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2011 Honduras Service Trip

Note: This page was adapted to browser-readable
format from a Powerpoint slide show prepared by Marty Patton. The slide show
includes a few more photographs than appear on this page.
Click here for the Powerpoint
slides in PDF format. Warning – the PDF file is
large (between 6 and 7 megabytes), so it will take a while to download.
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Cable over the Rio Cangrejal to the Juan Pablo
Segundo Fair Trade Sewing Co-Op, in El Pital, Honduras
Topics: The Service
Project Trip Chronology
Honduran Flora and Fauna
Neno's Las Mangas family
Honduran Environmental Efforts
– Guaruma
How We Can Help – Sewing Co-op – Heifer
International Project
Trip Participants and Photos Thanks
The Service Project
Our project was building latrines for an extended family
in the hills of Las Mangas.
About 50% of Hondurans live in rural
areas, and 75% live in poverty, according to Heifer International. Our UU
congregation has a strong interest in economic justice, particularly in the
economic context for some of the northward emigration from Central America
to the U.S.

Friends at the United Church of
Christ in Columbia, MO, had personal ties with a Honduran named Cito, the
individual who became our project foreman. Cito is the one who recommended a
community (Neno's extended family in the hills of Las Mangas) and a service
project (helping to build 10 latrines).
Neno's extended family resides in
about ten mud casas with thatched roofs, wood-fired ovens, no electricity,
and limited clean water in the Rio Cangrejal valley in the beautiful Pico
Bonito national forest.
We had much to teach each other. We
learned much from them about resourcefulness, self-sufficiency, and
sustainability.
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Trip Chronology
June 6 – flew from Kansas City, MO,
to San Pedro Sula, Honduras; took bus from SPS to La Ceiba on the north
coast
June 7 – traveled by bus from La
Ceiba to Las Mangas, met Neno & family, & started work on latrines
June 8, 9, 10 and 11 – worked on
latrines, lunched with families
June 12 – snorkeled in Cayos Cochinos
June 13 – took bus from La Ceiba to
San Pedro Sula; flew from San Pedro Sula, Honduras, to Kansas City, MO.
Lunes – June 6
Our bus trip from San Pedro Sula to
La Ceiba was harrowing and awesome, past pineapple and palm plantations and
lush, mist-topped mountains. Romulo gunned the bus past trucks, cyclists, &
mopeds, past lots of brightly painted homes, some with corrugated iron
roofs, some deserted or only half-built with rebar sticking up, some with
litter, roosters, or bony horses, tethered or loose. Beautiful flowering
bushes were mixed in with scraps along the roadside.
We stopped for a late lunch at a
buffet catering to tourists and then packed back into the bus, shoulder to
shoulder, window to window. Scenery was awesome and sobering. One of the
suitcases full of soccer shorts exploded before arriving at the Gran Hotel Paris in La Ceiba. Most of us took a swim before a special supper served for
us. Allie Gassmann, our fearless leader, provided an overview of the week
and closed with a Native American reading. At check-in, many expressed
gratitude for the participation of our UU kids.
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Loading luggage and UUs into Romulo's bus in San
Pedro Sula
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The beautiful Pico Bonito National Park in the Rio
Cangrejal Valley
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The La Ceiba coastline –
beautiful mountains, polluted water
Martes –
June 7
Once we were up the Congrejal valley
in Las Mangas, Alexis fed us a second breakfast and Cito met us at the gate.
We walked down the steep path to the river, forded it on foot or by raft, and
climbed a steep path on the other side. Local children scampered about like
mountain goats. Stunning beauty: Heavily forested, mist-topped mountains
towered above.
There awaiting us were about a dozen
thatch-covered stucco casas, each with a 6x6-foot dug waiting for a latrine.
Cito showed the group how to place rocks, mix cement, and place rebar and
corrugated tin over the hole. Friendships were forged with host families.
After breaking at one, we forded the
river and returned to the one-lane Las Mangas, where roosters and chickens
meandered freely with bicycles, mopeds, an occasional bus, and lots of
people on foot. A soccer game might be in full throttle, a tethered monkey
might be pulling a dog's tail at the casa across the road, and hibiscus and
other beautiful flowering bushes spilled over walls and gateways. Occasional
loud music and lots of beeps from passing buses filled the air as our UU
kids played basketball. Supper was six-ish, almost dark.
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Entrance to Cabañas Aventuras del Bosque
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Fording the Rio Cangrejal
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Casa of Juan Carlos Lopeti
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Miércoles –
June 8th
Alexis served us cereal, milk, and
mangoes with thick strong coffee and good juices, as usual.
We forded the stream again and
returned to our families. Juan Carlos Lopeti had already boxed in his stoop
for the latrine. Watching both Juan and Rosabelle handle a machete was a
marvel – he turned a blunt log into a pencil sharp spike in nothing flat. Their
kindergartner, Diana, could mix & shovel cement like a 16 year old boy.
Rosabelle allowed Marty into her
cocina and showed her how to chop papas on the washing/cutting board hanging
out the window. She also showed Marty how to pat tortillas and throw them on
the wood-fired stove top.
Many groups placed their toilets on
the cement pads – against a magnificent forested
mountain background.
Friendships among young and old
continued to blossom. Hondurans and Americans alike did their best with
learning a new language – with the help of
several bilingual speakers in the group.
Trees around the mountain village
include bananas, mangoes, pineapple, lemon, apricot, and more.
Later we took an awesome hike to a
waterfall. Most of us took a dip. Some of us tried Wendy's yoga class after
supper in the Guaruma meeting room.
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Jueves –
June 9
Before getting up, we heard intense
rain drilling on the tin roof, dogs barking and music from the hotel across
the road, but day dawned and we breakfasted on tortillas, eggs, beans,
cheese, fruit, good juice, and strong thick coffee.
Off again, we went down the steep,
stony path, across the river, and up to work –
many of us moving frequently from site to site. During the day, UU kids
stirred up lots of games with Honduran kids – Uno, ball games, and more.
Peter, the Pied Piper of Las Mangas, entertained all with balloons & his
recorder. Marty picked up trash and a half dozen little boys jumped into the
action – like an Easter egg hunt for them and
Halloween for her, watching her bag fill.
Later we meandered up the lane to
part of the Pico Bonito forest on the other side of the bridge, where local
Guaruma graduates introduced us to Ceiba trees you could hide in, fig trees
that blossom at night with bark like elephant skin, huge palm trees, and
trees with bark too smooth for snakes.
The climax of the tour was a hike
over a newly repaired swing bridge to another awesome waterfall and swimming
hole. Brave ones jumped from rock tops; others held their breath and hoped
everyone cleared the stone.
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Viernes – June 10
Back in Neno's village, we saw Quaker
State Oil water jugs hanging from porch posts, a bolt-lock stainless steel
doorknob on a shed with a rusty corrugated tin top, and freshly swept dirt
yards. One 60-pound octogenarian making her way up the steep incline from
the river stopped to kiss us, bubbled over enthusiastically in Spanish, and
hobbled away, using her machete as a cane.
The forest village was an interesting
combination of medieval and post-modern culture: Some casas were sparsely
furnished (hammock, one table, three plastic chairs, clay wood-fired oven)
with no electricity or running water – but the
residents had cell phones.
Mid-afternoon Cito trucked several
loads of us up to his mother's sewing co-op in El Pital, accessible only via
a wire cable over the Cangrejal. There we bought goods from the co-op and
hiked to still another magical swimming hole. There was a precipitous drop
down to the water, and many of us swung like monkeys from a vine and dropped
into the water. The lush green forest was punctuated with brilliant
flowering bushes including azaleas as large as baby trees. Hibiscus petals
dotted the path like confetti.
An evening hearing was scheduled for
a Lobo-backed plan to build a dam upriver for hydroelectric power, which
would virtually destroy downstream villages like Las Mangas. We didn't
attend, though, choosing instead to hear Neno and a brother-in-law play their
guitars for us.
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Sábado – June 11
After saying farewell to Neno's group, we packed and
boarded a bus headed for La Ceiba via Pepe's place on the Cangrejal. There
we said goodbye to the Byerly-Dukes.
Back in La Ceiba, we had baleadas at Romulo's mother's.
Marty stepped out of the courtyard straight into a hole in the sidewalk.
Then we headed back to the Gran Hotel Paris.
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Domingo June 12
By 7:30 a.m. most of us were
congregated in the lobby of the Gran Hotel Paris, awaiting the van taking us
to Sambo Creek, a Garifuna village near La Ceiba with a Pentacostal or other
evangelical church wedged in between every other structure.
At Tourismoptions.com, we boarded a
boat and headed out into the Cayos Cochinos islands, not far from the Bay
Islands, to go snorkeling in the world's second largest coral reef. We
enjoyed snorkeling, traipsing through the rainforest in search of a pink boa
constrictor (found! Leila can tell you!), eating Garifuna food (tapdados),
and being chased back to shore by high waves.
Our captain, Xavier, superbly surfed
the waves for almost an hour, gunning the motor then cutting it, riding a
wave, waiting for the bob of the next really big one, and gunning it as the
next wave crested. Waves got bigger and bigger, but Xavier was masterful
– a Garifunian who allegedly learned to swim
before he could walk.
An Italian film crew allegedly was
filming a reality show on one island.
Once back in La Ceiba, we ate at an
ex-pat sports bar, and many of our group watched the NBA playoffs.
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Lunes – June 13
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Honduran Flora
and Fauna
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Neno’s Las
Mangas Family
Below are some photos of our dozen-plus host family
members.
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Honduran
Environmental Efforts –
Guaruma
http://www.guaruma.org/?inc=what&lang=eng




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How We Can Help –
Sewing Co-op – Heifer International Project
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Educate ourselves about Honduras
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Support local jobs and co-ops
such as the El Pital sewing co-op or STITCH
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Contribute to Heifer
International Honduran drive
http://viewidc.com/22docqlv_

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Trip
Participants and Photos
Byerly-Duke, Eli Byerly-Duke,
Jacob Byerly-Duke, Kyna Byerly-Duke, Rachel Duke, Jeremy
Gassmann, Allie Gassmann, Gabriel Gassmann, Leila Gassmann, Walter
French, Aiyana French, Cassie French, Dan Holmes, Peter Mize,
Robert Patton, Marty Ratermann, Evan Ratermann, Graham
Ratermann, Tom Schillinger, Mary Beth Tanski-French, Caya Tanski,
Rachel
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The whole gang
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Eli Byerly-Duke
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Eli Byerly-Duke
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Jacob Byerly-Duke
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Kyna Byerly-Duke
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Rachel Byerly-Duke
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Jeremy Duke
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Aiyana French
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Cassie French
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Cassie French
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Dan French
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Allie Gassmann
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Gabriel Gassmann
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Leila Gassmann
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Leila Gassmann
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Walter Gassmann
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Peter Holmes
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Peter Holmes
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Robert Mize
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Marty Patton
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Marty Patton
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Evan Ratermann
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Evan Ratermann
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Graham Ratermann
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Tom Ratermann
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Tom Ratermann
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Tom Ratermann
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Mary Beth Schillinger
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Caya Tanski-French
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Caya Tanski-French
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Rachel Tanski
For many more photos, please visit
Kyna Byerly-Duke's Flickr site:
http://www.flickr.com/x/t/0092009/photos/65125895@N06/
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Thanks
Many thanks to . . . .
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Alexis, our gracious host at the
cabanas
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Allie Gassmann, our UU Honduran
trip leader
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Cito, our foreman for the latrine
project
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Cito's mother, who welcomed us at
the co-op
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Dan French, Caya Tanski-French
and other bilingual speakers
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Kristine Smith, our
Columbia/Honduran link
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Neno and his extended family, our
daily hosts
Gracias!
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