Saturday, July 20, 2013

Mice and rats.... doesn't matter they are pests



What would you do if you were kept up at night due to scurrying in your ceiling or food missing/chewed on. Ok I only lost some of my food when I wasn’t even here yet. My food and supplies had been shipped up here a month prior to my arrival and some rats got into it. Normally one would think that mice are easy enough to catch… set a trap with some good food on it and wait….. well these mice/rats are of a much smarter sort. I set up 2 traps and added some peanut butter to each trap….. the next morning the peanut butter was gone but there was no mice. They managed to eat it off the set trap and get away.

Attempt #2 – smear peanut butter all over the trap sensor thing and wait again. Again these mice managed to clean off the trap without getting caught.

Attempt #3 – not very creative but I decided to hit the mice I saw in my roof with a broom….(the roofs here are thatch with a layer of clear tarp underneath so any animals are visible from the underside). Fail again.

Attempt #4 resulted in a google search to see if there were other ways to get these pesky creatures. I found a few sites that showed a water bucket trap (http://fivegallonideas.com/bucket-mouse-trap/ ) and so I created something similar (sorry no pics) with some rope, a bucket, a tin can, peanut butter, and a bench. The next night I woke up from the noise of a can clunking…. The mouse had managed to pull the can to the edge of the bucket and was happily eating the peanut butter off the can while sitting on the bench I had as a ramp into the bucket….. Ok I admit the trap wasn’t identical but it should have worked for a normal mouse.

Attempt #5 – After chatting with one of my fellow missionaries I decided to try her suggestion and glue peanuts to the trap. My mistake was not pealing the outer skin off the peanut and again the mouse got away. I decided to try this version one more time but with just the peanut and lots of glue. FINALLY success.  When I awoke the next morning I saw that I had won the battle against the mouse.  
Now hopefully there are no more that want to come visit and I can get some sleep. 

Thursday, July 4, 2013

Trip to my location



Flying on chartered planes is a whole new and different experience. I’ve lived in a small city that has a small airport where we actually would walk out to the plane on the tarmac instead of through those long arms in big commercial airports (though I think the local airport has done some major upgrades recently). In these cases there are usually lines on the asphalt indicating where to go and a few staff directing you to the plane. That is totally not the case out here. We arrived at the airport and were checked through security then we were off to the waiting area to await further direction from our pilot. There was no 2-3 hour wait for international flights. Instead what I thought was a ½ hr wait was actually about 10 minutes. Walking to the plane was basically follow the pilot and don’t get too close to other planes. There were about 20 or so planes on the tarmac in various stages of being prepared for trips and there we were walking right next to them.   Soon we were off to our first destination. Out here you need to “check out” of a country and “checkin” to the new country so that meant we had to land at 2 aistrips along the border. The first one checkpoint (still in Kenya) was pretty big and pretty empty except for the planes parked beside the runway in various states of disrepair or crash damage. If you are nervous to fly, landing at places like this is not the most encouraging thing. Plane crashes do happen but out here the planes are not shipped off to a plane graveyard and any form of disassembly is much more difficult so many of them are just pulled out of the way and left there. 

 the planes in the picture don't work

Our next stop was a dusty airstrip with cows, goats, and people running around next to the landing area. Apparently the place we landed doesn’t get many flights through here so we were somewhat of a novelty to the local people. Many people were there to greet us. It took a while but some members of the team were able to figure out what tribe they were even though none of us spoke their language and they didn’t speak English. Cameras also were a novelty and I had to take many pictures of them and then show them their pictures which they thought was pretty cool. We were soon on our way again and off to our final destination.



A few more hours of flying and we were soon circling the final airfield. 2 years ago this area was a small community and now it’s a huge refugee camp. The whole area was dotted with white UN tarps. Again there were airplanes at the edge of the runway. One pulled waaay off to the side (and was one of the planes that crashed with people from our team) and a larger one just to the side.  We landed safely and got out. I had seen previous pictures of the landing strip prior to its expansion and knew it had been expanded but I wasn’t prepared for how small I felt once I was standing out there. Here I was, in some remote area, standing on a landing strip that can land some pretty big planes.  I felt pretty small standing there looking out at the other huge planes that were landing.  



Out here we are able to get up close to and involved with flight stuff. Loading, unloading, and walking around on the airstrips. Pretty different from the commercial flights I have been on where access is very controlled. Maybe one of these times I’ll be able to fly a plane (no worries I wont be landing/taking off any time soon).



an old post that didn't work - Life in Nairobi

First a few city pics 

The view from my apartment

 one of the side streets near the main part of the city

yes they have trampolines out here too. This was at Tuskey's (similar to walmart)

  A rainy day when umbrellas are necessary even if they are pink :)


Justin and I had the opportunity to go to a recycled glass factory one day. The following shots are from this place. 

the beginnings of a chair

 stained glass in the making

a finished chair


 an almost finished table - I think it just needed to be washed/polished

one of the lights they make
 the ceiling in the glass melting building. all the little holes are actually glass pieces which makes the ceiling look like it has colored stars

the glass melting area

recycled glass/bottle caps
 stained glass in thier store

 recycled eye glasses 

more artwork 

one of the paths in thier gardens - these paths were all through the gardens and buildings

bridge across a river near the glass place
 

 view from the bridge



 some flowers I've seen while out here



first ostrich that wasn't at a zoo (at the glass factory)

 camels (at the glass factory)


 termites were everywhere one evening when I was up north at the team conference. they were flying around, losing thier wings, and then crawling everywhere.


during some free time at the conference I was able to go with a group and have a tour of the tea field area on horseback. the following are some pics of that trip.

teafields

a harvested teaplant

tea field
 more tea fields





Another excursion was a trip to the cheese factory in the area. 
making cheese

once the cheese is made its allowed to sit in a huge fridge and grow a variety of molds.  Yes all the white and green/grey stuff is mold.




The finished cheese samples. the bottom left one was the best in my opinion (but I have no clue what they all were)

At the cheese factory we got a chance to tour the owner's garden. It had pretty much every plant/herb I have heard of. Many of the herbs/spices she uses to experiment to make different types of cheeses. 

we couldn't figure out what these were but they looked like watermelon hanging from the tree.