Tuesday, February 16, 2010

Pictures of My Time on Ometepe Island

                                           

 
Unique beauty of the island

  Growing carrots and beets under 
shade to keep the soil as cool as possible
 
pelibuey sheep donated by the American Nicaraguan Foundation


     Beach at Finca Santo Domingo Hotel

  
      Hermanos Keila and Cristian at Playa Taguizapa

  
Saira, Scarleth, Isamar, Luisa, Cristian, Danilo and Hilden
playing gin Nicaraguan style


Hellen leading Wednesday Night's Family Night
                                                                               
 Danilo doiong a fine job of transplanting onions.


                                                      









Félix mulching the beds.


 Darel mulches too, we all mulch, do you?





                         CICRIN'S new wellbeing dug, thanks to the American Nicaraguan Foundation
                        the kids take a picture with the pump about to be placed at the bottom of the well
  
Don Hilario catches an alligator/caiman? in our net.


Big Boss Jefferson helps with the planting.
Charco Verde


Darel wanted a picture with me.CICRIN gets ready to start the volcanic eruption evacuation drill, Islanders making their way to the ferry.you can tell we ran for our lives.from left to right, Maren holding Duñia, Lia, Rebecca, me, Beth and Aleida.  a hard-working group from a Lutheran church in DC.  Some groups you wish could stay longer.  Thanks Lia for the Starbuck's Via.

Time is a Strange Thing---El Tiempo Es algo Extraño

Ever since I quit my job to come down to Nicaragua I have felt like I'm living on borrowed time.  I wish it weren't true but my biggest worry is whether or not I will receive the support I need to be able to sustain this work over a period of time.  I look at money in terms of how much time it buys me to be able to be here at the orphanage.  I know from past experience that God has always provided for me in ways unexpected above and beyond my plans and expectations.  So I know that I can trust in Him to continue to do so.  But in my mind, thinking in the natural, I look at how much I have in my missions account and I calculate how long it will last and pray that my supporters will honor their pledges.  So these three short months sometimes felt like an eternity while I was in Nicaragua.  I didn't realize how much I would miss family, friends, home.  And of course I spent much less towards the end than I did in the beginning.  Of course mostly because I bought most of what I needed in the beginning and now I don't need to spend as much--until it's time to plant more trees and expand our growing area.  But now that I'm back in So Cal for a two-week visit I feel like I never left.  Time is a strange thing.  It seems like I have gone through a time machine and time stood still here while I was away from home.  In a way it has.  I have no memories of this place as of November 15, 2009--the day I left.  The lesson I learn from this is to make the best use of the time wherever we are.
Ephesian 5: 15, 16 say 'Therefore be careful how you walk, not as unwise men but as wise, making the most of your time because the days are evil'.
I am glad I am able to say thank God that He has given me a work to do that is keeping me busy.  I have been focused on planting a bunch of vegetables and that has been done.  I have also gotten to get to know most of the kids on a personal, one-on-one level, beyond what I would have expected at this point.  And I know He has given me influence with them that they will listen to what I have to say about things such as how to treat one another.  It has not been easy, like Paul said, '...the days are evil.'  They sure are.  Discouragement, boredom, loneliness, discourtesy, misunderstanding can ruin a day if you allow them.  But God has an answer to all of them: persistence, perseverance, patience, prayer, la Palabra.  I know God thinks bigger than me so I know that He has more for me to do there than teach kids to grow vegetables.  I don't know what it is yet but I sense it will come about in that amazing way that He always does things.  Thanks for taking the time to hear what I have to say and please keep these things in prayer and I will be praying for you that you will make the most of your time.

I always dreamed of doing this as a boy.
Jimmy's the real expert though.

Friday, February 12, 2010

GREETINGS FROM MANAGUA AIRPORT

Wow, I forgot what a fast Internet connection was like.  Free wifi Internet access at Augusto Sandino International Airport, Managua.  Very nice airport for a poor country.  I'm taking advantage of this fast connection to put up this post.  Again.  It's been a long, long time.  It's so frustrating to use the Internet at the orphanage that I don't even try to post a blog after I keep getting cut off.  Well to let you all know, I'm on my way home for a short two-week visit.  I've been counting down the days until now.  Not only to come home, but also to get everything in the ground.  We've (me and all the kids) have really been hustling.  We've planted zucchini, ayote squash, pipian squash, beets, carrots, cabbage, three kinds of tomatoes, two types of cucumbers, three types of onions, two types of radishes, two types of beans, okra--new to them, garlic everywhere, and flowers everywhere.  I wanted it all under way before my departure.  I want this time at home to drag by slowly but I am excited to see what the garden will look like when I get back.
Now I'm looking forward to feeling some cold air and cold rain.  Right now Nicaragua looks like California in the middle of a hot summer: dry and dusty.  Three more months until the rains come again.  But one good thing is the wind.  Cool winds blow in from the North and make things much more bearable.  Still, we're about 11 degrees from the equator and the sun is mercilessly strong from 11 to 4.  I will water in the morning and by 4 it looks like it's never been watered.  But we have started to use water from our new well, thanks to the American Nicaraguan Foundation, and we're flooding the trenches and now they stay moist for a couple of days.  I'm learning how to adapt to the conditions here.  Narrow and deep trenches, which shade the bottom of the trench, are the key.  Last Wednesday I got to lead our weekly 'Family Night' since the director is in Costa Rica.  It was quite different from what I'm used to at home, but we made it through.  I hope they got something out of the devotional and the game we played about acknowledging each others good qualities. 
Well, I better get to my gate.  Now that I will be at home with a fast connection I will be posting a lot of pictures of what I/we have been doing.  Please check back soon!