The walls are leaking.
My bed is wet. My xi-xi bucket is filling up with water I’m collecting from
where the roof is letting water drip into my room. I thought that Sandy, the impending “perfect
storm” ominously situated over the entire east coast was supposed to be bad;
but then I found out what the worst parts of the Mozambican Rainy Season were
really like.
As my former home braced for impact, my new home didn’t even
see it coming. Just another storm we
thought: Some rain, some mud, and complete certainty that we’d lose power. When the gloomy storm clouds over Namaacha finally
decided to empty their bowels right on tops of us, Hurricane Sandy began to
traverse the DC Metropolitan area. The
lights barely flickered on Longwood Drive, all the while I found myself using a
broom to battle a flash flood of water that was trying to breach the top of a
temporary dam I had built from rocks, sandals and socks to guard the entrance
of my host family’s African shack. Once
the front was secure, I went to place buckets inside the house to catch water that
was leaking from the roof, walls, and floor (the water entering from the later
method proved to be most difficult to catch; I blame gravity for that
one). The rain continued for about a
half hour, carving out miniature canyons in the earth as rivers of mud, rock,
and rain began to form and flow down the hill of our mountain-side machamba
(for those that don’t know, I live on a farm on the side of a rolling
mountain). The flashing lighting that was accompanied by a ferocious thunder
and torrential downpour made me feel oddly close to home. After all, I thought, how funny that my
American family was supposedly going through the same exact thing.
When the storm finally passed and the skies cleared up, we
had a chance to inspect the damage.
Apparently, this has been the worst rain Namaacha had seen since 2005.
One of our freshly plowed fields (my Pai is planning on planting peanuts, or
amendoim) was transformed into a sea of mud (matope!). Because it was completely compacted, the soil
would have to be turned over again. This
is done by hand with a hoe-like tool called an enxada. It’s a lot of back-breaking, bending-over work
that really sucks doing. But, he barely
shrugged after acknowledging that all the hard work he had just put in was all
for naught. He just accepted it. Alas,
that’s life here; and life goes on.
While we had been victorious at keeping the water from
flowing into our house, our casa de banho wasn’t so lucky. The matope river had decided that it would
flow right on through our ghetto little bathing shack and left behind about two
inches of mud caked to the cement floor.
Here’s a picture!
Matope Central |