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Klay Bartee "nuff-said."
This is Jay Starkey visiting with an imigration official that drove from Livingstone to be a part of the clinic at Makoli.
We set up our clinic at Makoli today, and for the first time in Zambia Medical Mission history set up within sight of a tar-road. We chose the site for several reasons, but we were not sure what to expect. The crowds were consistent, but not overwhelming and we were actually able to close registration early and start back to the mission. This was a great relief to many who anticipated a late night tonight packing to come home.
We are returned from Chileshi and we have eaten dinner and we are ONE TIRED GROUP. We are ready to get back to our host-family-homes and get cleaned up, only to start again in the morning at 5:30am.
Dick Flow and Dominique Moonga work together to put together the shelves that hold the hundreds of pair of glasses for the optical clinic.
You can have cell service at Chileshi as long as you are willing to climb high enough. This is Donald, a Namwianga Driver and a commercial lorry driver making a call for Eleanor.
We are at Chileshe, or as it is sometimes called, "RR" because it is near the railroad tracks. This is a significantly less remote area, and it is part of the way back to the mission place from where we camped for three days. We got off by 6:40 this morning. Our goal was 6:30 and we did great
We are into our second day of clinics at Singwamba. The closest outpost with a nurse is 50 kilometers away. Last night a group of women came and asked the team if they might help provide a permanent clinic here. They have hand crafted over 200,000 bricks and crushed stones into gravel in
My sincerest apologies. We have been out of touch for several days, and I had no real way to see it myself. Operating with only a satellite phone in a place with no electricity, and usually working in the middle-of-the-night on US-Time means our communication is sparse at best.
Welcome to Monday. We have been awake since about 5am (10pm Saturday in the central U.S.). We moved our clinic to a place called Kapaule. (Pronounced ka-pole) and it means "The Pole." It is on a major dirt road and very near a large fire-watch-tower which is called "The pole.
Zambia Medical Mission has a rhythm and a balance, and we did not find either of them until mid-day today, but now that we have found them, we are ready to fully achieve what we came to do.
We experienced an emergency last night. Johnny Robinson either suffered a siezure and fell and hit his head on the side of a truck, or as a result of hitting his head on the truck suffered a siezure.
We are having problems sending email, which is our method for posting to this blog. As soon as we have the email problem resolved, we'll post several updates.
The medical team all arrived on their designated flights today. The group
The weather is cold and getting colder and most of our team is headed to the airport. We are in a frenzy with last minute details getting ready for their arrival. A vehicle has a broken spring, another is missing a starter. We are loading a several thousand pounds of food into our trailer for our travel to the village.
How many medical-missionaries does it take to build a loft? Well at least three. Klay Bartee takes on the hard work, I pose for the picture, and Josh Massingill waits to hand Klay more screws. While the main team is here, we spend as many nights in tents as we do indoors, but before they arrive we cram several people into a few small indoor spaces. This loft, above the doorway in one room creates an additional sleeping space.