Sunday, December 30, 2007

Photos



Delivering the 100 recorders that the RPCV of Winston-Salem donated to help our music program. The man holding the recorder is setting up classes around the island and teaching "flauta" in his classes.




Mom, Dad, and I on top of the sand dunes



In front of the big church in Vila



Strela!



Making cookies with Sarah and Walter on her visit to Maio



English class- practicing body parts

Saturday, December 29, 2007

Happy New Year

This year IST was held in Rui Vaz instead of Tarrafal. Rui Vaz is technically part of Sao Domingos where I had my training but up higher in the mountains which meant it was probably the coldest place I’ve been in Cape Verde. It was really nice to be cold but at the same time I should have been better prepared. All of us were walking around in long sleeve shirts and wrapped up in blankets all day to try to defrost. I’m sure we were quite a site.

I don’t remember if I’ve written about it or not but one of the things we have in Peace Corps are committees. In Cape Verde we have a peer support network, Volunteer Action Commity, Diversity Committee, Youth Development Committee, IT committee, and WID/GAD (Women in Development/Gender and Development)/HIV/AIDS committee. I serve as a point person on the WID/GAD/HIV/AIDS committee and was at IST to conduct the meeting, select new representatives from the first years, and give an update from our previous meeting during PST. I also helped give a session on Challenges in the workplace and strategies to overcome them along with my APCD and another volunteer, Courtney. Anyways, the meeting went really well and we now have a representative from the northern islands who we were lacking.

I got back from IST on Thursday the 20th just in time for the holidays. I went on a baking spree and made lemon cookies, oatmeal date bars, chocolate chip bars, devils food cookies, and orange biscotti to give away as gifts. I spent Sunday in Morro visiting Bert and Miriama and helping him figure out his printer. I still don’t know what is wrong with it but it wouldn’t print a particular document. Miriama made an excellent Gambian dish for dinner and it made me more excited about my upcoming trip.

Monday was designated as Vila day. I wanted to give my friends in Vila their Christmas presents and spend some time with them since I keep getting called out as ingratu for not coming to Vila that much. The truth is, I go to Vila but I don’t stay very long so I don’t really get to spend much time with my friends, just with the local mini-mercados and places to run errands. I went and visited my friend Sandy who works at the Casa da Juventude and her son who just turned one. He is so cute and now walking around and knows a few words. If you ask him how old he is, he’ll hold up one finger. He is quite a curious little kid, grabbing everything he can get his hands on and wandering around the house up and down the stairs. After seeing Sandy I head over to Jeronimo’s house, my counterpart, and received a yelling from his wife for not bringing my parents over when they were here. I would have liked to bring them to everyone’s house but we just didn’t have the time and were constantly on the move. I apologized profusely and made known that our lack of visit was due to our lack of time. They enjoyed their presents (a 2008 calendar and cookies) and I played UNO with the kids until we sat down for lunch. It was really nice spending time with Jeron and his family and I realize for the rest of my service I’m going to make spending more time with people a priority.

Christmas eve I had dinner with Jacinta and her family around 9 pm and then headed out to the dance around midnight. It was a lot of fun and I felt included in the holiday. Even though I don’t celebrate Christmas it was so nice to be included. What a big change from last year when we sat around the house and no one really invited us to participate in anything. Christmas Day I slept in after getting home around 5 am and went back to Jacinta’s for lunch. After lunch it was back to sleep for me and I was too tired to make it to night 4 of dancing.

Since Christmas I’ve been planning out my work schedule/ things I want to accomplish before I leave Cape Verde and have begun applying for post- Peace Corps opportunities. I’m applying to be a leader for the program that took me to Africa for my first time as well as grad school. Before I leave Maio, I would like to accomplish the following:

- a workshop for women and craftsmen on business and marketing skills
- carry out the sessions with the micro-credit group to teach associations about savings and credit
- continue the Nhos Brinka program for children and train 10 teenagers to lead the program
- implement a camp over spring break for high school kids focusing on leadership, teamwork, self- esteem, and preventing teen pregnancy
- learn more about hydroponics and pass on the information for future development in Maio
- Hold another successful women’s day event with the Associacao das Mulheres de Calheta
- Work with established youth groups to participate in Scenarios of Africa and create HIV/AIDS awareness activities for their zones

Have a great new year and I wish everyone health and happiness in 2008!

Happy New Year

This year IST was held in Rui Vaz instead of Tarrafal. Rui Vaz is technically part of Sao Domingos where I had my training but up higher in the mountains which meant it was probably the coldest place I’ve been in Cape Verde. It was really nice to be cold but at the same time I should have been better prepared. All of us were walking around in long sleeve shirts and wrapped up in blankets all day to try to defrost. I’m sure we were quite a site.

I don’t remember if I’ve written about it or not but one of the things we have in Peace Corps are committees. In Cape Verde we have a peer support network, Volunteer Action Commity, Diversity Committee, Youth Development Committee, IT committee, and WID/GAD (Women in Development/Gender and Development)/HIV/AIDS committee. I serve as a point person on the WID/GAD/HIV/AIDS committee and was at IST to conduct the meeting, select new representatives from the first years, and give an update from our previous meeting during PST. I also helped give a session on Challenges in the workplace and strategies to overcome them along with my APCD and another volunteer, Courtney. Anyways, the meeting went really well and we now have a representative from the northern islands who we were lacking.

I got back from IST on Thursday the 20th just in time for the holidays. I went on a baking spree and made lemon cookies, oatmeal date bars, chocolate chip bars, devils food cookies, and orange biscotti to give away as gifts. I spent Sunday in Morro visiting Bert and Miriama and helping him figure out his printer. I still don’t know what is wrong with it but it wouldn’t print a particular document. Miriama made an excellent Gambian dish for dinner and it made me more excited about my upcoming trip.

Monday was designated as Vila day. I wanted to give my friends in Vila their Christmas presents and spend some time with them since I keep getting called out as ingratu for not coming to Vila that much. The truth is, I go to Vila but I don’t stay very long so I don’t really get to spend much time with my friends, just with the local mini-mercados and places to run errands. I went and visited my friend Sandy who works at the Casa da Juventude and her son who just turned one. He is so cute and now walking around and knows a few words. If you ask him how old he is, he’ll hold up one finger. He is quite a curious little kid, grabbing everything he can get his hands on and wandering around the house up and down the stairs. After seeing Sandy I head over to Jeronimo’s house, my counterpart, and received a yelling from his wife for not bringing my parents over when they were here. I would have liked to bring them to everyone’s house but we just didn’t have the time and were constantly on the move. I apologized profusely and made known that our lack of visit was due to our lack of time. They enjoyed their presents (a 2008 calendar and cookies) and I played UNO with the kids until we sat down for lunch. It was really nice spending time with Jeron and his family and I realize for the rest of my service I’m going to make spending more time with people a priority.

Christmas eve I had dinner with Jacinta and her family around 9 pm and then headed out to the dance around midnight. It was a lot of fun and I felt included in the holiday. Even though I don’t celebrate Christmas it was so nice to be included. What a big change from last year when we sat around the house and no one really invited us to participate in anything. Christmas Day I slept in after getting home around 5 am and went back to Jacinta’s for lunch. After lunch it was back to sleep for me and I was too tired to make it to night 4 of dancing.

Since Christmas I’ve been planning out my work schedule/ things I want to accomplish before I leave Cape Verde and have begun applying for post- Peace Corps opportunities. I’m applying to be a leader for the program that took me to Africa for my first time as well as grad school. Before I leave Maio, I would like to accomplish the following:

- a workshop for women and craftsmen on business and marketing skills
- carry out the sessions with the micro-credit group to teach associations about savings and credit
- continue the Nhos Brinka program for children and train 10 teenagers to lead the program
- implement a camp over spring break for high school kids focusing on leadership, teamwork, self- esteem, and preventing teen pregnancy
- learn more about hydroponics and pass on the information for future development in Maio
- Hold another successful women’s day event with the Associacao das Mulheres de Calheta
- Work with established youth groups to participate in Scenarios of Africa and create HIV/AIDS awareness activities for their zones

Have a great new year and I wish everyone health and happiness in 2008!

Sarah's Visit

Sarah’s Visit
Thursday, December 6, 2007
Sarah arrived from Fogo on the boat and while we waited for the ticket guy to come to his post who showed up? Mike Major. It was quite a surprise although I know its not unexpected of him to show up on other islands. It was really great to have 2 more volunteers on our tiny little island. Sarah and I headed into Vila for some lunch at Peter’s along with Stephanie. After lunch we made it to Calheta, hung out a bit and went on a walk. We ran into Sabine and Michael at their house and they invited us in. We spent the rest of the evening at their place chatting, playing with their sun and drinking tea and wine. It was a great time. On the way home we stopped by Monica’s where I was told my puppy would be waiting. She is SO cute! I named her Strela (star) and she is about the size of my foot, white with a brown head and a brown spot right where her tail starts. Roxy is quite intrigued by her and has spent every moment possible biting her legs, tail, fill in body part and swatting at her. Strela will sometimes try to fight back and give her the meanest growl she can muster.

We woke up around 6 today and I took Strela for a walk in the hopes of her learning to use the bathroom outside of the house. So far she hasn’t really learned but its been less than 24 hours. We showered, made breakfast and headed to Morro for my computer class. Afterwards we headed to Vila to walk back to Calheta along the beach. We brought Strela along and she walked a good deal on the beach with us, tripping over her feet or our footsteps and taking nosedives into the sand. We switched off carrying her for awhile and the hot sun surely tired her out. Once we got passed Morro (beachside), we tried to find a trail to get to the main road and ended up spending a few hours going over homemade rock walls which block off people’s land until we finally hit the main road. By that time it was about 3 pm and we were tired and hungry. Mike made it to Calheta and met up with us and Sarah and I made spinach dip for our lunch while Mike went on a search for fish and bobra for our nights dinner. He swam while we rested and entertained the neighborhood children with photos from past Nhos Brinka activities and other Calheta events. Sarah made me a birthday cake and it was delicious! In the evening I wateched Mike descale and cut out the guts of the fish while we prepared the rest of the curry dish. It was so good!

Saturday
After spending last night making cookie dough, we woke up early and made Christmas cookies for the kids to decorate and eat today during Nhos Brinka. We got to the center without key and jump roped with the kids outside for about an hour. They were also doing handstands and crab walks and I think I broke my back trying to do a backbend. Man I used to be so much more flexible. What happened to me? We played pin the nose on Rudolf and afterwards I taught them the dreidal game which some kids got and others not so much. We ended the day with decorating cookies and they were actually pretty well behaved. Amazing!

In the afternoon we went on a walk and ended up at Sabine and Michael’s house, a German couple who live here, and spent a few hours chatting with them, drinking tea, and playing with their son. We made plans to come back the following day for pizza and to make Christmas cookies. OUr Sunday with them was great, the cookies turned out well, their son had a great time decorating them and we helped celebrate Sabine’s birthday in the afternoon with apple pie and chocolate cake. Sarah and I took a walk to a beach called Cadjetinha and watched boys cleaning fish on the rocks on the way.


Monday
Monday was deemed the “wasted day” because we head out to Vila and spent the day there until the boat came, went to the pier, and Sarah decided to stay a few more days. In the evening we went back home and made some killer fish tacos for dinner.

Tuesday
The next day we took our long promised walk to the dunas- my favorite spot on the island. The sand dunes or dunas are in the town Morrinho which is about 4 kilometers from Calheta and then another km or 2 from the town. We walked from one end of the dunes to the “oasis” in another part which consists of some random palm trees in the middle of the dunes. I like to think of it as being in some movie where they are trekking through the desert and see a mirage but in this case its really there. We stopped on the beach for a bit and snacked on beef jerkey (thanks mom!) as we watched the ocean.

In the afternoon we went to my computer class where I am teaching my students to create a table in Word. We ended the day watching the first part of Shrek III, I of course fell asleep so the second half would have to wait for the next day.

On Wednesday I was hearing rumors that the Thursday boat would be the last boat to and from Maio until an indefinite time so I called Peace Corps and was told to come since I would be helping with IST- In Service Training that following Monday. So Sarah, Stephanie, and I all got to ride the boat together. As much as I dislike Praia (its really not THAT bad, I’m just used to the pace of life in Maio), it was nice to see other volunteers and my host family before IST started.

My Parents Visit

My parents visit to Maio
Guest column by my parents, edited by me

Julia was waiting for us when we arrived in Praia and we took a taxi to our hotel, driving at breakneck speed, the norm in Praia. Julia is not nearly as comfortable in Praia as she is in Maio. Praia reminded me of the poorer sections of Old San Juan, Puerto Rico. There is much garbage in the streets, fairly narrow alleys, and not much paving.
After we checked into our hotel and found out that they didn´t have the suite that we reserved (we had already dragged all our luggage to the 3rd floor) we settled into a small but clean room. We took a taxi to the Peace Corps office and toured and met several people there. From there we travelled by cab to a restaurant owned by British (or at least English speaking) people and had nice sandwiches and coffee. Then back to the PC office to quickly check email and pick up the Thanksgiving turkey from the PC freezer. We had a nice chat with the Country Director for Cape Verde, who was extremely complimentary about Julia´s skills, dedication, and help with training the new volunteers. Then we taxied back to the hotel for some rest and for Julia to do a small food shopping for items not found on Maio.
After naps, we went to dinner around 8:00 at a place called 5al (Quintal) Musica, which had good food and live Cape Verdian music. We had excellent grilled fish for dinner with rice, potatoes, carrots, green beans (Steve and Jules had red wine) with a delicious flan-like dessert (puddim de leite).

We woke up at 4:30 am on Thursday because Julia misplaced boat tickets to Maio (oops). We lugged 7 bags and a cooler down three flights of steps to hotel lobby. We had paid for a van to the pier, but driver did not arrive to drive the van, so we took a taxi whose driver had been outside chatting with hotel worker.
We arrived at the Pier at 6:00 am but the ticket agent did not arrive until 6:40 to straighten out our tickets. Fortunately they had our names on a list of paid customers for three beds in a four bed “cabin”. Two men fought over the right to carry our bags onto the boat, so Julia agreed to use them both (and tip them both). They finally checked us out and hauled the luggage up a plank with rope handles onto the boat. Our “cabin” was two sets of bunk beds with a vomit bucket and a table. Before the sea became too choppy, we drank boxes of mango-orange juice and ate baked goods that we had bought the day before in Praia. The fourth bed was occupied by a woman and niece. The two year old fell asleep immediately, but the Mom was nauseated most of the ride. She was wearing basically a two piece bathing suit covered by piece of fabric (panu) that she alternatively removed and wrapped over various parts of her body. They had told us that the sea was calm, but it was definitely not. “Beds” were twin bunks with hard springs in mattresses that hurt after 3 hours of lying on them. We were in a cabin with one window and when the landed in Maio, the other woman shouted out the window (to the deck outside) for help unloading the bags and she lifted our more than 60 pound bag out the window to the waiting men, as well as our other 6 bags and her own. Julia was unperturbed that the bags would all be sitting on the pier.
So we disembarked over the side of the boat, rather than on the gangplank. Out on the pier, Julia immediately was greeted by several different hiace drivers to Calheta who knew her by name and helped carry all of our bags to the van. After dropping off several other people, going through Vila do Maio, Morro, and the dusty brown, cobblestone streets, we arrived at her house. There her neighbors carried all our bags up one flight of steps to her house. We stood on her roof and viewed the ocean and the panorama of Calheta and the nearby mountain. We met Elizabet, her neighbour, who is married to someone who lives in Holland much of the year, and with whom Julia cooks often. We played with her black and white kitten named Roxy and tried to keep the cat out of our luggage and our bedroom. A few other people stopped by and her cleaning person took our laundry to wash. We unpacked and Jules cooked us pasta for lunch with melon grown (and brought to us) by her next door neighbor.
By then it was time to locate the key to the computer center so that Julia could teach classes at 3:00, 4:00 and 7:00 in a building not far from her house. The weather is so very breezy that you have to prop open the shuttered windows with rocks (and there are lots of rocks all over the place). There area also roosters, cows, and dogs, as well as unsupervised kids running around the cobblestone streets. The 3:00 computer class had six women, learning Portuguese spell check (ortografia).

After the 3 and 4:00 classes, we went to visit with Julia’s counterpart, Silvia and her husband. We drank juice inside for about an hour until the power went out. Then we sat outside on the porch with several people and kids and her husband went and bought us all fried eel to try. It tastes much like a flounder but is bony. We returned in the dark with a full moon to Julia’s apartment and she cooked omelettes by candlelight. Silvia’s kids took some cash from us and bought us freshly baked rolls for our dinner and breakfast. The 7:00 computer class was of course cancelled, since there was no electricity. The power came back on around 7:30 or 8:00.

We woke up around 4 am to the sound of roosters, got up at 6:30 and took a bucket shower. We took the car to Morro after breakfast so that Julia could teach an 8:30 computer class. The driver stops every block or so and picks up people, and also is flagged down by people to take cash and run errands, like refilling prescriptions. In Morro, the power was on for the street lights but not for the houses and buildings, so of course, no computer class. Julia chatted with Ney, who has written the play for AIDS Awareness Day that is being practiced in Calheta for the Dec 1 performance. We found the home of a woman who runs the ceramic center and bought a couple pieces of pottery. Thne we took a back-of-the-truck ride to Vila do Maio. We saw the Camara (similar to mayor´s office), then sat in on part of Stephanie´s (other PC volunteer) English class, taught mainly in Portuguese. We went to two small grocery shops and then the open market for vegetables, then to buy fish at Peter´s restaurant. Peter is from Cornwall, England, and runs a “European style” restaurant called Admiral Benbow and also sells fish. Boba, the driver, saw us and offered a ride back to Calheta. Julia told Boba that we needed to buy fish and he said he would wait. Drivers on the island of Maio stop along the roads and let passengers do errands before getting on the bus.

Silvia came over with five lobsters (we had paid her about $20) and prepared them on Julia´s stove. She cut them up, then cooked them in a pot with margarine, olive oil, onions, green peppers, tomatoes, garlic, cayenne and when they were almost done, added about half a bottle of wine. We ate with her after she sent a child down the street to buy us some freshly baked bread. While we were eating, the chickens on the roof made noises which we were informed was the noises that chickens make when they are laying eggs. Boy are we city people!

After Silvia left, and we took a nap, we went downstairs and chatted with Elizabet until after 6 and then we took a walk until dark. Elizabet offered to teach me how to pound corn and to make us couscous for breakfast the next morning in the traditional Maio, Cape Verde, style. Each island has its traditional food preparation methods and Eliazabet is very proud of her traditions which are hard work and time consuming.

On Saturday, we got up before 7 and watched Elizabet pound corn with a large stick and a pestle. I tried my hand at it and it made a funny video. As you pound, you put handfuls into a large woven flat basket and shake the basket (also takes a lot of practice) so that the finer particles of corn settle to the bottom and the unground ones rise to the top. These can be put back in for more grinding. The corn comes from Elizabet´s field and they dry the corn out in the fields and then bring it in. When the corn meal was ready, we went into her kitchen. The couscous mold is shaped like a very large thimble (probably about 3 pounds large) with large holes in it. She mixed the corn meal, sugar, cinnamon, and powdered milk in a bowl. She wet a little bit of the mixture to seal the holes and then filled the mold, using a little more of the wetted mixture to seal the opening between the mold and a pot of boiling water with its outside diameter matching the diameter of the mold. The couscous steams on the stove until it becomes the consistency of cake when fresh. We had it for breakfast, hot and delicious, with coffee and papaya. Later the leftovers get harder and denser and you can cut slices and toast it.

Saturday was to be our adventure day, called a Volta Ílha or a car tour of the island. We went with Bert, a colourful American and his wife Mariamne (from Gambia) and her daughter Ami. Our driver was terrific and took us on what seemed like every single road on Maio, to almost every town, and to several beaches in Maio. We collected conch shells, climbed fabulous sand dunes that Julia said reminded her of Jockey Ridge (but we were the only ones there) in a town called Morrinho, and drove through small and smaller villages. The beaches were deserted and quiet and beautiful. We stopped back in Vilo do Maio at the end of the trip for coffee at a café run by an Italian family and returned around 3:30 (we had left at 10:00). We cooked “lunch” of some of the fish that we had bought on Friday, then showered and rested and cooked a turkey that Julia had shlepped frozen from Praia (which was rather defrosted and needed to be cooked a day ahead) for Sunday´s “Thanksgiving” dinner.

In the evening, we were invited to again eat lobsters (they are caught off Maio) with several people - Djoi and Jacinta and her cousin and others. We would eat outdoors on the patio across the street. Around 5 pm we went to the community center to watch a group of people practice a play for the December 1 AIDS Awareness day. Play practice started at least an hour late (which is normal) - everyone has a cell phone but not too many watches here. On the way back, we saw a group of women a few houses down from Julia who were cooking huge pots of food and pounding corn. Julia asked them to show us what they were cooking. It was a big stew, traditional to the “celebration” a year after the death of someone, in this case a husband. The following morning (on a Sunday) they will make couscous and café (breakfast) to be served after the Sunday mass.

We had our outdoor meal later that night which consisted of lobsters split in half , cooked in a similar manner as the previous lunch, with onions and spices and a sauce, plus bread, and lots of beer and waters. Some of the people there were leaving around 10:30 for a local Festa in the town of Figuera. We had passed through Figuera that day on our island tour and had seen merchants setting up stands and grills.

Sunday
The streets are always noisy, especially on the weekend, with voices talking and laughing. About 11 we went searching for a man named Fogo, an artist, to look at some of his paintings in his house. His paintings included scenes with boats, Jesus, and Osama. He also painted the outside back wall of his sister´s stucco home. Then we walked over to the house of a woman who weaves very nice bags and arranged to have two made for me to buy. We then spent several hours cooking our traditional Thanksgiving-Day-on-Sunday dinner, with stuffing, string bean casserole, mashed and sweet potatoes, gravy, and pumpkin pie. Julia had invited Stephanie from Vila and Bert and his family from Morro, so there were 7 of us. They came around 3:30 or 4:00 and we ate a hearty American style supper.

Monday
We awoke around 6 am to Thanksgiving leftovers in the fridge and no power. Fortunately we had given many of the leftovers to Stephanie, a box for Mr. Ed, the ex-pat in Vila, and to Bert and family. So of course the computer class in Morro was again cancelled. We cooked coffee on the gas burner and ate leftovers. We took the hiace to Vila where there was electricity. We ran errands – checked internet, confirmed (we think) our TACV reservation, and stopped at a Chinese lojo. We went to Peter´s restaurant to buy salted fish and found out that it was closed on Monday´s but that there is a back entrance where he gave Julia the fish as a gift. We told him that we would eat there on Thursday before we take the boat back to Praia, and he said that we would be welcome to leave our luggage there. We had some expresso at the Italian café and a piece of homemade cake. We planned to go back on Wednesday and do more errands, more Internet, and purchase our boat tickets (and not lose them).

We took the hiace back to Calheta (again the driver drives around and lets people run into stores). Jacinta brought us a hot dish with caldo de peixe, a fish stew made with a whole grouper, green bananas, squash, sweet potatoes, and spices. We ate this with our left over Thanksgiving food. We spent time locating a hotel in Praia for Thursday night that had vacancy. We cleaned up Julia´s house because she was holding a grilhada that night. Power came back on at 3:30, so it had been out for close to ten hours. We went with Julia to the community center to help teach her English class on body parts and related verbs - only two students showed up. Then we came back to her house to watch the nightly parade of Lisabet´s chickens and roosters up the steps to the coops on the kintal (courtyard) outside Julia´s kitchen.

Children here are handed cash to purchase small items all the time and to deliver messages, locate people etc. Steve compared them to the owls in Harry Potter. The rhythm and flow of life here is so natural. Most people do not turn on lights during the day, never leave lights on when they leave a room; some cannot afford to keep their refrigerators on unless they need to use them. The animals in the streets (chickens, ducks, roosters, cows, goats, burros) don´t bother the people and vice versa and everyone seems to know whose animal each is. Water is very scarce; Julia has a water tank on her roof and a bedong (barrel of extra water) in her kitchen, plus a large filter from Peace Corps to which she adds bleach. But many of the CV-ians carry large jugs of water on their heads to use for their families who live 6 to 15 in houses not much larger than the one-bedroom apartment that Julia lives in. Julia has a toilet that “flushes”, but you have to wait hours for the tank to fill, so you do not flush often, and no one can flush toilet paper in Cape Verde. There are no hot showers; you can take a cold shower (which I guess is better in July when it is hot outside) or you can warm up water on the gas stove and take a shower using a pitcher and a bucket. Then you want to save as much of your shower water as possible (and as much of your sink-dishwashing water too) to pour down the toilet, especially when there are 3 of us instead of 1 using the same water tank. Hard to imagine 10 or 15 people sharing water. And the countryside is so dusty that you never really feel clean. You don´t exactly feel dirty, just dusty, with wind blowing the savannah like but volcanic dirt everywhere. Nothing is wasted, empty large water bottle bottoms are used as pencil holders, children don´t have any toys but seem content running all over the streets playing with stuff. We filmed a video of little boys taking off one of their thong sandals and using it as a steering wheel making car noises, running around with one shoe off and one shoe on. Women greet people with kisses on both cheeks (as in France); you constantly greet everyone with Bom Dia (until noon), Boa Tarde (until dark) or Bom Noite.

In Calheta, everyone knows Julia. The man next door, Jacinta´s father, speaks some English from his time on fruit ships, and said, “Your daughter is nice…..Julia knows the Cape Verdian language well and can between everyone´s house,” and we took that as a compliment to her. Everyone asks her if we “speak Cape Verdean” and we keep telling them that we understand a little, but have not learned to speak. They also constantly tell us that “we are young” and sometimes that I am “bonita” (pretty). We have watched Moms carry their youngest children on their backs, wrapped in a cloth that is tied in the front around their waists. This way they can carry a large basket, bucket, or drum of water or bag on their heads and other items in their hands. The women are strong and the men are good lookin…..

Julia´s grilhada was set for around 8 pm (time is always just a suggestion). Around 7, Monica, who had organized this, came to Julia´s to get carrots, onions, and tomatoes to contribute to the arroz (rice). We went over to her house, where several women were helping prepare this huge, huge pot of rice over a wood fire. They add bouillion (knorr), spices, sausage, and chicken to the rice and veggies and cook for a long time.

Monaca, who had organized the women to do the cooking, collected 200$00cve (about $2.40) from each attendee - Julia´s adult students had all been invited and about 20 or more people came. This paid for the chicken wings (supersized wings, the length of a large skewer), conch to skewer, and sodas. Julia and we contributed wine, cups, hamburgers (our freezer had defrosted and Julia had bought about 2 pounds of frozen ground beef in Praia), and her roof space. Elizabet strung a wire from the 2nd floor where Julia lives up to the 3rd floor roof with a compact fluorescent bright lightbulb. Kind of surprised us, since there isn´t much high tech on Maio. Women carried huge pots up the stairs with skewers, plates, chicken, and marinated conch. We brought a few chairs up to the roof, but mostly people sat on the ground against the walls, as it was quite windy.

Most people arrived after 9:00 as they had to first watch the Portuguese novellas on tv. The women did all the grilling (mostly one woman) and were expert at loading the huge chicken wings on to the skewers, distributing the rice and cooked chicken and sodas, then loading the conch onto skewers and doing the same, and then cooking Julia´s hamburgers, which also disappeared. Other than some rice (which people divided up), there was little left over. It was obvious that Julia enjoys being with these women (the guys mostly stayed in a corner or with a wife or girlfriend). They keep teasing Julia about how silly she is and she is great a laughing a lot. They are already telling her that they will miss her when she goes home; I guess some of this was prompted by our presence. Steve noted that the guys as a group sauntered up to the roof and I thought they looked like a basketball team entering the stadium. Steve and I are starting to understand some of the conversation, especially when only one person is speaking and not too fast, but we are shy to participate. There are a lot of French/Spanish words that are similar to Kriolu. It was a beautiful night up on the roof. The town was quieter than on the weekend (this was Monday). The moon, which had been full two nights before, was still pretty but hidden behind the clouds and the stars were out. No cars late at night and no airplanes. Because it was a Monday night, people cleaned everything up and left “early” around midnight. Julia said it was good to do this on a non-weekend or they would have stayed chatting until 3 am.

Just outside Julia´s kitchen door is the “pig bucket”. Instead of composting, we put our melon rinds (from the melon that Elisabet grows out in the field) and then dry out the melon seeds in the sun to give to her so that she can plant more melons. The pig bucket gets any semi-edible leftovers and skin and bones to feed Elisabet´s pig. The roosters and chickens roost on the kintal and run around the town during the day. When the chickens lay eggs (which is all the time) we are welcome to take what we need to eat. Very little food comes with big packaging and the government waste disposal truck comes by on Monday morning to empty the very small by American standards waste containers that are shared by the whole street. And much of the trash was from beer bottles - there are bars on almost every block, many of them just an awning to a room in the front of someone´s house where you can buy a cold drink, a snack, and maybe sit and watch tv. If you don’t have a refrig, you can ask to put food in one of the bar´s large refrigerators, especially if it belongs to a cousin or a friend.

In the larger town of Vila do Maio and on other islands with larger towns, most of the stores are called Lojo´s or Chinese Lojo´s. They are about the quality of the Dollar Store, but probably worse and more expensive. In Praia there is a new “American style” grocery store called Leader Price that has a variety of merchandise, but it´s a long boat ride with a cooler to bring food back from there. Stores in Calheta and the smaller towns on Maio are either a little room in someone´s house or a woman with a basket on her head going door to door or sitting on one of the benches that line the main roads. Cold drinks of soda are fairly expensive, about 70$00cve or almost a dollar and beer is slightly more expensive for an 8 ounce cold bottle. Small cottage industry is interesting; two years ago a cooperative group from the island of Sao Vicente taught the women here to weave bags and there are several looms to share in the community center. Not all the looms work and the yarn is locked up in a room until the teachers come back (maybe not). Several women still make the bags and they each know who still do and where to find their houses. So I ordered two bags and picked out colors and patterns and got to watch one of the women make one of my bags. Jobs here are scarce, intermittent (fishermen, carpenters, electricians etc). Everything is cash. People are trusting and hand each other cash to do errands or to pay people back constantly. In spite of the poor education system (until a few years ago high school only went up to 10th grade, so many adults are going to night school to finish high school), people seem to want to learn. Primary school through high school is held in two half day sessions and students attend either morning or afternoon. The only high school for the island is in Vila do Maio, and there are buses throughout the island for high school. They try to send the students from the farthest towns to the morning rather than late classes. The roads on the north and eastern parts of Maio are barely paved.

Sounds are part of the rhythm of the day. After the 3 or 4 am roosters, who seem to compete for loudness, you hear cows and chickens all day, and the early morning pounding of corn (grown and dried out just outside the town streets in fields marked by stone fences). Starting past daylight, you hear hiace (van) drivers honking their horns to let you know they are available and you can stick your head out the window and call the driver by name and tell him to wait. These vans circle around the streets door to door rather than having a particular van stop, which seems wasteful with the high cost of gas and the low mileage per gallon, but that´s how it is done. Lots of footsteps on the cobblestone streets and lots of voices, morning and night.

Tuesday
Around 12:30, we went out to find the person from the community center who hides the computer cable that connects the printer-scanner to the new computer in the computer room. There are 6 computers (5 brand new) but only one printer. Julia needs to scan about 100 pages for Peace Corps training. After first visiting with another family (visiting means sitting on hard wooden chairs in a dark front room set up for visitors, kissing everyone and saying good day, and chatting, plus having each of their 2 or 3 or in this case 9 children come in if they are not attending school that part of the day or if they are home for lunch). Often the grandparents either live in the house or spent much of the day there. So it took an hour to walk five minutes, visit twice, greet people in the streets, and walk back to Julia´s house for lunch. And then anyone we run into in the streets tell Julia that she needs to bring her parents over to meet their grandmom or cousin or greatgrand parent or whomever…..

We ate some leftovers for lunch and gathered up Julia´s materials for a 2:30 (yeah right, time is just a suggestion) time to make posters for the big AIDS Awareness Day and to present the recorders to Djoi so that he can organize the teaching of recorders in the music program at the primary school. Eventually people drifted into the room and at 5:30 they were still making posters while I typed this journal and Steve used another computer to work on a journal article.

Dinner is to be salted fish cooked in the oven (Peixe al Forna) prepared by Elisabet, Jacinta and whoever else, but Jacinta and Djoi are attending night school (they both teach primary school and are very bright but only went through 10th grade because that was all that was available 10 or 15 years ago). So dinner will be quite late.

Wednesday
Elisabet had offered to make xeren (chopped corn that tastes like rice) and galhina de terra (a chicken stew made with her freshly slaughtered chicken). The meat was very dark and delicious and the stew included sweet potatoes and massa di farina (dumplings).We had thought that this was to be dinner, but it turned out to be for lunch. So we went into Vila for the morning and did errands, buying boat tickets, purchasing another bag at the Shell station (made by the same person back in Calheta), going to the Camara where one of the people printed a nice map for Steve that was on her flash drive and not on the Camara´s files. We took a van back to Calheta and ate lunch with Elisabet at Julia´s. We napped and rested. Julia teaches a 6 to 8 pm computer class in Morro on Wednesday evenings and Bert had invited us to visit first. When we arrived at his house, they were cooking fresh pastels (fried dough filled with cooked fish similar to tuna called Serra) and had made a cake topped with caramel and bananas for us. Bert then took us on a tour of his new grocery store/hotel which is under construction and called Casa Blanca. From the roof of the unfinished 5 room hotel, you get beautiful views of the ocean, the mountains, and the towns, especially just before sunset. Just before 6, we went to set up for Julia´s computer class, where the room does not have adequate lighting for an evening class. The two hour class was cut short because one of the men with a van/truck who was giving us a ride back to Calheta wanted to leave early (with a bunch of people) to go see a soccer game between Calheta and Morro and/or also because the Portugal soccer game was on the radio. So it goes.

Thursday
Woke at 6:40 as usual. Bert called at 8:00 to say that the boat was not coming today. I guess it is the travelling Kramer effect! Several other people stopped by or called with the same news. Many calls later, we decided that we needed to pack up and look at options. There was a rumor that a smaller boat might come so we decided to drag all our luggage to Vila, and left it at Stephanie´s house. We ate lunch at Admiral Benbow, the British restaurant, but Peter was still in Praia (same boat). His partner Barry was there as was George, who cooked wonderful fresh tuna, shrimp (with heads and tails on) and goat with potatoes and carrots, all served with rice and green olives. Julia shared her home made chocolate gelato and Steve had the rum baba cake. Then we spent the next three hours trying to find a way to get home earlier than the next Tuesday Boston flight, which would mean an overnight stay in Boston and not getting home until Wednesday afternoon. Sun Travel, Peace Corps and the TAP web site were all useful. The best help was a telephone call to the International Customer Service dept of US Airways where we had a terrific agent who found us a way to get from Praia at 2:00 am on Sunday to Lisbon, with a 4 hour layover, then an 8 hour flight to Newark. So if the Saturday boat actually runs, we will go straight from the pier at Praia to the airport at Praia and spend how ever many hours in the Praia airport…..Please BARCO (boat) don´t be broken. This took until 5:00 pm including phone calls and Internet.

Looking for a ride back to Calheta, we ran into a friend of Julia´s named Andy who lives in Calheta with his CV-ian woman and their son. He had a small jeep and offered us a ride back.

Exhausted, we took naps until around 8:30, then Julia made homemade pizza and we went online to save the US Airways-TAP reservation to a flash drive so that we could take the drive and the connection to the Community Center printer the next day and print out our reservation.

Friday
Morning routine as usual. Listen to roosters from 4:30 am until getting out of bed. Actually slept until 7:20. Go into living room and through door to kitchen. Open and latch open door to outside kintal (courtyard); Open back door off of living room and latch it. Open front window shutter and walk outside to fasten latch. Get cross ventilation. No screens, shoo flies. There is a door through a “closet” to the bathroom, to the bedroom. This little apartment has nine doors plus three windows and most of the doors have either glass panes on top or frosted glass panels, so electric lights are not needed from 6:00 am to 6:00 pm.