Friday, March 29, 2013

Well, Second Round flew by...

This may always start out the same, but I have forgotten to write again! I'm absolutely terrible with this, so this'll be a long one (not that anyone really reads it ;) ) So we started out the Second Round of our term after a short break home for Christmas. It was really nice being around family and seeing everyone at home. Once we got back, we had a transition week, which is the time that we have more classes, discussion, debriefs with our unit leaders, and prepare for our upcoming projects. We had a little issue starting at the beginning of transition week; our team leader (along with another team leader) dipped out and decided to leave together without telling anyone. So the staff was faced with the task of finding not one, but TWO new team leaders for our upcoming projects. This had recently happened (though through different circumstances) to a team from a different unit, and they had raised a corps member to the position of team leader. This seemed like the best option, so there were two corps members promoted to team leaders, and sent through the FEMAcorps TLT (team leader training) for the first month of our deployment.








My second round project started in San Antonio, Texas, working at the Medina River Natural Area removing invasive chinaberry trees and assisting in other tasks needing to be done in the Natural Area. We sprayed herbicide on the chinaberry trees, young and older, to try to reduce the numbers that were harmful to the area. This was a pretty difficult task for a girl from Michigan, where the forests don't grow together like jungles. We were there in January, so the riparian (area between the river and the forest) wasn't as lush as it is in the spring and summer, but still, it was pretty difficult moving through the briar patches and vines that seemed to grab you in places you didn't even know about. We would find a group of chinaberries, spray them, call out the number of ones you sprayed with or without berries, and move on. I found myself sometimes stuck in the briar patches, not knowing where to grab the vines to remove them from my skin because it hurt to touch them. I also developed a nasty allergic reaction to everything growing in the area. That was easily (or not so much, i came to discover) with antibiotics and hydrocortizone cream. 

All of  it was totally worth it due to the teaching and knowledge that Peggy, our sponsor, passed down to us. I feel that I have never learned so much about environmental stewardship that when I was there, spraying chinaberry trees with a "ghostbuster's" pack on my back. We also did other things while we were there--putting up a border fence, taking fences from the farming days down, painting the bathroom building/staining the ramp to the office, removing trash from a dump site of 30 years. All of it was worthwhile work, and I wouldn't trade it for anything. 

Also, we were camping, and by "we" I don't mean "we". By "we" I mean the rest of my team camped while I slept on a cot in the kitchen. After that first night of 30 degree weather, I thought I would never be warm again. I enjoyed my sweet luxury and accept the fact that I'm a wimp.

For the time we were in Texas, our team leader was Nathalie, she was on a team with me last year and she was the best person to be with us for those three weeks we were in San Antonio, just what we needed. 

We also did some fun stuff-went to the MLK Day March (one of the largest in the country), went to the gigantic flea market, also went to the missions, which were of course beautiful. 

The second part of our project was supposed to be at Land Heritage Institute, again in San Antonio. I had seen on a facebook friend's wall that her team's project had gotten cancelled in Denver, and now they were coming to San Antonio to do trail building and hog-trap set up. That seemed odd-that's exactly what we were supposed to be doing! How funny, we were doing the same thing. We actually never got a confirmation that we weren't going to LHI, until they moved in. We were kept in the dark for about a week, wondering what was going to happen to us, poor Nathalie not being able to tell us what was in the works... 

We finally found out we were going on disaster! And on to the next project...

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