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Goodby

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This is Milford Sound.  It is a Valley that was carved by glacier which was then flooded by seawater when the glacier melted. The side Mountains are all granite and almost vertical. It is probably the most beautiful place I have seen in my life. There are beautiful snow-covered mountains and Lakes everywhere . New Zealand is also called and stormy. We were here in early October which is earl spring .  It was pretty cool everyday. Probably the temperature was around 40 Fahrenheit Waterfalls are everywhere. Because it rain so much many of the waterfalls are only temporary and disappear if it doesn't rain in a few days Here is a picture of the Franz Josef Glacier These are called Pancake Rocks. There are many more than what is shown in the picture. They haven't figured out yet how they are caused. These are part of the blue pools . The water is so blue because of the clouds, the coolness of the water and the snow in the area. It was a cold day and the water

Leaving Timor-Leste

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Over this past week we said goodbye to all of the members of our little church group,, our humanitarian partners and all of the students in our English class. When we showed up to catch up plane we were met by about 30 of our English students who came to wish us a final goodbye.  There were lots of pictures and lots of crying . President McKay our mission president and his wife came to give us our final farewell interview and to be sure that the sisters who are replacing us have things properly arranged.  This is the first time we've been able to drink water from a public water fountain in 2 years period we have always had to use bottled water. This is at the airport in Darwin Australia We went from Dili Timor leste to Darwin Australia to Sydney Australia to Christchurch New Zealand.   We had overnight stops in Darwin and Sydney so we could see some of the sites. We got off to a disappointing start.  After our English students bid us goodbye they waited around t

Busy last week

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We chartered an airplane and flew to nearby Atauro Island to check out our humanitarian project. It was only a 20-minute flight. If we took the ferry it would have taken two and a half hours each way. It only cost $290 for the round trip including about an hour and a half of waiting time for the pilot.  We took off from the Dili airport. We landed on a short dirt runway. The plane was in excellent condition and we had a very professional and experienced pilot. They are part of a NGO that provides discount charters to charitable organizations and they also do the Medevac flying for the country.  Upfront is our replacement sister Gruwell. Behind her is the head of the NGO who rebuilt the building for. Her name is Maria and the NGO is called Diak We were met at the runway with a modified golf cart that was used to transport us to our building. This is the building we financed to be constructed. It will be a dormitory for a mentoring program for young adults on the island.

Our Replacements have arrived

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This is Sister Staples and sister Gruwell. They have arrived here for a 10-day transition as our replacements. They were transferred in from the mission office in Jakarta. They are here until the middle of November until Elder and sister Bitter arrive. They have a great attitude and are very capable. We already feel some of our load being lifted.  One of our English classes wrote us some thank you notes. More thank you notes. Things are starting to wrap up very nicely. We got all of our legal agreements approved for the three projects that we just got approved. We will able able start all three projects and get them funded before we leave. The projects are a village water system, teaching intermediate English classes in a neighboring rural Village and training farmers and helping them start a community garden.

The last English class field trip

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 We had a field trip for our combined English classes. We went to a place called $1 Beach. There was a pavilion facility there that they let us use. Just like all of our field trips in the past each of the classes put on a skit or a presentation. It went well. It lasts a long time. Each class gets about 25 minutes. We had about a hundred and forty people attend. We use the normal mode of transportation for large groups which are pickup trucks. We had three this time. The third dump truck was from a town called Tibar which is just outside of Dili. It's a farming Community where we teach English to the town in one of their elementary schools on the weekends. The classes are taught by some of our advanced English class students. About 35 of them came. The beach here was beautiful. The weather was a little mild that day, so it went very well. After the presentations we had the traditional Timorese dance. It turned out to be a very successful activity. We are always su

Met with the Ministry of Justice

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  I was able to get an appointment with the director general of the Ministry of Justice. His name is John DeCosta. I was able to take about 20 minutes and explain what we're doing in this country and answer questions. This all was done through an interpreter. He is very supportive. He said he was very happy with what we've accomplished so far and that if we needed anything in the future he would be glad to support us and help.  If you look closely about 1/2 way up the cell tower there is a worker there. What's amazing is that there is no ladder and he has no safety harness. He moved around like he was working at ground level. When life is cheap and liability laws are lax you get of workers doing some pretty dangerous stuff The city actually built a park. It's a nice park by the ocean. This was all done in conjunction with the country's 20th anniversary of their independence. The Independence Day celebration was on Friday. We did not attend any of the activit

Hopefully one more big water project

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We are attempting to get one more projet approved before we leave.  The challenge is that it exceeds our budget by about $20,000. The project will bring water to a village of 300, a Catholic Church and a school.  The project is of added value because it is desired and it will be visible to the national government. We always place a higher priority on projects that align themselves with the government's desires. I received preliminary approval to write up the project and submit it. It will be interesting to see if I get it through the final committee which includes a member of the area presidency.  Because our congregation is so small and has very little of the typical congregation organizations it is sometimes difficult to find meaningful responsibilities for all of the members. We try and be creative and resourceful. We discovered that some of the new converts like to sing. This is the first Sunday where we had Januaro sing. He sang the hymn God be with you till we mee

What it's like to go grocery shopping

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 We start off by getting on the mekrolett about two blocks from our house. It cost $0.25 each. It's route takes us almost in front of our first grocery store.  This is our first stop for grocery shopping. We get most of our produce here. It has the largest selection. Overall the stores here have about one-fifth of the variety and selection then we have in America. Usually all we can buy these whole chickens. Occasionally we can buy chicken breasts. When we do find those we buy about 6 packages so we have a stock. All we've had for the last three months are these whole chickens. The problem is there is not so much meat and a lot of Bones and waste. They come Frozen from Brazil.  The challenges is the labeling. Usually you can tell what the product is from are the picture. If there's any mixing or ingredients involved it becomes very difficult.  We walk inside of the neighbouring mall and visit this grocery store. We pick up whatever produce we couldn't get