I love travelling - I enjoy the getting there part just as much as being there. My first flight was on Monday evening from Toronto to Amsterdam, a 3 hour layover, then off to Johannesburg, South Africa. The 10.5 hour flight was during the day and I had a window seat. It was quite the view crossing the beautiful Mediterranean and coming over the coast of Northern Africa and the Sahara with fairly clear skies.
| Northern coast of Africa |
| Africa is amazingly brown! |
| After clearing the clouds I got to enjoy an excellent sunset as well. |
Upon arrival I found out that my suitcase was not there. Our student guide Kevin picked me up and brought me to the University. 40 some hours after leaving home with almost no sleep and I was finally there! In the evening we went back to the airport and thankfully my suitcase was there. I spent the day getting to know some of the other international students and registering for courses. There are at least 60 exchange students here (Botswana is a popular destination), of which many are American so I do not feel too far from my own culture when I am with them. I am the only Canadian here, and it is interesting hearing all of the American and Setswana (the language) accents. Apparently I have an accent as well, and sometimes get a few chuckles when I say ‘aboot’ and ‘Eh!’
Over the next 2 days we went through orientation at the university. We also had a brief tour of the city, including the government grounds (very nice but no pictures allowed), and a monument of Khama III, Bathoen and Sebele.
They were leaders who appealed to Britain for protection of the Bechuanaland protectorate in 1885; Botswana gained independence in 1966. The countryside is very brown now (it is the dry season), and there are plenty of different looking plants and trees. We also had a tour of the university, which is very nice with many different buildings close together, and a lot of covered walkways going in between them. There are about 15,000 students (a little bigger than Laurentian, my home university), and it is sort of like a maze around campus in some places.
On Friday, we went out for a traditional meal in a field just outside of town. We ate around a campfire and had goat, Phalatshe (corn meal) and Mopani worms.
I unfortunately did not do very well with the worms, but I managed to eat half of one. The taste was not bad (salty), but the texture and crunchiness was a little too much for me. The food at the university is pretty good, and they eat a lot of meat. There is usually rice, pasta or Phalatshe with chicken or beef, and some (not very much) vegetables. Unfortunately there is not too much variation from this, but I am happy with it so far. They also eat a lot of ‘fat cakes’, which are deep fried balls of sweet dough. They are very good on their own, or can be dipped in meat or sauce.
| trying a mopani worm |
On Sunday, I walked to a fairly big church called the Universal Church. It is close to the university and is very nice. It was cool to see a different style of worship. I am looking forward to going to a few different churches here as well and experiencing the different bodies of believers here.
One thing that is different out on the streets is that the traffic drives on the left hand side, which is very strange to see when you are not used to it. It also takes a lot of getting used to, especially looking to the right when starting to cross the road. After a close call or two, I started looking both ways just in case I forgot which way the traffic would come from, but now I am getting used to it. It will be interesting to see what going back to right hand side traffic will be like.
One thing that is different out on the streets is that the traffic drives on the left hand side, which is very strange to see when you are not used to it. It also takes a lot of getting used to, especially looking to the right when starting to cross the road. After a close call or two, I started looking both ways just in case I forgot which way the traffic would come from, but now I am getting used to it. It will be interesting to see what going back to right hand side traffic will be like.
I have been getting settled in here, and getting a little bit used to some things that are different, including often having cold showers, and chilly evenings and mornings because the buildings are not heated. There is also a lot of time spent waiting for pretty much anything, whether for food or getting paperwork done. This is definitely the place to be if you need to develop some patience, but I am getting used to it. Next week I start school, and I’m looking forward to what it will be like...but not so much the studying part :-).
| just outside of my room |
Question: When you flew over the Mediterranean, did you see white flecks in the water? When I was coming back from Uganda, I saw thousands of white stuff floating on top...I wonder what they were?? :S
ReplyDeleteAnd you better buy a new sweater! It gets cold at night in Africa! tsk tsk aaron. Your mother would be worried.
I know exactly how you feel being the only Canadian and people laughing at your accent. I just had 2 months of being the LONE Canadian in a team of Americans in Uganda...also being the token Asian person too! Aboot, SOORRY, Eh, oout n aboot, yeah yeah...I get it, i'm strange. No one knew what a beaver tail was...or poutine. I love Americans, but after 2 months, I YEARNED for something Canadien.
OH and I had GRASSHOPPERS in Uganda. They were DELICIOUS. Crunchy and Salty...kinda like salted fish or anchovies...Mmm.
Lastly, you will get used to cold showers. It becomes so refreshing after the first 5 minutes! Now that I'm home, I can't stand the hot water. I actually have to turn on the cold water!
Oh and I also got used to the drivers on the other side...I sometimes get on the wrong side now when I'm home. Sigh...reverse culture shock...
And it is true how slow the pace is! African time always! And when things don't work out...believe me Aaron, you'll hit several roadblocks in one day...just remember: TIA- This is Africa.
Once, we waited over an hour at a restaurant for our food. It was a sandwich. And we were maybe one out of the five customers they had.
ReplyDeleteHave you read my blog before? Maybe you'll be too busy to read blogs. But maybe not. When you're waiting an hour for your BLT sandwich next time, run to the nearest internet cafe and log onto: olvieuganda.blogspot.com. I bet by the time you return, they'll have your drink ready.
ReplyDeletehm i just checked my pics...and i did not see any white flecks. maybe id was windy and there were white caps on the waves.
ReplyDeleteand ya i have some sweaters now, i bought 2 new ones :)
ya i saw the grasshoppers on your blog...i don't know if i could do those either. it would take a lot of getting used to for me.
i agree, the cold water is refreshing...but i still prefer at least luke warm. we'll see what i end up doing when i get back :)
lol you'd better be careful driving in Canada, but i think youll readjust pretty quickly to that part.
'african time' is the catchphrase around here too. ill have to introduce TIA.
and yes i have been keeping up on your blog over your trip, i enjoyed it a lot!...i guess should have commented so you would have known, i guess just never thought of being an active reader instead of passive. thanks for your comments tho.
and im in a university in a city, i have the luxury of high speed in my room :)