Monday, August 24, 2009

NEW BLOG

Hey everyone! I have started a new blog to follow my life in Atlanta and at seminary. It's: http://nobridgejustwater.blogspot.com

PEACE

Thursday, June 25, 2009

The last posting of "RyanInAfrica"

Well, this is it. My last post. Its long over due, seeing how I've been back in the US for a month now-- but I wanted to just fill everybody in on my last month in Africa, traveling around, and and whats happening in my life now. There is a chance that no-one is following this anymore, since I'm home, but just in case, here it is!

So, my final 3 weeks in Africa were spent traveling into and through 4 other African countries and exploring the eastern coast of SA with Jeremy and Danielle. We started our journey in Nairobi, Kenya visiting Sam and Melody Harrell. The Harrell's are missionaries there in Nairobi who our church in Dalton has worked with. Jeremy and I spent 5 days with Sam and 3 other American guys visiting several of the locations where Sam works. Danielle spent that week with ACTS Kenya. During those 5 days with Sam, we visited several villages, one only accessible by crossing a river on foot, some as far as 9 hours NW from Nairobi where we started. We actually spent a day hiking one of the mountains with the goal of finding a usable water source for one of those villages, which was incredible. We got to see the schools and agriculture/water projects that Sam has been working on and put in a huge swing-set for one of the schools. Kenya certainly was the "real Africa" we kept hearing about while in Cape Town from all the people there who don't consider South Africa much of the "real Africa". For sure there were some major differences--more rural and widespread, more of the African bush and wildlife. But then, of course, there where plenty of similarities to the areas in CT where we worked--lots of poverty and need, but still that overwhelming since of genuine nature and joy in the people we met. It was a blessing to be able to experience Kenya and see and do what we did. Traveling back and forth across the Great Rift Valley, wading across rivers, hiking mountainsides and working in remote villages were all experiences that I will certainly keep with me!

Our time in Zambia (where Danielle joined back up with us) was spent working with Lonnie and Fran Turner, an American missionary couple who have been working there for around 30 years. We spent our 9 days there visiting the boys at the Katombora Reformatory and teaching and playing basketball with them, visiting a community of people displaced by floods leaving in UNICEF tents, and exploring the African wilderness on a safari in Botswana and at Victoria Falls in Zambia, one of the 7 Natural Wonders of the World and one of the largest, if not THE largest waterfalls in the world-- more than twice the heigth and width of Niagra Falls. It was all pretty incredible. One of our days in Zambia, Jeremy and I ventured over to the gorge near Vic Falls to do the "gorge swing". It was by far one of the more intense things I've ever done!

After Zambia we flew back to Johannesburg to meet up with the Baz Bus, a backpacker's bus that travels the coast of South Africa back to Cape Town stopping along the way in numerous cities in locations. We made 4 stops along the way back to Cape Town including Johannesburg, the country of Swaziland, Durban and Port Elizabeth. We had 3 days in Swaziland and really enjoyed the tiny country. We did some touristy things including visiting the Swazi Candle Factory and the Swazi Cultural village. Durban and PE are both coastal cities in SA, each of which are hosts of the 2010 World Cup, so we got to see the World Cup stadiums and enjoyed some of the fun things in those cities, such as dinner at a revolving restaurant and visiting one of the largest aquariums in the world (in Durban). It was great to experience more of South Africa and more of Africa in general. It really is an amazing continent!

We arrived back in Cape Town late at night on Sunday the 24th and not even 48 hours I was on the plane home. It was hard to leave, even as excited as I was to be going home. Cape Town had almost become home to me after being there for so long and all the relationships I had formed and people I had worked with were very hard to leave. I consider myself incredibly blessed and fortunate to have been able to have experienced all that I did in those 9 months, and am eager to go back whenever God gives me that opportunity!

Since I've been back to the States, I've been to NYC to visit my new niece, who is absolutely adorable, and spent some time in Dalton just unwinding and readjusting--mostly sleeping and doing very little. I'm currently in Nashville, doing an internship at Brentwood Baptist Church in their missions office. BBC is the church my grandfather started almost 40 years ago and where my grandmother still attends. I'll be here for 6 weeks mostly working with the missions office, but also with their music and worship and their Tuesday evening service, Kairos. I'm living with my grandmother during that time, which has been great. It's been good to spend time with her one-on-one, since thats something we've never really been able to do before.

After this, I move to Atlanta the middle of August to start seminry at McAfee (Mercer Univ) the last week of August. I'm moving in with a friend from Furman who is at med school at Emory, which will be a great thing! I'm looking forward to that move and that transition and think this "next chapter" will be a good one!

Well, thanks to everyone who has kept up with me in the last year through this blog and in other ways. Once again, I truly have appreciated all the support and encouragement. Thank you!

Hopefully I'll be seeing you all soon! But for now, keep well, God bless and enjoy your summer!

Cheers!

Ryan

Monday, April 6, 2009

I wonder what seals taste like...

Well, its actually here...my last month in Cape Town. For me, that's pretty hard to believe and is also rather bittersweet. My 7 months here so far has been an experience like none other and it will definitely be hard to leave the people, relationships, and projects that have each been such a huge part of my time here and what has made my time so special. The exciting part, however, about my departure on May 3rd, is that I will then be starting my 3-week trip to Kenya, Zambia, Botswana, and the Eastern Cape of South Africa before my final departure back to the States! As excited as I am for that trip and to get back home, it will be tough leaving Cape Town, the place that I've called home the last 7 months.

The last few weeks have been very good and very busy. A few days ago, Living Hope had the dedication ceremony for 2 new buildings, a chapel and a prevention center. Both of these buildings were funded generously by Brentwood Baptist Church. So, Scott Harris, BBC's misisons minister, has been here this week for the dedication. We had plenty to do in preparation for the 200+ people coming for the dedication. It all went very well though and the buildings look amazing!

The Music Academy has grown since I last posted. I had invited the 10 youth that I work with on the worship team at Capricorn Church to join the Music Academy, since they were all very interested in learning music and instruments, and Friday I met with 5 of them. This coming Friday I will meet with the remaining 5 which brings the number of kids at the Capricorn Academy up to 12-14, which is great, since we have only been working with 4! I am also meeting with 2 people in Masi this week to try and set up a plan for the expansion into Masi. We are trying to get as many things in place while I am here and for when I leave, so that things can continue to run well and can be ready for the next person who comes in to lead. There is a girl coming in August from the States for a year who will be taking my place, which is great! She is a music person as well and very excited about the Academy. So things with the MMA are going well.

On Saturday Jeremy, Danielle, Jonathan (new volunteer from Scotland), Chris and I went to Gordon's Bay, on the other side of False Bay, to go shark cage diving. It was a great day! We left at 5am from our house to get there close to 7 to head out on the boat. We road for 25 minutes out to Seal Island, in the middle of False Bay, an island inhabitated by 50,000 seals! There we spent 6 hours watching seals and dolphins and whales and great white sharks! We saw 3 great whites while we were out there and had one grab a seal and come right up to our boat with eat. So we got a very close up view of a shark attack, which was incredible! It was a bit of a "quiet morning" of sharks, according to our guide, since it is still early in the shark season. So, we didn't see as much crazy shark action as maybe we had hoped, but it was amazing to see some great white sharks up close in the wild! I'll definitely be posting some pictures from that soon. On the way back to shore after the shark trip, one of the guys on the boat turned to me and said "I wonder what seals taste like?" Good question.

So, just to fill everyone in on the 3-week African adventure that I mentioned earlier: Danielle, Jeremy and I are leaving May 3rd heading to Nairobi, Kenya for a week to visit Sam and Melody Harrell, friends and partners of FBC Dalton, who head up Africa Exchange. A lot of what Africa Exchange does is with development projects, such as water development and eco-tourism, as well as work with children and the people of that region. Sam will be taking us, along with 3 others to a few of his project sites to help in various ways. FBC Dalton took a trip to Kenya with Sam this past September. It should be an amazing experience.
We leave Kenya, headed for Livingstone, Zambia, just across the Zimbabwean border. There we will meet up with Lonnie and Fran Turner, 2 US missionaries who live here in Cape Town, but work in Zambia doing sports ministry, water development and several other things. They are currenlty working to construct a school. We will spend about 9 days with the Turners helping with their ministry projects and doing a coupe of days of sight-seeing. We will get to go on safari in Chobe National Park in Botswana, and also see Victoria Falls that lies on the border of Zambia and Zimbabwe. We are of course looking forward to all of these things!
From there we fly back to Johannesburg and will travel down the eastern and souther coast of South Africa back to Cape Town, through Swaziland. It really should be an amazing 3 weeks! After which, I then fly back home.

Well, thats about it for now. I'm definitely looking forward to these last few weeks in Cape Town and last weeks in Africa before I head home! Its been amazing. Thanks to everyone again for ALL the support along the way. I'll be seeing a lot of you very soon!

Cheers!

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Family, Seminary, and Matt Damon

Hello all!

Sorry for the delay since my last post! Things have been going well and it has been an exciting few weeks since my last post.

My Valentine's Day was pretty special, with my family arriving for a week-long vacation. Mom, Dad, Brent and Sarah arrived that day, and we had a great week! We really did about as much as you can do in a week, including all the touristy things, helping out at my ministry projects, and meeting some of the people I live and work with regularly here. It was great to have them here and be able to show them all the things that they are always hearing about. So that was a great week.

Also, as many of you know, I applied to seminary back in December after discovering that calling. Well, I found out a couple of weeks ago that I was accepted! So I will be starting seminary in the fall at McAfee School of Theology (Mercer Univ.) in Atlanta, working towards a Master of Divinity degree. I'm pretty excited! So that helped finish off February as a very exciting month!

Saturday was the Cape Argus bike race, which is the largest bike race in the world...35,000 people ride in it...and it does the entire Cape peninsula (110km). So we went to watch it, since it is such a big deal and we had a couple of friends riding in it. Well, we found out afterwords that Matt Damon was in it! Apparently he was riding a tandem bike with his brother. How crazy! We found out later that he is here with Morgan Freeman and Clint Eastwood filming a movie about the 1995 SA Rugby team and Morgan Freeman is playing Nelson Mandela and Matt Damon is playing the big rugby star. Apparently he and the rugby star that he is playing, Francois Pienaar, decided to ride in the race for a charity...so they did, and Matt was riding tandem with his brother. So we actually saw him...since we saw all the tandem riders (they were in a group) but we didn't know he was in it or to be looking for him so we didn't know that we saw him. Pretty crazy! It would have been cool to actually see him and know it...but, oh well...

The Music Academy continues to move forward. We've actually hit a wall with this first approach to the academy and therefore we are beginning to move into 'Phase 2'. This second approach will be to actually get involved into the schools and do very basic, large group, music classes during the breaks in the school day. From those large groups we can then create smaller classes based on age and ability to do the more focused classes. We are pretty excited about it, since it should be a much more effective approach that will also involve A LOT more kids, which is great. So, things are moving forward and continue to be exciting and encouraging. I've also been able to do some 1-on-1 lessons with Basil, doing some voice and guitar lessons, which have been great. He has such an amazing voice for a 13 year old, and is quite gifted, so its fun to be able to work with him some.

Well, that's about it for now. Like I said, it's been an exciting month. These remaining few weeks will go by quickly, but I'm looking forward to seeing what will happen.

Hope everyone is doing very well!

Cheers!

Thursday, February 12, 2009

Pictures

I've just added a few new pictures. Enjoy!

Tuesday, February 10, 2009

23, Table Mtn, and the Eye of an Elephant

Hello everyone!

Well, since you last heard from me, we have moved into our new and permanent home, climbed Table Mountain and celebrated my 23rd birthday. It's been a very busy but very good couple of weeks!

Last Monday, February 1st, we moved from the Team House to our new home on the new Living Way campus, the former False Bay College campus. It's been something of an adjustment "settling in" to our new home. There was much work to do before we moved in to make this former office building into volunteer housing, and there was still plenty to do once we moved in. Gordon and Frans and Jade, the plumber, worked very hard for a full week building and installing 2 new showers into the house. All new furniture was moved in and the entire place was painted. It really has come a long way and has transformed into a pretty nice place! Jeremy and I are sharing a room, with Danielle down the hall, and our newest volunteer, Chris (from the UK), also down the hall. I'll be adding pictures soon for you to see the house and property and some of the progress that's been made.

Last weekend, Jeremy and I joined Kate (another US volunteer) and her mom, who was visiting, on a hike up Platteklip Gorge, one of the trails that goes up Table Mountain. It was one of the best and one of the hardest hikes I've done in a while! It's straight uphill for 1 1/2 hours, but is well worth the work once you get to the top. We started our hike in the morning, hoping it would be cooler in the morning, but by the time we were halfway up, it was plenty hot. We spent some time at the top of Table Mountain and then headed back down. Kate and her mom, the smart ones, took the cable car back down the mountain, while Jeremy and I decided to hike back down. The first 15 minutes of our mountain descent weren't too bad, but before too long our knees and legs decided that they had had enough and didn't want to work as well anymore. It only took us 50 minutes to get down, but it was some of the most physically exhausting 50 minutes either of us had experienced in a while. We were quite glad to be done once we got down, and spent the rest of the day doing as little as possible. It was a great time though!

A few days ago, Jeremy, Chris and I took another hike to Elephant's Eye, a huge cave at the top of the mountain range behind Table Mountain. What an amazing hike! The view from the cave is pretty amazing and the cave itself is pretty awesome. There are so many places like these to explore, and unfortunately we won't have time to see them all, but I'm glad we're able to take advantage of some of them.

Last Tuesday was my 23rd birthday. It was rather weird celebrating my birthday during the summer, when usually its right in the middle of winter. As you can imagine, I actually kept forgetting it was really my birthday, being in the summer heat and on a different continent. To celebrate, I went with about 13 of my friends here to dinner at a very cool restaurant downtown Cape Town. It is the restaurant in the Fire and Ice hotel, which is this really cool hotel. Basically the menu is every kind of burger you can imagine: beef, chicken, ostrich, lamb, seafood, etc. And they are big and really good. They also have a huge milkshake menu with about every kind of milkshake you can imagine...from oreo or kit-kat to pumpkin and marshmallow or avocado and green apple. The avo and apple one sounds disgusting, but I ordered it (I mean, I had to try it!) and it was really good! . They also have really cool bathrooms; 6 different ones (all one person bathrooms). Each of the bathrooms is themed and decorated differently. For example: one is setup so that the toilet is on this little black stage and the wallpaper is people sitting in an audience and pointing and laughing at you as you sit there...its very weird. Another has rolls or toilet paper covering an entire wall..so you go in and there is like 100 different rolls of toilet paper to choose from. Another is done like an outhouse, with aluminum sides and everything. It was quite interesting, but very cool. I'll also be adding some pictures soon of the restaurant for you to see for yourself. If you're ever in Cape Town, I recommend the Fire and Ice hotel restaurant!

Everything else is going very well. The Music Academy has started back up and is going very well. We are 2 weeks into the new curriculum and it seems to be working quite well. Last week I was able to purchase a keyboard for the academy with money that was raised for my trip for such expenses. So, thank you very much to all those who helped support me and the ministries here financially, prayerfully and through your encouragement and love!

Things in Red Hill are also going well. Unfortunately, I've had to cut back my time there, so now am only in Red Hill on Monday and Tuesday afternoons rather than Monday through Thursday, due to MMA expansion and the having started youth praise team practice for Capricorn church during the week. Working with the kids in Capricorn on the praise team has been so much fun and such a blessing. It's amazing how involved the youth of Capricorn are in that church. What a very cool thing.

That's all for now. Hope everyone is having a wonderful week! God bless!

Sunday, January 25, 2009

Music Academy and More Weddings

It's been a very good and busy week! Most of this week for me was spent working to finish the curriculum for this 2009 year for the Music Academy and meeting with people from some of the local schools to talk to them about getting the MMA involved in their schools. The idea was very well received at the Masi Primary School. Monday I'm meeting with the music teacher and possibly headmaster of Christian David, a school near Capricorn. The idea is to start doing some fun, large group music things with the kids at the schools during their long breaks during the school day. From those large groups we could find smaller groups to do the more concentrated lessons like we are doing with the 4 kids in Capricorn. It's definitely exciting to have some of these things come together for the MMA.

This was another weeding weekend for us. Mike and Pam Talley, the Living Hope volunteer coordinators (from Nashville), befriended a couple from Masi and decided to help put a wedding together for them. I was asked to do the music for the wedding and Jeremy and Danielle helped out as well; Jeremy doing video and Danielle helping with several things. It was fun to not only be the musician for the wedding but actually be the "music coordinator" for their wedding. I met with Brian and Blessing earlier in the week to plan out the music and then spent the week getting all that together. The wedding ended up being very nice and it was amazing to find out how so much for the wedding had been donated or given as a gift, including the cake, the rings, the flowers, etc. Its funny how in less than 5 months I've helped in 2 South African weddings and still have one more that I'm doing music for in May. It's been quite fun!

Jeremy has been busy this past week working with the team here from Delaware on the new property that Living Hope acquired, the old False Bay College campus. The plan for that campus is to house the classrooms and offices for Living Way, the economic empowerment branch of LH as well as the volunteer housing and some of ACTS offices. Unfortunately, we (the volunteers) have to move out of the Team House the 1st of February, but the new property won't be ready for us to move into yet, so we'll have to move somewhere else temporarily until it's ready. One more move for us! The new property is coming together well and it will be so exciting once it's all finished.

That's about all for now. My family comes in less than 3 weeks, which is very exciting! Unfortunately, because of the pregnancy, Jennifer and Christian won't be able to come. But that just gives me more reason to come back here and bring them with me next time! It will be fun to share some of what I'm doing here with family.

Hope everyone had a great weekend! Have a wonderful week!