Working on A Life

Experience is what its all about. And the stories. Post college most people go on to find a job, or apply to grad school. I decided just to live. This is my story as related to my family and friends. (This journal represents ONLY my views and none of Peace Corps or the US government.)

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Location: New England

We are working parents looking to make the most of whatever adventures we can find close to home.

Sunday, January 22, 2006

Winging It!

A Birding Adventure
Andy Tibbs with Carly Edwards and Karen Walsh


For most people the resort city of Agadir on Morocco’s Atlantic coast is home to only 2 species – tourists and locals – and the only outdoor environment worth noting is the beautiful crescent beach with its bright sunshine sparkling off the tops of slow rolling breakers. Certainly after six months in small bled outposts where the only species often seemed to be them and you the presence of other, stranger, foreigners and the ability to lay out on the sand and soak in the sun in minimal clothing was an idea that had much going for it.

However, Carly, Karen and I, being card carrying members of Peace Corps team environment, born outdoor enthusiasts, bird lovers, and often more than a little strange felt it important to take full advantage of the more ecologically diverse experiences offered by Agadir. We wanted to see some birds! What better opportunity than our In-Service training at the beginning of December? Never mind that Peace Corps staff had prepared an intense lecture and workshop schedule that kept us busy from early morning to late evening each day. They had also brought us together (and footed the bill for accommodations that included warm water showers!) and that’s all we needed. We managed to scrape together enough time for one daylight excursion.

Encouraged by some early – literally before the sun – failed attempts, our trusty and ubiquitous Lonely Planet guidebook and a rather loony British chap who spent the week pestering us about plastic bag contamination but also mentioned that there were wild flamingos as an afterthought; we set out in the mid-morning to find the Souss River estuary. Allegedly easy to find it is located just to the south of the Kings residential compound and reachable by the number 40 local bus. What wasn’t so easy to find was the number 40 local bus. After missing it in the excitement of simply seeing it the first time we gave up and took a taxi.

Since we only had the vaguest idea where we were going and barely passable communications skills the driver soon gave us up as a lost cause and dropped us off in the middle of a scrub forest next to the King’s fence. A few very confused guards and helpful locals later we came across a camel track that ran in the right general direction and our first birds of the day. Magpies – crow sized black and white birds with a long tail.

Eventually, we spotted a sign proclaiming that we were entering the estuary, a small sub-division of Souss-Massa National Park further to the south. This portion had been established specifically to protect the native birds that called it home and the many species that use the area as a stopover in migration seasons. Ironically the entrance was on the road we had left when we had lost the taxi.

A friendly and very talkative chain smoking park warden was just emerging from his hut to go on patrol as we passed. After his initial excitement that we could speak his language faded somewhat he agreed to take us to see the birds. He lead us down some narrow and winding trails towards the river, over barbed wire fences and around piles of plastic garbage, pausing now and again to show us his wardens badge (in his wallet because he didn’t want to ruin his new coat by sewing it on), his ID card or to expound on how there was too much garbage or too few tourists. We nodded at the appropriate moments and took in the surroundings amidst the chatter.

We crested a dune and suddenly the river spread out before us. Sluggish and clam brown water lapped against muddy banks and tree stumps. In the center was a large sand bar with tufts of grass growing on it in patches. On the far bank, perhaps 50 meters distant, groves of trees leaned out over the water, shading it. The late morning sun was in our faces as we stopped and looked across. The warden paused in his monologue and gestured sweepingly with his arm up and down the rivers expanse. “Birds,” he said.

And there were. Immediately in front of us a flock of Flamingos, almost a hundred strong, stood lazily napping or filtering river mud for food. It was the first time that any of us had seen them in the wild and they made for quite an impressive sight. The binoculars came up and we began to identify the various waders and shorebirds in the shallows by the sandbar. The warden – using a pair of binoculars that looked as if they had last seen service in the African campaigns of WWII – resumed his speech and pointed out a group of Grey Herons in one of the clumps of grass. The Curlews were also easy to spot because with their long curved bills and spotted plumage they were among the biggest of the waders.

We parted ways with the warden and moved up-river to an observation post that was all the park had in terms of infrastructure. Essentially no more than a platform raised about the level of the surrounding scrub it nevertheless provided a clear view of a large section of the river. Unfortunately is was also already occupied by a merchant who tried to sell us cheap necklaces and by a forest guard who insisted on playing his radio at our feet as we were trying to have a natural moment.

In spite of these intrusions we did manage to see some great birds including Black Winged Stilts with their tall pink legs, a Cattle Egret, and Several Cormerants both flying and paddling around in the river. Upriver some, perched on a tree stump in the center of the river sunning itself was an Osprey, a fish eating bird of prey and Carly’s sharp eyes picked out some Oystercatchers amongst a large group of sleeping waders in the channel.

We could have stayed longer but we had decided to walk back along the beach and time was of the essence. We attempted to have the forest guard take our picture on the platform but he insisted on being in the picture instead only to later ask us worriedly not to publish them anywhere because pictures of his uniform were illegal. Following a clear trail through the scrub along the river bank towards the ocean of which we could catch glittering glimpses in gaps between the dunes. Along the path we added several other bird sightings to our list for the day including a Great Grey Shrike flitting from tree to tree and a Stonechat perched on the barbed wire lining the trail and posing proudly for us.

Farther along we realized suddenly that we had been paying a bit too much attention to the birds and too little attention to the path which had dead-ended in a salt marsh; criss-crossed with tidal streams, smelling of slow rot and covered in low rubbery salt-resistant growth. In no direction except the way we had come was the path obvious. We could still see the ocean however, and the brush was low so after a hasty conference we decided to press on and bushwhack to the surf. This worked out well until we came to a junction surrounded on three sides by deep tidal streams. A bit more scouting revealed that we were stuck unless we wanted to go all the way back and start again.

There was nothing for it. Karen plunged in, hiking boots and all. I tried a different route but the result was the same. The muck threatened to come over our boot-tops and the water soaked our rolled up pant legs but we made it safely and only a little wet. Carly after another moments hesitation showed she was the bravest of us by attempting the crossing in flip-flops with the muck oozing over her feet. The fragile shoes proved to be more of a hindrance than a help so she shed them only to discover when she tried to retrieve them that they had been swallowed whole by the bog. The group converged and soon the three of us were doubled over and elbow deep in swampy water probing the mud on the bottom. One sandal was recovered but attempts to locate the second were abandoned after a crab climbing halfway up my boot caused some excitement and sparked our imaginations. We left the sandal to the bog as our cost of passage and – helping Carly get along barefoot – we crossed the rest of the marsh without further incident.

Once safely on the sand we ran into the warden completing his rounds. He could only shake his head at our soaked, smelly, mud coated and sunburned appearance. “The trail was over there.” He informed us, pointing. We thanked him and moved on.

The walk down the beach was pleasant. Karen plunged into the ocean fully clothed and I dumped out the slime from my boots and socks before joining Carly barefoot to complete the adventure. We saw a few more birds on the beach. A Little Egret wading in the surf showed off its flashy yellow legs and flocks of Lesser Black Backed Gulls made easy pickings off the European tourists. The tourists must have thought us very odd indeed as we walked dressed but dripping and with boots hanging over our shoulders, lugging bird books and binoculars. Even the hawkers selling things on the beach near the hotels gave us a wide berth.

That was fine with us. We had had an adventure.

Monday, January 02, 2006

Fun with Camels



This can't be the most comfortable way to sit on a camel... it just can't be







Peace Christi.... its why we're here after all





Stacey liked her camel.... really she did.
Shana is a bit more composed

Sandscape

If you click on the pictures you can see them bigger.... With the possible exception of the one of me its worth it!








Sunset

Erica and I contrived to take this picture.... came out pretty good I think.. (Its me jumping and she taking)

Merzuga Crew!

The Merzuga PC crew at the base of the great dune. Pretty sweet christmas card huh?



Me and Christi and our trusty steeds. She and I were the ones that managed to climb the "Great Dune" all the way to the top.

Stacey and her camel Gassy.... we named the camels and made them part of the Merzuga crew!

The whole merzuga crew minus Erica who was kind enough to take the picture. (trusting berbers with the camera just wasn't an option)
Yay for early mornings after long travel days!

Sunday, January 01, 2006

Giant Sandbox

Ok... so no one ever said I was the brightest person around...

The aftermath of a flip off a sand cliff. I just think my expression is priceless

Nothing like making sand angels for christmas! Who needs snow?

I guess word on the street is that I'm heavy.... I would beg to differ but I guess these guys would know. The three muskateers reunited! (clockwise starting with me, Erica and Stacey)

Dreaming of a Sandy Christmas

Hey all,
Hope all your holidays have been happening magnificently and smoothly and that you have all found some warmth (both literally and figuartively) in the season and its spirit. December has been a long and busy month for me with lots of travel, some awesome friends, some time off and has generally speaking been awesome! A great finish to the year. Here’s to hoping that 2006 will continue to provide me with challenges and triumphs.

The month started off with our IST (in service training) conference in Agadir, the tourist resort city on the Atlantic coast that Mark and I had been to once before in July for our court troubles. The charecter of the town was totally different at the begining of December, being the off season. The beach before had been packed with moroccans and Europeans relaxing in the sun but now there was very few people about. This was, in my opinion, a very good thing. The weather was magnificent the whole time we were there. Sunny and warm the whole time. So nice in fact that I couldn’t figure out why there was an off season at all. I didn’t ever go swimming in the ocean (much to the annoyance of some friends of mine I’m sure) but others did and reported that while chilly it was bearable. Almost all of our breaks between and after meetings and sessions were spent out enjoying the weather and the surf in some way.

Meetings and sessions themselves were pretty much as expected. In some cases pretty boring and useless to my particular problems and in others useful. At least they were all held in a 5 star hotel. I’m not sure how PC got set up there but the rumor is that the manager/owner met a PC voulenteer that spoke to him in his native version of berber and he was so impressed either by this simple fact, or by whatever message the PC person conveyed to him that he offered us a discount on all our visits there. Of course its still out of the range of our voulenteer budgets individually but if all our conferences are held there then who am I to complain?

The worst news of the week was the fact that we didn’t get very much money through our usual sources this year and what money we did get has already been spoken for during this physical year. This means that we are all going to have to scramble and fundraise under extreemly difficult circumstances and amidst all our other problems with simply getting projects organized and started in this country until the next physical year begins in October of 2006. I’m not sure if the grant that I submitted for consideration on the first of December to this dryed up funding source will get in under the wire for funding or not. I havn’t heard anything about it yet so I’m assuming the money will not come. Keep your fingers crossed though!

The conference was also supposed to be a time to work with our government counterparts to improve relations and see how we can make things work better in the National Parks. My problem here is that the government restructured the office in charge of my park (Toubkal NP) right as I was becoming an active voulenteer so I still dont’ really have an official counterpart. The lady that came to the conference to fill that capacity for Mark and I on a temporary basis is rare in Morocco for being a woman that dosn’t take crap from anyone and thus is not generally liked by pretty much anyone else. Still, I have to hand it to her for occationally getting things done... provided of course that you can make whatever your priorty is convinincing enough to be one of her priorites. She told me during one of our meetings that my village had already recieved a lot of assistance from the office as far as projects went and so probably wouldn’t be getting any more for a few years. Great... Obviously there are some problems here but at least I have a much better understanding of what they are now. I’ve done ok organizing some projects without any imput or assistance from the government and I’ll probably just keep to that strategy until it proves unworkable.

For me, the best part of the week was definately the friendships. It was absolutely awesome to see everyone that I had made friends with during my original three months of training and to continue to network with those people. Much of my contact with some of them for the last 6 months has been limited to periodic letters or occational phone calls and I was greatful for the opportuinity to grow some of those friendships to new levels. In between and after classes we managed to have a number of adventures. One friend and I got up before the sun one day and went in search of some birds. We didn’t find any but it was a great time... Later in the week we tried again with another friend and found the river estuary and saw and osprey, wild flamingos, lots of herons, cerlews, oystercatchers, and many others. Its cool to be part of a group with interests similar to mine! We also got bogged down in a salt marsh, covered with slime, attacked by crabs, and had our pitures taken with a forest guard who then proceeded to tell us that we couldn’t show them to anyone becuase its illeagal to have pictures of his uniform. Other activities for the week included movie nights, board games, occational drinking, trying out new and different foods... (one indian resuraunt we tried was fantastic) and managing to eat at McDonalds more than was probably good for us. ( Its amazing what too much moroccan food will do to ones previous tastes and avoidances.) It was also great to see what integration strategies have worked for people and have the opportunities to plan projects and visits to other parts of the country. (if we do it for “work” it dosn’t count as vacation!)

Alas, the week had to end eventually however and we all again went to our seperate corners of the country for the next 6 months of service. Mark and I got back home without incident. I spent a few days at my site and a few days at his before he left to go on his christmas vacation to spain. My own Christmas started a few days later in a blinding snow/hail storm that seems to just be my luck whenever I want to leave the mountains! I left on the Wednesday before Christmas just to be sure that I could get out and on Thursday spent the night with some friends of mine from the health sector near Ouarzazate. Friday I left with them on the long bus ride to Merzuga.

Merzuga is the one place where the famous moving ocean of sand that makes up the Algerian part of the Sahara desert touches Moroccan soil. (Other parts of morocco have parts of the desert but not the dunes). Seems like a strange place to spend the christmas holidays but actually it was quite cool. If you can’t go for the white christmas then you might as well try to go for the tan one! We were there for two nights and more or less two full days. I had a great time playing in the worlds largest sandbox and I’ll try to post some pictures of this on my journal page if I get a chance sometime this weekend. I decided that you could definately make “sand” (snow) angels but other snow activities like snowballs and snowmen were diffiuclt. According to our guidebook some of the hotels supplied skies and sleds and stuff to use on the dunes, which would have been awesome but our hotel didn’t and we didn’t se anyone else useing them either.

Walking on the sand is an interesting experiance. Even simple tasks take an amount of effort not really proportional to the distance traveled because for every step you take you slide at least half way back to where you started.... or your foot sinks half way into the sand. My self and one of my more adventureous friends decided to attempt to summit the “great dune” which was more sand in one place than I had ever even thought possible. (the size of the dunes was nothing that I’ve ever been able to picture accurately in my head. They are much much bigger than I gave them credit for) It wasn’t a particuarly tall “mountian” but it was very steep and we finished the last pitch gasping for breath and crawling on our hands and knees. It was well worth it though as we reached the top as the sun was setting and creating a really cool pattern of sun and shadow on the sea of sand around us. The contrast was such that the dunes appear to change colors with different angles of sunlight. Anything from reds to browns and even violet was possible.

The next night we went on a camel trek. Camels are interesting beasts to say the least and are not the most comfortable ride I’ve ever had for sure. Still I think I may have fared the best out of our group because I occationally ride horses or mules from place to place up where I live. The trek was again at sunset and this time I spent the sunset hours using the dunes as a giant gymnastics mat. I did jumps and cartwheels and flips and soon everyone had joined in including our camel guides. There was much laughter and excitement and some really funny moments. The downside is that I’ll be finding sand in places I didn’t even know existed for weeks and weeks. On the ride back we sang christmas carols that echoed across the sandscape.
For christmas dinner we hit up the home of a nearby voulenteer who had graciously agreed to host us. He deep fryed 3 chickens to go with homade stuffing, cranberry sauce and garlic mashed potatos with green beens and gravy. For desert was caremelized banannas and chocolate pudding pie with a delicious grahm cracker crust. I’ve not been so full and satisfied since moving here. Also the company was excellent the decorations were fabulous and his collection of christmas music set the tone for the evening just right. I even got a phone call from the states to say merry christmas! It was a great holiday (definately better than working retail during the last holiday season!) and reminded me that its the people and the message that are important and not all the traditional gimics and goodies. Before I went to sleep I went over in as much of the religious aspect of the christmas story as I could clearly remember in my head and was at peace.

Unfortuantely, I then decided to go back home for the week between christmas and new years and that process turned ugly. I was stuck halfway home for 2 days due to mechanical difficulties and then a snow storm worse than the one that I had left in. It is true to say that the weather in the mountains is unpredictable. Thank goodness I had packed for a week out and had my sleeping bag with me. I was still miserable but I was warm and miserable so it could have been worse. I did eventually make it home and things returned to normal.

Or close to normal anyway. I’m happy to report that I’ve got a halfway decent moroccan friend now! I’m not sure he would look at it the same way but he’s been teaching me the ins and outs of berber plumbing (at least as much destruction as construction as always) and I’ve been making dinner for him while we do lunch at his house. He’s younger than me and I think hangs out with me more for the novelty and the help with his chores as anything but its still progress and its defiantely better than him bugging me about my personal possessions all the time.

The trip down the mountians for New Years was long but uncomplicated by any of my recent travel difficulties. I spent the night celebrating with some of the same people I went to Merzuga with for Christmas. It was a generally quiet celebration but again the food was good (I should know since I helped cook it this time!) and was nice to be with people. Hopefully tonight and tomorrow maybe I’ll be able to talk with some people back home and see how thier holidays went. I miss you all!

Wish I could talk about everything in more detial but this is clearly too long as it is so I’ll wrap it up! Drop me an e-mail line or write! Letters are always appricated in any form!
Much love all around
Stay well
-Andy

p.s. if your interested in a good and very beautiful novel about the problems in South Africa I highly reccommend “Cry, the Beloved Country”