Friday, February 11, 2011

A calmer day

This morning I woke to the rare treat of a quiet flat.  So, I yoga-d on the terrace with the rising sun to wake me up and warm me up!  After my flatmates awoke, we headed to the beach.  It was so windy that the sand pelted us as we tried to lay out.  I strung my swim-suit-cover-up-dress-thingy around my head like a hijab to keep the sand out of my eyes, ears, mouth, and nose.  Some of the other ladies were not so lucky.  Those unfortunate people are still digging sand out of their ears, hair, and plenty of other crevices.  We walked up and back to the closest grocery, made ostrich pasta sauce with wilted spinach and pasta, and went to a Port Elizabeth Southern Kings pro rugby game at one of the Soccer World Cup stadiums.  The sweetest part of the game was at half time when they lit an orange smokebomb and within a few seconds some of the gladiators, the team mascots, parachuted into the stadium and landed on the field.  It was SOOOO cool.  They both hit the ground so hard that their knees collapsed.  The game was also really interesting and, sad to say, but a lot more exciting than American Football.  I would love to watch it regularly.  Another almost-as-exciting-part was when I showed Taylor a sweet HUGE moth on the sweatshirt of the boy sitting in front of us.  We quickly switched spots and she got the moth out of his arm pit without him noticing, despite a whole row of girls laughing hysterically, lol.  Then the moth just hung out on her sleeve for the rest of the game.  She hypothesized that the bug was drawn into the light and had nowhere to go, so it fell.  She said that it just hung out on her sleeve because when insects get too cold, they can’t fly.  So there you have it!  Ya can’t get between a girl and her bugs, right? Haha.

Here are some more pics from the tour yesterday:

Unexplored beach.

The South African Flag!  It's on the highest hill in the city.

Homes in New Brighton Township, the location of two of our three service sites.

This is where I will be volunteering in the preschool room on Monday and Tuesday mornings.

Can you see how far the township stretches?  It's unbelievable how many shacks there are.  In these shacks there is usually no running water or sewage.  There is a little house outside with a bucket for a toilet.  There is a high incidence of rape because young girls need to go out and use the rest room in the night when men are floating home from the spaza shops and bars.  Families as big as ten can share one bucket and then put it out on the street for pick-up in the morning.  If the municipality lays people off for lack of funding or the vehicles don't have gas or any number of other issues than the people do not receive the luxury of waste removal.



A township

An ancient-looking woman sweeping her front walk way.

A look at the path to the pottery house, Aya's Pottery, from the inside.

The front gate of Aya's.


Woman carry VERY heavy loads on their heads.  It is amazing to see how they maintain their posture.  Sometimes they carry enough water for the whole day on their heads back to their homes.

Children from a school who went nuts when they saw our bus.  They are adorable.

Some of the homes in the townships received solar panels as part of a government funded initiative to get electricity to the townships that was promised when the Apartheid government fell in 1994.  Seventeen years later the African National Party (ANC) has not delivered on the simplest promises.


Beautiful coastline but a cloudy day.
The Ford, GMC, and VW plants are on the coast on the way to our service sites.  There are also tire factories close to the townships to provide cheap labor that does not require extra transportation to the factory.  These cars are ready to ship.

All of the white vehicles ready to be shipped.

Ford, GMC or VW vehicles ready to ship around the world.  The factories keep the people employed.  During Reagan's presidency there were sanctions on South Africa's trade that severely stunted the growth and success of the manufacturing and shipping of vehicles out of PE.
Another beautiful vase.
More pottery

2 comments:

  1. Nice pictures again. Help to see what the environment there is. Enjoy each moment.

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  2. Great shots LinZ! Thanks for sharing.

    DawnW

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