For all you PCVs out there, do look over Water Charity's website: this initiative is designed especially for PCVs to be able to quickly and easily address clean water issues within their communities. If your community has need of such a project, I highly recommend applying for a grant from Water Charity. The application and reporting processes are intentionally very simple and straightforward so that your community can have access to clean water as quickly as possible.
For everyone, look around on Water Charity and consider donating to help another of these worthy projects, conducted by PCVs in communities around the world!





I went straight from Camp GLOW to a friend’s boat to take my last opportunity to visit the atoll of Pakin, near Pohnpei. Atolls are amazing: they have everything you would expect from a tropical island—sandy beaches, crystal-clear ocean, hammocks on the beach, delicious seafood. Very different from the rainy, mountainous, mangrove-encircled island I’ve been enjoying for the last two years! ;-)
And while all of these activities were amazing, I saved the best part of my summer for last: the long-awaited addition to our school (for which I take no credit at all) was finally completed just in time for graduation this year, so I finally put my meticulous organization and labelling skills to good use and spent many happy hourse with the librarian discussing the application of the Dewey Decimal system in our library and labelling and cataloguing some 1300 books, of which our little country library now boasts. Two years ago, I think the number of usable books in our library was somewhere in the ballpark of 60, and now it is 1300! So, for all of you who donated books since my desperate plea back in 2009, THANK YOU! You all have done so much for the students of Salapwuk, and your generosity will be a gift that keeps on giving as the kids enjoy the library and become more literate and more productive citizens because of it. 

