Wednesday, August 29, 2007

the landmark gecko v. roach decision

i woke up early this morning, alone in my dorm room at our teachers college, a bit startled by an unusual scratchy crunching noise not unlike the sound of a cautious footfall on a dry leaf. i was pretty sure the sound was coming from inside, perhaps near the corner of the room. upon investigation, i discovered something quite magical. here in uganda, i have encountered cockroaches and geckos aplenty, but this morning i bore witness to the hilarious predatory union of the two. my friend the gecko was clinging to the wall behind a neighboring bed with his little gray-green jaw clamped down tightly on the head of an enormous cockroach. as if this wasn't enough to get me excited, the gecko was "jump-chomping" on his prey's miserable face - leaving his back feet planted on the wall, he would raise his front feet, torso, and roach-filled maw up in the air and, with all the gecko force he could muster, let it come crashing down in one crunchy, heroic bite.

i have beaten, burned, drowned, eaten (inadvertently), and/or crushed many cockroaches in my day, only to see them later run away, after i believed they were long dead, to have another 1000 babies in my cupboard. based on such experience, i was convinced this wretched beast before me was still very much alive, perhaps merely playing along with the gecko, mildly inconvenienced in the same way you or i might feel when we've been roped into a conversation we never wanted in the first place with a person who does not respond predictably to standard and widely understood social cues. sure enough, i left the two of them alone for a minute to put my camera away and i returned to find only the gecko remaining. the cockroach was nowhere in sight, presumably back on task being filthy somewhere dark. apparently, our young gecko finally got the hint.


Saturday, August 25, 2007

Monday, August 13, 2007

well, back to work!

clearly, it's been all business and no party (unlike my hair) since my return to uganda.

actually, things have gotten quite busy here and for that i am glad. it just so happens that i do not take pictures of myself at work...though perhaps i should start?

there have been two major developments on the work front recently. first, the computer lab project i mentioned in an earlier post is now off the ground, and we have begun work refreshing some machines at the teacher college. second, my counterpart and i are preparing our coordinating center for what could/should be a worthwhile resource room, full of teaching materials and hopefully a computer. like most projects here, we are simply waiting for some financial support.

anyway, it's nice to feel somewhat useful here. my next big event is a three-day language workshop, in which i hope to rise to a new level of jap proficiency.

bedi maber.

go to the light, little friend...

do not feed the baboons?

i may have mentioned to some of you that there is a magical forest just short of tororo on the road from kampala. on the edge of this forest, you can sometimes spot a small pack of hungry baboons waiting for handouts from passing vehicles. i have seen these fellas several times before, but only from the back corner of a taxi at 110 km/hr.

however, luck was on my side after my medical voyage to south africa. instead of a taxi, i got a ride back in the sweet peace corps land rover. and, as an added benefit, i was being driven by a ugandan who was just as enthusiastic as i was about seeing "our friends." sure enough, they were waiting for us by the side of the road. the driver slowed to a stop, tossed an apple core and a half-empty sack of yogurt out the window, and i snapped the photo above.