Let’s recap.
January 3,
we entered Ghana with 500 pounds of luggage in 10 different bags. We’ve left
with 8 mostly empty bags and one fewer teammate. Don’t worry though; as much as
we’ll miss him here in the USA, we’re very excited for BenCh to start his work
with Burn Design Labs in Kenya. And he’s going to help us continue to improve
the project this spring semester.
But what
happened to all of that luggage in the two weeks in Ghana? Well. We built seven
functional graters and deployed six. One returned home so the new team knows
exactly what they’re working with. We built two new presses and modified an older
one. All three were deployed, and one was sold. Some materials were left at
ITTU for future work, a few old machines were brought home, and the existing
jigs were also returned home for redesign.
We arrived
at IDE in Accra on Thursday evening around dinner time, and the following
morning we visited a potential motor supplier. After that visit, a little
driving took us to Ashesi University (on the hill in the picture below).
Students and faculty from Ashesi visited us during the week, and we were given
the opportunity to visit their university in return.
Finally, on
Saturday morning, we hit the beach and did some shopping before it was time for
us to board our flight home. But as you must know from my previous blog post,
flights were never a simple matter for this team. We spent nearly three hours
on the tarmac (I watched a full length movie with plenty of time to spare).
There was a problem with the refueling panel of the plane. So after an hour or
so of trouble shooting, it was decided that we would power cycle the plane to
see if that fixed the problem. We were told over the intercom that this was a
technique often used in “computeristics”. That’s correct. The plane was turned
off and back on again. Tragically, when the plane was turned back on the
problem was not fixed, so the panel was disconnected and we were told “it is
possible we can still fly to Amsterdam”. And fly we did. We even kept some time
from our original five hour layover.
And now we’re
back. And the trip was a wild success. Rezzy and I will be continuing with ADE
this semester, and we’re sad to see Carly, Bench, Ndungu, Roy, and Tyler go. We’ve
picked up a new team of eleven people, and we’re full steam ahead into the
project. The ADE space has been cleaned, the site manager chosen, subteams assigned,
snack days set, luggage unpacked, and we’re ready to go. Wish us luck for the
new semester.
Cheers,
Kari
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