Wednesday, June 5, 2019

Life in Kibaale {Spring 2019}




When I'm not working on my school work I'm serving alongside my family and the amazing staff at the Kibaale Community Centre. On the 150 acre property where I live there is a school with 1,000 students from nursery class to high school, 200 staff, a medical clinic on the property for the staff, students and community and also a community outreach program, so there is always a lot going on! 

We also host a lot of teams and visitors that I help out with a lot. Teams are involved with devotions in the classes, Awana, sports programs, building new homes, delivering bedding, goats, mosquito nets or other needs families might be lacking, medical care including jigger removal and then also just spending time with the students and staff! 

I feel like I have developed a lot as a leader with the responsibilities I'm given especially when we are hosting teams. I am thankful for these opportunities where I am most often leading and teaching people who are a lot older than me! 

I also have learned a lot about the culture in Uganda and development programs. There are many ways to do things but I love that my family is just a very small part of an organization that is Ugandan led; we have all learned so much from everyone here that is included us so well into Kibaale and their families. 

My parents encourage me to learn about development, charities and non profit organisations while we are living and working overseas. One of the books I read this year was "When Helping Hurts" and I found it quite educating and applicable to the work that we do here in Kibaale! 

I'm thankful for the past few months, that although they were particularly busy, I met some amazing people and got to share Kibaale and all the great things being done in this community with them. We have had 107 visitors these past few months, which is the most visitors we have ever had in a year and it's only June! 


Sports Day with an Outreach team from Pacific Academy School



PE class with the Special Needs class and our visiting team of nursing students from Trinity Western University. The special needs class has 14 students, 13 of them are deaf! I have loved learning sign language to better communicate with these amazing students. 


My siblings and I are helping out with a primary school PE class. 

The best part of a sports day is the dance party finale! 


I love getting to build a new house for one of our students, a mud home costs only $3,000 Canadian dollars and can last up to 15 years! 

Babies usually love me but I guess I should have stuck to building a house with this little one!  




Building a home with a team from Village Church and the amazing students in the 
Kibaale Vocational School. 

I was able to help out a family that came to visit Kibaale to bring craft supplies to the primary school. We read them The Noon Balloon book and then all the kids made their own hot air balloons! 


One of my very favourite places to spend time in Kibaale is the Special Needs classroom, so I am the first to volunteer to take teams here. I love seeing the students give our visitors a sign name! We also love to do crafts in here, from colouring to making bracelets, purses or even sewing sweaters! 


Making play dough and learning a lot of new sign words! 


When I finish high school I am going into nursing, so I have particularly loved the time I have been able to spend with a Nursing team from Village Church as well a team of nursing students from Trinity Western University that came for the entire month of May. The nurses that came taught me to take vitals so I was able to help with that on our outreach clinic days, as well jigger removal! 





This little baby came to an outreach clinic and the nurses found him failing to thrive so we went back the next day to his home and did another check on him and brought formula to help fatten him up! 


My grandparents sponsor this family, I was able to go with my Mom to check on them, give them some extra food during the dry season and pray for them! 

Community outreach day!

On a community visit I was able to bathe this little baby and all her siblings, leave them some soap, toothpaste and toothbrushes, we also gave some new clothes to their whole family. 

Hours old! 


A perfect fit! 

We went with another family to this nearby village to give them supplies, sing songs and play games! 

One of the students our family sponsors, Lenon. He is the sweetest little boy. His father used to be a student at our school, he is deaf so was in our special needs class! It's great that so many years later his son can now be in our Nursery school. 

Living in Uganda is not always easy and not always fun, but a lot of the time it is! 

Wednesday, April 29, 2015

Water is LIFE in Uganda


by Avin Dyck
Social Studies 6
April 28, 2015

The students in the classrooms at our school have to pump water for drinking, washing hands and cleaning their classrooms. 

Each jerry can takes an average of 20 minutes to pump. 

Water is a valuable resource all over the world. It is essential to have clean water to grow food, not only for us but for the animals who God instructed us to care for. 

I live in Uganda where running water is not common in homes. Most families own jerry cans that they have to walk a distance to fill up every single time they need water. It is common for children to wake up at 5am to go and get water and again when they get home from school. Can you imagine having to walk to get water for bathing, cleaning, and watering your crops? They also have to boil this water before they can drink it. Part of the job we do in Uganda is educating the students on boiling their water before they drink it.

A bore hole allows you to pump deeper and cleaner water.

Our hope is to have bore holes that provide cleaner water to every community in the area we work, hopefully within an hour walking distance from their home. If there are not bore holes then people use watering holes and dirty rivers to get water from.

This is a dirty watering hole.

I am so thankful that God provides bore holes in Uganda so people don't only have to use watering holes.

I visited this community last week with a social worker, over 1,000 people only have this dirty watering hole as their nearby water source. A sickness called Typhoid is very high when this water is used for drinking and cooking. They say Typhoid feels like the worse flu you could ever imagine. We are very thankful that a donation for a new bore hole came in last week and this community is getting a bore hole! Praise Jesus for providing clean water!!!

A rain water collector at our secondary school.

Another safe way to provide water to families in Uganda is rain water collectors. It only rains in Uganda about 4-5 months of the year, but is very helpful to collect that water during the rainy season.

This family will collect water into this small rain collector from the roof of their mud house.

I am pumping water for our own house with my sister Mazzy, we have to pump water to use in our own house during the dry season, during the rainy season their is a rain collector on our house. 

Each of these normal sized jerry cans that took 20 minutes each to fill up will only flush your toilet 2 times!! That really tells you how much water we use without thinking about it. I can't drink the water out of our taps, we need to boil it first. When I am in Canada I see people using water without thinking about the work it takes some people to just have a clean glass of water. I am thankful for this experience and that I don't take water for granted. 


If you are interested in providing clean water in Uganda our organization is 

"Rule over the fish in the sea and the birds in the sky and over every living creature that moves on the ground." Genesis 1:28

Tuesday, February 24, 2015

Birthday Weekend in JINJA!!

It was so fun going with my family and our visitors Gabriella and Shea to Jinja for the weekend over my birthday!

Out for dinner to 2 Friends for pizza.



My family on the Nile River

Holding reptiles!!!

Cutest tortoises. 



Very scary forest cobra. I have seen one of these in my yard in Kibaale!!


I really want a donkey, they are so cool.

Loved getting to sit on the donkeys.


Joel decided to go bungee jumping into the Nile River, this is right before he climbed up to jump.


So cool to watch, I'm hoping to do this when I am 14 years old too.


We have a friend from home that is at Ekisa, I always love visiting there.

Swimming in the hot afternoon.

Boda Boda to dinner!!!

Dinner out on the lake.

I loved going away this weekend with Shea and Gabriella.