Sunday, March 27, 2011

Brighton

Brighton

On Saturday 26 March, we (finally) made it down to Brighton for a day trip. Brighton is one of the UK's most popular and famous tourist destinations. It became a destination for London day-trippers after the arrival of railway in 1841. Modern Brighton forms the major part of the city of Brighton and Hove, which has a population of around 156,000, so it was a lot larger than we expected!

We caught a train from London Bridge to Brighton, which took around an hour, and we arrived at the seaside town at about 11.30am. We headed straight to a cafe called "Bill's" that had been recommended to us and we had an amazing brunch. The food was delicious, the service was superb and the cafe was decorated with wall displays of all sorts of food that you could buy. Bill dabbles in a bit of everything, from jams and marmalades to lollies and Easter eggs!!

After lunch we enjoyed wandering the streets checking out quirky antique and second hand shops and street markets, while enjoying entertainment from various street performers. The highlight was a dog on a skateboard (see photo below). The dog not only rode on the skateboard (with two legs on the board), but also pushed itself along the road with its other two legs. It was awesome. Brighton is home to a lot of young, alternative people (there are two universities and a medical school), so the town has a very vibrant and exciting feel to it...and some interesting clothes and hairstyles.

We headed for the beach via some more shops and we were delighted to see the famous (and somewhat tacky) seaside and enormous Brighton Pier. The beach is covered with large stones rather than sand or pebbles - not ideal - but that's how they do it over here. Brighton Pier, however, is very fun. It must be around 200m long and it is covered with shops, food stalls, pubs and restaurants, a full-on "fun fair" / amusement park and an indoor games arcade.

We had a fantastic time playing in the games arcade. We didn't win any of the giant soft toys or other prizes, but we had a lot of fun. We walked right to the end of the pier and debated riding on the log fume (but didn't want to get wet) and the carousel, which had giant galloping roosters you could ride on (but were a bit shy). We did, however, place some bets on the mechanical horse races, got an ice cream and relaxed in the deck chairs looking off the side of the pier. It was a lovely warm day, until the wind got up late in the afternoon.

When it started to get chilly, we left the pier and headed to "The Lanes" - a collection of little alleyways full of boutique shops and upmarket restaurants and bars. We enjoyed having a poke around there for a while and then we headed to a pub called The Cricketer for a drink.

We briefly returned to Bill's Cafe to buy a huge chocolate rooster Easter egg (see photo below)! Then we headed to a cocktail bar that Megs had discovered, called The Medicine Chest. It was a really fun underground bar decorated as an old style pharmacy. It had old medicine bottles and sets of wooden drawers around the walls and the cocktails were delicious. We had a few drinks there and then we went for dinner at a traditional fish n chip restaurant called Bankers, before walking back to the train station and heading home to London.

We had a really fun and interesting day and we didn't even have time to visit Brighton's main draw card, the Royal Pavilion. So we may even return for a second visit!



Megs at
Bill's Cafe












Dog on
skate-
board!









Street
markets































Megs at
the pier












On the
pier












The stoney
beach












Ahhhh









































The Cricketer
pub

















Royal
Pavilion












Giant
chocolate
rooster!















Bear at
the pier







Wednesday, March 9, 2011

Ghana - Part 3

Sunday

We had a proper sleep-in on Sunday morning. We eventually got up around 9.45am. There was no electricity or running water, so we had bucket showers (we needed a shower!). When the water was on we made sure we filled up the two massive barrels with water so that when the water was off again, we would have a good water supply for bucket showers, washing, cooking etc.

Later in the morning, we went with Cathy and Gus to Chances Hotel to laze about by the swimming pool, but alas it was not open to the public (only hotel guests), so we went to the reliable old Freedom Hotel again to do the same thing there. It was a scorching hot day. When we arrived at Freedom Hotel, there was hardly anyone there, so we had the swimming pool almost to ourselves. We had a couple of dips in the pool and lay in the sun. We also had lunch at Freedom - Megan had chicken fried rice and Tim had vegetable curry with jollof rice - delicious.

After a couple of hours, it got too hot for Tim, so he headed back to the Mad House to cool off in the shade. The others stayed another hour or two at Freedom. There was a fair bit of sunburn going on by the end of the day! In the afternoon, Emily arrived back from Accra with our new Madventurer volunteer, Steph, a 19 year old girl from Indonesia / England. The power eventually came on again at about 3pm, so at least the ceiling fans cranked up and the fridge came on again.

We all went to White House for drinks and dinner to welcome Steph to the Mad House. It ended up being a massive night - we had quite a few beers and then the shots started...it was all downhill from there. Back at the Mad House, Steph emerged from her room with a big wooden stick, which she then broke on the ceiling fan in Emily's office...Emily was not amused. Cathy and Tim then had stick fights with the security guard - he taught us some techniques for "fighting enemies with a stick". It was hilarious. Tim thought it would be a good idea to drink the remaining white wine from the fridge - being rather cheap and nasty white wine, it turned out this was not a good idea...

Monday

Tim woke up feeling less than average. Thankfully Gideon called and said there was no building work to be done, as the masons needed to sort something out for the roof. The girls went to teach in the kindergarten, while Tim died a slow and painful death in the Mad House.

Monday was also Cathy's 23rd birthday - and she was very excited. Enyo, our cook, had baked her a birthday cake, and when the girls arrived back from the kindergarten at lunchtime, we soaked Cathy with two buckets of water - apparently this is a Ghanaian birthday tradition! Lunch was pasta and veges - it was really yum. In the afternoon, Megan, Tim and Steph added their hand prints to the wall of the Mad House. Unfortunately the paint did not wash off our hands very well! Later in the afternoon, the girls went off to the orphanage to play with the kids, while Tim went in to Ho and checked out a few more shops. Megan really enjoyed the orphanage, reading to the kids and colouring in with them.

In the evening we went in to Ho to a bar called "Talk of the Town" for some birthday drinks for Cathy. It was a much quieter night than the Sunday night had been! Megan and Tim stuck to soft drink and also declined the spicy Ghanaian sausage cooked on an open grill in the garden bar. Gideon and Wisdom joined us at the bar and Gideon entertained us with some bizarre stories / jokes - very random.

Tuesday

Tuesday began with a very different sort of average. Tim woke early and had two texts from friends saying that there had been a massive earthquake in Christchurch, that buildings had collapsed and that there had been a lot of deaths. Tim texted his family in Christchurch straight away and thankfully, they were all OK, but very shocked and distressed. It was hard being so far away and not having great access to news updates.

In the morning we went with Gus to the Ho Hospital for a tour. The hospital was very basic, but given the general state of things in Ghana it wasn't too bad. It was a little upsetting - the sick people just seemed to be left lying on beds without a lot of attention. Apparently a lot of the people in the hospital had malaria and some of them died from it.

After our hospital tour, we went to the building site and continued to remove and flatten the dirt pile in front of the toilet block. We also went with Gideon to buy some wood. Lunch back at the Mad House was red red and fried plantain - our favourite! Our afternoon trip to the cocoa plantation was cancelled again so we went to White House for french fries and fanta and then wandered around Ho, and got a couple of photos of Bear! Then we headed down to the Vodafone internet cafe to get some updates on the Christchurch earthquake.

As we left the internet cafe, there were dark black storm clouds rolling in. Late afternoon storms were fairly frequent during our time in Ghana. We got a taxi straight to the Mad House and we got home just in time. The wind really picked up and we got loads of lightning and thunder and eventually heavy rain for the rest of the evening. Dinner was OK - boiled yam and beef, tomato and herb sauce. There was the usual silly-buggers in the evening, including a lot of singing from the girls. We got a good night's sleep, as the storm meant that it was not too hot.

Wednesday

Wednesday was a bit different - we finally got to visit the cocoa plantation, in a village called Shia. Shia was about an hour's drive from Ho, mainly because the road was really bumpy and rough meaning that we had to drive very slowly. We were all loaded into Gideon's Land Rover, with Tim in the back, behind the seats.

The cocoa plantation we were going to visit was owned and run by a man named Justice (we love the names in Ghana!). Justice is well known by Gideon and the Madventurer crew. On arrival in Shia, we went to Justice's house. He showed us around a bit of his massive cocoa plantation, pointing out different types of cocoa trees, and the occasional tree affected by fungus (not good), as we went. Justice picked one of the cocoa pods off a tree and cut it open, showing us the cocoa beans inside and he explained how the beans are dried and roasted before being made into delicious chocolate. He even let us taste the cocoa beans - Emily was surprised that they tasted nothing like chocolate!

After the cocoa tour, we got a village tour. Justice took us through the little village to meet with the head chief! Shia was the village where John Lawler (the founder of Madventurer) first worked many years ago, and where he was made a chief to recognise the great work he had done for the village, so it has had links with Madventurer volunteers ever since. The head chief was very nice - he gave each of us a soft drink while he chatted away to us in his lounge. Then he walked with us down to the village school, to show us some of the buildings that John and previous Madventurers had helped to fund and build. At one point, when we were at the far end of the village, we could see the border with Togo, less than 100m away - so close to adding another country to the list!

We also met with the local parish priests and we saw the small hospital / health clinic. As we walked, we were spotted by a group of school children, who sprinted over to us and mobbed us! For some reason we were extremely popular. They even followed down the road for a while. Shia was a lovely little village - very quiet and the people were so welcoming and friendly to us. As we were about to leave, we got a great photo of three women walking towards us up the long dirt road, each carrying a huge basket of wood on their head (see photo below).

It was really interesting to see a cocoa plantation and we also thoroughly enjoyed our tour of Shia and meeting the head chief of the region. Back at the Mad House, we had chicken and chips for lunch and then headed to the building site at Sokode Gbogame. Unfortunately, the building materials we needed were not available, so we could not carry on with the project. Instead, Michael (one of the masons) took us for a walk around Sokode Gbogame, to show us some buildings with the same type of finish on the walls as we were going to put on our toilet block.

It was really fun wandering through the village. Needless to say, we soon had a band of happy children following us. Megan had brought some balloons with her and we each blew up a few balloons and gave them to the kids. We are pretty sure some of them had never seen a balloon before - they were super excited to get their hands on them and some of them got the fright of their lives when they squeezed their balloons too hard! There were loads of goats, sheep, chickens etc roaming about the village and we had running bets on anyone being able to catch a goat. Michael managed to grab hold of a baby lamb (see photo), which was pretty funny when its mother got angry with him!

Later in the afternoon, the girls went back to the orphanage to visit the kids there. Dinner at the Mad House was rice balls and steak. After dinner we all played Pictionary. Tim, Cathy and Steph were awesome and dominated Megs, Emily and Gus. Megs threatened to throw her toys out of the cot - it was all very funny. We heard that Arsenal beat Stoke 1-0 to close the gap in the premier league, but picked up two more injuries in the process...typical.

Thursday

There was no water on Thursday morning so no showers. We headed to the building site at around 8.30am and we spent the morning mixing cement or mortar to be applied to the outside of the walls, to give them a rough-cast finish. The masons had a hand held device that flicked the wet cement on to the wall - it was fun but we did get pretty messy. It was nice to have a change from hard physical work!

Tim won a five-way "rocks, scissors, paper" contest for the first shower once we got home, but when we arrived, the water was still off, so we had to settle for a bucket shower. Lunch was spaghetti and tomato sauce. After lunch we watched a bit of TV while some of the others had buckets showers and then we headed into Ho. We visited the internet cafe and changed some Great Britain Pounds into Ghanaian Cedis (which was a lot harder than it should have been).

Back at the Mad House we started sorting out things for packing and chilled out reading and doing a bit of sudoku! Dinner was rice with sausage in sauce, which was pretty good. In the evening, Megs joined the others on a trip into Ho for a few drinks and to try a traditional Ghanaian dish called "fufu". Tim was pretty tired and feeling worried about the Christchurch earthquake, so declined the fufu trip. He was pleased he did, as it turned out that it was "grasscutter fufu". Grasscutter is a large furry sort of rodent - like a giant rat - that is common on Ghanaian menus, as it is apparently quite easy to catch and provides a lot of meat. Apparently, it tasted smokey and had a leathery skin. Not cool.

Friday

Friday was our last day on the project and our last day in Ho! We woke extra early as we had to be down at the building site by 8am to ensure we had enough time to paint the building. There was still no water on - two whole days with no water - and our water barrels had run dry too. We kept our part of the deal by arriving at the building site around 8am, but there was no sign of Gideon. We waited around and played with the kids from the kindergarten. Eventually they went inside and we continued to wait...and wait... There were a few hangovers amongst the crew. Steph had a quiet spew in the bushes at one point. Not ideal. Gideon and Wisdom showed up just before 10am, claiming that the paint shop had opened late and then they didn't have the right paint. We were not impressed.

We mixed some paint and applied an undercoat on the outside wall facing the street and on the walls inside the cubicles. We followed the undercoat with two coats of a pale lemon coloured paint. Luckily, the paint was drying very quickly in the heat. Once the paint on the front wall had dried, we added a Madventurer logo and each painted our name on the wall. The building was almost complete - it just required the masons to come in and attach the doors to the cubicles. But our work was done.

It was a double dose of excitement when we got back to the Mad House. The water was back on, so we all had proper showers (much needed)! And it was red red for lunch! We all packed up our remaining things and Gideon took us down to the tro tro station in Ho. It was sad to be leaving the Mad House and Ho and to be saying goodbye to Gideon. It had been an excellent project to be involved in and we had had a very fun two weeks!

It was a very cramped and uncomfortable tro tro ride to Accra. Gus, Megan and Tim were all flying out of Accra on Saturday and Emily was flying back to England for a short break, so Cathy and Steph decided to join us in Accra for the weekend. The highlight of the tro tro ride was seeing two baboons sitting on the side of the road and also seeing a woman carrying two huge dead grasscutters by their tails - no doubt she was having fufu for dinner that night!

We arrived in Accra around 5pm and Megan and Tim caught a taxi to the Paloma Hotel, while the rest of the crew headed to the house they were staying at (a friend of Emily's). We were delighted to check in to the hotel - although it was just an average hotel room, it seemed incredibly luxurious! The running water and air conditioning was a treat! We had showers and got changed and met the others down at Champs Sports Bar, which is part of the Paloma Hotel complex and a Madventurer favourite.

The food was a treat too! We had chicken nibbles to share, then Tim had a chicken burger and chips while Megs had a BLT. It was a really fun night. We had a few drinks and really enjoyed Champs. But we were pretty tired, so we left the others to it and headed off to bed around 10.30pm. We must be getting old!

Saturday

After one of the finest sleeps either of us has ever had, we eventually got up and returned to Champs for breakfast - full English cooked breakfast and a milkshake! Ahhhhh. After checking out of the Paloma Hotel, we wandered the streets of Ghana's capital and we stumbled across an art shop called The Loom. It had some really good stuff and Megan found a painting that we both loved. It is an abstract painting of a crowd of African people, using both paint and small pieces of fabric. It is called "The People Still To Come" and it is by a local Ghanaian artist. So we bought that as another memento of Ghana.

From The Loom, we caught a taxi across the city to the Osu African Market. We found the taxi drivers in Accra a lot more sneaky than those in Ho, trying to rip us off whenever they could. We had a lovely walk around the Osu area, passing a bar (or a "spot" as they tend to call them in Ghana) called Millie Spot (see photo) and a taxi that had seen better days - its front left wheel was "dislocated"! The Osu African Market was amazing. We found some really cool souvenirs there, including a fridge magnet for Megan to keep her collection going!

It was incredibly hot outside and after the Osu African Market, we felt that we were done with checking out Accra, so we got a taxi back to the hotel and spent the afternoon in Champs - it had food, drinks, air conditioning, live sport and pool tables! Everything we needed for a relaxing afternoon. We did all of these things - we ate, drank, watched English football and Six Nations rugby, played some pool and then we were joined by Emily, Cathy and Steph in the evening, who had just seen Gus off to the airport.

Our flight left Accra at midnight and arrived in London around 6.30am on Sunday. We both managed to get a decent sleep on the flight, so the trip seemed to race by. If any blog readers are considering visiting West Africa or doing a volunteer programme, we would definitely recommend both Ghana and Madventurer - but regardless, just do it. It's an amazing part of the world, full of amazing people. We had a brilliant time are are so glad we did it.

Country Tally:
Megan: 45
Tim and Bear: 42







Building
site












Hard
work










Megs in
Shia














Shia












Kids in
Shia












They
loved us













Shia












The roof
is on!












Playing
in Sokode
Gbogame











Michael
lamb-
napping!











Coating
the walls












Football!













Play
time















Job done













Megs in
Accra














Accra












Millie
Spot -
a street-side
bar










Uh oh















Tim and
giraffe



Saturday, March 5, 2011

Ghana- Part 2

Monday

We woke up around 7am and there was running water, so we had a proper shower and prepared for our first day on the building site. We had bread and jam in the Mad House for breakfast, which was nice, but not really filling enough for the day of building ahead. We caught a shared taxi with Emily and Cathy to Sokode Gbogame, arriving at the building site around 8.30am.

Our project was the building of a toilet block for the kindergarten in Sokode Gbogame. Thankfully, we joined for the last two weeks of a six week project, so when we turned up, a 10-foot hole had already been dug and the majority of the foundations had been laid. Prior to our building project being completed, the children from the kindergarten had to use a grotty old shed with a hole in the ground inside it and a patch on the side of the road as their toilet. Not ideal.

Day 1 on the building site was really tough. It was scorching hot and there was a lot of physical work required, as we were mixing cement and then carrying it to the site to lay the foundations. Mixing cement does not sound like tough work, but when you basically have no tools other than a shovel and a bucket, it is very hard work! We had to carry sand in buckets from the big sand pile across to the cement mixing spot, then we had to carry a couple of huge sacks of cement mix to the same spot. We added some big stones to the sand and cement mix and we mixed it all together with the shovels. Then we had to walk about 300m away to a water supply and carry back several buckets of water, which we added to the pile to make the cement.

Then we had to scoop the wet cement into wide pans and carry them over to the building site to lay the last layer of foundations, or the floor of the toilet block. We probably made about 30-40 trips each and the pans were really heavy.

That, coupled with the intense heat and not a lot of breakfast in the belly, meant we really struggled. Gideon and his friend, Wisdom, were also working on the building site with us, along with two masons, who were showing us what to do and leading the way. Gideon disappeared briefly and returned with a bottle of some yellow-coloured beverage and shared it around the group. He encouraged us to try some and told us that it was really refreshing and would help us feel better in the heat. We each tried a little bit and it was seriously the most disgusting drink we have ever tasted. It was like tequila but worse. Megan and Tim both nearly threw up after tasting it. Not cool. Gideon thought it was hilarious!

On the up side, when the kids came out of the kindergarten block for their play break, they were so excited to see us. They ran up and literally threw themselves at us, shouting "Yevu, yevu". They were fascinated with our white skin, staring at it like we had gills! They also loved to ask us what our names were, then they would repeat back our names like parrots.

We stopped around 12.30pm for lunch. It was only four hours of work, but we were absolutely shattered. We got a taxi back to the Mad House (costing about 22 pence each) for lunch. Enyo had made us spaghetti and meat sauce - delicious. We got a lot of heavy carb-dominated food in Ghana, but we really needed it! We didn't go back after lunch, as it was too hot, and the masons had finished off the last little bit of the foundations after we had left, so it was a good place to call it a day.

Instead, we kicked around the house for a while, sipping on our little plastic sachets of drinking water, trying desperately to re-hydrate our bodies. Most of the drinking water in Ghana comes in 500ml plastic sachets (see photo on "part 1" blog). You tear a small corner off the sachet with your teeth and then you're away laughing. Cathy used to entertain us with how quickly she could down a water sachet - we timed her at the building site one day and she did it in 8 seconds!

Later in the afternoon, we went into Ho and walked through the market. We bought a few little bits and pieces, including a couple of mini footballs for the kids at the kindergarten to play with. Then we headed to the White House to meet the others. As it was Valentines Day, the White House had a cheesy CD of old love songs that kept playing over and over - including all our Celine Dion and Whitney Houston favourites. We ended up staying there for over four hours. We eventually pulled ourselves away from the Valentines Day festivities and caught a taxi back to the Mad House.

Dinner was jollof rice and chicken, which was delicious. Jollof rice is kind of like fried rice with a few veges and spices mixed in. YUM! Needless to say, we were stuffed after our first day on the project, so we crashed pretty early after dinner. We had a really fun day - people in Ghana are so friendly. We would exchange "Hellos" with almost everyone we passed on the street - very different to London!

Tuesday

Tuesday started well - running water two mornings from two and the mosquito nets over our bunks were obviously working, as neither of us had any mosquito bites! Unfortunately, one of our tasks at the building site was to remove the giant pile of dirt (that had come from the digging of the 10-foot pit beneath the toilet block) from in front of the building site and carry it away - and all we had was shovels to dig the dirt and one wheelbarrow and a few buckets to carry it away in. When we arrived at the building site on Tuesday morning, all of the kids from the kindergarten were carrying dirt away from the pile in little buckets they had brought from home. They looked like a little trail of ants carrying away food.

While it was pretty cute initially, we quickly realised that the kids "help" was actually a hindrance. Once the kids lost interest in carrying dirt away, they resorted to fighting each other, throwing stones at each other (and occasionally us), playing and lying all over the dirt pile, preventing us from doing our job. This made what was already a gruelling job a lot harder! It was so incredibly hot - we were all sweating insane amounts and we soon had sore backs, legs, arms and nasty blisters on our hands from the shovels.

We went back to the Mad House for lunch - and were treated to "red red" - probably our favourite Ghanaian dish. Red red is beans in a spicy sauce, served with fried plantain - it went down a treat. After lunch, we returned to the building site (this time with Gus) and continued to shift dirt and battle with the obstacles the kids provided.

Gus was mobbed by the kids more than the rest of us. The kids liked to follow whoever was taking the wheelbarrows full of dirt away and once the dirt was tipped out of the wheelbarrow, the kids liked to throw their own empty buckets into it, run in front of it, and occasionally try to jump into it themselves! Gus got an extra treat - witnessing a kid throwing up into the dirt, narrowly missing the wheelbarrow! Nice. By the time we knocked off for the day, we had actually made pretty good progress at shifting the dirt pile. It was pretty soul-destroying to think that a bulldozer and a truck could have moved that dirt pile in under 20 minutes - with our tools, it would take more than three days.

Back at the Mad House, we all had much needed showers and sat around reading - we were totally knackered. Dinner was pretty good - boiled yam (a little tasteless) with a spicy meat sauce, which made up for the yam! After dinner Megs joined Emily, Cathy and Gus in Ho for a few drinks. Tim was exhausted and stayed home!

Wednesday

We woke early on Wednesday and there was no water, so no showers. We had a change of scene today - we got a rest from building and went to the primary school in Sokode Gbogame for a morning of teaching. We were split up for the first class and each watched one of the teachers take a class.

Midway through Tim's class, the teacher took two of the kids outside the classroom and caned them. A boy and a girl were playing up; fighting over an exercise book, but nothing too serious. They were just being kids. The boy got three brutal smacks with the cane across the back of his legs, so hard that the cane snapped in half. He then had to go to the cupboard at the back of the classroom and get another cane for the teacher to continue. He copped another three vicious strokes of the cane. He did not flinch once and walked back to his desk with a forced brave face. The girl flinched every time she was hit and, as a result, she copped more punishment - at least 7 or 8 hits. She cried as she limped back to her desk. Tim was shocked. He asked the boy sitting next to him at the back of the classroom if that was common and he said it happened in almost every class.

We had heard that caning was prevalent at the school, despite the fact that it is actually illegal in Ghana. Volunteers in the past have complained about it and Madventurer has spoken many times to the school about stopping the caning; they have even threatened to withdraw funding for projects in the village, but it obviously still occurs. The teachers seem to enjoy it; it is sick.

Aside from the caning, we were surprised at how mundane the method of teaching is. Everything is learning by rote - it is copying what the teacher writes on the blackboard, repeating what the teacher chants at the kids, repetition, repetition, repetition. There is no creativity or encouragement to think outside the square. For the second class, Cathy, Megan and Tim took over and shared the teaching of an English class about Ghana and animals - in particular the difference between domestic and wild animals - a difference that was bizarre for us Kiwi folk. Goats, roosters and lizards are all domestic pets in Ghana!

Lunch at the Mad House was chicken and chips - delicious. In the afternoon, we went in to Ho and visited a shop at KK House that sold Ghanaian souvenirs and clothing. Megan bought a really cool and colourful handbag and some bracelets and Tim bought an African wall mask. He declined the enormous yellow print shirt that the shopkeeper tried to force on him... Gus bought just about everything else in the shop, which must have set the shopkeeper up for an early retirement. We had a drink at White House and then bought some fresh pineapple from a street vendor on the way home.

We spent the evening chilling out at the Mad House, being amused firstly by the crazy security guard, who "taught" us some words from the local Ewe language. He also claimed that if he saw another giant beetle in the lounge, like the one we had seen the previous night (an "enemy" as he called it), then he would run and call for help. Nice to know we were in safe hands! The entertainment continued when Gideon and his friends Wisdom and Moses turned up after dinner to play "Dragon's Den". Gideon had seen Dragon's Den on TV in the UK on his recent trip there. Gideon, Wisdom and Moses presented their business cases to us (the panel of Dragons) and they took it very seriously. It was hilarious. We also learned that Arsenal had beaten Barcelona 2-1 at Emirates Stadium in the first leg of the knock-out round of the Champions League, an amazing result.

Thursday

We woke before 7.15am on Thursday and we were back at the building site today. The masons had made good progress in our absence. The walls of the toilet block were partially constructed when we arrived. The masons kept building the walls, while we continued to shift dirt. For some reason, we did not have access to the wheelbarrow today, so we had to use buckets to shift the dirt away. Thankfully we decided to move the dirt to a location much closer than the one we had used on Tuesday, so we did not have to carry it so far.

Cathy's mascot, a monkey called Theo, joined us at the building site for some photos. Cathy takes him around the world with her for photo opportunities, much the same as we do with Mr Bear! We worked really hard and made good progress. We stopped for lunch around midday - it was veges and pasta. Emily and Gus had witnessed a C-section birth at the hospital in the morning. It sounded barbaric!

In the afternoon, we had showers, did some hand washing and rested. We were just about to leave to visit a cocoa plantation in a nearby village when a massive thunderstorm hit. There was plenty of thunder and lightning and it absolutely chucked it down for more than half an hour. So we decided to postpone the cocoa plantation visit and stay put for the afternoon. The roads would be dodgy after such a downpour and the vehicles are not reliable at the best of times.
Dinner was disappointing - just rice and a boiled egg in tomato sauce - that's not a meal! It happened to be our hungriest night too! Megs and Tim went in to Ho around 7.30pm and got some french fries at White House to make up for the lack of dinner. The french fries at White House really are amazing!

Friday

We experienced slight deja vu on Friday morning as we turned up at the building site to see dozens of school children carrying away buckets of dirt from the dirt pile. This time it was the kids from the primary school rather than the kindergarten, so they were more focused on the task! They were organised - the boys used pick-axes and shovels to loosen and scoop the dirt and the girls carried it away in buckets, usually on their heads.

We had become accustomed by now to seeing Ghanaians carrying anything and everything on their heads. We even tried it ourselves and it is a surprisingly comfortable and efficient way to carry weight. It was really good for the local children to contribute to the building project - there was a real sense of community effort. The school kids helped out for a couple of hours and then retired to the classroom for lessons and caning!

After they left, we carried on shifting dirt. We had the wheelbarrow back so we were able to make really good progress. We worked hard all morning and by lunchtime we had moved the majority of the dirt pile away and we flattened out the rest of it. The masons also finished laying the bricks on the walls of the building.

Lunch was spaghetti and meat sauce. In the afternoon, we went into Ho and visited the Vodafone internet cafe. It is an amazing new building, fully air-conditioned, full of new computers with super fast broadband internet, faster than we get in London!!! It was a pretty amazing place to hang out. As Cathy pointed out, we would gladly have paid the 1.80 Cedis to sit in an air-conditioned room for an hour, let alone get good internet access for an hour! While we were there, another big thunderstorm hit.

Once the storm had cleared, we walked to White House and had a mid-afternoon snack of sausages, french fries and yam chips along with a couple of Fantas. Emily had gone to Accra to pick up our new Mad recruit, so in the evening, we chilled out at the Mad House, did some reading and played a pretty heated game of Ludo with Cathy and Gus. Cathy takes Ludo very seriously and she did not approve of Gus's freakish ability to throw sixes on the dice almost every throw! It was a lot of fun and Megan won!!! It was hard to believe that our first week was over already - it really flew.

Saturday

We had a fantastic night's sleep on Friday night. We woke around 7.30am and we wanted to keep on sleeping but we had to get up. We had to make the most of our only free weekend in Ghana! We decided to visit the Tafi Atome monkey sanctuary, an hour or so away from Ho. We caught a taxi into the tro tro station in Ho and boarded a tro tro bound for a town called Hohoe. We jumped out at the turn-off to the monkey sanctuary and took a very run down taxi down the 5km bumpy dirt road to the sanctuary. We were concerned that the taxi wouldn't get us there - it was in pretty bad shape.

The Tafi Atome monkey sanctuary was created in 1993 to protect the sacred monkeys that live in the forest in the area. Since the creation of the sanctuary, the local monkey population has increased to around 350 monkeys, split among four groups. We got a one-hour guided tour of the monkey sanctuary, which cost less than £4 each. Monkeys aside, it was so peaceful and relaxing wandering around the forest.

The tour began rather oddly. We walked for around 20 minutes with the tour guide, who said nothing the whole time. Then she told us to wait on the path while she disappeared to "look for the monkeys". We waited and waited. She eventually re-appeared and we kept walking. She did the same thing again, but this time came back with good news. She had found the monkeys.

We followed her to the monkeys and they quickly descended on us from the tree tops. We had brought with us a bag of bananas to feed the monkeys. The tour guide told us to hold a banana (firmly) out away from our body. The monkeys came down to the edge of the branches and nervously peeled the banana skin with their hands and broke small pieces of banana off and ate it, before breaking more off. We learned why you need to hold on to the bananas firmly, as one was snatched from Tim's hand. Megan also got a close-up of a couple of the monkeys, who jumped from their branches and landed on her!

We followed the same route back to Ho - dodgy taxi along bumpy dirt road, tro tro back to Ho, then taxi back to the Mad House, arriving back around 1.30pm. In the afternoon we met Cathy and Gus at White House. They had been there for a couple of hours already and had down a bottle and a half of wine, so they were in fine form. We had beef pizza and fries for lunch and then we went shopping at KK House to get Cathy a birthday present and wandered leisurely around Ho.

The rest of the day was very chilled out - we sat around home, did some washing, bought a sack full of drinking water sachets from the store near the Mad House (and even carried it back to the house on our heads). We made dinner in the house (noodles and veges) and had a pretty early night.

To be continued...







Day 1 at
building
site










Lizard!













Building
site













Carrying
cement












Mixing
cement











Teacher
Megs












Sokode
Gbogame
school











Progress














Shifting
dirt











Trying the
Ghanaian
way!

























Help from
school
kids











Mad-
venturer
Megs











Still
shifting
dirt












Monkey
sanctuary












Feeding
monkeys













































Awesome
shop
names -
Ho











Another
shop in
Ho










Freedom
Hotel
pool










Drinks at
White
House











Raaa