Thursday, May 31, 2018

Tuesday Afternoon: Hunting for Fish in the Bush















Tuesday Afternoon: Hunting for Fish in the Bush


Today we went outside of town looking for fish. We carried several cane poles and a mosquito net. The scenery out in the bush was beautiful. As we walked down to the creek, we waded through a rice patty field with thick black mud between our toes. After arriving at the creek, it was easy to see that the depth would not be enough for any cane pole. That did not deter a couple of the locals who took the mosquito net and stretched it across this small ditch of water while the other locals went upstairs to scare the fish downstream to the mosquito net, Miraculously, we aught nearly 60 fish of all types. We caught the cherished tilapia (mekuba), African walking catfish and other unnamed species. Not to mention there was a four-foot monitor lizard in the stream with us the whole time. Although we struck out the first day of hunting for fish, the second day was a homeroom. 

Port Town: Aquaponics










The aquaponics system here in Port Town is up and running! Our team installed the last few pieces of the system Tuesday morning and things have run rather smoothly. The system contains roughly 800 gallons of water housed in three IBC food totes that have been cut in half. All 800 gallons is cycled twice a day and is run off a $40-dollar air pump. The water is pumped to the farthest tank with a rake siphon and a long run of PVC. Then the water is siphoned back to the fish tank with manual U-shaped siphons, making a complete loop. The physics behind the system is rather amazing and ingenious.

It is rather surreal seeing this system take shape. All things have fallen into place with ease and the local brothers are very interested and willing to learn. They have grasped the concepts with little effort and are eager to teach each other. It was encouraging to see one of the brothers teach his small son how to us a U shape siphon to transfer water from tank to tank. Any teacher worth their salt will tell you this is a true sign of mastery.

The goal of this system is to grow fish and plants for the local community with the hopes of one day expanding. It has also become important for our friends here to be able to renew their visas under a new platform. Lord willing, this could possibly be an avenue for them. However, this is not the ultimate end. This garden has already become a ministry platform for the Gospel here in Port Town. Just this week we have been able to share with many brothers the Good News! 

Tuesday: Lunch Bible study

Steven led the men in Bible Study from Matthew 6. It is ironic that just last week, a couple of the men memorized Matthew 6:38, which was the focus of today’s lesson. “Seek first the Kingdom of God and His righteousness and all of these things will be added to you.” This led to several good questions but more importantly, it led to examples of devotions that arise out of the aquaponics project. Adam has stressed to the locals the importance of having good water. He described the water that is good as “gold.” As Jesus was approached by the woman at the well, He informed her that her water would cause her to thirst again but His water would leave you never thirst again. The water we have in the project would eventually evaporate but the real “gold” water was what Jesus provided.


Tuesday: Malaria

Malaria malattia puntura zanzara


Facing disease in third-world is much different than how we face disease in the states. As the men gathered today and prepared for work, we were hit with the news of one of the workers who was found to be sick when he returned home on Monday afternoon. (Name withheld)'s three-year-old daughter was incoherent. He was the first to arrive but with pain in his voice announced that his daughter was "bad." Our host quickly got on his motorcycle with this worker and headed to his house.

After arriving at his home, his daughter was unable to open her eyes and unable to respond. She was quickly on the motorcycle for the trip to the hospital. The short trip to the hospital was met with the bad news that his daughter had a very serious form of malaria (cerebral malaria) which affects the brain. The prognosis is given with only one treatment at all that might offer the slimmest of hope. A blood transfusion would be required but beyond this lone treatment, there was only a very slim hope that his young daughter would survive.


Before lunch, he had returned from the hospital in obvious need. the hospital would attempt to use the blood of the young father for the transfusion. the hospital removed the necessary amount of blood but without payment refused to put the blood into his daughter. The father quickly mounted his bicycle back to our host home to ask for the necessary funds to complete the transfusion. This is a stark reminder of the need to remember our own malaria medicine each day.

Monday Morning and Meals




Our host expects the men of the community to begin arriving around 9 AM. But, before the day begins, our host has provided a breakfast of cinnamon rolls, scrambled eggs and a fruit medley. A better tasting cinnamon bun could not be found in the States. After breakfast, several men from the community begin arriving around 10 AM.

Islam AM Prayers


As we wait outside for the men of the community to come, we hear the Islamic call to prayer from the city. This reminder of the beautiful, yet dark, calls us to remember why we came. We hear this faint reminder five times each day. Our arrival coincides with the month of Ramadan. In Islam, this month features a call to prayers before sunrise followed by a day-long fast. Throughout the day Muslims are called back to prayers and each day concludes at sunset with Muslims breaking their fast until the following day.

Monday Meals

Meals, especially for breakfast and supper have been fairly standard. As mentioned before, we had cinnamon buns and scrambled eggs with fruit each morning. But, lunch each day is more the standard for Mozambique. Rice is served at virtually every meal. Usually, there is so much served that it is placed on our outdoor table in two wash pans. Today, lunch consisted of xima, matapa and fried fish. The fish market is less than a mile from the house and is a way of life for the people here. As in most countries besides the US, the fish is always cooked head on.

Xima is a dish that is made from cornmeal and looks like grits or even porridge. The taste is blander than grits. The men usually squeeze the xima into a ball and use it to sop up the matapa without using a fork. The matapa is quite tasty and is made from multiple different types of items. Casaba leaves, ground peanuts, garlic and onions and tomatoes. We have not starved while here but we have not had the standard American diet either.

Wednesday, May 30, 2018

Monday: Dirt and Solar Power










The second day of work was really like the first day-heavy or manual labor. Five tanks were buried in the cooler Mozambiquan dirt. Tanks were filled with water from the well that had plenty of the required bacteria that is necessary for aquaponics but is feared by the travelers to the third world.


As the week progresses, one of the last pieces of equipment to set up will be a solar power station to keep the gardening working during times of power outages. This is another area of hardship that missionaries often view as a way of life. Here in Mozambique, the power grid is taken down about twice per month for the entire day on Sunday. The hosts in the last year saw the power go out for a stretch of 7 days on one occasion and two years ago saw the power out for 39 straight days. 

Monday, May 28, 2018

Arrival in Pemba, Customs







2:20 PM (Friday, May 25)

Our flight lands in Pemba. As in South Africa, our plane is met on the runway by a lone plane manager who directs the plane to a stop some 100 yards away from the terminal where we stop and depart for the short walk to customs.

Customs is much different here than the airports that we are accustomed to in our larger destinations. Even in our larger international cities, most everyone speaks English, but that is not the case as our host speak the native Portuguese. The Portuguese settled this several centuries ago and often enslaved the people that they encountered. This often led to hostilities and the eventual freedom for those that were left behind. The language stayed and many of the tribal languages are left to distant tribes. However most all speak the national language of Portuguese.

Our first major in obstacle was just ahead of us as we, were told the necessity of obtaining a visa could now be managed at the airport with a letter from a local emissary giving us permission conduct our business in the country, developing a sustainable food source in the form of an aquaponics garden in the backyard of our IMB host (NAME) and their beautiful family.

Our Host

(Name) is a former college soccer player from Pittsburgh, PA. This Southwestern Baptist Theological graduate has a passion for the locals is indescribable. He seemingly is one continuous sentence of stores, names, people and as mentioned-passion. His wife, (Name) is a former school teacher. She literally was the breadwinner for the family as he completed his degree before heading to the mission field. The pictures that are on their wall in their house do not hide the love that these two missionaries have for one another and their family.

He and She met on a short-term mission trip which sparked the interest in the work of Lottie Moon. Their mutual interest in sharing the gospel with the nations is obvious. There is even a picture hung prominently above the dining room table with all the foreign countries that they have travelled together. Their partnership in sharing the gospel is unmistakable.

Customs in Pemba Airport

Our first roadblock is encountered when we reach customs. All four passports are gathered and carried to a different room. Our attempts to communicate our purpose is met with blank states, Although Portuguese is a member of the "love" languages (Romantic), the Spanish some on our team speak, all similarities seem to be non-existent at this point on our trip. Our alarm dissolves as our host comes around the corner to handle the conversations from here bringing a sense of relief to the team.

There are two hurdles that we must jump before leaving the airport. We must secure our visa and then pass through customs with our crates of tools and aquaponics equipment. Each of these items would be subject to a yet undetermined tax. If these were the only good in the crate, then all should go smoothly; if they inquire about a mysterious set of fishing equipment and their actual cost, this could prove to be very expensive and would ensure a hefty tax. This gift from Ron King of fishing equipment is taxable is probably much more than the aquaponics equipment.

Our first problem is encountered was that the letter that our host brought with him that is needed to secure our visa seems to contain only one name and not each name on the team. Thankfully, our host was able to supply the authorities with the information that all four names were actually inside the document. This was nearly 30 minutes of negotiating to pass through the double doors to the customs screening of our bags. Three of our checked bags were actually plastic tool rates that had been secured together by screws secured with our DeWalt drill. More negotiations to come.

The screws are apparently tagged with a card that has an invitation to open. The tools, still in their cartons as they were bought, provide an enticement to tax. . As is true in most countries, the negotiation is a game to some but a fear for others. Thankfully, this is not a game that the English speakers would have any fighting chance or really any hope of winning.

Waiting Outside the Airport in Pemba

As the team waited outside for the negotiations to finish, a group of national Mozambique children surround our Toyota Land Rover in attempt to sale us SIM cars for our phones and trinkets for our pockets. The water is enticing but with unsealed lids, it is obvious that this is a temptation that should easily be passed up. These children are looking for chocolate or money-either is fine with them which is sure to draw a much larger crowder -read: Andrew do not hand money to the kids 😊. This is common in most third world countries.

Sitting in the hot Pemba sun, we begin to get thirsty waiting for our host to return. His prolonged negotiations bring a worry to the team because our host has been working with the officials for well over an hour. A couple of us decide to go back in and find our host who has just finished up and is exchanging money. He gives Adam a handful of bills to go and purchase a few bottles of water for the team.
The small convenience store inside the airport has the bottles of water that we are looking for. The attendant punches the calculator several times and shows the final tally to Adam, who makes an attempt to count our currency for the correct number of bills but evidently coming up short based upon the face of the attendant. In Spanish (and Portuguese), Adam tells him no more. The attendant sighs and takes all of the bills out of Adam’s hand leaving us to wonder if we had just been had” in another one of the endless bartering games centered around every purchase. The “400” bills, according to our host, was probably a good deal. We leave the airport heading out to our next destination. It is not the Pemba Magic “Resort” that we had anticipated but is instead to our final destination of our IMB host, a “mere” 5.5 hours across the National Highway toward Northern Mozambique.

The Flights to Mozambique


4:30 AM on (Thursday, May 24th):

Quite an early start to what is the most gruelling leg of the journey from the comforts of the business of Charlotte, NC to the drastically slower pace of Mozambique. Meeting us at the airport is a young entourage to wish Sarah Beverage who is on this trip with us to Johannesburg ("Joburg"), South Africa. Sarah will be met by Brian Harrell who is the leader of a group of missionaries that covers the entire country of Mozambique for the International Mission Board. Sara, now entering her senior year at Hickory Grove Christian School, who will be giving up the next six weeks of her summer helping the Harrells in (city) by teaching young women in Biblical Motherhood as well as ESL to the locals. Sarah has aspirations to possibly be on the mission field herself someday. this trip will help her in making that decision.

7:30 AM (Thursday, May 24):

Depart Charlotte, NC for 2-hour flight to JFK Airport in New York

10:45 AM (Thursday, May 24)

Board flight from JFK for 13 hours flight to Johannesburg ("Joburg"), South Africa.

7:36 AM (Friday, May 25):

Once in Joburg, we are met with the news that Brian's flight from (city) has been delayed. Sarah, who was initially travelling with the guys, now appears to be on her own from Joburg to (city). As men with wives and in most cases daughters are left with a bit of uneasiness about leaving Sarah to board by herself and head to (city), Brian's hometown.

10:45 AM (Friday, May 25):

As the moment arrives for Sarah's departure, the guys walk Sarah up to the gate to turn her loose with a lone empty seat on the flight beside her -reserved for Brian. As a final glance is made to the escalator, Brian emerges from the top of the stairs with perspiration pouring from his brow arriving only a mere few moments before departure. Incredibly Brian will make the flight on time. A sense of relief comes over us all.

11:00 AM (Friday, May 25):

The rest of the guys on board the bus (that is correct) and head to the runway to board the plane for Pemba, Mozambique. The flight has less than twenty people, including pilots and a lone flight attendant. Most seats are full. Departure is 11:30 AM.

Pemba Airport receives only one flight per day from South Africa and typically only one departing the same day. As we fly over the expansiveness of South Africa and Mozambique, it is striking the lack of civilization that we witness looking down on the countryside compared to the cities that we just left. We pass over mountains and rivers headed for Northern Mozambique, very close to the Tanzanian border. To our East as we look out our plane windows to the seemingly endless Indian Ocean as we enter the last leg of our trip.

2:10 PM (Friday, May 25): 

Arrive in Mozambique








Sunday, May 27, 2018

Monday














Today was a really great day for our team!  We started out with breakfast and a time of praise and worship led by Jason's wife (Amanda) and then Steven led us in a time of devotion. They both did a fabulous job. It was a wonderful time of coming together and reflecting on the Lord's goodness to us His people.

The remainder of the day we worked! When I say work, I mean some good old-fashioned manual labor type of work. Digging trenches, leveling and cutting tanks, and moving water! It's almost surreal to watch this system come together. The locals are very intrigued to learn how all this works together to produce food. One of the guys is traveling inland to buy some freshwater fish tomorrow. Lord willing everything will be close to up and running tomorrow afternoon. So far everything has gone really well.

We have been able to share multiple times through the phases of construction and one of the young guys took a Bible home with him yesterday to read and study. We are supposed to see him again on Tuesday at ESL for follow-up. Please continue to pray that God would bring people to Himself over the next few days.

Friday, May 25, 2018

We made it to South Africa!





We made it safely to South Africa and are looking forward to breakfast at the Mug and Bean. We have one more connecting flight to Pemba later this morning. Then we will spend the evening at a local spot and make the four-hour jeep ride up to the Smith's tomorrow morning. Please continue to pray for us and Sarah as we travel. Everyone is doing great!

Change of plans...we drove up to Jason's house tonight. Everyone is doing great!