Farewell Peru!

22 July 2018

Our final day in Peru was Friday, 20 July. We were packed up and prepared to leave Peru after 18 months of humanitarian service.

First order of business was a visit to Dr. Alejandro Morales, my dermatologist, who removed the remaining stitches from the basal cell surgery he performed 2 weeks ago (getting the surgery in Peru only cost about $275 compared with the $1,500 it would have cost in the USA - better to get the surgery before leaving Peru).

Last visit to Dr. Morales to remove stitches from my skin surgery. He is a really excellent dermatologist, still in practice at age 84.

We later finished a 12-mile walk one last time to Miraflores just to remember the many happy long walks we had taken around Lima over the past few months.  In total, we completed 260 miles of walks in Lima on our days off since the first of April 2018.

Shortly before we were to leave for the airport, Alex Principe, our Area Welfare Specialist, dropped by our apartment with his family and Gloria Cornejo to give us a going-away cake. What a special goodbye!

Alex Principe and family with the going-away cake his wife had prepared.

Farewell delicious carrot cake with Peruvian and American flags. What a kind going-away treat from the Principes. We all ate the cake before leaving the apartment to go to the airport. 

We left our apartment at 6:30 p.m. and got to the airport by 8 p.m. in plenty of time for our midnight flight. However, our jet was delayed leaving from Miami due to thunderstorms, so we ended up with a flight delay of several hours and didn't leave Lima until 3:30 a.m.

In the mean time, our friends Michael and Nadia Trejo showed up at the airport to bid us farewell. With the extra time on our hands, we decided to have a final dinner together at the airport - Pollo a la Brasa (Peruvian rotisserie chicken, a national favorite).

Farewell dinner with friends Michael and Nadia Trejo at the airport before our flight home.

It was now time to pass through security and head to the gate. We bid a final farewell to Peru after a long and fruitful mission.

Bidding farewell to Peru as we headed into Security. (We were able to check six pieces of luggage, so our carry-on was light as we went through the doors into Security.)

We arrived in Albuquerque at 2 p.m. on Saturday and were greeted by our kids and grandkids in a joyous reunion. They had even made a banner they all held up to welcome us home.

Welcome home to Albuquerque with kids and grandkids.


And so our humanitarian mission to Peru is now completed. We are left with what seems like a decade worth of experiences and memories that were compressed into 18 months, and our lives have been deeply affected by this period of intense service.

We are glad we endured (and survived) this chance-of-a-lifetime experience, and we give the Lord thanks for this opportunity that we had.

Our Last Hurrah! Final Days of the Mission to Peru

15 July 2018

Our time is growing short - just a few days are left until our time here will be just a memory.

We are grateful for the role we played in reducing suffering and helping the poor on the road to self-sufficiency.

Somebody's grandmother - among the poorest of the poor on the streets of Lima. Our Peruvian mission focused on helping those with the greatest needs.

Our projects here in Peru helped:

  • restore better vision to the poor through eye surgeries and donations of glasses
  • provide clean water to thousands in remote villages
  • provide wheelchairs to the crippled and disabled poor throughout Peru
  • save lives of mothers and babies through donations of life-saving equipment and training courses for doctors and nurses in remote clinics

We have met incredible people along the way, and we sorrow, knowing that we will never see them again in this life. We have traveled throughout this varied country, from the coast to the jungle and high into the Andes. We have witnessed some very difficult and sad situations and so much poverty. Yet, in the midst of that poverty, the people live, love, and raise families as best they can. They love their culture and are so proud of it. The living conditions are harsh, but the people's hearts are soft and they have shown nothing but kindness to us.

We are glad we are returning to our home, but tender memories of Peru will always tug at our hearts.

Transitioning to the Next Set of Missionaries


Since we are volunteers, we serve for a period of time, and we then return home and are replaced by the next set of missionaries. Our replacements (Floyd and Valene Rose from Utah) came in on Saturday at 12:30 a.m. We met them at the airport and made sure they got to their new apartment. We then served as their escorts to make sure they got a good start. The Roses will now pick up where we have left off - their adventure begins as ours draws to an end.

Arriving in Peru - the Roses now pick up the reigns from us. We served as their escorts for the first days of their mission - now is their turn to serve as we return to our home. 

We spend the next few days training the Roses on the many processes and projects we currently have in the works. They now get to "drink from the fire hose" just like we did when we arrived.

Last Celebration - Festival de Danza


We had one last memorable event before leaving - the Festival de Danza. Various church wards (or barrios) participate yearly in this cultural celebration. Our friend the area office, Miguel Hurtado, invited us to the event we saw last year, and we were pleased that on this last weekend in Peru that he called to invite us to attend this year's event.

These groups practice for months to get their dances and costumes ready for the event. In Peru, people love celebrating their cultural heritage through dance. These cultural dance events are designed by and for Peruvians - there are seldom tourists present.

Months of preparation culminate in an amazing cultural event.

Each group dance focused on a different region of Peru.

The Marinera NorteƱa is the best known of all Peruvian dances. 

Incredible colors - brighter than what the mind can absorb.

Dancing is one of the best ways Peruvians celebrate their culture

The next group is on the side, anxiously awaiting their performance.

The event included this traditional dance of the Quechua in the Andes regions, high in the mountains.

Peruvians - so happy to be celebrating through dance.

These are incredible cultural events, by Peruvians and for Peruvians. 

Remembering Friends


And so, as we prepare to leave Peru, we especially remember those who helped make our stay a more enjoyable experience. The people we have met here have been among our most precious memories.

We and the Roses shared a final meal with Michael Trejo and his wife Nadia. We have spent countless hours with Michael (who works with us in the Humanitarian Welfare Office) and his wife as they have shown us the true Peruvian spirit of compassion and love.

None of our work would have progressed without Miguel Hurtado, the senior purchasing agent who worked tirelessly to make sure our humanitarian donations and projects made it into the hands of our partners who, in turn, worked with the poor. He and his wife showed us sites all around Lima on nights and weekends as they taught us through their kind actions what it means to be Peruvian.

One last hug for our good friend, Lily Davalos, a Peruvian who served part-time with us during our mission. We carry sweet memories of time we spent together with this hard-working, incredible woman.

Farewell to Peru - the entire Humanitarian and Welfare Office had one last get together with atole (our own version of Mexican hot chocolate) and some paneton - a celebration that Peruvians call a 'Chocolatada'. This was a final happy and yet sad event.

And so now, at the end, we are grateful we had this chance of a lifetime to come and serve in Peru. We now return to our home and get ready for the next adventure the Lord has in store for us.

Hope for the Disabled in Tumbes, Wheelchairs for the Poorest of the Poor

8 July 2018

We had a busy week of travel to Tumbes up north on the Ecuadorian border. This trip, the final one for us on our humanitarian service mission, was for reviewing the progress on the wheelchair donation project we oversaw last year.

Colorful Plaza de Armas (main square) in Tumbes, with its decorative performance stage paying homage to native heritage and Peruvian wildlife.

Tumbes, as close as you can get to the Ecuadorian border without leaving Peru.

Wheelchairs for the Poor


Our original trip here in June 2017 was to help donate 150 wheelchairs to the poor and disabled. In addition, we worked with our partner at the National Rehabilitation Institute to teach local health workers and technicians how to evaluate patients and repair wheelchairs. We came back this year, in part, to review their on-going repair workshop, but more importantly, to interview 10 percent of the recipients to make sure the donations were handled properly and to verify the state of the wheelchairs.

Jose Crisanto, from the regional health authority, showed us the work they were doing to repair broken wheelchairs using the repair parts we had given them. This is an impressive program they have organized with many of the disabled actually doing the repairs. The 'before' and 'after' versions of the wheelchairs were remarkable - they had restored beat-up wheelchairs to almost-new condition.

The wheelchair organization, run by the regional health authority, is the best partner we have in all of Peru for helping the poor and disabled.

Jose Crisanto, the representative of the regional health authority, showed us the repair workshop where they restore broken wheelchairs and return then to the disabled.

Wheelchair graveyard where they take beat-up and broken down wheelchairs and restore them to like-new condition.

Wheelchairs in various stages of repair - these will again serve the poor and disabled of Tumbes after the work is complete.

Here is the 'before' and 'after', along with the technician who did the repair. The region tries to employ the disabled to perform this work - they contribute in a significant way by helping to make life easier for other disabled people.

Wheelchair Interviews


After viewing the wheelchair workshop, we went into the homes of the wheelchair recipients for the interviews. In total, we were able to visit the homes of 16 people who received wheelchairs in June of 2017. All were grateful for the mobility their wheelchairs provided.

Most of the recipients were very poor and lived in humble houses, most with dirt floors. But their austere conditions did not diminish their cheerfulness as they greeted us and described how their wheelchairs have changed their lives.

Into the humble home of one of the wheelchair recipients. He calls his wheelchair his 'legs'.

Without the gift of a wheelchair, most of these people would be bed-ridden day in and day out.

This 4-year-old had a brain tumor that was successfully removed but not before leaving her crippled for life. Shown here with her is Angie Custodio, a young adult from our church who went with us and asked all the interview questions - she was a real natural in dealing with people and really enjoyed her time assisting with this humanitarian project.

This man sells candy everyday on the streets from his wheelchair. Without this mobility, he would be stuck at home with no hope for the future.

This man fell out of a tree, broke his neck, and is now quadriplegic. His family can move him around in the wheelchair he received last year. He cannot sit up without being strapped into the wheelchair, but at least he can get outside during the day thanks to the mobility of the wheelchair and the help of his family.

Most of the neighborhoods we went into were very poor with dirt streets and houses made of crude building materials like mud and sticks. It is hard to imagine how many people in the world live in places that are so poverty stricken. Life is especially hard if you are both poor and disabled.

In poor neighborhoods like this, you are considered rich if your floors are cement. Most are just dirt.

This was the poorest home we visited - made from just sticks.

The stick house has no windows, no electricity, and no running water. The best item this man owns is his wheelchair.

Typical interior of most of the homes we visited - along with the dirt floor. This woman is now able to get around well with her cane and walker, so she decided to give back the wheelchair so someone less fortunate could now benefit.

What a blessing these wheelchairs have been for those whose lives were changed as a result. We feel joy in having been able to play a role in this incredible project that restores hope and dignity to the most vulnerable in this world.

Life in Tumbes


Downtown Tumbes was filled with the typical traffic jam of motor taxis, the preferred form of cheap transportation in most smaller Peruvian cities.

Rush hour in downtown Tumbes.

The town comes to life at night as many of the locals walk around the downtown when temperatures cool down. Tumbes can be scorching hot most of the year, but temperatures were in the upper 70s (F) during our visit, so the locals complained about how cold it was!

Tumbes night life on the pedestrian-only streets. Locals come out when it cools down at night.

As we walked around the downtown one evening, we came across an interesting store. They sold each item for one Peruvian Sol (worth about $0.30 USD). We have seen 'dollar stores' throughout the USA and around the world where everything inside the store costs the equivalent of $1. Tumbes is a poor place, so the 'One Sol' store made sense. The locals call it a 'Solsito', or just 'a little tiny Sol'. We couldn't believe a store could exist by selling items that cheap.

Like the sign says: "Thousands of Items, Everything for 1 Sol" (worth about $0.30).

The next afternoon, I popped my head into the kitchen at the place where we ate lunch. The cook staff was a happy bunch, and they obliged my request to take their picture.

What a happy crew, cooking up our lunch at the restaurant in Puerto Pizzaro on the coast outside of Tumbes. 

We have found Peruvians are a fairly happy people, quick to smile and who also love to laugh. Some of the best memories we will take with us from Peru involve the many great people we got to meet along the way.

Last Get-Together


Senior missionaries in our Area Office got together last week to bid farewell to four of us as we draw close to the end of our missions.

Senior missionaries from the Area Office at our farewell get-together. These other volunteer missionaries work in areas such as legal, medical, auditor, church history, and self-reliance. Some have served up to 8 missions, and they just keep going with more energy than what we have. What a great group to work with!

In less than 2 weeks, our mission will end and we will return to our home in Albuquerque. Our replacements arrive in Peru in 3 days, and then we will have about a week together to teach all we know about serving in this humanitarian role.

We can't say that this has been an easy mission, but we have tried our best to help the poor throughout Peru. We take with us the memories of the many incredible people we have met in the many places along the way, and we rejoice that we had this chance to serve.

Latter-Day Saint Charities and Life in Peru during the World Cup of Soccer

24 June 2018

We are now approaching the completion of this humanitarian mission - we will be home in less than 4 weeks. We are now focused on closing projects that have been completed, including:

  • Donations of school equipment to impoverished jungle schools in Nauta.
  • Closing the course projects for Saving Mothers and Babies last year in Cajamarca and Huacho.
  • Family food production projects in various cities.
  • Donations of tools for the blind (canes and punch-card readers) now being disseminated throughout Peru.

After closing these projects, there will still be about 40 on-going projects that our successors will have to keep them busy.

Latter-Day Saint Charities


The legal name of the non-governmental organization (NGO) that we work for is Latter-Day Saint Charities. We work as volunteers, paying our own expenses on this mission. The church pays for our plane tickets and lodging when they send us around the country. Aside from that, we pay everything else.

LDS Charities sponsors relief and development projects in 189 countries and gives assistance without regard to race, religious affiliation, or nationality.


Funds come from donations of both members and friends of the LDS Church. None of the funding comes from government grants or large corporate donations. One hundred percent of donations go towards projects dedicated to humanitarian aid efforts, and all overhead costs are paid fully by the Church.

We, like other volunteers in over 100 countries around the world, count this service opportunity as one of the most significant events of our lives. Serving this mission had been one of our goals for many years. And even though it has been a sacrifice, we count ourselves truly blessed for this chance we have had to serve.

Life in Peru - World Cup of Soccer


When we are not working, we are immersed in life here in Peru. Lately we have been caught up in the soccer craze. For the first time in 36 years, Peru made it to the World Cup of Soccer (currently taking place in Russia).

Soccer-mania has taken the country by a storm, and everywhere we go, we see the national colors and people (and animals) dressed in Peruvian outfits.

Groups of crazed Peruvians in the streets - this is a common scene throughout the country.

Giant Peruvian team shirt on the San Ignacio de Loyola University near our apartment.

Presidential Palace in Lima, all dressed up this past weekend.

Work came to a screeching halt in our Area Office this week when Peru played France. Everyone in the office was given time off to watch the game in the auditorium (and they even gave us refreshments).

We joined in the festivities in our Area Office watching the game between Peru and France. Wearing our own Peruvian team shirts makes us feel half-Peruvian!

On game day, almost everyone in our office wears their Peruvian soccer shirts.

Unfortunately, Peru has lost their first two games in the World Cup, so we only get to play one more game this week. But national spirit still runs high around the country just for making it into the World Cup.

Every billboard around the country seems to have Peruvian team connections . . .

. . . including ads for American companies like Kentucky Fried Chicken.

But our favorite get-ups are when people get their pets into the soccer craze.

This little doggie may not be a soccer fan, but that doesn't seem to diminish his excitement.


And so we march on with our humanitarian work and hope to finish several more projects in the time we have left before going home. 

Our days may be numbered, but we are still focused on going out with a final burst of energy!