Tuesday, March 20, 2012

More Random stuff

Immigration was to be here at the hotel at 8am.  Now scheduled for 10am. 

So I will take a few minutes to catch up some more.  I am grabbing pictures as they come up rather than trying to put them in order.  The gang at Precision Air working to get our air tickets on the later flight out of Tanzania because earlier in the day after an hour of negotiation /communication we still were given the wrong time.  We were successful.




And this was my first lunch/ dinner (called Linner by our Ilona (our Dutch representative) in Zanziber ,  Prawns and sauteed vegetables.  Looks good.  Tasted good.

This is where we were watching for 3 hours in immigration.  Wishing we were on the other side of the fence.
 And us waiting in line for immigration which were two little doorways after the Tourist information sign.

This was the ferry we took from the mainland to Zanzibar. Nice and modern. 
  And inside, we had air conditioning and Francis on the left and Maria on the right with her admirer.
 And Petra and Ian saying "we finally made it"  after sprinting from Precision Air with our Air tickets and just making it in time for the ferry, which thank goodness was running about 15 minutes late. 




Monday, March 19, 2012

Zanzabar with pictures

Ok, well first I have something else to show.  I captured this from Today's newspaper.  This absolutely supports the initiative in our project that calls for more e-learning (learning over the web). 


We went to Zanzibar and I have so much to tell and so this is all out of order, but with the variable internet access we have I thought I would just toss it out as I found it.  Everyone  was making a big fuss around this next place.  Mercury House.  I had no idea.  But, the lead singer for Queen lived here. 


This next photo is in Stone Town .  Lots of stone buildings and alleys like this one.  Very interesting to walk through and there are tons of little shops not wider than two small closets. 
And we visited an old church and a slave holding center.  This truly was the most impactful thing to me that I have seen.  70 slaves were kept in here at one time and the two air slots you see are all they had.I am standing in the door taking this picture.
In this next picture you can get an idea of the size.  And all the slaves were up on the upper section, not where Maria is standing, but rather up on top of the cement.  You barely have room to sit,  The part where her legs are seen was where slaves would go to the bathroom.  This makes you think.  While Maria is smiling in this picture, not one of us was smiling when we entered the two room like this. 

Afterwards, I was talking to Ishmael and he said that many Africans that live in Zanzibar will not go to the beach because they do not want to be around white people that enslaved them, and they teach this to their children.  I asked a question about how slave traders got their slaves.   He said that tribal chiefs often sold their own people and when one tribe conquered another, they would sell their enemies.  I just shook my head.

This is a Memory for the Slaves.  


Now, lets change the tone.

Went to the beach.  Part of our reward for making it through immigration.  Impressive.  Look at the color of this water.
 Agusto ,  Ishmael - our guide - a really cool dude,  Shaun, and Ross.  With very sharp jagged coral behind us.  
 And everywhere we stopped are these painting shops.  Very neat.  I bought one, but not here. Notice the roofs of leaves in the background.  I never knew that these roofs last about 25 years.  That is really amazing. 

 And back to arrival, the bus took us most of the way and we walked through the village.  The road was incredibly bumpy.  "You can't even imagine", as Philip would say.  Take the worst nightmare of a bad road and triple it.  We only bottomed out once, but there were some interesting moments.  And you feel like your insides have been shaken a little too much. 


And because you appreciate these, this is the generator that runs the hotel when the power goes off, which was only a few times.
 And this was in a night market.  They were making sugar cane, spinning the wheel by hand and squeezing the juice out of canes.  Looked like hard work. 
 And the food.  hundreds of tables laid out with tons of food. 
 and in the market, you get to mingle with a few of your best friends.. 

 and more of them.
Oh, and while I am thinking about it,  On the way home there was a sign in the airport warning people to wash their hands and it had a list of when .  One of them was when "your child has defected".   I guess you just wash your hands of them as the saying goes. 

Some things need no pictures #2

As they said the old television program Dragnet;   "Just the facts Mam" 

These are the facts and I draw no conclusion.

A group of 10 of us went to Zanzibar which is a large island off the coast of Tanzania.  A popular tourist attraction.  Lots of shops, nice beaches and history.  It was a big launching point for collecting slaves prior to transport overseas.   I will tell more in another entry.

After stepping off the ferry, we had to go through immigration.  Why?  I am not sure.  Zanzibar is part of Tanzania and  so it is confusing as to why this might be necessary since we had already passed immigration two weeks prior.  

I filled out the form and waited 30 minutes in the hot sun and was then approved and ready to go. Others got processed over the next 30 minutes.  Then suddenly they asked for all 10 of our passports. Then they held them for 3 hours while we waited in the very hot dry conditions outdoors.  During that time, in this order:
  • They said we had the wrong visa and each must pay $200
  • We said no.
  • an hour later they said that really we needed to pay $500 per each for a special visa
  • We said no.
  • A half hour later they said that only 1/2 of the people had to pay because the others had received their visa from the embassy. 
  • 20 minutes later they said No,  All had to pay, but only $200
  • Meanwhile we contacted our Hosts and they got a hold of very high level Immigration officials in Tanzania, who then provided direction to release us and for us to report to immigration on Monday.  They noted this in the passports.  
We lost three hours of our 36 hour vacation. 

That the facts Mam,  you can't make em up like that.



Some things need no pictures #1

Ok, they do, but I can't find the chord to the camera .  It is 3 hours from here.

First, on the CSC assignment side.  My four teammates and I presented to our hosts today a midterm review.  Now to be precise, it was really a full set of analysis and recommendations.  Two very hard weeks of volunteer consulting work went into it.  The meeting went well and on each slide of recommendations we had dialogue and we gained agreement from our hosts that the points were on target and good for them.  At the end, because I am a sales guy, I went for the final close and asked this question.  Is what IBM has done for you over the last two weeks what you expected and the answer was "  Yes,  more than 100%"      Sold.  
Big relief and we celebrate as a team the effort we put in, the late nights and many discussions as to how best to get across the points we wanted to make.  Big thanks to Aldrey, Sonja, Maria, Ashish.





Tuesday, March 13, 2012

Sweating it out

After 7 days with promises every morning that my air conditioner (now called a fan) would be fixed, I was promised that it would be fixed. lol  ya.

It is cooler outside at night than in my room and there is no way you want to open your window because of the mosquitoes and other cute little and big bugs.  Inside there is a mosquito net that covers your bed on top and all sides and you tuck it in. There is a ceiling fan that blows the air conditioner's hot air all over the bed.

The picture above looks slanted on the left because there is a wall there.

Every morning, the maid draws it all up to the head board and I have to pull it back and set it up.  It works really well and I have never had a bug inside it.

Now, outside the room is lots of cool stuff as well.  These are Sisal plants which are used to make baskets, rugs and other stuff.  Notice the tree like structures growing out of the middle of the plants.  Amazing site as you drive along and see hundreds of these.
And when you need your veggies, there is no lack of them.  I have been drinking fresh fruit drinks for a week and they are really good.  Passion fruit is the best, followed by Mango, Pineapple, and Watermellon.
Transport of your local fruits in quantity.  For those of you with leg cramps, this should be enough.

This picture is interesting.  Selling some kind of gas in containers.  But notice the sign for Alternative Energy and Solar Power.   And then add in the Ambulance and the guy sitting indoors with the towel covering him.  
Carrying
And there are many ways to move goods. 
Pulling


Biking

and Pushing














And Kim, my wife, will be happy that I can get some clothes while I am on this trip.
And if I had a car,  I could get it cleaned up here. 

Ok, 1am,  Time for bed. 

Sunday - Mikumi National Park



It is Sunday and we are off to Mikumi National Park at 6am.  Well almost,  Maria " Where are you?"   "There she is!", and we are off.

It was about a two hour drive and it turned out to be an incredibly fantastic drive and we were not even there yet.  About 20 minutes before arriving at the gate we saw several giraffes very close to the road.  There were a lot of ooohs and ahs and I have to admit it was amazing.  This Giraffe was maybe 50 feet from away from us.  Our guide, Charles, commented that it was unusual to see them along the highway.

   And then elephants, and we still are not to the gate.

We arrived at the park and the paperwork was handled - the stuff that says "if you get eaten by a lion, don't sue us".  Philip handled it all and we stood around anxious to get on with the Safari.  I was walking around and walked past the gate and somehow accidentally triggered the gate to go up and it is a huge gate arm.  The guard was not too impressed.

Mikumi is a truly huge park: 3,300 sq km (1,250 sq miles), the fourth largest park in Tanzania.


We all posed for the traditional group shot where IBM demonstrates that technical collaboration means that every person must have the same group shot taken with their own camera.
Above is Philip, Ross, Maria, Shaun, Ilona, Aldrey, Christie, Ashish, Xiao, Ian, Agusto, Charles (our Guide for the day), Jonathan

And then we drove through the park.  It is truly huge and sometimes you drive a long ways seeing nothing and then bang.  You see something like this which is truly jaw dropping.  Yes, 10 in this picture!


And Gazelles

and Baboons                                         and a Hippo                       and a Worm !





Locked horns 
Lunch at Mikumi and we could see the following in our view: monkeys, water buffalo, impallas, wildebeasts, a huge elephant herd of more that 50 of them, antelope
Wildebeast

Getting some food from mom

What you don't see in a zoo and we saw a lot of animals of different species together sharing the same areas



Water Buffalo

Wow,  there is always something holding up our Safari!


and yada yada yada ......

At the end of an exhausting day ...
 Aldrey                                    Agusto-  normal look        Phiilip earning his CSC  money

and Ross  . ... ready to go for another Safari ....