The Trip & My New Digs

The Fourth of July, 2015

After a lovely dinner with Deb and Rod at one of their favorite Italian restaurants, Arrivederci, they drop me off at the San Diego airport. I’m in plenty of time and the airport seems deserted. I’m at the gate for my 10:30 PM flight to Washington Dulles and watch the fireworks from a window near the gate. The flight is on time and I arrive into IAD at 6AM with plenty of time until my 11AM flight to Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. So much time that I cash-in my coupon to use the United Club. There I use their free WiFi, have some nice oatmeal, fruit and coffee. A very relaxing morning.

I board the plan for my 11 and 1/2 hour flight from Washington to Ethiopia and score! I have three seats all to myself! I take my benedril and I’m out. I wake up with just two hours to go! In that time, I watch part of Cinderella. I give it thumbs-up.

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I arrive into Addis (as the natives call it) and have two hours to cool my heels. What do you know, the caverness international arrivals/departures hall has no services. No place to buy water or a snack, no WiFi and the restroom line is not only long, but the toilet for #2 is the “squat” kind. I’ll hold it.

At the airport, I meet a lovely group of five people also going to Lilongwe, Malawi. They are building a playground. I sort of wonder how they’re going to do this. Three of their group were women over 65 who did not fit the classical look of a construction worker.

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(view of Lake Malawi from the air)

Anyway, the flight leaves about an hour late. After three hours we arrive into Lilongwe, the capital city of Malawi. The stairs are manually rolled to the plane and we all walk down to board a bus. We can see the terminal- it’s only 1,000 feet away. Nevertheless, we are driven to the terminal. There is only one door. We all line up, wait out turns and have them take our fingerprints and stamp our passport. This is perhaps the smallest airport I’ve every seen. Passport control and customs takes an hour.  It’s July 6th, Malawian Independence Day.

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Once I leave the baggage claim, my promised ride is waiting for me. Michael speaks very poor English, but is a nice enough guy for the four and 1/2 hour drive to Mzuzu. As you notice by the photo, it’s an English style “right drive” car. I sit in the passenger seat where in the US, I’d be driving. I spend the trip dozing off or pushing on the floor thinking there is a break pedal there.

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(My driver, Michael, drives with his eyes closed- he’s a professional)

On the journey along the only north-south road, we see poverty everywhere. Lots of working-age people just standing around. Later, I asked Larry, the village administrator about this. He said it’s not that they are lazy, it’s just that they don’t get enough to eat to have any energy. There aren’t any sidewalks, so people just line the side of the road, walking or hawking things for sale.

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As we drive farther north, there are more trees and the mountains are beautiful.DSCN0130

We arrive into the Rafiki Village at about 5:30 PM. It’s just getting dark. In my bungalow they have given me a carton of milk, some cereal, and ground coffee for my breakfast (see photo)

I unpack and go to dinner at Larry and Cindy Renner’s for dinner. She has prepared a wonderful lasagna for us. Who is us? Larry Renner, his wife Cindy, and two other shorttermers, who are here for a month, Auntie Lauren and Auntie Jenny.

Exhausted, I’m in bed by 9 PM

Below are some photos from this morning, my first full day in Malawi. My breakfast foods, my room (complete with needed mosquito netting) and the view of my bungalow and the view from my front door.jDSCN0132DSCN0133DSCN0135 DSCN0134

2 thoughts on “The Trip & My New Digs

  1. so cool to read this, Steve! It was 7.5 years ago I spent some time in Lilongwe Malawi when I was in college and this brings back great memories..

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