Category Archives: Development

Brick Season

Winter is not so cold here near the equator, but the slightly shorter days a lack of rain mean that most rice fields around here are asleep for the season. However, the fields are not silent, farmers still head out every morning to mold the soil and cultivate the land, their product: bricks.

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Yes, there are cities made of wood, and others made of concrete, but Tana is mostly a city of bricks. And the bricks don’t come from a home improvement store or a big corporation… most come from regular farmers who dig up the clay from their rice paddies, pack it into squares, and fire it in makeshift furnaces made from last year’s bricks.

I’m not too fond of the smoke I encounter when I run along the paddies in the morning, but it doesn’t pollute the city the same way the brick production puts a cloud over Kathmandu. And hey, who can fault these farmers for trying to get a little more profit from their land? Supposedly the bricks sell for around .01USD apiece, but I guess it adds up, no?

Saw My First Swarm of Locusts

I didn’t get a photo, but it was basically as you might imagine… as in a cartoon or exaggerated CG shot from a film. We were driving just 50km south of Tana along National Route 7 when I saw this black cloud over the hill to the left. I mentioned it to my friend and he said we should roll up the windows.

As we approached, the locusts started to hit the windshield. I got a good look at one as it languished on the window, but still no photo. My friend explained that they consume all vegetation in their path and move on. The area looked green enough to me, so there was no obvious evidence of their wrath, but I can see how they could be a serious nuisance!

Apparently such locust problems are not so common globally. A quick search online indicates that serious locust problems have struck here-and-there or now-and-again, but the current problem in Madagascar attracted the attracted the attention of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the UN (FAO) because if it is not stopped early, it can lead to years of food insecurity among affected areas.

Bonus: Locusts are actually just grasshoppers that get really excited, overbreed, and swarm together in a somewhat atypical way. Once they get going, they almost behave like another species, but they are really just grasshoppers.