Gorobi is a relatively large community on a rise in a large mountain basin northwest of Jimeta. The town has two District churches located on either side of the rise. They report that they do not have a borehole in the town. They have the structure built for a water stand but no tanks. It was built back in the 1990’s or earlier. They have multiple hand dug wells which dry up or have low productivity in the dry season. They also have several low places where they dig down into or next to a dry stream bed to reach water. We looked at 6 of the wells and two of the water holes. I had visited Gorobi in 2008 when I spent 10 weeks learning about Nigeria, the water needs and the people. Not much has changed. My 2008 visit was at the end of a long day of visiting villages and was fairly brief the visited the large waterhole near the community and a couple wells.
Yakubu Bulama, Ruben and I left a little later than we
wanted to and drove to Mayo Belwa. There we dropped Ruben off to go and repair
a pump in a nearby village. The town water committee chair met him and the road
off on a motorbike. We continued on through Mayo Belwa, out of Adamawa State
into Taraba State to the town of Zing. There we headed west on a dirt road for
25 minutes and back into Adamawa State to Gorobi. We met with most of the Water
Committee that has been formed under a tree near the school. They had elected
officers and members. The members include two women and two “youth”. In Nigeria,
a Youth is anyone under 30. It is common that a community will only include
male elders in their committees. The Water Program encourages the inclusion of
women and youth.
They have taken as census to the number of families on each
side of the town, about 200 on each side. Bulama has visited several times and
the town has not made much progress. This was an improvement over previous
visits. He went through the program with them again and emphasized that the
next step is to have a geo-technical survey done by a geologist at a cost of
50,000 Naira. It is the community responsibility to pay for the survey. This
will determine the next step in the project. With the census, community maps
and the geotechnical survey date the Water Program can recommend various courses
of action to help the community with water, sanitation and hygiene. It will be
up to the community to determine what they want to do and how they want to pay
for the work. Currently, the program requires that the community provide a
minimum of 20 percent of the funding (not including the geotechnical survey).
After meeting under the trees near the school we all piled
into the Water Truck and toured most of their water sources. Since we got a
late start, I did not have a chance to wander about the town and look at the
water sources they did not show us.
The first well was dug on the east side of the community
near a seasonal stream. It was flooded and never cleaned out. It is now towards
the end of the dry season. There normally not enough rainfall to effect the
groundwater levels until June. Most of the wells had a little water at the
bottom. They could all use cleanout and deepening.
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As we approached one well I saw these children resting in the shade of a mango tree.
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As we got closer I noticed a pair of sandals in the branches.
A young man was enjoying the shade and breeze in the leaves.
The first water hole we looked at was south of Gogobi the same one I had
seen in 2008. The hole is a little bigger now. I was there later in the dry
season (May 9th, 2008) and there were many more people at the water
hole waiting their turn. The wells were almost all dry so this was their main
water source. Today they are able to still fetch water from some of the wells.
Since the water at the bottom of the wells are only a couple inches deep it
takes a lot of skill and persistence to fill a container of water.
Water hole south of Gorobi |
The last place we stopped was northwest of town about a
kilometer. This was the former farm of the Gongola State Water Board Manager.
It had a large water tank and the remains of several borehole. Gongola State
has been split into Adamawa and Taraba States. I suspect that when the
government approved the building of this large water supply it was for the
people of Gorobi. It is approximately, 100 feet below the town in elevation and
about 1 kilometer to the center of town.
The chairman of the water committee
said that he wanted to drill a new borehole and then pipe the water to the
town. I tried to explain to him that it will take a big generator and big pumps
to pump the water up the hill through a kilometer of pipes. There were some
boys loading water jugs onto a push cart. I asked him how hard would it be for
him or me to push the heavy cart to the top of the hill. We agreed that people
our age could not do it. I told him it is the same for the pump. We need a
powerful pump to push many carts of water up the hill every day. It would cost
a lot of money for the pipes and a lot of money each month for the fuel.
Today was a windy day here as the rainy season approaches the winds tend to pick up. I asked the chairman about the winds. He said they are strong today because of the storms building. I asked about other times. He said the winds are always blowing in this valley. Where they are located, the valley narrows and rises. The valley is a break through the mountains that the river flows through. This area could be a candidate for having a small scale solar – wind combination system. Could be an interesting project.
We headed back to Mayo Belwa and stopped for a late lunch or early dinner at Twin Sisters’ Restaurant. This is a small place with 4 tables inside and 4 tables outside. This is the third or fourth time I have eaten here. Today they had pounded corn and a soup (sauce) made from pounded melon seeds with two small pieces of meat (Beef most likely, I do not ask.)
After lunch/dinner we got back to Jimeta about the same time Rubin was getting back. The pump he had repaired was only two months old and the seals were worn out. He said there was not signs of sediment and that he had tested the pump before they had installed it two months ago. I he says it was new. The sellers of pumps here are not trustworthy or not knowledgeable in their product. I suspect the former. There are a lot of pump cylinders here that have been cleaned and re-painted. The seals may work well when you test it in a bucket of water but when you inspect them closely the seals are old and worn. In this village they pump on the one borehole from before sunup to after midnight. Good seals will need to be replaced every year or sooner with this heavy of use.
Later in the week I check Google Earth and there are
possibly three separate shallow water table around Gorobi. I suspect the
highest on is to the south of town.
There is a seasonal stream that has a relatively large catchment area to
the south. The stream flow to the west when it encounters the hill that Gorobi
is on. Southwest of Gorobi there appears
to be a natural restriction between the hill to the southwest and the hill that
Gorobi sits on. You can never be sure what is occurring underground but this
restriction may caused a natural underground lake.
The seasonal stream to the east of Gorobi appears to be 20 to 30 feet lower than the seasonal stream to the south. After this restriction the stream flows to the north and west and goes the water hole where the abandoned farm is. This area appears to be almost a hundred feet lower than the area south of town. Google Earth’s elevation data is not very accurate. It estimates that the water hole to the south is only 10 feet lower than the center of the town. I would guess it is closer to 30 or 40 feet. If I am still here when they do the geotechnical survey and I am able to go along I will take my GPS with a barometer and take some elevations readings based on air pressure difference. If they are taken within a few minutes of each other the estimated elevation difference is fairly accurate. My new Nikon has both a GPS and a barometer in it. The GPS locations are recorded with the pictures but the barometric pressure is not.
The Twin |
The seasonal stream to the east of Gorobi appears to be 20 to 30 feet lower than the seasonal stream to the south. After this restriction the stream flows to the north and west and goes the water hole where the abandoned farm is. This area appears to be almost a hundred feet lower than the area south of town. Google Earth’s elevation data is not very accurate. It estimates that the water hole to the south is only 10 feet lower than the center of the town. I would guess it is closer to 30 or 40 feet. If I am still here when they do the geotechnical survey and I am able to go along I will take my GPS with a barometer and take some elevations readings based on air pressure difference. If they are taken within a few minutes of each other the estimated elevation difference is fairly accurate. My new Nikon has both a GPS and a barometer in it. The GPS locations are recorded with the pictures but the barometric pressure is not.
Hello, Jay,
ReplyDeleteI just finished an enjoyable marathon-reading of your blog posts. How on earth could life in Nigeria ever be boring? Your posts are the opposite of boring! Live cobras, cooked cow heads, poisonous soap and getting lost in the bush...oh, my! (My mother's heart is still shuddering about those boys and the cobra.) I really enjoyed your photographs and descriptions of the wedding and your house tour too; they give such accurate representations of some of the Nigerian flavor you are experiencing. I also enjoyed reading about the various types of wells and their accompanying challenges. You explain them so well that even this reader who wouldn't know Mark II from Adam can understand the basics. Hopefully, there will be a way to transition more wells to the Afridev systems. They sound a whole lot simpler.
I hope your hands are healing from the rebar encounter. It sounds like your team is continuing to make progress on the wells. That's truly life-saving work, especially in light of some of the muddy places where water is gathered in the dry season. Your photographs of villagers gathering water from those mud puddles are sobering.
Thank you too for the videos of the deaf church dedication. Congratulations to Pastor Ruth and her congregation on beginning such an inspiring project and to you for assisting them and publicizing their work. What a worthy cause. It sounds from your description that Jimeta Cathedral is giving them a home base even though one or more of the other dioceses wouldn't even recognize them. --Makes me grateful for our connection with LCCN1 and the folks there!
You are a wonderful writer, and I just wanted to let you know that I thoroughly enjoyed reading your blog. It reminded me of the color, heat, food and wonderful people of Nigeria. Take care. Travel safely. You will be in my prayers.
Hi Jay,
ReplyDeleteThanks for the blog entries--you do way better than I would at keeping up with them and letting us know what's happening over there. I sent you a message earlier, but I think it was for an old entry, so not sure if you're gonna see it...
It might be refreshing (or it might make you jealous!) for you to know we're supposed to get a foot of snow tonight and tomorrow. So much for my golf tournament next week!
I find it interesting to hear about all the knowledge of the water table, how the seasonal water flow affects things so drastically, and about the technology you're trying to set up (high-tech or low-tech!) to help them over there.
I'd love to hear more about the people, the culture, and the food.
What are some of the day-to-day meals they eat there? Anything funky? (that's a given). Are random people you meet friendly? Is there still a curfew at night?
What other religions do you experience, with people not with the Lutheran Church?
Back here, our Serve To The Max Month is in high gear, and we're getting a great response. I set up a project for the "Coffee Crew", too, to try to get some help for Sally and Judy in April! You never know, maybe we could find some longer-term helpers...
There are many people over here thinking of you and praying for you.
Take care and keep the entries coming...
Chris