Strait from my journal:
Sunday January 27th 2008
“Today I was worried I’d have nothing to do I brushed my teeth and while doing so two of the boys from the homestead went off into the bush with rifles on their backs. I though nothing of it… Then I went looking for a place to hang my hammock and while walking near the main road towards some trees I saw some more people from the homestead including the father. From the road the man called to me asking if I’d seen a python. He informed me that a dog had been eaten one village over and they were going to find and kill the python. I asked if I could come and he said yes! We all walked into the bush and as we approached the village where the dog had been taken we heard a gun shot. We then caught up with the boys who had gone into the bush earlier to track the python. They had shot the python in the head and were in the process of trying to coax it (it was still moving a lot) out of the bush they found it in. I helped the older of the two boys drag it out and stretch it flat. We then held it down and sliced open the stomach next to the bulge that we correctly assumed was the dog. As we cut through the python’s skin it retracted like a popped balloon in a way that made it seem like it was pushing the dog out. The only thing worse than the sight of the partially digested dog was the smell. We pulled some bark of a nearby bush and used it as rope to tie a noose around the dog and in one motion the boy pulled out the carcass and threw it into the bushes. We then proceeded to carry the python back through the bush to the homestead. That night one of the families on the homestead eat well (I wish I had been around to have some…) because the next day the entire skin was wrapped around one of the rafters in the cooking hut…”
Saturday, June 7, 2008
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4 comments:
You need to write more! What is going on in your world?
Jeff! I got your amazing postcard and have a class that is very excited to do the pen pals. I think I will start class tomorrow by putting your great python hunt story on the LCD and reading that aloud to give them a sense of where you are. So tell me how to proceed: should we write first? If so, how many? What age are the kids/people to whom we would be writing? I have a class of 32 14 year olds. Seeing your photos here really takes me back. We had our 25th PCV reunion this summer and were immediately transported back to those days through all the photos (from that PRE blog, PRE cell phone, PRE Internet age). Can't wait to hear more from you. If we should begin, tell me to whom they should address the letters and what address we should use to send them. Or do they have access somehow to the internet and could we do it through that? One just can't assume anything these days when it comes to internet access.
Cheers, Jeff.
Jim
Didn't think to include my email or address in the last posting. If you need to reach me or send letters from your end, my info:
Jim Burke
Burlingame High School
1 Mangini Way
Burlingame, CA 94010
email: jburke@englishcompanion.com
Jeff,
New York Times today featured Namibia! Here is the link:
http://travel.nytimes.com/2008/08/24/travel/24namibia.html?partner=rssyahoo&emc=rss
Jim
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