Monday, July 27, 2009

Safari with a Purpose


Our second team of the summer is off and away on their safari of service and adventure!

This particular team has been brought together by Jesse and Trevor and they are leading the crew of college friends. While this is their initiative, we can't help but be pretty involved. There's too much work in the preparation and too much fun in the journey for just 2 Borden Boys :-) And having older, (read "More years in Africa,") folks around is never a bad thing.

What a blessing it is for us to host people as they experience Tanzania. How awesome that we get to be a part of their service and growth. We love to see hearts and minds opened by God as friends engage new cultures, new landscapes, new issues, new joys and new relationships. Culture, the environment, hunger, justice, service, poverty, wealth, wildlife, responsibility, faith, values and fears are all things that a trip like this brings up in the hearts of the participants. Conversations around the campfire are good.

Challenges are always a part of it as well. This photo was taken on Saturday before the early Monday departure...



But they pulled out on time this morning, big grins on all their faces.



May this be a beautiful time for each one. May they be a blessing where they serve and may there be lasting benefit in each of their lives as well.

Tuesday, July 21, 2009

We Harvest the Beans :-)


The April/May rains failed in parts of Kenya and Tanzania, leaving many of our friends struggling as the dust blows where grass should be growing for their weakening herds.

With this reality close to us, we don't take for granted the rains that we received on Wild Hope's acreage outside of Arusha. For whatever reason, this general area was blessed with quite a decent rainy season and we have been harvesting the first fruits off of the land.

What a precious thing to be involved in the rhythm of the earth as dry ground softens under the rain, nourishing the hidden seeds and encouraging them to sprout and grow. What a lot of fun to watch the plants mature and produce and then to finally bring in a harvest.

Our bean production (grown amongst the maize and replenishing what maize depletes) wasn't on a very large scale but we're pleased with it none-the-less. We celebrated the good gifts of our Creator as we enjoyed our first meal with home-grown beans in our burritos.

This is a beginning for us. We look forward to years of multiple types of harvests grown in sustainable, environmentally responsible ways. With hunger and the degradation of the land being ongoing concerns in sub-Saharan Africa, we hope to work together with our neighbors to see these issues decrease.

We sure wish you could stop by for a plate of beans and rice with us :-)

Wednesday, July 1, 2009

Bundles (and Bundles!) of Beads


Every month bundles of beaded products are brought in to the Wild Hope team here in Arusha. But Wild Hope's artisan-made products begin to take shape miles and miles and miles from where they end up on display. Carefully threaded onto the stiff wire and bent by the strong, skilled hands of our Maasai friends, the products first take shape in the remote villages where our friends live.

From the village, the product is loaded onto the backs of donkeys and walked for half a day to connect with a friend who has a Land Rover. The Land Rover delivers the product along dirt trails to the closest "public transport vehicle" which travels along the paved road to Arusha. It can be a 2 day process just to bring the product in to town.

Each month, Peter Ole Kukan and 2 or 3 of the Artisan women deliver the wares to Tammy, Grace and Philemon. Together, they now begin the 3 day process of sorting, counting, scrutinizing for quality control, paying, making new orders, assisting the women as they supply with new stock, and sending the little party of Maasai friends back out. When the delegation gets home, the process begins again with 80+ women launching into the work to fill the new orders.


The lovely ornaments and decorations move along to buyers. Some of them end up in high end tourist shops in our town. Some of them end up in Europe, New Zealand, Australia and the U.S. All of them provide a fair trade for traditional artisans who would not necessarily find employment otherwise.

We love the story of how the product gets from village to town. Even more, we love the stories of families provided for by the faithful work of these skilled women. Proceeds go back into the project, building communities in far away places.