Wednesday, August 15, 2012

A near CATastrophe


I knew that trying to bring a cat back from Nigeria was not going to be easy. But I underestimated just how difficult and stressful it would be. I spent my last week in Nigeria going backwards and forwards to the airport and doing my very best to not constantly lose my temper with the man I had to deal with from the airline. The man who works for a very well known and very well respected international airline. He made the process incredibly difficult. As an example, he phoned me and asked me for the weight of Squirt in the crate. So I gave him the weight – 9kg. I then arrived at the airport to find that he had put the weight down on the booking as 20kg. “Why?” I asked. Oh, because he needed to leave room for a margin of error. A margin of error that was over double the actual weight of the cat in the crate? Oh yes, silly me, because that way he can charge me double the amount it’s supposed to cost. I had a minor breakdown and had a small rant about how this was an international airline. An international airline that surely has internationally recognised policies and procedures. So how can he just bend the rules just because he wants to? I guess he realised that trying to extort me wasn’t worth the hysteria he would get in return, so he let me weigh Squirt in the crate in front of him. This didn’t however stop him from trying to extort me for ridiculous amounts of money every single step of the way. The day before I was due to travel the vet then kindly told me that he never has anything to do with this particular airline, not after they put his cat in the wrong part of the hold and she suffocated. So then when I asked endless questions about where Squirt would be on the plane, and would she be safe, he had the gall to say to me, “Please remember this is XX airline you are doing with here, forget you are in Nigeria and talking to me, and remember that I represent this airline. Your cat will be safe.” Gee, thanks mister. If only you could have remembered that weeks ago and saved us both the stress and hassle that has consumed my last few weeks in Nigeria.

The whole exercise turned almost farcical when Jenny and I arrived at Abuja airport on Thursday in time for our flight. The customs men asked me to put the “dog” through the x-ray machine with the rest of our bags. Jenny and I had to explain that the CAT is alive, and therefore should not go through that machine.

“Okay” they said, “take the “dog” out of the crate so we can scan the crate.”

“What? You want me to take this feral, terrified CAT out of the crate in the middle of Abuja airport? Seriously?”

“Yes,” they replied. “Yes we do”.

Oh goody. So out Squirt came. Trembling and scratching to get away from me. It got even better at check-in. The man from the airline was stood with me and Squirt, finishing the final bits of paperwork, when a member of staff came up to the crate and started peering in at Squirt.

“No, don’t do that,” said my new friend the airline man, who was on his very best behaviour on my day of departure, “I’ve been on the XX staff animal handling course, you can’t peer in the crate, you will scare the DOG.”

Excellent, so the animal handling course teaches them not to peer in crates at terrified animals, but it doesn’t teach them the difference between cats and dogs. Poor old Squirt remained a dog until we picked her up at Jersey airport and they asked us to sign the collection papers for a “live dog”.

“This is a cat, should we change the paperwork?” We asked them.

“Oh yes, so it is,” was the response. Oh goody.

All in all I will never ever again travel anywhere with any animal. Or pick up any animal off the streets of Nigeria – or any other country that I will then be leaving. But after two days of travelling, she made it, and she’s now settling well into her new home. And so am I.


Friday, August 3, 2012

Home sweet home


I’ve said it before; Nigeria is like marmite. People either seemed to love it or hate it. I loved it (on the whole!). And now I’ve ended my placement I’ve been thinking about all of the things that I will miss now I’m home. Some examples:
  • The way people interact with each other. Wherever you are, people are laughing and talking (loudly), and gesturing with their hands. There’s a vibrancy to social interactions that I know I’m really going to miss. 
  • The noise. I’ve been back almost a week now and I still can’t get used to how quiet it is. 
  • My office: I was lucky enough to be placed with a really brilliant organisation, filled with lots of really brilliant people. And I will miss working there a lot. I will especially miss working in a place where babies come to the office. 
  • The food – I NEVER thought I would say that. I will miss the food I could buy so easily from the street – akara, fried yam and masa to name a few. 
  • The music. I have grown to LOVE Nigerian music. And with the recent release of Oliver Twist in the UK, it seems at least the UK is hopefully catching onto this as well. 
  • Harp. Oh Harp, my best friend in Nigeria. I was never a beer drinker before I went to Nigeria, and I will probably never drink beer again at home. But when I was there, it helped fix many many things. 
  • All of the “sit outs” or local parks where you can just go and sit outside and have a beer, order food, and listen to music. 
  • All of the advertising flyers / leaflets that I was given during my time there. They never failed to cheer me up. 
  • The weather. Whilst I was sweating 90% of the time, I am still far happier living in a hot climate. This has been proven even more since coming home – it is FREEZING and I find it very depressing to be walking around in winter clothes in August!! 
  • My work life balance – overall my placement was very busy, but I still found I had a lot more time to myself, and I was far less stressed than I used to be – it’s hard to get stressed about things and timelines when no one else is. And when you know that really, it’s not the end of the world if something doesn’t get done that day.

And I suppose I should balance this list out with some things that I won’t miss:
  • The corruption: I’ve given enough examples of this in other blog posts, and I don’t want to dwell on it. It makes me sick to my stomach and I truly hope at some point in the very very very very near future the government will do its job and start cracking down on some of the awful things that happen on a daily basis. 
  • Oyibo prices: I will not miss having to haggle for absolutely everything, and people thinking I should pay more just because I’m white. I get it, a lot of expats who live there have a lot of money. I was not one of them! I haggled out of necessity, not just to try and cheat people out of a few extra naira. 
  • Flushing the toilet with a bucket (and a general lack of running water) 
  • Washing sheets and towels in a bucket. I can handle clothes, I got used to it. Sheets and towels still make me never want to use bedding or towels again.