taken away by two male lions.  It is estimated that thirty-five to one hundred men were eaten before these lions were killed.  The lion pelts, which were used as rugs by the general for several years, have been restored and are shown in a Chicago museum.  It is theorized that the lions may be a sub-species because of their larger size, shorter manes and taste for human flesh.  To this day it is required to have armed guards from the Kenya Wildlife Service stay at the campsite at night because several years ago a couple was dragged out of their tent by the Tsavo lions. 

For the past week I’ve been camping in Tsavo, but unfortunately didn’t see any of these famous lions.  We did see giraffes, elephants, multiple antelope species and even a cheetah, which is extremely rare for this park!  On the way to the campsite we stopped at Shetani Lava Flow, an impressive landscape composed entirely of volcanic rock, and Mzima Springs, the most beautiful, clear water filled with fish that I have seen yet in Africa.  There was even an underwater viewing tank.  Since the severe drought in 2009 there are no longer hippos here but we did see a massive crocodile.

The next day we took a trip to the Chyulu Hills, an incredibly scenic conservation area with roads that are better than a Disney ride.  Aside from a few bird ecologists, we are the only people that use the road that climbs up through the hills completely covered in tall grass and thorny trees.  Standing up in the Land Cruisers, we were dodging fallen trees and thorns as if it was some kind of obstacle course.

We went into town after a lecture day, a major truck stop called Mtito Andei, which is halfway between Mombasa and Nairobi.  Myself and a few of the other girls were thrilled because we were in Kamba territory!  I was given a Kamba tribal name by the previous staff in Tanzania so when we were talking to the vendors we introduced ourselves with our Kamba names.  The women started laughing hysterically and speaking Kamba to us.  They really got a kick out of it, and I think they may have given us a better deal on the wood carvings we bought because we were “sisters”.

On our last day we visited the Ngulia Wildlife Sanctuary and listened to several Kenya Wildlife Service officers talk about the successes and failures of the sanctuary.  They even named one of the newborn rhinos after an SFS student in the last group!  So of course we all put a word in for a rhino to be named after us.

It’s been stressful ever since we got back because of exams and papers, but we’re finally starting Directed Research in only a few days.  I’m hoping to do Wildlife Ecology, which focuses on water usage in the region.  At the end, we present our research to the entire community, with a translator for the locals in attendance.  I have mixed feelings about beginning the last academic portion of this program, both sadness that I’ll be leaving East Africa in less than a month and relief to get back to the comforts of America.