Monday, November 15, 2010

Home again

I got in last night around 9:30pm. The family was there to greet me but my luggage was not. Luckily there isn't anything that I absolutely need in that bag and they were able to confirm that it was still in Amsterdam and that it should arrive here sometime tonight.

The last few days over there were somewhat hectic because of the impending departure of three volunteers (myself included) and the upcoming celebration which effectively will shut down the project for five days or so. Those who remain there will be able to get all the data and records organized which will be very helpful.

Many things went very well during the last week. A few different groups visited our operation and they were very impressed with the work. Other groups were in the villages collecting blood lead data and doing other testing which is outside the scope of the remediation but very helpful in identifying what is going on with the lead in the villages.

The lead contamination in the villages is huge and off the scale of anything that has occurred here in the states with the exception of some superfund sites. The official numbers of deaths reported are likely low based on what we have heard in the villages. Many children have died and many are still sick. Kids in the villages have blood lead levels in excess of 100ug/dl which is way over any regulatory limit you will find in the states. So the damage has already been done to those kids. The work going on over there is to stop more damage from occuring.

Thanks to everyone who has taken the time to read this blog. I want to go back to be part of that work and part of that team. It wasn't scary at all, well except for the driving... The villagers were very friendly and helpful. The workers from the various groups in the country were all very talented. There is just no way to describe it all adequately. However, I came back with some Nigerian currency (naira) and as I was showing it to my family, I caught a whiff of the odor coming from the bills. Yep, I brought back the smell of Nigeria.

Friday, November 12, 2010

Time to go

It is my last night here. Those of us leaving tomorrow are up late packing and finishing up work so others can pick up where we left off. The talent of those over here is amazing each in their own way.

As midnight hit a few minutes ago I headed to bed, walked outside and finally was able to take a few moments to stargaze in complete darkness. It has been a great trip.

Wednesday, November 10, 2010

Office with a view

This has been one of my various offices for the past few weeks.  It is only another few days before my part in this ends. Until then I will keep enjoying this work as much as possible.

Tuesday, November 9, 2010

Setting up shop

There is a large village with significant contamination in a ten acre area just on the edge of the village. It is a wonderland as far as playgrounds go and it is also along a section of river which has been dammed so it serves as a wash area too. Unfortunately it is full of piles of dirt in excess of 30000ppm lead. Yesterday when we stopped by some men were making new mud bricks out of soil dug from this area and mixed with some of the sandy processed ore. Today I shot them with the XRF and got 14000ppm in the nrovks which are used to construct the compounds. Sort of hard to do remediation work when they are still bringing the ore into their houses.

Sunday, November 7, 2010

A better mouse trap

It is Sunday and we are all staying in the compound to work. There aren't enough computers for everyone so some of us are doing other things to help out whether shooting soil samples collected from the villages or looking over maps and trying to fine tune everything.

A boy in the village yesterday had some rodent traps and he sold me two for 10 naira. That is about 3 cents each. They are a piece ff wood with a rubber strip tied to one end and strings tied to the other with a small wood trigger. The rodent crawls through the loop, trips the trigger and the rubber strip strangles or breaks the neck of the rodent. It is pretty cool and we have them set up by the kitchen to catch a rat that has set up shop.

Saturday, November 6, 2010

Give the kid the camera

If you want a different perspective on life in the village, find an older kid and teach them to use your  camera and let them carry it around for you for few hours.


 

 










Today was the final day for the XRF at this village for exterior areas. The pattern in many of today's areas was higher concentrations in the shade and near the entry ways. The kids today were walking, sitting, playing and wrestling in areas with 4000ppm lead and up to 180ppm mercury. We try to communicate to the fathers, mothers, and kids to stay out of areas with really high levels but it doesn't seem to help. They really have a hard time with the concept of lead contamination.

Friday, November 5, 2010

Passing the torch

We went out to the nice village this morning to finish up shooting interiors and to keep going on the exterior mapping. I worked with one of the new guys to orient him to the village and the upcoming remediation. We dove into things quickly and just worked for an hour or two. Then we regrouped and went at things from the perspective of what would be most useful to him now that he had an understanding of mapping, visual cues, and the progression of taking ore to gold. He picked things up very quickly and I think he will have no problem taking on this village as his baby to the end. I will drop in if he needs me to, but I don't expect that to be necessary.
I will head out to the far village again to map exteriors out there. We put together the village map and are ready to start shooting. We just have to wait for people to become available.
We did take a little time today to stop by the market. Talk about an assault on the senses...it was amazing. It is interesting the differences between a market in a small remote village and a large weekly market in a big village. I plan to go back to the small village market tomorrow.

Going back out

Took a day off from the field work yesterday and just relaxed and worked in our office/compound. It was nice to have a break and I got lots of busy stuff done.

As for the other hard core folks who didn't need a break (I think it is age related...) they were able to make a lot of progress on finishing up the mapping of the next village to start with remediation. We have a strong group of managers and supervisors on the two villages in active remediation so we are able to utilize those folks to get rolling on the next village which should start on Monday or Tuesday.

This next village is near one of the mine locations with high lead content and most of the compounds are over 5000ppm. One shot yesterday was 50000ppm. Remediation is expected to take five weeks.

The other two villages that are finishing up are tense but good. Things are changing as we go and many adjustments have ready been made so things are actually going quite smoothly.

With the three new arrivals yesterday we are up to twelve volunteers working over here. The compound is only set up for ten but we can expand.

I am feeling the end of the trip looming and am disappointed about that. That was one drawback to the quiet time yesterday so today will be back to the grind in a good way. Plus I get to "train" one of the new guys.

Wednesday, November 3, 2010

Scheduling

Over the past few days we have learned of a celebration coming up that will greatly impact our work schedule. From what we have heard, even the airport will be shut down. So I think I will be cutting my trip short by a few days.
As far as work that went on today, we trekked to some compounds that we thought were part of a larger village across the river but it turns out it is a tiny village with its own name. Two months ago they had 15 children under the age of three. They lost three kids to lead poisoning. Now some of the other kids are showing signs of being sick. We got the coordinates of that village and will send the information on to the right people.
It’s been a very long week and I am looking forward to an office day at the compound and maybe a nap.

Tuesday, November 2, 2010

Getting work done and having fun

We took the long trip to the far village again today. On the way there we had a clogged fuel filter so we stopped at the stream crossing to fix it. Yes, it would have been nice to not fix it near a stream but that concept is lost here. This particular stream is in that forested area I mentioned a couple days ago so it was nice to be stuck someplace so nice. We played around on the log bridge for a while.
Once we got to town we made a lot of progress on mapping the entire village including exterior areas. Clean soil placement is happening all around the perimeter. This village is so small (approx. 1300 people) that it will be relatively easy for the crews to move clean soil from the outside in. This village is in such a dry area compared to the last village that things have been going quite smoothly. There are three compounds on the other side of the river from the main village that we have yet to find a path for, so that is an unmet challenge still to be dealt with.
We had a surprise at the next village we are working at when we learned that the village we knew about was actually twice as large as originally thought. We have been driving though the old town section and thought it was small but there is a new town section on the other side of the fields which we have never seen before today. So just some more work to take care of...
After finishing what we could we headed back and had to clean out the fuel filter again... When we got back we headed up to the tailor to pick up an item I ordered. The local village is quite large and busy, but we are learning the layout.

Waiting for tomorrow to come.

Monday, November 1, 2010

Finally a dry place

We spent the day traveling to the same village as yesterday and it seemed not as bumpy although the bumper fell off and the radiator cap fell into the engine compartment. Luckily we found it and didn't overheat the engine.

Once at the site, we found a path for the track hoe and tipper to go around the village instead of through it and the track hoe had completely dry soil to dig in. I got to be involved in initial mapping of the village so I spent my time searching the perimeter for grinding areas and sluicing areas. I found many of them and finally learned some new Hausa words. Wanke is slyicing or panning. Rua is water. Don't know if they are spelled correctly...




On my perimeter search I found a man building a new silo for his guinea corn. It takes many days to build one.







My female counterpart went into a compound today where a two year-old boy who used to be very active and playful is now lethargic and can hardly walk. He will hopefully make it into the hospital tomorrow to begin chelation treatment.  The kids in these villages are amazing.