Showing posts with label Camps International. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Camps International. Show all posts

Monday, 26 March 2012

Every Day is World Water Day


First published by Dipesh Pabari, Operations Manager at Camps International in Kenya. 22nd March 2012
Providing Water Security for local communities has always been a core objective for Camps International and there is always some project ongoing across our locations. It’s World Water Day today and we would like to use this day to highlight some of the work we are doing in Borneo,Cambodia and Kenya. As part of our long term objectives for the Camps International Foundation, we have decided to committ ourselves to increasing our water conservation and security program across our locations. And like everything else, the first commitment is to ensure we are doing as much as we can within our camps and that everyone who travels with us understands the importance of conserving water. Everyone of us needs to do our bit. So to everyone out there, we would like to ask two things:
1. Please use water in camps conservatively and remember in our parts of the world, a flushing toilet or a shower everyday is a luxury. We will continue to do our best to put recycling systems in place as we have done in many of our camps but every single drop counts.
2. If anyone is interested in helping towards our various water security projects, please do make a donation through the Camps International Foundation and specify it is for water projects. We guarantee 100% of any donations through the foundation will be earmarked for projects.
There are serious issues with water onMantanani due to the isolated and delicate nature of the island which has a unusually high water leading to both the benefit of close water access for the inhabitants but also the high than normal risk of the water table becoming contaminated by outside pollutants.
Our efforts at water conservation and protection on the island are twofold, and incorporate practical and educational elements.
At Camp Mantanani itself we already have a water catchment/rainwater harvesting system  which feeds our toilets and garden. We will soon be installing a grey water recycling system using a sand filter process that will both increase the available water storage and also limit the impact of gray water on the water table.
At our landmark project on the island, the Kindergarten next to the primary school, we will be installing a rain water harvesting system also and will be using this to help introduce water management and permaculture ideals to the local community alongside our other marine conservation and permaculture education programmes.
In Beng Mealea, our water management programme also encompasses bothour own camp, in an effort to limit our own impact and be more sustainable and also live by the standards we teach, as well as the projects we are working on.
At the camp we have limited our water usage by constructing waterless composting toilets. Alongside these all other water use in the camp is fed into our grey water leech field which, recycles the grey water and uses the run off to feed our Permaculture orchard feeding papaya and banana trees.
Of our water management projects in Beng Mealea, the most urgent is at the local high school which has very little water storage despite having four large classroom blocks available for water capture. At the moment only one out of eight available sloping roofs is used for water capture, which is fed to a 15k litre concrete tank that we refurbished in 2011. Before this tank was repaired the only available water source for the entire school of 600 children was a large pond which was empty during the dry season and barely drinkable during the rainy season.
Roofs like this can catch A LOT of water
We aim to install water catchment on the remaining 7 sloping roofs and build a new ablutions block to replace the one current toilet they have to help limit the natural waste polluting the current pond.
This year, we have just undertaken a technical assessment and plan (thank you GreenWater!) to recycle all shower water at our main camp in Muhaka to the proposed Trust House vocational school we are building. Water from the showers will go through a natural cleaning system and this july, we will be constructing a large pond which will act as the main water source for the farm. Additionally, we are starting the graywater recylcing system which will be ready for the summer at Camp Kaya. Water from your showers, will be recycled back to the toilets for flushing and extra water will go through a natural filter and be a reservoir for the new tree nursery at the forest
Plan for graywater at Camp Muhaka
This year alone in Kenya we have been very fortunate to receive additional donations that have allowed us to completely overhaul the water catchment system at Muhaka Dispensary. I
can’t thank the 2011 Nurse team (a.k.a Kenya Gappers) who raised approximately £2500 which was enough funds to change all the roofs at the dispensary, paint them with a special protective paint, put in new gutters, and put in two new tanks at the dispensary. The dispensary now has over 15,000lts of water storage facilities. We also recieved a small donation from the Herbert family which used to buy additional gutters and install one more 1000lt tank at Imani Women’s Group.
That’s just a snippet of what is happening at the moment and we know we can do so much more. We just received a video made by Vineel who travelled to Kenya for three months last year. He raised an additional fund which was used to provide a water source to a local nursery school at Muhaka. The video below really sums up how every little drop counts and yes, every penny will save another drop…

Sunday, 25 March 2012

Day 3 Marrakech - Imlil - Refuge Toubkal

After another cracking breakfast at Ksar Anika we boarded a rather spacious wagon for the 1.5 hour drive to Imlil . Imlil is the starting village for any treks into the Toubkal region and is perched on the edge of the hills at 1700 metres. Bizarely i recognised the second village where our guide lived. Making me feel old i realised i had been here 18 years before on my gap year. There are lots of hostels to stay at but the one that really screams magnificence is the kasbah Toubkhal. A Scholes like Berber hotel  standing out about 200ft above the rest of Imlil on its own precipice. This would be the ideal place to spend the night prior to climbing to adjust to the 1200 metre altitude difference between Imlil and Marrakech. 
We were greeted by our guide Abdullah and porter/chef/donkey driver who made us feel very welcome and answered all our queries. Being the organised people we are we hadn't packed any crampons so had to hire some from the village shop, according to Abdullah "not the wisest move, in Africa we don't make good crampons."

Perot the donkey porter
The Temperature was around 20 degrees in the sun and having packed several layers we ended up walking the whole day in just thermal top and bottoms with a t shirt on top. The route is blessed with sunshine for almost all of its 16kms. The first 2 hours are fairly basic footpaths climbing steadily towards sidi Charmouch a shrine to the mountain. This is where we stopped for the first of husseins fantastic fodder with mackerel, salad and bread. Along the way there are several little shops offering the last chance to buy and scarves or even jewellery. Just in case you hadn't had the chance in Marrakech. These all offer assorted soft drinks and of course endless bottled water. The refuge was another 3 hours up the mountain following a well beaten path with occasional snowy patches. The proper snow came at about 2900 metres but was not difficult to walk on without crampons and you can actually see the refuge for some time so have a good target to end the day on. Including stops it took us 6 hours to get to the refuge but then i walk very slowly. Abdullahs record is 2 hours and there are several annoying people who a Actualy run past you and back during your struggle. 

Finally someone tells Fran where to go
The refuge appears looking like a lift stop in the alps without any lift and sans frites and vino. It does however cater for lots of groups and we thinks there must have been 40/50 people in there that night. There is wood burner in the main room and several dining areas all clean cosy. There are 4 dormitories each with giant bunked layouts so you plonk your bag down and grab a thick blanket from The chef de refuge and bobs your uncle your home. It's pretty chilly outside once the sun has gone in at 5 ish so the door is kept shut. Once again hussein produced the goods, I foolishly had five bowls of soup only to discover the second course was a full blown lamb tagine and a bonus plate of spag Bol. I was in heaven! 
The refuge from below, you then head up the sharp face on the left of photo.
The bedroom was another thing altogether though with torches constantly shining this was and that and the archetypal Frenchman who opened the door and then walked off for half an hour. Needless to say the temperature was below freezing but bearable thanks to the bodyheat of others and the overpowering smell of the unwashed. Some of these guys were staying for four nights and I can tell you the showers were not well used.
The lovers embrace.
www.rjseven.com is the company we used to climb Toubkal.