Saturday, January 16, 2010

Fufu anyone?

From Lorrie:

Yesterday Karen had the day off (life here is slow) so our big adventure of the day was twofold – check out a nearby nursery school and go the really big mall.

The nursery school (Twinkle Tots International School) was delightful. Ama was keen to run in and start immediately. It was well outfitted with toys, sand, climbing things and had well equipped classrooms which were air conditioned no less. They welcomed us on a tour and then Ama played with the outdoor toys while Karen checked the cost. The cost was pretty steep – a $700 joining fee was the big deterrent as well as the fact that the hours were pretty rigid. With the traffic here that could be a problem. The traffic is insane – there are different rules here than we are used to and the horn is an integral part of driving, Back to the school – Karen will keep this as a back up plan in case the nanny her colleague Kingsley has lined up is unsuitable. But best case scenario is that the nanny will care for Ama here at the guesthouse while Karen works.

Part two was a trip to the Accra mall. It could be in any city really – pretty upscale and was anchored by a Walmart like store on one end and the grocery/general goods Shoprite on the other. It boasted a good food court and several movie theatres. It's quite the contrast to most of Accra, and it feels a bit weird to be inside. We bought new pillows, a wading pool for Ama and a few other small things. New pillows that only I will sweat on – luxury. The ones provided - cases are clean, just don’t look inside!

On our return trip the cab driver thought it was important that we see where our embassy was so we did a drive by (it is quite close to here) and it looks basic, sits on large grounds, flag flown proudly. The US emabassy is also close – looks like a big jail – max security and formidable facade. Cannot take pictures of embassies – I didn’t know that.

Today Ama and I were invited on a school presentation for Amend. Ama was swarmed by the kids who all wanted to touch her – wonder if perhaps they want to see if her white skin feels the same. I was shocked to see the teachers teach with a cane in hand and use it to wack those who misbehave. There is a lot of clapping in a particular pattern. The kids were pretty interested but the class was huge – I am guessing 200 kids squashed into that room – 6-12 yrs approx. They do split off by grade for most of their classes as far as I can tell. The school was in disrepair, no glass in the windows, dirt playground, no play equipment and the desks looked like those from early 1900s. Nevertheless the kids seemed keen and welcomed a diversion from their regular class work.



After school we took a cab to a vegetarian restaurant near the guesthouse and had quite the lunch. A plate of rice with veggies – delicious. A bowl of palm soup (I think) with foo foo. It stunk and was the vilest tasting substance I have ever had in my mouth. We laughed and laughed and vowed never to eat foo foo again. (Although we are pretty sure it was the actual soup part that was so gross)






The afternoon brought Karen’s colleagues Jeffrey and Tom for a meeting to discuss the project and Karen’s role and we spent a very pleasant time on the deck with them. Now they are at a soccer game – Ghana vs Ivory Coast (at a local bar; not live ) Apparently they are big rivals so I am sure it is wild.

From Karen:

Ghana definitely lost the soccer game, and it rained to much to go to the original "local" destination, but it was still fun!

We went to the Makola Market, which is a huge and crowded outdoor market that sells everything under the sun. We put Ama in the backpack and once again were grateful to have it! We were quite the spectacle though, and most people laughed and laughed as we walked by. Many people were eager to talk to Ama and touch her, and she did remarkably well with all the attention. If someone went to touch her hand and she didn’t want them to, she just smacked them-good job Ama!

I found the priced at the market to be very reasonable, and I don’t think anyone even tried to overcharge us. People did however try to make us buy way more than we could possibly need, or additional items that we did not want!

Besides the crowds there was nothing totally offensive at the market, except for the guy that tried to sell me a dead rat like animal hanging by a string. No thanks my friend...

It’s seems to be difficult to take pictures in the market, so we couldn’t capture the true insanity of it, but we did manage to get a few.






1 comment:

  1. Hey Karen, isn't foo foo that stuff that Julie thought was really gross? In her usual nice way she said that lots of people like it but I suspect it's lots of ghanain people that like it. The market looks a bit like the one we went to in .... can't remember the name but I do remember the table of dried bats for sale ..... yum!! Keep truckin and be comforted by the fact it's bloody cold here today.
    ciao ciao
    Barbara

    ReplyDelete