Friday, November 30, 2007

Exodus Live Infinite Word Festival


While Edna was visiting, we went to a poetry slam, which took place at the Maitisong theatre at the Maru a Pula school, which is about 2 blocks (long blocks) from our house. We had attended a poetry slam there at the end of our first week in Botswana and loved it, so we had the date of the next one booked in our calendars. The Exodus Live Infinite Word Festival includes some excellent poets and performers, all of them from Botswana (except for one African American who now lives here and some guest artists), and it's both entertaining and a great insight into local culture, politics and viewpoints. The poetry show also includes musical performances, comedy, and sometimes short theatre productions. Here are some photos of some of the artists who performed at the show.

This photo includes three of our favorite poets in the Exodus group. (L to R) Abimbole Cole (the African American woman, and a truly excellent poet), Joshua Machao, and Mandisa Mabuthoe. Here, (L to R) Kefhentse Kefhentse (who is charming jazz and skat vocalist), Mandisa Mabuthoe and Tebogo Gaetsewe bring the house down with a rousing song. They are all great singers and Tebogo should be recording solo albums, she's that good. I wish I knew what song they were singing and that I had recorded a video of this performance because it was one of the highlights of the night. It was fantastic! Poet Mandisa Mabuthoe at Exodus Live. Poet Moletlanyi Tshipa is a crowd favorite, at Exodus Live. He's a physicist who writes poetry about rather mundane things,but his ability to rhyme words with a jilted meter that arrives at the rhyme unexpectedly, along with his charmingly accented English make him my favorite poet in the ensemble. The first time we saw him perform, we had seen/heard poem after poem about life's hardships, boy meets girl, girl meets boy, sexual and domestic abuse, lovers dying of AIDS, the general strife (that's an inside joke for Rebeca)...and then this guy comes on stage to raucous applause, his dreads wrapped in a tam, starts with the line "Some may laugh while others scorn...because I like to eat my corn" and then launched into a poem about vegetables. During this Exodus Live performance, half of his poem was in Setswana, so we were unable to enjoy it as much. However, it's great to hear poems in Setswana because...well...why should Batswana write poems that speak to other Batswana in English? Poet Lesego Nswahu Nchunga at Exodus Live. Before the intermission, a group came on stage to perform some traditional singing and dancing. It was like a breath of fresh air to hear and see this as American-style R&B and Hip-Hop music seems to be all anybody here wants to listen to. The singing was absolutely beautiful and the dancing was entertaining as well! One of the best poems of the night (sadly I don't have a photo of the poet or know his name. He did preface the poem by apologizing to the audience for the cursing he was about to do) was a social and political diatribe in the format of (I am paraphrasing here from memory): "F*ck the Nobel Prize winning geneticist with his racist statements (a reference to Dr. Watson, who despite winning a Nobel for the discovery of DNA, has single-handedly proven that winning a Nobel Prize does not mean you are free of bigotry) and F*ck CNN for reporting it. F*ck the BBC and their Anglo-centric biased view of the struggles in the world, always acting like they know what's best for Africa. F*ck the UB student (University of Botswana) with their piercings and their apathy. F*ck the Indian businessman who complains that you don't work enough while they sit on their ass and watch you work , withholding your pay til the end of the month and if you ask for a raise, they won't give it to you because business is bad, as they say, though their accountant would state otherwise".

It was the first time I'd heard both outward and inwardly reflective criticism of the society here ("the general strife", as Rebeca would say) and it was a great insight to a lot of things here for us. We loved it and so did the audience!

The headliner of the show was a poet from Zimbabwe, named Sam Farai "Comrade Fatso" Monro. He was EXCELLENT! By far the best poet of the evening, but also the only professional poet who has performed across the globe, on the BBC, KPFA (Pacifica Radio) and other international media outlets. He writes about the social and political situation ongoing in Zimbabwe, which as you probably know is a social tragedy and a political nightmare.

The audience did not respond to him as well as to the other performers. I don't know why because he is clearly very talented. Perhaps it's because he's from Zimbabwe and people here are generally prejudiced against Zimbabweans (much like people in the US are prejudiced against Latin American immigrants). Maybe it was because he was white and there's something about white Africans speaking about struggle and hardship that wasn't convincing to the audience. I don't know, but I definitely sensed that the audience was not so into Comrade Fatso, even though our little group all agreed that he was by far the best performer of the night. He came with a Zimbabwean musician, Josh, who played Bass and who was phenomenal, playing with a style and speed like Victor Wooten. The audience was mesmerized by his playing, as was the back-up band on the stage, who were literally gaping and collapsing with disbelief as Josh played a solo. I have a video of some of his bass playing, but it's too big to post on the blog :(

After their performance, a rapper from S.Africa came on stage and basically started doing his thing, which was essentially lip-synching his own songs to a back-up recording. It was pretty lame, given that there were live DJs and live music and poetry performances all evening. In any case, it was 1 am, the show had started at 8 pm, Edna has just arrived from France within the past 24 hours and we were too tired to appreciate this type of performance so we went home. Overall, it was a good show, though we did not understand over half of it because we don't speak Setswana (yet...we're trying little by little ) or Kalanga. Still, we will be there for the next Exodus Live Poetry night, cant' miss it!

Friday, November 23, 2007

A Tiny Visitor

One evening, we received a tiny visitor in our home. We're not sure how the little fellow got into the house (though there are many ways to do so for small ones like him), but eventually the little one became attracted to the computer, and spent a good deal of time exploring the LCD screen. It even responded to movement of the mouse! At first, it was rather frightened by the moving arrow on the screen, but after a while it started to chase it. Eventually, we became worried that the little guy would be harmed by the heat of the computer, so we scooped him up in a glass and deposited him safely in a potted plant outside. I hope he hasn't suffered much from his experience with the humans and their magical light boxes.

Clear Skies over Gaborone

One of the new experiences I've had living in Botswana is a rejuvenation of my personal relationship with the sky. As a child growing up in Vermont, I loved the sky. I loved clouds, the deep blue skies of summer, sunrises, sunsets, the stars at night. I had a small telescope and spent many cold nights on the roof of our house peering at Andromeda (M31), the Orion nebula (M42), or the Pleiades (M45).

During my life in Boston, my relationship with the sky became more detached. The sky was just there. You could not see long distances, the horizon was littered with concrete, glass, bricks, branches and leaves. Weather changed rapidly, so a glance at the sky would not suffice to predict how the sky would behave an hour hence. It had few stars that were bright enough to pierce the ever orange glow of sodium street lights. But most importantly, the sky belonged to others. It was cluttered with sky scrapers, entangled in telephone lines, flooded with searchlights, invaded by raucous helicopters, bisected by airplanes and littered with diesel, smog and contrails. The second one established an existential link to the sky, it would be shattered by the flashing lights of a jetliner or the obtrusive actions of a news helicopter.

In Botswana, the sky is huge and it belongs to everybody. There are few planes flying over Gaborone. I never see contrails. About once every two weeks or so, I may hear an airplane in the sky, or a helicopter. But generally, unless you are in the Jo-burg/Gaborone flight path, the noise generated by mankind in Gaborone comes from the ground, not the air. Even the hills of my home state of Vermont echo with the sounds of jet planes depositing contrails at 35,000 feet, carrying a fuselage of passengers from large cities on their way to other large cities, for the most part ignorant of the disturbance recognized by those far below.

Remember how eerie it was for so many of us, in those few days following Sept. 11, 2001, to not hear the racket of noise coming from the sky, to not see the silver bellies of jets, their icy contrails following like billowing streamers? That is my experience virtually every day in Botswana and I love it. I love the silence of the skies, which are pretty much the same here as they have been for millions of years; Stars, planets, moons, asteroids, and galaxies produce the only lights in the sky and birds, bats and insects are the only things that traverse it. Without the clutter and pollution of the sky, I am again enjoying nuances in the shades of lighting and the sunsets that I took for granted or ignored for years.

Thursday, November 22, 2007

Thanksgiving in Botswana

Though this is probably obvious to all, thanksgiving is not a holiday celebrated all over the world. One of the places it's not celebrated is Botswana. I am sure that the people here do give thanks, often multiple times a day for their lives, their families, friends, loved ones, the bounty of food, clean water, clean air, possessions that they have, etc.. They just don't make a national holiday out of it. That being said, I am an American and a New Englander, and thanksgiving is my favorite holiday of the year. This is not the first time I've been out of the country for thanksgiving and it's not the first time that I have witnessed this holiday passing while not being in the presence of my family. But because of the circumstances, this thanksgiving has been one to remember for a long long time.

Part of what makes it a memorable thanksgiving is that it simply doesn't feel like thanksgiving to me. Today it was 83 degrees (F) and the only reason it was that cool was because it was cloudy for much of the day and we had two major thunderstorms roll through, one of which dropped ball bearing-sized hailstones that melted away within a fraction of a second in the heat and puddles of rain-water. The day was not all pelting water and hailstones; Shanthi came home from work, around 6 in the evening, walking beneath a rainbow. The rainbow made me smile and reminded me to be thankful of the beauty around us every day. I am thankful for all the good things I have in my life...families that support me and love me, Shanthi, my wonderful and loyal friends and acquaintances, my health, my talents and what wit I have about me, my cat Clove, who makes our exile here in Botswana feel like home more than anything else.

Lately the temperature has reached 95-100+ EVERY DAY. It's been humid, which is apparently quite odd for such a long period of time. But then again...who knows how long. The change in seasons has been so gradual that I find myself wondering what happened to October, and Edna's visit, two weeks ago this weekend seems like ages ago. Time goes by and you don't even know it. One day I feel I'll wake up and find that I'm 42 and I'll say to myself "What...just...happened?"

So it's thanksgiving. Shanthi and I are vegetarians. Hmmm. Our friends in the Baylor program here (Baylor College of Medicine has a program here in pediatrics, much like Penn's program in adult medicine) were hosting a thanksgiving dinner and invited us. Or maybe we just shouldered our way into getting an invitation. Either way, we were going. We decided to bake Spanikopita (one of my pot-luck go-to's) because...well, they don't have chestnuts in Botswana (well...none that I could find), and my first choice, a chestnut-loaf that my mother traditionally bakes for thanksgiving (all vegetarians when I was growing up) was thus a non-starter.

So I bought up all the frozen and fresh spinach available at the Riverwalk Mall on thanksgiving day (one good thing about it not being a holiday: shops are open). 2 bags frozen, 3 bags fresh. Bought two tubs of feta, a pack of portobello mushrooms. Phyllo dough from Woolworth's. We had garlic, onions, herbs and butter at home. Good to go. While the pies were baking (had to put them in the oven sequentially as there wasn't enough space for both pies at once), I called my parents on skype and spoke with my mother for long time, which was great. Skype is both a godsend and an instrument of depression. On the one hand, it's wonderful to be able to talk to our families and friends. On the other hand, it makes me miss being with them all the more...sigh...

I digress...So...here's one of the two pies I made: Here are some Stuffed Gem Squash that Rebeca made: So we then went over to the Baylor housing complex. It was great fun. There were about 20 people there, all great people to hang out with. We shared food and drink and humor. Here's the table before people stood or sat around it: Here are the people standing around the table: Michelle and Rebeca had a laugh while Parth helped Shanthi (and Jeff, who's somewhat out-of-focus in the background) re-set the table centerpiece that Jeff had accidentally knocked over: Jeff and Jennifer brought in their new, super-cute puppy who was especially fond of running to and fro while vigorously wagging his tail, much to everybody's delight: The puppy seemed to take a liking to Sam (turkey = great bribe for puppy love): On a sad note, I called my sister when we got home from the dinner, but she was not at home. I still have not had the chance to speak with her since we arrived in Botswana :( The 10 hour time difference between Gaborone and Seattle makes this more difficult. Hopefully I will get a chance to catch up with her soon.

Thursday, November 15, 2007

Hole in the Sky

After arriving in Botswana, we had a month of sunny weather, during which time I saw exactly zero clouds in the sky. After the first month was up, we awoke to a gray day, with a ceiling of ominous clouds overhead. I was delighted. It even rained a little, for about 3 minutes! Towards the end of the day, I finally spotted a break in the clouds, though it was fleeting. I snapped a photo and wrote this poem. As most of my poetry goes, it' s not in any proper poetic meter.


Hole in the Sky

Through this hole in the sky
lives the Everyday Sun
The Sun that bakes the Earth
that draws the life that water brings
from the dirt and the skins
of plants and animals
The omnipotent oven that roasts
all that dare to roam in the mid-day
forcing them to live at the mercy of the whims
of the winds
or the placement of a shadow

Through this hole in the sky
the Everyday Sun beams
It does not enjoy wasting it power
on obstinate clouds
interlopers that they are
upon a forbidden domain
The Everyday Sun grows petulant
and angry
with the hanging platform of gray
that defies its righteousness
that withstands its beatings
for a single day

Through this hole in the sky
the Everyday Sun creates an opening
in which to force its Halligan-like rays
and reclaim its dominance

And the clouds
who have given us this day of respite
who have stood eye to eye with Apollo
Lorenzo
and blinded him with their veils
These sheltering clouds
wandering wayward across the desert
hundreds of miles of sand beneath then
hundreds of miles of sand behind them
hundreds of miles of sand before them
have fought a good fight

But they cannot last against the might of the Everyday Sun

The hills of Zimbabwe are too far distant
and the Everyday Sun has time yet
to obliterate its amorphous, vapid opposition
and shine on the desert
this day
as it does
every day

Wednesday, November 14, 2007

The Clove Saga, Part 2 (Long!)


The next step in the plan was to figure out how to get Clove into Botswana. First, I considered taking a boat. Of course because Botswana is a land-locked nation, this would require some over-land travel, but the thought of taking a cruise ship or what-have-you across the Atlantic just seemed so grand it was hard to pass up the opportunity. So I did some investigation into transport to Cape Town. I kept imagining the wide open sea, the strength-giving ocean winds entering my cozy, gently rocking cabin where I would read books, muse upon matters and live a life of Riley for a week or two until the sheer cliffs of Table Mountain breached the horizon far a’port. How could such a trip be any better?….*sigh*

I’ll tell you how: If I first flew with Clove to Brasil, set up camp for a spell with my dear friends Ludmila and Ze in Sao Paulo, had cold beers with them while playing multiple rounds of hearts and listening to good local Brasilian music, and THEN hopped on the steamer heading from Sao Paulo across the waist of the Atlantic to Cape Town; I simply cannot imagine a trip sweeter than that. Oh except for one thing…crotchety Clove would be my bunk mate. None-the-less, I plowed on with such fanciful plans but when I put the plan into action and actually searched for ocean liners plying the depths of the South Atlantic, there were none. No passenger lines doing the old Sao Paulo- Cape Town circuit. So there fell my dreams in a whirlpool of untapped commercial potentials.

Back to the drawing board otherwise known as airline timetables. Ugh. On our first journey to southern Africa, Shanthi and I booked our tickets through the friendly Upul’s Travel service, based in CA, who specializes in travel to Sri Lanka, though that was not quite our final destination…though one of these days, inevitably, it shall be. They plunked us into the comfy seats on Emirates, who entertained us with some 200 moives, games and TV show episodes (including 5 or so of “The Office”) and some delicious Indian-style vegetarian meals as we floated across to Dubai and then down to Jo-burg. So, despite the inevitable luggage loss, we booked again on Emirates, salivating with thoughts of the comfort of the upcoming transit despite the fact that the trip route had us flying a bit past the continent of Africa, only to track back later.

However, in making such travel arrangements, I was shown to be an innocent, a novice in the world of pet transport…or so I was soon to find out…only to later to find that it really didn’t matter what I did, in the end, as the whole affair would eventually be marked down in the journal of my life under the heading “Fiascoes”.

First, there was the matter of gaining permission to bring one female, spayed cat into Botswana. But to get to Botswana, you must travel through South Africa. And therein lies the crux of the problem. You see, in order to bring a pet into South Africa, they must have all the appropriate papers, which includes a veterinary permit issued by the South African Department of Agriculture. In addition, the animal must also be listed on the ship’s manifold and thus can only enter the country through the cargo hold of the airplane. While that sounds simple enough, what it means is that Clove will have to be checked in as Cargo in Dubai. Oh and it turns out that to enter the U.A.E., the cat must also travel as cargo and have the proper permits.

I promptly contacted the South African Embassy in the United States and asked them what to do. I did the same with the Botswana embassy and the embassy to the U.A.E. S.A. and Botswana both informed me that I needed to contact their offices in Pretoria and Gaborone, respectively, and have them send the proper documentation to me in the States. They could not simply fax the forms because these forms needed to be officially stamped government documents. The U.A.E., failed to respond to any of my queries after three attempts by phone and one by email. Huh.

I then called Emirates airlines to make arrangements with them to transport Clove. They told me that they have a company in the States that subcontracts all this business and to get in touch with them. So I called AirAnimals to find out the scoop. Basically what they told me is this:

1) Clove has to go into Dubai and out of Dubai as cargo

2) Transferring Clove from the Delta shuttle (from Boston to JFK), where she’ll be in the cabin, to Emirates Cargo would involve me leaving the security area (a given anyway since the flights are in different terminals), finding transport over to the cargo terminals, checking the cat in, going back to the terminal with Emirates and going through security, check-in , etc. How long was my layover? Oh 3 hours? Well, at JFK this process can take the BETTER PART OF A DAY.

3) Just imagine how much time this would take on the ground in Dubai. Imagine you having to go through U.A.E. customs to get over to the cargo area, negotiate with those folks, go back through customs. Fughettabaddit, it will take you a day and a half. You have a 3 hour lay over in Dubai? Oh…um…it won’t be possible.

4) Fly a European carrier like Lufthansa or KLM. The transfer in Europe will be SO MUCH EASIER. Plus, you can bring the cat in the cabin for the first leg.

So, I had pictures in my mind of dealing with grounds-workers in Dubai who were more interested in their cigarette break than getting my cat switched on flights. And I compared that to the renowned efficiency of the Germans and my mind was made up. Lufthansa, here we come. So I switched our flights to Lufthansa. What I failed to take into account in this whole process was the looming juggernaut of American incompetence, a disease whose symptoms can be described as arrogance, indifference and false omnipotence.

Moving onward and upward on the necessary pet permits, please allow me to summarize:

1) It ended up costing me $142 to ship a single sheet of paper from Botswana to the United States, via DHL. You know that the poor Motswana working in the DHL office in Gaborone was not paid $142. Try $1. As if! Of course, DHL would not allow the fellow to pick up the permit until I gave them a name of someone in the office at the Ministry of Agriculture to pick it up from, despite the fact that, according to the actual Minister of Agriculture (who I spoke with over the phone at 2 am some morning on the east coast), DHL does this all the time and they know where the office is and where the “outbox” in the office is.

2) South Africa required a fee of some $100 Rand (about $16) which had to be wire transferred. The wire transfer cost $35, over twice the amount that I was transferring.

3) Forms for Germany could be printed off PDF files downloaded from their web site (yay for efficiency!).

4) Once I had received all the forms, I had to get an identifying microchip placed in Clove and renew her rabies vaccination. Cost of some $200 plus or minus.

5) The USDA, who needs to certify all the permit forms, at first balked at certifying more than one. Their argument is that once the cat leaves the US, she is no longer under their jurisdiction. Therefore, my 12-hour layover in Germany would mean that despite Clove’s birth and entire 9 years of life in the US, because she’s staying in Germany for 12 hours, she is now a German cat and the German verterinary authorities should be the ones to stamp their certified approval that the cat is in good health and suitable for entry into South Africa. Likewise with the South African authorities with the cat on its way to Botswana. I basically called them on the complete idiocy of this, sent them all three forms and a check to individually cover the costs of all three. The trick was that the South African permit had to be stamped NO MORE THAN 10 days before the date that the cat was to enter S.A. So…I had to FEDEX the forms to the USDA and have them FEDEX’d back to me as I was leaving for CA on my last day of work (August 15th), returning on the 20th and leaving for Gabs on the 23rd. They did it without complaints (see, I knew they were bluffing), and it cost me $46 less than I had paid. So I now have to file to get a refund, thanks to their mis-quotation of the price.

So, permits were in hand, officially stamped and ready to go.

The next step was calling Lufthansa to get the pet travel on the flight set up and request a vegetarian meal. I was about to enter the downward spiral that led to this whole saga being firmly entered in the journal of my life, as I have mentioned earlier, under so unfortunate a heading, shared with few other tales that I can readily glimpse while thumbing through the ToC.

Tuesday, November 13, 2007

Edna comes to visit!

One of my best friends, Edna, came by to visit us for the weekend. Edna lives in Boston but was traveling through South Africa for just over a week. She had some time to kill as her boyfriend Lars was not arriving in S.A. for a couple of days, so she flew up to Gaborone and became our first visitor. Edna and I go WAY back. She is a second sister to me. First off, she was born the day before I was. We met while in college and were flatmates for about 11 years spanning the end of college, pretty much all of graduate school, and up until the end of 2006. Edna is so well known and well loved in my family that my parents and my sister are always kept current with how Edna is doing. So it was rather fitting for me that our first visitor from abroad would be Edna. Of course, Eddie was very happy to see Clove once again, having lived with Clove for 8.5 years. We're not sure if Clove was able to recognize Edna, but Ed made sure Clove knew that she was happy to see her.

Potato Pizza


Shanthi is a big fan of both pizza and potatoes. If you too are a fan of both pizza and potatoes, you are in for the ultimate treat at Cambridge 1, the fabulous pizza restaurant in Harvard Square, Cambridge, MA. On the menu is a potato pizza. Of course they probably have a better name for it, but essentially it is a flatbread, super thin crust pizza topped with fire-roasted potato slices, chopped rosemary, parmesan cheese, healthy dollops of garlic, rosemary and sage-infused mashed potatoes and topped, once out of the oven, with strands of fresh scallions. It's a potato and pizza lovers dream! We decided to recreate this pizza here in Botswana from scratch and despite not having a brick, wood-fired pizza oven, or parmesan cheese, I think we've done pretty well, re-creating a pizza that has drawn rave reviews from all who have tasted it.

Where we live

Shanthi and I live in what is a pretty western-looking apartment complex, fairly luxurious by local standards, in a relatively posh neighborhood in Gaborone. We are a few blocks from the American, Indian, and Kenyan ambassadors' houses and the property abuts the Northside Primary School. Our housing complex has a pool and well maintained gardens with some lovely trees, plants and flowers. Some of the trees host weaver birds who build these elaborate nests that often dangle from branches, attached with a cleverly woven grass twine. Apparently the males of the species are tasked with the construction while the females play the role of inspectors. If the nest is not quite up to snuff, the female bird simply cuts it loose, and the male is then forced to try again.

Saturday, November 10, 2007

Who We Are

For those wondering what we look like, this should cover it. I don't tend to take photos of myself, unless I am sending some in to the Boston Globe for a "Red-Sox Player Look-Alike" photo submission...So here I am: Go Red Sox! Força Barça! Here is the love of my life, my beautiful and loving wife, Shanthi: Here's a photo that includes some of the main characters that will appear in this blog in the future...from left to right: Shanthi, Rebeca, Sam, myself, Rim, and...Rebeca's friend Steve who was visiting (and thus exits blog left at this point): And here's another shot of what will be recurring characters, I'm sure, with Derek, Rim, Shanthi and JC. Note how JC has to ease down like a giraffe to fit in the photo. He's 6'4" or so tall. He's also wearing a Burton Snowboarding T-shirt. We live in a desert: Oh, and lest we forget...Clove:

Establishing Home Base

Shanthi and I arrived at our new home: an empty apartment with white-pink-grayish tiles. It has a kitchen with faux-granite countertops and cupboards,a pantry with adequate shelving and a stove w/ oven (this was a huge plus as it meant we did not have to buy one). The apartment has one and a half bathrooms, two bedrooms and a large living room with a sliding glass door that opens out to a small patio. There is also a back door that leads to a small outdoor area enclosed with high cement walls -- the perfect spot for a grill, if we ever get one. Instead, the washing machine lives out there. Yes, outside...somewhat of a problem when it rains...

Our first order of business was to establish power and water, sign the lease, and then go out and buy appliances and furniture. Shanthi, who arrived two days earlier than I (foreshadowing for future installments of The Clove Saga), had already taken care of all but appliance shopping by the time I arrived and had also managed to get us both mobile phones.

Over the course of the first week, we purchased and took delivery of:


A refrigerator/freezer, a washing machine, a double bed and mattress, a desk, a nightstand, a dining table, four chairs, plates, bowls, mugs, glasses, pots, frying pans, cooking utensils, knives, a tea kettle, a toaster, an iron, dish rack, bathroom mat, cleaning supplies, groceries, duvet and duvet cover, etc. We started with an empty house and ended up, at the end of the week, with something we could more or less call a home.

Next we had to get curtains for the windows. Because the windows and glass doors were all unconventional in size, we ended up buying fabric and having these made. The tailor did a pretty terrible job sewing the curtains and all but one of them were too short for the windows. We hung them anyway. At that point, we were too tired to go through the process again. As you can see, one set of curtains was so short that we had to hang them from a curtain rod that was itself hung from the proper curtain rod!

Friday, November 9, 2007

The Clove Saga, Part 1 (Long)


My cat, Clove, is a large, cranky but lovable hair shedding machine that has known me since before she could even open her eyes. I held her as a tiny kitten and a few weeks later, welcomed her to my home. She is mostly white, with beige and charcoal grey patches, generally loves to receive cuddles around her face, but not so much on her body, has a penchant for “making biscuits” on my tummy as I drift off to sleep, and likes to sleep with her head resting in my hand.

While the plans for moving to Botswana had been put into place at least 6 months before the move was to take place, I had never quite solidified plans regarding Clove. You might think that before choosing various objects to bring across the latitude of the Atlantic and down the longitudinal length of the continent of Africa, to the small dusty, desert city that is the capital of Botswana, that my first priority in planning would be to figure out what to do with a 16 pound, somewhat testy, 9-year old cat.

I had decided that if I was going to sign on to the Botswana Adventure™, Clove was going to come as well. See, as much as I profess that Clove is totally attached to me and is virtually inconsolably unhappy in my absence, and have numerous witnesses that I can call upon to vouch to that effect, I must admit that I am quite attached to her in the way that most pet owners are attached to their pets. Thus, it had always occurred to me that I would bring Clove to Botswana with me, and despite the leading questions of my friend Christine, who was much more appropriately concerned about the logistics and timing of the thing than I, I never really gave much thought as to how this was to come about.

By about a month and a half before T=0, I had resigned to the idea that it was probably best to leave Clove behind in the States. I had secretly hoped that my roommate Anu would somehow volunteer to take on Clove. Clove is a somewhat cranky cat, and for some reason, unknown to neither me nor Anu, had quite taken to Anu. Actually, we do know the reason: food. Anu diligently fed Clove on the many occasions when I was gone for the night/weekend/week, and even on many occasions where I simply overslept. At 16 pounds, you can imagine that one thing Clove loves dearly is food, and it follows that she would be particularly amorous to the owner of the hand that feeds her. When Anu failed to spontaneously volunteer a 10-month stint at Clove-sitting, I was forced to come out and ask her, but being such a huge favor to ask of your friends, I attempted to do so in an indirect way. I emailed her. And cc’ed my former roommate Edna to spread the risk of the investment. In the email, I asked whether she (or my former roommate Edna) knew “anybody” who would be interested in taking care of the rotund, cranky beast for 10-11 months. The answer was made clear and I was then forced to resort to the fall back plan of passing Clove off on my parents.

My parents live in Vermont in a beautiful small house that has been shaped and re-shaped by my dad, with the help of his many friends who are in the business of shaping houses, over the years. It is surrounded with immaculate gardens, all plotted and tended by my parents, each with different themes and settings. There is a lovely sloping garden of primroses and hostas, a quaint stone path meandering through to provide the everyday garden stroller an intimate view of the varied flowering plants at their feet, under the shade of some trees of adequate but not intimidating height. In this same glade lie a few planted trees, and, importantly, what is referred to as “My Tree”. “My Tree” is actually a misnomer. It is a young oak tree, just over 10 years old that I gave to my father as a birthday gift. I grew the sapling from an acorn that I collected in 1996 while lunching under a particularly shady oak near Andover, MA. Each time I come home, I pay a visit to the tree to see how it is getting along, and my father is always happy to give me news of the tree’s wellbeing and talk about how deeply red its leaves turn in the fall. Last winter, the tree was gravely harmed by a snowfall that laidened the tree with snow so wet and heavy that it bent the young tree’s trunk to breaking, and my father was forced to prune the upper half of the tree to minimize the risk of infection and rot. The tree has recovered, somewhat, but perhaps it will never return to the tall, graceful, slender rising oak that it had once promised. Now it is more likely that it will display the architecture of a two-headed tree, which in the end may be nice as those are often the most fun to climb.

This garden is hemmed by a hedge of cedar to the south, and a stand of evergreens to the west, which is best to avoid if you tend to be the careless type as the evergreens mark the territory one could call the “outdoor litter box” for all household pets.

Veering round the cedar barrier, you come into the spiral garden. This plot was designed with paths that twist inward in such a way that the everyday stroller will always see new plants and flowers as they cast their gaze upon the garden beds along their walk. It’s quite beautiful in the summertime with the bee balm and delphiniums in flower. To the east of the spiral garden, and cut into the side of the hill is the small garden of heather, perched atop a curving stone wall. Circling back toward the house, the vegetable garden lies off the east, the Christmas tree stands tall and singular above the primrose garden, and you’ll pass the remnants of the first flower garden at my parents house, now simply a bed with a lilac bush or two. Behind the house lies another garden and on the west side of the house, another lawn with lilac, rose bushes and apple trees.

It is to this idyllic setting that I was to deposit Clove as a last resort. I say as a last resort because there were some caveats to this option. First, as the astute may have inferred, reading between the lines, my parents already had other pets. A cheerful Belgian Shepherd named Hanna and a cool-as-a-cucumber cat named Alex. Hanna and Alex are great friends, despite Hanna’s proclivity for a bit of cat-chasing, all in good fun of course. While Clove has lived with another cat in the past (Edna’s cat Pandora), she has rarely interacted with a dog and I was somewhat worried about how she would take to the situation. In addition, my parents’ pets are outdoors animals. Sure, they let them inside the house off and on throughout the day, but come bed time, it’s “out!” and the furry animals are sent packing before the fur-less ones trudge up to sleep. In the winter, on particularly cold nights, the furry ones are sometimes allowed some respite in the warmth of the house, but otherwise they huddle together in Hanna’s doghouse, keeping close to conserve warmth. Clove, being an indoor cat for her 9 years, would likely have some trouble adjusting to this, a life outdoors, but I had no doubt that she would love it in the end.

There was only one problem. My parents balked at the idea of keeping an indoor cat and I cannot blame them for balking. It is their house. The pets they keep live on their terms. Why should I expect any exceptions? I assumed that if they were to take care of Clove would live inside for a while until she adjusted, then gradually be shown the door. My parents have lost familiarity with such things as litter boxes, massive amounts of cat hair in the house, cats scratching on furniture, etc. Their cats have always done their business outside, whether it be littering, shedding, or scratching on objects. So upon discussion with me parents, it was made clear that the Vermont option was truly a last resort.

So I went looking for options. I emailed Christine, who is rather connected in the cat world. She is a wonderful person who has a deep love for all animals and is well connected in the pet-sitting scene in the Boston area. She recommended that I speak with another woman, who posted my email to a mailing list of cat-foster care folks, etc. The thing about email, which most people know, is that it never dies. It’s quite easy to pass the thing on, without a second thought, to your friends or acquaintances, and there’s an undefined length of time, the critical email event horizon, during which recipients will read the email and decide that it is worthwhile sending the email on others on their contact list, or even drafting a direct reply to the email. After a certain point in time, the email becomes dated. It is read but the reader realizes that the information is dated and they cut short a reply or a forward and simply delete the email, breaking the chain. Or it sits in an inbox, unread until someday that inbox is archived or cleaned out. Or it gets deleted without being opened. My hypothesis is that the relationship between the time-stamp of an email sent out to a large list of recipients and the readers[slash]passers-on per unit time post-initial send follows a distinct distribution, and my guess is poisson. Somebody could write a dissertation on this. Probably somebody already has.

So my email to Christine’s friend got sent around the horn and suddenly I was receiving emails from random people that I’ve never met, commiserating with my situation. Most of them were of the variety of “I wish I could help you out, but unfortunately ____. I will ask around for you, and pass your email on to my friend(s).” Others were interested in taking Clove, as they had small children that might like to have a cat about the house. My good friend Jason was interested as his son Louis has apparently become fond of pets, and he thought that maybe it would be good for Louis. I adore Louis. He’s an adventurous toddler, brimming with character, determination and spunk. He has a great sense of curiosity about him, and he is not shy to take on new things. But given that Clove occasionally hisses and swats a paw at me, I had to admit to Jason that Clove probably wasn’t the appropriate cat for Louis. I similarly turned down all other solicitors that proposed to take on Clove as a companion for their children.

I did receive one rather odd email; one person emailed to say that my parents were essentially insensitive jerks for not readily accepting Clove and good luck with finding a place for her. I was baffled. I didn’t know this person from Adam, and yet they felt qualified to criticize my parents. I deleted the email promptly.

I decided to email the administrator for Shanthi’s job in Botswana and ask her what the prospects are for domestic house cats in Botswana. Her reply set the whole thing in motion. She said that they had everything the young (well, 9 year old), healthy (well, 16 pounds) cat needed to survive in Botswana. Hills/Iams/Purina cat chow, litter, vets, everything. I also emailed a vet on the ground there. Apparently, the vet school associated with UPenn also sends vets to Botswana, so we’d have access to experienced vets while in Botswana. So I thought about it and made a decision.

I would bring Clove to Botswana. It was early July. I had a month and a half to make this happen.

The Story


I have asked myself, “How did I get here?” Not once, not twice…multiple times. At least 3 times a week. The 5 second version is simple. My wife took a job as a hospitalist at Princess Marina Hospital in Gaborone, Botswana and I came along for the adventure. But nothing is that simple, is it? Truth be told, I came here on an airplane, arriving at the dusty Gaborone airport on a late August afternoon, exhausted from a journey that took two days in flinging me across three continents an ocean and a sea. And I arrived frazzled as I had lost my cat. Yes, my cat. A 16 pound cat, in fact. One might think it impossible to lose touch with such a behemoth of fur and whiskers, but considering that nearly everybody arriving in Gaborone arrives sans one or more of their accompaniments, finding that my cat had gone missing was not surprising…just severely distressing. Who brings a cat from the U.S. all the way to Botswana? Ah…who indeed?