Wednesday, April 28, 2010

These Days

Miles in his FSU-gear, tossing the football with his dad. ...not that he really has ever watched American football on TV, but he actually has a good throw. I was impressed, considering he hasn't shown much interest in sports (yet?).


On our day trip to Bally-Vaughan, an "adopted animals" farm outside of Harare: Clementina, Olivie and Sebastian. They will likely be leaving Zimbabwe in June, unfortunately.


Miles's crazy hair... with those skinny plaid pants and the upturned collar, I thought he looked pretty darn cute ina punkish way. That's Sawa, the dog we've had since we arrived in December. Tomorrow he flies to Amman to join his family there.


Check out this elephant with the pink purse. Perfect!

Tuesday, April 27, 2010

Nice Surprise

You know when the house sounds really quiet, and as a parent you start to get worried about what it could mean. Did they get into the maple syrup again? Have they broken into the "off limits" room where we have all our fragiles in unpacked boxes? Is Miles doing another potion?! Perhaps they are dropping things into the pool or drawing things on the walls, floor or dog?

Isn't it such a relief when you find this:

Sunday, April 11, 2010

Antelope Park

















Again, this was a weekend trip we didn’t plan. At the last minute, we joined friends who had a house with a lot of space. Antelope Park is just outside of Gweru, a 3-4 hour drive southwest of Harare. There’s a dam at the center of the park and thatched main buildings, including an open air dining hall that overlooks the lawn sloping down to the water. There were always a few people fishing or sitting in the shade enjoying the view. The house where we stayed originally belonged to the developer of the park. It was hidden from view, across the bridge and down a long path. It has 11 beds (4 rooms), and a couple of big covered verandas where we spent most of our time. The kids were able to roam freely in the big yard that was protected (from animals!)with high wire fences like we’ve seen at other game parks.














Apparently there were a couple crocodiles in the water, but we never saw them. Still, that made me more careful with the kids, and especially Eliza, the non-swimmer. The other accommodations were along the water, which made for a great view but meant limited outdoor play space. At the house, we were able to totally relax with plenty of indoor and outdoor protected space. The house also had a kitchen, a bbq area, and big dining table so we could cook for ourselves which was easier with the kids, and we could save a little money. (I think meals were $10/adult, $5/child.) Accommodations were $33/adult/night and $15/kid which I thought was pretty reasonable, but with activities priced separately, it did start to add up fast.













David had to get back to work so only stayed one night. He and Mike left Monday, and Nevena and I came back with the kids on Tuesday. (Their boys are Martin-6 and Isaac-9.) The guys did a “bush walk” in the morning where they got an introduction on tracking animals. There are also bird watching walks, fishing, horseback riding, walks with lion cubs and other activities linked to the lion breeding program. They have 93 lions in a fenced area nearby that I never saw, but you could hear them roaring at night and in the early morning. There were probably 30 volunteers of all ages from around the world who lived and worked there. Lions (even cubs!) have eyes for the littlies (we saw other people walking with them), so we did other things less nerve-racking like taking a mule drawn wagon out for wildlife viewing. We saw waterbuck, tsessebe, zebra, wildebeest, elephants and most interestingly a herd of 8 giraffe that we were able to get very close to.













In the evening, we went out on a pontoon for sundowners. We were lucky to get one of those quintessential African sunsets: huge dark clouds were threatening rain, and when the sun dropped below the horizon, the sky went purple and the clouds red. The colors were reflected on the rippling water, and the trees and birds were silhouetted. If I hadn’t been preoccupied by the 2 young children without life-vests jacked up on sleep deprivation and Easter chocolate in crocodile-inhabited waters, I probably could have managed more than one beer and maybe a deep thought about this world and our place in it. But as things were, I snapped some photos and oooed and aahhed between reprimanding my kids to sit down, take turns on the pilot chair, and not lean over the rail, yes, like that, don’t do THAT.

The next morning, we went on an elephant ride which was really cool. There wasn’t exactly a seatbelt, so again, I was more nervous than anyone – my, that’s a far fall…and if the elephant even stepped on you once…Yikes! Hold on, Miles! There were four elephants each with a trainer. I rode on one with Eliza sandwiched between me and the trainer, which did feel like the safest option. Miles rode behind another trainer, and the other elephants were ridden by trainers beside us. These were female elephants so not the biggest, but they were still enormous, strong animals. They kept reaching their long trunks back to sneak a snack while we walked. I could feel the breath of ours on my hands and the spiky hairs on her trunk, strong enough to rip a tree out of the ground. My heart was beating fast half an hour after we got off, but the kids were totally cool and not scared at all.






























Wednesday, April 7, 2010

A Happy Sixth

Miles’s birthday party day started with his professing so much pain in his legs that he couldn’t stand or walk. He also was a little sniffly and slightly warm. (grrrrrrrr) I wasn’t terribly sympathetic, I confess. If you don’t get up and start running around normally, I’m calling off this party! Oh, he did not want me to call it off, but he still hobbled around. I’m fine, Mom! (grabbing on to furniture, knees bent stutter-stepping, even crawling!) [Miles: I had an idea, and I pulled myself along the ground with my hands.] That went on for a couple of hours, and then I started getting worried. Maybe he had some godforsaken African virus that attacks the muscles or joints or something. So I decided we’d go to the doctor (open on a Saturday morning, thankfully). Time was ticking and I was thinking, we’ll have to go ahead on the cake, but I could still cancel the balloons… But after not toooo long a wait, the doctor on duty said he had a slight cold and “growing pains” – sometimes one bone will grow faster than another which can be very uncomfortable… So I dosed Miles with some ibuprofen and the party was on! [Miles: At the time of my party, I could walk, stand and run!]

[Since I wrote that, Eliza came down with the same “growing pains” symptoms from what I can only assume was some godforsaken virus. This time it was Easter Sunday, exactly a week after Miles had been sick, so there was no hope of the doctor’s office being open. We had plans to leave that morning and drive 4 hours to Antelope Park to stay with another family in a house there, (more on that later) so we decided to go on since Miles had recovered after a few hours. It was scary to see Eliza in so much pain she couldn’t straighten her legs or walk and her symptoms did last longer, but by early evening she was running around. Does not make me feel very confident in that doctor on duty, however. I’ll be talking to their regular doctor about it.]



Back to the party…Miles’s KG class is all girls except for 3 other boys, 2 of whom couldn’t come, and then we had a couple other friends. They wore costumes and got little nametags to write their alias when they arrived. There was Sleeping Beauty, Tinkerbell, Hannah Montana, Cinderella (Eliza), Princess, Skeleton Girl, Spooky, Batman, Monsta, Kirriyo (no idea…something Italian?), and Crush-doh-man (Miles).



Six-year-olds are certainly more mature than 5-year-olds. They knew the rules of the games and reminded each other. They were very orderly and nice. (Maybe it’s because they were mainly girls.) It was too bad David couldn’t be there, but I had our friend Clem and a few new mom friends to hang out with (Nevena-Serbian, Bettina-Austrian, and Michelle-Zimbabwean).



On Miles’s actual birthday the next weekend, we opened some gifts David had brought back from the States, and we went to an Easter party with a few other families at Clem’s house. It was a nice scene…we stayed all day and night. The kids swam, hunted Easter eggs, and watched attentively as David set up Miles’s water pressured rocket which provided sufficient entertainment when it blasted 100 feet in the air and then landed on the house. Setting it up a second time proved impossible although the dads did make a valiant effort.