Monday, November 23, 2009
Moving About
On Sunday we took a walk across the hills that overlook our house in Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea. The hills aren't all that impressive in themselves but once you reach the top, there are views, quite lovely ones actually. Down to the sea on one side, across the coastal plain to the Owen Stanley Range some kilometres inland, on the other. Quite impressive in its own way. The walk wasn't all that long, just under two hours, and about seven kilometres. It was humid after the night's rain and in parts, slippery underfoot. After months of the dry season the first rains last week had brought forth a flush of green - the hills were changing their coats again, dull brown for green fresh. It was good to be there. The people who live here are not the originals - these days, that's not uncommon. They've come to the city from the bush, from the villages, looking for work, for opportunities, for the chance that independence promised them. To the uninitiated, it looks like most of them haven't found it. These people do it tough, these settlers, squatters many of them, living in crude shelters that are a mix of the traditional and the convenient. Of course everything has to be carried up by someone - by the women mainly, and the kids. The men bring the really heavy stuff. The water comes from the public tap down below, one tap to several hundred people. Here a 20 litre plastic container is a necessity, and a scrubbed out oil drum is a treasure, especially if there is also a sheet of corrugated iron to deflect rain water down and into the drum. And everywhere, you see the stones, piles of them, windrows of rocks, running along the edge of the ridges. Each and every one of them has been picked up and brought to the top of the slope, and deposited there. Clearing the way for the food gardens. Every slope is covered by food gardens, or what used to be food gardens and will one day again be, after a couple of years of spelling. Every spare metre, is under care, although not much can be called spare. That's an expression that indicates a surplus, and there isn't too much of anything surplus here. Except the welcomes, and the friendly faces. Bit incredulous some, seeing obvious strangers among them, but friendly, for all that. It's a really tough life for these people, really hard. Nothing is easy. We walk over the hills and through the settlement and back over the hills again, and we're home. Hot water and a shower to wash off the sweat. Two hours, and two worlds - makes you think. We'll go back of course. It's a great place to walk. And we'll help where we can. That's part of the PNG culture, to share, to give a bit. But of course at the back of your mind is the reality that it'll never be enough, not in your life-time. It's always going to be tough. But I'll bet there'll still be the welcomes though; bet you!
Friday, November 20, 2009
Going Along
Those who have experience with such things will understand what I mean when I say that taking up roller blades late in life can be a scary enterprise. Recently I dragged out an old pair of in-line skates that haven't seen action for at least 5 years, and began trying to regain a sense of balance on wheels! Well, let me say it has been a continuing experience of some note! For a start the straps are broken so I am using heavy gauge cable ties to bind the boots, while I look for a store that can supply replacement parts. It seems the bits are more expensive than the value of the boots, so the cable ties stay for the moment. The point behind all this tomfoolery is that I really enjoy doing things with the kids, including ice skating. Well, we live very much in the tropics, so not much chance of ice skating rinks here, BUT we are visiting relatives and friends in Europe in the early new year, and there there are rinks. So, out come the rollerblades to help me get ready for the ice. Evening therefore one can find me going endlessly around the driveway in the front yard, temperature in the high 20s humidity high 80%, sweating like an out of condition football player, and occasionally crashing to the ground when one leg takes off on a course of its own!
Of course I watch the children with their rollerblades and rib-sticks and other balancing high speed apparatus and dream that one day I'll be as good as them. Meanwhile, my son considers it an essential duty to remain awake while I do my rounds, just in case I hit the ground and can't get up.
Wouldn't be dead for quids.
Of course I watch the children with their rollerblades and rib-sticks and other balancing high speed apparatus and dream that one day I'll be as good as them. Meanwhile, my son considers it an essential duty to remain awake while I do my rounds, just in case I hit the ground and can't get up.
Wouldn't be dead for quids.
Wednesday, November 18, 2009
Opening Up
Just beginning, and still finding my way. I have been reading Jessica Watson's blog and have been tracking her progress since she left Sydney on her amazing voyage. I do wish her well. I have lived in Papua New Guinea for over 30 years and am used to seeing young people taking on big challenges, under often trying conditions, but what Jessica is attempting really does take the cake!
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