Monday, March 30, 2009


A tall palm tree we can see every morning when we take a walk.

It looks beautiful.   It's almost too beautiful and too perfect.

I believed it's a well grown palm tree but it wasn't.

It is a cell phone tower made of a fake palm tree.   Well done Malawi!


Morning Dew


This is the dew which gave me the idea of my blog title.  
"ASATSUYU" in Japanese.
   

Saturday, March 28, 2009

EDAMAME



Do you know “EDAMAME”? Did you know that Edamame is young Soybean? In other words Edamame is immature soy bean. To my surprise, not many countries eat soy bean as Edamame. If you live in America, you probably tried it at Sushi restaurant. They serve Edamame as one of the appetisers. Some people just buy Edamame to go at sushi bar or you can buy frozen one at store.
Edamame is a very popular food in Japan. We, Japanese love to eat Edamame with beer. That is the best combination for hot summer. I remember that my mom bought back a Edamame branch from a store and I helped to pick the pods when I was a small girl. She just boiled them quickly and put some salt on them. The picture of Edamame in a colander with steam makes me feel nostalgic.
Now I am in Malawi, my scientist husband who loves Edamame has a passionate idea to introduce Edamame to Malawi. Good new is Malawi grow soy bean already and we can buy dried soy beans at stores.
Have you ever concerned how much energy you need to cook your dinner tonight? To cook Thanksgiving turkey, probably need 5 hours oven energy. NO! NO! NO! In this country people use wood or charcoal for cooking and cooking time is very serious. I can see women carrying a enormous tree root which is just digged out from the ground put it on the head and bring it home. If I do that, I would not cook a turkey but a ear of corn.
Edamame could be a good food for Malawi people especially kids because lots of nutrition, quick cooking, everybody loves. Elementary school kids bring farming tools to school because the school has a garden and students grow veggies. Preschools (Child Centers) have gardens too. They grow corn, tomatoes, peanuts but time to time they are short of food. Jim’s idea is Edamame could be a supplementary food for schools and families.
I went to a sewing class yesterday and my teach (Japanese) asked us, “Anybody want to buy Edamame?” It made me surprised. She has already tried to grow them at her garden. Wow! They grow well! She says that they can pick them in 4 months and could be 4 times crops a year. That is a good news. She already proved it. She taught her house keeper how to grow Edamame and helps him to make extra money. It is a wonderful idea!
Some people are skeptical about Jim’s idea. But when corn was introduced into this country from America, who expected that this vegetable would be a main food for Malawian in the decades later.
Someone needs to try a new thing!


Friday, March 27, 2009

Peanuts Seller



We saw a guy selling peanuts on the street. It was around 7 am. I was pretty sure his spot was a good place for his business because near a mini bus station ( a station but there was nothing). Many people were getting in and out of the buses. This was a typical African rush hour. Jim and I were taking a morning walk at Blantyre that morning and pushed our way through the crowd.

I was staring at his table made of a stone unconsciously because of the simplicity. There were 6 bags neatly piled up 3 bags each. I could guess probably there were 20~30 peanuts in each bag.
When we returned, we decided to buy his peanuts. It was 10 kwacha per bag. That equals to $0.07/ bag. There were 6 bags on his table. I was thinking how many bags he could sell. Maybe he hid 100 more bags somewhere we could not see or he just had 6 bags only (I hope not). This is life in Malawi.

Thursday, March 26, 2009

Chameleons!


I don’t like reptiles. But! I pet Chameleons.
We can find them easily in this country. I can say that I almost like Chameleon now!

Look! He is on my hand!








Tuesday, March 17, 2009

Child Care Centers

I am back! We kept using internet at home and we used up all credit. It just likes phone cards.

We visited a local NGO named “Save Orphans Ministries" last week. Their office is located in a suburbs of Ncheu 2.5 hours drive form our place. We left home at 7 am. This NGO is taking care of local child care centers. The staff took us to 3 local feeding centers that day. We visited several centers before but most of the time the kids went home. The early bird was fully rewarded to see the children this time.
The centers are taking care of pre-school age children include orphans and kids HIV positive. My husband askes this question every visit, “How many orphans come in this center?” It made me surprised that the leader repeated that question directly to the kids in a local language. I didn’t know how he asked the kids but one boy stood up among the 60 kids. I understood he is the orphan. It was too pitiful for me to see. The leader told us there were more orphans in the group but I think they hesitated to tell us or they did not understand the question or they call their foster parent a (biological) parent. A good thing is orphans are taking care of locally. It means if the both parent past away, normally someone in the relative takes care of the child. The children come to the child center every day and eat, play, and learn. Even the family can not feed the kids enough, at least they can eat food at the center.
It was a feeding time! We observed how they eat food. The volunteer people prepared porridge on plates which has 2 spoons. The plates were served on the floor directly. Which is pretty normal and the kids came into the room and sat down. Now I understood why one plate had 2 spoons because 2 kids share one plate. I asked if the porridge contains some sugar. Yes, it does. The child slowly moved spoon to the mouth.
This day’s visits reminded me of my brother’s school. My brother and his wife run a preschool in Japan. The kids are exactly same ages. Here Malawi, the volunteer teachers, one center we visited just have 2 teachers take care of 80 kids and they showed me the teaching materials. I know both countries kids doing same things; learning numbers and alphabets. Nothing wrong with both places but they are the exact opposite. I saw a puzzle made of old card board cut in 3 peaces. All other materials were made of recycled staffs such as plastic bottles, potato sacks, rocks. etc. Wow! all staffs they use normally I throw away.........

“Life is not fair,” of course! But this was not my conclusion of that day.
Seeing children in a opposite situation aroused mixed feelings in me.




Monday, March 9, 2009

We can use internet at home but of course it is not free.   We need to buy credit just like a telephone cards.    If we use it too much, our credit is over.

We were supposed use this credit for  a couple of months but we used up already.  
Now we are in a hotel lobby near our place.   We logged in

Tuesday, March 3, 2009

Bare foot kids I met













Jim and I visited a community based child care center with a guy works for Women and Child development ministry.   It locates only 20 k from Lilongwe downtown but we drove on the bumpy condition roads.   The both sides of the road were maize (corn) field which almost have harvest time.
We saw an article that Lilongwe city forbids sales of green maize (corn).   This rule is to prevent people stealing maize.
As recently as yesterday, people could pick young corns from the field easily and sold them on the road but we don't see them any more.   I mean we can see them but no more maize sales. 

The center is operated by mostly volunteer people and take care of small village children.  They had a special meeting that day which local centers' leaders got together.  They welcomed us nicely and took us a tour.    They have chickens for eggs, cows for milk and they have new shower rooms which just finishing construction.  The one of the leaders said, " These toilets are probably the best toilets in this area.  People don't have a toilet but they use a pit toilet or go to bush."   These flush toilets are innovative things for them.   

We had a meeting with the leaders and the kids all together.   First we asked the leaders about the current problems they are facing at their each center.   They told us a bunch of problems.   They don't have transportation when someone need to urgent medical care, they don't have enough food and blanketsfor children, people who taking care of orphans are too poor to feed them, there are discrimination against HIV positive kids, etc.

Next we asked the kids about their own problems.   They are about 1~10 years old and little shy but one by one raised their hands and hesitated a little but I felt that they wanted to tell us something.   One boy said, "Sometimes we don't have food."  The other boy said, "We don't have shoes, that's why bare foot."    Scarcely they finished their words, the others bursted into a laugh.   You know, their laugh saved my heart.  The admirable children siting bare foot in front of me, they were telling us their critical problems with big laugh.   

We told them that we could not promise to make changes by tomorrow but we would work on and come back here.  We donated some vita-meals for them.   The leader told us that it was a perfect timing because they just run out the food.  

I can't forget these bare foot kids with big smiles.   The kids, they probably could not help laughing because of their circumstances.   
What can I  do for them?  
That is a big question for me.   

I wanted to write down my feeling today..........




Sunday, March 1, 2009

We bought a Jackfruit -the largest tree born fruit in the world

From Wikipedia:

The jackfruit (Artocarpus heterophyllus) is a species of tree of the mulberry family (Moracease) native to parts of South and Southeast Asia.  It is well suited to tropical lowlands.  Its fruit is the largest tree borne fruit in the world,  seldom less than about 25 cm (10 in) in diameter.  Even a relatively thin tree, around 10 cm (4 in) diameter, can bear large fruit.  The fruit can reach 36 kg (80 lbs) in weigh and up to 90 cm (36 in) long and 50 cm (20 in) in diameter.
The jackfruit is something of an acquired taste, but it is very popular in many parts of the world.  The sweet yellow sheaths around the seeds are about 3-5 mm thick and have a taste similar to that of pineapple, but milder and less juicy.














Jim and I went to Blantyre this week and we found this fruit on the road.  We paid 300 MK (about$2) for one.   It tastes very sweet.  The texture is different.   Feel like eating custard but smells different.   It is very gooey and like latex which does not come off even we wash. 

A Hamburger Monster


Wow!   Tomo made a monster hamburger!   










And it created a monster.












I will accept your comments.........here.

tomo