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Monday, May 6, 2013

Chicken farm

The home of Praise. 
A home
a school
community outreach
a church
all in a village outside of Kampala. They have 33 kids living there currently and and about 100 kids that go to the school. The kids in the home are orphans that a Ugandan lady named Praise has taken in as her own to love and care for. 
We have been working out there since we arrived in January this year. We have worked on many projects from building an additional class room to delivering food for them and IVO. Also focusing on helping the administrator learn better management skills. 
Brian the administrator getting the coop ready the week before.
The most recent focus has been a chicken farm. Building self sufficient programs that help them support them selfs and be able to step away from all western financial help. This is good because the kids will learn how to support themselves when they are out on there own. 

So this weekend was the first delivery of 50 baby chick that in 3 months will be laying eggs. We will be eating some of them for a good source of protein for the kids and also be selling to help with finances. 
The kids happy bringing in the baby chicks.
Brian unloading the first chicks.

Eat Eat Eat grow fast!



Monday, April 22, 2013

Not your American road trip

Finally going through pictures from this last month. Remembering some good times we have had. One of the best this last month was when we went to Fort Portal to help one of our Ugandan friend get away while he dealt with some life problems and spend some time with some friends adopting there.

So began our first family African road trip. We packed the car as if we would for any other trip. Plenty of food, snacks, candy, crackers, and sweets. Yes that is how we roll. 

Fort Portal is on the far west side of Uganda near the Congo boarder. It is mountains and very pretty. We where excited to get away from the Kampala heat. Nothing but bad roads, traffic officers and good times ahead. 

The trip was great, nothing at all like home. 
We got to play with some kids at a school.
Stood on the Equator.
Saw baboons on the road side. Stopped and fed them some crackers. One even jumped on the hood.
Even saw a heard of elephants in the bush.
It was so pretty there in Fort Portal, I am secretly(openly) waiting for God to call us to ministry there. 



Friday, March 15, 2013

Love the life God gave you

The other day I was thinking about Jethro. 
I was thinking about how he has no one to play with here at home.
Then, I started thinking about who he does get to play with
and it kind of broke my heart.
The only time Jethro gets to play with children is at an orphanage.
This has been heavy on my heart for a while now.
I know God has called us here and this is where we are supposed to be,
but it is still hard to realize the reality of Jethro's friends.

A couple weeks later, I talked to a friend on the phone 
and they were talking about how hard it is to see Jethro
living without all the things he would have and get to do if we lived in the US.
He would get to go to the park and play with children in an open field,
he would get to go to museums and learn about all kinds of cultures and the past,
he would be able to go to the zoo and learn about animals,
he would be able to go to daycare, if we wanted him to, 
and play with children without us fearing he will be beat by the caretakers.

So, I started praying and asking God to open my heart to all He has for us here.
And, of course, He did.
God has really opened my eyes.
I now see Jethro's situation in a different light.

Jethro at the Zoo with Lawrence,
a child from an orphanage we work at
Seeing the ocean for the first time
At a Balloon Fiesta in NM with Grandma


I now see that Jethro gets to play with children who long for a friend
and Jethro gets to be that person
I now realize that we only live 45 min away from a zoo and a good one at that, 
or 3 hours away from the real thing.
Jethro is already more cultured than most American children
and adults for that matter. 
We now have missionary friends from New Zealand 
who come over and their children play with Jethro.
We also have missionary friends from Uganda, Kenya, Canada and the US that Jethro can play with.
Jethro has been to Africa (of course), Europe and America. 
He has been to Tennessee, Texas, North Carolina, Virginia, Indiana, Ohio, Michigan, Colorado, Arizona, Utah, California, New Mexico, West Virginia, Illinois, Iowa, Nebraska, Oklahoma, Arkansas, Kentucky, and Nevada (yes, we took our son to Las Vegas. He had to experience a Las Vegas Buffet).
Jethro has gotten to see and will get to see more of the world than most people will ever get to see. 
God made me realize, Jethro doesn't need to go to a museum to learn about culture,
to experience culture, 
he is living a very culturally diverse life already.
Getting water to do dishes in Uganda
With Shawn on his first chair lift

On a ferry in North Carolina
Jethro's playground in Uganda
At GG's house picking strawberries

Jethro may not have a "normal" life,
but it is one that will teach him many life lessons and make him a well rounded person.
He will grow up loving people from all walks of life.
He will grow up seeing God move mountains.
He will Grow up to love Jesus with all his heart and
he will get to grow up serving people in Jesus name. 

I truly thank God for helping me to realize that Jethro is not missing out at all.
He is living the life God has blessed him with.
Jethro ready for an adventure in CA

Please dont be like me and only see the things that you or your children are mission out on,
but realize how blessed you are to have the life you have.