Friday, September 30, 2011

"The Cock Crows, but the Hen Lays the Eggs"

The month has finally arrived! Not only is Kaarina with child, but our chickens are soon to be as well! One afternoon I came home from work to give the chickens their evening meal and found one small egg laid on the floor of the coup. I had heard the tell-tale clucking of egg imminence from a hen on days prior, but didn’t expect the eggs to come so soon.
A Big Toe
 The next morning I woke early to install the nesting box. We were rewarded with 4 more eggs during the next few days, all of which were the size of a large big toe (or a silver dollar). It sure will take a lot of eggs to make an omelet if they don’t get bigger! We decided to sample the first three eggs by making Egg McKniselys (a family breakfast specialty).
Egg McKnisely (Sausage courtesy of Jyoti)
 Local practices of chicken rearing are as un-intensive as you can get. Every family seems to have a chicken shelter in which a few free range birds spend their nights. The birds spend their days roaming the village looking for food. When a hen becomes broody she finds a nesting spot (probably in a hay loft somewhere) and hatches a brood of 8-10 chicks. She then raises them until they are 3-4 months of age. Many may die of disease or predator attacks. In terms of meat and egg production it is pretty inefficient, but financial input and work invested by the owner is virtually nil.
Memorable First Egg
Our plan now that we have laying hens is to collect the eggs for about a week until we have 15 or so. After this we will try separate one of the laying hens to a section of coup containing a nesting box and eggs. Hopefully she will go broody and be able to hatch those eggs. After the chicks are two weeks old we will separate the hen from them and return her to the rest of the flock. In this way she will return to laying sooner and egg/chick production will be increased. I have not tried this method before, but hopefully it will prove successful and increase egg/chick production in our chickens!

Thursday, September 29, 2011

A New Sound in Town

Our landlord’s daughter came skipping down the path next to our house the other day, but a new sound issuing from our house stopped her in her tracks. She paused for several moments, looking up at our living room window, then in her childlike fashion picked up her heels and continued on her way. 

I just chuckled from my viewpoint in our outdoor kitchen as I watched her ponderings. She probably had never heard flute music before. She probably wondered what would bring such foreign sounds to Tha Thom. Who? Only a very special visitor from America!

The beginning of September we were blessed by a visit from our sister (my good-sister!), Jyoti! Now it is already the end of September and she has continued on with the second leg of her journey. We had many special times these past three weeks… too many to recount in full, but here are some highlights of our times together.
Getting a Lao Hair-do!
MCC staff – We had special times with all of MCC’s staff here in Laos. From bowling with service workers, to eating papaya salad and playing UNO with Lao staff at our home, to meeting and hanging out with 'new-comers’ (YAMEN volunteer from Zimbabwe and SALT volunteer from America), to joining all MCC staff during the 4-Month Meeting held in Tha Thom.
Teaching UNO
A Local Lao Lunch
Supper with the Service Workers
Adventures while traveling – We covered a lot of ground this month and we joke with Jyoti that she sampled every kind of transportation Laos has to offer! We got to go shopping in Vientiane, touring in Phonsavahn, suffering through the 10 hr. journey to Tha Thom, and a final adventure of trying to get back to Vientiane. Our final journey started by riding sawngteo (the local public transportation which consists of two wooden benches in the back of a covered truck bed) in the spitting rain, getting on a boat only to have it break down an hour into the journey. It could have been bad, stuck in the middle of nowhere with no cell service, but thankfully we were going down stream! After paddling for a while we came to a place where the road came near to the river. We scrambled up the bank with our bags and sat next to the road to wait. What a blessing! Within five minutes a public sawngteo came along and took us to the next city/bus station an hour and a half down the road! There is only one sawngteo that travels that road a day, and we were fortunate enough to meet it… pretty amazing!
Smiling with Pattu Xai
'We might be stranded in the middle of the jungle, but we are still happy!'
Food! – Jyoti commented during her trip, ‘I feel like all we do together is eat!’ and that statement was quite true. Jeffrey and I had a busy month and had to spend full days at the office. It was during lunch breaks and evenings that we spent most of our time together. Jyoti also brought us a suitcase of food from the states, so between her contributions and our local produce, we had a lot of good food to feast on!
A Western Feast!
One Rooster named Coconut Curry
Dolled-up for our Final Dinner Together
What a blessing to have Jyoti visit and we are so thankful she made it half way across the world to see us!

Wednesday, September 21, 2011

Between a Log and a Hard Place

More than once a day in almost every village in Tha Thom can be heard the rumbling of log trucks (converted Russian and American army trucks) transporting their heavy burdens from the jungle to the lumber mills or log landings nearer the main road. Laos is a country known for its timber. Huge tropical hardwoods can be harvested and are worth quite a pretty penny on the domestic and especially on the international market. It is said, that much of the harvested logs are shipped internationally to pay off national debt. The remaining wood is sawn at local mills and sold locally. Exquisite carved single-piece wooden furniture can be purchased in many places throughout the country, just make sure you have a way to transport it since it is heavy!
From one Landing to Another
Unfortunately, the big lumber and with it the jungle is disappearing at an alarming rate. Tha Thom district is one of the few areas in Laos that have big trees remaining. With the nearing completion of the road more trees will likely be carted off soon.

One Saturday afternoon we jumped in the office truck to explore a conservation area to see what the jungle was like before the cutting began. It is hard to explain how massive jungle trees are…pictures don’t even do it justice. With trunks 10 feet wide plus they rocket into the canopy hundreds of feet above. Strange shade loving ferns and palms cover the forest floor.
Hugging a Giant
Although it is disheartening to see these massive logs beings hauled away and jungles destroyed the real tragedy befalls local communities who usually gain nothing from the sale of the lumber from their land. On another occasion, standing with some local farmers in some paddy land we hear chain saws running in the hills nearby. The farmers comment that the water they have to irrigate their rice fields becomes less and less each year. They fear that more tree cutting could cause a greater shortage.

In most rural Lao communities, villagers supplement their daily food with many forest products. Frogs, insects, monkeys, bat, small deer, bamboo shoots, leaves, mushrooms, medicine plants, and many forest fruits are all collected to be eaten or sold in the local market. These are known as NTFPs (Non- Timber Forest Products) and are critical to life for many people.
"Sure we can fit one more log"
It certainly wouldn’t be fair to say that over-logging is the cause of all the problems facing the jungle. Since some NTFPs are gathered to be sold it is easy to over harvest them. In response to this issue MCC and other organizations are doing work to educate and develop NTFP management committees to help villagers keep their forests sustainable for years to come.

And finally, in case you are worried that we have become tree huggers…we can assure you this is not the case (despite the picture of Kaarina hugging a tree above). We are simply seeing firsthand how much an impact forest resources can have on communities that rely directly on the jungle for their livelihood.

Well managed logging is an excellent sustainable resource to access!