Tuesday 6 March 2018

Nepal Nov/Dec 2017 Dang Region

After a long flight with a ridiculous stop-over I arrived in Kathmandu tired and worn out in a time zone that added an extra 45 minutes to the 5 hour difference between home and Nepal. I never understood how India got the extra half an hour, 45 minutes, that's crazy.

As promised a driver was there to greet me at the airport. A short journey found us at the hotel which was to be home for a couple nights before we headed out to Lamahi in the Dang Region of Nepal.

I don't remember much about those few days as I drifted in and out of sleep, going to the lobby to meet team members as they arrived, meeting with Dinesh my Nepali contact from Creating Possibilities NEPAL, the charitable organisation we were partnering with on this project. A brief meeting with Madhu who was the travel organizer for the R&R I had arranged for the team on the weekend in the middle of the project. I had to settle the account and confirm all the arrangements were in place.


That done, it was dinner with the team in the evening, introductions for those who had not worked with each other previously and then an early night. The next morning we were up, packed and ready for a domestic flight to the Dang region.



After an uneventful flight we boarded our bus and headed out to Lamhi, a three hour journey. Santosh our driver would be with us throughout the project.  And only the second driver in all of my projects to work with us every day on site. An amazing man.


We traveled through some amazing countryside rising up into the mountains and dropping back down again on the other side. Eventually arriving at the hotel that was to be home for the next two weeks.


Unfortunately one of our team (Natasha) arrived minus her luggage. It was somewhere between the USA, China and Nepal. This was only retrieved one week into the build. Therefore she had to go shopping on our first day in Lamahi.

Dinesh helped with the shopping and the interpreting, I began to worry at this point :-)


Natasha was also lucky enough to have a few garments donated by our female team members and the ladies of UNAKO who made trousers and a shirt for her.


Day one of the build we board the bus and head out to the village, about a 45 minute drive on unmade roads, crossing rivers without bridges. Lifting the power lines with sticks so the bus could pass beneath. Chasing ducks and chickens away from the path in front of the bus.



Arriving at UNAKO house we were greeted by the ladies who run the organisation. Garlands hung around our necks and blessings made, welcome speeches and introductions made, we climbed back on the bus and headed for the plot where we were to help build a home for Bujiram and his family.


In brief, Bujiram's wife passed away and his life savings were consumed by medical bills. His eldest daughter lived away from home as did his eldest son. He had two young daughters and a young son living with him in a mud home. (I will post his story under a separate listing).


Throughout our time helping Bujiram build his new home you could see how hard it was for him to accept help from others. He is a very proud man and felt that he in some way was inadequate and had failed his family by not being able to provide the best for them. By the end of the project he was smiling with the team and I believe he understood that he was not being judged, compassion is not a judgement.


His girls were amazing, when not at school they helped with whatever they could around the build site. that was after completing their homework. The youngest lad had given up school but was convinced and sponsored by Creating Possibilities to go back to is studies.


During the build the team dug foundations, moved mud, sifted sand, shifted concrete blocks, mixed mortar, carried bamboo scaffold on their heads and helped lay blocks and build walls. All of this in extreme temperatures and humidity and without complaint.


Each day we bumped along the unmade roads, met locals along the way, watched them harvest the rice, herd their cattle and transport there crops on their heads.


At the weekend we headed off to Bardia National Park where we stayed for a coupe of nights and took part in a jeep safari and a walking safari. They don't have a lot of animals at Bardia but we did get to see the Rhino, a working elephant and an alligator. But that's not the point. The point is we had fun, and an adventure and that is what it is all about. Its not the seeing but the tracking.



Following our weekend break we continued with the building of Bujirams new home.


By the end of our time there, the house had risen to a height with the windows and doors and even the septic tank excavated and installed. The rest of the work would be completed by Bujiram and the employed labour. This would take approximately another two to three weeks. the results can be seen below.



Bujiram and his family now have a proper home, a home to be proud of. He has gone on to cultivate his piece of land and with the help of further donations has purchased more sheep to help him make a living and bring up his family as a respected member of the community. You can read Bujirams story in my next post.

After another 3 hour drive to the airport and a domestic flight back to Kathmandu, the team had one last night at the Eco hotel and then each went their own way. Some traveling directly back to their home countries whilst others continued their travels and headed for another adventure.

As for me I headed home via another long stop-over arriving back in the UK about 38 hours after I set off. Another project completed and time to work on the next. Unfortunately that was not going to happen as events took over and my life was to be changed once again.

For the full album of pictures documenting this project. go to:  https://photos.app.goo.gl/R8wzWzKmEMEF6Qnw1

Friday 8 September 2017

Bhinder Udaipur Rajasthan 2018

My previous trip to Bhinder was so amazing and worthwhile, I am going back in April 2018. This is your chance to get on board and join me in another amazing adventure.

To see the change from dry baron land to a lake and crops and full wells in just 6 weeks was the most awe-inspiring experience I think I have ever been a part of. And that was what made it so amazing, just being part of it, knowing the villagers will benefit from our help for the rest of their days and then on into their children's lives.

So come join me. You know you want to..


View from a Volunteer Team Leader: Nepal October 2017

View from a Volunteer Team Leader: Nepal October 2017: We are nearly there. October is coming around so fast. I have a great looking team of 12 members ready to help build a new home for a deserv...

View from a Volunteer Team Leader: Where have I been? Its been ages since the last en...

View from a Volunteer Team Leader: Where have I been? Its been ages since the last en...: So I guess you may be asking where I have been and why haven't I been posting. Or maybe not. But I am back and can bring you up to date....

Nepal October 2017

We are nearly there. October is coming around so fast. I have a great looking team of 12 members ready to help build a new home for a deserving family in the Dang region of Nepal.


Recently Nepal has suffered earthquakes and the latest natural disaster, Flooding. But these are a resilient people and they will survive. It is our job to help them along that path. We will be helping one family build a new home for the future. Can't wait.

I will post my report soon after I return to the UK, so watch this space.




Where have I been? Its been ages since the last entry

So I guess you may be asking where I have been and why haven't I been posting. Or maybe not. But I am back and can bring you up to date.

2017 has just flown past. I cannot believe we are in September already. But here we are most of the year gone, but not uneventful. Earlier in the year I was in Thailand. Lampang to be precise. Its in the north of the country, not down on the exotic coast line.



I didn't write it up when I returned because I got into remodeling a kitchen for Moira, my partner. That turned out to be an extremely lengthy task, but its all completed now and she is happy with the results.

So I will bring you up to date quickly and then move onto what I have coming up very soon.

The Thailand project was for The Fuller Center for Housing based in the USA. My hosts were Boots and Ramsey Walker Ex Habitat team leaders now hosting for TFC in Lampang. Boots is a native of the town so has a deep rooted interest in the welfare of the local inhabitants. And a great job they both do of hosting teams and building homes.

                                                     Boots and Ramsey Walker with Chris


My team on this occasion was small to say the least, but we still managed to construct the best part of two homes and a small part of a third. Ted, King Henry, Chris and myself worked alongside Boots and Ramsey. Helped by members of the Fuller organisation in Lampang and some of their family, the guys employed to build these homes and of course the families that were to eventually move into them.

                                             Chris      King Henry   Ted   &  Boots

We had a great time working alongside so many good people, we made a difference even though we were such a small team, which just goes to show that every little helps.



I have included a few pictures here but if you want to see the full album you can go to the gallery page and check it out. http://teamleader.myfreesites.net/gallery



Thursday 15 December 2016

A family in Las Penitas, Nicaraua gets a new home in 10 days

Its the end of November in Las Penitas Nicaragua. The temperature is in the high 30s and the humidity is off the dial.


I met Kyle at Atlanta airport as we were both transiting through there and heading for Managua. He from Canada and of course I came in from the Uk. The rest of the team had already arrived in Managua about 35 minutes before us and where waiting with our hosts just outside the terminal building. Following introductions it was into the bus after loading the luggage on the roof and then heading to Las Penitas, a two hour drive from the airport.

Old Home
I had visited Las Penitas the previous year to meet the Fuller Center guys and take a look at the projects they were working on. Since my visit they have been working hard hosting teams and funding the building of numerous homes in the  area. I was pleased to see one in particular that I had used in my marketing material for this trip. The plastic house had been replaced with a block built home and had even been painted by an artist from a previous team. I called to see the family and showed them the picture I had previously taken. They were so pleased and proud to show me their new home.

New Home
This was going to be a hot and hard build. Even the 50 degree heat of Rajasthan could not prepare me for the humidity we were about to experience here in Nicaragua. Our cloths were soaked through before we even got to the build site and started working.

Setting Out
Day one commenced with the setting out of the foundations and then digging them to depth. This was hard going as the ground was not very forgiving. We worked with the family who's home this would become.
Craig getting stuck into the foundations
I was surprised at the strength and tenacity of the wife within the family who was there from the very first pickax strike to the  last task of accepting the keys to her new home. Her husband was with her all the way except the last day when he had to travel to start work as a scuba diver fisherman some miles from home. So excepting the keys to the home was left to the rest of the family. No doubt they will prepare it for a celebration upon his homecoming.

Front left and far right are the home owners
From Digging foundations to bending and tying re-bar for the strength in the walls and Crown Beam. To laying blocks, placing and packing mortar, moving blocks, mixing concrete and raising the roof. The team worked tirelessly to achieve the goal of finishing the house in 10 days

Jean bending re-bar
Jenay and others tying  Re-bar
During our time in Las Penitas some of us took the opportunity to Visit Leon for the festival. An Amazing spectacle, sounds, colours, lights and fireworks. I was so pleased not to have missed this. The whole town put so much into it.

Leon
 

Back on site the house rose block by block throughout our time there. With direction from our mason and our Fuller Center hosts, the team managed to get the home built in 10 days. I can only applaud their efforts and thank them for completing a home, only the second time I have achieved this in 22 builds. The first was in Sri Lanka in 2006. We would normally get it up to lintel height and then have to leave or finish off a building started by another team. So this was a milestone for me and a great result for the team.

The handover of the house keys
Unfortunately Craig is missing from this line up
 So now it is onto the next project being Thailand. Watch  this space for more information. If you want to see the full set of pictures in this album please click the following link.

https://goo.gl/photos/HqHMQdEQrCPCjqNu7