Wednesday, June 30, 2010

Book Review "Adventures in Africa" by Gianni Celati



Adventures in Africa by Gianni Celati is a quick read at 170 pages and written as journal entries from notebooks while visiting Mali, Senegal, and Mauritania in 1997. The author and his friend, Jean, come to Africa to try to arrange to film a documentary, but the story is more about their interactions with the locals as tourists or white foreigners. The duo ultimately fail in their attempts to set up the documentary and spend most of their time being mobbed by children and merchants hawking their goods and services.


I found the book interesting in the author's reflections on being a tourist and how the locals interact with him and other tourists. He makes fun of the tourists that dress in safari gear or shorts (only children wear shorts in the local culture) and contrasts them with the locals who wear torn tshirts and ragged pants. The author also frequently remarks that the white tourist with money is like a continuation of colonialism and the African and the tourist are never on equal terms. The book is never deep but helped me prepare myself mentally for my upcoming travels in Africa.

Friday, May 28, 2010

Getting Ready to Go

Getting ready to go to Africa has taken up so much of my time i haven't been able to blog, tweet much, or even surf much. I was able to ship some food to Senegal, and arranged air freight for some stuff as well. I didn't bother sending a tv, but sent a wetsuit, some surf gear, my triathlon bike, and some camping gear.

I don't watch a lot of tv, get most of my news from the Internet, and would rather be out practicing my french or doing something. It also looks like I will need to learn Wolof as well. If I get to travel as much as i hope (and surf as much as i hope) satellite service would be wasted.

Another thing that i always wanted to do is a full ironman triathlon, and South Africa holds one each April. I will have plenty of time to train when i am not surfing, but figure i will have to spend most of my bike time on an indoor trainer. I am not looking forward to spending 6 hours on an indoor trainer. It seems like there is a healthy running community in Dakar, even a branch of the hash house harriers, but i haven't seen anything about open water swimming.


- Posted using BlogPress from my iPhone

Monday, May 3, 2010

Scuba School

This weekend i started the PADI Open Water Certification Course!  Saturday was spent in the classroom watching the PADI movies and taking written multiple choice tests (got one question wrong on the final exam) and today was spent in the pool doing confined space dives.  Next weekend we will venture into the Pacific Ocean for five dives to earn my open water certification!

Diving in the pool was a lot of fun today, the gear was heavy out of the water but once in the water i didnt notice it at all.  We were in a 13 foot deep salt water pool so we floated pretty easily- i might have even needed more weights (they gave me an extra 30 pounds to carry in my buoyancy control device (BCD) and on a belt around my waist to compensate for the 7mm thick farmer john wetsuit that I was wearing (14mm effectively on the core of my body). 

There was no big ceremony and they didnt make a big deal out of the first breath under water as i have seen others wax poetic as it being a life changing experience.  I thought it was pretty cool- the air was jsut there and i could breathe normally.  At first the bubbles coming out of the mouth piece were pretty annoying as they encumbered my vision, but after a couple minutes i adapted and wanted to get going. 

We did a bunch of drills to get started, first on our knees just barely under the water in the shallow end of the pool, then later on the bottom of the deep end.  Drills included clearing water from your mask, finding your mouthpiece if you drop it, taking off your mask & putting it back on and clearing the water, simulating running out of air and getting air from your buddies spare mouth piece (called a regulator), and similar actions in case of emergency under water.  For fun we even followed each other around the bottom of the pool and through hula-hoops suspended at different depths. 

We weren't allowed to bring a camera into the water so i don't have any pictures, but i am excited to dive with my GoPro video camera in the future since it is rated as waterproof to 100m.  The instructor said in the last class some people brought cameras and forgot to pay attention to their dive buddies or the instructor so they are banned during training.

I am looking forward to diving in Africa!  Its supposed to have some pristine areas with all kinds of fish and animals to check out.  There are three dive centers listed for Dakar and one rents all the needed gear for 45Euro per day so i should be able to dive at least once a month.  As well as when i am touring the rest of the continent I can take a break after surfing in the morning and dive in the afternoon.  Not sure i want to be lugging a boardbag and scuba gear on the plane and through customs for each country i will be visting in Africa. 

Saturday, May 1, 2010

They Turned Our Desert Into Fire

Thursday night i attended a screening of "They Turned Our Desert Into Fire" with a couple friends and met the director before the film began.  It was an interesting documentary of a photographer who visited Darfur in 2004 and was asked to present his findings to congress.  In order to get to Washington DC, the photographer traveled by Amtrak train from San Francisco and shared his photographs and story of Darfur with fellow passengers and recorded their reactions. 

Most of the people he recorded were unaware of the crisis in Darfur and wanted the government to do something.  Some of the statistics presented in the film about the media's neglect of the crisis were astounding, especially when compared to the Martha Stewart Insider-Trading Scandal (60 mins for Darfur over a year and 130 mins for Martha Stewart). 

Another part that was amazing to me is the impact of the American policy decision to not put any pressure on the government of Sudan until the North/South/rebel group conflict was resolved.  This allowed the government to delay any peace deal and continue the burning/killing operations in Darfur.  Bad analysis of the political situation drove bad American policy and allowed the deaths of thousands and displacement of millions. 

The reaction of many of the train passengers was to ask why the US Government and the United Nations hadn't intervened.  The director gave some information about how some of the nations on the Security Council had vested interests in the conflict continuing as they were making a profit (selling arms) as well as Sudan was selling them oil. 

In my opinion another major reason for non-involvement is the principle of sovereignty- that a sovereign nation can make its own decisions and no one can force them to do anything.  This is a principle that hasn't been evenly applied internationally.  It all seems to depend on the interests of the invading countries and what they can gain from it or the story that is told about it.  Sovereignty is something the US claims when another nation or group attempts to get it to do something that is not in its own interests (Kyoto for example).

It seems that Darfur hasn't been a bigger story because Iraq overshadowed it, because some were making money by selling arms, and others were afraid that it would upset the oil exports from the country.  The director challenged everyone to get the word out on Darfur and try to increase the visibility of the crisis to get support of the millions of displaced people and bring pressure on the government of Sudan.

Watch the film- check for a free screening around you or order the DVD.  Spread the word because the crisis is still not over. 

Sunday, April 25, 2010

REI Garage Sale


Yesterday i got to REI at 4:30 am to wait in line for the REI Garage Sale, and I was the 5th person in line. A group camped out the night before and pitched their tent by the front door in order to be first in the massive sale. I went straight to the clothing rack and got several pairs of pants, shirts, jackets, boots, sleeping bags, and mountaineering gloves- all at least 60% off, some items even at 90% off! Saved a bundle on a bunch of gear for my Africa trip. Even got a boot dryer for my wetsuit boots!

Friday, April 16, 2010

On Vacation!

Scored cheap tickets to Hawaii so jumped on a plane to paradise! Got myself a board at HIC in the Ala Mona Shopping Center (on sale for $424) and surfed rockpile the first two days and got tore up in the reef on day two.
I forgot how shallow it was and caught a wave too far over and ended up getting rolled onto the reef. Shredded my arm getting out and got stuck on the reef until a wave lifted me off. As I paddled in I could only stroke fingertip deep at low tide and still ended up with a huge gash in my left hand and blood streaming off my hand.
Yesterday we ventured up to the North Shore and tried to watch the Womens Pipe Classic, but it was pretty flat so there wasn't much going on. We checked a couple of my old hangouts when I went to college out here and i was pretty disappointed. Everything was much more expensive and the vibe had changed. We only saw tourists. Life is a lot different when you live here than when you come out for vacation and you get treated different too. My wife was born and raised on the windward side of the Oahu so she is enjoying this trip home too. We, of course, got the island staple: plate lunch from L&L Drive-In. One of my favorite dishes: Chicken Katsu. My wife got the BBQ Chicken Mini-Plate

Below is a picture from the balcony of our hotel South towards where i usually surf. I like to line up of the green buoy- notice the exposed reef visible at low tide (when this picture was taken).
Day 3 (today) i am waiting for the sun to come out to cure the ding repairs on my board so i can get out to surf. Low tide was about an hour ago so it should be safe to paddle out at Rockpile or I may take my chances with the tourists and surf schools at canoes.

Sunday, April 11, 2010

GoPro

Thanks to the taxman i was able to get myself the GoPro waterproof camera system. I also used my REI dividend and 20% off coupon to take a good chunk off the price.

I bought the surf package from backcountry.com and mounted it to my longboard this morning in the parking lot before i paddled out. I made sure to clean the surface of the board with acetone nail polish remover before i stuck the mount to the surface of the board to ensure a good clean bond. After two and a half hours the camera still had a solid grip on the board even though i took plenty of spills and got crushed by some closeouts.

I posted a 1:44 clip from the two hours i shot in the water on youtube. Didnt need to post all the paddling, duck dives, getting smashed, and waiting. It was a beautiful day for around here- the best i had seen at this break- i am glad i ignored the surf forecast. The longboard worked great even though we got crushed occasionally. Its still water tight and shows no sign of distress. Only problem is that i would need a separate mount for each board.