Wednesday, 18 September 2013

Rain in Bogota


Coming back last week from Medellin this was the view from the taxi back to my apartment. Some serious rain coming down. Normally the serious rain period in Bogota is in October and November, but with "global warming" you of course never know. Plus the weather in Bogota can change every day between sunshine and some rain. Last week we actually had some hail coming down!


Not sure if you can see it on the grass through the window of my apartment, but is was real hail.

Of course most of the time it is nice weather here in Bogota, during the day around 20 degrees Celcius and in the evening some ten degrees lower (remember Bogota is at 3,000 meter altitude in the Andes mountains). The past week has been planning and reporting work on the EFE project.


On my way to the SENA offices (about 15 blocks from my apartment) I seldom miss the opportunity to grab a good cuppa of Juan Valdez coffee. And in the SENA offices it is always busy....


Here is Sandra, our SENA project coordinator for the EFE program in action. Hopefully we can bring her in November a few weeks to Canada around the selection of the Canadian colleges for the work the next three years with the SENA teams in the provinces of Bolivar and Antioquia.


Tomorrow will be a happy day! Mary will come for another short visit to Colombia. In April we checked out the historic city of Cartagena in the north on the Atlantic ocean, plus we had a few lovely days on the island of Baru. This time we will go a few days to the city of Medellin. Back in Bogota on Saturday to celebrate Mary's birthday, our 23rd wedding anniversary, and - as it turns out - the Colombian version of Valentine's Day. On Sunday we will walk off all the good food & drinks by going to the Sunday art market in Usaquen. Monday Mary already needs to go back again.

That same day I will welcome a visitor from the Canadian Mining Sector Council (the MiHR, Mining HR Council) with whom we will do some workshops at the HQ of SENA in Bogota and at an annual Colombian Mining Fair in Medellin (Sept 25-27).

A next blog therefore probably by the end of this month.....

Wednesday, 11 September 2013

CSR in action in Antioquia


Yesterday I flew back to Medellin for some important meetings today with colleagues from the private industry, SENA and the Canadian government. The terminal of the domestic flights in Bogota is always a busy place. This is a country in "full movement".....


The view of Medellin from my hotel room this time. Time for a breakfast and the local news.



Some preparation with Juan Guillermo (my main "partner in crime" here in Antioquia, a 25 year veteran manager in SENA; great guy!) while enjoying a good cuppa Juan Valdez, and then on to the meeting hosted by GRAMALOTE, a joint venture company of Anglo Gold Ashanti (SA owned) and B2Gold (Canadian owned). They are working in a gold mining area 3 hours east of Medellin since ten years and have invested about 65 million dollars of which about 8 million on CSR work (Corporate Social Responsibility). The region had already for decades an artisanal mining culture but with very bad social and environmental side-effects. GRAMALOTE is the first formal company in the area. The team of GRAMALOTE took a lot of time with a team of about 30 professionals to sit down with the communities, to dialogue, to analyze and to slowly start training the people for a better future. Without going in too many details, it was telling that in this area - while in most regions of the country the "informal" miners were striking for better support and subsidies - the miners in the area of the GRAMALOTE sector had a meeting, decided they were doing well, made the meeting a social event and kept working all those weeks. Social change with winners all the way around...


I had arranged a meeting at the GRAMALOTE corporate offices for a delegation of the Canadian government. On the left the CEO of GRAMALOTE (a Chilean mining expert with a lot of experience and a deep belief in CSR) explained a bit of the history of the project.



Afterwards the HR Director gave more details, and Juan Guillermo explained how SENA teachers had been involved on request of GRAMALOTE.



I think it was an excellent exchange of experiences and ideas. To be followed by more, I hope.


My Colombian Mexican dinner was well earned tonight, I think...... :-)

Sunday, 8 September 2013

Sunday in the park


Bogota has a variety of parks but the largest is called "Parque Simon Bolivar", and it is about the size of Central Park in New York. On the way to or back from the airport I had passed the park many times in the taxi. On this cloudy Sunday I decided to take a walk to the park... about 30 blocks to the east (direction airport) from Carrera 7 to Carrera 37....a good work-out!


On the Sunday morning the city of Bogota closes a number of its roads for joggers, walkers, skaters and cyclists. So I started my walk with hundreds of others on the Carrera 7 (or "el septima")...



A bit to the east on Calle 63 there is a Sunday market at a square in front of one of the classic cathedrals. Lots of people come here for a solid lunch as they make them in in the rural areas...





Carrera 15 is one of the large roads going from the south to the north with the special bus lines called "Millenium". The buses have special lanes and in the middle there are the stations. I think the city of Curitiba in Brazil was the first city to come up with this public transport concept, and Ottawa in Canada has some of this copied in its bus system as well. More and more cities in Latin America are adopting this system especially in cities where building an underground is not easy to do.



A bit further to the east on one of the highways going through the city from south to north, you can see on the left an old sports stadium and further on the newer large soccer stadium. Turning back you can see the mountain range in the west of the city, the area where my apartment is.



The park is divided in four areas and each has a small lake. Here a group of puppet artists practicing and in an other spot a group of Pilatus practitioners have found a nice place to do a Sunday exercise.



Others are setting up for a Sunday party in the park. This park makes big city living do-able...


The park has a huge sports complex with track & field, soccer field (of course) and also an Olympic aquatic center. In front of this center is one of the many places where they sell shirts of the beloved national teams; the bright yellow, so popular in many South American countries.



Last week I learned that the Colombian national road skating team won about half of the medals at the world championships (in Belgium this year). Here are some future medal winners.... :-)

In front of one of the entrances of the largest part of the park you can buy kites of all sizes and most of them wonderfully colorful.



This is one of the areas where a lot of people were flying kites. Unfortunately with my iPhone camera you can't really see how nice these colorful kites look in the sky.


In another part of the park two employees of the city's wellness team are having many of their fellow Bogotanians going in a good arobics excercise in the park. Many others set up little tents and hang out for the day in the park; here for example in a play-ground area.



You can't see it well on this photo, but on the top of the mountain in the background is the Montseratte where also many Bogotanians hang out on a Sunday (see one of my blog posts of February when I went up there). I hope you had as nice and relaxing a Sunday as I had today!

Friday, 6 September 2013

Colombia (soccer/futbol) qualifies for Brazil 2014 world cup


Big day for Colombian soccer. A game against Ecuador and a win would guarantee pretty much the participation at the world cup finals in Brazil in June 2014. The Colombians plan their "home games" in the city of Barranquila (on the Atlantic ocean) where they "torture" their opponents in the 40 degree heat for a game that starts at 3 pm in the afternoon. Today that did not work though..... tropical rains came down. The game was postponed till 5 pm and was played most of the time in pouring rain.

Ecuador loses a player to a red card. Colombia scores 1-0. Ecuador get a penalty kick....but misses. Colombia hits the post. The Colombians can't wait till the final whistle......


But there it is.......Colombia will be part of the party of the world cup in Brazil.......!


Time for joy and salsa.......

Later in the evening Chile beats Venezuela and I think that will send them to Brazil as well together with Argentina and Colombia and one more team to qualify.

In Europe Holland almost lost from little Estonia....tied the game 2-2 in the last few minutes.
But I think they will also make it to Brazil.

Thursday, 5 September 2013

Mining Sector Council in Colombia


One of our project activities is to let the mining industry know about the efforts of SENA to reach out to the artisanal miners who - with lack of training and caught in an informal economy - cause maybe unwillingly but with clear proof a lot of damage to the environment and to the image of the mining industry. Not that 100 % of the larger companies behave as "responsible corporate citizens", but in general they have better skilled staff and they adhere in general to the legislation in place. And some of them (see my blog posts on the Gramalote project and the efforts of Ashmont in Bolivar) do even better than just comply (Frank, I tried to get the links to those posts in, but not "skilled" enough yet on my side...).

Today we presented to one of the sector councils that SENA works with from the industry in order to get their input for skills the employers would like to see from the SENA graduates. Today's session was with representatives from the Colombian mining sector.


The meeting was in one of SENA's so-called "Techno Parques" which are applied research centers where SENA offers two year business incubator space to aspiring innovators and entrepreneurs (I also made a blog post about this center earlier). There are spaces with testing equipment:



And lots of computer access. Many of the start-up entrepreneurs (the majority being local university graduates rather than SENA graduates) work on software applications. The area offers a secure business environment with a professional ambience:



This poster says: we are SENA students, free thinkers, with a social conscience and critical thinking, leaders and entrepreneurs. It is all the time about creating an atmosphere and confidence...



Our presentation went well and resulted in a lively debate with good suggestions. We are "on the radar" of some more people in the Colombian private sector with the SENA /Canadian efforts.

Tonight I translated a 15 page document (one of the "terms of reference" for one of our sub-projects in the EFE program) from Spanish into English. Four more of those to go the coming days... :-)

Sunday, 1 September 2013

Back in the "cold" of Bogota


After ten days in Cartagena and Medellin with daily temperatures between 25 and 30 Celcius, it is sort of cold being back in Bogota. See that sweater? In the evening it goes most of the time under 10 degrees Celcius, while during the day it can be 20-25 degrees if the sun gets through the clouds.

Anyhow, back in my apartment in Bogota. Getting ready for a week of follow up work from the busy past two weeks. Also preparations for a few activities in Medellin this month. More later.