Caboose

Also on Caboose: Journeys Antarctica, Kerguelen Islands, South America, Turkey, Cameroon
[Nigeria]Nigerian glossary

2006-08-06

Sukur Kingdom – day 1

Filed under: friends,sukur,travel,VSO — kevin @ 18:48

I saw the Sukur kingdom mentioned in the Bradt guide to Nigeria a few months ago and decided to go there. Dave decided to come along after his re-entry visa was delayed, meaning he couldn’t join Karin and Jenny on their trip to Niger and Mali.

We met up on Jos on the Friday evening and stayed the night at PW and the next morning took public transport to Maiduguri. We were a bit worried we wouldn’t make it in time because the car took hours to fill but in the end we arrived around four thirty having left Jos just after ten.

Father Leo had arranged accommodation for us at the St Patrick’s Catholic Cathedral in Maiduguri, where we were welcomed by Father Marcel. We had something to eat, went for a little wander around Maiduguri and then had an early night.

After an early start Dave and I took machines to Bama motor park and then squeezed into an overloaded Golf (which smelled strongly of cow) for the 45 minute and 250 Naira journey to Bama.

In Bama we stopped behind a bus that seemed to already be full and ready to leave, but the driver of the Golf spoke to the conductor and they managed to lever us in. Bama to Madagali cost another 250 Naira each and took about an hour.

At Madagali we stopped for our breakfast of crackers and cheese. This was a bit of a disappointment, the crackers had obviously been stored too close to the mothballs and tasted pretty horrible.

We were now at the point where the guidebooks said transport becomes difficult, but that just proves how little the writers know about Nigeria. We strolled up to the crowd of men, buses and machines at the side of the road and asked about buses to Mildo. There isn’t a regular service, so we chartered a minibus for 1000 Naira.

Our driver said that we should go and visit the District Head before setting off up the hill to Sukur. We dropped outside his house and waited for him to finish conducting the service, he’s also the local representative of the Catholic church and Father Marcel in Maiduguri had mentioned him.

Father Marcel forgot to mention that the District Head speaks no English, so we managed to greet him in Hausa and then stand around uncomfortably while an interpreter was fetched. It seems that you have to ask him for permission to visit Sukur.

Next the interpreter, Johnson, sent our bags round to the bottom of the path to Sukur by motorbike and led us on a more direct route to the home of the National Commission for Museums and Monuments guide. When we got there we found out that we were supposed to have a letter from the NCMM giving us permission to visit. We told the guide that the District Head had given us permission and he eventually relented and got us to fill in some forms.

From the guide’s house it’s not far to the bottom of the hill. We walked past a small hotel that has been built in the style of local buildings and fits into the landscape well, unfortunately there’s no water so it isn’t open yet.

A dirt track in the foreground leads up a green hill Dave sitting on a stone bench A valley with vegetation-covered hills on both sides, getting smaller in the distance

We finally set off up the hill, Johnson had insisted on carrying my rucksack but Dave was carrying his own and not letting me forget about it. The path up the hill is quite steep but little stone benches have been built so that you can stop on your way up and admire the beautiful views.

Dave eventually relented and we took turns carrying his bag up the stone path , which had obviously taken a lot of effort to build but hadn’t been maintained much recently.

A gap in a dry stone wall, with a stone-paved path coming through

As we reached the first gate of the Sukur kingdom and the path levelled out it started to rain lightly. Fortunately the rain didn’t get very heavy, so we just kept going. Soon after passing the royal burial ground some mud-plastered huts came into view, the guest huts at the royal palace.

Small huts in a grassy enclosure, goats grazing to one side Trees and grass, with small stone structures

The guest huts are in an outer compound of the palace, where the king meets with his advisers and title holders. He has a stone throne, there’s a little shrine and a few large trees for shade.

Scruffily-dressed small boys sitting on a rock
At the palace compound we were met by a crowd of small boys and someone was sent off to fetch the king. He arrived and greeted us in Hausa, the writers of the Bradt guide must have met a different king who could talk to them in “broken English”. He made a speech that Simon (the NCMM guide) translated for us and we thanked him for his welcome.

Mazie being grown inside dry stone walls Huts, trees, crops and rocks in a hilly landscape

Next we were taken on a tour of the palace, which isn’t what you might expect from the name. It consists of several dry stone walls and gateways, with a little compound of huts where the king lives with his wife. There’s also a hut for the king’s horse, a bull-fattening pen and the hut formerly used for dispensing justice.

Once we were back at the asked if we could stay for a couple of nights and everyone became even more welcoming. Various people were dispatched to bring things for us, a guest hut was opened and a young local man called George was assigned to look after us. I gave the king some presents we had brought: cola nuts and some Danish cookies. He seemed quite happy.

Johnson and Simon the guide finally left, Dave and I were getting very hungry by this point and were desperately waiting for them to go so that we could have lunch. Dave had brought flat bread, houmous and processed cheese slices. The only slight problem was that we were plagued by flies all day, I’ve no idea where they all come from or why there are so many but Sukur is full of flies.

A little later the king was holding a meeting and George was taking the minutes so we wandered around a little bit.

Two single-storey school buildings Boys and young men hanging around the side of a building

The local primary education board had built a school last year, which still looks very new. It also seems to be the centre of local social life on a Sunday afternoon, with boys playing football, young men with a stereo and older men playing cards and drinking some evil-looking local spirit.

After the school we wanted to get up to the top of one of the nearby hills for a view of the palace. In the end we managed to explain (in broken Hausa and hand waving) and were guided up by a small boy in green shorts. Near the top there was a lot of scrambling up big rocks, so the locals had the amusing sight of two big Baturis being hauled up by the small boy.

Huts and walls among crops An old man and a few boys (including one in green shorts) on top of a rock

The picture above left is the palace, above right are our guide and some onlookers.

In the evening some more small boys brought water for showers and a kerosene stove was fetched from somewhere inside the palace. We cooked pasta with tuna and cheese and then sat outside as the sun set. George had brought us some burukutu, a kind of beer made from millet that looks and tastes a lot like mud, and also insisted on washing up for us.

We eventually retired to our hut and settled on our creaky and uncomfortable bamboo beds for the night.

2006-06-28

Fun with dodgy wiring

Filed under: tech,VSO — kevin @ 09:10

I arrived at work this morning to find that although there was electricity (for a change) the network wasn’t working. A quick look in the server room revealed that the router was off.

The wiring led back to one of the usual dubious Chinese multi-way adaptors (called ‘multisockets’ here), I waggled the plugs in case it was a bad connection (quite common with those) but still no power.  I then tried waggling the multisocket’s plug and was rewarded with the power coming on briefly and some sparks.

When I pulled out the plug I got this:
A melted poor quality 13 amp plug

The plug (of course) has no fuse and very thin wires soldered directly to the top of the pins.
(more…)

2006-06-26

Hosting a placement visit

Filed under: friends,VSO — kevin @ 09:08

Last weekend I hosted one of the new volunteers on their placement visit, just like Phyllis hosted me when I first arrived. David has actually been in country for a couple of months, because he didn’t arrive as part of a “batch”. He’s working in HIV/AIDS down in Enugu.

On Sunday we met up with Monique, who has just returned from the Netherlands, and went to the park. Here are David and Monique with the crocodiles.
David and Monique standing in front of a pond

2006-06-13

Small things

Filed under: VSO — kevin @ 16:04

You know you’re living in Nigeria when you buy yourself a tin of baked beans as a treat and it costs more than a beer!

It’s been an interesting week on the culinary front, I accidentally picked up a can of “smoke-flavoured” tuna last time I was at the Shagalinku supermarket. It turns out to be quite nice, they also do one with little spicy green peppers. It is tricky (and expensive) to get tuna in brine instead of oil though.

The roadsides are still full of women selling mangoes. I bought a couple and some yoghurt today, stuck them in the blender (which was my housewarming present to myself), a lovely cool, thick drink in the heat.

2006-06-12

Saturday in Kaduna

Filed under: friends,VSO — kevin @ 18:40

On Saturday I joined a couple of busloads of my colleagues at the wedding of Bello from the exams department. After a bit of a delay we missed the church part of the wedding but made it for the reception. Like Tayo’s wedding it was a Yoruba affair, with lots of singing and dancing.
Wedding party standing in the car park in front of a church

Afterwards myself and Omoba from the computer centre went back to his place. He lives near where the wedding was held, in Kaduna South, the mainly Christian and non-Hausa part of town. The picture is him with three of his sisters, in the small business centre and computer training place he owns.
Omoba and three of his sisters

We moved on to Barnawa Complex, an area packed with bars and shops, to see another sister. This sister owns a tailor’s shop and has just recently returned from almost ten years living in the Netherlands.

2006-05-29

Happy Democracy Day

Filed under: VSO — kevin @ 17:00

Today was a public holiday, so Simon and I decided to visit the park. It’s officially called General Hassan Usman Katsina park, but the gate you enter through is Gamji Gate (Kofar Gamji in Hausa) and some people call it Gamji park instead.

The map at the entrance makes it look like the park is huge but once you get inside you realise it’s actually quite small and run down. There’s a pool with some crocodiles, probably the only ones remaining in a town named for the crocodile river, and three scruffy ostriches.
Stagnant-looking pool with a few small crocodiles and a large concrete ornament Two ostriches behind a fence
(more…)

2006-05-25

Rainy season

Filed under: VSO — kevin @ 07:59

Rainy season starts a bit later here in Kaduna, the first rain was a few weeks ago but there have been long gaps between rain. It seems to be getting more frequent now.

Here’s the view from my kitchen step a couple of weeks ago, taking while it was raining. On the right is the same view today, it’s amazing how quickly everything has turned green.
Trees and brown grass Trees and thick green grass

I’ve not been updating this site much recently because I’m quite busy at work.

A week away from Kaduna

Filed under: friends,travel,VSO — kevin @ 07:54

I spent last week at the VSO office in Abuja, updating the “Welcome Pack” that new volunteers get on arrival in the country.

Some of the materials inside were in serious need of an update, especially the guide to Abuja which had been written over five years ago. Abuja has changed a lot in the last five years, particularly in the last year or so with all the demolitions.

It was slightly worrying when I asked for an up-to-date list of volunteers in country and was given a list that included people who left weeks ago and others who haven’t arrived yet! The electronic copies of welcome pack documents were scattered all over the network, making it difficult to be sure I had the most recent one.

While I was doing this work I was living in the VSO guest house, a small building on the VSO compound. This was obviously originally intended as the servants’ quarters (“boys quarters” is the local phrase) for the house that is now the VSO office. There are two small bedrooms, one used for storage, a toilet and shower and a filthy kitchen.

Bob and Karen were very kind and invited me round to dinner three of the nights, so I wasn’t even tempted to use the kitchen.

On Friday a group of us headed up to Jos, to meet Fathers Noel and Leo (the Kabba Boys) at the PW camp. It was Leo’s birthday, so we celebrated with a few beers.

On Saturday we had lunch at AfriOne in town and then half the group stayed to do some shopping while the rest of us went back to PW to watch Munster beat Biarritz in the rugby.

Nicole had bought some plastic “Hello Kitty” tennis rackets, various people tried to play but Ronan and Noel managed best:
Two men playing tennis with children's bats on a gravel car park

That evening we went to a restaurant owned by a German called Walter, who had been at PW on Friday night. The restaurant, Felak’s, is in the bush just outside Jos and the food was fantastic. We had leek and potato soup, chicken with lovely deep-fried aubergine and cake with cream for dessert. There was also plenty of fresh bread and cottage cheese to go with it all.
People sitting at a table

The next morning Noel and Nicole went hiking, while the rest of us lazed around or attended Leo’s Mass.

After a lunch of pizza and pasta people started heading back home, Bob gave me a lift to the motor park and I then had what seemed like a very long journey down the incredibly potholed road back to Kaduna.

2006-05-02

Surveying

Filed under: VSO — kevin @ 11:45

Today I’ve been wandering around the NTI campus with my colleague Isaac, trying to solve some problems with our wireless network. This has involved using a laptop to take measurements of signal strength, as you can see in the picture:
Two people measuring wireless signal strength with a laptop, standing on a dusty road in front of a gate

Saying goodbye to Janita

Filed under: friends,VSO — kevin @ 11:40

On Friday night we met up at the usual place, PDP. This was apparently once the local secretariat for the dominant Nigerian political party but is now a bar. It’s one of the few bars in the (largely Muslim) north of Kaduna city. It was a bit of a special occasion because Janita was leaving us, travelling back to Abuja and then home to the UK.

Here’s a picture, Janita is in the middle of the group next to Victoria (headmistress of the school for deaf children):
A group of people sitting around a plastic table with beers

« Previous PageNext Page »

Powered by WordPress