James and Ashley had a great trip to Guatemala. The little girls, Briana,
and I had a nice time while they were away, too. We went swimming a
couple of times, went on a picnic and hike one day, went to some yard
sales, had a campfire one night, and went out on the lake a couple of
times. Briana is still at my parents' house at musical
theatre/acting/dance camp--a 2 week long, all day camp at their local
playhouse. We will go see her performances on Friday.
Even though I didn't get to go to Guatemala personally, I live it through my husband and daughter,
and in my heart. So I wanted to share a few pictures with you. It was
so hard to choose. If I thought I wouldn't bore you death, I would
have posted tons more, especially of all the sweet little children's
faces.
Ashley wrote a great report on the trip. Go HERE to read it. If you're short on time, the mission part of the trip starts on Saturday.
The first 4 pictures are in Antigua. The others are in villages about 4 hours north of Guatemala City.
Volcano seen from Antigua
Yes, that is a SMOKING volcano.
Woman in Antigua using a traditional backstrap loom.
The cottages James and some others stayed in.
Ashley with some of the children.
VBS
Line for the dental clinic
New church that James and the other men were finishing
Binoculars made in VBS
Banana tree
Ashley with the area missionary. He took all the ladies for a spin.
A Guatemalan cemetery
Look at all of the houses on the side of that hill. They are very poor houses--dirt floors, tin or thatched roofs...
They had been to the market in Antigua and
one in a village called Tactic. They told them they were going to go
to a market in nearby Coban. This is where they ended up. Some market,
huh? Guatemala is one of the ultimate pictures of extremes. This is
only about 40 min. from where they were working.
They took a hike to a waterfall.
Blowing bubbles
This is my husband's hand. He was
surrounded by children during the services. One little girl sat in his
lap during one entire church service. Ashley speaks enough Spanish to
communicate decently with the children, and 2 or 3 others on the trip
speak Spanish, and they had translators, but you find out very quickly
that love and friendship can be communicated in many ways--playing ball,
blowing bubbles, hugs, tickles, smiles, and holding hands. Ashley
talks more about this, especially related to the church on her blog.
Stop by for a couple of minutes and read about the trip.
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