Wednesday, March 28, 2012

Hump Day

Trip Day 5 Work Day 3

6:00am the southern sun rises through the Alabama cedars. And youth leaders wake up their adopted children as they see fit.

6:30am Boys leaf through dirty socks for the cleanest ones, girls comb their hair, do their make up, clip their nails, hem their skirts and tidy up the trailer.

6:35am Sandwiches are hastily slapped together and poor decisions are made at the lunch making table that are sure to be regretted at noon.

7:30am After a hearty breakfast and short devotional we all wake up. The vehicles are packed with chain saws, gas and workers. Some drive 5 minutes, some drive 45. Work commences, sweat flows, skid steers roar and the volunteers pepper the crew chiefs with questions.

12:00pm ish. Lunch bags are handed out and precious water is consumed as if by camels.

5:00pm. The volunteers arrive back at base except for Neil's crew which always arrives late. Short showers are all that can be taken to remove dirt and sweat and sawdust and poisonous creatures.

6:00pm Supper is consumed by a pack of wolves.

6:30-8:00pm A group plays a sorry game of 21 until they can`t see the ball. Some relax, some walk to the store, Nolan looks as if he`s about to pass out. Poor guy.

8:00pm Debrief

8:30pm  Sirens sound, people scatter. Leo claims the sirens are for him, he spends the evening with shady new friends under the bridge. He is back in his bed every morning. The rest fight off sleep. The weak are out by ten, and the stupid last till 12.

12:00am   Snore SNORE snore dream twitch whimper snore rustle jerk SNORE grind mumble moan sit up cry snore wake up to sirens wonder where Leo is snore gulp itch wake up to Leo coming in snore SNORE snore...

Today for supper some people from a university cooked supper for us and another group of volunteers.

This is exactly how we feel after the long day of work.

`Rebuilding Hope`

 A sad game of 21.

 Mike had `noticed` that there weren`t any pictures on the blog and made the mistake of mentioning it...
 So we fixed it...

Gotcha!

Written by Joel (pics and captions by Gina)

Tuesday, March 27, 2012

Hi-ho hi-ho it's off to work we go

Today was our second work day. Most of us are up around 6am. Breakfast is at 7 and we have to make our lunches before that. After a short devotional, Bert (the man in charge who's been with MDS for 23 years) gives us a run down of what each group would be doing and we set out for our different destinations. The groups change a little every day depending on where there is work. I'll let you know a little of what each group has been doing the past couple days.

Neil's group (Neil is one of the group leaders and he's from Grunthal, Manitoba!) has been doing a lot of clean-up. The yard they were at yesterday and some of today was completely covered in fallen trees when they got there. They could barely describe how big of a pile it was. The trees here are a LOT bigger then any we have in Manitoba. Using chain saws, a couple skid-steers and whole lot of muscle they uncovered the backyard, a deck and an above ground pool. For the rest of today they were at a different house doing pretty much the same thing.


The pile of cleaned up trees...and a couple weird dudes in front of it.

The backyard after it was all cleared away. (Unfortunately we didn't get a picture before)

The pool and deck and was discovered under the ruble.

Bert's group spent Monday at a house belonging to a lovely lady named Sylvia. She was in her house alone when the tornado ripped the room she was in off her house. She was really sweet. The group spent the day painting her porch, some of the brick on her house and the back room. Today they finished painting, headed to another house to estimate how many shingles would be needed and tore down a wall in a church.



Shin doing her thing.

Tearing down a wall.

Karen's Group (Karen is a group leader from Pennsylvania) went to a Police Office/Community Centre where they were working on renovations/rebuilding after tornado damage. On Monday some worked on clean-up, some on the drop ceiling, some painting and some spent many dirty hours sanding drywall. Today they were supposed to start painting the walls that they had sanded but the paint never showed up so they joined Ren's group for the rest of the day.



Luke working on the drop ceiling.

Sanding Exhibit A

Sanding Exhibit B

Ren's group (Ren is another group leader from Pennsylvania. He has been volunteering every march for the past 7 years) spends their days at a job site building a brand new home for a couple who lost theirs when a tornado completely destroyed it. When our group arrived the house had walls up and rafters on. The biggest task for Monday was sheeting the roof, some worked on the front porch floor, some attaching the roof to the house in hopes that the next time a tornado comes by...the roof will stay attached to the house. Today the roof was covered in tar paper and the shingles arrived at lunch providing work for the afternoon and most of tomorrow. The people working on the ground (the majority since Karen's group was also there) installed windows, build a porch onto the back of the house, started on the railings for the front porch and some just sat around since there were too many people for the work.



The front of the house.

Some of Karen's group talking to Linda. She is one of the recipients of this lovely new home.

Linda showing some pictures of her home after the tornado.

Ren and Josh working on the back porch.

Adam, Dan, Derek, Gina and Mike working on the roof.

Tanis, Karen, Kendra and Alayna. Not enough work so the picture-taking commenced.

Cory and Mike installing the windows!

Mark working on the railings for the front patio.

Karen and Ren's groups combined for the day. Some worked, some supervised...everyone is happy!!

We all return exhausted around 5 to shower up and eat a delicious supper at 6pm. The evenings are spent debriefing and relaxing/recuperating. 

Everyone we meet is super friendly and all the people benefiting from our work are so very grateful and happy to have us there. They love to chat and tell us all about their stories and how excited they are about what MDS is doing for them. But we have to save some stories for when we get home! Despite some blisters, very sore muscles and the occasional farmer burn, we're doing swell! God is definitely giving us some extra strength this week.

Thanks for all your prayers!! We can sure feel them!

Sunday, March 25, 2012

'Hate cannot drive out hate, only love can do that.' - Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.

This morning we went to the 16th Street Baptist Church for the morning service. This is the church that Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. preached at and attended back in the day. It was primarily african american people in attendance and they were very welcoming and happy to have us there. Some of us even recieved hugs. The service was lively, passionate and very charismatic. Something we will never forget.

(Here is a link to a video that was taken at the church. I wasn't able to post it to this blog but managed to     upload it to our youth facebook page. Some of you may not be able to watch it if you aren't part of the group. For that I am sorry. Hopefully once we return you can be added to the group or can watch it from on of the youth's pages.)



 
The 16th Street Baptist Church

 Our good lookin' group.

For lunch we attempted to go to a place called Nikki's but it was closed and looked like it had been closed for a while so we made our way to option #2 which was called Dreamland Bar-b-que. Deffinetly the right choice. As we were led to our tables we walked past a very impressive indoor brick barbeque covered in slabs of ribs...needless to say we knew this was the restaurant for us. 

 
Outside the restaurant.



In the bible God took a rib from the man and made it into a woman...this time the women gave their extra ribs to the men.

Yum!

Couldn't quite finish...

Love at first sight.

After a delicious and filling lunch we made our way to the Birmingham Civil Rights museum (right beside the 16th Street Baptist Church). There we walked through a maze of informative exibets about how society moved from segregation and extreme racism to freedom and equality. The pictures, models, videos and timelines were angering, saddening and frustrating at times. We agreed that it was embarrasing to think that it was our race that treated them so poorly. 



Chillin' (or rather cookin') outside the Civil Rights Museum.


After the museum we headed over to the MDS home base. We were extremely excited when we saw our trailers becasue we were all expecting some pretty dingy construction trailers and it turned out to be nice camper trailers with a full bathroom in each!!! 5 of the boys headed back to the hotel to pick up our luggage and the rest of us went for a walk to see some of the damage that was near the site.


Our new home for the week.

Not too shabby.

Our trailers.

A church that had been demolished by a tornado.


Once the boys returned we headed out for another fast food supper and then headed back to the site for orientation. Tomorow we wake up bright and early to start work on the project sites! Oh one interesting fact...apparently we have accents. We've been asked numerous times "Where ya'll from" to which we say "Canada" and they reply "Ok I was just wondering cuz of your accents".

Goodnight ya'll.

Gina

Saturday, March 24, 2012

The Fun has Arrived...

After a day chalked full of flights and delays we, the fun, have finally arrived in our sweet home Alabama. We checked into our Birmingham hotel just before 11 pm after 17 hours of travelling.

Checking into the smallest international airport in the world (we're guessing)

Feel the burn. Adam made it to ten minutes.

Obesity here we come!

Packing out DQ for lunch/supper. 

Today, Saturday, we accidently abandoned the majority of the girls and visited the Vulcan tower. It was cool. Leo rode his wheel chair down a long slope towards a street, reaching a top speed of approximately 7 mph he locked up his wheels and came to a screeching halt a few feet from the curb.  In the the afternoon the entire crew went to the Birmingham zoo after overwhelming a lonely subway sandwich worker. After the zoo we drove out to a mall and strolled/shopped/sat. Dan leads the caravan since he has the only working GPS. He is an overly capable driver. 

Enjoying some of God's coolest creations.

Maybe they came from us. (new evolution theory compliments of Joel)

Sponsored by Powerade. (Actually this guy did have a heart disease that they had treated with medication and powerade before giving him surgery. Neat!)

Roar.

Arriving back at our hotel around 7 we had pizza. Pastor Mike had us do a team building exercise. Myles had to sit down outside the room for a while when he found out his team lost the spaghetti tower challenge so don't ask him if he cried on the trip... We had a blast overwhelming the pool area. Now most of us are relaxing. Griffin is dealing with a vicious case of swimmers itch. j/k. but seriously please send lotion and advice, and be sure to ask him how he is doing when we return. 

Lets play a little game I like to call Naaaaaaaame That Youth!


Written by Joel (pics & captions by Gina)

Tuesday, March 20, 2012

Prayer items as we depart for trip and look ahead...

Schedule:
Friday, March 23
6:00am          Meet at church for prayer and send-off
Pray everyone wakes up and has everything including passport! PTL for Blumenort bus and Ed who is driving us down!
6:30am            Leave for Grand Forks
Pray for smooth border crossing as it could take up to 2 hours     
11:00am          Arrive at Grand Forks Airport
1:07pm            Depart Grand Forks – see flight itinerary
8:59pm            Arrive Birmingham

Saturday, March 24
Fun day in Birmingham

Sunday, March 25
Church in Birmingham
Evening – Orientation

Monday – Friday, March 26-30
6:00                 Wake up
6:30                 Make your own bag lunch
7:00                 Eat a hot breakfast in dining room
7:30                 Devotions
7:45                 Get your job assignment
8:00                 Load tools & head to work site
12:00               Eat lunch
4:00                 Clean up work site
5:00                 Return to camp
6:00                 Eat supper in dining room
7:00                 Wash dishes
7:30                 Free time (except Wednesday evenings is set aside for worship, fellowship and sharing. Often local residents are invited to share their stories with volunteers.)
9:00               Team Devotions/Debrief
*pray for spiritual impact of this trip (servant heart/missional & personal growth in faith)
10:00               Bedtime

Saturday, March 31

6:00am                        Arrive at Birmingham airport
Pray everyone wakes up and has everything including passport!
8:00am                        Depart Birmingham (see flight itinerary)
12:35pm          Arrive Grand Forks

Emergency Contact info:
·       Bert and Doris Hamm
o   Phone: 717-682-3480
o   Phone: (717) 682-5796

Sunday, March 18, 2012

NOTE change

We are not staying at the church as we were originally told. We will be at the school just down the road. (1517 Hibernian Street)

Thursday, March 15, 2012

8 more sleeps

Make sure you pack your bags in advance:
- make sure everything fits
- your baggage meets the required measurements (see your booklet)
- your baggage meets the required weight (see your booklet)
- don't phone Mike on Thursday night...he will be sleeping and not happy to get woken by the phone! :)

want to see updates from MDS website?

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

Thursday, March 1, 2012

22 more sleeps!
At least 12 killed as tornadoes strike U.S. Midwest
Thu Mar 1, 2012 1:38am EST
* Tornadoes spawn series of storms
* Entire house lifted by twister kills six
* Millions of dollars in damages expected
* Storms heading for Mid-Atlantic states
By Tim and Ghianni
NASHVILLE, Tenn., Feb 29 (Reuters) - Powerful storms that spawned tornadoes ripped through the U.S. Midwest on Wednesday, killing at least 12 people, including six in Illinois who were crushed when a house was lifted up and fell on them, authorities said.
The violent weather that hit six Midwest states starting in Kansas and Missouri overnight swept into middle Tennessee and slammed the Cumberland Plateau region, about an hour east of Nashville, killing two women in Cumberland County and one person in DeKalb County, according to emergency agency officials.
Three people in Missouri were also killed by a storm that struck during the night. A tornado temporarily closed the famous entertainment strip in Branson, Missouri, where country music shows and other performers draw thousands of people a day.
Two men and four women died when a pre-dawn tornado struck Harrisburg, Illinois, a town of nearly 10,000 people, Mayor Eric Gregg said, describing the storm damage as "horrific."
In Harrisburg, the six people were killed when powerful winds lifted a house up and dropped it on top of other homes in a housing subdivision adjacent to a wrecked shopping strip.
"There are hundreds of homes damaged, millions of dollars in damage. The hospital is severely damaged. There's a mall with 10 stores that was destroyed," Gregg said.
Mike Hancock, an employee of the U.S. Forest Service, and several others armed with tools attempted a rescue where the six people died.
"We crawled in there as much as we could. Then there wasn't enough stability, the whole foundation was shaking. We had to get out of there," he said.
Illinois Governor Pat Quinn issued a disaster declaration for the southern third of the state, Missouri Governor Jay Nixon declared a state of emergency for the state, while Kansas Governor Sam Brownback declared a state of disaster emergency for Wabaunsee County.
The National Weather Service's Storm Prediction Center rated the Harrisburg tornado an EF-4, or one notch below the strongest tornadoes, meaning it packed winds of up to 200 miles per hour. The EF-4 rating put it on par with the devastating tornado that killed 64 people in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, last April, and one notch below the massive EF-5 Joplin storm that flattened whole sections of the Missouri town.
The violent weather prompted reports of 18 tornadoes across six states, including Nebraska, Kansas, Missouri, Illinois, Indiana and Kentucky, according to the National Weather Service.
Forecasters said there was no relief in sight as the stormy weather headed east to the Mid-Atlantic states and parts of the Southeast.
"We have a number of strong, severe storms ongoing from the Appalachian Mountains through the Southeast, said meteorologist Jared Guyer of the National Weather Service Storm Prediction Center.
There were tornado watches issued for parts of Mississippi, Alabama, Tennessee, Kentucky, Virginia, West Virginia and Ohio.
FEAR OF ANOTHER DEADLY YEAR
The storms raised fears that 2012 will be another bad year for tornadoes after 550 people died in the United States from them last year, the deadliest year in nearly a century, according to the Weather Service. The highest death tolls were from an April outbreak in Alabama and Mississippi that claimed 364 lives, and the tornado in Joplin on May 22 that killed 161 people.
Twisters caused $28.7 billion in damage last year, according to the U.S. National Climatic Data Center.
In Harrisburg, a stretch of the normally busy shopping strip along Highway 45 was a mass of splintered wood, signage and debris from collapsed stores.
The tornado smashed a Forest Service headquarters serving the nearby Shawnee National Forest and a Walmart, and ripped away a wall from the hospital. A truck trailer and cars were upended. Dozens of people were injured, suffering broken bones and cuts, Mayor Gregg said.
A suspected tornado killed a person in a mobile home park in rural Buffalo, Missouri, and 13 people were injured by a suspected twister, said Lamont Swanson, coroner for Dallas County.
A man in Stoddard County in southeast Missouri was killed when his mobile home was destroyed. His wife was severely injured.
"It looks like it just exploded," Dale Moreland of the county's emergency management service said of the home.
A 70-year-old man died in Cassville, Missouri, when he was thrown from his mobile home by high winds, Barr County Sheriff Mick Epperly said in a news release.
'A WIDESPREAD' EVENT
There had been two tornado-related deaths in 2012 before these storms, both in Alabama on Jan. 23.
At least eight people were injured in Kentucky on Wednesday, one critically, said state emergency management spokesman Buddy Rogers. "We're getting hammered," Rogers said. "This is a pretty widespread weather event."
Rogers said at least five homes caught fire, the roof of an elementary school gymnasium in Muhlenberg County was blown off, but no students were injured.
A suspected tornado a half-mile wide damaged more than 50 homes in southern Indiana, said Madison Seib, a public information officer in Warrick County, Indiana. Warning sirens alerted residents to take cover, and there were no serious injuries, she said.
The tornado in Branson caused mostly minor injuries to about 30 people, damaged three theaters, four or five hotels and numerous stores that will have to be closed for a while, said Ross Summers, president of the local chamber of commerce.
"Some businesses will take some time to reopen, no question about that," Summers said.
The storm struck early Wednesday, after entertainment shows had shut down and about two weeks before the busy tourist season begins, city officials said.
"We are still in shock," said Rose Atchley in the city administrator's office. "The strip is totally shut off. There is lots of debris here and there. We are struggling along."
Kansas officials said a suspected tornado inflicted heavy damage to Harveyville near the state capital of Topeka, critically injuring three people. Eight others suffered minor injuries.

Friday, February 17, 2012

198th Anniversary of the Battle of Horseshoe Bend
Daviston Tallapoosa County
Mar 24, 2012
This annual event recreates frontier life in the year 1814 and emphasizes the importance of the battle in United States history through a variety of special demonstrations and interpretive programs. Experience the life of the Creek and Cherokee Indians. Visit authentic hunting camps and watch demonstrations of traditional skills such as hide tanning, flint knapping and finger weaving. Learn how to make Cherokee baskets and participate in an authentic Creek stomp dance. Experience the life of Andrew Jackson’s frontier army. Watch Tennessee militiamen and soldiers representing the 39th United States Infantry fire smoothbore cannon and flintlock muskets. Learn how soldiers cooked their meals and lived while on campaign.
Location:
Horseshoe Bend National Military Park 11288 Horseshoe Bend Rd.Daviston, AL 36256
Birmingham's history isn't typical of other great cities of the southern United States because at the time of the region's defining event—the Civil War—Birmingham didn't even exist. The area that is now Birmingham was first settled in the 1830s and was known as Elyton until 1871. Elyton, however, was nothing more than an insignificant trading post. All that changed with the discovery of large deposits of iron ore, limestone, and coal in Red Mountain, at the foot of which the city now lies.
In 1871, at the point where two railroads intersected (now the corner of First Avenue South and 31st Street), certain railroad and industrial interests formally organized the city of Birmingham, naming it after the greatest industrial city in the world at the time: Birmingham, England. The city's rise to prominence happened so quickly that it became known as "the magic city", a nickname still used today. Fueled by large infusions of capital from Northern industrial interests, the city grew at an amazing rate and became a major center for the production of steel, beginning with the construction of the massive Bessemer, Fairfield and Sloss furnaces. The city's industries, hungry for labor, drew immigrants from the Mediterranean and from Eastern Europe; members of ethnic groups from these regions continue to make up an important segment of Birmingham's demographic. Being a predominantly industrial city, Birmingham suffered more severe economic hardships than most American cities during the Great Depression and post-World War II periods. The economy didn't fully recover until long after the steel industry's economic influence began to wane in the 1970s. The 1950s and 1960s in Birmingham have become known as the Civil Rights years. This was a terrible period for the city's reputation, and in many ways, Birmingham is still trying to recover from such chilling images as those of policemen turning fire hoses and attack dogs on Civil Rights protesters, the bombing of the 16th Street Baptist Church, and the burning of a Freedom Rider bus downtown. Despite these momentous events (which are commemorated in the Birmingham Civil Rights Institute), the city actually integrated quietly and rather successfully in most areas.
Following these tumultuous times, the 1970s saw the emergence of the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB) and its world-renowned medical facilities. Today, the medical community, with its emphasis on education and research along with all its various service industries, attracts professionals from all over the world and makes up the most important and influential sector of Birmingham's economy.
April 27, 2011
Today, at least 118 tornadoes ripped across Alabama, including ones that brought severe damage to the Birmingham outlying communities of Pleasant Grove, Fultondale, Pinson and Gardendale, to name a few.
We don’t know the extent of the damage, or the death toll beyond 49 at time of publication, including 10 dead in Jefferson County.

see address below for video of tornado
http://magiccitypost.com/2011/04/27/tornadoes-kill-dozens-across-alabama-now-is-the-time-to-help/