Menji is
the village where I am posted. It has a population of about 5,000 people and is
spread out through a valley in the mountains, in an area known as the Lebialem
Highlands, in the South West region of Cameroon. Lebialem is the Division,
Fontem is the Subdivision, and Menji is the town. Menji is rather hilly.
Although there are not too many hills that are very steep it still takes some
leg strength to trek (or as we say, walk) around Menji. So, walking around
Menji is sometimes difficult but it is getting easier and it makes for
beautiful scenery. The village is surrounded by mountains to which clouds and
fog usually cling in the mornings or on overcast days.
Peace Corps gives us bicycles to
take to post with us (although I believe that I was part of the last training
group that will be given bicycles). I realized, once I arrived in Menji, that I
will not be using my bicycle very often or possibly at all, especially since I
live on one of the biggest, steepest hills in town. It would have been nice to
know this before bringing my bicycle all the way to Menji because it added
quite a large cost to my travel costs. Such
is life though, you never know until you get there, you just have to prepare as
well as you can with the information you have.
Dschang is my banking city. It is
at a higher elevation than Menji, so it is usually colder. Even though it is
cooler it can still get hot during the days in dry season, just like Menji. I
travel to Dschang typically every other weekend in order to pick up my monthly
living allowance or things that I need that I cannot get in Menji. Or I use to
do this but now I usually only go to pick up my allowance or because I am
traveling through to somewhere else. To travel one way between Menji and
Dschang costs between 2,500 fcfa – 6,000fcfa depending on the season, time of
day, mode of transportation, and road conditions. By the way, there are 500fcfa
to 1 U.S. Dollar, in case I have not mentioned it before. Right now it is
2,500fcfa in a car and 3,000fcfa on a motorcycle as one of two riders and
5,000fcfa as a single rider, this is because it is dry season and the roads are
in better condition than in the rainy season.
Dschang is very dusty right now
since it is dry season. Even though the dust can get so bad that you are red,
from the red dust, when you get off the bike, I prefer it over the mud. When
the roads are muddy I am nervous traveling between Menji and Dschang because the
bike slips sometimes.
Dschang is definitely a city
compared to Menji, although I do not know the exact population. (Note: Douala
is the largest city in Cameroon with a population of just over 2million
people.) I can get most things that I need, as in necessities, in Dschang but
definitely not everything I could want. There are some things that simply cannot
be found in Cameroon, for those things I must ask that they be sent from the
States. Dschang has several large markets, super markets, and of course my
bank. And, by the way, those super markets are not what we think of as a super
market in the States; those are only in Yaoundé and Douala. It is also in the
West region of Cameroon, this means that it is a francophone region. So, in
order to pick up my monthly living allowance I must navigate the bank and the
city in French! If nothing else I will have French banking vocabulary by the
end of my service. This will certainly keep me from losing my French
completely. I like Dschang except for the cold and dust but I like my village a
little bit more. I also like how there are French speakers in Menji as well. I
like speaking with these people because then I also get to practice my French
in my own village.