Wednesday, August 5, 2009
Nearby Flood Disaster
Friday, July 31, 2009
Wild Alaska Salmon Cambodia Style
I wish you could read the label on the can better. It's Bumble Bee Alaska Wild Salmon. I found it in a big grocery store in a big city. Since my Cambodian family has seen all the pictures of my Alaska kids, grandkids and fish I figured now I could at least share a taste of salmon with them. Phouen here usually does the cooking, and she giggled at the thought of me preparing dinner. Nothing but nothing comes out of a can here. Phouen goes to market every morning and comes back with fresh, in season food including Mekong River fish. Okay, I accepted her help. That cleaver I could use for the business of butchering Dungeness crab but not for can opening. She fired up the wok for me - yes that usually does mean a fire - and I threw the contents in with some onion, garlic, and green vine leafy stuff of the day. Of course it was served on rice. Did they like it? Maybe. Did I like it? Not so much. Did the cat, Thom, like it - a definite 10!
Wednesday, July 29, 2009
Another day at the office
Yesterday afternoon, Yous Thy, our director, asked if I would give a workshop this morning on report writing. Until now, I thought she was a reasonable woman! We worked things out so we would co-lead the workshop. Tona translated for me, but I was pretty impressed that the staff understood so much of my English. Our 2 classes a day are helping. That and I practically act out everything I am saying! You'll see in the photo that being on the floor is preferred. I still always shake my head when I see the staff hard at work on the floor next to their desks. You''ll note a motor cycle or two in the room which is also normal. Isn't the Khmer writing beautiful! What you can''t see is that we're all barefoot, something I have gotten use to and come to love!
Tuesday, July 28, 2009
The Cleanest Feet in All of Cambodia!
ps for you tile folks, there's a lot to be sold in Cambodia! These pools are going to catch on!
Saturday, July 25, 2009
I Found Them!
Did I really want to take a 10 hour bus ride to Siem Reap for the weekend? Why not? I had a mission. Four years ago I was in Cambodia for only 4 days. I connected with 5 little girls who sold me enough of their mom's grass bracelets to cover my arm - wrist to elbow. It was my first morning and the girls and I ate fruit together by the river, learned to play cat's cradle, and sang Itsy-bitsy Spider. I rented a bike so I could take them up on their offer to meet their moms at their homes, an hour's pedal away. It was a moving, magical day for me. They had so little, their bamboo huts so small and they were so kind and appreciative of me. I took the girls to lunch - I'm sure their first time to eat in a restaurant - and saw them the next day and the next. Fortunately I was able to give them their family photos I'd developed because I never saw them after that. I got called back home, back in time to see my dad just hours before he left us.
So here I am back in Siem Reap wondering how I can possibly find the girls who must now be 13 and 14. My tuk-tuk driver from the bus station recognized the grandparents. He would meet me 8 the next morning and we'd see if we could find them. Nephew Nate and one of his Putney Summer Travel students, Nat, went with us and I dubbed him official photographer. We weren''t sure the tuk-tuk could make it down the dirt paths, but it did and we kept getting pointed closer as we showed the pictures along the way. The last person we showed got all excited and emotional. It was the grandmother! The one there in the picture! Runners were sent down the winding footpaths and two of the girls were found. Of course they remembered me! And they could still sing Itsy-bitsy. In four years, the bracelets were still a dime a piece. I now have enough to go all the way to my arm pit. The girls have pretty necklaces from Alaska with gold flakes inside. One girl, the one with the amazing smile, came back to town with us so I could give her the extra pictures I'd brought. She and Nat played cats cradle the whole way in.
I didn't know what to expect by finding the girls or even why I wanted to do it. But I feel fulfilled. And yet I feel sad that only the one girl is still in school. Grandfather who was very ill is still alive and getting around on his toothpick legs. Father who played music for me on a Cambodian instrument was now drunk. One family looked better off. The other with only the little they were still getting by on.
I'm thinking about my dad and how he'd be shaking his head that it was okay going back and reconnecting. Yes, it was okay. I feel good and I hope I brightened their day too.
Wednesday, July 22, 2009
Gone fishing!
The 5 hour trip back from Phnom Penh took almost 8 because the taxi van drove an alternate route to load up on live fish. There roadside fish ponds were operated by a Vietnamese family and they went fishing for us. The thousands of fish were the size of my pinky and varied from gold to brown to black. They sorted them, weighed them, got them into big bags of water, added air from a pressure tank then tied them off. Our luggage was taken out of the car, the third seat set aside and the van was loaded to to ceiling with the fish. Somehow the 7 of us fit back in with our bags at and on our feet, and we were off. (Bet I ended up delivering more fish than Lindsey's F/V Rainy Dawn! Bet I ate some of those fished mushed in my rice today!)
The usual route has a bridge to cross the Mighty Mekong, but now we had to wait for 3 ferry crossings, about an hour, before getting our turn to load on. Then of course, we got a flat tire and that delayed us another hour. We were all in good humor, and another passenger had enough English so he could translate the tourist jokes that had everyone else laughing their heads off. Like the one about the tourist who''s driver hit a cow and the tourist said "Stupid Cow!" I guess some things get lost in translation, but I laughed right along with my new buddies lest they be telling jokes about me!
Sunday, July 19, 2009
Weekend in the crazy, crammed, chaotic capital
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)