I’ve never seen summer. I’ve seen spring, along with beautiful green leaves all around an equally beautiful campus. I have seen winter, and snow whitening the land as if to prove a certain point to all foreign-born residents. I’ve seen fall, with leaves brown and restless, flowing with the cooling wind. But summer? No. What on earth is it?
Is it like hell, with an absolutely unbearable temperature which keeps people mostly indoors and all public parks free of visitors? Or is it like the oven? Is it like Kano, the reputed July heat that causes meningitis or just like a milder version of the microwave. Do the leaves shrivel? Do they sway? Are they beautiful or are they grey?
I’m not here to write poetry, so tell me what it looks like. Did I miss anything in my absence from the scene of action? Well I left that place in the middle of May just when the almighty summer was supposed to have begun. If I return there now, what will I find? Fall, no doubt. Summer would have escaped from my grasp once again. What did I miss?
The highest temperature here was around 29 degrees Celcius. That would be like 84 in America. There was this rumour that temperature in America was up to 90 in some places. Oh my, that would be like the temperature in Maiduguri on a regular afternoon. That means that my American friends could actually come and spend their summer in Nigeria. Go figure. Much of this country is actually cooler than 29 during this period. And it rains too. Oh, the rains! I should be glad I’m here.
Alright, I will return to that place, but not until the famed summer is over. Is it, yet? I like Fall. I like brown leaves that remind me of the leaf covers of eko and moin-moin made by old women in Ibadan villages. I like the way they look in photographs too. Who wants a hot summer when they can spend cool raining seasons in Ibadan, Lagos, and all over Nigeria eating spicy food, playing uncle, buying fuel in jerry cans, making day and night calls, killing mosquitos and generally playing he traveller?
And by the way, when I return to the States, let no one ask me how I spent my summer. I did not. You did.
1
Good Naija Girl at http://goodnaijagirl.com
Can they ask you how you spent what they call summer? 🙂
I don’t think you’re missing much by missing a typical North American summer, to be honest.
Posted at August 9, 2010 on 2:39pm.
2
Kola at http://www.ktravula.com
Well, that would be too long to pronounce, and too much to ask for, won’t it? I know for sure that people will ask me how I spent my summer. I think I have now got a standard response.
Q: How did you spend your summer, Kola?
A: The same way my folks spent Harmattan in Nigeria last year 😉
Haha, that is bound to keep them confused for about thirty seconds while I slowly take my exit. Hehehe. I’m evil now. 😮
Posted at August 9, 2010 on 4:58pm.
3
Abi Idowu at http://abidowu.vpweb.co.uk
LOL!
Bad Boi! Long time. I know how I spent summer and I’m looking forward to autumn
Posted at August 9, 2010 on 5:14pm.
4
Kola at http://www.ktravula.com
You’ve been absent without leave. Glad you had a good summer. Now what on earth is autumn? 🙂 Yea, yea, it sounds sweet and poetic. Just call it “fall” and get it over with. 🙂
And we miss you too.
Posted at August 9, 2010 on 6:08pm.
5
Clarissa at http://clarissasbox.blogspot.com
“That place” is suffering from an unrelieved bout of the most disgusting heat. It’s been +36 C for several days in a row. At night, it only goes down to +27 C (like right now.) And from my experience, it is going to stay this way until the end of August definitely.
My Northern body is suffering the tortures of hell. 🙂 People just scuttle from one air conditioned space to another. The campus is completely deserted. Well, actually that is something I like, so it’s not that bad. 🙂
Posted at August 10, 2010 on 3:03am.
6
Kola at http://www.ktravula.com
Well, if my memory serves me right, the middle of August till the end of the month is actually not that hot, at least for my tropical constitution. I remember thinking that it was rather cold/cool even as at 17th last year. Whatever happens, I’ll be glad to arrive there when it has gone far down from 36C. That’s too much for one person to endure. How did you survive?
Posted at August 10, 2010 on 3:52am.
7
Clarissa at http://clarissasbox.blogspot.com
I’m not sure if I’ve survived it yet. 🙂
Actually, this has been very trying for my health. I can’t wait for the heat to end!!!
Posted at August 10, 2010 on 11:33am.
8
Kola at http://www.ktravula.com
It might help if you don’t go out so often. I know that it’s better indoors. But how easy is that to ask a teacher not to leave the house? Accept my empathy :).
Posted at August 10, 2010 on 6:56pm.
9
Ike at http://YourWebsite
For your info Kola,we had a heat index of about 113 F in Edwardsville yesterday,I was too scared to step outside!
Posted at August 10, 2010 on 8:49am.
10
Kola at http://www.ktravula.com
Ah Ike, You’ve already survived much of it. Enjoy the last days of summer before it turns all cold again :).
Posted at August 10, 2010 on 6:57pm.