It was pretty jarring to look at the calendar this morning and having it sink in that I leave for Chicago to meet my flight TWO WEEKS FROM TODAY! Maybe this trip isn't so very hypothetical after all.
I have learned that there are no fees for the first two checked suitcases, weighing up to 50 pounds EACH, plus a 25-pound max carry-on, so, man, am I taking the stuff! Lots of veterinary supplies and gifts. Several bars of amazing home made soap.
Now I'm feeling the responsibility of bringing books to leave at the project for future volunteers to read. Since most of the volunteers are British and Australian, I feel a mandate to provide an entertaining selection of AMERICAN material with a focus on environmentalist concerns. Tony Hillerman and Carl Hiassen are already packed after I went shopping for used books at Kids Korner.
While I'm still looking for good quality pen knives, I'm going to follow Jack's suggestion and get aspirin, ibuprofen, and band aids as gifts for the locals. Apparently the over-the counter stuff available there is inconsistent and low quality--cheap Chinese knock-offs.
A little lacking in creative gift-giving, perhaps, but hopefully something that's needed. And as one astute reader commented, not something that constitutes an attempt to change the people's way of life.
Some thoughts by a . . . well, "middle-aged" woman embarking on uncharacteristic adventures to Africa and Cambodia to volunteer at wildlife rehabilitation projects
Wednesday, June 22, 2011
Saturday, June 4, 2011
Collecting stuff
Well, preparations are getting serious. I've gotten Jack's wish list of items he could use for the elephants. Stuff like eyewash, for example.
I have a friend who is an exec with Drs. Foster & Smith, a mail order pet supply place headquartered in Rhinelander, and they GAVE me 6 bottles of eyewash and eyewash pads to take with me. The local clinic is going to give me latex gloves for--oh, I don't know, doing unspeakable things to the elephants, I guess. And I'm still working on some other stuff.
The quandry over gifts to take to the local people is starting to resolve itself. We'd thought of reading glasses, knives, scissors, caps, ladles, and oh, I don't know what-all. The best suggestion, I thought, was Swiss Army knives. I was thinking American though, so I modified that to Leatherman. But fortunately I asked Jack's opinion, and he said they're just too complicated and something simpler would be more welcome. Apparently, the residents of Mondulkiri province don't have much use for bottle openers, for example.
So now Mitch at our local sporting goods supply store is looking for a good price on some small "Buck" knives.
Maybe it's true about "It takes a village . . . ."
I have a friend who is an exec with Drs. Foster & Smith, a mail order pet supply place headquartered in Rhinelander, and they GAVE me 6 bottles of eyewash and eyewash pads to take with me. The local clinic is going to give me latex gloves for--oh, I don't know, doing unspeakable things to the elephants, I guess. And I'm still working on some other stuff.
The quandry over gifts to take to the local people is starting to resolve itself. We'd thought of reading glasses, knives, scissors, caps, ladles, and oh, I don't know what-all. The best suggestion, I thought, was Swiss Army knives. I was thinking American though, so I modified that to Leatherman. But fortunately I asked Jack's opinion, and he said they're just too complicated and something simpler would be more welcome. Apparently, the residents of Mondulkiri province don't have much use for bottle openers, for example.
So now Mitch at our local sporting goods supply store is looking for a good price on some small "Buck" knives.
Maybe it's true about "It takes a village . . . ."
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