Sunday, July 13, 2008

last week of work

we will be finished finally with the pipeline by the middle of the week. just a few valve boxes, concrete covers, and some digging remain. thank god. Justin and I will traveling to village very early Monday to accomplish all the tasks. We told the village that we would not turn the water on until all of the trench is back filled. so the whole village filled the trench on Friday. only a couple of day remain for that. after we finish we will have some free time to do whatever we want. The villagers want to take us to another village to see their friends and play football.

the journalist, Matt dewalt, the journalist from ud arrived on Wednesday. he spent one night in the village. he has talked to many of the projects adviser's and other key people. he will be traveling with the immersion group to get a complete feel of Cameroon.When we visited friends he comes, he seems to enjoy everything we do.he is impressed on the relationships that we have. i believe he will write a good article with some nice picutres.

10. we had the Dayton versus Cameroon football match. the cameroon team didn't have any girls on the team so we divided the 15 dayton girls to play on both teams. the match finished in 7-7 draw, many people scored including girls, justin, and myself. dr amin was the referee but tends to not concentrate on the game, he is just there to make sure everyone has fun.

9. i bought dress shoes yesterday, the salesman initially wanted 60,000 cfa but we finally agreed on 27,000. my friend dereck did all the negotiating. there is whiteman and blackman price for everything.

8. i have learned how used a machete, i have been cutting forms with it. i am not as good as the local but i can do it.

7. we have gone swimming in the lake twice, once we had all villagers around our age went for a swim. we took the villages engine boat without an engine into the lake. we dove of the boat and enjoyed the water and sun. the next time just us whites wen. we were waiting for the canoe that was carrying our luggage to come and we went in for a dip. the lake is warm in most placed from the sun but there are also some cool spots.

6. now i am very adjusted to the heat. i do not sweat as much and i don't drink as much water. today would be a very hot day in ohio but it is cool here.

5. every sunday at eben's in kumba they play micheal jackson's greatest hits as everyone prepares for the big midday meal. this is the one meal that we usually eat with ma and pa.

4. in the village everyone is related. there is one family that had five children, those five chrildren have many kids and grandkids. some people in the family have married other villagers making one huge family that is at least half the village.

3. some small kids are afraid of whites. there is one named kelvin who you can hold one day but the next you can't even get near him without him crying.

2. i got another hair, this time at barber shop in kumba. the barber shops are similar to one in the states, a rotating chair, sports picture everywhere, and sports illustrated. but this one had pictures of footballers covering all the walls and ceiling. also on the walls are hair styles of puff daddy snoop dogg, and other random people.

1. water is going to flow this week.

much love,
mark

Monday, July 7, 2008

filters are coming in the village!

Hello Everyone,

Happy late 4th of July! When you were probably grilling out, swimming, and watching the fireworks we were in the bush celebrating. Overall, we are all having a great time staying in the village. Even though there are lots of bugs, we are having a blast! During the day we work on either the pipe line of filter construction and by night the boys are ready to play some soccer while the girls hang out with the kids, play cards with the women, and help with dinner.

As you may know, our main goal for the Barombi Water Project is to provide Barombi Village with clean drinking water using affordable and appropriate technology. The pipe line will provide the water while the point-of-use filters will be implemented to provide clean, healthy drinking water.

For the first three/four weeks here Katie, Marissa, and I worked with a welder in town to fabricate a mold which we are using in the village to cast the concrete forms for the filters. After finishing the mold, we casted our first form at the hardware man's house; unfortunately, we had to destroy the form because the extractor fabrication errors. The welder made some adjustments, and we were successful on our next try. The mold and other necessary materials were then transported to the lake on a motorcycle and then carried to the village by canoe late last week.
Last week, for the first time, all six students stayed in the village for the week. Construction for the water distribution system continued and the production and implementation of the filters started. The team met with the water committee to start organizing for production, education, and distribution of filters. During the week we worked with a few men everyday to teaching them the process of making the concrete forms; by the end of the week 4 forms were constructed. We also met with the women in the village to give them a brief summary of the filters using visual aids and help from Carin, our Cameroonian mommy, who helped translate for us. This Thursday we will be having our first filter demonstration to show the villagers how they work and let them start signing up for their very own. As for the distribution, as a team decided that it would be best for the villagers to pay for a jug (which will be used to carry the clean water) and to provide a half liter of oil for the steel mold. The money collected will go to the water committee for future filter maintenance and materials.

This weekend we came back to town to catch up with our Kumba Town friends and gather more materials to build the concrete filters. It was a pretty big adventure trying to send more concrete and sand to the village. We had to find a truck which was willing to drive back to the lake side; it's not an easy drive with all the hills and pot holes (I think it could be called Father of the Beast). The best part of it is that the truck we used is 48 years old (If you have seen the movie Cars, it looked just like the old rusty truck Mator, haha)!! Tomorrow we will meet up with Justin, Mark, and Liz in the village and continue making the point-of-use filters (hopefully the men will not need any of our help!), start painting the forms, and filling the forms with the sand and gravel. By the end of the week we will be done with the pipeline and everyone is going to want there very own filter after seeing how beautiful they are!

We are all excited to come home and tell you all more about the village life and the project, it really has been a blast. Despite all of the midgets, mosquitoes, and the outhouse, we are all loving it. Well anyway, I hope you guys are having a great summer, I can't wait to hear about your summers too.

Keep in touch and see you in a few weeks,
Hayley
Hello everyone!

A quick update on the progress of the pipeline for those interested...
We have now connected all of the pipes except for the branches reaching to the three tap stands. Last week we finished the pvc in the village and connected the iron and pvc pipes. We also installed all the appropriate valves and poured the concrete tap stands in the village. This week we will hook up all three tap stands to the main pipeline and proceed to test the line with water flowing for the first time! Hopefully we don't encounter any leaks or other problems! After testing it, all that is left to do is fill in the trenches and some minor clean-up work at the catchment and tapstands. We also need to design our drainage plan for each tap stand and excavate accordingly. Our final task will be to train and educate the appointed villagers (from the water committee) to maintain and care for the pipeline after we leave. We aim to have all this accomplished within the next two weeks, which will give us one week remaining to relax and have our inaugeration ceremony in the village before we come back to the States! Wish us luck!

Monday, June 23, 2008

some lighter emails

6/15/08
Hello everyone,

Happy father's day to all dads granddads, and uncles (dad, granddad and pop-pop). I don't know if father's day is practiced here in cameroon. Also happy graduation to all who have recently graduates.

We returned from village late friday after a tiring but successful week in the village. We have finished most of the catchment, which is the majority of the project. We finished digging on monday and tuesday. Wed and thurs were used to prepare for the casting of concrete on friday. friday About 30 men showed up to pour 2 m^3 of concrete. First the foundation was poured then the walls. This dam is huge, it will not move.

the top ten list

1. yesterday the Eben's (our host parents) and us went to someone 40's wedding anniversary party or ruby jubilee. The event started with a three hour long church service starting at 11 am. After pictures were taken, we were forced to have a picture with the couple probably because we were honorary guests remember we are white. Then we went to the banquet hall, which i helped build last summer, to continue the celebration with 300 other people. Some people gave toast's, the couple cut cake, then after sitting forever we ate. Then we danced until about 7, everyone says i can dance like an africa, but i dont think so. The event was like a huge family reunion it was very fun to say the least.

2. Somehow the catchment came out very well. Initially the plumber who we hired wanted to control the whole process, But I basically prepared all the form work and tied all the rebar. You cant learn about building a dam in the jungle from schooling. it was quite a learning experience.

3. Staying a village i have strict sleeping schedule. I cant stay awake past 9. Probably because i am very tired from working all day and that we just finished the dinner. and having hardly any lights in the village doesn't help. Then i wake at 6 when the sun rises

4. Us students will having a party for the workers a monday to celebrate the good work a the catchment. We will be buying beer, palm wine, wine, grane nuts, and popcorn the party. We will also buy some petrol so we can run the generator to play music.

5. I have been catching some euro 2008 football (soccer) matches at local places. That is the sporting events i have seen.

6. I forgot my toothbrush in kumba last week, so i had to brush my teeth with my fingers and use marissa mouth wash to get somewhat clean teeth.

7. We met with a government official who is in the parliament. He wants to discuss about community development and wants the information that we have. While talking with him we agreed that the funding of the projects is the hardest part.

8. the goal count is tied now justin-2 mark-2

9. we have been given nicknames: marissa-best bo (best friend) justin- k man liz - k lady and myself - boss of bross

10. the best of all was carrying 50 pounds of sand to the catchment site on my head. Villagers, Justin and I carried the sand about one kilometer through the village and jungle. We had to avoid the pipeline trench while it was raining. this make the whole trail muddy. The trek was hard but was very rewarding. Justin and I carrying the sand motivated the village to take more sand and gravel to the site and showed that we were very serious about pouring the catchment in one day.

make sure to visit the blog barombiwaterproject.blogspot.com i think justin is updating it now

peace
mark

6/22/08
Hello everyone,

Wow we just completed another long exuasthing week in the village. here is what happened

Monday- AFter travleing ot the village after runnning errands to prep the week stay, Justin and I realized that we forgot the key school house. The school house, where we stay in the village, so contains are the tools and materials for the project. We waited a couple of hours for the key, but decided to go to the catchment to wreck some form work with no tools. We were also planing to cast the second portion of the catchment, the collection chamber that day. All we could do was small tasks, then the tools and work accelerated. First we formed and poured its foundation. then while we were 3/4 finished the walls of the chamber we had to send two workers to get another bag of concrete, by this time it was 5 oclock and already getting duck. We finally finished around 6. I still cant believe that we finished in one day and half the day we didn't have tools.

That we partied. The friday before the we told the water commitiee chairmen that we were planning a party for monday night to celebrate the completion of the catchment. During the day 6 crates of beers, two jugs of wine were carried by canoe for the event. We also bought petrol for the generator we could play some music. just about the whole village came, only the ones who worked on that monday and friday were supposed to come. We still had very nice time, we danced and discussed all night

Tuesday- was a rain day no work- sat around we drank the left over wine then in the after played football with justin liz and the villagers

wednesday ( i lose track of the date and time while stayin the village)- I took forms off the collection chamber, and cleaned all around the catchment area, also the inlet and outlet pipes we set in the catchment. While the plumber did his work i took a crew of the workers to finish the trench the was previously dug.

thursday- i helped the plumber fit the first iron pipes, then i concentrated on building the rest on the form work of the remaining strucutures, one for the collection chamber cover, one for the tap stands. that night we went to someone house to watch undercover brother, he was running his generated that night, so of course many people were there.

friday- today, I layout the pipeline trench, the trench is almost finished we are out of the bush and into the village now. I carried a pipe up to the pipeline and then took a plank to village. Then i continued to dig the trench, finished the tap stand form and walked home

as requested by liz and justin i will continue the top ten list:

1. I dont know if i like drinking palm wine in the middle of a hot work day, but some how i have given glasses of the white stuff or mebo each day when i am noticeably tired and sweaty.

2. a shower never felt so nice after a long week a bucket shower.

3. the bucket shower on tuesday was the coldest shower i have ever had, it was a bucket of rain water. the water is noticeably colder when it rains, most of the time hot water was not needed but that day i needed it

4. i have another nickname now: marco

5. one day in the village, while listening the our hand held radio we( justin, julius the guy from kumba who with us, i) brought out in harmony to what was coming out of it Micheal Jackson's you are not alone. all the villagers like it and so did liz an karen, the girl from kumba.

6. Dad, your football boots (soccer shoes) are in ruins, the soles are 3/4 off on both of them, i tried to play with them one day but i could only move foward with out having soles borthering me, i should have played in shandles which would be normal here. they are getting repaired this weekend

7. in village, we hang with the area boys. These are boys in the village that are around our age. we play football with them, they are hardest workers, and they are always at our house. some of the nickname are, the game, gunshot, sexy, and "use your imagination".

8.the top of my head hurts, i carried wood planks fresh out of the tree on my head the past two days. I put roll of plantain stems on head as a pad, but my head still hurts. The top of my shoulders also hurts because that is where the pipes rest. It is hard to walk planks or pipes in the jungle while avoiding the trench. I always hit trees and get swiped by branches.

9. at night recently we have been playin check, a card game similar to uno. aces skip 7 draw two and jack are wild. one game we had ten people playing, we played until one player remained, its was the area boys versus the visitors (justin, liz, julius, karen, and i). justin and liz made to the finals but both lost to the area boys.

10.the project could not be moving any better, the whole village has been working hard the past three days. More pipeline has been dug in these days than all the day previous. almost half the iron pipes have been fitted in two days. the catchment in finished, tap stands are ready to be casted. the pipeline could be finished within two weeks. the second project could be replacing a bamboo bridge.

later,
mark

Sunday, June 15, 2008

Life in The Trenches

Digging the trench for the pipeline has proved to be a bit more tedious than planned on paper. Even after completing the topographic survey and staking out points that we thought would be ideal for the pipeline, this only provided a false sense of security in knowing where the actual pipeline would lie. When your construction site is in the middle of the jungle, you must adapt your mentality and application of skills to the environment. With one of the plumbers, and a gang of machetes, we began tracing the section of the galvanized pipeline that lies near the stream. The terrain is very rock and steep, so the pipeline will "sleep" on the hillside near the stream and will be supported by the earth as much as possible, and some concrete columns. Much of this clearing will occur when we lay the actual galvanized iron pipes, upon completion of the collection chamber next week.

Digging began and continued for over one week for the section of the pipe that will be PVC. This proved to be the tedious part of laying out the areas for digging.Most of the terrain under which the PVC pipes will lie is cocoa farms. There are two objectives I keep in mind when laying out the sections for digging: avoid as many trees as possible (cocoa equals cash) and keep sections as straight as possible to minimize unions and fittings. The trench is 60mm deep and 40mm wide. It is necessary to provide enough cover to protect the pipes, and also allow room for the technicians to enter the trench during installation of pipes. Community work, as it is called, is used to dig the trench. The first day some 20-30 people showed up and dug 6 meter sections. After that, the sections were reduced to 4 meter, as people were complaining the work was too difficult.

At this time, over 300 meters have been dug, and this happened in one weeks time. There are approximately 500 meters remaining, so I am very confident that within two weeks time, the trench will be complete.

The catchment was poured on Friday (more info to follow) and the collection chamber will be completed Monday or Tuesday. Once this is finished, we will begin to dice and lay the galvanized iron pipe. We will meet the trench when the galvanized iron pipes are finished and then follow them home to the village. We want to start the pipeline at the catchment so we can be testing for any problems as we lay the pipe.

Thursday, June 12, 2008