Sunday, June 17, 2007

Marco Had to Drag Them Away ...

One half inch every ten feet. That’s all that mattered. One half inch every ten feet. The heat didn’t matter, not even when it hit 90 degrees every day by 11AM, or when it hit 105 on Tuesday. The bugs didn’t matter, not even the cockroaches that performed like trapeze artists in the rafters above my lower bunk each night. The well-intended but overlappingly chaotic “organization” that surrounded us didn’t matter either, not even when we were sent to the wrong addresses, or when homeowners or contractors who were supposed to meet us and/or supply us failed to materialize.

All that mattered to me and to 6 wonderful, determined, and increasingly tight-knit CA students was how to make the approximately 180 feet of three-inch wide sewer pipe that we laid one feet deep into Rick Galle’s back yard achieve a consistent descent on one half inch for every ten feet between the oil barrel-sized sump pump we buried at one end, and the septic tank we bored into at the other. If you’re a geometry genius who can look at that challenge and quickly determine that it’s mathematically impossible to achieve, then keep it to yourself, for two reasons. First, none of the whip-smart kids I worked with this week ever reached that conclusion, (nor did any of the Camp Coastal staff, the Americorps volunteers who assisted them, the two or three contractors who occasionally stopped by, nor Rick himself). Secondly, and more importantly, keep it to yourself because, as I’ve learned in just one week of wandering around in Katrina’s wake, everything seemingly has to be difficult, but nothing is ultimately allowed to be impossible.

Our week together in Rick Galle’s back yard turned out to be everything I could have possibly wished for these students when I first agreed to accompany them to Mississippi. Like all of life’s great challenges, the challenge of the descending septic pipe slowly. Not only does Rick live a scant two miles from the Camp Coastal site, but the proposed septic line would connect his house (which was gutted but not demolished after the storm, and is currently being refurbished) to a renovated structure on one end of his property which he has generously donated to Camp Coastal to use as a larger and more permanent administrative headquarters. After being sent on Monday to a site where no work materialized and then ending up building a set of wooden steps into a function tent at the Camp Coastal campsite itself, finding out Tuesday morning that we were barely going down the road to do what initially felt like another “favor” for Camp Coastal might have understandably been a been of a letdown. And besides, for goodness sakes, we weren’t being sent out to “build homes” or two sheetrock walls for Katrina survivors, as had been prophesized back in the safe confines of the Ransome Room just a few weeks ago – we were going to dig a septic ditch so that Camp Coastal staffers could flush their toilet.

Of course the temperature hit 105 on Tuesday, our first day at Rick’s. And of course the ground was full of dense roots and/or heavy red clay. And of course the proposed pipeline didn’t follow a straight path, but instead fish-hooked out the side of one house and created a bizarre looping arc. And of course it involved crisscrossing sections of 2 and 3” pipelines. But something wonderful happened as we dug ditches, carved out roots, learned to prepare and then connect PVC pipe, and dug our way under not one, but two different fences. In fact, several wonderful things happened.

First of all, we were blessed with the opportunity to spend four days at one site. Unlike many others who were deployed to different (and of course important) tasks each day – sometimes doing different tasks at different sites at different parts of the same day – we happily slipped off the radar each morning. “Marco, your crew is back at Rick’s today,” was all the confirmation I needed to hear. This allowed us to bypass the daily hub-bub that attended the distribution of tasks and then quickly get to our job site, which in turn allowed us to get a bit of a jump on the inevitably brutal heat, and the seemingly inevitable 3:30PM thunderstorm. Secondly, and more importantly, we became deeply invested in – and arguably quite knowledgeable about – the task at hand, allowing me to do what I really wanted to do: let the students own the work. By Wednesday I was consulting with them more than they consulted with me, and it was great to watch them strategize about digging angles, different uses of tools and fittings, rotations of tasks and breaks, and, of course, the ultimately vital question of one half inch per ten feet. Finally, and most importantly, we got to spend a week with Rick himself, who seemed to me to be the very face of decency in the aftermath of calamity. He told us stories about his family and neighbors, and very matter-of-factly told us about of the many ways he reached out to them. He told us stories about the many waves of volunteers who had already helped him: members of the Grand Valley State football team apparently fainted from the April – yes, April – heat as they built a wooden fence. Three “little girls” from Massachusetts roofed the Camp Coastal building whose septic trench we laid. Rick told us about his gardens and his trees. He bought us fried chicken and pecan pie on our last day. Rick told us, “I know y’all think you come down here to rebuild houses, but you don’t. You come down here to rebuild hearts.” He told us we always would have a home in Mississippi.

But before he did any of that, Rick told us, on the very first day we arrived, why what we were doing mattered just as much as any other more seemingly “glamorous” relief work we might have envisioned. He told us why we weren’t just making it easy for Camp Coastal to flush a toilet. He said, “Y’know, I don’t consider myself a religious man, but what y’all are doing – and maybe you don’t understand it yet – but it’s like y’all are helping the Jesus of this whole situation. That’s what these Camp Coastal people have been to us down here.” If it mattered that much to Rick, how could it matter any less to any of us?

So what about one half inch every ten feet? Yes, the kids figured it out. And in a somewhat cruel twist of fate, we never got to lay it in. On our last day we worked from 8:30AM until 6:45PM, and I still had to literally drag them away from the ditch. Some pipe fittings and inconsistencies among allegedly uniform-sized PVC pipes finally betrayed us, and we ended up about seven feet and one fitting short of completing the job. Of course, Rick eloquently told the kids that they won, that the job really was finished, that several other group leaders had balked at even starting the job we eventually completed, and that he had never been as proud of any team of volunteers as he was of ours. He actually had, on more than one occasion this week, dragged various Camp Coastal officials down from the campsite to show them our work and brag about us. We took a piece of PVC and all signed it for him, posed for group pictures, dutifully sniffed the gardenias and magnolias of which Rick was so proud, and then did one thing that really made the whole week entirely worthwhile: we hugged someone we’d never known as if we’d known him for years, and we put faith in his head shaking gratitude for having completed a job that he wasn’t sure would ever get done. Of course my wonderful companions – Janney, Steven, Rose, Sandy, Nora, and Eric – would probably miss today flight home on a second’s notice if it could by them just one more 22.5 joint and about another three hours in Rick’s back yard to complete that line, lay that grade, and bury that pipe. So would I. But just like every other image you might point a camera at down here, it’s best to constantly go back and forth between the wide-angle view and the zoomed in view, and really pause to take in the magnitude of each. To the goat loving members of “Team Awesome” – thanks for coming together as you did, and for taking wing as you did. It was an honor to spend this week with you.

Saturday, June 16, 2007

Team Marco's Final Day

Team Marco returned on our final day to Rick’s house to complete laying pipe for his septic and grey water systems. We needed to dig a hole about four feet deep and three feet across to bury the septic pump near the front of the pipe system. After the pump was buried the pipe system was nearly completed by us except for the final few feet near the pump. In total there was almost 220 feet of pipe.
Rick treated us to a fried chicken lunch. We will never forget him nor his story.
-Steven, 6/15/20707

Friday, June 15, 2007

Signing Off ...

David and I (Liz) had to leave MS a day early (quite reluctantly, I assure you) in order to attend CA's Reunion Weekend festivities on Sat morning. Accordingly, the blog won't be updated from on site tomorrow (Sat) am, though I hope additional images and comments will be posted, fleshing out what's here. Anyone who'd like to post something is welcome to send it to Liz at her school email and I'll upload it.

Meantime, the quick report we got by cell phone this evening was that all is well; a couple of groups feasted on homemade catfish for lunch, while others finished priming the house mentioned in the "Pink Paint" entry of yesterday.

Hope this blog has been both entertaining and informative!

Fireside Reflections

I wonder if I can capture the power of tonight’s fire in words. We gathered, all of us, around a bonfire after dark fell, gazing at the flames and, like unending human generations, allowing their light to draw us into communion with those sitting around it. Story time. David invited us to share observations, feelings, and thoughts on the week’s experience. Slowly, than in a rush, people spoke. Comments ranged from frustration with Camp Coastal’s inefficiency at dispatching us or insufficiency of tools to questioning, “How can we be building houses that might not withstand Katrina 2.0, the next hurricane?” to thoughts about the profound gratitude we’d heard from everyone whom we’d met and the complex feelings that such thankfulness aroused.

Some voices were a bit daunted, wondering what can one week of my work (or team’s work, all of CA’s work) do? How much impact can it have when we can see so much damage all around us. But then a counterpoint emerged: realize that we have among us dug four or five houses worth of postholes, putting those houses on the track to being built, literally digging the foundation of people’s new lives; that there are 300 people in Camp Coastal alone, and countless other camps, all making small, incremental progress. The names of those we’d met came up – Randy, Noel, Butch, Rick, and others. One person spoke of the power of bearing witness to their experience, through hearing their stories, and listening with deep attentiveness. We heard of one group priming the walls in an almost finished houses, so a little girl could have her longed-for pink bedroom. Many told stories of especially gratifying or wrenching moments they’d experienced over the week.

Kids spoke of how much they had learned – about how complicated the whole house construction process is, and how modest one person’s input can be, about how much remains untouched 21 months after Katrina hit. Some spoke of a deep anger that had been building over the week, anger at the failure of the government (local, national, whatever) to have responded more wholly to the devastation still visible nearly everywhere.

And as we closed, several of the adults (echoed by some students) voiced their deep appreciation of our group, for the CA kids have worked unstintingly, with focus, effort and immense sweat, at whatever task they were assigned, whether glamorous or grungy. Their effort and willingness to pitch in has been noted by everyone (Camp Coastal staff and other volunteers; homeowners) and I (Liz) am very proud to be a part of this group and this school.

And then, after all that solemnity, we cheerfully fell upon the s’mores supplies, which disappeared with alarming rapidity!









Beach Boulevard






Almost every group has by now driven along the 4-5 mile stretch of Beach Boulevard in Waveland and Bay St. Louis, fronting on the Gulf. This area saw a 30 foot storm surge and the echoing emptiness remains haunting. What were obviously estate-properties, beachfront homes in every sense, are now empty foundations, though vestiges of the landscaping remain. Some have rebuilt, and a local man on a bike that my group encountered on Wed. evening told us that those houses are both self-funded and self-insured. Too many people here cannot afford insurance on their properties (esp. nearer the beach), and so have been unable to rebuild.

Striking sights on this stretch include a bank branch that was ripped away, all save its fast-rusting vault. Or a bridge/overpass that stands alone, the pier it once led to long vanished.

Septic Pipes and Accomplishment

When Marco learned that we would probably be working at Rick’s property for at least three days, he didn’t tell our group because he feared we’d be disappointed. However we were all glad and excited to return this morning for a third—and perhaps final—day of work on the septic trenches. After a rather stubborn member of our team triumphed over the final remaining root, we were clear to continue laying pipe. We finished laying pipe in the straightaway, which ended up measuring between eighty and eighty-five feet. Unfortunately because of an error, we did not have sufficient piping to complete the circle to the backside of the house; we needed an additional forty feet of piping.
Before lunch we loaded into the van to go to a site where according to Marco we would “unload some trestles.” We arrived and met a group of volunteers from a church in Arkansas. In total there were 21 trestles, measuring roughly 20 feet across, 15 feet tall and each weighing about 250 pounds. The process of bringing the trestles down off of the open 18-wheeler and piling them up on the ground beside the truck was quite arduous. A group of five stood on the truck, handed them down to another group of five on the ground, before the trestle was handed to yet another group of five inside the ever-growing pile of trestles. Once the trestles were stacked about 6 feet high, the final five had to climb out from inside the trestles.
After lunch we returned to Rick’s to complete odd jobs. Some gardened and others prepped the house to be power washed by bleaching the sides of the house by hand with bleach. We also cleaned out the inside of the CC house so that a team could come in within the next few weeks to lay floor or perhaps even paint. We promised Rick we would return tomorrow to say goodbye on our final day of work.

-Steven 6/14/2007

Pink Paint





Today in Ms. Hill’s house we primed. Having arrived after lunch, fresh from digging holes in the morning, we applied primer to the entry/living room, kitchen, hallway and one of the bedrooms. After hole-digging, painting seemed to be a nice break, and we appreciated seeing a nearly-finished house. The wonderful thing about a house in the final stages of constructions is that it offers the possibility of imagining the personal touches that are to come and the family that will actually live inside. This was particularly evident in the corner bedroom of Ms. Hill’s house, where a piece of paper taped to the window indicated that this particular room needed to be painted pink whereas every other room would be classic taupe. This is Ms. Hill’s youngest daughter’s room, and right now nothing could make our team happier than to be able to paint that room pink for this little girl. This house is speeding towards becoming a home as it takes on the personalities of its future owners. It might be this part of the process that we have been the most excited to help along.

Molly

Frustration and Questions


This service trip has shown me the devastation of the region, and I have enjoyed helping the area progress. Yesterday I went to a site to demolish a house. Initially, demolition did not appeal to me; it seemed depressing. At the site, I learned that demolition takes organization and many hard workers, not dynamite and a wrecking ball. We ripped apart floors, removed foundation cinderblocks from the mud, and took away any other objects on the site. Among other possessions, we found dresses, an axel to a tricycle, and a teddy bear. I felt a strange sadness clearing away a family’s home, but I also understood my part in the process of rebuilding. In only a few weeks of work, a completed house will stand on the same plot of land that I helped to clear. I am a part of a process.

Today, I went to a site to lay down dirt at a previously cleared site. The homeowner at this site requested a new home three years ago—before Katrina hit the area. As I spread orange dirt with a rake, I stepped on ground that felt as if a trampoline were under it. I quickly asked why the ground felt like it did. An Americorps member responded that a septic tank lay under the soil. The soil felt bouncy because it had many roots and water in it. When the grandson of homeowner came over to look at our work, he told us that the springy ground was not the site of a septic tank. He laughed and told us there might be a water table underground. The lack of organization and communication frustrated me. We have encountered countless changes in plans, and I worry about the fate of the area with so few workers and organizers for such a large, demanding problem.

--- Roger

Thursday, June 14, 2007

You Gotta See It To Believe it ...




Our estimable Dean of Students was a "beast" with a sledgehammer. See the image-sequences below for some sense of it. We all stood around in silent awe (horror?) as he whacked away at a set of concrete steps, demolishing it in minutes. The sound effects were even funnier -- each blow was accompanied by a "take that, ____!" No specific names were used -- I promise!

Demo Day!



Today about half of the group went off to demolish a house. “Demo-ing,” as it’s called, was very satisfying. The two pictures above are a more-or-less “before” and “after” shots. Those that follow show us variously pulling up stubborn flooing or even more stubborn half-submerged in mud concrete blocks, or creating a towering “to burn” wood pile. It was hot (very hot), sweaty work and much Gatorade and water were downed, but we escaped without injury (an Americorps member, though, unfortunately got hit with a plank, but she too is now OK). It was a gloriously destructive day!


Handing Out Supplies

Today our group stayed at Camp Coastal to move and distribute supplies to people in the area. We started out by cleaning out a large storage tent. It was a lot of grueling work to lift the wet and damaged boxers as well as heavy insulation, but extremely satisfying knowing it was going to people in need. After a few snake sightings and some mouse poop, we were ready to hand out supplies. The twelve of us hung hand-painted signs that read “Free Paint and Supplies.” Soon after, cars began pulling into the parking lot where we had set everything up and we knew all our hard labor was worthwhile. We met so many great people as 2we handed out piles of paper plates, napkins, paints, windows, cleaning supplies and applesauce.

Things that we take for granted every day were so needed and appreciated it made each of us realize how much people here had gone through. One touching story we heard was from a kind woman who had taken in seven orphans on top of her three children after the hurricane. Despite having so little at the moment of Katrina, she still had the heart to give more.

A welcome thunderstorm arrived, cooling down the intense Mississippi heat. We had to retreat under a tent for the lightning to pass, but we were all eager to get out as soon as possible to continue loading cars. It was a lot of hard work, but rewarding and satisfying to meet so many people who had gone through such a horrible disaster.

-- Razina and Jenna

Life in a Boy’s Bunk



Several people have written asking for images of life in a boy’s bunk. I can’t convey here the odor that David and Bob describe eloquently, so you’ll have to make do with some images, taken by David early on Wed. morning as he woke the boys up!

Wednesday, June 13, 2007

The Beach Beckons ...






Tuesday evening after dinner, the entire group loaded up the vans and headed south to Waveland Beach, along the Gulf Coast. We got there just as the sky was turning rosy with early sunset, and watched the whole show. Meantime, the waves beckoned and the water was soon filled with laughing, splashing kids. Others sat on the jetty, journals in hand, and watched the show. We squelched sand between our toes, relishing its coolness. As dusk fell, the heroic Bob returned from a Walmart trek, armed with popsicles which disappeared beneath the ravening hordes. We returned to Camp Coastal salt-sticky and contented.

Hot Lunch, Every Day

Many of the groups have been working in Pearlington, MS, on the Louisiana line. Every day (beginning 5 days after Katrina struck), the ladies of the Baptist church in the center of town have been providing a hot lunch to 250-300 local residents and volunteers alike – in an air-conditioned parish hall. These lunches have become a highlight of our days, because one sits with volunteers from all over the country (Seattle, Nebraska, Georgia yesterday) as well as people who live a quarter-mile away, laughing, drinking (lots) of water, relaxing. As good as the cornbread fresh from the oven is, it’s the sweaty community that makes the experience.

Learning to Side

For the last two days our group, led by David Rost, worked on putting up siding on a woman’s house, Pam Sanders. The first day started slow and we only got up two sheets of siding, but we came back ready to work the next morning and by lunchtime we had gotten up three more sheets of siding. The work consists of hoisting the siding to its proper height and sliding the new sheet under the old sheet while someone on a ladder nails the board in place. Then the hoisters can step back and the rest of the sheet of siding can be nailed in place. However, the ground at the back of the house was very uneven and there were puddles that needed filling in before the ladder could rest easily in that spot. Consequently, many of the would-be idle workers not nailing were filling in puddles with the Mississippi mud-clay, and some logs as well. After lunch we were told that we needed to average twenty minutes to each sheet in order to finish the side of the house, and though no one admitted it, we didn’t think we could do it. Lo and behold, come 4:30 we had finished that side of the house just in time to be sprinkled by the rain. The whole crew got in at least one nail, and we left the site satisfied and proud of our work.

Louisa S.




Digging ... Digging

At roughly 8 a.m. we left Camp Costal (CC) but did not arrive at the property where we worked until about 8:30. Even though the property lay a mere mile or two from camp, it took us at least 15 minutes to find the site after we pulled off of the main road. When we eventually arrived the property owner Rick courteously greeted us.
“I stayed with my family at my nephews in Biloxi during the storm,” Rick told us during one of many breaks. “On the Monday after when things had settled down, we all went to see my sister’s place and it was gone. We went to my mother’s place and that was gone. We came back here to my place and it was gone.”
We would later learn from an Americorps volunteer that Rick donated the back half of his spacious property to Camp Costal (CC) to build a place for the Americorps volunteers to gather in some privacy from the rest of the campers. Rick’s generosity touched the CA students led by Marco Odiaga as well when he brought us ice cream sandwiches at the end of the day.
Our objective for the day was to connect the new Americorps building to the septic system of Rick’s house. On a day when temperatures reportedly peaked at 105 degrees (plus humidity!!!) most of the work was accomplished before a nearly hour-long lunch break. For relief many students took shelter in the airc-onditioned mini van at regular intervals and downed at least a gallon of water each. At the end of the day, a foot deep and a foot across trench winding for roughly 130 feet connected the two buildings. In addition to the heat, work was hindered during the afternoon due to tree roots that reached up to 5 inches in diameter. Only one major root was conquered—with the addition of a power handsaw—and the rest will await us (and a chainsaw) tomorrow.

-Steven B.

Randy's Story


Randy McGrew sat on his front step, pointing up toward the roof of his FEMA trailer. “I crawled up there during the storm. There was nowhere else to go.” Randy’s dog Freckles buried under his arm, resting her bristling white jowls along the edge of his worn jeans. “I had two other dogs that made it through the storm,” Randy recalled. “They died about two months later, and then I found her chewing at my tires—the tires on my Honda.” He rustled Freckles’ ears and then let his hands drop to his knees. Gianna motioned toward Randy’s trailer. “Did anything make it through?” He laughed, and paused a moment. “My jeans, my shirt—they were on me.” He laughed again, looking down at Freckles and waving his fingers through her coat. “I found Freckles here when she was only a baby, sniffing all around my tires.”
“She’s been a good companion for you,” Gianna said. Randy looked up. “Yeah, a good friend.”
-Katie M

Tuesday, June 12, 2007

Work -- and Play

And a couple more images of yesterday's labors -- and of an epic water balloon contest that cooled us down:





Images of A First Day at Work

There is an eloquent post on the CA website about our trip to-date; I'll update this blog (with a bunch of student writing) tonight when there is more time. Wifi access continues to be scarce, so it involves going off-site.

Herewith, though, a bunch of pictures of us as we worked on a sweltering Day 1. Groups did different things, from removing debris and leveling a future-house site to digging post holes to hold the six-foot beams that will support houses to nailing on siding. Along the way, there was plenty of time to talk with local residents, hearing their stories both of Katrina and of life.







There is an eloquent post on the CA website about our trip to-date; I'll update this blog (with a bunch of student writing) tonight when there is more time. Wifi access continues to be scarce, so it involves going off-site.

Herewith, though, a bunch of pictures of us as we worked on a sweltering Day 1. Groups did different things, from removing debris and leveling a future-house site to digging post holes to hold the six-foot beams that will support houses to nailing on siding. Along the way, there was plenty of time to talk with local residents, hearing their stories both of Katrina and of life.

Monday, June 11, 2007

Camp Coastal


Some images of life at Camp Coastal:




Meeting Miss Evans


On Sunday morning, our group went to a NENA (Neighborhood Empowerment N_____ Association) distribution center based at St. David’s Catholic church where Katrina victims could come to pick up items such as windows and doors for their homes. Miss Mary Evans was fairly noticeable today at our site in New Orleans as she was wearing her Sunday best, a yellow skirt and shirt outfit covered in pink roses. Her cheery clothing was my in to a conversation. With a small compliment I unleashed her story. A former middle school special education teacher, Miss Evans came to the distribution center to pick up windows for her “disaster home” (her partially destroyed home). She told us about the church of which she has been a member for 54 years, and when she found out we came down from Massachusetts she excitedly told us about all her family in the Boston area. She is now getting ready to take her great-grandchildren up for a visit. A woman known to many for her happiness (she told us a story about someone’s amazement at her constantly cheery attitude), Miss Evans was a character who definitely made my day.

-- MT

Sunday, June 10, 2007

Wifi Issues

A quick word -- the wifi at Camp Coastal has so far been rather fickle (and mostly inoperative). I have found a local coffeehouse w/ wifi, but I'll only be able to get there once a day or so. So assume that I'll keep the blog updated as frequently as possible (and with lots of images from everyone's cameras), but there may be a lot of posts uploaded at one time.

Afternoon in the French Quarter

Most of us (in small groups) are spending Sunday afternoon wandering around the French Quarter, grubby boots and all. Over here, it really is like nothing ever happened – and carefree tourists are all over the place. I just took the image to the right with my computer’s camera (imperfect – sorry); it’s across from where I’m sitting with coffee as I type this. Voodoo merchants, jazz, today’s amazing Zydeco festival – it’s a beautiful summer Sunday here, a world away from our morning’s work.

Other imags from our afternoon in the French Quarter:

Lower Ninth Ward Holy Cross Neighborhood


Greetings! We woke up early Sunday morning and headed into New Orleans, to the Holy Cross neighborhood of the lower Ninth Ward. We were split into two groups; one group worked to clean up one of the neighborhood’s treasures, the Doullut Steamboat House (one of a pair built at the start of the 20th century by Milton P. Doullut, a steamboat captain). This house, just behind the Mississippi River levee, survived, but the image to the left (from the web) will give you a sense of what it once was. We powerwashed and cleaned and weeded and mulched and planted (lots), to ready the place for a reception tonight for George Soros’ Open Society Institute, a major fundraising effort to benefit the neighborhood. Some broke off to help several elderly residents with their gardens, while still others helped ready a space which will become an art center for children in the area.

The Orange Invasion Arrives at Camp Coastal


We arrived safely (as cell phones have doubtlessly assured you by now!), albeit a bit late, and found our way to Camp Coastal. It probably surprises no one that there weren’t many grumbles about a 10:30 lights out, as we were all exhausted. At least one cabin insisted on a bedtime story ( !) ...

Here are of the orange-invasion (sorry, Ukraine) that was 56 CA folk wandering through airports in uniform bright orange shirts. David called it right – it was far easier to spot one another and there were enough of us looking silly that it became fun.