She described her situation: “We had to dig our own traditional well down at the bottom of the valley near the river. We dug a hole that was two meters deep. Then we would use small containers to scoop water from the well into our buckets. During the dry season we would each have to wait five to six hours for our turn to collect water."
Then WaterAid helped the community to drill a borehole fitted with an electric pump. Now Asha has easy access to safe, clean water close to home, which has freed up time for more farming work, as she describes: “I have my own shaban [smallholding farm] out of town. Before we had the new tapstand, some days I wouldn’t go to the farm at all, I would just collect water all day. Everything had to stop then, we couldn’t do any other activities until we had collected our water for the day.
“Now there is no worry, I can wake up early in the morning and go to the farm and know I can come back and fetch water from the tap stand without there being a line. Now I can spend more time at the farm and grow cassava, rice and sweet potatoes.”
As well as having more time to work, Asha now knows she is a lot safer from illness, and can use more water each day. She told us: “When we used the old traditional well we had problems with diseases, including cholera. It was horrible, very horrible. Now we get clean, safe water from the tap stand, and we don’t get diarrheal diseases so often.
“When we had the old well, we didn’t have enough water. Some days we would have to decide that the water we got that day would just be for drinking and not other purposes. Washing and other purposes would have to wait until another day.”
Asha can be confident the new well will continue to deliver safe water long into the future. Like all WaterAid's projects, the community was fully involved in the project from day one. They helped build it and were trained to maintain it. Asha herself helped in the construction, as she recounted:
“When we got the new well I took part in the project by helping to dig the trench that the pipes were laid in and helping build the riser tanks. It was hard work, but I was the founding member of the water and sanitation committee and I wanted to do something to help us get safe, clean water.”
