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Showing posts from April, 2018

The Animals of Ghana

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This weekend brings week 2 of 10 to a close! 2 months from now I will be back at home in the UK and Ghana will be another finished experience on my world tour. This week has been our first week back in the office which means more planning than doing as I’ve found once you have a plan of your objectives, it helps manage expectations and gets people in the right mindset. We found out this week that we are the last cohort for PAGSUNG and potentially the last cohort for ICS with International Service, but time and the government will tell. As a result, we have been told to focus on celebrating the achievements of the 5 previous teams and putting more measures in place, so the work is in the hands of the PAGSUNG women and local organisations to help sustain it. Most of my pictures this week are just of the office which you have already seen but next week we will be going out to new communities. We have this Tuesday off work as it’s May/Labour Day. I’ve never been one to argue with a n

The Rainy Season Cometh!

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So the date has finally arrived after over 3 weeks of waiting, my second and final cohort landed this Wednesday and we start our first day in the office tomorrow. Their first taste of Tamale was being stuck in a hotel complex for several hours each day doing mandatory training. There was a spring break camp for small children there too who kindly woke us up one day by playing the drums at 6am. However, they seem to be a strong and motivated group so powered through and settled into their host homes on Saturday morning. We had our first trips to town while they adjust to the culture shock and massive spike in heat, average 38 degrees every day and drops to 27 in the evening. As you can see from the pictures below, the signs of the ever so slightly cooler rainy season are beginning to show. Although, sadly on this occasion to add to the heat, there was a fire at the power station last year and repairs were finally being completed so everyone’s electricity was off from morning to even

Mole, Larabanga and the Mystic Stone

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For one reason or another, ICS Version 2 (the version I am currently on and is being stopped in summer) has a restricted travel policy which means volunteers must stay in the town they are working in for their placement apart from mid-term review and training. When I was in India, we were free to travel around the whole of Tamil Nadu in our free time, so I go to experience a lot more of their history. However, as we had such a large gap between cohorts we were given special permission to go to Mole National Park for the day, the biggest national park in Ghana and most famous for it’s elephants. The day started at 3am, there had been heavy rain all night and I woke up to no electricity as the electric company usually turn it off during this weather, I assume for safety reason. I got washed and ready by torchlight and navigated around the flooded areas in my neighbourhood to reach the roadside. My host mum (<3) walked me to the roundabout and waited with me. International serv

Foods of Ghana

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Unfortunately, I haven’t got anything particularly exciting to update you on, so I thought I would go back and show you some of the different foods here. The only things worthy of note are my new counterpart team leader arrives soon, going to Mole National Park tomorrow to see some animals (squee!), spent some of the week with the new volunteers on the REACT project and been doing paperwork and training…... That’s all so here come the foods! Breakfast - bread brought from the bread seller who visits the house every morning, groundnut paste, jam, nescafe coffee with powdered milk and a doxycycline to prevent malaria.  Breakfast 2 - Omelette sandwich, always on white bread as hard and expensive to find anything different.  Dinner Option 1 - Plain rice, beans and fried plantain (commonly called red red and the beans are served in a tomato sauce) Dinner Option 2 - Guinea fowl, lettuce, fried rice, ketchup/mayo and shito (a pepper and spice mix) Dinner O

Goalball

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1 week down and 2 and a bit to go until the second cohort arrive. Due to the no travel policy I have spent most of this week relaxing by watching sopranos, reading and listening to podcasts. During the week, 2 team leaders arrived from the UK who are starting a new 8-week project here called REACT. The teams are split between here and Sandema in the upper east and are a mixture of visually impaired (various levels) and fully sighted volunteers who will challenge how people “react” to disabilities such as blindness. I have not had much interaction with the disabled communities whilst here in Tamale as our project is focussed on female empowerment. However, what I have seen is people in wheelchairs getting over uneven terrain by using a hand crank version of a chair and having to beg for a living. The same applies to the blind who are led round by placing their hands-on a child’s shoulder, possibly their own children or grandchildren.   Now I don’t like the saying “don’t judge a bo