The idea for this blog came to me when I was searching for a better way to communicate about the various missional activities I'm involved with. During my November 2009 and March 2010 mission trips to Kenya, it became obvious that there had to be a less cumbersome solution for getting the word out to a large number of people. This blog is the result.
Sunday, June 11, 2023
Reflections on our Sunday worship at Springs of Life Lutheran Church 5-28-2023
Sunday, June 4, 2023
The last flight home
At Heathrow. Yay!
From Nairobi to London
Saturday, June 3, 2023
A good last day in Nairobi
Friday, June 2, 2023
We finish with a bang!
Thursday, June 1, 2023
Our biggest day yet in the vision clinic
Wednesday, May 31, 2023
The clinic continues to function well
Tuesday, May 30, 2023
The Tuesday clinic ran smoothly
Monday, May 29, 2023
The first day of the clinic went well
Sunday, May 28, 2023
Back to Nairobi and worship in Kibera
Saturday, May 27, 2023
Great day at Lake Nakuru
Friday, May 26, 2023
Luggage woes in Nairobi
After landing pretty much on time in Nairobi, we made our way through immigration in pretty good time. That is, until we went to find our luggage at the carousel. Ken and Sandra beat us to that step and had searched high and low and their bags were not to be found. Elizabeth and I took a look and came to the same conclusion. We spent the next hour filling out paper work designed to find the luggage and then have it delivered to Little Daughters. This did Elizabeth and I little good, since we were leaving for days of safaris and only had our carry-ons. After meeting our driver, Willie, we went to The Hub, a mall near our lodgings and we each bought underwear, sox and some tops to get us through the weekend. We returned to Little Daughters where the sisters provided Elizabeth and I each with our own room to clean up in. Once we were done, we headed to Lake Naivasha, a national game park famous for its hippos and for birds of all types. Once there, we took a boat ride and got some great looks and photos of African Fish Eagles, Hammerkops, Hippos. Ibises and others. We had a nice lunch and headed for Catherine's school on the way to Lake Nakuru.
What should have been a 30 minute ride turned into about an hour and a half of very bad dirt roads, numerous calls to Catherine and the school and finally ended with one of the teachers tracking us down on a motorcycle and leading us for about half an hour to the school. Even though we were late, the students stayed after school and sang and danced for us. After each if the teachers introduced themselves, and we did the same, Catherine's sister Susan invited us in for a quick meal.
The students needed to get home and we needed to be at the Lake Nakuru Game Park before sunset or risk losing not only the drive back to Nairobi, but also forfeiting what he had paid for being there Friday afternoon. My drivers talked to the lady ranger who was just getting off duty and somehow convinced her to let us in and to pay in the morning. Wow, the first thing that really went right in over a day and a half on the road!
Elizabeth and I sampled from the dinner buffet and it was all quite good. I'm ready to hopefully sleep through the night after all we've endured since Wednesday morning and will be getting breakfast at the lodge tomorrow at 6:30 before heading out on our morning safari. Blessings everybody!
Thursday, May 25, 2023
Finally heading towards Nairobi
Trouble in Paradise!
Wednesday, May 24, 2023
Ready to head to London
Enroute to New York JFK
Getting ready for takeoff! Let the adventure begin!
We all made it through security without incident, but Elizabeth and I are having trouble getting seat assigments for the British Air flights from New York to London and for London to Nairobi. We'll just have to deal with that at JFK at the British Air counter. I always say "Anybody who thinks that International travel is glamorous hasn't done it!" We have a four hour flight to New York and only a two hour layover, which might sound like a lot, but JFK is huge and I'm sure we'll have to go from one end to the other to get to British Air. Pastor Kevin and I did it once and I wish I had counted the number of escalators and elevators we took in the process, it seemed like 20 or more.
Once onboard and flying to London, we'll have dinner and then it's always a good plan to try to sleep as much as we can to get acclimated to the eight hour time difference we will have in Kenya. We attempt to stay awake from London to Nairobi, so that we'll be exhausted and might sleep the first night after we arrive around 9pm and make it to our lodgings around 11pm or midnight.
We only have a two hour layover in London as well and that may be a scramble, so I might not be able to post again until possibly Friday sometime. I usually write blog entries on my phone during the flights and send them out whenever I'm in wifi range. Keep us in your prayers for travel mercies and an effective mission. More to follow!
Tuesday, May 23, 2023
The church sends us
Only one more day and we head 'em out! As usual, there have been way more last-minute computer repairs and other distractions as I slowly but surely get packed up. Yesterday was a good example of that. I took my friend Bill Henderson out on my bass boat in search of birds on Lake Georgetown. We had a wonderful morning, seeing several Great Blue Herons, Great Egrets, Painted Buntings and others birds up close and personal in outstanding early morning light. It was calm and in the high 60's when we started and we saw a very nice, but subdued, sunrise. We kept up a nice conversation all morning and I was pretty happy with how our Gilligan's Island 3-hour tour had gone. That is until after I had gotten the boat ready and was trailering out of the park and immediately had a flat tire on the boat trailer. I counted my blessings, it had happened at about 15 miles per hour and I wasn't out on the Interstate going 70 miles per hour. It could have been much worse. About a year and a half ago, I'd had a flat on the boat trailer and had called my insurance to get roadside assistance. I learned that tires on my truck we covered, but the fine print said no to trailer tires. That little adventure cost me $85 for the tire change plus new tires. I did need help that time because where I had pulled off of the road would have been to dangerous to use the scissors jack that I had in the truck. This time I was on level ground and proceeded to break the lug nuts free and was sizing up where to place the jack when a work truck passed by and did an immediate u-turn. Out jumped a guy in a neon green work crew vest asking if he could help me. I told him a better jack would be a good thing and he said he just happened to have one. I told him with a good jack we were ten minutes away from having the flat tire changed out for the spare. During the next ten minutes, I learned his name was Hassan and even though I tried to pay him or buy him lunch for his trouble, he wouldn't take anything and just remained a cheerful, friendly guy. I asked him again what I could do for him and he said "Pay it forward!" I always do the same myself, so we hit it off famously. I explained the mission trip that was only 2 days away and how things like this always slow you down when you probably need it. We shook hands, and we promised to keep each other in our prayers. I wouldn't have encountered such a beautiful soul without some trouble. Thank you Jesus for always letting "chance" encounters like this to happen!
Next, I called the Discount Tire near my house 20 miles away and they were out of my tire, but one 2 miles away in Georgetown had what I needed. I called them and they said to come and drop the boat off. Being a Monday, they were real busy but they got me in. The guy who checked me in was named Antowan, and I noticed an accent. I told him I was going to Africa and wondered where he was from. "Jamaica mon!" I said "Cool" and told him a bit about the mission trip. He was fascinated and said he'd love to come with us. Another "chance" encounter, another new friend. I think my cancer survival saga that I wrote about at my other blog has really taught me to always look at the bright side of things. I went back to Austin, got a haircut and attempted to repair a last minute computer issue for a client unsuccessfully and then was waiting for word that the boat was ready. I found out it would be about 4:30 and traffic is horrendous coming and going the 20 miles I needed to travel. But not yesterday! It was like the Red Sea parted. I had my boat back in storage just before 5pm and was still able to spend some time with my girlfriend and Pete, our old, old Dachshund. I didn't get quite as many things accomplished as I had planned, but God's plan was far better.
Today has been spent getting brand new $100 bills, 2017 issue, because they have anti-counterfeiting measures in them, starting to pack and taking care of last-minute details like putting timers on lights, alerting the police I'll be traveling, getting travel notifications to credit card companies and the like. I will be writing daily during the trip as possible. I am not always near a good Internet connection and power can be spotty at times. Please come back often to learn how the vision clinic and other aspects of the trip are going and, of course, keep us in your prayers for a safe and effective mission.
Blessings everybody!
Wednesday, May 3, 2023
Preparing to Saddle Up for Nairobi again!
Thanks for following our progress as we get ready for another Vision Clinic in Nairobi. I will be posting as much as I am able when we are on the ground in Kenya. Sometimes power or Internet connections are a little iffy, but I am usually able to write about our experiences on a regular basis so that you will know we are safe and will know what to pray for as we face inevitable challenges. This will be my 21st trip to Kenya, I have grown to love it there. The people have a faith I can only hope to emulate and a joy, even in some pretty dire circumstances, that I strive to imitate in my own life. I always return home completely energized.
This time, we will be serving at the Springs of Life Lutheran Church in the slum of Kibera, partnering with the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Kenya and Nuru, the local arm of the Lutheran Laymen's League. I have served at this church multiple times before and we have always had cheerful, hard-working volunteers from the congregation to help make the clinic run smoothly as well as doctors from the Ministry of Health who have become dear friends over the years. I am really looking forward to this mission trip. Covid got in the way in 2020 and we served in Waithaka in the slum of Kawangware last year, so it has been at least 4 years since we held a clinic in Kibera. I feel like we will have a very large impact this time, seeing maybe 3500 or more patients from Monday through Friday.
More to follow as our planning, ordering of supplies and recruiting any last-minute team members continues. Which reminds me, we had a solid team of 7 ready to embark on this mission only a month ago and a series of circumstances have dwindled us to 4, including me. Luckily, 3 out of 4 of us have done this multiple times and I have led a successful clinic with only 3 team members from Redeemer in the past. The secret is empowering the local volunteers to do a good job and concentrating on the bigger picture of the logistical and spiritual aspects of our work. We can still accept applications to come with us and would welcome the help. It's a life changer, you will come back with a different and better perspective, I can guarantee that. It's what has made me a "repeat offender"! The cost is your round-trip airfare, which has hovered around $1500 for this trip and $500 for on the ground expenses including lodging and meals at a very nice compound called The Little Daughters of St. Joseph in the Nairobi suburb of Karen. Only a little more money for souvenirs and incidentals like bottled water, snacks for the clinic and any sightseeing is extra. In my experience, friends, family and groups you belong to can be very generous sources of funds, so please consider joining us from May 24th to June 4th. An application and more information is at www.redeemer.net/kenya.
Here is a picture of our team in front of Mt. Kilimanjaro last June.