Okhaldunga
I eventually got down to Okhaldunga, as before the roads
were flooded and they have a lot of leaches so the trip was delayed a few
weeks. Turns out I was the first visitor they ever had. Now this school is far
away, it took around three hours to get there, mainly driving along mountain
roads. After that there was a four-five minute walk down the hill to the
village. I’ve heard a lot about the Nepali people walking very fast though the
mountains but I kept getting told to slow down, I think I was just enjoying
being able to have a proper walk somewhere. The village is really isolated, the
closest village is a two hour walk and the closet town is a forty-five minute
walk then an hour drive. However, it is easily the best place I have been so
far. It’s beautiful, it is completely surrounded by mountains which are great
for trekking (more on that later).
The school is a split campus and even though it only takes
five minutes to traverse the path way, it is a very dangerous path, well not a
path, a mountain side which is prone to small rivers when it rains. However,
there is a longer route which is safer but takes three times as long. It is a
big higher secondary school with a nursery. The children are really excitable
and love to learn, I ended up with teaching four classes at once because all
the children, from year 2, 3 and 5, were watching from the door and windows
while I was trying to teach year 4. So we just did body songs in the end.
Saying that, from year 7 and up the children are rather subdued and reluctant
to be involved in the lessons, from what I remember during my high school, this
is pretty much the case in England but not normally in Nepal. They are normally
really eager. Most of the classrooms are very big and light for Nepali standards,
apart from nursery, year 1, 2 and 3. These four classrooms are really small and
really dark. However, they have just built two new rooms here, so I managed to
convince them to move the nursery and another primary class into these and I
also suggested they knock down the walls to make bigger classrooms so the
primary school.
The teachers are really friendly here and are involved in
the community in a big way: running sports clubs, spending time chatting to the
villagers and even doing a little childcare. They really tried to make me feel
welcome, perhaps a little too much on the food front. When I first got there I
told them I did eat meat so they have me an omelette and a few roties, which
was really good and I told them that. After this I have omelette and three/four
roties for breakfast, dinner and tea. For six days. I was a bit sick of it by
the end.
On the Friday I asked to go trekking in the mountains on the
Saturday (no school) but they said there was a village volleyball tournament
starting in the morning so we would go there first. Therefore, when we set of
at 7 a.m., after going sleep at 2 a.m. I thought we were going for a hour walk
to the volleyball competition area. I was wrong we went on an eight hour trek
first. It was amazing we went up three different mountains, through some jungle
land, had a picnic (omelette and roti) on a plateau at the top of a mountain
and even managed a bit of pot-holing.
However, there were two bad points. One, from 12-2 it was so hot I could
only walk 15 mins before resting and, two, there was only two bottles of drink
for five people, one was water and the other was very strong roksi, and you
cannot get more water on the mountain side as there are no streams. To say I
was parched is an understatement. We did get to the volleyball game at about 5
p.m. just as the village team was starting to play, the game was about twenty
mins long. They lost and we went home straight away, they didn’t say much on
the way back.
Also, after school one day we took a walk up to the big
stone, after which the village is named. It was only about a hour walk though
some woodland. It was really nice up there and I asked to stay for a bit longer
until sunset. On the way down though the woodland one of the teachers said,
rather casually, that they get tigers and poisonous snakes after sunset in the
woods. I wish they’d told me before as I was of got of sharpish from the hill
in that case. A number of people had been killed by them.
No comments:
Post a Comment