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Bawana Shortie Pants, Tanzania update #7

The following was written by Steve Boeke.
 
Friends and Family:
 
tanz2008_22a.jpgThe weather here has been real a surprise. I was expecting that it was going to be oppressively hot. Gale believes that on average the temps this year have been about 10 degrees cooler than what he experienced at the same time last year. The weather has been absolutely beautiful here.
 
I might have worn shorts everyday and probably would have it was hotter than it has been. On the day after our arrival in Morogoro we went out into the bush and Pastor Herb told me a story about the Masai school boys that we saw at the village. On that afternoon we saw the Masai boys come home from school wearing, what is considered in Tanzania, the standard elementary school uniform. They wear blue shorts and a white shirts - all of them. Shortly after the boys got home from school they change into their traditional Masai dress which is a brightly colored tunic with a belt. I imagine that they feel the same way that I do when I get home and take off my shirt, tie, and dress pants and put on my comfortable clothes.
 
Anyway, Pastor Herb told me that when Tanzanian school boys graduate from elementary school they no longer are required to wear short pants anymore. It is like a rite of passage. Now they are young men, they are proud of their manhood, and always wear long pants in public. After hearing Herb's story I decided right then that I would wear long pants whenever I left our campus. Well, Gale has been wearing shorts everyday except when he attends church services. Since he has been in Tanzania before, I assumed that he knew about the short pants/long pants thing so I never talked to him about it until this morning when one of the vendors at the Morogoro market started calling Gale shortie pants.
 
After we got back from the market, we had tea with Pastor Harold. Harold started telling us that in Africa it is considered inappropriate for adult males to wear shorts out in public. Men wearing shorts is especially frowned upon by Muslim men. Well, we spent a good deal of time this morning in Rotary Club President Riyaz's place of business. Riyaz is Muslim. I just hope "Bawana shortie pants" hasn't given Rotary a bad name! It will be interesting to see how "Bawana shortie pants" dresses for the the rest of our visit.
 
The cultural differences are often times surprising and occasionally seem silly. 
 
The top ten reasons we know we are not in Iowa anymore:
#10  The cattle farms have no fences.
#9   There are stomachs hanging up for sale in the open air butcher shops.
*8   A calf is born twenty five yards from the altar during a Masai church service.
#7   Seeing microbuses packed to the gills with people hanging out the windows.
#6   The toilet is a hole in the ground or floor.
#5   The Big Dipper is upside down and there is no North Star.
#4   Women and children eat last.
#3   No one uses their left hand while eating.
#2   An offer to marry a man's daughter comes with a dowry of cattle. Lucky father!
#1   Elephant crossing warning signs along the highway.
 
From Steve Boeke and Gale Bonsall
 
 
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Tanzania Update #6

Hello all: Thursday May 8,2008
     Time for a break. On Wednesday at 1:00 Steve,the Wartburg students and I depart Morogoro bound for Mikumi Wildlife Refuge. The drive is west down the good road about 2 hours. We know that we are not in Kansas anymore when we see the triangular sign along the side of the road reading,"watch for elephants". tanz2008-31.JPGMikumi is 4000 square miles,mostly low flat grasslands land bordered by mountains. 

We arrive at 3:00,check in to our thatch roofed huts,and board the bus again on the hunt for Africa's "big 5". Not much time goes by and we see dozens of impala's,zebra's,giraffe and birds that I cannot name even though I was told. I do remember the vultures and thinking they would like the soft meat on our Iowa bones.tanz2008-33.JPG

The roads are 1 lane natural gravel and sand paths that travel over small streams and wind all over the park. This is the end of the rainy season so at some crossroads sticks are laid across the path warning that they are not yet passable. We go to the hippo pond and are entertained by watching 6-8 hippos as they come up for air.tanz2008-34.JPG Further along we see warthogs,baboons,gazelles  and water buffalo. Also wildebeest by the score. The migration of the wildebeest is the largest migration of animals anywhere in the world. Their numbers are estimated at 1.5 billion. They travel back and forth northward and then southward across Africa each year. I have seen video from an airplane of the migration and the line is nonstop for miles and miles.tanz2008-37.JPG

As the sun is setting we spot 3 lions in a tree. The sunlight turns them a golden color making this a great shot for the newest National Geographic photographers from Iowa. Of course I thought it would be a good idea to get out of the bus, but that is not allowed. Good rule I guess. Eventually all 3 climb nimbly down and walk right in front of our bus to join some baby cubs that were before obscured by the tall grass. Cute.


As the sunsets we travel back to the lodge for a great dinner under a huge thatched roof that is built around a very old and large native reddish tree. The structures are all made to blend into this natural environment. While they are modern they are not over the top.tanz2008-36.JPG The generator goes off at 10:00PM and we are all under our mosquito nettings for a nights sleep. Weird noises are all around. Dozens of impala are about 25 yards outside of our hut. They fight once in a while as we shine flashlights on them to see their eyes glow back at us. The stars here are unbelievably bright with dense clusters. We see the big dipper upside down since this is the southern hemisphere and the southern cross that is not visible in the northern hemisphere. Truly amazing and worth the trip.

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   Wide awake again at 5:30 a.m. to see the sunrise as we again travel around the park in the bus. Just as the sun rises we spot a leopard in a tree. Great timing again. Seeing the lions and a leopard is somewhat rare for the infrequent visitor. Last year we saw neither. The big 5 are in Africa are elephant,lion,hippo,leopard and black rhino. We see all but the rhino.

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    Pater Herb Hafermann sees a pile of rocks at an intersection of  the road. These,chest high piles of rocks serve as markers for the guides and provides distances to the next intersection. Herb,one of the better story tellers I know, begins to capture our attention by telling us that last year as he,his wife Kirsten and his family were here the SUV became immobile. So Herb the warrior set out on foot to save the family. The sun sets and it is dark. Pitch black. Herb hears noises as he sits atop of one of the "markers at an intersection waiting for the park ranger to make a last check for those who have checked in for the day. While atop of the rocks he hears the load crunching of grass,the noise comes closer and closer and louder and louder. A heard of elephants of course. There are numerous signs throughout the park cautioning humans not to mess with elephants. They are now almost side by side with him. What should he do in the blackness? He bangs a stick and makes load guttural sounds and scares them away. A brave and lucky warrior indeed! His new granddaughter,born just after he left Waverly for this trip will have great bedtime stories from grandpa.


     By 10;00 it is back to camp and time for a super large American like breakfast. By 1:00 we depart back to Morogoro,with a short stop at the snake farm, where cobras are king, knowing that we could not have scripted a better 26 hour safari.
     More later.

   President Steve Boeke and Gale Bonsall
Click here for a gallery of the pictures so far. Gallery-button.jpg

  

 

 

 
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Welcome to our Website

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Hello, my name is Steve Boeke and as the 2007-2008 President, I would personally like to welcome you to the Cedar Falls Rotary Club website.

The Cedar Falls Rotary Club is proud of its long tradition of supporting local service projects like the Cedar Falls Public Library, a Habitat for Humanity home, and the Cedar Falls Rotary Prairie, just to name a few. A strong supporter of the effort to eradicate polio in the world, Cedar Falls Rotary is especially proud of its most recent international service project – drilling two water wells in Tanzania. 

The Object of Rotary is to encourage and foster the ideal of service as a basis of worthy enterprise and, in particular, to encourage and foster:

First: The development of acquaintance as an opportunity for service;

Second: High ethical standards in business and professions;

Third: The application of the ideal of service in each Rotarian’s personal, business, and community life;

Fourth: The advancement of international understanding, goodwill, and peace through a world fellowship of business and professional person united in the ideal of service. 

It is certainly a privilege and an honor to be asked to lead a Club that holds principles such as these in high esteem. Our goal for the 2007-2008 Rotary Year is to continue to serve our community and the world with worthwhile service projects. 

Weekly meetings are held at the Cedar Falls Women’s Club every Tuesday at 11:45AM. Guests and visiting Rotarians are always welcome!