miƩrcoles, 3 de marzo de 2010

Save The Children

http://www.savethechildren.net/alliance/media/newsdesk/2010-03-02.html

We were lucky but many other families were not. Thousands of children here have been through an incredibly traumatic experience. Many will be injured, and may have lost their parents or friends. Others will have been separated from their families in the chaos of the quake and are extremely vulnerable

When children have experienced this level of trauma, it is crucial they are able to get back to school and regain a sense of normality and routine fast, as this will help the healing process.

Graphics to Undestand Geology

some links to understand the geology

http://earthquake.usgs.gov/earthquakes/eqarchives/poster/2010/20100227.php

http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2010/02/27/world/americas/0227-chile-quake-map.html?ref=americas

Help from the Beekeeping World

I am traveling friday morning to the disaster area. I will try to find the family of a colleague and the uncles of a worker that live at Curanilahue.

On this trip I will try to find a school that we could help to reconstruct.

There are many beekeeping friends from around the world whishing to help Chile.

If the wiretranfer that Jhon smith from NsW Australia works, I will ask other friends from abroad to deposit some money with the porpuse of:

a.- Help to the inhabitants of the chosen town right now.
b.- Help to reconstruct the school of that town.
c.- Install the capacities on that school for the teaching of beekeeping.