Earthquake, Followup #1

Two weeks after our April 16 earthquake, the disaster zone on the coast is starting to see some signs of normalcy.  Some gas stations have gas, some grocery stores have food and supplies, some destroyed buildings have been leveled.  All the small villages have been reached with initial emergency response of food, water, shelter, and medical care.  Major roads are being patched.

My (Jody) first-hand knowledge of the emergency response is through the reports of teams we (Reach Beyond) have sent out and also through the announcements and activities of the church we attend (Iglesia Dios es Fiel–God is Faithful Church).

Reach Beyond sent a medical response team of four doctors during the first week for five days.  A second team of two doctors, an EMT, and an engineer went for eight days, returning two days ago.  For the first few days, this team was joined by a second team of pastors and counselors, with the special mission of counseling traumatized children.  All of these teams were a combination of Ecuadoreans and expats (foreigners who live here).  The second group worked under the direction of the national health department, going to both isolated villages and also refugee camps close to large cities.

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Drs. Steve Nelson, Joe Martin, Hugo Espejo, Paola Pérez, and Jack Pena (Dr Pérez is a physician in Atacames who invited Team #1 to come)

Teams 1 & 2

Teams 1 & 2 plus pastors and counselors from Quito (photo is missing two doctors and an engineer)

Reach Beyond’s plan is to continue sending medical teams as long as they are needed, and also to plan for other long-term help.  Which communities would be good locations for clean water projects?  Which churches do we already have relationship with which could utilize a work team?  The idea is to partner with the local church and community; Reach Beyond provides what the community can’t and the community provides what they can (primarily labor and administration).  It’s a model that builds community ownership and self-sufficiency while minimizing continuing dependence on outside  help.

The evangelical churches of Ecuador have formed a disaster committee which is assigning different sectors of the earthquake zone to individual large churches or groups of smaller churches.  This is both for immediate, emergency help and also for rebuilding and restoration.  Our Spanish isn’t good enough yet to understand all that our church is doing, but we know that last week our church sent food and supplies to an orphanage.

Besides the physical destruction and the human suffering on the coast, the emotional and spiritual impact on the country has been remarkable.  The whole country hurts for the coast.  The outpouring of prayers, donations, and volunteers is overwhelming.

I’ll try to put it in context:  imagine if Oregon (almost exactly the same size as Ecuador) were a nation and had over 15 million people (instead of Oregon’s just under four million). Imagine large extended families with strong ties throughout the country, a nation where community is very important.  Imagine a massive earthquake hitting the coast, killing 660 people, leaving over 22,000 homeless, and destroying 70 or 80% of the buildings.  Beyond homelessness, the destruction would  devastate the tourism industry and thus the coastal economy.   Almost everyone would know someone who died, was injured, or lost their home and/or business.

Thank you for praying.  Please continue to pray for those who are suffering.  Pray for wise and well-coordinated assistance from all the help that is here.  And pray that the body of Christ here in Ecuador will bring glory to God and many will follow Christ and gain eternal life.  Earthly life is so fragile; we need to be ready to die.

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Earthquake!

It’s too early to write a comprehensive post about last night’s 7.8 earthquake about 100 miles from us off the Ecuador coast.  But I (Jody) have just a few reflections.

What we experienced

Just after sunset, we felt a gentle rocking which just kept going for what seemed like forever.  (It was actually 40 seconds.)  As it continued the building was swaying and we could hear rumbling outside.  It took a few seconds to realize we should leave the building, as we kept thinking it was going to stop.  But when we got to the street, we were the only ones that we could see in our very long block.  Maybe people weren’t home; it’s always hard to tell beause people keep their curtains closed.  But there definitely was no panic in our very densely populated neighborhood.

[Update:  we have since learned that it is better to get under a heavy table or desk rather than leave the building during a quake.]

Afterwards our lights dimmed a few times, but our power and internet stayed on.  We have a guest from the U.S. with us and he and I started sending out messages letting people know we were o.k.  (Scott doesn’t do social media, although he kept us updated on news.)

Late last night our church sent out a WhatsApp message saying that all large gatherings were cancelled until further notice and there would be no church today.  We went to church anyway this a.m., thinking maybe the ban might be lifted in Quito since there’s almost no damage here.  But the gates were locked, so not chance to pray corporately for those on the coast.

What we’re hearing

At least three earthquakes occurred off the Ecuadorean coast within a short period of time: 4.8  (Pedernales, Manabí), 7.8 (Muisne, Esmeraldas), and 5.4 (Bahía de Caráquez, Manabí).  Dozens of aftershocks happened on the coast.

Preliminary estimates are 77 killed and 600 injured, but there is very little information coming out of the hardest hit areas.  Between Quito and Esmeraldas the elevation drops about 10,000 ft  in about 100 miles, so the roads are steep, curvy, and prone to landslides, especially with the heavy rains we’ve been having.  Roads are closed but we’re not sure yet which ones.  There are small airports in some of the larger coastal towns and I suspect disaster relief will flow through them rather than by road from Quito.

We talked briefly with an Ecuadorean neighbor this morning and he lamented that Ecuador doesn’t have the economic resources to cope with a disaster of this magnitude.  “Estamos en crisis economica.”  (We’re in an economic crisis.)  I pray that other nations will respond generously to help recovery, and especially that Christians will be the hands of Jesus to help in small and big ways.

I’m sure our organization (Reach Beyond) will be trying to send doctors, nurses, water engineers, and who ever else can be of use as soon as possible, although transportation will be a problem.  I’m sure we have to get government approval to proceed; please pray that the paperwork will go smoothly and the red tape minimized.

I just got a phone call from an Ecuadorean co-worker checking to make sure we were ok.  She ended with (in Spanish), “Call me if you need anything.”  This is a country of brave and big-hearted people, however financially poor they are.  We are blessed to be here and are ready to help however we can.  Thank you for your prayers.

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March 2016 Newsletter

Want to see the print version?  Click here.

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A new grandbaby, a trip to the jungle, surgery, and a small anniversary:  that’s what’s new with us.

After multiple miscarriages, our son and daughter-in-law have a baby girl, born in mid-February.  Jody has a “grandma trip” scheduled, we’re savoring the photos, and our hearts are full of joy and gratitude.  Many of you prayed for this baby for months–thank you!  (Contact us if you’d like a photo.)

In late January we flew into the jungle for the dedication of the clean water system in Santa Rosa.  Last September Scott spent five days working on the water tower in this community, and it was wonderful to be part of the celebration.

3-Jody & Scott after landing

In December Scott had foot surgery to remove a metal plate and six screws which were used to piece the bone together when he broke it in Costa Rica in 2014.  After eight weeks he is fully recovered and back to unicycling and hiking.

Climbing Ruku Pichincha

February 15 we celebrated 1-1/2 years in Ecuador.  We’re stil newbies, but our neighbors are starting to talk to us, we are understanding more of the sermon in church, and sometimes we have a clue of what is expected in social situations.  Progress!

Thank you for your encouragement, support, and prayers.  We are very blessed.

Ministry Focus:  Corrientes

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Corrientes (Spanish for “Currents”) is Reach Beyond’s mentoring program to equip Latin American believers who have the zeal to serve God with their talents, especially in places where the gospel is least known.

Corrientes 1

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Former Corrientes students are serving around the globe as medical missionaries, healthcare and community development workers, teachers and church planters.

Here’s a great video for a glimpse of Latin American missionaries and Corrientes.

How Can You Pray for Us?

Thanks for:

  • our new grand-daughter
  • Scott’s successful surgery
  • Jody’s retinal problem improving
  • God’s continued faithfulness

Requests for:

  • Upcoming travel (Jody to Oregon, Scott to work in Colorado)
  • Continued growth in Spanish
  • The thriving Latin American churches and their missionaries

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Recent Blog Posts

 

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Iglesia Dios es Fiel

We’ve been attending a large church, Dios es Fiel (“God is Faithful”) for over a year now and enjoying it a lot.  Last Sunday the church celebrated its tenth anniversary, which was great fun.  At the end of the service as we were singing the song below, scores of balloons cascaded down from the ceiling.  Everyone started grabbing balloons and waving them overhead or hitting them volley ball style all over the church.  What a celebration!

If you’d like an encouraging glimpse of a thriving Latin American church, check out this video from the church’s fifth anniversary.

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Return to Santa Rosa

The clean water system in Santa Rosa which Scott worked on last September was dedicated at the end of January.  We got to fly into the jungle and be part of the celebration.  My (Jody’s) journal about the trip was polished into a blog post by another missionary, and you can read it here.

Scott described his five days in Santa Rosa and posted photos in our Fall 2015 newsletter.  Here are a few photos from our recent trip.

3-Jody & Scott after landing

After landing in San Carlos

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Hiking through the jungle to Santa Rosa

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View from the water tower

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Lunch:  fish roasted in a banana leaf

 

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December 2015 Newsletter

Click here for a printable, pdf version.

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          It’s December in Quito! This weekend is the celebration of Quito’s founding by the Spanish in 1534, next weekend is a three-day Share-a-thon by our radio station, and we have other parties and events leading up to Christmas and New Year’s. The weather doesn’t feel like Christmas, but the busyness does.
          2015 has been a great year. Our Spanish is improving (slowly), as is our competency at work. Building friendships with Ecuadoreans is also a slow process. The long-time missionaries here seem to expect that our first three-year term will be spent in training, but it’s a surprise to us!
          Along with visits from “kids” in May and October, we spent part of November in the U.S., mostly visiting family. We’ve traveled and explored this beautiful country a bit, busing and often staying in hostels. Sometimes we’re three times the age of the young backpackers, but we have a good time.
          One of the year’s highlights was Scott’s jungle trip to help with a community clean-water project. Check our last newsletter for the story and photos.
          God has faithfully provided for us this year, watching over our family and nudging people to donate and pray. In addition, next year our health insurance premiums are dropping over $400 a month (yay!), which raised our pledged support thermometer quite a bit. As always, you can donate via our web page or mail a check:  here’s how.  Thank you!

          May the joy, hope, and celebration of Christ’s coming fill your hearts and homes this Christmas season.

How Can You Pray for Us?

Thanks for:

  • God’s continued care
  • A new 2-year lease on our apartment
  • Our donors and pray-ers

Requests:

  • Improved Spanish
  • New friendships
  • Blessings on our family, especially a new grandbaby due in February.
  • Health for Jody’s eyes: a retinal problem has emerged to complicate the glaucoma in her bad eye
  • Reach Beyond’s ministries worldwide:  our hospital, clinics, water projects, medical caravans, radio stations, and training for national missionaries and pastors

 

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And here are some photos of our year we hope you enjoy!

Scott unicycling 2

Scott unicycling 6

Flour sacks at the grocery store--free fabric!

Flour sacks in the grocery store:  free fabric for Jody!

Otovalo market - spoons almost as tall as Jody

Otovalo Market: spoons almost as tall as Jody

Quilotoa - Scott

Lake Quilotoa

Quilotoa - Jody

Quilotoa Trail

Pichincha Jody Scott Vjera

With our daughter Vjera–that’s part of Quito behind us

Mindo - Vjera Jody

Mindo & the Cloud Forest (Jody & Vjera)

Papallacta - Simon & Jody

Papallacta with our son Simon

Scott on top of Hill of the Antennas

Hiking Pichincha

Scott-Jody dressed up 2015

All dressed up for the hospital’s 60th anniversary

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An early Thanksgiving in Oregon–almost our whole family!

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Fall 2015 Newsletter

(Want to read the pdf/print version?  Click here.)

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I (Scott) recently had the opportunity to fly into the jungle of eastern Ecuador with a Reach Beyond work team that is helping a small indigenous community build a water system.  Instead of carrying impure water from a nearby river, the community will have clean spring water piped to stations outside each dwelling.

Unloading the aircraft (Eric and Pedro)

Unloading the aircraft (Eric and Pedro)

The system will be solar and gravity powered – a small solar-powered pump will raise the water into two 2,500-liter tanks sitting six meters atop a wooden tower.  Reach Beyond is there by invitation, providing resources and expertise, with community members doing the great majority of the work.  Since it is a community project, not a government or Reach Beyond project, we expect it to be well-maintained and last for many years.

Santa Rosa and the tower and spring

Aerial view of the community, the tower, and the spring

The path to the spring; structure is where solar panel for pump will go.

The path to the spring; the structure is where the solar panel for the pump will go.

Although primarily an office worker in a city of more than two million people, I asked if I could accompany the small Reach Beyond team (Eric Fogg, a fellow Reach Beyond missionary and Pedro Llallico, an Ecuadorean contractor) as a manual laborer on a four day trip into the selva (the Spanish word for jungle).  Our team and construction supplies were ferried into the jungle in a small plane by Alas de Socorro, which some of you may know as MAF (Mission Aviation Fellowship).

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Scott and others working on the tower.

For several days we worked alongside community members, we ate and took breaks with them, we walked to the spring to bathe each evening, and we slept in “bug huts” on the floor of their community building.  We endured what many North Americans would call hardship, but we also enjoyed the tranquility and beauty of the Ecuadorean jungle.

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Eric and workers assessing the progress.

All the floor beams are finally up!

All the floor beams are finally up! (Daniel, Juan, Patricio, & Pedro)

Children playing at the work site

Children playing next to the tower

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Women preparing the morning meal

Thank you Lord for the beauty you have created, your provision for our physical needs, and your great love for all peoples.

How Can You Pray for Us?

Thanks for:

  • Scott’s safe and interesting travels
  • God’s provision

Pray for:

  • Our family in the U.S.
  • The community of Santa Rosa
  • Reach Beyond’s water project workers

Our Financial Support Status:

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THANK YOU to all of you who pray and give so we can serve here!

Recent Blog Post (www.AdventuresInMiddleEarth.com)

Touch the Sky (Toca el Cielo), Scott’s hike up and down Pichincha

Extra photos:  The tower

Extra photos:  The community

How to Contact Us

  • Scott & Jody Arnold
  • Reach Beyond/HCJB
  • Casilla 17-17-691
  • Quito, Ecuador 170521
  • (US address) 815 Laurelhurst DR
  • Eugene, OR  97402
  • 541-359-7633 (U.S. number–rings on our computer)
  • Jody’s email:  jarnold@ReachBeyond.org
  • Scott’s email:  sarnold@ReachBeyond.org

Donate via our blog or send check to:

  • Reach Beyond
  • PO Box 39800
  • Colorado Springs, CO  80949-9800

Please make payable to Reach Beyond and note Account #110563 on memo line.

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Touch the Sky (Toca el Cielo)

2015-07-04 08.49.08  We live on the flanks of Pichincha, a stratovolcano that soars to 15,696 feet above sea level.  Saturday I (Scott) decided to hike (not ride) up Teleférico to a viewpoint about 13,450 above sea level.  There is no posted trail but mountain bikers can take their bicycles up on a cable car and on previous visits we had seen them zigzagging down the mountain below.  (Vivimos en la falda de Pichincha, un estratovolcán que se dispara hasta 4.784 metros sobre el nivel del mar.  El sábado yo (Scott) decidí subir al Teleférico a pie (no en la góndola) hasta el mirador, 4.100 metros sobre el nivel del mar.  No hay sendero señalizado pero ciclistas de montaña pueden llevar las bicicletas a la cima en una góndola; en viajes anteriores las hemos visto serpenteando abajo de la montaña).

I left our apartment at 8:00 a.m. and reached the base of Teleférico after about an hour’s walk. I quickly found the beginning of the ascent and soon was enjoying spectacular views of Quito down below.  It is a strenuous climb of 3,450 feet up a progressively steeper trail that switchbacks up through the páramo, sometimes so steep that I had to scramble using my hands.  (Salí de nuestro departamento a las 8:00 de la mañana y alcancé a la base del Teleférico después de caminar una hora.  Rapidamente encontré el inicio de la ascensión y pronto estaba disfrutando vistas espectaculares de Quito.  Es una extenuante subida de 1.050 metros y la pendiente se hace progresivamente más empinada mientras el sendero zigzaguea a través del páramo.  A veces el sendero era tan inclinado que tuve que ayudarme de las manos).

Twice I leaned to the side of the gullied trail to dodge descending mountain bikers as they skidded by me.  At 11:45 I reached the top of Teleférico and took a short break before heading back down.  I found a sign that said Humboldt Trail that said it went to central Quito, so I explored a seldom used way down that brought me back to the land of 2,000,000 in less than two hours.  (Algunas veces el sendero fue como un barranco; dos veces salté al lado para evitar una ciclista que se precipitó bajo la cuesta deslizadiza.  Llegué a la cima del Teleférico a las 11:45 y descansé por poco tiempo antes de bajar.  Cerca descrubrí un rótulo que dijo “Sendero Ruta de Humboldt. Centro de la Ciudad”.  Así que exploré un camino poco utilizado que me devolvió en menos de dos horas a la tierra de 2.000.000 personas).

After walking a half mile or so and hopping two buses (total cost 50 cents), I was back in our apartment by about 2:00 in the afternoon.  Click on the first picture below to start a slide show of my adventure . . .  (Después de caminar más o menos un kilometro y tomar dos buses (costo total de 50 centavos), estaba adentro de nuestra departamento a los dos de la tarde.  Haga clic en una foto siguiente para comenzar una presentación de imágenes de mi aventura . . . )

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June 2015 Newsletter

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And we’ve had our first U.S. visitor!

P1030287Read about his visit (and more) in our latest newsletter; just click below:

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Cost of Living, Part 2: Health Care

When our youngest son Simon visited us for three weeks last month, we did a bit of medical tourism. He had a sebaceous cyst on his eyelid (which had been growing for about a year and a half).  Our mission (Reach Beyond) has a hospital, Hospital Vozandes Quito; he saw a dermatologist and had an ultrasound on a Tuesday afternoon, had the cyst removed by a plastic surgeon Wednesday morning, and had the (3) stitches taken out in the emergency room on Sunday afternoon (he was leaving Quito early Monday morning). Total cost $186:

  • $18        Dermatologist (we got a 10% missionary discount)
  • $33        Ultrasound
  • $129      Surgery by plastic surgeon
  • $6           Stitches removed in the ER

Had we gone to one of the more modern hospitals we would have paid more.  Jody sat next to a lady on a long bus ride who happens to go to the same glaucomologist at Hospital Metropolitano.  Her doctor recommended that she have her cataract surgery at Hospital Vozandes for $2,000 rather than at Hospital Metropolitano for $4,000.

Here is a random collection of our medical expenses:

  • Jody’s eye expenses
    • $60      Appointment with glaucomologist
    • $40      Field of vision test
    • $35       Month’s supply of Krytan-tek, glaucoma eye drops
    • $35       Month’s supply of Travatan Bak-free, glaucoma eye drops
  • Jody’s annual physical
    • $17      Initial doctor appointment (at Reach Beyond clinic, with an English-speaking doctor)
    • $44     Blood tests
    • $22     Bone scans (densitometria osea 2 puntos)
    • $79      Mammogram
    • $9        Ear Wax removal by nurse
    • $17       Followup visit with doctor
    • $311     Boniva, 12 monthly doses (with $105 discount for buying a year’s supply)
  • Vaccinations (at Reach Beyond clinic)
    • $25/dose    Rabies (first, second, and third dose) (Verorab)
    • $75 & $21    Pneumonia vaccine (1st dose:  Prevenar 13V X 1 JER PRE X0.5ml); (2nd dose:  Imovax pneumo 23 Vacuna)
    • $8    DT vaccine (Imovax DT)
    • $22    Typhoid (Typhim)
    • $12 & 26    Hepatitis A (first dose:  Havrix Adulto 1440; second dose:  Avaxim Adulto)
  • Scott’s orthopedic care (at Hospital Vozandes (for foot he broke in Costa Rica))
    • $18    Orthopedist appointment
    • $28    X-ray of foot
    • $30    Initial physical therapy session with evaluation
    • $11    Subsequent physical therapy sessions

For our friends living in other Latin American countries, how do these health care costs compare with your experience?

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