Thursday, February 27, 2014

Oh Well

So we meet this Dutch guy Elzo who is staying at our lovely boutique hotel in Siem Reap, who tells us that he has been installing wells for needy families in the poor countryside around town for the last three years. He has been doing this with his own funds, help from friends, work (from which he recently retired as an engineer), and word of mouth. He asked me if I wanted to go on a bike ride to see some of his wells and what he does. He is an avid bicyclist, having taken a six month trip from the Netherlands to the base of Mount Everest on the Tibetan side a few years ago. How could I resist!


Buddha at breakfast at Le Tigre, named as shortened from le tigre papier (paper tiger), the taunt of the Vietnamese about the Americans during the American War there, as it is referred to. Owned by a Frechman and his Cambodian wife, who are enjoying their one year old son Tito.
Elzo on his special carbon frame belt drive mountain bike, partially sponsored by the bike builders for his travels.
We ride through small compounds checking out previously installed wells or looking for appropriate sites for  new ones. Selection of a family depends on whether the land they squat will be sold by the government, the needs of the family, and a sense of how industrous and neat the owners are (he doesn't like places with garbage piling).
A recent installed well.
We came to the site of the well being dug today.

Chief driller, with a hat from a Dutch company that donated. 

The father of the family of six children who will benefit from today's well. Having a well allows field irrigatation, enabling three rice crops per year rather than one. Clean water speaks for itself.
Kiki and Jitske joined us. They are on six weeks vacation in South East Asia and one is the daughter of a friend, so they looked Elzo up on their trip here.
His home on stilts. Very clean. One open space with sections for different functions.





Their current water supply is a pole, bucket, and a ditch


She came over to check out the activity of four barang on bikes and a new well. She demurely asked if we could come to her house.
Her well maintained compound
Very neat and beautiful raised bed gardens. We decided that she was a great candidate for a well. I had told Elzo I wanted to sponsor a well with him. Three hundred euro is what it takes to do each one. My well is number 071.

After ten minutes of scouting the property the spot for the project was chosen. Shade is best, less stress on metal parts than in the exposed sun. The next day Elzo tells me they finished the well the same day we visited, as well as fixing another family's broken one. Try getting that done where you live.
When everything is finished, and the concrete is set, a sign is erected with attribution. Elzo didn't like the big signs, and started to remove one for a smaller version, but the family asked him to leave it, as it was convenient for hanging laundry. If anyone would like information about donating a well, please get in touch with me.
The warmth and openess of those we met was overwhelming, which is why he keeps on doing this project.






We then visited a school and were surrounded by the kids who were on break.





Showing off his toy which he carefully returned to his pocket.



When the teacher got back, she had the class sing us a couple of songs. The kids wanted us to sing to them, and Kiki and Jitske came through.
She is five months pregnant with her first child and has been teaching for twelve years. Her look of pride and satisfaction was not contrived.



Just arrived in Battambang where we are being treatead to the fastest internet of our trip, which enabled my pictures. The  beach on Rabbit Island, a thirty minute boat ride from Kep.



































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