Tuesday, February 14, 2012

Gisyeni on Lake Kivu

 Arrived in Gisyeni just in time for lunch
Avocadoes are endless in Rwanda which is great because they are a pregnancy super-food.
 Beautiful views from our lodge

 31+ weeks
 Chris being funny






 Hibiscus grow really well here
 Sand beaches are small here  because it doesn't come naturally.    The geology is mostly volcanic rock, which makes the earth black and sharp, rather than sandy and soft.  
Feeling big and uncomfortable
The area of Gisyeni borders Goma (in Congo) which is the hub for major volcanic activity.  There is currently a volcano erupting and our friend Ben, and fellow MASSer, who we ran into on the Gisyeni Beach, took this photo right after he climbed one of the dormant volcanoes this past weekend.  He took this shot at nightime. 
Lush flowers
 This picture doesn't show it quite accurately, but at a certain point, around sunset, the horizon is no longer visible and the water becomes one monotone hue with the sky, so you don't know where one ends and one begins.  This is an effect that happened on Lake Tanganyika in Burundi too.  Must be characteristic of this area in Africa.
 really BIG

 Stripes
 31 weeks and 2 days

Chris posing like Bill Murray in Lost in Translation
 Serenading me and the baby on the beach


 We also randomly ran into our friends Josh and Emily who are doctors with PIH (Partners in Health, the non-prof that MASS designs hospitals for).  Josh and Chris have been guitar buddy's for the last couple months and so they jammed for a bit too.
 Tea fields during harvest season

 Lake Kivu
Street view on the way home