Tuesday, October 25, 2011

WALLS ARE BEING RAISED

Received this email today with pics from David Kayando, JVP Lead Champion and Medical Dispensary Administrator:

"I pray this day may God give you his grace sufficient enough to take you through the activites of the day.  Please see attached some pictures of the dispensary expansion, which is going on at a very good pace. The building of the walls are up and with the use of the Eco Tech blocks, it goes much faster.

I presume by the end of the year the building will be fully complete and will only wait furnishings with the equipments.  This is coming out smart and a great encouragement to me and the entire community."

Poured Foundation

Progress!!!

Local Masons At Work

EcoTech Interlocking Bricks Made With No Firing

Future Laboratory

Wednesday, October 19, 2011

FOUNDATIONS FOR THE FUTURE BEING LAYED

This week we received an update from David Kayando, Kager Dispensary Administrator, the following update on clinic expansion:

"The clinc expansion work is currently going on.  They have now started building the foundation after which they will fill the base fully.  The men are continuing to make the stock of EcoTech Bricks which we will soon use for the construction of the walls.  I have taken the following pictures so you can see and share the progress with all the Climb and JVP supporters."





Friday, October 14, 2011

WHAT ZACH TAUGHT ME ABOUT SPIRITUAL LEADERSHIP

One of the great things about being in the mountains for five days is you have a lot of time just to think about life and meditate on spiritual matters – all of which helps bring clarity in my own life.  I also had the opportunity to observe my Mt. Kenya climbing guide, Zach Maina.  Zach is a pretty humble and unassuming young Kenyan man, but watching him for five days was a learning experience in itself.

Zach at Nithi Falls
During those five days, I saw a lot of parallels between being a mountain guide and also being a spiritual leader.  Here are some of the things I observed:

·         They know the terrain and watch the changing conditions – it was interesting to see that even when there wasn’t a path, Zach knew how to read the terrain to get us where we needed to go.  I also noticed he looked up at the clouds a lot and was always on the watch for a change in the weather…spiritual leaders need to be on the lookout at all times, for both opportunities and opposition.

·         They know their climbers – over the course of five days, Zach figured out what I could and couldn’t do, both physically and mentally.  He took the time to get to know me not just as a climber, but also as a person…spiritual leaders need to treat a person individually and personally, not just one of many numbers.

·         They have a climb plan, but are willing to change it – on the third day of our climb, Zach made a change to our established climb plan.  We arrived at our set camp 2 hours early, and he pushed us on to climb another 3 hours and 1,000 feet.  By doing this, he made the summit the next day that much easier and doable…spiritual leaders need to have a plan for where they are going, but they need to be willing to change it if opportunity or obstacles arise.

·         They know how to set the pace for others – I know Zach could have climbed the mountain a lot faster than we did, but he set our pace each day for me.  He knew when we needed to slow down (pole, pole – slow, slow) to not get nailed by the altitude and when he needed to push me to speed up (twende – come on)…spiritual leaders need to be more concerned about those they are leading and set their pace for the people they are leading, not themselves.

·         They aren’t afraid to go off the beaten path – one of the favorite parts of my climb was when Zach took us “off road” for about one hour to go see Nithi Falls, a two-tiered fall of about 100 feet that reminded me of Kauai.  Most people climbing Mt. Kenya don’t get to see these falls because it takes a little extra time and is a little treacherous…spiritual leaders need to be willing to break away from the pack and explore where others may not go.

·         They emphasize the climb, not the destination – one thing Zach never did was tell me how far we had to go in either time, distance or altitude.  He kept me focused on the paths we were on and what we had ahead of us and it really helped me enjoy what I was doing at the moment and not worry about what was ahead…spiritual leaders need to understand the power of “being present in the moment” and not talk only about the things to come and the mountaintop experiences, but talk more about the here-and-now and daily life.

·         They come back to the mountain with more climbers – Zach shared with me that I was about his 150th climber and he anticipated there would be many more after me.  He makes a living not climbing Mt. Kenya, but guiding others to climb Mt. Kenya…spiritual leaders need to keep discipling others their entire lives and not be satisfied with their own mountaintop experiences or having just disciple a few people

It truly was a powerful experience to climb Mt. Kenya, but I was equally pleased with the way God spoke to me during my time there with Him.  The people of the Kikuyu tribe believe that Mogai (God) lives on Kere-Nyaga (Mt. Kenya) and he talked with their ancestral tribal leader on the mountain many, many centuries ago.  I think I heard from Mogai on my climb, too.

Wednesday, October 12, 2011

WHY I CLIMBED -- THE MEDICAL CLINIC EXPANSION

So after the climb to the top of Mt. Kenya and my return to Nairobi, I met up with my two Hoosier buddies, Keith O'Dell and Al Lay.  We then flew to Kisumu and then travelled to the village of Kager in the Homa Bay District.

It was the eighth time a team from Indiana of the Jubilee Village Project had been to Kager -- and in the three years of these visits -- the village really has started to transfrom.  During our week in the village, we conducted six different vision and goal setting workshops with villagers.  We also introduced 4 "innovation projects": SODIS (solar water disingection), solar bottle light bulbs, solar tire cookers and aquaponics.

The Expansion (Next to Existing Dispensary)
On Thursday (9/22), we met with the newly formed Village Health Committee, made up of 3 staff from the clinic and 12 community representatives from Kager and surrounding villages.  It was on that day that we had a groundbreaking ceremony for the Kager Medical Clinic expansion -- the sole purpose of the Climb To End Poverty.

I was honored to join Mr. Michael Anayo Oyudo, Chairman of the Health Committee, to lift our traditional African hoes and break the hard rocky ground of Kager for the new foundations of the expansion.  It truly was "a dream come true" to know that because of the many faithful sponsors back in the USA, the clinic expansion we were breaking ground for was already funded and was certain to be completed.

Ned and Michael Oyudo



When finished, the Clinic is planned to look like the following plans:





Thursday, October 6, 2011

FAVORITE FIVE PICS OF THE CLIMB

So the memories of the Climb are so incredible.  But I learned in my study of architecture that "constraint causes creativity"...so here are my five favorite pictures from my time on Mt. Kenya:


#1 - This is my favorite -- it captures the essence, the beauty, the majesty,
the enormity and the farawayness of Mt. Kenya.  I took this picture with
my Blackberry, but the colors and sharpness are awesome.
Vivienne Falls



#2 - Battian at sunrise from my summit of Pt. Lenana
I love the colors of the rocks and clouds,
the darkness and cold of the shadows,
and the light of the white snow and white moon


#3 - well I couldn't not have one of Zach and I at Summit



#4 - this was climbing back down from Summit to Base Camp.
The yellow tents below are like wildflower growing out of the Mt.Kenya rocks.
It also captures both the rawness and the grade of what days 3 and 4 of the Climb.



#5 - my Climb Team!
Naftaly (cook), Zach (guide), me
Josephat (porter)
We all have our Climb "uniform hats" on


Sunday, October 2, 2011

DAY 5 (9/16) – THE FINAL LEG

I bedded down at 10 pm last night and, even over the chatter of the French climbing group next door, fell fast asleep.  I woke at 6:30 after what was no doubt my best sleep of the Climb.

The road out from Old Moses
 Having my last breakfast of tea, passion fruits, pineapple and toast was a little bittersweet, but the thought of a hot shower and a cold Coca Cola awaiting me in Nairobi got me going.  The last trek from Old Moses to Sirimon Park Gate was really a cake walk.  Wide trails and gentle downhill was a relief from the monster trek the day before. 

Crossing the Equator
About two hours in Zach stopped and had me stand on a pile of toppled carved stones on the side of the road and announced, “You’re standing on the Equator.”  He went on to explain the geographic milestone used to be bigger and erect, but had been torn down by the elephants…I guess when you live at the Equator it really isn’t that big of deal.



Naftaly, Zach, Ned and Josephat at the Sirimon Gate
It was about noon when we arrived at Sirimon Gate and there were both teams coming and going from there.  I was really so thankful for my Climb team and we took a team pic in our logoed stocking caps with earflaps.  I got a real kick when they told me all the other porters had asked them where they had gotten their “corporate uniform.”  I also shared with them their porter tips for the week and they were real appreciative of it.

Leaving the Park, Mt. Kenya in background
So the final Climb tally was as follows:

·         Day 1 – 15 km – Montane Forest to Meru Mt. Kenya Bandas (2,800 m)
·         Day 2 – 7 km – Bandas to The Nithi Gates (3.200 m)
·         Day 3 – 21 km – Nithi Gates to Upper Simba Tarn (4,500 m)
·         Day 4 – 19 km – Simba Tarn to Pt. Lenana (4,985 m) to Old Moses Camp (3,300 m)
·         Day 5 – 9 km – Old Moses (Judmaier) Camp to Sirimon Park Gate (2,660 m)

A grand total of about 75 kilometers or about 47 miles in five days – not bad for a middle-aged, slightly overweight American that had never climbed anything close to being a mountain.

I really can’t say enough about the beauty of the Mt. Kenya National Park – the diversity, the weather, the flora and fauna – I truly was blessed with a great time with my Creator (and 3 new Kenyan friends).