Tuesday, April 28, 2015

THANKS, ERIE!


I would like to thank the Erie team kids who came down to Haiti a few months ago.


In January a team came and they brought a lot of youth. Their ages were between 15 and 18. They were really nice to me and I had a really fun time with them while they were here. At the end of their time here they said "We're going to send a box full of stuff for you. What would you like? I said cereal, or more specifically Apple Jacks, which, as you can see from the picture, they did. 


My favorite meal is tacos and my birthday was coming up and I knew I would want a special birthday dinner so I said to my parents a few days before we received the box that I wanted taco sauce from the US, and they sent it in! That's really special to me so thank you so much. And of course my whole family LOVED the Oreos.

Thank you!!

Wednesday, January 28, 2015

Ice cream!

Here are some pictures from two Sundays ago. 




 
We got ice cream! There was a great ice cream place downtown that we never knew about before that Sunday. Ice cream is kind of rare for us here or expensive, but the ice cream was cheap there. I had some great chocolate ice cream. That ice cream was the best I'd ever had in Haiti. I can't wait to have it again!

Sunday, January 11, 2015

One of the things you see here every day you probably won't see in the U.S. At this time of year is the lizard.


Lizards are all over the place here. They come in a lot of different sizes from a foot long to only an inch like this baby one in the picture. They like to hang out on the screens over our windows and by the front porch light, but you can really find them anywhere.



Monday, January 5, 2015

Jesse Tree

As a New Years resolution I'm going to try to make blog posts more often, but shorter. I'll do a picture and caption at the least. So here is my first one this year.


This is my dad finishing the job of taking down all the Christmas decorations last Saturday.

He's holding an extra Christmas decoration we made ourselves at the beginning of December that we hung on the wall. We called it the Jesse tree because that is what an advent book, that we have, suggested. Every day we hung an ornament that had to do with a different lesson in the book that we read leading up to Christmas. The book was about "unwrapping God's greatest gift."



Sunday, October 12, 2014

summer part 1 by Caleb


          I figure I need to put my summer in three or four parts because it was so busy which was part of why I didn’t do much blogging over the summer. So I should start with the end of school. We had a fun in the sun day. We played water games for most of the day. We played water volleyball where you partner up with someone, form teams, and use a towel to launch a water balloon to the other team’s side. We also had water balloon fights and launched water balloons at targets (our target might’ve been Mr. James, Samuel’s teacher). Then the next few days we were packing and saying good-byes to friends.



Water volleyball
          Then Hannah got chikungunya, or something like it, (chickengunya is a virus carried by mosquitos that makes your joints hurt really badly for a few days to a few months) but she slept through most of it. My parents tried waking her up several times to see if she wanted to go to dinner with the Heckmans, our friends, but she would say no and go back to sleep. Now she has no recollection of being woken up at all. Then my dad got it and then my mom got it a day before we left.
When we arrived in Florida, we had to stay at an MFI house because we couldn’t get the rental car we were going to use to get to the resort we were planning on staying at. The next day we got the rental and got to see our Grandma Trudy again. Everybody was happy to see her. We stayed at a resort called The Fountains for about three days, enjoying the pool and American food.
The MFI house
 
As soon as we got out of the van we were hugging our Grandma Trudy.

The pool







All of us in the hot tub.
We saw our old dog Oreo. We were excited to see her, and she was excited to see us.




We returned home to Indiana at about midnight a few days later. The next morning we got up at 9:00 to see our friends, the Combs. I had a good morning catching up with my friend, Matthew, and playing. I can’t remember all that we did, but I do remember being really excited to see them. All that week, I saw them every day. One thing I loved doing was youth group. Sometimes I went early if I was at the Comb’s house because Matthew was in the middle school worship band and he had to be at the church an hour early for practice. When youth group started, we ate. They had sandwiches, chips, brownies or cookies, and soda. 
The Comb's trampoline
Matthew, Samuel,and I
We also played fun games like, one of the most memorable ones, nine-square. It's a game that we played set up with PVC pipe. Samuel and I helped set it up. First, we made nine squares all connected together. The catch was that the squares had to be supported in the air. So we made the whole thing upside down. In retrospect, it may not have been the best idea. First of all, all the poles that were supposed to be holding the thing up were duct taped in. Our plan was to flip the whole thing over at once. A bunch of poles came undone. More duct tape. It worked, but we spent an hour on it. When we were done, it got taken apart in about ten minutes. The point of the game was to keep a ball from going through the square overhead from hitting the ground. It got passed from person to person. That’s just one of the most memorable youth group experiences for me.




Saturday, August 30, 2014

OMS CONFERENCE - Caleb


         We spent over two months in the U.S. this summer and now we're back in Haiti. We went to a lot of different states and churches. One part of the summer I really enjoyed was the OMS mission conference in northern Indiana. It was at Wesleyan University. It was great! I feel like I learned a lot from being there. It was from a Thursday night to a Sunday afternoon. In the mornings, the youth would meet together and we had fun games and small groups discussing our spiritual gifts and how God calls us. Everybody had lunch together. In the evenings there was a service with missionaries speaking about different things like Homes for Haiti. Then there was a message. One night they talked about running the race from beginning to end. The guy giving the sermon said that sometimes as people get older, they slow down and forget what the joy of the Lord is. He encouraged everybody to keep going and run the race to the end. This fits in with a line I spoke in a church musical I was recently in. I wasn’t really a character in it, but I was part of the choir. In one of the songs called “Eye on It” I stepped up to the microphone and said a verse from the Bible: “Therefore, let us throw off everything that hinders and the sin that so easily entangles. And let us run with perseverance the race marked out for us, fixing our eyes on Jesus.” It’s just one of the things that stood out the most to me.

                The OMS Conference was a great experience and I can’t wait for the next one, but I don’t know when that will be. Here are some pictures...


This is one of the activities we did. We each had rope tied from one hand to the other. It was in-between the other person's arms, though, and you had to try to get your arms out without breaking the rope. Nobody could figure it out so my dad, who was leading the activities for the youth, had to show everybody how to do it. You have to loop your hand through the other person's loop of string around their hand.


This is the pool on the campus.


This is the cafeteria. They served great food three meals a day. 



Early one morning there was a 5k run/walk for Homes for Haiti.
This is me running the first part of the race. Even though it says finish line in the distance it isn't actually the finish line.(We found out later in the race when we thought it was the finish and it really wasn't.)


Another youth activity.


They also had a rock climbing wall that was lots of fun. 



Our friend, Bob Riggles, also lead the youth.



He and his wife, Jill, have twins: a boy named Turner and a girl named Lily Jo.


Us and the Riggles.