20 April 2006

Kenya - day 8 - 10 Diani Beach, Mombassa

Spent three days relaxing, sleeping and enjoying warm weather. Who would have thought a safari was so tiring? The water is super warm, the beaches are empty. Mami and I were learning how to windsurf, until she fell onto a black sea urchin (papaya milk is the local remedy). Painful!! Went on two dives. Visibility not as good as Koh Tao, but we saw some large turtles, a school of baracuda, clown fish (nemos), an angel fish, a parrot fish and a lot of dead coral.

Mombassa - well I wouldn't make the effort to go to the old town. Not that interesting and too many tourist shops on a 300m long stretch . And it's a good 45 minute drive from Diani (all that lost beach time!). I preferred the old San Juan in Puerto Rico.... We did hit a great kanga fabric store - Mali Ya Abdulla on Biashara street - who apparently initiated adding Swahili sayings on the prints. I could have stayed there hours and bought so much more...


Road to Diani


soap facade to Diani


le père et son ami


Diani Ferry arrival


Full make-up and fashionable wear under the niqab (she took it off while waiting for the ferry to arrive. i can see the niqab's utility for the dust in mombassa.)


Useful information:
- Mombassa hotel (part of package) - Indian Ocean Beach Club - like all resorts in Diani, it is isolated from the town and is meant to be all inclusive. You can't walk out to dinner, but you can get a tuk-tuk to go out to the stores, etc. Hotel was excellent, food was pretty decent and always plentiful.

- Diving in Diani - most serious place was the Diani Marina - our hotel ried to make us dive with them but we later found out that you would have to go about an hour's drive before getting to a boat, etc. We did two dives right off the shore on the coral reef. An experienced diver said it wasn't worth goign to Pemba because the cost was so high and the fish were about the same as in Diani.

18 April 2006

Road photos - Kenya


Mount Kenya


North of Nairobi


On road to Samburu


Getting close to Samburu


Between Samburu and Mount Kenya region


Near Aberdares


Rift Valley cliff


Rain storm across the Rift Valley

Kenya - day 5 - 7 Masai Mara


friendly


jumping for a free woman


Sleeping beauty


Tanzania/Kenya border in Masai Mara - note land erosion!

16 April 2006

Kenya - day 4 + 5 - Lake Nakuru and Naivasha

Perfect stopping place between Masai Mara and Samburu - long drive but worth a quick peak. The colors on my colour film are fabulous (these photos are from the digital). We also stopped at a Presbyterian women's self-help project -- Nanyuki Spinners and Weavers -- where single women learn how to make sheep's wool into rugs, blankets and other home items. Their products are mostly purchased by tourists (like my mom, my sister and me), as the prices are quite high for local consumers. I remember some sign about the American government being involved in the center's opening (maybe they sponsored the building?).


Zebra on Lake Naivasha - animal sanctuary where Out of Africa was mostly filmed


smelly


A friendly old beast


Lake Nakuru

14 April 2006

Kenya - day 2 - 4 - Samburu Shaba Buffalo Springs

Amazing hotel in Shaba.


Samburu children singing


In Samburu, dusk


Buffalo Springs/Samburu border


12 foot termite hill

05 April 2006

things to come...

i have a few travel stories to tell on Kenya. i'll post them over the next week or so.

scotch tape

have you ever wondered what is the maximum length of a piece of clear tape you can unroll before it starts twisting and sticking to itself?

or if it is cheaper to exfoliate dead skin cells with scotch tape rather than the overpriced, perfumed beauty product?

or why scotch cannot adhere to liquids?

or why, on some days, playing with scotch tape seems much more intellectually stimulating than your work?

me neither

05 March 2006

le cinéma!

I finally made it to the movies. Brokeback Mountain was the choice. I truly enjoyed it on many grounds. I wondered during the movie whether the storyline would be as appealing if it were about heterosexual couple and I believe so. Going through that kind of pain due to separation, thwarted love, exclusion and an unfulfilled life seems miserable, unbearable.

In terms of the Oscars, I don't usually follow the nominations, etc. But I do hope that Paradise Now wins. Saw it many months ago with my mom. I remarked the objectivity it angled to present on such a delicate subject.

03 March 2006

The EU tells Kosmo "Stay inside!"

If you are in a protected zone (zone de protection déterminée), keep all your pets inside and if outside on a leash. See latest EU rercommendations.

Sorry Kosmo - no more sparrows on the balcony... Ok Paris is not yet a protected zone, but I'd rather be safe than sorry.

01 March 2006

50-year tunnel project creating another hole in NYC

Vinnie the Mole (450-ton tunnel-boring machine) is digging the massive second phase of City Tunnel No. 3, a 60-mile tunnel that began in the Bronx in 1970 and is scheduled for completion in 2020. By then, the tunnel will be able to handle the roughly one billion gallons of water a day used in New York City that originates from rural watersheds to points throughout the city.

The water tunnel has taken its toll in human life, with 24 construction-related deaths. A man a mile, the saying goes among the workers.

A geologist's involvement in the tunnel project makes his geologist friends jealous. "For a geologist," he said, "this is like going to Disneyland."

Read more in the NYT (sign-up needed).

Is 27/02 comment a blog pick-up line or simply nice dying heart liberal stuck in Texas?

27 February 2006

blog fans

I have a fan in Hummelstown, Pennsylvania - home of penn state athletics.

France vs. Uganda

http://www.theonion.com/content/node/45589
Stable government leads to lack of passion and getting any.

Year of travel will not stop to rest

If anyone thinks that I am going to stop at 4 continents per year, they are wrong!

Did I mention I am leaving for Kenya in 13 days?

You working the night shift?

First thing pronounced by my office mate when he walked in this morning. No, I was not wearing my PJs, sleeping at my desk or getting paid extra. I just hadn't turned on the fluorescent overhead lights.

21 February 2006

Avian Flu - In my mailbox on Monday

Une petite documentation gratuite offerte par la CIV - "une association loi 1901 dont la principale mission est de contribuer à une meilleure connaissance des viandes et de leurs filières." La CIV en fait représente les industrie de la viande.

Je ne sais pas si la CIV lit les journaux, les informations scientifiques, etc... mais on ne dirait pas. Lisez les "informations" de la doc (toutes citées) - elles sont ILLUSOIRES, TROMPEUSES ET MALHONNETES DE LA PART DES INDUSTRIELS ET FAVORISENT LES CHANCES DE LA PROPAGATION DU VIRUS :
- en France, chez les volailles, il n'y a à ce jour aucun cas de grippe aviaire.
- la consommation de viandes de volailles en France ne présente pas de risque de contamination de l'Homme par le virus de la grippe aviaire.
- Le virus de la grippe aviaire ne pet se transmettre à l'Homme que de manière très exceptionnelle, principalement par voie respiratoire à la suite d'un contact direct en milieu confiné avec des oiseaux malades fortement excréteurs du virus.

ça continue...
- Non, il n'y a pas de risque de contamination de l'Homme par le virus H5N1 asiatique en consommant de la viande de volaille.

Mieux vaut lire le site de l'Organisation Mondiale de la Santé (bcp + fiable) :

- La persistance très répandue du virus H5N1 chez les populations de volailles constitue un double risque pour la santé humaine. [...] une infection directe en provoquant une pathologie très grave [et...] la transformation du virus [qui...] pourrait constituer le point de départ d’une flambée mondiale (une pandémie).

- L’infection humaine résulte principalement d’un contact direct avec des volailles infectées ou des surfaces et des objets contaminés par leurs déjections. On considère que l’exposition intervient surtout lors de l’abattage, du plumage, du dépeçage et de la préparation des volailles avant la cuisson.

- Aux températures où s'effectue normalement la cuisson (70 oC), le virus sera détruit. Il faudra s'assurer que toutes les parties sont bien cuites (la chair ne doit plus être rose) et que les jaunes d'œufs ne doivent pas être liquides.

- On n’a pas encore compris pourquoi certaines personnes sont infectées et pas d’autres alors que les conditions d’exposition semblent similaires.

20 February 2006

S'essuyer c'est bien, se laver c'est mieux!

tagline for "award-winning" toilet paper plus unknown liquid dispensing machine in office bathroom.