Author Archive

Project Phongsali: For children with club foot getting timely treatment is critical.

March 3, 2010
By
Project Phongsali: For children with club foot getting timely treatment is critical.

Day 30 Today we had to make a market run to Muang May for fresh vegetables. Pickings are really slim in Sop Houn. About the only surplus items people here have to sell are live chickens, rice, chili peppers, onions and garlic. I’m surprised that we can’t even find bananas in the village. The...
Read more »

Posted in Blog | No Comments »

Project Phongsali: Women in some villages are learning new skills and starting new industries.

March 2, 2010
By
Project Phongsali: Women in some villages are learning new skills and starting new industries.

Day 29 When we start demolitions in a couple of days, the sound of ordnance being destroyed in controlled explosions will boom up and down the valley of the Nua River, the noise an excellent calling card for us. The disturbance will alert villagers working up in the hills — people living in temporary...
Read more »

Posted in Blog | No Comments »

Project Phongsali: Villagers roam far from home in search of food and happen upon UXO In remote places.

March 1, 2010
By
Project Phongsali: Villagers roam far from home in search of food and happen upon UXO In remote places.

Day 28 The doctor is back from his rounds in the more remote villages and, by rights, we should move out of our room at the hospital. He reassures us that anyone local who needs care will prefer to reside at home; he doubts that there will be an immediate need for the room....
Read more »

Posted in Blog | No Comments »

Project Phongsali: The village school is within lethal range of cluster munitions. The school was built on uncleared land!

February 28, 2010
By
Project Phongsali: The village school is within lethal range of cluster munitions.  The school was built on uncleared land!

Days 26 and 27 The local elementary school sits at the base of a steep hill that is covered with dense vegetation. You’d need an outfielder’s arm, but if you can throw a baseball from shallow center field and hit home plate, then you’ve got the strength to could throw a rock from the...
Read more »

Posted in Blog | No Comments »

Project Phongsali: Animal encounters keep work interesting. Can anyone identify this snake?

February 26, 2010
By
Project Phongsali: Animal encounters keep work interesting.  Can anyone identify this snake?

Day 25 Some quick takes: Saw a hen leading a flock of ducklings about. I suppose someone tricked her into brooding some duck eggs. I wondered, how would they ever learn to swim? Then, a huge Vietnamese potbellied pig bolted out of the bushes, snatched a duckling, chomped just once, and swallowed the youngster...
Read more »

Posted in Blog | No Comments »

Project Phongsali: Villagers move ordnance in an effort to keep others safe.

February 25, 2010
By
Project Phongsali: Villagers move ordnance in an effort to keep others safe.

Day 24 We continue to have villagers stop us to tell their UXO stories and to take us to see ordnance. We’ve seen eight or ten items already and have leads on a dozen more. Most are cluster munitions. Each piece we learn about requires an inspection and every trip to look at ordnance...
Read more »

Posted in Blog | No Comments »

Project Phongsali: Every Lao village has a village chief, or “naiban”.

February 23, 2010
By
Project Phongsali: Every Lao village has a village chief, or “naiban”.

Day 23 Every village in Laos has a village chief, or “naiban”. The position is not strictly reserved for an esteemed village elder but to be effective, the naiban, male or female, must be respected by people of the village. (Which is not to say that all naibans are virtuous; a very few are...
Read more »

Posted in Blog | No Comments »

Project Phongsali: Villagers welcome us with food, drink, and unexploded ordnance.

February 22, 2010
By
Project Phongsali: Villagers welcome us with food, drink, and unexploded ordnance.

Day 22 Bunking here at the hospital, we get a close look at the level of emergency medical care. It’s good for us to know what’s available, since we might need the care ourselves. Yesterday a girl came to the clinic fresh from a motorcycle accident. I suspect she took a spill on the...
Read more »

Posted in Blog | No Comments »

Project Phongsali: Days 15 to 21

February 22, 2010
By

Project Phongsali Daily Log: Week Three Day 15 PCL is still looking for a replacement truck for our project. (The company is one vehicle (and a driver) short due to the road accident in which Om, Noi, and Vonna were injured.) I decide to have a copy shop make a hard copy of the...
Read more »

Posted in Blog | 1 Comment »

Project Phongsali: Days 8 to 14

February 15, 2010
By

Project Phongsali Daily Log: Week Two Day 8 Yai is definitely out of the Phongsali Project.  He’s putting his affairs in order so he can check into a hospital for more tests and treatment.  His joint ache is worse, his swollen leg is larger.  If he feels as bad as he looks, he’s in...
Read more »

Posted in Blog | 2 Comments »