There have been plenty of photographs in our news posts of the hedging and trees flourishing at Mayega. One thing we haven’t shown is the beauty of the passion flowers.

Also, our vegetable garden has benefited from the recent rains with the biringanya (aubergine) and nyanya chungu (white tomato) doing particularly well. The white tomato is also called African egg plant and is an indigenous type of aubergine.

The garden produces a mixture of local and introduced vegetables. The benefit of all this activity is dinner at the Centre. Easter Sunday was celebrated with a special meal of beans, meat, rice, vegetables, fruit and sodas.

One of the key commitments in the Busega Scotland Covid-19 Action Plan is to ‘monitor the availability of food and other supplies in Mayega and Mwanza and ensure the storeroom at the Children’s Centre is well stocked’.
We normally keep up to four months supply at the Children’s Centre and the last bulk food delivery was in February. Acting on advice of our Tanzanian colleagues, we decided to bring forward the next shipment and so have 6 months supply on site. There are worries about price and availability.
So when the lorry arrived last weekend, we were delivering not only supplies but also comfort to the children that they would not go hungry.
We know that part of Tanzania has been called the ‘Cradle of Mankind’ but as far as we know dinosaurs have just arrived at the Children’s Centre for the first time. The idea to introduce the children to Triceratops etc came from their visit to the Serengeti, that was backed up by models of the animals found there. The children love playing with them; making imaginative scenes of the plains and drawing coloured pictures.
You could here a pin drop as the models and books were used to copy colours and details. Once finished, the pictures were stored in the children’s files. A great afternoon was had by all.
Life is tough for many people in Scotland at the moment but somehow, with government and community support, people will get by. This is not the same in Tanzania. Sure, communities pull together in adversity but the wealth is not there to sustain families through very difficult times.

One of the great advantages of working closely with Tanzanian colleagues are the connections they provide with the local community.
Although on the shores of the second freshwater largest lake in the world, Mayega is, for most of the year, dry and arid. At the moment, the rainy season is bringing some much needed relief but the downpours can be intense with spectacular thunder and lightning.
We have also upgraded the kitchen with a screened window and door to improve hygiene standards. The rain is encouraging our tress to grow and we have just planted another fifty passion fruit seedlings. A plan to link up the Centre, Mayega Primary School and a school Moray in a tree garden project has been put on hold because of Covid 19. We’ll get started as soon as it is safe to do so.



She, along with a Montessori-trained colleague Sebastian, and our very own Julieth, are the support team, ably assisted by Julieth’s baby, Golden. When Golden arrives at Buswelu he is immediately whisked away by the girls, Lydia and Ester, who love showing him off to their friends. Julieth recounts, with a resigned shrug, the times she has to delay her departure home while Golden is retrieved from his admirers!