Archive for February, 2008

My Child, The Microlender

Posted in Kiva, Look What I Found on February 23rd, 2008 by Bigwig – Be the first to comment

Every month, Ngnat lends $25 to a third-world entrepreneur. This month’s recipient was Fasat Akinrinade, from Lagos in Nigeria.

From Kiva:

You can go to Kiva’s website and lend to someone in the developing world who needs a loan for their business – like raising goats, selling vegetables at market or making bricks. Each loan has a picture of the entrepreneur, a description of their business and how they plan to use the loan so you know exactly how your money is being spent – and you get updates letting you know how the entrepreneur is going. The best part is, when the entrepreneur pays back their loan you get your money back – and Kiva’s loans are managed by microfinance institutions on the ground who have a lot of experience doing this, so you can trust that your money is being handled responsibly.

I just made a loan to an entrepreneur named Fasat Akinrinade in Nigeria. They still need another $100.00 to complete their loan request of $450.00 (you can loan as little as $25.00!). Help me get this entrepreneur off the ground by clicking on the link below to make a loan to Fasat Akinrinade too:

Make a Loan to Fasat

It’s finally easy to actually do something about poverty – using Kiva I know exactly who my money is loaned to and what they’re using it for. And most of all, I know that I’m helping them build a sustainable business that will provide income to feed, clothe, house and educate their family long after my loan is paid back.

Join me in changing the world – one loan at a time.

Thanks!

Birds of Iraq

Posted in Birds of Iraq on February 22nd, 2008 by Bigwig – 5 Comments

The latest from LTC. Bob.

I found a new bird pond – lots and lots of ducks: shovelers, pochards, pintails, ferruginous ducks, common teal; as well as grebes, coots, gulls, a pair of mallards. Water birds are flaky – as soon as they see or hear you, off they go. I was lucky and quiet a couple of times, so I have a few pics to send to you. Several of these are new species for me, I know, I am turning into a bit of a bird dork and kind of keeping a life list. But as Bigwig explained a couple of years back this “makes me a major bird geek as far as the vast majority of humanity is concerned, but to the real major bird geeks, I’m no more than a dilettante.” Anyway – nice birds. I like the name “ferruginous” – pertaining to or coloured like iron rust.

Shoveler
Fri Feb 22 19:34:51 2008

Common Teal
Fri Feb 22 19:37:44 2008

Ferruginous Duck
Fri Feb 22 19:36:15 2008

Shoveler and Pochard Hens
Fri Feb 22 19:33:56 2008

A little background on the birds here. Have had some questions – where they live, how much water there is, etc. etc.

This is Mesopotamia – that means “land between the rivers” – the two rivers being two of the worlds great rivers, the Tigris, which runs thru Baghdad, and the Euphrates, which runs about 30 miles south of Baghdad. They both start way up in Turkey; the Tigris enters Iraq from the north, the Euphrates drops down into Syria and enters Iraq from the west. They get close to each other near Baghdad, then separate and rejoin near the Shatt al Arab in the southeast at the Persian Gulf. The area between the rivers in the southeast is one of the most extensive marsh areas in the middle east – the marsh Arabs live there, and it is a water bird paradise. The extensive irrigation – Iraq is the cradle of civilization and has been irrigated for thousands of years, also leads to plenty of bird habitat.

I assume the winter visitors go north to the Black Sea, or even further – maybe up into the former Soviet Union or thereabouts.

The coots, ducks, shovelers and teal are all migratory – they started showing up here in December and will probably leave out in the next few weeks. The grebes will stay around all year, as do the moorhens. The pygmy cormorants are year round, but the common ones will head north soon as well. The herons and egrets are year round, as long as there’s water.

The first three pics are of birds mentioned – the geese are real wild geese, not the half domestic ones in the pond here at Al Faw.

Greylag Geese
Fri Feb 22 19:31:07 2008

Moorhen
Fri Feb 22 19:32:38 2008

Little Grebe Hen
Fri Feb 22 19:28:34 2008

The next photo is of COL Grey’s last day here, last Wednesday, taken from the back deck of the boathouse.

clear view

The next one is from the same location at 1722 this afternoon – as the dust storm moved in. The spots are flecks of dust picked up by the camera flash.

dusty view

It’s a bit worse now – I am heading out to get on my bike and ride to my hooch.