Sebastian Felipe Barreto Ortiz ’10 documents Engineers Without Borders project this summer
Sebastian Felipe Barreto Ortiz ’10 (Bogota,  Colombia) is pursuing a degree in chemical engineering. From July 18 to  August 1, Barreto participated in an Engineers Without Borders (EWB)  project in Honduras where he, as well as civil engineering major Michael Adelman ’10 (Clarks Summit, Pa.) and Samir Awuapara ’10 (Lima, Peru), who is pursuing a B.S. in mechanical engineering and an  A.B. in economics and business, worked to help create sustainable  economies related to local coffee crops. They were under the guidance of  Gladstone Fluney Hutchinson, associate professor of economics  and business. The following is a copy of the journal that Barreto Ortiz  kept while on the trip.
- Engineers Without Borders Builds Sustainable Economies on a Global Scale
 
- Watch a Video about the Project.
 
Note: Everything  inside brackets was added by Barreto Ortizwhile transcribing the diary  from its original version to this electronic version, in order to help  the readers understand it better. The contents are exactly the same as  in the original notepad, which is kept in the EWB project room.
18/07/07 Wednesday- El Progreso
We got out of the airport at around 6 p.m. The money exchange agency  was closed, and so was the bus station at the airport. An employee at  the airport changed us $100 at 18 Lempiras/dollar. We got a taxi to El  Progreso, which left us at a motel of very doubtful reputation near the  town’s bus station. Samir and I went to a telephone/internet place near  the town square. We sent emails home, and contacted Matt Verbyla [a  Fulbright Scholar alum working in Honduras] and Porfirio Castro  [community leader in Lagunitas]. We arranged to meet with Porfirio  tomorrow in El Salitre (bus stop nearest to Lagunitas). The owner of the  telephone booth place (Juan Fernando) told us that we were staying at a  very bad place and offered to take us to a decent hotel. We were  suspicious at first, but he took us to get food and then to a much  better hotel (Hotel Plaza Victoria). He didn’t accept the tip we  offered; he said he did it because he didn’t want people to leave with a  bad impression of El Progreso. We are still suspicious about why he was  so friendly, but if all goes well we might arrange for him to pick up  Hutchinson on Saturday and send him off to La Habana to meet us.
19/07/07 Thursday- Lagunitas
We got a chip for the cell phone [one that Samir brought and was  already decoded to work in other countries] and we exchanged money at a  bank. We took the 11 a.m. bus to Yoro, and got off at “El Salitre,”  which is the closest bus stop to Lagunitas. There we were met by  Porfirio, who got a truck to take us the rest of they way. He summoned a  meeting that day. Eleven people attended [two were missing according to  the rest, so the whole group was of 13]. We presented the project and  concluded we would help them build “viveros” (fenced spaces like a  greenhouse [or plant nursery]) to plant coffee. We leave tomorrow to  Yoro to get supplies, send emails, and contact FUCOHSO. So far we  haven’t received any help from them. [FUCOHSO is an Non Government  Organization that focuses on improving farmers’ lives by increasing the  production of sustainable crops. They’ve helped in the past with the  logistics of EWB-LC’s water system projects. We had contacted them  before the trip.]
20/07/07 Friday- Yoro-Lagunitas
We left at about 9 a.m.: Samir, Virgilio [a resident of Lagunitas who  attended yesterday’s meeting], and me. We walked around Yoro looking  for supplies. We couldn’t find coffee seeds or a used bike [to mount the  coffee grinder] at a low price. Instead we bought replacements to build  a bike in Lagunitas. We also got some food and Samir sent emails to  Kavinda and Hutchinson. We’ve arranged with Yovany [a FUCOHSO  representative] so that he can go and pick up Hutchinson at the airport.
Back in Lagunitas we built the bike and set up a stand for the huller  [which we bought from a company in England and brought with us from the  U.S]. We’re going to have to go back to Yoro tomorrow to buy screws to  attach the huller to the stand, and a couple of additional things.
We are having problems with the grinder. We’ve also encountered several scorpions where we are sleeping.
21/07/07 Saturday- Yoro-Lagunitas
Samir and I left for Yoro early. We got the rest of the supplies and spent some time on the Internet sending more emails.
On the bus back the driver turned the radio on, and the whole trip we  had to listen as a woman read, with anguish in her voice, some chapters  of the apocalypse. Basically it was a description of hell and how  people who steal, commit adultery, or don’t pay the “diezmo” (tenth of  your income to church [also called a tithe]) would suffer eternally. The  tone of the reading made me think the whole purpose was to scare people  into giving money to the church (which I saw in Yoro; it looked like a  new building).
The huller was installed and it works great. The people are very  happy with it. The grinder looks like it is not going to work, and there  is really no need for it either because grinding by hand is very easy.  We did two batches of coffee from the dry cherry to the cup, one with  their traditional way and one with our gadgets [huller, roaster, and  grinder]. The roaster works but needs improvement, the huller is  perfect, and the grinder is useless. The coffee produced was really  good.
We called Matt [Verbyla] and he said he had picked up Hutchinson. We  couldn’t contact Yovany. Porfirio was telling us about how FUCOHSO  didn’t give them much help. They would only provide small things. He  says most of the money ends up in the hands of FUCOHSO employees.
We found and killed two more scorpions in our room. We haven’t been  able to sleep the last two days properly. It’s either scorpions, or  rats, or dogs barking, or cows, or roosters
22/07/07 Sunday- La Habana-Lagunitas
I went to La Habana on a bike they lent me to buy food and recharge  batteries. Meanwhile Samir and Mickey [Michael Adelman] fixed some  drainage systems in the village.
Professor Hutchinson arrived with Matt, but Matt went on directly to  La Habana, while Hutchinson came with us to Lagunitas and we filled him  in on the news. He saw the huller and grinder, and had some coffee  before I left with him to stay the night in La Habana. [For health  reasons Professor Hutchinson needs to stay somewhere with electricity.)
[In La Habana,] we discussed with Matt and Hutchinson how we couldn’t  provide financial support to individuals but had to do it to the  community as a whole. Also, the purpose of the support is to develop  their capabilities as part of a learning process. As such, we shouldn’t  agree to give them money to buy other crops and process them to sell  them with an added value, but we should provide the means for the whole  community to increase their own production.
23/07/07 Monday- Lagunitas
We woke up early and went to Lagunitas with Hutchinson and Matt. Matt  left for El Convento, where we joined Samir and Mickey and other  community members in building the greenhouses of 5 members of the  community. We cleaned an area of wild plants, fenced it in, set a space  for the 5 sets of seeds to be planted, and measured the space for the  bags once the seeds germinate.
We came back for lunch very happy with the work done, and afterwards  we discussed with Porfirio and his family what would be a good option to  get some coffee to process while the new plants grow (~4 years). We  informed them about our purpose and about how we wouldn’t help one  individual alone. We considered several options, from planting  fast-growing crops among the whole community in the meantime, to buying  coffee [from nearby communities] to process. We discarded the latter.
We suggested using Porfirio’s plantation [he planted a good type of  coffee a while ago but didn’t have money to take care of it properly,  and after a drop in coffee prices he abandoned it] and restoring it, as  it has approximately 2,500 grown coffee trees of a good variety. He said  that with fertilizer and proper care they could give around 45 sacs  (4500 lbs) of cherries. As we can’t help him alone, we suggested  offering help if he was willing to split the income in some percentage  with the other 12 of the group. In that way the whole community would  benefit but he would receive a fair return for his earlier investment.  The people present agreed it was a good solution, and the idea is to be  presented on Thursday to everyone.
24/07/07 Tuesday- Lagunitas-Yoro
Today we built one more greenhouse. We fenced the space, prepared the  earth for the seeds and built a structure to provide shade once the  coffee is put in bags. In the afternoon we went to Yoro, where we got  two rooms for the four of us. We ate, showered, relaxed, and went to bed  expecting an interesting day tomorrow in the market and the fest of  Yoro. [Hutchinson was commuting from La Habana, where he was staying in  FUCOHSO’s house. However, he had to move to Yoro because the house got  full. We went with him to set him up in a hotel and show him how to get  to Lagunitas from there.]
25/07/07 Wednesday- Lagunitas-Yoro
We got some marbles and a soccer ball for the kids, and some things  for the water system. [Mickey had noted several valves that needed to be  replaced, along with some drains that were damaged or non-existent. He  originally planned to just collect data for an as-built sketch of the  water system, but we thought it would be more productive to invest our  time in repairing the system.]
We showed Hutchinson how to move around Yoro. We saw the “feria”  [fest]. There were lots of people in the town. We also went to the  market (which because of the feria was basically all around). We got in a  really packed bus to El Salitre and we made our way back to Lagunitas.  We played with some spray bottles with the kids.
26/07/07 Thursday- Lagunitas
We went to work around 9 a.m. with Virgilio in his greenhouse. So far  he’s got the best crops we’ve seen, well-taken care of and with an  irrigation system. By 1 p.m. we were done and we had done more than in  the previous one. We built the poles and cables for the roof. We are  more organized now that we have more experience.
When we came back, Hutchinson was waiting. We waited for Wilmer for a  long time, but he didn’t show up. [Wilmer is a technician from FUCOHSO.  He is supposed to have some expertise in coffee plantations, so we  contacted him and arranged for him to come to the meeting so he could  give a workshop on coffee plant nurseries.]
We started the meeting by reading the coffee huller instructions,  giving out 1,000 bags to each member (to grow the coffee in), and  deciding property rights for the equipment. I wrote everything down, and  we also recorded it on film.
Hutchinson left to catch the last bus to Yoro, and we [Samir and I]  left a while afterwards for water on bikes. We actually caught up with  Hutchison. It started to rain heavily; we reached the main road and were  all soaking wet. Two buses passed, but they didn’t stop, probably  because they saw Hutchinson completely drenched. For reasons mentioned  above, we had to get him back to Yoro. So he took my bike, I sat on the  back of Samir’s, and the three of us went to La Habana. It was still  pouring.
In La Habana, I spoke to the owner of the store (Marcos), who had  previously taken us to Yoro in his van for 300 Lempiras. He asked for  600L this time. After some talking we got the price down to 400L, but  with the condition that he would also take Samir and me back with a big 5  gallon container of water to El Salitre. Hutchinson left in one van,  and we were taken back in the other. It was still pouring.
Samir and I were of course drenched, so we sat with the bikes and the  water on the back of the pick up truck. It was freezing, and the guy  drove really fast. We tried to offer more money if he would take us all  the way up to Lagunitas, but he said his brakes were failing.
We managed to tie the water to Samir’s bike, and we started our way down. It was still pouring.
Samir got stuck in the middle of a huge puddle, the water up to his  knees. I had to get in also to get him back on track. Further down Samir  lost control of the bike due to bad brakes, the unbalance created by  the water bottle, and the rain. He fell down and scratched himself badly  on his arms and legs. It was still pouring.
Back in Lagunitas he washed with soap and water and after we dried  ourselves I got my first-aid kit in which fortunately I had an iodine  antiseptic solution, some gauze, and cotton. We did our best to clean up  his wounds and used the gauze and toilet paper to wrap around his arm.  It was STILL pouring.
At night, Samir started to talk in his sleep for the first time, and  of all the topics he could choose, he chose snakes. [On our way to the  first set of nurseries we came across a snake that kills you in half an  hour with one bite.] He started yelling that there was a big snake on  top, and I of course got alarmed and searched with the flashlight. Then I  saw he was sleeping, so I figured it was a dream. Ten minutes later, he  said in Spanish “We need to ask Porfirio about the snakes.” I couldn’t  get much sleep afterwards
27/07/07 Friday- Yoro
I went to Yoro early with Porfirio and Alberto. They were going to  get some documents ready for the “personeria juridica” (legal  incorporation/recognition) of the water board. I bought some PVC to  Galvanized Iron adapters, some food for Hutchinson, and a couple more  things for the community.
The idea was to get some market information for the different stages  of coffee (wet, dry, parchment, etc.) Unfortunately at this time of year  it is impossible to get that information. Instead we are going to ask  the group to record the prices throughout the next harvest season.
At lunch, I discussed with Hutchinson the limits of the project. We  think that right now we’ve already done enough to provide an incentive  for their entrepreneurial skills and that as long as we provide for  fertilizers and fungicides they can build on what they have. They said  they would make more money with a huller for cherries [wet instead of  dry]; this tells us that’s the limit. We won’t give them capital to make  more money; they are going to be able to do that for themselves. We  won’t need to send another team later on. Perhaps we’ll send someone to  monitor; or if they get to the point of roasting it and grinding it,  then we would need to reconsider.
I came back to Lagunitas to work a little bit on the report.
28/07/07 Saturday- Lagunitas
We worked on two “viveros” today, the ones belonging to Eulofio and  Roman. They decided to work together, but in different places. The hike  was really long, around 45 minutes through the mountain. Fortunately we  were more experienced because they didn’t know as much as the other  farmers.
We came back hungry and thirsty. Though we came two nights ago with 5  gallons of water, we had already run out. I rested a while and then  went on a bike to El Salitre to buy some water bags to keep us going. It  started raining again. It is the rainy season. I had to wait in the  store and then start on my way back up to Lagunitas. It’s been a very  long day and we are all really tired. Mickey is a little bit sick, he  says perhaps due to dehydration. I gave Samir some antibiotic ointment  that I had. As for myself, I’m feeling a little bit weak and I’m really  sleepy. It’s only 8:25 p.m.
29/07/07 Sunday- Lagunitas
Mickey got sick last night. We had to take out the mattresses and  stuff outside. We gave him water, but we couldn’t do much more. We don’t  know what it was because Samir and I are fine. The beans make your  stomach a little bit heavy, but not that much. [We ate beans every day  in Lagunitas]. Perhaps it was because he didn’t wash his hands before  eating, and though he did use a hand sanitizer, I don’t think that would  take away the chemicals from the bug spray (DEET) and such.
In the morning we had a meeting with the group. The only one absent  was Esteban, who had an accident recently and we haven’t been able to  meet yet. Wilmer of FUCOHSO was supposed to come to give technical  advice to the group because he is supposed to have some experience with  coffee. He didn’t show up. Porfirio called him at 9 a.m. and he said he  would arrive around 10 a.m., but he didn’t come. It’s the second time he  has left us waiting, and when I met him in Yoro I was very clear in  stating the importance of him not missing it this time. He had assured  me he would come. The group tells us that FUCOHSO tends to do that. They  promise materials and support, and then they don’t show up, leave you  waiting, and don’t answer at their office. We are going to look for  other alternatives to get the coffee seeds [FUCOHSO had also said they  would help us find quality seeds] and to find a technician to provide  assistance to the group.
The meeting went really well otherwise. They agreed to use Porfirio’s  plantation and then the crop would be divided among the group members.  The full details of the agreement were written down. They understand our  purpose and are conscious about what we are doing, not investing in the  land but in them; that is, we are giving them the initial push to get  their entrepreneurial skills rolling.
We were going to work on the GI pipes today, but we wasted time  waiting for Wilmer and the plumber didn’t turn off the water, so we are  leaving that for Tuesday. We decided to do some bonding with the adults,  as we have done some with the kids but not with them. We went to play  billiard pool and bought refreshments for everyone.
30/07/07 Monday- Lagunitas
Mickey and I went up to the source and built a ditch around it to cut  off run-off water. It is a 45-minute to 1-hour hike. On our way back we  visited three houses [the team was visiting each house in the community  to check on their water taps and drains] and built three drains in  three more. The kids were really helpful in gathering rocks. [We used  rocks in the drains to prevent erosion and encourage infiltration of  greywater into the soil.]
Back at Porfirio’s we worked a little bit on the report and Samir  filled us in about his day in Yoro. He said he went to the National  Coffee Institute and contacted an expert in coffee technologies. They  provide free orientation to farmers as long as they ask for help  themselves first and are located at around 1,000 m above sea level.  [Above this elevation is where coffee grows best.] Since Alberto Galindo  [community member] had gone with Samir, the first requirement was  covered. We also checked on the topographic map and with the GPS  devices, which said Lagunitas was more than 900 m above sea level at its  lowest point. Therefore, we are within their constraints.
They said they also provide supplies such as fertilizers, usually at a  lower cost because they buy them cheaper, being a national non-profit  organization. They seem to be pretty serious, so we got all their info  and are thinking of sending them the money for the supplies so they can  give them to the community. Their technician is going to come and check  how everything is being done, give lectures, and monitor periodically.  They are also going to get the certified seeds for us.
In the evening we wrote the agreement for Porfirio’s plantation.
31/07/07 Tuesday- Lagunitas
In the morning we were changing the PVC pipes that were exposed to  the sun to GI pipes. I had to run to Yoro to get an English wrench, some  adapters and a couple more check valves. When I came back around 12:30  p.m. the group had met and signed the agreement we wrote last night.  Mickey and the plumber had changed most of the check valves, and the  pipes were ready for the adapters to be put on, at which point we were  done.
We had met Esteban last night finally, and he came today too. We left  the extra materials in the granary so that he could build his  greenhouse later.
In the evening, Professor Hutchinson gave a few last words to the  group and he left with Mickey to Yoro from which they will leave early  tomorrow. We started to gather our stuff with Samir too; we’re leaving  everything that’s useful to them. We also hulled, roasted, and ground  some more coffee to take with us.
1/08/07 Wednesday- Lagunitas-Yoro
We spent the last day in Lagunitas walking through the village and  gathering the last bits of information. We also worked on a last minute  repair to the water system. A tube broke last night after the tank was  reopened, so we had to cut the water off again to fix it.
We said goodbye to everyone and left for Yoro in the afternoon, where we each had a long shower and got some rest.
2/08/07 Thursday- Yoro
We both woke up early out of habit, but had a rat-and-scorpion-free  night of sleep for a change. We went out around the market and bought  some coffee. Again we tried to get prices for dried, cherry, and  parchment coffee. We got some estimates, but once more we couldn’t get  anything precise because we are not in harvest season. We also found out  about the prices of some farming equipment they might need (“chancha,”  machete, etc.).
We used the opportunity to get some fruits also because for some  reason in Lagunitas they don’t eat much fruit, and I, being used to  eating lots of fruit back home, was happy to finally get some.
3/08/07 Friday- El Progreso
We had breakfast at Yoro and then we left for El Progreso. We checked  in at the same hotel we had stayed in before (Plaza Victoria). Then we  went to the market and looked around for coffee: either roasted and  ground, or only the cherries, dried or parchment. As we expected, we  only found ground coffee. We asked around and we were told that during  harvest season farmers from the region we were in come here and to San  Pedro to sell their coffee. We assume you can get better prices here.
We also went to the same Internet place where the guy that helped us  the first day works. We contacted our families back at home, and looked  up places of interest to visit in Honduras. Now that we have done all we  can for the project at this moment, we plan on spending a couple of  days getting to know Honduras. We heard about the ruins of Copan, the  beaches of Tela and La Ceiba, and the island Roatan. We are both tired  of the jungle, so we discarded Copan. Of the other three places, Roatan  seems to be the nicest one. We called several hotels and managed to get a  room in the Hotel Pura Vida, in West End, Roatan, for Sunday and  Monday. Tomorrow we will travel to La Ceiba, from which you take the  ferry to the island. We are going to have to look in La Ceiba for a  hotel for tomorrow night, because everything was booked in Roatan for  tomorrow.
4/08/07 Saturday- La Ceiba
From here on we will cover our expenses ourselves, because though  Professor [Sharon] Jones[, associate professor of civil &  environmental engineering and EWB adviser,] did tell us we should take a  couple of days off, we don’t feel we should include this in the budget.  Fortunately we brought our debit cards and we can get money from an  ATM.
We left for La Ceiba after breakfast. This trip was longer than to  Yoro, because there is no straight route and you have to pass by Tela.  La Ceiba is the third largest city of Honduras, and for the first time  we saw a real city. Yoro and El Progreso had been only towns compared to  this. There were still no tall buildings, but at least you can see nice  houses, streets, proper lighting
Once there we found a hotel in the outsides of the city. It is called  Canadien, and was obviously built by a Canadian who fell in love with  the Caribbean Sea and decided to live here. The beach is nice, though  the water is not clear and the waves are a bit too strong for just  swimming. It is a good change though.
We are using our spare time to work on the report, so we can put in as much as we can while it’s still fresh in our heads.
5/08/07 Sunday- Roatan
We left early for the city to get the ferry to the island. The ride  on the ferry was a bit rough; they gave everyone plastic bags just in  case. Several people got seasick, but I just imagined it was a  rollercoaster or some kind of mechanical attraction in an amusement park  and got by without getting sick. It was actually fun sometimes.
In the island you could see how different everything was. Most people  speak English, some speak Italian; some natives don’t even speak  Spanish. The ATMs give both dollars and Lempiras, and you can pay with  both in most places. Prices are also higher than on the continent, but  they are still not that expensive. The hotel we are in is in the center  of the nightlife of the island. Nevertheless, it is Sunday and there is  nothing going on.
The island is very beautiful though. Where we are there is not that  much beach, but we were told of where to go. Today we just walked around  and relaxed, tomorrow we’re looking forward to go to the beach.
6/08/07 Monday- Roatan
We woke up early and got a taxi to the beach. It is the most  beautiful beach I’ve seen. The water is so clear that even when you can  no longer touch the ground you can still see the pearly white sand  beneath you. There are practically no waves, and swimming is very easy.  The water is also denser so it is easy to float. We rented a small boat  for two for two hours and went snorkeling. They say they have the second  largest coral reef in the world. It was gorgeous. There were lots of  fish in the coral, and it is all very well preserved.
After that we had lunch and just laid out in the sun. When it was  getting dark we got a taxi back to our hotel. It’s too bad we can’t stay  longer; tomorrow we have to catch the last ferry to La Ceiba and get a  bus from there to El Progreso. I would definitely try to come again  sometime. It is not a very popular place for people of my age, but it is  so nice and relaxing.
7/08/07 Tuesday- Roatan- La Ceiba- El Progreso
We enjoyed our last half of the day in Roatan and got a taxi back to  the ferry. The ride was much calmer now that we were going with the  waves.In La Ceiba we got a bus to San Pedro, and we got off at El  Progreso. We practically spent the whole day traveling; we arrived at  night to the same hotel we knew already.
Tomorrow we leave in the morning for the airport, and again we will  spend a whole day traveling. We have to wait a while in Miami, but at  least we don’t have to make two connections and wait five hours in  Durham like when we came. It’s OK though, because we got cheaper tickets  for that, and the money we saved was well spent building the viveros.
We are both tired of traveling, but excited about the work done. We  feel this project has a bright future and are happy with how it evolved  throughout its course.