Pages

Thursday, April 26, 2012

Musical morning at Walmer!


Stay tuned for Principal Dyani's excitement with the video camera at the end.. too good! Happy Thursday everyone!



Tuesday, April 24, 2012

Where did April go!?!

Holy cow, the month has disappeared! We returned from holiday to a busy start to term 2 at Walmer. Each of our classes is getting into their projects and it's been fun for us to watch them get excited about it. The grade 9s are really taking off with their "create their own restaurant projects," and are even bringing in outside materials/magazines/etc to make their part of the project better. The grade 8s are still working through some of the introductory lessons of how to create a good cookbook, but are on pace to dive into their groupwork here shortly! This month has been filled with national holidays, which continue this weekend as we have a half day Thursday and no school Friday, Monday, or Tuesday! Our weeks have been very full with class preparations, Xhosa classes, training new library prefects, university club, and other mini projects- but we're enjoying having such full days.

This past weekend was IronMan South Africa in PE (we watched much of it from our living room window)! It was incredible to see what these athletes put their body through over the course of a day. We woke up at 7am to walk down and watch the athletes getting out of the ocean and on to their bikes, and when I went to bed at 10pm, I could still see many athletes running the marathon leg of the triathalon from my bedroom window. It was wild to watch how long these athletes could compete for- the swim started at 7 and they had until midnight to complete the course (3.8k swim, 180k bike, 42 k run). I had a few friends from my running club competing, so it was fun to watch for them as well.

This upcoming long weekend will be full of fun little activities. The NFL draft is on Thursday night, and for those of you who have spent any time with me in the fall, you know how much football means to me. It's on at 1am here, but I have 4 guy friends who are keen to stay up and watch so we're going to make a night of it! On Saturday, the City Lads (the women's soccer team from PE that our Grassroots soccer friends are close with) are playing in their first playoff game in East London, a town about 3 hours up the coast from us. A big group of us are going to drive up for the day to watch them play and then stay the night in a little beach town about 30 minutes away. There is a lot on the line for them this game so we are excited to be able to go and support! Then we will be able to return to PE and relax on Monday and Tuesday before school picks up again. On Friday of that next week, Alice and I are flying to Capetown/Stellenbosch for my birthday- so we have a few busy weekends ahead! (we live a tough life, I know).

The seasons and different school year here keep up constantly confused- because it is moving into winter here, Alice and I are constantly feeling like its September/October. Yet we are reminded by our American friends and family that summer is on the way at home, school is wrapping up, and it is indeed almost May! I'm looking forward to the upcoming weekends and turning a year older in the winelands! Lots of love to everyone, xx

Monday, April 9, 2012

Fall Holiday


Heyo! Home again after 10 awesome days of travel. As you can imagine, I have a lot to share, so I’ll try and break it down into pictures and highlights of each city.

Johannesburg
I started the trip with a weekend in Joburg. I had yet to see the city, so I stayed with another Fulbright ETA, Scott, for the weekend- he was an awesome host/tour guide!

  • Friday night at the South Africa vs. India cricket match. More fun than I thought it would be (I’ve always assumed cricket was painfully boring), the fanfare was great for both teams, and President Zuma was in attendance. 

  • Saturday morning short run through the Kopies (a big park in Joburg), walked around the Univeristy of Wits (where Scott teaches), and headed to Soweto- a huge township located just outside of Joburg. Over 2 million residents, well known for the large protests/demonstrations as well as police brutality during apartheid. Drove around and had a lunch of “Kotas” (or “bunny chow”)- quarter loaf of bread, hollowed out, and stuffed with fries, cheese, sauce, and sausage. 

  • I was surprised to find Soweto was much more developed than I had imagined. I pictured 2 million shanty shacks, and instead found that most of the residences were small, simple houses. After Soweto, we went to the apartheid museum. The museum was beautiful with many powerful exhibits and lots of video/audio exhibits. Seeing the breadth as well of quality of the photographs and videos was a vivid reminder of how recently apartheid was finally ended (1994). There was also a large exhibit on Mandela which I find somewhat fascinating because it’s not often such tribute to a leader is seen until they are dead. It’s wild to think that he could go see the exhibit of himself if he wanted to.
  • Sunday: Scott, myself, and 3 other Fulbright ETAs (Rob, Ben, and Mariann) drove from Jozi to Durban. It was a 6 hour drive in which we got to pass through the provinces of Gauteng, Mpumalanga, and KwaZulu-Natal which all had totally different landscapes! 


Driving thru Soweto with Jozi in the background



Your ticket to the museum identifies you as black or white which determines how you enter the museum, a pretty neat way to bring visitors in.

Durban
Durban is a city on the coast of KwaZulu-Natal (East of PE if you’re looking at a map). It has the highest concentrated Indian population outside of India, so we were looking forward to some good curries! I didn’t know exactly what to expect of Durban, but I loved it! The perfect combo of city and beach life.
  • First morning explored downtown: Indian markets, centre city, and Juma Musjid mosque (largest mosque in the Southern Hemisphere and can accommodate 7000 worshipers). Afternoon was spent picnicking/lounging on the beach.
Outdoor lounge area at our hostel
Downtown Durban
Juma Musjid Mosque
  • Next morning took a skycar to the top of the world cup stadium- incredible views and photo opps from the top. Afternoon boat tour of the port (Durban is the largest port in Africa!) and more great views of the city. Dinner with a Fulbright research grantee at a fun restaurant called Market that had a great outdoor eating area and even better food!
The world cup stadium- the architecture (specifically the triangular part) is meant to emulate the South African flag. 

The skycar carried us up the arch to an open-aired platform we could get out and walk around on. 



Our group at the top! 

Tour of Durban's Port

  • Wednesday- drove to Warner Beach (a town about 40 minutes south of Durban) to lounge around the water for one more day in the quiet beach town. 

Ladybrand/Lesotho
  • Another car day- 6 hours from the KZN coast to a town called Ladybrand in the Freestate about 20 mins outside of Lesotho (the tiny country inside of South Africa), which was our next destination.
Our B&B in Ladybrand
  • On the drive, we passed through Golden Gate National Park- my pictures don’t do it justice, but the road curved for miles through incredible rock formations, plateaus, and landscape. That night we drove into Maseru, the capital of Lesotho, for dinner. We forgot that it was Easter weekend and Friday was a national holiday, so we waited in a line of cars for 2 hours to cross the border. There was nothing remarkable about Maseru (a typical big, dirty city), but it was nice to see.
Driving thru the park
Bridge to Lesotho
Gorgeous sunset driving in
  • Friday was probably the highlight of the whole trip- Pony trek! The name, however, is deceiving. These were not ponies, they were horses, which we were more than thankful for once we began the “trek” part of it. We spent six hours on these horses that took us through the mountains of Lesotho. They carried us up steep, rocky trails, through rivers, to a gorgeous waterfall, and to the site of some Bushmen paintings (some of the oldest indigenous people to Africa). We were exhausted, sunburned, and sore from the waist down after 6 hours of riding- but it was some of the most beautiful, untouched landscape I had ever seen.
Driving to the pony trek

The trek begins..

Little did we know we'd be going through this valley






Bushmen paintings



  • Saturday we returned to Jobrug, and Sunday I returned to PE. Before I flew home, Scott and I went to Easter Mass (or at least the last hour and a half of it because we messed up the mass times) at Regina Mundi. This is the largest Catholic church in South Africa, and is where Desmond Tutu preached. It was also where Tutu and Mandela held many of their meetings to organize resistance during the apartheid era, and as a result, was also victim to many police raids/acts of violence. After church, we drove past the homes that Tutu and Mandela each lived in during apartheid in Soweto. It was neat to see the areas I had read so much about in real life. 


Regina Mundi Church


It was nice to get out of PE and see other parts of this beautiful country with Fulbright friends I hadn’t seen since orientation! But after 10 packed days in 5 provinces, it is certainly nice to be back home! Tomorrow begins term 2 of the school year, so time to get back into school mode. Hope everyone had a wonderful Easter! xx