Chief Mountain, Colorado

Chief Mountain, Colorado
Showing posts with label Colorado Flooding. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Colorado Flooding. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 4, 2014

Flood Recovery in Lyons, CO

As it has happened quite often with this blog, it went on a small six month hiatus, one that can be credited to a combination of a busy schedule, lack of internet connection, and mostly procrastination. My sincere apologies.

So, picking up right where I left off, my last entry summarized a whirlwind of events in the two short weeks of Corps Member Training Institute. The day after induction, most teams departed for their first round projects, with their destinations ranging from south Texas to Arizona to Arkansas, and many in between. Since my team was selected to be local first round, we had a few days off before beginning our project, a time that we used very wisely: 
Sun 2 after completing the Manitou Springs Incline, 1 mile of stairs
A few days later, we were on our way to Boulder, Colorado. Upon arrival, we settled into our beautiful home for the next five weeks, better known as the AmeriMansion:
Our home at the foothills in Boulder, Colorado
Enjoying one of the many snow days
We shared our six bedroom home among twenty people, living with a team from the Water Unit that was working with Boulder Open Space and Mountain Parks. All in all we got extremely lucky with our housing - we were living across the road from the foothills, with beautiful trails within walking distance, yet we were still within minutes of downtown Boulder, a place I briefly visited (and fell in love with) on my cross-country road trip two summers ago.

Located at the base of the foothills of the Rocky Mountains, Boulder is a very popular tourist destination. Known as a hippie haven, the city has been voted as one of the happiest places to live in the United States, boasting an array of outdoor recreation, healthy lifestyles, delicacies, arts, music, and everything in between.

For a vegan foodie, the food selection was a dream come true; for a yogi, an abundance of yoga studios (if you have never tried hot yoga, please do!) and the Shambhala Meditation Center offered much needed meditation escapes; for a reader, the Boulder Public Library, World of Books and Trident Booksellers were my sanctuaries, where I spent most of my free time; for a lover of the great outdoors, the beautiful trails surrounding Boulder and the Rocky Mountain National Park were pure joy; lastly, the city offered an abundance of breweries, a winery, and a few fun bars that provided dancing, karaoke, and even arcade games that pleased my inner-nerd!
A trail above Boulder, Colorado
Rocky Mountain National Park
For six weeks, my team and I worked with the City of Lyons assisting in flood recovery. Our tasks varied on a day to day basis, but they included mucking and gutting flooded homes (everything from ripping out dry wall to sledge hammering tile in bathrooms, from taking out tile floors to demolishing entire rooms), helping residents move their belongings out of destroyed homes into storage (we even helped a wine business owner, whose winery was located on the creek in the mountains, move dozens of boxes of wine from his flooded garage... yes, he did invite us for a tasting), dirt removal (it is exactly what it sounds like - you take a shovel, and you move dirt, avoiding the patches that were drenched in sewage water due to unpleasant odor), debris removal, and preparing homes for mold remediation treatments.
An article about our work in Lyons in their local paper, The Recorder
This home was lifted off of its foundation by the flood water
Removing dirt which covered this property during the flood
Mucking and gutting a church in Lyons, Colorado
Helping out in Lyons was my second disaster deployment, the first being in Moore, Oklahoma, following the tornadoes last spring. Unsurprisingly, both brought up very similar emotions. Emotionally challenging and draining, both experiences come with a silver lining - a shift in perspective that can only be experienced after talking to a person that has lost all of their material possessions, a person in economic distress, yet a person with gratitude and joy simply because they're alive.
 
I recall a conversation with a man who lived on the creek whose guest house was washed away while his daughter and her boyfriend were sleeping in it. A rescue mission followed and thankfully nobody was hurt. Having lost his entire home, having had his entire property destroyed, having had his family almost killed in the flood water, all this man kept saying was how excited he is to rebuild, and how lucky he is to have my team there to help.
 
We spend so much of our time worrying about the small things and chasing after the wrong things, attempting to fill the gap in our lives with material goods when in reality, who we are what is left once all of that is taken away.


I could not have asked for a better team


 

Tuesday, December 10, 2013

Corps Member Training Institute

Due to the government shutdown, Corps Member Training Institute was condensed from a month to two weeks. Fortunately, the staff worked extremely hard to ensure that all necessary trainings were completed in the short amount of time. Unfortunately, the new schedule left very little time for unit outings – hikes, museum visits, teambuilding and PT games. We did, however, get to take our temporary teams out to dinner for the first week, which gave us a chance to get to know them and sample some delicious local cuisine (nothing fancy, but I am a firm believer that the best conversation very often happens around food, so I was happy).

As always, we made the best of it.
AmeriCorps Next Top Model  (Uniform violations edition)
Unit time at Red Rocks Amphitheater
Chief Mountain, CO - elevation 11,709ft
Chief Mountain, CO
Classes, classes, and more classes. From Red Cross First Aid/ CPR certification to diversity training, from driver training to AmeriLympics, the shortened CTI was jam-packed with information as we prepared the corps members for induction and deployment. A week and a half into CTI we finally got our permanent teams, and I could not have gotten luckier. For our first round project, we will be working on disaster recovery in Lyons, Colorado, the hardest hit area in the September flooding.
My fantastic team all geared up for disaster recovery
Before we knew it, Induction Day was upon us. Before I knew it, I was holding one of my corps member's hand and tearing up as we listened to an incredible, inspirational reflection by Sun Unit's very own on challenges, perseverance, and turning obstacles into opportunities. The ceremony came and went, and the corps members of Class 20A were officially sworn in. A big congratulations, and best of luck to all!
Leadership of the Sun Unit on Induction Day
My amazing team on Induction Day!

Sunday, September 29, 2013

A Week in the Life of an AmeriCorps NCCC Team Leader (In Training)

As some of you may have heard, "The most recent continuing resolution passed by the House would cut all federal funding for the agency that oversees [NCCC], the Corporation for National and Community Service, effectively wiping out AmeriCorps."

Source: An AmeriCorps Alum Defends The Program Against Republican Defunding Threats

Time and time again I have heard people refer to my life as a "permanent vacation." I suppose it's an easy assumption to make if you base your judgment on the photos that I post without ever actually having a conversation with me. Sadly, we're human and that's what we do - we judge without investigating, we stereotype, we assume and we put people in boxes.

But here's the thing - most of the time, we're wrong.

Yes, I travel, I travel a lot. Unfortunately, travel and vacation are not synonymous. I am, however, fortunate enough to have a job that allows me to explore new places on a monthly basis, acquire new skills, work with and learn from amazing individuals, and get unlimited satisfaction from helping those in need.

So, what exactly do I do for a living? Well, I suppose there is no better way of answering that question than recalling the last week (and a half) of my life.
Wednesday: Partnered with the American Red Cross and answered
phones at the Rocky Mountain PBS telethon, raising $1,066,061
to aid the victims of Colorado Flooding
Thursday: Chainsaw training to prepare for future
environmental projects
Friday: Helped out flood victims with Boulder CareConnect, mucking,
gutting, and cleaning out basements       
Saturday: Volunteered at the Denver River Sweep,
clearing out invasive weeds along the bank
Thursday: Teambuilding Ropes Course, helping my roomie
get over her fear of heights
Thursday: Teambuilding Ropes Course
Friday: Partnered with Operation Blessing to help clear debris in 
Lyons, CO, one of the hardest hit areas
Friday: Trailer park in Lyons, CO destroyed by the flood
Friday: Assisted in clearing mud from a home devastated by a
flash flood in Lyons, CO
Friday: Mucked and gutted a home of a flood victim in Lyons, CO
Yes, I am lucky enough to have a job that does not always feel like work. However, what AmeriCorps NCCC members get done for communities throughout the United States is priceless. If I could have a dollar for every time that I heard "Thank you AmeriCorps, this would not have been done without you," perhaps I could fund this program myself...