Monday, June 07, 2010

And the winter has arrived, thus once again suffering the cold, frozen feet, the seeing my breath in my bedroom.

So I decided that since it has been so long since I have posted something, randomly, without having arrived the request of family members, generally of my Grandpa Ken via my mom, I thought I would write something.

The last time I posted I said that I would write again soon about my volunteer work I have done since returning to Chile post-earthquake, but I never did that. So I suppose I can do that. The title of my last post became the motto of Un Techo Para Chile (a rooftop for Chile), a non-profit volunteer organization made up of youth between the ages of 18 and 30 years old. It was founded in order to help serve the poor, focussing on ridding the country of ghettos and poor living situations. Chile was the first country to create it, but it now exists in all countries of Latin America. Additionally, the mother organization, which I believe also is based primarily out of chile, is called Un Techo para Mi País...a rooftop for my country. Anyway, after the earthquake, UTPCH hopped on the opportunity right of the bat to recruit thousands of volunteers to build emergency homes for victims...the people would suffered dangerous damages to their homes, or those that lost their homes entirely, most of them due to the tsunami that followed the earthquake, although many people who lived in central-southern chile lost their homes because they were built of adobe or brick and just crumbled to pieces. Talca, Concepción, Chillán are some of the areas that were hit hard by these damages, and of the tsunami, Constitución, Concepción and it's port city Talcahuano, and Pichilemu (known for large waves in Chile, and with the tsunami, it received the larges waves in all of Chile due to the tsunami, thus quite large destruction).

Anyway, as soon as I got back I wanted to help in any way possible. The first time I went, I was able to go with a friend of mine Jorge who studies architecture at a different university, but I went with this university. We were a group of about 60 I'd say and we went to a town called Huelquén, which is near Paine, if you googlemap it. Actually I don't think it even shows up so just search Paine. It is just south of Santiago, but very rural and country nevertheless. We were split into groups of 6-7 people, each with a leader who had experience who could direct us and tell everyone what to do. We were building with materials donated by ONEMI, Chile's natural-disaster relief organization. Onemi got lots of criticism for the number of deaths due to the tsunami, being told that they didn't announce and force evacuation soon enough. Anywho, we were building for an elderly gentleman named Humberto. He was one of 8 or so brothers and sisters, I think 7 of them lived in the house that had been in their family's name since it was built, over 100 years ago, made of adobe..a thick mud structure. Lots of them, little space, and very rural. No running water (typical in countryside pueblo towns of chile)...they have these manual pumps that draw water from wells in the ground, quite cool...kinda like the bike pump my dad made a few years back, but you pump with your hands. That means hole in the ground toilets are standard...and generally the toilet is not connected to the house, duhhh. That would be stinky. Don Humberto and his brothers had a bunch of mini-orchards, which means we were given tonssss of amazing fresh fruits, and I swear, the best grapes I've ever had in my life. They had grapes, corn, apples, almonds, walnuts, peaches, tuna (cactus-fruit), and other things I can't remember. When we left, he gave each of us a massive bag of grapes (like, a grocery bag full), and a small bag of fresh almonds. It was very generous of them. As far as the damage to their home, there were lots of cracks in the walls, but the kitchen, which was at then end of the house, looked like it had been picked up and turned about 30 degrees downward, sloping towards the ground and thus opening a large gap between the top of the wall and the roof. The floor was all cracked and uneven and in pieces.

The second time I went with UTPCH, with Jorge again. This time we were 3 buses full of volunteers, almost all university students. There were 2 German guys, and Argentinean girl, and me as far as foreigners. We went to a town called El Peral, a small town near the city of Los Angeles, about 8 hours south of Santiago. Since we went on Easter weekend and left Wednesday night instead of Friday (which is standard), we were to have 4 days to work (leave late sun night to return) and therefore each group (6 people) was to build 2 homes. Our first family was wonderful. It was a Grandma, her daughter, and her 2 daughters, and one of them had two sons who were 5 and 9. They were so nice, the mom and grandma cooked delicious amazing food which fresh bread every day and the two little boys were the most adorable things ever...I had so much fun playing with them when I wasn't digging a hole or something. I got their address and Jorge and I are going to print some of the pictures we took and send them to them. The kept telling us to come back and visit them next summer, they were really sweet. They lived in a very simple meager home...the 5 of them...I think there might have been one bedroom, maybe 2, and then the living room and the teensy kitchen. The youngest 3 slept in the living room with a mattress they stacked in the corner during the day. Very modest, but so kind.

They second family was just a sweet old lady of 73 years who had no husband or children but lived in the house she was raised in next door to her brother, the only two of the kids that never married. She went by Doña Rosita. It was also an adobe home with no running water and had a lot of rather large cracks in it, and an inspector had come and said that she needed to get out as soon as possible because the damage, especially on the rooftop, was quite bad and could collapse. I could tell she was quite attached to the home, and petrified of further earthquakes...she said since that night she hadn't been able to sleep soundly a single night and often stayed awake in bed all night, scared to death it'd happen again. The second day when we got there in the morning, she was absolutely delighted, full of smiles, hugging all of us...she even started to tear up that morning because she said that she slept well after we'd come, the first time in about 5 weeks since the earthquake. She was a real sweetheart.

The homes are very basic. We are delivered the materials, two floor panels, 6 wall panels, a door, cutouts and covers for windows (all hinge based, no windows), and the aluminum rooftop which has a rubbery something filter panel thing that goes under that to block out water and help hold in some of the cold. We have to dig 15 holes, generally about 2-3 feet deep, and using wood pillars, they are put into the holes and then filled in with a mixture of dirt and rocks to keep them sturdy and not moving, and obviously all leveled out using a clear tube filled with water...gravity. Then the floor panels go on...then the walls and last the roof and doors. I'd say the hardest part and most irritating was the door and windows because at least with UTPCH, we had to cut them out of the panels...and well, using a saw doesnt make for the most even cuts, especially when the wood is full of knots and our group leader, who honestly was a quite bad leader and thougt he knew way more than he did, thought he could cut it the best and then it came out like a 3 year old cut it...and then insisted on screwing the stinking door on and that it would work despite us saying that we should measure it and prolly cut off uneven edges...well lets just say that made for a grumpy long evening.

Anyway, both experiences were really amazing and just all around makes one feel good about themself. Sadly these homes wont protect much from the cold, but lots of people have talked of putting further insulation on them....mud, more walls, etc. They are supposed to be temporary until their own homes are fixed or replaced.

Ok, now i have freezing fingers so I don't think I'm gonna write more right now. BUt I will try and write something within a week or so, and post pictures.

Wednesday, April 07, 2010

la tierra se movió, ahora muévete tú!!!

"The earth moved, now you (move)!!"

So I've been back in Santiago for a month now and I never blogged about my travels, but I figure the pictures I posted are sufficient. Most have captions so it kinda explains what I did. But long story short, basically it was about 2 months: 10 days traveling through northern chile, then a few days break in Santiago, then 10 days in the south...PATAGONIA (the BEST) with one of my best friends from California, Ali, then back in santiago for a few days break.

Then Ali and I and her boyfriend Mike who flew in to meet us crossed the border Chile from Santiago to go to Mendoza, Argentina. 8 hour bus ride. One night in Mendoza. 12 hour night bus ride to Córdoba, Argentina. Stayed in Córdoba for the day to see my friend Belén from rotary in Germany. 12 hour night bus ride to Buenos Aires. Stayed in BA for 2 nights with Ali, Mike, and their Argentine friend Nico. 18 Hour overnight/half day bus ride from BA to Iguazu waterfalls. Went to the waterfalls, crossed the border to Brasil (yah, without problems! Good thing my visa worked out well). Stayed one night in Foz do Iguacu. 16 hour overnight bus ride to Florianopolis, Brasil. Took short bus ride across the island (it's the island of santa catarina in southern brasil...connected with a bridge to the mainland) to the small town of Barra da Lagoa. Ali and Mike have been there before so they knew people and got us a hook up in a beautiful house up on the hill, away from the noise and lights (not that there was much, its a small town, but still touristy), each with our own room..and a queen size bed!!! Giant french doors, kitchen, mosquito net...the best! And CHEAP! It pays off to know people. We stayed their from about the 2nd or so of feb till Ali and I both flew out, the 15th of feb. Beach, sleep, rest, beach, swim, beach, surf...it was so amazing and gorgeous. I loved it!!! Also got to meet up with Bruna from rotary in germany because she lives near there!!

The 15th of feb I flew out headed to Ecuador while Ali went home. I had two 12 hour layovers, blech. Arrived in Quito...stayed at an awesome hostel there and met lots of cool people. 2 night there, then took an 8 hour bus ride through the andes, rainforest, etc, to portoviejo where I met up with Jaime, also from rotary in germany (these are all kids that were in my district in germany, but from these respective countries, ie argentina, brasil, ecuador). His family so kindly offered for me to stay in their home. Stayed there a couple nights and then met with Tito, also from rotary in germany, but not my district, and we went to Montañita...beach surf town a bit further south with them and Jaime's little brother. Went surfing, got smacked pretty hard in the nose with a surfboard, that hurt...but I surfed in the best surf of ecuador so it's all good. Stayed there one night then went to Baños while they returned home because they had university. Baños is a little adventure town in the mountains...went mtn biking, saw waterfalls, and white water rafting...rafting was SOOOOO COOL! Except I got smacked in the chin in the same place...first with a paddle by the uncoordinated english kid next to me, then with his helmet. And then the scrawny kid fell overboard and I had to pull him back in!! It was a lot of fun tho...I'm ready to go when I get back to California now in the Trinity!

Finally I headed to Guayaquil, largest city in ecuador, where i did my volunteer work with vosh (volunteer optometric services to humanity). We we about 10 from the US. 3 doctors, 6 others part of the org. and myself. I was the only optician, woohoo! There were a few that had minor experience dispensing glasses but I think I came in handy. Also there were only 2 of us that could speak spanish well...so sarah and I did a lotttt of translating. It was a really amazing experience. We gave eye exams to about 1000 people more or less, in the slums of the city. The lions club and a community center was who helped organize it all. We got glasses to everyone we could/needed them. I remember one man, probabaly around 50 years old and he'd never had glasses in his life. He measured to be extremely near-sighted...about -6.00 or -7.00 prescription...if you know anything about Rx's, that's pretty much blind without glasses. And hed never worn any. When we gave him a pair, which were'nt even dead on cause they were all donated, he spent the entire rest of the afternoon staring at everything. His hands, the wall, other people, just looking at everything ...he'd never known how it was to really be able to see. Well that lasted 3 days and then I flew back to chile, a week after the earthquake.

I've felt some good aftershocks, but not many in a while now...there have been lots of little ones that aren't always felt.

Oke I'm going to post this now and verrry soon I will blog about my latest experiences...volunteering with chile to help the earthquake victims.

Friday, March 12, 2010

Picture's of the REST of my travels...

So I'm back in Santiago...and I've just put up pics (link to the right) of Patagonia in Chile and Argentina, Central Argentina, Iguazu waterfalls, southern Brasil, and Ecuador. Check em out!

Monday, January 25, 2010

pictures of the north

i went on a trip to the north and i posted pictures on my web gallery...click on the link to the right that says gallery.

i will blog as soon as i can...but im sorta in the midst of travelling and it might be hard...