Watching Grass Grow

The house we live in came with a good sized yard, which we love!  However, when we moved here, we had no idea how to grow grass.  It sounds simple, but really, it’s not that easy.  We’d never had grass of our own to grow before, never mind trying to grow it in a hot, dry African country.  But we learned a trick: tobacco stem.

Tobacco Stem

Two of Malawi’s biggest exports are tea and tobacco, likely leftovers from when the British were here.  The leaves are the part of the tobacco that goes into cigarettes, so that’s the part the farmers are interested in.  The leftovers – the stem – is just by-product, but someone made the brilliant discovery that tobacco stem not only adds nutrients back into the soil, it also works as mulch, helping the soil retain moisture.  Someday someone will wise-up and actually sell the stuff, but for now, it’s free.  You just have to pay for the delivery.

Tobacco Stem Truck

We got a lot.  I mean, it was free, right?!  And thankfully it doesn’t smell like tobacco.  It just smells like dirt and dust.

Tobacco Stem Grass

We spread it all over the lawn, and the grass is LOVING it!  We’ll let it do its thing and post some final product pictures soon.

6 Weeks later…

During our lack of internet access for the past few weeks, we’ve grown grass!

Green Grass

For all of you with brown winter grass right now, the grass is greener on the other side!

Church Christmas Parties

We hosted the church Christmas parties again this year and had a great time with the church family.  We read the Christmas story, we sang Christmas carols and played games, but most of all, we had a chance to be together as a church family and enjoy a time of fellowship and friendship.  We love our church!

We had 90 people come to the Christmas parties, so split the group up over two nights.  Here are a few pictures of the evenings:

Matt reading Luke 2

Matt read the Christmas story from Luke 2.  Pastor Brian had taken a few weeks to preach from this text, so we all had a greater understanding of the passage as we listened to the story together.

Christmas Parties Photo Booth 2010 2

Christmas Parties Photo Booth 2010 3

Christmas Parties Photo Booth 2010 4

Matt had set up a photo booth in our dining room and left a remote control for everyone to take their own pictures.  A few Christmas hats and garland only added to the fun!
101222 Christmas Party Group Photo
A quick group shot from our second night.  We had a great time celebrating our Savior’s birth with our church family, and we’re already looking forward to next year!

A Full House!

We have visitors!  The Taglieres and Vances came to stay with us on Saturday, and we love having them in our home!

Taglieres and Vances

It’s been a trip full of the unexpected for them, so we’re glad to give them a place to stay and use as home base while they figure things out and get to see a bit of Malawi.  You can read about what brought them here on Laura’s blog, and then please keep them in your prayers as they make decisions and arrangements about when to head back to the States.

Margie Vance and Abigail

An added bonus of these great visitors – Abigail is soaking up the grandmothering while she can!

Out with the Old Geyser, in with the New

First of all, it’s pronounced “geezer,” like the disparaging name for an old man.  And secondly, most of you will know it as a water heater… though what you see here probably in no way resembles the water heater you have in your house!

Geyser 1

That’s right, it’s a metal box.  This is our brand new geyser, just waiting to be installed.  It’s to replace the old geyser, which our plumber made by himself – it was 5 sheets of metal welded together.  But this one… it’s state of the art!

Geyser Insulation

It even has insulation!  I kind of feel bad calling this one a geyser now.  The old water heater deserved its nickname, but this one is so nice and new, and it works so well!

It lives in our roof (gravity = water pressure) and I just wish I could have been fast enough with the camera to capture the plumber and his assistant raising it to the roof outside Abigail’s room.  They didn’t bring a rope, so instead they borrowed the most “rope-like” item in our yard to hoist it up – the garden hose.

Simba and the Wheelbarrow

Everyone keeps asking about our great guard dog, Simba.  By the time we left Malawi at the end of May, he was already a very large dog, weighing over 80 pounds, though only 7 months old.  We can’t wait to see how big he’ll be when we get back in September!

Simba 7 monthsThis picture was taken the first of May.  We’d been measuring Simba the first of every month to keep track of how much he’d grown.  You can see the marks on the wall.  The lowest mark is how tall he was to the shoulder on the day we brought him home, November 30, 2009.  He has easily tripled his height in the 5 months depicted on this post, making him over 2 foot tall at the shoulder.  And that was the beginning of May.

But we do have footage of what a great guard dog Simba is.  He’s part Rhodesian Ridgeback, and Ridgebacks were bred to be lion hunters.  We figure if a lion ever comes to attack us in a wheelbarrow, we’ll be safe…