This week has been pretty crazy. Professor Roy arrived in
Luanda and we began work on the EWB water project. The day before he came,
everyone in Luanda was very excited and his coming became the catalyst for
work. Trenches that had been started suddenly multiplied, supplies came in, and
people materialized to start the project. It was all very exciting.
During the day, I’ve started getting my hands dirty on the
construction sites to make concrete foundations with the community. Monday we dug giant holes in both dirt and rock, Tuesday we
filled the holes with stones and hard pack (a mix of sand, rocks, and water),
Wednesday we poured cement mixed with more sand, rocks, and water into the hole
that used to have dirt, and today we did the same with the hole that used to
have rock. My dad was totally right about the volcanic rock though. With a
chisel and this great worker whose previous job happened to be in a quarry, the
rock broke apart. Tomorrow we will break apart more of the rock to finish up
the trenches for the pipes. Everything is moving very quickly on the project and
very fun. The work sites are a fun mix of volunteers who live in the nearby
homes, hired workers, a mason, a carpenter, the water committee (a small group
who sits around drinking sodas and watching the work), women who are busy harvesting
corn and millet but come to great us and thank us for bringing water, and a
gaggle of small children who watch the work and ask me to take their picture.
The construction sites are full of activity.
Unfortunately, this will be a short blog post because I’m
exhausted and the mosquitoes really like my computer screen and think I taste
delicious. Time to head under the mosquito net for bed and to get ready for
tomorrow when the rest of the EWB team arrive. More to come on stories from the
water project sites. Also, Roy tells the best stories about his adventures
traveling around the world that I should try to share on here too. Oriti
(goodbye)!
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