Wednesday, December 23, 2009

Festive Greetings!


Festive Greetings 2009 from Botswana!
First, my apologies for not getting out proper Christmas cards before I left the country. While I usually try to “do it all” something had to give between grading, packing, and planning for the spring Africa Study Away program. It is one thing to pack for a couple of weeks vacation and quite another to pack for a 3 ½ month hiatus which involves coordinated travel for 20 students for two of those months. In any case, I hope this holiday greeting finds you happy and healthy!

2009 was a travel fill year as Paul and I rang in the New Year on a three week overland trip to Tanzania. We drove from Botswana through Zambia where the pot holes were the size of kiddy pools up to Tanzania where busses drove at death defying speeds. We visited some of the best known sights of East Africa including Mount Kilimanjaro, Serengeti National Park, Ngorogoro Crater and the island of Zanzibar. The trip was culturally rich, especially when we stayed with a Masi warrior and his family, and amazingly beautiful as we ate dinner with our toes in the sand on the beaches of Zanzibar. Our drive back traversed through Malawi which was lovely and undeveloped and is definitely on our list of places to go back to and explore further. This is especially true given that a bout of malaria while driving through meant I don’t remember much of it!

In late January I joined my study away group of twenty students in Namibia for ten weeks of travel around Southern Africa. As the Director of the program, I was with them the whole time while the other three faculty members involved from the departments History, English and Religion rotated in for two weeks at a time. My course on Global Health Inequalities examined HIV/AIDS, Malaria and TB as well as the many organizations in Namibia, South Africa and Botswana focused on trying to deal with these health issues.

Returning in April, I finished off the term, did four presentations (someone remind me not to do THAT again!) and prepared for a cross-country trip with Paul, his son Nikolaj and daughter-in-law Trine out to Colorado to see his sister Connie. We rented an RV and visited some very cool places in the south western region of the US including: Santa Fe, Taos, 4-corners, Mesa Verde, Carlsbad Caverns, Monument Valley, etc. We also rented Harley’s for a couple of days and cruised through the Rockies stopping for a brief snowball fight…in May. Paul is convinced he wants to buy an RV and trailer for the motorcycle and head west!

The summer brought me back to Botswana for two and a half months and, for the first time, I finally felt like I was actually “living” here, instead of just visiting. Paul offered many star shows in Nxai Pan, where we bring his 10” telescope out to one of the very flat areas of Botswana for the most stunning views of the skies of the Southern Hemisphere. We also did a trans-Kalahari safari with a group of Spaniards that culminated with a lion in camp. Very scary but very cool!

By mid-August I was back to the states for the Fall semester. I had the opportunity to teach my First Year Seminar on Global Health for a second time and I had a nice group of twelve students who were also part of an “Engaged Living” program where they lived in the same dorm and we did several out of class activities together (e.g. a poverty tour of Greenville, an evening lecture and demonstration by a Japanese massage therapist accompanied by Chinese take-out, a popcorn and movie night in their dorm, etc.). It was fun but all the grading of their papers (it was a writing seminar) kept me very busy. When Paul visited from mid-October to mid-November he affectionately called me “the grader.”

I also taught my Medical Sociology class for the first time in the semester system. We used to teach it in the winter term when students only took two courses. Now in the semester system our ten credit hour program that combines medical sociology with medical ethics and incorporates ten weeks of field observations at a local hospital takes up most of the Tuesday/Thursdays for the 20 handpicked students (they have to apply for the program). Sadly, we often saw the firsthand realities of what it means to be uninsured in America and had some very timely discussions of the proposed health care reform currently being debated.

We’re finishing off the year with me back in Botswana. On Christmas Eve day we’ll take a day trip to Moremi and on Christmas day we’ll head down to Meno a Kwena (tooth of the crocodile) where we’ll camp for the night. In January we plan to take a trip over to Mozambique for a couple of weeks before my study away students arrive in early February.

We hope you and yours have a joyous festive season.
Peace,
Kristy and Paul

3 comments:

  1. Kristy, I can't believe you got Paul to wear that Santa Clause hat! And I can't believe you drove right through New Mexico and didn't visit. Please ask Paul to contact me. We were going to catch up a few years ago but lost the connection. Have you ever heard the story of how he saved an friend's life after she was hit by lightning? That's me. I would also like to catch up with Connie. I love your blog. Glad I found it. I'm very happy for both of you. Nancy

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  2. Nancy,
    Not sure if you got the previous message that I sent. So surprised to receive a comment from the "lightening girl" -- of course I've heard that story. How ever did you find the blog? Paul would love to be in touch with you. Let us know your e-mail address so he can write.
    Best,
    Kristy

    PS: getting Paul to wear the Santa hat was easier than getting the ostriches to keep their heads up for the photos.

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  3. Let's see, how did I find the blog? I think I googled Paul and found a mention of it in something that came up. My email address is nancy@nancybaumgardner.com. I hope you'll both be in touch!

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