My Costa Rican Experience

Having spent the last few years feeling very restless and not sure in what direction my life was heading, I started researching voluntary work overseas but found the costs of 'gap year' companies extortionate. Delving deeper I found some superb projects, particularly Rancho Mastatal in Costa Rica, I emailed in an application for voluntary work and very luckily was offered a three month internship starting in January 2010. I am very excited but also feeling rather nervous, as I am sure I will be the oldest intern ever!!.....I will be 51 when I go and even though I am quite fit and strong, I just hope I will be able to keep up with the other interns. This is their web address http://www.ranchomastatal.com
This is my story and hopefully the start of not just one but other new experiences for me.
Philippa x

Thursday, 11 March 2010

Finally finished

My bed is finally finished, we are so pleased with it, worth all that hard work.
I have included a photo of my old bed frame, also the breeze blocks it stood on. We decided
to oil rather than varnish the wood as we wanted a more natural finish and it is far easier!
I think that you will agree that the colours of the different woods are enhanced by the oil.

Saturday, 6 March 2010

Bed


All the joints have now been made and yesterday we had a trial fit to see if everything would fix together, with six of us working on it and at all different times I was a little worried but yes it all went together!!
Here are some photographs of the mortice and tenon that I worked on, I am not very good at the laying out, the maths boggles my mind but I could drill, chisel and sand all day!

Friday, 19 February 2010

A Day In The Life

Thought you would like to know about a typical day for me at Rancho Mastatal...
Wake at 5am, find my head torch and go to the Biodigester toilet, looking out for snakes and spiders on the way.....get dressed, brush teeth, find the key and unlock the front gate, open up the back kitchen door and turn on the fairy lights (they surround the main building), while doing this I am also trying to avoid the piles of toad poo!
By this time it is 530am, I am normally part of the breakfast crew, there are normally three of us.....the top priority is to turn on the coffee pots. As they say I am a good baker I normally make pancakes or muffins (all are American apart from me and a guy from Portugal), I prepare pineapple, melon and papaya, make pancakes and sieve the kefir, kefir is rather like yogurt but contains a bug that needs to caught when sieved and also it does not need to be brought to a certain temperature. Breakfast is meant to be served at 7am, we had everything ready at 7.08am, it consisted of the pancakes, fruit, scrambled eggs, rice & beans, granola, kefir, sauerkraut and syrup served with either coffee or tea. I have to have two bowls as I can't eat sweet and savoury together, the Americans mix their food...ugggh!

At 8am we have our morning meeting which normally takes 30 minutes, we discuss current projects, any extra tasks that need to be covered that day and any new guests arriving. I then start baking what they call 'snack', cake to you and me.....we have a large group of EMT (emergency medical technician) students who have been with us for almost three weeks, so I am baking for 40 people, I cook in the solar ovens which take at least five hours to bake the cakes, I deliver them to the classroom and wood shop etc at about 3.30pm and always get a great welcome.
I normally try to get to the wood shop by 10am, today I was working on the headboard for my bed, it is the last piece needing to be planed and sanded.

Lunch is called at 1230pm by someone blowing the conch shell, we had black bean soup, foccacia bread and salad, all the food is freshly prepared and very tasty, two local girls plus one intern prepare the main meals during the week, at the weekend three interns cook.
In the afternoon I volunteered to be a casualty for the EMT group, I had burnt my hand and had to act the part 5 times over, my throat became rather sore with the screaming, I was given a t-shirt for donating my time.

I normally have a shower (cold) at 530pm and change into clean clothes (not clean really but cleaner than what I have been wearing all day). Dinner is called at 7pm again via the Conch shell, we gather and form a circle, we have a few seconds silence and then depending on how you feel give thanks to others for things they have helped you with that day or take a few moments to think of family/friends we are thinking about. Dinner tonight was Bagels that had been cooked in the cob oven, lots of different toppings including, humus, tomatoes, tomatoes, cheese, cucumber, avocado, peanut butter, pesto and hot sauce, very very yummy.
In the evening, there is what they call ping-pong (table tennis), I normally play cards...at 9pm myself and the two other girls that sleep at the Ranch start closing everything down and announce to those still here that we need our beds, all is quiet by 9.30pm and I fall into bed exhausted.

Monday, 15 February 2010

Saturday, 13 February 2010

Flowers and Fruits

 
Cashew nut

Woodshop



This past week we have been selecting the wood for my bed, I did not realise what a long drawn out process it would be but we finally came to an agreement!
I spent the whole of Wednesday working on one of the runners, I rounded the edges and then planed both sides, I have taken before and after photographs.....hope you can see the difference...lol
The other piece I am working on is for decoration, we were hoping to start cutting the wood but we all have so many others things going on that we are involved and so didn't quite get there.
I have really enjoyed working with wood and love the woodshop and am really looking forward to many more hours in the woodshop.
 
Wood store



Bodega

Monday, 1 February 2010

Bed!!

Great excitement, just heard that I am getting a new bed and I am going to be part of the team that are making it, will post photo's of my current bed, plans for the new one and show the project as it progresses.

Jeanies


Jeanies House is also known as the bunkhouse, people who are attending residential courses tend to sleep here and it houses about 16. They have the only hot shower, so when people are not staying there I head over for a special treat, the view from the shower is super.
I thought you would like to see the composting toilet, it really doesn't smell....I promise.
All the washbasins are so pretty.