I have been happy to have a single room during the last five days in Mityana. For reasons that I had not foreseen, I am even more grateful. The issue is, the door has a glitchy lock. It is a struggle each and every day to get the deadbolt to open, and the deadbolt takes three solid turns before it releases from the door I am without I internet/wifi in my room, and so I have no way to contact a team member in the event I should be locked in. My greatest fear is not lack of food, nor lack of water, rather, my greatest fear is running out of toilet paperππππ!
Today is our last day here in Mitayana. Five of the group will pack up and head to the airport to go home, and the rest of us will be picked up for a four hour drive to a national park, the name of which escapes my just now. As they cater to the foreign travelers, I imagine wifi service will be readily available. So hopefully I will be able to catch you up on some pretty neat tales. But for now, some photos of our last day in clinicπ.
Our volunteers loading up for the long ride back to Kampala
A little team member π.
The infamous chair. As the team leader for the second week of clinics, I was responsible for tallying a lot of numbers at the end of the day. So much of my time was spent sitting in one of these chairs. They were consistent throughout all of the clinical sites we went to, and they were used even for Sunday worship services. it made for an achy back, unless I got up and worked standing up intermittently throughout the day. I will not miss these one bit! And if I should ever see another again, I will most likely break it to bits! πππ
A case of Avian Influenza came through…
And a case of swine fluπππ.
i’ll try to continue these on a new Blog. A couple of the team members are down, so I will go visit with them less I appear unsociable.
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