The trusty pickup gets us anywhere!
Friday, 12 November 2010
Intag Climate Change
Monday, 18 October 2010
Construction weeks 1 and 2: Elevated Tank
Last minute calculations in one of the classrooms at the school, to investigate a potential solution that was suggested a short time before construction was due to start. The operator, Nivo, preferred the option of an on-line tank but calculations being done here showed that this would not guarantee supply to the school. At this time there was a lot of pressure to complete construction well before the end-Nov funding deadline. Unfortunately this coincided with Pete´s visit, but he was able to help us with our investigations!
Materials begin to arrive on site. Each load arrived a day late, resulting in half a day´s lost work while waiting for the steel to arrive.
Thursday, 12 August 2010
Investigations Begin
Taking a closer look at the water flowing into the resrve tank (above). This tank of 12.5m3 capacity serves around 33 households. It overflows during the night, which has been cited as the reason why the water is not chlorinated.
The chlorination tank sits disused on top of the reserve tank, above.
The realities of maintaining this system began to hit home on our first trek to see the spring where the water for the system comes out of the ground and is channelled into the piped system The walk took around 3 hours of hard uphill hiking. When we arrived I was so tired Ihad forgotten what i had gone up there for! My fitness will definitely improve here...
En route we followed the pipework and had a chance to see the various infrastructure along the way: air valves, washout valves and break pressure tanks, such as the one seen in the background of the photograph above. Here Nivo, the operator, and his wife Maria point out the reserve tank, which lies across the valley we have just walked, to Tom. They do not own any form of transport, making their work all the more time consuming as they have to walk everywhere.
- Difficulty detecting leaks, having to search for the pipe and the leak for in some cases months before finding the rupture
- Pressure: the two communities are essentially on two levels, with the water serving Limones at high level first and then passing down a steep slope to Villadora. At times there is excess pressure in Villadora, with water coming out of the taps "like milk"
- The pipe crossing a valley and prone to rupture at the low point due to the high pressure
- At one location a hole has been made in the pipe to release air, but can also allow contamination to enter at this point.
- Some of the infrastructure that was built by the Government is of unsatisfactory quality
- Insufficient storage volume in the reserve tank at the head of the system
- Misuse of water: some people use the water in large quantities for commercial gain yet pay the same rates as domestic users
- People being unwilling to pay excess use charges or fines for non-attendance at community work days
At this stage it is difficult to ascertain the extent and relevance of these issues and to understand exactly what impact they have on the provision of clean water. It is also clear that there are some deep-seated social divisions between the two communities which we as outsiders are in no position to tackle.
Friday, 23 July 2010
Introduction to Ibarra and Intag
Monday, 19 July 2010
Moving on: from Quito to Ibarra
In Quito I was at the Simon Bolivar spanish school to consolidate my learning. The school is brilliant because they organise a lot of activities outside of classes. The first weekend I went on a trip to Mindo and met many of the people who have since become good friends. The only trouble being that they´re mostly German so we don´t practice our Spanish together much...
Back at the Spanish school we discovered they also run salsa classes twice a week. Salsa is a big force here and it helps to know how to dance when going out in the evening! I remember my first night out, in Mindo, everyone stood around the edge of the dancefloor until salsa music was put on, at which point the dancefloor came alive.
We decided to spend the second weekend at the beach at Puerto Lopez and it was the perfect cure for illness. It is a 10 hour bus ride from Quito but there are very comfortable night buses that cost around $10 - a dollar an hour! The buses are just one of the things that work fantastically well here. So much about Ecuador is very developed, the people are very friendly, Quito has fantastic parks, an amazing skate park and beautiful grafiti pieces throughout the city that indicate the community and organisation of the city. But at the same time, in this country where it rains almost every day you can´t drink the tap water and even the main Basilica in Quito has big gaps in the walls.
With the first two weeks behind us it's time to leave the holiday atmosphere and beach excursions behind and get to work in Ibarra, our home for the next six months.