Sunday, May 19, 2013

And beyond...


Dirt paths line the sides of the tarmac where you can watch bicycles and people traveling as the airplane lands. They parallel the highway, leading into the city Lilongwe, which resembles more of a large scattered town, sectioned off into areas (Area 1, Area, 2, Area 44), with dozens of roundabouts shared with bicycles and left hand traffic, pedestrian crossing spontaneously, booths hawking cell phones, hubcaps, and/or belts, dusty shopping centers and supermarket bargain margins, dirty trousers and colorful chitenje (cloth wraps), sacks on heads or carts heaping. All very bustling. I live in Area 44. The streets narrow as the dirt paths widen and become the road that leads to my new home. It’s called Kusamala.

You enter through the courtyard, which is enclosed by the stable rooms, an office, a common room, house the resident interns. Sizeable rooms with brick walls and concrete floors, single bed and bamboo shelf… electricity! Peanuts have been laid to dry next to the rooms. There is a small garden we open our doors to, with a cozy sitting area under a green covered trellis and hibiscus growing everywhere. Exiting the courtyard, are gardens within gardens.  The resident garden has plants nooked and crannied into any old space, here and there traces of novice planter interns come and gone, and yielding mostly hot peppers at the moment, a bit of kale, and hope. There are wild tomatoes and papaya sprouts popping up in the grey-water collection (maybe not eat those), a banana tree dwarfing an avocado tree, a random poinsettia here, a cow pea there. The chicken coop is behind, housing eleven chickens, a confused rooster, and eight fluffy baby chicks (they just hatched when I arrived!). The commercial garden is beautiful, growing enough vegetables to supply their CSA baskets once a week, and where we often nibble and supplement our own greens from. There is a medicinal garden, a nursery made of bamboo poles and plastic, a ‘memo’ (demonstration) garden, exemplifying permaculture, a food forest, a staple field of maize that has just been harvested and is waiting to be ground up… I will get a full on tour tomorrow.

There are three other interns at the moment, Daniel here ten months and can speak Chichewa like a local, Carolina a spunky old spainard, and Piere who is endeavoring to start up his own NGO in the area. Interns seem to come and go, always leaving traces and stories behind, a booming beehive, a failed herb spiral, a thatched dome, to name a few, and all the planting in between.  There are three resident workers: Molly the director, Catherine is logistics, and Marie is the chief agricultural officer. They along with the handsome Malawians, two very knowledgeable permaculture heads (Inuk and Biswick), a handful of farm workers (stoked to have just discovered Rosetta Stone -English), three African ladies who cook lunch, all run the center. Everyone has fun and inspiring stories, are quick with a smile, and a definite sense of humor.

This, I believe, to be key to living here. As most everything built is ramshackled together, often out of tire string and bamboo, and frogs hopping out of the wood-works, our rooster crowing at midnight, there are spiders out of your worst nightmares, pot holes the size of VWs, a stove that works half the time, night gaurds who ward off the wild hogs, vuvu the cat snarfing down a snake in the kitchen (!!), and being the bumbling newbee… laughter can be crucial. But so too can the appreciation for the crazy beautiful birds, the smell of dirt and sweat, and the most beautiful sunsets.

3 comments:

  1. Meggie! What a picture you've painted for us. Thank you! The picture in my mind is beautiful, though I'm sure even my imaginings can't do it justice. I can't wait to hear and see more.

    I'm thinking of you, my dear! I'm proud of you, and envious of those sunsets.

    Take good care of you. All my love, Bobafet.

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  2. Very nice introduction. I'm afraid of those spiders for you. I hope you will be taking pictures of those, the baby chicks, & all the smiling faces.

    Be Well Schulzey & keep em coming
    Xoxox
    Leary

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  3. Sounds pretty wonderful, overall! But what happened to areas 3-43? It's like how you say you can count to 100 when you're a kid, and you just go 1, 2, 3, 4, 99, 100! haha

    Also I agree with Megan that there needs to be pictures of those baby chickies, and more updates!

    Love and miss you lots and lots. <3

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