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Saturday, November 19, 2016

September and October at Ecclesia College

We spent a very pleasant two months at Ecclesia College in Springdale, Arkansas. We worked a month then traveled to Lindale, Texas to attend the SOWER board meeting then back to Springdale for another month.
The college is a "work college" in that the students are assigned hours of work to do around the campus in lieu of tuition.
The campground is a secluded space west of the campus.  The facility actually started out as a YWAM, Youth With A Mission, and later transitioned to a college campus.
When we got there we felt we needed to remove a layer of tree resin and dust, mostly from South Dakota, from the motor home including the roof.
Mornings were beautiful as the fog set up a number of great photo ops.  Here is one of the men's dorms which later we spent a lot of time in doing repairs.
The first several jobs were wiring.  This house was a girl's staff house---
---then there was an outlet in the kitchen which needed to be rerouted---
---and a new line had to be run for the pop dispenser.
A leak had been reported in a room in one of the women's dorms and it had ruined the ceiling and the floor in the room. 
After cutting out the damaged floor and replacing it---
---we attached the ceiling repair.
There was quite a lot of damaged sheet rock which had to be replaced---
---and of course the old ceiling had an odd texture on it which was best matched with a texture roller.
One weekend we went to downtown Springdale to see an historic house---
---and visit the gift shop of course.
After the end of the September project we made a trip to Lindale, Texas to attend a SOWER board meeting.  At a noon break we all ate under a roofed RV site---
---and enjoyed the meal and the fellowship.
We were staying at Mercy Ships, another SOWER project just a few miles from the office.  On our way back to our room we came across this small fellow and decided to document it for you.
Back in Springdale the cafeteria was under new management and one of their goals was to spruce up the place.  Obviously the pop dispenser rack is not the kind of thing one would like to look at while you are eating so we were asked to clean it up a little.
Here is our solution!!
The kitchen staff also did not have a good place to store their mops and brooms.  Currently they were in a very tiny closet behind the ladies restroom.  The smell in the restroom was a bit disgusting and again we were asked if we could provide a place which would be better.  This picture is of a door to a store room which was no longer used.
It provided a perfect place to build a closed which would be outside and still available.  Note that it is off the ground.  When it rains this sidewalk is under a three inch stream of water which drains from the parking lot.
Another weekend we also visited Crystal Bridge in Bentonville.  It is an art gallery founded and funded by the Walton family.
Between the gift shop and the gallery there is a twenty five foot tall spider which is a great piece of art all by itself.
There is a stream which flows down the valley in which the gallery is built and with the recent rains the water was quite high.
We also spotted a ground hog digging around in one of the gardens at the site.
We spent a lovely afternoon visiting the grounds---
---including going through one of their newest exhibits, a Frank Lloyd Wright house which had been on the east coast but was dismantled a move to Bentonville a year ago.
  Back at work.  Remember the picture of the house in the fog.  This is one of the rooms in it---
---and this is the kind of thing we found when we started tearing down the ceiling.  There were all kinds of things which had been put into the ceiling for insulation we guessed.
We tore all of the old damaged paneling off of the walls and ceiling---
---hung sheet rock---
---and finished it.  Some difference, huh.

On our way back to the RV site one evening we found a tree laying across the road away from camp.
A couple of days later, after a significant storm, the road going the other way was closed by this large oak tree.

Of course there was plenty of office work to keep Billie busy---
---but when she wasn't doing office work she was home making sanitary pads for ladies in third world countries.  We have so much!  We didn't stop to think that things like this are not available for a large portion of the world.
One last job.  The maintenance manager had contracted a welder to weld a new beam for the entry way to the office.  He was not available for several weeks so we were asked to do the job.
A little torch work to make the beams the right size---
---and a welder to make it permanent and there we have a structure to hold up one end of the new overhang.
We had a great group of people which we met with on Sunday morning for Sunday School.  They decided to have a barbecue one evening and this is a picture of the back yard of the couple who hosted the affair.  How neat is this endless pool?

Wednesday, August 31, 2016

August is over and we have hit the road once more!

With the completion of the August project at Sunshine Bible Academy we have headed south once more.  We lived in South Dakota long enough to know that in September it will freeze and in October it will snow.  We will stop at the farm in Kansas for the "honey do" list from Sis.
Just a little sage advice to begin the blog.
During our August project we had great help from Les and Janet Turkelson.  They were the only other Sowers to come to Sunshine this year while we were there.  There were three more couples coming in September.
Our Oriel friend was there to help us along---
---and I should have known something was coming when there was such a corona around the moon. 
 Sure enough, the wind sent a dart through the cedar trees and snapped one clean off.
  There was quite a bit of damage around the campus and we filled the truck three times with brush before we had it cleaned up.  
Everyone got into the cleanup action---
---but after the work it was time to relax and spend quiet time with God.
Unfortunately, I didn't have quiet time as the fan in the Ranger went south before we were ready and I had to replace the fan resistor.
When you look at this wall what are your thoughts???  A mom let her teenage daughter decorate the wall.
After a good coat of primer---
---two coats in some places---
---then the cutting and finish coat and the wall was a wonderful off white again.
The ladies spent a good deal of time cleaning trophies to get them ready for the new trophy cases---
---They spent time cleaning flower beds---
---on both sides of the Chapel---
---and they spent a lot of time in the kitchen---
---mostly cleaning and getting ready for the returning students---
---but sometimes they spent time with the cooks cutting corn from the cob that a local farmer provided for the school.
Meanwhile, in order to get clear to the top of the Chapel bell tower, we had to rent a 55 foot reach bucket lift.
Eventually all of the loose paint was gone and the spraying began.
Just a few hours later the tower had a coat of primer and paint and was I glad.
We also put in a new drain for a dehumidifier which has bugged me for several years.  Les is not getting ready to dump something on me, he is filling the drain spout with water to test the installation.
We also built doors for the "crows nest" and the concession stand on the football field.
Here we are testing one of the doors in the "crows nest" which is the place where the announcer will be to announce the football game plays.
They are quite a ways up in the air but it would be a great place from which to watch the game.
We constructed it so that the doors would open sufficiently so the announcer could see the whole field but still have protection from the elements.  Remember, it will snow in South Dakota in October!
The lower section will be for the concession stand.  When the door is opened it well also serve as a serving table.
The door will swing down and be supported by chains---
---and we added a note to make sure that there is someone outside to catch the door as it opens so that no one will be crushed with a falling door.
One other quick job was to build a new sill for the window in the back of the Chapel.  The sill had rotted and fallen off allowing the cracked window to start slipping out.

When we got to the farm we were greeted by some of the locals---
---and we found that the pear trees had loads of pears on them---
---so we took the time to harvest some.
Who needs a picking bag if you have a tight belt and a tough shirt!