Saturday, February 14, 2009

Happy Valentines.

Well, as is well here. The light is at the end of the tunnel. I’ll be leaving in the beginning of March (actually March 2nd at 11:50pm) and hitting Amsterdam for 7 days. I can’t wait for the vacation time. I was thinking this week about this place and concluded I have a hate/love relationship with this place. I guess that would be right too for such extremes coming form America, the land of opportunity, to Dar, the land of hardship and struggle. It is definitely a learning experience for me and I do hope that I bring back something. Maybe minute, but something. I do like the people here, resourceful and nice when they get to know you. Work is still a struggle for me. Mostly just trying to get these guys to make up time they have lost. I think this is a good job for them and they are in no hurry to get it done, the American Cash Cow is here.

New peps on site now - the Greeks. They are the divers for the landing of the fiber optic sea cable. Their job is to dive and place the cable in 6 meters (20 feet for the US peps) of water or less, from what I gather. Great group of guys. But now I have the Swahili and Greek accents to deal with. Plus we got the Brits too. The big joke is we are going to get into an international crisis with all of us here. The Greeks being here means they are going to land the sea cable on shore this Monday. I will take as many pics as possible to show you this. I hope to go out onto the landing ship, but we will see if I have the time. From what I have been told, this is pretty cool sight to see – if you’re into this type of thing – which I am. I’m a geek.

What else….. oh man, it was weird. Thursday morning I was watching CNN International and the Buffalo News was on about the plane crash. It was surreal – in Africa watching the news channel I literally used to watch when living in Buffalo. It really sucks about the plane crash; I really don’t know what else to say – 50 people gone, just gone. It happened just one block away from our friend’s house, which is crazy too. CNN had a huge broadcast about the plane crash, which was what was weird too. I think they cater to the America crowd a little. They would go back and forth with the Buffalo news station and then their commentary. I hope no knows anyone on that plane.

Till next time.
Cheers

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

Just another day!

We ended work late the other night, they poured concrete until we could not see anymore. It is wierd, they take forever to get shit done but once they set their minds to getting something done. They do it, in crazy ways too. The people here don't have all the nice tools and equipment here. If they do, most don't know how to us them properly. Electric drills - uhm, more like hand drills. Want to make a hole in a piece of plywood - drill a hole and use a hach saw blade to make the hole. Digging, they take as much off with the loader and then the rest by hand. Like I said they don't know how to work equipment. It takes time and effort, but it gets done. I am trying to let my NY pace not get the best of me. I would have thought Colorado would have slowed me down a little. Or wait maybe it's my Colorado pace is too fast. Either or, I am trying.

So, alot of crap has been going down from the other jub sites about the health and safety. So I had to push it here. We are trying to get them to wear safety boot (steel toe) and hard hats. Well, that would be over a weeks pay for these guys who are living below poverty here. The contractor wont buy for a lot of them, so he laid off like close to 20 temp. guys. I didn't think of that happening at all. I was just worried about the job. Sucks, because that was money they needed. I mean really needed. The people who work here have to support them thier family and then there whole family (mother, father, sisters, brother, aunts, and uncles). So the money goes along way. I found this our from a really nice gentleman that works at the job site. The regulars are pretty much nice to me. They call Mr. Patrick, besides some other names I am sure, but that is work. Well, at least no one got hurt because they couldn't afford health care (the only way I can look at it).

So back to leaving late after work. So I drive (well Mr. James drives) down the usual route and it is dark out. Now during the day, there is all kinds of people and delivery trucks doing the usual daily business. People walking to and form, school childern walk to/from school in their lime greenish uniforms - they don't look that bad, but close. Workers putting in a sewer or water line under a road by hand and machine - this took close to over four weeks. Get the picture. At night, even more people and the place is a live like I would have never thought. I drove past and was like "I want to get out and walk around and be a part of this". The bars, which I never seen during the day, were lit up and people playing pool and having fun. People walking around ready to get into the action. Little roadside food stand and I mean roadside. A lady, they are usually women, bring some sort of table and a grill and cook on the side of the road. Fires blazing and all. Little stands selling all kinds of stuff. It was pretty cool. A totally different look of the same old crappy road I go down twice a day.

Well, the rumor is that I am stuck here for an extra week. I hope to leave March 1st now and then hit Amsterdam for a week with my buddy. Then home, home sweet home to see my girls and Ro.

Sunday, February 8, 2009


Hey all. Life is normal here. Just alot of work and more gray hairs. I went out into town last night with my new British friends and Mr. James. A good time for sure but got my cheap work cell phone picked out of my pocket (carpenter jeans - the little side pocket). They will be a little pissed, I have no minutes on it. Haha. Oh well.
I took this pic a couple of weeks ago to show how they fix cars and taxis - any way you can pretty much. Then I really looked into the pic and saw more stories. If you look to the left you'll see the pool tables. This is on the way to/from the job site and hotel. These little pubs are all over the place and every one has at least one pool table and they are all out doors. Pretty crazy coming from NY and CO - where everything is inside.
The pub last night, Q-bar, was the same way, all out doors, with half of it covered. TV's everywhere with Engilsh Football and the Rugby Six Nations (Ireland vs. France) games on last night. Ireland killed the French last night by the way. Some of these bars look real dodgey, but everyone is really nice and ya never have an issue. Once they find out your from America the first thing they ask is about Obama and then some ask how they can move there. America is still a dream land and everyone thinks it is like jobs and money grow on trees kind of way.
Back to the pic. As you can see in the grass, everyone burns there garbage and brush. With the pollution form the burning garbage and all the cars, buses, and tic tic's (the small taxis in the pic), third world countries should be cleaned up too along with us.
In short, these are the little road side shops and stands that are located everywhere out side the city. As you get closer to the city, the get cleaner and bigger.
Hope all is well with everyone. Take care.
Patrick

I am everywhere - hahaha

Tuesday, February 3, 2009


Hey all

Life is normal here, just busy with work. Haven’t been able to go out and get in trouble. I hope to this weekend (Jen don’t worry). My client and his consultant have two British bodyguards, well one is Scottish living in Wales, who are pretty cool. The plan is to go into the Oyster Bay area (me and the two Brit’s), where the expats from Germany and Britain hang out. We’ll see how that goes – Brit’s and German’s in the same bar with a “mic” in the middle. (mic = Irish, i.e. McCarthy)

The job site is driving me crazy. Health and Safety is not even a thought to anyone out here. Actually, no one really knows about it. The skilled laborers wear the hard hat and safety boots but the “unskilled” they actually take there shoes off when the work. (Travis, don’t tell Bart, he’ll kill me) When the move concrete, they actually have a mixer on site and make it all by hand, the unskilled laborers put it on their heads and walk around with it. Man, I have to give it to these guys, some young and old, that is not an easy job at all. A funny thing happened the other day, they went on strike. I guess the contractor was paying them 6,000 shillings ($4 US) for pretty much 6 hours of hard work. They guys would not start work until they got 8,000 shillings. I think the contractor got them to accept 7,500 shillings.

There is still a language barrier with the workers and I, but am learning to improvise. An abbreviated short story – The workers were placing rebar for the foundation. The rebar was to close to the formwork, so when the pour the concrete the rebar would be at the surface – not good at all. I say “happna safi” meaning no good. Point at the rebar I am leaning on and gap between my fingers. Then I point at the tape measure of the required gap and then point at the location I don’t like. Then I point at the wood and a saw I just handed him then I make a sawing motion for him to cut the form or wood. He laughs and understands. I then follow with “asante” meaning thank you with a thumbs up. Another guys was laughing at us the whole time too.

I started scuba on Sundays, but got a cold (so many other good illnesses to get but I get a cold) so I have to wait till this is gone. Went to the drug store to day and almost got sinus meds with codeine. That would be great for the job site – “yeah don’t worry about it, I look at it later when I am awake”. Hahaha

Alright, I better look busy, I am writing this up at work. “Poli sana leo” = very slow today, or that’s how I think you say it. I still suck at learning languages, still learning English as I go. Hahaha

Later
Patrick