Tag Archives: mud

Construction

Sturdy houses and larger buildings are built using blocks which are made with clay soil which is readily available and cheap. A simple wood form is filled with mud mixed with straw. The block is left to dry in the sun until it is hard enough to be used for building.

It doesn’t snow here (even though the altitude is above 12000 ft) so snow loads are not a factor in roof construction. Houses are finished in stages as money for things like doors and glass for windows becomes available. Initially the roof is thatch but the sign of prosperity is a house with a tile roof. The brown of the mud is the standard colour and during an election campaign, Political Parties will paint the outside of your house for free to advertise their candidate. Less drab that way.

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Dominican Republic

We visited the Dominican Republic last week (sorry, no posts possible during that time) and were imprisoned in a very comfortable “all-inclusive” resort complex.  Beautiful beach, lots of scantily clad people (some of whom shouldn’t have been – but they’re paying so they get to do what they choose) few smiles, fewer greetings.  Weather was great – warm, no rain, just the nirvannah everyone seeks, right?

We were able to escape this utterly artificial jail on a one day ride around the countryside to visit the “typical” DR  on the back of a specially equipped four wheel drive truck guided by Jonathan.

Well…I have ridden some rough roads but these were some of the roughest I’ve seen.  Off the pavement it became a real adventure to hold on and stay in our seats.  It was WONDERFUL!  And eye-opening.

The areas we travelled into were the equivalent of the rural areas around North Bay.  Read “Chisolm Township”, “North Himsworth”, “East Ferris”, etc.  The gravel roads here are superhighways in comparison to the roads we bounced along in the DR.  People live in the rural areas and have a tough job getting to town, but that’s what’s available and so you live with it and you deal with it.  Our truck got bogged down at an intersection of two roads and was pulled out by another truck using a piece of cable.  It was a true adventure.

Here is the road after we were rescued.

Another fellow approaching the intersection was not fortunate:

Note that he is up to the back axle in mud.  We weren’t able to stay around to see how he made out.

More next time.

 

 

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