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Mission: Possible
Kenya humanitarian trip takes twist
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To Learn More:
If you'd like to learn more about the
Kenya humanitarian project, visit the
Earth Crafters Inc. website at:
www.earthcraftersinc.com and follow
the "projects" link. |
By Rodika Tollefson
KP News
When Mark Plummer and his son Shane
were getting ready earlier this year to leave for Kenya
to install a septic system for an orphanage, they were
prepared for the unknown. The two Key Pen residents knew
all work in the village was done with hand tools and
getting materials was far removed from the American
experience of a quick trip to the hardware store.

The villagers gather
around as the well is run for the
first time.
Photo courtesy Earth Crafters |
The two
were part of a group that traveled to Kenya this summer;
many group members were from Hawaii, others from
Washington state. Part of the group focused on the
sanitation project at an orphanage school in the village
of Kapiyo, while others taught or provided medical help.
Mark, who
owns Vaughn-based site development and construction
company Earth Crafters Inc., and Shane, who works for
his father, told the KP News before leaving that their
job while in Kenya would be to improvise. But they
weren’t quite prepared for the news their group received
upon arrival: The well system they thought had been
hooked up was not.
Shifting
gears, their first step was to raise about $5,000 on the
spot in order to buy a well pump, parts, and a generator
(the power company wanted $10,000 to bring electricity
to the village, so they opted for the generator). The
task was achieved by calling back home to raise funds,
and by members of the humanitarian team donating their
own money.
“We worked
like madmen to hook up the pumps,” Shane Plummer said.
Finding
the extra funds was maybe the easiest part. “No
materials except the word ‘pipe’ are the same,” said Don
Burlingame, a Port Orchard resident who got his friend
Mark Plummer involved in the trip.

Members of the
group, including Mark Plummer, give
children ringworm medicine. Photo
courtesy Earth Crafters |
Burlingame, who works in Hawaii, had visited the village
the year before to help build the orphanage and work on
the well system. The village uses contaminated water
sources for their drinking water, has no electricity or
sanitation, and no regular source of income.
Although
that trip was a success, Burlingame saw a much greater
need for continuous involvement, and planned to return
to build the septic system, and eventually hopes to see
a medical facility there.
“The need
is beyond your imagination,” he said.
Everything
was done by hand —including crushing rock to make gravel
and digging the ditches for the holding tank; the dump
truck was a flatbed truck where the workers “shoveled in
and out.”
To find
the needed parts for the well hookup and septic,
Burlingame spent several days shopping for many hours.
Bartering is a big part of the African culture that
helps build relationships —which in Kenya take priority
over work, schedules and other elements that drive the
American culture. When all else failed, the local
workers hired for the group had to make materials.

Power tools have never been used in the village; this worker
uses the power drill for a long time.
Photo courtesy Earth Crafters |
“Here, you
buy (pipe) connectors; there, you make the connectors,”
Mark Plummer said.
The
American team hired one or two dozen locals each day, at
$5 per day (much higher than average wage) to work on
the project, which also brought a much-needed cash
influx into the village.
It may be
difficult to imagine how the group pulled it off, but
the most unbelievable part was what happened when the
water started to run.
“(The
running water) was the happiest moment in the village,”
Shane said. Women broke into dancing and singing; people
came all night long with buckets, and kids skipped
school to get water — causing the well to be closed
during the school day. A big celebration involved six
hours worth of speeches and a feast that included the
butchering of two bulls, four goats, and two sheep, with
about 3,000 people coming to the orphanage on foot from
as far as 10 miles away. The orphanage was the first in
the village of more than 30,000 residents to have
electricity. The 2,500-gallon water tank is large enough
to supply water for the entire village, and a spigot was
installed outside the compound that is controlled from
the inside.

The hole for the septic tank, dug with shovels,
is nearly
complete.
Photo courtesy Earth Crafters |
The group
returned to the United States at the end of July after
two and a half weeks. Although it took a few days to
“get back to reality” and “our way of life,” one thing
they knew right away: They would need to go back. The
septic system, which was installed, still needs to be
hooked up, and much more work can be done to help the
village. They envision setting up education programs,
and some villagers have expressed interest in learning
entrepreneurial skills.
The group
is working closely with Fred Outa, a Kenyan orphan
raised and educated by American missionaries. Outa has
returned to Kapiyo, and has been the driving force to
help bring a better life to his native village. The
orphanage is one of his projects. Once the American team
builds a planned bathhouse, Outa will teach the children
showering and personal hygiene, a habit that is not part
of their culture.
“Fred’s
concept is that every time you try to teach something
anti-cultural like sanitation, the best way to do it is
through the young people,” Mark said.
The goal
is to take another small team to the village in
February, if enough funds are raised. “There are plenty
of things to do,” Shane said. “We hope to make it
ongoing.”

Workers had to crush rock by hand to make
gravel. Photo courtesy
Earth Crafters
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Hundreds of bikes are neatly parked after
villagers came from miles away to celebrate the
village’s first running water line.
Photo courtesy Earth Crafters |
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