Archive for the ‘construction’ Category

What the Work has been like

Sunday, May 18th, 2008

Our team has been working hard on the building site for a couple of days. it’s a little hard to see progress but a lot is being done. in the past few days we have hauled about 100 buckets of water from a pond about 200m from the building site, used a trailer to haul 3 loads of aggragate (gravel) from one side of Tabora to the other (loading by shovel at the supply yard unloading by shovel at the building site) and today we cleared a 30m road to provide better access at our building site.

The work has been hot and dusty. For the most part we are all well watered (bottled), covered in sunscreen, wearing sunglasses and hats. very few mosquitoes. Christy got what we think was sunstroke yesterday and she stayed at the FPCT centre for the afternoon. She’s doing better today.

Today, Saturday, we started at 8:30 AM and finished at 1:00 PM. Had lunch (food is always tasty and there is lots of it — rice, ungali, salads, some fruit, usually chicken or beef but once a great tasting fish — chicken isn’t the fat juicy kind you find in NA). Methuselah is our cook and he is a great guy serving us for all meals each day. after lunch we cleaned up and went downtown so all of us could buy material and get fitted for a dressy African outfit. the girls have a Tanzanian lady helping them, the guys have Elias helping us.
It’s amazing to see what these people live with (and without). With a 20litre bucket and a bicycle they can pretty well do 90% of what they need to do. Most of the places they live in (from what we have seen) would be considered unlivable in our world. the current home for Juma, Haruna, 5 other orphans and the grandma is beyond comprehension. one small room (8 x 10??), one mattress and an entrance way (5×5??) is what they have. When the place is done, they will move to a mansion — even if running water and sewer is a few months away. It looks like they won’t move in until about July. The house is quite a bit more than we had imagined and everything is labour intensive.

We bought a shovel, 2 rakes and a wheel barrow. The shovel broke in about 1 hour, the rakes looked strong but bent to become close to useless and the wheel barrow is so shakey that it takes two peope to load it — one to load, one to hold. I’d love to talk peavey mart into sending them a few really good implements.

(Nick)

construction

Sunday, May 18th, 2008

building building building, in more ways than one!

House Building

Saturday, May 17th, 2008

We have been busy working on the house. We have loaded and unloaded
bricks and rocks, dug holes, cut grass and cleared a way to make a
road, prepared flooring in the rooms to be ready for concrete, and a
lot of “grunt work” that is needed to help the project move along.
We are getting sunburned and sore, but it feels so very good to see
some progress made on the house.
While we work and travel with people we are trying to learn as much
swahili as we can … it is not an easy language to pick up and they
laugh at us often as we try to pronounce words or to communicate with
them. It is a lot of fun!
Tabora is a very friendly city compared to Dar Es Salaam … people
wave to us and greet us wherever we go. The children are absolutely
beautiful! Their smiles take your heart away … they are so
gorgeous!
Tami had an incident with her tooth yesterday where the tooth split
apart (it was a tooth that had previously had a root canal done on
it). The part that broke off was hanging off. So I went with her
and |Elias to a local dentist (we sent a picture to Andrew for the
blog of this!). What an archaic dentist office … concrete and
simple …. He was very good and put in a temporary filling as she
did not want the piece pulled. However, it had fallen out by supper
time! Today we went back again and he pulled the broken piece off
for her and put some temporary composite on it until she returns
home. We were so very grateful that it was not worse than that.
While we were at the dentist, there were so many people waiting at
the medical clinic. People with all types of illnesses. It was
heart-breaking! Others had their teeth pulled at the dentist …
literal screaming from the chair. — I know we complain often about
our healthcare system, but I am so grateful for how well we are taken
care of!
Tomorrow we are going to church — Stu will be preaching and we will
be singing a few songs for the congregation. We are so very excited
to worship with the African people here … We are sure to have a
wonderful time of singing and worship with them! The people here are
so kind and gracius and have been so good to us! It will be a
blessing to worship God together.
Today we had the pleasure of being taken to the market to choose
material for tailors to make outfits for the women and suits for the
men … All in all with the material and the fittings, the outfits or
suits will cost about 30 – 35 dollars! We are amazed! Their fabrics
are absolutely beautiful and the people dress in such a gorgeous
manner! We are excited to see the outfits when they are finished
next week!