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The Fellowship Program Begins!

The CWS Fellowship Program kicked off without a hitch!  Amaia Noguera, Ben Powell, James Little, Molly Barrett, and Sarah Britz, our first team of CWS Fellows, spent the week learning about the global water crisis, the water treatment process, the CWS Approach for bringing clean water to its communities, as well as getting to know Tamale and the various CWS villages.

DAY ONE:

The Fellows began their program in the “classroom”.   For the first half of the day, after introductions and some review of the program itinerary, we settled in to review the history of the Global Water Crisis, the various approaches to water treatment, the background of Community Water Solutions, and the CWS approach for village implementations.  For the second half of the day though, we let the fellows loose to explore Tamale through a little scavenger hunt!  What was on the list? Various items that one can find in the open market and surrounding stands and stores, if one has a sharp eye that is.  A price cap of 25 Ghanaian Cedis was given to make sure the Fellows had to negotiate appropriate prices and truly have a Ghanaian experience.  They were dropped off in downtown Tamale with the 25 Cedis and enough money to take a taxi to find their way to the restaurant where we were all meeting for dinner.

The Fellows' booty from the Tamale Scavenger Hunt!

The Fellows returned successful! (Though they did have to settle for Nescafe rather than ground coffee.)

The following items were on the scavenger hunt list:

  1. Anything with Pres. Obama’s picture on it
  2. 4 tomatoes
  3. 6 Chicken eggs (not guinea fowl)
  4. One bag of groundnut paste
  5. One bag of curry powder
  6. Coke Lite
  7. 1 Meter of fabric with orange and blue
  8. 1 pound ground coffee
  9. Any Tom Cruise movie

DAY TWO:

The next day, the team started off with a hands on lesson in the CWS water treatment process, starting with rolling alum balls and removing the turbidity in the same manner in which they would be teaching their village when we sent them into the field.  We even had them use actual dam water from one of our villages. (Jerigu)

The Fellows learning how to roll Alum balls
Perfectly made Alum balls!
Candid Shot with our Alum Balls. From left to right: Shak, Amaia, Sarah, James, Ben, Mike, and Molly
Sample Dam Water collected from Jerigu
Ben and James practicing using Alum
Particle Removal: Using Alum to removal turbidity.
James, Ben and Sarah. Fascinated by the magic of their Alum balls.
Ben is impressed.
Ta da! Within hours, the particles have settled and the water is clear.

Following the simulation of the treatment process, the Fellows saw their first villages.  They visited 3 treatment center sites, Jerigu, Cheko, and Nyamaliga.

The Fellows go to see their first village dam. (Ben and Amaia shown)
Shak and the Fellows at the Nyamaliga Dam.

DAY THREE:

Day three began with visits to other water-focused organizations working in the Tamale region.

Visit to Unicef Office in Tamale
Samuel from Unicef discussing the organization's work concerning water health in Ghana with the Fellows
Following Unicef, the group visits New Energy, a local development NGO in Tamale
Osmond from New Energy discusses the many projects the organization has undertaken
Osmond shows New Energy's design for an improved hand-pump well
All of the New Energy campus is powered by these solar panels, another of the organization's specialties

The Fellows took the remainder of the day to explore Tamale a little more and rest up for the long day they had coming.

DAY FOUR:

Saturday, the Fellows embarked on the journey to Gidanturu to visit a treatment center in action.  We began our day, and the long drive ahead of us, with the greatest treat Ghana offers, and the highlight of many of our days at CWS.  A delicious egg sandwich, or as the Ghanaians call it, “eggs and bread”.  Delicious.

Eggs and Bread!
Great start to our day!

The Gidanturu treatment center was busier than ever!  The Fellows watched the clean water flow as they got to know the children, the women, and the monkey of this lively village!

Baramini's son & little helper diligently writing down all the bucket numbers as his mother filled them

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Ben tries to take one of his new friends home with him in his bag...he was unsuccessful
Molly and Peter are amused...from a distance

After visiting the treatment center, the Fellows learned how to make household visits and take water samples.

The Fellows enter their first household to learn how to monitor and take water samples
Amaia and Ben return from succesfully visiting and monitoring 10 households
James, Sara and Molly return from successfully visiting 10 households

Later that day, the Fellows learned how to test the water samples they took in the CWS lab!

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Thank you Gifts

Over the past 18 months CWS has gotten some pretty amazing thank you gifts from the villages that we work in.  We have loved them all, but have also found them to be pretty hilarious:

Yams From Nyamaliga - January 2009
A big bag of groundnuts (aka peanuts) from Nyamaliga - September 2009
A chicken from Gbong - February 2010
Eggs from Cheko - May 2010 (and no, they are not for eating, they are for hatching!)

“Chlorine Kills Germs and Makes Water Clean”

As I mentioned in a previous post, we have started preparing our water treatment businesses for the rainy season which starts in mid-June. In most of our villages, there are no major operational changes in the rainy season. But, in a few of them, the dugouts flood during the heavy rains making it hard for people to reach the water business to fetch drinking water. In the flooded villages, we are planning to move our water treatment centers to the center of the town (away from the flooded dugouts) and harvest rainwater as a way to fill the polytank. In order to make sure that this rainwater is safe to drink, and to avoid re-contamination in the home, the women at the water treatment centers will still be treating the water with chlorine. This can be a little confusing to people in the village because many of them assume that the rainwater is clean because: 1.) it comes from the sky and/or 2.) its clear.

While rainwater is MUCH better to drink than the dugout water, there are many ways that it can become contaminated in the village. So, last week, we decided to have our first “water education” meeting in the village of Gbong to explain how rainwater gets contaminated and what chlorine and similar tcca products can do to help. The meeting was really fun and we think it was pretty successful. Here are some pictures from the day:

Women in Gbong gathered for the meeting

checking out an aquatab

What We’ve Been Upto

The past couple weeks have been devoted to monitoring, updating my monitoring files (pretty much as fun as it sounds…), preparing for the rainy season, and  getting ready for our awesome Fellows who arrive on June 7th! Its hard to take pictures of these tasks, but I managed to snap a few, enjoy! Be prepared for a post with our updated monitoring results soon!

Shak showing the results of our water quality testing to a woman in Gidanturu. We like to do this to show people what happens with the water samples we take from their safe storage containers. Its fun to see their reactions when they see the difference between a test with their "safe water" and the dugout water!
Showing the water tests to some cute kiddos!
New signboard at Gidanturu - thank you village sponsor, Colleen and Jeff Clopeck!

The next few pictures are from an old Guinea Worm Containment Center. In order to prepare for the rainy season, our team went to check out some rainwater harvesting projects (in two of our villages, the paths to the dugouts, and therefore the water treatment centers, flood during the heavy rains. We are thinking about setting up rainwater harvesting systems to fill the polytanks with rainwater during this time – ill keep you posted!). We stopped by this containment center to look at their rainwater harvesting system and found out that the center had essentially been abandoned. Why? Because there haven’t been ANY Guinea Worm cases in this area in months! Such great news!

Guinea Worm is a horrendous water-related disease that has been endemic in Ghana for years. Due to the amazing Guinea Worm Eradication Campaign, led by the Carter Center, the number of Guinea Worm cases has drastically reduced – especially over the past few years. Shak visited this center in 2008 and said that there were so many patients that they had to put beds on the veranda. Not anymore! As the Carter Center explains on their website:

“Humans are a Guinea worm’s only host, so spread of the disease can be controlled by identifying all cases and modifying human behavior to prevent it from recurring.  Once all human cases are eliminated, the disease will be eradicated.”

I recently heard through the volunteer rumor mill that soon, it is going to be announced that Guinea Worm has been eradicated from Ghana!

Since humans are the only host for Guinea worm, these containment centers were built so that infected persons could be effectively treated and the disease could be kept from spreading

Empty Beds - wahoo!
Picture on the wall of the Guinea Worm Containment Center advertising the LifeStraw - a point-of-use intervention designed to filter out the water fleas that cause Guinea Worm

Fit Girls Support CWS

One of the awesome new village sponsors that committed to raising money for CWS at the Medfield Fundraiser, was the Medfield Fit Girls, led by Fit Girls founder, Sarah Nixon. Fit Girls is a fitness program for girls in 4th and 5th grade that uniquely combines training for a 5k race with reading and community outreach. Each year, the Fit Girls choose a charity to support, and this year they chose CWS!

The Medfield Fit Girls launched their Safe Water Campaign last week and sent us a few pictures from their first meeting! We are so grateful for their support and so excited to be partnering with such an awesome organization! Thank you Fit Girls, we’re looking forward to working with you this spring!

Monitoring in Gidanturu

This week we spent some time monitoring in Gidanturu. Its always so fun to see people using their safe storage containers in their homes. We were very excited about our monitoring results and are so proud of Birami and Mariam, who have been doing an excellent job working at the water treatment center!

Gidanturu customer, proudly showing us how her bucket is kept on a stool (so a cup can easily fit underneath)
Posing with another Gidanturu customer and her safe storage container
Peter and our favorite little girl in Gidanturu. Her family was not home when we distributed the safe storage container but she promised to "open her ears well" and then explain everything that we told her to her parents. She did an awesome job and was SO excited to show us where they keep their safe storage container!
So adorable. This little boy could have died from diarrhea caused by contaminated water (children under 5 are the most vulnerable), but thanks to our awesome village sponsors, Colleen and Jeff Clopeck, he has safe water to drink!
When we stopped by the dugout to check on Barami and Mariam, I spotted this little guy doing his laundry! Definitely the youngest person I have seen doing their own laundry so far!

Opening Day in Gidanturu

Its only Tuesday, but our team has been so busy this week it feels like it should be Friday! We spent Sunday and Monday passing out safe storage containers to every family in Gidanturu, and training Mariam and Bariami (sp?), the two women who were nominated by their community to run the CWS water business. Then today, we opened for business! Over 90% of the village showed up to buy water, and we even saw a few more people headed to the center as we were leaving (unfortunately we had run out of water due to a leaky polytank, so we closed before those people were able to fetch. Have no worries, the polytank is fixed and more water will be ready tomorrow!) A big THANK YOU to Colleen and Jeff Clopeck for sponsoring this water business!

First batch of dirty water ready to be treated during our "water treatment training"
Miriam and Birami treating the water with alum during day 1 of water treatment training
Water treatment training day 2 - particles from the dugout water have settled at the bottom on the drum
Alum - in case you were wondering what it looked like
Water treatment training day 2 - scooping water into the polytank
Peter teaching a lovely Gidanturian (sp?) lady how to use the tap on her safe storage container
Opening day! Selling water at Gidanturu
Happy customers on opening day in Gidanturu
All set to go - safe storage container filled with clean water!
Recording the households that came to buy water

Gidanturu is home to many fun animals! They actually have crocodiles in their dugout and pet monkeys!

Can you spot the crocodile?
Monkey!

On our way home from Gidanturu we passed an overturned Coke truck – the road was COVERED in broken glass. I had to take a pic!

Hard at work at village number SIX!

Cute kids from Gidanturu who came to watch us build the polytank stand!

I am excited to announce that we have started setting up our SIXTH water business in the village of Gidanturu! This water business is sponsored by Colleen and Jeff Clopeck, who have been incredible CWS supporters over the past 1.5 years!

Gidanturu is located on the Salaga Rd (the same road as Jarigu, Cheko, Nyamaliga, and Gbong) about 90 minutes outside of Tamale. Before purchasing the truck, it would have been impossible for us to even consider a village this far away – the taxi fees would have been astronomical and the Salaga road turns to dirt shortly after passing Gbong which makes it very difficult to drive on without 4 wheel drive. This village is the home to ~650-700 people who were desperately in need of safe drinking water, so we are so glad that we have the truck and are able to partner with them!

We are planning to open the water business early next week. Here are some pictures from the past few days:

We LOVE our truck! We only had to take ONE trip out to Gidanturu with supplies for polytank stand!
Gidanturu Dugout
Gidanturu Dugout

One of the elders from Gidanturu hanging out at the future site of the CWS water business
Building the Gidanturu polytank stand
Me with the guys from Gidanturu who helped build the polytank stand (minus Peter who was taking the picture!)
Finishing up the polytank stand!

During our first visit to Gidanturu I noticed that many of the children were wearing funny looking hats. After looking closely, I noticed that the children were raising money for Haiti at their school! I thought that this was SO amazing! Back home, we have things like crowdfunding platforms which make raising money on a large scale so easy, and yet this tiny village in rural Ghana – that we have a hard time reaching in our 4 wheel-drive truck, where people live on less than $1 per day, were also raising money for Haiti! How cool is that?! (and they weren’t just wearing the hats, they were really taking donations!)

Hats that kids in Gidanturu were wearing to try to raise money for Haiti relief - pretty amazing!
Hope for Haiti!