the rest of my build ….

As always, being flexible is necessary on a Habitat build!

Days 3 and 4 fell on the Wesak holiday so we took R&R days. Day 3 saw us head off to a local Buddhist temple where there were young monks studying. We were the only Westerners there. After divesting ourselves of our shoes, we climbed to the top of the high hill in our bare feet over stones and rocks … note I know why I wear tender tootsies! It was very peaceful as we passed many pilgrims who were silently meditating at various spots along the way that presumably had significance for them. Reaching the top, there was a new Stupa under construction. We then made our way down again to the main temple where prayers were starting and quietly stood throughout. After prayers it seemed meditation was over and there was a communal meal about to be served.

After having lunch at our hotel, we got in the van and headed to the Katamalla Eco-Hotel (sp?) designed by architect Joseph Bawl to “bring the outdoors in or indoors out”! We entered through an entryway partly cut into the hillside into which the hotel is built. Much greenery falls off balconies … much loved by the local monkey population who fascinated our group with their babies and their antics!

Day 4 started with a trip to the Dambulla Golden Temple where there is a huge golden Sitting Buddha statue above the temple which is, of course, built into a hillside which needed to be climbed … this time, shod but up umpteen hundred stairs … to caves at the top where we were de-shod and had a guide to tour the cave temples … many dating from 150 BCE … all with multiple Buddha statues in many poses including a 90+ foot long reclining Buddha. The vibrancy of the painting of the walls and ceilings and multiple carved statues is amazing!

After a lunch at our hotel, off we went about 1.5 hours away for a 4×4 jeep safari to see the huge herd of elephants at a national park. Although smaller than African elephants it was amazing to see so many elephants in one spot. The jeeps (our group had 2) were open top, long wheel base with two benches. Everyone else was standing up but I found sitting less bruising than constantly hitting the grab bars!

Day 5 saw us back at our work sites where my partner and I finished the brick walls (these were conrete bricks just smaller than we would see as concrete block in Canada) of the addition and shoveled lots of red clay into the addition and porch area and my partner tamped it down. That completed the Habitat portion of that build … the family will have to add the roof and pour the concrete floor themselves.

Day 6 saw my partner and I move to another site where one room was being added to the house. We moved bricks … the more common red clay ones about twice the size we see in Canada … mix mortar and help the mason fill the cracks. Needless to say this is hot work in 35 Celsius heat and high humidity … I have been averaging 4-5litres of water per day.

Day 7 was the same but we fitted a window, too. Sadly, about 3 in the afternoon, my partner was handing me bricks and one broke in half and landed square on my foot. After a few minutes to catch my breath, and despite my feeling a crack, I carried on with the work until the end of the day. Once back at the hotel with shoe off, it was clear that the foot was broken. Fortunately, we have a Dr. with us as a team member who has been extremely generous with his expertise. After Alan notified the Habitat insurer … who could not find our location on her map … we (Alan, the dr,, a team member who is a Canadian after emigrating from Sri Lanka, two Habitat folks and the driver) beaded off to explore local health care …always an experience in the subcontinent. After the Xray confirmed the break, the local Dr. at the clinic remarked “broken, what to do?”. His idea was to see a surgeon the next day! After we got back, Alan, our Dr. and I huddled. Our Dr’s assessment was simply “You are not having surgery here, ARE YOU?” I can only say that I heartily agreed! Not sure if surgery is necessary but apparently the break is of a metatarsal head … the same one I broke 5 years ago which apparently did not heal well … the osteoarthritis does not help, either.

The upshot: I have spent the last two days with my foot up, iced or in a tensor bandage while the Habitat insurer assessed the situation, recommending repatriation and making flight arrangements … business class …for which they are paying … to be kinder to the foot and, in light of my age, prevent a DVT if possible. So, I leave tomorrow, Wednesday, and get in to Moncton around supper time to head to the local hospital to see “what to do?”. Sadly, the foot cannot be plastered prior to flying since it will swell in flight so it has been quite painful.

In the meantime, the build has continued… the two guys who have been digging a 6x6x10 foot deep latrine in this heat and humidity … cheerfully, I might add … finally finished yesterday and were looking to learn how to mix concrete for a floor today! Apparently the last group assigned to dig a latrine the same size took 4 guys 7 days … our guys are heroes!!

Will post this and this afternoon, if possible, will try to post a few pictures!

 

 

day 2

Well, got cut off yesterday! Iffy WiFi!

Yesterday moved bricks all day! Today, mixed mortar and poured foundation for the porch area and a different morter for the brick wall of the additional room that is being built.

The reason we are at five different sites is because Habitat Sri Lanka works with homeowners in stages … A loan for the initial small 2 room house and when that is paid then another loan can be had to stucco or add a room etc.

The other thing we did today was first thing we walked with\from the local school to the Buddhist temple and lit oil lamps. It is Wesak tomorrow and Thurs which celebrates the birth, death and enlightenment of the Buddha. Since both days are holidays and no work, we will be having R and R for the next two days.

Sadly, the internet is so poor thaI am unable to post any photos … Will do so once home!!

 

a

If I get a hold of the person who gave me a 7 hour layover in TO and an 11 hour layover in London, she is going to get a piece of my mind! Ooops!, that was me! Must have been looking at the price rather than comfort! Anyway, met up with three fellow builders in London and because the plane was half empty, we snagged bulkhead seats and spend some time getting to know each other. We also had an early nap until a poor older lady fell in the aisle during  turbulence and a later nap just after breakfast before landing. Getting thru immigration was a breeze and Alan met us as the wall of heat and humidity met us! We got settled at the hotel … after killing the resident cockroach with one of my Birkenstocks … and had a shower followed by a short walk. The hotel is in a quiet neighbourhood with a few stores. The roads are nowhere near as crazy as India. We had a group meeting before supper … nice to finally put names to faces! Supper was from the menu and I had a nice piece of grilled fish and rice! After supper we all headed to our rooms and beds. Despite a rock hard pillow and a couple trips to the bathroom, jet lag ensured I slept well. Will post about today’s trip from Colombo to Dambulla tomorrow … with luck since the internet is a bit iffy!!

One more sleep

My bag is packed, it’s at the door

My backpack is packed, it’s waiting for me

My clothes are laid out, tomorrow to wear

Checked in and have aisle seats all the way

Colombo here I come!!

And just as I am about to leave, Spring has finally arrived. Lovely, warm day today, lots of sunshine. Making it really official, the yellow-rumped warblers are back and my mini-daffodils, planted in the garden from a pot given to me by Sahib a few years ago, have bloomed. Hopefully, the rest won’t start to bloom for a week or so and I will be home in just over two weeks when the tulips should be making their show!

 

 

 

Aside

Two full days left then off I go! Today was a chilly, chilly day and tomorrow calls for snow flurries! on the 6th of May! Sahib’s tomato plants are beautiful and ready to plant out but are staying on the sun porch for now rather than frost their little footsies!

Posting a picture of my first GV build in Nicaragua to help warm me up and get me ready to go!Image

 

Aside

Not only are the clothes laid out on the bed, I have been over the list and checked it twice! I also had Sahib look it over, since he often sees what I miss! Rechecked the list and realized we had both missed what we call my “sun shirts” – light cotton, long sleeved shirts worn over anything to protect this former redhead’s tender skin. Now, will it all fit in my suitcase??

Really beginning to get excited: ever since I was a little girl collecting stamps, I have wanted to travel to what was then Ceylon and is now Sri Lanka. One of my daughters has beat me to it, having visited a school friend there. I have given up counting but I think this will be the 66th or 67th country I have visited – and one that I have always wanted to visit!

I am also thinking we have seen our allowed 6 hours of Spring today where the temperature was not the forecast 5 Celsius but rather 16 Celsius and the sun was shining rather than the called-for rain. We have now had a bit of small hail about 4 pm and it has rained since. This leaves me very much looking forward to warmer temperatures.

Because I have only imagination and anticipation of Sri Lanka, I am going to post a favourite picture of a previous GV build in Romania!

Image

Getting ready….for Sri Lanka

As with any travel, the first step is prep!

Heading to Sri Lanka with a GV Build …. this will be my fourth international build and my fifth if one counts a local one here in my hometown! So far, the trip has been confirmed by GV headquarters and our fearless leader Mr. V. So, I have finished funding the trip, booked my travel and applied for, and been granted, my ETA (electronic travel authority – the “modern” term for a pre-authorized visa!) and am now sitting back getting mentally prepared and pulling together this and that.

One suggestion is to bring a mosquito net. Being a fan of Rick Mercer, I went to http://www.spreadthenet.org and found that it has become part of Plan Canada. Wandering around their site, the recommendation is for a mosquito net that is impregnated with repellant. While they offer to let you donate (the funds for) a net that will be given to someone who needs one, there is nowhere to order a net for personal use! I did write them but, as with many on-line outfits, received no response since my goal was to buy a net that I could donate on departure from Sri Lanka!! After an extensive online search for a Canadian (outdoors store?) supplier of nets, I eventually found a European supplier for a reasonable price. Their delivery charge was more than the cost of the net!! Not only that, it came by DHL – and it cost me $21.47 to have DHL process it through Canada Customs when the import duty owed was, yes, you have it, $0.

So that sits with my work gloves from my last build in Nepal, the bright blue (!!) T-shirt sent by the GV folks and my work shoes in a corner while my file folder with tickets and passport and ETA approval grace the top of the filing cabinet….ready to rock and roll and the trip is yet a month away!!

In the meantime, I travel to visit my mother and a daughter this week….saves me getting over-prepared!