Friday, May 31, 2013

Visiting Temple Square

 
Ella Mae
                                                   
                                                    Faith

Mimi Judy and Zach
Papa and Jaxon

Wednesday, April 3, 2013

WELCOME HOME! March 23, 2013

 Here are several of our grandkids waiting for us to arrive.  We were a half hour late arriving.

 As soon as we got down the escalator, the kids ran up to greet us. Notice 4 year old, Kirtland Judy waiting patiently to see Mimi Judy.

 Judy and her 95 year old father, Sherm Gowans.

 This must be what heaven is like when we are reunited with our dear ones.

 Judy and T having a good laugh.

The kids made this big banner and put it on our front porch.  So, we took it down and hung it in our kitchen!

Friday, March 15, 2013

Our Trainers, the Kimballs, return to Liberia

 Waiting for the Kimballs to arrive at Roberts International airport.  I usually get a shoe shine when we pick up people from the airport.

It's deja vu all over again! We surprised Elder and Sister Kimball that we were the ones who picked them up at the airport.  They are now humanitarian missionaries who do short term service - staying several weeks in a country to train and help local priesthood leaders and the full time humanitarian service missionaries serving in the country.

Dinner with great people at Donna Marie's Restaurant!  l to r, the Miles - humanitarian service missionaries serving in Liberia, the Kimballs, the Hezseltines - replacing us a senior missionaries in Liberia, Sista Kirkham

Saturday, March 9, 2013

Tour of Firestone Rubber Tree Plantation

We arranged with the Director of Public Affairs at the Firstone rubber tree plantation for our senior missionaries to get a tour of their operation.  We went to their headquarters which is near the airport and near the Harbel mission branch.  There are over 119,000 acres of rubber trees in this plantation.  Firestone started in Liberia in 1926.  In 2008, Firestone negotiated a "concessionary agreement" with the Liberian government allowing them to operate through 2041.

Firestone provides 27 schools for 16,000 children of Firestone employees at no cost.  Firestone hospital (the best hospital in Liberia, we've been told by American doctors) treats 9,000 patients/month.  They provide homes for employees.  They've rennovated 2,000 homes since "the cessation of hostitilites" in 2003 when the Liberian civil war ended.

The Nursery is the nucleus of the Rubber Tree plantation

 Firestone employs 7,000 "teammates", as they call their employees, who harvest, process rubber and work in the nursery.  They showed us how they do grafting.  A grafter (the person doing grafting) must have a 90-95% success rate to remain a grafter.  This means that 90-95 % of the grafts they do must grow and be healthy.

Here you see a small, green piece of bark being grafted into another tree.  The reason they graft is to produce trees with particular strengths.  Each graft is of known "parentage."  A piece of bark is cut open allowing the graft to be placed on the tree.

 The graft is then wrapped to protect it.  They use grafts to produce trees that are wind resistant, high yielding, disease resistant, etc.  They need trees with different strengths depending on the environment where they will be planted.  They wait 21 days to see if the graft is successful.

Once the graft is in place, the original sapling is cut off to force all the strengths of the roots to go to the graft.  Firestone replants 3,500 acres per year with new trees.  They told us that before the recent civil war, they used to replant 1,000 acres per year.  However, due to the devastation of the war, they have been replanting 3,500 acres per year for several years.

Suddenly, a storm came up

 A very unexpected storm came up.  It's the dry season...except today.

 The wind started to blow.

And blow...

Thursday, March 7, 2013

Tapping Rubber Trees

Tapping rubber trees is called "controlled wounding."  A tree is tapped for six years and then they let it rest for six years.  Rubber trees produce for 30 years.  The rubber tree plantation has three products: (1) latex, (2) block rubber from which tires are made, (3) wood from the rubber trees.

Every morning, a 1/16 inch cut is made into the tree to start the latex flowing.

 The white line on the tree is latex which immediately started flowing.

You can see the latex dripping into the cup attached to the tree.  Workers come around and collect from each of the cups. 

Wednesday, March 6, 2013

The Final Product of the Rubber Trees

 Here's the cup attached to the tree filling with the latex sap.

 The cups of latex are then collected in buckets and the latex pour into these containers.

The latex that is left in the cups after pouring out, coagulates and then is collected in the clumps.  These clumps are what tires are made from.  There are sprayed pink to identify them as from Firestone so people don't steal the clumps and try to sell them.

Monday, March 4, 2013

Goat Washing

We cross this bridge all the time.  Elder Hezseltine was driving and noticed the goat washing.  He handed me his camera and I took this picture.  It also shows the canoe just pulling in by the goats being washed.

This is another picture snapped seconds later showing the goats being washed.

Sunday, March 3, 2013

Caldwell Bridge backup

To get to Caldwell where there are three branches and 8 missionaries, we have to go over a 1-way bridge.  You can't see the other end of the bridge from either side. So, sometimes, like this day, a car will start across the bridge and another car has also started across the bridge coming right at you.  The complication is there are usually several cars in a line going across the bridge.  Getting two lines of cars facing each other requires coordinated backing up from one of the lines of cars.  Deciding who will do the backing up sometimes leads to stalemate, like today.  So, we went away and came back a half hour later and it was sorted out.

Sunday, January 27, 2013

Bushrod Island, January Zone Conference with Elder & Sister Curtis

 Elder and Sister Curtis came with Pres. & Sister Roggia for our zone conference.  Elder Curtis is second counselor is the West Africa Area Presidency.

 Elder Elliott, meeting Elder & Sister Curtis.  Elder Elliott came on mission to Liberia in December.  He is from Hannibal, Missouri.

 Here we have Elders Connor, Smith, Molahatsa and Elliott.  This picture was taken in December.

  The tall and the short of it. Elder Hill learning from Sister Kirkham.


The back and front of it.  Below: Elders Skouson, Kouao,Okunrobo, and Andersen going back to their areas after Zone Conference.


Transformation in Monrovia


These two pictures show the transformation that is taking place in Monrovia.  These pictures are of Caldwell road - showing the significantly improved road, cement curb and gutter, drainage system, cement sidewalks,  and solar powered street lights.


Farewell Lunch for Elder Buckman and Elder & Sister Smith, the first service missionaries to serve in Liberia

 Sista's Krumm, Miles, Roggia & Kirkham prepare a farewell lunch for Elder Buckman going home and Elder & Sister Smith finishing their service mission.

l to r: Elder Buckman, Pres. Roggia, Elder & Sister Smith.  The Smith served for two years as local service missionaries.  In his interview releasing Elder Smith as a service missionary, he then called brother Smith to be Branch President of the Upper Caldwell branch.  So Pres. Smith, literally, had a few seconds to rest from being a service missionary before receiving another important calling. 

Saturday, January 26, 2013

Visiting Kakata with Elder & Sister Miles

 Elder & Sister Miles have humanitarian projects they oversee in Kakata.  We went with them one day to check out a possible apartment for missionaries.  These are some of the kids at a community latrine project near Kakata.

 Elder Miles teaches the kids how to "give me 5!"

 Pres. Harmon, Kakata branch president, showed us the house he has been trying to build for his family for several years.

Sister Kirkham and Sister Miles are in Pres. Harmon's son, Christian's "store."  He made the store out of bamboo.

Visiting Pres. Harmon's Village

Pres. Harmon of Kakata branch took us to the village where his parents live.  Pres. Harmon is on the left next to his mother and father and some neighbor children.

A few of the houses in this village had these hand prints painted on the side of their walls for decoration.

These are a few of the children in the village.  NOTICE the Salt Lake Bees T-shirt the boy is wearing.

Christmas morning pondering

Pres. Roggia: "Hmmm. Well, it is Christmas morning, but I don't think it's really Santa."