The setting is impressive: palm trees colour the coast and the fresh cocoa nut juice is a delicious natural drink. Served from tree to fridge, the sellers use a lethal looking giant blade to slash the tops. I keep my ring finger well hidden during this process! A straw is inserted into the clear, cooling liquid. In temperatures of 35 degrees (I’m on three showers a day and that’s not enough) it’s refreshing, pure nectar.
I’ve been asked to run an hour-long session on school linking. My powerpoint was sent over weeks ago for translation into Portuguese but it’s 4.30 in the afternoon so I’m going to be a maverick and do something I hadn’t planned. I direct some spontaneous role plays and mimes- stories to illustrate various educational concepts and bring them to life. It’s the old drama teacher in me- actually I’m just a failed film director. But it works and we have ear-splitting laughs and a happy group.
To conclude I show the Top Talent DVD, a Luke Flegg/Lucy Mccance collaboration that mixes excerpts from past productions, activities and events. It’s clever stuff and the quality of the work by South Dartmoor students is a talking point.
Pernambucco umbrellas are used to illustrate leadership concepts. That’s one the NCSL hadn’t thought of! They’re also pretty effective against the sun when we walk to lunch. Best of all the group wave them wildly at the end of a four way video conference with Mexico, Argentina and Sao Paulo. The project is being done in South America with Brazil one country among many.
The video link gives the sense of how the work is valued and its importance in the region as well as to the UK. The waving goes on until the screen fades. This is how they do things in Latin America- a joy to work with.
The Conference ends with Bom dia, the ‘Good Morning’ song, and this time I make an audio recording and translation. After everyone in the room has been hugged, we finish with the compulsory picture shoot. A professional photographer has been clicking away throughout the event.
We have small gifts of beautifully wrapped parcels of soil and packets of sunflower seeds joined by a hand of cut out green felt. We’re asked to plant the seeds as a symbol of the growth of the project and its continuing success. Will I get them through the customs, I wonder. Are they classified as a drug! What with this and the death threats to ring wearers, I could get paranoid.
The group of Brazilian directors give the UK heads illustrated cards with the words:
‘Dear Friends:
You are unique…
But, there is something especially
Charming about you:
The belief in life,
The belief in people,
The will to change the world.
Such people are never erased
From our memories.’
The Brazilian people are every bit as beautiful as their country. As I return to the hotel to try and clear my in-box before dinner, I know that I have been inspired.


Of course if you want to see some stunning examples of work, just look under the subject section on the new website. Wow! The old site was described to me by someone from the DCSF (Department for cows, sheep and frogs- actually children, schools and families but easier to r
Lin Blackman is like an electronic decorator, wallpapering and painting the site each day in new colours and patterns. You can have any colour you like- even one mysteriously called ‘don’t like green’. What would Al Gore make of that?
The number of hits is extraordinary- 132,640 different individuals last year, each spending on average 166 seconds and viewing 4 pages. And they say Big Brother isn’t watching us! In the first week of this year there were almost 5,000 hits on the new site. Have they really nothing better to do?


