Week 6
- Produced and repaired 33 vegetable plots collectively as a team (2 a day, per mini team).
- A Film night was run by the Youth Group.
- We hosted a Healthy Eating Community Action Day.
- A environmental School group session and Women’s Group meeting.
- A Trip to Achuapa to print reports.
It’s Sunday 10th November and Naomi, Yamil and I are lounging in a bed together with hero-cat nestled between us. It’s our only day off for the week and we embrace the relaxed pace morning with a lazy lie in.
Our ‘Healthy Eating’ community action day was scheduled for 2:00pm in the afternoon, however the attendance numbers were marred by the heavy and relentless monsoon rainfall. The torrent of water drenched our community regularly, creating grey and hazy afternoons.
We decided to carry out the action day across the course of a few days. Overall, we had around forty attendees to our event. The action day was for raising awareness of the health benefits of vegetables. We designed information posters and we drew inspiration from reusing waste such as plastic water-bottle plant growers and wind chimes from discarded metal.
It’s the start of a long and strenuous week of constructing vegetable plots. We are trained on how to prepare them, the ideal location, the dimensions and how to construct plots on slated land. Laxmi and Diabelis distributed the workload of 33 vegetable plots across the course of the week and we tackled 4 – 5 plots per mini team.
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| Mini team: Me, Ben, Chama and Ana. |
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| Lugging big, heavy bags of compost/fertilizer! |
It’s a wonderful feeling working with the families, next to their houses. We see the results of our work straight away and most of the vegetable plots only took a few hours to complete. We are also treated to a random array of refreshments throughout the course of the week by the different families we built plots for. From freshly made lemon grass tea to coffee to tortilla with beans, each occurrence demonstrated genuine Nicaraguan hospitality. After finishing each plot, we handed the families an assortment of seeds (provided by the co-operative) for planting fruit and vegetables such as tomatoes, peppers, onions and pepinos.
A day before changeover, Mark, Karen and I embark to Achuapa in order to print reports. It’s a beautiful and scenic walk. The river reflects the deep blue sky and the surrounding hills and mountains are a vivid, flourishing green. We caught a glimpse of the national bird of Nicaragua, a brightly multicoloured motmot.
Week 7
- A 2 – 3 day changeover reunion at Jinotega.
- House to house survey for eco-ovens across all five sectors.
- Eco oven construction.
- Hosted a Women’s Group meeting and a Youth English lesson.
- ICS Staff and Ross & Dan from Raleigh visit El Cacao.
- A Weekend break to visit Charlie dos in their community, Las Tablas.
(Purple: Changeover, Blue: Volunteer Duties, Green: Team Activities)
2nd Changeover
It’s a long, bumpy and mountainous drive up to Jinotega in Northern Nicaragua! We weave through the green, rolling mountains, driving through wisps of cloud to over a thousand metres in elevation. We total over eight hours on the bus. The air is noticeably cooler and we shiver as we disembark at the hotel, all of us a little dishevelled from the long journey. It’s 15 – 18 degrees here, half of what we are used to in El Cacao!
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| The drive up to Jinotega |
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| The hotel Maze entrance |
Phase 3
As Mark and I are about to leave a house, Maylin, a lady who hosted Raleigh volunteers before, hands me a large bunch of small, sweet bananas on a stalk. At first, I tell her not to worry and to keep them (in bad spanish). She insists and hands them to me with a smile. I am completely taken back by her act of casual generosity, she only just met me! I thank her over and over, I love mini bananas and I contemplate of how I can reflect back her act of kindness.
In the evening, Naomi was attacked by a scorpion! It was a horrible, terrifying moment where I couldn’t quite comprehend the situation as it happened. It was a typical evening of antics in the house of five, with Naomi and Yamil play fighting in the living area. Yamil yells “don’t move!” over and over. I could’ve cut the tension with a knife, I thought it was a cruel joke to begin with. Naomi was stood rooted to the spot, utterly unaware of the creature perched on her shoulder. Yamil slowly moves towards her, carefully pulling off the hoodie and dropping it to the floor. Jader, our host dad handles the situation, killing the scorpion with a shoe.
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| Scorpion #2 |
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| Scorpion #1 |
A visit to Charlie dos, Las Tablas
Week 8
- Constructed and finished 14 eco-ovens (worked in mini teams).
- End of project report writing and a Youth English Lesson.
- A team social: Facundo’s bonfire.
- A Youth cultural entertainment event.
- The last Charlie one team banquet.
(Blue: Volunteer Duties, Red: Activities with the community, Green: Team Activities)
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| Bricks for making Eco-ovens |
Before constructing eco ovens, we had to make bricks with the materials gathered by the households. The bricks have to be made early on in the week, as they take 3 days to dry.
It’s Kati’s (a daughter of a host mum) birthday today as well. As I pass her house I give her a present I picked up in Jinotega: a disney colouring book with colouring pencils. I wanted to reflect back the generosity that I’ve experienced whilst staying in El Cacao.
Making Eco-Ovens
- Shoes off and plodding through the mud/sand/horse poo/water mixture in order to stir it up!
- Grabbing handfuls of the sloppy, mixed material and putting it in moulds in order to make bricks.
- We get extremely dirty doing this! 🙂
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| Making bricks in Los Carbones |
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| The delicious meal Marianna (Facundo’s Wife) cooked for us,one of the best meals I had in Nicaragua! |
Mark and I hide praise notes for everyone in our team. We decided that sometimes people felt a little underappreciated for all the work they did, thus the notes were a little morale booster.

Starting off with an empty base!
Eco-oven building involves the following:
– Mix more mud/water/horse poo and sand together to form a gooey paste.
– Lay bricks in L shape and stack chimney bricks, with mud paste between each layer.
– Install Metal hoops for the stove holes and metal stick supports.
– Eco Oven is done! No more smoky rooms and up to 70% less wood usage! 🙂
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| Our finished Eco-oven in a soon to be kitchen! |
The next day, it’s eco-oven take 2! This time its just Naomi, Mark and I getting mucky and building in El Pacon.
Our last team social for the week is a final Charlie One group dinner. We go all out of our way for this one! There was a feast of food! We brought beef and fish from local sellers.
The beef, surprisingly soft and tender, was marinated with a fresh chilli and garlic sauce. 3kg of fish was pan fried with lemon and basil. The mains were accompanied by salty, garlic potato chips and stir fried carrots with shredded cabbage and I made fried strawberry pancakes. Not too shabby considering we cooked it all on a log fire eco oven! :). There was a warm, team ambience and it was a wonderfully satisfying end to a long week of eco-ovens.
Week 9
- Constructed the last 2 eco ovens and built x2 eco latrines, one for the school and one for the community centre.
- We painted a large mural on the outside of the community house with the help of PioresNada, a art group specialising in street art.
- Our Community Farewell party.
- Genedree’s 5th birthday party.
- A final Team Bonfire with Charlie 1 Awards.
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| Chimneys which carry the smoke out. |
- Water infrastructure was ok, but some of the days did spiral into endless digging.
- Vegetable plots were a step-up. They were quicker to do and you were working for families as opposed to random areas by the roadside.
- Eco-ovens: you make something totally from scratch! There is no digging and there are so many benefits for the families using them.
With two eco-ovens built in one day, there was no doubt I was completely and utterly filthy :). Dregs of dried mud crusted my legs up to my knees and my clothes were begrimed with dirt. There was a permanent layer of crud I could never shift beneath my nails and my forearms were browned with mud.
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| Before (top) and after (bottom) photo! |
We also start the construction of two eco-latrines. It’s been a wonderful Phase 3, we’ve all worked diligently and we’ve spent lots of evenings together with our impending departure date drawing ever closer… Work hard and play hard: It’s a great combo!
In the afternoon, a local elderly lady gave us a tour of her farmland and the local honey production, up in the midst of beautiful hills overlooking El Cacao.
We have a final, late night team bonfire in La Mora. Ben hosts the ‘Individual Charlie 1 awards’ with quirky categories such as “Charlie Millionnaire, Charlie guapo (good-looking) and Charlie bandit.”
All the voting was done in secrecy, with everyone assigned a number to input into an anonymous spreadsheet. There were 18 – 20 categories in total for 15 of us. I scooped 3 titles and I was voted “Raleigh baby, Charlie dreamer and Charlie kind/amable!”
The Last Day
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| Morning of the last day: we painted and cemented rocks with our names on. |
I trek together with Mark to El Pacon to say bye to Facundo and Maylin one last time. The kids follow us suite with Dennis, Candida and Margaly hand in hand with us.
Saying Goodbye…
I want to bring this back to the UK. I’ve seen it in so many LEDC countries and I get rare glimpses of it back in London. Even if the behaviour of others never change, at least I am in control of my own. I value and respect other people and I know one thoughtful or kind act towards an individual can go a long way.
Mark, Chama, Alnufo and I rush back to El Cacao, just in time for the community goodbye party for us. It is an extremely deep and emotionally upsetting day: the host families make speeches on behalf of us as we hug and say goodbye to one another.Round Up
- A link to our end of project report is at: https://drive.google.com/file/d/0Bw_svIa6rMDqcnJnYndtN3BzNGc/edit?usp=sharing
- We finished together as a complete team, Ana came back to El Cacao after visiting her grandma :).
- In the final 2 days (known as ‘wash-up’), we visited Masaya market, Masaya Volcano National Park and we had a end of project party.
- To volunteer with ICS, go to http://www.volunteerics.org/ to apply and select ‘Raleigh International‘ as the preferred sending organisation.
- You don’t need much spending money for the placement at all. I brought around £55.00 ($90.00) and it lasted for the 10 weeks.
- Things I wish I brought: A proper first aid kit (I went with a few plasters & painkillers!), more pens/batteries, more chocolate, little gifts for the kids and aloe vera (for the weird skin condition I got and for mosquito bite relief).
- You can get internet access once every 2 weeks or so on placement. It varies if there is electricity or not, depending on where your project is.
- If you have any questions about ICS, please feel free to email me or comment here.
- Thank you SO MUCH to anyone who sponsored me! £800 was a high target for me and I am truly thankful for every single donation.
- To read Week 1 – 5 of my blog, go to: http://days-of-adventure.blogspot.co.uk/2013/12/ics-raleigh-international-13x-charlie.html
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| Charlie 1: El Cacao – http://www.raleighinternational.org/ri-blogs/raleigh-nica-ics |








































sound really fun! I wish i do have some time to do what you did Aurnny.. thank you for sharing! keep it up your best experiences! and be safe!
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