Hurricane Maria hit Puerto Rico on September 20, and a month later, clean water continues to be hard to come by for some residents -- particularly those in more rural parts of the island.
Lea esta historia en español. / Read this story in Spanish.
Police escorted a convoy of veterans and volunteers from San Juan past fallen homes and torn-up trees. As the team drove along, they stayed in touch with two-way radios.
“Okay, we got horses on the left in the middle of the road,” said a voice on the radio.
The convoy eventually stopped at a patch of mud next to a river in Salinas. In an instant, two men were ankle deep in the water setting a blue hose while others ran it to a 250-gallon portable tank sitting on the riverbank.

Then Ray Guasp started pumping, back and forth, bringing the river water up. Once there, it got treated with chlorine, tested, and finally, pumped through a manual filter.
The product is made by a Utah-based company named Aquamira, and the whole process takes about an hour.
As he pumps, Guasp said he doesn’t like to watch people do things. He likes to do them.
“We’ve been sitting on a couch on the sidelines waiting for things to get better, needle really hasn’t moved that much,” he said. “We thought we could maybe do some help, and do some good, and help support what the efforts are.”

Guasp served in the Marines. But this week, he and his volunteer team aren’t on orders. They say they’re self-deployed Connecticut residents -- working with local emergency officials to target areas that need it most.
They’ve raised money for equipment, paid their own way, and packed their own food. Some are veterans, some aren’t, but all wanted to help.
Guasp said he got his dad off the island five days after Hurricane Maria passed, but he has other family all over.
“I have Dorado, I have Salinas, this town here -- my aunt lives in,” he said, listing off locations where his family lives.
Angel Fernandez helped coordinate the trip. He’s retired Navy and considers Puerto Rico home.
“I wasn’t born and raised here, but I live part of the time – I come four times a year with my family and they know I love the island -- that’s where my roots came from,” he said. “And, when you’re overseas doing your missions, you don’t have no personal ties at all.”
But this mission is clearly personal.
With the river raging and the rain falling, the obvious problem isn’t water, but clean water. And this team stands by its product. Before they give it out, they drink it.
“They know that they can trust us to provide them with the clean water they need,” said Fernandez. “It’s all about trust.”
As they worked, people slowly came down in the rain to the river valley with empty containers – water jugs, bleach and detergent bottles, some five-gallon buckets.

“I’m looking for water – to cook, to drink. We don’t have nothing over here now,” said Joey Diaz, who came here with his wife and two kids. He was born in Puerto Rico and lived in Connecticut.
Diaz said they’ve gotten some bottled water delivered from the government and they’ve got what they need to drink. But if they want to bathe or clean, they have to go to the river.
“It’s hard. It’s hard. Very hard,” he said. But when he sees the volunteers helping out, “[I] feel happy, man. That helps a lot.”

As the first 250 gallons ran out, the team started pumping again. As it did, still more residents came to fill up their bottles. And even though 250 gallons at a time won’t solve an island’s water problems, it’s a lifeline for those who now have more to drink.
This story is part of “The Island Next Door,” WNPR’s reporting project about Puerto Rico and Connecticut after Hurricane Maria.