Sunday, May 08, 2011

After the earthquake, I had been afraid Marie-Phila was killed or injured. To my relief, I found her doing well and the first thing she said was,



"Something really important happend while you were away and I'm mad that you were gone so long and missed it."



I said,

"Yes, of course I was not here for the earthquake but I came as soon as I could to help"



She responded,

"No, not the earthquake, you missed something else that is really, really important, and because you had just left us all here for so long, you missed it."



Confused, I said,

"What is it that could have happened that so much more important than the earthquake?"



She proudly declared,

"I became a Christian and now I'm in church ALL the time"



She continued,

"But because you weren't here, there was no one to buy me a bible, or a hymnal, or nice black shoes I can wear to church. I'm not going to be ok with you unless you get me those things"



I played along with her joke and pretended extreme outrage at her bossy attitude and we both busted up laughing. I of course spent the next month scoring the city to find her a little bible, hymnal, and a cute little carrying case.

Saturday, June 16, 2007

Salt Project Update


It's been slow forming a co-operative of salt producers. I first hired a man with legal and accounting training to write the co-op’s charter and internal regulation. Although he has experience writing such documents he seemed to lack the motivation skills to get the people excited about working together. After a week of work he turned in a two pages that amount to little more than an outline. As well he said that the $60 dollars a day we had agreed on paying him was a fine wage for a day wage but he now also needed a new technical wage, something in the order of $5,000 dollars. When Ewan let him know he would not receive this unagreed upon sum he was fine. When Ewan asked him to sign a little slip of paper stating he received the money of his original contract he blew up. It turns out the slip is usually used when paying unskilled day labors. I wasn't present for the tirade but it end with him saying taking the money was beneath him and storming out the office. The new guy I found works for the Haitian Department of Agriculture and trained specifically motivating and forming co-ops. He'll start Monday and I hope things go a little better.

Leasing the land for the AMURT pilot salt works has its own troubles. I signed a contract on Tuesday to lease a plot from a land owner. Wednesday morning at 6:40 AM two old guys found me and told me in a harsh tone "You can't lease anything without our consent." I'm finding out nothing is as simple as it should be. Previously I had been trying to purchase some land from these same old guys but over the course of a couple weeks they never turned up with the correct paperwork and they didn't really know what they owned. So it seems because they don't know where their land is, they feel they need to oversee all land deals just in case it's on their land.

Progress is always slow in Haiti and so I’m far from being discouraged. I’ve been spending part of my time looking for other ways start spending the grant money while the co-ops and pilot project are being sorted out. Many Haitian salt producers have suggested digging drainage canals to protect the salt basins from the annual flooding. Acting upon this idea I studied the aerial photos, talk with locals, and even rode my motorcycle inside the dry riverbeds to locate all areas of flooding. Since the floods are such dramatic events it’s been easy to rally the people into action. One community in particular that was skeptical investing energy into the new method of salt production is hugely enthused about the drainage canals, they want to start work Monday!

Just today I learned we'll be receiving addition funds to create a GPS database of all the salt basins. The huge deficit of information has plagued every NGO in their attempts to reform and modernize the salt industry. No one in Haiti could even give you a guess as to how much salt is produced, or who owns the basins, where the salt is sold or for how much is it sold. Finally knowing the answers to the most basic questions will be hugely important.

UN Beach Party!

The Sri Lankan peace keepers where very polite and generous.
UN party bus!
Erin and I will be featured in hundreds of home videos.

Wednesday, June 13, 2007

Aux Cayes Jacmel

Every local's question:
Does it fold out and get bigger?

Erin, the caribbean sand and sea
Happy to be by the sea!
Some coconut trees are easier to climb than others

In Marmalade

A typical bean tree. Unfortunately the coffee roaster was closed on the weekend.


Bamboo forest, courtesy of the Taiwanese Government.
Erin thinks the scary staircase and head wound are connected



Our host in the lovely mountain village of Marmalade

Tuesday, June 05, 2007

Sources Chad bath house


These bath houses are fed by natural hot springs. And I mean hot! We did our laundry in them one day. It is hard to imagine feeling clean when you look at the dirt though, huh?
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