Thursday and Friday were spent in meetings...about as exciting as that sounds. All the foreigners who had traveled from the US were hit with fierce jetlag. My eyes crossed, my head nodded, I may have fallen asleep during a short video clip when they dimmed the lights. I felt a bit less guilty when our donor representative confessed to almost falling out of her chair at one point when she nodded off.
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| Bean pickers |
Saturday however, while a long, long day included an afternoon of field trips. We boarded mini-buses to go out to a small private company started by a couple agriculture university graduates who had put their entrepreneur class to good use. I admit, I don't quite understand the business model, but our group of 20+ trudged out into the muddy fields (some with better suited shoes than others) to see how production worked and chat with some of the farmer workers. They were mostly women, barefoot in the mud, hand picking green beans. The field we went to was run by a young woman as well which was heartening since one of the main aims of our project is to improve women's empowerment.
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| Bean pickers |
The second field trip was more eco-tourism than project oriented. A sub-set of our group bused out to walk around a "Masai" village to see how they live. I put that in quotations because traditionally Masai are pastoral and constantly move with their herds. These Masai were in an established village with only one or two cows per family. They harvest bananas and coffee, it seems, and we were treated to a coffee preparation demonstration starting with the raw bean and ending with brewed coffee. Not really what one would like to do every morning, so thank goodness for modern processing.
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| Shelling and roasting coffee |
After that long day we had our group dinner at a fancy restaurant which unfortunately did not have fancy food. Good thing we weren't terribly hungry. Last thing I did that evening was clean the mud off my running shoes, knowing that I would have a significant amount of sludge to clean out of the sink once the water slowly drained.
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