Goyo and the La Quebrada crew clean and disinfect the system |
Coming up from cleaning the LG well - 300 yrs old |
The crew cleaned and disinfected the water tank |
I’m shocked to realize that this week marks 1/3 of my
service time here in Peru.
Blog # 108 will likely be my finale. If the last two-thirds are anything like
the first third, It’ll be a Helluva ride.
The week started with a medical trip to Lima. I am still amazed at how well Peruvians
sleep on the bus. They can be in Dreamland within seconds of sitting down. I
figure they are either in perpetual sleep-deficit or motor transit makes them
very sleepy. The only thing that seems to wake them, is if I crack a window –
causing howls of “cerrar, cerrar” – Close that window !!. They can sleep right
through even the loudest special effects type action movies.
I went to Big Lime for drugs – steroids – the same stuff the
baseball players get. Sort of. While my daily stretches have increased the
range of motion in my shoulders, I was still not 100%. I’d heard stories from a
couple of my fellow PCVs about how well steroids worked for their Dads. That
was my plan.
The Peace Corps Health Care is better than any other. They
cover transportation, meds, go with us to appointments, hold our hands and
offer great advice and compassion. Suni met me at the Clinic and even brought a
1964 National Geographic article about the Peace Corps. Back in the day, PC
training was quite different. There were Outward Bound type training camps in
the US
and trainees were shown how to kill and dress chickens. Then they were dropped
off at site and left on their own for 2 years. Way different now, with internet
and cell phone connections and frequent visits from PC Staff.
We had planned to do the injections directly into the
shoulder, but decided instead on a butt shot. I have to say, the results are
impressive. The next morning, I was amazed at how much more range of motion I
had (99%) with almost no pain. Stretches will continue and I’m adding some
small weight lifting to the morning “work-out”. Win Williams talked about the 3
S’s (Shower, Shit, Shave) and I’ve added a 4th – Stretch. 4S’s and
my day is off to a great start.
A good day with my bike (yes, I still LOVE my bike). We
started out early (6:30am) with Regidore Angel leading the way on his
motorcycle and visited our three Kids Parks sites. One is next to a concrete
soccer field / basketball court in the Town center. Concrete is the normal
surface for soccer here – seems pretty suicidal to me. A pretty stark piece of
real estate, but we can turn that around. The second is in the annex of Laura
Caller, right next to a new elementary school, which will give the kids a great
place for recess. I’m amazed that schools here are built with little or no
recreation facilities. The ones in the “downtown” area have absolutely no place
for kids to play. The LC site has some nice trees on it and a Parents’
Association that is willing to help with installation and painting. The third
site is in a suburb called “Viviendas”. This site had some equipment at one
time, but it was stripped by looters for scrap metal. Hopefully, a re-energized
community association and use of recycled materials will avoid a repeat. We
also visted a local welding shop to get costs on building the play equipment,
which will include : swing set, jungle gym, teeter-totter, slide, tire mountain
and tire crawls, along with new trees and landscaping. We’ll also be getting
some scraps of Astro-Turf to use in critical areas.
Next, I rode out to San
Antonio to check on the #2 biodigester site. Diebe has
excavated a part of the trench and built a beautiful stone wall on one side. He
plans to get the other side done “soon”. This site is not great as a demo
location, as it’s out a REALLY rough road from town. But it IS a near perfect
site for the biodigester. The pigs, house and digester are located near each
other up on a small hill, with his fruit trees and chakra just down the hill.
So, the “shit” will literally “flow down-hill”.
Then a ride out to La Quebrada to meet with my good JASS
guys and see the progress on the new water lines and connections. Work is well
underway and includes a new structure around the 300 yr-old well. They are
finding that MANY folks in town did not have their own connection, but were
tapped into a neighbor’s. This means many new user accounts and hopefully more
revenue. They are still planning to do another cleaning and disinfection in
July/August, after the work is done, followed by daily chlorination. At that
point, I will be one pleased Volunteer. 2,500 people will have a reliable and
safe water supply, with a JASS that is well-trained and stable.
The ride home from LQ is my usual “speed run”. I don’t know
if it was my elation at the progress, the tail wind or even the steroids, but I
shaved a full 8 seconds off my record and finally broke the 8 minute mark. The
last ¼ mile was a dead sprint and I really would have liked another gear. I
treated my trusty steed to a well-deserved bath and lube job and myself to an
afternoon nap.
I finished my Renewable Energy grant proposal for the Solar
Water pump systems, second draft on the PEPFAR (HIV / STD / teen pregnancy
prevention) complete and draft of the Kids’ Parks proposal. This is my first
attempt at grant writing. It’s really a lot like planning a construction
project, only more verbose. The fun part for me is the budget – trying to walk
all the way through the project mentally and noting all the inputs is a fun
challenge. The hardest part for me is making the “community contributions” come
up to the 40% required by the Peace Corps. It is no secret that these numbers
are often grossly over-stated – value of materials and labor values are
routinely inflated. I understand it is the way the game is played, but it still
tweaks my conscience. Though, focus on the ultimate good that will result eases
that a bit.
A visit to the Health
Center revealed a
shocking 2kg weight gain. Too much office work and high living on the road –
gotta get back to field work. Soon.
The latest fruit to top the local market fruit charts is
Mandarinas – mandarin oranges. There are two huge “fondos” or plantations in
San Luis – Arona and Don Augustino. Both packing houses are going 24/7, packing
the sweet little organic oranges for export. The local markets are full of them
and street vendors deliver them fresh to the door. The irony is that the
“rejects” are the most ripe and luscious of the harvest – too ripe to ship. So,
the locals are obliged to snack on the cream of the crop. Current street price
is about US$0.17 / lb. But, if I ride the bike down to the packing shed, they
sell for about ½ that. I am blessed to live in this fertile agricultural
valley, with such a huge variety of fresh fruits and vegetables. I hear pecan
harvest is just about to start……
Today was “Dia de Banderas” (Flag Day) here in Peru. All the
school kids got decked out in their para-military regalia for the big parade. I
gotta say, they were pretty adorable, even while goose-stepping, which is the
Peruvian march norm. The band for the ENTIRE parade was a 5 piece ensemble of
bass , snare, trumpet, trombone and cymbal. Sousa would be turning over in his
grave. What WAS impressive, however, was that all the kids actually sang the
national anthem – which sounds a bit like the French anthem. The voices were
much louder than the band, which was kinda nice.
Yet another 6.0 quake hit southern Peru this week.
Only felt a small short tremble. This place has got SoCal beat for number of
quakes, hands-down.
For many years, I’ve adopted the practice of ALWAYS carrying
pen and paper, to jot down names and information. I’ve found that my short-term
memory is not what it used to be and it’s the only way I can remember new names
and project details and “to-do’s”. The problem is more acute in Peru, where
many names have no English equivalent. I seem to remember town names IF they
are San or Santa something – the Quechua names all get blurred, especially
since they all seem to start with “Hua-something”. Pen and paper are pretty
rare items here, so my practice often attracts attention. Folks always want to
see what I’m writing down. The good news is that they get all excited when I
write down their name. Lucky for me, they take it as a compliment. At most
“charlas” or workshops, PCVs tend to give out candy or cookies as prizes. I’m
planning to give out pens and small note pads instead.
Yet ANOTHER Patron Saint party last night. This propensity
to very late night partying is remarkable. The drinking circles in the street
start about 7pm, and I do my best to avoid them but “getting the Gringo to
drink” seems a national sport. It may also stem from the previous Volunteer’s
reputation of buying rounds. The procession or “parade”, including an elaborate
icon carried around town usually starts about 10-11pm, followed by more
alcoholic revelry and ends at daylight. As I write this (6am) the party is
ending with the explosion of several of the loud M-80 style firecrackers being
fired off around town, announcing the end of their day…and the beginning of
mine. The regularity of these celebrations is stunning.