Wednesday, June 24, 2009

Photo Contest Submission

Hannah - Farmgirl in Flipflops, has a photography content on her blog. Below are submissions from my sister and I.

Hannah, if you need us to email them to you, let us know...

This is my (David's) photo submission - a snapshot I took from the Grand Caymans. This photo is not edited... this is natural.
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This is a picture my sister took from Appomattox, Virginia.
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A good snapshot stops a moment from running away. ~Eudora Welty

Nurse Aide Training

Recently I passed the entry test for a local hospitals nurse aide training course. The course is eight weeks long and at it preps me to take the state board test for nurse aides. I am excited because this will enlarge my mission field. My training will start in August and will be very intense. Pray for me.

The photo shows my new hospital ID badge.


I will be in God's service. I can remember how Jesus came by the side of people and helped/healed them. As a Christian I should show that same love. Becoming a nurse aide is a great way to in act that love.



Monday, June 15, 2009

Strawberry Picking!

My two brothers - one by blood and one through Christ, went strawberry picking recently at Poor John's Farm Market (U-Pick), and we had a rich harvest! We've enjoyed strawberries and even yummy strawberry smoothies for many days. Yum!

David picked the most!

My mum's art...


David's art.

The boys and me.

Midnight snack?? *smiles!*

Oh and guess what? Zoe, our mommy mouse who recently died had babies a few weeks ago. This is one of them. She had them in the travel house. We had to come up with new and fun ideas to get her hydrated. The babies are all doing well now living with their "Aunt Alice"... *laughs* With mouse relationships, it's hard to say!


More post to follow!

Friday, June 5, 2009

Dad's Travels Part II

After the ICAF study group finished in the Solomon Islands they headed for Australia. They were had briefings from high level people in government and military positions, but they did find sometime to snap some photos.

In the City of Brisbane there is a company that takes groups, for fun, up the Suspension Bridge across the river. Here is my dad and some friends from his ICAF study group.
One thing they learned about national security is that Australia has a police force that is deployed around the world, similar to how our Marine Corps Expeditionary Unit deploys. These Police are more about peace keeping and less battlefield fighting.







Australia values the U.S. so much that they
made a special place for our stained glass in their war museum -the right. The Ă…ustralian window is on the left.
The Australians have fought with us in almost every war back to WWI.






Here is the ICAF study group having a meal with one of the Australian commanders.

The Australian salt water crocks are such a danger that the people call the military to kill them. These crocks are big enough that they could grab a pet or child, so the military is doing the right thing to get rid of them.

As cute as the Kangaroos are, they are a pest to the Australians and so the kangaroos are being killed, as are the crocks.

She is a courageous nurse.
The Australian Capital, reminds me of Washington D.C., but the greater amount of trees around it are beautiful.



Tuesday, June 2, 2009

Dad's Travels to Haiti and Soloman Islands

Recently my dad and his study group traveled from the Industrial College of the Armed Forces (ICAF) to Haiti, Solomon Islands, and Australia. They were studying reconstruction and nation building. How to take a country smashed by poverty, war, or natural disasters-typhoons... and help them rebuild. Below are some photos of his adventures.

The trip to Haiti was eye opening. The study group needed a armed escort to travel into Haiti. Before they left the states they needed a whole lot of immunizations. Once they got there the smell was awful all over the island because of trash littered everywhere. The people wore second hand clothes, while some children wore no clothes. The people were using oil barrels to make animals figurines to sell. The average wage in Haiti is two dollars a week.

You really want to do something to help after seeing the poverty. One of the reconstruction non governmental organizations was a Baptist mission group called Double Harvest."Double Harvest is a Christian ministry that desires to magnify Christ by ministering to the spiritual and physical needs of people in developing countries. “If anyone has material possessions and sees his brother in need but has no pity on him, how can the love of God be in him?” (1 John 3:17)

Double Harvest understands that people’s deepest need is a spiritual one, a changed life through faith in Jesus Christ. As a Christian ministry, Double Harvest also seeks to model Christ’s compassion by offering economic, educational and medical programs in difficult and impoverished situations. Double Harvest is about “Sowing Seeds of Life” for this life and the next. “Man does not live on bread alone.” (Luke 4:4)

In Haiti, these purposes are achieved through Operation Double Harvest, a project that includes a large agricultural project, an academic/vocational school, a medical/surgical clinic, and an associated but independent church." http://www.doubleharvest.org/

Here is a photo from double Harvest web site to show what they are accomplishing with agriculture. Prayer is needed for this mission.


The second trip was to the Solomons Islands. Here is the international airport which reminds me of the rural airports I saw in Truck and Yap.


The trip was pretty rushed with briefings with military and government officials. But while my dad and his team were traveling they saw some neat things. Here is a photo of a group of children playing in the river after school.

A woman in her garden. Her house in the background does not look like it could stand in a typhoon like Pongsongwa.


Here is one of two of the Solomon Island's police boats. The sunset is beautiful.

People of the Solomon Islands still tell the stories of the liberation from the Japanese in WWII like it was yesterday. The Marines landed at Red beach on Guadalcanal and pushed the Japanese back, clearing the mountains and the air field. The first WWII photo is a memorial. The tower in the second photo is a reconstruction of the WWII tower on the air strip that the Marines took from the Japanese. The third photo is a Chapel at Red Beach. The beach reminds me of Asan Beach on Guam.

Part two will come soon.