Krissy
I went to Banana Island on Sunday, where I did in fact find NO banana trees, but alot of jungle and tropical island-ness. Beautiful. I know you love photos so here you go:

Beauty.


Random kids that live on the island.




Our group hiking through the jungle to get to the beach.



A good way to get across the river.



The boats of Sierra Leone are beautifully painted and often have colorful patchwork sails. We rode in one of these over to the island. The beach wasn't that great, it was rocky and harder to enjoy swimming, but the hike through the jungle was cool and we ate freshly caught fish on the beach. Wonderful!



20 days to America! Love to all. K
Krissy
It's eerily quiet on board right now.

Two our crewmembers are getting married! Yay!

I'm working. Boo. But yay, because 2/3 of our crew is at the wedding. And all of our day workers are gone. And all of our patients are gone. And the hope center is closed down. And and and.....

And dinner will be a cinch. Emma and I just realized that we are actually the ranking crew in the galley/dining room. Everyone above us in this piece of the organization is ashore.

Alright crew, let's make some changes! Just kidding. But I do get to decide if we will only open up one food line instead of two. Whoopie.

What else should I ramble about right now? Maybe I'll go try to find some pictures to post. Or make juice in the Dining room. It's been a CRAZY week - wednesday was the big shindig for the minister of health, thursday was thanksgiving, and yesterday was the day worker goodbye celebration. All a TON of work for the dining room and galley staff. (though I didn't work in the dining room yesterday, I was a security guard!) So it's really nice to have the time to breathe a little bit.

Wahoo. Ciao for now. 24 days to America. Wonder what is going to happen then? K

Update: Turns out that there WERE indeed ranking managers on board so I couldn't make the decision to sail the boat to the Bahamas. Too bad. ;)
Krissy
A few posts ago I mentioned the Dental team and I got a few comments from surprised readers, "I thought it was a medical ship!" Here's an article about the Dental team! Enjoy. Happy Black Friday. krissy


Mercy Ships Dental Clinic Brings Brighter Smiles and Hope to Freetown


On Thursday, March 10, 2011, Mercy Ships opened the doors to their dental clinic in Freetown, Sierra Leone, offering free treatment to provide relief for those suffering from long-term dental problems. The clinic is held in The HOPE Center, Lower Savage Square, beside the dock. It is a spacious building and an ideal environment for the daily dental procedures. The pre-screening assessment station is located outside the front entrance. This conveniently leads into the waiting room, where there are wooden benches facing an educational wall of dental hygiene information.

The dental practice consists of one large room, with many windows providing a good source of daylight. It has functioning air-conditioning and electricity connections. There are five dental stations. Each station contains two dental chairs, a table for sterile dental equipment and medications, a portable suction machine and a trolley. Additional lighting is provided by head torches worn by the dentist and hygienist. An adjoining room is equipped with a sink and running water for use in the sterilization process.

Typically the dental clinic is staffed with four dentists, one hygienist and four dental nurses from the Africa Mercy. They are accompanied by local day-volunteers who perform various duties such as pre-screening patients, sterilizing equipment, translating, and escorting patients through the process. The dental team at each station consists of a dentist, dental nurse and several local dental assistants, who are day-volunteers serving as translators. Each station serves two patients at a time.

On the opening day, the clinic gave free treatment to the local day-volunteers. This achieved two goals: to ensure that they received essential dental care and to provide them with an understanding of the process and the patient's experience.

As the day-volunteers arrived, they were met at the pre-screening station to identify those requiring dental treatment. Then they waited in an orderly seated queue. Any apprehensions were successfully distracted by the oral health education trainers in the waiting room. Their energetic demonstrations with over-sized props were not only entertaining but also offered clear simple advice on dental hygiene. The volunteers were invited one-by-one to the dental practice, where they were greeted by friendly, relaxed dental teams.

The dental procedures are highly professional and enviably efficient. It is an impressive operation. The majority of procedures are routine extractions of multiple decayed and broken teeth which create much pain for the patient. In fact, many of the patients have been suffering for months, if not years. The dental screening also provides an opportunity to diagnose other types of oral lesions such as benign tumors, which can be referred to the hospital ship for further investigation and treatment – often a life-saving intervention.

Dental health care services are rarely found in Sierra Leone. There are currently five dental officers serving the four regions of Sierra Leone with a total population of approximately 6.5 million. Basic dental problems such as decaying teeth and gum disorders can escalate into oral infections that threaten the lives of the sufferers. So, the provision of dental treatment is vitally important to the Freetown communities.

It is easy to underestimate the value of the patient care provided by the dental teams. But for many of the patients, this is the first time they have experienced compassion. The result is evident in the radiance of their smiles. The Mercy Ships Dental Clinic is a paving the way for cleaner brighter smiles – and happier, hope-filled lives.

Story by Claire Ross
Edited by Nancy Predaina
Photos by Tom Bradley







Potential patients waiting in line at the dental screenings. The screeners are faced with the challenges of deciding which of the thousands of patients will get treatment on any given day.

Patients recieve oral hygiene and care instructions in the patient waiting room.



Krissy
Yesterday was a CRAZY day!

We hosted our big "thank you" event for the minister of health, american ambassador, and a bunch of other important people who helped us out here in Sierra Leone this last year. I had attended a few meetings about it and knew my team would do well but still, I didn't sleep well the night before as I was thinking about the event and all the preparation that needed to happen, and was up at 4:45 am washing the overnighters dishes and getting the dining room moving.

The day went really well and the event spectacular; it was just a LONG day after starting so early and then not only did we have to work the event and the clean up but then went right into serving dinner! My team is absolutely stellar, I got a couple photos in our dress uniforms and will post them when I get them off emma's camera :)

Today is a 'normal' day, our last normal day, actually! Today is the day workers' (Sierra Leonians who work on board and get paid) last day and the last day we have any patients in the hospital - they will all be discharged today and tomorrow we have a celebration and thank-you party of for our day workers! Starting Monday we will get some of the hospital workers to help us up in the dining room and in the galley. I am working security for the day worker party tomorrow.... I have no idea what that means but they needed volunteers and I am not working!

Anyway... Happy Thanksgiving America! 26 days 'till I'm home again! Love to all, Krissy
Krissy








Went to Cheshire house again today - that's the boarding school and house for children with polio or other polio-like diseases. It was fun. We sang and colored and then gave out some gifts because it's the last official visit from Mercy Ships. Everything is winding down these days! Tomorrow we are serving a big fancy thank-you luncheon for the ministry of health and other important people and my team is serving so I'm going to be busy ALL day. It'll be great - I love a good challenge and get bored doing the same thing every day so I'm really looking forward to it! But it also means I will not get a nap tomorrow and with my 5:15 wakeup call looming ahead of me, I'm going to call it a night. Love to all! Krissy

Krissy
Well the last two days have been.... interesting! Work has been tough. Yesterday one of my crewmembers didn't show up, and then in the afternoon all of my day workers (Sierra Leonians who get paid) left without talking to anyone or giving an explanation. My manager suggested a few things; that we use paper plates, or only open one food line instead of two, but I was determined my team would not run from a challenge but rise up to the challenge - and they did! They weren't the prettiest or most flawless of meals, but everyone got fed and everything got done, and my team rocked it. This morning one of my team members again did not show up and we didn't have any day workers, so three of us managed again to rise to the occasion and it was brilliant. I love my team and even might go as far as saying I really like being a team leader... because they are so awesome and my new manager, Ken, is super supportive. Wahoo.

So today is Saturday, yesterday was a ships holiday so there aren't very many people on board right now. It's quiet and I really like that. That's probably how we actually survived the last three meals with such a small staff, too!

An awesome article about Peace Corps and so true: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/maya-lau/what-the-peace-corp-taugh_b_1099202.html?ref=fb&src=sp&comm_ref=false

That's all I have for today. I finally sat down and updated my resume, if anyone wants to hire me, please email me. :) Peace, krissy

One month from today I say goodbye to Africa! CRAZY!
Krissy
Just a quick note: we've received notice that the last box of mail will be sent from the International Operations Center in Texas to Sierra Leone on November 29th. After that mail will be sent to Ghana and Togo, which I will not be here to receive. SO... any mail for me needs to be in Texas by the 29th, or don't send it! :)

More later. Ciao for now. K
Krissy
SO... I promised to answer a question today so here it is! What are the markets like? What can you buy there and are they like the markets in Benin?


Yes, they are like the markets in Benin. Most markets have a food area, a fabric area, and a chinese junk area. Food you can get in street markets include manioc, flour, eggs, tomatoes, onions, plantains, and dried or fresh fish. Many markets have a butcher area but not all. This is all pretty much what you find in a Benin market, too. The fabric here is not nearly as good quality as the fabric in Benin, so that's too bad. I do get alot of compliments when I wear my Benin skirts, which is basically every day that I am not working! The chinese junk is basically cheap electronics and portable phones, as well as cheap clothes, flip flops, and plastic jewelry, most of which comes from China.


Here on the ship we get most of our food from containers; frozen containers full of meat, vegetables, berries, orange juice concentrate, etc. and dry containers with canned foods, candy, baking supplies, etc. We get produce a few times a week locally, usually lettuce, tomatoes, cucumbers, and occasionally pineapple or watermelon, and apples which are bought locally but imported from South Africa.


An interesting twist on the food situation - our freezer container that was supposed to arrive to us around the 14th of October has basically been held hostage for the last month by the Sierra Leone port - I don't know all the details or to whom the blame belongs but from what I understand, someone was demanding a bribe that we were refusing to pay to get OUR own container from wherever it was sitting in the port to our little piece of the dock. We had about two weeks worth of meat that we had to start spreading...but for the last several weeks the majority of the meat has been sausage and/or hot dogs. So when the Chief Steward made the announcement yesterday that the frozen container had finally been released, there was a ship-wide cheer!


Okay, so that's all I have for tonight. Today I'm off, I slept in, read a book for awhile, made brownies for the dental team whose last day on service is tomorrow, and attended a required 2-hour safety training. Wonderful. I have absolutely nothing planned for tomorrow so will probably go to the hope center and do some laundry. Then I work all weekend - cheers!


35 days left! Some days I think I'm absolutely schitzophrenic as I'm thrilled to be going home for a bit but devastated to be leaving Africa and my new family here on the Africa Mercy!



Peace, Krissy

Emma and I waiting to get picked up on Sunday for African church. Lovely!
Krissy
A few weeks ago I think I mentioned that a forklift had accidentally been driven off the dock into the water between the dock and the ship. It took several hours and a few different crane type things to get it back up out of the water - here's a photo of the carnage:



I'll answer some more questions tomorrow, I promise!

Peace, krissy

Krissy
Umu sat next to her mother in the shade of the awning at the admissions tent. A quiet and modest 18-year-old, she had a very large tumor that expanded her chin, making it difficult to talk and leaving her bottom teeth in disarray. It had started four years before as a toothache, but then it grew rapidly, disfiguring her face and disrupting her life. She had been a relay racer on her school’s running team and played defense on the football team until verbal abuse from classmates became so degrading that she dropped out of school.

Her Aunt Fatmata had come to a Mercy Ships screening, hoping to find relief for her own health problem. But in the process, she met people with facial tumors similar to Umu’s. They were waiting for appointments for surgical repair. She knew her niece was afraid to go out because people laughed at her. So, she went to Guinea immediately to get Umu and her mother and brought them to a screening.

Grateful to have this opportunity, Umu and her mother sat in front of the admissions nurse, who offered encouragement while explaining the admission process. With all the questions answered, measurements taken, and the medical forms completed, she was ushered into a hospital ward in the middle of the afternoon. A bit hesitant and withdrawn, it took a while for her to become accustomed to her new surroundings. The fact that she was French-speaking added to her feeling of isolation. But the nursing staff soon made her feel welcome, and the patients in the ward treated her with understanding. When she discovered a day-worker who spoke French, she relaxed a bit.

The surgery went smoothly. When she awoke in her hospital bed, her hand could feel the growth was gone. One look in the mirror brought a huge smile as she jubilantly exclaimed, “I am beautiful, so beautiful!”

The shy and retiring teen had bloomed into a lovely flower. The surgery had released a fountain of bliss that bubbled over, changing her demeanor into one of confidence and joy. She smiled at everyone around her.

After a few days of recovery and some post-operative care, Umu was released to begin her life again. “I am so happy to come here and do a surgery. I am so happy Fatmata brought me here,” she said with a warm smile. “If not for the ship, I would never have had a surgery,”

She is anxious to return to school to complete her education. “I want to be a doctor someday and come back to volunteer on the Mercy Ship,” she said.


Story by Elaine B. Winn
Edited by Nancy Predaina
Photos by Liz Cantu





Umu arriving to the ship for her surgery.


Before the surgery.



After her surgery, a smiling Umu is very thankful for her new face and outlook.
Krissy
I promised photos of Princess Anne of England during her visit a few weeks ago - here you are! The closest I'll probably ever get to royalty, and I only saw her out the window. :)




Visiting the Academy, the school onboard for the ships children.


Visiting patients in the hospital.



Visiting the bridge.



Welcome!





Krissy
The roomies, from L to R: Heather, Jenny (my bunkmate), Savanna, Emma, me, and Tifanny. Yes, we are all in our pajamas. Not pictured - Kaleena, who just left, and Rebekah, who just arrived! Love you girls!

A random guy hauling a huge cart of rice down the street. When these guys get going, they can be as dangerous as a car! well, that might be an exaggeration, but I certainly wouldn't want to have that much weight barrelling down on me with just a skinny little African guy for brakes!




The craft market in Freetown - every stall sells the same stuff, most of which you can find of much better quality in Benin, Togo, or Ghana. So I haven't bought much here.





Need junk? Come here!!


Monday and Tuesday of this week I had off, and Monday Emma and I and a friend Josh walked to the craft market, about 2 miles I guess. We got there and it was closed - Monday was a holiday! Wa waaaahhhh..... but it was a nice walk and I was glad to get out anyway, even if I did have a few PTSD moments having to do with really fast motos flying by me (my moto accident wasn't that long ago, and my face still has a shadow of a bruise....) SO on Tuesday, Emma, Greta, and Jeff (a married couple on my Dining room team) and I walked to a nicer restaurant to eat and then on to the craft market again! I intended to go to Cheshire house that afternoon, the place with the polio kids, but we didn't get back in time. Hopefully I can get back there one more time before we leave Sierra Leone! Anyway, they were both lovely days and it was nice to get out and see more of freetown. All of the above photos were taken by Emma (thanks, love!)


Yesterday and today were work days for me - work is going well, I'm enjoying my team and doing the best job I can do as a leader. It is additional stress over just being a team member, but my team is great and we have a brand new food service manager just starting with us who has worked and run many restaurants and I'm excited about some of the changes he's looking to make. So it's good!


This weekend I have off (Friday-Sunday) and it's looking a like a beach trip planned for Sunday? We'll see!! I hope so. I'm down to about 40 days left in Africa - crazy! Can't believe it is November 10th already!! No, I haven't figured out what I am doing next, besides going to MN for christmas where I just might freeze to death, making any more future planning fruitless! ;) If you want to hire me or pay for me to go to graduate school, shoot me an email :) peace, Krissy






Krissy
Good morning, Happy Monday!

My fabulous friend Laura sent me a question - What did I like least about Benin, and what do I like least about Mercy Ships?

Well, in Benin, probably the hardest things I had to deal with and thus the things I liked the least had to do with very agressive people in the south, usually in Cotonou. Going to the market or even just leaving the Peace Corps office in Cotonou was always a hassle. Getting grabbed in the market, followed, items shoved in your face, and people quoting exhorbitant yovo prices on all items are just a few of the hassles that faced me every single time I left the safety of the Peace Corps office. It wasn't like that in my village at all, people knew me and I usually liked getting out of my house. But Cotonou was a totally different story. It's one thing I noticed here in Sierra Leone right away, the markets are very tame and people are not nearly as pushy or grabby as they are in Benin.

The other big thing I didn't like at all in Benin was transportation - there is never a good option, unless you get lucky enough to land a seat in a new air conditioned Peace Corps vehicle! Otherwise, you are on the back of a crappy moto getting your leg burned or shoes melted by the exhaust pipe, or crammed with 8 others in a 5 person taxi with no upholstery left, no window cranks and definitely no air conditioning, or on a filthy bus with no ventilation and hygiene-deficient passengers. I am very much looking forward to being in control of my own transportation again once I return to the states!!

What I like least about Mercy Ships - I haven't really been here long enough to have strong opinions yet! I mean, alot of people complain about the food or other things that they are missing out on, but thanks to my time in Benin, I am thankful for everything I have and will never take those things for granted. I guess it's hard that everyone seems to come and go so frequently - every week we have new crew arriving and other crew leaving. I've been surrounded by people here on board but have felt lonely; it's hard to develop anything more than surface friendships. I think coming out of the isolation I had in Benin I feel very needy here and I don't like that feeling!! So I try to keep to myself. But anyway, I'm still so very thankful for my time here and trying to hold on to every moment and every blessing possible.

SO there you have it! Today I was planning on going to the craft market, but it's raining and I am not really interested in going out in the rain, so we will see what the weather holds in the next few hours. I have to do laundry this afternoon, and I'll see if I can find or take some pictures of what the inside of the ship looks like so you have some reference to what I am talking about! Tonight is the weekly French class that I am helping to teach (we went from about a hundred participants the first night to about thirty last week!) and then we'll see what other adventures find me in the next few days. I didn't sleep well last night so I might try for a nap sometime today. We'll see.

Send in your questions! if you can't leave a comment on the blog (sorry to those of you having technical difficulties), send me an email to krissypeacecorps at gmail dot com. I look forward to hearing form you!! Hugs to all - Krissy

Yes, I realize I am no longer in the peace corps and will change my email address eventually... but not today. :)
Krissy
The last three days have been... crazy! I've stepped into my new role as dining room Team Leader - and it has gone very well, I've just managed to keep myself stressed out trying to not let anything bad happen... ha! but it's been fun, my team is great and I feel very supported. Wahoo!

Last night instead of a regular meal we had a barbecue on the dock - it was nice for a change, but alot of running up and down the looong staircase gangway! We also ran out of food, which was the fault of the galley not the dining room, but since it's my team that gets to handle the majority of complaints, it was still a pain. BUT, everyone managed to eat something, and we didn't have to clean up the dining room!

My team is down to four people. At one point we had seven, which was heavenly and we were getting done with clean up about a half an hour after the meal finished. This morning, with our 4-person team, it took us a good solid hour and a half to clean up. Blerg. But now we're off until dinner time! I am thankful we don't serve lunch on weekends!

Okay, so my question to you now, my faithful readers, is what do you want to know?? About life on the Africa Mercy, my previous life in Benin, or anything, really? Please, I'm running out of things to talk about, and it would be nice to know if people actually read my blog, anyway! So click the little 'comment' box at the bottom of this entry and send me something. Anything, really. But know that it will be posted for all to see.... which won't be a problem if no one actually reads this. Besides mom, I know you read it. Thanks for the letters every week. :)

44 days left in Africa! Love to all - Krissy
Krissy
SO I've had the last two days off, which has been good - I really love our schedule! I haven't done anything noteworthy - cleaned my room, slept in and took naps, read, played games, watched lightning from the top deck.... nothing terribly exciting but very relaxing! Work in the dining room and the galley is very physically demanding so it's been nice to laze around and rest.

Tomorrow I go back to work in the dining room... as the team leader! Yes, a 'promotion' of sorts... which I said NO to at least four times before finally agreeing to it. I didn't want any responsibility when coming here, I just wanted to do what I was told to do and serve the best I can, but it was made clear to me that my best way to serve would be to step up into this position, so here we go!

I'll let you know how it goes! In the meantime, for the rest of the day today I'm babysitting for a family here on board and then we have our crew community meeting this evening. Then I work all weekend. Cheers!

Love to all. Krissy

ps I got an email yesterday informing me I only have 48 days left in Africa... so I did the math and I've been here well over 850 days. Wow! 47 left!
Krissy
Binta Barrie’s Curse Is Lifted

Ten-year-old Binta Barrie lies in her hospital bed onboard the Africa Mercy clicking her fingers and smiling at everyone around her. Her cheerful attitude and smiling face cause all of the patients around her to laugh.

Binta was born with bowed legs, a problem easily correctable if proper medical care can be received, but in Sierra Leone proper medical care is hard or even impossible to find. Binta’s friends and neighbors laughed at her and mocked her because of her strange legs. When this happened, Binta would walk away to be by herself. In West Africa, bowed legs are usually seen as a curse instead of a medical condition. This made her family very sad. “I was not feeling fine,” said Binta’s older sister Marie.

One day Binta’s mother heard a radio announcement about a hospital ship that might be able to help Binta. She took her daughter to a Mercy Ships medical screening at a hospital in Kabala. Binta was delighted when she was accepted for surgery. She and her sister, Marie, traveled to the Africa Mercy, and Binta received a free surgery to correct her legs.

Even though Binta’s legs are still in casts, they are beautifully straight. When Binta goes home, she hopes to continue school and spend more time with her friends. She simply says, “When I go [home], I will be happy.”

Binta’s surgery has changed her life forever. Thanks to the doctors onboard the Africa Mercy she has a bright, happy, future ahead of her – a wonderful reason to smile!


Story by Rachel-Elise Cairncross, student in the AFM Academy
Edited by Nancy Predaina
Photos by Hannah Palmer