Mark Till, one of the volunteers we worked with during our week in the DR, is an amateur documentarian, and created a video of it (in 2 parts) :
Author: shahkarim
New Track – The Portrait
This is a cover of “The Portait”, by Greg Howe. A song I wish I had written.
I played it on a classical guitar, and it’s recorded using GarageBand on the iPad with a touch of reverb. Straight mic input as before.
I did 3 takes, and edited together the best of those into the final track. Getting the volume dynamics even across the takes was more difficult than I would have expected. Would have been much easier if I was good enough to just play this straight through in a single take.
DR Volunteer Trip Summary
We spent a week this summer volunteering as a family with a children’s education nonprofit in the town of Monte Cristi, in the Dominican Republic. This is a summary of that trip.
The non-profit we worked with was Outreach360, which we chose because they met a number of criteria :
- Established track record (these guys have been operating in the region for over a decade)
- Family oriented programs that can easily incorporate younger children, including our 6yo.
- Work that involves the betterment of conditions for children.
- Education as the central theme.
Our flight arrived in Santiago around 3am on Saturday, and we chose to get some sleep at the Hodelpa airport hotel until 1pm Saturday when we were met by an O360 long-term volunteer, Catherine, who had come to take us to Monte Cristi, along with 3 other volunteers who had also arrived that day (Mark & Theresa, and Joyce).
The ride out took about 3 hours, and eventually we arrived in the dusty, arrid northwest coastal highlands of Monte Cristi.
In addition to Team Karim + Mark&Theresa + Joyce, there were about 12 longer term volunteers there who were part of a multi-week stint. The Manolo Tavarez center, where all the volunteers were housed for the week, was rounded out by 4 full-time O360 staff members.
Sunday was orientation, where one of the leaders went over the basic structure of the week. The program for the children runs Monday – Friday, but short-term (1 wk) volunteers work only Monday-Thursday, leaving Friday as a “Culture day” – more on that later. We also spent Sunday afternoon scouring the neighborhood handing out fliers advertising the coming week’s program, and trying to get children to come.
The campamento itself was held a 15 minute walk away from the O360 house, at a building in the Solomon Jorge neighborhood.
Each team had volunteers as group leaders (our eldest 2 acted as group leaders for Los Piratas, and Estrellas Del Mar) who led them through 4 classrooms : Health, Spanish/Literacy, English, and Environment. Here Arman is getting Los Piratas ready for lessons.
I was one of 2 instructors for the Spanish/literacy classroom, and Samina was one of 3 instructors for the Environment classroom.
Sarina and Domini became fast friends.Safiya was a floater, and also performed a critical role in playing with the kids during recess.
On Friday (culture day) we went to Dajabón, which is a town on the DR-Haiti border about 1 hour from Monte Cristi. The goal was to experience the Haitian market, where literally thousands of Haitians cross the border every week to sell anything from produce, clothing, cigars, and countless other variety of goods. Truly an eye opener.
Outreach 360
We are heading to the Dominican Republic in July for one week to serve children, many of whom are orphans, by donating our time and energy in the rural town of Monte Cristi through a nonprofit called Outreach360.

Should be a great experience – we hope to help the children learn to speak and read English, and do whatever else is needed at the orphanage and community center. All of us, even little Safiya, will be volunteering.
Come join us! Or consider making a donation to help us reach our goal and tell others about Outreach360.
Stay tuned to Facebook where I will be posting updates as we go.
Shift Register
This one is called Shift Register. Totally done on GarageBand, on a long Trans-Atlantic flight.
The idea was to mess around with time signatures and odd meters.
The “shift register” vocal at the end is 11-year-old Sarina.
Idea for a story
2055.
Most of the world is still reeling from the effects of a series of worsening economic calamities that has left currencies devastated, industries in ruin, and entire cities abandoned. The food crisis of the 30’s has come to an end with localized agriculture and subsistence farming taking the place of now-defunct large-scale food production facilities.
Economic experts now agree that the world is in the midst of transitioning to a post-currency era where the demand for material goods and services has all but vanished.
Meanwhile, for the first time in history, the average human life expectancy is shrinking at an alarming rate. The AIDS epidemic is defeated, but a new virulent strain of the Marburg virus is spreading across the planet at rates never seen before.
August, 2055.
In a basement room at the abandoned shell of what was the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratories, an aging scientist working on routine calculations in particle physics has just stumbled upon something that has the potential to change everything, and to give mankind control over the last resource he has left to conquer – Time.
September 18, 2055. Phoenix, AZ. 2:55pm
A door slams shut and the man with one bad eye looks up, startled, as an arc of charged air shoots across the room and knocks him backwards onto the filing cabinets against the wall.
“The scientist.” says a voice. “Who is he?”
“I.. I don’t know what you’re talking about.”
“Who is he and who does he work for?”
“I swear I don’t know what you’re talking about! Please.. What do you want from me?”
“Let’s go. This one’s not gonna tell us anything. Finish him off,” says another man at the doorway.
The man with one bad eye screams as another arc, much brighter this time, jumps across the room again, and knocks him down to the ground, writhing uncontrollably. The two visitors leave quietly as the room starts to fill with the acrid smell of smoke and burning flesh.
Sockeye
June 2011
Wild Alaskan sockeye salmon with Mediterranean herb couscous.
Straight from the grill.

Recording Session
This is a cover of the first few verses of “Crying” by Yngwie Malmsteen. I played the guitars (Acoustic, rhythm, and bass). The keyboards and cymbals are courtesy of Garage Band on the iPad. Mixing was also done on GB. I didn’t use line-in or mic the audio, this is recorded exactly as it was heard through the iPad’s built-in mic.
Shrimp Scampi Cilantro

Kapla Barge
Arman made a barge from Kapla blocks. It is hollow, and currently carrying a cargo of pens.


















