I have been very busy trying to get ready to leave.
Besides the regular things that come up I have had some unexpected
situations. Yesterday, I had organized that Sholto would celebrate a
home anniversary Mass but he took Mario down to Nkubu to see a doctor,
and was about an hour and a half late returning so I felt I should go
to the home for Mass. I took the Motorbike hoping that the weather
might hold. No luck. Partway in the Mass it started to pour. We were
celebrating outside so we had to move inside a little house and pack
like sardines. Then had to leave the motorbike locked in the Church
and walk up. I arrived in about an hour and a half just as it was
getting dark. My gortex coat worked well but I was completely wet on
my pants and, as well, my shoes and rubbers were waterlogged. Took a
shower and got into something dry.
Then chapter two. A family from Igandene arrived at
the door looking for assistance. They had a very ill child and the
medication was not working well. Pneumonia they thought. As she is the
community health nurse form the dispensary in Igandene, I presumed her
judgment must be right and the child must be taken to the hospital
that night. The roads are horrendous at this time when it has not had
a chance to dry. Anyway, I grabbed a bowl of Kitheri (Beans, Maize)
and then headed down with them. It was raining lightly but I managed
slowly to keep on the road and reach the blacktop. I waited about an
hour for the child to be treated. By then it was coming down in
buckets. Very few people on the road to help you (not like during the
day). Well, I think I drove as well as anyone could and managed the
first half of the journey quite well, keeping the vehicle out of the
crevices created by running water and the ruts of the lorries. I
thought when I managed to make the hill near Ngongo I was going to
succeed. Not so. I even managed to pass another stalled vehicle with
only a foot to spare from a good ditch just missing his mirrors, but
then the inevitable happened. Coming up another hill trying to direct
the truck between a ditch and a crevice, I got sucked into the crevice
- actually, a stream flowing down the middle of the road. That was it.
With help from three fellows, waiting and spinning for an hour and a
half, one hundred shillings less as gift to the workers, I managed to
get through that hole. I arrived back at midnight. Then I tried to
take the woman back down to Igandene. Got about halfway down and met
another truck on the road stuck. So, I left her and her husband off
there and found a place to turn around and came back up on my own.
I arrived to an empty house, with the lights on. Mario
had been resting after getting medication from the doctors. He woke up
and found I had not returned so woke up James and went by foot down to
Igandene thinking I had gone there. (I had gone to Nkubu) The phones
were out with the weather so I waited for an hour or so, had a shot of
rye, and went to bed thinking that he would have seen Patricia by now
and she would have told him I had arrived home safely. I thought he
might have stayed down there for the night. I was zonked and never
heard him when he arrived at two a.m.
Why bother bungee-jumping, white water rafting, etc?
Come to Kenya during the rainy season