the journey in

So, I’m finally here; 6 airports, 4 flights and aeroplanes that became smaller and smaller.  And luggage that became lighter and lighter. 

Our last flight from the Haitian Capital of Port au Prince to Cap Haitien in the north, where the hospital is, was a little six-seater Cessna.  We were a team of 4, although the others are only here for a couple of weeks.  They had brought vital parts for the hospital’s generator and incinerator (amongst other things), which obviously equalled weight.  I am here for a year so had maxed out on my luggage allowance.  Now this is all very well on your wide-bodied jet flying across the Atlantic.  However, in an (ancient) little single engine thing, it wasn’t going to work out – even removing(!) the empty (6th) seat we would not need, we still had to shed weight.  It would be flown up to us the following day, so we all spent a fun 20 minutes at check-in deciding which items we could live without for 24 hours (I’m thinking one of many ‘Firsties’ I will encounter).

The short flight was uneventful, save glimpses of the beautiful scenery through the clouds and then before long we were being driven back to the ‘Volunteer Village’.  It may only have been 15 or so minutes, but it was exhausting.  Not the heat and humidity, though it was fairly high on both counts, but the sensory barrage.  The poverty was apparent immediately, but there was also a vibrancy about the place too.  Bright colours everywhere; clothing, buildings, shopfront advertising (all hand painted), and taxis (tap-taps) all of which had incredible artwork mostly glorifying the Lord; be it a simple statement (Glwa a Jezu) or a verse from the bible.  And of course the smell, born of a mixture of rubbish, rotting food, animal dung (and probably worse), standing water (breeding mozzies) and all baked in the heat and humidity. Pungent.

As you might imagine, the roads were in a pretty poor state; rutted and pot-holed, but dealing with the traffic was far more of a challenge; there seemed to be only two rules. 

#1 drive on the right – but that does not preclude one direction of traffic taking up the whole road,

#2 the locals always have right of way.

It was hard seeing the people lining the roads trying to eke out a living.  Every sort of activity seemed to be going on; some cooking street-food, others selling clothes, money changers, beauty parlours, building materials, jewellery, phones, drinks, furniture, mechanics…a million miles from home.

Strangely, it felt comfortable.

One thought on “the journey in

  1. Virginia Taylor

    Sounds like a bit of a journey, but you got there at last!
    Hope the rest if your luggage found you eventually. Good luck with everything you’re up to out there Phil!

    Reply

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