Project Status



Project Type:  Dug Well and Hand Pump

Regional Program: Southeastern Kenya WaSH Program

Impact: 500 Served

Project Phase:  In Service - Mar 2024

Functionality Status:  Functional

Last Checkup: 08/12/2024

Project Features


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Community Profile

The 500 people in this area primarily rely on the community's women or children waking up at four a.m. each morning to find and fetch surface water. Here, water-fetching is time-consuming and best avoided under the scorching sun when it becomes oppressive.

"We spend most of the day searching for water. Like today, I woke up early, as usual, to fetch water from the surface water located far away. I arrived past midday and [was] tired from carrying water on my back. However, this is a normal routine, and I have had to bear with the situation," shared 39-year-old farmer Marietta Mutua (seen below).

Marietta continued: "The long journey is time-consuming and exhausting, leaving me with little time and effort to conduct activities like farming or improving hygiene standards at home."

The available water sources are four kilometers (2.5 miles) away, so understandably, the journey is tiring and time-consuming.

There is a hand-dug well where some community members choose to fetch water, but the long queues waiting for their turn waste even more time. To collect from the well, they attach their containers, which are inevitably dirty from the journey, to a rope and drop it into the water. Not only is it challenging to haul full heavy water containers back out of the well, but this process surely contaminates the source.

Because of the delays at the well, people choose to collect from open pools of water instead. But this is a hazardous choice, as this water is open to contamination from humans and animals alike.

Once the water's collected, there is still a long journey back home with it on their backs or, if they are fortunate enough to afford one, by donkey.

It is not surprising that after arriving home, people are exhausted. All of the time spent collecting water makes them unable to concentrate on other essential activities like conducting chores, land preparation, or rearing cattle, rendering success unattainable.

Young people are not immune from responsibility and pay high physical and academic prices. Many help collect water for their families or, if they stay home, spend a lot of time waiting for their parents to return from collecting water. Often, meals end up delayed, and children remain hungry.

"I am often requested to carry water to school for cleaning, drinking, or cooking purposes. However, water is scarce at home, and I have to fetch some at the distant surface water [source] before going to school," said 18-year-old student Mila (shown below).

He continued: "Due to such water scarcity issues, I am occasionally late for classes. Like [the] last term, where I had to face disciplinary action from the teacher due to lateness. I was lucky the teacher understood my situation, but in most cases, I am unlucky. I also help my parents fetch water in the evening and [on] weekends, which consumes my play and study time."

"During this and [the] last drought season, my children have had to stay at home because they did not have water to carry to school, which is often requested by the school administration for cleaning, drinking, and cooking," said Marietta.

If that wasn't bad enough, residents also regularly suffer from water-related illnesses like typhoid, amoeba, and dysentery after drinking water from the sources. Doing so causes them to spend their meager earnings on medical care and treatments, extending the reach of their poverty even further.

With a reliable water source near their homes, people should be able to quickly and efficiently collect water and get back to doing essential things. And hopefully, this will reserve their energy and finances to improve their daily lives.

Note: Our proposed water point can only serve 300 people per day. We are working with the community to identify other water solutions that will ensure all 500 people in the community have access to safe and reliable drinking water.

What We Can Do:

Reliable Water

Our main entry point into this community has been the Self-Help Group, which comprises households working together to address water and food scarcity in their region. These members will be our hands and feet in constructing water projects and spreading the message of good hygiene and sanitation to everyone.

Hand-Dug Well

This particular hand-dug well will be built adjacent to a sand dam project, which will supply clean drinking water once it rains. We have provided the group with the tools needed for excavation. With the guidance of our artisans and mechanics, the excavated well will be cased, sealed with a well pad, and then finished with a new AfriDev pump.

Excavation takes a month or more on average, depending on the nature of the rock beneath. Construction of the well lining and installation of the pump takes 12 days maximum. The well will be lined with a concrete wall including perforations so that once it rains, water will filter in from the sand dam.

This well will bring clean water closer to families.

New Knowledge

These community members currently do their best to practice good hygiene and sanitation, but their severe lack of water has significantly hindered reaching their fullest potential.

We will hold hygiene and sanitation training sessions with the Self-Help Group and other community members to teach essential hygiene practices and daily habits to establish at the personal, household, and community levels. This training will help to ensure that participants have the knowledge they need to make the most out of their new water point as soon as the water is flowing.

One of the most important topics we plan to cover is handling, storage, and water treatment. Having a clean water source will be extremely helpful, but it is useless if water gets contaminated when it is consumed. We will also emphasize the importance of handwashing.

The community and we firmly believe that all of these components will work together to improve living standards here, which will help to unlock the potential for these community members to live better, healthier lives.

We typically work with self-help groups for 3 to 5 years on multiple water projects. We will conduct follow-up visits and refresher training during this period and remain in contact with the group after all of the projects are completed to support their efforts to improve sanitation and hygiene.

Project Updates


March, 2024: Ingutho Community Dug Well Complete!

Ingutho Community, Kenya, now has a new water source, thanks to your donation! We constructed a new hand-dug well adjacent to a new sand dam on the riverbed. The sand dam will build up sand to raise the water table and naturally filter water, while the well will provide a safer method of drawing drinking water for the community.

It could take up to three years of rain for this sand dam to reach maximum capacity because sometimes it only rains once a year in this region! As the sand dam matures and stores more sand, the surrounding landscape will become lush and fertile, and the well will fill with water. "I am glad I will no longer be sent far to draw water because this water point is close to my home. We will also have enough food at home because we will use water to irrigate vegetables. I will also have enough clean water to drink because I can easily pump out water from the shallow well," said 7-year-old Mutele.

Mutele.

"Going to the earth dam was very frustrating, and I could come back home feeling exhausted to even play with friends or do homework. This water point is now close to my home and only takes me a few minutes to draw water; therefore, I will have more time to study and play with my friends," Mutele concluded.

Hand-Dug Well Construction Process

Construction for this well was a success!

We delivered the experts, materials, and tools, but the community helped get an extraordinary amount of work done, too. They collected local materials to supplement the project, including sand, stones, and water. When all the materials were ready, it was time to dig in!

First, we excavated a hole seven feet in diameter up to the recommended depth of 25 feet. (Most hand-dug wells do not reach that depth due to hard rocks between 10-18 feet.) As planned, the diameter shrank to 5 feet when the well lining was complete. This lining is made of brick and mortar with perforations to allow water to seep through. When the well is finished, sand builds up around its walls, which will filter the rainwater stored behind the dam.

Excavation begins.

Once the lining reached ground level, we laid a precast concrete slab on top of the lining and joined it to the wall using mortar. The concrete dried for two weeks before installation. We fixed four bolts onto the slab during casting in preparation for the handpumps installation.

Next, the mechanics arrived to install the pump as community members watched, learning how to manage simple maintenance tasks. We installed the pump level with the top of the sand dam. As the dam matures, sand will build up to the top of the wall. Until then, people will use concrete steps to get their water. After installing the pump, we gave the well another few days to let the joints dry.

The completed well.

We worked with the Amani KaliluniWomen'ss Self-Help Group for this project. The members and their families contributed tremendous amounts of materials and physical labor.

New Knowledge

Our trainer conferred with the field staff about their previous household visits and interviews with community members to determine which topics the community could improve upon."We have learned a lot from this training and will apply them in our lives and daily activities. For instance, the [making of] soap and latrine disinfectant skill is valuable to us. We will make our own, sell, and make money. We will also use the soap to improve hygiene in our homesteads. Furthermore, we will use the latrine disinfectant to clean our latrines and keep them free of odor and flies. We will put into consideration other hygiene practices and [the] installation of infrastructures that support hygiene, and through that, we will prevent ourselves from diseases. We will be hygiene and sanitation ambassadors, and I'm sure that will help improve hygiene in our villages," said 66-year-old farmer and Chairperson of the Water User Committee Rhoda Mwikali Musee.

Rhoda (with a white head scarf) was curious about the soap-making process.

We trained the group on various skills, including bookkeeping, financial management, project management, group dynamics, and governance. We also conducted hygiene and sanitation training to teach skills like soap- and detergent-making and improve behaviors such as handwashing.

Mapping their community resources.

We also touched on health problems in the community, good and bad hygiene behaviors, the spread and prevention of disease, and sanitation improvements. Finally, we covered natural resource management and the operation and maintenance of the sand dam.

Learning to use a tippy tap handwashing station to prevent disease transmission.

A session of note was when disease transmission routes were discussed. During this session, a community member shared her personal story, which Field Officer Alex Koech recounted," She said that she personally lost her husband to cholera after he went to the market to collect some items for the family, and someone offered him some tea. Since there was [a] cholera outbreak by then, he got infected and went home. He got sick and immediately was attacked by diarrhea. She insisted that people should be cautious with what they eat and practice hygiene when handling food."

Conclusion

This project required a substantial collaboration between our staff, our in-country teams, and the community members. When an issue arises concerning the well, the group members are equipped with the necessary skills to rectify the problem and ensure it works appropriately. However, if the issue is beyond their capabilities, they can contact their local field officers to assist them.

Also, we will continue to offer them unmatchable support as a part of our monitoring and maintenance program. We walk with each community, problem-solving together when they face challenges with functionality, seasonality, or water quality. Together, all these components help us strive for enduring access to reliable, clean, and safe water for this community.

With your contribution, one more piece has been added to a large puzzle of water projects. In Kenya, Uganda, and Sierra Leone, we're working toward complete coverage. That means reliable, maintained water sources within a 30-minute round trip for each community, household, school, and health center. With this in mind, search through our upcoming projects to see which community you can help next!

Thank you for making all of this possible!




January, 2024: Ingutho Community Dug Well Underway!

The lack of adequate water in Ingutho Community costs people time, energy, and health every single day. Clean water scarcity contributes to community instability and diminishes individuals’ personal progress.

But thanks to your recent generosity, things will soon improve here. We are now working to install a reliable water point and improve hygiene standards. We look forward to sharing inspiring news in the near future!




Project Photos


Project Type

Hand-dug wells have been an important source of water throughout human history! Now, we have so many different types of water sources, but hand-dug wells still have their place. Hand dug wells are not as deep as borehole wells, and work best in areas where there is a ready supply of water just under the surface of the ground, such as next to a mature sand dam. Our artisans dig down through the layers of the ground and then line the hole with bricks, stone, or concrete, which prevent contamination and collapse. Then, back up at surface level, we install a well platform and a hand pump so people can draw up the water easily.


Contributors

23 individual donor(s)