Jungle Wheelchair Training

30 March 2017

This was our week for the wheelchair evaluator/repair course in Iquitos (ee-KEY-toes). What a hot and steamy jungle this place is! Only part of our shipment of repair parts and tools arrived in time for the class (flood disasters throughout Peru pre-empted part of the shipment), but we successfully finished the course and trained 13 evaluators and technicians who will support our wheelchair donations arriving in the jungle in the next few months. We are donating 1,100 wheelchairs throughout Peru this year.

Our efforts with wheelchairs (and all of our humanitarian projects) help all needy people, regardless of their religious affiliation.

Students practiced proper patient evaluation before fitting recipients into wheelchairs. Evaluations are critical for proper fitting of recipients who will spend 16 hours per day in their wheelchair.

The technician/maintenance training was the most action-packed portion of the class. We all got our hands dirty and fixed a bunch of broken chairs.

Hands-on repair class.

Too much fun to be called work.

Sandy helped out along with the guys.

Class members showing off their newly repaired chairs.

This woman suffered from polio at age 5. Her current chair, after 10 years in the jungle, was completely rusted and unusable before the repairs. With new wheels and hardware, this chair was restored to like-new condition, and she could actually get herself home on her own power.

Of the 13 students in our course, 7 were wheelchair-bound because of polio. They had contracted the disease during a period when all of us in the USA had easy access to the polio vaccine. Polio has now been eliminated throughout most of the world, but the effects of the disease live on.

We took graduation photos at the end of the course.  

Graduating class of evaluators / technicians. The four in the front were from the National Rehabilitation Institute in Lima. This course was their chance to completely teach the training course and develop this program so it continues long after we are gone.

Our desire now is that these people can run this project in Iquitos by themselves. We now move on to Cusco, high in the Andes Mountains, to present this course again.






Into the Jungle - with the Wheelchair Course

27 March 2017

This week we spent time with our partners at the National Rehabilitation Institute (Instituto Nacional de Rehabilitation) in Lima reviewing the training courses we will jointly present over the next two weeks in the jungle city of Iquitos, Peru, and then again high in the Andes Mountains in Cusco.

Putting the finishing touches on wheelchair courses with our partners from the National Rehabilitation Institute who will be helping with teaching the courses in the jungle and high in the Andes Mountains.

We are donating 1,100 wheelchairs this year throughout Peru (in addition to the 3,500 wheelchairs we have already donated over the past 5 years). Having a wheelchair can make the difference between having a job and supporting a family versus being locked into a life with no future.

We left Lima Friday night and flew to Iquitos in the jungle for the first week-long course for wheelchair evaluators and maintainers.

Jungle City - Iquitos, Peru


Half of Peru is in the Amazon jungle. Iquitos, located near the equator in the north of the country, is the principal hub in this remote region and has a population of 500,000. There are no roads into Iquitos because of all the rivers and jungle - everything comes in either by boat or by air.

Iquitos, principal jungle city of Peru, is located on the Amazon River.  Jungle makes up about half of Peru. The other half is made up of the the high-altitude Andes Mountains and a narrow strip of very dry coast.

Getting Around Iquitos


Iquitos is very remote and hard to reach. This is the largest city in the world that you can't reach by a road. And, since everything must be imported by air or boat, cars are few and far between. Motor taxis rule the streets. Motor taxi rides are fast and very breezy, and it costs about $0.60 to $0.90 for a ride.  You find these loud three-wheeled motorcycles everywhere you go in Iquitos.  There must be 10,000 of these motor taxis in Iquitos, making it the loudest city we have ever visited. It feels like a motorcycle rally (or go-cart race) is underway wherever you go.

Motor taxis are everywhere in Iquitos, making this the loudest city we have ever visited.

Amazon River - Highway of the Jungle


The Amazon River, about a mile wide at Iquitos, serves as the jungle highway of Peru. The river is filled with boats carrying people to distant jungle cities, boats of fishermen and their river catches, and families in dugout canoes plying the waters of this constantly changing river

The Amazon River, a mile wide at Iquitos, still has a 2,000-mile journey through Brazil before it reaches the Atlantic Ocean. This shot shows a very nice floating house - most are not quite so nice.

River ferries shuttle people up and down the river. This boat was heading up river to Pucallpa, Peru, a journey of 3 days.  Similar boats head down river to Manaus, Brazil, and take 10 days. Everyone sleeps in hammocks and cooks their own meals on the decks.

A constant flow of ferries carries passengers up and down river on a scenic (but slow) journey. Note all the hammocks on which people sleep.

In Iquitos down near the river, floating houses rise when the Amazon is high (like during this season). Other houses are built on stilts to keep above the water.

Kids paddling without oars in their dugout canoe.

We took a river tour on our free day. Dave and Sherri Jones, Church wheelchair specialists, flew in from Texas to direct the wheelchair training course, and they joined us on the tour of the Amazon. We traveled up and down the river in this high-speed motorized canoe.

Wild Jungle - At the Edge of Town


The jungle begins right at the edge of town where the last paved street ends. We found a boa constrictor hanging from a tree a few feet from the sidewalk, so we all took turns holding it (while being careful not to let the thing bite). Thankfully, it was only a small boa because holding a large one would have been like trying to hold a wild, fighting firehouse.
Young boa constrictor we found hanging from a tree next to a sidewalk.

Our journey into the jungle was a hot, sweaty experience. We visited nature reserves and saw a host of jungle animals.


These caymans are small crocodiles found throughout this region of the Amazon. This happy bunch of critters was in a nature preserve we visited near Iquitos while on the river tour.

The jungle near to town was filled with colorful birds like this yellow-rumped cacique.

This toucan was rescued from a live animal market in Iquitos.  Rescued animals are often sent to nature preserves around Iquitos for rehabilitation and possible release.

One nature preserve kept us inside a cage made into a tunnel of chain-link fencing to protect us from all the animals that roamed freely outside. We felt like we were the exhibits at the zoo and that we were brought in so the animals could be entertained.

Red-faced monkey and woolly monkey staring at us as we walked along inside our protective cage.

Jungle Village


We stopped in a tiny jungle village and found a woman who set up shop next to a path to a river overlook. She was selling her handmade handicrafts and the fruits she had gathered from the surrounding jungle - a real entrepreneur in the middle of the Amazon. We bought some incredible jungle fruit from her stand.

Our river guide demonstrates opening and eating a pod of guaba we bought from the woman in the Amazon jungle shop.  This long pod fruit looked like green beans and tasted like vanilla ice cream. The round fruit (sapote) was vivid orange inside and tasted a little like mango. She was selling the fruit, which she harvested herself in the jungle, for about 10 cents each.

Sandy bought one of the handmade necklaces made from fish scales of a gigantic Amazon paiche fish.  The scales were as big as potato chips. This handmade treasure cost something like $3.

We climbed to the overlook tower to get a good view of the jungle. Sweat poured off of us as the jungle heat rose. From the top, all you could see for miles and miles was the green wall of the jungle and the Amazon splitting the jungle into two halves.

View from the jungle lookout - the Amazon cut through the heart of the jungle.


Climbing the lookout tower was a sweaty experience. We made use of the hammocks on top to relax and try to stop sweating.

Jungle Cuisine


Peruvian food is excellent. However, here in the jungle, they do things a little different. Instead of potatoes, you could get fried bananas. We have eaten fried bananas at least once a day since we arrived.  They are tasty treats that I think we will miss when we leave.

Typical Peruvian Jungle food -  fried bananas at least once each day instead of potatoes. 

And so our week of training here in Iquitos gets underway, and we have hopes for it being a successful adventure. Wish us well!

Flood Disasters, Trip into the Andes, and More

19 March 2017

Surviving our first national crisis - Flooding and Landslides throughout Peru


Incredible rains throughout the country have led to floods and landslides of Biblical proportions. Mud filled a water treatment plant here in Lima, leaving 10 million residents without water for days so far (and the outage continues into the foreseeable future). While we are surviving with water we had stockpiled to drink, we are running our dehumidifier to get enough water to flush our toilets!

Thirsty crowds line up, hoping to get water from a water truck. 

Some people resort to getting their water out of public fountains.

Our apartment had been bone dry since Friday, so our landlady ordered a big truck of water to come fill up the cistern this morning (most buildings use cisterns in cement vaults under the building to stockpile water for emergencies like this).  As soon as the truck arrived, a line of thirsty neighbors (with buckets and bottles) formed for a half block running down the street in hopes of filling up.  But after the truck emptied its contents into our cistern, it left and the crowds let out a groan and then dispersed. It seems like things may be approaching panic state. No one knows when the water will come back on.

Water truck filling up our apartment underground water cistern. Crowds lined up, hoping to get water, but after the truck finished loading our water, it drove off, and the crowd dispersed with a groan. 

Our colleagues in the Area Office have shipped lots of food, water, and emergency supplies all over Peru to help in the current flooding and landslide crisis.

Last week, emergency supplies were sent by the church to northern Peru for all people involved in this crisis. These supplies filled the cargo hold of a C-130 military transport for shipment to the scene by air. Moroni Torres, our Area Welfare Manager, 3rd from the right, flew with the supplies. Local youth from the church were on scene to help with distribution.

In addition, our office has been buying lots of food at local stores for distribution to people here in Lima who have been affected by this crisis.

 Welfare Specialist Alex Principe (R) and Bishop's Storehouse Manager Oscar Sanchez (L) buying all sorts of rice, beans, and canned tuna to provide to disaster victims here in Lima. When we saw them making these purchases, we teased them about being extra hungry.

Follow this link <Peruvian Flood and Landslide Disasterfor more on the state of emergency throughout Peru. There are some incredible videos here.


Into the Andes - High-Altitude Journey


We traveled from the heat of Lima high into the icy-cold Andes (14,400 feet) to the city of Cerro de Pasco. Our trip was to assess needy schools and health centers for possible donations of desks and medical equipment. Cerro de Pasco is one of the highest cities in the world, and we had to take altitude sickness medication (which hardly worked) and drink coca tea (which made us all feel much better).

Cerro de Pasco is only 105 miles from Lima (as the crow flies if it could fly that high). But the road is so precarious that driving over the Andes to get there takes 6 hours by car. We chose to fly to Huanuco, a city just 70 miles away from Cerro de Pasco, but that drive took us 2 hours through winding mountain roads. 

Google Earth shot of Cerro de Pasco, At 14,000 feet, it is one of the highest cities in the world. A gigantic open pit mine sits right in the middle of town.

Open pit mining is the life blood of Cerro de Pasco. We felt the extreme effects of altitude the entire time we were here.

Maternal & Newborn Health


We visited five health centers (Centro de Salud) in remote Andean villages like the one shown here. They look nice on the outside, but have virtually no equipment inside, including no fetal monitors or ultrasound equipment.  In these health centers over the past 4 years they have lost about 50 babies, and 12 mothers have died in child birth.  We hope to help reverse this with donations of critical medical equipment.

Health Center in village of Huariaca. The center director, obstetricians, and us lined up for a photo. We hope we can help their situation through donations of key medical equipment.

Schools High in the Andes


We also assessed schools needs as part of this journey into Cerro de Pasco.  We have donated school equipment in the past to help impoverished schools improve their standards, and this trip was to make that assessment. Note that everyone wears coats here, year-round, indoors, because it is so cold at this altitude - and it is currently summer here in the Southern Hemisphere!

The first school we assessed - Lorenzo Rockovich in Cerro de Pasco. Note that the kids wear coats indoors year-round due to the high altitudes and cold temperatures. It was 30 degrees F when we arrived - and this is summer.  Winter up here is even colder.

Some of the school furniture was in pretty bad shape, but most of the schools had taken good care of their limited resources.

Most of the grade schools were surrounded by huge walls and gates, designed to keep the kids safe (but they also felt a little like a jail). 

The school in this mountain village had 12 modern computers in their lab and a robotics classroom. Amazing! We also visited a very tiny school that only had ten students, but they still had a computer and a 32" flat screen TV. The classrooms were child-friendly and happy places to learn. 

We were really impressed with the teachers' love and desire to help their students. We probably won't be doing a project for these schools since they were all doing so well (which was disappointing for some of the teachers and staff).

We met in the town hall in Cerro de Pasco with the Mayor's chief assistant, Elmer Gomez, who took us to all the schools and health centers.  Right after this meeting with him, we walked outside the town hall and immediately had an interview (with microphones in our face) with the local press who were interested to learn about our visit. That was a first for us! I guess we will be famous now in Cerro de Pasco!

Llamas and Alpacas - Peruvian Traffic Jam


Farmers high in the Andes often raise llamas and alpacas (both are raised for their meat, alpacas are raised for their fur). We saw thousands of these animals during this trip to the highlands.

Cars had to stop while this herd of llamas / alpacas crossed the highway.  We laughingly called this a "Peruvian Traffic Jam in the Andes".

After seeing these pictures, our granddaughter Ella told her mom that the alpacas looked like sheep with long necks (she's right).  If the babies had shorter necks, they would actually be cute little lambs.

A farmer and his wife gathered their herd (mostly alpacas with a few llamas mixed in). Their little doggie came along for the fun. This was the middle of the summer, but temperatures at 14,000 feet were right at freezing.

Getting back down from Cerro de Pasco proved interesting. All along the route there were rockslides that shut down traffic in several places - a daily event here in the Andes.

The Andes Mountains - Many places looked like Switzerland. Note the terraces (called chacras) high on the mountain slope. Farmers still plant and harvest crops in these chacras, some of which date back to Inca times. Imagine hiking up these mountains to work on your fields, and then struggling to bring down back the harvest (much of which are potatoes). 

Back to Lima - Folkloric Espectacular in the Teatro Nacional


We made it back by Saturday to Lima to see the Folkloric Espectacular at the Teatro Nacional. About 20 other senior missionaries joined us for the night out.  It was an amazing 2-hour performance with dancers in native costumes and fabulous music in an amazing performance hall.

Teatro Nacional in Lima, the most beautiful building in Peru

Incredible musicians performed all music for the show, including all the traditional Andean instruments like Kena flutes and Charango mandolins.

Dancers in traditional costumes



As part of the final number, the audience was invited to join in the fun.  

And so another busy week comes to an end.  This coming week starts our wheelchair evaluator and maintainer courses here in Lima, then we fly out in the Amazon jungle on Friday to continue the training and to hand over part of the 1,100 wheelchair donation we are making this year in Peru.

Humanitarian Work Marches On & Trip to Barranco

12 March 2017

Humanitarian Projects


Among all the things we are doing, preparing for wheelchair courses is the biggest project right now. We put together 45 tool kits for the repair technicians and delivered them to the Instituto Nacional de Rehabilitacion (INR) this week so they can get them airlifted to the jungle city of Iquitos in the Amazon region. We travel there in 2 weeks to help with the courses.

About $5,000 worth of tools, manuals, & supplies for the wheelchair training courses.

Manuals we printed for the Sillas de Ruedes (wheelchair) training courses to present in the jungle, high in the Andes, and along the coast.

Our partners, Dr. Cusihuaman (L) and Sergio Reynoso (R), both from INR, told us that the Peruvian Air Force is airlifting 120 of  the 1,100 wheelchairs the church is donating (plus the tools, manuals, and other supplies) to the jungle city of Iquitos, Peru, next week. Iquitos is the largest city in the world with no highway connections - you get there only by air or on the Amazon River. 

More Floods


Our humanitarian office handles natural disasters as they occur around the country (floods, earthquakes, volcanos, etc.), but floods continue to occur in northern Peru with the continual rain they are receiving. While we have our hands full with the wheelchair program, our office continues to manage disaster relief up north, including providing food boxes, water, and other short-term necessities.

Photo from Piura, Peru, up north showing the floods that are happening around the country. We continue to provide disaster relief. (However, here in Lima, it continues to be dry - we only get about 2 inches of rain/year in this extremely dry desert).

Barranco - Saturday Trip to Sceneic Lima Suburb


Saturday is our preparation day (or better-stated, our diversion day) and we take the inexpensive taxis to visit scenic parts around town.  This week we went to the artsy suburb of Barranco on the coast, about 45 minutes from our apartment.


Bridge of Sighs (Puente de los Suspiros) - According to legend, if you make a wish and hold your breath while you walk across the bridge, your wish will come true.

Below the Bridge of Sighs is a beautiful sloping path that leads to the ocean. The path, called the Bajada de los Banos, leads down a former streambed followed by fishermen years ago, but now this shady path leads past upscale homes and nice restaurants.

Tree-lined and shady with a wonderful ocean breeze, the Bajada de los Banos once led down the hill to some luxurious bath houses for the rich.

Shortcut to the Pacific


Just a short stroll down the Bajada de los Banos let us pop out of a narrow canyon right at the ocean.  Beaches were packed with Peruvians seeking to get away from the heat.

At the bottom of the Bajada de los Banos path, you pop out at the beach, filled with people.

Murals Everywhere


Many of the walls throughout Barranco are painted with amazing murals - amazing colors were everywhere. In fact, this is where many of the still-existing hippies hang out in Lima.

Sandy seemed to become one with the wall murals in Barranco

All of Barranco seemed very free-spirited. 

"Think with the Heart" (Pensar con el Corazon)


Barranca Mansions and Beautiful Architecture


Barranco is filled with exquisite homes built by the wealthy in the late 1800s.

Mansion in Barranco - Opulence of a bygone era.

Iglesia de la Santisima Cruz (Church of the Most Holy Cross) - only 50 years old after replacing the previous church that was destroyed in an earthquake.

Barranco's public library (Biblioteca), 95 years old this year

Last Street Car in Lima


Lima got rid of their street car system 50 years ago. However, they found one last car in a scrap yard a few years back, and they decided to put it back in operation.  It runs on its own set of tracks for about 6 blocks, then turns around and comes back. It is part of the Museum of Electricity - the most popular part of the museum.

Marshall pretending to do something naughty (again?)

Mexican Food in Peru?


While the native Peruvian food is excellent (and can be spicy hot), most of us North Americans miss our Mexican food.  One of our reasons for going to Barranco was to try out the Burrito Bar, a hole-in-the-wall spot serving the closest thing to real Mexican food in South America. Oh yes . . . it was really good!

Carnitas Burrito, good Mexican food for South America, along with an ice-cold glass of Chicha Morada (Peruvian purple corn and pineapple drink - so refreshing on a hot and sweaty day)

Farewell, Barranco


And so we finished our day, exhausted as always on a Saturday, but we just had to buy this cute little family of hand-made brass llamas. The seller's father makes them in his home. This group of llamas cost about $6.60 USD for all four - what a bargain.

Hand-made Brass Llamas we bought in Barranco. 

And so Monday starts another week for us. This week we journey high into the Andes for a school and health-center project. The place is called "Cerro de Pasco", one of the highest cities in the world at 14,400 feet. We already have the altitude-sickness pills ready for this trip!