Wednesday, 22 January 2014

Biju's village and Bagnas

Hello again,

There was time for one last trip before schools started again, this time a visit to my friend Biju’s village. Biju has been a good friend to me out here and had been asking for some time that I come and visit her family and her village so I was pleased to finally have some time in which to do this. 

Not too much room to move in the jeep!
It was about a five hour bus journey to Rampur, along some of the scarier roads I have been on with very steep drops falling away from the bumpy tracks. We safely reached there though and had a quick walk around and some lunch before getting on a jeep to take us the remaining two hours, high up to her village. It was incredible the amount of people packed in and on that jeep. I counted 22 of us inside, one sat on the bonnet, and many more either hanging onto the side or on the roof. There must have been at least 35 people on it and possibly more like 40!

We made it though without incident and the welcome from the village was very warm despite the fact I was not there to work with the school. I think that they would be very keen to work with us but it would be difficult given the huge distance and time it takes to make the journey.

Biju and I were given a lovely welcome in her village, Gohrekot.


Biju (right) with her mum (left) and sisters.
The first evening was very quiet and I was all too happy to have an early night after another tiring journey. The next morning we went for a walk up to a village called Anandy (meaning relaxing place), where Biju’s old school used to be. As ever the walk offered great views, though it was rather cloudy. 

In the afternoon I went up to the school which was closed but there were some teachers there who were keen to get some ideas for teaching and so I did a few simple activities with them such as the drawing round the body. After we had done that I organised lots of games for the children to play which they really enjoyed. Having started with about 10 children we ended up with closer to 30! Some of the games worked really well, including ladders and bulldogs but others I had real difficulty explaining such as stuck in the mud where they didn’t seem to understand if they should be tagging others or running away!!!  


It was a really nice afternoon though and the children seemed to love it. We finished with some relay races and a wheelbarrow race which they found very funny!!!

                                      Last two boys left in bulldogs against everyone else - reminded me of the Adidas                                     advert with the caption 'impossible is nothing'!



Kept this picture small!!!
In the evening there was a dance program but unfortunately I was feeling quite ill with a bad stomach – probably due to the amount of meat that had been presented to me which I had politely tried to get through!
Biju was very good though and as a trainee nurse was able to give me some medicines which did help and I joined in with the dancing and merriment as best I could. I didn’t get a very good night’s sleep, feeling rather poorly, but thankfully by the morning I did feel a little better. 

Some of the more 'senior' members of the village.
Some more traditional dancing than my attempted efforts!

It was amazing the amount of people who gathered to wave us off – Nepali hospitality really is second to none. It would have been nice to stay an extra day and unfortunate that I had not felt too well for the last night but I had still had a really good time. 



Way home from Biju's village.


Left to right: Melanie, Regina, Bec and Roisin.
I had a couple of days back in Tansen and enjoyed the company of Roisin, Bec, Melanie, and Regina, an Irish and three Australian girls working on a placement at a hospital near Chitwan. They were staying at home-stay and were good fun. We went for an evening walk along Shrinegar hill, just above Tansen and also the next morning I took them up to see the sunrise (I am becoming quite a tour guide now). In between these times I also started to get ready to go back to school, which after a long time off for exams and holidays, I was quite looking forward to.

Jumping pictures at sunrise!

Two of my home-made clocks!
My first school trip after the holidays was to Bagnas, a short walk from Tansen. I had three days at Bagnas and taught a variety of lessons including the science experiments to test friction and the separating experiment – making alien soup. I also did some English lessons on asking questions about what time it is. I tried to keep the lessons as practical as possible and also incorporated lots of display work. One of the lessons on time the children had to match up cards which asked the question e.g. ‘What time do you have breakfast?’ and the answer ‘I have breakfast at 8:00’. I encouraged the children to do lots of speaking in the lesson which is important though not always easy in Nepali classrooms as the children are just so shy and not used to speaking up. 

'Alien soup' proved to be a really successful lesson (mixing sand, salt, water, rice and paperclips and then separating them using magnets, different seized sieves/ filters and evaporation). The children clearly loved doing such a practical activity of which they are clearly not used to doing. It worked really well and the children could see the salt starting to crystalise on the plate after a couple of hours left out in the sun. Unfortunately someone picked up the plate and cleared it away before all of the water had evaporated!! The children did at least see that it was working though and hopefully the teachers saw how much the practical nature of the exercise benefited the children and enhanced the learning. From the pictures you may think that this is a very colorful school with good resources, whilst this is true of the library, which was built as part of another charity's project, 'room to read', the classrooms in the school require much work. 

This picture and above: 'Alien Soup' activity.

By the end of my trip to Bagnas there was a bit more display work in evidence in the classrooms – there is still much to be done but I was really pleased to see one of the teachers put up some of the times tables on coloured paper I had given them and another teacher using the building blocks we had provided to demonstrate something in maths. It is really encouraging to see things start to happen and whilst they may be small things it is still good progress. 

Making a start at getting more display work up.


It might be small but was great to see one of the teachers put this up off their own back - hopefully the message is getting through that display work is important!!

A lesson on the five human senses.
During my time teaching in Bagnas I had one night where I stayed in the village (the other nights I walked back to Tansen) and had a really nice evening playing games with the children and the next morning walked up to the top of the hill which gave some of the best views I have had so far this trip.


It has been another successful and encouraging trip and whilst there is still much to do – it is good to see some progress being made. I am hoping when I return to Bagnas I will see both the display work I put up, still there and some new things too…we will have to wait and see though! It was another good visit though and good to get back to some teaching!

Thank you to those people who have donated - it is really kind of you. For anyone who would like to make a donation the link is here: http://uk.virginmoneygiving.com/charity-web/charity/finalCharityHomepage.action?uniqueVmgCharityUrl=manishachildwelfarefoundationnepaluk 

Andy. X

The lovely children of Bagnas school. 




Stunning views from Bagnas.


Thursday, 9 January 2014

Running into rhino's and the tiger that turned out to be a tree trunk!

After my New Year trip to Pokhara and Kathmandu it was not long to wait for my next adventure, a trip to Bardia National Park. This inevitably involved another long bus journey though – I generally quite enjoy the first six hours of the bus journeys – it is the last few hours which are a killer!!!
I visited Bardia with Janake and Abhi, from my home-stay family. We set off early on the short 2 hour trip to Butwal before changing onto the bus to take us to Bardia. It was a very different journey though from Butwal as we headed West along the Southern and mostly flat part of Nepal, known as the Terai region. It was getting dark by the time we reached Bardia and we then had a short ½ hour journey to Sonja’s home-stay, though long enough to get a puncture! We soon arrived at Sonja and her partner Bouddi’s new home-stay though (we were their first ever guests!) and were warmly welcomed by them and Bouddi’s two excitable but adorable children, Usha and Sandez. We had dinner that evening sat round a campfire and I had my first taste of Rice Beer which I love!!! 
The next morning started very foggy as we had expected but to our surprise and delight it turned into a beautiful blue sky day (the area at this time of year is often plagued by a lingering, cold fog). Abhi and I borrowed two old bicycles with the old fashioned handlebars and set off for a short exploration before we returned back and then took Usha and Sandez to school on the back of the bikes. The area is really beautiful and so different to other parts of Nepal. There were lots of other people on bicycles taking their children to school and it was a really lovely cycle through farmland and picturesque villages. The houses almost look like they are a film set or set up for a picture postcard  – there are old tools scattered around and corn drying in the sun and sometimes a few chickens, goats or a buffalo munching on some grass; but it is all real and it’s just how it is.

Abhi and I take Usha and Sandez to school.


 

Cycling is very popular in Bardia which, unlike Tansen, is very flat.
When we got back we visited another home-stay as Janake was interested to see some others, as a member of the home-stay committee. The design of the houses is really amazing, there is a wooden frame coated with a clay like mud which hardens to form the walls. They decorate the walls with lots of carvings of rhino’s, elephants and other animals and sometimes there are small pieces of mirror embedded into the clay to form decorative patterns. 
Our next trip and the bit I was excited about was a walk into the community forest where wild animals roam freely. We were given a stick each though told that this would be fairly useless against a tiger, rhino or wild elephant. The stick can be used to beat on the floor to scare animals off though I wouldn’t want to bet on it!!!

Frightened expressions as we enter the jungle!!


 It was amazing to be walking through the undergrowth knowing that there was a very real possibility that there were wild animals around which realistically were far more likely to see us than they were to see them, particularly in the case of the tigers. Not long after we saw what looked to be fairly fresh footprints of a tiger and also seemingly fresh droppings. That only heightened the excitement though we carried on for a while longer without seeing anything. It wasn’t too long though before we heard some shouting which apparently came from villagers on the other side of the forest. At first this seemed to be a real annoyance but luckily for us it was people who were there cutting the grass and were actually trying to shoo off some rhino which were munching away there. This pushed the rhino towards us and forced us to climb a tree. Rhino’s have notoriously bad eye sight and we didn’t want them charging blindly towards us. From our vantage point in the tree we had a close, if a little obscured, view of three rhino’s approaching. We watched for a good 20 - 30 minutes as a mother and her two offspring, one a small baby, another rather bigger, grazed in the long grass all around us. They can’t have been more than 15 metres away and at one point one of them looked up and stared intently as us before getting back to its eating. We were sure to be absolutely silent throughout and had to ignore the growing feeling of cramp that comes from being in an awkward position halfway up a tree, unable to move! It was a truly awesome experience to be so near to such big and powerful creatures knowing that if they went for us we would be in real trouble!



For such a large animal the rhino is amazingly well camouflaged (top left). Monkey in the trees (top right) and a close up look at the rhino (bottom).
 Thankfully we didn’t have any trouble and they skulked off into the undergrowth and we jumped down from the tree and made off in the other direction. A short time later we were back at the jeep and went off to the nearby village for some lunch. It really had been quite a surreal experience. 

A delicious lunch after our jungle adventure.
After some lunch Abhi and I went for another short cycle ride to explore the village before we got back in the jeep and drove through a track in the forest back to Sonja’s village. 
An elephant returning to the stables with it's dinner.
We stopped off at an elephant breeding sanctuary on the way back to get a close up look at some of the elephants. Having seen the rhino’s in the wild it was a little sad to see the elephants in captivity, though they are there because they have either been ill-treated or orphaned from poaching, which only a few years ago was rife and is still something the army guard against. The elephants are let out into the park each day to graize and from all accounts are well treated. 

With the sun setting it was a really beautiful walk back through the village towards Sonja and Bouddi’s house. Having been down by the river earlier I thought it would be a good place to watch the sunset so Abhi and I grabbed the bikes and Usha and Sandez jumped on the back wanting to go too. We cycled as fast as we could down to the riverbank trying to beat the setting sun. We got there a moment too late but the sky was still a beautiful colour and it was very peaceful so it was still worth the trip. We were looking out across the river which marks the boundry of the national park hoping that some animals might emerge from the other side to take an evening drink. 



Beautiful Bardia.
Suddenly we thought we had had some unbelievable luck when Usha shouted out tiger and pointed to the the tree line on the other bank. There, keeping quite still, there was a big cat which seemed to be staring right at us! I grabbed my camera and tried to take some photo’s but even on full zoom it was difficult to make out if it was indeed a tiger. For a couple of minutes we wathced but after a while it became cleared that having still not moved an inch, it was, in fact, a very tiger shaped, tree trunk!!!
It was a little dissapointing though also quite funny and I had about 8 different pictures of this tree trunk which we had all let our imagination believe was a tiger…maybe next time!!!


Top: Abhi and Usha, Middle:Buffalo being herded home and bottom: Sandez, Abhi and Usha.

First sight of the tiger...
...which on closer inspection was nothing more than a tree trunk!
That evening we again sat round a camp fire eating the delicious chicken that Bouddi cooked on the open fire. We started to make some plans for the next day – I was hoping to go into the national park, hopeful that I might see something more exciting than a tree trunk! Unfortunately though our plans for the next day were literally washed away by the torrential rain that persisted all morning and for a couple of hours past lunchtime. We moved to another lodge which Janaki wanted to visit but spent quite some time peering out at the rain and playing some cards. 


Top: Myself, Janaki and Abhi keeping warm around the fire. Bottom: Sonja (far left) and Bouddi (far right) prepare the feast.



Rain changed our plans on our last day - we were very lucky though to get one good day at this time of year.
Eventually it did clear up enough to venture out and we visited another lodge, an eco lodge. It was interesting to see and great to see that there are some people here who have an understanding of the environment and the need to protect it. 
Abhi, Janaki and I went out also to visit the crocodile breeding centre which although doing some positive work was a rather grim set of enclosures but there was also lots of monkies roaming freely in the trees which I always enjoy seeing. The final evening was again a nice evening, keeping warm around the campfire, eating good food and getting better aquainted with the rice beer!
The next morning it was a very early start before a long, 10 hour, bus journey back to Tansen. Bardia was definitely worth visiting though. We counted orselves very lucky having had one glorious day of sunshine when the area, at this time of the year, is often enveloped in a cold fog that lingers about for much of the day. I hope, though I’m not sure f time will permit it, to come back here and continue looking out for those elusive tigers. The people, the villages and of course the rhino’s, though made it a really memorable trip. 
Will write again soon!

Andy. x






Sunday, 5 January 2014

New Year - Pokhara and onto Kathmandu.



After the crazily busy build up to and delivery of teacher training I had a couple of days off which I largely spent with my homestay family before Saran and I headed off to Pokhara for some well deserved New Year Celebrations!
Pokhara was hosting a street festival which was great fun to be a part of. We also met up with Emma, who I had met on the two occasions I visited Abu Dhabi about 12 years ago (that makes me feel old!). She had seen from my facebook updates and blog that I was out in Nepal and she was travelling there from Abu Dhabi with her fiance, Khalid, and friends Chris and Holly.

It was really great to meet up with them and in fact we spent both evenings we were there together. I had not known Emma particularly well but everyone got on really well. On New Years eve we went out for pizza (Pokhara is a haven for Western food and I do take advantage when I can!) and a few beers. There were fireworks at midnight (well actually a few minutes early!) but shortly after it all seemed to ground to a rather abrupt halt! Pokhara is the late night town in Nepal, by which I mean things can stay open as late as 11pm, but whilst they had special dispensation to stay up later for New Year they didn’t seem in much of a mood to carry on after 12 and everything closed down pretty quickly. In fairness it’s not actually their New Year as Nepal operates on a different calendar. 
New Year celebrations - from left: Emma, Me, Chris, Saran and Khalid.
It did however mean that I was able to get up at a reasonable time the next morning for my trip to Kathmandu. Whilst not particularly hungover an 8 hour bumpy journey is not the most fun thing to do on New Years Day and I was glad to get there. The following day I went to the British Embassy, which was the purpose of my trip to Kathmandu, to get an approval letter to open a bank account in Nepal. This will enable the charity to avoid some of the expensive bank charges we incur when money is sent out here. It was a little intimidating going to the embassy where I was ushered in a small side gate and had to pass through a scanning machine like you get in an airport before giving in all of my electronic items to be kept at the desk. After all of that I was very quickly given a letter which in very laborious and drawn out terms explained that I didn’t need a letter to open a bank account!

In the afternoon I met up with Emma and the others from Pokhara who had flown back to Kathmandu on New Years day as they were approaching the end of their trip to Nepal. We tried to meet up in the busy Durbar square but after a few telephone conversations which basically included me saying ‘I’m by the temple’ and getting the reply ‘which one?’ etc. we decided it would be easier to meet up at Swayambhunath, nicknamed the monkey temple, a place I had visited four years ago on my first trip to Kathmandu. 
Swayambhunath is fairly easy to find, even amongst the maze of alleyways, as it sits on top of a steep hill, and so stands out easily once you get out into the open a bit more. We met up easily and climbed the steep staircase up to the temple at the top of the hill. It is not hard to see why it is nicknamed the monkey temple as there are monkeys running around everywhere giving lots of good photo opportunities. The Stupa itself is really impressive, a golden shrine to Buddha, surrounded by prayer wheels and prayer flags. The views though really make it a special place - you can see the whole of Kathmandu, nestled in amongst a backdrop of towering hills and mountains.
Top: The Stupa at Swayambhunath, above - the fantastic view looking North to the Himalayas. Below - it's not hard to see why it is nicknamed the monkey temple! Bottom - the views come at a price, a steep climb up to the top!
Having taken a good look round and a beer from a cafe right at the top, we headed back in a taxi to wards central Kathmandu and Emma very kindly invited me out to dinner with them and a friend of her family, who has lived in Kathmandu for almost 20 years. It was right up there as one of the best meals I have ever had, the food was delicious and the company great.

Back in Pokhara Emma and Khalid had also donated very generously to the charity which was really kind of them. Emma has got a special interest in Nepal having spent some of her childhood schooled out here though previous donations she has made to her old school have only seen 10% arrive at the schools and 90% syphonned off in admin fees which I found quite shocking! If you are kind enough to donate to Manisha UK, please be assured that that is not the case with us!!
After being dropped off just on the edge of the Thamel district where I was staying I managed to get myself lost in the maze of alleyways which was a little frightening. It was only about 10:30pm but that was late enough for the narrow streets and alleyways to be pretty much deserted apart from a few people and the odd stray dog. Thamel is an absolute maze and although I knew I was roughly in the right area it took me quite a while and couple of helpful people to help me find my way in the dark. 
A lovely evening out with great company and delicious food!

At lunchtime the next day I met up with Emma and the others in the Garden of Dreams, which I had visited previously with Barbara, Alan and Elaine. I arrived about an hour earlier than them but it is a beautiful place to loung around reading a book so I was quite happy. After having a small snack in the gardens, ginger ale and Key Lime Pie, we headed back into Thamel for some dinner and a beer before I finally said goodbye to them as they headed to the airport to fly back to Dubai. They provided great company over my few days in Pokhara and Kathmandu and I hope to see them again sometime soon. 
Relaxing in the 'Garden of Dreams', a sanctuary from the hustle and bustle of Kathmandu.

I headed out in a taxi to Ekta bookshop and spent a good couple of hours spending the money Emma and Khalid had donated on books and resources to take back to Tansen. I had an early night and was up early the next morning for the 10 hour bus journey to Tansen. 
I have had a couple of days back in Tansen and am happy to say we have now sent our first whiteboards out to schools. We put in an order for 50 of them with the aim that every classroom in every one of our schools should have a whiteboard. These are a huge improvement both in terms of the childrens ability to read the board in an often fairly dark classroom and also means there will not be nearly so much dust in the air from the chalk. 

These have been brought through generous donations to the charity. If you do have any spare money left from Christmas and would like to give something, however small, it can be donated by following the following link

It would be greatly appreciated.

Andy. X



Sending out the first batch of whiteboards - they should make both teachers and pupils lives easier.