Tuesday, May 31, 2011

Running up the Ngong Hills

by Adharanand Finn

My alarm goes off at 5.15am. I sit on the edge of my bed trying to wake up. It's still dark outside. I'm in Nairobi, about to head out into the Ngong Hills to run with a group of Kenyans I've never met before. Right now it all seems vaguely ridiculous. I'm 37. An average runner. I've got a nice, warm, cosy bed. Why am I leaving it to try in vain to keep up with a bunch of stupidly fast Kenyan runners? I must be mad.

It's a thought process that runs through my mind virtually every time I wake up for one of these early morning runs. But today it's worse. I've been given directions to a side street in Ngong, a busy, run-down satellite town on the outskirts of Nairobi. At 6am, apparently, a group of athletes meet there every morning. That's all I know. Just turning up unannounced is a daunting prospect.

I drive up to Ngong and pull my car up on the side of the street. I turn off the lights and sit tight, listening to the Christian rap music on the radio. I'm about 10 minutes early and the side road is deserted as far as I can make out in the darkness.

A figure comes walking past suddenly, peering in through the window at me. I turn off the radio. I feel suddenly vulnerable sitting here in my car. I imagine what the runners will think when I step out of my car and walk over to say hello. It would be better without the car, I decide. I've got 10 minutes to kill, anyway. It would be safer parked on the main road.

I turn the engine back on, like a loud cough, the headlights glaring at everything as I turn the car and head back up into Ngong.

Once I've parked, I jog back along the edge of the main road to the side street. And sure enough, there they are. About eight athletes stand stretching in the tiny beginnings of morning, a red glow scratching the horizon behind them.

They all turn to watch me as I walk over. One smiles. "Jambo," he says.
I shake his hand, and ask if it's OK if I run with them.

"Fine, fine," they say.

"We're running up the hill," says one. That doesn't sound promising.

"I'll try to keep up."

"Up the mountain," he says. "But not fast. Easy." Like other Kenyan runners, he over-emphasises the word "easy", as though he means it's going to be the easiest thing you've ever done, like lying back on a sun-lounger as someone slices up a mango and feeds it to you piece by piece. Not like a run up a mountain in the cold dawn.

We set off jogging slowly and I slot in behind the front few runners. After a few moments we start our ascent, going at a comfortable pace. I've seen the Ngong Hills from a distance. They didn't seem that high, so I'm not too worried. I'll just stick with them for as long as I can, I think, trying to remember the way we've run so I can turn back if I need to.

After a while people start dropping off from the group. Is the pace too quick, I wonder. Perhaps the runners here are not as good as in Iten. They all look like decent runners, with their long, skinny legs and calf muscles like bricks inserted under their tights. My calves just don't look like that, even when I tense them as hard as I can.

After about 20 minutes we're still climbing, running past small houses and children walking to school. The dawn is in full bloom now, striping the sky in red and yellow. One of the runners turns to me.
"How are you feeling?" I'm fine, actually. My legs don't feel tired. I'm breathing OK. But I don't want to sound cocky.

"OK," I say. "A bit breathless." Suddenly I do feel breathless. Another of the runners looks at me over his shoulder.

"Is it OK?" he asks. They seem surprised that I'm still with them, and their lack of belief is sowing doubts in my mind. Before I know it I'm starting to struggle. I wonder what happened to the other five runners. Maybe I'm going too fast. Perhaps I should slow down and wait for them.

"Where are the others?" I ask, but almost before the words are out I hear the patter of feet as they run up behind us. The pace suddenly picks up and they all start pushing on. The path seems to be getting steeper. I'm done for.

One of the runners kindly slows down to wait for me. Up, up, up we go. Out of the houses and on to a neat, sparse mountainside.

On we run. Every time I think we must be reaching the top, it turns out to be another false summit. And each time the next bit is even steeper. I begin to labour like a 20-stone jogger. Tiny pitter-patter steps that barely seem to inch me on. And still it goes on. Past huge swooping wind turbines, like spaceships from a distant future that have landed silently in the night. Up more, along a path so smooth, so steep. And all the time, the other runner stays with me, quietly encouraging me.

Virtually every athlete I have met in Kenya has shown me the same kindness. Many of them are struggling to make enough money even to buy food. They live in small shacks without electricity or running water, struggling to make headway in a saturated field in which only a very few will succeed. Yet they do it so well, and with such dedication, that every one of them would be a champion in virtually any other country in the world, would be lauded and celebrated, instead of being just another nameless runner making his way along the roads and tracks of Ngong or Iten.

Yet in this struggle there is no resentment towards the hapless mzungu [white man] with the car and the money to shop in supermarkets and travel the world and eat ice-cream. Instead, all they ever show me is compassion. As a fellow runner, no matter how slow, they offer me only encouragement. It is quite humbling.
As we finally approach the great peak of Ngong Hill, the whole of Kenya seems to stretch out around us. Distant mountains poke up out of the dawn mist, as a huge orange ball of sun begins its own ascent up into the hazy, pink sky. The air is cool and fresh, breathing life into me with each gulp.

"It's beautiful up here," I say to the runner beside me. He looks around as though he hasn't considered this before. "Yes," he says.

We're almost at the top when the rest of our group comes trundling back down the slope towards us. "Turn around," they say. Relieved I turn my weary legs. It's hard to believe how high we have come. It's like looking out across the world from an aeroplane. Did I really run up this far? I must be getting fitter. Surely.



original article in the guardian can be found here

Saturday, May 28, 2011

banana bread muffins

not long after my near-baking fail with the coconut lime cake (note to self: malibu rum tastes like sun-tan lotion) i decided to go for something a bit more tested & true. now, i am not a patient person. i am definitely not a patient baker. i don't know why i like it since i never eat anything i bake (tastes bad to me, go figure) i do like the baking bit itself. a bit like doing arts & crafts even if you suck at art... or something.


however, the problem with being a perfectionist & not being patient is that you never end up with perfection. unless, of course, you are my father & make dad's banana bread muffins. this is how they turned out:




who stole one?






roughly translated, here is the recipe:

4 over-ripe bananas
6 table spoons of oil
1/2 cup of sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla essence
2 well beaten eggs
1 1/2 cups of flour
1 heaped teaspoon baking powder
1 leveled teaspoon of baking soda
optional: 1/4 cup of chopped walnuts, almonds or chocolate chip

method:
with fork mix oil, vanilla essence, sugar and mash in the bananas then add the well beaten eggs, baking soda, baking powder and the flour.
mix the dough well and add the nuts
grease the baking tray and bake at 325F till golden brown (approx. 30min, maybe a little less)

om NOM nom nom

may morning weekend

sometimes i struggle a little with what this blog is for. i know i don't really write for an audience, and yet at the same time i constantly feel like i do, however small it is. i don't keep it as a personal or private record - between my email and notebooks, i don't need yet another venue to document my hum-drum daily life. & who cares if i bake shit anyway? but i keep wanted to 'post things on my blog' for whatever reason, so here goes.


i'm tempted to explain certain bits of my oxford life to 'everyone back home' but it feels rather redundant, so i'll stick to links to the ever-so-trusted wikipedia for know. it frustrates me that anything i post is always a month behind--i'll log in my ideas and then forget to finish until a time like now (28th may, for example) when i'm sick in bed on a saturday & can't really concentrate on one task to completion. 


already today i've managed to start doing laundry but not finishing, because someone left their wet stuff in the machine, i went into town to get some medications & only to find out i have been mixing the wrong ones & came back with perogies instead, i've watched half a tv programme on italian food & religion which has been making me LOL all afternoon, and i've updated facebook about 10 times now. dreadfully boring being sick. i pick up my book but i get sleepy but i don't want to sleep but i can't go outside & i want to go running but can't because i'm ill and all together this is just a frustrating unpleasant place to be. remind me to book tickets for london, btw. on top of it all, i keep swallowing my own snot which is getting disgusting. perhaps that's why i'm not hungry.


this has nothing to do with what i meant to write about, which was may morning.






it's been a weekend of baking for me. david was having a few old friends from undergrad over for the celebrations so i thought i'd bake a cake. alas, i forgot to take a picture of the said cake & the only one i have is of it in the fridge, which is not a very nice one at all. it was a coconut lime cake (infused with rum). i didn't like it, but everyone else did. one chap ate three slices in a go, so i was pleased. 




perhaps not the nicest cake picture ever... it was slightly lopsided toO! but was it ever difficult to get the toasted coconut only on the sides & not on the top!  & for comparison purposes, here is what i was going for (the light green coconut lime one, obviously):






we're getting there.






Monday, May 16, 2011

Larkin in Love

i have started writing for the Oxonian Review - this will become a regular thing. here is my first submission, on Philip Larkin's Letters to Monica, ed. Anthony Thwaite.

http://www.oxonianreview.org/wp/larkin-in-love/

looking forward to the next one in a couple weeks!