![]() ![]() View Red Line Route To Canyon Lodge and The Village Operates from 7:05 AM until 5:20 PM with service between The Village at Mammoth and Canyon Lodge. The Red Line provides service throughout town via Old Mammoth Road and Main Street traveling between the Community Recreation Center and Mammoth Mountain Main Lodge. To Main Lodge The Red Line operates every 20 minutes, 7 days per week from 7:00 AM until 5:30 PM. From buses to get you to all of our base lodges and nighttime trolleys so you can après with ease in town, we have you covered. When the weather is dicey and parking is limited, taking the transit system is the way to go. The trolley also pulls a bike trailer to transport you and your bike uphill to enjoy the downhill ride on the stunning Lakes Basin Bike Trail. View Town Trolley Routes Lakes Basin Trolley This route provides service from The Village to the Lakes Basin area, including Tamarack Lodge. Town Trolley The Town Trolley operates approximately every 30 minutes, stopping at locations including Snow Creek Athletic Club, Juniper Springs Resort, Vons, The Village, and Canyon Lodge. Priority is given to Bike Park riders and a valid bike park ticket is required to transport a bicycle. Bike Park Shuttle Offers free transportation service between The Village and Main Lodge on a space-available basis, leaving The Village from stop #90 (on Canyon Blvd.) on the quarter from 9:00 AM–4:30 PM. Hop on the Mammoth Bike Park Shuttle to get to Main Lodge, or take the Trolley up to the Lakes Basin for a day on the lake or adventure out on a hike. The kekeh is a symbol of a safe space where women can feel comfortable in discussing issues affecting their communities and also how they, as women, can take up decisions and make brilliant contributions to whatever is going on or happening in their communities,” says Conteh.ĭorget en Lappa is part of the project Women Arise and Shine, funded by World Vision International and back-funded by the UN.With so much to see and do in Mammoth during the summer months, it's important you get to where you need with ease. “But when they see this kekeh, they want to get the experience of sitting in it. The kekeh is a symbol of how women can ‘travel’ from one point to another –from not having confidence, to being braver, making decisions and having a say in what happens in their communities and families.Īdding to the symbolism is that women in Sierra Leone usually only see men riding a kekeh – and the kekeh is not yet common in some communities. Having a kekeh play a central part in the radio programme came from a team brainstorm before the production started. ![]() They find a way to include women to be part of meetings, or whatever engagements they are having,” Conteh said. ”When you see them in groups, you will hear them saying ‘I think we should be equal’. Now, Conteh says, people are aware of the importance of female representation when discussing topics related to their communities. With 18 episodes planned before the project finishes next January 2024, the radio programme is beginning to shift societal expectations around women. Marian Conteh, mentor and producer, BBC Media Action Sierra Leone “The program is empowering women in terms of taking key decisions, being part of the women's movement, of decision-making in their communities, their homes, and also where they live and how women can be financially empowered." It’s aimed at promoting women’s participation in social, economic, and political space and rights. Now, Sombo and her kekeh have become a symbol for women in Sierra Leone, as a strong statement about what women are capable of.ĭorget en Lappa - a Krio term for a blouse and wrapper style mainly worn by women.- is part of the project Women Arise and Shine, funded by World Vision International. The kekeh – a motorised three-wheeled vehicle – is a common sight on the streets of communities in Sierra Leone, where they are an important form of commercial transportation, and almost exclusively driven by men.īut journalist Sombo Angelina Fullah learned how to drive one in just three days - not for its normal use of transporting people or products, but to conduct interviews for Dorget en Lappa, a 30-minute radio magazine produced by BBC Media Action in partnership with Radio Wanjei in Pujon, in the southern part of the country. ![]()
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