Health – Dr. Kanikav

20 12 2009

Dr. Kanikav is a prive family doctor for the village of Devrukh (rural area of Konkan) at the local public healthcentre.

Visit to doctor

Common diseases in Devrukh he mentioned are the Cold and the Fever. Not different compared to the western society. Next to that he mentioned that there is some diria caused by bad food processing.

As Dr. Kanikav started 40 years a go in Devrukh without electricity, he said that a lot has changed. For the most the mindset of the people has changed. People take their symptoms more serious and therefore go sooner to the doctor.

According to Dr. Kanikav the water in Devrukh is clean enough to drink directly, though filtering is better. Because there are industries in the villager, there is also no source for contamination of the water.

Since 5-8 years the government of India has a new scheme. That supply potable water to everyone. This can be by grid, well, bore or if necessary by tanker.





Lifestyle – Factsheet

20 12 2009

1 Euro  = 70 Rupees

Workers loan:  Rp. 120-150 a day

Thee (with milk!): Rp. 5
Chips (little bag): Rp. 5
Steal water pot: Rp. 75-175

Gas: Rp. 10 a Liter
Diesel: Rp. 38 a Liter
Private Driver: Rp. 7,5 a Km

Mobile phone: Rp. 0,01 a minute

Bottled water: Rp. 10





Water – rural areas of Konkan

20 12 2009

Summary of our activities in the urban areas
We went to the rural areas of  Konkan for 5 days, to investigate the drinking water problems people have here. We were stationated  in the village devrukh to be precize. We have seen a lot in those days so fist a summary of our activities:

- We visited a ’Wadu’  (about 600 people) to see how these people get their water and how they use it.
- We spoke to one of the five members of the ‘Grandpatjati’ (that’s the council of wise men that every village has) about the way people use water.
- We visited a dam the goverment is making in this area. The goverment uses this water for the grid connections most people have in this region.
- We spoke to two poor woman who were working in the field, carring big pots of water on their heads.
- We visited a special village that is an great example of living in harmony with nature. We will wrote a seperate blog about that.
- we visited several wadus/houses close to the coast to see if living so close to the see gives water problems
- We visited a local public healthcare centre and we spoke to the doctor.

Summary of some interesting findings
Before we summarize the most important findings it is good to tell something about he housing situation in the rural areas. In the rural areas you have different types of villages. You have the ‘real’ villages (over 2000 people), you have the so called ‘Wadu’s’ small villages with a few hundred people and you have small settlements with just some houses. In the villages you mostly see real houses, on the farmland it is also seen that the small settlements exist out of cottages made out of plastic sheets, wood and stones.

Grid connection
In the real villages of Konkan all the people have a connection to the grid. Every month a fixed amount of money needs to be paid for this connection and you have to pay ones when you want the connection. This grid connection is a connection provided by the government and the water is coming from a big lake behind a dam the government has build here.

lake behind dam that supplies the governmental grid

construction work at the dam

other side of the dam

Private wells
You see that most of the people with some money also have there own well. The place we slept (Onest) had its own well for example and they used this water for everything. The grid water is only used for watering the garden. The cost for digging a well is between 20 and 40.000 rupees. If you want a well an engineer comes by to tell were to dig the well exactly and what dept it should be. Most of the time it’s around 300 feet deep.

Governemental wells
People with less money don’t have an own well. They use a public well made by the government. In the last 8 year the government provided a lot of wells in the rural areas so everybody has access to water. We have heard and seen that in the most unfortunate situation you have to walk for a bit more than 1km to reach a well, al the other people life closer to the well than that. When the ladies go to the well to collect water they bring water vessels with them. On the way back they carrie two of them on their head.

girl carrying watervesel on her head

people drink the water directly from the well

We have seen two types of wells; old wells (called wells) and modern wells (called bore). The old ones are big open wholes (waterput) while the new ones exist out of a closed system (pipe and handpump)

Modern well (bore well)

bore well

Open well

Availability
In the konkan region the wells are filled with water all year long, they almost never dry up. This is because of two reasons. First of all there falls a lot of rain during the monsoon. Second, there are a lot of trees in this region that can hold the water for a long time. They make sure that the rain that falls in June and July will be kept.

There are many trees that can hold the water

There are some places in the konkan region with less trees and there the wells dry up some times. In that case the government comes with tankers filled with drinking water to solve the water shortage. So in general you can say that there is no problem in the rural areas of konkan if you look at availability of drinking water.

tanker with drinking water

Quality
If we should believe the people in Konkan, the water from the wells is of really good quality. The ground filters the water naturally so it can be consumed directly from the well (no boiling or filtering). People avoid the use of parricides because they know it can contaminate the water. By accident we tested the quality of the water our selves as well. We drank a whole glass of water from the well of Onest (because we thought it was bottle water). We are still alive and kicking so we can say that the quality is good indeed.

Human errors
So if you ask us there are no big problems in relation to drinking water in the rural areas of Konkan. The only improvement we see is increasing the changes of human errors. As the picture showed, all the old fasion wells are big wholes in the ground. None of them is properly covered so all kinds of things can easily fall in. When an animal falls in for example the water will get contaminated. When something like this happens, the people will use chlorine drops to clean the water again. (the government has given all the villagers a bottle with chlorine for cleaning contaminated water)





Water – Example village

18 12 2009

On Thursday December 18th we went to ‘Dweger’. A village which is able to totally run on its own. We were shown around by Mr. Sadannand Bondre, which is an local agriculture expert. He helped to rearrange the village into an eco-village.

320 people
65 houses

The first impression of Dweger is its the immense greenness of the place. By a smart combination of water resources, vegetation and irrigration, the villages manages to stay green throughout the year. This system is fed by a river crossing all trice lands. Little dams here and there will stop the water for a sudden time to let it float into the rice lands. Next to that there is a natural pawn, which is groundwater which can be reached directly. This is the village’s source for drinking water. It can be consumed directly, though at the school they learn to filter it before drinking it.

Children are going to school 6 days a week, to learn about: history, personal hygiene, water, trees (they sang I beautiful song about not cutting down the trees) and all the rest that keeps the village into perfect eco-balance.

Water collection from natural source

This village is a good example of how to live a balanced life with nature.  Be a part of it and don’t destroy it. Vegetation is the key for keeping the ground hydrated. Though reality is different, even in this little town the population grew with 50% the last 10 years. Population growth is causing big changes on a national level.

Still this village is really inspiring, the way they treat their environment by for example learn the children to not cut down the trees. Next to that mr. Sadannand Bondre in cooperation with COL (Commonwealth of learning) helped to write a booklet about the village, with the subject of how to achieve this yourself.

On Thursday December 18th we went to ‘Dweger’. A village which is able to totally run on its own. We were shown around by Mr. Sadannand Bondre, which is an local agriculture expert. He helped to rearrange the village into an eco-village.

320 people
65 houses

The first impression of Dweger is its the immense greenness of the place. By a smart combination of water resources, vegetation and irrigration, the villages manages to stay green throughout the year. This system is fed by a river crossing all trice lands. Little dams here and there will stop the water for a sudden time to let it float into the rice lands. Next to that there is a natural pawn, which is groundwater which can be reached directly. This is the village’s source for drinking water. It can be consumed directly, though at the school they learn to filter it before drinking it.

Children are going to school 6 days a week, to learn about: history, personal hygiene, water, trees (they sang I beautiful song about not cutting down the trees) and all the rest that keeps the village into perfect eco-balance.

This village is a good example of how to live with nature. Be a part of it and don’t destroy it. Vegetation is the key for keeping the ground hydrated. Though reality is different, even in this little town the population grew with 50% the last 10 years. Population growth is causing big changes on a national level.

Still this village is really inspiring, the way they treat their environment by for example learn the children to not cut down the trees. Next to that mr. Sadannand Bondre in cooperation with COL (Commonwealth of learning) helped to write a booklet about the village, with the subject of how to achieve this yourself.





Lifestyle – mini Slum

15 12 2009

Very close to the main gate of the IIT campus you can find a mini slum. It is so strange to see that rich and poor live and work so close together.

Imagine this being your grand parents…

Very sustainable; rubish gets a 2nd (or 3th, 4th) life

keep smiling





Lifestyle – Leerzaam ommetje (NL)

15 12 2009

Zojuist hebben we ons een weg gebaand door de waterbuffels om de ingang van de Industrieel Ontwerpen faculteit te bereiken. Deze faculteit is de afgelopen dagen onze thuisbasis geweest. Zoals ik eerder al schreef is de campus een geweldige plaats om te zijn. Ondanks de hitte in de stad is het hier goed te doen en door de bomen is er veel schaduw. We drinken volop ijs koffie om onzelf een beetje koel te houden en om onze tong te blussen als het eten weer eens een beetje pittig is.

Een uurtje geleden hebben we de veilige campus verlaten en hebben we een ommetje gemaakt door de straten buiten de campus muren. Een erg nuttig ommetje wat betreft het krijgen van meer informatie over hoe de mensen omgaan met water in de stoffige en vervuilde straten van Bombay.

Small street just outsite the IIT campus

We hebben veel ‘op straat liggende’ waterleidingen gezien. Ze zijn totaal niet beschermd en volgens mij snapt niemand meer precies waar ze vandaan komen of heen gaan.

Waterpipes in the streets of Bombay

We hebben ondertussen geleerd dat een hoop van de watervervuiling in de stad wordt veroorzaakt doordat mensen leidingen open breken (om water te kunnen aftappen) en deze op een hele geknutselde manier weer aan elkaar vast maken. Hierdoor raakt het schone water dat vanaf de zuiveringsinstallatie komt vervuild voordat het bij de mensen thuis uit de kraan komt.

Repared waterpipe

Op de foto zie je zo’n gerepareerde pijp. Je snapt dat dit problemen oplevert. We hebben onze ogen de kost gegeven en dit heeft wat plaatjes opgeleverd die laten zien hoe mensen hier met water om gaan.

Cooking the water before drinking

Boy standing next to the cooking pot

De mensen die weten dat vervuild water drinken slecht voor je is koken het water eerst voordat ze het drinken. Dit doen ze vooral voor de babies en kinderen die nog niet resistent zijn tegen het ‘Bombay water’. Op de foto zie je hoe ze dit doen. Ze stapelen wat stenen, maken een smeulend vuurtje en zetten er een ketel met water op.

Boy washing his hair

Ook wordt het water gebruikt om zichzelf te wassen. De blauwe tank op de foto zit vol met water. Die is gevuld in de uren dat er water beschikbaar was. Nu schept de jonge er met een kommetje kleine beetjes uit om zijn haar mee uit te spoelen.  Zoals je ziet loopt het afval water via een open riool gewoon de straat in.  Dat zelfde geldt  voor het waswater inclusief zeep van de vrouwen hieronder die op straat hun was zitten te doen.

Women washing on the street

De foto hieronder laat zien hoe de open riool puttn er uit zien. Ik was net te laat om de twee ratten die van de etensresten zaten te knabbelen nog op de foto te krijgen…

Open riool put met ratten

Al deze foto’s zijn genomen op ongeveer 5 minuten lopen van de campus. Het is niet eens een slechte wijk; geen sloppewijk dus. Daar zijn de omstandigheden nog heel wat erbarmelijker…

Snel weer terug naar ‘onze’ schone, rustige campus.

Place at the nice IIT campus were we have lunch every day

Groet van een nog altijd volledig gezonde Lisanne





Lifestyle- Great food of India

15 12 2009

During the weekend visit to the hill station we tasted a wide variety of food from different regions of India. I don’t remember the name of all of them, so here are some pictures:

Food

More food





Water

14 12 2009

Water scheme

Finding out what is the real situation of water accessibility and quality in India is one of the main goals of our research. To understand the different aspects involved in it is necessary to divide the study in three areas according to location: urban, suburban and rural.

This year (2009) there was less rain during the monsoon. Water levels in lakes that surround Mumbai, and serve as water storage year round, are in low levels. There is a big concern about this issue and a lot of people are working on finding solutions.

URBAN

  • Water problems (quality and quantity) are bigger in the cities, like Mumbai, than in rural areas (Dr. at KEM hospital)
  • Frequent water cuts. Water available from the grid only twice a day (e.g. 5am and 5pm)
  • Collective water storage in tanks, to ensure access at all times. One tank underground and another one on top of the building
  • Water gets contaminated during storage. People don’t clean the tanks often enough and/or leave them semi-open allowing
  • Pipelines are 50 years old so water gets contaminated after filtration on its way to the houses (student session)

SUBURBAN

  • Taping of the grid to get access to water in slums gets water contaminated. Lack of knowledge and education. People want to satisfy their basic needs
  • Monsoon floodings cause epidemics
  • Non-stop growing population in Mumbai. Thousands arrive every day looking for a better life
  • Collective access to water. One water access point for hundreds/thousands. Water gets contaminated in buckets where it is storaged
  • Water is also supplied by tanks, which in most cases are not clean. They take water from contaminated wells and sell it with a very high price

RURAL

  • Access to water: rivers, lakes, wells
  • People in rural areas prefer to walk up to 2km before paying fot water
  • They create their own solutions to solve problems. Very creative.
  • Water purification relies more on tradition than in real knowledge of the problem and its consequences




Lifestyle – urbanization:hard workers

14 12 2009

Urbanization:hard workers

People in India are not scared to work hard and a lot. Urbanisation is a fact, as stated there a lot of people.
These people need jobs, but competition is high, so they will work harder than everybody else.

Like the American Dream, you have the ‘Mumbai Dream’. Mumbai is the city of opportunities in the eyes of big part of the rural population. In the past era India went from 400 million tot 1 billion inhabitants. The rural land became divided within families, which resulted in smaller and less work. In the meanwhile the economic growth was taking place in the cities. While having no idea of what to do in the cities, people just went and started doing something.





Lifestyle – People, a lot of people

14 12 2009
People everywere

It does not matter where you are, there are always people around you. A lot of people. How can you expect different from a town that has 20 million inhabitants… Everybody is busy with something; reparing the road, selling fruits, bagging for money, drive people around in a riksja, whiping the street, opening doors…

 

Sand mandela on the street








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