Saturday, 26 December 2009

Christmas






Merry Christmas from Doha,
We had a neat Christmas in Doha - presents at home on Christmas morning, then a day out at Sharq Village with a fabulous meal, enjoying the company of around a dozen of Andrea's team from work. Very relaxed with plenty of bubbly flowing, outside overlooking the harbour and fantastic weather. If the rest of you were here it would have been unbeatable.

Matija got a CD player, a table and chairs from Nana and Dida, a jersey from Grandma and Grandad and lots of other pressies - thank you all for that. Ande received pearls and pot plants while Vince got a world globe, cufflinks and a very nice salt and pepper grinder.

I've attached some photos - Ande is back at work, I'm driving now on a temporary licence and Matija and I will be out and about a little now going to some playgrounds and other exciting attractions.

All our love,
Vince, Ande and Matija.

Friday, 18 December 2009

Coming up to Christmas






It's a couple of weeks after Eid-al-Adha. Andrea has begun leading workshops with developing principals, aspiring principals and master trainers (those training to lead principals) - that's about 250 people participating for three days in a week, over five weeks and all of the materials have to be prepared far enough in advance to have them translated! Feedback has been wonderful, although she was battling a flu over the first week, which hasn't helped at all.

Matija has finished kindy for about three weeks over Christmas, so she'll be back at home with Dad for a while. She's been loving kindy, the teacher and helpers are all great and she runs around to give each of them a hug before she goes home. She has made two friends, Emma and Paige - she'll look forward to seeing them again in the new year.

We've had a celebration of Cognition's 20 years in Doha which was fun - dinner, drinks and speeches a the Diplomatic club. We had the Cognition Christmas function last night, which was a sit-down meal, drinks and a band at the Intercontinental. Nice night, but Ande was still feeling the effects of the flu so we didn't stay too long.

I've got a little writing done, completed some changes to the first in a series, although I can't see myself getting much writing done while Matija is home. I'm not getting stressed about that though, I may as well enjoy my time with her while I can.

We had a day off on Thursday as it is National Day today. We went down to the Corniche to watch the parade. There were thousands of people there to watch. They were about 5 deep where we were, luckily we were in a family area that they fenced off. Matija was on my shoulders and we stayed to see marching troops, others mounted on horses and camels, school kids etc. It was pretty hot and crammed. There were thousands of single Indian guys just beside us and we were all jammed in. The police were pushing the young Indian guys back - it wasn't nasty, but they are certainly treated as a lower class than locals and westerners and it wasn't pleasant. We didn't stay for the whole parade but came home and caught some of it on local TV - big speed boats on the gulf, a fly-by from the Air Force and the Emir driving past.

There are also heaps of cars with flags, stickers and Qatar stuff all over them, Ande took a couple of photos to show you how they look. Others have big photos of the Emir and his son plastered all over them.

We did get out to a camel and horse show at the edge of town, but they don't post the times etc, so we only saw some young boys saddling camels. I did get to hold a falcon though and Matija patted it.

We have the Christmas tree up and there are a few pressies under it. We've still got a bit of Christmas shopping to do. We're going out to a hotel - Shaq Village for Christmas with quite a few of Ande's team. All food and booze supplied and there is an area for kids where they can play and be watched when we want to chill out for a bit too. Should be fun.

We're settling in pretty well, starting to find our way around better and getting some things accomplished. Having fun too and both learning to live a little more in the moment and enjoy those moments - each of them are precious.

love V, Ande and Matija.

Monday, 30 November 2009

Eid al-Adha






Hi everyone,
we're still in holiday mode over here. Eid al-Adha is the second most significant celebration on the Muslim calendar and there are three days of celebration (although Andrea gets a whopping 10 day break). It celebrates the old testament story of Abraham, who is asked to sacrifice his only son. When he is about to do the deed, God lets him off and he sacrifices a lamb instead. The locals had prayer on Thursday morning and, as part of the celebrations, they slaughter an animal. A third of the meat goes to friends and family, a third goes to the needy and they keep a third.

We visited the fruit and vegetable markets on Friday morning - the produce was pretty cheap and it ranged from pineapples to cabbages to strawberries and bananas and some stuff we'd never seen in our lives. After that we visited the live animal markets. There were big makeshift pens of sheep and cattle along with the trucks they came in and their feed. Many were from Somalia and places further away than that. They were charging around $400 for a sheep on the hoof (a premium for Eid and for Westerners I think). One Somali sheep-seller offered a money back guarantee. If it didn't taste any good he'd take the sheep back. There were a few merinos (from Australia I think) but they were mostly long-legged or fat-tailed woolly sheep. There were slim looking goats too and Brahmin style cattle.

As part of the animal market there are two slaughter houses, one for sheep and goats and one for cattle. If you didn't choose to drive you purchase away in your boot then you backed your ute up with your cow on board or you dragged your sheep/goat around to the slaughter house and waited your turn. When it was your turn you roped your cow and dragged it in. There was a public viewing area where we saw them drop the cow with ropes then cut it's throat, hang it, skin it, gut it and cut it up, then loaded the bags of meat back into the ute. No hanging the carcass here. There was a bit more of a chain operating for the sheep, they had five or six on a bench and were cutting throats and hooking them onto a chain as others were being dragged onto the bench. Because of Eid the whole place was going off - utes and animals everywhere. Very exciting.

We also went camel racing. That was really hard case. They line up at the start of the 5km course. Their Somali handlers are on one side of a barrier, holding onto lead ropes and the camels are on the other. They banned small boy jockeys a while ago so they use battery operated robots that spin a whip around when you press the button. Anyway, the barrier goes up and the handlers run for their lives to the side of the track and dive out of the way as the camels launch themselves down the track. We saw three or four handlers go under the camels at the start and a couple of camels went down too, but no-one was carted off to hospital. A few camels balk and go sideways and their handlers sprint after them to try and grab hold of them again, since they're not going to win the race. We were about ten metres down from the start and we got very close-up to a couple of camels that hadn't quite got the hang of the start.

Anyway, they take off, then all of the owners vehicles race off around the road at the edge of the track to follow the race and whip the camels along where necessary. Spectators leap on a bus on the inside of the track and the bus tears alongside the running camels so you get to watch the whole thing in close-up. The buses are wired with Arabic race commentary, you can hear the owners screaming at the camels and the little robots occasionally come to life and start beating the camels along. It's fantastic fun. They should do horse racing like that back home! About 15 of Andrea's work colleagues came along too and we had a great day out, apart from the fact that no-one could tell us when it was, and when we did get there the races were about 100m from the grandstand and we never realised when they actually started.

Other than that, we've joined a health club at one of the hotels where we have access to the gym, pool, squash and tennis courts etc. We've been flogging that over Eid, one of us takes Matija swimming while the other hits the gym. She's got a little floaty vest and has been loving bobbing around the pool.

We're off to the Souk tonight to check out the nuts, dried fruit and spices and we'll stay down there for dinner in a Moroccan place that is supposed to be very good and still pretty cheap by NZ standards.

All in all we're settling in pretty well, finding our way around and starting to get a handle on things. We'll keep you posted on exciting news as it happens and I'll add some photos too.

Cheers V, Matija and Ande

Tuesday, 24 November 2009

First Posts



Hi everyone,
Just posting some photos and updating. Matija got a
new bike last night and hasn't stopped riding it since. I'll take her up to the apartment roof for a ride this afternoon (hopefully there is a wall or rail around the rooftop!). Also included are photos from the beach, nothing like a Gizzy beach but still warm, sandy and wet.