Monday, January 29, 2007

A ravine in Lashaine Village, which can become dangerous during the rainy season.

Monday, September 26, 2005

WARNING! Some of the pictures below may not be suitable for vegetarians, goat lovers, or people with weak stomaches for carnage. You've been warned!
Andy with students Paulo (L) and Elias (R) constructing the school sign
From left to right, Peter, Laizer, Goodluck, Samwel, (driver) and Kauka, about to leave for Monduli juu loaded in the back of a 4x4 taking 2 week's worth of food and 1 week's worth of water. Can you locate the live goat??
A young cattle herder
Some children playing around their boma
Maasai warriors. The warrior on the left has his hair braided long with extentions. Only warriors are allowed to grow out there hair to show their status. The warrior on the right is holding a staff with a tuft of hair from the tail of a wildebeest at the top. Usually, if there is a party at a boma, the father of the boma carries a shorter wand like this one to show it is his home.
A Maasai warrior
A goat slaughter in the Maasai culture is performed by suffocating the goat. This takes from 3 mintues up to about 5 minutes and is done for the purpose of saving as much blood as possible for later consumption.
The carnage begins...
The first order of business is to preserve the goat's skin. It will later be sold for about a dollar or two at the local market and made into a goat-skin chair stretched over a wood frame or made into something else useful.
Friends Grosper (L) and Laizer (R) share a leg of goat (who needs a butcher?!)
An excited crowd of Maasai elders on Open Day in August
Haley enjoying a dip in a Kilimanjaro National Park stream
Waterfalls in Kilimanjaro National Park
A mosque in Moshi Town
Mt. Kilimanjaro over Moshi Town, east of Arusha
Vicky, with knife in hand, about to prepare our chicken for dinner (aka cut its head off). Neither she nor any other female students can believe we don't know the proper way of "offing" a chicken.
Students Jonayce (L) and Upendo (R). Jonayce is representing Michigan with a sweatshirt she bought in Monduli chini market.
Students Miliary (L) and Supuro (R). Miliary is representing with his "Oregon Cowgirls" shirt on which he bought in Monduli chini market.
Haley with student Paulo
Ashley with students Elizabeth (L) and Bibiana (R)
Mt. Meru overlooking Ausha Town. We've been told by locals that, compared to Kili, it's terrain is "steepy sana" (very steep!)
A 5-year old girl with her paka (cat) outside her boma.
Below, a Maasai boma overlooks the famous Great Rift Valley which runs through Kenya and Northern Tanzania.