Thursday, December 20, 2007

Argentina Update - December 2007 - Part III: Of People, Animals, and Miscellaneous Stuff

Argentina Update – December 2007 – Part III: Of People, Animals, and Miscellaneous Stuff

Hello. This is the third and final part of our photo tour. We have several pictures of the family, the animals, and some miscellaneous things that we wanted to share with you. We hope you enjoy them.


Here we are. Here Joseph is playing with one of the puppies. He is such a sweet baby and it sure is hard to keep him clean now that he is crawling. In this picture, Andrea is cleaning the new concrete so that Joseph can play on it.
Here is a picture of David. He is such an adventurous little boy. I think that he has had more accidents since we have been here than all of our other children combined in their life times. As soon as he turned two, it all began. He is not scared of much (except dump trucks) which is scary for us. Meme, Dane’s mother, says that he reminds her of Dane when he was little. Here is a run down of the injuries that he has had since earlier this year: 1) David cuts his hand with a knife that was left on the table while trying to cut a lime – for this injury he had to have his thumb taped to his palm for two weeks. 2) David severs two toes in Elijah’s bicycle – for this his toes had to be sewed back on. 3) David falls in a hole filled with water from a recent rain only to be rescued by his brother Elijah who was with him. Later, David came down with what we think was an e coli infection. He was sick for two weeks. 4) David breaks his collar bone by falling out of the bottom of the bunk bed only to be accidentally knelled on by his father who was arising to help him – for this David had to have his shoulders in a figure eight sling and his arm immobilized for three weeks. 5) David gets hit in the head with a machete that Elisabeth picked up and is cut just above his eye – for this he had to have his head bandaged for a few days. 6) As soon as the cut healed, David tripped and fell twice in one day and gave himself two nice sized goose egg bumps – because of this he looked like a Klingon from Star Trek for a week. 7) David touches the generator motor when it is hot and burns his entire right palm – for this he had to hold his hand on ice for two hours and wear a sock on his hand for a week. I think that that is all of the most significant injuries up to this point. We stay busy keeping an eye on him. When he is out of sight briefly, everyone goes into panic mode until he is found. He hears all the time, “No David, that is dangerous! Don’t do that!” All in all he is a joy to have around. He talks up a storm and can switch between English and Castellano with ease. Furthermore, we are constantly trying to teach the children modesty and since David stopped wearing diapers, he has had a problem keeping his pants from sliding down a little. David doesn’t quite understand all this as was demonstrated the other day when he asked me, “Can you see my bottom?” I answered, “No.” He then asked me, “Why, is it dangerous?” We have laughed and laughed about that. This is a picture of Elisabeth. She loves to help whenever she can and will clean, clean, clean when given an opportunity. She loves to carry around bags and will collect things to put in them. It really doesn’t matter what kind of bag it is either. She has a deep little voice and a funny laugh that makes everyone else laugh when she gets started. At four, she is still trying to figure out how things work. She still hasn’t figured out the difference between breakfast, lunch, and dinner. Other things are difficult too. The other day she said to me, “Look Mommy, I’m fat, but I have to have a place for my gizzards.” I think she meant organs.
This is Elijah, our six year old. He is such a big help to his Daddy. He is always by Dane’s side and is a hard worker. He is very careful about most things and is always concerned about the welfare of his brothers and sisters. Here is Sarah. At seven, she is also a very hard worker. I depend on her a lot to get things done because she is very conscientious about her work and usually doesn’t stop until she sees the job through. She is also lighthearted and laughs easily.
Here is Abby who is nine. As the oldest child, she bares a lot of responsibility. She is great with the younger children and the baby is usually content with her carrying him around. She has already become quite fluent in Castellano and we often have her translate for us when we have a hard time understanding. She loves animals and bugs and is constantly finding new ones to show us.
Here is a picture of the puppies. All the puppies that we still have, three of them, are growing and doing well, even the one that had to have his tail amputated.
We are all enjoying the chickens. This is a picture of one of our roosters. This is our smallest hen. She has been sitting on a nest for about twenty days now. We expect her chick to hatch at any time if the Lord wills. She originally had eight eggs, but only one has survived being cracked and eaten by the other chickens. We have so much to learn about chicken raising. Here are a few of our other hens. A few of our chickens fly the coop everyday and one hen likes to lay her eggs in an empty box on top of the trailer.


We find giant snail shells without snails all the time, but Abby finally found one with a live snail in our garden. These things are huge! There are giant firefly type things here, called taca tacas, except their light doesn’t go on and off like a firefly. They stay lit up all the time and while they are flying they look like a green glowing ball zipping through the air. When they land, their wings cover most of their glowing abdomens and you can only see two dots on their backs that look like glowing green eyes. One night, a couple of months ago, we were in the forest, walking by lamplight and we saw two glowing green eyes in the weeds by a tree. It was very bizarre and we were afraid to inspect it further. Then a couple of weeks ago, I was coming from the outhouse and I saw this glowing green ball flying around the house area. I had no idea what it was. It looked like something you would see in a science fiction movie. I called to Dane, “It’s coming around again Dane!” He still thinks this is funny and repeats what I said often. He had already seen one of these bugs earlier in the week. Here is a picture of one that had landed on the ground. You can see the spots that glow on its back. In the picture below, we used the flash on the camera so that you can see what the bug looks like. These bugs are about an inch and a half long and their lower bodies are totally fluorescent green when their wings are open.
This is a picture of our neighbor’s property up on top of the hills. We live down in the valley on the other side of the road. The valley is the area with all the fog that you see in the picture.

Here is a picture taken from our adjoining neighbor’s property of the valley that we live in. You can see the roof of our future house in the middle left of the picture.

Here is a closer up view of the valley. Again, you can see the roof of our future house. This is the trail that leads down to the large creek. The Sosa’s cleaned it up all the way to their house for easier passage. Following this trail is like visiting a national park in the states.
This is a picture of our corn field.
Here is one of our cucumbers growing. They grow so big and green here.

Well that is the end of my photo tour. I hope you all have enjoyed seeing what we are doing here. We miss you all and think of you often. As I said before, if you have any questions or have any photo requests, let us know. I have more to write soon.

Take care,

Jessica

Argentina Update - December 2007 - Part II: Things We Are Working On

Argentina Update – December 2007 – Part II: Things We Are Working On

Hello again. This is the second part of our photo tour. In this update, I hope to show you some of the things that we are working on around here. Dane is working on so many different projects. A homestead is difficult to start, particularly in the absence of many of the building conveniences that we are used to, but in the end I think we will appreciate it more because of all the hard work that went into it.

This is a picture of Dane and Javier burning the cut brush and dead trees in preparation of the garden.

The burning continued into the night. After the garden fence was built and the shade cloth put on, Dane plowed the earth with the track vehicle. Here is a picture of some of the wood that Dane will use to build the house. All of this is inside wood (floors, walls, etc.). The wood for the outside will be delivered later because we really don’t have much more room to store it until Dane is ready for it. Dane covered all the wood with plastic to protect it from the rain.
The next two pictures show Dane and Javier making the metal brackets for screwing the wood together. Dane bought the iron and they are using a device that Dane made on the back of the track vehicle to bend the iron into the shapes that Dane needs.

Dane, Javier, and Andres poured concrete for half of the bottom floor of our house. It was two days of hard work and they did a great job!Dane bought a chainsaw to cut posts from some fallen trees on our property. Here is Elijah posing with it after Dane finished testing it out. Dane and Javier found a huge fallen Angico tree in the forest and have begun cutting posts for our fence. The wood is beautiful and extremely heavy. When all the cutting is done, they are going to have to find a way to haul it up here to camp.


Well we have had relatively dry weather here for about a month and our little uphill springs finally dried up, so Dane bought a pump and we are now pumping water from the big downhill spring until more rain comes and fills the uphill springs again. This picture is of the pump house.
This picture is of the spring where Dane is pumping the water from. He built a little dam to make the water a little deeper where the spring starts.
I also do my laundry here sometimes (in the pools below where we take the water for the house) while the children play in the other pools.

Most of the time though, I do my laundry here.

Well that is all the pictures that we have for now of what we are working on, but there will be more to come, Lord willing. And another note, the inverter that Dane bought here in Argentina went out and is being repaired. For now we run a generator to check email and use the phones several times a day, but our phone is not on all the time. If you need to get a hold of us, please send us an email or call our phone and leave a message. All our phone messages go straight to email. We would love to hear from you. Again, let us know if you have any questions and if you want any particular pictures.


Jessica

Argentina Update - December 2007 - Part I: Our Camp

Argentina Update –December 2007 – Part I: Our Camp

Hello to everyone. With this update, I want to give you all a photo tour. I am trying to assemble some pictures so this will be a several part update for easier downloading. To start, I know that you all are interested in how we are living here so the first part of the tour will be pictures of our camp.

This is the entrance to our camp. Abby saw that one of our neighbors had a sign that said, “No Pasar” (no passing) so she made one for our property too, writing the words with a leaf on some scrap wood.


We are all sleeping in the same tent now. Pop bought us a ten person tent to camp in a while back and Dane was able to fit our double bed, a bunk bed, and a baby bed into it so that we don’t have to sleep on the ground. It is really nice being all together in the same sleeping area. The small children often wake in the night and need help going to the bathroom, so it is a lot easier this way. In front of the tent you can see the concrete that Dane, Javier, and Andres just poured last week.

This is an inside view of the tent. Dane, the baby, and I sleep in the double bed. Elijah and David sleep on the bottom of the bunk bed and Abby and Sarah sleep on the top bunk. Elisabeth sleeps in the baby bed because she is still small enough to do so. The baby bed is on the other side of the bunk bed.



This picture is of our showering area underneath the water tower. Dane surrounded the bottom of the water tower with plastic so that we would have an area to clean up.


This is a picture of our outhouse. It is just an outhouse, although, a special one, because it accommodates very tall people and has a toilet that we can flush with hauled water.



This is the inside of the outhouse.



This is a picture of our garden. It is nice and large and is shaded so that we can grow vegetables year round.


This picture is inside our kitchen tent. Looks just like a regular kitchen – almost – huh? In this tent we have three tables: one for Dane’s office and the other two for preparing food and for gathering to eat.



This is a picture of our hen house and chicken yard.

This is the inside of the chicken house. It has fourteen nest boxes and can accommodate many more chickens than we have.


Well that is the end to the tour of our campsite. Write us if you have any questions or if you would like any other pictures. I will be sending out a couple more updates with more pictures soon. Take care and hope to talk to you soon.


Jessica