Data Collection, week 2!
We have now completed the second week of data collection for our theses which were even better than the first! Probably because we now know what we are doing ;o)
We left Masaka Monday morning, the three of us, the three translators, and Fred, our driver. It took us around 1½ hours to get to Lyantonde where we checked in at a somewhat expensive hotel (Skyeblue) but is was either this or a brothel!... And disregarding the fact that there was no power, only a noisy generator; no light in the bath room; no hot water in the shower; no water at all in the sink; a non-functioning TV: it was indeed worth the money! A very comfortable bed and incredible nice staff! We then continued to Kacheera, a further 40 minutes away, where we met with the chairman for the cooperative (KAFAME) whose members we were going to interview.

We got the member list, selected our 30 members to interview and off we went in our big 4-wheel drive on roads that half of the time were a narrow path...

The region was so beautiful, very green despite the fact that this region also suffers from frequent droughts. At the end of the day we had interviewed 7 members, one more than planned and early! On the way back we stopped to copy the member list and Sara and Sophie grapped the opportunity to share a roasted maize.

We went back to the hotel, talked about the day while enjoying a cold Guinness.
Compared to last week, it was much more organised so we finished early each day and had time to relax a while each afternoon (meaning: reading a good book at the hotel while enjoying a cold beer in the sun).

Students running after the car waving and screaming "bye" at us! We felt like rock stars!

Another beautiful picture of the landscape. Don't you think?
Me, Fred the driver, Chris (translator), Orgrives (translator) and Sophie posing for a group photo.
Here we are all three of us, trying to take a nice photos sitting on a broken banana palm tree, but it was very slippery!

On Thursday around lunch we had interviewed the 30 people we planned, so we picked up Mountain Dew (Fred bought another goat pregnant with triplets!), left Kacheera and headed back to Masaka. We played some hacky sack in the garden before getting ready to go to 10 tables for dinner. We had decided to invite the field crew (translators, Fred and Cotilda) for dinner as we could not have done the data collection without them! It was a perfect way to finish the two weeks. Not that we are totally done, but for now at least.
We left Masaka Monday morning, the three of us, the three translators, and Fred, our driver. It took us around 1½ hours to get to Lyantonde where we checked in at a somewhat expensive hotel (Skyeblue) but is was either this or a brothel!... And disregarding the fact that there was no power, only a noisy generator; no light in the bath room; no hot water in the shower; no water at all in the sink; a non-functioning TV: it was indeed worth the money! A very comfortable bed and incredible nice staff! We then continued to Kacheera, a further 40 minutes away, where we met with the chairman for the cooperative (KAFAME) whose members we were going to interview.

We got the member list, selected our 30 members to interview and off we went in our big 4-wheel drive on roads that half of the time were a narrow path...

The region was so beautiful, very green despite the fact that this region also suffers from frequent droughts. At the end of the day we had interviewed 7 members, one more than planned and early! On the way back we stopped to copy the member list and Sara and Sophie grapped the opportunity to share a roasted maize.

We went back to the hotel, talked about the day while enjoying a cold Guinness.
Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday were pretty much the same: Got picked up by Fred, bought lunch (chapati’s), drove to Kacheera, picked up the chairman and two other community guides, and split up with a translator and guide each and a list of who to find and interview that day.



Compared to last week, it was much more organised so we finished early each day and had time to relax a while each afternoon (meaning: reading a good book at the hotel while enjoying a cold beer in the sun).

Students running after the car waving and screaming "bye" at us! We felt like rock stars!

Another beautiful picture of the landscape. Don't you think?
And he I am doing the final interview with the help of my translator Wilson (English-Luganda), another translator (Luganda-local language) and the woman being interviewed.
Me, Fred the driver, Chris (translator), Orgrives (translator) and Sophie posing for a group photo.
Here we are all three of us, trying to take a nice photos sitting on a broken banana palm tree, but it was very slippery!

On Thursday around lunch we had interviewed the 30 people we planned, so we picked up Mountain Dew (Fred bought another goat pregnant with triplets!), left Kacheera and headed back to Masaka. We played some hacky sack in the garden before getting ready to go to 10 tables for dinner. We had decided to invite the field crew (translators, Fred and Cotilda) for dinner as we could not have done the data collection without them! It was a perfect way to finish the two weeks. Not that we are totally done, but for now at least.

























