Here are some pictures of our apartment decked out for Christmas! We didn't want to buy too much since this is our last Christmas overseas, so we were blessed to get the "extras" from our supervisor's house! And they were some pretty great "extras!" Of course I added some of my own creativity :) and used my nativity scenes that I purchased in Colombia & Ecuardor. Check it out!
Welcome to our little apartment! :) 
Sliding glass doors...looking outside to the porch.
Can you see the lights on the palm trees?
Our Christmas tree...still in progress!

Can you see the lights on the palm trees?
Our Christmas tree...still in progress!
The book shelf...
Side table and our 2nd little Christmas tree
Looking up the stairs to our rooms....
Looking into the kitchen...
A view from the stairs into the living room...
on our little plant by the hammock
Our porch railing decorations...
on all the palm trees. It actually looks really good!
At night when I turn on the lights...it actually feels like Christmas...well, "feels" as in my heart gets in the Christmas spirit! It's 95 degrees + outside! Kids are swimming in the pool all day long...and I'm sunburned from yesterdays evangelism trip around the barrios! haha! What a different way to experience December! :0) Hope you enjoy the pictures!

This is where we worked. It was sand, mud & cactus for miles! It was such a drastic change from where we live and work on a regular basis. Our daily schedule consisted of driving for MILES, sometimes hours to reach our first location, "the ranch", where women would walk for miles, or ride a bike to get to. Their homes are build of a mud/manure mix, and the roofs of their homes are made of the hollow wooden part inside the cactus. The women wear a long "dress" that looks like a "moo moo" to me, hehe, but given the hot climate, I'm sure it works out well for them.
Day 1-Obstacle #1 So it rained really hard on Sunday night...it leaked through the hotel roof and into my stuff, so of course it also made a mess of all the roads. After getting directions from the little lady, we ended up at this "stream" which had risen into a flowing river. It was waist deep at the time...and they wanted us to drive the truck through it....for on the other side was our first clinic location. Needless to say, we listened to wisdom, and decided we'd have to come back another day....
Here is Joy, seeing a patient. One of the most interesting things about this people group is that they are very timid and reserved. Our people group on the coast are very open, robust and friendly. It took a lot of effort to get these women to talk to me! Just to be fair...some of them didn't speak Spanish, and only understood their native language (which to me sounds a little Asian) but several people from each ranch did understand Spanish. I had no idea who understood and who was just acting like it...because the only answer we could get out of any of them was "uhhh"...it sounds kind of like a short, soft grunt...but it's their way of communicating "yes", "no", "I didn't get that"...and much more....so as you can see...we had our hands full trying to communicate clearly! 
This was the final group we saw all week. It's a brand new group and it was our very first clinic with them. Please lift them up in your prayers. They have several solid believers in this group. Pray that they begin to form a solid church!


