I have started to get used to the idea that the cute farm animal I see around the kitchen in the morning will often be my dinner in the evening. It is easier in Uganda to keep your meat fresh by keeping it alive than using a freezer.
--PHD
Wednesday, July 20, 2011
Tuesday, July 19, 2011
Monday, July 18, 2011
Date Night
Heather and I spent a few days in Kampala buying supplies and took an afternoon off to see a movie in the only theater in Uganda. I was excited to find “Thor” was playing and during the movie we almost forgot we were even in Uganda. Almost… because apparently it started raining outside and water began pouring into the theater from leaks on the roof making a few members of the audience have to change seats to avoid getting drenched. The sound of dripping water continued throughout most of the movie – just to remind us of where we were.
--PHD
--PHD
Saturday, July 16, 2011
Taxis II
Another time I was in a taxi, we were driving through Luwero again when the person sitting shotgun started cracking up laughing. He yelled over to the driver who then halted the taxi, put it in reverse for 20 yards or so, and then stopped. The man in shotgun pointed into a nearby shop and soon the whole taxi was rolling with laughter about something I couldn’t discern in the shop. Then we drove off.
--PHD
--PHD
Friday, July 15, 2011
Thursday, July 14, 2011
Bicycle Race
I had taken some visitors into Ntuuti on bikes to tour them around the villages, when a kid on a bike came up from behind me shouting, “Ofwono, Ofwono,” which is my Ugandan name (Ofwono was the tallest man to live
in Uganda). He was trying to pass me and I kept biking a bit faster, laughing at him as we went. Soon he surged forward passing me and the American visitors who were in front of us, also on bikes. Well I couldn’t let that stand so while he split to the left of the visitors I split to the right and began pumping my pedals ferociously, not to be beaten by a 10 year old in a bike race.
We flew past the visitors and were dodging potholes, children, and bodas (I had a distinct disadvantage being on the wrong side of the road) speeding through the village, both of us laughing the whole way.
And of course you are wondering… I defended the Mzungus that day winning the race pretty handedly.
--PHD
We flew past the visitors and were dodging potholes, children, and bodas (I had a distinct disadvantage being on the wrong side of the road) speeding through the village, both of us laughing the whole way.
And of course you are wondering… I defended the Mzungus that day winning the race pretty handedly.
--PHD
Tuesday, July 12, 2011
Taxis - MicroStory
Not all of the stories from here in Uganda fit into larger
narratives. In fact, most are fun little things that just happen to collide into
life as you live it out here. So I thought I would share some these
“MicroStories” on a random basis. There will be more of these from both of Heather and I in the future. Below is the first installment.
--PHD
When I say taxi you may envision a little yellow car with a lighted sign of the roof. However that is not at all a Ugandan taxi. Instead envision one of those big ugly church vans, usually they are painted white with a blue checkerboard detailing pattern around the sides. Ugandans are piled in as deep as you can get them and goods are piled high on the roof-rack. They drive a “route” but you can hail one anywhere along that route and also tell them to stop anywhere along that route. You can even tell them to stop, do some quick purchases and hop right back in, that is, if you don’t mind a van full of other Ugandans rumbling while they wait for you.
So I (Patrick) was sitting in a taxi at the taxi park in Luwero, one stop on our way ultimately to Wobolenzi. Our driver was outside shouting at people, trying to round them up like a man working a carnival game. The taxi was mostly packed but there was certainly still room by Ugandan standards. The day was hot and random Ugandans would approach the taxi with goods like bananas, mystery meat on a stick (likely roadkill), or bottled water.
I noticed among the passengers the mild seat shifting and under the breath grumbling that indicates impatience. When Ugandans get frustrated they start making this sound with their tongue and teeth, sort of like when you suck the tongue from the roof of your mouth to make a clicking sound, it sort of sounds like a “tsk”. At first that sound could be heard first just here and there, but soon momentum grew it into a wave of tsking, grumbling and seat shifting rising up all around me. The next thing I knew, mutiny was on this taxi drivers hands as Ugandans began piling out and leaving the taxi for another one. The driver bounced around to all the deserters trying to convince them he would go right then but they just shook their heads. The driver surrendered, hopped in his taxi that was now barely half full and began to drive off.
Just outside of the taxi park several people were waiting for a taxi and he was quickly full before we even left Luwero.
On my return trip that same day I was about to hop into a taxi at the Wobolenzi taxi park when that same driver came running up to me and grabbed me by the arm. "I drove him down here today, this Mzungu is MINE!” he stated defiantly to all the Taxi drivers in the area. Shrugging because I really had no reason not to go with him I followed him back to his taxi.
--PHD
--PHD
When I say taxi you may envision a little yellow car with a lighted sign of the roof. However that is not at all a Ugandan taxi. Instead envision one of those big ugly church vans, usually they are painted white with a blue checkerboard detailing pattern around the sides. Ugandans are piled in as deep as you can get them and goods are piled high on the roof-rack. They drive a “route” but you can hail one anywhere along that route and also tell them to stop anywhere along that route. You can even tell them to stop, do some quick purchases and hop right back in, that is, if you don’t mind a van full of other Ugandans rumbling while they wait for you.
So I (Patrick) was sitting in a taxi at the taxi park in Luwero, one stop on our way ultimately to Wobolenzi. Our driver was outside shouting at people, trying to round them up like a man working a carnival game. The taxi was mostly packed but there was certainly still room by Ugandan standards. The day was hot and random Ugandans would approach the taxi with goods like bananas, mystery meat on a stick (likely roadkill), or bottled water.
I noticed among the passengers the mild seat shifting and under the breath grumbling that indicates impatience. When Ugandans get frustrated they start making this sound with their tongue and teeth, sort of like when you suck the tongue from the roof of your mouth to make a clicking sound, it sort of sounds like a “tsk”. At first that sound could be heard first just here and there, but soon momentum grew it into a wave of tsking, grumbling and seat shifting rising up all around me. The next thing I knew, mutiny was on this taxi drivers hands as Ugandans began piling out and leaving the taxi for another one. The driver bounced around to all the deserters trying to convince them he would go right then but they just shook their heads. The driver surrendered, hopped in his taxi that was now barely half full and began to drive off.
Just outside of the taxi park several people were waiting for a taxi and he was quickly full before we even left Luwero.
On my return trip that same day I was about to hop into a taxi at the Wobolenzi taxi park when that same driver came running up to me and grabbed me by the arm. "I drove him down here today, this Mzungu is MINE!” he stated defiantly to all the Taxi drivers in the area. Shrugging because I really had no reason not to go with him I followed him back to his taxi.
--PHD
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