Projects Abroad

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canis13

Tufts V'15
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  1. Veterinary Student
I was randomly searching google for volunteer abroad opportunities, and I found this company: http://www.projects-abroad.org/projects/ (click veterinary medicine).
I was wondering if anyone had ever done a Projects Abroad trip or knew someone who has or even heard of them before. I contacted them and they seem pretty helpful (the guy I talked to is even contacting the local project heads in India and Ghana to see if they could set me up with a project that is entirely large animal), but I just wanted to find out more information from other people.

Alternately, does anyone know of any other volunteer abroad programs (not study abroad) that are several months long? So far, this company is the only one I've found that offers 2-3 month long volunteer abroad experiences instead of just 2 weeks.
 
I was randomly searching google for volunteer abroad opportunities, and I found this company: http://www.projects-abroad.org/projects/ (click veterinary medicine).
I was wondering if anyone had ever done a Projects Abroad trip or knew someone who has or even heard of them before. I contacted them and they seem pretty helpful (the guy I talked to is even contacting the local project heads in India and Ghana to see if they could set me up with a project that is entirely large animal), but I just wanted to find out more information from other people.

Alternately, does anyone know of any other volunteer abroad programs (not study abroad) that are several months long? So far, this company is the only one I've found that offers 2-3 month long volunteer abroad experiences instead of just 2 weeks.

Some of the same groups that organize 2-week trips offer long-term internships as well. I know that VIDA is offering 12-week volunteer internships in Costa Rica. The sloth sanctuary in Costa Rica also does 1 month internships (http://www.slothrescue.org/Volunteers/). A group called "Tropical Adventures" claims to offer longer-term volunteer projects, but they didn't seem very serious when I looked (http://www.tropicaladventures.com/).

Something that long-term isn't likely to be as heavily promoted as the short programs, so I'd suggest calling some of the groups that you've found that offer short programs and see if they're in need of longer-term volunteers.
 
*points at HopefulAg's post* yay for our two week adventure!!!! If I had a tail - it would be wagging... 🙂
 
Are you aware of the SDN Vida trip? May disqualify itself by not being several months long, but it's an option.
http://more.studentdoctor.net/showthread.php?t=711713

Yeah, I saw that thread, and have looked at VIDA as well as World Vets. It does sound really cool, but I will unfortunately be in summer school during that time. Maybe I might go on a VIDA trip in the future, but that would be in addition to a 2 or 3 month long trip. Although that's a lot of money for flying internationally...

Tiktaalik, thanks for the links and the suggestion.
 
Really useful site that i've used several times - volunteersouthamerica.net
It definitely helps if you speak Spanish (even a tiny bit is fine - I did a trip to Ecuador after only taking one quarter of Spanish)... but there a lot of really cool programs on here. Scroll over each and it'll give you the general info about it, and much more on each website. I think they are categorized by how much you have to pay - for most, it's just room and board, often with other volunteers, which is about $100 a week. You fly there (cheap flights thru Lan and some other airlines) and get yourself to that part of the country, or some programs will pick you up, and then you spend however long you want. Some have minimums of several weeks or months. Tons of cool programs to choose from and no admin fees or anything like most programs have. You have to do the planning yourself and its much less structured and more independent, but also a lot cheaper than anything you would pay five times as much for, and it's a really valuable experience.
 
thedogisgreen - thanks so much for the website, it's really awesome. i've definitely been questioning the merits of doing projects abroad because of the huge overhead/admin fees...now the only problem is to see if i can find large animal veterinary experience abroad.
 
I did a veterinary Projects Abroad trip in India last summer, and it was awesome! If you do a longer-term project (I did 1 month) you get to live with a host family in a village, and shadow the village vet who mostly treats cows/bullocks, some goats, occasionally dogs, one time a horse... they also arrange for you to go to Madurai for a week to see how a city vet works (more dogs, still plenty of cows, temple elephants), and at the end they take you on a tour of various farms. After you've put in your hours shadowing the vets, the rest of the day is yours to do with as you wish. Every other weekend, Projects Abroad sets up an organization-wide trip, so you get to mingle with other interns in different fields. During the weekends in between, you can also arrange with your friends to go on trips of your own. You really get to see the aspects of India that aren't available to tourists that only go train-to-train to the cities - I much preferred village life, and taking the buses and rickshaws meant going through a variety of smaller villages and towns and really seeing the sights.

The two-week veterinary project has you stay at Projects Abroad's headquarters, where they have a dormitory, and from what I gathered it's much more regimented, because they're cramming a lot (nearly the same amount of stuff as above) into a short amount of time.

Interning in India is really exciting, though, because it's very hands-on - the vets teach you how to artificially inseminate cows (which is about 80% of what they do!) and you start by sticking your gloved arm up the cow's rectum. XD Goat castration, vaccinations (stabbing an 18-gauge needle into a cow's rump), all sorts of stuff. The village vet I shadowed was also super friendly and would seek out opportunities for me and the other vet interns I lived with - once he arranged for us to see the corpse of an elephant that had died in the mountains under another vet's jurisdiction (the other vet autopsied it afterward - which we didn't get to see, but the corpse had been there for a couple of days already so I doubt we would have wanted to stick around, curiosity or no...)

The thing about India is, well, it *is* a much different culture - having lived in Taiwan most of my life (with Taiwanese parents/appearance), I know what it's like to live in a monoculture, but being on the other end of that was kind of a shock. Most people are friendly and intensely curious, but being a foreigner and standing out also makes you a target for pickpockets and scammers (especially since there's the idea of "foreign = rich", and in the city people are used to stupid tourists). Also, I could stand the heat and humidity fairly well, but it's not for everybody. As for the program itself - my biggest beef with it was that the people running the program there (all locals) were terrible at explaining things, so there was sort of an oral culture amongst the interns teaching the newcomers what to expect and what to do XD;; Food poisoning isn't exactly guaranteed to happen, but, well, it's fairly common.

The program is kind of expensive, true, but that's the price you pay for having the entire infrastructure in place for you to just gallivant in and not have to do any setting up yourself. It's a good program for going straight into a really different place/culture without much/any prior experience and hitting the ground running.
 
Gilandir, thanks so much for the reply! I'm so excited to have heard from someone on SDN who has done the program. I think I'm leaning strongly towards India if I do decide to go with them. My preferred location would be Mongolia, but I think I'd only be doing mostly small animal in Mongolia and I really want to get the chance to get a lot of large animal experience, so it sounds like India is the better destination for that. I'm also still considering Ghana as well.
It's also really good to hear that you feel like the price was worth it; definitely makes me feel better about spending the money if I do a trip...part of me wants to just rough it and try to put together shadowing a vet in whatever country on my own, but I think that's a lot easier said than done...
Are you female? I think I read that actually regardless of how long you stay in India, all men have to stay in dormitories due to local culture of host families not wanting strange men in their houses. But that doesn't bum me out too much, I'd be fine with either. And I'd definitely be doing longer term; either 2 or 3 months.

I spent a while in rural Turkey, so I don't think it'd be total culture shock for me, but it is good to know that I'll definitely need to prepare myself for a different way of life. I guess probably my biggest concern about India is heat and humidity, as I really love cold climates. But I could probably learn to deal.

Anyway, thanks so much for the feedback.
 
Forgot to check back till now, sorry XD

I'm a girl, yeah, and the girls all lived in the host family's house in the village. There were guys living with the same host family, only in a separate house across the street set up for them. Everybody hung out and took meals in the host family's house. I think this might've been a recent development - when I was applying, they said my fiance would have to live in the dorms at their city headquarters, but when I got there he actually stayed at the other house instead. The cultural advice they send you is fairly accurate, but also fairly incomplete XD;;
 
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