Friday, November 28, 2014
Sunday, November 23, 2014
The history of a water pump in an African village
A case study Mtindili / Mbawai subvillage, November 2014
Blue
Pump installed by Mambo View Point / Jamii Sawa
At 1728 m
altitude in the Green Valley near Mambo Village, Tanzania
By Niek
Hoorweg, MSc & Professional Volunteer @ Mambo View Point eco lodge
info@MamboViewPoint.org
Description
of the area around Mambo village
The village of Mambo is composed of several sub villages,
including Mtindili. Mtindili is actually a valley with remnants of a dry
riverbed. The river / stream is said to have been perennial until 30 – 40 years
ago. Now it only contains water for several hours during peak discharges after
a shower. The major part of the valley has fertile soils and is largely
terraced for agriculture. The main crops are potato intercropped with beans and
maize.
At the high end of the valley there is a small
independent catchment area (Mbawai) with plenty of water until recently. At the
high end of the valley a traditional hand-dug well was constructed about 7
meters deep. This traditional well is now running dry and users (mainly
children) are spending hours for fetching water which is not clear.
Niek with the new Blue pump
Environmental
restoration and -management
Our team was asked to drill a well upstream of the
traditional well. The first test drill failed by hitting bedrock at only 3 m
depth and expectations were low. However, the second test drill reached a depth
of 10 m and a subsequent pump test yielded 33 buckets , 10 liters each. The
standard survey screen casing (2 m) was from 5 - 7 m in a rather non-defined
aquifer. This yield would normally not justify the construction of a tube well with
Blue Pump, costing around 3.000 Euro’s.
However, upon request of the Village Water Committee
it was agreed to construct the well under strict conditions :
-
Cut all Eucalyptus trees (invasive species) around the
(upper) edge of the catchment area
-
Replace these trees by planting local varieties like
Mvumo, Mshai and Mkuyu.
-
Introduce strict supervision by the Village Water
Committee.
The interesting status of this small Green Valley is
that no agriculture is allowed (by village by-law). Only one month per year,
the green pastures are open for grazing cattle after the Idd ul Fitri feast at
the end of the Ramadan.
The drilling team in action
History of
water supply around Mambo village
A.
German
settlers (Thirties)
The earliest foreign interventions for water
management were done by German settlers.
They constructed a dam at the edge of Shagayu forest.
This was a successful effort by colonists in the Thirties, reflecting high
quality civil engineering. The water was mainly used for irrigation purposes,
but the water quality was probably good enough for drinking purposes. In the
meantime the valves of the dam are broken and the water supply dried out since
most water is taken higher up for drinking water and (illegal) irrigation.
The dam which is still
strong but not functional since the valves are broken
TIRDEP
(Eighties)
Tanga Integrated Rural Development Project was running
parallel to the Dutch rural water supply project in Morogoro : Mradi wa Visima
(1978 – 1992). In fact TIRDEP procured their equipment for shallow wells from
Morogoro. First they provided a kangaroo spring pump but later changed to the the
Morogoro model called SWN 80 pump (Sociale Werkplaats Nunspeet, introduced in
1980). The design of their installed
handpumps is exactly this SWN 80 Pump On several places some leftovers from
foundations or even working samples are found. Most of these pumps however
collapsed and the holes were not well preserved and became unusable like in
Mbawai.
The remaining’s of a Kangaroo
spring pump which were placed during the seventies
A.
World Bank
(1996)
A concept master plan was developed by the World Bank
during the mid-Nineties. Mr Ibrahim (79
years) remembers how he was involved in that process in his function of
Mtendaji (Village Executive Officer). However, the WB did not succeed in
raising sufficient funds for implementing their plans.
A traditional well
A.
Idara ya
Maji, Water Department Tanga (2000)
As far as I know, Idara ya Maji for some time has run
a rehabilitation programme for handpumps in Tanga Region. Their standard hand pump
is the SWN 80 model, as introduced by the Dutch and is still placed by the government.
In general their program involved replacing the yellow
pumps of the TIRDEP –range. In the case of our Green Valley, the existing
traditional HDW (Hand Dug Well) was modified to host a hand pump. The ring well
was fully covered (with wood and cement) with a pre-cast cement pump stand in
the middle. The newly installed pump was beyond repair when we visited this
well with the Water Committee in April 2014. A few weeks later it was removed
to give clients access to the water by using the bucket-and-rope system.
The left overs during a
visit from Blue pump sponsor Ralph Tuijn (right on the photo)
B.
Mambo View
Point (2011 – present)
The next (known) intervention came from Mambo View
Point eco lodge in September 2014. We know that local (environmental)
management is a key to sustainable Operation and Maintenance (O&M). The
Green Valley has no distinct aquifer , but the soil is somehow saturated with
water from a depth of 6 m onwards. Hence, our drillers kept drilling and
reached even 12 m, with volunteers from the village (Nguvu Kazi) ! So far this
is our deepest tube well, with the longest screen (6m).
We used a PVC screen which is produced in Tanzania and
comes in standard tube lengths of 6 m.
The drilling team now also masters the skill of making
slots during a laborious exercise using a hacksaw and much patience…
And the newly installed Blue Pump is expected to last (almost) forever. This valley has the
potential of becoming a “show case” for sustainable O&M. We will coach this
process with inputs from the newly established office of Jamii Sawa (NGO), the
implementing partner for village development projects.
One of the few SWN 80 pumps
which is still working but in a terrible condition. This one was replaced by
the government in 2010
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