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A Shower Strike Like None Other

Wow.  This year’s Shower Strike fundraiser for our clean water systems in Kenya is getting crazy awesome.  We already have 84 people registered online to go “on strike” with us (and there are even more on teams), and we are getting great coverage by local media- here and in Denver, The Woodlands, Calgary Canada, and possibly more- we keep searching the web for more new stuff.

If you missed our segment on Fox, you can check it out here:  No Showers for a Good Cause

We’re most excited, at the moment, about our big celebration on this Sunday eve to kick off our Shower Strike week. The Austin Cosmopolitan Rotary Club is hosting our H2O 4 Africa: Shower Strike Launch Party at Antone’s (on 5th in Austin) at 7pm.  Check out additional deets below.

In addition to amazing talent and ridiculous prizes, we also have some special surprises in store.  We hope to see you there!

(Also, spreading the word is a very cool thing to do.)

www.ShowerStrike.com

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Posted in About Town, Events, In the News, Information, Shower Strike 2011.

Tagged with antone's, austin, austin cosmopolitan rotary club, drilling, drought, east africa, fox news, fundraiser, july 24th 2011, kenya, lost bayou ramblers, manteca beat, party, prizes, shower strike, water, well aware, wells.


Top Ten Reasons You Should go on Shower Strike This Month

Hide your children and lock the front door.  The Shower Strike is back!  From July 24th-31st, brave people from all over the states and elsewhere will be eschewing the shower for our clean water systems in East Africa.  And, this year it’s bigger, it’s hotter (literally) and it’s more competitive than ever!

Oh yes, and it’s EASIER than ever to be a part of this no-bathing business.  This year, all you need to do is sign up on ShowerStrike.com (takes 2 minutes), and you’ll start receiving Shower Striker updates and be all set to start your campaign on July 24th at midnight!

But why???  Why would you do such a thing?  Well, here are our top ten reasons why.

10. You secretly hate being clean anyway, and here’s your excuse (a great one, at that) to be dirty for a whole week!

9. You despise your boss and are dying for a reason to annoy him/her… your wretched stink will be the perfect tool for your surreptitious desires.

8. You won’t have to clean the bathtub that week. (But you’ll need a pressure washer for it after your fist post-strike washing.)

7. The “greasy hair look” is in again this year.

6. You wanna blend in with the vagrants so maybe YOU will get a little extra change when you’re downtown!

5. You’re tired of having to pick your duds out all the time, and while you’re striking, you get to wear the same T-shirt every day… no brainer!

4. The malodorous vapors that will emanate from your body from its cleansing neglect will help you kick-start that diet you’ve been meaning to try for, like… ever.

3. You’re a hard-core environmentalist and you’ll jump on any chance to conserve water.

2. A friend or spouse is making you.

And the number one reason you should shower strike with us….

You believe in our cause and are willing to be ridiculous for a week so that others can have clean water for life!


The strike will take place from July 24th-31st.  Check out more details on ShowerStrike.com.

And, don’t miss out on our AMAZING Launch Party in Austin, Tx at Antone’s on July 24th- event on Facebook here.

$1,000 (one shower strike) can provide clean and plentiful drinking water to 200 orphans in Mithini. And all that it takes is skipping a few showers.  Don’t ya wanna?

A drink of clean water is a luxury where we are working;  a shower is unheard of.  It’s least we can do to skip ours for a few days so that others can simply survive.

Be a part of what the stink is all about!  Pass this along!
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Posted in About Town, Events, Shower Strike 2011.

Tagged with africa, aid, austin, clean water, drought, fundraiser, kenya, shower strike, well aware, wells.


What’s Happenin’

We’ve been out making the presentation circuit a lot lately- chatting up our new projects and the impending Shower Strike- and the guilt for not posting here has become heavy enough to affect some action.  We were actually speaking to Austin’s green (before green was cool) EnviroMedia group this morning (they are going on Sower Strike with us, thunderous applause!), and I really struggled to fit our updates into a 10 minute schpeel, so I had better relay them to you now before I’ll need to post a treatise instead.

Partnerships for Long-term Community Success

In a post earlier this year, I explained that Well Aware is teaming up with strong nonprofit partners who will work in the communities where we provide water in additional areas of need- so that we can truly provide each community with the tools, planning and resources they need to succeed and sustain (you’ll hear that “sustain” word a lot from us now- it’s the only way we wanna work).  We’ve added new partners and invite you to check ‘em out if you like on our website- Partners of Well Aware.

One of our more recent and super exciting new partnerships is with The Nobelity Project.  Also an Austin-based org, this group (founded by actor/author/filmmaker, Turk Pipkin) has been working on education projects in Kenya for the past several years.  Just last year, they completed the construction of a school (including high school) with a rain water court that supplies more water than they can even consume right now.  Nobelity is a a solid, ethical and effective organization, and we are pretty darn stoked about working with them on joint projects.  We know that the struggle that Kenya faces, on a whole, can most effectively be addressed by educating its future citizens and leaders.

Turk Pipkin and the children on Mahiga Hope School

You can actually check out the projects that are already underway with Nobelity on our website.  That’s a pretty convenient (and only minimally annoying) segue to our next new thing.

Democratized Giving to Well Aware

We decided that YOU should be able to select exactly which water system you would like to contribute to- and also be able to easily keep up with what’s happening with that project.  So, we have “packaged” each of our water projects in a menu page on our website.  This page lists every water system we are currently working on, as well as the overall deets, including our Partner Organization, number of people effected, power source used and long-term work there.

Each project also has its own Project Page where we post even more info, such as images, maps, project proposals, status changes and more.  So, you can know exactly what is going on where you have given your dollar.  As soon as the water system is completed, the same page can still be found in our Completed Projects section, and we will continue to post updates on that community’s growth and needs indefinitely.

a snippet from out Current Projects menu

The thought behind our new “democratized giving” concept is to give our supporters get to choose which project means the most to them (and they are all individually unique) and also know how that project is advancing because of their help.  We like it.  We hope you do, too.  Well Aware’s Current Projects

Community Commitment

We have been evaluating the true needs and possibilities for community success pretty thoroughly over the past several months.  We have found that without appropriate community involvement and commitment, these projects have a significantly lower chance of long-term success and sustainability (there’s that word again).  So, we’ve implemented some measures that will ensure that our communities are fully involved and have a plan for their own responsible growth once they have a brand new water system.

How so?  There are several levels here- we launch community awareness campaigns and employ local labor- but so that I don’t lose you here to prime time TV, I will point out the key component.  We require that each community and/or partner organization submit a project proposal to Well Aware for our review.  We work very closely with our friends in Kenya on these plans, and once they are accepted, they have a very clear and realistic plan for their community for decades to come.  You can find these on our project pages on our website, too.  It’s a win-win.  We have faith that each community will thrive on their own.  And the community has confidence in the same.

Other Cool Organizational Stuff

  • We have recruited a hydrogeologist (and super guy) to our team who is helping us be environmentally responsible with our water systems; ensuring we select the most sustainable (the winning word!) and realistic water option in each area; and providing consistent technical support- he translates things like “submersible cable splicing joint” and “crystalline solar module”
  • We have two part-time employees in Kenya now.  They are awesome and make us so much more efficient!
  • We have an amazing new Board of Directors that is keeping us solid and strong.
  • We’re back to Kenya in August!
  • Our annual public fundraiser, the Shower Strike is new and improved… another segue, you see.

This Part Stinks (But it Really Doesn’t)

Dum-du-dum-dum.  Shower Strike 2011 is coming soon to a friend or family member near you!  We’ll post another blog later this week with the Strike skinny (there’s too much good stuff to tell, and you’ve already been a trooper to read this far).  But, you can sing up to go on Shower Strike with us today at ShowerStrike.com!

We have made it simpler and funner (what, we like that word) than ever!  You can be a part of this event from anywhere on the globe- and from your couch if you want.  Even if you can’t join the Strike (we know, we know- clean is a good thing), we would really, really appreciate your support by joining our event on Facebook.  And maybe you could spread it around a bit?  The event, not the filth.  Our goal is 100K this year, and we’re pretty sure you guys are going to help us get there!

If you made it through all of that, thank you!  We have been busy.  It means everything to us to be working in Kenya the very best way we know how, and we always love new ideas and feedback, so bring em on!

More soon.  Thank you for clicking in!

Well Aware

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Posted in Information, Messages to Readers, Shower Strike 2011.

Tagged with africa, austin, clean water, community, drilling, fundraiser, holistic, hydrogeology, kenya, nobelity project, nonprofit, partnerships, pipeline, rainwater, shower strike, turk pipkin, well aware.


Report From Our Final Days in Kenya, Tumaini

Jambo Rafikis. We’re starting off our final day in Kenya, and we’ve been to more places that I can even remember anymore.  Mike informed us that we have already already added almost 3000 kilometers to his matatu’s odometer.  He’s been an incredible sport.  He never complains and is always going an extra distance to make sure that we are safe and comfortable.

Mike gets to chill a bit in Nkoilale

When we left Namanga on Sunday, we drove a good way through Nairobi and on to Kooi, a rural community off of the highway on the way to Mombassa.

Traditionally a farming community, all of the approximately 4000 members of the community there are now struggling to survive without water. The only river that provided water is now almost always dry, due to the drought and other damming projectst that have diverted the water away from their area.

some water in the river in Kooi after a rain

I am particularly interested in this community because of the potential I see there for the advancement of the women.  Kooi hasn’t yet been introdced to the ways in which women and their education can change the future course of an area whose cycle of poverty and oppression would otherwise remain stagnant.

A few women from Kooi have already formed small committees amongst themselves to grow seedlings by the river when it rains (very infrequently), as well as structuring a coop for a community fund so help feed and support the local orphans.

orphaned children is a rampant problem in Kooi

Their efforts, however, won’t have much impact unless they and the community can have access to water.  They currently retreive what they can get from digging holes by the river bed when it rains.

hole by the river bed to collect unpolluted water

I was so excited to learn that Mike’s wife is actually from an area near here, and is eager to volunteer to lead these women into success and prosperity for their families.  Then men don’t do much in Kooi, but the women and youth are desperate to help us help them, and we want to encourage and enable their future vision!

the current community leaders of Kooi

the crops aren't surviving in Kooi

I have to note, too, that we also had the great pleasure to meet Mike’s daughter, Joy, who is the spitting image of Mike.  And the sharpest six-year-old I have ever met.

Mike and his beautiful family

From Kooi, we drove back to Nairobi to crash that night, and the next morning our itinerary led us to Nakuru.  We were scheduled to meet with a community leader of the village of Kiamunyi, but he informed us that their water committee was unable to meet until the following morning, so we were able to catch up on work a bit.  I also treated myself to a $20 Kenyan massage at a Nakuru business hotel, and holy wow.  I needed that.  It’s no Mary Ellen Fine massage from Austin, but flying her over may have been a wee bit more expensive.

We met with the Kiamunyi water committee the next morning, and we were also met by the chief and community elders.  Well Aware is currently partnering with Austin’s Partnership for Africa, and the founder of that organization referred us to this area because they have many plans to develop and improve their area if they have the water to do so.  Their first priority is the construction of an much needed orphanage and implementation of community farming and education.

the queue for the only water source currently in Kiamunyi

We were touched by their readiness and passion for a better Kiamunyi.  I can’t yet fully report on our participation in this area, because we need to conduct more thorough research there.  But, if we find that our aid is possible, we hope to answer their heartfelt pleas for help.

retrieving water in Kiamunyi

I forgot to mention that, on our way to Nakuru, we had a chance to stop by the Rotary Club of Naivasha’s Safe House project there.  They have been very successful in implementing efficient and well maintained water collection and boreholes in Naivasha, and we were able to gather a good deal on information from this endeavor and from the project’s manager, Richard McGonnell (a Brittish expat in Kenya who is a hoot and a remarkable person).

the children of the Naivasha Safe House

Yesterday, we braced ourselved for the long and bumpy (understatement) drive to Nkoilale, where Well Aware helped to complete the second phase of an incredible pipeline project for the entire community.

gate for the primary school in Nkoilale

There is a natural spring in the hills nearby, and the project executed by one of our partners, Stitching Nkoilale, has managed to now draw over 100,000 liters of water PER DAY of pure water to service the entire community.

the dry riverbed where the women and children on Nkoilale once collected contaminated water

one of the severl faucets now in Nkoilale

When we visited Nkoilale last August, we toured the primary school, children’s dormatories, community center and the beginnings of the pipeline that the project has accomplished since its inception there in 2005.  When we returned yesterday, the water was aready gushing from five different faucets at the school alone and two other faucets sttrategically placed in the surrounding villages.

Nkoilale primary school and full water tank (one of several)

the older children mind direct the younder ones at the tank by the school

another water hose by the school

The number of children at the school has almost doubled since the water is there, and they have more supply than they even know what to do with now.  They wash and drink whenever they wish.  And no member of the community has to walk any more than less than a kilometer to retrieve as much water as they want from the Nkoilale’s faucets.

an elderly Maasai woman looks on happily at children playing in the water

We were in awe of the progress and blooming prosperity and happiness there.

happy, healthy kids in Nkoilale

many more cows now

The director of the project, Gert Bomhoff, of Holland, was in Nkoilale yesterday for an elaborate celebration they held to mark te beginning of a new future for Nkoilale.  We were able to be there to witness the joyous occassion.

dancing and singing for the event

Gert and I also fit in a little business, since he has agreed to advise on any future pipelining initiatives that Well Aware will undertake.  We are extremely fortunate to have such a relationship.

making plans

Today, I have a few meetings in Nairobi, and then we will set to the air once more to return to Austin, Texas. I cannot put into words the volumes that we have learned and experienced on this trip.  I am more heavy-hearted than ever from the suffering and desperation we have witnessed this time in Kenya.  But I am also more hopeful and confident than ever that Well Aware can be a large part of changing that.

our motivation

We could not achieve anything here without your attention and support.  Please know that by just following what we are doing here, you are part of the work we do.

In the next month, we will be adding our Project Review and Approval Procedures and Requirements, as well as listing detail and expenses for each project on our website.  I will also post them here, too.

I am also posting many of our trip photos on our Fan Page here:  Well Aware Facebook Fan Page

Thank you.  See you soon, Austin!
Sarah, Bradley, Mike and Kenya

tree climbing in Nkoilale

boma babies

enjoying the books generously donated by Stacey Moreno of Austin, TX

Mahiga beauties

hoops in Mahiga

Mahiga hello

we plant trees for the Nobelity Project

Mike supervises in Mithini

Posted in Reports from the Field, The Drought in Kenya, Travel.

Tagged with africa, austin, boreholes, charity, clean water, drilling, drought, kenya, Kiamunyi, Kooi, nairobi, nkoilale, nonprofit, pipeline, raiwater collection, texas, well aware.


Internets Again, Tunashughulika

We are finally back online!  So much has happened since I was able to post three days ago, and there is no way I can type everything we have seen, learned, felt and experienced in the past few days in this entry.  So, I will spare you my verbosity (you’re welcome) and try to stick to gist.  (And, please forgive me for typos and incoherence- we’re sorta beat.)

I think I left off on Tuesday night after our day in Nairobi.  Well, Wednesday morning was off to a late start because I woke up feeling pretty sick.  We were worried, but after some Kenyan soda and a little time, I perked up and we drove out of the intensity of Nairobi and into the rural rolling hills of Maai Mahiu.

Well Aware is planning a borehole in this area to service the community of 40,000 people, as well as a center that will provide therapy and education to special needs children, HIV/AIDS community education, skills training and employment for women and horticultural training and resources (and much more).

When we arrived, we were met by Zane (Director of Comfort the Chidren-creators of the project) and Jeremiah, the project manager. We met briefly to go over the progress made on project prep and then caravanned out to the beautiful piece of land where the center will be developed.  Having our our feet on the very soil where the dreams of CTC will be realized was exhillerating.

Jeremiah explains the layout

the boys at Maai Mahiu

Mike then drove Bradley and me about 30 minutes down the road to a neighboring town, where we attended the Rotary Club of Naivasha’s weekly meeting (this is the club that has generously agreed to entertain our RI grant).

Every member was incredibly welcoming.  I was tense with anticipation when walking into the room, but was soon laughing with the group and sipping a Tusker.  It was a wonderful time, and we made great progress.  Bradley and I are both looking forward to meeting with our new Naivasha friends again soon.

asked to speak on the spot

We had an excellent evening with Zane, Jeremian and Mike of planning, trouble-shooting and even a little bit of relaxing.  Then we slept like babies.

Thursday morning began at the crack of dawn, when we ate breakfast and then headed up north to the Shaba Game Reserve to see the Daaba school that Turk Pipkin and the Nobelity Project recommended we evaluate.

But, we had to stop in Mahiga to see the children of Mahiga Hope High School (Nobelity Project) to witness the breathtaking progress there on the school and one-of-a-kind rain water court.

the rainwater court by the Nobelity Project

future leaders of Kenya from Mahiga Hope

We had to drag ourselves away from the kids and pile back into the matatu to get to Shaba before dark.  What we found at the Sarova Shaba Lodge was nothing short of an oasis in an 11 day stint of “rustic” accommodations for us.

The property manager, Anthony, offered to host us for the evening at his gorgeous property that was perched just beside the river and surrounded by natural flowing springs.  We felt ultimately spoiled and enjoyed a delicious meal and extraordinary bird viewing from our beautiful room in the middle of the reserve.  We felt deeply grateful for the hospitality- and for the excellent night’s sleep.

We arose the following day to venture out to the Daaba School, not even 20 kilometers from the luxury we experienced at the lodge.  We were referred to this area after Turk witnessed the devastating conditions there during his stay at Sarova last month.

What we saw there will remain in my memory, and in my heart, for ever.  Next to two small and dilapidated school houses, in the middle of the most arid area of Kenya I have seen yet, was this. The community and the school’s only source of water is this 50 foot deep hand-dug water well that the school children were climbing down into, using sharply terraced stone outcroppings, to hoist buckets of dirty water up to eachother to ground level to then use to drink.  A young girl was killed in this well last year retrieving water.  We were horrified. But, there is another borehole on this property that needs only to be powered updated.  After a little bit of investigation, we have learned that it might only take the installation of solar panels and piping to be able to yield unlimited pure water to the school and entire community. The 213 children who currently receive an education here could expand exponentially with this kind of access to their most basic, most crucial and most scarce resource.  Well Aware wants to help.

three grades in one small class room at Daaba

After Daaba, we departed Shaba and were on the road to Mithini in Ithica Hills.   After several hours on roads of varying degrees of crazy, we arrived in the stunning hills of Ithanga.

If you followed our blog from our trip last August, you might remember the orphanage in which we volunteered that was was completely self-sustained by low-water agriculture, methane gas production and solar electricity.

Geoffrey, the project manager there has planned a duplicate of this amazing establishment in Mithini- about 40 kilometers away from the original. Sadly, the conditions in Mithini appear even more bleak than did the area of Makuyu (Geoffrey’s first orphanage). There are more orphans here than can even be accounted for.  And, the government’s neglect, combined with unimaginable poverty has left these children forgotten and doomed.

We saw photos of two twin sisters who were squatting in a boma nearby who are nine years old- but who appear only four or five and are losing their hair due to malnutrition.

she's nine

In only five months, Geoffrey has already erected a structure to house nine children, two staff and two volunteers in Mithini.  They have already sought out many of the children in the area that they could reach and nurture if only they had water to sustain a new orphanage here.  They will also be able to build a primary school and replicate the wildly successful holistic structure of Makuyu there.

Geoffrey and Mithini children

We were honored to be able to stay with the children in Mithini last night.  We woke up before dawn to gather their jerry cans for water collection and trapsed behind them down an embankment to fill the cans and drag them back up the hill for the morning’s breakfast and washing (this was a luxury because it had just rained- the typical journey for water for them is over five kilometers to a dirty riverbed).

water hole

Well Aware will be drilling the borehole in Mithini in August.

me and my new Mithini friends

It was difficult to leave Mithini.  But, we had to be on our way this morning to Namanga to check on the borehole that we drilled there last August.

What we found there when we arrived about eight hours later was women and children drinking, bathing and playing in the the crystal-clear and aggressively flowing water spitting from the faucet attached to the well.  As a matter of fact, the flow from the Namanga well was increasing in volume daily, as reported by a local Maasai leader.  It was a joyous moment

I want everyone who participated in or contributed to our 2010 Shower Strike to know that this is what you created.

And so now, we are bunked up at the Namanga River Lodge for a few hours of shut-eye so that we can get an early start to Kooi tomorrow (another area to scout- East of Naoribi and about six hours from here). The days after that will include visits to Nakuru (for scouting), Oltinga (site check), back to Naivasha (partner project visit), Nkoilale (site check) and, finally, a few more meeting in Nairobi and into to air back to the states on Thursday.  Whew.

We have had, and will have still, some very busy days.  But we are so glad to see progress and so very hopeful for the future of the areas we see in need. I can’t assure you we’ll be back to report tomorrow, but I can promise you we will try!  We miss you and can’t wait to tell you more.

Asante Sana!

And goodnight.

Namanga faucets

full of water in Namanga

dinner in Mithini

Posted in Reports from the Field, The Drought in Kenya, Travel.

Tagged with africa, austin texas, borehole, charity, clean water, Daaba, drought, Ithanga Hills, kenya, Maai Mahiu, Mithini, Naivasha, nonprofit, rain water collection, Sarova Shaba, solar power, Travel, water, well aware.


We’re Back in Kenya! Siku Moja

We have returned to Kenya this month for Well Aware bia (business), and despite the onerous journey over, we’re pretty anxious to begin our adventure here.  I miss this country when I’m home, and waking up this morning to the smell of burning eucalyptus and the sound of the matatus hooting and braking was an impelling  nostalgia.  Even better was getting to see Mike’s (our famous driver) shining face at the airport as we wearily dragged ourselves and our luggage through customs and out into the damp Nairobi night air.  We are fortunate to have such good friends here.

downtown Nairobi

Our objectives on this trip:  to negotiate and schedule future drilling activity, to check on our completed projects, to review our 2011 project sites, and to evaluate as many other locations as we can possibly squeeze in for future work.

It is only Bradley, Mike and me on tour this time, and I think we’ve managed to put one over on our internal clocks, because we were out bright and (relatively) early today to tackle our business in Nairobi so that we can hit the road tomorrow.  Our first stop was Drilling Spares- the drilling company we have used on all of our boreholes so far.  We have developed a good relationship with the owner and he seems eager to accommodate Well Aware’s future endeavors.  As a matter of procedure, we always procure at least three additional quotes from other companies, but our continued relationship with Spares looks promising (which is super news since working with these companies here can be a bit of a challenge).

Oltinga borehole, Drilling Spares

Our next few errands would bore you, but you might like to know a little tip I learned today at the ATM.  So, it seems to be that if you wait longer that 30 seconds to yank your shillings out of the cash dispenser in the machines here, they will yank it right back.  And after a tedious wait attempting to sort this out with the bank, I’m told it will take up to two weeks to get it credited back to my account.  Yeah, lesson learned.

The peak of our day was our visit to the Boston Childrens Centre in one of the slums in Kayole (Narobi).  Brief back story:  we are now working with an organization called Hydrogeologists Without Borders who will be providing experts to supervise all of our water projects going forward.  Their Director, Laurra Olmsted, suggested that we visit this school and rescue home, as they are in dire need of water to continue to operate.

We were greeted by the loving and fully animated tots there who gave us a thorough tour of the three buildings that make up the centre.  Stephen Okwaro, the headmaster of the school, then met us to explain the history of his project there and the water crisis they now face.

our hosts at Boston Childresn Centre

This area of Nairobi was once piped with municipal water supply, but in recent years, the pipes lie useless and dry in the ground.  The population of the city has outgrown the capabilities of their resources, and there is no hope of returning water to this area by means of city support in the future.  This is, sadly, a very common problem in the outlying areas of Nairobi, particlarly in the slums, which get little to no attention from the government.

The school now accommodates almost 500 students, many of whom are attending without fees so that they can go to school at all.  Prior to being admitted here, and if they were going at all, they were walkng 20 kilometers to get to another school.  Stephen was a teacher when the center was originally founded in 2002 and is now a remarkable headmaster and director of their operations.  He grew up there in Kayole and has enormous dedication to ensuring that these precious children can continue to receive an education. He also has dreams of expanding the school and their farm to admit more students and become more self-sustaining.

Stephen from Bostons Childrens Centre

We left the center with a heavy mix of emotions.  We now have a desperate desire to help this community.  The WA Board and I have much research to do before we know if we can, however.  We have heard that it is close to impossible to procure a permit to drill in Nairobi.  There are over 5,000 boreholes in this city, and the government isn’t eager to approve the drilling of any more.  Oh, and by the way, 90% of those 5,000 are privately owned.  And those land owners aren’t too keen on anyone else sucking up “their” water.  See where I’m going with this?   The corruption here can be beyond deplorable.

But we are still going to fully investigate.  I hope with all of my heart that something can be done to save these kids.

sweet baby boy at Bostons

We’re back at our lodging now and tying up the day.   Bradley has been an amazing support and professional help.  I’m really not sure I could pull all of this off without him.

Mike has set a very logical schedule for the rest of our trip (those of you who know me realize that may not be my forte), and we’re off to Maai Mahiu tomorrow to check out the location of the borehole being drilled there this year by Well Aware and attend the Naivasha Rotary Club meeting.  (Naivasha Rotary has generously offered to sponsor our Rotary Intrernational Matching grant that will provide funding for two borehols this autumn.)

The next days will include trips to Samburu, Makuyu, Ithanga, Namanga, Oltinga, Nakuru and Nkoilale.  I realize that didn’t make a whole lot of sense to most of you, but I’ll explain as we go- never really been at a loss for written word.

So many folks have been immensely kind to us in prep for this trip, so I wanna give a shout-out in each post to someone who has made this jaunt across the Atlantic way better for Bradley and me.  Today, thank you so much Board members Sarah Nemec and Amanda Torres for having EVERYTHING covered state-side while I’m away.  You are amazing.  XO.

I hope to be posting again tomorrow eve with a report from the day.  Thank you for tuning in!  And thank you for your loyal support.  None of our work would be possible without you.

Pendana,
Sarah & Bradley

Posted in Reports from the Field, The Drought in Kenya, Travel.

Tagged with africa, austin, boston childrens home, bradley markham, clean water, drilling, drought, kenya, nairobi, pipeline, rain water collection, rescue, sarah evans, texas, water wells.


A Quick Click for the Cause

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You can help us receive funding for our next water well by a quick click of your mouse.  Please join our Fan Page on Facebook to enter us into a competition for local nonprofits to receive project funding!

WE ARE NO LONGER A FACEBOOK GROUP, and our upgraded Fan Page is brand new! We will have more functionality and better visibility in cyberspace by making this move- to reach more people to support our cause. And, if we win the contest, we could be so much closer to completing our next water project!

Also, if you choose to forward to a friend or two, the AfriGnomes will re-emerge!  Ok, so they were going to do that anyway, but the little guys really want you to like us.

We thank you so much for your loyal support!  Your attention to our cause helps us help these guys.

You can check out all of our projects and progress on our website: www.wellawareworld.org

Posted in Information, Messages to Readers, Social Networking, The Drought in Kenya.

Tagged with africa, afrignomes, austin, cause, charity, clean water, contest, drilling, drought, facebook, holistic community, Ithanga Hills, kenya, safe water, water, well aware, wells.


Beyond the Water Well: A New Year and New Strategy for Well Aware

When I woke up on New Year’s Day, my very first thought was that I would make it this year’s resolution to blog here more- that, and to exercise regularly.  I have failed at both.  However, we will be posting more frequent entries here this year, because we have an incredible team who is constantly sending me fodder to expound upon.  And, so, I present to you, our first blog (of many more to come) of 2011.

I never realized, back in June of 2006, when I signed up for this cause, what an incredible education I would accumulate.  It may be a similar pattern and curve for any nonprofit management:  1) a deep submersion into the desperate need and passion to help, 2)  a rude awakening to the obstacles and difficulty in helping and the revelation that passion needs to be met with business savvy and constant organizational vigilance, and finally, 3)  an acceptance that any act that we execute or support is forever our responsibility and that it’s all a hell of a lot of work.

But the work is welcomed, and it’s the ultimate labor of love.  And we, as an organization, have also been very lucky to have had very meaningful support from infancy until now.

The responsibility to our supporters and the people we are able to help includes (perhaps more so when working in a different country) focusing on our educations- research, followup, more research, and more followup.  And, while our intentions have always been very good, and our efforts exhaustive, we have, admittedly, made mistakes along the way that we now get to proactively apply to our work.  It’s only through our pursuit of new knowledge and application of lessons learned that we can be the most efficient and effective organization we can be.

I could write a book now (and just might attempt that one day) on everything we have learned and how.  But for now, I want to let you in on arguably the most important new adjustment we have made to overcome the obstacle that is rampant water project abandonment in Kenya.

You may know that in the amount of time that it takes you to brush your teeth, two children will die from water-born disease.  This statistic only accounts for illness caused by unsanitary water, and not that which results from malnutrition, warfare and other devastation that are products of water deprivation.

What you probably don’t know is that a large portion of this diseased water is coming from a water well.  60% of boreholes in Kenya don’t work at all, and a majority of the ones that do work are not maintained properly.  Lack of sanitation training, community abandonment, and little or no water testing and treatment are resulting in drastically increasing cases of death from typhoid, dysentery and cholera.  And, as usual, most of the victims are infants and young children.

All of us working on water in Africa have great intentions.  But we are learning that good will and project completion are just not enough- and potentially very dangerous without every other measure that must come next.  Well Aware has developed this new model to insure substantial change and true sustainability in the communities in which we work.

I am honored to introduce some of our new nonprofit partners who have committed to assisting Well Aware in seeing that these measures are fully implemented and sustained.

Geoffrey Ndungu of Watoto Wa Baraka (Kenya NGO)

Geoffrey is overseeing our borehole in Ithica Hills and will advise on sustainability, sanitation and care for children with HIV.  He created a completely self-sustainable orphanage- right down to methane gas to cook with from bovine “byproduct”- in a rural area north or Nairobi, and has years of experience in sanitation and HIV training.

He also has experience and proficiency in post-education job placement for orphaned children in Kenya.

Elijah Mwangi of Partnership for Africa (U.S. 501(c)3 and NGO Kenya)

Elijah manages an Austin-based nonprofit which organizes and conducts lectures in Kenya on tribal peace.  One of the most prevalent and tragic reason that children are orphaned in Kenya is inter-tribal warfare.  Elijah and his team have attracted tribal and governmental leaders from all over Kenya, as well as university professors from the U.S. for his Peace Talks.  He will be providing community tools for establishing and maintaining inter-tribal harmony in the communities in which we work.  Well Aware learned about the importance of this element through Partnership for Africa, and we are quite lucky to have their help.

Elijah also has years of experience in orphan placement and care, and Well Aware is hoping to assist his nonprofit goal to establish his own orphanage in a devastatingly dry area of rural Kenya.

Joshua (Mike) Matuku

Mike has been our devoted transportation specialist since we have been drilling in Kenya, and has graciously agreed to be Well Aware’s project auditor.  We are conducting quarterly audits of every project that we have executed or contributed to for as long as we exist as an organization (and we plan for that to be a very, very long time).  Our audits include actual site visits once every three months to ensure that every component of the well and community structure set up for the well is in proper and working order.

Mike is not only the safest and most masterful driver we have ever known, but he is also educated on general borehole function and speaks a bit of almost all languages in Kenya.  He has become a photographer, translator, negotiator, chaperon, treasurer, travel agent, body guard and friend.  We are proud and privileged to have him on our team and looking out for our communities.

Jeremiah Kuria of Comfort the Children (U.S. 501(c)3 and Kenya NGO)

Jeremiah is currently the project manager at Comfort the Children International, based in Austin Texas and located in Kenya.  He has been integral in the first stages of our work Maai Mahiu (the location of our next borehole) and will continue to be of assistance in water well oversight and management.

He will also be coordinating the implementation of a school for special needs children, skills training and employment of local women and a relationship with the U.N. for physical therapy for children with physical disabilities.

In rural Kenya, most children with physical or mental handicap are abandoned or severely neglected.  Jeremiah is working to change that where we work.

Richard McGonnell with the Rotary Club of Navaisha and The Naivasha Safe House (NGOs Kenya)

Richard has been the president of the Rotary Club of Naivasha and is founder of the Safe House there.  He has also worked on many borehole projects over the years with other Rotary clubs and NGO’s.  He has agreed to assist us in setting up community structure for lifetime care of the water wells, as well as mobilizing the Kenyan companies we employ to construct the well.

You can find more information, as well as websites for these orgs and our other partners, on our website’s Partner Page.

Well Aware is also currently working with Rotary International’s efforts to establish water sources in Kanya that do not break down, taint the supply or become neglected.

In summary:  We will always monitor, always question, and always learn.  Thank you for trusting us to do this work.

If you would for us to write or report on any issue relating to our cause, or about our organization, please let us know!  If at all possible, we will be obliged to comply.  We would really like to initiate a more interactive discourse on these issues.

Thank you, as always, for tuning in.  Simply reading this blog entry is a step toward a better Kenya.  Passing it on would be two.

Ubuntu,

Well Aware

www.wellawareworld.org

Resources for this article:

The Water Project: www.thewaterproject.org

News From Africa:  www.newsfromafrica.org

Tree Hugger:  www.treehugger.com

Posted in In the News, Information, Messages to Readers, Reports from the Field, The Drought in Kenya.

Tagged with africa, austin, comfort the children, communities, drilling, drought, holistic, kenya, partnership for africa, sarah evans, water wells, watoto wa baraka, well aware.


September News from Well Aware

If you missed our Newsletter with updates on our new projects and events, you can view it here!   We have also been hearing that our donation link is not working in this email, so if you want to make a contribution, you can do so here with this big, obnoxious button.

The people that We serve are so deeply apreciative of your attention to our mission to bring life-saving drinking water to the people of rural Kenya.  We will continue to seek the most substantial and sustainable change for people in dire need.

You can sign up to receive our monthly newsletters by entering your email here.

Have a wonderful beginning of “Autumn”!

Posted in Donate, Information, Messages to Readers.

Tagged with africa, clean water, drought, drought relief, kenya, newsletter, water, well aware.


Great News from Kenya!

As most of you know, we recently returned from another journey to Kenya to complete our second water well in Namanga.  Thank you so much for following our progress there and for all of your incredible support and encouragement!

When we were there, we were also able to visit an area called Nkoilale.  This part of Kenya is very special to Well Aware, since it is the region in which one of our original founding members was born, and it was the inspiration for the inception of our cause.  We have always hoped to be able to aid this community and provide life-saving water for a previously very desperate people.

On our visit there, we were to thrilled to learn that another organization called Stitching Nkoilale has been working in this area for several years rebuilding the primary school and erecting a community center, in addition to launching a sophisticated water project.  The pipeline system, that feeds from a plentiful natural spring, is already pouring water into a 90,000 tank.  This community of approximately 2000 people now have access to more water than five wells could have provided.  We just received copies of all of the paperwork granting the structures and access to the community, as well as these amazing pictures from Nkoilale!

pipeline to the main water tank

pure spring water flowing from the tank

90,000 liter water tank

Gert Bomhof, the Director of Stitching Nkoilale enjoys the flow

This is where they were retrieving their water before this project…

We are so happy for our friends there, but Well Aware still has a sincere desire to continue to see this community prosper, and we hope that one of our next projects will be helping with additional piping.

We will be reporting in more detail on our upcoming projects and partnerships, as well as the status of Well Aware’s exciting growth as an organization, in this month’s Newsletter, which I will post here in the  next couple of days.

Thank you for supporting us and our endeavors.  We are so honored to have your ongoing encouragement, and we will continue to pursue the most ethical and substantial change for people in great need.

Well Aware

Posted in Kudos, Messages to Readers, Reports from the Field.

Tagged with africa, austin texas, clean water, drought, kenya, nkoilale, sarah evans, water wells, well aware.