Wednesday, December 11, 2013

Las Fotos

Location: Havana, Cuba

Bet you didn't think you were ever getting another post out of me again, huh? Well it's a short one; here are some pictures from Cuba!

Monday, December 9, 2013

The Posts Just Get Shorter and Shorter!

Location: Havana, Cuba

That's right, everyone––I'm in Havana, Cuba! How often in a person's life do they get to say that? Anyhow it's late and I'm tired, so I've just posted a few pictures from Brazil and am going to call it a night (I'll post pictures of Cuba in the next few days; I know everyone's curious!)

Thursday, November 21, 2013

How Small Can You Post?

Location: Rio de Janeiro

Hey, long time no post. As you can see, I am in Rio de Janeiro now! Once again I don't have time for one of my nice long detailed posts, but I thought it might be better to post something small rather than the continual nothing at all.

I do have a few bits of news though: firstly, it was announced at our last logistical preport that we will be making a surprise stop in the Bahamas! As in, we'll get to actually get off the ship in the Bahamas! Initially the ship was just stopping there for a while to refuel while we all sit around gaze longingly at the shore (we did that at the Canary Islands after Morocco and Namibia before South Africa) but the staff on the ship have been advocating our case back to ISE headquarters back in Virginia for a while now, and they finally gave us the go ahead! Yes, the entire ship is very excited. I believe we're going to be there only one day, but I'm not sure exactly when (sometime in the four days after Cub and before Fort Lauderdale.) Anyone have suggestions for what I should do there?

Anyhow, second bit of news: I am leaving tomorrow morning for one of my most anticipated excursions of SAS––the Amazon rainforest! I will be traveling via riverboat (equipped with hammocks for us to sleep in) up the Rio Negro and into the Amazon River for the next four days, so I should have some awesome pictures for you after that! As it is here are a few pictures from Argentina and my two days in Rio to tide you over. Enjoy!

Thursday, November 7, 2013

The Denizens of Kruger National Park

Because I always seem to end up getting busy and not posting anything, I thought I'd at least put up some pictures from my safari in South Africa. Enjoy!

Sunday, November 3, 2013

Mpumalanga!

Location: Westbound in the Atlantic

Hey, it's me again! I am now on day 4 of the 12-day Atlantic Ocean crossing (which is the longest stretch that we will be at sea during the voyage.) Everyone is bemoaning 12 days straight of ship food, but I'm enjoying having some R&R before we get to Buenos Aires. There's an effort to make sure that we all don't get too bored (a ship full of bored college students can be a scary thing!) which includes nightly Union Seminars on all sorts of topics, and a couple of special events:

One of the biggest events we have on the ship is called the Sea Olympics, during which the ship's 7 "Seas" compete against each other at a variety of different activities, including lip-synching, synchronized swimming (I think we're all a bit curious on how those folks are going to manage in our little tiny pool on deck 7), trivia, dodgeball, and scrabble (I signed up for that, but then I realized that I'm actually very bad at scrabble. Oops.) I think I mentioned a while back that we are assigned to a particular "Sea" depending on which deck/hall our cabin located, and I am in the Caribbean Sea. For some strange reason the color that they assigned us was gray (nobody can figure out why they would make the Caribbean gray––we should be a nice aquamarine or something. The Yellow Sea got to be yellow!), and since we all must wear our sea's color while participating in the events, I am now decked out head-to-toe in gray (the Olympics start tonight!)

But why head-to-toe, you might ask? Well that is a result of the other attempt to ensure that we don't get too bored over the next 8 days––we are having a shipwide game of Assassins! Okay, so I'm going to assume that most if not all of you have never heard of this game (I hadn't, and apparently it's a thing with my generation. Who knew?) Anyhow, in the version of Assassins that we are playing everyone is assigned another player as a "target," and the object of the game is to eliminate your target by getting them alone and marking them with a washable marker while proclaiming "Assassins!" Then that person must tell you who their target was going to be, and that becomes your new target. This continues until there are just one person left, and that person is the winner. Of course you don't know which person has been assigned to assassinate you, so the best defenses are to either travel around in groups of at least three, or to make sure you have as little skin showing as possible for people to mark (you're not allowed to mark people's clothing or faces.) Since the ship is a bit cold and I tend to bundle up when I go out anyway, I think I'm going with the latter strategy.

Either way it's going to be interesting trying to get people completely alone to "assassinate" them while stuck on a ship of 800ish people! There are 258 of us are signed up to play, and the game starts this evening, so it should be really fun. I think I'm more excited about it than the Sea Olympics, but don't tell my Sea that! I've already been informed who my target will be, and I'm already trying to devise a way to get him/her alone.... hmm...

*Ahem* So, who wants to hear about the first of my five days in South Africa?


––––––– Cape Town & Johannesburg, South Africa: 10/26 –––––––

The evening before we pull into a port we always have a Logistical Preport meeting in the Union to discuss, well, the logistics of the upcoming port. This is where we find out more than anyone would ever want to know about all the terrible dangers and nasty diseases which could befall us in the country, as well as some of the more fun/interesting things that we may want to know about the place we will be staying. In this particular Preport, we were informed that of all the ports we would be docking at, Cape Town is one of the most beautiful to get up and watch the ship pull into. We were due to arrive between 7 and 7:30am, and sunrise was at about 6am, so it was recommended that we wake up early to catch the sunrise and then watch as the ship arrived at Cape Town.

Okay, so I'm not really a morning person (at all), and I tend to find it a bit hard to get to sleep the night before we're due to arrive at a port. But I set my alarm for 5:30, figuring that I would be up on deck by about 5:45 to catch the latter part of the sunrise and hopefully not have to wait too long before we arrived at the port. From what I gathered, my plan was shared by most of the shipboard community.

Which is why, when the ship rumbled to a stop in the harbor at about 5:40am, and we all rushed upstairs only to see the last of the pink fading from the large cloud swirling over the top of Table Mountain, there was a considerable amount of grumbling among the shipboard community. I myself was a little bit irked, but it's hard to stay that way when you realize that you have just arrived in Cape Town, South Africa.

For some reason the South African immigration people decided that we should be put through the wringer before they cleared the ship (every country has it's own fun little process for that), so we had also been informed at Logistical Preport that we would all have to get up and be ready to leave the ship at 8am, because every single person on the ship (including the crew) would have to go through the off-ship immigration building in order for the ship to be cleared, and that it would not be possible to get back on the ship until the whole process was finished several hours later.

I had just finished circling the ship to try to find a better vantage point to photograph the fading sunrise (there was a big white building blocking the best of the view from deck 6), when I heard Rita's voice come over the loudspeaker: "Would Deans Nick, Eddie, and Kathy please come to the purser's desk" ....Well, that never bodes well.

As it turned out the process had now been changed so that everyone would be called (by their Sea) to go off the ship, through the immigration process, and then back on the ship again. Then when the ship cleared we would all be allowed to actually disembark. This was announced at 6am; the process would be starting immediately. Now all the people who hadn't gotten up early to go watch the sunrise were mad too, because they suddenly had to be up at 6am instead of 8am.

All in all it was a very entertaining morning! We did eventually get everything figured out, and got off the ship at a reasonable time.

Through a series of circumstances, I had wound up with only about half of that first day in Cape Town (out of all 5 days) to have free time to explore, and as I had already decided that I did not have time to go south to Boulder Beach and see the penguin colony living there (yes, there are penguins in South Africa!) I decided that I wanted to spend it taking the cable car up to the top of Table Mountain. The only problem was, once again, finding a group that would do this with me. A large number of people were on field labs with their classes that day, still others were doing SAS field programs, and for some odd reason the rest seemed to be planning to go to the mall on the V&A waterfront. Most everyone felt that they would have time for Table Mountain at some other point in the five days that we would be in Cape Town.

I didn't actually find a group to travel with until about an hour before the ship cleared, but I did manage it! The three of us then headed out to find a taxi to take us to the cable car at the foot of the mountain (it was a bit far to walk––especially considering that I had to be back to the ship at 1:45 to meet Kenzie, who would be my traveling buddy that evening.)

The cable car station is actually situated part of the way up the mountain, and there is a nice view of Cape Town from there––which is good, because the cable car itself was closed that morning due to high winds, and we mostly hung around the base of the station and took pictures. Then we went back to town and wandered around for a little while, finally ending up in a little street market. At this point I knew I only had a little bit of time before I would need to get a taxi back to the ship, so I split off from the group and speed-walked through the market (which is actually very hard to do, because every time you try to stop and briefly look at something, the person in charge of the booth would strike up a conversation from which it is inevitably difficult to extricate yourself.) It was about 1:35 by the time I made it back to the ship, whereby I hurriedly donned my backpack and went to meet Kenzie.

Some of you are doubtlessly wondering at this point what I am up to, so I will give a brief explanation (haha, like I am capable of brevity!):

This summer, before I embarked on SAS, I was glued to the Fall 2013 facebook page (which for me is highly unusual, since I generally rarely use facebook), and I saw that a number of students were already planning independent trips in some of the countries. Many of these mimicked the SAS trips, but at a much cheaper cost (often, for example, substituting hotel for hostel accommodations.) One such trip was for a safari in South Africa's Kruger Park.

I had already looked through the pages of safaris that SAS offered, and had found myself somewhat disappointed. For one thing, most were very expensive. But more importantly, they struck me as inauthentic. Nearly all of them were to take place at private game reserves where the animals were bought and brought to the reserve for tourists to observe. Of course, the lions and other carnivores would be kept separate from herbivores like zebras and impalas (otherwise this whole circle of life thing could start to get expensive pretty fast!) Many boasted lavish-looking accommodations with swimming pools and guaranteed that visitors would get to see all of the "Big 5" (elephants, rhinos, lions, water buffalo, leopards.) All this within a couple hours drive from Cape Town!

It basically sounded like a larger version of Oregon's Wildlife Safari. I didn't want to be guaranteed to see all of the Big 5 (where's the fun in that?), and I certainly didn't want to stay in some ritzy "luxury hut" with a swimming pool. Because of this, I had pretty much decided not do any of the safaris, which was also disappointing.

Anyhow, back to the Fall 2013 facebook page. Lo and behold, someone was organizing an independent trip all the way to Kruger National Park! Kruger is South Africa's first national park, and covers about 7500 square miles on the far eastern side of the country. It is also the place to go if you want to do an actual safari in South Africa. This was the most major thing that I had planned ahead of time for my SAS trip; needless to say, I was pretty excited.

South Africa isn't exactly a small country (yes, now would be the time to go check google maps––go ahead, I'll wait.) In order to get to Kruger Park Kenzie and I would be taking a two hour plane to Johannesburg, spending the night at a hostel there with the rest of our group, and then getting picked up by a bus which would take us five hours east to the province of Mpumalanga, where we would stay at a place called Marc's Treehouse lodge and then be taken by our guide in open air jeeps to Kruger Park.

But because this post has once again become absurdly long and I'm starting to get hungry, I'm going to save the rest of that tale for another day. Cheers!

Wednesday, October 23, 2013

Tro Tros, Coconuts, and Really Long Posts!

Location: Walvis Bay, Namibia

Takoradi, Ghana: 10/15-10/16 & Tema, Ghana: 10/17-10/18

For those of you who don't know, Ghana is a country in West Africa which has about the same land area as the state of Oregon. In 1957 Ghana was the first country in sub-saharan Africa to gain independence from colonial rule, and it is doing better economically and politically than many African countries (though the average yearly wage is still only $3,500.) The Prime Meridian also runs right through it (side note: the ship crossed the equator at the prime meridian, aka 0˚ latitude and 0˚ longitude! Isn't that cool?)

As you can see above, for some unknown reason, the M.V. Explorer was docking at two different ports in Ghana over the four days that we were there. It spent the first two days in Takoradi (which is supposed to have a population of about 445,000, but honestly didn't feel very big) before moving on the second evening to a port in Tema (which is about the size of Eugene, but we had a shuttle that would take us about an hour away to the much larger city of Accra.) This meant that we were allowed to either travel with the ship or find our way overland between the two ports. Of course, you must decide which option you will be choosing several days before arriving at the port, which makes sense but also makes it hard to plan (remember we have limited internet to look up bus routes or places to stay.) Many people just wing it and manage to find their way just fine, especially since these two ports were really not very far apart. Once again I decided to stay with the ship, since most of the in-country time that would be lost by the move was at night, and therefor when I would be sleeping anyway (and I might as well be sleeping in my cozy cabin on the ship than paying for a place wherever whichever group I managed to join decided to stay.)

Beyond that, I didn't have much of a plan for Ghana. The previous eight days (after I left Morocco) had just been one big blur of essays and midterm exams in all of my classes, and it had left me with remarkably little time to plan. I had signed up for a field program to visit and learn about the Morning Star School in Accra on the third day (10/17), but that left the entire time in Takoradi open. I planned to explore the city a bit on the second day (I wanted to stay close since I would have to be back to the ship before on-ship time anyway), and I was undecided whether to spend the first day going to Kakum National Park (a rainforest with a famous treetop canopy walk) or to one of the infamous castles and slave dungeons on Cape Coast (disturbing, but interesting)––while I wanted to do both, they were both an hour or so from Takoradi and I was fairly certain there wouldn't be time.

I ultimately found someone else who wanted to go to the rainforest, and so I planned to meet with her and her group that morning for breakfast while we were waiting for the ship to clear so that we could disembark. Unfortunately, they then decided to simply explore Takoradi that morning. Dang. Okay, so I needed to find a different group. One of the girls I was sitting with helpfully led me over to a table with another group planning to go to Kakum that day. I didn't know any of them, but I awkwardly invited myself along (which is basically commonplace on Semester at Sea, so they were alright with it.) But then I found out that we were now a group of 8 people. Nothing good ever comes from traveling in a group that large. So I thank them and roam off to try to find someone else to travel with (will this finally be the time that I find myself completely groupless? I hoped not!)

In the end I ran into Tanner and Yawen, two of the people I had traveled in Morocco with; it turned out that they were planning to go to Kakum and/or Cape Coast as well, and I had rather enjoyed our time in Morocco, so I happily joined them. We consulted with a local woman that was at the hospitality desk giving people tips on what to do and where to go, and she informed us that no, it was probably not a good idea to try and see both Kakum and Cape Coast in one day, and that since it was a national holiday Kakum would probably be crowded and not the best place to go. So we decided to go to the castles/dungeons of Cape Coast. 

Then the announcement came over the loudspeaker that the ship had cleared, and we were off! We disembarked the ship and went straight to the shuttle that would take us to the port gate, bypassing the little makeshift market that had sprung up alongside the ship, trying to tempt students with vibrant clothes, colorful canvas paintings, and little bracelets with your name on them which were woven on the spot. We would all be very tired of those merchants by the time we left. Many of them followed us to Tema.

The air was warm and very humid. I sat in my seat, waiting for the bus to leave, and alternated slathering on more sunscreen and more bug repellent. I was already paranoid about getting bitten by mosquitos in Ghana. I had been taking my antimalarial medication, and I had gotten my Yellow Fever vaccination, but after listening to Doctor Dave in logistical pre-port, and Professor Boyer in his lecture the previous night, and everyone else who put in a word on the subject of tropical diseases, I was really not in the mood to risk it. From the warnings we got, I almost expected to step off the ship and be instantly swarmed with disease-carrying insects.

For the record, I did not see, hear, or feel a single mosquito the entire time I was in Ghana. Nope, not even one.

But speaking of being swarmed, the moment that our shuttle helpfully dropped us off at the port gate we encountered another kind of swarm; the less-fortunate bracelet-making people who had apparently not bribed their way into the actual port were lying in wait. The second we stepped off of the bus, they were everywhere. Taken a little aback, Tanner and Yawen and I tried to forge our way through the throng. Yawen accidentally picked up one of the bracelet guys, who heard her name and immediately started weaving her a bracelet which she would spend the next 15 minutes (he followed us unto the taxi we got) trying to convince him that she really didn't want.

The taxi took us to a bank with an ATM, which all of us needed because we had determined that the $15 service fee charged by the ship to order Cedi through them was more than we wanted to pay (Cedi is the currency in Ghana: 2 Cedi is worth about 1 USD.) We then decided to make our own way into the main market square, escaping both from Yawen's bracelet-maker and the Taxi guy, who was trying to get us to hire him to take us all the way to Cape Coast.

Dang it was hot out! And the three of us stuck out like a sore thumb as we walked down the mostly residential streets. Every taxi that passed us would honk, sometimes multiple times, as if to say "What the heck are you white people doing walking? Don't you want a taxi? Are you sure?" But we eventually made it to our destination: the central market. We knew that the bus station would be around there somewhere, and Tanner started asking locals which direction we should go. One woman helpfully pointed down the way we were walking. The next said that we should go back a little, and turn the left. After we did that a guy who looked like he knew what he was talking about shook his head and pointed back the way we had come. We were now very confused.

The market itself consisted of a very helter-skelter assortment, from people with carts full of shoes to sellers sitting on the ground by blankets or buckets piled high with all kinds of discolored fruits, and large tuberous yams (not the sweet potato kind.) Nearly all of these sellers were women, many of them walking along carrying their wares in large bowls balanced atop their heads. One woman's bowl was full of huge doomed slugs trying to make their slow escape with varying degrees of unsuccess; another woman was carrying a neatly sliced watermelon covered daintily in plastic wrap with a large, lethal-looking knife sticking right up through the center.

We eventually made it to the bus station, along with another group of about nine other SASers (that's what we call ourselves) who were also resisting the honks of the taxis. What ensued was a confusing rush. The driver of the bus to Cape Coast tried to assure us that the bus would be leaving "soon", though we had learned from a woman in our pre-port lecture who had lived in Ghana for two years that this likely translate to "when the bus is full," which could quite literally be hours. There were maybe five other people there, and the bus was pretty big. Then there were the Tro Tro drivers. A Tro Tro is like a large Taxi, and before we knew it all 12 of us were being ushered away from the still shouting bus driver over to a line of taxis and Tro Tros. There were 12 spots in the large white Tro Tro, and all 12 of us wanted to get to Cape Coast. Okay, it was a deal.

Once they realized that their quarry was taken, the other drivers hurried back to their respective vehicles, waiting for the next unsuspecting group of SASers. We all clambered into our Tro Tro, and breathed a sigh of relief. By the time we were moving at a decent speed with all of the windows down it wasn't even too hot!

The ride was relatively uneventful, and I spent most of the time watching shack after shack of make-shift mini marts pass by my window, framed by large tropical trees and bushes. The funny thing was that nearly all of these little businesses seemed to have religious names, regardless of their wares. I wish I had thought to start writing them down earlier, but as it was I saw signs for a "By His Grace Mini Mart" and "Put Your Trust in Jesus Chop Bar." Even the hairdressers were likewise christened! It was really interesting.

On the opposite side of the street stretched the ocean, and a long golden beach dotted with palm trees. Suddenly we were stopping. Were we there yet? Nope, the driver was just stopping to buy himself a coconut from a cluster of boys on the side of the road bearing a stack of the aforementioned nuts and large saber-like knives with which they would proceed to rapidly divest the coconuts of their tops (how were they not chopping their fingers off? They were wielding those huge knives like one might a potato peeler or cheese-grater!)

Being a little less inhibited than us Americans, Yawen, who is from China, proceeds to hand the driver money to get her a coconut too. Then everyone else starts digging into their pockets for money to get their own coconuts. Everyone was quite thrilled after this, and as the driver (who introduced himself as Patrick) pulled back onto the highway we were all merrily taking pictures of ourselves with our prizes. He must have thought we were all very weird.

We arrived at Cape Coast Castle, and after making arrangements for Patrick to come pick us up in a few hours, the three of us separated from the other group and made our way into the castle. Since this post is already very long and I still have to finish my Anthropology readings before tomorrow's quiz, I am not going to go into detail about the rest of the day. Our tour of the castle was informative and creepy, and by the time we made it make to Takoradi we had just enough time to get dinner (which turned out to be very spicy and therefor inedible to me) before heading back to the ship as it was almost dark.

I spent the next day with Yawen and Christina (the forth person I had traveling with in Morocco!) wandering through the center of the central market in Takoradi, which is an interesting tale for another time!

That night the ship repositioned to Tema, and the next day I went on my field program to the Morning Star School, which was interesting but really highlighted that I should not go into any career involving large groups of small children, because I am not a natural with kids (one of the first things that we did was to go and hang out with the kids during their recess. I was feeling very out of my depth until I realized that I could just hand out stickers and they would be happy.)

It was still early in the day when the field program got back to the ship, so I hopped on the next shuttle to Accra (remember that's the nearest decent-sized city, about an hour's drive from our port in Tema) and joined two girls who had also been on the Morning Star field program and were planning to find the market (they'd had field programs/labs over the last couple of days and not gotten a chance to buy any souvenirs.)

Long story still long, we found the market with the help of two local guys. In contrast to the market I had explored the previous day in Takoradi, which was clearly there for the locals, this market was clearly oriented to appeal to tourists. It was basically a larger version of the one which had yet again sprung up outside the ship. I didn't buy much, though I did manage to find a pin for my collection (I have gotten myself a pin in every country; I somehow managed to lose the one for Belgium though, which bummed me out because I rather liked Belgium.)

Anyhow, we eventually got back to the shuttle. It was dark by this point, and I had to dodge numerous painting-sellers who had gathered around the SASers trying to get onto the bus. One of them wanted my flashlight, and was trying to guilt-trip me into parting with it by telling me about his family sitting around with no light and the three little sisters he had to put through school. I felt like a complete heel not giving him my silly flashlight (probably $5 from Walmart), but seriously, I can't just give away stuff/money to all of the painting-sellers and bracelet-makers and cute little children of Ghana that I meet! Yes, I made the mistake of buying a 2 Cedi water bottle for one of the kids in Cape Town, and then had to bodily drag myself away from the others who wanted me to buy them water/food too.

I'll skip over talking about the last day, because I pretty much spent it sticking close to the ship (I wasn't even going to chance taking the shuttle to Accra, since there's only one road between the cities and an accident along that road had already delayed the morning shuttle––we were expecting about 270 SASers to return at the last minute just from field labs alone, and I was not going to stuck behind them and get dock time in Cape Town because my shuttle got delayed.) I took a taxi into Tema to find myself WiFi so that I could get some stuff squared away on the internet. I was a bit tired of Ghana at that point, so I was grateful when the taxi driver took me to a nice hotel where I could buy WiFi and not have to worry about people eyeing my laptop in a local internet cafe. I was not the only SASer there, but the place wasn't overrun (just a couple of life-long learners) which was nice.

So yah, that was Ghana! I took a taxi back to the ship and we departed for Cape Town. Obviously I skimmed over a bunch, but since it's really quite late now and this is probably the longest post of I have written I think I'll leave you with that. I don't have very great pictures from Ghana, since much of the time a camera would have been rude or out-of-place. So I'm probably not going to post any photos; you'll have to settle for my dubious narrative abilities instead!

Thanks for keeping up my adventures, and don't forget to comment!

A Few Photos from Spain and Morocco