Date: Saturday 29th June.
It’s my last weekend here, & as I found out on Friday, it’s
also a long public holiday weekend: Ghanaians celebrate Republic Day on Monday.
Wandering around town earlier, I noticed a number of people wearing smart black
clothes, or dark rose printed dresses. Not in a mournful way; everyone seems as
jolly & laissez-faire as usual!
Things have been slowing down at work, & I’ve spent a bit of
time surfing the interwebs & editing photos inbetween waiting to be called
upon. Towards the end of the week however, things got busier as it was
requested I prepare a formal report of recommendations, evaluations, &
points to consider for future volunteer workers. Initially, I thought I might
cut short my assignment here & head to Accra earlier than suggested, on
Tuesday instead of Thursday. Turns out there should be enough for me to do
(plus the bank holiday that I was unaware of!) to fill a couple of days. Things
generally work at a slower pace here, so whilst back in the UK I might assess a
workload to take 2 days, here you might spend 4... you never can tell! Friday
was pretty busy in the office too: people gathered to hold a meeting that began
in the morning to discuss ideas & progress concerning Voice Ghana’s work (I kept hearing mention of Obama, significant
since he is currently in the midst of his first visit to Africa as President) –
I think the meeting was meant to end by 1pm - people drifted away, caught up on
previous conversations, came back to discuss new topics, & then I think the
last of the blue plastic chairs was stacked back in its tower by the door come
4pm.
A couple of important things we completed last week included
going through the Quickbooks backup procedure with Millicent. She’ll create
backups on a weekly basis, saving to an external hard-drive. It’s something we
kind of take for granted in a large office: we’ll take care to save our work
into shared folders, but any electronic mishap or accidental delete is solved
with a simple phone call to IT to request an automatic backup...
I took a somewhat leisurely stroll around the markets in Ho
today. I didn’t buy anything, as a lot of produce I saw was either food or
knick-knacks, although I think they have different markets every day. I bought
a great wooden carving (pictured above) at the Wli falls last weekend, & I think any other material purchases
may well be in Accra, as I’m planning to scope out The Centre for National Culture, a sort of marketplace that Bradt recommends. The market was very
busy & full of hustle & bustle, & I didn’t feel quite comfortable
taking my camera out, I think it would have appeared too voyeuristic.
I don’t have too many plans for tomorrow, although I might walk
to the Chances hotel in order to
check out their gym. I also need to go to the bank (this may seem a simple
task, but given that cash is the only currency here, that there are only a
handful of banks, & quite often the networks go down, a walk to the bank is
not always so fruitful!) Monday, I plan to go and hike Adaklu Mountain.
I have only a few more days left in Ho. I think the anonymity
that London brings will be strange at first! The wonder that is online
communication makes it super easy to keep in touch, but it sometimes emphasizes
the bizarre - I’m in a small office in West Africa, dodging the lizards
scrambling across the carpet, whilst discussing outfits over email with Sophie
for our next London Fashion Week! I’m looking forward to real coffee (perhaps
the coffee grown here outprices the locals, as I haven’t come across anything
other than instant coffee. There’s an Espresso place in town, which I later
found out was an internet café). Other things I’m looking forward to: cooking
my own meals, EXERCISE, Orange Wednesdays, shopping in Zara, Sunday newspapers,
& catching up with my friends over cocktails (Err Ceri, I wanna try some of
that punch!) I downloaded a couple of things to watch this weekend (last 2
episodes of Made in Chelsea OMG OMG, plus
vintage eps of Sex & The City,
classic!)
One thing I’ve learnt here is how to take things at a slower
pace, enjoying the simpler things - no commute to work bar a 100foot stroll
across the track, taking breakfast without simultaneously trying to listen to The Today Show & catching up on
emails, getting early nights & plugging in the headphones to listen to
music as I fall asleep... to, ahem, the Glee
soundtrack & Taylor Swift. This is as cool as it gets for this 30 y/o
accountant.
Pictures: goats everywhere, a peek
through the woods at the Tafi Atome Monkey Sanctuary, the village & some
of its crafts on the way to the Wli
falls, trying to capture the light and humidity and lusciousness of the
rainforest, one of the high-schools in Ho, signs for the hair-salon, The
Agricultural Development Bank, where some
call it sightseeing & we call it business, banapine – yup, banana
pineapple juice, as delicious as it sounds, & the view from my hut door.
{all photos by me}
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