It has been awhile since I (Virginia) have written anything. The days have been so busy! I will try to give you a brief overview of what our (Mary Jane and I) days are like at home here on Bonaire.
Usually our day begins around 5:45 in the morning, at least that is the time the alarm is supposed to go off. We usually are awake before that. A quick cool shower wakes one up and readies us for the day. The shower is cool because we have no hot water heater in our side of the duplex. The water pipes run on the top of the ground and heat up during the day from the sunshine and can be very warm in the evenings, but are usually always cool in the mornings.
After getting dressed and having a little quiet time, it is time to prepare breakfast We try to prep as much as possible the night before, but we do have cooked cereal and eggs once in awhile and pancakes on Saturday mornings. We usually eat around 7:00, a hymn is sung after eating, then the guys get ready to leave. They collect their lunch and make sure they have water bottles along.
When things quiet down, after the guys leave, Mary Jane and I clean up, start the laundry and then we sit down with something to drink and go over the menu for the next couple of days and begin prepping for dinner. We do hang the clothes out on the line, but there is a dryer that is run off bottled gas, as is the stove. The dryer is slow and expensive to run, but the clothes dry quickly in the breeze so we seldom have the need for the dryer. The wind blows from the east and the clothes lines run north and south, so it is just right for drying. We have learned to not drop anything on the ground. The ground is covered with burrs of some sort and they are literally a pain to remove. The wind also can blow them onto things and those annoying little things stick to shoes and track into the house as well.
Larry and Ralph, the two grandpas (actually there are some younger grandpas here, too), come home for lunch. They eat lunch and snooze for 15-20 minutes before going back to work. The temperature is in the high 80’s and the humidity is fairly high, and working with the much younger men, creates a combination that makes a break at noon very much appreciated and needed.
Most days Mary Jane or I take Ralph and Larry back to work after lunch and we take the truck to town. Everything is close here on Bonaire so it doesn’t take long to get to the site or to town. We buy groceries that are needed and try to do a little sight seeing and visit the shops. We do have two refrigerators, but feeding 11 people keeps our refrigerators full and us constantly thinking about food. For example we use about 2-1/2 loaves of bread a day. Buying fresh bread and veggies are usually the main items on the shopping list. Sometimes we stop for some ice cream at the little ice cream shop @ $1.75 a scoop or a cool drink in the newer grocery store on the island. All the shops are air-conditioned which makes it even more pleasant to walk into the shops and linger.
We normally have to rush home to pick up the guys at 4:30 when the work day here seems to end. The guys then like to head to the water, which is less than a half mile away, to cool off and relax. I would say ‘beach’, but there is no sand until one gets into the water. There are stairs down the short coral cliff to the water. When they return, they shower under the outside shower to get the sand off and get ready for dinner around 5:30 or 6:00. After dinner we have one or two hymns and then everyone gets out their ‘device’ and talks to their families or sweethearts
I forgot to mention that mornings and evenings finds the young men sitting around with their Bibles or ‘devices’ studying God’s word. Some are memorizing portions of scripture and often we hear them reciting to each other. Such a thoughtful, caring group of young men.
After cleaning up from the evening meal, Mary Jane and I make the sandwiches and lunches for the next day and prep for breakfast. Usually we are done with all that around 8:00 and are ready to shower and drop into bed. We are SO thankful for air-conditioning in the bed rooms so we can relax and sleep well. The cost of utilities is about 10 times what it is in the States, so we only run it at night. We are also thankful for air-conditioners in cars. Air -conditioning makes life so much more pleasant.
Dear Oma; For church, I have to interview a missionary. Can you answer these for me?
Where in Bonaire are you?
Have you learned anything new?
What is the best part of you trip so far?
Is that the place with webcam you can wave to us?
Is there a little girl there?
Is she about my age? Can you tell her hello for me?
Have you tried a new food?
I love you and miss you!
Love,
Megan!
Hi, Megan! I would be glad to try to answer these questions for you. We have been without internet for nearly 6 days. It is nice to have it back so I can ‘talk’ to you. We are on the south side of the town of Kralendijk. We are close enough to the water we can just walk where we can get in. Kralendijk is the largest town on Bonaire. It is where the ships come into harbor. There have been some days when there have been two cruise ships in at the same time. They really look big compared to this little island!
What have I learned new? Well, I have learned some things that might seem rather odd. I have learned that I can still drive a stick shift and not jerk or kill the engine of the truck. I can parallel park a truck with a stick shift, I can cook for 11 people 3 times a day for 14 days, plus do their laundry, etc. I have not had a opportunity to do or learn a lot of new things yet because we have been so busy
It is hard to say what has been the best part of the trip so far. I think it is hearing all these young men who have come here to work sing. They sing every evening after dinner and they usually sing every stanza of every hymn they choose. Rarely do we sing the same hymn twice. One evening we sang for 1-1/2 hours. Usually they sing only one or two and then they are dismissed from the table. I think it is a good thing to do, to sing a hymn to begin you day and one to end the day. That is what they do.
Other good things is hearing that the men are getting done what they came to do in spite of what we would label as problems. They are getting the job done.
Yes, they do have a web-cam. I need to look and see if it still works and then maybe I can wave to you again. That would be fun.
I have not met any little girls your age yet. But I have met one that is a bit younger than Nora. She is just learning to walk and her daddy had me get some fabric so her mommy could make her some clothes. Her mommy has already made her some cute things. She is from Switzerland.
So far we have not had the opportunity to try a new food. The men who are working with Opa and staying here have though. They tried iguana. They said it was a female iguana and there were eggs inside, so they cooked the eggs and the iguana in a stew. They also had goat stew, but that is not really new. I did have a $15 hamburger with fries. I will probably never have one of those again. The bread was freshly made just for our hamburgers and the hamburg was thick. They put lettuce, tomatoes and onions on it. It was good, but too expensive!
I love you, too and miss you.
Oma