Friday, December 12, 2008

Letter in the Namibian

The Namibian has been our very favorite newspaper here, and we buy it from the guy standing on the corner every Monday through Friday for N$3 (about 30 cents). The Namibian has been around since before independence, and is a surprisingly in-depth, and balanced newspaper. It's motto is, "still telling it like it is." It is an English language paper, but it has several pages each day in Oshiwambo. There also is a government run English paper that also has sections in indigineous languages (the New Era), an Afrikaans paper (Republikein), a German paper, some free weeklies and some other local papers. One of the neat features of the Namibian is that they have a whole page every day dedicated to SMSs from readers. I think it's a great way to publish a lot of opinions daily (40 to 50 per day), and you really get a pulse of the nation reading these. Plus, most people communicate via SMS here - much more than actually talking on the phone and infinitely more than email or letter writing. I think US papers will need to copy this SMS idea in its papers.

While I am a fan of the SMSs, I was pleased to get a real letter to the editor (not an SMS) published today about my social work department at Unam in the Namibian. It's all true. Read it here!

Spring Break in the Namib (in October)

During the kids’ Spring Break in October (yes, took awhile to post this), the girls and I went with our good friends on a camping trip to the Namib Desert. The Namib, obviously, is Namibia’s namesake. It is a huge desert west of Windhoek that spreads all the way to the coast. It is famous for its red sand dunes, the white desert, and other stunning landscapes, and has lots of unique plants, many that have yet to be documented. We spent most of our trip in the Namib-Naukluft National Park.


Most of the time all 5 kids rode with me in the combi.

The first day we drove over an absolutely gorgeous pass leaving the Hochland Highlands where Windhoek is (we are at about 5,000 feet in elevation in Windhoek) toward the desert. We stayed in an extremely remote campground/lodge, which felt like it was at the end of the earth. It was about 30 kilometres off the “main road” on an extremely bumpy road, with the main road being a gravel road with nobody on it. The proprietors had been living in the desert along time; the man wore only shorts and nothing else, walking around barefoot on all of the sharp thorns. Our campsite was up in the rocks, and had an amazing view where you could see forever. The kids had a great time exploring the rocks, though I wasn’t too happy when they found a Scorpion. The campground was a lovely place, but the rocks formed sort of a wind tunnel.

In the middle of the night, the wind kept blowing down our tents and it was sort of miserable. At one point, Maxine and Alice got out of their tent, and the wind actually blew their tent away over the side of the cliff!! We all ended up sleeping in the car. The next day a worker brought it back, as she had found it stuck on a game fence a few kilometers away. After we had recovered from our windy night, we stopped by the lodge, and the owners of the place took us to see their pets, an orphan zebra and a donkey (apparently, the zebra and the donkey are “married”). The owner gives the zebra, named Linus, a cup of coffee every morning. The zebra came running down the hill for the coffee, sort of like I do in the morning for my coffee, and drank the coffee from the mug. The kids all got to ride the Linus the Zebra bareback, which was fun.


Off to an auspicious start - flat tire!


Entrance to Rooiklip - another 30 K to go.


Our campsite


Kids at sunset


Linus drinking coffee


Alice riding the zebra bareback

We then headed for our main destination, the Gobabeb Desert Research Centre, which is run by the Desert Research Foundation of Namibia. The road were pretty desolate on the way to Gobabeb, as you need a permit to enter this fragile part of the ecosystem. We saw some Ostrich, Springbok and Gemsbok on the way, and had a few instances where the combi went into sand pits in the road and was covered completely in a cloud of sand. We took a little break in a cool cave, and also drove by the Tropic of Capricorn.


Cave





Tropic of Capricorn

We were able to get permits and an invitation to visit because we were on the Fulbright programme, and because the person we were talking to was a student from Grinnell College who grew up in Minnesota! Gobabeb is almost 100% off-grid, making use of the almost universal Namibian sunshine to power itself with solar energy. The interest in solar energy is growing in Namibia, but I am surprised still at the resistance to solar energy here. There couldn’t be a better place for solar energy in the world.


Gobabeb Entrance


Touring the Solar Panels

Gobabeb lies at the intersection of the white gravelly plains type of desert, the red desert, and the dry riverbeds. As far as we could tell, the main research activities were documenting the insects, plants and other wildlife in the area. We were surprised that there weren’t actually more scientists there, as they have a great location and great facilities. While we got a tour of the facilities, the highlight of our stay at Gobabeb was going on a self-guided nature walk through all three landscapes. The kids, of course, preferred climbing the red dunes and running down them!


Kids on the hike


Gobabeb from the Red Dune



Climbing up the Dunes




Girls by the red dunes


The Riverbed

The next day we left Gobabeb, stopped in for refueling in Walvis Bay, and then headed for an area known as the Welwetchisa Plains. Welwitschia are Namibian plants that have only two leaves and lives for more than 1,000 years. It is a desert adapted plant, gaining its moisture solely from the fog that comes off the ocean. This area is quite a barren part of the country, and one part of it is called the “moonscape” as it resembles the moon. We saw the largest known Welwetschia plant there, which is about 4 meters wide and 1 ½ tall. While this region is a protected region that requires permits for entry, all care for the environment goes away when mining is concerned. There is a “uranium rush” occurring in Namibia, where lots of prospectors think they are going to get rich off of uranium. The government allows uranium prospectors to prospect anywhere, so it was very disconcerting to see all of this completely unregulated activity happening in this extremely delicate environment. They founder of he Desert Research Foundation of Namibia is quite upset about this, but is trying to get the Uranium prospectors to try not to ruin the entire desert in their quest for uranium. See this article here if you are interested.


Ruby at the Moonscape


Welwetschia Plains


The famous Welwetschia Plant


Uranium



Picnic in the Swapok River Valley

We camped that night at one of my favorite campsites we’ve stayed at in Namibia, called Bloedkoppie, which is Afrikaans for Blood Hill. The campsite was at this huge orangish/reddish hill, a granite inselberg. At sunset, the rock turns bright red. Of course, we all had to climb to the top of this rocky hill, which had amazing views. On the climb up, you see rock sculptures made from the erosion, which were quite beautiful. There were six campsites at Bloedkoppie, but it was only our group and a German couple in the whole place.


Bloedkoppie campsite from on top of the rock



Rock Sculpture


Ruby on top of BloedKoppie


Another view from on top of Bloedkoppie


We stopped by an old German fort on the way home



And climbed up another pass.


This whole trip I kept thinking, if this beautiful place was anywhere NEAR the United States, it would be overrun would tourists. Instead, we hardly saw a passing car the whole trip.

Friday, December 5, 2008

Busy

We are all busy in Namibia! It is getting close to our time to leave Windhoek in middle January, and I have been too busy to post about our activities lately. The girls have been busy with end of the year school activities, like performances and science fairs. The girls finish school today at WIS with each of them having a small good-bye party, and then we begin, what they call here, the “festive season”. Christmas is a big holiday here, and decorations began appearing here and there around Halloween.

Bill has finished up his teaching at UNAM (he taught two sections of a legal writing course this term), and is still tutoring a few folks at the American Cultural Center. I am still finishing up a number of projects at UNAM and with three NGOs, and now am getting stressed about all I wanted to get done before we leave! We have also stepped up our travelling, and have been out and about seeing Namibia on weekend trips quite often. I’ll update a bit in the next week, and try to post some photos.