| 5000 litre rainwater harvest tank Kibuye, Rwanda | 
CHECK IT OUT
SATURDAY
Then we took a small boat over to Bat Island, where as the name implies, there are millions of large bats. We hiked for five minutes into the interior and when our guide gave the signal we started clapping which woke the bats up and sent them into a panic flight. There were cows there; a herd of about seven. They were the healthiest cows I have seen so far. Then we went to “ Peace “ island where there is a little shack that sells cold cokes and fries. Pete and I brought travel fishing poles and cast a few times to say we have been fishing in Africa.
There are only little 4” long sardine looking fish called sombasas. I guess there is a massive methane deposit under the lake, so it is pretty much a dead lake. I heard that occasionally gas vents and people along the shore have been killed by the fumes, which is comforting as we are staying in rooms maybe two thousand feet from the shore. We met a boat load of teenage girls on Peace Island who are here from San Diego helping a pastor build a clinic.
| Sambasa Boats at Amahoro Island | 
Tonight   we will all go to a  different hotel where a celebration feast is   planned. Our rooms have  no power or water today so I am eager for a   shower and hope the power  is on again soon as all my batteries are   almost drained. Now, for a  little shuteye before diner…
I   woke  up totally disorientated at sundown thinking it was sunrise and  that  I  had missed diner. The place we went to had a buffet prepared  with the   usual fruits, pasta and potatoes but there was the added treat  of   tender beef in pepper sauce and banana bread for desert. It was    outstanding.
Tomorrow we all split up   and  go to various churches in teams of two as guest pastors. Those  who  know  me will be laughing out loud at that notion, but I guess it  is part  of  the job. I will speak for a few minutes about the clean  water  project  we are doing and Pete will handle the religious stuff.  It’s  difficult  for me to talk out loud about that stuff. It is not a  question  of  believing in God or not, but for me it is a personal and  private  thing.
For the first time I  get the  sense of the  trip winding down. I mentioned that to the other  team and  they don’t  feel that as they have three days of work left. I  need about  two hours  for some detail work and testing at our two  locations.  
Tomorrow the plan is to go out with a local pastor to visit some other churches that may be potential locations for other systems to be installed by other teams. I love getting out into the country away from the urban area of Kibuye.
Tomorrow the plan is to go out with a local pastor to visit some other churches that may be potential locations for other systems to be installed by other teams. I love getting out into the country away from the urban area of Kibuye.
SUNDAY
Speaking in the church was no big deal. I just reprised the post I made to the peacewater.org blog. There were some other muzumkoos from Pennsylvania and that took some of the pressure off me and Pete. The pastor and his people seemed genuinely grateful for the catchment ( I am finally getting used to that term ). Then we went to the pastor’s home and unloaded some of our gift items. I have found that it does no good whatsoever for us to say to these people, “ we are coming to visit, please do not prepare any food as we know it is a big deal and we don’t need that. “ Everywhere we go they have sodas and food, even if that means they ask others from their village to bring items like potatoes and beans for them to prepare. The first pastor’s house was Pastor Valance, and he runs the church where we installed the first system. He seemed embarrassed that he had only room temperature sodas and no flushing toilets.
He had been having services there in a tarp structure but I guess the government doesn’t allow that so his flock of fifty meet on Sundays in his home. He asked us to pray for his church to have the funds to build and so we did there in the dark under strange stars and a crescent moon with the crescent in a place I normally don’t see it. The Big Dipper is upside down here.
I hope to return someday to install a catchment system on his church and hope that he gets it built.
| Magical moment in a field. | 
I    cannot say that I will ever be able to return here but I will    definitely stay involved with the McBrides and assist in preparing other    teams to go out and do the same stuff. Larry mentioned that he and I    may return in the near future to prep the ground for other teams. That    will not happen unless the church or another generous donor like  Karen   funds it. I guess there has been no work done while I have been  gone and   the situation financially will be grim when I return. The  main thing   has been that my career, which has up until this trip  seemed like a   meaningless waste of life, now has a meaning like I  never could have   imagined. This water stuff actually saves lives. The  villagers around   Augustine’s house in the field where he wants to  build a church gathered   around and when they were told that we are the  folks that help provide   the wells, the chlorinators and now the  rainwater harvesting, they all   cheered and wanted to touch us. This is  powerful stuff. I feel that I am meant to be here.
These    people astonish me; from Larry, Pete and Joel to the Africans. You    can’t help but love the Rwandans and you have to try really hard to have them    not love you more. When you are a person that does not have access to running water...it's like I had never seen genuine gratitude before. They were so thankful.
Today    is the first day that I feel kind of oogy. I have no energy; it's  like I   have weights strapped to my arms. I hope it is just that the  week   finally caught up to me. I know I was bitten by mosquitoes last  night as   they woke me up, but that shouldn't be a big deal. I slept  through   breakfast. We went deep into the country to survey two  churches that are   potential locations for future rainwater harvesting  projects. They   really need the help. Both locations have roof areas of  about 2400   square feet.
Using conservative numbers based on forty inches of rain a year the roofs on those churches would yield well over 62,000 gallons of water a year. RAINFALL DATA FROM HERE. The high altitude of Rwanda provides the country with a pleasant tropical highland climate, with a mean daily temperature range of less than 2° C (4° F ). Temperatures vary considerably from region to region because of the variations in altitude. At Kigali, on the central plateau, the average temperature is 21° C (70° F ). Rainfall is heaviest in the southwest and lightest in the east. A long rainy season lasts from February to May and a short one from November through December. At Gisovu, in the west, near Kibuye, annual rainfall averages 160 cm (63 in); at Gabiro, in the northeast, 78 cm (31 in); and at Butare, in the south, 115 cm (45 in). I will save the rest of the technical data for part 2 but as I stated another place on my blog they will have more rain than their ability to store it.
Using conservative numbers based on forty inches of rain a year the roofs on those churches would yield well over 62,000 gallons of water a year. RAINFALL DATA FROM HERE. The high altitude of Rwanda provides the country with a pleasant tropical highland climate, with a mean daily temperature range of less than 2° C (4° F ). Temperatures vary considerably from region to region because of the variations in altitude. At Kigali, on the central plateau, the average temperature is 21° C (70° F ). Rainfall is heaviest in the southwest and lightest in the east. A long rainy season lasts from February to May and a short one from November through December. At Gisovu, in the west, near Kibuye, annual rainfall averages 160 cm (63 in); at Gabiro, in the northeast, 78 cm (31 in); and at Butare, in the south, 115 cm (45 in). I will save the rest of the technical data for part 2 but as I stated another place on my blog they will have more rain than their ability to store it.
Now   I wait patiently for my cheese burger (  which was very good ). Then   Peter and I went to the market to buy our  wives some African skirts.   There was a man walking around with a  machete, which makes both me and   our interpreter nervous; too many  images of bad people with sharp  blades  are stuck in our minds.
We   did  another house visit in the evening. Although we insisted that they   not  serve us diner there was again a full spread. It is fascinating to   get  inside the houses of the Rwandan people. The gratitude they have   for the  simple little gifts we bring is genuine.
TUESDAY
Today   we wrapped up some misc. loose ends  on the two churches where we   installed the rainwater harvesting  systems. We were expecting to go out   scouting for more locations but  the pastor was busy and as is often  the  case in Rwanda the plans we  make get changed. Not much going on  today.  We are hanging again at the  Bethany waiting for cheeseburgers.
| View from the Centre Bethany | 
WEDNESDAY-The last working day in Kibuye
I    went with just three Rwandans to survey three potential locations for    future projects. That was interesting. You can’t help but feel like  an   important person as the gifts of clean water we bring are hugely    important to the Rwandans. We went to a  huge outdoor market in the town    of Rugenbara ( safe to assume  I got the spelling wrong ) were there    must have been 20,000 people. I bought a traditional Rwandan knife for    $0.15.  There was a mild blowing child stampede at our last stop. It was surreal. 
 I   got a last look at one of our project  sites and it was 100%, with the   lock box for the tank valve, the sawyer  filters inside the church and   the happy children. Jasque and I took a  moto-taxi ( motorcycle ) to  the  Bethany. That place has become a  special place to me, right by the  water  of Lake Kivu.
We  met for  diner back  here at Saint Maries and Pastor Augustine had nice  little  gifts for  Joel, Pete and I. As I sit trying to document my last  few  thoughts on  this place the Catholic girls are singing a sweet  sounding  song at the  school below…
This has been one of the greatest experiences of my life.
Tomorrow    we return to the capital of Kigali for shopping for gifts and a final    celebration diner. Friday we will get up at five a.m. and drive two  and  a  half hours to an animal sanctuary were we might get a chance to  see   some wildlife. There really are no wild creatures here where we  are,   except for birds. Whatever there was didn’t survive the genocide  when   people fled to the forests to escape the killers.
THURSDAY
We  went for our last walk in kibuye in the morning before packing up to  leave. Larry is able to win over most of the people we encounter on the  road as he speaks enough of the language to communicate greetings and  answer some questions. He said to an old man in kinyanrwandan “ be  strong old man “ and some ladies walking next to us said to him in their  language  “ you said everything but good morning! ” to which he  replied, “ I am sorry. Good morning old man. Be strong. “ Just that fast  he made friends with everybody. They respect him. That makes him more  effective.
I tried to drink in  everything with my eyes one last time as we walked and I felt a little sad  that my time there was ending. I don’t know yet if I ever will be able  to return but I can say that I fell in love with both the people and the  countryside. We got to do things no tourists ever do; go into villages  far away from hotels and meet as friends in people’s houses. We were  welcomed as honored guests and they served us food and cold sodas even  though for them such things come at great expense to them.
On  the way back to Kigali we stopped at a beautiful waterfall and some  boys came out. Instead of begging they broke into a song. One played  some sort of homemade violin and they sang first in English and then in  their own tongue. Once again I was charmed and entranced. I couldn’t  help but reach for a coin as everybody snapped pictures and the boy made the coin disappear in a flash so that none of his friends even realized I had given him money. They also  received toothbrushes from one of the members of the hygiene team. 
There  was one more stop, at a genocide memorial at the Catholic church where  the walls were pushed in by a bulldozer. I think I must save that tale  for the end as we were guided this time into the memorial by a father  who had lost all nine children in the war. It was a moving, powerful  experience and I caught something a little spooky on my camera.
We  arrived in Kigali late in the afternoon and Larry arranged a treat at  an all-you-can-eat buffet in an upscale place across the street from the  place known in pop culture as the Hotel Rwanda. When we first arrived  in Rwanda Kigali seemed so exotic. After our ten days in the quiet and  small lakeside town of Kibuye the capitol just seemed dirty and hectic.  The infrastructure is…lacking. The sewer system is challenged.  Pete and  I shared a room and we were both out shortly after the lights went out  for our four hours of rest before the last official day in Africa.
FRIDAY
We  were up at 4:45 a.m. and out the door. The safari truck was waiting and  part of our group piled in for a two hour ride to Akagera National  Park.  It was a real treat to see exotic game; cape buffalo, several  types of antelope, hippos, zebras, monkeys, baboons and giraffe in their  natural habitat. If somebody had said to me a year ago that I would be  in a photo with a giraffe in Africa I would have said they were crazy.  My friends will probably accuse me of using photoshop to drop myself  into the picture.
On the way back to  Kigali I stayed awake while the rest of the team on our safari slept. I  wanted to look at every shack, every terraced hillside and every person  with an impossible load balanced on their head one last time.  Our guide  on the game drive, as they call them, lost his daughter in the  genocide. He didn’t want to talk about it on the way out. He said to us,  “ we want to look forward, not back, “ as we drove. But after hanging  out all day we invited him to share a lunch with us at the lodge. We  told him a little about what we had been doing in Rwanda and he opened  up. He said that he had spent five years looking for his daughter,  brother and parents after the genocide. Apparently he found the people  directly responsible for their deaths. He said they told him, “ you will  never find them. We threw them into the river and they are probably  buried in Uganda. “
We finally got back to the hotel and cleaned up and did our final packing.
Those who have encouraged me to go are waiting for the answer to the question; did I find God in Rwanda?
I  would say that I was never as lost as they thought. My issue has always  been with men who put themselves between other men and God like the  politicians disguised as preachers and other power hungry fools trying  to define something that is undefinable.  The world is still poisoned  and full of them. I write of the child molester protectors, the sham  television evangelists and the type of people like the so called  Christian priests and nuns who not only did nothing to stop the genocide  but actually participated in the mass murder. I still believe that all  religions bring one closer to God and that it is men who try to  interfere it that journey by trying to judge other people.
I  saw love of God and a positive power in the people of Rwanda like I  have never seen before. I remember that night when we stood in that  field that pastor Augustine wants to build a church on; we made a circle  and joined hands with a group of children in the middle and we asked  that he be successful in the quest to build his church. It gave me goosebumps 
Did I feel the power of God?
Like a lightning bolt. 
There  was a powerful current of spiritual energy that surrounded us. Their  conditions and their ability to be warm and loving and happy anyway made  all my problems at home inconsequential for a while. We were working  with people with scars from weapons used against them on their bodies  and people who wore emotional scars from having lost in some cases,  their entire families. These things do not make my own struggles less  real, but they did demonstrate that the life you have, including the  hardships and struggles, is a beautiful thing.
The Cass family can be proud of the fact that they made possible clean water for hundreds of people. I am still dealing with strange feelings. You get this strange feeling of guilt about everything we have. I felt like I was getting too much credit for making the gutter installation part happen. As we walked up to the door of Larry and Caroyn McBridge two nights after I returned for the debriefing and to see they next team off I was explaining to my wife how everything felt too easy and I wanted to get them to stop treating me like some sort of returning hero. We walked in and there was a standing O for me. It was really, really awkward. But of course, it is nice to be appreciated.
Suddenly all those people at peacewater, whom I had met before yet felt distance, seemed familiar to me. We had all shared an experience; we had went to Rwanda and been ruined. Gloriously ruined. And when I walked in for the debriefing it was like I knew everybody.
Gloriously ruined is the term for having your world view shattered. It is what happens when you are able to help somebody in a meaningful way and you ask nothing in return. It is how you feel when you go into a Walmart and what had been junky stuff before now seems like abundance and amazing quality.
A special thanks again to my wife and all those who made this trip possible.
Next up; The How to Install Rainwater Harvesting Systems in the Third World guide, er...manual. Whatever.
I am finally getting used to my new title; rainwater catchment specialist. I think when I have an office again someday the sign on the door will say something like, " structural drainage engineer . "
Part one and two of this series on Rwanda can be found here.
Gazillions of photos are linked to in a slide show below;
The Cass family can be proud of the fact that they made possible clean water for hundreds of people. I am still dealing with strange feelings. You get this strange feeling of guilt about everything we have. I felt like I was getting too much credit for making the gutter installation part happen. As we walked up to the door of Larry and Caroyn McBridge two nights after I returned for the debriefing and to see they next team off I was explaining to my wife how everything felt too easy and I wanted to get them to stop treating me like some sort of returning hero. We walked in and there was a standing O for me. It was really, really awkward. But of course, it is nice to be appreciated.
Suddenly all those people at peacewater, whom I had met before yet felt distance, seemed familiar to me. We had all shared an experience; we had went to Rwanda and been ruined. Gloriously ruined. And when I walked in for the debriefing it was like I knew everybody.
Gloriously ruined is the term for having your world view shattered. It is what happens when you are able to help somebody in a meaningful way and you ask nothing in return. It is how you feel when you go into a Walmart and what had been junky stuff before now seems like abundance and amazing quality.
A special thanks again to my wife and all those who made this trip possible.
Next up; The How to Install Rainwater Harvesting Systems in the Third World guide, er...manual. Whatever.
I am finally getting used to my new title; rainwater catchment specialist. I think when I have an office again someday the sign on the door will say something like, " structural drainage engineer . "
Part one and two of this series on Rwanda can be found here.
Gazillions of photos are linked to in a slide show below;