Tuesday, February 24, 2009

Living, eating and gettin' around...

I love my place! My bicycle ride home at night is great. I have yet to get a helmet but hope to do so soon. Sometimes I ride home in the dark which isn't too dangerous - the main concern I have is being chased by the dogs that sleep during the day and chase me at night! Although I am going slower on the way home cuz it's uphill!

My bicycle and I have an ongoing stand off about who gets to choose what gear I'm in. The bicycle or me. Hmm... well since the bike is ornery and I'm yelling at it... it needed a name. George seemed fitting until I remembered... Mike R's real name is George and that just won't do cuz he's a nice guy. Then the other morning, the local rooster walked up to open the office door and screeched his call so loud I jumped out of my skin... (it was SO loud Dylan heard it on Google talk!). Since then, the bike has been christened The Blue Rooster.


Blue Rooster and the Fresh Coconut! HAHAHAHAHHA!






I am now set up with a propane burner and in between eating at the local Bali warung (small "booth" on the side of the road with yummy food) and the western yummy restaurants, I'm cooking fresh vegies and fruit dishes. YUM. I missed cooking! And of course... being the geeky photo taker I am... I've taken pictures of most of my meals!

Mornings I wake up to the sound of roosters calling (they start about 5:00). I'm having trouble sleeping lately, mostly cuz I'm fired up about working on the education for SOS and from reading Mountains Beyond Mountains. That book had me pacing the floor. There are things that I am passionate about changing. I'm not a health care professional but I believe in what PIH and Farmer and Kim et al are doing. Personally, one of the things I am very interested in learning more about and making work better is the foster care system in the USA but I'm also interested in poverty and inequality issues abroad (and in the US) so reading this book got me ramped up even more. There is so much to do. Organizations need to collaborate across fields and across political and profit lines to get things done. Anyways, I'll stop before I go on and on and on! It comes down to this for me - there are things to do and not enough time and I need more experience, more training, more... more... more... I want to learn and to contribute and take action. ANYWAYS. :-)

First dinner I cooked here! YUM.









Catching up and pictures

Thought maybe you might like some picture updates and news other than what I'm reading and the different organizations I'm recommending!

Valentine's Day the Yoga Barn (BaliSpirit) hosted a free movie night and played "Moulin Rouge."

Monday last week was my "first day of work" for SOS. We worked primarily on the Orangutan Caring Week here in Ubud.

I'm now working on the education program (for the international schools) as my pet project for SOS while Jane and Dewi and Maria and Widi work on the events and everything. Their main focus is on Orangutan Caring Week which is kicking off this Friday - yay!

I'm making the curriculum plan using some of the information we have from a sister organization as well as our own and prepping the activities. (Dewi and Widi already teach at the Indonesian schools too). On Thursday we will present to a local school called Green School here in Bali.

Side note - what a great opportunity this school would be if I were still a kiddo! Check it out....

http://www.greenschool.org/

I'm very excited about teaching children about the environment and an endangered species and SOS has a lot of great information. We're presenting to kids between kindergarten to high school. COOL stuff.

Here's some pics! Enjoy

Orangutan Mask - kids get to paint these during Orangutan Caring Week



If you want a t-shirt let me know...

Dewi and Widi teaching at a local Bali school - this is an orangutan song with dance! FUN!






















I don't "sit and observe" very well... I had to join in!

Mountains Beyond Mountains

I can't rave about this book enough so I'll just recommend that you read it. It's probably one of the best books I've read - it is well written (by Tracy Kidder) but what Paul Farmer, friends and Partners in Health did and ARE doing is phenomenal. This is a must read.

Check out their website:
http://www.pih.org/home.html

I applaud Farmer's blog article, "Can Obama Solve America's Health Care Crisis?":
http://www.thedailybeast.com/blogs-and-stories/2008-11-10/can-obama-solve-the-health-care-crisis/

Ways to help (besides donations):
http://www.pih.org/youcando/act.html

Thanks and much love to you!

Saturday, February 21, 2009

DIG

Hello all!

This is the link to "DIG" website - Development in Gardening:

http://www.developmentingardening.org/DIG/HOME.html

I met Steve bicycling and his program sounds excellent.

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Bentuyang Village

My homestay is simple, beautiful, clean and so peaceful. My first night it poured rain. I moved in about 4 and after chatting with the owners I unpacked everything.

Part of my porch...












Rainy view from my patio from the night I moved in.










My kitchen - I now have a propane burner in the corner and dishes! YAYAYAYAY for cooking yummy vegies and Bali food!












My bedroom












More room pics (this is the bathroom door)













Hopping spider... I sat for several minutes just watching this little spider. It was COOL! Reminds me of the days I was studying science and biology and chemistry... the world is SO COOL.

Friday, February 13, 2009

Homestay

I've found a place to live through the end of March. It's 5-6km outside of where I'll be volunteering which I may hate after a week of bicycling in the rain but for now I'm very happy to have found a place outside of Ubud. It's on the ground level but overlooks rice fields and is very quiet. I have a kitchen and warm shower and the owner seems very nice.

I love Ubud but it has so many expats and tourists and with the artist community I feel very much like I'm back in one of Seattle's small eclectic neighborhoods. Enjoyable but not quite the "local" experience I'm after. Still nice for a month though!

I move in tomorrow. I'll post pictures later.

Best to you all!

Sumatran Orangutan Society

Hello all,

I am volunteering for the next month with the Sumatran Orangutan Society. Their office is here in Ubud. This is a great organization and I'll get to help with admin/media/education programs etc. I'm very excited. This is a little different from most of the volunteer work I've done in the past and I'm thrilled to have a chance to do something to help animals and the environment.

SOS is hosting their first Orangutan Caring Week here in Ubud on the last week of February. We'll also be putting together materials to take into the international schools. They have a lot of material but need someone to help organize the actual class time and projects in English. They already have Bahasa material (Bahasa is the Indonesian language).

I'm very impressed with much of what this organization and its fellow organizations have done. They focus not only on the orangutans and their plight but also promote legislation to decrease deforestation. Deforestation in addition to killing numerous plants and animals and destroying ecosystems also increases carbon emissions. By clear cutting forests much of the bogs and wetland areas become dry and give off carbon, creating more carbon emissions than those created by transportation. WOW... I didn't know that - not sure how many of you did either. Interesting and important. I have much to learn and will be working with some fun people at SOS. Here's their website. Enjoy!

http://www.orangutans-sos.org/

And of course... if you have any questions - please ask and I'd be happy to help!

Thursday, February 12, 2009

Auspicious Days

The Balinese Calendar says that the 13th of February, 2009 is the best day ...

- To go hunting
- Propose a girl
- To put the roof for the house

Hmmm... I'm hunting for a place to live but I'm not sure that's what is meant! As for proposals, unfortunately I don't know a girl to "propose!" Now putting a roof for the house, my condo in Seattle already has a roof... so unless there's something I should know (fellow condo owners?) I don't think it needs one. Guess I'll just have to stick with this being a good day for walking, walking and more walking.

I've spent much of the morning looking for inexpensive housing and walking all over Ubud and talking to every homestay owner I can find! I'm finding places in the range from 35,000 Rupiah/night to 100,000 (about $3-9 USD / night). While that sounds very cheap, keep in mind that I am traveling for a year with limited funds so I was hoping for something less expensive than $3/nt for 6 weeks. I still have to pay for food and laundry. The room for 35,000 Rp was pretty uh... well rustic. I don't mind not having a western toilet (this one did) and I actually really don't mind cold water given the option for a cheaper room but I prefer someplace with less bugs? :-)

I just took a break to drink watermelon juice and to buy a large bottle of water. Nice how sitting for 30 minutes and resting can help ones perspective! Maybe "drinking watermelon juice" could be on the list of Auspicious Days.

Tuesday, February 10, 2009

Volunteer Opportunities in Indonesia

For the curious, here are some of the organizations I'm looking at volunteering for in Indonesia:
*Most of these I found using the Volunteer Abroad website http://www.volunteerabroad.com/search.cfm

4th World Love - Lombok, Indonesia
http://fourthworldlove.org/

Sumatran Orangutan Society - Ubud, Bali
http://www.orangutans-sos.org/

International Humanity Foundation - Buitan, Bali
http://www.ihfonline.org/

Please also check out the Ubud library - this is wonderful!. I explored it this evening and booked a class there for Balinese dancing. The library provides books for westerners as well as for the Indonesian people. There is also a specific children's library though. Yayayayay!

Pondok Pekak Library
I'm including the link to an article about the library...
http://www.baliadvertiser.biz/articles/nonprofitnews/2005/pondok_pekak.html

It was founded by Laurie Billington (American - I think they said Montana?) about 13(?) years ago. WAY COOL. I enjoyed browsing their books - they actually have a nice selection of English books! They also have a program for travelers like myself to check out books. They are of course always in need of donations so I will probably leave a couple of my books here.

I'm also checking out an organization run by Steve who I met bicycling... I'll post the link later - he runs a program that works in collaboration with hospitals and clinics helping AIDS victims. He works to promote healthy gardening so that individuals with AIDS get proper nutrition. I hope to visit his program in Cambodia later this year - he formerly ran his program in various countries in Africa. I don't know that he needs volunteers but I am interested in his work and hope that some of you find this information helpful.

What I'm finding is that there are a large number of organizations that need help - much like the U.S. There are people in poverty, animals that are endangered, waste management issues, legislative issues, children needing better education and opportunities and so many more ... not that unlike the U.S. The difference being that some of the countries I'm in are not as developed as the U.S. I wouldn't call Thailand a third world country and I'm not sure where Indonesia as a whole ranks with development and competition in the global market. Much of what I'm seeing in Ubud is tourist driven and not poor. While the images of poverty or need are different than what I'm used to they may be very similar to the needs of some individuals and populations that live within the U.S., a very developed country. I find irony in this. We need to help our own populations as well as those abroad. I found this in Thailand too though. Many of the poorer individuals I met thought westerners were incredibly rich in comparison to Thais - and yes - they are right - the individuals they meet traveling through or settling there are very rich in comparison. However there are many wealthy Thais too. Especially in the urban areas.

What I am looking for in this trip is experience working with organizations that are working hard to find sustainable solutions to the problems they are addressing. I can find this in the United States. However I'm also looking for the intercultural experience and exposure to other people and other ways of thinking. I also get to play tourist when I'm in between stints and I happen to be in some of the most beautiful areas of the world. But that's not what I'm here for. I resist the tourist front that I'm living in right now in Ubud. I like it but I also want more of the culture. I want to live with families. The modern world is creeping into villages and distant regions and some of the cultures it touches, it changes. In some ways this is good yet in others it's sad. If there are ways to bring help and funding from the western world without as much "western" impact I want to promote this. So many of the cultures I'm encountering are so rich in comparison to my own. They are absolutely beautiful.

I found a lovely cafe here in Ubud (I won't name it because it is lovely and doing good things), but it's also very western. I felt as if I was back in Seattle in a cafe listening to Seattle-ites and islanders discuss their yoga and art and craft and their thoughts on world and US politics. There's even a pro-Obama hanging. (And there were a few people from Seattle at the next table over!) This cafe promotes various organizations here and does some very good things - they are even asking that individuals not use straws in an attempt to find one more way to decrease waste - BUT... it needs more Bali flavor. Then again, I am in the center of Ubud in a place most tourists choose to stop to enjoy the art, food, dance and culture.

Anyways, take my thoughts as they are, just my opinions. There is good and bad in all places and all things and both should be accounted. The Balinese make offerings to many gods but they also place daily offerings on the ground and sidewalks to appease the bad spirits. I kind of like this philosophy - I don't know enough about it or the history but I like it.

I miss home and I miss my friends - both here and in Thailand. I miss being able to say hello to the other teachers and staff at Yaowawit. I miss being able to go to coffee or lunch with my friends in Seattle. I miss my kiddo and our jokes and laughs. You all enrich my life and I'm sad to not be closer. I hope all of you are doing well and that life is treating you kind.

Much love and hugs,
Joyann

More pics
































































Monday, February 9, 2009

A day of bicycling

On Monday I took a half day bicycle tour. There were five in our group plus our guide. On the drive up we stopped at Amertha Yoga gardens where we were taken on a small tour and shown some of the things they grow.

Avocado tree









Rambutan tree or maybe it's mangosteen... hmmm...









Nutmeg tree












Rambutan, Mangosteen and Snake Skin fruit - all delicious!












Coffee bean tree (think I got the picture right...)














A woman roasting the coffee beans









Three stages: ground, roasted, green (pealed)









Coffee is manually ground








And then there's special coffee, Kopi Lewak...











Kopi Lewak... yes that's monkey poop!













We drove on to a cafe at the rim of the crater overlooking Batur volcano and Batur lake for a "brunch" of coffee/tea and fried bananas. Then our group was outfitted with helmets and bikes for the ride down.
Batur volcano - view from our starting point









Our group









Yours truly... the helmet was seriously for decoration only. It was so big I eventually ditched it as I figured I'd get injured worse wearing it!









Children along the road would hold out their hands for us to slap as we rode by yelling "Halo!"
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We rode about 40 km - all of which was downhill (with the exception of two small STEEP hills). We stopped in a village and visited the home of a family. Communal style living with two or three generations living in one housing "complex." Each family home has its own temple, kitchen, storage area, garden, one or two cooking areas and various buildings/houses for each of the families. (Ie grandparents and parents would probably have their own houses).


Rice field along the way












Part of a temple














Towards the end we had torrential downpour - AWESOME and then had lunch in Pejeng not far from Ubud.
A view from our table








A nice ride and our guide Marcel was great!

Saturday, February 7, 2009

More pics...

This was posted in the Biker Bar in Khao Lak where Dylan and I rented the truck. YES... I DROVE IN THAILAND! For TWO DAYS! HAHAHAHAHH! Wonder how I'll do returning to having the steering wheel on the left side and the driving back on the right!













Dylan on the beach in Khao Lak













These boats are in the harbor where the diving boats pickup and drop off people to take diving.
















Fiona and I - night out with Dylan and our friend Steve














Tsunami memorial in Nam Khem near where Fiona lives

Catching up... Dylan's visit to Thailand

These pictures are completely out of order and I'm posting before the internet crashes again. Hopefully I can upload more later. And yes Sherri - I hope to upload you and Michael's trip soon too! :-)

Ever the photographer... check out Dylan's photos of Thailand at

http://dylanalamode.com/2009_02_01-Thailand/index.html















Dylan went scuba diving... I chilled on the boat and did some snorkeling...













Dylan and I stayed one night at Art's Riverview in Khao Sok (Bob - thanks for the tip!). It's a beautiful place and I was sad we only had one day there. Beautiful and romantic too.

Our room was upstairs in this house at Art's Riverview













Aww! :-)












Walking up to one of the waterfalls in Khao Sok National Park.














View from Cream & Kim's restaurant - sunset








Sunset in Khao Lak











A night out in Khao Lak... my friends Fiona and Steve joined us.