I am loving the volunteer position! It's a great balance of having fun, helping with research, and being involved in the community. On Tuesday morning, Tracey, Charlie, and I took a drive to Nature's Valley (not the granola bar factory, but a nature preserve) which was about a half hour away. We spent the morning examining rocky shore tidal pools. We took a survey or what organisms we found using GPS, and then we caught some new fish for the aquarium back at the shop. I could have done that all day! The tide pools were FILLED with urchins, sea anemones, fish, sea stars, you name it.
Yesterday we worked on my competent crew certification. In the morning we went out on the boat on the ocean where I learned how to anchor the boat, drive the boat, and perform a man-overboard exercise. After lunch Tracey and I took a much smaller boat up the Keurbooms river to choose spots for water testing, marking them with the GPS. The landscape was gorgeous! The river has basically cut a giant valley so the banks of the river are like mountains. Something about it actually reminded me of the Milford Sound in New Zealand. I drove the boat upstream which was difficult because the tide was not up yet so we had to be careful not to run aground.
Today was awesome too! In the morning we headed to the "creche", or better known as the pre-school in the township. Before I came here, I didn't really understand what a township was. It is basically the lower class neighborhood, and townships are all over South Africa. It is amazing the difference between the classes here. Everyday Thursday ORCA (the organization I'm working with) goes to the school to teach the kids a conservation topic. Because the students do not speak English, we must keep it simple so the teachers can translate. They speak the language of Khosa, which I found to be a very pretty language to listen to. I was a bit nervous about today because I wasn't sure what to expect going into the township. I was also a little nervous because we were going to be working with 100 kids, ages 3-6, and NONE of them speak English! It was SO fun though! The time FLEW by. The kids seemed so happy and energetic, but well behaved. It was hard for me to believe that they could be that happy, considering their living conditions. We started out teaching the kids about families of marine animals. Tracey wanted to come up with a game that emphasize the need to work in teams. I came up with a wheel-barrel (wheel-barrow? I don't know) race and they LOVED it. Tracey was amazed at how much they loved it and wants to do it again sometime. After our lesson we helped prepare their lunch. There was so much food! Feeding 100 kids everyday takes a lot of effort, but I thoroughly enjoyed it. I can't wait til next week!
This afternoon we went for a dive! My first dive without being in the PADI course, but Tracey is a dive instructor as well, so no need to be nervous. It was very cool - we saw hundreds of sea stars - all different types. I am still trying to master the last skill in the course - removing my mask and replacing it underwater. I have issues breathing through just my mouth and not my nose at all. I just need to practice.
That's it for now! The next volunteer comes tomorrow and my new friend from Addo, Sara, is going to be here this weekend which should be fun. I can't believe I've already been here for 2 weeks (well almost).