wroughtn_harv
Super Member
Harvey, I think you need to start a "Harvey in Haiti" thread in the Rural Living Forum, that's pretty rural. I saw your welding post, only by doing a search on your name. Questions to answer: Where are you staying? How long are you going to be there? Have you started making the blocks? Are you going to build the first house there? Are you training the people there? Are they receptive to the concept? How are the beaches? Is the steering wheel taking the place of the handle? Do they use tractors there? That wooden chair in the last picture is the most laid back chair I've seen. The thread will be so interesting!!!!
1. I'm a guest of Grass Roots United dot org in Haiti. GRU's mission up to now after the earthquake has been to help other NGOs (Non Governmental Organizations).
2. I bought a one way ticket and arrived on August 11th. It would be nice to go home about the 10th of September. At least three times a day that looks plausible. Five times a day it doesn't. If we get a program going where my presence isn't necessary then I will go home for at least a little while. My wife and I are on the same page when it comes to me staying if I'm needed.
3. We made our first four blocks in Haiti Friday morning. It was exciting. I'm making two machines with one of them a couple of steps ahead of the other. I rigged the one so we could make some blocks for samples.
I sent one block to Haiti with Sam Bloch who is the executive director of GRU. Mutual friends and interests got us in contact with each other. He changed his intinery in the states and visited us in Wylie Texas. He made a block and brought it here with him. When I got here I was given quite a tour by some real nice people from the UN. They took that block and my pictures to show them to others and get the pictures laminated for me. That was two weeks ago.
Two others were sent to Haiti via someone else. I have tried to locate those blocks here without success. The person who has them refuses to communicate with me. If by any chance anyone anywhere attempts to raise funds using my blocks or my name my advice is to sit on your wallet until you are comfortable we are involved.
4. The first Ubuntu-blox house built in Haiti will be built on the GRU compound. The best reason for doing this is they already have an Earthship House. It is amazing, amazing. There is a strawbale house. There are two container houses, an unfiinished Yurt of one kind or another, an unfinished Super Adobe, and our house here would give those interested a good chance to compare apples to apples at the same place you might say.
5. This about Haitians. We will leave and the Ubuntu-blox construction will have a Haitian name and face. Haitans like the idea with one reservation.
6. Haitians like everyone dislike the idea of a house being made of trash. I explain this be using the idea of road kill properly prepared for supper. You wouldn't want a house made from trash or a supper made from road kill. But the truth is we have been making house out of trash forever and our meat is dead when it's prepared for us to eat.
We had the same thing happen at SMU when we built the house for the Hunt Intitute. But when the house was done and it was a great house the thought of trash as part of it was all positive. People are people. Haitians are people.
I haven't been to the beaches. My days here are similar to the days we spent outside Lexington Texas. I work and enjoy people. Today is Sunday/funday, no meals served by GRUso my one meal today will be at a restaurant about a half of a mile away. The kids will stare big eyed stares, more so as December gets closer. Some adults will smile and some will glare because I am a foreigner eating native in an off street restaurant.
There is a lot of heavy equipment around. The joke is a fifty million dollar grant to help Haiti involves forty five million dollars worth of equipment to sit in a compound next door to another coumpound with millions of dollars of heavy equipment. Always enough money for equipment, never enough for work.
1. I'm a guest of Grass Roots United dot org in Haiti. GRU's mission up to now after the earthquake has been to help other NGOs (Non Governmental Organizations).
2. I bought a one way ticket and arrived on August 11th. It would be nice to go home about the 10th of September. At least three times a day that looks plausible. Five times a day it doesn't. If we get a program going where my presence isn't necessary then I will go home for at least a little while. My wife and I are on the same page when it comes to me staying if I'm needed.
3. We made our first four blocks in Haiti Friday morning. It was exciting. I'm making two machines with one of them a couple of steps ahead of the other. I rigged the one so we could make some blocks for samples.
I sent one block to Haiti with Sam Bloch who is the executive director of GRU. Mutual friends and interests got us in contact with each other. He changed his intinery in the states and visited us in Wylie Texas. He made a block and brought it here with him. When I got here I was given quite a tour by some real nice people from the UN. They took that block and my pictures to show them to others and get the pictures laminated for me. That was two weeks ago.
Two others were sent to Haiti via someone else. I have tried to locate those blocks here without success. The person who has them refuses to communicate with me. If by any chance anyone anywhere attempts to raise funds using my blocks or my name my advice is to sit on your wallet until you are comfortable we are involved.
4. The first Ubuntu-blox house built in Haiti will be built on the GRU compound. The best reason for doing this is they already have an Earthship House. It is amazing, amazing. There is a strawbale house. There are two container houses, an unfiinished Yurt of one kind or another, an unfinished Super Adobe, and our house here would give those interested a good chance to compare apples to apples at the same place you might say.
5. This about Haitians. We will leave and the Ubuntu-blox construction will have a Haitian name and face. Haitans like the idea with one reservation.
6. Haitians like everyone dislike the idea of a house being made of trash. I explain this be using the idea of road kill properly prepared for supper. You wouldn't want a house made from trash or a supper made from road kill. But the truth is we have been making house out of trash forever and our meat is dead when it's prepared for us to eat.
We had the same thing happen at SMU when we built the house for the Hunt Intitute. But when the house was done and it was a great house the thought of trash as part of it was all positive. People are people. Haitians are people.
I haven't been to the beaches. My days here are similar to the days we spent outside Lexington Texas. I work and enjoy people. Today is Sunday/funday, no meals served by GRUso my one meal today will be at a restaurant about a half of a mile away. The kids will stare big eyed stares, more so as December gets closer. Some adults will smile and some will glare because I am a foreigner eating native in an off street restaurant.
There is a lot of heavy equipment around. The joke is a fifty million dollar grant to help Haiti involves forty five million dollars worth of equipment to sit in a compound next door to another coumpound with millions of dollars of heavy equipment. Always enough money for equipment, never enough for work.