Saturday, December 22, 2012

From John's Perspective


Life in Siem Riep so far: From John's Perspective                                   23 December, 2012

          When we go out in a tuk-tuk in traffic, I am SO GRATEFUL that we are right in the palm of God's hand. There are no discernible traffic laws here. If the light is red, traffic is stopped, and our driver wants to turn left, he runs up into the service road, or the sidewalk, and heads parallel to, and against the flow of traffic, until he can merge over, with no signaling except his little toot toot motorcycle horn. Any vehicle ahead of us generally has the right of way, unless there is enough room to squeeze by, on our side of the road, the opposite lane, the service roads, or either sidewalk. It seems to be a requirement that every vehicle attempts to pass any other vehicle ahead of it, even if this means 3 abreast on a one lane road. Amazingly, we are no longer terrified. Thank you Lord!

          We have been attending the Christian Fellowship church of Siem Riep services in English, and are starting to form relationships there. It's an amazing thing to praise and worship our Father with Philipinas singing, an Australian playing guitar, a Japanese on a African drum, and anyone else with musical or vocal talent joining in. Our pastor is from Northern Ireland, and sounds like it. God is praised, the Word is preached, and we are all grateful. Hallelujah!

          Every Sunday morning, since we have been in Siem Riep, we have joined in worship at the campus across the river, which I don't yet know the name of. Hymns in Khmer are strange to us, but the lessons are bi-lingual, and we have been able to participate in some counseling and ministry there. Our presence as older Christians is having a positive effect. One of the university directors has asked me to prepare teachings for one Sunday a month, starting in January, which I am pleased to do. It is truly heartwarming to see young Khmer men and women coming to the Lord, and growing in the knowledge of Him. Their families and culture are not accepting of faith in Jesus, and it can be hard.

          Jackie has been sick almost all this week, so I have gone to the Y.W.A.M. base by myself. Corporate worship is really good, in spite of the language differences. A few days ago I was able to talk with a young man who was leaving for Nepal that night. He has ministered there before, and has a heart for agriculture and animal husbandry. I shared some of the Korean Natural Farming principles with him, and he got really excited. Father told me to invest in him, so I gave him a K.N.F. Book to use when he got there. I have also met a young man from Singapore, who has a heart for teaching food farming to the Khmer villagers where we work. I'll be working with him more soon. Now I need to figure out how to get more KNF books.

          Next week the base director will take us out to all the villages and locations where we are working in Siem Riep province. We came here as servants, with no agenda other than to be of help any way we can. Father's plan is set in His mind, and will be revealed to us, in His perfect time. Last night we were privileged to be part of a first ever event in Siem Riep. A group of about forty of us from church went down to Pub Street (think Tenderloin Area in San Francisco) in the heart of town, and sang Christmas carols. We were blessed, many of the restaurant and bar patrons were blessed, and we showed that Jesus is the King of Pub Street too! Tourists stopped their strolling, and some joined in. Praised be Jesus Christ!

          Please pray for Holy Spirit to have His way in the hearts of the people of Cambodia. They are so lost, and without direction or hope.

          F.Y.I.:  We will deliberately omit names and specific locations in our correspondence to protect the identities and work of our associates.

Friday, December 21, 2012

Our New Home!


After days of house-hunting, on Wednesday the 5th, we found it! Our home-to-be. Giving up on realtors finding something suitable, Da (our Tuk Tuk driver) suggested that he drive around and look. He knew of something not far away ...

We looked at 4 interesting possibilities before he found this one. It had a little tiny "for rent" sign in Khmer posted on the gate! The couple who built it were working on some finishing touches but they stopped to show us around. They had already turned several groups of people away and were being picky about who they rented their house to!

View of front door through the fence and gate.

Next day, two of the University of the Nations administrators came back to the house with us to facilitate negotiations. We got busy shopping, designing and planning. Once the water filtering system was installed and functioning we could move in.

Water filtering tanks being installed.
That's the window of the room we chose as ours.

~ Signing the Lease Agreement ~

We asked for:
     Water heaters in each bedroom shower,
     Air-Conditioning in each bedroom but not the living room (we plan to leave the windows open most of the time),
     Screen doors to be installed,
     Hot water to the kitchen sink (that took a bit of convincing! and shopping ... no two-tap faucets to be found! The plumber had one in his shop.),
     John wanted the stove-top propane tank to go outside but they balked at that. Finally through translation we understood that it is too hot outside and here, in Cambodia, people turn the valve on and off as needed. We will need a big sign until that becomes routine!

Provided with the house:
     Three beds (65" x 77"),
     Wooden sofa set and coffee table,
     Kitchen table and 4 chairs (It's all Teak!),
     Two wardrobes,
     Fridge,
     Stove-top + ~30 lb. propane tank.
Anything else is up to us!
So ... we set a budget and John has set me loose!

~ Welder installing Concertina Wire ~
Focus in on the welding machine!
Would CSA approve?

Floor Plan of the house

Internet is provided by a Cambodian company called "OnLine". Wireless ended up being our only choice as fiber optics would have meant them running 2 kilometers of wire. Our speed is 512 meg. It takes 6 minutes to view a U-tube video - in segments.

G-mail allows me to make phone calls at 1 cent a minute. YoHoo!

Rubbish pick up costs $5 per month and is on Monday afternoons, sometime! The container was delivered a few days ago; a re-made tire!


Thursday, December 13 - Move In Day!

Electric Meter Pole just across and South of us.
John + our landlord are figuring out which one is ours so we can take a reading.  It's the third from the top on the back side of the pole.

John on Da's Tuk Tuk with the First Load
going from the Guest House to our New Home.

Jackie and Da with the Second Load.
I found room on the other side but
I had to keep a firm grip on that top box!

What a huge help this young man has been this day!
Ah Kun Chran!

Jackie blending up our first Green Drink. It is wonderful to work in our new kitchen. The drink was quite horrible!  ~  I forgot the bananas and that local, unnamed green plant we bought is way too bitter for our taste! The fresh carrots are delicious.

The Screen Doors being installed on our front doors. 

Designated "Office" - This bedroom will soon have furniture.

John opening the new BLUE bed linen package.
The walls are a nice blue.

Our brand new Front-Loading Washing Machine.
See the on-demand water heater under the counter? I NEED Hot Water!
The counter top is brick with mortar and tile covering it. The washing machine was 1/2" too tall to fit under there!
Our Front Yard + Temporary Laundry Drying Area.
John's new office chair makes for an excellent "laundry basket".
The tiles on the porch go continuously into the living room.

Kitchen Recycling Corner will soon have a table for that stove top and hangers on the wall for pots, pans and cooking utensils. There are no cupboards or drawers in this kitchen. We will need to get creative to keep it uncluttered looking!
Our House from the Electric Meter Pole.
The Rubbish Container on it's dog-proof stand.

Our House from the North.
Sorry folks, nothing edible growing on that fence; morning glory and weeds!

Thursday, December 20, 2012

Week One - Our New Home Town



The gist of our first week:                                              November 29, 2012

-First things first: We bought and learnt how to use 2 cell phones

-We've eaten at 5 different Korean, 1 Mexican, 1 Khmer, and 1 International Restaurant
-John is fine, Jackie's stomach is a bit queasy these days; yesterday we bought both Garlic and Ginger and will incorporate both into our diets! We are drinking plenty of bottled water.


Korean Food - We both ate very well for $11 US.

-Both Sundays: attended and started building friendships at both the UofN Sunday morning meeting and the International Christian Fellowship of Siem Reap.

-Most prices are less than half of Western prices... we have been spending lots of Dad's money.... but it goes a looong way!
-We bought a printer, ink and misc. office supplies... and binders for my music.
-We bought me a guitar! It's not as sweet sounding as my old one ... it might help if I cut my nails! They are the longest and cleanest I've ever seen them!

-They burn debris out on the streets; there is garbage everywhere!
-We see dogs, cats, chickens and cattle wandering around ...
-Those crazy drivers really aren't going to hit us!
-We have adopted a Tuk Tuk driver named Da; we only once had to push our Tuk Tuk out of a hole; rarely do the moguls in the roads get graded!


Mr. Phat Da - Tourist Tuk Tuk Services - We are on a shopping expedition. The wheeled buggy to the right is another Tuk Tuk just like ours.

-We have searched for days and have found a house. We signed the lease Saturday and move in when it is finished, sometime in the next few days. It is newly constructed and we showed up just in time to ask for and get some Western upgrades; Our new washing machine was bought delivered + plumbed in today; hot water installed in each shower and in the kitchen; Air Conditioning in each bedroom but not in the living room (we will open windows all the time!
-We are both looking forward to building a garden in the back yard (~20 x ~50 feet - We'll measure later!)
-We will need to be very careful not to overload the electrical circuits; we did not arrive in time to get that Westernized!
-Jackie is busy designing, planning furniture layout and list making (instead of creating blog updates!)


Photos later!

-John is researching the vehicle market here in Siem Reap and in Phnom Penh.

-If I wait until midnight I can call Laura in Vancouver and wake her up on a Sunday morning .... Nope! I won't do that! I'll wait until Monday morning and catch her in the evening the day before! Sweet to talk to her! Called Dad in Montreal too ... I caught him just going to bed!

-We still don't know exactly what our ministry will be but there sure is a lot to do. We have yet to become involved at the campus but will when we have settled in a little more.

-It seems to us that God is showing off to us with His provision, guidance and love!

Sunday, December 9, 2012

Through the Skies to Cambodia

Wednesday, November 28th, 6:30am: We rushed out the door of our Kona home; only 15 minutes late!
 We and our luggage are on our way to Cambodia. (6 suitcases 1 box of books, 4 carry-ons) We found out at the airport that the lady on the phone was wrong about the 70 lbs / suitcase weight limit. It was only supposed to be 50 lbs. They let us on anyway!

A one hour flight from Kona to Honolulu, Hawaii; wait less than one hour; An 11 hour flight from Honolulu to Incheon (Soeul, South Korea); about an hour's wait and a 5 hour flight down to Siem Reap, Cambodia.

We had everything done except ....  I still had about 30 NewsLetters to finish (out of about 130 in all) -- these I did sitting at the airports in Kona & Honolulu - the janitor posted them for me as we ran for the next airplane!

At Incheon Airport, I walked 20 minutes in search of comfort food, coffee + hot chocolate.
We are so excited and having a great time together!

It looks like any airport we've been to before but ... the vehicles, advertising, people are so different! (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Incheon_International_Airport)
We read our books and watched the movie "We Bought A Zoo" and Jackie slept in bits and starts.
Food was very good!

Arrival at Siem Reap - It feels like a sauna!
 We no longer have any idea of the time! We traveled somewhere around 25 hours!

Our Welcoming Committee