Papua Ny Guinea Papua Ny Guinea

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  • Dag 27

    Pizza Night!!!

    29. maj 2024, Papua Ny Guinea ⋅ ☁️ 18 °C

    Bei den Hosteleltern von Joelle und Niklas waren wir zur Pizza Night eingeladen. Etwa 20 Pizzen im Holzofen auf der Veranda 😁. Danach Vanille Glacé aus dem 16 Liter Karton 😂! Sehr fein, und vielen Dank an Inneke und Leigh!Læs mere

  • Dag 38

    Madang…wieder mal „Stadt“😉

    1. april, Papua Ny Guinea ⋅ ⛅ 30 °C

    Heute erreichten wir Madang. Ein Teil der Passagiere flog ins Hochland nach Goroka zu den Mudmens. Wir blieben hier und machten einen Ausflug „Die Highlights von Madang“…Schwefelquelle, Drehort von Robinson Crusoe, großer Markt und natürlich Sing Sing …ein echt netter Ausflug und mit frischen Früchten vom Markt ging es zurück zum Schiff und ein Lazy day Nachmittag folgte. Dann Dinner mit Schnitzel und Bierchen. Nach dem Auslaufen gab es noch einen Absacker bei „Pop meets classic“ und jetzt ist bedtime😉🤪🙏🙋🏻‍♂️…Morgen wartet ein spannender Tag am Sepik…VORFREUDE😉👏Læs mere

  • Dag 24

    A day in my life

    20. november 2024, Papua Ny Guinea ⋅ ☁️ 64 °F

    I’ve been wanting to share what a typical day here is like. On any given weekday, hospital rounds start at 8 am. Monday mornings start at 7:30 with chapel, Fridays at 7:30 with a doctor’s meeting. After rounds on weekdays, generally I’m in the ER seeing patients. If it’s slow, I got across the “hall” to the clinic and help out there. Every 4 days or so, I’m on call. Usually it’s a 24 hour call, with rounds the next morning before having the rest of the day off. Call varies a lot. Sometimes it’s busy, sometimes not. Patients in the ER or those on the ward with some issue are my responsibility. As I don’t do OB care, someone else is assigned to that ward. I always have a long-term doc as backup for help.

    There’s a more or less protected lunchtime, which has been wonderful. It’s nice to have an hour for lunch and not have to eat here and there between seeing patients. After clinic ends around 4, I often go on a short walk before making (or reheating dinner). Dishes get washed and put away, water filtered, sometimes the floor swept. Some evenings there’s a Bible study or prayer meeting. Sundays the single people get together for a food swap, so they have different dishes to eat throughout the week (I go but eat my own food- the socialization is nice).

    I’ve been sick for about 2 weeks with back-to-back crud, so my time off has been less having fun or working out and more laying in bed. I’m on the upswing from a head cold and pray that it’s gone completely before I leave in a few days!
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  • Dag 17

    Worlds apart

    13. november 2024, Papua Ny Guinea ⋅ ☁️ 63 °F

    My plans of writing a little blurb every few days were foiled by my GI system rebelling. I still don’t know if I accidentally ate some gluten or if I caught something. Regardless I’m feeling back to normal today, praise God!

    I wish it were easy to share life here in a few words, but when compared to the US or Europe, PNG is a world apart. I did some reading yesterday- PNG is the 29th poorest country in the world. I see the effects of this every day in the hospital and clinic. Medications we use every day aren’t available, people often come in barefoot because they can’t afford shoes.

    People often delay care. I’m not sure how much of this is due to poverty, how much is cultural and/or a sense of fatalism, and how much is the rugged terrain that impedes travel. There are probably myriad more reasons that I simply don’t know of or understand. So I see patients coming in with advanced cancer yet to be diagnosed. People with TB affecting their lungs, their brain, their spleen, their belly. Infections that we rarely see in the US are more common and often more advanced.

    And yet, I also see people who are so grateful for the care they receive, who give a deeper thank you than I hear back home. I hear children laughing outside as they play. I see families caring for their loved ones. And I hear the voices of staff, students, and families praising Jesus. The longer I’m here, the more I see what a privilege it is to be serving here.

    (I hope to share about my daily life and some stories in the coming days. Pictures are mostly devoid of people as I want to protect patient confidentiality. And I’m bad at remembering to take photos!)
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  • Dag 10

    Alotau last stop in PNG

    7. november 2024, Papua Ny Guinea ⋅ ☁️ 26 °C

    Alotau is the provincial capital of Milne Bay. It was the scene of a major battle between Australian , Papua New Guinean and American troops against the Japanese. When we get off the ship we are greeted by music and dancers with spears, they look a little out of context standing on the dock.

    Two of the stops involve a museum with not very much and a memorial to the battle. A short morning of touring and no snorkeling. We start with a memorial of the Milne Bay battle and then on to the last performance we will have in this part of the island of New Guinea.

    The bus ride takes us well out of the Town center and down a dirt track towards the sea. It's a little hard to quite know what it is we are supposed to be doing. We can see men with canoes and a welcoming group opposite the water, it's a little chaotic, a matter of going with the flow. It starts with a traditional welcome with spears, dancers and general battle cries. This is not the main performance, just the warm-up act. Two large war canoes arrive filled with men. We are told this is a traditional canoe the men would go off to battle in this type of craft. They are very narrow so I don't think the purpose of the battle is to return with any booty just kill and destroy I suspect. No women participate in these performances which is the first time that has been the case. It's all very dramatic and I think the purpose of this performance is how tribes around the sea would have raided other villages. A small boy with his spear stands beside the men dancing and copying their actions. It is good to see these traditions being carried on and embraced even by small children.

    There is a small market with a few handicrafts, mostly wood carvings. We have 200 kina left and decide on another small bowl, we have no intention of taking any local currency home with us.

    Back to the ship, we stop at another memorial park arriving back in time for lunch, we will sail a day and a half to Cairns.
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  • Dag 10

    One week in

    6. november 2024, Papua Ny Guinea ⋅ ⛅ 61 °F

    Good morning from the other side of the world!

    I’ve tried several times to write a new post, but words have failed me. Probably a combination of jet lag and things being so different here. To be honest, my first week at Kudjip was very challenging. Now after one week, I’ve gotten the hang of daily life here and am getting my feet wet with the medical side of things.

    I think I’ll try giving little snapshots of life here in this next several posts- some about where they’ve put me up, what cooking/getting food here is like, work, etc. For now, I’ll leave this post saying that, despite how challenging life here is, I’m thankful to be here. My heart wasn’t at a place I could say that one month ago, but the Lord has been softening my heart. I’m thankful I can come provide some relief to the long-term missionaries and local doctors, that I can learn from locals and from people who live here, and that I am gaining eyes to see the beauty around me.

    I haven’t taken many photos, but I’ll post the few that I do have.
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  • Dag 22

    Island homes and trading day

    28. juli 2024, Papua Ny Guinea ⋅ ⛅ 29 °C

    We visited an island that was celebrating a trading ceremony with a partner community - a town on new Ireland called Namatanai. Each person that registers to trade thinks of the person he will be trading with(usually same sex and age) and packs things that this person could want from his home. The town boy packs rice, tin fish, fishing hooks, soap bar, fishing rod etc. The island boy packs woven mats, baskets, sago, banana, etc.
    We were gifted 2 puppies...😂
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  • Dag 21

    Mumu island style

    27. juli 2024, Papua Ny Guinea ⋅ ☁️ 27 °C

    Last night our hosts packed banana leaf parcels: one with rice, ciconut milk and papaya, one with tapioca, fish and coconut milk, one with tapioca, coconut and bananas... They layed them on and under hot stones overnight and served it for all of us together, helpers, hosts and guests alike. I enjoyed that we weren't served separately for once! The food was delicious.Læs mere

  • Dag 7

    Village Mumu preparation

    13. juli 2024, Papua Ny Guinea ⋅ ☁️ 23 °C

    The most important birthday is the first birthday, cause the child made it through its first year of life and is more likely to grow up well. Here they are preparing a Mumu for the first B'day of the daughter of Nebo, a young man Leroy met and who invited us to drop by. When we came by the whole clan and friends were there to help prepare the feast and we were welcomed to watch.Læs mere

  • Dag 33

    Port Moresby

    4. juni 2024, Papua Ny Guinea ⋅ ⛅ 27 °C

    Wir sind wieder im gleichen Hotel wie vor 5 Jahren.... und die Zeit ist daran nicht spurlos vorbei gegangen 🤷‍♀️. Auf Grund der Lage des Hotels in der Nähe des Flughafens, war am Nachmittag ein Spaziergang ausserhalb keine Option 😬. Zudem ist es mit 28°C schwül und heiss, so dass wir gemütlich am Schatten sassen.
    Dafür gabs "Cesar Salad" zum Znacht, mit Lamingtons (wirklich fein!) im Zimmer zum Dessert.
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