Showing posts with label salvage. Show all posts
Showing posts with label salvage. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

Hunting for volunteers

After a catch up phone call with Peter and Steve at Peros to update them on our news, Leander and I are meeting at a Bar in Cusco where we are hoping to organise van loads of volunteers to help with the salvage operation in the SacredValley at the weekend. It’s vitally important to salvage items from peoples houses before more rain comes. We are hoping to get 100’s of people to help people like Marissa and her family and hope that when people see the situation with their own eyes, they will also want to get involved in the support effort.

Hopefully lots of people will turn up!

Photos: the community in Huayronkoyocoyocpampa where we hope to provide volunteers to help with the salvage effort

Tuesday, February 9, 2010

Update from the Sacred Valley

George, Cathy, Carlos and I headed back into the Sacred Valley and to the community of Paucarbamba about 2 hours by car from Cusco. On route we stopped at San Pedro market to buy meat and bread for the damnificados (those affected by the flooding) and to buy more wood to construct tables and benches.

When we arrived we dropped food at a community in lower Paucarbamba and Carolos showed us the proposed site for a second comedor to benefit this community. As ever the women were busy cooking lunch in a lean-to and children were playing outside.

After this we drove up to the higher community of Paucarbama where we were all delighted to see the comedor (that we had built on Saturday) was being put to excellent use. The gas hob had been moved in and the women were busy peeling hundreds of potatoes to be used for lunch. It was obvious that more tables and seats were needed- lucky Carlos had instructed us to buy more wood!

It was obvious that the Peruvians were far more skilled at woodwork than us, so we decided to head back to Huayronkoyocoyocpampa to see if we could offer our strength for the salvage work.

Here we came across a family, desperately digging out their home. The women were using pick axes to free up the wood beams that could be salvageable, and Cathy, George and I quickly formed a chain to move the wood to safety where it could be stored before it is needed.

The family had lost everything. They had spent years constructing a 2 story house, from money that Roberto had made working on construction sites in the nearby town. However, as with most of the houses here, it was made from adobe bricks which were unable to stand the quantity and force of the water.

The family are living in the local school and have no idea of where they are going to rebuild and how they are going to find the money. Luckily their small piece of land where they grow maize for domestic consumption and to sell was unaffected, so they should be able to generate a little bit of cash from this, but obviously not enough to rebuild.