Showing posts with label Kenya. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kenya. Show all posts

29 August, 2017

Around the World and Back Again

This July I left Kenya to pursue graduate school back in Boston. After 3 years there, and 6 years abroad in total, it feels like a major step. My excitement to learn new skills and grow through an MBA helps to maintain motivation and resolve, my belief that I will be back again soon helps to balance the difficulty of leaving, and returning home to Boston alongside Emily helps to smooth the transition. 

After 114 blog posts, that's at least one a month since the day I left, I'll no longer be adding material on a regular basis. I'm so glad to have this detailed record of the experience, where I can relive the discoveries, the trips, the music and the learning at a monthly or even weekly level. I'm also glad I was able to share all this with people I care about- it helped to maintain a feeling of connection and shared experience.

After these past 3 years of incredible work and exciting travel, I thought this map I made of all my flights during that time would be a fitting coda. Thanks for reading.


25 July, 2017

Moving to Kakamega- part 2

When we moved to Kakamega, we also moved into new houses. Many of the staff moved into a complex of newly built homes on cleared hillside surrounded by farmland. It’s a beautiful spot, very green and hilly. The surrounding hills are coved in maize and sugarcane, and, since it’s essentially in the rain forest, there are tropical trees, flowers, and birds all around including hamerkops, hornbills, ibises, cranes, and many others. It’s also incredibly peaceful; there’s little noise apart from nearby children playing and cows in the pasture. It’s a ways off the main street: a 40-minute walk on a dirt road. However, we did have access to shared company cars to make running out for groceries or to the office easier.



(Sunset over the compound)

 (July 4th party)



Despite living on a compound, it felt very private for the 3 months we were there. The houses themselves are spacious with lots of natural light and high ceilings. Emily and I had a place right at the base of the compound with an uninterrupted view of the surroundings. We had a nice little porch from which we could enjoy incredible sunsets daily. The inside of the house, though I don’t have any photos to share, felt very homey and pleasant with its open floor plan. The highlight was probably the very strong, hot showers- a major upgrade from our last place in Bungoma. While there are some drawbacks to living so far out of town (difficulty interacting with the community, for one), it is a very pleasant place to live and we were really happy we had the chance to enjoy it!

(Our porch)

(Birthday party in our house)

07 June, 2017

Moving to Kakamega - part 1

In March of this year, the entire One Acre Fund community picked up and moved to an entirely new city in Kenya. Our new home, Kakamega is not far - only about 1.5 hours away from Bungoma. However, it was still a major undertaking to relocate 5 separate offices, 100s of Kenyan head office staff, and 50 odd international head office staff. Not to mention our infrastructure team has been building the new office and many of our houses from scratch over the past 3 years. The move was driven by the location, more central for our future expansion, as well as the rent savings, since we own the land and buildings. Kakamega is a slightly bigger town, though Bungoma's been closing the gap over the past few years. Kakamega still has the distinct advantage of being more or less in a rainforest.

This post is a brief tour of our new office. The first and most noticeable improvement is its size: it's big enough to house the entire Kenya team under one roof. After 3 years working in just 1 of 5 offices in Bungoma, it's great to see how big the Kenya team really is and to interact with lots of new people in the hallways and canteen. And that's the next best thing about this place- we get free daily lunches of simple but tasty Kenyan food provided in a large canteen where it's easy to connect with people you may not interact with often through work. Third best thing about the office is how spacious, light and breezy it is. It was designed with an open floor plan and entire walls that can slide to let in the breeze or keep out the rain as needed. It's a unique building with some nice spaces, sorely needed functionality (like a big amphitheater / training room) and a beautiful setting. It seems like a solid permanent home for One Acre Fund Kenya over the long term, and it's been fun to have the chance to enjoy it.


(Reception)

(Training hall)

(Canteen)

(Sliding walls)

(My desk)

24 February, 2017

Harvesting 1 Year Old Fruits

I have a suspicion that I’ve started previous blog posts with a line akin to “the new year started with a bang”, but once again that feels like the reality. 15% of 2017 has already passed before the dust has even settled, and in 40 days I’ve already come and gone from Kenya 4 times. To catch my footing in this rush, I want to spend this post reflecting on the immense shift my work has undergone over the course of the last 12 months.

This time last year I was focused on 2 long-shot ideas: creating an operational partnership with an MFI in Ethiopia and convincing MIX Market to collaborate on and host our farm finance database. Mixed into my regular work, I was writing concept notes and memos, and holding calls to pitch our ideas. I was excited, but also increasingly frustrated as both initiatives became bogged down.

Now, a year later, I still feel a little amazement when I think about the status of each idea. I feel proud of what we’ve accomplished after the energy we’ve poured in, and what we’re positioned to accomplish going forward.

MIX Market database:
I was sitting across a table from my manager in Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso when he shared this idea. Our new team would build a database of the best examples in the world of microfinance institutions working with smallholder farmers. We would go visit these examples personally to truly understand them, and we would construct the database with an average “operations manager” user in mind: simple to use, with relevant and practical information.

After personally visiting 24 microfinance institutions in 11 countries, I am deeply invested in this database. I have seen firsthand how many innovative ideas about working with farmers exist in the world, but also how great the need is for institutions to learn from one another. The wheel is being reinvented time and again, leading not just to inefficient use of resources, but an increasing perception that there are high barriers to working in the smallholder farmer space. Each time an agricultural product stumbles or fails it decreases an institution’s appetite to undertake this type of work in the future. This reality is one reason I feel strongly that creating this database, the first of its kind, could bring down barriers and unlock huge growth in the rural financial inclusion space.

If you had told use 2.5 years ago that we’d bring MIX Market, the go-to online resource for financial inclusion data, on board as a partner and host for this database I’m not sure I would’ve believed you. One of the amazing things about developing this into a formal collaboration with MIX, beyond accessing their decades of expertise in online product design and their networks, is the amount of web traffic (including those operations managers) that will be funneled past this information. From the results of an experimentation stage late last year, in which we tested the value and strength of our proposed solution through 2 dozen interviews, we felt confident in fully investing in making this database a real, functioning part of MIX Market’s data product lineup. I am approaching the product build and initial release in mid-2017 with a real sense of optimism and excitement and the potential impact this could have on the sector.

(Our current database coverage)

Ethiopian partnership:
This idea was also born around a table, but this time sitting across from the executive director of a microfinance institution (MFI) in Ethiopia.  This was late 2015- I was on a field visit with this MFI to develop content for the database, and had been thoroughly impressed with their work. Despite being a fairly standard MFI with no agricultural expertise, they had undertaken serious efforts to better tailor their financial products to the needs of smallholder farmers. They also expressed a clear commitment to investing further in these products and expanding their agriculture services.

Walking away with a sense there was strong alignment between our organizations, and that they would make a great collaborator, I wrote up a partnership concept note revolving around building their internal capabilities to deliver agricultural trainings to their clients. Now, a full 12 months after that note received initial approval, after wrangling internal stakeholders and navigating a turbulent 2016 in Ethiopia (politically and environmentally), we are officially engaged in a pilot partnership. We aim to roll out the trainings we’ve developed to a selection of their farmer clients during the 2017 growing season, from May to November. Based on the results for farmers and the institution, they might then scale the trainings to all their agricultural clients (50,000+ clients) I’ve enjoyed the chance to work so closely with a strong team at this other institution, to spend time on the ground learning from their staff and clients, and to be able to design something from scratch with exciting potential impact. I look forward to what the next busy few months of implementation bring!

(Finalizing our 2017 workplan!)

29 November, 2016

The New Thanksgiving

As an American, there’s no better scale on which to measure the give and take of living abroad than Thanksgiving. How do you celebrate a holiday about home, family, and the onset of chilly weather in an equatorial place 7,000 miles away? Falling so close to Christmas, it’s also the only major celebration that I’ve consistently spent apart from family all 6 years, and I would guess I’m not alone in that.
When it comes to how to celebrate in a place like Kenya or Zambia, you have choices. Hunting down a frozen turkey or killing a live one, a massive patriotic gathering or an intimate meal, the options are many. But there’s never any question that your day will be weighed against past Thanksgivings and those happening back home- what you brought with you, and what you left behind. My personal Thanksgiving story arc moves from preserving and recreating tradition, to embracing an almost entirely unrecognizable new celebration.
My first Thanksgiving, in Zambia, was the first (and last) time I hosted dinner and cooked my own turkey. It was an event replete with homages to home, down to a fireplace video loop projected onto a wall. The setting wasn’t fancy, I remember throwing a tablecloth over our washing machine when we ran out of tables, but the multi-cultural gathering was warm, loving and about as close to home as I could get.
Each year since, I’ve moved slowly away from this direct translation as the holiday began to develop a new life based on friends gathering and comfort food. Eventually, even the near-religious importance of key food like green bean casserole (which I don’t think I ever ate in the US) began to drop away, and last year was the first I did without turkey.
This year, though, was the grandest departure yet. As a small group of friends we celebrated on the tropical coast of Kenya, in the ancient island city of Lamu. We rented a stunningly beautiful house with endless reading nooks, light and airy Swahili architecture, and even a small pool. Not only did we not cook a single traditional Thanksgiving dish, we didn’t cook period: we hired a chef with the house who prepared an amazing meal of fresh lobster and crab that evening. With not a pumpkin pie or cranberry sauce in sight, and near 100% humidity, it was a happy Thanksgiving celebration nonetheless.
Yet, at the end of the day, American traditions or not, Thanksgiving isn’t complete without the (new) traditional evening video call back to Massachusetts just as the family is starting to gather. Passed around from one relative to the next, glimpses of foreheads and feet and drinks in hand, someone inevitably taunting me with the appetizers I’m missing, warm wishes all around. It’s not much, but it has always been that crucial digital foot in the door, keeping me connected, keeping me eternally weighing and remembering. On Thanksgiving, wherever it is, I’m thankful for family, for friends, for plenty in my life, and, of course, for good internet. 

(Lamu town)

(Inside our house)

(Traditional lateen sail dhow)

(Coral-walled alleyways)

29 August, 2016

17 Years and Counting

I’m from a small town, and grew up in a bit of a bubble. Luckily, in that bubble with me was a tight circle of friends. Since the moment we left that town, these friends have spread around the country and world like dandelion seeds carried on an adventurous breeze. I’m grateful that, unlike dandelions, we regularly come back together again where we grew up, swapping plenty of stories and laughs.

I wouldn’t change these home reunions for anything, but recently those of us living far from home have also started venturing to see each other in our current habitats. Taking advantage of cheap tickets or timely work travel, we’ve been able to bridge chasms that have opened in the 11 years since we knew the daily details of each other’s lives. These have been opportunities to meet friends and girlfriends, see places only known from photos, and understand passions and daily life far better than stories can ever express.

In April, a series of work visits across India fell into place, and just in time- I managed to catch Derek on his last week in the country. He had been living in Delhi for years, teaching at a music school by day and jetting off every few months on musical outreach assignments from Sudan to Palestine to Turkmenistan.

He was a gracious host for someone wrapping up three years living somewhere. If he’d caught me at the same time in Zambia I would’ve likely been a harried wreck. I stayed in his rooftop bungalow overlooking the sprawling, smoggy mega city. In the short span of a weekend, I met his friends, listened to their music, saw his school, ate all the amazing food constantly within his reach, and visited many a ruin and rooftop.


(Rooftop sunset through the haze)

Right around that time I got a message from Thom, who’s been living in Austria, about bargain airline tickets he’d found to East Africa. Suddenly and unexpectedly, he and his girlfriend Chri had tickets into Uganda and out of Kenya, and plans to stay with us along the way. The first half of the year was very busy so their visit was quickly upon us, and by then our friend Andrew had procured himself a ticket too. Andrew lives out in California, but has close ties in the agricultural community all over East Africa after half a dozen visits to the region. This would be the third time we’d seen each other in Kenya over the past 5 years.

(Outside Nairobi, 4 years ago)

I picked the 3 of them up at the Uganda border, dusty, sweaty and bearing gifts of recycled plastic toys. Bringing them to our home was both surreal and natural. They fit right into our house, or as Andrew was camping, our lawn. With their combined travel expertise and Andrew’s impressive Swahili, they were out and about during the week exploring. Over a long weekend, all 5 of us road-tripped through the Rift Valley to see Lake Baringo in central Kenya. The lake is a paradise for bird watching, and our campsite was home to a number of friendly starlings and hornbills. A nighttime close encounter with foraging hippos also upped the excitement factor. It was too soon before they moved on from Bungoma to visit other parts of the country. They were awesome to have here even for a short time, bringing plenty of great food and good laughs with them. I look forward to many reciprocal visits in the near future!

(Overlooking Lake Baringo)

(Friendly hornbill, a little too friendly...)

(Out for a boat bird tour, malaria and giardia be damned!)


**100th blog post!**

22 May, 2016

The Trek to Wagagai

The last time I spent longer than a day hiking anything, I was probably smaller than the backpack I was carrying. It would therefore not be unreasonable to see committing to hiking the second tallest mountain in Kenya over four days as highly optimistic.

To be precise, though Mount Elgon straddles the Kenya – Uganda border, its highest peak is located entirely in our neighbor to the west. This made it an ideal meeting place for our Easter weekend get together. Friends in Zambia who used to live in Uganda were eager to come for a visit, and another friend from Lusaka had recently moved to northern Uganda, while Emily, our colleague and I were easily able to hop over from Bungoma. That’s how we came to gather at the ominously named but enormously helpful Rose’s Last Chance outside of Mbale, Uganda one late March evening.

Rose, of Last Chance fame, helped us organize porters and guides for our trek ahead of time, so we were in pretty good shape to leave the next morning once we managed to cram all our supplies and cooking gear into our packs. It was still early morning by the time we were taking our first steps through villages and farms, heading towards the border of the national park.

To get the same feel of that first day, you could drag a stairmaster out into the summer sunshine. Once we entered the park, things got vertical fast. Eventually though, we entered the rain forest-esque zone and the pitch of the ground flattened out some.

As we hiked up we passed through more zones; surprisingly varied ecosystems stacked on top of one another. The higher we got, the more the trees thinned out. The scrub was replaced by tall brown grass, fields of it, dotted with prehistoric trees shaped like old multi-light street lamps. Once we were up in the foothills of the mountain, these vistas rolled along to either side of us, just high enough to keep the peaks out of sight.

We camped the first night at significant elevation and prepared for a summit ascent in the early morning. “Summit ascent” carried a certain weight in my mind, conjuring an image of ice axes, crampons and oxygen tanks, but of course it was nothing like that. We started behind schedule, as we did every morning, so consistently in fact that our guide started to work it into our wake up calls. By the time we left the loose cover of the small grove where we’d camped, the sun was stretching white rays across the brown grass. We were bundled up even then, as the light didn’t chase away the chill, but we’d come to learn how strong it could be at altitude.

By this time we could see the first, slightly shorter peak that we would eventually skirt around. The climb was gradual, with only a few short steep pitches, while the altitude was the real challenge. Our steps took more attention, and it was amazingly easily to become winded. We were careful to avoid overexertion and altitude sickness, and I certainly didn’t mind lots of little breaks.

At mid day we crested the ridge leading to Wagagai Peak, and it was only an hour or so until we summited. The exact height of Wagagai is a satisfying 4,321 meters (14,000 ft) above sea level, but the view wasn’t the precipitous drop I had imaged. Instead, stretched around us were the rolling foothills we had just navigated. Through a pass in the distance we could make out a village our guide told us was in Kenya. Weary and accomplished, we sought out worn patches of rock or little bits of grass to rest on. Enjoyable as that respite was, the sun really worked us over, and I got some of the worst burns I’ve ever had. I suppose the ridiculous outfits I had to sport afterwards for extra protection, including gloves, were the silver lining for all of us.

We spent that night in the same campsite after descending from the summit, and readied ourselves for the distance we’d need to cover the next day to reach the other side of the mountain. It really was a trek: 33km over rolling hills, climbing out of a gorge only to descend back into the next one, then the next one, and so on. The views were stunning when we were on hilltops and able to look down the long valleys. Crossing the caldera, the site where this ancient volcano essentially imploded, we were ringed by tall chimneys and jagged crests of red rugged rock protruding from the earth.

Most of us were feeling very weary when we finally stopped for lunch, not halfway to our next campsite. The rest of the day was a blur of sun, sweat and heavy breathing, but we finally allowed ourselves some optimism upon entering the thickening brush signaling the end of the plateau and the start of our descent.

Not too long after, running from a gathering storm that thankfully never reached us, we were standing at the mouth of a massive cave, Tutum Cave, with a stream of water falling front and center. It was here under this water, with the waning light and the high chattering of the bats roosting within, that we washed off days of dirt and sweat and cleaned the wounds and blisters we now boasted. The campsite, though muddy to reach and infested with ants, was inviting in the knowledge that it would be our last.

The following morning, squeezing bandaged feet into sodden shoes, we started our final descent. The trees changed from bamboo forests to thick vines and trunks, and the downhills became steeper and more direct. And suddenly, the birdcalls were playing harmonies with chainsaws and we could look down and see a town, and the edge of the park. At the gate we managed to haul ourselves onto motorcycle taxis, which carried us at relatively astonishing speed down the dusty roads to deposit us at a crumbling guesthouse near Sipi Falls. We sat and admired one of these stunning falls, beer in hand, feet released from their prisons, before treating ourselves to a real shower, a nice meal, and a bed.

I've heard people refer to Type II fun, something you don’t necessarily enjoy at all times throughout but look back on in a positive light. I think this would qualify; certainly I can’t remember the last time I pushed myself that hard. But there’s a real sense of accomplishment in traversing an entire mountain, especially when you think back on how far you’ve come. Cliché as it sounds, this particular hike pushed me to enjoy the journey, since the whole thing was a journey really, and to appreciate the subtle changing beauty of our surroundings. Even with more realistic expectations, I’d still set out on a trek like this again. Or maybe that’s the Type II fun talking…

(We traveled from Budadiri, bottom right, up to Wagagai Peak, down to Tutum Cave, then exited through Forest Exploration Center)

 (The upper ecosystem, first peak visible in the distance)

(Circumventing the first peak)

(Post summit nap)

(Valleys stretching from the caldera)

(In the caldera. Photo by Jeff)

(Help with sun protection. Not pictured, my gloves. Photo by Jeff)

(Colorful little guy we ran into)