Saturday, 10 April 2010

More dentistry


I forgot to include this photo on the earlier blog - it's a shrine to toothache - if you have toothache, you nail a rupee to the shrine and your toothache is miraculously cured without the need to visit the dentist - amazing!

Friday, 9 April 2010

Shopping, shopping, shopping - instalment 2


Even the cows were shopping


Cleaning day at the temple


Rickshaw rank


Transport in Old Town


Dentist anyone?


The teeth in the bowl were real (the flash has obscured them a bit) - I had to drag Alison and Emma away from this window, the gruesome pair!

Shopping, shopping, shopping


Alison and Emma improving their karma


Tibetan hair extensions - yes, really


Emma at a shiny, sparkly shop


Very quick post - only 15 mins of electric left! Went into Thamel with Emma today and shopped till we dropped - spent quite a long time in the old town, down an alleyway with lots of 'shiny, sparkly shops' (bindis and bracelets!). I got blessed by a holy man and now have a big red blob on my head; someone touched Alison and then crossed themselves (is she really a Goddess?); we improved our karma by spinning prayer wheels in a temple; we wandered down 'dentist alley' - euw - and spent ages just looking at the general chaos - great fun.

Run out of time to post more photos - will try again tomorrow with the rest.

Ann & Alison
x

Thursday, 8 April 2010

Circus painters, and swimming


The street outside our house - why did the chickens cross the road?


The daredevil circus performance by the painters across the road. The scaffold is only tied on with two bits of rope at the top


We spent ages watching them (occasionally covering our eyes when we were sure they were going to fall!)


Swimming - the deep end


The shallow end

Wednesday, 7 April 2010

Busy, busy, busy


Thamel


Playing the stones game - hours are spent throwing a stone up in the air, picking various others up off the ground and then catching the one you threw - I'm rubbish at it


Emma and I posing for the camera - obligatory when you hand it over to one of the girls!


Jeni Rai with tiffin (lunch) - a huge cake!


Rasmita practicing hula hooping

I can't believe it's over a week since I updated the blog last time. It's been very busy, plus we've tended to be out during the times that the electricity's been on so there's been no opportunity to sit down and write this.

We've spent most of our time up at the top house with the kids, playing cards or a word/picture game that we bought, and Alison's been brushing up on her basketball, skipping and running around. There's been an epidemic of tickling as well - that's always popular up there!

We had a second thunderstorm the night after the first last week - it was spectacular - huge bolts of lightning and loud thunder that went on for about 3 hours. One of the volunteers here managed to get some amazing photos so I'm hoping he'll email a couple to us.

We took three of the girls (Anu, Anita and Anu Maya) out to do some shopping and have lunch at the big supermarket last week. They'd been sent some spending money and Michael (the founder of NOH) had been intending to take them but had lots of other things to do that day, so we offered to go with them instead. As I think I said before, the supermarket has escalators - a rarity in Kathmandu - and the girls hadn't seen them before. The youngest one, Anita, leapt on and off like a pro after the first trip up the escalator, but Anu Maya (the oldest) was really scared - after four trips she was still really nervy and had to hold my hand! We spent ages in the toy department and of course the girls only wanted Barbie dolls (well, the Indian equivalent) - the more shiny nylon tacky dresses with the dolls the better it seemed. After they'd decided on their dolls, we went to the Bakery Cafe for lunch. It's staffed completely by people who are deaf, which worried the girls for a few minutes, and then they ate the biggest lunch ever - pizza, chips and momos (tibetan dumplings) followed by huge ice creams and washed down with Fanta. The Fanta here is the most intense orange colour - we've dubbed it 'nuclear'. What became very clear during lunch is how conscientious the kids are about not wasting food. There was too much for them, really, but they were determined not to leave it, and were visibly upset when Alison left a few pizza slices because she was too full. It's a humbling reminder that we have so much greed and waste at home - in our own kitchens every day.

There was an expedition to the swimming pool on Monday morning followed by a birthday tea for all the kids with a March birthday. The swimming pool's in a leisure club that's still being built just down the road from here, called The Nature Club. The pool's finished, but there's building going on everywhere which is so typically Nepal. The kids had a brilliant time - although I think the water was pretty cold - there wasn't much swimming going on but lots and lots of splashing and screaming! The swimming costumes here are all really sweet - it's not the done thing for a Nepali girl to show off her body in a swimming costume, so they all have little skirts which are really cute! It was funny, though, watching all the boys posing and trying to look cool in their swimming shorts - some things are the same the world over!

I"m sure there are other things I should tell you about, but for now I can't think of them - we're just trying to make sure that we fit all the things in that we want to do now before we leave for home - like visit a couple of the big temples here, go to Bhaktapur for Nepali New Year (April 14th - it will be the year 2067 here), and finish washing all the blankets! If you'd like to see how Emma (the Volunteer Manager) has been getting Alison to contribute to the running of the house, have a look at www.travelpod.com/travel-blog-entries/duncanemma/3/1270221727/tpod.html (don't think that will show as a link, but copy and paste and hopefully it'll work).

Have stuck a few photos onto this post but there are more to come off the camera from swimming and playing at the house, so I'll try to post a few tonight or tomorrow.

Ann & Alison
x

Tuesday, 30 March 2010

Half way

Well, that's us at the halfway mark with our trip - 27 days till we get on the plane home, and somehow I think they'll go more quickly than the first 27.

The kids finished their exams today and are on two weeks' holiday now. Quite a few of them are going home for the holidays - those that have one parent, or other extended family to stay with, so the numbers will be lower over the holidays. Our favourite kids (no, we don't have favourites, of course not - well, ok, we do) are going to be away over the holiday so hopefully we'll have time to catch up with them again once they're back for school. We're hoping to spend as much time with the kids as we can over the fortnight and then maybe try again to help out with those that are being home-schooled for the two weeks before we leave. There are a couple of trips planned I think, including swimming on Monday at the local health club. We pass the health club on the way down the hill to the supermarket - it looks like a construction site, so that'll be an interesting day out I'm sure!

We went shopping to the big (and very swanky) supermarket at Bhat Bateni the other day (it has escalators - ooohhhh!!) and amongst other things Alison found hula hoops (the sort that go round your waist, not the sort in packets - we miss them) so we picked up a few. We took one down to Babita's house (there are 30 girls there and there's no garden, just a roof terrace). The kids had never seen one before and thought it was hysterical - they were all having a go - think we're going to need to go back to the supermarket and buy more! We've also bought some story books to read with the kids and to form the beginning of a library for them - Lauren, a Professor of English who's volunteering here has also bought books, so hopefully they'll have a wee library that future volunteers can add to. The kids don't seem to read for pleasure very much - the focus is all on study.

We've nearly finished our blanket washing duties - only another three to go and they'll all be done. Not sure I ever want to see another blanket in my life, particularly not one that has to be washed in cold water in a bucket...but it's been good to be useful.

There was a huge thunderstorm tonight with sheet and forked lightning and really loud thunder. We all watched it from the roof terrace until the rain started and we had to take refuge. It was amazing. Five new folk have arrived today - from one of the most exclusive private schools in Switzerland - think we've all got culture shock (they're very clean and shiny!) - so it'll be interesting to see how that goes. I think they're going on placement to Bigu sometime in the next few days (which is where I'd go if it wasn't so far - it's a Buddhist nunnery up in the mountains and looks amazing). They're looking at whether they can start a programme of sending a group of students every year to volunteer in Nepal, which would be really good.

Anyway, it's way past my bedtime - it's 9pm for goodness sake - we're usually in bed by 7.30pm - and I now have the cold that Alison has generously passed on to me, so I'm going to head for bed and some more Beechams.

Will probably have photos to post sometime into the holidays, so will catch up again then.

Ann & Alison
x

Saturday, 27 March 2010

Who to choose?

We were thinking that we could take some of the kids out for a treat.At first we were only going to take Anu and Anita,but then it turned into Anu,Anita,Ramila and Shushmita!

There is a really nice little restraunt that sells pizza and stuff so we will take them there.Then we will take them for ice cream.Then we will take them to the garden of dreams!

We will tell you how it went.

Alison : )( :