The News-Times (Sunday)

‘Best two weeks of my life’

Science teacher recounts visit to Africa

- By Stephen Coulter

Ridgefield Academy science teacher Mac Rand has run marathons, completed back-to-back Ironmans, and logged 101 miles in one 24-hour period.

None of it compares to climbing Kilimanjar­o and then getting to visit students from the village of Mungere in Tanzania.

“It was everything I hoped for and more,” said Rand, “it exceeded all my expectatio­ns ... it was the best two weeks of my life.”

Rand said the most emotional moment of the dual vacations was reaching Kilimanjar­o’s summit.

“Your appetite goes with the altitude so you’re not eating as well and you’re going for eight days straight carrying a 25-pound pack with less oxygen,” he said. “I’ve done endurance events before but nothing that long. On summit day, we woke up at 11 at night and got to the top of the mountain around 9 in the morning. We didn’t get back to our camp until six that night so it ended up being about a 17 or 18 hour day which was a real challenge ...

“It was pretty emotional getting to the top, I definitely shed a few tears.”

Rand’s favorite moment of the trip came the following week when he hiked to a local waterfall with the Mungere School students.

Rand brought dozens of handwritte­n letters from Ridgefield Academy students with him to the Mungere School.

The Ridgefield resident said watching the Tanzanian students open the cards was one of the biggest highlights of the trip.

“I don’t think they’d ever received a letter before, at least not from America,” he said.

Rand brought pictures of his students to show the Mungere children their American counterpar­ts.

“They were infatuated with who these kids are and where they were from — where I’m from,” Rand said. “They immediatel­y started writing back.”

The letter writing process was the first brick in the foundation of a partnershi­p between the Red Sweater Project, which runs the Mungere School, and Ridgefield Academy.

“We want it to be more than just a simple exchange of letters,” he said. “We want to trade ideas with them and help open up the world for our kids but most important we want it to be a twoway experience where there’s meaningful learning going on on both sides.”

Rand said he got a big envelope of letters last week from the Mungere School. He distribute­d them to his students on Monday, April 8.

A moment for Greg

Endurance events have been a part of Rand’s life for the past 28 years.

He started with a 24-hour marathon race in September 1991, when his brother Greg was near the losing end of his personal battle with leukemia.

Since then, Rand has raised more than $100,000 for the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society (LLS)’s Team in Training — the same organizati­on he fund-raised for through his Kilimanjar­o climb.

“It’s not a very technical climb,” he said, “but it’s very long, and that’s the biggest challenge. We’re talking six to seven hours each day at a very slow pace. You have to be very patient up there.”

What stood out to him on the climb — and one of the many things he intends to incorporat­e in a presentati­on of the trip to his Ridgefield Academy students this month — was the change in environmen­t.

“We started off in the jungle and as we got higher hit this Arctic desert landscape,” he said. “The trees were suddenly gone, and it became so dry.

Rand said he pushed himself on summit day, overcoming the fatigue from the altitude and bitter cold temperatur­es.

“When you’re climbing up the summit in the middle of the night, you lose sense of time,” he said. “You’re just looking at the feet in front of you.”

When he reached the summit, he made sure to spend a few minutes to reflect on his lost brother.

“You only get 20 minutes at the top because the oxygen level will beat you up if you stay longer,” he said. “I was fortunate that they gave me a few extra minutes so I could be alone with Greg. ... I wasn’t ready to go.”

Before his descent, Rand scooped up a few pebbles from the top of Kilimanjar­o. He’s given them to his family members and his students. He also plans to give them to Greg’s widow.

“She’s always been so supportive of everything I’ve done with Team in Training,” he said. “I started this journey 28 years ago to keep Greg’s memory alive and he has been in my mind every step of the journey.”

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 ?? Contribute­d photo ?? Ridgefield Academy science teacher Mac Rand in Tanzania.
Contribute­d photo Ridgefield Academy science teacher Mac Rand in Tanzania.
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