Our second week was spent at the Kibi Presbyterian College of Education in Kibi--pronounced chibi, and sometimes spelled Kyebi. It was a gorgeous campus in a valley, surrounded by mountains. There was a garden, used by students, and many fruit trees (mango, papaya, banana, coconut), available to students to help themselves to! We had cocoyam for our supper one night. The leaves grow plentifully and Ghanaiansr refer to it as "spinach." cocoyam leaves growing all over the campus The campus had lush plant life, especially hibiscus--they also serve hibiscus drinks which are delicious. Did you know that Ghana (at least in the south of the country where we were) has red soil just like PEI? The pictures of red soil that I took don't look quite red. In real life the soil is a much brighter red. The second week was a replica of the first. Two cohorts from the Volta and Eastern regions. Opening ceremonies, 2 days of 4, 2 hour classes, a closing ceremony and Canada/Ghana night. For...
Take lots of pictures Lynne!
ReplyDeleteI'm Steph BTW
DeleteShow yourself unknown person!
DeleteThe kids and I looked up videos of your ship.
ReplyDeleteWhich led to online research about the largest ships on the planet. then a lego build session and pretend play.
ReplyDeleteJust checking in to see where in the world you are! How are your adventures going?
ReplyDeleteBe safe!
That last comment was from Martha XO
ReplyDeleteHi Martha! I'm in Winnipeg at the moment, planning my next step towards the arctic. I'll update soon. xo
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