This is the beginning of the project, a quick shot of the site. Laying out and pouring the foundation for the walls to be built. It is set off in the hillside, surrounded by trees, coffee plants, and a small river down the hill.
The walls came in as pre made slabs of concrete so they went up quickly with some bracing. They were bonded in between with a strip of a plastic mesh and a type of plaster/cement mixture.
That is me in the hat laying brick for the sewage tank with Rafa. Fun stuff, throwing cement with a trowel on blocks. It got messy and frustrating when the cement would slide off the trowel or I would miss the edge of a block with the cement. Also did a lot of cement mixing and shoveling while building this container.
The sewage tank complete, hooray. It took two days but nice to be done with it. Had to stack bricks on the inside to climb out. Then finish the left most wall from the outside.
Another quick shot of the walls and the rebar that will be secured with concrete and used to attach the roof. We painted a blue adhesive on the walls to help bond the following layer of cement to the walls.
Lots of shoveling, digging, sifting, and any other generic labor. I have on multiple occasions shoveled and sifted dirt for entire work days.
Just a small beetle I found while digging. Small but built like a tank. Had a horn on the front of its head and barbs on its legs that made it nearly impossible to hold it. Not that the barbs were sharp but they would grip into my hands and the beetle would just push ahead.
I am well above average height in Costa Rica, I have gotten plenty of stares to confirm this. It just so happens to help in the construction process. Here we are pouring concrete into the framing which will secure the roof and my job was to pass the 1/4 filled buckets of concrete up to the guys. My nickname on the site became "escalera" or ladder in Spanish because of this.
Just a simple overview shot of the house progress and the surrounding area. The cement mixer is 1 of only a few electric tools available. Nearly everything is manual, we additionaly mixed a lot of cement by hand if the mixer had concrete in it.
Two fellow volunteers coating the walls with cement. This is the initial stage to finishing the walls. Take a bit of cement on a trowel and fling it against the wall. It can get messy, especially if you´re walking through a doorway right when someone is throwing cement and you catch the splatter in the face. Happened to all of us. It took us a week to cover all the walls in the house. Granted none of us are experienced in this task but it is time consuming. On the left is Dan, a British guy who lives in Vancouver, Canada and Layne, a California girl going to school in Maryland. They both were fun and interesting people and I felt very fortunate to work with them.
"The hole". I had to create a 4 inch diameter hole through roughly 16 inches of solid concrete with a hammer, chisel, and pick. Was a good workout to say the least.
Another progress photo, the uncle, Tio is on the left and the son Jovani is on the right. They do more of the tasks that require experience and deal with materials that are in limited supply.
They welded the beams together for the roof structure then asked us to climb up and clean them. That is me cleaning a bead, by the way there are no building codes or OSHA guidelines as far as I can tell. Looking at these welds made me think twice about putting my weight on them. It´s just how they do, they build it like they know and call it good because it works for them. "Itsokay" and "ship it" come to mind.
Roof work on the house is coming along, and no harnesses or safety apparatus to be seen on the site.
Break time! We took a ten minute break and all had a beer. Yes, we drink beer during our breaks and even the guys on the roof had a beer. Jovani the son top left, Rafa the father top right. Below, Tio on the left and then two other volunteers that I worked with for 2 weeks. Jaime a fellow Washingtonian from Seattle on the left and Dan again on the right. I found it odd that 3 guys all from the Northwest were here working but it was easy to relate.
So that is a 1 post recap of about a month of work. It has been incredibly fun and rewarding. Working side by side with the family and fellow volunteers has been very fun, even comical at times what with language barrier. Still working on that Spanish, but still not very good. Take care everyone, buenas noches.
Aaron,
ReplyDeleteOh how we all miss you!!! Glad to see you are doing well. I tried to get them to pay you $20 an hour more to come back, but well....not so much (didn't get a phone call did ya). We had to offer up our theme song for the AC's "Another One Bites the Dust" has now gone multi universal :) Hope life continues to treat you well and I will check back in a couple of days. Take care of yourself and as far as the Spanish, barrerra (sp) means steel. My husband taught me that. TTYS - Leanne
YAYY!! So happy to see you are doing great work, but even better, meeting great people! This family sounds pretty wonderful and can't complain about a beer break while doing construction. Stay safe?! Haha. Miss you lots and hope to be reading a re-cap of Nicolette's trip to you soon? Love and miss you!
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