Guest Blog by Kate Loe,
Twin Cities Habitat Staff & Global Village Volunteer
Our “super group” of 30 traveled from San Jose to Guanacaste province on Sunday; it was a long bus ride but we stopped along the way at a beach and a roadside café with macaws in the trees. After settling in to our hotel, we visited a beautiful black sand beach and played in the huge waves while the sun set. A pretty great way to start our week!
On Monday, the real work began. We start each day bright and early with a bus ride to our build site; it’s not far physically but it takes close to an hour because it’s remote and the roads are unpaved and bumpy. We travel through fields of sugar cane and melons and watch the field workers. We are building three homes next to each other. Although we are here in the dry season, the area is prone to flooding, so we are building the houses on stilts. We began by installing the foundations, which involved using a sledgehammer to pound metal poles into the ground. We then moved on to digging trenches; many of us spent a full day digging. This is probably the hardest physical work I’ve ever done. It’s hot – really hot! But we are lucky to have a break spot under a large and shady mango tree. (We discovered a new reason to wear hard hats on a construction site – falling mangos!) Today we started framing; it’s very similar to the way we build in Minnesota. This is the first time that Habitat Costa Rica has built with wood and panelized walls - luckily we have a lot of experts in our group! The walls went up quickly despite the intense heat.