My
friend, Karna, came for an extended visit, leaving just last Saturday. Upon her
initial arrival, I felt like I was just walking around in the states with my
friend rather than that my friend was walking around in Uganda with me! It was
just such an odd experience, seeing her in this context.
Having
Karna around was quite wonderful because, frankly, Karna is such a wonderful
friend. She’s laid back, introspective, knows how to laugh, and is just plain
fun to be around. While she was here, we split our time between Jinja, Mukono,
and Murchison Falls National Park, so that’s how I split up my descriptions
below.
Jinja:
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| Karna & I at the source of the Nile, apparently there is an underground spring right by where we are standing. |
Besides
taking the obligatory visit to the source of the Nile and walking around the
small downtown of Jinja, we also volunteered at Amani Baby Cottage (http://amanibabycottage.org/). Amani an orphanage that takes care of roughly
60 children ages 0-5. Often they try and reunite the kids back with someone
from their extended families, but they will also help to facilitate adoptions.
Being in the orphanage was very interesting, but also exhausting. They have
quite the system down for the kids making everything go rather smoothly
considering the numbers and ages of the kids they have to corral. And though
they certainly don't get all the individual attention they need (it’s hard to
recreate a real home), overall they certainly are at a good place, are
well-cared for, and, most importantly, are loved. We were only there for a few
days, but serving their ministry was enjoyable.
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| Karna, hanging out with one of the little ones at the bonfire (a special activity that the kids talked about all day) |
Mukono:
In
between Jinja and Murchison we spent time at UCU, mostly cooking, relaxing, and
watching some TV episodes (Call the
Midwife, mostly). Karna tried chapatti, jackfruit, passion fruit, Ugandan
pineapple (which is sweeter then back home), fried chicken (the equivalent of
the hamburger here—in my opinion), cooked cabbage, Stoney (ginger-flavored
soda), Krest (bitter-lemon flavored soda), African tea, Irish potatoes, and the
Pioneer Women’s cinnamon rolls (not Ugandan, but we made them for the first
time in Uganda so it makes the list). We also visited Vision for Africa (http://www.visionforafrica-intl.org/en/aboutvfa/index.html where they have vocational schools and then you can buy their work--pottery, ect)
and Bajo Glass (this great place that collects recycled glass then blows it into glassware).
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| Karna & I at Bajo Glass--The floors & walls are all decorated with melted, recycled glass. |
Murchison:
Murchison Falls
National Park is a beautiful park in Northwestern Uganda with a good amount of
game (animals) and, of course, an amazing water-fall. Getting to the park is
always a bit of a challenge as roads are not well kept here, and dirt roads
less so. As a result it takes about 2 hours to go the 30 miles from the town of
Masindi (located just outside the park) to the Nile river running halfway
through the park. For a particularly bad stretch it took about 15 minutes to go
a little over a mile. Despite these trials, we had a nice time. Groups of
giraffes and elephants and tiny deer (can't remember their official name) dotted
the savanna and wandered near the roadside. At times they posed quite perfectly,
allowing Karna and I to snap their portraits. My favorite part was getting to
see the lion! At the park they usually only see 1 or 2 lions a week, so we were quite lucky. Plus, we were able to
drive up really close to it and were probably around 5 feet away from the young
male lion when Karna and I popped up through the open sun roof to take
pictures. The lion just looked at us then laid back down for a nap, but it got
my heart racing a bit :).

The other major activity of our park excursion was a
hike up to the top of Murchison Falls. It only took about an hour, but it was
beautiful. The rock on the path is formica, so it glistened in the sunshine and
covered my chacos with some nice little sparkles. Eventually the path took us
so close to the waterfall that we could feel the cool spray of water issuing
off it. This also provided the perfect circumstances for lovely and complete
double rainbows! Though there was no gold at the end of it...just formica.
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| The bottom of Murchison Falls |
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| A little worse for the wear, but here's us at the top of the falls and at the end of the rainbow :) |
Now Karna is safe
back home and I have begun preparing for classes which start next week. Since I
just received the syllabus a few days back, there is a lot of work for me to do
-- so vacation officially over.