Sunday, March 27, 2011

St.Louis in Senegal

Two weeks ago I headed off on a 2-day research trip to St. Louis, a former capital city of Senegal during its colonial era. Once again I had several fishermen help me plant the prawn traps in the Senegal River.

                           Off we go in this little piroque~

                     As usual we caught more unwelcomed critters other than prawns!


St. Louis was the one place in Senegal which I thought the climate was more pleasant than the rest of the country. The air was cooler, and more importantly, dust-free! I could deal with the crazy traffic and trash-ridden sidewalks, but spare me the hamattan dusts.

                            The streets are clean and orderly, and there are concrete sidewalks! 

Monday, March 7, 2011

Crawling to Dakar

I've only had a few occasions to visit Dakar since my arrival in Senegal last December. Unless I have to run an errand downtown, I would avoid it like a plague. It's just too much of a burden to get there. And from where I'm currently located in Somone, heading 90km up to Dakar can take a painstaking 3-hour drive. It's basically crawling bumper-to-bumper, I shit you not!

                     Street vendors in Dakar sell everything from used clothing to kitchenware

Leaving Port-au-Prince behind and coming down to Dakar has given me some kind of nostalgia. And I mean it in a good way. It's a real bustling place filled with all kinds of economic activities ranging from street vendors selling traditional arts and eateries to mid-range office buildings. I wouldn't call it heaven here, but what this city stands out from Port-au-Prince and Haiti as a whole is political stability and security.  

                             Dakar was rated as one of the world's most expensive cities in 2010

Just by going to Dakar alone from Somone can drain away half of your day, which pretty much leaves you only the afternoon to do whatever you were headed out to do. But since Senegal is 90% Islamic, government offices and banks are closed for lunch break at 12:30pm. Work resumes at 2:30pm. I guess it has a lot to do with going to prayer, or something like that.

Tuesday, March 1, 2011

Trail Two: Planting Shrimp Cages in Guereo

Today was my second attempt at planting two shrimp cages 1km off the sea in a remote fishing village in Guereo, Senegal. The last time having lost one of the two cages due to the rough sea, plus the results weren't that fruitful. In the end the one cage we picked back up came out with nothing. Though I was glad this didn't entirely kill their enthusiasm. I decided to give it another go ahead this evening as time is pressing since the donations have to be made official within a few weeks, and we just have to make sure the cages work well for the people who need them.

Thanks to the calm sea we were actually able to go ahead without much trouble. During our last trial our little piroque actually sank right in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean before the cages could be planted! Tommorow will be the big day! Hope things turn out as expected...plenty of rose prawns for the fishermen of Guereo!