irene_dsc
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Nov 1, 2007
- Messages
- 1,655
What were once sterile gloves were tossed in and compromised and I was getting more and more irritated and upset with each moment.
That definitely seems like the most stressful part of the unpacking/re-packing experience! Disorganized is one thing, but compromised sterility is another. Just thinking about the kid with the scratch that became infected in your other post...
On the other hand, I learned a valuable lesson: a detailed manifest would have been helpful for the medical supplies we were taking which would have saved some time when we got there. As for our personal items, now parsed out to 14 other bags, time would tell us whether we’d see them again.
I hope everything showed up!
It was also the last red meat I ate for 10 days.
Yeah, not a whole lot of grass for grazing cattle in Africa.
Oh, and speaking of groundnut stew - I'm not positive if I had some (probably), but I do remember that The Gambia was my first experience with natural style peanut butter, and the concept that it didn't need refrigeration. Peanuts / ground nuts are a common crop in West Africa, but they don't add all the other stuff you get in the brand name stuff. This was before natural style peanut butter became more popularized in the US, although dh says he discovered it in college (about the same time), at Trader Joe's.
I also enjoyed watching the other passengers who were obviously traveling with us to W. Africa. Their beautiful, colorful outfits lent an exotic touch to the otherwise ordinary and somewhat drab Departures Hall. The melancholy of leaving Disney was still fresh and, while the mood should have been extreme excitement, the transition from order, the known, and comfortable to the unknown, disorganized, and difficult was admittedly weighing on me.
African cloth is amazing. I got a couple things made while I was in The Gambia, although somewhat tamer colors than most Africans tend to wear. I loved the authentic African fashion - sadly, much of our excess clothes end up in Africa and has really dealt a heavy blow to the local clothing manufacturing economy.
So, here is our team with the leading presidential candidate.
If he does end up famous, or infamous, this will be an even more interesting souvenir!
Surprisingly, we were given lifevests, and then given a choice of down below or “on deck”. Below was over-crowded and stuffy, so we chose up top in case something went awry and we could bail off quickly.
I'm going to say that I agree with your decision on this one!