Reports from Planet Drum Staff
Eco-Ecuador Project 2008
Clay Plager-Unger
Field Projects Manager
Planet Drum Foundation
Report: May 12-23, 2008
Note: Click on photos for larger picture
Summary:
A good volunteer force and enough rain to keep us from full-time
watering allow us to make some real progress on site maintenance and in
the greenhouse.

Sam watering the revegetation site on the hillside overlooking
downtown Bahia |
On Monday we split into groups. I
take some of the volunteers to water the trees at La Cruz and then
take a neighborhood tour, collecting discarded three-liter bottles
along the way. Jaime heads out to Kilometro 8 with the other group
and they cut more Pelo Caballo branches to use as identification
stakes. |

Jaime, Amber and Sam fill gallon jugs used for watering at the
Reales Tamarindos neighborhood. |
Tuesday as one large group we water
El Astillero. While there, Palo Santo seeds from some of the trees
in the area are collected. We then hike over to the Reales
Tamarindos site and water there as well.
Upon returning to the house, some of the stakes cut from
yesterday are painted red.
On Wednesday the La Granja revegetation site is watered. From
there we walk to Ricardito's farm and identify trees planted with
red-tipped identification stakes. |

Sam and Cameron sift soil while Fuki cuts three-liter bottles. |
Thursday we spend the day at the greenhouse. The
seed bed with baby Algarrobos is ready for transplanting. Nearly
200 Algarrobos are moved from the bed to three-liter bottles with
a freshly prepared mixture of soil, compost, and sand.
Also, a general cleanup is done around the greenhouse and
the house compost is dumped off. |

Scavenging for Neem stakes among cuttings alongside a
watermelon patch. |
Friday everyone goes to cut stakes at
the Nuevo Globo site as usual. Along the way we find some felled
Neem trees at a nearby farm that have similar branches to the Pelo
Caballo trees and we decide to use them instead. [INSERT
05-26estacas.jpg, ''] Each
volunteer fills a sack of with stakes and then we return to the
house for painting. Back
at the house, a few hundred stakes are painted. |

Mike and Ricardito's truck, the Enterprise, loaded up with
Guasmo trees. |
On Monday we head to the site at the
greenhouse to mark more trees with identifying stakes.
Our friend Ricardito shows up to help drive a batch of
already somewhat large sapling trees over to the greenhouse |

Cameron loads trees into the greenhouse extension. |
extension and we free up a good amount
of space inside the greenhouse for next year's planting. |

Fuki and Mike take in the exciting sites and smells of the
Bahia dump while searching for three-liter bottles. |
An exciting day on Tuesday begins with a visit to
the local dump! We are
searching for more three-liter bottles. Success! We quickly fill our sacks with scavenged bottles and take off
for the greenhouse with the plastic loot. At the greenhouse, the
bottles are cut, soil is prepared, and Guachepeli seedlings are
transplanted. |
That night I leave to Guayaquil for the first in a
series of trips which will hopefully result in a shiny, new visa allowing
me to stay here for longer. Overnight it rains relatively hard for
approximately an hour, enough to provide some crucial water to the trees
and allow us to put off watering sites for even longer.
While I'm in Guayaquil, Jaime takes the volunteer on
a sight-seeing tour of Leonidas Plaza, suburb of Bahia. Along the way,
they search for three-liter bottles. After collecting their share, they
head for the greenhouse, where they weed, organize trees and cleanup.
Thursday there's a bit of a drizzle. Jaime takes the
volunteers to El Toro to finish identifying trees with stakes. From there
they collect more bottles in the Fanca neighborhood. I spend the day
chasing down lawyers, notaries and other locals in my quest for a visa.
On Friday Jaime and the volunteers go to the
greenhouse and do some upkeep on the trees that have already grown
approximately six months or more in bottles. As the trees grow and times
goes by, the dirt in the bottles compacts. When watering, the water drains
straight down the sides of the bottle and out the holes in the bottom. The
best way to counter this is by topping off the bottles with a fresh soil
mixture. This adds new nutrients to the bottles and helps reduce wasting
water.
I return to Guayaquil and submit what turns out to be
only the first part of my visa application. Another trip will be required
next Monday.
Pásalo bien,
Clay
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