Monday, October 19, 2009
We've Arrived!
We have had a few interesting incidents. Jeff Troutman got pulled over by the federales driving back to the mission house. It was a little scary but he eventually showed back up... Brian Boggs has taken out two plastic chairs already. At 6'7" we have now relegated him to the sofa. It's sturdier... And one of our team members needs to go to the US Embassy on Wednesday (tomorrow is a Guatemalan holiday). We think it will all work out and they will able to leave the country.
Avocado count stands at 13.
Incidents of malaria - 0.
Tomorrow we leave at 7am to go to a village 1 1/2 hours from the mission house. We will do all of our building in this village (15 houses) and on Friday the medical team will join us there for a clinic. We will also do our food/shoes/clothing distribution for 150 families in this village. (When I get a name I can spell I will share the name of the village with you.) Our medical team will work here at the farm that the mission house is on.
Please pray for us and for the children and the families we will get to share our week with. We are excited and anxious. Our village is quite remote and travel is always interesting. Cell phone service ends with the highway, 30 minutes from our destination. We expect it to be 40 degrees when we leave the mission house and very hot during the day. Welcome to the mountains of Guatemala!
Team members will start blogging tomorrow and we hope to have pictures!
Grace,
Jayne
Saturday, October 17, 2009
October Team Set to Leave for Guatemala
Thanks for the opportunity to go to Guatemala. We will try to keep you posted with lots of pictures. We're even attempting to shoot a video to be shown on Sunday morning. Keep your fingers crossed! Check back here often and post comments - it helps us feel connected to home.
Grace,
Jayne Davis
Monday, August 10, 2009
CANT EXPLAIN
What did Twig do???
Well.....
I was back at the house all day working on my tan with the sun that is suppose to burn you 27 times faster than at sea level....
No, not really. My Job is the Chief Cook, Bottle Washer, Driver, Care Taker of the sick and Logistics Specialist.... ( I fetch batteries, lotion, boot laces, etc) whatever DON VIGUS or the team needs or may have forgotten to bring to make GOD'S Objective possible. It was a great week of fun and GOD'S work. A Few FACTS....
Ms. Marie will kill me for not having all my receipts and ones I do have are in Spanish.
38 Avocados for Guat Dip
15 Pounds of Tomatoes for Salsa
5 Pineapples for Pineapple Salsa 5 others for dipping and eating
10 Gallons of Ice Cream for Smoothies and Milk Shakes
32 Pounds of Beef for meals
11 Jars of Peanut butter
8 Pounds of Onions
10 Pounds of Flour
12 Dozen Eggs
150 Bananas
20 Pounds of Strawberries
So what did we eat with all this????
Meat Loaf
Butter Noodles
Corn Confetti
Baked Spaghetti
Garlic Bread
Toss Salad
Cookies
Strawberry Short Cake
Chocolate Dipped Strawberries and Bananas
Guat Dip
Ceviche
Salsa
Pineapple Salsa
Beef Stew and Rice
Green Beans
Cheese Potatoes
Steak
Broccoli
Fajitas’ Chicken and Beef
Tacos
Pancakes
French Toast
Homemade Biscuits and Gravy
Cinnamon Rolls
Yogurt
Fruit Dip
Fresh Fruit
Cereal
Ham sandwiches
Cookies
Chips
Tuna Fish Sandwiches
Meat Loaf Sandwiches
ARE YOU GETTING THE PICTURE????
The TEAM got FATTER and over course more SASSY.
It was a great week and I did my best to feed them well. I take very seriously in feeding the team. I wanted to create an experience, for the first timers and the returning folks that after a long days work by the team that I had something very special waiting for a snack and for dinner every evening to make their experience more meaningful. I could not have done it without the Help of a BEAUTIFUL Lady named Louisa. She is "OLD SOUL" type of women who works behind the scenes for Grace Ministries. She Cleans every day like for a Military Inspection!!! She went with me to the market and translated for me. She washed GARY'S only Pair of Underwear.... Often LOL and did many other things. This lady is the servant, we should all strive to be!!!!! Taking no credit, just every day doing the behind the scenes work/support to make GOD'S Plan work for our Team.
I can't wait to return in October and Room with WES DAVIS!!!! He is a Good roommate when he sleeps... but then he has night mares that wake the rest of us up every night.
First Day Back
Sunday, August 9, 2009
Not to mention having to use a ladder on the work site more this year.
We had to climb up on the bed every time we wanted to cut on the ceiling fan.
Saturday, August 8, 2009
You might know this......
Click on the pictures in the blog and they get bigger.
Hope that helps, especially with the map.
That's all.
Good night.
g
8,373 feet above sea level. Last eruption 2008.
The temperature of the lava was approximately 2500 degrees celsius (4500 farenheit) For a comparison, pizza ovens operate between 500 - 600 degrees farenheit. The surface of the sun is 9950 degrees farenheit. ( We had to look that up. We have never been to the sun.)
The End of The Beginning.
It is the last night at the mission house and I have mixed emotions about leaving. On the one hand there is still so much left to do. The country of Guatemala still has tremendous basic needs: physical needs and emotional needs. It is hard to leave a place that you have invested in; a place you have poured your heart into. However, our lives are not in Guatemala. God has placed us in Wilmington, Rosmond, Atlanta, and Athens for a reason. We are called to serve others and love others in our daily lives. My prayer for myself and the members of this team is that we would continue what we started here in Guatemala. I pray our lives reflect the love of Jesus everyday, that we love the poor in spirit, that we have compassion on the suffering, and that we constantly seek out opportunities to serve others.
What a privilege to serve the God of the Universe, the creator of all. May the passion he has instilled in me to love his children continue to burn in my heart until the day I reside with him in heaven.
Love,
McCall
This is a picture of my with a little baby that was laying on a rock crying while her mother was washing clothes in a stream. I had to pick her up, it was impossible to leave her there crying. When I picked her up she stopped crying, but then I had to put her back down...
VALCANO!!
After the volcano adventure, we went to Antigua to shop the markets. We bought a lot of authentic Guatemalan stuff!!
This has been a great week and we head home tomorrow!
This is my favorite "Chicken Bus"-
ESMERELDA.
They are brightly decorated on the outside while still spartan on the inside. They're called Chicken Buses because you can bring animals on, the most popular being a chicken. It's common to see someone on top adjusting luggage while it goes down the road.
They fly down the road. Because of their size and prevalence, they pretty much rule the road.
Find Guatemala City........go west(left) until you see Chimaltenango. It's the first labeled city directly east. That's where we stay.
We're at 6,000 feet at the house and closer to 7,000 for the work sites.
We were told that you sunburn 27 times faster here than in the states because of closeness to the Equator and the elevation.
I find that hard to believe.
( Ex. If you sunburn in 3 hours, twice as fast would be 1 1/2 hours, 4 times faster would be 45 minutes, 8 times would be 22 1/2 minutes, 16 times faster would be 11 and 1/4 minutes, making 27 times faster roughly 8 minutes.
I didn't get burned in 8 minutes. It might be quicker here, but not 27 times quicker, sorry.)
Guate has 53 volcanoes
and 5 of them active. Seeing one spew twice yesterday was wild.
Driving anywhere involves lots of long steep hills and driving at high rpm"s in low gear. Pray the clutch on the van lasts until we get to the aeroporto.
Driving to the work sites takes us through, and to, incredibly lush and fertile countryside. Everyday we see them harvesting and bagging carrots as big as my forearm. I'm not exaggerating. Big as my forearm. Personally, I have no use for baby carrots, so carrots that big are just overkill.
They farm on incredibly steep hillsides. I'll try to find some pictures and post. It's unreal.
The indigenous people we are building houses for are very small. It's funny because we build the houses with doors and windows and hardly any of them are tall enough to look out the window.
Saw some pretty sweet boots yesterday with lightning bolts on the front, but not in my size so I didn't get them.
Driving is an adventure just about everywhere we go. People pass on curves, uphills, downhills, traffic coming, traffic stopped...... it doesn't matter.
Chimaltenango doesn't have any signal lights for traffic. Not one. You pullout when you can and just understand that people will pull out in front of you and expect you to slow down and let them in.
There's a cool looking town square that's lit up and busy at night with lots of vendors and activity, but we were told it was not safe for North Americans to go there at night. We'd stick out like sore thumbs and be targets for theft and violence. I was bummed about that. It looked fun.
Go to Wikipedia and check out "Chicken Buses". They're everywhere down here. My favorite is "ESMERALDA". They fly everywhere they go - in town, outside town..doesn't matter. And if you're directly behind one when they shift gears, it's Black Lung for everybody riding with you.
Ask Wes Davis what his definition of a fever is when you see him at church.
I'm out.
Friday, August 7, 2009
Random stuff until Don finishes the pictures for me to post.
Abbey Lewis has caught "Blog Fever".
Don Vigus has mispronounced "volcano" every time he's said it. Seriously.
"Val-cano". Every time.
Jim Morgan was quoted once in "Good Housekeeping" magazine.
We have yet to play a single game of cards at night. Not Golf, or Spades, or Murder. Not even a game of Farkle. I must be slipping.
We have, however, played games every night as a group for those who wanted to.
We've taught them Signs, Zen Clap, The Scissors game and 3 Things in a Hat.
It's been a hoot every time. There are some very fun people in this group.
Saw one of the volcanoes erupt a couple of times today. Not "big lava" erupt but "ash and smoke way up in the air" erupt. Way cool. One of the locals told us that the volcano is in a state of constant eruption and it does it regularly.
next-to-last day
A great week in Guatemala!
11 houses built and dedicated to the Lord
100 bags of food distributed
12 special needs orphans fed and loved
200 pieces of candy thrown from the window of the van to excited Guatemalan children
16 pairs of boots bought for cheap cheap cheap
1 volcano eruption
This week has been absolutely amazing. It has been great to see God throughout our trip.
God was present while we built homes for deserving Guatemalan families.
God was present in the smiles of joy from the kids when we gave them a few pieces of candy, a sandwich, chips and cookies.
God was present in the tears that flowed from the mothers and fathers who finally held the keys to a new home and a basket of toys, soap, cleaning supplies, and food etc.
God was present as we prayed for each home dedicating them to God, especially when one of the Guatemalan women prayed a prayer that gave chills, caused tears, and inspired our own prayers.
God was present in our fellowship at the work sites, on the long, bumpy van rides, around the dinner table, playing games late at night, and in our time of nightly worship and discussion.
God was present in every hola and adios.
God was present in the line for the food distributions as we filled bags, passed out shoes and clothes.
God was present in the thank you's and God bless you's said by the people receiving the food, houses, clothes, shoes.
God was present in the bubbles, the high fives, the "cool dude's" and "yummy yummy's" (phrases I taught to several of the Guatemalan children at our work sites)
God was present throughout this trip. AMEN and AMEN
It has been an amazing summer, and I am thankful to FBC Wilmington for allowing me to intern with THE Don Vigus and the rest of the youth leaders. I was able to go to beach camp, Puerto Rico, Journey On to Tennessee, and Guatemala. I have had the wonderful opportunity to get to know the youth of FBC.
Our theme for the summer was WALK WORTHY. Our shirts for this trip say "ANDE DIGNO" which is a translation of walk worthy in Spanish.
Therefore I, a prisoner for serving the Lord, beg you to WALK WORTHY of your calling, for you have been called by God. Always be humble and gentle. Be patient with each other, making allowance for each other's faults because of your love.
Make every effort to keep yourselves united in the Spirit, binding yourselves together with peace. For there is one body and one Spirit, just as you have been called to one glorious hope for the future. There is one Lord, one faith, one baptism, and on God and Father, who is over all and in all and living through all.
Ephesians 4:1-6
It was so amazing to watch each individual on this trip WALK WORTHY this week.
Soli Deo Gloria (To God alone be the glory)
Will Deal
Boots, boots and more boots!
Drew
Went 3 for 3 yesterday
Teared up at each one of them.
Thank God for sunglasses.
Friday Morning......
Dewayne Malpass showing you the best part of the work site-the kids. Aren't they beautiful? The kids, not Dewayne!
This is the last house we built. Notice the expert craftsmanship by Team Awesome. There's a door there, it's just open.That's a window on the right side
This a house dedication. The basket in front of the family has food, toys and housewares for their new house. The Guatemalan on the far right is Freddy, our translator.
This is Wally McCall hammering with Dewayne in the background.
That's Max, our supervisor in the bottom left.
Thursday, August 6, 2009
Gonna try something new. We've got pictures......now we're gonna try VIDEO!
Jeff got some video of a house dedication and the prayer. the Guatemalans pray out loud along with whoever is praying. It's really cool and this one lady prays like a champ!
Click and give it a try.
g
We began with a regular schedule. Breakfast at 7am. Leave at 8. On the work site and building by 930...well, give or take some minutes due to hikes and crazy hills! We finished our LAST TWO HOUSES of the trip! This work site was amazing for our team. We were building a home for a Mom, Dad, and their 4 children...one 15 yr old girl, a 6 yr old girl (who had down syndrome) and a 1 yr old baby boy. When we arrived to the site, the first thing we saw was the 15 yr old and the 6 yr old girls beginning to pile up all the concrete for their father and the other workers who were there to help so they could begin to mix it as soon as we were ready. Lilia (the 6 yr old girl) had the biggest smile on her face the minute we walked up to the site. That smile stayed on her face the entire time we were with her. She helped us drill a door and window together, she followed us all around the site, and most of all, kept a smile on everyones face throughout the morning. To see her smile, and laugh, and be so incredibly happy to just be around everyone was so sweet.
The baby boy was named Danny. Oh my goodness he was PRECIOUS. He was a little shy and not so sure about letting me hold him at first...but don't worry, he warmed up to me and I was finally able to hold him and play with him (Jeff on the other hand...wasn't so lucky)! Seeing the moms faces while we were playing with the children was great. They lit up and were smiling from ear to ear seeing their kids laughing and messing around with us. We had a BLAST :)
After we finished the last two houses, the dedicating began. We started dedicating at the sites we had just finished, then went on to the 4 houses we did on Tuesday. What an amazing experience. These families are SO grateful. At dedication we give them the lock to the outside of the house, as well as a basket full of household needs such as rice, beans, sugar, salt, dish washing soap, toys, wash cloths, etc. To see these families faces when they open up the baskets is the greatest thing in the world! It was incredible to hear them pray and give glory to God for all that he has done! Although we couldn't understand all of the words, the spirit of the Lord was all around, and you could feel it...how amazing is that!?
After dedicating, it was time to go do food distributions. 100 tickets were given out to families, and they each received one bag for everything to go in. We had shoes, clothes, food, and some other smaller things. Gary told us tonight in the discussion that one lady came up to get her bag, and had folded her ticket up as small as she could, had put it into a zip lock plastic bag, and did NOT wanna give it up. This gave me an idea of how important this was to all of those families and children. We gave them a supply of food for a month...just a month, I mean, how many times a month do we go to the grocery store and fill up our carts of food? I'm thinking much more than once a month. It was an incredible experience to give these families a months worth of food, and shoes to put on their feet.
From there we went to a special needs orphanage, where we ate pizza and ice cream with about 12 special need kids. They were some of the happiest kids I have ever seen! We were welcomed by one of the boys who gave us all a few high fives and a huge smile. They were all laughing, smiling, screaming, and clapping as we all kept walking towards the backyard for dinner. We all ate dinner and had ice cream together, while loving on these kids at the same time.
After the orphanage, we came back to have a discussion at the house and then played some really fun and easyyyy games. Just ask Dewayne, hes really good at all of them.
Needless to say it was a long, but great day! Hope everyone is doing great in Wilmington/wherever you are! Talk to you guys soon! Miss you all! :)
hasta manana... :)
Abbey Lew
Wednesday, August 5, 2009
...if Wally McCall showed up at FBC one day. I hope he does.
He doesn't attend FBC, so you might not ever get the chance to meet him.
Hidden Secrets
Here is our group dedicating the land the house will be built on.
We played one of my favorite games tonight: write down one thing about yourself that no one else in the group knows, put them in a hat, Gary reads them out loud, and we try to guess who said what. Here are a few surprises:
-Don: Hand painted his car and upholstered the seats with snake skin for his senior prom date
-Drew: Can tie a cherry stem with his tongue
-Jim: Was quoted in Good Housekeeping magazine
-Gary: Spent the night in jail
-Jon Hill: Ran a cop off the road
...you can ask them to tell you the various stories
Tonight we prepared big laundry baskets for all the houses we build. They are full of really great things like clothes pins, coloring books, beans, soap, cooking utensils, and a lot of other great things! We are excited to pass those out tomorrow and Friday!
Pray for us as we dedicate the houses the next two days. This will be the last time we can leave an impact on the people we build houses for. God is great and he provides, we want everyone here to know that too.
Also, thanks for reading these blogs...it is encouraging to all of us to know that so many of you back home are thinking about us!
Gracias por tu amor,
McCall
As for the mistakes go, we were almost through building the house we were assigned to for the day, and Don decides he is going to measure and cut a piece of siding without asking anyone if it's the right piece to cut to fit across our door...that was a minor technicality as Don calls it. We then had to cut 3 more pieces of lumber to put above the door in order for the siding to fit. BUT, the house looks great and we got it done!
We finished early and had a picnic lunch down at the bottom of the worksite all together. As we were about to leave, Mccall and Will saw a group of kids and their families down the street so some of us walked down to give them candy and a few toys. The children were so thankful, and so blessed to have been given something as simple, and small as a few pieces of candy and chalk for the street. It made me realize how lucky and fortuante we all are. The kids had the biggest smile on their face and it was the greatest thing ever to see how God uses us to spread his love!
From then on, we drove back to the house, and have just been chillaxinnnn. Fellowship is such a wonderful thing! :)
Hey mom, i know your reading this! :) and Hey to everyone else! Talk to you all soon! :)
Tuesday, August 4, 2009
Tuesday - Construction Day 2
Built 4 houses today. That brings the total to 7. Our goal is 11. As long as it doesn't rain, we're looking pretty good. The plan is 2 tomorrow and then come back to let people take a shopping trip nearby or just relax.
Today we didn't have nearly as tough a time getting in and out of sites. Heck, we even drove up and parked beside our last one. NICE!
Jeff feels better about himself today because when we left the work site, he turned around in the small truck with a three point turn. I, on the other hand, in a bigger, longer van filled with 12 people , took about 9 points. Small victories for small people,
Here's something many of you do not know. Jim Morgan is a very, very good guitar player. He has mentioned this to me in the past, but I'd never seen it until this week. he has played before worship both nights. Not that "Sweet home Alabama" stuff , either. Fancy stuff.
The kids keep coming out every where we work. We saw some today from yesterday's work sites, and they're not real close. We talked about that tonight as a group. Part of why they would come back might be the candy, but a large part of it is the attention they get and the love they feel. Their parents live hard lives and spend most of their day doing stuff to survive. Cutting the fool and making kids laugh is probably not something they have the luxury of doing very often. I can do that and work at the same time,so.....
We have a super group of people here this week. We haven't had to assign any duties around the house because everyone has just stepped up or chipped in. One of the real drags is loading the truck in the morning and unloading it when we get home. Haven't had to ask anyone to do it yet, because they go back and do it on their own.
Thursday night is when we will do food distribution. It has been my favorite part of the past two trips and I'm excited about it this year. I can't wait. The local church goes into a community and passes out approx. 200 tickets, 1 per family. Thursday night they show up with their ticket and go down the line with a bag and we fill it with a predetermined amount of food items. The majority of people are little old ladies and single moms with a ton of kids in tow. The feeling you get when you see their excitement and the looks of gratitude is something I have trouble describing. It hits you deep and stays with you.
The first year we did it, we really had no idea how it would shape up. We walked into a room with a thousand people in it, that had been waiting two hours for us. It gave me chills. I still remember passing out stuff with Christian Davis and doing stupid magic tricks for the people who sat near our spot in the line. He and I got someone to teach us how to say "God Bless You" in their dialect. We butchered it every time, but they smiled when we said it and that was good enough for us.
I don't know if you know who's here, so let me tell you
WILL DEAL/ JANE DODD/ McCALL DUDECK/ JON HILL/ WAYNE HILL/ ASHLEY JOHNSON/ ABBEY LEWIS/ DEWAYNE MALPASS/ JOHN MARCUCCI/ WALTER McCALL/ JIM MORGAN/ DREW PITTMAN/ TWIG ROLLINS/ KELLY SOFFE/ JEFF TANNER/ GINGER TAYLOR/ DON VIGUS/ NOT WES DAVIS(The daily Wes Davis HAMMER TIME #3) and me.
We're here and things are great but continue to pray for us. We need it and desire it. There are still great things to be done here and prayer is how it will be accomplished.
Thanks.
g
P.S. Check out McCall"s post. Without any prompting, she hammers Wes too. Gotta love that. g
I'll try my hand at this...
On my work site we ran into a minor problem...on top of the mountain we ran into the Nile River. Maybe not, but it was an unpleasant surprise to hit water so early in the digging process. However, nothing can stop Team Awesome or Jeff the resident engineer, so we just made concrete! What ingenuity!
Enough about the building...the best part of the trip are the Guatemalan children. Don't tell my parents, but I really want to bring one home! Today John got a soccer ball out or futbol as they call it and we played in the street. Did you know we are in the mountains? Yeah...that means the ball gets through the kids and it rolls and rolls and rolls. No worries. Fatigue is not a factor when I spend time with these kids. God grants energy and joy even in my moments of exhaustion. I really loved playing with them and watching the joy they received from a simple game of soccer or a piece of candy. It is amazing when you watch any member of our team play with the kids because they all reflect the love of Jesus. I absolutely love seeing God work through others so naturally!
At our last site today we encountered our first taste of Guatemalan animals other than dogs and cats. We got up-close and personal with pigs, cows, goats, and sheep. Ashley, Abbey, and I wanted to take a picture with the cow but we were afraid. The result: we stood within 5 yards of the cow and cheesed. Then, we saw a pig and decided it was less threatening...still not an easy picture. It was tied to a stake and we tried to pull it closer and made him mad. A girl tried to calm him down and before we knew it the pig took off! At that point we all looked the other way and prayed we hadn't just freed their dinner...oh well! We got to hold a baby goat which was fun, but all the girls did load up with hand sanitizer after the animal episode...safety first...well maybe I'll just do what everyone else does. I am not a clean freak, but you know it can't hurt to keep your hands clean in this environment. Speaking of clean...my luggage arrived yesterday and that was a huge blessing!
okay so it is time to go because now Gary is reading over my shoulder and putting the pressure on me to be a pro blogger...not everyone can be as cool as him. Maybe I won't go to bed super early because we only have to build two houses tomorrow!! However, team awesome likes to take their time so it could still be a long day. To be honest, long days aren't bad at all when you are serving the Lord and hanging out with some really wonderful people!
Love to all,
McCall
(take the time to note the rhyme)
P.S. I don't know Wes Davis, but according to Gary and Jeff I am pretty sure he would have cried because we worked until 6 o'clock for the second day in a row.
Monday, August 3, 2009
Monday- First Construction Day.
The first year was a fairly easy once we got to the place we were building. It was in a paved village and we parked outside of our work sites.
Last year we had to get out and carry our tools but it wasn't that bad.
Today we drove an hour and 20 minutes to get to the site. Then we had to get out and carry everything up Mt. Dadgum Everest.
Not really, but we did climb a very steep and long hill, steep and long being the key words. Everybody was huffing and puffing at the end. We probably went up 150 ft. in elevation, steeply.
We built our first house there as one big group, so everyone could see it start to finish. After we built that, we split into two groups and one group climbed up and the other group went down some and then back up higher to build at different sites. That way we met our goal of three houses today.
Have I mentioned it's the rainy season?
Yeah...........
As we were finishing and getting ready to load up and carry everything down the long, steep and up to this point, dusty hill, it started to rain. Big honkin', cold rain.
Getting down the hill was very tough. Wes Davis would still be up there.(Daily Wes Davis HammerTime #2) Basically it was just one long slide down. There were 2 sketchy bridges we had to cross, too.
There was a kinda fun element to it, but at the end, it was just.."Finally!"
But God is Good. We did it with His strength and for His glory. 3 families got houses today. We managed to play with a slew of kids at each spot. Nobody got hurt.
Hope everything's good back home with y'all.
See ya tomorrow.
Sunday, August 2, 2009
In case you're wondering.....
They were the first things I packed this year.
Wes Davis is not on the trip this year..............
Check back here every day for more Hammer Time on Wes Davis.
......What else could we want?
The flights were good and we got to the Guat about 20 minutes early.
We got out of the airport and on the road about 1:30 Guatemala time, which meant 3:30 stomach time. So when you're in a foreign country with Don Vigus, guess where your first lunch stop is gonna be?
Say it with me........McDONALDS!
After a quick rundown on the whole 8 quetzcal"s equal one dollar setup, we ordered lunch. I got a numero uno combo(grande!) and was in business. It was alot of fun because all the employees were smiling and happy, which isn't really the vibe at get at MickeyD's USA too often.
They run a serious ketchup operation. When you walk up to the ketchup stand, one of the McDonalds employees was there to pump it for you. Every time. Without fail. I know because me, Jeff and Jim sat on the other side of it and watched "Kandy" do it.
Then it was back on the road and headed to Chimaltenango. Our vehicle arrangement is one small 4-door truck and a Nissan "Urvan", which is a Guatemalan 15 passenger van. That means it's half the size of an American 15 passenger van. Fun.
I'm the driver so I've always got a decent seat.
When we got to the house , it was basically relax and take it easy. We went and checked the tools and toolboxes to get ready for tomorrow. We'll have a worship session tonight after supper, which is going to be Guatemalan meatloaf, Guatemalan buttered noodles and Guatemalan Chocolate cake.
All in all, it's shaping up really good. I know most of the people, but some I didn't know at all, which is cool. Two years ago, I had never laid eyes on Candace, Eric, or Mary Dyer. Since that trip though, I've done tons of stuff with them and they've been a huge help on Tuesday nights.
Plus, Jim Morgan is here.........
Sunday, July 26, 2009
New Team Set to Leave for Guatemala
Grace,
Jayne