Our last morning in Africa. Got up early again for a morning bird walk in
a botanical garden just down the road from the hostel we stayed at. Got a few more species to add to our bird
list including the pygmy kingfisher and white-throated bee eater, more of God’s
creative handiwork. Now we are off for 2
days of flying to get back to the US. We once again have a 24 hour layover in Houston,
TX, where we get to visit our good friends
the Przybyszewskis again.
Thursday, October 18, 2012
Oct. 17 - Hipomower
We were “lulled” to sleep last night by the sounds of the Red Chilli
Rest Camp ‘lawnmower’, one of the hippopotamus’ that relished the nice grass
around our banda. Amazing how much noise
that 2 foot wide mouth makes!
Woke up early again to fairly clear skies and set off for the
top of Murchison Falls. The falls cascade over a 40 foot drop with a
huge volume of water. Quite spectacular
especially with a full rainbow in the spray!
Next stop was the ZIWA rhino sanctuary, a 70 square kilometer area set
up to breed the white rhino for reintroduction to the wild. Uganda
had a large white and black rhino population that was decimated by poachers
during the reign of Idi Amin. The horns
are valued in oriental countries for supposed health and aphrodisiac
properties. By 1986 only 5 white rhino
were left in Uganda
and those too were poached. We met a
lady on the plane to Nairobi who
told us her husband liked to hand out bumper stickers that read “save a rhino,
take Viagra”. The sanctuary started with
4 white rhino from Kenya
and was given 2 more by the US. Since 1993 those 6 rhino have produced 6
offspring. We were lucky enough to get
to see one of the females with her 8 month old, 300 pound calf. The white rhino are very docile and not a
threat to humans. They are hoping eventually
to breed and reintroduce the black rhino but that will have to be done on the
game reserves as black rhino are very aggressive and would kill people if they
escaped near human habitation. Next was
the not quite as long drive back to Kampala,
about 4 hours.
Wednesday, October 17, 2012
Oct. 16 - Sprecken Zi (sp) LORD!
Woke up to clear skies! Had a 5
hour game and bird drive. Saw about 15
new species of birds plus giraffes, hartebeast, jackals and a small antelope
called an oribi. Also saw all the
‘usual’ animals: elephants, Ugandan Kob, waterbuck, warthogs, etc. Took a boat trip on the Nile
in the afternoon to the base of Murchison
Falls – pretty spectacular. Over dinner we met several German youth who
were here on a 1 to 3 month mission trip working with children and
orphans. Great to meet young people from
other countries serving the Lord.
Oct. 15 - Surprise by Hippo
A long drive today from Queen Elizabeth
National Park to Murchison
Falls National Park. A long, long drive – 10 hours to be
exact. Got in after dark at 7:30pm and it was pouring with rain! Took late showers. The rain had actually stopped as we were
walking from the shower to our “banda” (cabin).
We rounded a tent to come and Andy came within two feet face to face with a startled hippo. Not sure who was more startled but he sure
made us jump when he snorted a hippo sized snort. We provided a lot of entertainment for the
people around us when we jumped and yelled in surprise.
Oct. 14 - Lions and Wart Hogs and Kob Oh My!
Got up at 5:30 for an early
morning game drive. Saw a lot more of
God’s amazing animal creation: lions, elephants, hippopotamus, crocodiles,
monitor lizards, and lots more waterbuck, water buffalo, warthogs, African kob,
baboons, monkeys. We took a boat ride on
the Kazinga canal which joins Lake George to Lake
Edward. Saw an amazing
array and number of birds along the shore intermixed with hippos, elephants and
water buffalo. The cloud formations are
spectacular here. It is still the end of
the rainy season so there are clouds every day.
They seem to stand out crisper and more distinct from each other than we
have ever seen before. It must have to
do with the equatorial sun and atmosphere.
Andy has lots of cloud pictures as well as birds mammals and scenery. Still don’t have enough bandwidth to upload
photos so you may have to wait till we get home.
Oct. 13 - Loooonnnnggg Ride!
Forgot to mention that the last night we spent in Karamoja we saw the
most amazing shooting star. It was the
brightest one we’ve ever seen, you could actually see the meteor, and it went
across at least half the sky. Another
demonstration of God’s power and sense of beauty.
This was the first day of our “mini-safari”. Most of the day was spent driving from Kampala
to Queen Elizabeth Park. The principal
lakes in Queen Elizabeth are Albert and George.
Farther north is Lake Albert. Gee – wonder where they got the names? Saw some cool stuff along way: African Kob,
an antelope and the national mammal of Uganda;
Grey Crowned Crane, the national bird of Uganda;
Water Buck; Water Buffalo; Warthog; Baboons and a variety of birds. Had the nicest shower we’ve had since leaving
Val’s house in Soroti – a hot solar shower at Simba Safari Camp. After dinner we are ready to retire to our
tent for the night.
Friday, October 12, 2012
Oct. 12 - Back in Kampala
Today is the last day of our mission portion of the trip. We fly to Kampala
later today in preparation for our 5 day Safari starting tomorrow. More dogs and cats arrived for treatments
this morning so we spent part of the morning treating and vaccinating. We saw the little dog that had the eye
removed today – it is doing much better.
We are finally able to send the last week of Blog postings
today as we are back in Kampala, There was no internet available in
Karamoja. Most of the prayer request are
outdated I am afraid but everything has worked out well. Do please continue to pray for Val’s
vehicle. She was able to get some of the
parts she wanted in Kenya
and a mechanic should be arriving today to install them and hopefully get it
running. It has been very inconvenient
and expensive hiring a driver.
Oct. 11 - Brucellosis Testing at the Kraal
We got up early and went to a local kraal (area where livestock is kept
at night) to collect blood samples for brucellosis testing on sheep and
goats. Brucellosis is a big problem in
the cows, sheep and goats here and humans contract it from the animals. The project is to help determine exactly how
and from what animals the people are contracting it. We also treated a number of sick cows. Cows here get nasty ear infections – that was
new to Liz! We returned to our huts to
find more animals lined up for surgery!
We did 4 surgeries and processed the brucellosis samples.
Oct. 10 - Dr. Val Arrives!
Val texted us this morning. She
is on her way on the bus from Soroti!!!
Liz and Julie spent all day doing surgeries again – lost count
again. Liz got to use her teaching
skills again to supervise Julie doing several surgeries. Julie is a large animal vet and said she had
not spayed a dog in 10 years! Andy
worked on various doors that were not closing or latching. We got done before dark and Val arrived at 5:30!
Oct. 9 - HAPPY 50th UGANDA!
Got up early and went to the 3 hour service at 7:30am. Great
message from the book of Leviticus about the year of Jubilee. The pastor related the Ugandan Jubilee to the
Jubilee the Jews celebrated when all the property was returned to its original
owner. He likened it to turning control
of our lives over to God and giving back to Him what is due. Ivory, Val’s lab, decided to join us for
church. He wandered down the aisle
getting petted by various people, laying down in the aisle periodically to
rest.
We told the people yesterday that we would start surgery
again after church, thinking there were 2 services again. When we got out at 10:30 they were already lined up as it turned out there
was no second service today! We asked
them to at least wait till we had breakfast.
Did another 13 surgeries today.
One was a rather forlorn little dog belonging to 2 young boys. It had been hit in the face with a stick some
time ago and had the remnant of 1 eye with the lids adhessed into it. It was very uncomfortable and teared
constantly. The other eye had a huge
ulcer on it. Liz spayed it and removed
the remnant of the eye and sutured it closed.
Sent it home with antibiotics, eye ointment and pain meds. The little boys seemed very grateful.
Life is hard here. Most
of the children and many adults have no shoes.
Many have missing toe nails.
There is a nasty parasite here called jiggers that lays its eggs under
the toenail. Except on Sunday and
special occasions most of their clothes are very tattered and dirty. Those who can afford to go to school have a
school uniform and some have a nice set of clothes for Sunday. We heard some friend’s stories recently.
-
Joyce, who cooks and cleans for us, has 5 children and
1 grandchild. The oldest is 29. Her
husband was shot and killed several years ago. She struggles to raise her children on her own. She attends church and is very helpful.
-
Charles, a CLIDE employee who has been helping us every
day, looks like he could be a professional in the US. He has 2 university degrees and has worked
for CLIDE for 5 years. His first wife
died of a combination of Brucellosis and Typhoid. She was pregnant with their 4th
child when she became ill and died shortly after delivering the baby. Charles was left with 3 children to raise
(their 3rd child had also died).
The baby was very sick for a long time and they did not think she was
going to make it but now she is 8 and going to school. The wife of his step brother was widowed
when her husband was killed in a warrior raid.
Her family decided Charles should marry her as neither of her husband’s
brothers were suitable candidates. So
Charles dutifully married her. She
already had 1 child which he is helping to raise and they have 4 more of their
own. Charles looks like he is in his
30’s and now has 8 children, ages 1 to 16 to provide for. He is a very cheerful and friendly young man
and a strong Christian.
-
Dorcas is 15.
She has come several days with dogs for us to do surgery on. She speaks English well and has acted as an
interpreter for us and has helped install catheters. She is already teaching preschool to earn
money to help support her younger siblings.
She finished grade primary 7 a couple of years ago then her father
died. She can no longer afford to go to
school.
Val is not coming today either but at least she is back in Uganda. She got into Soroti too late to get the bus
to Karamoja. She will come tomorrow.
Oct. 8 - Surprise, Surprise... More Surgeries.
Julie and Liz did 18 surgeries today.
There seems to be an endless supply of them. We ran out of vaccines (brought 100 doses of
each) and are close to running out of flea and ticks meds. All the animals have lots of fleas and ticks
and often lice. We have seen a number of
cases of TVT (transmissible venereal tumor).
Surprisingly Kadafi and Osama are popular dog names, not surprisingly so
are Simba and Rocket. Most notably we
got done just before dark! Our helpers
decided to limit the number of people and dogs in the compound and have the
rest wait outside. That was extremely
helpful. We prayed with each group as
they came in and did not feel as overwhelmed as the day before. There was no school today either so there
were lots of children watching surgery.
Andy has been starting on projects on the ‘compound’ here as
the concrete projects are not going to work due to $$. He is making progress but had to deal with a
CLIDE member trying to ‘help’. Let’s
see; he succeeded in bending most of the nails, breaking off the screw and
nothing was square. Andy was very
patient.
Tomorrow is Ugandan Independence Day and this is a special
one. It was 50 years ago that Uganda
obtained its independence from Britain. Most officials have gone to Kampala
for the big celebration. Here they plan
to have an all night singing and prayer service at St. Mark’s then a regular
service at 7:30 in the morning. We joined the festivities for about an hour
then went off to bed. We heard them
singing and ululating well into the night.
Oct 7 - St. Marks... Liturgy with an Africian flair
Sunday:
Went to the local Anglican church, St. Mark. Anglican is the church of Uganda,
also known as Episcopal in the US. Here it is a very alive church, a mix of
Anglican liturgy and African enthusiasm.
Lots of singing and prayer. The
pastor is great and puts a lot of humor in his sermon. The services last 2 ½ to 3 hours. Fortunately for us the early service is in
English. The later one was in
Karamajong. We did more surgery in the
afternoon, about 13. We are getting
really good as shaving with a scalpel blade as there is no electricity for
clippers. Andy is becoming a fine
surgical assistant. He helps Julie put
in catheters and prep for surgery while Liz cuts and sutures. We finished at 7:30. What was that we said about not working after
dark???? There was a bit of a breeze so
the bugs weren’t so bad.
Val is not coming today as the bus she took to Kenya
broke down on the road for 11 hours and she did not arrive in time to buy auto
parts. Will have to wait till Monday and
hopefully come to Karamoja on Tuesday.
Oct. 6 - Veterinary Theater in Kongoli
Another busy day for Liz and Julie.
They had a huge audience today as there was no school. It got pretty hectic with 20+ patients and
twice as many people all crowding around the surgery table at any given
time. We treated 31 patients today, 14
of which were spays and neuters. There
were more to do but we told them to come back tomorrow afternoon after
church. The animals came with various
forms of ‘collars’ and ‘leashes’ including ropes, wire, plastic bags and pieces
of clothing. Most of the cats came in
feed sacks but one came with a leash made of fabric strips and was tied to its
box carrier. It spent quite a while
calmly sitting in or beside its box but then it decided to go for a walk. The box followed. So it went faster. Still the box chased it so it finally ran up
a tree, cardboard box and all! Quite a
sight! Fortunately the owner grabbed the
box before it went too high and pulled the frightened cat out of the tree.
Ugandans must be among the most patient people in the
world. Some of them waited 8 hours for
us to work on their dogs and some who waited almost that long were told they
needed to come back tomorrow. It was 8:30 when we finished the last surgery by
headlamp. The light was fine but we
decided not to do surgery after dark again as Liz was close to frantic with all
the bugs attracted to her headlamp. Hard
to swat bugs when you are trying to maintain sterility. She enlisted Andy as chief de-bugger which
helped some. She was careful not to
suture any bugs into the incisions.
Andy made some progress in figuring out what he is going to
do with the concrete projects. He spent
a long time talking to a local engineer, also named Andrew, who is familiar
with the type of projects. We did
surgery on 3 of his dogs today. Andy
also assisted Julie in catheter placements, got suture for Liz, and took lots
of photos.
More wildlife in the hut tonight – a scorpion.
The stars here are amazing at night. One advantage to no electricity available is
the brilliance of the night sky. We’ve
never seen the Milky Way so clearly.
Prayer Requests:
-
safe arrival for Val here tomorrow, Sunday
-
the projects Andy is to work on – plans and $$ for them
-
That we would continue to be a blessing to the people
here.
Oct. 5 - Lots of surgeries
Liz got her wish today. She and
Dr. Julie were very busy with surgeries, in fact they lost count of how many
dog and cat spays and neuters they did not to mention the puppy deworming and
vaccinations of animals that did not need surgery. They did surgery under the
shade of the tree outside the huts in the morning. The occasional breeze caused leaves to
flutter down into the instrument tray and surgery table. Fortunately none made it into the
incisions. After a hot and dry morning
they were interrupted in the middle of the day by a fierce wind and rain
storm. They were able to finish after it
abated but had to move into the motorcycle hut as it continued to sprinkle on
and off.
Andy had the
frustrating day today. All the projects
he was slatted to work on have ended up costing a lot more than was planned
for. Discussion is happening as to how
they might proceed on the projects with limited funds.
The ticks don’t seem to be as selective here. Only Liz got ticks in Soroti. Here everyone is getting them. Wild life in the grass roofed hut we are
staying in – a camel spider, quite venomous.
We promptly dispatched it.
Prayer Requests:
-
Safe travel for Val and success on auto parts shopping
-
Guidance for Andy’s projects and the finances to fund
them
-
Opportunity to witness to the
local Karamajong. Very few of them speak
English.
Oct. 4 - Karamoja bound
Spent the morning at devotions, packing and shopping for supplies. Liz led devotions and picked “Jesus and Food”
as her topic. 3 of Jesus’ miracles
involved food, He used meals as teaching opportunities, His last time with His
disciples was over a meal, He proved His physical resurrection with food and we
will all one day feast with Him at the marriage supper of the Lamb.
Thank you for your prayers.
We made it safely to Karamoja.
There were truck size ‘pot holes’ but very little water in them. Ten days ago they were filled with as much
as 4 feet of water and the road was impassable at times. The drive was very pretty but Andy was
tortured by not being able to stop and identify all the bird life we saw in
passing! We even arrived just before
dark. We have left the land of flush
toilets, hot showers and electricity. We
have a ‘squatty potty’ (alias pit toilet), took a refreshing lukewarm ‘cup
shower’ tonight and lighting is kerosene lanterns. It was great to wash all the dust from the
drive off. There is no AC in the cars
here so we drive on dirt roads with all the windows down in the heat of the
days.
Dr. Val stayed behind in Soroti to finish some paperwork
there then she is going to Kenya
to get vehicle parts. She will be
joining us here on Sunday. Our new team
consists of Julie, Andy and Liz. Melissa
had to leave for a chicken project and Daniel and Rachel are living in Soroti.
Prayer Requests:
-
That we would function well with her absent and the
other CLIDE members would be successful at organizing work for is.
Wednesday, October 3, 2012
Oct. 3 - Watching Sunrise from Ocholoy
Got up at 5:00 to climb
Ocholoy, a rock formation nearby, and watch the sun rise. It was lovely. We could see for many miles and the sky was
beautiful. The sun rises and sets very
quickly here so you could watch the sun rise over some distant mountains very
quickly. Lots of lizards came out to
bask in the early morning rays. Val must
have been laying in a lizard trail as several ran up her leg and over the top
of her!
We met several young children as we were leaving the
rock. One was 4 or 5 and was carrying a
baby on her back. Another was no more
than 8 and was carrying her little brother piggy back. Children get a lot of responsibility very
young here. Their parents were quarrying
rock by hand from the base of Ocholoy.
The children will probably never get the chance to go to school or learn
to read or write. Liz talked to Jennifer,
the nurse missionary, about them. She
said parents will send children that young out to tend the cattle and goats by
themselves all day. She sees a lot of
snake bites in children. The cattle stir
the snakes up and the children following get bitten. Most snakes here are very venomous and most
of the children don’t survive.
Andy spent the day finishing up projects at Val’s house. Liz
spent several hours doing computer work for Val in the morning. In the afternoon she went with the rest of
the team to visit women and children who had received goats, sheep and cattle
in a revolving animal loan project. The
people are given a goat, sheep, or cow and must give the first offspring back
to the project to be given to another.
Local pastors select the people who are to receive the animal based on
need or opportunity to reach them with the Gospel. We dewormed the animals and treated them for
various ailments. Many of the people had
just received their animal 2 weeks previous.
We handed out Bibles to all who could read. It will be the only book most of them will
own till they get to secondary school.
One lady started with 1 goat in 2005.
She showed us the brick house she had built over the years with the
proceeds from breeding that goat.
Another lady showed us the new metal roof she had put on her house
thanks to the goat she had received several years ago. Another told us about the business she had
been able to start with the proceeds.
Usually the animals are given to the children in the family so that
should the mother every marry another man he can not claim the animals for
himself. At dusk the pastor invited us
to his home for sodas. As it got dark
and we talked the sky was filled with shooting stars. Another expression of God’s majesty and
power.
Prayer Requests:
-Pray for good weather as we travel to Karamoja tomorrow. It has been dry there for almost a week and
much of the damage done by the rains to the dirt road has been repaired this
week.
- Val’s vehicle to be fixed soon. The computer checked out OK and she has an
idea what may be wrong
Oct. 2 - Another day in Soroti
Awakened at 5:30
to the sound of Emmanuel, the resident ‘grounds keeper’, trimming the hedge
with a machete whilst walking around on the corrugated metal roof of the shed
in the back yard! I don’t think he understands that Muzungos are usually asleep
at that hour!
Another day in a long lesson on patience for Liz. Guess God thought she still needed work. It has not been nearly busy enough here in
Soroti for Liz’s liking. We are spending
much longer here than expected and things are not very organized for treating
the animals. A lot of it stems from Dr.
Val and Moses being gone for 3 days at the board meeting. Val’s Jeep is still not repaired so
transportation has been difficult. So
far they have repaired some wiring and changed the fuel filter but it still
won’t start. Currently the computer
board is in Kampala for
diagnostics. Hopefully that will show
something but it will not be repaired in time for us to use on this trip. We had planned to leave for Karamoja today
but there are problems with organization there also. Of the 4 key organizers one is AWOL, perhaps
out of the country, one is sick, one is away at a funeral, and the last in
headed down to Soroti for supplies today.
There are surgeries to do and large animals to treat there but it will
be a matter of getting the people organized for it.
Melissa and Liz did get to do one TVT surgery today. Melissa and Liz have been getting up early
each morning to jog/walk for 45 minutes and riding bikes into town each evening
to pick up fried fish, Liz’s favorite.
Andy on the other hand is continuing to have busy and
productive days. Today they finished
wiring and worked on curtain rods and doors that did not work properly. Andy is up to 3000+ on picture taking. Andy went into town with Batman today for
lunch. He noticed a man staring intently
at him who then motioned to his beard.
He was from Sudan
and was fascinated with Andy’s facial hair.
He took Andy’s photo then came back shortly with several friends who all
filed by to look at the strange Muzungo.
The children all want to ‘stroke’ Andy’s arms. Africans do not have much body hair and they
are all fascinated with Andy’s arm hair.
Tomorrow we are, hopefully, heading to Karamoja.
Prayer Requests:
-
a vehicle and safe travel to Karamoja
-
that the community will be mobilized with lots of
animals to treat
-
that there will be many hands to help Andy in the
projects he has to work on : retaining wall, foundation, and water catchment.
-
Speedy repair of Val’s Jeep
-
Many opportunities to witness to the Karamajong people
and encourage the church there.
Oct 1 - Getting Wired
Liz did surgery with Melissa and got to use her teaching skills
again. Melissa did a spay and a neuter with
Liz merely giving advice and hovering.
We treated a couple of male dogs for TVT, transmissible venereal
tumor. This is a unique cancer as it is
spread by direct cell transmission during breeding. It mostly occurs on the penis of male dogs
and the vulva of female dogs. It is
only found in the tropics. It can
metastasis and male dogs can bleed to death as the tumors get quite large and
hemorrhagic. Liz cut most of the tumor
mass off, treated them with vincristine, a chemotherapy agent, and neutered
them so they would not continue to spread the tumor. We also did another surgery on Lolly, Daniel
and Rachel’s little dog, as she had more dead bone on her foot from the dog
bite a week ago.
Julie arrived today, a large animal vet considering long
term service here. She is going to hang
out with us for a while then go to a different area of Uganda where she is
considering working to get a feel for it.
Andy moved on from plumbing to electrical wiring as many of
the lights in Val’s house did not work.
An electrician came and they worked together most of the day. Batman and Andy replaced and painted the ceiling in the
bathroom. We had our 3rd
consecutive day of hot showers! Val said
it had been more than 2 years since the hot water worked.
Sept. 30 - Sunday
We went to church this
morning, Rock View
Baptist Church,
where several of the CLIDE team are members and leaders. Church here lasts about 3 hours.
We have now ridden on motorized boda bodas!
We noticed some of the schools here, even primary schools,
have signs at the entrance that read “Don’t give free sex for gifts”. The number two killers here are AIDS and TB.
Today was Melissa’s 22nd birthday so we had a
party for her in the evening. We had
home made pizza for dinner. Liz made
brownies and the rest of the team made chapatti ice cream sandwiches. Chapattis are like flour tortillas. There is no refrigeration here so the ice
cream was more like a milkshake but everyone enjoyed it a lot. Melissa got a few gifts and we all played
Pandemic again.
Saturday, September 29, 2012
Sept. 29 - Experiencing LRA and hot Shower
If you are in Uganda
very long you will hear about the LRA (Lord’s Resistance Army). It would be more accurately called the SRA
– Satan’s Resistance Army. It began in
1986 with Joseph Koney leading it.
Supposedly his plan was to overthrow the government of Uganda
but with no clear plan, working in multiple countries (Sudan,
Uganda, Congo)
and abhorrent tactics they are merely a really nasty terrorist
organization. They kill, rape, and loot
indiscriminantly. Their worst practice
is that of abducting children to become slaves and soldiers. The children are physically, emotionally and
sexually abused, become addicted to drugs and alcohol and are often forced to
kill their own parents as their first act of terror. Currently Joseph Koney has been driven out of
Uganda and Sudan
and is hiding in the Democratic Republic of Congo, a vast, undeveloped and
heavily forested country. He will be
difficult to apprehend there but at least there are few children being abducted
currently. Hopefully the LRA is near its
end.
Today we were invited to go on a 25K bike ride with a group
of missionaries and the LRA children they work with. The purpose of the ride was to commemorate a
mass grave that was started 4 years ago for people in a local area who were
murdered by the LRA in 2003. They have
been gradually collecting remains as they are found. Some are identified, some are not. There are 365 buried there so far. The LRA children were abducted as young as 6
and today are young adults attempting to assimilate back into society. As you can imagine this can be very difficult
for them and often their own people don’t want them as they as afraid of
them. We spent a couple of hours
clearing the graves of overgrown weeds, brushing off the concrete grave markers
and installing a commemorative plaque on the cross memorial marking the
area. We had a short service and
encouraged the young people to forgive and go on. It was very moving. There were people in the US
doing a similar 25K ride to raise awareness and funds for the LRA
children. Many have escaped from the LRA
in recent years as the LRA has been pushed back by national and international
forces.
Andy stayed ‘home’ at Val’s house today. We (Liz and Melissa) returned to find Val had
made it back from the board meeting and we had a working shower complete with
hot water!
Sept. 28 - Birding at Moses' home
We had an early morning bird walk at the lake that had been arranged for
us. Took a short ride in a very tippy
wooden boat that road very low in the water with 6 of us aboard! Then we were off to the village where Moses
grew up. Moses is the Ugandan head of
CLIDE. Moses is an extremely popular
name here. Moses’ parents wanted us to
visit and deworm some of their animals.
They of course had to give us tea before we worked and lunch after. They like to feed their guests well here! We had left overs for dinner when we got ‘home’
and joined the Graham’s for late night games again. Yesterday we learned how to play Pandemic,
today it was Settlers of Catan.
Thursday, September 27, 2012
Sept. 27 - Batman in Soroti
This was a frustrating day for Liz and a very productive day for
Andy. There were about 12 surgeries
scheduled for today and by 11:00 no
one had showed up. We finally got a
‘tumor case’ (turned out to be flea bite allergy!) and a cat abscess in the
afternoon. Later found out this was a
special market day and everyone had gone to the market without bothering to
tell us. Guess God thought Liz needed
more instruction in patience.
Liz did pick up some more interesting facts about Uganda
in conversations today. There is a nurse
here, Jennifer, who comes to CLIDE in the morning for devotions and brought us
animals to work on. Uganda
has the highest AIDS rate of any African country and AIDS started in Uganda. It is perpetuated by misconceptions about how
it is spread and by an attitude of acceptance that it is a normal part of
life. The culture is still highly
influenced by witchcraft which contributes to misunderstandings about AIDS, even
in the church. One in 13 women die in
childbirth, primarily from bleeding complications and the death rate in infants
is even higher. The primary means of
birth control for many people is still abortion although we have noticed many
billboards advertising and encouraging family planning and various means of
birth control methods. At lunch Liz and
Melissa stopped by a local craft store and upon talking with the proprietor
discovered it is run as a fund raiser for Silent Voices, a Christian
organization that seeks to educate about the dangers of abortion and encourage
women to keep their babies. They are
allowed into all the local schools to educate the students. They have been focusing on secondary schools
but see the need to begin education in primary schools.
Andy began the day with batman (alias Paul) finishing the
ladder so they could access the bat attic.
They were short on nails so made the ladder rungs 16” instead of 12”
apart. Andy continued to work on
plumbing while batman disposed of bats and cleaned bat guano out of the
attic. Last count was 14 boxes of bat
guano and counting! Liz had the cleaning
lady clean the room we are sleeping in as a fine mist of bat guano had covered
everything. As for Andy’s progress we
now have a leak proof sink with running water, a shower that works that should
have hot water by tomorrow and a toilet that does not flood the bathroom every
time it is flushed.
Tonight we will join the Grahams for fried fish and chips
and a game night. The fish here is
tilapia and you can get is filleted and breaded or the Ugandan way in which the
entire fish is just dropped in hot oil and fried till crisp. No breading or anything. It is delicious.
Sept. 26 - Surgeries at CLIDE
We went to the CLIDE office early for devotions then had a full day of
surgeries, 4 cats and 5 dogs. Melissa,
the Aussie vet student, worked with Liz all day. Melissa is very enthusiastic about doing
everything, especially surgeries, so Liz enjoyed mentoring her through several
procedures. She also installed all the
IV catheters. Good thing Liz brought her
trusty headlamp as the power went out for a while during the thunder and
lightening storm. The rain and wind
brought much appreciated cooling as it has been very hot and humid here.
We are staying in Val’s house is Soroti which is in much
need of many repairs. Andy is going to
start on the plumbing as neither sink, tub, shower or hot water heater work and
most of what does work leaks. We have
been taking cold ‘cup’ showers in the wash room. His first project today, after diagnosing
some of the problems, is to build a ladder so he can get into the attic where
some of the plumbing is located. Beware
of bat guano and ticks!!!! Dr. Val told
us a great tick horror story tonight.
Many bats live in the attic and harbor large numbers of ticks. When she arrived here back from the states in
May she noticed as soon as the dogs entered the house that they had a lot of
ticks on them. Then she noticed ticks
all over the floor around the dogs. She
thought “that is really quickly for the ticks to fall off the dogs.” Then she sat on the sofa and noticed movement
on the walls. There were thousands of
ticks pouring out of the attic and down the walls in search of the warm bodies
they sensed in the house. She tried
sweeping up the ticks but they just kept coming. She sprayed the walls with insecticide and
they kept coming. Finally she had to
abandon the house for a period of time till the ‘tick bloom’ was over. Tomorrow batman is coming to help Andy deal
with the problem.
Sept. 25 - Waking up in Soroti
Awoke at 6;00 am to the sounds of roosters crowing and the maintenance
man “mowing” the lawn with a machete.
That is how it is done here!
Had a low key day today; errand running and organizing
supplies for the start of tomorrow’s surgeries.
Dr. Val will unfortunately be leaving us for a few days as the CLIDE
(Community Livestock Integrated Development) organization she works with is
having their annual board meeting in a town 2 hours away on Thursday and
Friday.
We rode our first boda boda today, a single person
taxi. They come in motorized
(motorcycle) and non-motorized (bicycle) versions. We rented the later as it was cheaper and safer!
Wednesday, September 26, 2012
Sept 24 - Kampala to Soroti
The morning was errand running.
We had lunch at the mall in Kampaal.
Liz got her first salad since arriving in Uganda,
complete with lettuce and everything! It
will likely be her last salad for the next 3 weeks. We set off for the 8 hour drive to Soroti at 4:00. At
dusk the torrential rains began, at times blowing horizontally and flooding the
road. Liz was wishing she were not in
the front seat where she could see, or rather not see, the road ahead. Visibility for her was 1 to 3 feet! The blessings were: Christian music was
playing helping her concentrate on praying we would stay on the road and
survive; Val assured her Africans can see better in the dark than muzungus due
to more rods and cones on their retina; the almost continuous lightening
frequently lit the road in front of us.
We finally arrived, exhausted, at midnight. We being Val, Andy, Liz, Melissa (an
Australian vet student here for a year), Daniel and Rachel (a vet and his wife
just arrived for a 3 year term in Soroti), and their new puppy, Lolli. Lolli is a black and white fluff ball that
had 2 of her toes amputated by Dr. Daniel due to a dog bite. She is named after the Australian term for
hard candy. We don’t think she’ll be
much of a watch dog but she is adorable.
Ugandanisms:
-
lines on the road, when paved, are merely suggestions
-
Di Sexual Saloon = beauty salon for both sexes
-
Your Welcome = a greeting, not a reply to thank you
-
It is OK to answer your cell phone at any time,
including lectures, but is considered rude to verbally interrupt someone while
they are eating.
-
Pure glucose is advertised as ‘what energizes Uganda’,
kind of like health food.
Sunday, September 23, 2012
Sept. 23 - Sunday Worship and Travel
Today is Sunday. One of our team
members, Kathy, and the vet students returned to Kampala
early this morning as Kathy had to catch a plane to Kenya
this afternoon. The rest of the team
stayed in Namayingo to share at 2 local churches. We were the guest pastors for the services. Andy, Liz, Sara and, Hillary went to a small
church that had recently formed. There
were about 40 people in service. The
praise and singing is amazing. Africans
really know how to worship. The only
musical instrument was a drum but they are great singers and the ladies love to
ululate (a noise made with the tongue, kind of like a war cry). A couple of people gave their testimony about
how God was working in their lives. We
all shared our testimonies and something from God’s Word. Andy and I did a devotion on how marriage is
a picture of Christ’s relationship with the church. It was really fun and well received. Next they had us pray over 2 ladies who were
sick and all the school children so they would do well in their studies. It was a great time of fellowship.
In the afternoon we took a very short boat ride on Lake
Victoria as it was very windy with whitecaps on the water. Then we drove the 5 hour trip back to Kampala. Tomorrow the other 2 members of our team,
Sara and Hilary, leave. Several other missionaries and we head to Soroti with
Dr. Val to start work there.
I am sorry you are receiving the last few days late but we
have again had no internet access for 4 days.
Sept 22 - Second day in the villages around Namayingo
Another day in which God kept us very
busy. We got up early for Morning
Glory. Andy had the privilege of giving
the devotion today, “Communing With the Creator Through the Creation”. Then we were off to another 5 sites to treat
many cows, goats, sheep, pigs, dogs and a few cats. Liz is getting more comfortable diagnosing
exotic cow diseases such as anaplasmosis, trypanosomiasis, East Coast Fever
and, her favorite, lumpy skin disease (yes it’s really called that). We shared the Gospel at each site and many made
decisions for Christ.
Sept 21 - First day in the field
Sept 21st:
Up early for ‘Morning Glory”, a time of worship and praise. Liz had the privilege of leading the devotion
‘Living in Anticipation of Heaven”. Then
we were off to the outreach sites. We
split into groups and visited 5 sites where we treated several hundred cows, goats, sheep, pigs
and dogs. We had lots of opportunity to
share God’s Word. One group met next to
the primary school. Apparently the
students were so distracted the teachers finally brought them out and the team
preached to all 900 of them for an hour.
Many made decisions for Christ. The
place we went to in the afternoon was at first not welcoming. They had had a bad experience 2 years
previous when some government vets vaccinated their animals with a bad vaccine
and many of them died. We spent a long
time talking with them and finally they began to bring the animals. We are sure God orchestrated that one too as
with not so many animals to treat half our group went through town to
evangelize. Several made decisions for
Christ and a number of Muslims were present and heard the Word of God. We had another wonderful time of praise and
worship in the evening, a late dinner, and yes, to bed late again!
Prayer Request:
-
praise for the Christian community God provided for us
here.
-
praise for the many people who made decisions for
Christ today. Pray they will be
discipled by the local church and body of believers.
-
Continue to pray for repair of Val’s car.
-
Continue to pray for the flooding and mud conditions in
Karamoja.
Sept 20 - On the Road to Namayingo
This morning we packed supplies for the
outreach clinics and Dr. Val gave us 2 hours of instruction on tropical
diseases we might see. In the afternoon
about 40 of us set off for the 5 ½ hour drive to Namayingo. About half were students and the rest national vets and us Muzungos (what white
people are called}. The last 1 ½ hours of
the drive was over an incredibly bad dirt road.
We were told it was really only 30 KM but it sure seemed like more! Praise – God provided us with a welcoming
church for the students to sleep in.
They had a wonderful dinner prepared when we arrived and we had a great
time of worship. Again, to bed late.
Wednesday, September 19, 2012
Sept 19 - Symposium, Last day of Lectures and Labs
Sept. 19th:
This was our last day of lectures and labs with the students. Dr. Gibson presented on opthalmology, Dr.
Sara presented on parasites and Liz got to do 2 short lectures, the first on
minor surgical procedures. The second
was her favorite lecture, Our Biblical Responsibility to Animals. It uses lots of Scripture and goes over mans
responsibility to care for the animals and how God uses animals throughout the
Biblical stories. It also brings in the
new heaven and earth and the animals present there and why Jesus is represented
by both a lamb and a lion. The students
really liked it and several asked for copies.
Pray that it would speak to the hearts of those who are not saved and be
used as a witnessing tool by those taking a copy.
In the afternoon we did labs again. Our group did 4 cat surgeries and installed
lots of IV catheters in dogs. Most of
the students had never done any hands on procedures and they loved it and
thanked us profusely. It was very
humbling as to us the procedures were very basic but to them they were
exciting. We again got done late, 8pm, had a late dinner and went to bed very
tired but glad we had a productive day and opportunities to share Scripture and
prayer with the students.
Prayer Requests:
-
Val’s car
-
Tomorrow we travel to a village to do outreach. There are some problems with accommodations
and the partnership with the local church.
Please pray that these issues will be resolved before we get there, that
Satan will be rebuked as we are sure he is behind it, and for good relations
with the local community of believers.
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