2013 Stockholm Water Prize. Dr. Morgan recently shared the design of The Mukombe on the forum of the Sustainable Sanitation Alliance. The Mukombe is a HAND WASHING device – a “tippy tap” as it is commonly known within the Water, Sanitation & Hygiene (WASH) scene – as it just requires a little tip to provide the user with just enough water to wash the hands. In water-arid areas, such a simple device can be essential to hygiene.
Dr. Morgan says: “(The Mukombe) was first conceived by Dr Jim Watt when he worked in Zimbabwe as a Salvation Army doctor in Chiweshe in the late 1970′s. (…) This vegetable had a hard shell and could be used as a gourd or calabash for carrying water and other commodities. It is commonly grown in the fields. The great innovation was to turn this common plant into a hand washing device. (…) Many years ago I made a fibre glass replica of this remarkably simple and elegant device. Many if not most natural plants did not have the right shape. Using the fibre glass replica with its idealised shape, Prodorite in Harare have been able to mass produce the product. The mukombe holds about 2 litres (1/2 Gallons) of water and can provide enough water in a single filling to give about 35 hand washes.”
No, it is not a voodoo curse, or a new dance step, but rather a design by Dr. Peter Morgan, resident of Zimbabwe and a winner of the Dr. Morgan says: “(The Mukombe) was first conceived by Dr Jim Watt when he worked in Zimbabwe as a Salvation Army doctor in Chiweshe in the late 1970′s. (…) This vegetable had a hard shell and could be used as a gourd or calabash for carrying water and other commodities. It is commonly grown in the fields. The great innovation was to turn this common plant into a hand washing device. (…) Many years ago I made a fibre glass replica of this remarkably simple and elegant device. Many if not most natural plants did not have the right shape. Using the fibre glass replica with its idealised shape, Prodorite in Harare have been able to mass produce the product. The mukombe holds about 2 litres (1/2 Gallons) of water and can provide enough water in a single filling to give about 35 hand washes.”
How the Mukombe works (drawings by Jim Watt):
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