Talking About Our VSAT Internet/Wifi coverage w Canadian Docs |
Crumbled Hospital In Dhunche - Replaced By Canadian Red Cross Field Unit |
My
little yellow tent sailed off the cliff where I had slept the night
before. I couldn’t stake it down because
of the rockface, so left my duffle inside as anchor against the strong winds
whipping up from the steep Himalayan valley.
It was all replaceable; clothes, dehydrated food and sleeping gear. All the important stuff was right next to me
in my backpack; satphone, radio, toilet paper….
Helo Bringing Medical Supplies |
Ewan
Coldicott and I were out in the field as part of a joint American/New Zealand
Red Cross IT/Telecoms Emergency Response
Unit (ERU). When I heard about my tent I
looked down the mountain and kept on about our business. With
all the serious disaster surrounding us the loss of my tent seemed pretty
mild. To get to this remote mountainous area
of Nepal we had driven at walking pace up a narrow, dusty road with steep drop
offs, stopping only for a landslide which partially blocked the road and to
check on our sensitive equipment strapped to the roof of our car. Our
destination was Dhunche, a remote village high in the northern mountains where
we were going to support a 35 person Canadian Red Cross medical unit perched on
a narrow strip of rare, flat land. This
Red Cross unit was the only medical facility in the region and needed contact with
the outside world to do their job.
Along
the way we passed destroyed villages waving strings of colorful Buddhist
prayer flags. Their baked brick homes
built on a ridge line had literally crumbled during the earthquake. Survivors had salvaged and gathered what they
could and were sleeping outdoors or under raised blue tarps with the Red Cross
symbol.
Ewan - NZ Red Cross Team Member |
Finding
a clear line of sight to the satellite among the steep mountains was a
challenge. We finally locked on and got
the row of green lights - success. At
this point the lack of useable living space turned into an advantage for us. As we hammered nails and strung our cables we
realized it was all so compact we could cover the hospital as well as the Red
Cross medical personnel sleeping quarters with one large wifi antenna. As Ewan explained the system to the Red Cross team a
villager ran up the mountain path carrying my tent and duffle over his
head. “Auntie, auntie, your tent!” Now we were all smiling; the Red Cross
hospital workers had internet and communication with the outside world and I had
my tent back.
All the
best from Glen and Julie Bradley,
American Red Cross IT/Telecoms disaster volunteers
The thought of someone calling you "auntie" brought tears to my eyes! What a term of endearment.
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