
Wednesday, March 29, 2006
Monday, March 20, 2006
Tea Time in Gaborone

Tea Time
On Sunday afternoon I hosted an FM ladies tea at our place.

Jeff was so helpful in helping me set up but decided that when the back garden was full of ladies he should make himself scarce. I was so glad because nearly all the FM ladies managed to come and it was nice and cloudy but no rain. I had just talked to my sister on the phone the day before and she gave me a great idea for a game. You write down three truths about yourself and one lie and then the group has to guess who wrote the card and then which one is the lie. We also had a chance to pray for three of our FM ladies who are getting ready to leave. One, Carrie, was here with her husband as a shortermer and they leave on Sat. to return to the states. Teresa, wife and mother of four and a homeschooler, is leaving for furlough on the 10th of April (states), and Diane, wife and mother of two and one on the way will be leaving on April the 19th. Their situation is slightly more complicated. They are moving up to Zambia where Bryan will be ops manager but first they go to England, Bryan will be in the states for a little while doing PR and development, then he will come back to Botswana and ship their stuff up to Zambia and then (remember she is still prego through it all) she and the kids will join him in Zambia. Yikes.

Jeff was so helpful in helping me set up but decided that when the back garden was full of ladies he should make himself scarce. I was so glad because nearly all the FM ladies managed to come and it was nice and cloudy but no rain. I had just talked to my sister on the phone the day before and she gave me a great idea for a game. You write down three truths about yourself and one lie and then the group has to guess who wrote the card and then which one is the lie. We also had a chance to pray for three of our FM ladies who are getting ready to leave. One, Carrie, was here with her husband as a shortermer and they leave on Sat. to return to the states. Teresa, wife and mother of four and a homeschooler, is leaving for furlough on the 10th of April (states), and Diane, wife and mother of two and one on the way will be leaving on April the 19th. Their situation is slightly more complicated. They are moving up to Zambia where Bryan will be ops manager but first they go to England, Bryan will be in the states for a little while doing PR and development, then he will come back to Botswana and ship their stuff up to Zambia and then (remember she is still prego through it all) she and the kids will join him in Zambia. Yikes.
I was also nice to be able to use some of the lovely designer tea plates and napkins that the team brought over from the states and to use the tea set that they bought me as a present. Plus my mom-in-law's prayer group set me up with some great stuff as well.
I think all of us ladies really just needed to have some fun together and really this may be the last time that some of us are together. But that's life in Gabs, it's just one big bus stop, gotta make the most of it while you can.






P.O. Box 1022
Gaborone,
Botswana
Africa
Gaborone,
Botswana
Africa
http://www.flyingmission.botsnet.co.bw/news.htm
http://jeffandmichele.blogspot.com
Thursday, March 16, 2006
Botswana Bits March 15th 2006

Drama
I don't know if any of you have read that book "The Sacred Romance", well I read it a couple of years ago but one of the illustrations that Eldridge talks about really stuck with me and I've always wanted to write up a skit or drama to share it with others. He talks about "arrows" that we get in life and the "messages" that they bring. He gives a personal example of when he was a young boy and always chosen last for the team, he got and arrow and the message with it was that he would never go out for sports again, in fact he didn't like sports (which wasn't the truth but if you've got an arrow sticking out of you then you will do anything to make sure no one jiggles it around). Imagine if you had a arrow sticking out of the side of you arm, every time you walked through a door you would have to enter sideways, maybe it's been there some time and now you just think that is the way you were made, that it's your "personality". Or imagine going to pull out an arrow that had been imbedded for some time and now the skin is all grown up around it, how painful is that to pull out, would you bleed to death, is it worth it. Well, with these thoughts in mind I wrote up a drama and approached some folks at church to be in it. It all sounds great but I'm just coming to grips with the fact that now I'm the director and the drama is in four weeks, we still need more choir members, another angel, and a curtain to be put up in the church. Yikes!! Anyway, the drama is a young married couple, he has an arrow sticking out of his eye, and she has one sticking out of her heart. They have a blow up fight at the beginning. They leave each other in frustration. They pray and meet up with Jesus who shows them their arrows and then they go to "hospital" (but they are in separate rooms) with Jesus and through prayer pull the arrows out and he bandages them. They lament at how painful it is but after some time the bandages are removed and they've been "healed". Then in the last scene they see one another again, the man now being able to "see" and the woman now be able to "love". It's kind of hard to explain but I think it could be really great or a huge disaster, so please pray that is can be a blessing to the church and not kaos. I really really want people to be encouraged that Jesus knows about our arrows, he loves us even with them in, and that he won't let us bleed to death when we pull them out and that it is totally worth it. We Christians have to face these arrows, they are not part of the image of God. We are planning on doing the drama on the 9th.

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Hangar news
Jeff is pretty much by himself this week. Bryan is doing one last trip to Zambia (they are going on furlough in April and then moving up there in Sept) so this is the last chance to do some house hunting and stuff before he goes. Ken (whose in charge of the maintenance school) is back and has agreed to come onto the shop floor to help Jeff with maintenance. THe students are still around but they still need quite a bit of supervision. Larry is preparing for furlough so he's no longer at work. Luckily the shop isn't extremely busy at the moment, PTL. Later this month Bob Patterson and his wife arrive, Bob and Mark Spicer will be taking over running FM in Botswana. I think Bob will be doing mostly administration, but he hopes to start early April and Jeff and Bryan will have a chance to start orientating him. Mark (who worked at FM before) is coming in early June, but we think he will be here a week in March as well. This is the "bridge" month. Just holding things together as all these other things and people fall into place.

________________________________
c/o Flying Mission
P.O. Box 1022
Gaborone,
Botswana
Africa royces@flyingmission.org.bw
http://www.flyingmission.botsnet.co.bw/news.htm
http://jeffandmichele.blogspot.com
We'd love to hear from y'all so give us a shout if you time. Thanks for keeping up with us and what's going on "this side". We really appreciate it.
love,
Jeff and Michele Royce
c/o Flying Mission
P.O. Box 1022
Gaborone,
Botswana
Africa
http://www.flyingmission.botsnet.co.bw/news.htm
http://jeffandmichele.blogspot.com
Monday, March 06, 2006
Botswana Bits - ZAMBIA EDITION
Just to say that Jeff's trip went really well. He was able to fly with Joel, Marcus, and Rick and get them pretty much up to date as far as their Botswana Licenses are concerned. He was also able to have a meeting with the guys and talk about safety issues, stresses and stuff like that.

Joel and Sue Bolthouse where the first FM family to go there, the whole plot needed a lot of TLC (and it's a BIG place) it was pretty run down (actually Roger and Sally Green from the U.K. went up to the farm first to do repairs) . Then Rick, a single guy from Canada joined them and now Marcus and Evelyn and family from Germany (worked for FM in Botswana for several years as well) have taken up residence in the "pilot house" which is a fixer uper. They have reconstructed the one end of the house and now they are working on the other end.

Jeff was able to help Joel with some maintenance on a couple of the planes as well as some maintenance on the house (i.e.) they put up a ceiling fan and a few other bits and bobs.
Jeff and Joel flew to Chitokoloki, which is out in the Northwest part of the country. There is a mission hospital out there. They would like FM to have a regular scheduled flight from there to Lusaka once a week (I think) at least. Everything official happens in Lusaka and it's quite a drive coming from the NW corner into the middle of the country where Lusaka is. Chitokoloki is rather remote, their electricity is produced by generators at certain times of the day. They are not "on the grid" as they say (not connected to the power utilities) Jeff showed me a picture of one family's solution to the hot water challenge. They had a cast iron wood stove that they built a fire in every morning and they had it connected to a large water tank and the stove would keep the water tank hot for the rest of the day. The folks out in Chitokoloki would really like to have an FM pilot based out there full time (sometimes medical flights, and flights for meetings, and getting people in and out of there from Lusaka,..). It's was funny, they actually have some quads out there and instead of driving around in trucks they just use those mainly to get from home to the hospital and around the mission station.

Repair job.

As Jeff and Joel were preparing to go back to Lusaka or maybe it was Mukinge (another mission statoin with a hospital) they got a strange request from the folks at Chitokoloki. They asked them if they could try to find a large double trailer overlander truck that had broke down on the way (The truck is quite heavy duty to make such a trek), they wanted Jeff and Joel to drop a fan belt down to the guy so that he could replace the broken one and carry on with his journey. They found the truck and circled above it's position and threw the belt out the window and the guy found it and waved and then they carred on back to Lusaka. Jeff said that he had never thrown anything out of the plane before, of course we were all reminded of that old movie "The gods must be crazy."
I know Jeff went to Mukinge to do some flying with Rick but I can't remember the chronilogical order. Mukinge is also a hospital/mission station run by SIM missionaries, in a rural setting. Rick has been based there for awhile, in fact he just moved up there like three weeks ago.

On his way back to Botswana Jeff stopped in another village called Macha (to learn more about what's happening there check out Gil and Rhonda's website, www.somacha.com) . Macha hosts a malaria research hospital and they also do work with HIV/AIDS (every hospital helps with that). There is a man from Norway, whose wife is working at the hospital, he (name is Geritjan) has used his time to help the community develop communication links via satillite. The more a person can accomplish in their home village the less they have to make the long, expensive, arduous trips into Lusaka (not to mention be away from home and family, which would decrease the spread of certain disease...) so he has been working on developmening projects like the internet cafe, a little coffee shop/restaurant, a place to sell local crafts like baskets and pottery. Gil and Rhonda, a for mentioned, have went up to help start a school (they had been working at a Christian school in Gaborone for the past 7 years, they are wonderful Christian people). Gertijan would love to have a pilot based there full time because he makes several trips into Lusaka a week and he has been using FM extensively. He is a visionary type of guy, he was so excited about being able to use the plane that he got several of the Zambians together and they just started slashing and digging out a run way 1000 meters long. He would love to see this type of project duplicated all over the country so that the rural areas can be helped. All the projects mentioned are Christian based a great place an opportunity to share the gospel.
Zambia is a very poor country but the people there seem to be hard working and creative and we can see that God is opening so many doors into that country, we really think that things are on the up and up and God is doing great things. I have some Zambian friends here in Gabs and it's exciting to hear the hope and joy in there voices as they talk about the changes happening in Zambia. So we are just excited that FM can be a part of that Kingdom building work. We just want to help and support that in anyway we can. We would value your prayers for the missionaries there and for the local Christians, Zambia IS on the up and up but it's STILL difficult to live there, just physically it's much harder (meeting your everyday needs take sooooo much more time and effort) and getting any paper work down take what seems like forever (sorry the guy that has that stamp is on holiday or at a funeral, come back next week....). So please pray that the Love of Jesus would be so full in our and their hearts that these troubles would pale in comparison.

Hope you enjoyed the Zambia edition. Check out the blogsite www.jeffandmichele.blogspot.com to view more pictures.
Jeff and I are still not sure where God is leading us, but we know He will let us know in his time. Thank you so much to all of you who have been praying for us over these uncertain times. It means so much to us and we know God will be faithful to your prayers.
Love,
Jeff and Michele
Jeff and Michele Royce
c/o Flying Mission
P.O. Box 1022
Gaborone,
Botswana
Africa
c/o Flying Mission
P.O. Box 1022
Gaborone,
Botswana
Africa
http://www.flyingmission.botsnet.co.bw/news.htm
http://jeffandmichele.blogspot.com