Thursday, 30 April 2015

Smoke That Thunders

On Monday we were able to hire a car and go with a local family (mum and 3 children) to Livingstone to see the Victoria Falls.  This family had never been before and it was a thrill for us to see their reaction to so much water.  We had previously asked Charles, 12, what was the biggest piece of water he had seen.  It was a pool less than the size of a football pitch.  The Zambezi rendered him speechless!
 

Victoria Falls in the local language (Nyanja) is Mosi-oa-Tunya, which translates as The Smoke That Thunders.  From above the falls you can see a huge cloud of spray rising up like smoke, and the noise is thunder.  We could see this column of cloud as we approached Livingstone, from about 4 miles away.  Mosi-oa-Tunya is also the name for Livingstone itself.  In Chitonga, the language here that we are trying to learn, it is Manziahuma, which means Water and Thunder.

The water level is at its peak at the moment (it reaches a maximum flow rate of 30003/second going over the falls.  We got very wet and the visibility was dramatic, some might say poor!
Count the legs - 3 children, one coat!



 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Afterwards we sat above the falls to dry out and eat a picnic, and for the children to play in the water.




 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

At the end of the afternoon we drove by the river to see what we could see.  Quite a variety of creatures as you can see.





 

There was a lot of sleeping in the car on the way home.

Friday, 24 April 2015

Thank you...

A big thank you to St Michael's Church and St Mair's Church Aberystwyth for the generous funding that they have sent towards the teachers' back pay.

Creepies and Crawlies and Tiny Wee Beasties

Frog on the shower room wall

Gecko in the bed room

Ants crossing the road.  These are BIG and if they bit it REALLY REALLY hurts!

Hawkmoth outside the door

The hairiest caterpillar you ever did see

Friday, 17 April 2015

Two sunsets and a rainbow




Out and about


We went into the bush with a couple of American missionaries and spent 3 nights sleeping in a tent pitched under a pole barn with half a thatched roof. 
The accommodation


Lighting the fire for hot water
 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
After due consideration, this route was NOT chosen
 
 
 
The journey took 6 hours on some very bad roads.  We were grateful for a good British Landrover and an experienced driver!
 
 
 
 
 

We spent part of the day clearing the ground ready around the accommodation, ready for the season’s work to begin in the village, and part of the day walking around and looking at birds.  It was lovely to do something different and spend some time with Jim and Rachel, seeing the work they were doing in the village and the surrounding area.  This is building up the local church and supporting local evangelistic outreaches to the surrounding villages, church planting and discipling new believers.
Slash and burn

Tents on the left, cooking on the right.  Fortunately there was very little rain.

Rachel catering for us
 

The bush
Cotton - who'd have thought it?

 
Sausage tree - yes really!
 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 We also went with the pastor and his wife to her village and joined the Sunday service at the church where they began their ministry.
 

It all started under this tree preaching to 5.  By the time they left, the congregation was 120.  He would go to the surrounding villages on his bike and say ‘I have news for you, do you want to hear it…?’  Of course, who doesn’t want to hear news?  So he would tell them, God loves you, you have gone far away from Him and He wants you back.  Jesus has made that possible.

 










The interior of the current church building

Monday, 13 April 2015

Teaching English at home

Amos reading with Patrick

Bridget and the afternoon class grappling with the present tense