Wednesday, January 26, 2011

Day Nineteen: Hitting the Whale

Special Note: Our public presentation of our final multimedia projects will be on Thursday, February 10, at 7:00 p.m. in Hagerty Lounge on the Saint Mary's campus.  Please join us there and bring friends!




We rousted out early this morning and found that we were more ready to finish packing than we had first guessed.  By the time our vans arrived this morning, we were packed, had eaten, and were ready to head out for our long journey home.

We made our boat in plenty of time, with a few extra minutes to pursue a couple of final souvenirs.  Our boat left the port in choppy waters and within a few minutes we heard a loud "thump" that made us wonder what had happened.  The public address system told us (in French) that everything was okay, but that we had actually hit a WHALE!  We followed up on the info and found out that it was true, then realized that this may be the only time in our lives that we will have the chance to speak those words: "I was in a boat that ran over a whale."

As far as we know, the whale was fine, as was the boat.  We, however, had to deal with the consequences of a choppy sea as a few of us struggled with motion sickness.  We bought some Dramamine in town, which only comes in the "drowsy" version over here.  That drowsy factor paid off for us as we essentially sedated ourselves to survive the pitching and yawing that might have made us throw up like many of the people around us were doing.   We all survived the trip without puking, which counted as a big accomplishment today.

We are back at the hotel where we stayed at the front end of our trip, so we revisited the beach where we swam and sunbathed almost three weeks ago.  It was odd to realize how differently we felt about the town, the Caribbean, our comfort in both of those places, and ourselves as a result of all that we have experienced in the last few weeks.

We hope to take it easy tomorrow to get as far as we can at finishing our coursework.  That way we will all get real breaks as we prepare for the spring semester.  We'll write again and let you know how things have gone in St. Lucia, then we will be back in California late Friday night.  We look forward to reconnecting with all of you in person soon thereafter . . .





Day Eighteen: Farewell to the Site

Strangely, our last day of work at the site was a somewhat slow one.  We got to work as quickly as we could, prepared to make our last big push, but the main work to be done was the construction of a very complicated set of forms to cast the three main walls of the tank.  Thus, our Dominican worker friends had to do most of the labor of the day, while the rest of us either transported more cement down via zipline or transported extra rocks and sand to the site via wheelbarrow (from a new location in a different direction from our current ziplines).

We also focused on our interviews and other video work for the projects that we will complete for our final work in this course.  We are doing a public presentation of some of our final work on campus during the first week of the spring semester, but we are waiting for confirmation on the time and location of that event.

Near the end of the workday, the slowness stopped and we cranked into high gear to pour the concrete for the first four feet of the walls around the tank.  Mr. Sparkle came back to help us think through the revised plan and it seemed clear that we should pour only four feet at a time to prevent the wooden forms from spreading and throwing off the shape of the new walls.

We bucketed, bucketed, and bucketed some more to get the concrete mixture into the three walls.  Our task went well past the end of daylight, so much of it was done by flashlight and headlamp.  We finally brought our participation in the project to an end and climbed up the hill to the opening between the fence and the breadfruit tree for the last time.

Charles and the workers were all in cahoots to throw a big party for us tonight and they did a great job of pulling things together.  They had food and music (a DJ!) and lots of gratitude and we had our general happiness and Luke's brilliant contribution to the plan: a portable photo printer that allowed us to take and print pictures on the spot.  We had a blast.

Charles gave a big speech to commemorate us.  Claude gave a big speech to talk about all that we have done together.  Shawny gave a big speech about the greatness of Charles.  And Julius gave a big speech about the beauty of Dominica and the fact that Dominica "loves its friends in California."

Of course, we wish that we had finished a functioning tank and that we could watch the locals walk up and turn the tap to get fresh water in the containers that they carry back over the hills to their homes.  Sadly, we did not get that far.  Still, all of our friends at the party talked about the level at which they and others are inspired to see this project to its end.  We really think they will continue to plug away and that they will expand the system as time goes by.  Eventual pumps and piping might make it even more convenient than what we have worked on so far.

Charles told us that our presence had awakened a will in the locals to work together for their collective benefit.  He said that the long-standing spirit of unity that the Kalinago (Carib) people had long enjoyed has grown weaker in recent years.  He hopes and believes that this project will be one of many that will help that spirit to reawaken.  He and all the rest of our friends expressed a strong desire for us to return and work in the Territory again.  We haven't made plans for next January Term yet, so we shall see . . .

We had to knock off from our fabulous party a bit early to get as far as we could in packing, as we have to get up at 6:00 a.m. to make our boat in the morning.  We will once again travel through St. Lucia to make our way back to San Francisco.  We will write briefly from there and we will try to catch up on photos and videos.  And also, we will see you SOON!

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Day Seventeen: Pouring the Floor and the SAD Office




Today was supposed to be an early start, as it turns out the Dominican workers who wouldn’t let us work on Sunday actually decided to work on Sunday themselves.  In doing so, they got close enough to finishing the steel work on the floor that we could almost show up and pour it.  There was still a bit of work to do to complete the prepwork so we got right in there and moved everything around to make it possible to lay the floor.  It was our biggest load of concrete mixing and moving so far, but we held on and got it done.

Just as we began to pour the floor, Charles took Shawny and Scott into town to chase down some camera lenses that our beloved support colleague Renee had sent from California.  They have been held up in Customs for a week or so now, so we finally just drove down there to try to get them out. 

The port where freight deliveries land is entirely confusing and the process for claiming your own possessions is even more so.  After multiple stops through various levels of Customs officers, our retrieval crew finally got to walk into the actual warehouse where the packages wait.  There another circuitous process started up, beginning at the window labeled “S.A.D. Office.”  S.A.D. stands for “Simplification of Administrative Documents,” which turns out to be an entirely incorrect description of what goes on there. 

Instead of simplifying anything, the office produces a range of incomprehensible documents, asks for verification of totally irrelevant pieces of information, then charges $4 EC (about $1.60 USD).  From there, the team went to another window under the instruction of the S.A.D Office but still didn’t come in contact with our package.  More paperwork emerged and the team was sent to a table by the door, from which a new form emerged that established another charge to be paid.

After a conversation about that piece of paper the group proceeded to another window right next to the first window, then carried the new paperwork they acquired from one person to another on adjoining tables near the door.  Though the staffers at those tables were sitting elbow-to-elbow at adjoining tables, the process involved handing all the papers to one guy, getting them back, taking one step to the right and handing them to the next guy, getting them back again, then taking one step to the right and handing them to the next guy.  Somehow that strange ritual completed the task and the package was freed.  “Simplification,” though, was out the window. 

Happily, the folks at the worksite had a less complicated day and they even got a chance to explore the area around the site, mainly because they had to cut a trail to an already-existing pile of rocks and sand that will supplement the materials we are using at our current site.  They found some beautiful seeds and a coffee tree, and some other weird fruits and stuff that we hadn’t seen yet.  Of course, they found more breadfruit trees and the accompanying fruits, which we might have maxed out on consuming. 

In the evening, we followed up on a special invitation from the Kalinago Council (including the current chief), who wanted to welcome us officially to the territory.  We did some mutual information sharing then explored the possibility of other projects we might have done or might do in the future.  We learned about some of the priorities that the council is pursuing, including health issues (diabetes and high blood pressure primarily), cultural issues (including reclaiming their native language), water and sanitation issues (for the residents who are not yet on “pipe water”), and education issues (including health and sex education). 

We came home for dinner and realized that we need to get serious about packing for our return home, but instead of doing that we sat together and laughed for a long time.  Surely we will get our things packed somehow . . .












Monday, January 24, 2011

Day Sixteen: Rigorous, Arduous, and Slippery



The Dominicans take Sunday off from manual labor and even though we proposed the idea of working instead, they convinced us that we HAD to visit another of the island’s natural beauties, this one called Boiling Lake.  As far as we can tell, this path is the island’s most challenging hike (at least one that is halfway marked) and it leads to the crater of a formerly active volcano.  In the center of the crater is a huge lake that actually, truly boils (almost) nonstop.

The hike is about eight miles long and it involves climbing about 2000 vertical feet then dropping down 1000 or more before going up again to get to a huge overlook above the lake.  The trail is apparently always muddy – really really really muddy – so hikers get a one-inch or so platform on the bottoms of their boots to complicate things a bit more. 

The beginning of the hike goes to the last clear-running stream that isn’t full of sulphur; that stopping point about an hour into the hike is called Breakfast River.  We were already feeling the rigors of the hike at that point, knowing that another five or more hours of walking were still ahead of us.  Additionally, our guides warned us that the hour we had just spent was the easy part and the next couple of hours were going to really kick our butts.  They were right.

Speaking of our guides, it is probably important to introduce them, as they have each hiked this monster dozens of times.  Our lead guide was Jonathan, otherwise known as Skippy.  Watching the video from today will help you to understand why he has that nickname.  His partner for the day was Philbert, who was assigned to bring up the rear and deal with the slow group, whoever that might be.  (Actually, determining the slowest member of our team is not difficult; it was Shawny for sure.  We are granting her special dispensation for this hike because last year at this time she was on crutches in the Brazilian Amazon with a broken leg so this doesn’t seem so bad.)

The post-Breakfast River slog was a never-ending upward climb and when there finally was some relief in the downward direction, it was so thick with mud (and so vertical) that at certain points the only way down was for strings of us to hold hands and support each other step by step.  The symbolism of all of those collective efforts definitely made the struggle worth it. 

Our main way of coping with the slog was to have Scott tell us complicated synopses of movies that not everyone had seen.  He did multi-hour renditions of the movies “Taken” and “In Brouges,” which kept us all laughing and clinging to his pace so that we wouldn’t miss anything. 

The struggle of the vertical mudslope got us to a place that might not sound “worth it” – the Valley of Desolation.  Visually, the name is pretty accurate but as in most volcanic areas, there was a lot going on in that apparently desolate place.  Hot streams poured all through sulphur deposits, some of which were claylike and smushy, some of which were rocklike and crunchy, and all of which smell like rotten eggs.  We took some of the smushy kind and spread it on our faces to declare ourselves some kind of unified tribe.  We certainly have an identifiable unique culture, so why not add facepaint?

We ate lunch there in the Valley, consisting of peanut butter and jelly sandwiches, Clif Bars, some canned chicken, a few sardines and our usual mountain of Ritz crackers.  We also had a very special treat for a lucky few: Luke carried up two raw eggs and hardboiled them in the volcanic water.  It was fascinating even if there wasn’t much to watch.  Those who tasted them said that they were excellent but most of us didn’t have the guts to even try. 

After lunch we continued to hike up and up and up, occasionally having to climb a rock wall of eight feet or so and sometimes having to ford a hot stream.  We got to the top and found a cliff overlooking the enormous crater lake.  Sometimes steam consumed the entire atmosphere, keeping us from seeing the lake; other times the steam would lift and the whole place looked like a big boiling drain, swirling in the middle. 

Some of us ventured down the rocky trail to get right to the lake but most of us just observed from above, resting our aching legs without getting so comfortable that we couldn’t walk back out.  A couple of people started back toward the trailhead because they knew there was a workable mineral pool on the way back to Desolation Valley.  The rest followed soon thereafter but skipped the pool to get ourselves to the cooling pool (with one hot mineral spring showering into the side) at the bottom. 

The pool at the bottom brought great relief, especially because it turned out to be attached to a cavernous canyon that had a waterfall at one end.  We could swim the length of the canyon, brace ourselves under the waterfall for a few seconds, then get shot out into the canyon again by the force of the water.  We were almost too exhausted to enjoy it, but we found a way. 

We grabbed some pizza on our way through town (the locals actually recommended Pizza Hut as the best to be had), along with some cold drinks.  We ate four large pizzas in about two minutes, then got in the car and headed back to the territory. 

We were too crowded in the van to get the sleep that most of us needed so we entertained ourselves by having Scotchy and Matt “Pappy” Beutner recite almost the whole move “The Big Lebowski” from memory. 

We rejoined Hilary and Christina back at home, as they both opted to skip the hike and get some much-needed rest.  We were jealous of their state of rest though they also put in quite a bit of work sorting and condensing our piles of stuff to help us fast forward our upcoming packing push.

We leave here on Wednesday morning early to start another boat odyssey back to St. Lucia that will get us to SFO by Friday night.  After that, we will camp out in the computer labs on campus finishing our media projects.  The next you will hear from us is at our public presentation on campus during the second week of February.  We think it is on Wednesday or so of the first week of the spring semester, but we will confirm and post the date and time in the next couple of day.  Please join us there to see the final presentation of our work.







Sunday, January 23, 2011

Day Fifteen: Of Rasta Jellies and Cutlasses



We cranked things up early today to make a very important run into town: for shopping!  We haven't focused on souvenirs (other than pictures and memories) at all so today we set aside the morning to go to Roseauto buy some (for ourselves and no doubt for some of YOU!).  There are some open air market options and also shops on the streets that sell various items like flags, keychains, etc.  Many of the vendors were calling out to us to get us to check out their wares.

We, however, had different ideas about souvenirs than most visitors to Dominica.  Instead of keychains and coconut hulls, we were more jazzed by acquiring some of the plastic "jelly" shoes that we have seen our Dominican co-workers wear and the cutlasses (machetes) that we have learned to use on the worksite.  We got advice about just where to find what we wanted and made pretty quick work of our purchasing.  We stopped by the grocery store and got a few replacement items for our pantry.  The two most important, of course, were Ritz crackers (we're almost out!  we won't survive!) and Nutella (our newest addition to the staples that we carry with us every day.  (The other two main staples are Tapatio hot sauce and an assortment of Clif Bars.)

From there we went to a local art gallery run by a Canadian woman who focuses primarily on Dominican art.  A few of us fell in love with pieces that we saw there and two of us (to remain unnamed) actually made purchases that will become part of our permanent collections.

We tried to hurry back to our worksite, but because we needed to eat lunch, we stopped to grab something in town.  We were a pretty big group to show up unannounced, but a place called Cocorica took us in and fed us really well.  It took quite a while for them to process all of our orders, though, so we didn't get back to the guesthouse until almost 3.

We hustled right down to the site and saw that there had been a cave-in on one of our walls; our Dominican friends had spent the whole day so far trying to fix that situation.  Once it got cleared, we started prepping to pour at least one of the "teeth" that will hold the tank in to the wall where the water falls.

It sounds like Charles wants to find a way to continue to pursue the old plan of having a huge 24-foot tank instead of a smaller 12-foot one.  We will have to see how things unfold over the next few days to understand what is going on now.  We will be sure to pass the info along just as soon as we manage to grasp it . . .

Saturday, January 22, 2011

Day Fourteen: Mr. Sparkle and the Dance of the Plywood

Day Fourteen: Mr. Sparkle and The Dance of the Plywood

Our meeting with the engineer, Mr. Trotter, finally came.  It helped.  A ton.  He explained what he was thinking in his original plan, helped us organize our thoughts around the conditions we now face, and answered all of our questions about how to proceed.  So now we have a plan that we hope we can pull off in the next four days.  (He also had a friendly sparkle in his eye, so we are more likely to call him “Mr. Sparkle” than Mr. Trotter.) 

The general idea is to reduce the overall size of the tank we are currently building, with an eye to establishing an even bigger containment tank later, perhaps close to the intake tank but maybe not.  So, where we have a 24-foot trench for an undersupport for whatever project we build, we are now going to lay down a 16-foot support that will help to prevent erosion from underneath the floor of the tank. 

On that support, we will lay a concrete pad that will underlie the tank.  We think right now that the pad will be 16 feet long to match the support but we want it to extend wider than the tank.  So, we think the tank will be 12 feet long and about six or eight feet wide, but the pad will have a little “sidewalk” on two sides for a couple of feet so that people can stand on it rather than on the wet riverbank. 

Because we were focused on concrete work today, most of us didn’t have the expertise to do much work of consequence.  So whenever someone wasn’t working, different bunches of us would tackle different muddy slopes and try to reduce the slipping hazards on them.  Luke and Jared could start a professional eco-stair company, Scott and Christina added a few that became bleachers from which to watch the tank action, and Lindsey, Iris, Morgan, and Dani took control of the slope right by our tarp tents.  (It turns out that Iris is a natural with a machete, which surprised even her.)  As an added bonus, we used all natural materials for our landscaping work, including everything that had been cut down or chopped off in the clearing of the space. 

Just before lunch, we finally made enough progress in the trench to set an 8-foot form and pour concrete into it.  The process of prepping the space, bailing the water, mixing the concrete, moving the mixture to the form, getting the empty buckets back up the short hill, and mixing the concrete in the form took everyone we had.  They were using a “dry mix” approach, which means that they were pouring the combination of dry cement, sand, and gravel right into the space where water already stood and mixing it as they went. 

Scott came up with an ingenious use of our battery-powered drills when he rigged a piece of bent rebar into it to use as a mechanical stirrer.  It made all of the difference in the world to be able to really mix the concrete properly with something other than a shovel, pick, or pitchfork. 

We realized that the first batch of concrete was setting up pretty fast so we went ahead and fast-forwarded the prep work on the second batch.  Though we had planned to remove and reuse the first form in pouring the second batch, we instead decided to make a whole new form and butt it up against the one we had already poured.  We were hurrying because it was getting late.  At one point, three people went to retrieve a piece of the heavy-duty plywood that we are using, which was a pretty heavy load for three people to carry.  It was especially challenging on the muddy slopes that we face at our site.  

The three people (to remain unnamed) started down the hill and at one point or another, each one of them slid and started to fall.  Without fail, though, that person would recover and regain footing, but the momentary lapse would throw off one of the other two, who would trigger a similar reaction.  They were jerking and jumping and the plywood was teetering all over the place but somehow they all managed to stay upright and get to the bottom of the hill intact.  One of them never even stopped talking, no matter how out of control his footing became.  It seemed almost choreographed, perhaps as a dance routine, perhaps as a comedy routine.  In either case, for us it became “The Dance of the Plywood” and any of us who witnessed it just fell silent and watched dumbfounded as it all unfolded. 

Near the end of the afternoon, we decided to go for it and pour the second form.  Goose ran up the hill to grab all of the headlamps he could find “just in case,” and we started the process of pouring during what we knew was our last hour of daylight.  Like Scott’s power tool ingenuity, the headlamps paid off enormously as dusk began to fall, stars came out, fireflies twinkled, and our pails of concrete mix made their way down our bucket brigade lines and into the trench. 

It felt like a fabulous achievement to have finished that whole support, especially because that means we will very likely manage to shape and pour most of the floor when we get back from a brief souvenir hunt in the morning tomorrow.  Then we can pour walls in the remaining days and hopefully have a completed intake tank before we leave. 

We have gotten pretty convinced that this project is something that the community wants and will appreciate.  We get lots of support as we are walking the hill from the worksite to our guesthouse and we have learned from Mr. Sparkle and others that this kind of water work is normal and much-needed throughout the island.  In fact, he says that one of the fancy bottled water companies in the area uses almost the same kind of tank that we are building as its primary intake for spring water.  It helped us immensely to get all of this information (and support for our project). 

Along with all of this positive reinforcement, we got one bit of bad news, which is that Hilary seems to have sprained her finger.  She was a catcher at the bottom of a pulley a few days ago and the load caught her by the pinkie in a strange way.  It was a bit misshapen right away and it hurt her, but it didn’t turn black and blue and she could still move it.  We’ve been icing it and taping it to her ring finger but she can’t wear her work gloves and is a bit limited in the range of jobs she can do.  She is a total workhorse, though, which means she is still out there full time (even if she is wearing only one glove) and she is still sometimes a one-handed catcher of empty buckets on the line.  She’s a trooper, but she (and we) would still appreciate your sympathy, good wishes, prayers, and other positive thoughts as she continues to plug away.

Oh, and by the way, almost all of us have had our first big run-ins with mosquitoes in the last day or two.  We have been pretty safe from bites until now and we have been attributing our success to an Avon product called Skin-So-Soft, which most of us use in massive quantities daily.  We still think it is a miracle repellant, but we have gotten ourselves in situations where we wash it off then forget to reapply (like when we swam in the Caribbean Sea a few nights ago) and we believe that's why we got nailed.  No matter what, the bugs in general here are nothing like this summer's Haiti trip or last January's Amazon trip.  Now on to the Benadryl spray . . .













Thursday, January 20, 2011

Day Thirteen: "Let's rethink this and come back to it later."




Well, well, well. Development work is very rewarding but also very maddening and very frustrating. Perhaps that is our lesson for the day. We ate our oatmeal and headed down to the worksite where we found that almost all of the sand was at the very bottom of the hill, having been transported there by our Dominican co-workers using our pulley system. We had a moment of disappointment that we didn't get to play with the pulleys today but then we got very excited when we realized that our attempt at labor-saving technology was actually paying off for our hosts. We have said that we will leave the ropes in place if our friends would like for us to do so, and now we have every reason to believe that they will want them. Of course, big yellow and white nylon lines might not be the best aesthetic contribution we can make to the landscape, but if they are helpful then we will gladly keep them in place.

One set of us got right to work on cutting "teeth" into the wall of our worksite where we thought supports for the tank would rest. As we dug them out, though, we realized that there wasn't solid enough rock on the wall to use as an anchor for anything. So, right away the overall plan changed. This level of change at this stage in our trip is a pretty big deal. That is, the engineer's plans are based on the belief that the wall from which the springs come is solid rock. It's not.

So, where the plans involved a 3-sided structure sunk into the wall, we now have to convert to a 4-sided structure and solve a number of problems about the interface between the springs and the tank. There was frantic mind-changing going on all day, with Shawny consulting our team then reporting to Charles about our thoughts, then returning with Charles' responses, etc., etc., etc.   It went on and on.  And on.

So, suddenly we were re-engineering this whole project on the fly in the rain on the muddy slopes of the riverbank.  We called the actual engineer who designed the project and ran our ideas by him.  (He liked the Tarp Diaper!)  He gave us some immediate tips then agreed to come out (from more than an hour away) and join us at the site tomorrow morning to help us solve our problems.   We look forward to getting absolute clarity first thing in the morning.

Perhaps it is obvious, but the shifting and changing of the day was quite frustrating.  We were fried as we felt unsure about where the project was going and whether we can even finish in the days we have left.  We struggled as we huddled under the tarps during one of many cloudbursts.  We snapped at each other a bit as we tried to process what was happening around us.  But we made it through.

One of our secrets to surviving today was that we had fabulous letters of encouragement from our penpals at Happy Hollow Elementary in West Lafayette, Indiana!  They have written to us three times so far and we actually owe them answers to some questions that they sent by email.  We also have some correspondence from Southwestern Elementary in Hanover, Indiana, so we have lots of shoutouts ahead of us.  Thanks to all of the Hoosier schoolfolks who are helping to boost our spirits!


Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Day Twelve: Happy Birthday, Iris!








We have a lot to tell you, but we went to town for Iris' birthday tonight and we are too tired to make videos, choose pictures, or post stories.  For now, though, we will tell you that Iris' birthday was a happy one, with a lovely meal, a homemade cake, and a warm late night swim in the Caribbean Sea.  Ahhh.

And from there we need to tell you that the phrase of the day is "Tarp Diaper."  More on this later.

_____

Okay, it's later.   So, we spent a huge chunk of the morning strategizing about how to control the flow of water into the trench that will house the main support of the concrete water tank.  The first four of us who were up talked about it for an hour or more, then when more people got up it turned into a full group discussion.  We kept doing a great job of tearing ideas apart, but we had all kinds of trouble finding an idea that seemed like it might work.  

Finally, Luke proposed that we drop a tarp into the trench in such a way that the water would not get inside.  We would weight the tarp with rocks, then pour the concrete base right into it, sealing in the tarp for all time, but getting a shot at a solid block that did not get washed downstream before it could set.  When people were having trouble getting the concept, someone finally said, “Like a tarp diaper?”  Once we realized that the metaphor almost worked, we used that phrase all day as our shorthand version of the new option. 

We proposed the tarp diaper idea to Charles, who wasn’t sure it sounded like a good idea, but who also had no better idea about how to control the flow of water into the trench.  We started exploring the idea of a portable pump, but that’s not an easy item to find in the area where we are working (or in this whole country, apparently).  We bailed the trench just to see how fast it would fill up again and learned that we could get the water level pretty low pretty fast without it rising again too quickly for us to pour concrete into the trench (if we time it just right). 

While some of us were hypothesizing about how to control the water down below, others of us started to address the enormous pile of sand that got delivered last night.  As you may recall, it was not delivered to our normal trailhead, meaning that we had to carry it much farther down the steep slope than all of the other piles we’ve managed.  Our usual method of delivery is wheelbarrows but this path was REALLY daunting for a wheelbarrow (and even more so for its driver). 

A few brave souls still wrestled with the barrows (a new word for some of our teammates here, who were always convinced the word was “wheelbarrel”) and the rest of us started carrying sand bucket by bucket down the hill.  Some hugged their buckets close to their bodies, some carried them on their heads (using rolled-up t-shirts for balance) and others made yokes out of shovels to help them carry two buckets at once (probably totaling about 80 pounds or so).  No workout in any gym could possibly compare.

We took a lunch break and enjoyed food cooked for us by our Dominican co-workers.  They intended to make breadfruit, green bananas, and fish with coconut milk, but we were slow acquiring fish so they made a run for chicken wings instead.  They built a fire between three rocks that they used as a tripod for their big round pot and then started bringing things down from the trees all around.  Their machetes (which they call “cutlasses”) were their main cooking instruments. 

Once they finished cooking, they piled huge loads of food into our bowls and served up Kool-aid as a special drink.  Obviously the food was fabulous and surprisingly the Kool-aid was too.  We couldn’t possibly eat all that they made, but the broth and the breadfruit at the bottom of the pot were both so good that we could barely stop. 

There was more sand to be moved, though, so we headed back up the hill again to keep it rolling down the hill in whatever ways we could.  We also had to do a small bucket brigade at the bottom of the hill because Charles decided to knock some more of the loose dirt down from the hillside to prevent it from falling in to the tank later. 

The bucket brigade made good use of a game idea proposed in our comments section by Luke’s dad Russ, in which the group starts with a sentence and then with each pass of the bucket the sentence changes by one word.  The new word has to start with the same letter as the old word, so we got from combinations like “The avalanche scared the chief” to “Ten archaeologists Skyped Thai children.”  It is admittedly a bit stupid, but anything that can distract us from the monotony of moving more buckets is a welcome diversion. 

We knocked off early so that we could drive all along the coast to get to a beachfront restaurant on the Caribbean Sea.  Where we are staying, we overlook the Atlantic, so we decided we needed at least one night on the Caribbean itself.  The water was warm and calm with soft sand underfoot and gently sloping drops to ease us into the water.  After dinner we took a moonlight swim, then headed back to the vans.  

We started our hour or so drive home and suddenly saw that the headlights went out on one of the two vans in which we were riding.  The other van stopped to help and all of us did what we could to help locate and change the fuse for the lights.  Nothing worked.  Then it did.  So we drove.  Then the lights went out again.  We strategized for awhile then decided to caravan as closely together as we could with flashers flashing so that we could get home at a survivable hour.  Fortunately, the moon was almost full (and very bright) and there were only about three other cars on the road for the whole drive.  Also, we learned that the roads were strangely well-lit for the area where we are.  Things feel pretty underdeveloped here, but as far as streetlights go, the situation is better than we might have guessed.  We, of course, won't count on that driver/van again, but we are happy that we got home safely.  

We didn’t get home until almost 1:00 a.m., which counts as a VERY late night for us.  Either way, we need to get a lot done at the worksite on Thursday to get the project anywhere near completion before we leave.  Let’s hope . . .