30 June 2009
New Global Terrain Map
29 June 2009
Flickr Photoset of the Day
The Moyer's home, Kigwembimbe
(roughly translated from Kihehe:
" Where the beer overflows/spills")
24 June 2009
Canonizing Mwalimu
The Catholic Church has started the canonisation process for Mwalimu Julius Nyerere, the first President of Tanganyika, who united his country with Zanzibar to form Tanzania in 1964.
If the Pope declares Mwalimu a saint, he will be the first purely political figure to attain such status. The Sunday Monitor in Kampala, Uganda has reported on "St. Nyerere's 18 Political Miracles" which qualify him for canonisation.
Labels:
canonisation,
Catholic Church,
Mwalimu Nyerere,
Tanzania
23 June 2009
Whale-Watching & Safari Hunting
The BBC just published an article about how much more money whale watching brings in than whaling (hunting). I find this an interesting contrast to Tanzania where managed professional hunting outearns photographic tourism nearly 50:1. Ethics aside, this would seem to be an argument for whale-watching and hunting as the most economically viable uses of these natural resources.
For the record, I do not support whaling, and while I believe that hunting can be a sustainable and beneficial practice, I understand that it is prone to the same corruption and abuses that plague other industries as well. The Loliondo case makes me particularly sick and angry.
22 June 2009
Embedded Programs at PSU
As reported by the Penn State Newswire, our office is experiencing real growth in the realm of faculty-led short-term education abroad programs (which we call "embedded programs"). I have been managing the administration of these programs since November of last year, when the previous manager left.
Last year we had a little over 800 students study on embedded programs--this year we've had nearly 1000. While this increase is due to a number of factors - our office is broadening its reach to enfold programs that were previously not under our purview - it also reflects the increasing number of faculty members who are integrating international experiences into the curriculum of courses taught residentially at Penn State. This means that students who couldn't find the flexibility in their schedule to study abroad for an entire semester are now able to travel, if only for a couple of weeks. And a well-implemented short-term trip can be a valuable experience.
Labels:
Education Abroad,
Embedded Programs,
Penn State,
UOGP
16 June 2009
"Bad Safaris"

I happened across these scanned slides on flickr the other day, and thoroughly enjoyed the predicaments that this zoologist has managed to get his Landies in to over many years operating in the bush of Tanzania.
15 June 2009
Expedition Africa - Week Three
This week's show covered much familiar territory in our old stomping grounds. They just left the Uluguru Mountains and headed out on to the Mkata Plain (Mikumi National Park)...
14 June 2009
12 June 2009
Michigan Trip

Click on the image above to see weekend photos
We had a wonderful time this past weekend in Michigan. We crammed lots into our 4 day visit. We saw many friends from Tanzania (Caraways! Bentons! Millers! Zubers! LUKA!), rejoiced with Casey and Steven being joined in marriage, visited a friend from Taiwan, and saw Becca and Andrew, whose wedding we attended just two weeks ago.
Usually travelling weekends are draining, but we arrived home from this one somehow recharged.
11 June 2009
Wireless Charging
So it seems that Nokia has produced a phone that charges itself wirelessly from excess radio waves that would otherwise be wasted diffused energy. No more chargers to manufacture and carry. And it eliminates otherwise wasted energy, thereby countering global warming!
Thanks Nokia for being part of the solution!
01 June 2009
Expedition Africa - Week One
For those of you to who don't know the background, Mark Burnett (of Survivor fame) put 4 experienced (and completely Type A) people together to recreate Stanley's trek to "find" Livingstone in the interior of Africa in 1871. Not surprisingly the show focuses on interpersonal drama (true to Burnett's Survivor-roots).
Anyway, overlooking the above, I really enjoyed seeing so many reminders of "home." This includes:
- roads that I've walked in Zanzibar
- dhows on the Indian Ocean
- Bagamoyo
- the same Chinese-made aluminum tea kettle that I suspect everyone in Tanzania owns
- Mangrove swamps (and lots of MUD)
- the Ruvu River
- Euphorbia candelabra
- Hornbills calling
- spitting cobras
- crocodiles
- rudimentary Swahili: "Moja, mbili, tatu!" "Tuende!"
- Acacia thornscrub
- termite mounds
- Maasai simis
Man, I miss that place! Anyone want to finance my expedition proposal to follow P.J. Pretorius' 1916-1918 track across Tanganyika?
Labels:
Africa Tanzania,
Bagamoyo,
Expedition Africa,
History Channel
Weddings

Higgins, NY 5.23.09
We are starting into the wedding season! Last weekend we journeyed back to our old stomping grounds in western New York to celebrate Becca & Andrew's wedding. This weekend, my coworker and friend Julia Kisner became Julia Law, and next weekend we will head to central Michigan to celebrate the start of Casey and Steven's life together.
Click on the image above for photos from Becca & Andrew's wedding weekend.
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