Saturday, April 21, 2012

Pencils for Jamaica ... each one reach one!

I don't know yet where I will be assigned for my two year service after training  - and won't know until I am sworn in - May - that said - PENCILS are sorely lacking in every school I have been at, and educators here in Jamaica as well as Peace Corps Volunteers would love to have a pencil for every child.

Pencil sharpeners and/or erasers are also not available - if the students have pencils, they chew them down, to sharpen them.

 I will be working in the Green/Environment sector... SO ... if anyone has pencils that you could donate- please send them to:

 Alice Anderson, Peace Corps Volunteer,
 %Carla Ellis Country Director, 
8 Worthington Ave.,
 Kingston 5, Jamaica, West Indies.

When I have my permanent assignment - I will update this address. Ideally, at the end of my two year tour, students will have pencils. We will never have a surplus ... so more is better. I will also be able to distribute your pencils to others in my group, or the past groups that are here in Jamaica. Ideally, we can cover the entire island with Pencils from everywhere USA and beyond.




Thursday, April 19, 2012

Blogs for Peace Corps Jamaica group 83

For insights into the past three weeks in Jamaica for Peace Corps Group 83...check out videos plus on blogs by talented fellow PC Trainees:
http://kcapes.wordpress.com/
 or
Kristen and Marie's combined blog:
The World We Know

http://simplyintentional.wordpress.com/
Especially the video "Community Based Training Part I" and more ..

The Jamaican Brandi: One ...


Also Kevin, Linnae and Autumn (in my Green/Environment Group) Blogs
 Other PCV's from group 83 - Greens

Sunday, April 8, 2012

Blue Mountain Coffee...from field to market

The world's best coffee, grown in Jamaica...Blue Mountain Coffee. A small farmer shared his growing technique, and later we discovered how the berry is dried, cleaned, roasted and ground for consumers. Typically a small farmer will grow (prune, fertilize with chicken manure and Nitrogen, treat for the berry borer, pay women to pick the berry in 50# boxes) and sell to wholesalers as the berry.

Saturday, April 7, 2012

My Hub training in St Andrew hillside community

I seldom have Internet access so have not been able to upload photos however try this to get a quick overview of the first two weeks:
http://vimeo.com/39170093
full blog athttp://simplyintentional.wordpress.com/
Video produced by two fellow Peace Corps Trainees who are at different locations with their groups.

Photo of fellow Peace Corps trainee Autumn and myself as we shadowed a small coffee farmer growing Blue Mountain Coffee, clearing land to plant okra with gungo beans and group photo of our Sector (Greens).