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| View off porch of Mt. Meru |
As a volunteer we stay on campus in a very nice volunteer house. We all have our own rooms that are pleasant. There is a kitchen, and a living area with a bookshelf filled with great books to read. The best part about our house is the porch with an amazing view of Mt. Meru. If we are lucky and it’s clear we can see the top of Mt. Kilimanjaro to the right of it. My housemates are Chris, Julian, and Simon. All are very nice and we live together well so far.
Every month the students have to take government standardized tests. The have spent all of this week taking the tests and studying. So for this week we have been doing lots of manual labor in the garden and maze field. Much of the work has been planting food and slashing weeds with a jembe that has given me some pretty big blisters to work around. Next week I will be starting my work in the classroom as a tech teacher. I am excited to get to know the kids better and let my hands rest from all of the fieldwork.
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| Replacing a water tank |
Karibu- your welcome/ you are welcome in Swahili
Wazungu- foreigner in Swahili
Jembe- garden tool with long shaft and blade like a hoe
Maze- corn
Ugali- flowered corn that is mixed and cooked in water until thick mashed potato consistency with no flavor
Kande- beans and maze mix
Once again the Internet has not been working well so it’s been difficult to upload all of the photos I have taken so far. I know it would be nice to have some visuals.


It was really enjoyable to see all your photos. I follow Peace House on Twitter and FB and that is how I learned of your blog. It was May of 2009 that I and a handful of Rotarians visited Peace House and then headed to Lake Manyara and Ngorongoro. Tough to choose a favorite as the Peace House experience is life changing but then again so is the beauty you see while on safari. This all aside, hopefully you all had a chance to eat at The Big Bite in Arusha!
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