Today is the first day since our arrival on
Nanumaga when I have felt words running into my head and had the energy at the
end of the day to sit at the computer and get them out. We have been working so
hard for the past two weeks that, at the end of each day, it’s all I can do to
crawl into the cold shower, dunk my concrete dust and sweat saturated clothes
in a bucket and stare blankly at our assortment of tinned and dried food for
dinner inspiration. I’ve barely been keeping up with e-mails - the outside
world is not missing me very much.
Getting off Nanumea and moving us and our
gear to Nanumaga proved as adventurous as anything to date. The Baldur arrived
to collect us and part way through loading our tools it became clear that the
process was taking longer than the ship’s crew were obviously hoping. Anxiety
started showing on their faces by about midday when the swell hitting the
opening of the reef passage made it too dangerous for the small whale boats to
navigate safely, loading was stalled and the ship drifted away. When she
returned at 4pm we were being pushed to board but refused without our cargo –
afraid that once aboard they’d tell us we had to sail for Nanumaga and leave
our remaining gear behind. We finally managed to get from the panicked Captain
the reason for the pressure to sail – the ship had left Funafuti amid a strong
wind warning with barely enough fuel to make the round trip and no contingency
for delays loading or unloading cargo (despite a contract with us covering
daily rates for just this). How could this happen? How could a ship risk
stranding like this?
Luckily we were able to negotiate purchase
of some spare diesel from the Nanumea Kaupule and TEC – 25 barrels which had to
be moved to the wharf at 10pm that night and then carefully transferred to the
ship the next morning in addition to all our own cargo. The end result was an
unplanned 24hr delay in the charter but some assurance that we’d have enough
fuel to unload on Nanumaga and for the Baldur to safely return to Funafuti.
Loading diesel in Nanumea |
By the time we arrived at Nanumaga (about
4pm Tuesday afternoon), we were strung out and anxious that the unloading be
completed by mid-afternoon Wednesday when the boat would have to set sail for
Funafuti regardless of whether we were done or not. To their credit the crew
and local labour we arranged on the shore worked through until it was too dark
to be safe and were at it again by 7am the next morning. We were fully
discharged by 2pm and watched the Baldur disappear into the distance.
Back to work!
Hadley started the conversation… “Does your
rash itch sometimes?” I can’t quite remember where it went from there but it
wasn’t dinner conversation. My rash doesn’t itch so much as prickle. My skin is
covered in small red spots – a heat rash? And I hate wearing clothes: they
scratch and rub and need constant adjustment. Marty deals with his rash by
going shirtless. Hadley wears indecently short shorts. I have been dreaming up the perfect island
work wear – a pair of seamless, Kevlar embedded, lightweight overalls that
somehow don’t actually touch my skin anywhere and steel-capped jandals(?).
Concrete dust angels |
My trusty work boots |
We all had expectations about what it would
be like working out here. They weren’t idealised but they were kind of “all the
best bits, none of the bad bits”.
Nanumea was an island of flies. They were
everywhere. And in everything. Although the Aussie’s in our party seemed less
bothered by them than the Kiwi/Dutch contingent. The biggest challenge was
keeping them away from open healing wounds – they would zero in on any scratch
or sore and use their little suckers to probe for yummy morsels (I’m sorry but
this is the imagery that stuck with us each day as we fought to keep wounds
covered!). We discovered a new use for Chux-wipes and electrical tape –
fly-guards.
Hadley's modelling island work wear: fly-guard, short shorts, neck snake, flappy hat and bushy beard |
Nanumaga will be remembered for the ants. I wish I had taken a photo of the Nanumaga Kaupule guesthouse when
we opened the door on that first afternoon. The floor was literally alive –
crawling with yellow crazy ants which have almost taken over the island. There
are nests under the front porch and they swarm over every surface including the
mats and mattresses laid out on the bedroom floors. They even make it up into
the camp beds with us at night – an unsettling feeling but one you get used to
eventually. And there are holes and “soft spots” in the floor where the
supporting timbers have become rotten and mice and rats freely rampage through
the house. They are as bold as brass – gallivanting up and down the corridor in
broad daylight.
Ants swarming on the array foundations provided motivation to keep moving and work fast |
Our first full day on the island was spent
trying to carve out a space to live alongside the ants and rats for the next
month. And convert this semi-rotten shack into a haven from the daily toils of
working in the heat, dirt, sand, grime and salt. We started unpacking food and
setting up tables in all corners of the house with little bowls of water under
their feet. The ants kept coming. And as we unpacked food from crates outside,
the ants discovered this new source of wonders and seemed to come up through
the ground itself. If you stood still for more than a second, they would swarm
up your legs. I tried spraying my feet and sandals with surface (bug) spray,
then a piece of cardboard to stand on, then I stood in a bucket of water. They
were unstoppable.
As for the rats, we’ve started feeding
them. It seems easier to sacrifice some food than battle constantly with trying
to keep everything away from them. They are keen on noodles. The big fellow in
the front room is onto his third packet.
Our remaining food being preciously hoarded from from scurrying housemates |
Nanumaga has also been the first island
where falling coconuts have proven themselves a significant threat. The walk
from the guesthouse to the powerhouse is only about 100m. But on the corner is
a cantankerous old coconut tree with a mean sense of timing. After a
combined 5 months now in the outer islands of Tuvalu, Marty has had two
near-death experiences in under a week, and Shane one. The verge under this
tree is littered with coconuts which have only just missed their target. We are cutting a
wide path now.
Amidst these challenges of daily life in
the islands we are working hard, but we are also working smarter and faster.
Two weeks after we started on site and we switched the system on this
afternoon. Kaupule Secretary Sefuteni Liki was there to flick the switch – even
if it was a bit of an anti-climax – solar doesn’t make much of a bang. Tonight
the sweet joy of having a fan on all night and (hopefully) sleeping my first
night through in weeks.
As individuals, we are all coming to grips
with our roles and getting our heads around how to manage our respective parts
of the installation efficiently. No more missing some little step and having to
retrofit something which would have been way easier to do 3 days ago. No more
double doing. We’ve also had a fantastic group of local workers here on Nanumaga
– a crew who’ve worked really well together and solidly from start to finish. It’s
a system that Powersmart, MFAT, TEC, and Nanumaga, can be proud of.
The Nanumaga work crew |
We’ve also been lucky to have Falani from
TEC here with us throughout the install. Falani works for TEC in Funafuti and
has had an opportunity to see some of the other (non MFAT funded) systems going
in on the central islands. It’s been wonderful for us to get some feedback from him on the
quality of the work we’re doing and to hear through him how positively all the
northern islands are viewing our work in the context of the broader Tuvalu
Renewable Energy program.