Join us on our adventures in Zimbabwe

Posts tagged “willow park camps

Finally

Hey guys … I finally have a good internet connection so I will attempt to upload some pictures of the toilet block repaint.  I am also hoping to post a lot more pictures over the coming days as I will be in Johannesburg and I am hoping to find a nice little coffee shop with excellent coffee and fast broadband speed.


Finally some pics

Sorry for the dely … but I have finally uploaded the pictures from the Mawabeni graduation.  Enjoy!!!!


Mawabeni Graduation

Last week we were finally able to have the graduation service for the young men from Mawabeni who we trained in various aspects of building.  The service was held at Willow Park in the new (and nearly completed) dining hall. 

 

The young men could invite 2 people each to the ceremony so they could show off what they had done in the last 5 months. This meant that I needed to try to find transport for 30 people to get from Mawabeni to Willow Park (about 20klm).  Being true Zim style a majority of my transport plans did fall through at the very last moment … but we did manage to get everyone there after calling on some favours… if there was just one extra person we wouldn’t have had enough transport.

 

We had en excellent time with the young men and their families, they enjoyed showing off their work and their families were so proud of their accomplishment.  One mother, when we handed out the certificate to her son got up and did a HUGE dance and African song/chant … she was as proud as punch.

 

Unfortunately, the hall isn’t quite complete yet.  The paint that was stolen from our house was the paint we purchased for the hall, so we need to go across the border to buys some more.  We also need to make some changes to the roof structure, as the company who constructed the roof didn’t make the cross beams strong enough and they are pushing against the walls making them crack under the pressure.

 

 

 

 

 


The roof is finished …

Just last week the thatched roof had finally been completed.  It took a little longer than normal because we had run out of thatching twine and could not find it anywhere (even in South Africa).  This is looking absolutely GREAT.

 


What absolute Legends!!!

My men from Mawabeni are absolute troopers.  Just last week I had organised to collect them from the bus stop (where I normally collect them) at 8am.  Unfortunately the fuel situation in Bulawayo was dire with only one fuel station out of four that had diesel; hence I was about 1.5 hours late to meet them.  What makes them ‘absolute legends’ is that it was the only day that we had a constant rain and these guys waited for me in the rain and drizzle for the whole time and did not complain when I finally got there; they were just happy to get back to Willow Park to do more work.     

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Legends from Mawebeni 

The Legends from Mawebeni


More that just building

Having the SPCC team at Willow Park was such a HUGE help; not only did they help train the guys how to build they also got involved in a whole range of other duties.  A group helped re-furbish the volleyball court; they cleaned the chook (chicken) pens as well as help repaint the glass hall … what absolute legends.  One lone sole also fixed our ovens and hot water geezers as well as a lot of other electrical stuff that needed altering / fixing.  Thanks Team!!!!


Out at Willow Park

The main aim for the trip to Zimbabwe was for the South Pine team to help in the re-building of the dining hall at Willow Park.  They have done an absolutely fantastic job getting stuck into the plastering of the inside of the building and helping train the Mawabeni guys on how to fit windows.  Two of the carpenters told me that when they were training the guys in fitting the window, the Mawabeni men had never seen a power drill before and it startled them at first, but low and behold they were excited to use it and became quite skilled in the art of power drilling.  The building is finally beginning to take shape … it will be great when all of it is finally complete.


Occupational Heath and Safety … is it really needed

One of the interesting things here in Zim is the lack of Occupational Heath Safety on the worksite.  It always humours me to see the ways in which things are done without the stringent guidelines back in Brisbane.  I remember last year when one of the dorms was being re-thatched; the thatchers put their scaffolding on a bucket and a couple of bricks so they could get it a little higher and more even.  This year, when the roof structure was being put on the dining hall, a young man was up about 3 m’s and walked out onto an wooden plank only being held by another man on the scaffolding … life is Zim … you gotta love it.


Proud as punch!!!

The other day I was able to take the central African regional director out to Willow Park to show and tell him all that is happening.  Whilst out at Willow Park we were able to give the young men from Mawabeni a break from the build and present them with their certificates for preparing and building a brick structure.  They were so proud in getting their first certificate and I was told by the builder that they when they got back to working they started to sing about receiving their certificates.

 


It more than just the dining hall?

The building of the dining hall is going extremely well and all the young men we are training are REALLY appreciating the experience they are getting.  It has been encouraging to hear them all speak about how these new skills will not only benefit them (building their own houses) but also their community.  They are asking our builder how they can build a proper toilet for their community because at the moment their toilets are just tin walls with a rickety tin door and they want to build a new toilet block with brick walls and a proper door.


Where has the builder gone?

Our trainer / builder has left for a month to go to a church conference in the UK and the guys have been carry on with the job of laying the last of the bricks … and boy have they done an EXCELLENT job.  All the walls are just about completed (there are only 3 courses left on one of the outside walls) and they are eagerly waiting to lay more of the floor and learn from one of our workers at Willow Park how to plaster.


A bridge over trouble waters … or a trouble bridge of waters

You know what? I have crossed this bridge so many times over the last year that it has just become part of the norm; but boy this dam bridge (I am not swearing … it is a dam that also acts as a bridge) is starting to get a few leaks in it and most of the “other side” has eroded away … it will probably only take a few more rainy seasons and we will need to invest in a barge to get the cars from one side to the other.  This bridge leads over one of our smaller waterways and is the gateway to Willow Park Camps.  Make sure you keep tuned to http://zimbabwebound.com to find out more and to see how you can help Willow Park rebuild this troubled bridge of waters.

 

 

 


Where’s the local hardware store when you need one?

This whole building project has definitely been an interesting task to say the least.  I know that when building back in Brisbane it didn’t take much to find the labour or the materials to complete a variety of tasks … come to Bulawayo and it is a totally different story.

 

I had always planned to be on the build site to get some building experience but I just have not had the time to stay out at Willow Park all day every day.  A majority of my time is spent sourcing out all the building material such as cement or trowels at a reasonable rate and then trying to find the funds in cash to pay for such rare commodities. Fun and games all round!!!

 

Just the other day I came out to Willow Park to collect some of our trainees to take them to the local rural council to pay for pitt sand and then we would have to drive another 30 kms to the site and load the back of the bakkie manually.  Much to my delight, one of our young men knew of a “location” where pitt sand could be retrieved without paying for it from the rural council (don’t worry it was totally legal … I made sure of it).  After a VERY bumpy ride through the bush we came to an old private mining site with more than enough pitt sand to build 100 dining halls.  As they always say … “it’s not what you know but who you know”.


Ready … Setty … BUILD!!!!

As mentioned in the previous blog we are in the process of demolishing our old dining hall and rebuilding a new one.  One of the more exciting aspects of this whole venture is the training we are able to provide to a bunch of local young men from Mawabene (a small rural village about 20 klm’s from Willow Park).

 

Yes … Willow Park did need a new dining hall, but we wanted to do more than just build a hall, we wanted to be able to use this whole project as a form of outreach into the local community and to be able to introduce and train a group of young men in the “how to’s” of a build.

 

These guys have all been working hard and according to our builder have been VERY enthusiastic and eager to learn all that he has to teach them.  It is also exciting is to hear how these young men are now thinking of ways in which they can use these new skills in helping advance and build their own communities.

 

These are exciting times and I can’t wait to see what further training and outreach Willow Park can give to those in the surrounding communities.

 


So what’s the go at Willow Park Camps?

I don’t know if I have told you guys about the dining hall at Willow Park … unfortunately the dilapidated dining hall was basically falling down all by itself and needed either some major tender loving care or to be demolished and to start all over again.  Hooray … we are getting to do the latter of the two.

 

We are organising a team from our sending church in Brisbane to come over in June to help complete this building project.  These guys and gals from South Pine Community Church have been absolute troopers in raising funds for the building project as well as raising funds to get their eager working hands over here to Zimbabwe.  Check out http://teamzimbabwe.wordpress.com/ to find out more about who is coming and there perspectives on it all.

 

Make sure you keep logging onto zimbabound.com to get more info on what is happening with the building … it extends beyond Willow Park and believe me it is REALLY exciting.

 

 

 

 

 

     

 


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