| country: | Honduras |
| departures: | Departures every Saturday throughout the year |
| price: | From £675 (1 week) - £1325 (4 weeks) per adult and £250 (1 week) - £790 (4 weeks) per child excluding flights, plus additional fee of £230 per family (regardless of number of children). 30% off for children aged under 18. |
| vouchers: | Gift vouchers can be used with this holiday |
the amazing things you'll be doing
Join this project and live in the ancient colonial town of Copan Ruinas, working with the indigenous communities nearby. This unique project enables families to learn Spanish whilst experiencing first-hand a new culture, by interacting with the community on construction projects. Assist in the building of energy efficient stoves for cleaner air and less wood consumption, promote agriculture to provide harvests for one family for one year, or help with livestock rearing. We have, along with leaders of the indigenous communities, developed short-term manual projects to improve the standard of living for hundreds of indigenous families in rural Honduras.
20 hours of one-on-one Spanish classes (based on skill level) are included in the price to help all the family converse in their new environment.
Also included in your fee is the funding needed to successfully complete whichever project you choose to do within the week, whether this be bricks, cement, seeds, fertilisers, tools, extra local labour, wood, wire fencing, corrugated iron, livestock etc. The idea is that you will have funded, worked on and completed each individual project within a week, aimed to improve the standard of living of one family.
Parents and children will have their own bedrooms in semi basic, but comfortable accommodation living with a local family. All amenities will be included, such as washing facilities and 3 meals a day. Minimum age: 12 years
The Projects
Volunteers will work with their chosen individual project until it is finished, which will be within one week! Days start early with eating breakfast with the host family before catching the pickup to the relevant project site, arriving to start work at about 7.30am. You will then work with the corresponding family for whom you are funding and working on your project, until around midday when you will eat lunch and return to Copán to start Spanish classes at 2pm.
Each project/task is designed to be started and finished within one week. We have together with leaders of the communities conducted numerous surveys, investigations and meetings to find out what the community leaders and families really want and need. It should be noted that the following projects have been approved by members of the communities. The following project areas are ones we have decided are most needed and beneficial for the local indigenous families to confront the problems mentioned above.
20 hours of one-on-one Spanish classes (based on skill level) are included in the price to help all the family converse in their new environment.
Also included in your fee is the funding needed to successfully complete whichever project you choose to do within the week, whether this be bricks, cement, seeds, fertilisers, tools, extra local labour, wood, wire fencing, corrugated iron, livestock etc. The idea is that you will have funded, worked on and completed each individual project within a week, aimed to improve the standard of living of one family.
Parents and children will have their own bedrooms in semi basic, but comfortable accommodation living with a local family. All amenities will be included, such as washing facilities and 3 meals a day. Minimum age: 12 years
a day in the life of a volunteer
This project is a great way for families to work together, a real bonding experience with a positive final goal of the completion of a much needed cooking stove. Language barriers seem to be of no concern to the younger members of the family as the universal language of ‘Play’ encourages a real sense of integration between family volunteers and the local community. This opportunity will be an exciting learning experience for the whole family with new friends made young and old. Children will be given responsibilities depending on age – maybe help Mum and Dad with the actual building or out in open helping local families look after the smaller children or babies, but always with an aspect of a relaxed environment and time to do the things they want, whether it’s a game of football or a bike ride into the country. The Projects
Volunteers will work with their chosen individual project until it is finished, which will be within one week! Days start early with eating breakfast with the host family before catching the pickup to the relevant project site, arriving to start work at about 7.30am. You will then work with the corresponding family for whom you are funding and working on your project, until around midday when you will eat lunch and return to Copán to start Spanish classes at 2pm.
Each project/task is designed to be started and finished within one week. We have together with leaders of the communities conducted numerous surveys, investigations and meetings to find out what the community leaders and families really want and need. It should be noted that the following projects have been approved by members of the communities. The following project areas are ones we have decided are most needed and beneficial for the local indigenous families to confront the problems mentioned above.
volunteer travel - what's it all about?
Are you are looking for an adventurous trip with a purpose, or on a gap year or career break? If you want to make a difference in some of the world’s most important conservation areas - and in community projects - then volunteer trips are for you! Volunteers tend to have a sense of adventure, and come from a range of different backgrounds and from all over the world. Edward Abbey said 'sentiment without action is the ruin of the soul'.
how this holiday makes a difference
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By living with a local family you really are making a difference to their life, not only in a financial aspect, but also in a learning experience. You can be guaranteed that the money for accommodation and food is going straight back into the local economy. Local families buy food produce from local providers, helping not only the host family but the whole community.
On the actual project you will be assisting the building of energy efficient stoves for cleaner air and less wood consumption for the local Mayan communities. Almost all Indigenous families use three-stone fires to cook. Due to the living conditions of the families, often in one room to cook, sleep and eat, wood burning is extremely detrimental to the health of the children and other family members. Also, burning wood on an open fire is a very inefficient way to cook and many trees are cut down each day. Our stoves are simple wood burning stoves made from cement, block and bricks that encase the fire and provide a chimney to vent smoke out of the home. They cut down the amount of smoke and carbon dioxide in the home by 70% and use 75% less firewood than three-stone fires thus saving resources and time used collecting firewood. Also, the use of less wood consumption promotes agriculture to provide bigger harvests and increased livestock rearing, whilst also reducing air pollution locally and globally. We have committed ourselves to helping and assisting the May Chortí villages around Copan Ruinas. These areas of Honduras are the poorest in the country and, as so often happens, rural communities are forgotten and ignored, with more emphasis given to urban school and communities. Our aims are first and foremost to improve the standard of living of 100’s of Indigenous families who live in often extreme poverty. Global Vision International, with the full support of the Indigenous leaders of the communities, aims to tackle these issues in many different ways through basic funding of simple but essential physical sustainable projects. Once the initial starting phase has been funded and completed, it can be continued for many years without further funding, helping the families become self-sustainable and even start micro-businesses to increase the family income. We will begin work in the Maya Chortí community of San Rafael, with a population of approximately 300 and whose family income is about 25 Lempiras (just over a dollar) a day. With this money, up to ten children must be fed, clothed and educated. Education is free in Honduras, the materials are not, so this can force children not to attend school. Volunteer contributions are removing this financial constraint by supplying the children with the school materials they require. It is hoped with the extra income the family will receive with this burden removed that those children who have dropped out will return. Living conditions for those in the community is exceptionally basic; their wooden and mud homes consist of one or two rooms, where the cooking, eating and sleeping is spent in the same room, shared also by animals. Running water is scarce, sanitation is almost non-existent. 40% of children do not reach the age of two due to malnutrition and dysentery. As mentioned, we will be working in the community of San Rafael at first, with the aim to start work in more communities, including La Pintada, Santa Cruz, Sinaí, Boca del Monte and Rincon del Buey. It must be stressed that we have the full support of the local indigenous leaders and teachers. |
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