BootsnAll Travel Network

The Tranquilo Traveler

The Tranquilo Traveler is a celebration of voluntourism, slow travel, and other interesting ways to see the world. Travel writer and award- winning Moon Handbooks author Joshua Berman created The Tranquilo Travel as a resource for world trippers and international volunteers, a window to the author’s travels in Nicaragua, Belize, and beyond, and an update of his books and articles.

Archive for the (3) Ghana Category

Game On! Ghana vs. USA today…

June 22nd, 2006 | Username By Joshua | Comments 3 Comments »

gh6_flags.jpg

It is “do or die” for the Black Stars this afternoon in Germany. The other four African teams (Togo, Tunisia, Angola, and Cote D’Ivoire) have all been sent home, and Ghana must win in order to proceed to the next round of the World Cup. I haven’t been much of a sports fan for the last 20 years, but it’s impossible not to get caught up in the electricity here.
(more…)

Accra: sight-free, soccer-insane city by the sea

June 19th, 2006 | Username By Joshua | Comments No Comments »

gh5_blackstar1.jpg

There are no “sights” in Accra. None to write home about, anyway. There is a National Theatre, a museum (I think), and a zoo that we have yet to visit, but in general, I agree with our guidebook that, from a tourist’s perspective, Accra is downright “disappointing.”
(more…)

Cassavas, Castles, and a day trip to Keta

June 12th, 2006 | Username By Joshua | Comments 2 Comments »

gh4_beach.jpg

It is nice to see some new landscapes, something other than the urban Accra grime. The 3-hour drive east along the coast is a long, flat expanse of lush cassava fields, pocked by red termite towers, the roadside dotted with clusters of watermelon and okra sellers. Although we are following the coast toward Togo, the ocean does not come into view until after we’ve crossed the wide Volta River, and dipped south to the coast.
(more…)

Doctor/health worker strike in Ghana

June 8th, 2006 | Username By Joshua | Comments 2 Comments »

Today, nurses and other health workers joined Ghana’s junior doctors in an indefinite strike protesting the new Health Service salary structure. Public hospitals and clinics are effectively shut down (critical patients are still being cared for). It doesn’t really affect Tay’s work at the PPAG clinic, though patients seem to be staying away. In an unrelated story, many Ghanaian pregnant women were trying NOT to deliver their babies on Tuesday (6/6/06), for fear of bringing the AntiChrist into the world.

What’s in a Name: Ya-ya calls me “Uncle”

June 7th, 2006 | Username By Joshua | Comments 1 Comment »

gh2_iloveghana.jpg

Ya-ya, our helper and housemate here in Accra, calls me “Uncle,” a term of respect for one’s elders. She sometimes also calls me “Kwame” (rhymes with “Swami”), because that’s the day on which I was born: Saturday. Everyone at work calls me “Kwame Joshua.”
(more…)

Planned Parenthood Ghana: Our New Gig

June 1st, 2006 | Username By Joshua | Comments 1 Comment »

gh_ppagsign.jpg

If the folks at PALM (with whom we worked in Sri Lanka) were some of the hardest-working NGO workers I’ve ever seen, then Planned Parenthood Ghana (PPAG) is one of the most developed organizations to which I’ve been assigned. To wit, PPAG has been addressing family planning and reproductive health issues in Ghana for 39 years!
(more…)

The Bermans meet The Schnurmans, and other African connections

May 31st, 2006 | Username By Joshua | Comments No Comments »

Acclimating to our new home means meeting new people, from our cheerful office-mates at PPAG to our fellow volunteers in Accra. There aren’t many AJWS volunteers in town, so it was nice to make contact with Peter and Hinda Schnurman, AJWS Volunteer Corps vets on their fifth(!) assignment.
(more…)

Where in the World is Accra?

May 28th, 2006 | Username By Joshua | Comments 1 Comment »

We are here:
map_ghana1.jpg

Or, for a closer look, here:
(more…)

Akwaaba! Welcome to West Africa

May 26th, 2006 | Username By Joshua | Comments No Comments »

gh_george.jpg

Once again, to be met at the airport! To know that someone has been waiting for you! To see the happy and relieved look on their faces when you arrive! So it is when George, a driver from Planned Parenthood Ghana (PPAG), and Aseye, our in-country AJWS representative, pick us up at Ghana’s Kotoka International and take us to our home for the next two months.
(more…)

Pages
BY JOSHUA BERMAN
Categories
Travel links
My Links
Monthly Archives