The chicken diaries: Babies

I became a parent to two chickens I named Sitfwatfwa (snow) and Thandi (love) in January 2017. This is their story.

My first chicks hatched about two months ago and the second group hatched two weeks after that. Watching these babies grow up has been adorable.

I was worried about Thandi being a good mother, but she has continued to keep her five chicks that are now pullets with her. They wander on their own for part of the day, but they reunite regularly and sleep together in the tree. I call them my demon babies because they have started flying into my garden. They ate my broccoli first, and now they just dig. Fortunately they are nothing more than a nuisance.

Sitfwatfwa on the other hand is an unhappy mother. She has abandoned her babies multiple times and finally kicked them out for good last week. They are too young to sleep on their own in the tree. She started with six chicks and they have slowly dwindled to three. I hope these make it.

I tried having a photo shoot with Thandi’s babies, but that did not work out. Sitfwatfwa acquiesced and I was able to take many photos with the chicks before they grew feathers.

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Thandi and her babies in their apartment.

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One of Thandi’s babies

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Sitfwatfwa’s eggs

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Sitfwatfwa and her babies

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The baby sitting down is so cute.

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Sitfwatfwa loves sitting down and eating at the same time.

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Sitfwatfwa’s three remaining babies taking a dust bath.

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How I spent May’s Swaziland PCV stipend

May was a glorious month. 

The first week was spent in Lusaka, Zambia, at a fancy hotel with included and amazing breakfast and lunch. Dinners out were cheap and paid for with a Peace Corps stipend. 
The second week was spent at the training center in Swaziland for MST, where all meals were catered. 

That left two weeks with four weeks of money! I did not save as much as I should have because of Bushfire, where there was a delightful assortment of food. I forgot to put Bushfire expenses on my form, which is about E400 for food, drinks, and transport. The food was expensive, and I brought my own for most of my breakfasts and lunches. 

 I also made a trip to the office for a meeting and the SOJO. Like always, I didn’t put those transport or food expenses here because I get reimbursed. 

 

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Reflections on life after a year as a PCV in Swaziland

I wasn’t sure that I was going to write something in honor of being in Swaziland for one year until I sat down and the words came out of my fingers. Why have a countdown when I am content and happy to be here?

Saying that my time here has been hard would be unfair. I came to Swaziland extremely well prepared for having only about three weeks between final medical clearance and departure, and I have many people and experiences to thank for being ready for this.

Having a huge desire to learn about and experience other people and places than the ones I grew up with really made me want to join the Peace Corps. Combine that with a love of working outside of an office, talking to people, and learning about their problems, and Peace Corps is the perfect place to be.

Learning to love and live more in tune with nature and wild spaces during my time in Salt Lake City has made rural living easier.

Having traveled to Ghana to study the storage and disposal of poisons during my MPH made me feel like a journalist again and that has continued here.

I was excited to live with a family in Swaziland for two years. My moms in Salzburg, Romania, and Kenya all gave me excellent trial runs for an epically fantastic homestay.

What has been hard has been being oddly alone but surrounded by so many people who are always watching and do not want to get to know me, but they do want to marry me.

Thinking about HIV is hard here too. Its scars are everywhere. Some days I wish I did not know the statistics so that I did not have to think about all the young women who engage in transactional sex because they need money for their bus fares or because they would like airtime for their cell phones. It is also jarring to think about how one-third of these same young women have been forced to have sex by the time they finish high school. And then half, yes, HALF, of females my age in Swaziland are HIV positive.

Learning siSwati has been its own challenge as well, but that’s more of a personal problem. To say I have failed at siSwati is an understatement, but it is how I feel most days. There are many things I can blame for this failure such as extremely limited practice resources, a teaching style that was not my learning style, and too fast of a pace too early, but they all still come down to me not being able to remember vocab words. It was hard enough in high school practicing German vocab with an extremely patient mother, and here I floundered.

On a happier note, it does seem that the year mark is a turning point in my community. It has been hard finding willing counterparts, but I have two projects moving forward nicely (English Club and an empowerment club for girls), and I think I have found someone as excited about a jump rope exercise program as me. The foundation has also been laid for expanding a water system but a lack of individual contributions (everyone was out of money from contributing to the chief’s wedding fund) has currently halted the project. Other projects are in limbo, too, including gardening trainings (we need land from the traditional council) and financial training (there’s no manual in siSwati).

My accomplishments this past year include growing at least 100 pounds of butternut and baking more in the past nine months than I likely did in the previous three years. I have more or less integrated into my community, gained a few friends and allies, and improved the English of my family members. I have a few favorite songs in siSwati and have learned so much about Swazi culture.

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My harvest. I had already given a roughly equal amount away straight from the vine.

Make (mother) always tells me that I force her to think differently about the world and its ways, which I think is an accomplishment, too.

Make also has me in training to be a perfect Swazi wife. There are plenty of Swazis who want to marry me to varying degrees of seriousness. Fortunately, babe (father) set a ridiculously high lobola, or bride price (140 cows; the average is 13), and I added two elephants just to be safe. It is entertaining to play along and tell these men that I do not cook incwancwa, a sour porridge; I will not wash their clothes; and that I loathe washing dishes so he better have a dishwasher. Those three points scare most men away.

But just in case, make has me learning the responsibilities of a Swazi wife, like gardening, butchering chickens, planting maize, and traditional dancing. I am even planning to dance at Umhlanga (the Reed Festival) this year, like all young women in Swaziland do. And before that, I should be participating in a teka, the first step of a traditional wedding. My eldest bhuti (brother) is planning to marry the mother of his children, and the teka makes her part of our family and his official wife.

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Umhlanga, the Reed Dance

This has also been a year of many firsts:

  • I can talk to myself in a jumble of three or four languages now. I can’t decide on the number because my brain doesn’t do such a great job at distinguishing Austrian from German any more.
  • I have my first pseudo-pets (my chickens).
  • I have been an active accomplice to the death of chickens.
  • I pee in a bucket almost daily. It’s either that or using the cockroach infested toilet at night, and I never again need another cockroach to walk on me.
  • I regularly get up at 5:30 a.m. to go to the office. But don’t worry, I still hate the morning.
  • I have not seen snow, but I’m taking care of that (I hope) in Lesotho next month.
  • This is the first summer in 28 years or so that I won’t go for a swim in Lake Erie. I look at a photo of a lake sunset every day, though.
  • This is the longest stretch of time I have been away from the U.S.

And finally, has Swaziland and Peace Corps been what I expected? First, let me say that I really tried to form as few expectations as possible. I was lucky in that I had experienced a few corners of Africa before coming to Swaziland by having completed schoolwork in Ghana and been a tourist in Kenya. I was prepared for a much more physically demanding life where I would have to bike or ride in a definitely non-road-worthy van for hours to buy rice and beans, collect water from a disgusting cesspool, and live in a mud and stick home with a grass roof with no electricity.

My life is more or less none of those things. PCVs in Swaziland are not assigned bicycles, although I just requested one to cut down on some transport costs and to get more exercise. Sometimes the khumbis (transport vans) are not road worthy (I rode one where the breaks failed as we were going downhill a couple months ago. Fortunately it was Sunday and there wasn’t much traffic.), but generally the khumbis are well functioning.

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The view from the front row of the khumbi just outside Manzini.

I buy 98 percent of my food at a grocery store with refrigerated and freezer aisles. Almost everything I could need is available within a reasonable distance from my home. I can even go to the big shopping plaza called Gables that is straight from America – or in this case, South Africa – and has two large grocery stores, a movie theater, restaurants, and a variety of other home goods and clothing shops, and can be back at my house in a couple hours unless I stop to use the free internet at the Embassy, in which case my trip is an all-day affair. This means that I eat nearly the same food as I did in Salt Lake minus most of the bad stuff. I make even more from scratch than I did there. And I never cook rice and beans after a failed bean cooking that could have burnt my house down. Now, I give beans to make and she cooks them for me.

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I have even impressed myself a few times with some of the food I have prepared here, such as this cinnamon apple custard pie. Two other dishes that have blown me away are chocolate babkha bread and a chicken pot pie.

Water was a challenge during my training period, but now I have water in my yard. It ran 100 percent from the start of the rains until a couple weeks ago. It will be more hit and miss until it rains again, but I never hurt for water.

My house was constructed from bricks, has a sometimes-leaky corrugated metal roof, and regular electricity for one light bulb and outlets to charge my electronics and plug in my stoven and fridge and fan in the hot months. I have windows on three sides (yay cross-breeze!).

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My house is the square beige one in the middle.

I couldn’t ask for anything else when it comes to my living experience. On the other hand, I could and do ask for many things from Peace Corps. There are many things that could be improved here.

Let’s take the reason why we are here in Swaziland: 28 percent of the population has HIV. Sure, that might be only about 300,000 people, but 28 percent of people living in one tiny area are HIV positive! This is a problem.

I think about HIV projects in two ways. You can do something that directly helps reduce the spread of HIV such as condom demonstrations, linking people who are positive to care, or working with young men to change how they treat women, or you can do something that secondarily could reduce the spread of HIV such as building a library so children can be more proficient at English and stay in school.

Peace Corps Swaziland promotes the secondary projects more than the primary ones. Volunteers want to do the primary projects, but we receive little training on them in Swaziland. Health volunteers also are not paired with any organization such as a clinic, health post, or NGO operating in our communities. We are left to make our own connections and find out what is (or is not) happening in our communities, which makes doing those primary projects even more difficult.

Making changes here is hard, but there are a few of us trying. Another PCV and I are rewriting the community assessment manual. A newly formed HIV committee I am a member of is pushing for more trainings and practical take-home activities for volunteers. Additionally, the program’s five-year review is this year, where many of our comments will be heard in order to improve Peace Corps Swaziland.

So, that has been the last year. It has generally moved quite fast and I often wonder where the time has gone. I look forward to an even better second year in my community (that starts September 1).

Thank you all for your thoughts, support, cards, packages, and messages. It means so much to me to know that you are thinking about me. If you have questions, please ask!

Salani kahle (all of you stay well),

Alison noma Hloniphile

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Wednesday photo: Lost baby chick

A few days ago I heard a chick crying in the yard. I headed outside and found a fresh baby wandering the front yard. I assumed it belonged to the group of babies that just hatched and would eventually be reunited.

It turns out, this baby does not belong to any of our hens. No one knows where it came from. It has cried and cried all day every day. I kept joking about how if I put it in my pocket, I could keep it safe and it would stop crying.

Yesterday operation likhikhi (pocket) commenced and sisi and make caught the baby and we put it in my skirt pocket. It stopped crying.

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The chick slept in a box inside last night to keep warm. Sadly, I have not seen or heard it today, which usually means the worst.

*Lost baby chick is still alive! It has many weeks to go before it can sleep outside alone though. 

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Wednesday photo: Handmade photo booth props

I have spent the last week in Christmas party preparation mode. 

Christmas in June, you ask? Apparently it’s a Peace Corps thing, and it makes some sense in Swaziland with June having colder weather than December. 

I’m in charge of this year’s party. There have been many times that I wished I wasn’t, but I will follow through with my assignment. It was fun to have a craft project to work on and adapt to Swazi style. 

The Christmas party is actually a Navidad party, complete with Mexican food and dessert and drinks, which meant I couldn’t make only American Christmas photo booth props. I had to make Mexican ones, too. 

Photo booth props complete with sticks from the yard in true Peace Corps style.

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Wednesday photo: Letters from America

Mail is a wonderful thing.

I invited my English club students to be pen pals with the students of one of my high school teachers. They were excited, but ultimately only four wrote letters for me to mail to America. I asked my teacher to have more than four of his students write a letter back in hopes that I could convince more of my students to participate.

When the mail finally arrived, the students were so excited. This is probably the first letter they have ever received.

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I hope the letters make it much easier for them to write responses.

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I may look like this as well when I receive mail.

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How I spent April’s Swaziland PCV stipend

The month of April’s spending was a bit more complicated than March’s. 

I made three trips to the office for the SOJO and for HIV Boot Camp preparations, which cost me a lot of emalangeni that are not reflected on this sheet because I would be reimbursed for the travel, hostel, and some food costs. With those expenses, plus another E500 in tutor costs that are also reimburseable, I was out more than E1000. This is a monthly occurrence that causes me some stress because I am already trying to live on a small amount of money, and compound that with spending one-third of that stipend up front on reimburseable activities, and it creates a bit of a bind. 

In April, I also went on vacation in Mozambique where I spent plenty of money on food and fabric and other touristy activities. I fit what expenses I could into my monthly totals, but still have a separate travel section. 

  

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Wednesday photo: Sunflower

I love watching and tending my plants in my garden perhaps more than I enjoy eating them. 

Watching this sunflower has been very exciting as it grew so tall so fast. It opened its flowers to the world this week, and then I forgot to share it yesterday. 

My sunflower, with trellised beans behind.

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A moment in my life: Bragging bosisi

So many entertaining things happen in my life in Swaziland. These are the moments I will want to remember because they make me laugh, and they show insight into my daily routine. These moments are often hard to photograph and usually last only a minute or two. I will start sharing them with you in this occasional series. 

Within the last two weeks, I have done something with two of my host sisters that has lead to each of them bragging about it with their friends.

First was my youngest sisi’s birthday. She turned 12 and it was her first birthday celebration. I have made a birthday cake for each of my family members of their birthdays. This sisi requested chocolate cake. Additionally my family had a small party for her, eating dinner together at the table and having soda and chips. It was beautiful.

Secondly, my middle sisi was able to attend Bushfire with me thanks to a Swede who could not attend and wanted a Swazi to go in her place. My usually loud sisi was quiet with sensory overload. She had never been somewhere so loud, so crowded, and so expensive. But she got to see Sands perform, a brag-worthy occasion, and then she screamed at me over my photo with Sands, which happened after she had headed home.

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Roundup of what you need to know before joining Peace Corps Swaziland

Sanibonani G15!

I have written a lot about what life is like as a PCV in Swaziland in the last year. This post is just to serve as a compilation of all my useful posts for you and your concerned loved ones.

Organized clothing

All of my clothes reunited and sorted on the day I moved into my permanent site. Not once have I thought I overpacked clothing.

Packing and home life

These are a few of our favorite things

These are a few of my favorite things

My favorite items during PST

What Peace Corps gives us

Packing for Peace Corps Swaziland

Home supplies

Clothing

Homestead hospitality in Swaziland

My permanent home in Swaziland

My first Swazi home

 

A week in the life

Sunday

Monday

Tuesday

Wednesday

Thursday

Friday

Saturday

 

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Traditionally dressed for Incwala.

Life in Swaziland

Dreams and hope in Swaziland

Monthly expenses as a PCV in Swaziland

There’s more to me and America than what Swazis know from TV

Transportation in Swaziland

Home for the holidays and advice on the Peace Corps life

Love and hardship with my training family

Learning about my community and the art of saying no

What’s in a Swazi name?

Upholding the meaning of my first name

Overview of Peace Corps Swaziland’s PST

Lessons learned in the first month as a Peace Corps Trainee

My first day as Ntombi

Impressions of Swaziland

 

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A lion at Hlane

What to do in Swaziland

Top activities in Swaziland

Wildlife at Mbuluzi and Mlawula

Rhinos at Hlane Royal National Park

Lions at Hlane Royal National Park

Elephants at Hlane Royal National Park

 

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Me, my sisi, and my chickens

A moment in my life

A week without professions of love

Peaches

Community meeting

Winter coats in summer

A green lollipop

Mama cow steals my water

Cockroaches

Words of wisdom from Make on cats

Trash bags and rainstorms

Water use and reuse

 

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