20-12-2014

met Maurits en Cobie naar HARAR

My brother Maurits and my sister-n-law Cobie visited us in november. Their purpose was threefold: 
1. to see us, and get and idea of our life in Ethiopia, 
2. to experience Ethiopia and its cultural heritage, so they toured the North, visiting the monasteries in lake Tana, gondar, Axum, the Simien mountains, and Lalibela. Together we visiited Harar, an age-old walled Muslim-city in the Est of the country 
3. to pay a visit to the project that the Rotaries of Maurits/ Vogelenzang and Robert/ Addis Abeba may jointly sponsor. it is a project in which schools can provide their own food to the schoolchildren, by establishing a bakery and vegetable gardens. 

View of the Blue Nile valley: note the terraces in the hill side! 


 The pelicans in lake Tana
 the traditional reed boats, that were also used in lake titicaca in Peru! 

One of the women coming to the orthodox church, in traditional cotton clothes
























02-11-2014

To Ghimbi, West Ethiopia

I had the opportunity to join a group going to Ghimbi, October 28-31, where a contract was signed for an interesting project. 

Organic coffee will be produced by the area around Ghimbi; the local cooperative, the women's cooperative and the Oromo Coffee Union have agreed to do so. Here you see the members of the booard of the local coffee coopertaive, all in their best shoes and trousers, and offical white clothes! 


The coffee is going to be bought by a big Netherlands based supermarket chain and they will sell it as a special brand. 

There were many people watching, as they had never seen so many 'foreign-gees' together. 


The interesting aspect is that the F&S climate fund was part of the deal as they will organise that 40.000 households will get a sustainable cooking stove. The women can earn carbon credits by using those stoves. They are sustainable in 3 ways:  first oif all: women do not need to walk far and carry heavy loads of fire wood, and secondly, the forest will be saved from cutting wood. Thirdly, the stoves are bruning on compressed organic waste, so it's been recycled. 



The director of Max Havelaar/ Fair Trade Netherlands was also present as - in fact - they organise thefair deal ( percentage) for the farmers. 


The guy at the right is a very jolly 'shoe-shine boy' and since he made us all laugh, in beautiful English mind you, he got ten-fold of what a normal shoe shine boy would earn. 




26-10-2014

My friends visiting us and Ethiopia

From October 8 till October 21 my 'intervision group' visited me and Ethiopa. It was great. The purpose was to have 'intervision' ( feed back on what we do towards sustainable agriculture) here an that succeeded quite well since we had the most in-depth discussions at the Agri-Hub office, in the bus on the way and in Debre Zeit, after visiting 3 different Dutch farms/ businesses  in Ethiopia, with very different approaches to their purpose of being here.
 

We started out together to Debre Markos ( Portugese bridge and monatery with special windows) and continued to Bahir Dar at the Tana Lake. 


Beautiful views along the way - the Blue Nile valley! 
 



02-10-2014

a 3 day outing to Guassa - community eco tourism

As it was the feast of Meskel (september 26th) we went to Guassa, a 5 hours drive North West past Debre Berhan into the mountains. The meskel flowers were everywhere. They announce springtime here:  rich harvests, end of rainy season, good times! And that was obvious! 



we stayed 2 nights at Guassa lodge, self catering and it was terribly cold! 3000 meters above sea level! We saw the most beautiful endemic birds and the Simien wolves! 





17-09-2014

An outing into the wild

Today we had an afternoon 'off', an excursion into the national park around the lake Navaisha here. To my surprise we WALKED through the area, in between the wild animals:  zebra, giraffe, buffalo, monkeys, antilopes. a pity that it started raining, so we- and the animals ( see picture of the giraffes ) - went home.  



Isn't it amazing?

Training in Kenya near lake Navaisha 15-20 september

On Sunday 19th, concluding our great 4 day holiday, Robert flew from Mombasa back to Addis Abeba. on his return home he found the house without guard and the dog very very happy to see him and very very hungry. it appeared that the guard was still there on Friday but somehow got a fit (depression?  anger? epilepsia?) and disappeared. Luckily, Robert could call the guard's brother, who located him in Debre Zeit, in a hospital? For the time being the guard from our former house is now watching over house and garden and dog, but I feel really sorry about our guars as he is such a nice and responsible guy.

 Anyway, on that same sunday I flew to Nairobi to meet up with colleagues from 11 different African countries, where indeed they have Agri-Hubs:  Burundi, Rwanda, Senegal, Tanzania, Kenia, Mozambique, Uganda, Niger, Benin, Congo (DRC). Monday morning early we drive in two hours into the Rift Valley. Bautiful views! 



Once down near lake Navaisha we saw the biggest rose grower farms ( vanden berg, Florensis, Oserian, Finlays) and the houses for the labourors. 











Also I could take some money from an ATM in the smallest Barclays Bank I have ever seen. It must be the smallest in the world.


Our lodge is very isolated. Apart from work there is not much to do.... unless you like birdwatching! Although it is rather chilly, every morning at 06:15 I walk around with my binoculars, with some nice results! After that, around 07:0 I swim in the small pool. great! 


Above some nice bee-eaters.

The ones on the cacti looks like  Fischers' starling, also from their behaviour and the strane bleak colour, white beak and black patch near the eye.

And then.. the swallows (or martins?) are back from Europe; already now, half september?


15-09-2014

Great days at Pearl Beach

For the second day of our 4 day outing Robert had reserved a very interesting tour. 
We set out at 07:30, with our driver Omar. We went to the south and got some more impressions of the very Liberia-look-alike landscape. Along the road there were mango- plan- tations, scattered cashewnut trees, and coconut palm plantations. 



We went to the village of Shimoni; formerly a place where slaves were being kept- in cold and wet caves, before they were shipped to Zanzibar, by Arab ( and some Portugese) slave traders.
From Shimoni we went by boat to see dolphins and after that to two different spots for snorkling and seeing the coral reef fishes- beautiful! (In the process we badly burnt the insides of our knees!) 



 After the trip we got a very very good sea-food lunch, with crab and fish and seaweed, just great. Then a short walk over the island, visit the school and a good view of the mangrove-area. 






On the way back the crew made the greatest (jazzy) music ever on old oil drum, a chest and an empty bottle, singing along, amazing!  

 At home we spotted the golden Oriole...

and Jelleke also relaxed...