Three days after leaving Costa Rica, students are in the snow and freezing rain in the mountains of western Montana. Aided by the amazing cooking of our chef, Raven (participating in a scenario, first picture below), they are beginning their winter survival, Leave no Trace Trainer and avalanche training. This Tuesday they will put on skis and snowshoes for four days at a backcountry yurt earning their Level 1 Avalanche from Steve Karkanen and Dudley Improta of the West Central Montana Advisory Center. By week's end they will travel to Missoula for a full day of human anatomy instruction at the University of Montana cadaver lab and vehicle extrication with the East Missoula Fire Department.
Daily blog from Aerie's Semester in Wilderness Medicine in Costa Rica and Montana
Sunday, March 14, 2010
Tuesday, March 9, 2010
Swiftwater Rescue Technician Training
Students spent three days in training, working with throwbags, pulling victims out of the water, setting up tension lines to retrieve boats, and treating victims once on shore.
Students practice rescue skills with Aerie and Whitewater Rescue Institute staff. For video footage of our 2009 SRT class, view this link.
Health Clinic
Aerie students were treated to an exceptional medical education as they made house calls with Dr. Greg Moore, Aerie's medical director, here examining a patient with cataracts.
Aerie's free public health clinic operated for 2 days out of the community center, with the second afternoon reserved for house calls for anyone not able to make it to the clinic.
Community Service Project
The community service portion of the Semester gives students a glimpse of the links between health issues and daily living. The following photos summarize some of the work done at two different homes. In one case, students' work included providing drainage from sinks, so potential mosquito-breeding pools of water are no longer collecting outside; wiring new lights into the kitchen to enable the cooks to have a light source beyond the flames of the cooking fire; and installing a model rocket stove (a wood-fired stove with low CO and particulate emissions) in the kitchen for a test drive before the family committed to a total overhaul of the current cook top: a wood fire-heated plancha. The second home received a new, permanent double-burner rocket stove made from scratch with local materials by our students and Rancho Mastatal staff.
We installed pipes to divert drain water from bathroom and kitchen sinks away from the back of the house where it collected. The external wall of the kitchen is shown here.
To create a cleaner cooking environment, we pulled this old sink out of the kitchen in one home and replaced it with a similarly-designed, albeit newer, one with a drain pipe.
To make a rocket stove, our students mixed cow manure, straw, clay, rice hulls and lime to form a soft, clay-like building material easily sculpted around the j-shaped fire chamber and vent stack.
Rocket stoves are unique designs which reduce particulate emissions in smoke that can cause emphysema and chronic respiratory problems in family members spending a lot of time cooking indoors over wood fires. They also reduce the need for fuel: this pot of beans boiled in less than 15 minutes with a small handful of twigs! The family invited several friends in to see the stove in action while we were putting the finishing touches on the electrical wiring and tending the fire periodically. This stove was built over a two day period as a test model.
Friday, March 5, 2010
Leaving Costa Rica, headed for Montana
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