Monday, June 13, 2011

The books I’ve read in the past year…

  1. The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo – by: Stieg Larson
  2. The Best of Friends – by: Sara James and Ginger Mauney
  3. The Book Thief – by: Markus Zusak
  4. Way of the Peaceful Warrior – by: Dan Millman
  5. The Pilot’s Wife – by: Anita Sherve
  6. Day After Night – by: Anita Diamant
  7. The Botany of Desire – by: Michael Pollan
  8. The Poisenwood Bible – by: Barbara Kingsolver
  9. The Life of Pi – by: Yann Martel
  10. Amsterdam – by: Ian McEwan
  11. Infidel – by: Ayaan Hirsi Ali
  12. A Reliable Wife – by: Robert Goolrick
  13. The Subtle Knife – by: Phillip Pullman
  14. The Amber Spyglass – by: Phillip Pullman
  15. The Help – by: Kathryn Stockett
  16. The Art of Racing in the Rain – by: Garth Stein
  17. The namesake – by: Jhumpa Lahiri
  18. In Other Rooms, Other Wonders – by: Daniyal Mueenudin
  19. The Purple Hibiscus – by: Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
  20. The girl who played with Fire – Stieg Larson
  21. 20 Chickens for a Saddle – by: Robyn Scott
  22. The Glass Castle – by: Jeannette
  23. Marley and Me – by: John Grogan
  24. Snow falling on Cedars – by: David Gutterson
  25. Prodigal Summer – by: Barbara Kingsolver
  26. Angle of Repose – by: Wallace Stegner
  27. Under the Banner of Heaven – by: Jon Krakauer
  28. Unless – by: Carol Shields
  29. Sarah’s Keys – by: Tatiana deRosnay
  30. The Last Days of Dogtown – by: Anita Diamant
  31. Absurdistan – by: Gary Shteyngart
  32. Running With Scissors – by: Augusten Burroughs
  33. Monique and the Mango Rains – by: Kris Holloway
  34. Rebecca’s Tale – by: Sally Beauman
  35. The Bean Trees – by: Barbara Kingsolver
  36. Beyond Eden – by: Catherine Coulter
  37. The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn – by: Mark Twain
  38. Memorial Day – by: Vince Flynn
  39. Cutting for Stone – by: Abraham Verghese
  40. A Long Way Gone – by: Ishmael Bach
  41. Remember Me – by: Sophie Kinsella
  42. The Number 1 Ladies Detective Agency – by: Alexander McCallsmith
  43. Interpreter of Maladies – by: Jhumpa Lahiri
  44. Bad Things Happen – by: Harry Dollan
  45. The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet’s Nest – Sby: tieg larson
  46. A Map of the World – by: Jane Hamilton
  47. The Reader – by: Bernhard Schlink
  48. Kafka on the Shore – by: Haruki Murakami
  49. Murder of a Sweet Old Lady – by: Denise Swanson
  50. Deception Point – by: dan Brown
  51. Middlesex – by: Jeffrey Eugenides
  52. The Memory Keeper’s Daughter – by: Kim Edwards
  53. Dry – by: Augusten Burroughs
  54. The Notebook – by: Nicholas Sparks

One year in Ghana! What I’ve learned, noticed, observed, been shocked by, discovered, and well everything else that might fall into one of these categories.

  1. The novelty of me being in Ghana has worn off to those back home… as in the letter, postcards and packages are not frequenting my mailbox like they once use to. Don’t stop sending mail… getting snail mail is one of the best things EVER (well actually getting packages I think is ten times better and thanks so everyone that has sent me one or more than one this far)!
  2. I’m can now sit on a bus for hours and hours and still be comfortable for sitting for many more long, long hours to come… will make my 3 flights back to Colorado in a few weeks much more enjoyable, and just think I’ll have leg room!
  3. I’m now an expert at baby holding… or carrying on my back.
  4. Saw a goat being born, and found snake eggs in my garden… but that was just another day in Africa.
  5. Lost all creativity with cooking… all I know how to cook now is rice with a sauce on top.
  6. I enjoy bucket bathing and I may take it home with me at the end of my two years (only for the summer months though)… just imagine bathing under a starry sky, or while watching the lightning off in the distance… AMAZING!
  7. I’m learning to be patient, even when patience isn’t necessary.
  8. I’ve learned a whole new side to the English language… “Driva I will elite here” … “No, please madam I will go come” … “Oh I beg, I beg please you cheat me” … yup that’s how I speak now.
  9. I don’t like to hold babies that have just wet themselves… yes most babies here don’t wear diapers and just pee when they have to pee… yes I have been peed on numerous times by babies.
  10. Read over 50 books… probably 50 more books than I’ve read the past 5 years… no joke.
  11. I’m now used to ducking as I enter into any doorway… Never thought I was that tall, but I guess I am in Ghana.
  12. I’m still given more food that I know what to do with… today alone I was given a bushel of plantains (about 16 plantains), 2 avocados, 2 papayas, and 1 HUGE mango… can’t really complain too much about it though.
  13. I never thought I would see the day when I enjoyed spicy food, and then crave it… but yep that day has come and I am loving the spice!
  14. I have the ability to make babies cry… just by looking at them.
  15. I’m almost to the point where I can turn off my thoughts… almost.

Thursday, June 9, 2011

I am just about to hit the point in my Peace Corps service where I’m the ‘old group.’ The one-year marker is rapidly approaching, and the ‘senior group’ just had their Close of Service conference to determine when everyone takes off (and for me, one year down, one plus a few months to go!) and the ‘new group’ will be arriving in less than 4 weeks.

We finished out first year of service off with the All Volunteer conference held in Ho, Volta Region (my regional capital). About 130 Peace Corps Volunteers who live all over Ghana came together to catch up, have pool parties almost every night, step back in time and go to Prom, compare all our talents or lack there of, and possibly learn something during the day sessions of the conference…. just maybe though. It was a chance to hear what projects people are working on, see what crafts their villages are making, and an opportunity to congratulate Peace Corps Ghana on 50 years of continues service (yes, Ghana is the first ever Peace Corps Country, and Peace Corps Ghana has served for 50 uninterrupted years)!

As the one-year maker creeps up on me I thought I want to write about what my country director reminded us in our April News Letter (that I got in May). Reality has probably set in (yes it has)… the honeymoon is over (most defiantly), and the question to stay or to go can only be determined by us (just has that conversation with myself)… but he asked us to think about how far we have come in the past year. Think about how much we’ve learned, what once were challenges now seem like a meager bumps in the road. We all came to Ghana so hopeful that we could change the world, but again he reminded us that we now probably understand the reality: we may not be able to prevent teachers from sleeping with students, we may not be able to stop committee members from chopping (team used in Ghana when someone takes the money for their own personal use) money, and we may not be able to convince our villages to throw their trash away. But at the same time we now realize that to help Ghana it may mean to help just one person. Influence that girl that she is smart and can go to college. Or to help the small children learn about other vegetables that they can grow and possibly sell. Help to get the few women in your compound on birth control, because you know if they have their 8th child they might not stay alive to raise it. He reminded us to start small, and our return will be big.

“After successfully completing this worthwhile experience, nothing will ever seem quite as hard as it used to be. After all, if you can poop in a hole at night while shivering with a 103 temperature when your torch is not working, very few things back home will seem insurmountable.” (I think that says it all.)



After much preparation, and many trips to Accra, the Animal Rearing/Cage Building IST held at my site in the Volta Region was a huge success… or at least I thought it was.

Chris and I persevered through all the obstacles that lay in our way in order to put on a successful, and first ever, volunteer led In Service Training.

Day 1: Snail Cage

Last minute the dates were changed, the budget was never approved until 5 days before the training was suppose to start, the Easter holiday that happens to last for about 5 days in Ghana, caused us to not be able to buy many of our materials, and we booked our hotel too late causing us to have to change the location where everyone was suppose to stay… all lessened learned for the next IST that we give.

Day 2: Rabbit Cage

But in the course of 3 days, 12 Peace Corps Volunteers (including Chris and myself), 10 Counterparts, and 13 participants from my village all took part in building 7 animal cages/hutches in hopes of turning the trend to caging animals vs. living with the animals. We got MOFA, The Ministry of Food and Agriculture in Ghana, on board and they gave a very encouraging presentation on the benefits of caging animals… the trends are starting to change.

Day 3: Looking through the Chicken Coup

The first day, 3 snail cages were built, two above the ground and one in ground to mimic their natural habitat. The second day 2 rabbit hutches and 1 grasscutter cage were built. And on the last day we built an amazing chicken coup (I might be predigest because it was built so I could raise chickens with my Ghanaian Family, but I must say it’s a bomb chicken coup!) and finished what wasn’t finished on the first day.


It was great to see everyone in the training get involved, from the village participants to all the PCV’s everyone worked well and efficient together. This was the first time for many PCV’s that we were able to get our hands dirty during a training. We were all tired of observing during our technical training instead of partaking in the technical aspect of our training.