Monday, November 27, 2006

wha- whe- how- ???

only a condensed version this time, you'll be pleased to hear... I'm still here, alive and kicking (lots of kicking, not so much life). Have just been to Port Moresby for a few days for a meeting, and now work is even more crazy than it's been so far. Surely it will let up soon, all these jobs have their lulls, right?

Other developments:
1. I'm forgetting how to speak English... couldn't decide whether 'operationalizing' was really a word when I was reading through someone else's bit of a funding proposal. Certainly would be in pidgin (along with classics like developmentis-im, strategis-im, plann-im, etc.), but not so sure from the point of view of a US donor.
2. A fellow AYAD hassled me the other day about working too hard and not doing my job as far as the AYAD program is concerned (not enough 'capacity building'). After agonising moments of extra guilt and feeling even more hopeless than before, have decided to apply Solomons Time to this dilemma, for now.
3. You'll have to make the rest up... I'm tired and going home for now.


This is a picture of my workmate/counterpart John Pita and a new friend he made while at the meeting in PNG.

Thursday, November 16, 2006

confused roosters, mysterious substances

I've moved into a new house until I go to Gizo - on Tanuli Ridge. I'm living with three other volunteers; Ben, Steph and Gen. The house is pretty cool, and there's an extended hours canteen at the top of the exciting driveway where we can pop up to buy odd bits and pieces, or just gather gossip.

Good points = nice people, handy location (don't have to walk all the way through town on my way to work), ultimate frizbee.

Bad points = confused rooster next door, who wakes me up at around 4 most mornings, lack of internet.

We have weekly dinners for the volunteers, and anyone else who wants to come along. Last night I was all excited about making chick pea curry. I hadn't managed to get into town to stock up on spices, but I knew there were at least some at the house. Hunting through the cupboards I happily added some cumin or garam masala or something (bit hard to tell when everything's a bit stale), and a good whack of what I thought was ground coriander. Tossed in highly prized tinned tomatoes etc., tasted and was shocked by a very distinctive bitter flavour. After a few more tastes to work out what the bitterness was I realised my mouth was numb, and came to the conclusion that the coriander was kava in disguise. Probably not Fijian judging by the potency. I managed to salvage the dish by rinsing the sauce off and starting again, but everyone did seem pretty mellow by the end of the evening...

Tuesday, November 07, 2006

I found Nemo and an island paradise

Saturday 4 November 2006

Well, my trip to Western Province was an interesting experience! Gizo is definitely a much nicer place to be than Honiara. It’s a smaller, one-street town, the people are generally a bit friendlier, the market is REALLY good (smaller than Honiara, but heaps of fresh fish every afternoon), it’s cleaner, less dusty and nowhere near as smelly. And it’s closer to lots of really nice places out west too. The only disadvantage is the number of tourists, and the (mainly British) medical students who seem to be journeying to SI and Western Province in particular en masse.

After a delayed flight we (Dale, the WWF South Pacific coordinator and I) touched down for a refueling stop in Munda, where Julian Moti recently sneaked back to the Solomon Islands courtesy of the PNG defence force. Then onto Gizo, where the airstrip is actually on a separate island (not sure if this is because there’s not enough flat land on Ghizo Island, or just so that the single boat taxi operator can make a killing through this essential service…). Arriving lunchless and starving I then had to walk past the market; masses of very fresh looking fish, fish and chips, fruit, etc etc. and go straight to the office to meet the staff. It was pushing 4 on a Friday, and normal office hours are 8 – 4:30, so we were stretching company loyalty expecting people to wait around for too long.

We just went around the table doing quick introductions, and having people talk a little bit about their projects or what they are working on. Everyone was really nice, and it seems like an interesting range of projects that WWF-SI has going. Most of the work is on marine conservation in the Western part of SI; particularly assisting communities to assess their resources and use patterns, identify areas of conservation priority, develop management plans for various kinds of protected areas, monitor species and populations, education and awareness raising, and training in alternative sustainable livelihoods. The first project technical report since I started was due on Tuesday, so that forced me to get my head around at least one of the projects. The project manager had written it, I just had to edit and check that the donor requirements had been met, and check the financial reports for this and another project which also had a financial report due. I was pretty nervous about going back to the project manager with the fairly significant changes I had made, but it seemed to go down OK, and we got the report in on time. Unfortunately the weird procedures for financial reporting have meant that the financial reports will be a little late to the donors, but oh well… maybe I should have incorporated a report on the meaning of ‘Solomon Time’.

Last Sunday I took a day off and went on a snorkeling trip with Dive Gizo. The trip cost SBD150 (or about AUD30, I think), and first off we went to a reef wall off an island called Naru (ha ha). It was really amazing, easily the best snorkeling I’ve every done. Not that I’ve done all that much, but it definitely beat anything I’ve seen on the Great Barrier Reef or in PNG. A recent rapid environmental assessment showed that bits of Western Province have some of the highest fish and coral diversity in the world. Getting even more technical, I saw some Nemos (they do look pretty nice hiding out in the anemones (?) as the common photos show), Angelfish, Parrotfish, and a whole lot of others that I don’t know the name of. And those blue starfish that I was raving about earlier – common as anything, saw lots of them just walking along the seaside around Gizo. The person who went diving on the same trip saw a turtle and sharks, too.

Munda is a really sweet place; very small, again very pretty on the seaside, and very friendly. I came here to go to the AGM of the Tetepare Descendents’ Association, which manages the conservation and use of Tetepare Island. This is a fantastic ‘good news’ conservation story – I’ll post a link to their website when it’s working again. The AGM went all day, and I’ll have no excuse to complain about AGMs of Australian associations after sitting through that in a stinking hot hall, not to mention being coopted into being a returning officer for the voting in of committee members, which turned into a fairly complicated process…

Today I went for a really nice walk in the morning along a seaside road, then up into the island past some gardens and into the bush. It was raining when I headed off, so nice and cool. I wandered around for a while, and there seemed to be roads everywhere so I was pretty confident that when I was ready to head back I could just pick one heading in the right direction. Forgot that I have a terrible sense of direction, and luckily the sun came out and I realized that I was heading in completely the wrong direction to find Munda again, and my plane back to Honiara. I got just a little concerned, especially after I tried a couple of other roads that looked promising but eventually dwindled and disappeared at seemingly random destinations. I ended up having to retrace my steps, and made it back just in time for the plane.

I can’t really say that it’s nice to be back in Honiara, ‘though I am enjoying my last few days of living in a nice house, and plan to stuff myself with dairy products before moving west, where they’re not really available. Also making the most of broadband… don’t know how much more download-intensive blogging there’ll be!

Monday, November 06, 2006

more photos!

I've set up a Flickr account. Haven't quite worked out how to post from there yet, but will do soon! Till then if you're really keen you can see the photos at http://www.flickr.com/photos/lozpix

Saturday, November 04, 2006

back to Boneggi

I'm all excited about being able to load photos from my Mac (ok, only one so far, but I still maintain that Macs are the best) so I'm not going to write about Gizo until I've downloaded some photos.

Instead, the trip to the beach on Sunday 22. I walked to the designated meeting spot where us vollies were supposed to be congregating (or so I thought). Noone was there, so I dropped off the food I had brought (potato salad with megapod eggs from Victoria) and wandered on in the general direction of Boneggi.

This first shot, on the right, is a typical local house; not all have this 'location location location', but they're generally pretty small leaf houses, and the small bit on the left is the outdoor kitchen (the toilet is most likely the beach, hence the need to travel so far out of town for a swim).

The shot underneath shows the contrast with an expatty abode - the building to the right is probably the security shack...


Had a really good day despite the lack of coordinated vollie activity - got a ride from some fellow beach-goers (wouldn't have made it to Boneggi otherwise), had a nice snorkel, nice walk back from the fish BBQ stall somewhere starting with T out past somewhere starting with K (ah, the disadvantages of writing too late!), and got some nice shots. I think I'm a little obsessed with graffiti and painted stores at the moment... I quite liked this little Marxist comment.


The snorkelling was really good - masses of fish today, maybe because it was a bit rough and the water was a bit stirred up. I think my lung capacity and ability to equalise is improving too. Maybe someone can explain to me why the top layer of the water was really murky and unclear, but as soon as I dived down under a bit it was much better? Seemed really strange...

I saw these boys playing in a stream outlet on the way and couldn't resist the 'cute' shot. One of the advantages of a digital camera is that I could show them the photo afterwards.