Sunday, May 30, 2010

Tipping Bucket Fundraiser: the Saman Mit Community


So I'm in charge of a project here where we're building an observation tower in a farming community just outside of Chiang Rai, where we're living.

Read about their need for an observation tower and visit tippingbucket.org to make a donation of at least $1 to help get it built! We have four days to raise $950 and we need everyone's help!

Saman Mit is a farming community consisting of 148 families located 30 minutes outside of Chiang Rai, Thailand. They migrated from the Isaan province 33 years ago when their farmlands were flooded as a result of a government hydro-electric project that dammed the Isaan rivers. Many were left without homes or land to sustain their livelihood. The land they found in Chiang Rai was fertile and well suited for their way of life, but it was too small to support the community.

Acknowledging their plight, the government has recently granted them six square hectares of land to cultivate and develop through their traditional cooperative system of farming. They plan to increase their fish stocks in the ponds, grow trees to sell, cultivate and sell rice, potatoes, and other vegetables as they pursue a goal of becoming a wholly self-sufficient community.

However, to achieve their goal, the community needs to prove to the government that they are using the land wisely, developing it productively, and protecting it from any problems that may arise, such as wildfires or theft.

Through long debate and discussion, the village council has decided that the most effective way to watch over the land’s crop development, while detecting possible problems of theft from outside private farmers, is to build an observation tower. The observation post will be located high atop a hill that provides an ideal purview of all the lands within the 6 hectares of the co-op. The tower will be thirty feet high, built by community members and HELP International development volunteers. The community has come to HELP International looking for a partner to help with construction, fundraising, and business consulting workshops that aim to boost productivity, sales, and land efficiency.

Remember to tell friends and family about this fundraiser, too! Thanks!

Go to tippingbucket.org for more information about the non-profit organization partnering with us on this.


Tuesday, May 25, 2010

Chiang Mai, anyone?

Flight of the Gibbon Zip line Canopy Tour

Pim was able to get us foreigners a sweet deal to do this. She pulled the "they are just students here to help our people and do humanitarian work" and it worked like a charm. We should've paid $70, but we paid what a native Thai would pay which is about half that.
- Zip line through a 1500 year old rainforest with gigantic trees. Just picture Avatar.
- 2 km of zip line
- 15 different platforms
- An awesome, all-you-can-eat lunch was included after a hike to a beautiful waterfall


We were in this little village way up in the mountains with really cool houses, almost like tree houses. Really peaceful place to live except for when tons of foreigners come to swing like monkeys through the trees.




Chubby rice cheeks...what can we say, we eat rice here. Everyday. Multiple times a day.









Sorry about the scream...definitely not necessary.

Wat Phrathat Doi Suthep Rajvoravihara





350 stairs doesn't seem like a lot, but it kind of is.

Umbrella Factory


Night Safari

It was overrated. A day safari would have been much more worth the time and money or just a real one in Africa. The best part was the lone chimp on an island that danced like a ballerina when we made monkey noises and pounded on the railing. That may have been worth our ฿250...

Overall, it was a fun weekend!

Don't you wish your kid had a mullet?

So, on Tuesdays we teach English at a school we don't know the name of, but we call it the Mullet School because there's a tiny preschooler kid with an awesome mullet and he wears a chain with a dog tag on it and leaves his shirt half unbuttoned. Picture of mullet kid coming soon.

We teach 1st graders for an hour...taught them how to ask each others' names, colors, and head shoulders knees and toes. It was fun, got us out of our comfort zones. We're not always the most animated people, but we discovered the more like a fool you look and act, the more affective the teaching is. The sixth graders we taught next already knew a lot of English so we had to improvise a little more and played hangman with animal names and sports and stuff. Not knowing Thai makes things really difficult, but with a lot of actions and drawing on the board, we eventually got our points across.

We had a break for a while, so we sat outside reading until a few kids nearby yelled hello and asked our names. They love learning English. Five kids turned into ten kids, which multiplied after a couple hours into 40 kids pulling us in all different directions to play games, girls holding our hands, and the boys pulled Holly into their basketball game twice. She has lovely blisters to show it because she played barefoot in the 100 degree weather and forgot how sizzling hot the cement would be
. So she's been walking on the outsides of her feet for the last few days.



This little girl loved wearing Holly's sunglasses. Didn't want to give them back.

And here's the delayed documentation of Holly's historic ostrich ride. Still the strangest thing we've ever done.







Sunday, May 16, 2010

Ostrich for breakfast, ostrich for lunch

Okay so...I know that I look like a huge dork in this video, but no one's allowed to judge me cause you've never ridden an ostrich and you don't know what it's like. It's really just ridiculous. We'll put up Holly's video in a little bit.



And...yeah, at the end of my ostrich ride, I did not slide gracefully off. I lost hold of the wing and started sliding down to the neck and tried to grab onto the neck that's as sturdy as string cheese and it didn't work and I just fell off. Ha.

Thursday, May 13, 2010

Well THAT was fun...

So today, for lunch we went to this Islam restaurant and we had the choice between chicken or beef and rice or noodles so I chose chicken and rice. Sounds safe right? So we sit down and start eating and I'm thinking, "Mmm, this is pretty good". Next thing you know, I feel a little pop in my mouth and I feel a nice burning sensation. So then I think, "Well that's pretty normal, things are always spicy in Thailand, it's expected", so I continue eating. Then, POP, another one, POP another one, POP another one. Now my lips and tongue have gone numb. At this point, it's more like "How come the person right across from me is eating the same thing as me and is NOT having a fire burning in her mouth?!?" So I ask, "What the heck is going on?!" And Dave tells me, "Holly, those are peppers you're eating there, and they're not just peppers, they're like really really HOT peppers" and I think, "Why yes, yes they are" as I sniff the snot back up my nose and wipe the tears from my eyes. Then I go to reach for my Coke because naturally a liquid will help calm this blazing heat in my mouth and bring back feeling to my tongue and Rose yells, "Holly! Don't drink carbonation, it'll make it even worse!" So after drinking who knows how much water, Dave traded his plate with me and I was able to finish eating the rest of his meal while he snarfed down my food because he likes having a fire party in his mouth. So yep, turns out the things I though were chives were most definitely NOT chives. Thank you Thailand, you always provide me with a good party in my mouth and awesome eating adventures. I have learned now to expect the unexpected and ask what you're eating before you eat it. Although, when you don't ask and just eat, it provides some nice entertainment for those eating at the table with you.

Holly

Wednesday, May 12, 2010

Hong Nam U Nai?

Okay, so Saturday night we went to this night bazaar/market thing where merchants had come and set up their goods to sell all along this street and it was probably a mile long and there were two sides to it. The first thing we saw was this dance that these Thai girls were doing. They were probably Stephanie and Andrew's age. And that's what that video is. So we walked along the street, looking at the cool stuff, watching all the interesting people, smelling all the interesting smells, and laughing as Holly kept gagging when she'd smell something gross. Which was all the time. There are some smells that really are not so good though.

Holly likes dried kiwis.




Also, we never really know what we're eating. At the mall, we all ate at a food court and we thought we were getting something really delicious and we got back to the table and our Thai director, Pim, goes, "So you guys got catfish? Wow, you're brave."

Awesome. Holly actually liked it though. And then we ate dinner at a really awesome restaurant where they had a buffet of raw meat and these tiny little round barbecues on the tables to cook your meat. We almost took the gizzard and chicken heart, but we just stuck with the chicken and found some pineapple to grill.

On Sunday, we went to Wat Rung Khun, a white temple that a famous Thai artist is building. He's pretty much the Michelangelo of Chiang Rai. It was pretty sparkly. Take a look. Don't mind the conversation in the background. We went to another cool temple on Monday and the Bhuddist monk who lives there is Pi's, the lady who rents us our house and drives us around, her uncle. So we got to go inside his little Buddhist house and then we weeded his huge garden. Luckily it had cooled down a lot cause of a storm that was coming. We got to eat good fruit off the trees again as a reward.




Rose's ankles have turned into kankles (due to immense swelling).

Monday night, after most people had gone to bed, Rose and I went out on the porch to write in our journals (yes, be proud) and a storm was a brewin. Kenny and our country director, Dave, were having a nice conversation to the side of us which we both were eavesdropping on and then eventually joined in as we watched it begin to rain. The lightening would light up the whole sky and the thunder was pretty cool. Then at about midnight, it started to downpour, hard, and we decided it would be fun to get drenched while playing soccer, so that's what we did for about half an hour - get soaked in the rain and it was AWESOME! By the way, it was boys against sexy girls and the sexy girls won.


In a classroom at a school where we might build a cement walkway, a toothbrushing station and a library. And that's Ryleigh, our new friend who's traveled the world.





These are girls from another school we visited, they were at a daycare/preschool watching Ice Age and we got to play with them for a little bit. Little Thai boys are craaazy.
Sawadee ka...

Sunday, May 9, 2010

So...this one time, we went to Thailand...

And we're still in Thailand. THAILAND. When we got off the plane in Bangkok, after flying for too many hours, sleeping between chicken rice vegetable tofu noodle midnight meals on the plane, and lots of naps and card games on the airport floors, we could not believe where we were. Two little American white girls, wandering around the huge Bangkok airport, sweat dripping off the ends of our noses from the humidity and heat...not something you see everyday. Not something the Thai people see everyday.
We live in a house, like many people, and it has air conditioning, which may turn out to be the best thing about this whole trip since it's 100+ degrees and 100% humidity everyday. Awesome. It feels good to shower in the cold shower, we feel all clean and dry. Then we walk outside and our clothes immediately suction to our bodies and BAM! We're sweaty. But the fruit makes up for all of that. Watermelon redder and juicier than a...something and pineapple like you wouldn't believe, mangoes that taste like candy and heaven and loveliness all at the same time. Fruit smoothies that put Spoon Me and Jamba Juice to shame. They know how to do things here.

In the meantime though, we've been doing some other activities. Riding elephants, visiting temples, riding around in the back of a pickup truck at unsafe speeds, standing in rainstorms, checking out mountains to climb, playing phase 10, reading...super awesome. Seriously though. Um, have you ever ridden an elephant? Did you know that their heads are really big? We're not sure if their brains fill their whole head or if there's other stuff in there, too. We did get sneezed on a lot and covered in mud and guck that definitely came out of our elephants head. Actually, just Rose did. Our guide, a teenage boy, had a little crush on Rosemary and he made the elephant sneeze on her. Did you know that the fuzzy little black hairs that cover their skin are, in fact, not fuzzy but very prickly and pokey? Even if you have pants on. Did you know that elephants like this fruit called leche? It's like a huge grape that you pick off the trees. We liked them, too. Our elephant guide let us take turns riding on the elephant's neck while he picked the fruit off the trees and peeled them for us. Delicioso. When we got off the elephant, our guide asked Rosemary to stay haha. He also wanted us to go swimming with him in the river. Unfortunately, we didn't have time...

At church yesterday our group made up more than half of the congregation. There are 13 of us, 9 girls and 4 boys. The boy pickins' are looking quite slim so far, but there are many many many Thai boys that have nice skin and engaging smiles. Anyway, church. So we made up most of the congregation, all of sunday school and pretty much all of Relief Society. It was really nice to be in a place that was so familiar. Same music, same spirit, same doctrine, same gospel. A little bit of home away from home. One of the weirdest things so far has been the time difference. It's 9:00am on Monday morning here and it's Sunday night at home. And if the fact that we're already in the future isn't strange enough, we're also in a different year. Completely. Date in Thailand: May 10, 2553.
So...we didn't fly halfway across the world just to play, we really are here to do humanitarian work. We haven't started anything yet cause we're just getting settled and everything, but we did visit a school for Autistic children and an aids prevention center. We got to play with the kids and sort of get to know them. They were really shy until we bribed them with candy. Not very different from kids in the U.S. So, this week we're going to a hospital and to a human trafficking prevention center to see what projects we could organize there and then we start organizing, get started trying to help people. We're going to go into it full board, with everything we have. It'll be sweet.

So...til next time. Enjoy the pictures and videos!







Holly riding on the head of the elephant through the Mae Kong River.




The "country side". This is what we drove through to get to the elephant rides.


Yes, it's a pig head with its limbs and hooves off to the side. Mmmm...
Sorry these next pictures are small. I'll get better at this uploading pictures thing soon enough.

The clock tower changes color at 8:00 p.m. each night.


A statue that is part of the white temple, Wat Rung Khun.

The creepy hands reaching up as you enter the temple.




This is our awesome HELP-International group!



Rose and I with our guide after the elephant ride lookin real hot...I mean literally, really really hot.






Sunday, May 2, 2010

Hard math.

He's turning...twenty-eight...twenty-nine...thirty...? Twenty-eight, I think. And he's a super cool brother.



Jeff, happy birthday :)