This is a record of the journey - working with communities to provide safe drinking water where there is none.
Wednesday, October 5, 2016
Thursday, September 22, 2016
Eight Cisterns in Eight Weeks | Salitrillo Cistern Project
Wrapping Up - 22nd Sept 2016
The cistern project in Salitrillo is well and truly
underway. The Pilot cistern at the home of Señora Cecilia Luna Rosas is
finished except for a curing period to set the concrete.
Meanwhile the second
cistern of eight which make up the first phase of the Salitrillo project is
just about ready for its “gorro” or roof. At this point, the build team of seven
women and two men are on their own except for weekly visits from Señor Abel,
the technical advisor from CEDESA.
This year the Rotary San Miguel Midday Club working
with the Rotary Action Group for Water and Sanitation (WASRAG) introduced an
innovation in the cistern construction process: plastic wrap!
As with any
ferro-cement structure, cement must be allowed to cure slowly to prevent
cracking and to attain its maximum structural strength. Normally ferro-cement
structures are “watered”, sprayed down with water on a daily basis, for a
period of days or weeks to make sure that the cement sets up slowly and remains
crack-free.
Needless to say this involves both careful attention to the
watering schedule and the use of water which is then wasted.
Hence, the use of
plastic wrap. By wrapping the entire structure in a double layer of industrial
sized plastic wrap (think kitchen plastic wrap on a grand scale), the cisterns
wall and roof can undergo a slow curing period with much less care and feeding,
and with virtually no wasted water.
Though
it may seem modest, it’s important to place Salitrillo’s cistern project in
perspective. The eight Salitrillo cisterns are among a total of 819 cisterns
constructed since 2008. Each cistern collects 12,000 liters of rainwater when
full. If you do the math, CEDESA and COCIRA, Project Beneficiaries and Rotary
San Miguel Midday have created an amazing above ground reservoir capable of
holding a whopping 9,828,000 liters of potable water storage.
Think about that
for a minute. 10 million liters is approximately 3 million gallons or roughly
four Olympic sized swimming pools of water captured each year for the drinking
and cooking needs of people living within the area of the Independencia
aquifer.
When
the current Global Grant is completed in the spring of 2017, a total of 1,092
cisterns will have been built representing an investment of over $10,000,000
pesos ($550,000 USD). Total rainwater collection capacity will top 13 million
liters. And the geographic area serviced by the combined Rotary projects will
include the communities surrounding San Miguel de Allende, San Diego de la
Union, Dolores Hidalgo and San Luis de la Paz.
Guest post by Roger Brudno.
Friday, September 16, 2016
Ready for a Top Hat: Salitrillo Cistern Project
Day Three - 16th September 2016
It’s been two days since my last visit and I can’t
believe the progress the build team has made. Not only has the concrete base of
the cistern been set, but the walls of the cistern are up, and the metal work
for the “gorro” or cap is laid out on the ground.
Cement is applied first in one direction
(horizontal), then after a short period for layer-one cement to set up, a
second layer is overlaid in the opposite direction (vertical).
The
bidirectional application makes for tough and water-tight walls. I am amazed to
learn that, when full, the walls flex. Okay, the walls don’t actually bulge,
but the ferro-cement expands dynamically under the weight of the water.
The
“masa” or concrete mud for the gorro is mixed at a ratio of four parts cement
to one-part sand, and significantly stiffer than the walls because the wet mix
is applied directly to the metal mesh without the aid of plywood backing.
And the exterior of the cistern is fitted with a clever, but commonsense water level gauge. A clear plastic hose will be connected between the water spigot at the bottom of the cistern and a narrow diameter pipe protruding from the top of the cistern. As the interior water level is drawn down, there is a corresponding drop in the water level in the transparent hose.
Recommended cistern maintenance consists of two primary elements: 1) yearly brushing of interior walls, and 2) if the catchment roof surface is of any material other than concrete or tin, then it must be repainted annually.
Next stop, the final
finish work.
Guest post by Roger Brudno.
Tuesday, September 13, 2016
Launched! Salitrillo Cistern Project
Day One - 13th September 2016
When
Lee Carter and I arrive, the Salitrillo cistern build team had already laid out
a base layer of chicken wire. As a first-time visitor to a cistern pilot, I’m excited
to learn the basics of ferro-cement cistern construction.
Once
completed, the cistern will hold 12,000 liters, harvesting enough water during
one rainy season to serve all of the potable water needs, both drinking and
cooking, for a family of 6-8 for a year.
It turns out that the metal structural elements of the
cistern walls form a kind of layer cake—a layer of chicken wire folded over a
layer of heavy-gauge iron mesh, then covered with a second layer of chicken
wire all woven neatly together. Or rather, a layer cake that rolls up into a cylinder
to create the walls of the cistern which are then set on a concrete base and
lined with a temporary barrier of bendy plywood designed to support the application
of an exterior coat of concrete until it dries.
Members of the community are hard at work weaving the
chicken wire together under the watchful eye of Señor Abel, a technical expert
from CEDESA in charge of teaching community members the basics of cistern
construction.
What stands out for me right away is the ratio of women to men in
the work group: most of the team consists of women. And it’s obvious, that the
team is already a well-oiled machine. Tasks are carried out with little
discussion and a light-hearted atmosphere prevails.
This Salitrillo Pilot is cistern number 48 out of 319 cisterns funded by the Rotary
Club’s recent Global Grant (GG1524911) and implemented in collaboration with CEDESA and
COCIRA.
It’s the first cistern for this little community of just 52 families. A
total of eight cisterns are planned for Salitrillo. Once the core group is
trained, they will cooperate to assist their neighbors with subsequent
cisterns. Señor Abel from CEDESA will then make weekly visits to monitor
progress and ensure quality-control.
Guest post by Roger Brudno.
Saturday, August 13, 2016
Nombre de Dios Cistern Project Completion Celebration – August 13, 2016
The night was full of rain & the road there was sometimes good & sometimes a muddy slip-sliding mess, but a 90 minute drive got us there. The day was overcast with a breeze & chairs were set up in a large circle under a large Mesquite tree. The view to the west to get to Guanajuato was beautiful. Everything green from recent rains. The cisterns already had 2 feet of water.
After thanks to the people coming, CEDESA, COCIRA, & Rotary Club Midday, the people all held hands & gave (one at a time) thanks. Some took longer but you were allowed to pass the “prayer” to the next person.
The nice thing about travelling is seeing how people are the same but different. This prayer circle was a perfect example. They all held hands left under and right over. After “prayer” we all went to three cisterns close by & had ribbon cutting with the owners.
One elderly woman, instead of materials for a cistern, received a tinaco (large plastic container) because she would not be able to do the work of building a cistern.
After thanks to the people coming, CEDESA, COCIRA, & Rotary Club Midday, the people all held hands & gave (one at a time) thanks. Some took longer but you were allowed to pass the “prayer” to the next person.
The nice thing about travelling is seeing how people are the same but different. This prayer circle was a perfect example. They all held hands left under and right over. After “prayer” we all went to three cisterns close by & had ribbon cutting with the owners.
One elderly woman, instead of materials for a cistern, received a tinaco (large plastic container) because she would not be able to do the work of building a cistern.
Lunch was a potluck type where all families come together with rice,
tortilla, mole, beans, macaroni & ham, beef, horchata (a rice drink with
cinnamon), & pineapple water.
Lee Carter, Nate Fultz, Beatriz Salcedo from Rotary attended as did
Carla Cadena, intern/administrator of GG1524911.
Guest Report by Nate Fultz, President Midday Rotary Club SMA
Saturday, July 23, 2016
Project Update July 23, 2016
The project (1624911) has been moving along at break neck speed!
We have now presented the education program 3 times: Boca de la Cañada, Charco de Araujo, La Colorada.
This week I went with Ceci (CEDESA) to observe the final day of the program in La Colorada. Universally the beneficiaries are finding the program both helpful & also very fun. A number of people told me that they thought spending three days in water education was going to be boring & too much time. However, after experiencing the program, they are all very excited & relate that they understand much better now the water problems of the region & why the cisterns are so important.
We are administering a Pre-education questionnaire & a Post-education questionnaire so that we can measure the success of the education program. I look forward to reporting those results at a later date.
We have cisterns under construction in Charco de Araujo (14 cisterns & 3 tinacos), La Colorada (24), & Boca de la Cañada (21) now.
We have used all of the special caliber chicken wire from our vendor, Hierro Comercial, & are now waiting for it to be re-stocked. It is a special factory order & will take from four to six weeks to be restocked. This is OK as we are at a point that we need to review our progress to date & take care of many details.
We hope to have the final version of the Water Education Manual finished & ready to go to the printer late next week. We are moving forward on the second draft of the Cistern Construction & Maintenance Manual next week.
We still have not found a suitable truck for CEDESA & without it, getting CEDESA promotors & technicians to the project sites has been a challenge. With this respite in construction, I hope we can get these important details completed in the next few weeks.
Next Thursday we will have a planning meeting at CEDESA to reschedule the project details & resolve questions about the next phases of the project.
Lee Carter - Rotary San Miguel Midday
Tuesday, June 21, 2016
Charco de Araujo, San Diego de la Union June 21 to June 23, 2016
After many meetings & lots of hard work on the part of CEDESA, COCIRA, UCCANG & Rotary under the guiding hands of Wendy Coulson; our expert in curriculum & adult teaching methods, the first five modules of the education program were presented in Charco de Araujo.
The program is very hands-on & participatory so it is much more than just a presentation.
There was much enthusiasm among the participants with several persons proclaiming that EVERY person in the community should have an opportunity to learn all of this!
Overall, we are very pleased. We are now teaching at Boca de la Cañada in San Miguel & next week Wendy & I will meet to review & talk about revisions to the curriculum & also the manual which is in its "almost final draft" form.
I will let the photos tell the story. Enjoy - Lee
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