Sunday, June 12, 2011

Travel Update #2

Made it to London safely. The flight felt longer coming back than it did going out. I don't think anyone got more than an hour of sleep and it is 8:30AM here already. But we've all gotten some food and coffee, so we're feeling pretty good. One more flight to go!

P.S. I will write a comprehensive post about our visit to Victoria Falls later. But I did want to share that while we were shopping near the falls afterwards, John was attacked by a male alpha baboon! He's completely fine and was not at all hurt, but it has had us laughing all day and night just remembering it! The baboon walked up to him, took a swipe at the bag in his hand, and was trying to get something John had just bought. John tried to swing the bag away from the baboon and then threw it up on the hood of the car. As the baboon went for the bag, a Zambian suddenly showed up with a sling-shot and scared it away. I didn't see this happen, but it sounds hilarious! You need to hear John tell the story.

Saturday, June 11, 2011

Travel Update

We have reached Jo'Burg! (Dr. Kari says that's how the "cool people" say Johannesburg) We had a few complication with the luggage but that is all sorted out now. We board in about 45 minutes. See you soon!

Friday, June 10, 2011

Good-Bye From Zambia!

This will be my last blog post from Zambia. It is currently lunchtime on Friday, but we will be busy packing tonight and leaving very early tomorrow. Our flight leaves Livingstone at 1:30pm tomorrow, but we are leaving early to go sightseeing at Victoria Falls before we leave.
            Last night was a very dramatic night. Kari and Barb were running late on the two scheduled surgeries (not at all their faults). As soon as they finally finished the second surgery (at about 7:30), there was a woman rushed into the hospital from out in the bush who needed an emergency c-section. After already being worn out from the two other surgeries, they needed to start this new one. The problem was that this woman had given birth by c-section once before to a stillborn baby, so with this second pregnancy the clinic she was at should have performed another c-section before she even went into labor this time. The clinic failed to do that. By the time this patient arrived at the Zimba hospital, she had been in labor for two days, her uterus had been ruptured for a day, and the baby was already dead inside of her.  They needed to perform the c-section to remove the baby and then perform a hysterectomy and then stitch together the rest of the organs that had been dislodged and rearranged. If they did not do this all quickly, the woman would probably die.  We rarely see this kind of complication in the United States. Praise God, they saved the woman’s life. From hearing their descriptions it was an extreme tense and stressful and scary couple of hours as they performed this operation. Kari and Barb did not return to the mission house until about 10:50. Meanwhile, the rest of us had started getting concerned that they hadn’t come home yet even for dinner. We had sent John and Larry to check on them at 9:45, and since they hadn’t returned by 10:45 we were about to send two more people to check on all of them. It was a stressful night, to say the least.
            Today has been better! We have had our now ‘routine’ activities. Larry, Bob, and John treated the water supply but it will take a couple days to see how well the cleaning worked. They spent some time this morning explaining and teaching to some other maintenance workers so they can carry out the purifying process after we leave. The medical people in our group did their rounds at the hospital this morning; and Lindsay, Tehanne, Lori, and Kari helped in the pharmacy. Since I am now done teaching, I spent yesterday afternoon and this morning shadowing Dr. Dan in the Out Patient Department. I am able to do small tasks and running errands for him, making me feel useful. We all took a trip through the market for the last time during lunch break to purchase gifts for our families at home.
            This is good-bye from Zambia, I suppose. I will probably write at some point during our travels from Johannesburg or London. (If I have internet. I may not be able to connect, so do not worry if there is not any more posts in the next couple days.) We are sad to leave but excited to be home again. God has done many great things while we have been here. We have met dozens of amazing people. I, personally, have been so grateful for this life opportunity. We can’t wait to tell you all about it in person. See you soon!!


As a final summary, I wrote this small semi-humorous post below. I hope you like it, though you probably won’t find it as funny as we do. Enjoy!


A typical day in the life of a temporary missionary
4:00am – get woken up early by roosters and stray dogs making unnecessary noises
6:30am – wake up for real and get dressed
7:15am – have a delicious breakfast
7:45am – take malaria medicine and soak yourself in bug spray
7:50am – leave to walk to the hospital for morning chapel
7:55am – attempt to greet someone in Tonga
7:55:05am – be laughed at by the person you greeted because your accent sounds funny to them
8:00am – arrive on time for chapel, but you are the only people present so far
8:05am – chapel begins with singing in Tonga and a sermon
8:10am – all the other people arrive for chapel ten minutes late
8:40am – chapel ends, go to your separate projects/activities
About 9:05am – discover some kind of problem
About 9:30am – start to get a little frustrated with the said problem
About 9:45am – realize you can’t find a solution to the problem
About 9:55am – say a prayer to ask God for help
About 10:00am – find a solution to the problem
About 11:00am – meet one of many amazing Zambians that you can work with
12:00pm – come back to the mission house for a delicious lunch
1:00pm – continue to enjoy the Zambian 2 hour lunch break
2:00pm – wait for whichever Zambian worker you are with to return from lunch break
2:30pm – have someone mistaken you for the doctor because you’re white
About 3:00pm – witness/experience some kind of traumatic event (e.g. emergency surgery, see a man get run over by a semi, deliver a still-born child, find a water tank full of dead animals)
About 4:00pm – return to the mission house and relax a little bit (unless you’re a doctor/surgeon)
About 5:00pm – take a walk through the marketplace
About 5:15pm – be charged twice as much for whatever you’re buying because you’re white
About 5:30pm – power goes out
About 6:15pm – power comes back on
6:30pm – have a delicious dinner and dessert
About 7:30pm – have nightly devotional and praise God
About 8:30pm – shower (sometimes by candlelight)
About 9:30pm – Praise God for another day, go to sleep, and pray to have the strength to do it all over again.

Thursday, June 9, 2011

Lunchtime Update

Last night’s guest dinner went very well. We had about 7 guests, and two of them brought their children. There was a 3 year old boy and a 4 year old girl. All of the mothers here who have been missing their children really enjoyed spending time with these kids. The power was out for the first half of the dinner, so we ate by candlelight again. The power returned half way through the meal.
            Also last night, Lindsay and I visited the teacher’s house. He had a small brick/concrete house with a small living room, a kitchen the size of a closet, and 3 bedrooms. He has 3 children, but he has taken in SIX other children who are orphaned or not cared for. We were amazed at how much he had obviously given to others.
            As Lindsay and I were walking back to the mission house, we saw a man get hit by and partially run over by a semi-truck that was going way too fast. Everyone who had been standing around the road and market place created commotion as everyone tried to help the man. We had quite an adrenaline rush as we sprinted the remaining 100 yards to the mission house to get one of our doctors or nurses to come help the man. But by the time we came back out to the road, the people had already thrown the man into a car and were taking him down the road to the hospital.  The man who had been driving the semi had stopped his truck and gotten out and ran somewhere. John explained to me that he probably was running to the police because in these types of countries, the community will kill someone who hits a person with his vehicle. So that man was running to the police for safety before the community could catch him.  Our doctors and nurses have been checking in on the man who was hit throughout the night and this morning, and they tell me that they expect him to make a full recovery.
Now that the pipes are connected, there has been a brick and concrete box built around the junction to protect it. John, Larry, and Bob ran some tests on the water from the well we are using and found that it is contaminated. They asked the city water maintenance what they should do about cleaning the water in the well, and the city told them they should abandon the well. But we believe there may be some bad history between the hospital and the city water maintenance because the hospital refused to use the city water’s services. We are going to attempt to clean the well so that all this work we have done won’t be wasted.
Today, Lindsay is running the mission house. She is having a great time cooking for us and cleaning the house. She was very excited to feed us lunch, which consisted of sloppy joes and baked beans. She led the prayer, and at the end added in, “And please Lord, don’t let my food kill them,” which didn’t make us feel all that confident. But the food turned out to be very good and we are enjoying her work.
            Lori, Tehanne, and Kari took baby hats around the maternity ward this morning. The hats had bunny ears sewed on top. And Dr. Kari and Barb are doing more surgeries today.
            I had my last day of teaching today. At the end of class I talked with the students about America again and showed them some pictures that I brought on my computer. I’m always entertained by their reactions to things like pictures of my brother with red hair, my fiancĂ©, and the pictures of snow. They said my brother was very handsome (hint hint, Luke) and wanted to see lots of pictures of my fiancĂ© and told me “I know how to choose them”. I said my good-byes to all the students and the teachers I have been working with. It was bittersweet to be finished with my teaching project. I feel very accomplished that I can now say that I taught in a Zambian school for a week!
            It is currently lunchtime on Thursday, so we have one and a half more days of work. We are all sad to leave but very excited to get home. I will be writing again tomorrow, God bless!

Wednesday, June 8, 2011

Update from the last couple days

Hello, again! We lost our Internet connection the last couple days, but it seems to be working again now. Instead of going through each individual’s activities, I am going to give a general update of the different projects we have all been working on.
Thank you for your prayers for the water supply. After I posted the previous post, I found out that Larry, Bob, and John had already discovered a solution to the problem I had explained. By fitting some of the pipes inside each other they were able to make them fit. However, your prayers were still very much needed because, as seems to be the trend, as soon as we solved that problem a new one came up. Larry, Bob, and John started running the water from the new tank to test it, and found that there were little black chunks coming out. Long story short – the tank had been just sitting there for about a year, with the lid off. A giant hawk had made a nest inside the tank. When John climbed up the tower to look in the tank (the tank is about the size of a round kitchen table and about 10 feet high) he found six dead baby hawks and three dead rats amongst a ton of floating dirt and grass. We now are looking back at this and laughing, but at the time is was anything but funny. Larry, Bob, and John spent the day creating a make-shift net and fishing out all the carcasses and junk. Now that the tank is clean, we started working on hooking up the pipe we constructed to the pipe that is already in the ground. We had a lot of trouble connecting to the pre-existing pipe. We tried multiple times but it leaked every time. This was very scary because we had to cut off the water supply to the Women’s Shelter in order to hook up this new pipe; so if we could not re-connect it then dozens of people would be without water. In one last attempt, John and I tried some “MacGyver-ing” by wrapping the pipe in rubber and glue and calc.  It was mostly John’s work; I basically stood by and gave ideas. We left the glue on the pipe to dry over-night before opening the valve to test it. When Larry, Bob, and John returned this morning, they found that someone had come and opened the valve during the night! But praise God because the pipe did not leak! So the new water supply is now connected, which is a huge victory and success for us! This was our original goal and after many obstacles and challenges we have met our goal. However, we now need to test the new water and treat it for any bacteria we find in it. In the meantime, we are able to supply the Women’s Shelter with water from the old tank by closing our new valve and opening the old one. That is what we are working on now, but we have had a great accomplishment regardless because as soon as the water is clean it is only a matter of opening the valve.
In other news, Lindsay and I were able to observe some surgeries. I observed a C-section and Lindsay observed a hysterectomy. We both really enjoyed it! The medical people in our group have continued to help at the hospital and work with the Zambian staff. There has not been anything too unusual going on with them, as far as I understand. I apologize that I have so much more detail on the other projects; it is just difficult for me to explain the activities I have not been witnessing. However, Tehanne was able to work in the dental clinic that has been going on for the last two days. She has really enjoyed it! She has been working with a dentist and has been pulling teeth! She usually does not get to pull teeth in the States, so this has been a great privilege for her! She came back to the mission house beaming and with photos of her pulled teeth.
I have continued my teaching at the school. I am getting a lot more comfortable in this new environment. Lindsay and Tehanne came to school with me today and took pictures. And Derek, the teacher I am working with, gave us all a tour again. It has been very nice! The kids really seem to like learning about America.
Tonight we are having a dinner and inviting the people we have been working with. We are all very excited for this! We will have about 17 people total. And this afternoon Lindsay and I are going to see Derek’s home and family.
We are all missing our families very much and are looking forward to seeing you soon! As we put it at lunch, “Every day we enjoy our time here more and more, but every day we are longing more and more to come home again.”

Sunday, June 5, 2011

Summary of the Week

Hello all! It is currently Sunday afternoon here in Zambia. I know I missed writing the blog about Friday’s activities, but I have decided to write an overall summary of the week instead of trying to retroactively write about the specific activities we did Friday.

            After our long plane rides and spending a day in London, we arrived at the mission house on Tuesday afternoon. Dan and Joan Jones, who are both doctors, run the mission house and help at the hospital. During our three working days thus far, our medical people (Dr. Kari, Barb, Lori, Kari, Tehanne, and Lindsay) have been spending their time in the hospital doing various things. Dr. Kari and Barb have been doing surgeries with the Zambian staff, and Lori and Kari have observed some of them. Lori and Kari have mostly been working with the other nurses and have been learning how the Zambians treat certain conditions while lacking what we would consider the “proper supplies”. Tehanne and Lindsay have spent a couple days trying to organize the pharmacy and have been preparing for a dental clinic (Tehanne’s specialty) that starts tomorrow. They have all been experiencing some of the culture differences, like the way a woman needs her husband’s permission to have surgery.
            Jonathan, Larry, Bob, and I have been working on the hospital’s water supply. After discovering that the hospital and surrounding houses could triple their water supply by connecting the unused water tank, we began working on that. We have had a lot of success, but a lot of difficulties, too. We have been working very hard with some of the maintenance people from the hospital to find the connecting pipes and dig the trenches (with nothing but one shovel and two broken pick-axes) for the new pipes to go in. However, on Friday we discovered that the piping that we have does not fit any of the sizes that the Zambian stores make for the valves we need to attach. We have gone through a lot of hassle to try every size they have in this country, and none of them fit. This is quite a setback. By Friday evening we were a bit discouraged because it seemed that all the work and digging we have been doing might be useless if the valves can’t connect. We need prayers to find a way to make this work.
            Bob has also been spending time going through the hospital to pray with the patients. This has been very rewarding for him. Kari and Larry have also been working with Bob to start a type of prayer group for the Zambians on how to manage finances. As far as I understand, they have many videos and pamphlets of sessions to have on their computers. On Saturday, while the rest of us were on the Safari, they had a group from the local churches over to try to get this started. It is their hope that this will be something lasting for the locals that will remain while we are gone and help pull some of them out of the deep poverty that has plagued this country.
            I have spent much of my time at the local school. The assistant headmaster assigned me to work with the 9th grade science teacher and for me to teach a class every day for 5 days. I began my teaching on Friday and it went very well. There have been awkward moments (they are unavoidable when there is a slight language barrier) when other teachers came to the classroom, as I was finishing because I am obviously a foreigner and they do not know why I am there. But the children seem to receive me well, and I have had fun by leaving much of the class time for Q&A on American and Zambian culture. One of the girls asked me if I had any brothers, and when I told her yes, she said, “Okay, good. Save one for me.” All the kids laughed and it was really funny. So Luke, if you’re reading this, I think I might have accidently set you up with an African girl from Zambia. 
            This morning everyone except Tehanne, Barb, and I went out to a “bush church”. In the Zambian lingo, “bush” basically means that it is somewhere out in the middle of nowhere. They took a trip to a newer church that is far from the cities with a pastor that Kari and Larry know. They said it was an amazing experience because they were the first white people to ever come visit their church or village. It was a powerful experience, but slightly awkward because the locals had them sit in cushioned seats (because they were the guests of honor) while the rest of the congregation sat on wooden logs or the floor. They said they also gave them food as thanks for coming. Tehanne, Barb, and I did not go because there was not enough room in the vehicle and we agreed to stay behind and get some extra rest instead. We went to the local church and it was still very nice. We also got to see what the Zambian church service is like; it just was not quite as far away or foreign to white people. It was very spontaneous and full of singing. Both services were about 3 hours long!
            That about sums up our activities so far. Please pray that this next week will be productive, and especially for a way to connect the water tank. We greatly appreciate your prayers! We hope everyone at home is doing well and we are praying for you, also. Looking forward to seeing our family and friends in a week! God bless!
 

Saturday, June 4, 2011

Saturday

     Today was our Safari! Simply put: It was amazing! Describing it in a blog post won’t do it justice, so I will save most of the descriptive details for us to share with our families when we get home. We got hundreds of pictures. We saw multiple types of colorful birds, hippos, zebras, giraffes, water buffalo, alligators, elephants, warthogs, baboons, kudu, impalas, iguanas, sable antelopes, mongoose, and…. Lions!! Lions are the most rare animals to see on their safaris because they tend to stay far away from the paths and sleep during the day. But we had an excellent tour guide! We were sitting in the middle of a group of giraffes when our tour guide noticed the giraffes were looking at something far away in the bushes and started moving in the other direction. He told us they must be looking at “some cats”, so we did a little off-roading through bushes and trees! It was very exciting! After about ten minutes we spotted the two lions lying underneath a tree. We pulled our big jeep right up next to them – we were about 10 yards away! It was the highlight of the day. When we rejoined the other groups in jeeps, the other tour guides did not believe our tour guide that we had found lions until we showed them the pictures. The second best part of the safari was when we got to watch two male elephants spare for about 30 full minutes! We got lots of video of that. That was also a rare occurrence.  I will save the rest of the details for us to share in person.
            Once again, it is getting late here in Zambia. Tomorrow is Sunday, so I should have time to write a more comprehensive post. I apologize for how brief my last two posts have been. We have been very busy and the Internet has been unreliable. Good night from Zambia!

Day Two

Days 2

Note: I wrote this post last night, but Dr. Dan took the computer, before I could post it, to the hospital so some patients could watch a movie about Christ in Tonga (their native language). I am sorry I have not been able to post in the last couple days!

It is Friday evening already! We can hardly believe it. I apologize for not posting yesterday; we lost power for most of the evening. Apparently the power grid in Zambia is a little screwy, because they purposely cut off power sometimes to distribute it somewhere else. When the power went out yesterday evening, Dr. Kari, Barb, Lori, Kari and the African assistants were in surgery but luckily the hospital has a generator. The power-outage turned out to be an awesome experience because it made us have an amazing feast by candlelight (from a giant candelabrum!). And, we went outside for a bit and saw the most amazing stars most of us have ever seen. There were not lights for miles, making the stars extremely bright and multiple! It was truly beautiful.
In our other activities yesterday, the nurses (Lori and Kari) made morning rounds like they did the first day. They spent time in both the Men’s and Women’s wards. They also said that they are trying to be good influences on the Zambian nurses on getting lab work done. The work ethic in Zambia is very different. This is partly because the government pays all the hospital employees and they are paid whether they come to work or not. So many people who are employed do not show up for months at a time, and the workers who do come to work are not very motivated. Lori and Kari are helping motivate these workers.
Dr. Kari and Barb did many surgeries yesterday. They work together the entire time because Barb provides the anesthesia while Kari operates. They have mostly performed hysterectomies. They work with the Zambian hospital employees on all of these surgeries.
Bob spend yesterday morning visiting the patients in the hospital with a translator, Ana. He said that he really enjoyed praying and talking with the patients. He got to go to every ward, which is unusually because men are usually not allowed in the maternity ward.
Tehanne and Lindsay spent the day trying to organize the pharmacy at the hospital. The hospital is not very organized, so often times the staff will try to treat various things without the best materials even when they have the materials because they do not know where to find them.
Larry and John spent the day figuring out how to hook up the plumbing to the water tank. It was difficult because Dennis, the maintenance man they were working with, left unexpectantly for Livingstone for the day. But they were able to get some planning done and Larry spent some time preparing a program they are going to present to the Zambian church about finances.
I went over to the school in the morning and the assistant headmaster set me up with the head science teacher. They decided to have me teach 9th grade science once a day for a whole week! I am pretty excited about this! They set me up with a textbook and let me select a section to teach. So I took the text home and made a lesson plan for most of the day.
It is getting late, so I am going to write another post soon on our activities from Friday. Everyone is doing well; we have not had any sickness or injury. We are continuing to pray for everyone at home. God bless!

Wednesday, June 1, 2011

Day One

Today has been a great day, if only because we got to wake up in beds this morning! We began the day with breakfast, which consisted of milk and cereal, toast and jam, and apples and oranges. We then went over to the chapel in the hospital at 8:00 for morning chapel service. The service was very touching because we are thousands of miles from home, yet we can all connect on our universal faith. After singing a few hymns and hearing a short sermon, our group split up into our own specialized activities.
            Barb spent part of the day sorting through all the medical supplies we brought with us. She has concluded that we brought 800lbs of medical supplies! In Zambia, it is tradition that women do the heavy carrying of things. So when Barb and Tehanne worked with some of the Zambian men to carry the supplies down to the hospital, they were expected to carry the supplies themselves.  An interesting cultural difference.
            Tehanne and Lindsay went on an outreach with some of the hospital staff. This means that they drove out to a small village to give medical care to mothers and infants. They gave vaccines, weighed the infants, and helped the mothers with whatever they needed. Lindsay said that the highlight was when she got to use an authentic Zambian latrine, which consisted of a hole in the ground and some brinks around it. She said that people are supposed to stand, “But I squatted, because I’m a lady.” We all had a good laugh at that. Tehanne said that her favorite part was when she got to just sit and watch the outreach and saw a little girl playing. She said the girl was just twirling around in her skirt and that she saw how similar we all are. She said that she loved seeing how close the families were, and that even children as young as 5 or 6 would help carry the infants on their backs.
            Dr. Kari actually missed chapel because she went with Dr. Dan (one of our hosts) to meet the Health Officer as a representative of our group. Once she returned, she was able to see patients. Mostly notably, she saw a patient who has a potentially cancerous tumor in her uterus. This patient has 10 children and is in her mid-late forty’s, so Kari and the other doctors have concluded that a hysterectomy would be the best option to save this woman’s life. However, there is clearly a very big cultural difference because this woman needs permission from both her husband and her village’s elders in order to have this procedure.  As Americans we are so unaccustomed to this kind of authority and reliance. The woman’s husband has left to go seek the permission of their elders. The operation is delayed at best, or possibly canceled.
            Lori, as one of our nurses, spent the day working in the hospital. She wanted me to share about the extreme differences in the cultures and how we differ in our medical treatments in America.  In Zambia, the medical care is extremely simple compared to in the U.S. Only the worst patients get O2 here, and it is usually a sign that the patient is doing poorly. She was very interested in how the patients’ families are expected to do the general care – they bring their own blankets, get them food, etc. She was very amazed by these differences.
            Kari, as our other nurse, had similar activities as Lori. She made morning rounds with the physician. She was also interested in how they have mostly the same types of diseases and problems as we have in American hospitals, yet they treat things so differently. She said that she really liked the simplicity of it and is really enjoying her work.
            I spent the morning at the local primary school. I met with the assistant headmaster and he gave me a tour of the school. The school holds grades 1-9, and each grade has three classrooms. The students all wore uniforms, and the little children were very amused with me (I assume because of my white skin). Whenever the assistant headmaster would enter a classroom, the students would stand and say in unison, “Good morning sir, how are you today?” It was very impressive! After my tour, the assistant headmaster told me that he would have something for me to help with starting tomorrow morning. He had one of the students escort me back to the mission house, and I joined the rest of the men in today’s work.
            Jonathan, Larry, Bob, and I spent the day working on assessing the hospital’s water supply. John’s specialty in water maintenance has been extreme useful and he has been leading the way. The hospital has been having problems with their water supply because new houses have been built nearby that have been using their water supply and they are not sure how the water is all being used so fast.  We have measured the rate each of the three pumps in the wells can pump water. Only one well can be used at a time, so it could be extremely valuable if we could find one well that is better than the others. On a humorous note, I’ll mention that John broke the mission house gardener’s bucket after tossing it down from a 3-story tall water tower (we were half entertained and half embarrassed, so I taunted him by telling him the story would go in the blog). The two wells that are currently hooked up to the water tanks are producing 6 GPM (gallons per minute) and 11 GPM. We discovered that the third well, which is not hooked up to the tanks, is producing 35 GPM. John says that this third well has potential to produce up to 140 GPM! Because of this, our new goal is to supply the plumbing for this third pump to be connected to the hospital. This would give the hospital three times as much water each day! If the hospital someday got a better motor and bigger pipes, they could increase their water supply to the well’s full potential.  This would be extremely valuable. We are now in the process of finding a way to purchase the plumbing pieces we need.
           
            Thank you to everyone for your prayers! Again, if you have any questions on our activities please post them. Or if you would like me to focus more on something in my posts let me know. We all send love to our family and friends at home. God bless!

Tuesday, May 31, 2011

Hello from Zimba, Zambia!

     After over 20 hours on airplanes, 14 hours of layover, 2 red-eye flights in a row, and a drive from Livingstone to Zimba, we have arrived! The jouney was mostly uneventful, so praise God. Everyone has been telling me to make sure I mention how excited we are: We are excited!! The mission house is very nice and the people here have been very friendly.  We just arrived about an hour ago, so there is not much to update on except to let our families at home know that we have all arrived safely. It is currently 4:00pm on Tuesday local time. I will hopefully have the chance to post a few of our pictures at some point. Thank you for your thoughts and prayer!

Helpful Hint: Our local time is 6 hours ahead of Michigan time. For the rest of the blog posts, I will only refer to the time as it is here in Zambia.

Hello from London!

Note: This post was written Monday evening in London. There was no internet access, so I am just now posting it.

Hello from London! Our travels so far have been relatively smooth.  We had a huge blessing as soon as we got to O’Hare airport when Lori happened to mention in passing to the baggage check-in clerk that we are going on a mission trip, which resulted in the airline refunding the charge for our second bags of medical supplies. This saved us a total of $600! After some delay in Chicago due to weather and mechanical problems, we arrived in London this morning about 10:00am local time (5:00am Michigan time). 
None of us got much sleep, but it really seems that the Lord has been filling us with energy as we have been traveling around London today. We have seen so many amazing buildings and places today! We took a train and the London ‘subway’ and ended up in Westminster. We saw and took pictures in front of Big Ben and the British Parliament. We then headed over to Westminster Abbey, where some of us took an audio tour inside. Unfortunately pictures were prohibited, so I will not be able to upload pictures from inside the church. After seeing the Abbey, we walked through the park (and saw some pretty exotic birds on the way) to Buckingham Palace. We weren’t able to spend quite as much time in front of the Palace as we would have liked because the weather was starting to look bad, so we soon started trying to find our way back to the subway.
Once we found the subway entrance, we had a couple hours to spare. We sat down to eat at an old fashioned pub where more than half of us had some AMAZING fish and chips. They were great! After a nice early dinner, we crammed into the subway (during rush hour) and made our way back to the airport. We are now relaxing after a very tiring day and we are waiting for our gate to open. It has been a great day!
We are praying for all of those at home who have dealt with the storms and tornadoes in the last 24 hours. I will hopefully be able to post again tomorrow evening (tomorrow afternoon for Michigan time) from the mission house in Zambia. Please feel free to ask any questions in the comments! Any one of us can respond to the questions so don’t hold back! I am sure that we all would really appreciate that chance to communicate with our loved ones at home. God bless!

Sunday, May 15, 2011

Where We're Going

Hello family and friends! This blog is being designed as a way for the team going to Zambia this June to post updates on our activities while we are out of touch via cell phones. My name is R.J., I am the unofficial team 'blogger', so I will probably be writing most of these posts. Other people may write occasionally and I hope to have a post at least once every couple days (depending on reliability of our internet connection while in Zambia).

To begin, I would like to show where we will be going. Zambia is a land-locked country in southern Africa.

 Our flight plans include a 12-hour layover in London, and then we will be flying into Livingstone (southern boarder of Zambia).

The town our mission house is located in is called Zimba. It is located approximately 40 miles north-east of Livingstone. The main road between Livingstone and Lusaka runs directly through the middle of Zimba.

On our trip, we will also be seeing Victoria Falls. It is only about 10 miles from our airport in Livingstone.