Sunday, March 23, 2014

Beach bums & nothing more

Bula, Americans

Perhaps you've also noticed the trend of this blog, in which I really only update after the weekend. I didn't mean to do it that way, that's just how it's happened, because not much exciting really goes on during the week. I'm tempted to make a post with pictures and stories of my mundane, everyday activities on a Wednesday or something.

After our big trip to Leleuvia last weekend, this weekend was much more low key. I didn't have class on Friday, so the weekend started off Thursday night by going out for happy hour with some of the girls in my apartment, which turned into staying out much past happy hour when everybody else decided to hit the town too (sorry, Ma).

Friday night was just a movie night and hanging out with friends, and I remember now that Ice Cube movies suck. Nothing special, but a lovely night nonetheless.

Yesterday, though, almost everybody in 10th hall took a trip to the beach. It was a public beach close to Uprising, the resort we stayed at the first week in Fiji. It had nothing on Leleuvia's waters, but it's a beach in Fiji so I'm not going to be the one to complain. The waves broke on shore and were much bigger, and I felt like I was 10 years old on a summer Florida trip again while playing in them. No big activities like surfing or paddling this time, just a day of sun and sand. Maybe a little too much sun and sand though, because by the time I got off the bus and back to the apartment around 5, I headed straight to bed exhausted and with a migraine. I only meant to take a nap, but it ended up being almost 5 hours long, and might have lasted longer if Sami didn't call me asking where I was (they were having a party I forgot about).


In other news, our water is back on! Most of eastern Viti Levu had the water shut off yesterday for maintenance or something around 6 pm, and it didn't come back on until around that time today. I spent the day stinky and in need of a shower, and you wouldn't believe how incredibly disgusting the bathroom got (8 people, 3 toilets that don't flush... you get the picture). Fiji life, I suppose. Things just don't always work here.



Tuesday, March 18, 2014

A weekend in pics

Bula, friends and family!

Well, I think I found heaven on earth this weekend. A dozen friends and myself all took a weekend vacation to Leleuvia Island and it was the most beautiful place I've ever been. I'm really not in the mood to write today, but they say a picture is worth a thousand words. Here we go.

We had to take a 45 minute bus and a 25 minute boat ride to get out there, so this was my first good view of the island.
Almost there...

As soon as we got off the boat and onto the dock, we could look down and see coral. The water was so clear it was like glass.

We divided up and stayed in 3 bures, which are pretty much just huts on the beach with a couple beds thrown in there. They were okay, but the resort cut off electricity at midnight, meaning the fan went off. It was hard to sleep in these because of it, but whatever.

I still can't get over how gorgeous the water was.

I stole these pictures from Bre because she has an underwater GoPro camera, but this is what I saw. I spent a good several hours snorkeling this weekend and it was absolutely amazing.

Sunrise over the beach was pretty sweet too.

A few hours after we got back on Monday, USP hosted a Holi Festival of Colors. Holi is an Indian holiday to celebrate unity. Food, live Indian music from students, and of course, the colors and dancing were all part of it.





Thursday, March 13, 2014

Adjustments

Things I've gotten surprisingly used to over the last month and a half:

  • Sweating
  • Whole milk
  • Hardly ever wearing makeup/ doing my hair
  • Being the only white person in sight
  • Cold showers (I actually choose this too)
  • Taking taxis or buses everywhere that's out of walking distance
  • Hearing conversations in passing and having no clue what they're saying, let alone what language they're saying it in
  • Suva's tap water
  • No air conditioning
  • Hanging my clothes out to dry (no dryer)
  • Bugs always in the kitchen
  • Tuna
  • Being stared at
  • Construction noises outside the dorms at all hours of the day
  • Sleeping with only a sheet
  • Walking in the rain
  • Fiji time (it's very real - nobody is in a hurry or on time for anything)
Though I will never get used to the mosquitos. The windows and doors are always open to let in a breeze, so there's no escaping  them. I HATE THEM.

Sunday, March 9, 2014

I live for the weekends

Since we weren't under the threat of cyclones this weekend, it turned out pretty great.

On Thursday, I decided to join the rowing team here. I had missed the informational meeting, but anybody interested was allowed to come to the first practice to check it out. Many of my friends were also doing it, so we all made the trek down to lower campus where the ocean is, and I'm glad I did. The first practice was just to get acquainted with the paddling styles, the role of each person in the boat, and how to row in sync, but in the future they will be longer and more intense. The coach, Lili, was SO excited to see a pack of girls show up. Apparently for the last two years it has only been her and two other girls on the team and she had been wanting to up the number of female members. Competing in races is optional, but she encouraged us to consider it. Some of the marathon races are up to 18 km, but I think I want to do it anyway. I just need to get working on my shoulders.

The next day, I had my first "exam" in my ED184 class, which is called something along the lines of Integrating Games and Movement in Education, but is really almost like being back in elementary PE, except that everybody is a lot bigger than 10 year olds. Our exam consisted of our instructor dividing us into groups of 8 and giving us random equipment, and we had to come up with a game using them. The class isn't turning out to be what I expected, and is certainly the easiest class I have, but it's actually really fun.

Later on in the evening, a ton of us international kids met up in Ali and Malcolm's apartment for a Flip Coconut tournament. Even all of the Koreans, who are studying here to learn English and usually don't hang around us as much, came out for the event. They're a pretty funny group of people. In case you didn't pick up on it, Flip Coconut is the same thing as the game Flip Cup, except obviously with half-coconut shells. It's way harder because coconuts like to roll, and no two are the same size or shape, so the game is really just a game of chance. Or at least that's what I'm going to keep asserting since our team lost. I blame that on Dan though.

Saturday was also really fun. There was a huge rugby tournament at the ANZ Stadium right off campus that went all of Friday and Saturday and featured pretty much every team in Fiji, which apparently is a lot (Fijians take their rugby very seriously). I had never been to a rugby game before, but I really enjoyed it. I think I like watching rugby more than football because it's simpler to follow and they don't take a bazillion breaks in play. Each half is 7 minutes, so each game is just about continuous action for 15 minutes and then it's over. It's so intense too, they go all out with their sprints and tackles even in the 100 degree heat. Speaking of heat, myself and Dylan turned out to be the only ones that didn't have the forethought to buy tickets in advance, so when I got to the gate and tried to buy a seat, the lady told me that the stadium was full and I would have to sit on the grassy hill. The view was still okay, but there was no shade anywhere, so the two of us sat frying in the sun while watching the rest of the group enjoying the shade. After about an hour and a half, though, everybody got hungry and crossed the street to McDonald's, which was blessedly air conditioned, and when we got back to the game I managed to make my way into the stands. I just told the security guard I was just heading for the bar,which was inside the stadium gate, then made my way back up the stairs to where everyone else was sitting (there were plenty of open seats too!) After the tournament, I took a much needed nap after being in the blazing sun all day, then we all reconvened to hang out and watch 47 Ronin, which was terrible.



Yesterday was just what I needed. A handful of us caught the 9:30 bus out to the Beachouse again, just for a day trip. I didn't do surfing or snorkeling again this time (there was a surf competition going on and Matt didn't come this time so I couldn't borrow his snorkel gear), but I still had a wonderful day relaxing at the beach. All I had to pay was bus fare to get out there and I got to spend a day in paradise.


Speaking of beaches, at the paddling meeting on Thursday, Riccarda and I came up with a plan. Since you obviously have to enter the canoe from the water, you have to walk across the small sandy beach area between the grass and the water. Now, the beach in Suva is nothing like the beach pictures I've been posting. There's a reason we take an hour and a half bus ride to go to the beach. Here, it's so polluted and absolutely filthy. Just covered in garbage that has washed up and accumulated, not to mention all the industrial waste they dump in the harbor. Fiji has a litter problem as it is, and you can really tell there. So, while we were picking our way through the garbage down to the water, we both expressed how sad we thought it was and decided to have a day in which we go down and clean up the beach. Riccarda made a post on facebook to round up a group, and we're planning on going down with rubber gloves and garbage bags tomorrow. A friend of ours, Ronish, is working as a journalist for USP and heard about our plan, so he is going to come along and create a story for the school news to try to spread the word and maybe spread the effort.

Monday, March 3, 2014

5 day weekend over

Due to some potential natural disasters they were predicting could happen last week, I ended up with a very long weekend. All classes were cancelled on Thursday and Friday, and I never have classes on Mondays. Thursday really did need to be cancelled; all day the rain was torrential and the thunder really meant business. I loved it though. I always really miss thunderstorms during the winter, and stormy days instead of classes are just so relaxing. The sky Wednesday night before it stormed was just crazy too. Close to sunset, the entire sky turned an ominous orange, then purple, then cotton candy pink.

Friday, though, classes certainly didn't need to be cancelled. The worst was over and it probably rained a total of 25 minutes all day, which is typical for Suva anyway. But hey, I'll take it.

Nobody really went anywhere special this weekend, since so many people went on our Beachouse vacation last weekend and we can't afford to do that every weekend. Mostly it was just hanging around campus and downtown Suva. During the day on Saturday I went shopping with Taylor and Matt, and we finally hit up the handicrafts market. I didn't actually intend to buy anything, I just wanted to look, but that seemed to work to my advantage. Because it was apparently a slow day there and they were about to close for the day, the vendors all seemed pretty desperate to make a sale and were pushy. I kept telling them no, I just want to check it out, but each time I told them no, they would offer me a better deal on something. Eventually I got one of them down to $5 FJD on a handmade turtle necklace that admittedly I did like, so I broke down and bought it. It's pretty cute though.

Also, I finally got my Fiji Bitter tank. I feel local.

Sunday was hot and sunny, so I decided it was a good day to go to the pool. As a pleasant surprise to me, a whole bunch of my friends here had the same thought, so there ended up being a whole big group of us there. One of them, Malcolm, got permission from the pool guy to set up a slackline across the pool. If you don't know, slacklining is basically like tightrope walking, so you can imagine how much fun we had with that. 

Yesterday was another day spent at the pool, because why not. Having an outdoor pool on campus is one of the greatest things and I plan to take advantage of that. Later on in the night, I went over to the apartments across campus where some of the other international students from other programs live. I don't know them as well as my UWP family, but they're all really cool people. We spent most of the night playing Canastas, which is a long card game meant for bigger groups of people like we had. All of us except for the two teaching us were completely lost for a while, but once we got it, it turned out to be pretty fun. I just realized as I typed that how much cards I play here. Cheap and easy entertainment, plus the power goes out at least on a weekly basis.

I finally took some campus pictures today too! It really is like a jungle. I suppose it is.





This is the walkway to 10th hall, where I live.