
I woke up yesterday morning at 1am. I spent the next 4 hours lying in bed, wide awake, until I finally decided to get up. Everyone else only started to stir about 2 hours later. Damn jetlag.
Mornings are quite beautiful here. The sun comes up behind our house and right into my bedroom window. We tend to get up between 7 and 8 and take a couple of hours in the morning to leisurely eat, chat, and update people from home. We aim to get going around 10 for whatever it is we are doing that day.
Yesterday, we walked into town just after 10am and headed for the "matatu" station. A matatu is a main mode of transportation in Nairobi and the surrounding areas. It's a haggard, old van that seats 14 people, but they usually try to jam more than that inside. It's only 50 Kenyan Shillings (KES) to ride from Mlolongo into town. 1000 KES equals about $13 Canadian. So roughly $0.65 for the minimum 45 minute drive into Nairobi.
Our ride ended up being free thanks to the corruption of the police service in Kenya. We were stuck in traffic just before the bridge to get us inside downtown Nairobi when a Kenyan officer kicked out the two people sitting in front and made them squish into the back. He made the driver pull over to the side of the road where they chatted in Swahili for a bit. On a matatu, there is the driver and the conductor. The conductor sits by the side door in the back and collects money and tells people when they can get in and out. Our conductor had jumped out of the matatu when he saw the police coming to our van. So when the Kenyan officer was asking our driver for bribe money to be let go, he said he didn't have any. Our conductor came back to our matatu, money in pocket, and then we all got kicked out of the matatu and were told to go find another.
From what Josh explained to me after, because they lied about not having any money, and then the conductor showed up with the money, they were going to get in much more trouble than if they had just paid them off in the first place. So we ended up walking over the bridge and into town because it wasn't worth it to try and find another matatu for the 8 of us. Let's just say I much prefer the Winnipeg Police to the police in Kenya... for a few reasons ;)
After a hike through downtown, we stopped to book flights for Josh's cousin and his 2 friends who were with us, then Milanne and I got a cell phone for out here. We wound our way through the streets of crowded and chaotic Nairobi until we jumped into another matatu, this time with giant speakers blasting rap, and headed to a small market area. We stopped at a buffet place for lunch and ate some delicious food. I was quite nervous to eat, partly because I didn't know exactly what I was about to eat and I was still slightly nauseous from the rollercoaster matatu ride we just finished. Oh, I should also mention that they often open the side door of the matatu far before they are about to stop so the conductor can stick his head out... I was sitting in the seat next to the door. I feared for my life several times during that trip.
After we ate, we bought some rice and oil at a grocery store and some fresh vegetables from the market and got into taxis to head to the Hope Baby Orphanage in Thika. This orphanage isn't legally registered because it does not have 25 children. The woman running it does not think she would be able to provide adequate care for the children if she had that many. For that reason, they run entirely off private donations and, just recently, they have volunteers living in a cabin in the back and they pay rent.
There are at least 15 children there, full of life and energy. We held 3 babies, all under 6 months, and one of which is only 2 weeks old. Another girl, Precious, is 10 weeks, and one of the Australian girls who is volunteering there has decided she is going to adopt her. She has been in Kenya for 8 weeks and got there at the same time as Precious. She will now be living in Kenya for 3 years before she can start the adoption process, which will then take another 6 months.
After about an hour at the baby orphanage, we got back into taxis and headed to Westlands, an area of Nairobi, and had drinks with Josh's mom who is in town for a conference on communicable diseases. I also met Anina, the woman who owns the house I am staying in. She is the woman that Josh initially started working with and is incredible. She does a lot of work with sex workers in Nairobi regarding HIV/STI prevention and care.
At 7pm, we were ready for dinner, but I was exhausted. Milanne, Katie, and I took a cab ride back to Mlolongo. Traffic in Nairobi was crazy, so it took us about an hour and a half to get back to our compound. After wiping the layer of dirt off my skin, I went straight to bed. Got up at 6am today. Yay, looks like I may finally be on a good schedule.
Til next time.