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Archive for December, 2010


Garbage day on our farm in South Africa doesn’t mean rolling a big green garbage bin out to the front lawn for pick-up. It means, hauling the bag(s) into the back of the car and driving 40 minutes on mostly country roads to our dump.

This is what we saw during Week 50.

I believe that if we all had to regularly face the inconvenience and this “in your face” look at what we’re doing to our planet, we’d re-think and take greater care about what we consume and how we treat our Earth. I know that my attitude and habits have changed since this first trip ever to our dump. (more…)

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Woo woo woo

I’m not much of a sports fan — neither as a participant nor a spectator — but every four years, my “inner jock-ette” rises to the surface, has been known to don a b*tt-ugly team t-shirt and cheer, yell and emit war cries at the television set along with the best of them.  It’s only FIFA World Cup (also known as Soccer World Cup or simply World Cup) that will awaken this creature within.

This year was certainly no different, and the fact that Nils’ and my current love and future home, South Africa, hosted this year’s event made it all that much more significant (not to mention that we had good friends from the States visiting during the summer finals and we got them hooked too).

How S. Africa Fared

Pre-World Cup, South Africa, the first African nation to host the World Cup finals, was scrutinized and dissected in its preparation. (more…)

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We’ve found Lisa’s way of Traveling (with) Impact so inspiring that when we travel to developing countries or to areas where there might be specific needs, we, too, do what we can to benefit the local community.

Our treasure trove of school supplies and books

Prior to our most recent trip, Nils and I put out a call to colleagues and friends for donations of school supplies and books for a needy primary school near our farm in rural South Africa. So many rose to the occasion that we traveled with nearly a half-suitcase filled with colorful pencils, chalk, crayons, coloring books, paperbacks, and even a magnetic board that I certainly would’ve coveted at the age of 7 or 8 — thank goodness for Nils’ “Senator” status that includes an extra luggage allowance! (more…)

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For Week 47, one of my dearest friends since college days, inspires us through her efforts to benefit the communities to which she travels — and she travels a lot! Here’s a report of Lisa’s latest voyage and Impact Effort with her partner, Ken. (Nils’ and my round-up follows tomorrow)

Khnar Village school

“The Khmer Rouge thing is in the past, I don’t complain about it,” said Ponheary Ly, a formidable woman and founder of the Ponheary Ly Foundation, whose mission is to make education available to the disenfranchised in the rural communities of Siem Reap, Cambodia. “What I focus on is how we can change the future. Education is the answer.”

Ken and I had the amazing experience of meeting Ponheary Ly and her family, and staying at their Seven Candles Guesthouse in Siem Reap, when we visited there in November (approx. $20 USD per night for a lovely room and en-suite bathroom – best value ever). Four of the six Ly siblings are tour guides, taking visitors to the Angkor Wat temples and surrounding areas. But the real focus of the Ly family is working tirelessly and passionately for the Foundation which supports over 2000 students. This includes providing uniforms, school supplies, a nutritious breakfast when necessary and pays monthly stipends to teachers, bicycles to students who live long distances from the schools and more.

Lisa and Ponheary

Ponheary Ly was nominated for a CNN 2010 Hero of the Year Award. It is humbling to listen to her video and how before the Foundation was established, started by using her tips to help support children in rural areas go to school. I think her message crystallizes what the 52 weeks blog demonstrates: that it can be the small impacts that can make the difference. For those who would like to connect with, donate to, or find out about volunteering, check out Ponheary Ly on Facebook.

My personal philosophy when travelling to developing countries is to do whatever possible to ensure the visit benefits the local community. Where we choose to sleep, eat, shop and sightsee can all make a difference to the people of the area and to us. Researching this in advance is part of my routine travel planning in addition to identifying at least one school or local charity which are in need of supplies and bringing these over.

There are many websites you can access for this information, depending on where you are travelling to. The main sites I used in planning my trip were www.stayanotherdaycambodia.com (click HERE for a PDF brochure) which promotes sustainable tourism and offers (or at least used to offer before the site was being updated) a search feature by location and type of activity. I found loads of great shopping and restaurant ideas – all affiliated with local charities. Most of the meals we ate in Cambodia and places where we shopped we learned of on this website and came out tops on our list.

A website which I wish I had known about prior to the trip is www.stuffyourrucksack.com. This online community set up by Kate Humble, UK broadcaster and journalist, puts travellers in touch with a range of charities across the globe and lists what items they are looking for such as clothes or textbooks that we can fit into our rucksack. What a great idea!

If you are using a travel agent, ask them if there are any affiliations with a local school or charity and what you can bring over.

Pondheary Ly Foundation

The Ponheary Ly Foundation website includes a wish list of items for travelers to bring over as well as a link to a more extensive wish list on Amazon. Armed with this information, Ken and I paid a visit to one of the 99p stores (like “dollar stores”) near where we live in the UK and came away with bags of stuff to bring over: pens, alphabeads (which they use to teach the children how to spell their names), band-aids, stencils, markers and more. On a personal note, one of the pluses of packing your suitcase with items to leave in country, is it gives you room to pack the treasures from your journey that you want to take back!

A sample of what we donated to the Ponheary Ly Foundation schools

Through correspondence with Lori Carlson, the manager of the guesthouse and President of the Foundation, I had learned that there was a need for USBs. So we went through our desk drawers and found a bunch of them. Ken also happened to be attending a technology exhibition prior to our trip and asked exhibitors for pens that we could bring over for the schools. These pens were especially well received as they either lit up or had other cool features. Lori has since told me that these “fancy” pens are being used at the computer lab as prizes for various games and that the kids were specifically enthralled that they were “technology pens” and “clicker pens” which is apparently a novelty. The USBs we brought over are being distributed to the students as they start learning about how to move and share documents.

Khnar Primary School

During our visit to Siem Reap, Ponheary took us to visit Khnar Primary School in Khnar Village, outside Siem Reap. 400+ students attend half-day, morning or afternoon kindergarten through 6th grade. Children who attend morning classes are given a simple breakfast cooked by the village women of rice and canned mackerel fish, provided by the World Food Program (WFP), and sometimes supplemented, donations permitting, with vegetables from the market. To ensure all students can partake in the breakfast, the class schedule rotates monthly.

At this school, the Ponheary Ly Foundation has put in a clean water tank to replace the previous well and has made improvements to the recreational area. The principal of the school has also set up a catfish pond and planted a vegetable garden with a view to providing a more sustainable model for the breakfasts served at the school.

In Lori’s email to me after we left when I commented on how wonderful and enchanting the people are, she wrote “the kids are the source of Cambodia’s greatest hope.”

Wherever you travel I urge you to research and plan into your trip some opportunities to support and share with the local community. Your trip will be enriched and rewarded by the experience. I know ours was.

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The art of cloth wrapping

Back when I was a kid, when our family went visiting, mom would pull out a large, colorful square of fabric, place one of the delicacies she had cooked up, or a gift she had bought in the center and then fold, twist and tie the material into a beautiful carrying “package.” In Japanese, it’s called a furoshiki. And, I love that this art of cloth wrapping seems to have taken hold as an eco-friendly wrapping option!

While the furoshiki(s) I grew up with were usually cotton or silk cloths adorned with Japanese designs, any thin, easily foldable cloth will do. They indeed make beautiful packaging! And, they’re reuseable for wrapping, carrying, or can be worn as  a scarf, making the wrapping part of the gift itself.  The bonus: no paper garbage, sticky tape or ribbons to throw away.

The wrapping is part of the gift

Here are a few websites with instructions and techniques for wrapping your holiday gifts. This year, I’ve made good use of the technique for bottles of wine.

p.s. – yes, I know. I continue to appear to be numerically challenged, having skipped all the way to Week 51. Nils and I are still in S. Africa with limited (and excruciatingly slow) internet access. We’ve got lots of photos to share from our Impact Efforts, but the postings of those shall have to wait until we’re back home.

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Momentarily Off the Grid


The battlefield at Spionkop.

Yes, we’re still alive and well, but find ourselves a bit “off the grid.”  While we do have internet access, it’s very limited and terribly expensive.

Young students take up a collection for football (soccer) equipment for their team.

We’re continuing on with our 52 Weeks Efforts doing a bit with local schools, students and wildlife. Unfortunately, we’ll be very slow in posting. We’ll try to catch up a bit next week — hoping  not to have to postpone until we’re back “on the grid” at the end of the month.

Unsuccessful attempt at repairing the Land Rover for a trip to Lesotho

In the meantime, here are a few hastily posted photos from where we are in the Drakensburg Mountains, South Africa.

A "neighbor" drops by with breakfast

If you’ve seen the movie “2012″, you know that the ‘”new world” begins in the Drakensburg (which becomes the highest mountain in the world). :-)

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