It has been two weeks since we posted.
I did a Grange pruning job on this fig tree. It hadn't been pruned for a long time and one of the two main branches were dead. I promised that it would be looking healthy in a year. She said she would hunt me down.
We piled the branches and other stuff in the driveway.
We had to drag all the branches and trash through her house to the driveway in the front.
I went to see this missionary apartment in the rain. The rain that hits the front step runs inside so they put up a couple of shower curtains to keep it out. It has rained for several weeks. We are excited to see it as it hasn't really rained in a year.
We just refurbished the apartment of these two elders and I hung the mirror back up in the bath room. When I took the mirror down there was a picture of Emma Smith behind it.
Last Saturday we got a call that the power was out in an apartment so I went to fix it. It was very wet. I replaced a breaker in the house and it still didn't work. Finally I found a short in a junction box and pulled the wires apart and the lights worked.
This is the box with the short.
My niece Michelle Dray and her son Payton came to visit this week. He served his mission here in 2019. They came to visit people he knows here. It was fun see him meet his old friends and introduce his mom. This is on the way from the airport to Curacavi where we were setting up a missionary apartment.
This is Michelle cleaning the apartment. It is an A frame and she saw a big birds nest in the peak. She and Jackie worked hard to get it down and cleaned up
On the way back from Curacavi we stopped in San Francisco to visit Nora. She is a landlord of 2 of our apartments. Jackie bonded with her when we first arrived. Peyton lived here for a while and she knitted a sweater for Michelle. She is 80 years old and spunky and loves missionaries.
There is a good fast food place next to this missionary apartment. We were close by so we stopped for Payton to buy a completo(fancy hotdog). I delivered a clothes drying rack. The electricity had been out in this apartment for several days. I didn't even open the door but left the rack by the door. On the way back to the car I remembered the power was out. I went to the meter on the left of the window and flipped the breaker and I saw a light come on inside. I was proud of my electrical skills. We told the sisters to do the same thing.
We went to Lampa on Friday night to check out some missionary apartments. Payton had some friends there. This is the road to their house. It was wall to wall water in several places. They all have tall brick fences around their property.
This is the kitchen in Paytons friends house. It was large and open. They had a wood stove and had it fired up. We really liked it. Most buildings aren't heated and we freeze. Church buildings are marginally heated. I wear 3-4 layers of clothing.
This is Paytons friend starting to BBQ a nice roast. It was about 10 PM. We said we can't stay until it was cooked. We were an hour from home and it looked like it would take an hour or more to cook it. We had some good ribs and grilled sandwiches with them before we left.
Today we went with them to another friends house for lunch. She is a good cook and loves Elvis.
There is a sister missionary here that we thought looks and acts like Michelle. She is serving in the ward we attended today so we got a picture of them together.
This is the lady that cooked the good lunch and her son.
This is the sunset we saw tonight as we left our building.
This is the fire we saw tonight as we got to the road outside the apartment. It looks like several homes burned up completely. These are cheap homes up on the hillside where the roads don't go.These cheap homes seem impossible to stop from burning once they start. The firemen do a good job of keeping other homes from catching fire.
Time here goes fast. We are renting new apartments, refurbishing old apartments, looking for more apartments. Jackie spends a lot of time writing up rental contracts and seeing that rent is increased per the contract and seeing that utility bills are paid.
We are sending home about 16 missionaries tomorrow. I am amazed at their maturity after 18-24 months here. Contacting people and sharing their beliefs with them. Living in place where they may not speack the language well, they get robbed, they live in dark cold apartments. They spend 24/7 with a companion. I have hope for the future when I think of them being our future leaders.
Thanks for sharing bits of your day and posting photos! I love to read about your missionary life and the people you meet and sights you see.
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