After School Psychedelia with Francis and Maggie Boakye |
Archbishop Emeritus Thomas Mensah |
The Heart of Blessed Trinity Leadership Academy |
Con Ms. Paige Sin Headmistress Sr. Martha Fosu Dansowaa |
With Recently Professed Sr. Patricia (left) and Sr. Georgina (right). Two of my best friends; if I know how to live well in Ghana it is because of their guidance. |
Boss #1 Sr. Martha (left) and Boss #2 Sr. Lydia (right). Joy is their most natural reaction to pretty much everything. |
Kindergarten awkwardness of the sexes. Sheryl (left) and Stephen Twomase (right) |
Ask me where I found this moth. |
Lunchtime chaos. Featuring James. |
Anonymous parent at our last PTA meeting. |
Kwame and Mom at the PTA meeting. |
Liberated from uniforms and class schedules at the PTA meeting. |
Taking care of business. |
Blood of life. |
There are two seasons in Ghana: the wet/rainy season and the dry season/Harmattan. This picture is fairly illustrative of Harmattan...dry is an understatement. These lizards don't seem to mind. |
Crows are crows...awesome anywhere. |
I had the opportunity to be a seminarian for a day. At the Lake Bosomtwe Grotto. |
My homie and future traveling companion for April's adventures: Soon to be Father, Mr. Evans. |
Lake Bosomtwe. Originally formed by a meteor, it is reputed to be the largest naturally-formed lake in all of Africa. |
Boat full of future priests. |
Priestly cruise. |
Favorites. KG2'ers from right to left Olivia, Manuella and Abrafi. |
Sr. Marie and Sr. Pauline came to visit for the month. Pictured here with Nursury 2 kiddos. |
Feasting party for the celebration of Sr. Martha and Sr. Christie's ten years of religious life anniversary at the convent. |
So cool. |
Holy sandwich. Sr. Christie (left) and Sr. Martha (right) celebrate ten years as FST sisters. |
In the newly improved, equipped with thirty laptops ICT lab. Prince (front), Charles Tutu (middle) and the ever-joyful Richmond |
Anokye. I think he had fun eventually. |
As Harmattan fades out, the millipedes are appearing in droves. |
I don't appreciate how routine my visits to the hospital have become, but I have always been fond of the apartment complex that backs it up. |