July
20th, & 21st 2010 Addis
This
is the rainy season of Ethiopia. It
rains several times each day and night.
Many times I am woken up at night by the rain pounding on the roof. The
heavy rains help to keep the air clean and fresh. When it is not raining every day the black
diesel smoke from all of the trucks soon makes a brown haze all around Addis.
The downside to the rain is that everything is muddy. Most of the areas that we
go around here are either paved of have sidewalk so it is not a big problem but
I have seen deep mud and stuck vehicles because of the weather.
This
morning Tsehay and I went to the Ethiopian Veterinary Association’s annual
meeting. We meet Dr. Fitzhugh and Belachew at the gate of the African Union complex
where the meetings were held. They are working on a USAID project to
standardize the regulations for slaughtering and exporting meat. Dr. Fitzhugh
has been working in Ethiopia for about 30 years. He and Tsehay know each other very well from
working on similar projects. I was also
able to meet several of the staff members from ATARC, DZARC and HARC.
As
we walked into the conference center we saw Dr. Abera, the Minister of
Agriculture, and his party off to the side.
We went over and said hello then followed them into the conference hall.
Most of the seats were full so I just followed Tsehay who followed the group
and we ended up sitting directly behind Dr. Abera and Dr Birhanu, the President
of the EVA. It was a little
uncomfortable for me to sit there but I consoled myself by thinking that it
would probably give credibility to our project and may open doors later on down
the line.
Tsehay
and I spent yesterday and today formulating a new plan for the Kokosa property
and the dairy initiative. In a nutshell
our plan has three phases: 1-build a small simple dairy in Kokosa this year, 2-
build a larger modern dairy near Addis in a year or two, and 3- develop a
support industry for the Ethiopian dairies in two to three years. Paul liked the first and third initiatives
but was hesitant on the second until we have more experience in the dairy
industry in Ethiopia. I feel much more
comfortable with this plan. It will
still challenge us but it won’t be such a huge financial drain to start with.
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