Friday, October 05, 2007

closing the chapter...

Well... my work with eMi has come to a close (for full time work anyway). God is leading our family on to other things stateside. I'm sure I will still go on eMi project trips here and there and who knows what the future holds. For now this site will serve as a journal of sorts for the work I was able to do with eMi in Guatemala.

Future ministry work will probably be written about in a different blog. You can always hear the latest on teamhaddox.blogspot.com and find out where I am writing about our current ministry involvement.

Monday, August 20, 2007

Office work...

I haven't written about work in a while so I thought I would give it an update.

Nothing so exotic has happened with work lately. After the conference I have been in the office working on wrapping up the open projects for the office. Paying office bills and reviewing reports and plans is much less exciting to read about than the snake wrestling, jungle trodding work that have filled my days before. The ministry is just as powerful nonetheless. I may not be in the depths physically but the projects I am working on will be constructed there. True ministry is not found in the exciting but rather in obedience and service. I hope that I have been a helpful hand in the closing of current projects. I am glad to have the opportunity to be a part of so many truly meaningful ministries by working on designs for them.

Tomorrow I will visit Tabacal for the last time to schedule the construction of about 5 block homes for the most needy families there. Hopefully I will get around to posting about their progress.

Thursday, July 12, 2007

eMi 25th Ann World Conference


I didn't know many of the people in eMi before the conference. This was my main reason for going to the conference. I was able to meet most everyone from every office around the world. I met all emi staff at the conference as well as everyone else attending the conference except 25 people.

My journey to the conference from Guatemala was a God lesson that can be read about here. The breakout sessions on Disaster Response were the highlight for me (aside from meeting all the wonderful people at the conference). Scott Powell of eMi did a great job of putting that together. We had head representatives from Samaritan's Purse, World Vision, YWAM and Food for the Hungry.

All of the members of the Guatemala eMi office have gone back to the states. I am the only one here as the office transitions to become the Latin America office and moves to Costa Rica. Tom and his family will return at the end of the month and I will help him pack up the office for the move in September. Anyway, it was great to see everyone there at the conference and be able to have a lot of social time with them. It was a grand farewell. Some of them will be moving down to Costa Rice but we will not. Our time in Guatemala is coming to a close as our sights move toward the possibilities of Jordan.

It was an encouraging and exciting time to be together and see all that eMi is doing and has done around the world. eMi is on the cutting edge, showing that everyone can use their skills to further the gospel and for engineers the Lord is actively using them through eMi in "designing a world of hope..."

Tuesday, July 10, 2007

broken plans = God's provision...

I am writing this post rom my hotel room in LA. My flight was delayed and I missed my connection to Guatemala. Heather is sick at home and I desperately want to be with her, yet I am calm, trusting the hand of God. This is because I just learned from my traveling TO this conference in Jackson Hole WY that I am never out of God's hands. It is only when my plans go wrong that I can really see God's provision.

This webTV application has erased my post 3 times so I will continue this story later. ...more to come...

Monday, June 11, 2007

Adventures in Jordan...

(See post in Team Haddox also here)I was able to join an eMi project team to Jordan to advise Habitat for Humanity (who "displays the love of Jesus through building homes for the poor") how they can streamline their construction process and look at the possibility of moving over there with my family to work in implementing the construction suggestions. This was the first eMi trip of its kind. Construction management is a new and developing department.

I would arrive a couple days before the rest of the team. The flight was long and torturous. I left on the 23rd and arrived on the 25th! and to top it all off, the airline misplaced my bag. When I arrived at the Habitat team home, where we all would be staying, I washed my one set of stinky travel clothes in the tub and set them out on the fence to dry. I later came back to find my shirt missing. I even lost the shirt off my back! I was able to borrow some clothes until my bag finally arrived 5 days later but when I received it, my phone and PDA were stolen out of it. First the laptop stolen at LAX and now my phone and PDA! Thanks be to God that he gave me the patience and detachment enough to not let it bother me and maintain a fun attitude. I know that stuff is only stuff but I find that dispite how I would LIKE to respond in certain circumstances, I rarely can accomplish it but in this case God gave me the grace.

After a day of rest the team arrived and the project began. We evaluated their construction by serving them as a work team in the construction of the roofing system on a current house project. We just followed their direction to see how they do it and note areas for improvement. We had 4 funfilled days of formwork, tieing rebar, mixing concrete, and best of all we poured the entire roof as a bucket brigate up the scaffolding. They were days of great conversations with the locals. The team was constantly joking around like highschool boys. One team member put it best when he said, "guys never mature past the age of 14".

Each lunch we had the privilage of eating at the home of the father of the woman for whome we were building the house. Authentic meals in a local's home really gave all of us a great connection with the land and the people.

By the end of the days of construction, everyone had a pretty good idea of ways to greatly increase the effectiveness of the construction process. We had seen a lot and God had used our expertise to reveal areas of improvement. We had a meeting with the Habitat staff to discuss some of thease measures. My main areas were in site preperation and grading, foundation, and different building technologies with the same building materials that would be safer and cheaper and possibly faster. It all was a lot for them to process. We will now work on a comprehensive report to be slowly implemented this year and the next. Overall I think we were an effective instrument in God's hand to provide excellent insight and advise as to how to improve their system and make them more effective in reaching their goals of displaying Jesus through building affordable housing for the poor.

After the trip we were able to tour a bit. My visit to Mt Nebo where Moses gave his final adress to the Israelites, where God showed him the promised land, and where he died and God secretly buried him. It was a deeply spiritual experience to be there in the actual place where Moses was and read his final exhortation to the people, "these are not just idle words, they are your life!"

Later we visited a crusader castle where Randy Craig and I found a secret escape staircase/cave. We used the LCD screens from our cameras as lights down the steep and slippery path. It was MUCH langer than we had figured but finally we reached the other side and trekked back up the mountain to find the rest of the team looking for us and waiting to leave (OOPS!).

We also visited the ever famous Petra. This place was extrordinary and beyond description. We rode horses into Petra from the hotel. Craig and I had fun riding donkeys up the mountain to the "monestary". Later Steve and Randy joined us for a camel ride that turned into a four way camel race back to the Siq (the 1/4 mi. narrow canyon that is the entrance to Petra).

After the team left I spent a couple more days in Jordan with teammember Brian. We visited another castle and an entire first century Roman city in Jeresh. When I went to the airport I stuffed all my luggage into one carry-on sized bag but the bag was too heavy. I explained to the ticketing agent that m y bag was previously lost and robbed of items. He insisted on it being checked and, of course, my bag was lost again and I still have yet to receive it! (hence no pictures in this post) The flight back was no better than the one going. I probably slept a total of 1 hour through the entire journey. The one motivation was meeting Heather and the kids in LA.

What a spectacular adventure. Whoever said following Christ is boring is just plain hanging out with the wrong crowd!

Thursday, May 10, 2007

DENGE strikes again...

Jonathan is in the hospital with Denge fever (a tropical disease contracted from mosquitoes). He has been in the hospital for a few days without them knowing what was wrong. Yesterday the "infectious disease" specialist saw him and dignosed Denge. This is actually a good thing because now they know what they are dealing with and can treat it. The other good thing is that he is not contagious (good because my family visited him in the hospital a couple days ago :)) We will visit him again today on the way to the embassy to pick up Anzo's visa. Jonathan will be heading home in a few days instead of staying until the 23rd. I will be presenting our report to the leaders of Balcones regarding future improvements to the water system

Block home started...

Paul and I started the construction of our new block design home in San Pablo Atitlan for a widow and her two daughters who are Tzutujil Mayan and do not speak Spanish. The local pastor Tono was able to translate for us from Tzutujil into Spanish and she expressed her immense gratitude. She even helped where she could by carrying dirt in for fill using a 1 gallon pale. We carried in the sand and gravel using 1 Gal pales and potato sacks. We mixed the rock, sand and cement on the pad of the building using a couple shovels and hoes. (oh, to have a pumper truck).

With all prototype designs, it started slow. In our three days there we got the reinforcement placed and foundation laid. The Pastor Tono was previously a contractor and I was able to go over the plans and the construction process with him and he will finish the building with some other people from the church. Paul will return tomorrow to check on the process.

Her home will be the 4m x 6m home design. I anticipate that the final cost of the building will be less than $1500 with a water filter and high efficiency wood stove. All the materials are locally produced and/or sold so this will help bolster the economy as well.

Friday, May 04, 2007

Update on San Pablo


Remember the house we built for Jorge in San Pablo?(The Lake Houses Jan 22, 2007) Here it is finished. Jorge finished the door and window and the stucco on the outside and it looks great.

We have created a new design for a home using block. The design takes longer to build but is cheaper. Paul and I will be building the prototype this next week (may 6-8) for a widow and her children. Hopefully the construction will go well and we can build another in San Pablo and 9 more in other locations in July and August.

San Pablo is made primarily of adobe. some of which is not even made from adobe bricks but rather from corn stalks in a grid with mud on them. Many of these homes are barely standing but we still are limiting our construction for those recommended by the local church who have no home at all.

Balcones...


Finally I post on the work in Balcones. Jonathan has been with us since January and we have worked together in the refugee community of Balcones de Palin. His original task was to be the construction manager for the design and construction of a new water tank, a suspension bridge to anothe comunity, and a clinic. This has been shortened down to the design and construction of the tank and evaluation/reparation plans for the water system (welcome to Guatemalan timelines).

I feel like I have had a lot to contribute to this project in particular. Most of the eMi projects revolve around structural systems where I know the least. With this project I was able to really teach Jonathan about Hydraulics in pipes and come up with some creative ways to overcome some very difficult conditions.

We knew things were going to be tough when the people tore down the old tank without telling us and before the tank design was even finished. From the huge rock under the tank area that broke the backhoe and the neighbors slab, that was too big to remove from the site and is still sitting in the road; to the workers being accustomed to certain construction and not listening to Jonathan's advice, to undersized pipes broken all over with holes drilled in them "to let the air out". It has been quite a journey. At virtually every step there was a new obstacle. Solving one problem only seemed to uncover 5 more but God has given us the grace, patience and creativity to meet them head on and, I believe, come up with some great, creative solutions .

Jonathan has been able to grow professionally as well as personally by working and living in such a challenging environment. We have had some great times studying the word in how God relates to men and discussing how to bring these trues into daily life.

The tank is nearing completion and Jonathan will return home May 23. I consider it a privilage that I was able to work with him in the office, have so much fun having him the times he was living in our home, and approach new discoveries on site while living in Balcones.

Thursday, March 08, 2007

Guatemalan Sinkhole

At the end of February a large sinkhole opened up in Zone 6 of Guatemala City. I'm sure you have heard of it, but if you haven't go here to read an article I was interviewed for concerning the details of the sinkhole. This post won't be about the details of the sinkhole but rather my involvement.

A couple weeks ago, just after the sinkhole opened, my curiosity brought me to visit the sinkhole site. You must understand that here in Guatemala you are given a lot of respect with a title and engineers are placed in a similar category as doctors. I figured that I could come to the control area and say I am an engineer from the states and I am looking for the engineer in charge of the site and then I would be able to learn what happened and see the hole for myself. There are always very interesting engineering lessons to be learned from these odd types of disasters.

The surrounding police and army quickly welcomed me and sent me from person to person working my way up the ladder of command. I was ushered in past barricades and into makeshift offices and introduced to brass from the army and city and government officials. I even had a meeting set up with the director of public works for Guatemala City to discuss how I may be of assistance.

There is a camera set on a boom stretching out into the crevice which is controlled remotely. I was able to look at the video and move the camera around zooming in on the problem areas at the bottom of the hole. I was utterly amazed at what kind of red carpet was rolled out for me simply because of my title.

The site itself was impressive, the size of the hole, the sounds of the water, the smells of the sewer. Over a week has passed since my initial meeting and yesterday I brought Jonathan to the site to see it and to check on how things were going. I was remembered and welcomed by name. Not much has changed. They still have not been able to do an assessment because there is still water falling into the hole from the storm drain collector pipes.

I just found the situation quite interesting and becomes another one of my stories labeled, "only in Guatemala..." Only in Guatemala can you show up at a disaster site as an unknown person on a motorcycle and be welcomed into the inner workings. Yesterday I was even able to enter passed all the blockades and come within a few meters of the hole to take pictures (the pic was stitched from several pics from being so close)

Wednesday, February 14, 2007

Chichi church...


Manuel from Tabacal as well as many of the people from Tabacal are originally from a village named Lacama in Chichicastenango. I had been there once before to preach the opening sermon to a newly united church there under the Christian and Missionary Alliance denomination. This church is now more than 500 Mayan people! they have found land that they are purchasing and are meeting there without any building, just out in the sun. The CMA of Guatemala asked me to work with them in the design and construction of a new building. They anticipate that once the building is there, the attendance may swell to 1000-2000 people in the next year so the structure will remain primarily without walls so that if more people come than can fit in the building, they can still meet.

When I was asked to come and visit the church in Chichi I was unaware of what was going on, I only knew they were having a conference of some sort. I was amazed at the welcome we received. When Marco Antonio (Friend from church and on the board of CMA of Guatemala) and I came there were about 600 people there (the previous day they had about 1200-1500). They welcomed us up and we both said a few words. We then convened for lunch and get to the business of the new church. We ate in a small adobe home in places of honor with the deputy mayor of the department of Chichi.

When we left we had scheduled for me to come back the following week to survey the property. This next visit required bringing the whole family. The people of Lacama and Tabacal have wanted my family to visit Lacama so they can know them.


That next week, on Valentines Day, I returned with my family and Jonathan to help me with the survey. We met Manuel at the school and all the kids came out to greet us. The crowd just kept growing and growing. The principle of the school had prepared for our visit and brought us to each of the classrooms for us to say a word to them. The classes all either made a craft for us or sang songs for us or even made us some ceviche to eat. This all was very humbling that we would be considered like celebrities. we ate lunch at Manuel's home and then Jonathan and I set out to survey while Heather met wth the women and the kids played with the village children.

The survey went very smoothly except the battery, which had been charging in the car, now did ot work. So again I slipped into MacGuyver mode and we constructed a battery out of some extra AAA batteries we had brought for the data recorder. Once the equipment was working we were able to take the survey in less than 1.5 hours. When surveying, the most important thing to do is to have two defined points so that you can always return later, align yourself to the previous survey and then do whatever else you need. We had one defined point and took all the survey points. I decided that we needed to define a second point quickly just in case of something went wrong. We shot a second defined point and the very next point, the equipment stopped working. We had all the information we needed but thank God that we were able to get the second defined point!

see more photos

Monday, January 22, 2007

The Lake Houses...


Lake Atitlán was one of the places hardest hit by Hurricane Stan. We have not been able to help the people there mainly due to the fact that as a policy we will not design or build on land that is not yours and most of the people around the lake now have land that is either unusable, unstable, or confiscated as a cemetary. Fortunately, due to its high profile, the majority of aid for the hurricane victims has been aimed at Lake Atitlán and many have found help.

I was able to aid YWAM in the construction of two homes in San Pablo on the northwest shore of the lake because they were providing the funding and I was merely providing the technology and direction in the construction. San Pablo is primarily a lakeside coffee village. The town is pretty low key and composed of nearly all adobe buildings. Many of the people own small coffee farms or they work picking the coffee. I watched the people bring their 100lb sacks of coffee to the market and receive a little more than a dollar for each sack. I watched one boy about 10 years old carrying his 100lb sack of coffee and his backpack down the street in torn clothes and without shoes.

One of our constuction projects was a block addition to an adobe home and the other was a complete new home. My involvement as primarily with the new home because it was built with electropanel, the strange material we use in our home designs. We couldn't use our design because the size of Jorge's property was smaller than the footprint of our home. His property is about 10'x16'! We customized the home to half its size and builtit there along the new road. Before, both he and his wife were living on the property with 4 sticks holding up a tin roof and corn stalks tied together with some plastic bits. They used another sheet of plastic tied like a tent to the surrounding coffee trees with a small "campfire" as the kitchen. He now has a secure home with a concrete floor that he can lock to keep both his family and his belongings safe.


Go to my Flickr account to see all the photos

Team Haddox

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"Bringing physical help to the poor to give them eternal hope in Christ"... A Family dedicated to seeking God and showing His enduring love to ALL, in a world that is passing away.