Saturday, December 31, 2005
Ken and I leave for Africa today...
Our flight route is from Vancouver to Heathrow. Overnight in London, UK. Then continue on directly to Accra, Ghana. Accra is the location of the nearest (and only) Canadian Embassy in West Africa. This is where we must process the Immigration and Visa paperwork to bring "Ethan" back to Canada. Accra reads to be a semi-modern city with pleasantries like electricity, Internet, TV and a Taco Bell at the University of Ghana campus. The Lonely Planet describes Ghana as having "the friendliest people in West Africa." We are staying at the GILLBT Accra Guest House.
After a few days in Accra, we then take a local flight from Accra to Monrovia, Liberia. In Monrovia and surrounding area, we are to be escorted and continually with people from ACFI. Foreigners stand out bigtime and may be targets, so don't be unescorted outside of the ACFI compound is the recurring message. To contrast Ghana, the Lonely Planet describes Liberia as "...no place to go for a beach holiday" due to "sporadic looting as well as bursts of shooting in pockets of the country". Things are reportedly gradually improving and the recent November 2005 election of Africa's first female president offers hope for peace and rebuilding.
While in Monrovia, we alternate our time between the ACFI headquarters, and the Daniel Hoover Orphanage in Dixville. The two places are supposedly only 15 minutes apart, but the trip can take up to 2 hours because of poor road conditions. This map shows the locations. There is another Orphanage for Deaf children nearby which we'll be visiting. ~450 children from ages 2-19 are at the Dixville orphanage, and another ~40 at the Deaf orphanage.
After ~4 days in Monrovia, it's back to Accra, WITH Ethan (yeah!), and the Canadian High Commission to finalize the adoption. **IF** things go as planned, and the CDN Embassy in Ghana does what they are supposed to do in a timely manner, then we'll be back in Canada on January 16, 2006.
Weather in Accra is 32C, cooling (?) to 24C at night. Humidity is +80%. Monrovia is a similar 29C, same humidity, with intermittent heavy showers.
I plan to take photos and will blog as the availaibility of Internet Cafes permits. Other pictures and stories are (and will be) posted at http://www.wilsenack.com/Africa/ upon my return.
Cheers!
-=H=-
P.S. Happy New Year!!! Cheers to a wonderful 2006.
Wednesday, December 28, 2005
So why are you going to Africa?
"So why are you going to Liberia?", people ask me.
"It's a tourist mecca, don't yah know. A real travel hot-spot ", I say.
The real reason is to make a difference in the life of one child. One family... In reality, adopting a child from a Liberian orphanage impacts the lives of many people,... the whole "village" in essence.
Certainly the most direct benefit is to the life of one child, one "Prince", giving that child a chance for a life that he would other-wise never have. This alone is reason enough.
***** "One hundred years from now, It will not matter what kind of car I drove, What kind of house I lived in, Or how much money I had in the bank, But the world may be a better place because I made a difference in a child's life." --- Author Unknown *****
However the family and "village" aspect is equally as strong. When you bring an adopted child into a family and community, particularly when that child is from a war-torn, international, poor country, you also dramatically affect all those people who come into contact with that child. Their world, their culture, and their values are impacted. Their eyes open wide to the broader world out there and their lives change. Forever.
I like to believe that these eye-opening changes and cultural impacts are educational, enriching and ultimately breed awareness, tolerance and peace. It does for me. And I hope for others and future generations as well.
-=H=-
Tuesday, December 27, 2005
Liberia (thru the eyes of Google Earth)
Any photos I bring back will be posted to http://www.wilsenack.com/Africa/.
The views from Google Earth are spectacular:
Zoomed in: http://maps.google.com/maps?q=monrovia,+liberia&ll=6.291337,-10.790076&spn=0.007132,0.011558&t=k&hl=en
Zoomed out: http://maps.google.com/maps?q=monrovia,+liberia&spn=0.923288,1.638611&t=k&hl=en
Zoomed way out: http://maps.google.com/maps?q=monrovia,+liberia&spn=56.411663,104.871094&t=k&hl=en
-=-=-=-
For more information about Liberian adoptions, see Children Concerned and For the Children.
The World Is Flat (or Around The World in 80 milliseconds)
Ah ha! Finally someone else who agrees with me that the "world is flat".
For years, as a Worldwide IT Telecom Director, I have been advocating that it was impractical and virtually impossible to circumference the earth with high-speed (45Mbps+) network connectivity.
Rather in my view, Eastern Europe is at one end of the flat world, and Asia/India was at the other flat end, with North America being at the 'centre' of the world. From a high-speed networking perspective, Europa and Asia/India do not really connect, except the long-way around the earth through North Ameria. Hence, my "flat-earth" viewpoint.
It's silly really. To circumnavigate the earth from a data networking perspective, it should be ~450mSec, which can be described in 3 segments:
- ~150mSec from Asia/India to North America.
- ~150mSec from North America to Europe.
- ~150mSec from Europe to Asia/India.
However the 3rd segment is not readily available from a high-speed, affordable data networking perspective. Hence to get from Asia/India to Europe, you are realistically looking at 300mSec++ latency, over North America (E.g. the LONG way around the earth) which is brutally slow for most of today's bandwidth-guzzling, latency-sensitive software applications.
The solution? Well, one day scientists will increase the speed-of-light. Until then, the common-sense solution for truly global enterprise organzations is to accept the 'flat-earth' philosophy and design their datacentres and global applications around using North America as the centre of the world, thereby never leaving any major global metropolitan centre from its informaiton source more than ~150mSec away. This is practical advice. This works.
Nevermind all this --- I will always believe in my dream of "80mSec Around the World".
-=H=-
My fav christmas gift
Santa Skiing
Monday, December 26, 2005
What I'm listening to....
* Great Big Sea - high engergy celtic, newfoundland, irish drinking & sailing tunes
* Cowboy Junkies - blues with emotion that goes right through your soul
* Sheryl Crow - fun, clean, up-beat rock
* Diana Krall - sexy, swooning jazz
* Huey Lewis & The News, Cars, Pat Benatar, Queen - Classic rock n' roll
-=-=-=-
Sunday, December 25, 2005
Meaning of Life... Some observations...
Hmmm,.... I think I'm beginning to figure out the meaning of life....
-=H=-
Saturday, December 24, 2005
Big Bob, Elvis and the World
Canada, Germany, Thailand, India and Liberia all have special meaning to me in this world.
My glass {of life} is always 3/4 full. That's all for now.
-=Elvis=-