Tuesday, January 22, 2008

Holiday trip pics

Waterfall in Bouma Heritage park
I just got back this week from a trip to Suva for a workshop, and while there I was able to get my hands on the pictures from my Christmas/New Years trip. I didn't want to go over the trip until I got them, so i'm going to do a bit of time-traveling here and briefly go over my fabulous trip out in Taviuni. For most of the trip we were either camping of shacking up with other volunteers that live out that way. On our first day there we visited a volunteer friend of ours and went up to a "water slide" in the mountains surrounding his site. The term water slide is used loosely, as it is better described as 60meters of shallow rapids that you can rocket down like a slide. The locals are fantastic at it, going down head first and surfing their way down; my trips down weren't nearly as graceful, led to several bruises, and quite a few laughs for the fijian kids that were there. After spending the day there, we spend the night and the next couple days (including christmas) and a camp site towards the top of the island. The canadian dive instructor that had been living at the camp site for the last 6 weeks or so called it the best he had ever been to, and it difficult to argue with him. We made friends easily and had a peaceful christmas and boxing day there. We were able to finagle a decent discount, and went diving on Rainbow Reef while there, which was my first time diving in Fiji and was amazing(the picture below is from the dive trip). The following day we then went out to the west side of the island, hooked up with a volunteer living there and did the Bouma waterfall hike. The picture above is the lower falls (there are three).

On our way to Rainbow reef

The view from my campsite

Rope bridge on Lavena Coastal walk

Some of the Lavena youth posing
After a night in Waitabu village, we spend the evening in Lavena and went on the coastal walk to village has set up there. The walk takes you through the rainforest of the park there and end at a waterfall you can swim out to a dive off. After doing a bit of snorkeling out in the marine park on the westernside, we returned to the East. After spending the night in Somosomo village we got up early in the morning and hiked up the mountain to Lake Tacimocea. The Lake is surrounded by Fiji folk lore about it's origins, and is the only site where the Fiji national flower can be found (also called tacimocea). We spend the morning climbing the mountain (the picture directly below depicts one of the views on the hike up) and a couple hours searching for the flower and swimming in the lake.
The village boys and I looking out from atop the mountain


The Tacimocea flower

After the hike (which took 8 hours give or take), we headed back to our previous campsite where we spend a very low-key New Years Eve with a few other volunteers and some new friends
New Years in camp
We spend another day at camp snorkeling and enjoying a lazy New Years day. The following morning, on finding out our boat back to Vanua Levu had been canceled, we headed down to the Southern tip of the island (Vuna) for the night. There we did some pretty good snorkeling and such, then headed back home the following day.
One of the Orchid species native to Taviuni

Sunset in Vuna
All and all it was a great trip, can't wait to make it back out there.
Back to the present... My trip to Suva went well, the workshop I attended there was great. Now it's back to the grind here in Labasa for awhile. I have some meeting and a WWF workshop scheduled for the end of the week, so hopefully all goes well and I am able to generate some more work through this week.
As an aside, one of our volunteer's dogs in Savusavu had puppies last week, and I think I have been talked into taking one. Since my roommate left the old house has been a little empty, so it may be good to get another living thing hanging around.
Puppies!
Hope all is well with everyone, and I hope to get back on here in a week or so. Send me updates and any ideas you have for Dog names!

Sunday, January 13, 2008

quick note on address

Just a quick note to let you know I have a new address that will make my mail a bit more reliable. So, if any of you are inclined to send me anything please use the following address:

P.O. Box 2589
Labasa, Fiji islands
If you sent something to the other address, no worries, is will still get here, it will just take a bit longer. I write up here again in a week or so.

Friday, January 11, 2008

Back to work

Buavou village
Mikelle being a good volunteer and catching rain water during our "cyclone" scare
We may have been going a little stirr crazy after being in the same house with 11 volunteers for 24 hours

I have great stories and such from my christmas vacation, but I want to wait to share those until I have the pictures from the trip to post (which should be by the end of next week), so check back in a few days for that.
I got back about a week ago, and hopefully I can hit the ground running here on some work in the new year. This past week I made a couple of field visits to aquaculture farms in the area. One of the things I hear the most from villages in the MPA areas is that they have not found a way to supplement the income and food generation that they have lost due to setting aside some of their fishing areas to be protected. As such, I am working on traveling around to the villages in the Provence that have sustainable income generating projects, looking over their operations, identifying individuals in the community who can transfer these skills to other communities, and then trying to connect the dots. Theoretically it is a good plan, as there is some governmental money set aside to help some of these projects to get off the ground, but we'll see how it goes logistically. The visits this week have been good, and there is certainly a large market available for aquaculture product and for the communities that have a low supply, it is good protein source. I am also looking at communities that do bee keeping, pearl farming, and seaweed farming to visit in the next month or so. Hopefully after that I will have a small array of possible projects that interested villages can chose from based on their needs and community assets.
Otherwise things are kinda slow here in Labasa. I've been the only volunteer in town (as the others are still finishing out their holiday vacations), so it's been pretty quiet. Next week i will be in Suva for a couple of work days and then a three day training at the end of the week (I was chosen to work in out peer support network here, and they are bringing the eight of us in to teach us how to support our peers). My plan is to get back up here next weekend when I return and write again.
I hope every one's holidays here great, mine certainly were. I look forward to hearing updates from all you guys.