My brother Bob tells me there are millions of "bucket farmers" in sub-Saharan Africa. This was a new concept to me, but I get the gist of it. People all over Africa are stuck with the difficult task of sending their women or children a fairly long way to get water and carry it in buckets back to their gardens.
If I had to do it, the first thing I'd worry about is sore shoulders. Then spilling a lot of the water on the way. Then heat exhaustion. But I guess these people are accumstomed to the climate.
Bob likes to design things and understands a bit about the physics of motion. He's a mechanic and has always liked tinkering with things. So he set about designing and making something he calls a water rickshaw. A child can pull one with four 5-gallon containers on it! The handles are comfortable and angled properly. The wheels are non-pneumatic, so there will never be a tire to repair.
But he could use some help from people who are good at the internet and good at administration. He's a designer and builder. And he can envision people benefitting from this thing, or some version of it. He doesn't care about profits, and has been advised that the design is too general to patent. But he needs helpers.
There are probably people in Africa using such things already, because they are simple. But the fact that researches give us such appalling statistics means this: More help is needed! There are two ways Bob envisions it. One is simply for many more people to have a great thing such as a water rickshaw. Another is for many enterprising people to grab the idea and get rolling (excuse the pun) with little micro-businesses producing the things locally! Then their families and communities could have some economic benefit, too. If you want to view a picture and see the website, its www.carts4communities.org
Is there anyone in my readership that knows about micro-loans, or how to disseminate such plans? Please let Bob know if you do. His name is Bob Lee, and his email is BoRoBeRe@comcast.net
If I had to do it, the first thing I'd worry about is sore shoulders. Then spilling a lot of the water on the way. Then heat exhaustion. But I guess these people are accumstomed to the climate.
Bob likes to design things and understands a bit about the physics of motion. He's a mechanic and has always liked tinkering with things. So he set about designing and making something he calls a water rickshaw. A child can pull one with four 5-gallon containers on it! The handles are comfortable and angled properly. The wheels are non-pneumatic, so there will never be a tire to repair.
But he could use some help from people who are good at the internet and good at administration. He's a designer and builder. And he can envision people benefitting from this thing, or some version of it. He doesn't care about profits, and has been advised that the design is too general to patent. But he needs helpers.
There are probably people in Africa using such things already, because they are simple. But the fact that researches give us such appalling statistics means this: More help is needed! There are two ways Bob envisions it. One is simply for many more people to have a great thing such as a water rickshaw. Another is for many enterprising people to grab the idea and get rolling (excuse the pun) with little micro-businesses producing the things locally! Then their families and communities could have some economic benefit, too. If you want to view a picture and see the website, its www.carts4communities.org
Is there anyone in my readership that knows about micro-loans, or how to disseminate such plans? Please let Bob know if you do. His name is Bob Lee, and his email is BoRoBeRe@comcast.net
