Reports from Planet Drum Staff
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Summary:
More volunteers show up and we prepare for a visit from a group of
Canadian volunteers from the 'Children of Ecuador' organization. This
group spends six consecutive days working with us and we accomplish nearly
a month's worth of work in that time.
Over the weekend Mica and Danielle from New York and Andrew from L.A. arrived. Monday morning we gave the house a much needed cleaning.
Tuesday Jaime took the volunteers to the greenhouse
revegetation site and they cleared weeds and put down booster soil on the
trees. I spent the day around Bahia trying to get a lead on a neighboring
landowner for the Planet Drum institute land. I also edited the materials
for this week's Bioregional education class.
With financial support from the Municipio he is
maintaining this reforestation site and hopes to build a greenhouse to be
able to plant more trees and produce fruit trees for the neighborhood.
They are already collecting three-liter bottles for the greenhouse. With
the Canadians we will increase the size of Patilla's site and plant more
trees. Despite being late in the season, the trees have a good chance for
survival because they will be watered regularly by a Municipio-paid
worker.
On Friday some of the volunteers took the day off to
go camping up on the beach north of Jama. Others stayed back with Jaime
and did some work in the greenhouse.
Those who worked Friday took the day off on Monday to visit Puerto Lopez and Isla de la Plata. The others, refreshed from their long weekend camping excursion, went to the Bosque Encantado site to clear trails. All of the trail-clearing at the sites in the past week has been to clear weeds from the sites so that we can accomplish loads of watering with the soon-arriving Canadian volunteers.
![]() Clay, Andrew and Mica climbing the ridiculously steep hill in El Astillero to water the trees. |
Tuesday morning we watered at our El Astillero site and then did some more work around the house. |
In the afternoon the Canadians arrived. This group, representing the Children of Ecuador organization (www.childrenofecuador.ca), visited Bahia and worked with Planet Drum last year. They are working on several different projects around town. They are working with us in groups of 12-15 volunteers. Each group spends two days working on each of the three different projects. So for six days we have 12-15 extra volunteers helping out.
Tuesday afternoon we received the first group took a walking and watering tour of Bahia, hitting the sites that can be accessed without getting on the bus. Sites at Bosque en Medio de las Ruinas, La Cruz and Reales Tamarindos were all watered with double the normal amount of water.
Thursday a new group of Canadians showed up to help out with Planet Drum work. We took them to the Don Pepe site and demonstrated how to go about watering trees. The trees all got extra doses of water and then the Nuevo Globo site next door was watered. Things took a bit longer than usual because water ran out and had to be carried all the way in from the road. But with all of the extra help we were still able to water both sites in one day.
In the afternoon I took some of the Planet Drum volunteers to the Arte Papel recycled paper cooperative. We saw their workshop, bought some recycled paper products and even got to decorate some pieces on our own.
In the afternoon Planet Drum took a field trip to a pueblo in rice country to visit a friend who is promoting bee keeping and honey production in Ecuador and particularly the Dry Tropical forests of the province of Manabi.
The final activity for the week with the Canadians was to visit the Los Caras community at kilometer 16. I arranged a community tour, a morning of tree planting work and a lunch with community leader Sebastian. We visited the community's schools and farms.
It was a great way to finish up a long week of work. The members of the Los Caras community were very grateful for the visit and the work with them. They are an ecologically minded group and will take good care of the newly planted trees.
Many, many thanks to the Canadian volunteers who came and to helped out some of the groups working in Bahia. Planet Drum's greenhouse and revegetation sites definitely appreciate it, as did the communities of El Astillero and Los Caras. We look forward to seeing you again next year. Your motivation and dedication are a real inspiration.
Pásalo bien.
Clay