Friday, November 28, 2008



the office, where we did our work in the training village


at the local cafe in the training village where you can get egg sandwiches and nescafe...btw, it is about 110 degrees in the shade and there is about a 98 percent humidity level there.
celebrating my friend caleb's bday in conakry

Happy Turkey Day!

hey yall. so happy THANKSGIVING!!! more than every before in my life i realize how much i have to be thankful for. i love my family, and my friends all over the world. i love america. i love airconditioning. i love cheese. i love pie and turkey. yesteraday, i had more than lately of those things on that list. a really interesting thought i had yesterday as i sat around eating and laughing with my fellow pc volunteers and some of my best friends, is that although my family and friends from home are far away, and i have had very little contact for the past year, i still really felt a sense of home and comfort. what a far way i have come from a year ago, when i was absolutely scared to death if what awaited me here and how i would deal with a life away from america for 27 months. hmmm, well enough self reflection. one year down, one year to go:)

in other news, i just got back from the training village because G-17, a new group of trainees (my class was G-15, and G-16 arrived in july) will be arriving on December 4th and i am one of the volunteer trainers who will be helping with their "stage" (training). most volunteers who wanted to were able to sign up for a two week block during G-17's 9 week training, and we will be helping with technical training as well as emotional support and cultural integration. it was exciting to be back in the village where i spent my first few weeks in guinea. during our 3 days there, we met the new technical, language and cross cultural trainers who would be helping with the stage, and participated in sessions to design and schedule the training program. we did this by sector, so i was with all the other agroforestry volunteers, which was also awesome because we had a chance to share all our first year experiences and hear what did and did not work for who, and what we think was really important for the training and what no one has used and we think should maybe be eliminated or at least have less emphasis.

Now that im back in conakry im going to look up some information on some projects im doing, most notably bush rat breeding- like what they eat and how to take care of them etc. i also have to type up proposals for two projects im trying to get funding for. ill update you on those depending on their sucess.

anyway, i love yall and hope everyone has a happy holiday season!!! here is a little article i thought you might find interesting, i did.

sarah!

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/7647962.stm

Wednesday, November 19, 2008


Jess and I pointing to our hometowns on our completed World Map project


me in front of our un finished world map project (my friend jess and i painted it on the side of an elementary school)


more "wildlife of Africa"


my friends and i ready to go visit some bee hives


me getting in my gear to visit the bee hives


Halloween 2008 in Labe (regional capital of the Fouta region)...

from left: Brittany Spears, Sarah Palin (me), Cher, 80's Mafia Guy, Bush Fire, Black Eyed Pea, Magi Cube (like a bullion cube everyone eats here in their sauce), MSG (everyone eats packages of that too in their sauce here), Guinean School girl (that is what their uniforms look like here), another 80's Mafia man

again, another from my "wildlife of Africa" series

the taxi "gare" where i wait patiently (from 8am-2:30 pm two days ago) to get a bush taxi to fill up with enough passengers to leave (at least 3x the amt of seatbelts in the car)

more from my "wildlife of Africa" series...btw, this is a fly hanging off a piece of straw from my thatch roof


me with my friend Madame Sow's new baby Hashiatu

*i know im so sweaty it looks like i just gave birth haha but it was about 900 degrees in that room and people kept walking in and out making it hotter!*



at my friend Madame Sow's new baby's babtism