How You Can Help in Honduras by Lance Winslow & Dr. Nathalie Fiset - HTML preview

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Road Conditions

00012.jpg00013.jpg00014.jpg[Honduras Mission Trips Co.]

Only some of the roads in the larger cities of Honduras are paved, others are cobblestone and most are dirt. In the rural areas they are mostly all dirt and due to the average rainfall there are often landslides making the roads impassible or causing vehicles to get stuck due to heavy mud.

The mountain peaks are from 3,000 to 9,000 feet and the temperature at higher elevations can be very cold and it should be noted that 2 degrees per thousand feet you go up in elevation is the norm and when you add in some wind-chill factor, they temperatures can change along the route. The treacherous roads cause many accidents and the statistics are not pretty, better roads are needed, along with bridges, landslide barriers and runoff ditches and pipes to divert water flows.

If you are interested in the some actual video footage of travels and poor road conditions in Honduras you can find them in the "References and Works Cited" section at the back of this eBook under the Media, NGOs and Internet Articles or Pictures Worth 1000 Words Sections. These videos are a must see for anyone going on a volunteer mission to Honduras, they were brought back by Dr. Nathalie Fiset a Doctor from one of her successful medical mission trips. One volunteer told us about her first encounter and the foreshadowing signs of the muddy road ahead in a little story of her journey thru the treacherous muddy roads;

"I admit I was a little judgmental at first when I saw little girls with pretty dresses but that were very dirty. After riding in the back of the trucks for hours through muddy roads and small rivers, I was the dirtiest person. Lesson learned!"

Indeed, we had so many similar reports from volunteers during their adventures to Honduras. Stories of bouncing around in the back of a Toyota Truck and not being able to put their elbows out or they would get them mudded. Then were heard comments about leaning to one side to get traction, getting out of the truck completely to help dig out tires while stuck in a rut and of course the rain, cold, wind, small landslides along the way too.

" We had the occasion to “sample” the roads more on our mission in 2006 as we went through the mountains. They are dangerous as steep and when it comes rainy season, the rate of fatal accidents is astounding."