Wednesday, December 31, 2008

Arusha Tanzania

Got here last night from Amsterdam at around 8:30 pm. I am 8 hours ahead here. The flight was on a KLM plane and was amazing. The Sahara Dessert looked so large from the plane. The food was pretty good. Chocolate ice cream, oyster chicken with rice and green beans, and coconut rice pudding, then soup and salad. I am going to try to post pics later but I have to use the local internet cafe to get online. It is about a 5 minute walk from where I am staying and 30 mins is $1. I arrived in Mt Kili which is 1 hour away from Arusha. The main roads here have speed humps where you drive through towns and the side roads require a special art of driving. There are so many holes you can not drive in a straight line. I met my family tomorrow so right now I am at the Volunteer house. There are 6 new people starting with me and around 12 that are already here. Money here is the Tanzanian shilling wich is 1200 for $1. Gass here is 1700 shillings and disel here is 1200 shillings, just teh opposite of the US. I have only eaten breakfast so far but we were allowed only one hard boiled egg and then toast with red plum jelly. It was actually my first time eating a hard boiled egg and the white was good, yolk not so much. The town has many small shops on the side. A lot of people walk versus driving but there is also the Dalla Dalla which is the local bus. To shower here you have to turn on the hot water heater 30 mins before you shower and even then it would be considered luke warm to most Americans. Water has to be purifed here and you even need to use the purifed water to brush your teeth. It is amazing to see the culture and here the language. We do not really wear shoes or anything in the house and we sleep in bunk beds under the mosquito net. The is no air conditioning so it is pretty hot even at night, but something that I will have to get adjusted to. Also as far as walking people will walk miles to everything...from towns to towns in the pitch black dark of night. At the volunteer house we do have a secuity guard. His name is Kaka or brother in swahili. Random information Asante-thank you, tafadahili is please, hapana is no, ndiyo is fine, hari gani is how are you. The house managers name is Ommy. I am getting excited to meet my family tomorrow when we have orientation. It is def a different culture here, one I am excited to learn about. One of the local sayings is TIA this is africa. There are volunteers from all over. The US, Ireland, Australia, and many other places. Hopefully I will find a way to add pictures because words do not do justice. The stars at night are absolutely amazing. Hope everyone is well...will blog soon.

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