This week has been a busy but fun week! Last Sunday Ashley’s
Mum Jane and Step-father Paul arrived in the country so since then it has been
a hectic mash-up of showing them our projects and trying to give them a real
Swazi experience!
The day they arrived we went in the hire car to Malolotja Nature Reserve which is past Mbabane and right up in the highvelds of Swaziland.
It was COLD; I had goose bumps and I was shivering. The Tree Top Canopy Tour’s
base was on the top of a hill in the reserve; the wind was blowing, it was
overcast and I hadn’t brought anything warm – I keep forgetting that Big Bend
is the hottest place in Swaziland; you basically wear the least amount of
clothes that’s socially acceptable.
We were so high up that when you looked out over the mountains the clouds were literally sitting on the summits, it was beautiful.
Ashley, Paul and I did the Malolotja Tree Top Canopy Tour; which was a series of zip lines that took you from the top of a valley in the game reserve to the bottom. It was great fun! You could go seriously fast on the zip lines and when you were hanging over the valley you could look right over the carpet of treetops beneath you and hear the river gurgling below.
We were so high up that when you looked out over the mountains the clouds were literally sitting on the summits, it was beautiful.
Ashley, Paul and I did the Malolotja Tree Top Canopy Tour; which was a series of zip lines that took you from the top of a valley in the game reserve to the bottom. It was great fun! You could go seriously fast on the zip lines and when you were hanging over the valley you could look right over the carpet of treetops beneath you and hear the river gurgling below.
Cloud Level! |
After the Tree Tops we headed to ‘Swazi Candles’; Swazi
Candles along with some other independent shops come together to create a
lovely Craft Market in Malkerns near Manzini. The place is full of hundreds and
hundreds of handmade candles all with a Swazi/African feel to them; there are 2
or 3 people who sit in the shop itself to make the candles for shoppers to
watch, but in total there are 12 candle makers in a small workshop elsewhere.
We saw one man make an elephant from a ball of wax in about 5 minutes flat, the
craftsman ship is amazing and the candles really are beautifully made!
Monday brought Injabulo into the lives of Jane and Paul; the
kids went absolutely crazy (as they do when we get any visitors) and carried on
their new obsession of stroking manly arm hair... They really are fascinated, I
think it must be because black people have less body hair than white people –
they must think we’re some sort of animal!
Jane and Paul had brought out 3 30kg suitcases from the UK, and about 50kg of
their luggage was toys, presents and clothes for the kids. So at Injabulo on
Monday they had a whale of a time throwing bean bags around and dressing up as
princesses, ladybirds, Woody from Toy Story and a Little Miss from The Mr Men!
(Jane and Paul's Pictures) |
(Jane and Paul's Pictures) |
Tuesday was the Moriah Center; the day started out great as
we were reading a story that included making popcorn for all the kids to eat...
They loved watching the popcorn maker spit out the popcorn; however they had to
wait a little while longer to try some because the teachers were more
interested in eating all of the popcorn their selves rather than handing it out
to the children, haha!
Unfortunately at play time the day took a turn for the worst; one little boy
came up to us in the playground crying and he had a plastic truck toy sticking
out of his side. Two of the wheels had came off and we presumed that there was
an exposed metal spike which had lodged itself into his skin. We’re still not
sure how it happened; we thought he had fallen on it, but the rest of the kids
said that someone threw it at him and it got stuck... no one is sure how it happened.
Luckily Jane and Paul had the car there so we managed to get him to the private hospital down the road in 2 minutes of it happening. The doctors weren’t sure how deep the metal was so they had to give him a full anaesthetic to knock him out in case he wriggled when they were removing the truck. Thankfully the metal wasn’t deep enough to puncture anything and all he needed was a few stitches and some medicine.
Everything turned out fine; but if Jane and Paul hadn’t been there we don’t know what would’ve happened, the kombi we usually drive was in South Africa because the missionaries had been taken to Pongola in it. Inevitably we would have been in a horrible situation if it wasn’t for their car, we wouldn’t have been able to pull it out because we wouldn’t have known the extent of the damage so we would have had to carry him 20 minutes to hospital.
Luckily Jane and Paul had the car there so we managed to get him to the private hospital down the road in 2 minutes of it happening. The doctors weren’t sure how deep the metal was so they had to give him a full anaesthetic to knock him out in case he wriggled when they were removing the truck. Thankfully the metal wasn’t deep enough to puncture anything and all he needed was a few stitches and some medicine.
Everything turned out fine; but if Jane and Paul hadn’t been there we don’t know what would’ve happened, the kombi we usually drive was in South Africa because the missionaries had been taken to Pongola in it. Inevitably we would have been in a horrible situation if it wasn’t for their car, we wouldn’t have been able to pull it out because we wouldn’t have known the extent of the damage so we would have had to carry him 20 minutes to hospital.
After the drama at Moriah on the morning we headed off to
Hlane the Royal National Park for a sunset safari! We saw loads of rhino,
impala (obviously)and warthog; we also saw elephants for the first time! I
couldn’t have been any more excited and I was not disappointed, there was a
herd of about 8 elephants and the bull was MASSIVE. It was walking directly
behind our truck and at one point I’m pretty sure it started charging at us
because it picked up some speed, started flapping its ears and our ranger put
his foot down pretty hastily to get us away. Amazing.
After what I now call a hideously expensive dinner (E140 - £10), we watched all the staff of Hlane do a traditional Swazi dance, the third proper one that we have seen... and by far the longest. I love watching them dance but it is rather repetitive and when it goes on for about 40 minutes you start to get a little bit bored. But at the end everyone got up together and had a bit of a stomp around with the staff before retiring to their paraffin lit huts. There’s no electricity in the accommodation at Hlane so you have to put paraffin lamps everywhere to create some light, personally I love it as I feel that electricity kills the atmosphere of sleeping in a hut even if it has a kitchen, bathroom, living room, two double rooms and a platform in the rafters with four single beds! This was a party hut for sure, it was brilliant.
After what I now call a hideously expensive dinner (E140 - £10), we watched all the staff of Hlane do a traditional Swazi dance, the third proper one that we have seen... and by far the longest. I love watching them dance but it is rather repetitive and when it goes on for about 40 minutes you start to get a little bit bored. But at the end everyone got up together and had a bit of a stomp around with the staff before retiring to their paraffin lit huts. There’s no electricity in the accommodation at Hlane so you have to put paraffin lamps everywhere to create some light, personally I love it as I feel that electricity kills the atmosphere of sleeping in a hut even if it has a kitchen, bathroom, living room, two double rooms and a platform in the rafters with four single beds! This was a party hut for sure, it was brilliant.
Perfection. |
Swazi Secrets
The next morning we left Hlane and went to a factory called Swazi Secrets; Swazi Secrets produce beauty products from the oil extracted from the Marula nut.
Every year in March the people of Swaziland celebrate Marula
season by drinking the traditional Swazi beer ‘buganu’, I have spoken about it
before on this blog. After the women have used the actual fruits to ferment and
make the beer they take the nut from the fruits and dry them for weeks in the
sun. During March/April time the workers of Swazi Secrets go out into the rural
impoverished communities of the lowveld areas of Swaziland to buy the marula
nuts from the local women who have made the beer; they weigh the nuts/kernels
on the spot and pay by cash per kg.
Marula Tree |
They then take these kernels to the Mpaka factory to be
crushed by hand and the oil to be extracted and made into beauty products.
Instead of having one large mechanical machine that crushes the nuts Swazi
Secrets have opted for a number of smaller man-powered machines that crush
smaller quantities of nuts. For every 40kg of nuts crushed 11kg of pure marula
oil is gained.
The smaller machines make the extraction process much more sustainable as each machine has the community name written on it; therefore only the nuts from that community may be crushed in that machine. Therefore if there’s a bad batch of products the workers can trace which machine the nuts were crushed in and then know which community the nuts were bought from; this allows them to pull the rest of the communities batch for testing before shipping and they can go back to the community and find out what caused the marula nuts to be contaminated.
Whereas if all of their nuts were crushed together they would have to destroy larger batches of products without knowing the problem, so the smaller machines prevent cross-contamination, promote sustainability of the factory’s process and they save money!
The smaller machines make the extraction process much more sustainable as each machine has the community name written on it; therefore only the nuts from that community may be crushed in that machine. Therefore if there’s a bad batch of products the workers can trace which machine the nuts were crushed in and then know which community the nuts were bought from; this allows them to pull the rest of the communities batch for testing before shipping and they can go back to the community and find out what caused the marula nuts to be contaminated.
Whereas if all of their nuts were crushed together they would have to destroy larger batches of products without knowing the problem, so the smaller machines prevent cross-contamination, promote sustainability of the factory’s process and they save money!
Crushing the kernels for natural oil |
The visit really was very interesting and we were shown
around the production room where the products are actually made. It couldn’t
have been any larger than a store room and there were 3 workers in there doing
everything by hand; one lady was painstakingly heating up and measuring out
ingredients for marula lip-balm by hand (this allows higher control of the
temperature so that the oil doesn’t degrade at a too high heat), and man was
packaging the lip-balms into their containers while another lady stamped on the
date of expiry.
After seeing this production on such a small scale I wasn’t expecting the
company to be large or well known; therefore it surprised me when they said
that they export to the UK and Germany and their products are very popular in
Europe, they have even been given a ‘Product of the Year’ award by Elle!
The company is also co-funded by the WK Kellogg Foundation, that’s right, the very same Kellogg that brings you your cornflakes in the morning.
I really enjoyed our visit to Swazi Secrets and it is
fantastic knowing that they are supporting the rural women in the communities
who harvest the raw materials; these communities include places that we are
very familiar with... For example Mpolongeni where we run our soup kitchen is
one of the areas that provide Swazi Secrets with marula kernels for crushing,
and I think that it is fantastic that there are some companies out there who
are dedicated to providing fair business to the Swazi population.
Thursday brought soup kitchen with Jane and Paul! The first
thing that Aunty Vinah said to them was along the lines of ‘where are the
surprises?!’, although what she was getting wasn’t really a surprise because
she had been asking for chocolates ever since we arrived in the country.
Either way she was happy with her gifts and there were even more clothes that had been brought for the kids to wear; I’m pretty sure that we’ve clothed these children about 3 times over in the time that we've been here!
One of the little girls at soup kitchen, SiSi pleasantly surprised me this week; she’s the one in the pictures that always wears the white and blue chequered shower cap. She never smiles, is really timid and gets scared really easily, but this week is was like she was a different person!
She was smiling, laughing, letting me tickle her, hugging me rather than sitting rigid in my arms and gripping on like a little monkey. I even started jiggling her around in my arms (which normally terrifies her) but this time she stared throwing herself into it, laughing and waving her arms around.
I know that this probably doesn’t make sense to you but after knowing someone for 6 months and suddenly seeing a personality change for the better just made me feel so proud and happy for her, it’s like she’s a new little girl and I don’t know what has happened to make the change but I am grateful that it has happened. I just hope it carries on and she doesn’t go back into her shell.
Either way she was happy with her gifts and there were even more clothes that had been brought for the kids to wear; I’m pretty sure that we’ve clothed these children about 3 times over in the time that we've been here!
One of the little girls at soup kitchen, SiSi pleasantly surprised me this week; she’s the one in the pictures that always wears the white and blue chequered shower cap. She never smiles, is really timid and gets scared really easily, but this week is was like she was a different person!
She was smiling, laughing, letting me tickle her, hugging me rather than sitting rigid in my arms and gripping on like a little monkey. I even started jiggling her around in my arms (which normally terrifies her) but this time she stared throwing herself into it, laughing and waving her arms around.
I know that this probably doesn’t make sense to you but after knowing someone for 6 months and suddenly seeing a personality change for the better just made me feel so proud and happy for her, it’s like she’s a new little girl and I don’t know what has happened to make the change but I am grateful that it has happened. I just hope it carries on and she doesn’t go back into her shell.
We finished off Jane and Pauls visit with a trip to Manzini
to see Kathy and Richard and eat at our favourite Portuguese Manzini restaurant, Gil Vicente (one that
we have been seeing quite a lot of lately!)
So now Ashley, Jane and Paul are gallivanting around South
Africa, they’re currently in Durban before going to Cape Town and finally
Johannesburg.
So for a week I am alone on project and running everything by myself, hahaaa let’s see how this goes shall we?!
I am interested to see what this week brings, hopefully
there will be no more drama otherwise I will have a lot on my plate... Wish me
luck!
Kate xx
P.S. The name of this blog is a quote from our ranger on safari
at Hlane; Paul asked him what a rhino was doing now and he bluntly replied
‘spraying urine’. His accent and the way he said it reduced Ashley and I too
immature fits of laughter for about 5 minutes straight and I almost chocked on
my Hunters Dry. It’s a memory I will cherish forever.
so pleased that Sisi is warming to you ... all the hard work has it's benefits :) Love that she obviously likes and trusts you now ... proud of you Kate XXXX
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