Tuesday, May 10, 2011

Stairs and Filters

Mon 3/28 

Built gates for in front of the Library. Sonny & Fedelum built the cinderblock and cement stairs for the bathroom. 


Lebon gathered palm frond for the fence and Wag, Lebon and Liffern stuck them into the fence. Nice work, nice fence. 



4 pm 12 more people showed up, gave out filters, 12 more people got filters and instructions how to care for them and clean them. Ken took photos again.





Demo and distributing the filters

Sun 3/27
12 people showed up at 4 pm to get water filters. I did a complete demo with Sam & Federique reading & translating the care and cleaning instructions. It went very well. 12 people left all happy to have filters. Ken took video and photos. 











The Filter Pure water Filters arrive

Sat 3/26
Took the 8 am taxi boat along with 25 or so locals from the village. Sam pays someone to carry him to the boat so he won’t get his shoes and pants wet.  I sit next to the French Canadian couple with two young boys from Quebec. They left the kids on the boat for the day and are off to Les Cayes to see the city. 













We are on a mission to PU the water filters.
We arrive, call the filter delivery man and I am told he is still two hours away, so we head for the hardware store to buy materials. You folks at Waterstreet Company in Sausalito would get a kick out of seeing how they run hardware stores here. Everything is behind the counter. Some things are displayed on walls behind the counters, but only a few. You ask for what you want, the clerk fetches it, or what she thought you asked for, then goes back several times until you get something that might serve the purpose, or you figure out how to make do with what they do have or give up. 
Then the clerk writes it all up long hand on a slip of blank paper, starting over if there are any changes or deletions. The completed list is handed across to a man in a wire cage in the middle of the room, who totals the bill and hands it back to the clerk. The clerk shows it to you, you hand her the money, she hands it to the money guy, who makes change, but wait, we are not yet done. The money counter man now locks up his cage, comes around to the counter and checks off each item on the list which have all be laid out neatly on the counter before the clerk is allowed to bag or box them up. Not the most efficient system, but it sure must be necessary to reduce shrinkage and pilfering. 
Just about the time we are done paying we get a call that the water filter truck has arrived. They made better time than we expected, or maybe I misheard what was said. Anyway we head out of the hardware store. I ask Karma if he will carry the four small sheets of very thin sheet metal we have bought to protect the water cisterns form the sun’s rays, and he says “No.” I am puzzled and not sure what is going on. I ask him why and am told they never carry anything in Les Cayes, there are other people for that. I ask Wagner if he will carry them and he also says he never carries anything in Les Cayes, it is never done. He says he will carry anything on Ile a Vache, but not in Les Cayes. I am not sure why, but don’t care or want to wait for the explanation, so I lift the four sheets up on my head and fold them down over my ears like a sheet metal sunbonnet and start off down the street, They are all incredulous and laughing at me and tell me that the people are all laughing. I don’t mind, but perhaps it would be better if I don’t break the local social taboos and take work away from the men who carry things for others for a living.
When we get back we call a committee meeting for 5 pm, went over filters w/ Karma & Sam reading w/ Federique translating, me demonstrating, and gave one to each of the 6 committee members, met and agreed each would pick two people to come at 4 pm on Sunday to PU filters





Pizza and Lobster

Fri 3/25
Wagner off to Les Cayes to PU money and buy materials. Breakfast at Port Morgan w/ Adrian, Liza, Alberto & his Mexican wife.

Offered and accept a ride back in Adrian & Liza dinghy, Very pretty hard shell fiberglass lapstrake dinghy with teak seats & flotation chambers fore and aft. Very stable, lightweight and strong. I like it a lot and will look for a similar one for Nepenthe.
Make Pizza in the solar oven. Solar Cooking 1.0, first attempt to make pizza. Semi success, mostly a failure, crust never got done, very doughy, cheese never melted. Need larger oven bags, more solar gain. Will try again by inverting the lid on the roasting pan, thus reducing its size and volume, making it possible to fit two oven bags over it, and also less volume of air to heat inside. Also need to increase solar reflector area by factor of 2-3 will use plywood covered with foil on second attempt. We ate the pizza anyway and everyone says it is good. What’s not to like? Dough, pesto with olive oil, garlic, basil, chopped tomatoes, mozzarella cheese, olives, all good to eat even if not crispy and melted.
Lobster for dinner. Just lobster, good size, large tails.  remove the tail, cover with lime juice and olive oil. It is delicious. Another great day in paradise.

Sunday, May 8, 2011

No more climbing thru the window to the bathroom

Wed 3/23
Wag, Sonny & Fedlum knock out walls above and below window to make the door opening. Big mess. Monclaire helping.

Monclaire & I take Wags boat out rowing to visit boats in the harbor. Meet the French couple on Namaste, Adrian on Two Ticks, a Wharram catamaran from South Africa.



One day old colt by the path on way to Port Morgan hotel

A typical Haitian boat undergoing some repairs by the path on way to Port Morgan hotel



The shipwright 

Saturday, May 7, 2011

Two Miracles in one day

Tuesday 3/22 
After two weeks here, and the tantalizing promise of a working shower some day “soon come”, today that much anticipated event finally arrived. Jackson finished hooking up the sink, shower and toilet, the cistern barrels on the roof got filled with water and Voila, we have running water. Taking a real shower for the first time in many weeks was an almost spiritual experience, or at least a material pleasure. Only a few problems: the sink drains onto the floor, the shower doesn’t drain at all, and the floor in the bathroom slopes away from the shower drain, making a deep puddle right in front of the door. Why have the floor slope towards the drain if the drain doesn’t work anyway?
For people who might have never seen or been in a running water bathroom, much less built one, it is coming along remarkably well and I have faith it will work well soon. 
Visited the fish ponds to see the men working to dig them deeper, doing a great job working out in the hot sun. 

The other minor miracle was that after giving out more than 25 sails, supposedly to fishermen with boats, supposedly in exchange for fish, we finally got fish for dinner, and it was delicious. Boney little things, but very tender and tasty. 
Today was my father’s birthday. He would have been 103 this year, but only made it to 89. I honored his memory with a swim in the lagoon, something he would have enjoyed if he were here.
The fence around the library was a bit too Haitian for me to fully appreciate. Some places had six strands of wire, some seven and some eight, one section even had nine. Some places the rows were even and straight, some they were very cooked and uneven. Of course it is not really important, but we decided it might be a useful lesson for them to make some adjustments to make it more “foreign”. It seems that foreigners, probably mostly North Americans and Europeans, like things straight and even, so I showed them how to make it more foreign. It might be good for them to learn a few foreign ways as most of the opportunities for jobs and money that might come their way in the future will most likely come from foreigners who like things straight and even.

Today we also learned about the deep well of good water that has been repaired two months ago. It seems that someone, some unknown NGO, put in a deep well with a hand pump that produces good fresh water from an underground aquifer about 10 years ago. It was broken for several years until just recently but is now fixed and works again producing the best water on the island up to a rocky hillside from and deep rocky aquifer.


Solar panel installation and saving chickens

Mon 3/21
Big full moon last night. Clear and beautiful, no clouds, the wind is dying down. Surprisingly the dogs were relatively quiet. The locals build smoky fires at dusk and the village fills with smoke, to drive away the mosquitos we are told. Either it works or maybe the local mosquitos don’t like white people. Ken tells me a story about how when the British arrived in Honduras and found people there building smoky fires inside their houses without chimneys, they promptly taught them how to build chimneys in every house. The result was a plague of malaria. Stupid F...ing white man, thinks he knows better. We are told the mosquitos here get much worse in the rainy season in summer when it is hot and damp. Remind me not to come here then, November to May is the time to visit Ile a Vache if you value comfort.
Wagner  heads for Aux Cayes along with Federique and a few others to pick up money for the water filters and to pay the crew. It is payday and many will be happy. Monclaire and I cover the roof of the bathroom with two very small jib sails that were donated and are too small for the Haitian fishing boats, must have been from small yacht club racing boats or kids learn to sail programs. Once the sails are covering the roof, we lay 2 x 4’s across over them, The (temporary) roof is ready for the two water cistern barrels to be replaced, one for well water for the toilet, the other for cleaner water for the sink and shower. Later in the day Jackson comes by to work on the shower pipes.
Samuel brings over his solar panel and I show him how to make mounting brackets for it out of some pipe clamps by bending and drilling them. We attach 4 of the 12 brackets Sam makes to the panels and head over to his restaurant/store to install it on the roof. On the way we run into an interesting couple of young Americans, Rebecca and Cory from Atlanta. They are camping in a tent in a field on the other side of the village at a friends house, taking a break from working for NGO’s in Jacmel and Port au Prince. They are on the way to Mme Bernard to the market and we invite them to stop by later on their way back. 
The installation at Sammy’s Place goes well,  I buy a couple of scrap wood blocks from the boatyard nearby for a dollar to use as backing blocks on the underside of the roof. I am sure they would have given me the small scraps for free, but I feel good about giving them a dollar anyway. I’ll get a free beer from Sammy when we are done so it all works out. We are a little skeptical about Sam’s roof supporting my weight, but I distribute it well and put my knees over the supports only. The very thin sheet metal roof makes lots of cracking, creaking and groaning noises, but does fulfill its threatened collapse. We are successful and retire to inside Sam’s for refreshments and music powered by the newly installed battery and solar panel. 
After lunch I grab my snorkel and fins and head for the lagoon. It is pretty dirty today, a lot of floating paper and plastic and sea grass, probably blown over from aux Cayes in the strong North winds we had for several days. Jean Lorique and Genieux have departed, but there are two new boats in the harbor so I swim over to take a look. One is Harmony VI, a sleek 48 ft monohull flying a very faded Japanese flag. As I swim by, one man sitting in the cockpit waves and says hello. We chat for a few minutes and he informs me they have spent 2 1/2 years sailing here from Phuket Thailand by way of the Indian Ocean and Mediterranean Sea. From here they plan another year and a half to complete their circumnavigation back to Phuket.
The other boat is a big catamaran flying a French flag, but no one is up on deck. I notice a large graphic painted on the side of both hulls that shows a logo of the earth and a sail with the name “Voiles sans Frontiers”; Sails without Borders. Remind me to look it up next time I get access to the internet, sounds interesting, I hope we get a chance to meet and hear their story.
After my swim, a washcloth rinse and a nap, I feel pretty good, a little tired but a good tired. I begin preparations to build a door for the bathroom by removing nailed on cleats from some thin plywood sheets from a crate that has Made in China stenciled in big red letters on it. The plywood is thin, maybe 1/4” thick, but sturdy enough and made of some nice red hardwood veneer so it will look beautiful when varnished. It will make good door skins when fitted to a 1X4 frame. We will leave the Made in China stencil on it to add character. It is a lot of work removing the nailed on cleats, three cleats per sheet, 6-8 nails per cleat and all of the nails have been driven through and clinched over so I need to dig each one out with a hammer and chisel (a screwdriver really, we don’t have chisels) straighten with pliers, pound back through and pull each one out with the most rusty claw hammer I have ever see. It is so rusty it has scale on it, like an antique or artifact from another era, but it still works. A hammer is a satisfying tool. They rarely break and can be counted on to almost always work properly, even when rusty, unlike a lot of other tools.
I have dragged a chair out on our front porch to pull the nails out of the plywood and attract a fair amount of attention, Karma comes by to watch along with Monclaire and a man passing by on the path in front who is so fascinated I think he takes out his camera to take my picture.
Wagner returns from Aux Cayes with a load of cinderblocks for Federiques house, some steel and cement for our projects along with a lot of food and other supplies, plus the money to pay the crew and for the water filters.
As dusk approaches Rebecca and Cory return from Mme Bernard, a long walk they confirm, an hour and a half each way. We offer them lemonade, and later we share some rum and coconut water. They tell us amazing, crazy, wild stories about life in Haiti. Rebecca has been here for over a year, since the earthquake in January 2010. She came first with Burners Without Borders, but has worked with 4 or 5 NGO’s since then, often living in tents and horrible conditions but avoiding the prison like dormitories of the larger NGO’s. She tells us of how prevalent cocaine and pot use is among the NGO workers. Most Haitians don’t use cocaine, only the wealthy ones, but there is a huge trade in it for the UN and NGO workers. She tells us there are two classes of NGO workers, the “on the ground and in the trenches” types like herself and others, who live work and travel in the open and among the people, and the “chickens” as they are called derisively, the NGO’s that are so big and powerful that they have to worry about lawsuits and damages if anyone gets hurt, so they insure safety of their workers by keeping them like prisoners under armed guard with strict quarantine areas, curfews, rules and regulations. She says they are more concerned with their own safety than helping people, so much so they are almost handcuffed and tied and totally ineffective. 
Yet another way that resources that could be helping people here are wasted. Even a huge international NGO with a half a billion dollar annual budget and a good reputation for high ratio of funds raised to funds going to programs, is called Save the Chickens here in Haiti, because their volunteers are kept cooped up like chickens and rarely get out to see what is really going on and are not allowed to do as much as other free lance or grass roots organizations. Your donation dollars at work. Yet another reason to give donations to organizations that deliver 100% of the money and goods donated directly to the people of Haiti rather than to a big NGO that, even if they don’t use it up on overhead and advertising, uses it up on ineffective programs.
Rebecca confirms that she loves the Filter Pure water filters, they work well and she has been using them in Jacmel for a year. Only a few drawbacks she points out: 1) At $30 each they are too expensive for most Haitians who need them; 2) they need to be cleaned every week; 3) the ceramic insert is fragile and easily broken during cleaning if you are not careful. We talk about reinforcing the top and rim with Gorilla tape or Duct tape and she agrees this will be a good idea and might prevent breakage. So if they can be subsidized and given to those who need them, if they can be trained and will follow up and clean them every week, and if they treat them carefully and don’t break them, they sound like a very good water filter.