
Travelling to visit the schools by speedboat across the Essequibo and into the Mazaruni is just brilliant and it's at times like these we forget about the intermittent water supply into the house or the cockroaches or the cramped quarters near the school dormitory . for we are on the edge of tropical rainforest and the weekend walks we have undertaken so far have yielded up a tiny part of the exotic bird life, the staggerinly large and beautiful butterflies of irridescent blue, brimstne yellow , bright red and the dense tropical forestation.
So far the weather has been cool for here ( c. 25C ) and very wet and people keep telling us this is the dry season ...We think this is in part due to el Nino but I have never quite worked out what that means. Anyway the 'cool' weather has helped us acclimatise quite well but there are days when we return to the house exhausted and we haven't really done that much.
Our social life continues to be good and we meet more extraordinary 'locals...Peter and Malcolm the gold miners, Dr. George the Cuban doctor, Assim the ebullient retailer, Frankie the man whose wife has died and who has 6 children to support and never seems to stop working....these are people that I feel is part of the reason we are here ...to improve the education system for these good guyanese people
1 comment:
Glad to see you in school and getting on with some work at long last! Perhaps you could introduce an Oath of Allegiance to the Queen in order to raise standards- that is the latest wheeze by the powers that be back in the UK! One assumes this will be even less popular in Scotland than it was in my staffroom!
Incidentally I notice Scotland won the wooden spoon despite stuffing England in the 6 Nations- work that one out!
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