We are now in the second 5 weeks of the expedition where everyone has more time for projects as done with the TEFL teacher training. I have planned various projects which will happen along until the end of the expedition on the 21st march. Part of the activities is a beach clean on sat 8th march which we will start promoting next week and putting together (looking at a place on the beach to hold a small gig at the end of the beach clean with our friends from Maria Cantu and Cannabis club) We are also preparing an environmental education workshop about the importance of the reef, the mangrove and the sea grass ecosystems . 2 dates are planned at the Julio Ruelas School for this new workshop. Also working on a micro enterprise initiative where we will teach how to make and sell cards from recyclable paper. Finally we are planning to spend 2 days in a mayan community the last week of the expedition. This community approached us as they are working on developing an ecotourism project and need English for the group of guides to be. We already spent some time there and assessed their specific needs. Now our volunteers are planning the contents and the structure of the workshop that they will give there during 2 days at the end of the expedition. See! We work too in the tropics!
Recycling and environmental education programs….. 22 février, 2008
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One of the main achievements of GVI in 2007 was to build a recycling centre for plastics followed by some environmental education in schools to encourage children to separate garbage and some promotion in town in order for people to use it. The centre was then donated to the community and a committee was supposed to maintain it and outsource a company to come and pick up the plastics. Unfortunately lots of politicians in Mexico tend to talk a lot but not do very much. Anyway this is a long story but to make it short the centre is still used by people which is good! The Municipality of Playa sends us a truck every month to pick up everything there. Unfortunately we have to do what we can to maintain it and I have seen quite a lot of crazy stuff happening there like when a circus came in town (which circus I didn’t forget to denounce to my friends at Born Free as they were using Siberian Tigers…in Mexico!! Imagine these poor tigers in tiny little cages!! Anyway lets get back to the subject for now!…) well the people from the circus didn’t find a better idea than hanging their clothes on the gates of our centre! Then another day some horses had found shelter at night as I could recognize horse shit all over! And yesterday we had goats visiting! Oh well, It’s Mexico! …as I tend to say to myself often!
We’ve given another workshop on recycling at the Julio Ruelas elementary school and we are planning a couple more in another school I made contact with. Each time we’ve implemented this workshop in a school we’ve donated a container for them to separate their plastics. We then pass by the schools once a week with our tricycle and take everything to the centre. Its still a little bit messy though as it takes a while for all the kids to understand and remember what they can and what they can’t put in these containers. But this morning as I visited one of these schools to talk to the Director about another workshop I was delighted to see how 2 kids were sorting out the containers and asking me lots of questions about what they can and what they can’t put in there. Then they were asking about the paper, the cans, they were so keen to get these recycled too…..So this would be the next step, get these 2 schools to recycle not only plastics but also glass, paper etc….We are working on this second phase!……..
The Puc Puc children… 22 février, 2008
There is a back road to the Casa de la Cultura where some of the poorest families of Tulum live in tiny wooden shacks. GVI Volunteers used to walk to town this way and because the kids were always yelling ‘Hola, Hola, Hola!!’ we started to get to know them. Little by little we knew the mum, Antonia, the dad and a few brothers and sisters (11 children all together) We found out that the youngest kids in age for school: Marcelina (9), Manuel (7) and Gricela (6) actually never went to school mainly due to costs reasons. Although primary school is free in Mexico, poor families can’t afford to send their kids as they don’t have the money for the books and stationary they would need to buy. I started going a few times during the last expedition and I go as much as I can during this expedition, with Rita, our intern who leads the project with grace. It is one of the most rewarding experience to see the smile of these kids when they manage to write properly one of the first letters of the alphabet or find the proper sound and word starting by this letter.
Its also sometimes sad to see that they are actually quite clever kids but don’t have the chance to be able to develop at school but need to work at the house. This week was extremally sad for all of us. The Mum had also 2 twin girls 8 months old. Rita came back to the base on Wednesday nearly crying as she just discovered that one of the 2 twin babies died due to asthma. We spent the rest of the week doing rounds to look after the kids. Rita, Rachel, Jacky and Fran managed to get the parents agreement to take Marcelina, Manuel, Gricela and Sandy to the beach today. That was their first time. They were crazily happy discovering this new world. We decided to take them again, I can’t wait to go this time!