Thursday, October 8, 2009

week 2

Two words: shark diving.

Though we had to get up at 5am, and the water was freezing, this was pretty cool. And surprisingly not scary. Spielberg got it all wrong, apparently. Sharks are actually pretty cool, and way more interested in fish guts than us. One of them (there were about 4, including a baby) got a little rowdy after a long period of being teased with the fish gut bait and hit the cage full of people with his tail, but it was the good kind of scary.







This next one is for mom:






In other news, my placement has been going pretty well. My job is to market our organization to people who might want to buy the products made by the ladies there, like conference organizers who need bags and lanyards, or student groups doing interested in fair trade products, etc. PS if any of you out there in cyber space is involved with a student organization or something like that, please let me know. i got things to sell you.

Income Generation Ladies:



We had another tour of the city yesterday, and it still looks pretty good. We've also been eating a lot of local cuisine in the past few days, which includes a lot of curry, and a lot of fried things. There's this bread that's pretty much just fried dough that comes with literally everything you get here. Cape Townians call it Fat Bread. Its my favorite food.


We also toured one neighborhood with crazy houses that were all different colors. It reminded me a lot of Ireland. Have a look:





And finally we went to a museum that was really just an archway underneath a bridge where some really cool and apparently important paintings live, like this one.


This is a depiction of the first Mosque in Cape Town, which was the first mosque in South Africa. Some dude who came to Cape Town to flee persecution wrote down the whole Quran from memory and started the mosque, which was also one of the first schools in Cape Town, and also the origin of the Afrikaans language, which is a mix of many European and Malaysian languages, still widely spoken and one of the official SA languages.



This one was pretty cool too.


So, I guess that's all the interesting stuff, feel free to leave comments and let me know what y'all want to see more of, pictures, stories, some vague attempts to speak the isiXhosa language, whatev.

Sidenote, this weekend commences the Garden Route in which everything is awesome and looks like this:



The garden route is also home to some of the major attractions of South Africa, including elephant riding, ostrich racing, skydiving, zip lining, and the largest bungee jump in the world, which I will do, and afterwards will look like this.



2 comments:

  1. Emmett.....great pictures and commentary, keep up the good work. What kind of stuff do the ladies sell? Can anyone buy? Wedding is tomorrow, we'll miss you but will be thinking of you.
    Jill

    ReplyDelete
  2. Nice Em! missed you at the wedding. It was beautiful and fun. Glad I read this after you went bungie jumping! xo

    ReplyDelete