small update

Well, I managed to blow the power supply for my laptop last night. I knew power surges were an issue but thought my surge-protected power bar I brought along would help. I guess maybe it did, the laptop is fine but I can’t charge it. Right now I’m at the GEU using someone else’s computer. Perhaps I can find another power supply, we’ll see…

My workday hasn’t really officially started, as I’m not sure what I have to do just yet. The director just arrived and I’m waiting for her to come collect me and talk to me. I don’t have too much of a plan at this point – I do have some documents drawn up but my mandate might have changed since I applied for this position so I guess we’ll have to wait and see.

Oh, and I survived my first trotro experience! I’m not sure if Akum is guiding me home as well, but I hope so since I’m not 100% sure how exactly to get back to Suma.

Akwaaba! Welcome!

I arrived Sunday evening without my luggage, which was expected since I barely made my connection in London.  Luckily British Airways was on the ball and had someone literally run me through Heathrow so I could make the second plane.  I picked up my bag this morning though, so now I’m set.

I’m staying at a place called Suma Court, which is a small hotel, run like a guest house.  My room is small and modest but very comfortable.  Here,  for the past two mornings I have eaten my breakfast of scrambled eggs with onion, green pepper and hotdogs while watching a hilariously dubbed Mexican telenovela called Pasión. I’ll be sad to miss it for the rest of the time I’m here, as I’ll be starting work at the Girls Education Unit tomorrow.

I first visited the GEU yesterday with Patience,  my liaison here (Sectoral Officer for WUSC).  She introduced me to the employees, and I briefly spoke to them about what they needed from me.  There’s another Uniterra volunteer from Canada there called Akum, who is meeting me at the WUSC office (a 5 minute walk away from Suma) and I imagine he’ll be guiding me through my first trotro experience.

What is trotro? Essentially it’s the most affordable way around Ghana. You can get taxis (‘dropping’, like we are used to, or shared with others) or you can go trotro.  Minivans in assorted states of disrepair, filled up with travellers.   The driver has a mate,  who calls out where they are going.  Which is great if you know where “CIRC!CIRC!” or “37”  is, and if it’s near where you wanna go.  No one uses addresses here, and very few streets have names that people use for navigational purposes.  You get around by knowing landmarks.  It’s neat but can be confusing as Accra is bloody massive.

OK, that’s all for now.  I’m researching places to visit this weekend, this one looks nice (web design could use a little work,  maybe I can work out a deal with them).

gak! I’m leaving tomorrow!

Those butterflies are fluttering around in my tummy now! My list of things to do have been whittled down to just a few items, and I’m now planning on what knitting projects to take with me, and what books to read. One of those books is Spellbound by Karen Palmer, which might spark some interesting conversation once I’m there.

Earlier this week I spoke with Julia Baldwin, 2010 L4C participant from the University of Guelph, who went to Ghana to work as an ICT Training Needs Advisor as well. She gave me the real deal when it comes to advice, it’s amazing how much more prepared I feel now. She recommended a bunch of  stuff to take, stuff I wouldn’t have thought of (a flashlight, bandanas, ziplock baggies, a vegetable peeler). She also recommended a guide from the very kickass  http://gisforghana.blogspot.com, which I promptly bought, downloaded and have been reading with fascination ever since.

I’ve procured a “crappy laptop” (a slow, older Vaio with Windows XP) to take with me, which I suspect will be better for creating training materials than my  Macbook Pro. Plus, if it goes missing, I won’t have a heart attack. All the USB memory sticks I’ll be taking with me have AVP on ’em, and I’ve loaded some other programs on DVDs that might take forever and a day to download (Open Office and some handy PC utility tools).

OK, off I go to tie up some loose work ends, then attend to those last few items on my to-do list and pack for GHANA, baby!

Pre-departure orientation

Last week the Leave for Change participants (and three other folks heading abroad with Uniterra but not with L4C) had a 2 day orientation to prepare us for our placements. It was great to meet the others* and find out where they’ll be going and what they’ll be doing (most folks will be blogging on the UBC Leave for Change blog if you’re interested in following along).

Both days were full of useful information and fun workshops. There’s still some ambiguity around my mandate and I still don’t know where I’m actually staying in Accra, but I certainly wasn’t the only one in that position, and I am confident that it will all fall into place. I also met an absolutely fantastic woman named Samelia from Ghana – we chatted at length about all kinds of stuff, from Ghanaian politics, common workplace styles, traditions, food and even just general communication differences that I might encounter. She assured me that I would have the time of my life there, and of that I have no doubt. Oh yes – she told me my Akan name: Adwoa (I was born on a Monday). She was very happy to learn this as her mother and her eldest daughter are also both called Adwoa.

*Nancy Hogan has a great photo of all of us in her introductory post on the UBC Leave for Change blog here: http://www.focusonpeople.ubc.ca/leaveforchange/blog/2011/02/06/2011-orientation-for-botswana/

DIY in Africa

An interesting article about DIY in Africa that I wanted to mention here, mostly for my own reference and a reminder to check out that scene when I’m in Ghana. The article has lots of great information, even if I get the feeling that I’m to feel guilty for enjoying the privilege for being a crafter here in North America.

I’m staying in Accra, where Maker Faire Africa is held (unfortunately, not when I’ll be there). I’ve added a few links to the sidebar if you interested in reading more about some cool things Africans are doing DIY style. Oh, and a “mini” Maker Faire is coming to Vancouver is June!

Leave for Change – the why

One of my colleagues, Manpreet, was a Leave for Change participant a couple years ago – she went to Botswana – and when she returned, she gave a presentation at one of our staff meetings about her experience. That was the first I’d heard of the program, and I remember jotting something down in my notebook, “check out Leave for Change – apply next year?”. I didn’t though. I’d plum forgot all about it, since I rarely go back and read my notes from meetings. (There, I said it.) When I received an email calling for participants again, I remembered Manpreet’s talk and thought, ok, this year, for real. I figured out what I had to do and started working on it. Part of the application asked why I wanted to go, and I really did some self-reflection before I answered.

I was what you might consider an “at-risk youth”. If it wasn’t for some amazing government and other community programs, and for a handful of counselors who saw the good in me and helped me care about my own future, I wouldn’t be where I am today. One of those programs whisked me away to Jamaica, and I was promptly placed outside my comfortable little bubble. I learned a lot about the country, its people, its culture, myself, and the world during that time. It helped shape me into the person I am today, and I happen to really like that person,  so for that, I’m forever grateful.

It’s been a long time coming, but it’s time to show some of that gratitude. I’ve been meaning to get off my arse and do some volunteering  here in Vancouver – there’s lots of work to be done, that’s for sure – but for some reason, going to a developing country and starting there seems like what I need to do to get that ball rolling. I need to be reminded of what things are like outside my bubble again.

Preparations

Woo, first post!

I’ll be traveling to Ghana in late February to work with an organization called the Girls’ Education Unit – I will post more about what they’re all about and what I’ll be doing with them later on. I just wanted to get my first post out of the way and customize the blog a bit.