We finished the well yesterday.  It is recharging to thirty meters.  Usually we need it to recharge to about fifteen from the top, being fourty one meters but Don Juan will pump it until it is recharging to the top.  We finished about middle of the day yesterday and then we went to the homestead about a mile away to throw the cast net and play a little in the pond because it was a pretty day.  We played till about four thirty then headed home.  We got about a mile away and the truck shut off.  We were not able to get it started again.  Mr.Terry had his cell phone thankfully so he got on the roof of the truck to get signal and he called Mrs. Kathy.  He wanted her to get the battery put it in the other truck SUV thingy and come get us.  She showed up an hour later in a cab.  She could not get the battery to work.  We left the truck and headed into town.  Then I had one of those moments in my life were I have no idea how I got to this place.  Ha Mrs. Kathy had made oatmeal chocolate chip cookies and had brought them with bottled water with her.  I was in a cab with eight people eating cookies, covered in grease, driving at sunset through the prettiest backcountry I have ever seen.  It was ridiculous and such a God moment.  I could not help but laugh.  When we got to town we ate spaggetti and then got the other SUV working and headed back to get the other truck.  We got there and finally figured out that if we pull the drive shaft out of the back wheels then we can drive it home in four wheel drive using only the front two tires.  What had happened was all the bumps we hit on the bad roads because of the rain had crammed the Universal drive shaft into itself and broke some stuff in the back axil or something.  We tied up the universal drive shaft with a rope under the truck and got the truck working and were about to leave when we went to start the SUV and it would not start.  The battery was dead.  We did not have jumper cables but were able to push start it to start it.  Then we began the two hour ride back home in first gear.  We had to stop four times to put a knew rope under to hold the universal drive shaft because it was burning holes through the rope.  Finally we greased up an old T-shirt and put it between the rope and shaft and it worked.  We got home at about 12:45.  Then me and Mr. Terry and Mrs. Kathy sat in the kitchen and told delirious stories for about thirty minutes.  It was great.  This morning I woke up about the time for sunday school and played with the kids. After that me and Mary Lou watched High School Musical.  Then Mrs Kathy made homeade.  It was delicious.  It has been a great day.  I am about to go play soccer with the church people before church. Tommorrow the Wallers and I are heading to Santa Cruz.  Hopefully I will catch a bus to La Paz.  Mrs Kathy has to have surgery for her sinus problems so pray for that.  It will be sad leaving these wonderful people.  They have been great and a blast to be around.  I will also miss the food ha.  They have been such a blessing from God not just for me for two weeks but for all of the people in this area who they have touched.  Pray for safe travels. -Addison-

All is quiet at the Internado. I took Rachel to the bus place this morning. I would say station but its more where they just park the bus. She is going back to La Paz in an attempt to resolve some residency issues. That makes me the only Greengo at the Internado. I think it will be good for me. It will force me to use Spanish and not rely on Rachel the Translator. All but a few of the students have gone home for Holy Week and it is frightenly quiet around the home. I think Mateo and I will begin building the stove either this afternoon or in the morning sometime. I have to admit the readings on it are a little intimidating, especially all the calculations. I wish history was somehow involved and not math. I guess that would be a weird stove though. Anyway, I ask that you pray for the project and we receive understanding so that the internado can have a new, hopefully more efficient Winiarski Pot Slip stove, 2008 edition. – Jarred

I guess about two weeks ago now, we were on our way to Santa Cruz via La Paz. Every Sunday and Thursday, there is a big market in El Alto, a large suburb if you will of La Paz. We were going to look for supplies in the market and I think Rachel asked Cristina, Mateo´s sister-in-law to accompany us. Anyway, Cristina lives next to Mateo´s mother, whose name I cannot pronounce or spell. Mateo´s parents own a small store that sells snacks and bread made fresh every morning. We came into the store and found his mother there. She burst into tears and started saying things I dont think Bolivians could understand. I immediately felt uncomfortable. She gave each of us a huge hug and thanked us for coming to visit. She said, ¨Come! Come!¨ She took us back to where the family makes bread each day. She told us to sit, and that we did. We listened to Mateo´s father talk for a while until his mother came back with a wide smile and told us to follow her. She told us took us into the kitchen, which is separate from everything else. She said, ¨Sit! Sit!. She thanked us again for coming to visit. The whole time I was wondering if she thought we were someone else. Although we had eaten breakfast just an hour before, she begged us to eat an egg sandwhich and have some coffee. I am not sure how old she is. Maybe mid 60s. But, she was literally skipping from the table to the stove to turn the eggs in her skillet. She brought the eggs over to the table, sliced open the bread, and said, ¨Eat! Eat!¨Yeah she said everything twice. Then she said, ¨Teach me! Teach me English so I can say Eat! Eat!¨. I still had the first bite of an egg sandwhich that I didnt really want in my mouth when Rachel said, ¨we are going to pray¨. I stopped chewing and bowed my head only to raise it back up almost immediately after she had begun to pray. Her prayer was muffled by a constant stream of tears flowing down her face. The only words I understood was ¨Holy Jesus, Thank You!¨. That was all I need to hear. I have thought about that prayer at least once everyday since then. I knew at the time there was more to the prayer than what appeared on the surface and that I needed time to think about it. Near the beginning of our time in Ixiamas, I asked the pastor what his favorite book of the Bible is. I found it interesting when he said Ephesians, not the normal reply of John, Romans, or 1st Corinthians. I read it and a verse in Ephesians 3 stuck out to me. Mateo´s mom lives this verse. The verse talks about a love beyond knowledge, and recognizing how deep, wide, long, and high the love of God is. I realized I had never literally cried out to God in thanksgiving, even moreso because strangers came to visit me. I asked Rachel about her and she said Mateo said she is like that all of the time. Then I thought, ¨oh. Well it probably wasnt that big of a deal.¨Then I though, ¨Wait, that makes it an even bigger deal! She lives her life with an open love for God and his children.¨ You can´t know love unless you experience it. As the verse says, it is beyond knowledge. Love is not a feeling, it is an action. A verb, not a noun. If service is love, than I have not loved at times when I had a clear opportunity to serve. And if I did, it was not in a manner as what I believe Jesus would have wanted it to be.- Jarred

 

Rachel, Mateo´s brother Felix, his son Israel, his brother-in-law Marco, and I left La Paz yesterday morning at 630 am. We made excellent time all the way to Sapecho. A 10 or so hour trip in a bus, we made it in less than 7. Right outside of Sapecho, we had to wait an hour while cargo trucks took turns pulling eachother out of the mud. I said to Rachel, ´´Barring any other road problems, we can be in Rurrenabaque by midnight.¨ I thought maybe we could have eaten lunch the next day in Ixiamas. Little did I know we would not get back until 730 tonight. About 10 miles from the middle of nowhere, we came upon a line of cargo trucks stopped on a muddy incline. A floata had gotten stuck in the mud and could not move. I guess this was about 8 pm. I think the bus finally got out at around 10. I thought, ok, maybe we can be RRBAKE by 2 am. Nope. We werent able to get through until around 7 am this morning. The five of us slept in the truck we were bringing from La Paz. The four guys slept in the cab and Rachel got the lady´s suite. (in the back of the truck under a tarp.) I was beyond frustrated.It was definitely a lesson in patience and flexibility. When a man on a tractor fixed the road around 7am, it took him 5 minutes. I shook my head sideways and laughed. Anyway, its great to be back in Ixiamas. I was bombarded with a barage of hugs from the kids and fast words I couldnt understand. We are going out to the Chaco again tomorrow to harvest some more rice. You can say we provide job security for Snap, Crackle, and Pop.

Yesterday was good we woke up and Mr. Terry decided that he just needed to send us in to camp because the rain had been so bad…it usually is about a fourty five min drive to the drill sight that is not far away ,but because the roads are so bad it takes a while.  We got everything ready to leave and we headed off.  Mr. Terry stayed behind because he needed to hold down the Waller compound.  Me, Teo, and four other boys that Mr. Terry hired left and it very soon started raining.  We made the call to give it a try.  We got about fifteen min then it started raining harder to Teo who was driving decided  with the rest of us we should not continue because if we got the truck stuck then that would be a long walk back home.  The road is narrow so we did not really have a place to turn around so we just sat there.  No one but me spoke english and though my spanish is not bad I had a hard time explaining to Teo that I didnt think the rain was going to stop and we prolly needed to try and turn around.  I was unsuccessful in this attempt, so we sat in the middle of the road for an hour waiting for the rain to stop I napped and thought about life and so on and so forth.  Finally a truck coming the other direction made it were we had to move our truck and then leading to us turning around and heading back.  Me and Teo spent the rest of the day making our pump station mold out of concrete.  It was a good day.

We woke up this morining and it was raining again so we could not go drill.  We are going to go on Monday and camp I think.  Me and Mr. Terry went fishing last night a block from the house with his cast net.  There is a really low area that fills up with water and so we were about to throw from the road and actually caught some small fish.  This morning we found out that at  that same time we were fishing about three blocks away there was a lynching of a young man here in San Julian.  I am telling this not for anyone to feel sorry, or for anyone to think that we are in danger ,or for a good story ,but simply because prayer is needed.  I dont really know much but listening to Mr. Terry talk who has lived here for seventeen years it sounds pretty bad.  This is the tenth lynching this year in Bolivia.  So pray for the people of this country, and for that matter the people of the states and the world.

-Addison