Hey everyone, I know this blog was originally only supposed to be for my guatemala trip but I decided, when my Dad took some photos of my apartment here in Loma Linda at school, that I should post some of them for my mom to see. Well, if you for some reason are looking at my blog, they're for you too. Enjoy.
Tuesday, August 4, 2009
Loma Linda Day One
Hey everyone, I know this blog was originally only supposed to be for my guatemala trip but I decided, when my Dad took some photos of my apartment here in Loma Linda at school, that I should post some of them for my mom to see. Well, if you for some reason are looking at my blog, they're for you too. Enjoy.
Monday, May 11, 2009
Lake Atitlan
In this group photo,
Tuesday, May 5, 2009
It was a theme this past week in Nebaj, that everyone we came in contact with was absolutely enfatuated with not only our cameras but with us (since most of them had never previously seen a camera or a white human...most had also never seen themselves before since most of the people out there have no mirrors in their homes).
This church is in a little town that has never had gringos (white people) come in and help like this before. It's called Ojo de Agua whiThis blue building is the church itself, the bus was ours for transportation and all these kids were kids that were just hanging around while we worked...occastionally we were able to take photos and then get mobbed while showing the photos to the kids. The photo with the building on the left and the worksite to the center and right is showing what we did pretty much the whole week...that is, cutting, bending and tying rebar into columns and footers, and then hand mixing, hand transporting (via buckets), and then hand pouring the footers into place.
Below are more pics of kids and such. Also there is one with me and the three guys that helped us throughout the week. Domingo was the 'forman', Andres is a pastor and a guy who often works with Domingo, and Francisco is a pastor and traveling evangelist (in his case this means that he hikes alone to surrounding villages sometimes up to 8 hrs away, spreading the gospel in places that have never received the gospel). These guys all speak spanish and Ixil (a local mayan language, which is e
veryone's first language around those parts), and Domingo also speaks Quiche, another mayan language.
This was a rest stop we took...kinda a cool rapids/falls.
Above is a prayer circle with all us gringos and the guys we worked with in Chajul (I think).
Monday, May 4, 2009
Okay, so I spent last week in Nebaj...Saturday to Saturday...with a group from York, PA. What we did was we went around to 7 different aldeas or villages surrounding Nebaj and we tied rebar together to make columns and then we poured the concrete footers for each column...in all we set and poured footers for 47 columns during the week. On Sunday we worked for about 5 hrs at a church that was in a village which started out as a refugee camp during the 30 year Guatemalen civil war which just ended in 1996. So after our work we went back to our amazingly nice, clean hotel (Q100 or $12.50 per night) to clean up before returning for church service at 4PM. So we went down there for church and had an incredibly loud worship before two of the team members shared their testimonies and two others shared the job of delivering the sermon. So all that happened and then at the end (as would be the case after every day of work that followed the rest of the week)
Here is a street level view from our hotel we stayed at. THe other photo is of the first day of work...this is inside the church building for which we placed the columns that will allow the expansion of this building.
Stuff
Left is Nancy (13) and Iris (10), middle is Solomon (15), Astrid (19), me (23), Angie (11?), Nancy, Brenda (14), and the one behind me is Karla (13) on the right is a pan of the original property, the light green building is the school, then trees, then the outdoor gym, then an older building with storage and also a couple apartments that a couple of the college boys live in.
Upper left is a photo taken from the third story of the school looking down at the prayer garden on the left and the Wheeler´s house. Upper middle is a photo from the third floor looking at the roof of the gym and at the huge squater village on the hill in the background. THe other pan is of the new property where almost everyone livesñ in the middle left is the view of the end of the boys house, then on the other side is the building where a bunch of the 2 year plus missionaries live and the to the right in the background is the girls house, on the far right is the construction for the Wheeler´s new home...coming along slowly and sometimes not at all. It turns out that the layout of the photos on this page I´m producing the post on and the page that it´s actually shown on, is totally different...so hopefully you can just take my photo descriptions and match them to the correct ones.
Monday, April 20, 2009
On the top is the church we go to - La Fraternidad Christiana...it seats 12,200 and typically has about 5 to 6,000 people for a 
Sunday service.
The photo in the middle -Jon, he´s at the University studying tourism stuff. .
To the right is David (10?) in the yellow and Emily (10?) just in front of the
To the right is David (10?) in the yellow and Emily (10?) just in front of the
camera, and Astrid (19) on the right.
Below is a video of a church member singing a song originally done by Josh Groban and Charlotte church. He´s singing entirely in Spanish, but I think the original was done partially in Spanish or Italian, and partially in English. It´s opera ish, and this guy belted it...it was pretty amazing to hear it in person. The video is about 3 mins long.
Tuesday, April 14, 2009
This is one of the teams lined up before the first games began on Wednesday.
Sorry, I really didn´t take a whole lot of photos of
games b-c I was busy doing lots of other stuff.
Here is Edgar, getting his clothes stuffed with balloons...the team with the most balloons stuffed in the individual´s clothing was the winner. Well, that´s all folks, see ya.
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