Monday was day one of work. We went to a distribution center in a local Parish that was affected by Hurricane Isaac. Our team put together personal care bags at a location where different churches come to give out to their parishioners. We did over 300 bags for the day. Jamie and I got to help a kitchen that was feeding volunteers clean out their area. Their kitchen is called Mercy Chefs and they travel to disaster areas to make food to feed volunteers. Debby, the head chef, told us that it is her duty to feed volunteers because without food for them, there essentially couldn't be any volunteers. Never until this day did I once think of how volunteers and first responders to disasters eat. Now I know. Sam, Jamie, and I got to work with another kitchen, The Chow Train. These people were the best. We pulled chicken for them so they could make enchiladas the following day. Once we had all of the chicken done, the whole team got in on the fun. We made about 30 trays of food for the next day, leaving the chefs to do the other about 40. Once we were done, they popped a tray of food for us in the oven. We did some good work. This lovely 12 hour day ended around 8ish.
Just me and the debris from the house. |
Thursday and Friday we were back at a different distribution center. This place hands out food, drinks, diapers, and cleaning supplies. The line never ends. It is open from 9-4 and cars are constantly coming. Friday we actually counted that there were 317 cars that came from the late opening time of 12-4. I really enjoyed working at these places because we got to meet some of the people that the food and supplies were going to. Everyone is so thankful we are helping them and it makes me feel like the reason I signed up for the program is really coming full circle on this part of our project.
Yesterday we traveled to a different Parish to do some mucking and gutting of a neighborhood that was really devastated by the hurricane. The damage was unreal. The home we worked on had water 3 feet high on the second floor. That means the entire first floor was under water and up to 3 feet upstairs. We had to gut the whole first floor from the ceiling to the floor. We typically only do 2 feet above the water line on the drywall, but this house and neighborhood was that damaged. The awesome part about this neighborhood was that they go from house to house everyday and help each other out. They are rebuilding their neighborhood together and they all have an awesome sense of community. It was nice to work with about 25 neighbors and really help them speed recovery process up. We only worked a half day since it was our 6th day of work. 6th long day of work. 65.25 hours worth of work this week to be exact, no big deal though. I earned my night last night that is for sure. Let's hope my body can keep up with me this week!
Needless to say, River 10 is more than thrilled to be in NOLA. I personally love the fact we are doing real disaster work because Florida was kind of a bust as far as the work load. I signed up for AmeriCorps knowing the possibility of responding to a disaster would be high. I am so glad that we are helping out here because they need it. Talking to people while working and really hearing how happy we are that we are helping reassures me that even through some tough days, I am so glad I am doing this work. We have another 2 weeks of disaster relief here in NOLA and I personally am thrilled. The work days are long, but so worth it in the long run.
That's all I have for this long 65.25 hour week! Really looking forward to hearing about what our 4th round project will be. We should know today or tomorrow. Can't believe it is 4th round already! More to come next week from me in NOLA! Pictures are taking way too long for my patience, maybe next week!
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