Saturday, October 18, 2008
Same Story
During the first week of October all 57 of the volunteers here in Fiji were brought into Nadi for our annual All Volunteer conference. Immedietely following my group stayed in Nadi for our Middle of Service conference. These two conferences have not traditionally been run consecutively (in the past All Vol. was done over Thanksgiving), but due to budget cuts back home and the depreciation of the dollar in conjunction with rising transportation costs have forced us to tighten the belt a bit and combine trips; the result was all of us being in Nadi for about a week. It was good to see some of the volunteers I do not get a chance to that often, however I'm not a huge fan of Nadi (international airport is there as are several of Fiji's larger resorts, as such it is expensive and tacky; not to mention seeing the sterotypical tourist from our country that comes to Fiji, spends two weeks at a resort that they never leave and is strikingly similar to one they might find in Virgina Beach, and then goes home feeling like they got the Fiji experience bumms me out a bit), and I truthfully would have rathered spent my time elsewhere. That being said, the conference was one of the better run ones we have had since I have been here and it is good to see out post growing up a bit and improving as time goes by.
This past week I spent three days in my province's chiefly village, Naduri. The first two were for our bi-annual provincial council meeting, and the third was for the annual Macuata Day celebration. The council meeting lagged on a bit as I was not involved in it as much this time around, but the Macuata Day celebration was a pretty good time. The main purpose of the event is for the provincil office to raise the 40% of its operating budget that comes from the communities they serve. In that sense it was quite successful in my opinion, the final figure I saw was $65,000 raised, which I believe to be a significant amount. Each tikina (think county) set up a stall on the village grounds that their representative delegation sat and drank kava in throughout the day. Each tikina also brought local dishes for a shared lunch and preformed a meke (a fijian tradition dance) or other item for general entertainment. Aside from the tikina that illegally brought a dozen sea turtles for the feast, it was a nice event and it was great to see people from all over the province celebrating together.
My work on the park here in Labasa has stalled a little bit. The Town Council is in the process of reconfiguring their lease on the park's land, and they have asked us to delay our renovations until they have finalized that (which will probably take about 3 weeks or so). We did however receive some more funding from the Festival Committee and are in the process of panning some other environmental/beautification projects around town.
We have had some funding and transportation problems over at the Ministry of Fisheries office that have kept us from getting out into the field as much as we need to. We have about half-a-dozen fish ponds that are ready to be harvested, so hopefully that will all rectify itself here in the next week or so and we can get back out there. I am trying to set up a better working relationship between our office here in Labasa and the local resturants and hotels so that we have a fixed market for the tilipia the local farmers are producing. I am also working on creating a manual that the ministry can use to help train interested communities on small scale aquaculture. These have kept me busy, but it's mostly office/town work and I'm itching to get in the field more.
My big success for the past 7 weeks or so has been my garden; it is starting to get pretty respectable. I have 4ft high long bean plants, a couple rows of broccoli, 3 rows of spinach, a couple nice squash plants, about a dozen good looking tomato vines, and a mint plant that is getting out of control. Those added to the preexisting papaya, mango, lemon, chili, and coconut trees on the property are working to make it a nice little oasis here in town. I hoping to get some more beans in this weekend along with a few other things. I am a little concerned on how some of these plants will fare during the upcoming raining season (about a month away), but it is still pretty exciting to walk back there everyday.
Thats about all I have for the time being. I will do all I can to get up here next week. I hope all is well...
Friday, September 5, 2008
A Long August
It has been a pretty busy month, and it has unfortunately kept me from writing up here as often as I would like. The organization that has been funding my environmental group had their week long festival here at the end of August, which has kept me a bit preoccupied. For being run only a week in a small town in Fiji, the Festival of the Friendly North raises a pretty substantial about of money; we grossed this year about $125 thousand (net is expected to be around $100 thousand). All of the money that is raised goes towards community projects in the greater Labasa area. Through the past couple years they have constructed new wings for an elderly nursing home, dormitories for a local school for the handicapped, aid to flood victums, a fitness center here in town, and contributed towards several other smaller projects (including the town beautification that I am currently assisting with). The funds raised this year are planned to go towards building a mortuary in a rural town a couple hours east of Labasa and continued beautification work. It is a great organization and I have been very happy to have been a part of it. The Fiji Sun did a short write up on the beautification project (I'm kind of a big deal here, I own many leather bound books...people know me...), and it can be found here: http://www.fijisun.com.fj/main_page/view.asp?id=5472 . They miss quoted me a bit, but the general idea still came through I think.
The pictures above are from the Festival parade where some of the members of my environmental group (H.O.P.E. Labasa) along with some of the other volunteers in the area marched. They gave me a night to MC the entertainment program and a small amount of time to speak on the final day of Festival about our beautification/environmental work. Between these I think we got a decent amount of awareness out to the area about our group and what we are trying to accomplish. We received quite a bit of good feedback and have started getting some new support since the Festival, and we seem to be gathering a bit of steam as we go on.
As scheduled, we began work on the park here in town midway through August. The Labasa police came out and joined members of H.O.P.E. to start the clean-up of the park, and we are looking at begining construction here in the next couple weeks. We have been asked to aid in the creation of a children's park around the new fitness center that the Festival funded, and we are hoping to do some youth education work with some of the new funding that should be coming in now with the completion of the Festival.
Otherwise things are going well. I have started working about half the week over at the Ministry of Fisheries. They have several projects they are juggling, and right now I am going around and trying to figure out exactly where I can best fit in. I have been taking it a bit easy this week, as with the Festival and everything there have been a lot of visitors and late nights. It looks like (keeping my fingers crossed) that we will be starting the reef surveys in a week or so, which will keep me busy and traveling for awhile, but I'll do my best to write back up here soon. I hope all is well with everyone.
Sunday, August 3, 2008
Back Again
I feel like I start off a lot of these posts this way, but I apologize for being a bit derelict in posting recently; it has been a crazy month or so filled with several projects, several visitors, and several new responsibilities for me. I am really going to make a better concerted effort to get back to the once-a-week posts.
My friend Jessica just completed her visit to Fiji last week. She was in for 8 days or so, during which we spend a few days on Viti Levu around Sigatoka and Suva, then the rest of her time up here in the Labasa region. It was a good little break from the grind, and it was nice to see someone else from home out here; I hope to get some pictures from the trip up in a couple weeks or so. Jessy attended one of the meetings for the Marine Protected Area project I am helping WWF up here with, and in the process found her way to making an appearance in the Fiji Times, one of Fiji's national newspapers. Thanks to the wonders of the internet, you can see the picture (jess is on the far right and I am sitting next to her obstructed by the man in front of me) at the following link: http://www.fijitimes.com/story.aspx?id=96136
I have been doing quite a bit of work recently with the environmental group I helped to form here, H.O.P.E (Helping Our Polluted Environment) Labasa. We just completed out first project, which was organizing the primary and secondary school children around town to come out and help us paint the new trash cans places along the main road. We received a write up in the paper for it, which can be found at the link here: http://www.fijitimes.com/story.aspx?id=95729 We are now in the process of renovating a park here in town. It has been pretty exciting, as we have received several donations and quite a bit of free labor for the endeavor, and it looks like we will be "breaking ground," so to speak, in a week or so. Labasa is glaringly lacking any green areas in town, and we are hoping that crreating this park will be a stepping stone to creating more awareness about environmental issues to the population here as a whole.
I also just started to officially work with the Ministry of Fisheries up here. It's looking like I will be focusing on their aquaculture program, which I am really looking forward to as it has very good potential up on this island and there seems to be a healthy amount of interest and funding. They are also the lead organization on the spat collection and seaweed farming projects I have been trying to promote, so I stand to be able to continue with that as well. I feel like I am finally at a point between my work with the environmental group, the provincial office, and the ministry of fisheries that I have full work days, which may sound a bit odd, but it comforting to be busy....
Three new volunteers just arrived here in Labasa; all female and all working in the health sector. It's really good to have some new blood up here; they have all come up being pretty energetic and motivated, and it's brought some new life up here which is great.
Thats about all I have for now, I'll get back up here in a week or so.
Wednesday, July 2, 2008
Back
During the next couple weeks the group that came in before mine will be departing. It only reinforces how fast the past year has seemed to go. It also looks like I will be invloved with starting a youth organization in the area. A local NGO (Save the Children) is looking to expand a branch of one of their programs up into my provenence, and they are planning on using my position here as a facilitation point to make it happen. It should be a good project; it deals a lot with empowering children and young adults to take leadership rolls and such. I don't have a whole lot of experience with these kinds of things, but I'm looking forward to the prospect of it. I go back down to Suva in a couple weeks for another training sessions. The new groups finds out their sites in July 4th, and we are all eagerly anticipating it to find out which of the new volunteers are coming up to our area. I have a few other things going on here and there, but I should be able to get back up here next week.
Wednesday, June 11, 2008
I am getting ready to make a trip down to
Not a whole lot going on up here the last week or so. I am working on getting a meeting together of local Labasa leaders and other stake holders to discuss the environmental issues we are dealing with in the city and strategies we can look at to solve them (or at the least mitigate them). The impetus for the meeting is figuring out the best way to use some funding that is available for projects working on these things, and the hope would be to bring other organizations that are trying to do the same kind of work into the fold so that we can pool our resources and do something a bit bigger than we would be able to accomplish on our own individually. So, going into all this we have some good ideals, let’s hope we can keep that legitimacy and come out of it with something good.
If I don’t get back up here next week it is because I’m going to be kinda all over the place. I will do my best to post something soon after.
Monday, June 2, 2008
Ok, so I have gotten a lot of flack about keeping the person who visited me unnamed. I tried to respect said person’s right to privacy, but this was apparently not needed (in some people’s cases unappreciated). So, with unneeded building up, Mary Margaret Popelar, famed Long John Silver’s company rep, UD grad, and Wasigo resident came to visit me a couple weeks ago. We had a great time. She came up and spent a week or so in Labasa, during which she piggy-backed on some of my work trips around the area and did some work with the Salvation Army kindergarten here in town. We then spend a few days in Taviuni, where we finally saw some sunshine and relaxed in one of my favorite places here in this country. After Tavs, we spent a couple nights in the big city, down in
Mary left on Sunday the 25th. Afterwards I came back to Labasa and jumped straight back into work. WWF held a workshop in Naduri (the chiefly village of my province; it is about an hour and a half from Labasa). They brought representatives from the 37 villages in the Marine Protected Area (MPA) network that I work with in to the village to look at how the network has worked out so far, and if there are any changes that need to be made. It went pretty well I thought, and there were several big decisions made. Together, we redrew many of the MPAs and worked on starting some freshwater and forest reserves. They are really trying to take an ecosystem based approach to the conservation up here, which I think is the right mindset to have because (especially in as small a place as Fiji is) the activities that go on upstream in rivers and on the land greatly influence the status of our marine areas. There is still quite a bit of work to be done, but I think that the organizations working up here are moving in the correct direction.
I have also been doing some work here with a local organization on some beautification and environmental friendliness work around Labasa. They run a festival up here every August and use the proceeds from it to do community projects in the area. One of their areas of emphasis this year is to better the look and environmental impact Labasa has. In this capacity, they have asked me to advise them and too look into a suitable project for them to work on in these areas. It’s kind of exciting, as they actually have a bit of money and quite a bit of motivation to do some of this work. So far it is going well, and I am getting some good suggestions and involving some good people to look at all this. It has the potential to be a really good start for the area.
Two weeks ago the new group also arrived. So the office has been busy recently with their training. They have asked me to come in and help facilitate four of the training sessions for the new group over the next 2 months or so. It’s kind of a strange feeling now being on the other side of the training deal. I remember being in their place last year and thinking that all these people knew so much and had so much that I could learn from, and I guess I just don’t feel like that large of a resource as I built the volunteers I met in training up to be. Interesting how life moves I guess.
So, I will be making several trips back and fourth to
Tuesday, May 13, 2008
Finally
Kid with a killer mullet
Friday, I went down to the Fiji Institute of Technology campus here in town for their clean-up day. We cleaned up the campus area then walked down the main street picking up the trash. There were maybe about 50 people, and I think the event went really well. There were several people along the way who stopped and asked the students where they were from and what they were doing, and I feel that it worked well to help raise awareness about the trash problem in the area. It is certainly not sufficient to change much, but it at the least showed the town that the youth would like to see a better Labasa. After the clean-up, the students did some of their traditional dances and participated in sports events for the rest of the afternoon, which is a great way to run an event like this; everyone works in the morning, then goes out and has fun in the afternoon. I was very happy with the way they pulled it off, and especially with the beautification work we are talking about, it brought to light some very good issues.
The last couple days I was out on Mali Island, just off the coast of Labasa. One of the villages out there asked me to go out and talk to their people about the spat collection (juvenile oyster’s collected to sell to pearl farms) project that I am trying to promote in the area. I ended up speaking with two villages on the island about the project, and I think it went pretty well. One of the villages is interested for sure, and we can go on to the next step with them and the other is going to discuss it this week and get back to me. I have been trying to find a community to try this project out since February, and it is exciting that one may have signed on yesterday.
I have some more work to do on the beautification project to do the rest of the week. I think my guest and I will travel out to Taviuni and maybe down to the main island middle of next week before she has to leave, so I may not be able to write back up here for another week or so. But, when I get back I should have some good stories.
Monday, April 28, 2008
Back from Suva
I just got back on Sunday from the national track championships in
Monday, April 14, 2008
Some Bad News
So, some bad news; I found out late last week that the race I had been training for (scheduled for May 17th) has been canceled. This is a bit disappointing as I had been training for it (not including some injury time) for about 30 weeks and had made some travel plans around it, but I’ll have to roll with the punches I guess. There is a triathlon or two coming up on the horizon that I imagine I can continue training for, so all is not lost.
Work has been a little slow this past week. The village visits that my office has been planning have continued to be delayed (it’s now been about 15 days since we were supposed to start), and unfortunately not much else had been planned for this period of time. I do have the national track meet coming up next week (we leave on tues), which is exciting. The two day meet is going to be shown live on television in 12 pacific countries; I’m told it’s the largest secondary school track meet in the world (but these claims have a high probability of being over inflated); at the least, it’s the largest in the pacific. The kids and the school are starting to get excited, and it’s hard not to get wrapped up in the energy. We’ll be in Suva for about 5 days, so it should be interesting traveling around the big city with twenty-one 15-18 year olds.
That is about all that has gone on in the last week. There have been a few people in and out of town, so the place hasn’t been too lonely. The dog is growing quickly and starting to test his boundaries; it’s an exciting time for the little guy. Otherwise all is well. I’ll get back up here before I leave next week for Suva. Take care….
Monday, April 7, 2008
Busy April
It’s been a busy last couple weeks. Although we did not, as scheduled, start our village visits. Those are now scheduled to begin tomorrow, and I am hoping to catch a ride with the team that will be visiting all the coastal villages from Udu point down by boat. It’s a great opportunity and I hope it works out, but I have a few responsibilities to tie up here before I would be able to go, and it may be a on the wire decision as to whether I can.
The track team I have been coaching ran in their zone meet (the equivalent to our regional meet in the states) two Fridays ago. We finished 2nd, behind a school that fielded a team 4 times the size of ours, and finished with gold medals in 15 events. We will be taking the individuals/relay teams from those 15 events to
Last week was pretty granola, but I did make a weekend trip down to Savusavu. Several of us came in, and had a belated Easter and birthday gathering for one of the volunteers in town there. Our visit coincided with the current prime ministers visit, and a few of us randomly ran into him at one of the hotels there and promptly accosted him for photos and conversation. Consequently enough, I also brought the dog down (who is named after the prime minister……) and took him out to the beach for the first time. He wasn’t exactly all that excited about it, but he now knows that the earth is not covered by just land; and important lesson for anyone. I also say a bid of the Aberdeen Rugby 7’s tournament, and the
Otherwise, all is well. I just sent in my expression of interest to be involved with the next group’s training, so hopefully one or more of my ideas will be accepted. I am also continuing to prepare for the race in May, which is quickly approaching, and it looks like I might have a state side visitor around that time, which is all kinds of exciting. If I make it on this trip I’m not sure when I will post again, but hopefully I will be able to find some time in the next week or so.
Wednesday, March 26, 2008
Following the holiday...
After the long four day Easter holiday, things are working back towards normalcy. The weekend was good though, and it was nice to have the time to settle into the house and get a few out-of-work things taken care of. A local friend of mine got married over the weekend, so most of my evenings were taken up by those ceremonies (Hindi weddings have three days/nights worth of ceremonies around the wedding day). I unfortunately missed the actual wedding ceremony, but the other three nights were a pretty good time.
Tuesday, March 18, 2008
The Last Couple Weeks
The week before last I started pitching my IGP project to the tikinas. I believe it went pretty well, although I would be lying if I did not admit to some discomfort in speaking to these large groups of people in my own special combination of Fijian and English, but all in all I was happy with how it went. There were a few interested parties, and most said they would contact me after the Easter holiday, so hopefully I will start to hear back from some interested communities around that time.
Last week Peace Corps had a conference in the Suva area, in which 13 of us attended with a youth from our community, to go through some project design and management training. I went with a 21 year old guy from here in Labasa that had been working for the Ministry of Youth and Sports. The conference went well, and we have worked out a plan to do some lifeskills workshops together (HIV awareness, reproductive health, STD education, etc.) with the youth groups in the province up here. I think it’s a great idea, and is certainly a need in many of the communities here. The only possible kink in the plan is finding a funding source. We have some leads, and some people to start talking to (of course after the holiday); so hopefully we can work something out.
The conference ended on Saturday morning, and afterwards a few of us went back out to our host villages for lunch and the afternoon. I was a little hesitant to go back, but I’m really glad that I did; it was wonderful to see some of those people again and it really made me feel like I had a family of sorts that I could visit there at any time. After spending the day out in the village, I met up with several other volunteers in Suva where we had a Fiji version of a St. Patrick’s Day celebration at a pseudo-Irish pub there. The following morning I returned to Labasa, and started the relatively painstaking process of putting the new house together (I’m just about finished).
It’s a short week this week (Monday was Prophet Mohammad’s observed birthday, and Friday is Good Friday), so there is not a whole lot going on. I had planned on maybe traveling over the long Easter weekend, but I have a few commitments here and a wedding invitation that may keep me at home. My best to everyone, and I should be able to get up here next week.
Wednesday, February 27, 2008
Some new work
Tuesday, February 19, 2008
This past week I have also been able to start running again. If you didn't know, I strained a ligament in my ankle that has kept me down for the last several weeks. So, it's quite nice to be getting back out there and training again.
I leave tomorrow to go down to Savusavu to visit their pearl farms. Apparently the Ministry of Fisheries is offering a program that will allow rural villages to collect and sell Spate clam young to their pearl farms. It looks to be a relatively lucrative industry for some of the small communities and I am anxious to get down there and get the details.
Otherwise, it's life as usual here in Fiji. I should be able to get back up here next week. Hope all is well....
Tuesday, February 12, 2008
Hmmm
Monday, February 4, 2008
January Rains
Morning on the coast
Tuesday, January 22, 2008
Holiday trip pics
The view from my campsite
Rope bridge on Lavena Coastal walk
Some of the Lavena youth posing