well, the travel log reviews for Ethiopia Recap were such a hit, that i'm doing what any good studio head would do...make a sequel! hence, Ethiopia Recap Part Deux! more pics and more adventure stories. so let's get to it...(again, pics in random order. shot on my iphone4.)
friendly country girl.
a view of Mariam KorKor from Gheralta rock. we climbed it the next day. i was nervous i wouldn't make it.
cool country kid. no pretense. no game boy. no playstation. curious and content. i'm just saying.
another school CW is involved in. we played volleyball and frisbee with volleyballs and frisbees we brought. fun chaos.
three amigos. (and team member shak in the shades.)
the water walk. at least they are carrying clean water from a well nearby.
the girls carry the 44 pound jerry cans. and start at super young age. back problems gone wild.
clean water from the handpump can fill the jerry can in 3-5 minutes.
a good day is filling your jerry cans with clean water and letting your camel do the work carrying it home.
hand filling jerry cans with dirty water can take 10-20 minutes per can. and then the long walk home. twice a day.
some of our UN-esque convoy land cruisers. we had 6. and the drivers ride each other's tails, like in Syriana. dust galore.
the faces. always told a such story.
here was a village waiting for water. shot at sunset.
taxi fleet in northern territory.
view of mariam korkor from gheralta lodge at sunset.
the beast awaits. 10,000 feet at the top. wasn't sure i was going to make it. very thin air.
the hike had a pre-hike to get to the trail.
one of the steeper pitches.
the chief priest of the church at the top.
outside the church carved into the rock.
temple of doom feel inside. cool air. towering columns.
massive pillars and etchings. awestruck.
built in 400AD, the birth of christianity. it felt so old and very cool. very contemplative. we spent 20 minutes in silence.
the indomitable scott harrison, the head of charity water. our fearless leader with ray-bans, scarf, and panache.
the view down from 9800 feet. the summit was still above.
more cliff etchings. cleopatra style.
real skulls and bones. kept waiting for indiana jones to pop up. the old priests die here.
the view from inside the second smaller church around the corner on a narrow ledge.
the second church entrance, very small and tight to enter.
another view. straight drop down over the ledge. i had an impulse to dive off. didn't have my flight suit. i backed off.
the etchings on the ceiling of the second church. truly historic looking and feeling.
the priest gave blessings. he never leaves the mountaintop.
could be an old pic from a grand canyon vacation. this was on the summit. in tigray.
on the way down we went as long as we could without touching the walls or the ground with our hands. it's a guy thing.
here's a hand dug well. with dynamite they go down 60 feet and strike clean water. the deep boreholes go 300 feet down. CW has helped 2 million people get clean water in 5 years... NOT 200 million as erroneously reported earlier by this reporter. you should check out CW's site...
http://www.charitywater.org/
here was my bathroom the last nite of the trip at the castle hotel back in mekele. it looks like a jail cell out of Midnight Express, but aside from the stained tile, no shower curtain, and dodgy dingy floor...there were no bugs and it had hot water. ahhh. all i needed. after 10 days on the road, i was used to things working or not working. sometimes no hot water, sometimes no water at all, so having a shower with both was a luxury.
ethiopian air out of Addis Ababa. an empty 767. had a row to myself.
the sheraton addis. felt and like orlando. surreal.
the sheraton addis is $450 a nite, but the new york team only spent the day in transit here. the spa was $16. a nice way to spend the day. here was where i met the mysterious salim amin. a great guy, a doco filmmaker type. we hit it off. had dinner at Stockholm that night, a hot spot in addis ababa.
overall
the trip to ethiopia was a great indoctrination to my new life in africa. it toughened me up. a cultural crash course in all things NOT L.A.. africa is old and wild and emerging into the 21st century. things work and sometimes they don't. you gotta roll with it. you get what you get and you don't get upset. it's easy to get frustrated, but it won't get you anywhere. you have to chill and accept it. like last night i spent 3 hours on this blog at the java house, but the server went down and the whole entry was lost. you gotta roll with it.
seeing the villagers and staying in remote hotels and driving everyday from breakfast to sunset, you see the people and country and get a feel for their incredible past. most of the villagers have probably never ridden in a car. our world as foreign to them as theirs was to us. we take so much for granted in the states. cars, food, clothing, housing, clean hot water all day everyday. the trip got us all out of our comfort zone. and into a new reality. nairobi is a commercial city, but there are still old school issues. my power went out the other day for 4 hours. and has gone out every day. but the upside is i get power most of the time. you appreciate things more here. little things. it's a process, but i feel i'm acclimating easier after the ethiopia reality check.
safety
the kenyan invasion into somalia triggered some grenade attacks in nairobi. that's settled down for now. the security is still high at the malls and hotels and some buildings, but i live in a remote area called Hardy past the karen blixen museum. not a high target zone.
the cottage
the one bedroom cottage sublet is working out great. small, cozy, like a weekend getaway shack. finding space for all my stuff is a challenge, but it'll all work out. my expectations are in check. i'm in a good place. and i'm glad to be here. it sure beats lying on my couch watching TV! no TV needed here. i came here for a new life and to find adventure, and in less than a month it has certainly surpassed all my expectations. i'll be busy cutting the charity:water footage for the next two weeks. then may off to sudan and darfur with Voice of the Martyrs to scout the people and places up there for a video for VOM and maybe find a way to get some clean water wells up there to serve the 100,000 refugees. another amazing trip potentially in the works.
well, all for now. it's bedtime, sunday nite. a long week ahead. but the adventure continues. it's been pretty hectic and fast paced right out of the gate for this life change. i can't expect it to last...or can i???
cheers. ddm
WOW, DDM! Thank you for updating us - completely awestruck! The faces, terrain, history and cultural magnitude are extremely well communicated here. Wow, wow, wow. You look great standing on the peak! Keep it up my friend! We MISS you around here!
ReplyDeleteThanks for taking the time a second time to get this done...it really helps me see and feel what you are going through. Quiet Sunday here...football on, just came how with halloween candy after getting a car wash and pedicure...a little different from your day! love love
ReplyDeleteJeremy
"Old school issues". Well said. May those old school issues be resolved in order to look into the age-old issue of need for Jesus. Keep being his arms!
ReplyDelete