Officially the hardest week of the project and in the running for the hardest week of my life thus far! We all worked as hard as we could and I at least learnt that I could power through when you think you've hit bottom. But we knew we were working to finish something brilliant and beautiful, and we wanted it to be the best we could muster!
Monday was spent mainly on the remaining book sorting, cataloguing and referencing with some finishing touches to the painting of inside. Tuesday saw us starting to sand down and varnish any shelves that the fundi's had completed, and I finally finished books! 3785 in total, and that is excluding the book-by-book ones and the ones the school already owned :S Lets hope there are enough shelves!
Steff and I were lucky enough to go back to Lindi on Wednesday to print bits and buy even more solvent! (Going through it like water!) While we were gone the girls were working so hard! Came back to find the blackboard repainted, the other outside wall was being painted and the fundi rangi (painter) was half way through the library rules on the wall. This was such an upbeat day, because I started to think that this impossible task was doable by Saturday!
We had had to change the date of the opening ceremony from the Friday to the Saturday because of Form 2 mock exams. This meant we lost a day of travelling but realistically it meant we could spend longer and involve all of the students, which was the whole point of us being there.
Thursday and Friday saw us working harder than before as the days to opening ceremony grew closer and closer. The metal grids on the windows were FINALLY being removed by the fundis, and the mesh going on, so we needed to paint the grids the pale dutch blue of the bars. After that every chair had to be sanded down and varnished with two coats, which was a laborious job and one that was made even harder when we ran out of varnish!!
By the end of the late night, we had almost finished all of the furniture, all of the painting and moved all of the boxes of books over from the ICT store room to our semi-complete library space. Our guest house -host, kaka Doula, was kind enough to make us all chips or chipsi mayai for lunch and transport them up to the school, because we couldn't stop to eat. Unfortunately a 2nd member of our 7 had to go to the hospital today as she had malaria, so we were two down and desperately under-staffed, but somehow managed to cope. The floor was 'cleaned' of dust and dirt, although white spirit and soapy water did not remove the paint and varnish splodges on the floor :( Even still, we had just over 24 hours to go and it was really taking shape.
Dinner tonight was a bowl of rice krispies with powdered milk; I was too tired to make yet another vegetable omelette.
The final day had arrived and it was yet another rushed breakfast and early start. Today we actually put the first books on the finished shelves in their pride of place. I thought this would be the relatively easy part...oh how wrong I was! The neatly arranged sections of general science, biology, physics, chemistry and maths had to be taken down and moved more times than I can count, to make way for stray books and better organisation. It was such a pain to have a nice finished section of Form 2/3 Maths books squeezing brilliantly onto one shelf, to then find 5 Form 1 books and have to move everything along and across. Science and maths are no longer in my top 5 subjects of all time haha.
When all books were on, we moved the 'finished' desks and chairs into the space and sorted the comfy corner. It was surreal to think it was 4pm and everything was more or less finished! We decorated the library with bunting and balloons, put a blue ribbon around the door, and made posters detailing the library floorplan and explaining the colours and coding system.
Dinner tonight was yet another bowl of cereal, then packing and an early night was in order. It was strange to think that 21 days had passed in Phaisha Guesthouse so quickly!