Showing posts with label travel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label travel. Show all posts

Friday, 19 December 2008

A year ago - Ethiopia


It's Gabriel's Day and for almost half of Ethiopia's population this means a day at church, and a holiday for everyone. It was an amazing thing to witness.



At the entrance to a church, crowds wax and wane


The grass is sold to be laid inside the house to freshen it and also in some way to mark a new beginning or "fresh start".


A street seller







Crowded streets on Gabriel's Day


This woman smiles shyly as she sells her candles.


Some of the crowd in one street near a church, Gabriel's Day.


It's Gabriel's Day (after the Archangel Gabriel) and the citizens of Addis come out in their hundreds of thousands to celebrate. Impromptu markets are near every church and everything you could imagine is on sale, including candles and very colourful umbrellas used for offerings.


An Addis street


Koni and Dagem say goodbye with a typical open-handed slap "handshake". The harder the bigger the "slap" (that is how far back the arm is taken, and the slap never hard enough to hurt), the more affection and regard you have for a person (the same in Egypt). Once the hand is slapped a loose and quick shake follows.


The Emperor Haile Selassie's throne, in the Museum.


Dagem, one of the former street boys who lived in Ermi's House, or the Hope Centre, looks at Lucy's skeleton in the Museum. We went to the Museum on a "field trip". The boys were all fascinated with their country's history and culture. The oldest humans known have been found in Ethiopia. Lucy, several million years old, was discovered there in 1974.


"The interestingly named "I Love You Hotel"



Building scaffolding - I used to hold my breath watching the workers go up this ramp, bags of cement and other materials across their shoulders


A man makes his living with a sewing machine at his "shop" on the street


Pedestrians walk past one of the "plastic houses" of the homeless














Shoe shine "boys", some of the homeless of Addis. When Sentayhu asked me about shoe shine boys in Australia and I told him we didn't have any he couldn't contain his amazement and referred to it often.



Just a small supermarket


Near the end of the street that eventually leads to the girls' house (Joy Centre)


One of the small workshops where artists make goods for sale to tourists like me. I bought beautiful beads, a wonderful knitted shawl that I use all the time, saw weavers and artists at work.

G'day. I've been looking through some photos while I've been home and of course many of them are from Africa last year. I miss Ethiopia and all the wonderful kids and even Addis - I really found a heart-to-heart connection there. Sadly Konjit tells me that the Youth Impact Library hasn't opened again yet after the summer break when this year it closed down, not offering a summer program. It's all money of course, that's all, such a simple answer to this particular problem. Not even a lot of money.

Is there anyone out there who knows how to access around $30,000 US to make this amazing project basically self-sufficient for the forseeable future? $20,000 for one year's operation and $10,000 to set up the little business venture that should make it self-sufficient. Anyone who could help or who has ideas don't hesitate to let me know - PLEASE!

Anyway, I hope that you enjoy these few photos of Addis that you probably didn't see before.

Hope you enjoy,

lots of love

Lyndall

PS Tomorrow the kids go away for the day and so I will add some more photos and stories from the African trip

Friday, 12 December 2008

At home in Oz









First solid food












Playing soccer




At Underwater World with Lahni and Lonni

Well I made it home just fine - 27 hours travelling with my stop in Dubai almost 8 hours. But it was at the new terminal (Terminal 3) and as a Silver level frequent flyer with Emirates I am able to use the Business Class lounge so it's not too arduous. I even found a vacant bench to sleep on - had a staff member come and ask me if I needed a blanket - that's service. So I had a couple of hours sleep as well as did some shopping and also had an excellent snack - the food is always brilliant - and free.

Have had plenty to keep me busy, doctor's appointments, doing stuff with the kids, a colonoscopy and endoscopy, shopping for Christmas and of course, Logan. I've put in some of the pics we've taken while I've been back. He's very wary of strangers (as in, he bursts into tears) and after not liking me at all on the first day and only a little bit on the second day, now he is great and tonight I am babysitting. He always has big smiles for me and is happy to be carried, nursed, changed, walked etc. He's a joy. Hope you enjoy the pictures.

On Tuesday I get to go back into hospital for Dr Tarr to work a little more magic but best case scenario is that this time I am out the next day (worst case, 3 days), get my stitches out on Christmas Eve and will now fly home mid January. No heavy lifting for 6 weeks again but still I am sure that Logan and I will manage fine.

Anyway, I still have the ironing and the dishes to do so I'll get going. Mohamed is doing fine in Egypt getting the office organised and says "hello for everyone".

Lots of love

Lyndall

Monday, 17 November 2008

A visit to City Stars







Mohamed bought me all this cake for my birthday and even candles. This was a big deal as birthdays are not important in Egypt.


Well hi, sorry that I haven’t posted for a while, life has been just in the house but without anything very exciting happening. Yesterday we went for a drive and visited City Stars looking for clothes for Mohamed and so I thought I’d better send you something at least, and this is what you get.

I was amazed at how many changes there were to be seen in just over a couple of weeks. At the end of the street, only a couple of hundred metres tops, there’s a new building going up, on the corner of First Street (our street) and the main road into the estate from the second gate (Khefre Gate). There are 3 main gates leading into our estate from the Faiyoum Road and they are named after the 3 pyramids.

As we head into the city we must go through Ramiya Square (well, it’s a huge roundabout really). This is a total bottleneck and almost always busy – for example last night (about 6.30 pm) we were at crawling pace for around a kilometer or more. The roundabout is controlled by police, usually there’s about a dozen on duty. There are 4 divided roads that feed into the square, the Cairo-Alexandria Road in one direction and the Faiyoum Road and the street that leads down to Faisal Street (one of the biggest and busiest in the pyramids area) in the other. It seems that the powers that be have finally decided there must be a better answer and the roundabout has road works happening, which at this early stage look like they are making it into an intersection. All I can say is - I hope not, I think that will make it even worse unless there’s an overpass that goes in. I guess time will tell.

I notice that the police are now in their winter uniform. Egyptian police wear a white cotton uniform in winter and a black uniform in winter. When I last went out they were all in white, now they are in winter uniform. And it is getting much cooler, especially at night, so the timing is good.

As we head into El Haram (Pyramids) Road (yes, it is the main road that leads from Cairo through Giza and up to the pyramids) I also notice there are new traffic and tourist signs looking SO clean and spanking new. Most street signs in Cairo are pretty battered so these really stand out.

The trip on the Round Road is fairly smooth and we have time for a stop at On the Run for a coffee. One thing that's new is the price of coffee there - and the coffee is very good I might add - but when I came a year ago it was 7.50 pounds, now it is 13 pounds for a cappuchino. Inflation in Egypt is running at around 23% at the moment but this still seems a huge price rise. Off the Round Road and into Ourouba Road and down into Heliopolis and finally we arrive at City Stars after about an hour’s trip. City Stars is on the north east of the city, while we are on the south west. It’s not so busy tonight and we jag a park on the first sub-level near one of the doors. To get into the car park we must open our boot and have it swept for explosive traces, a sniffer dog goes around the car and another guy with one of those mirror devices to see under the car also goes round the vehicle. Once we’ve parked and want to enter the shopping centre we must also go through a metal detector and my handbag goes through an X-ray machine. This sort of security also applies at the big hotels and some other shopping areas we’ve been to. It’s a world away from Oz.

So we shop, it’s a big shopping centre, about 6 floors and I never know where I am particularly but I reckon we walked it all, ending up getting one jumper for Mohamed at the Levi’s store. He is a particular shopper but always looks great in his clothes so I guess it pays off. We just shop differently – I always want to go in to take a look but Mohamed just looks from the outside unless something sort of attracts him, I’m not quite sure what, and then he goes in to have a little look. We also visited the Virgin Megastore which stocks all sorts of good things. We can get movies there with Arabic subtitles although they are around 200 pounds which is pretty expensive. They have just started to stock what they call DCDs and these are movies on CDs, which only cost 25 pounds (about $6 at current exchange rates) and are good quality. So we got some movies and also some X-Box games (reduced from 550 pounds to 50 pounds – crazy) and I also got to get a new book at the bookstore. For which I am grateful as I’m reading a book for the 4th time right now. I’ve told the kids I need books to be on my Christmas list.

City Stars is full of designer label shops, big chain food outlets (Pizza Hut, McDonalds etc.), coffee shops like Costas and Starbucks and a cinema complex, with more big name shops opening soon, I notice for example, that Versace is opening next month. They have just opened a new section of 250 shops so there’s plenty to see. Prices are high though - to go with the big rents etc. I guess. Just like lots of shopping centres in Australia. There’s also a section called the Khan El Khalili (named after the big bazaar in Old Cairo) which has all sorts of traditional clothing, perfume and souvenirs.

Monday 17th

Sorry I got to take a break, longer than I intended, yesterday was the usual routine but we went out to the Dendy Mall last night and after looking again for clothes for Mohamed (without success) we sat and had coffee in one of the outdoor coffee shops which wa very pleasant. Today I’ve just been busy washing all the floors etc. Mohamed is out at the moment meeting with one of the companies we work for and I’m watching Grey’s Anatomy, a few seasons ago. I’ve got some bookwork to do yet so I’m going to finish off; sorry it’s a bit abruptly. I’m beginning to get excited about getting home – I fly out on the 1st December and arrive early on the 3rd in Brisbane. I’ve got just about a month and hope to get to Melbourne as well as staying in Brisbane and on the Sunny Coast. As far as I know Christmas is with Lahni and Ian and Logan for as many of us as can get there.

So I’ll go now and certainly hope to see some of you when I’m home. Take care, I’ll write again I’m sure before I get home,

Lots of love

Lyndall

Friday, 24 October 2008

NEWS FLASH FROM CAIRO - AT LONG LAST

Well at long last a couple of things have happened. As Mohamed would say, here is the first – today it RAINED! The forecast had said a 30% chance of rain in the morning but as it hasn’t rained at all since about February and it wasn’t too cloudy I felt sure we wouldn’t get any. But we did - for around 5 minutes and barely enough to dampen the ground. Mind you that was almost immediately followed by a small sandstorm when we had no hope of seeing the pyramids and Mohamed was rushing around the house raising all the awnings and shutting all the windows. It only lasted a little while however and now it’s back to just cloudy again. Mohamed was on his way back from Friday prayers and got caught in the rain and it was actually like mud spots all over his T-shirt. It would have been great to get some good rain to wash out the air as it has been extra bad lately but I’m not sure that it happens in Cairo.

Anyway enough about the weather – the other great news flash is that the Minister has signed off on our company application (well one of the 3) and although it will take 2-3 months to get everything done and make it happen, in the new year we will have our Class A travel company open for business. I can’t tell you the name yet, we have to submit 3 names after the weekend and we will be told what it will be after checks are made. Police checks will also be carried out in these early stages. We’ve also begun to make office fit-out lists and have been to the first shop to look at what’s available and what it costs. I am coming back to Oz for December and Mohamed will be able to buy once we have looked now and determined some preferences. We have been waiting all year for this so we are both very excited and happy that it’s coming into being at last.

And it means the end of my (relatively) idle life.

I am flying out of Cairo on 1st December and will arrive in Brisbane on 3rd. I leave again to come back on the 29th. I will spend some time with each of the kids and am very much looking forward to having a holiday this time around and to catching up with as many people as I can. (And of course getting in as much Logan time as I can while I’m there). I do expect to be in Melbourne for a few days with Linc and so hope to catch up with a few Victorians as well. Will keep you updated as the time draws closer and we work out when I am where. Christmas is at Lahni’s, Maroochydore.

Lahni and I have managed to speak a few times via Windows Live Messenger and it has been fabulous to see Logan on the screen, he’s certainly growing and doing well and looking so cute. I’ve also heard him laugh, a very infectious gurgle. Isn’t the Internet amazing?

I’m sorry I haven’t written for a while – don’t know where the time goes half the time. One other thing that I have done is to set up a gallery for photos on the National Geographic site – you are all welcome to go and have a look. It only takes 100 shots and there are 100 up, so what I will probably do is change a few each week or something. You can take a look if you want at http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/myshot/gallery/63570. The good thing for me is that people can log on and rate the photos, so it’s excellent to get comments and ratings from random viewers, hopefully it will help improve my photography in the long run.

I’ve also been continuing with my baking experiments. I got Lahni to dig out a few of my mother’s recipes – she is the keeper of all this stuff and my mother was an excellent baker and cook – and so I’ve made shortbread biscuits and a few other things, with reasonable success. I never used to cook biscuits or cakes or anything, I always preferred to make main course meals, but with Mohamed really only liking Egyptian type cooking for that, I’ve decided to branch out a bit. So far so good, although the oven is a bit weird with its temperatures and is taking some getting used to and getting the right results. SO I’ve only been baking biscuits until I get the hang of it and find all the ingredients to have in the cupboard (like SR flour, only found it once in the supermarket, things seem to be there one week and not the next). Presently we have peanut butter biscuits in the barrel and those are disappearing rapidly.

Can’t find vanilla essence anywhere (which has been holding up cake production also) and I realized why the other day as it is made with alcohol. But I can find vanilla pods and now just need to find out what the equivalencies are. If anyone has any idea I’d be glad to hear from you as I haven’t yet been able to track it down on the net. I have been making do with vanilla sugar but it’s not really strong enough.

About time to post as I’ve really not any more news just now, Mohamed is reading the paper in bed and I am watching Russell Crowe in Master & Commander which I’ve always really enjoyed so am happy to watch again. But I need to get a drink and a final snack and need to think about bed. For some reason neither of us could sleep last night, finally nodding off just before 4 am so an earlier night will be a good thing.

So until next time, which I will try and make a lot sooner than this, I hope you are well and happy,

Lots of love

Lyndall

Monday, 18 August 2008

Home again and we have the net at last!

Well hello at last

I’m so sorry that I haven’t written before now – I don’t know where the time has gone really and I have only been to the net once very quickly and then another trip to Honda to service the car where they have wi-fi. But I spent most of my time there trying to renew my security subscription and update security on the laptop with only time for a couple of quick emails.

We have had Mohamed’s sisters Walaa and Hagar and Walaa’s two children Khamsa and Mariam aged 2 and 2 months and 11 months respectively staying on and off. The kids were both extremely cute but Khamsa is EXCEPTIONALLY active and was awake from about 9.00 am until 1.00 am with maybe a tiny nap in the middle somewhere, around 5 pm. Both had chest infections, with Mariam the worst and a nasty cough. She was such a happy thing though and just on the verge of walking, she took her very first steps from the coffee table to Mohamed (about 3).


But anyway, back to the beginning.

The flight was fine, very smooth, I slept plenty really (business class - I hope never to fly anything else again, unless of course it is first), stayed on the plane in Singapore (why is it that you can stay on the plane going over but you MUST get off at Singapore for all of 20 minutes coming to Oz) and had a fairly quick break in Dubai, where I shopped and bought an X-Box for Mohamed.

There were a couple of surprises for me when I got home – Mohamed had bought the bedroom suite and it is very nice really. Probably not what I would have originally chosen but very good in the room, it really suits it and I like it a lot. It has a king size bed, two bedside tables, a big dressing table with a mirror, a very large wardrobe, a coat stand and another cabinet with a drawer and large cupboard. The dressing table and bedside tables and cabinet are topped in a dark red, white-veined marble.













He had also done a lot of work on the roof and had bought 50 trees and shrubs in pots that are now up there and it also looks very nice. It’s lovely up there in the evening and I really enjoy watering after the sun has gone down. We usually spend an hour or so up there fiddling with the plants. Tonight was magical, cooler than the house, full moon over the desert and the sound and light show (well I could only see the light show) on the pyramids. Pretty special.














We have also been and bought a dining room suite and a cabinet kind of like a large china cabinet with a glass-doored one on top and closed in cupboards on the bottom. It is made of a wood called zaan in Arabic but neither Mohamed nor the lady in the shop knew what it is in English. And I can’t tell by looking either. At the same shop we bought two bedside lamps for the bedroom tables that I really like, a sort of dark red and gold. We also bought some artificial flowers, again not usually my thing but Mohamed really wanted flowers so we went to a specialist shop for artificial flowers and got some that are quite good I think. Got some for the bedroom as well in dark red. They are still too long for the vases but I need a pair of clippers to get them right.








So the house is beginning to look a little more “full” although still lots to get.

We had two trips to Alexandria to sort out my boxes from Australia. A total cost of just over 3000 pounds to get them out and into the house. Terminal charges, payment for the man to do the paperwork and also customs duties. At first we had a phone call to say that there were many cds with naked pictures on them, but I said that I didn’t believe that was true and was either an attempt to explain why some disappeared or someone wanted more money. So Mohamed just told them it wasn’t true and when we got the boxes they all seemed to be there. I thought I couldn’t find one at all with a naked picture but Mohamed did find a Tom Waits one with a naked woman in the background on the cover.

Unfortunately not everything arrived intact with 4 crystal glasses broken, one of the crystal vases smashed to smithereens and about a dozen pieces of the dinner set broken. And Mohamed told me when we unpacked the silver cutlery that it is haram for Muslims to eat or serve food with gold or silver. So all of that was a waste to bring and it will sit in the cupboard. Actually under the main silver set was a whole lot of miscellaneous silver and cutlery, some of which was stainless so was OK. Can’t use all the silver teaspoons I brought over in my luggage either.

Nor was I meant to have any of mum’s crystal glasses – two days later the glass cupboard in the kitchen fell off the wall and smashed everything!

While the sisters Walaa and Hagar were here I have learned some more Egyptian dishes - white beans you might like (sort of like a spicy homemade baked beans) but I wonder if you’d enjoy the meat soup (basically boiled big chunks of meat with an onion in it and salt and pepper). Still they all think it is delicious. I think I also have the egg perfected and my mashed potatoes are considered good. And koshery I can now also make except for the lemon sauce – koshery is a really cheap dish you can buy on the street – rice, very tiny macaroni and lentils all cooked in together and then you get a tomato type sauce, just a little spicy, a very hot sauce, a lemon sauce, extra crispy lentils and very golden dry crispy onion and chick peas that you sprinkle on top. I only got the method for the tomato type sauce from Hagar but I can do the sprinkles although I would need a recipe for the hot sauce and the lemon sauce. Maybe the net will provide eventually. Mind you a huge dish of it costs 5 pounds (A$1) on the street – you would wonder why we would bother making it!

And the phone and the net is another story. The phone is here and is to be wireless. Yes, the phone will be some sort of wireless/mobile deal as will the net but it doesn’t work right now – we get to wait for them to build the tower for this area – they said a couple of months but goodness knows what that means. Mohamed got it to work the other night but he now tells me it can only make house to house calls, not to mobiles, and he doesn’t know if it will make international calls. So we have made one call to Rania,

Etisalat has a new deal for mobile net for 6 months – it costs 300 pounds per month and if you take 6 months you get your modem free – or something to that effect. At least that was what was advertised. And that was 3.75G with 3G about half that price. I wanted to faster speed, of course, but on further investigation Mohamed has phoned me tonight to say that the fast speed is only available in 2 areas in Cairo so it will be the slower speed. I think he’s organizing it tonight. I HOPE!

On our first trip to Alexandria about the boxes we had a bit of time and we went to the library – it is such an impressive building from the outside, so incredibly unique and unusual – I was a bit disappointed with the inside. It also costs you to get in which surprised me. Still I was pleased to have seen it. It’s renowned throughout the library world.







The new library at Alexandria replacing at last the ancient library that was destroyed by fire.


Have also had a new sort of mango which is just incredibly delicious – it’s called a foss –don’t know if that’s how you spell it but it’s how you say it – it’s very small and also has a tiny seed and is not at all stringy, very sweet and juicy. They are fabulous and so we’re eating lots of mangoes. At the moment most of the roadside donkey and horse carts have mangoes, probably about a dozen different varieties. And cucumbers are just starting to come and corn is getting ripe in the fields, there are food sellers with roasted cobs all around the streets. And guavas are also in season, we have a couple of kilos in the fridge – mind you now everything smells of guava!



Porto Sohkna - a huge new hotel and apartment complex being built


We took another trip to Sokhna and this time spent a day on a beach at one of the big hotels (cost us 300 pounds to use the beach) and we swam all day and had an excellent lunch (extra, not included). We could also have used the pool if we had wanted but the sea (the Red Sea below Suez) was much better. Lots of fish in it – they would sometimes nibble on you – a bit disconcerting. The sea was beautiful to swim in, fabulous temperature and very clean. Only problem where we were there were rocks with lots of sea urchins, Mohamed got some small spine pieces in his foot and it’s given him some problems but I think I finally got the last very tiny piece out last night as it seems at last to be not so sore. Not a lot of sand and very rocky in places to get into the water but beautiful once in. Not a wave in sight of course. Mohamed is very willing to learn to swim and mastered floating without much problem, I think he will be swimming in no time if we get to go back often enough. He’s just got to get the breathing thing happening, although while we’ve watched the Olympics he has seen how the swimmers breathe out through their nose. He’s very observant and has probably learned heaps just from watching.

The other night we took Walaa and the kids to the airport – she had 120 kg of luggage but she could take 100 for free. At last! Someone with more luggage than me! She also had a problem because the police wanted proof the children belonged to her and she hadn’t put Mariam into her passport yet. I asked Mohamed how she managed and he said that she cried and the policeman let her go. Different – it’s all so very different.

We also went back to the visa halls to get my visa renewed. Now I am married to an Egyptian I am entitled to a 5 year resident’s visa, renewable as many times as you like. So it was back to the first window we ever went to and again off to the other window to pay the fees, but this time I had a pen and we knew enough to have photographs with us and copies of my passport and the marriage contract etc. etc. But we were still caught out because we didn’t have copies of Mohamed’s passport. So it was still back down the stairs to the copy booths and shove through the crowd of dozens all shouting waving papers (well Mohamed shoving through the crowds) to get his passport copied. But eventually we had everything we needed and we went back to our original window and dropped it all off. It will take two weeks, which means that it is supposed to be ready on Monday. I HOPE!

Hagar has come back to stay with us for maybe a week – well as long as she likes really and as often as she likes. She has given up work and I am most concerned about her living alone without any work to do. She can work for us once the company is a reality but meanwhile I hope she stays as often as possible.

So off to wash the floors, talk to you again soon now that I can do it more easily

lots of love

Lyndall


PS - And just for Henry Kwaczynski – Henry when we were driving to the supermarket the other night I saw a whole new one – a truck with the load slipped and no rocks on the road – instead we had a fire on the road to warn everyone of the problem! There’s always something on the road to astound me!