


I feel incredibly blessed to have been given the opportunity to journey to Sierra Leone. And on the way back, we stopped in Brussels, ate Belgian Waffles (which are very light, flakey and overpriced by the way) and saw some awesome sights.
Aqua Honey Badger enjoys a Belgian Waffles
Less than 12 hours after returning to Colorado Springs, my housemate Seth left for his project trip to Thailand! We had a little send-off for him, excited to hear about what he gets to do there.
I'm excited to jump into three months at the Colorado Springs office. Our goal is to finish the written report for Mercy Ships within a month so they can begin planning their next step. After that report is done, I get to jump on whatever other projects need help. I'll continue to update here about how God is using me and what He is teaching me over here.
To start off that theme, one of the biggest things I learned over the course of the trip is a small aspect of a well known bible passage. In one of our morning devotionals in Sierra Leone, the team went over the story in Luke 10 of the good samaritan. What stood out to me so clearly about the story is how the good samaritan finds the half-dead man "as he traveled". He finds him as he travels, as he walks through life. He doesn't go on a search for half-dead men, he doesn't have a 5 year ministry plan. He's traveling. This convicted me hugely that God desires for me to show mercy in the places he's already led me too, and leading me through. Take my heads out of the clouds so to speak and pay attention to what's happening right in front of me. It's definitely stuck with me too. Good stuff!
Until next time!
-Mike
Being our last full day in Sierra Leone, and having given our presentation last night, today was reserved for debriefing and decompressing from the last week and a half of assessing, reporting and presenting. After breakfast, we took off in two cars on a two hour, bumpy-as-no-other car ride to River No. 2, one of the nicest beaches in Sierra Leone.
Anyways, after a great time in the water and some fresh barracuda and rice, it was time to head back to the ship. Another 2.5 hours and one overheated engineer later, we got back to The African Mercy just in time to grab dinner.
By far the best part of the day was after dinner. We did a debrief highs/lows/prayer request/affirmations time, going person by person around the team. A great time to hear how the rest of the team has grown, and share a little bit as well.
Now its time to pack up! We leave for the airport at noon tomorrow, via car to a ferry to another car to the airport. Our flight leaves Sierra Leone at 7pm and hits Brussels around 6am. We're planning on taking a train into town once we get there and grabbing Belgian waffles for breakfast, should be fun!
Please pray for safe travels as we go by land, sea and air. Looking forward to updating again soon.
In Christ,
-Mike
The morning was more report prep work. Made final Sketchup layouts for both hospital sites, specific site drawings for various sewage and water systems at both sites, and began gathering each sub-team's power point slides.
After 3 days straight on the boat, I finally stepped on land this afternoon! Brad and I got a ride with Dulce (one of our Mercy Ships hosts) into town to check on the progress of a past eMi design project. We met with a construct manager named Fara, who detailed the successes and pitfalls to the design concept eMi prepared for them almost two years ago. Check out the link to see what they worked on!
http://www.emiusa.org/projects/projectprofile_5504.php
After the meeting, we hopped over to the Connaught site to get some specs on pre-existing pumps on site. One of the pumps happened to be on a shed roof, about 12 feet off the ground. Naturally, its the intern's job to climb up there and get work done! So we went to the maintenance department looking for a ladder. We found a wooden one, but it was about 5 feet too short. 5 minutes later, we had a metal ladder just a foot short of reaching the roof, good enough for government work, right! After placing the ladder upside-down and a foot under the roof, the maintenance manager insisted I climb to the top. Fun stuff!
On the roof, getting work done!
That's all the adventures for the day! In my spare time on this trip I've been making a few videos, which will be posted on youtube after I get back to the states and have access to youtube (its blocked here on the ship). I'll post links here once those go live.
The big presentation is tomorrow, be praying we can keep things concise as we have 30 minutes to go over all of our report!
-Mike
Hello world!
Another day in the office! Doing a lot more writing and diagram-ing for our report and final presentation on Tuesday. Having a team of engineers with ten to thirty years of experience has been a huge blessing. They have a full grasp on the project, which allows me to play a support role, assisting them in whatever they need. Transferring hand drawings to CAD, putting spreadsheets together, etc. have been the majority of my day, I love it!
Everyone else on the ship now knows us as "those-nerds-in-the-corner-of-the-dining-hall-always-on-their-computers". One of the Mercy Ship staff came up to me today and said she felt sorry for me. I told her it's not so bad, thats how us engineers role!
Two more days until our presentation to Mercy Ships!
-Mike
Hey everyone!
Just a quick update for today! Brad and I were supposed to go to a past eMi project site this morning to see the progress there, but it's been pouring most of the day, so we had to postpone the tour. Hopefully we'll get to drive over and take a look tomorrow!
Today has been a lot more report writing. It looks like we have most of the information we need to make a cohesive and complete assessment, now it's time for the engineers to kick in their communication skills! :)
I've been doing a lot of AutoCAD, SketchUp, and image editing today. Fun stuff.
Also finished the book A Million Miles in a Thousand Years by Donald Miller. I started just two days ago, and couldn't stop myself from finishing it. Definitely recommend it!
That's all I got, still loving Jesus and loving being on the Mercy Ship!
-Mike
But we didn't see any major structural issues...
Got back to the ship in time for lunch, and then quickly set up our mobile office in the dining hall again. Typed up more report data and printed a few pages out for reference (yes, we have a mobile printer too, its awesome).
In a few minutes we're gonna get a tour of the engine room on the ship, I'm super stoked! I'll be sure to post pictures of that soon.
Overall, the team is flying at a pretty fast pace. Work has been divided to suit each team members strengths and we've really meshed into one cohesive engineering unit. Continue to pray that efficiency and skill carry through the next four days of work ahead.
Look for a funny post on this blog soon.
-Mike
Today looked very different from yesterday.
Instead of going out and taking data on PCMH and ODCH, I stayed back on the ship with Joe and the two electrical engineers to process the information we gathered yesterday.
We set up shop in the Dining Hall, put 3 tables together, opened up the laptops and got to work. It ended up being a very productive day of data summarizing and report writing.
Tomorrow I am headed to the Maternity and Children's Hospitals. They are two hospitals but share the same campus and utilities (electrical, water, waste water), so we've affectionately dubbed them the Siamese Twins. I'll be touring the facilities with Joe and noting many of the same things we did at Connaught yesterday. Hopefully our experience with Connaught will expedite the process at the Siamese Twins.
That's all I got for today! Tonight we're going to the ship "Community Meeting", we'll see what that means! I'm stoked.
-Mike
We met last night to arrange a plan of attack for today's off-ship work. I ended up driving to the Connaught Hospital site with Joe (structural engineer), Geoff (electrical engineer) and Ryan (Mercy Ship's off-ship project director and all around awesome dude). The rest of the team walked to the closer Maternity and Children's Hospitals.
At Connaught, we first met with the hospital manager, who introduced us the head maintenance guy. From that point on, the head maintenance guy led us from building to building, answering any questions we had or referring us to someone who could.
At each building, Geoff evaluated electrical supply/demand, working closely with Phillip, their head electrician. They took close looks at each building's power management systems, getting specs on power distribution panels, generators, and other electrical things that I have little to no clue about.
Joe looked at the structural condition of every building and took note of areas of concern. Luckily, upon first glance, none of the buildings are coming down soon, but we'll be going back in the next few days to take a closer look at the more worrisome structures.
Ryan and I took general notes on every building, identifying facility functions, patient capacity, equipment conditions, and perceived immediate needs from the hospital staff. Two things really struck me from our initial walkthrough.
First, every waiting room is full. Every single one. And whats more, I figure that most of the people with tickets in line wont get in before the day is done.
Second, there is so much equipment that is either in pieces, broken, or not being used. The hospital has one working X-ray machine. Just next door, another X-ray machine has been sitting in pieces for 5 years because no one knows how to put it together! Didn't expect to see that.
It's easy to get overwhelmed by the excess of immediate needs that this hospital has. But when it comes down to it, we're here for a specific goal: provide consistent and adequate water, electricity, waster water management, and structural stability to all the hospital facilities. This in and of itself is a monumental challenge, and it is re-assuring to know that we are only Phase 1 of Mercy Ships work with this hospital. I hope and pray the assessments and recommendations eMi provides will serve as a base point for this hospital to better serve the people of Sierra Leone.
Until tomorrow!
-Mike