January 28, 2017

Wedding

We went to the wedding of the brother of one of the families in our church.  It was very pretty with draped fabrics set up in the family's yard.
Waiting for the wedding to start.  This precious
lady is Aura, my friend Lesvi's mother.
Girls lined up in their traditional outfits
to watch the bride enter.  These are girls
from our church dance team.
After the ceremony, the bride and groom
stand under a bell-shaped paper form that is
filled with rice.  The parents of the bride and
groom stand on either side of them and
pull strings, breaking the paper on the bottom
and letting the rice fall on the newlyweds
as a blessing.  This seems to be done instead
of throwing rice, like in the United States.
After receiving the rice blessing, the newlyweds
return to the front, and the guests line up to
give gifts and hug the couple.  Then comes

a full meal and wedding cake.

January 21, 2017

View from kitchen window

One day I was looking out my kitchen window and saw that our neighbor decided to build a shed... almost blocking my view.  One of the things I love most about living here is that new, unexpected things happen all the time!
Our neighbor, Roberto, built a basic wood
frame on his roof, then nailed on steel roofing
panels as the walls of the shed.
This is my new view.
Thankfully, I can still look out over part
of the neighborhood!

January 14, 2017

Babysitting Suzy

From time to time, one of the other missionaries here, Carol, asks us to babysit her dachshund, Suzy.
We all love Suzy!

January 7, 2017

Ferromax video

Here is a video made by our Ferromax store, where we buy our steel roofing panels and galvanized metal products.  (It is in Spanish, but basically all they are saying is that it is a great product.)  All the employees on the video know us!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JZ3qJ4GVs8Q

January 2, 2017

Siding panels

The outer layer on the classroom building is going up!
We decided to hang steel roofing panels
as siding because there isn't any vinyl siding
for sale here.
The workers hung a plastic tarp to block
the sun from one side where it was melting
the duct tape they were using on the
asphalt paper layers.  At 7000 ft. elevation,
direct sun rays can get pretty strong.
They took down the plastic once the
siding was screwed on.
Cutting the panels to fit under the roof
was difficult, but important for keeping
out flies when we are using this building
as a kitchen.  The flies come from our
neighbor's toilet wastewater dumping pit.
Veronica and I are checking out the progress!