a) The pilot says, "Your flight from Roma, Italy, to Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, will be 5 hours and 75 minutes long..."
b) Your flight from Ethiopia to Uganda is randomly combined with 2 other flights, and they use the plane as a bus, making stops in Uganda (thankfully I was first stop), and then Rwanda and the Congo. People disembarked when it was their turn. Needless to say the Congolese were REALLY angry that they were the last stop and they were yelling the entire time, cursing the pilot, as I sat in the back wide-eyed, next to a village Reverend who was gripping his bible the whole time;
c) Your ride didn't come to pick you up at the airport until 1.5 hours after you landed, because "It rained".
So yes... after 5 planes, and one awesome 36 hour layover in London, I have made it to Uganda.
We spent our first night in Kampala, all a blur due to being severely tired. This morning, however, 5 of us (4 coordinators - me, Sarah, Jonathan, William - and Matt, the UVP boardmember/our guide) loaded up on a matatu (van), and made our way through Kampala to the one road that runs through Uganda and into Kenya (conveniently called Kampala Road). In leaving Kampala, I have never seen a place more congested. I was in shock. There's really no way to even describe what it was like - next time I will have take a video.
We drove 3.5 hours through the rolling, green hills of Uganda to reach Iganga, our working district. We are currently in Igangatown, and this is the place I will travel back to in order to obtain Internet and any type of supplies. Pretty crazy. We get followed around by all the children yelling, "Mzungu... hi! I'm fine!!!"
It's raining... gotta go before power dies...........
Saturday, May 24, 2008
Sunday, May 18, 2008
Did someone say I leave the day after tomorrow???
I am kind of sitting here in a weird state right now... I have said my goodbyes to friends and coworkers through various lunches/dinners/happy hours, bought what looks to be a whole CVS store, and collected a bunch of donateable items (thanks to everyone who helped!) for my soon-to-be village. However, I really don't feel like I'm about to leave all my creature comforts for the most simplistic of living conditions in just two days...
A huge pile of stuff, ranging from shampoo to packages of ramen noodles to mosquito bed nets, has just taken over my bedroom floor. Yes, ramen, hence "passtheramen.blogspot.com". I was told this might just become the most important item to pack of all... apparently Ugandan food is unpalatable. I've never brought food with me before while traveling, because I thought the whole point was to embrace diversity in every way, shape and form... but I have been warned repeatedly about Ugandan food, even from the most non-picky, laid-back of family friends. Hence I decided to fold and bring lots of ramen, protein bars and multi-vitamins, which will have to snuggle with the donated baby clothes, my water purifier/filter, and headtorch that will also be taking up a lot of space in my bags.
I am excited for what's to come, but nervous about being so far removed from the developed world. People keep asking me questions about life in Uganda to which I don't really have the answers, but ironically I'm about to go live there. I suppose I'll learn as I go...
For now though, I'm going to watch some TV... I'll pack tomorrow.
A huge pile of stuff, ranging from shampoo to packages of ramen noodles to mosquito bed nets, has just taken over my bedroom floor. Yes, ramen, hence "passtheramen.blogspot.com". I was told this might just become the most important item to pack of all... apparently Ugandan food is unpalatable. I've never brought food with me before while traveling, because I thought the whole point was to embrace diversity in every way, shape and form... but I have been warned repeatedly about Ugandan food, even from the most non-picky, laid-back of family friends. Hence I decided to fold and bring lots of ramen, protein bars and multi-vitamins, which will have to snuggle with the donated baby clothes, my water purifier/filter, and headtorch that will also be taking up a lot of space in my bags.
I am excited for what's to come, but nervous about being so far removed from the developed world. People keep asking me questions about life in Uganda to which I don't really have the answers, but ironically I'm about to go live there. I suppose I'll learn as I go...
For now though, I'm going to watch some TV... I'll pack tomorrow.
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