Friday, December 25, 2015

Christmas Eve and Christmas Day on Ebeye

Our big meal of the season occurred on Christmas Eve.  Several friends got together to enjoy beef wellington and all the fixings.  Being away from family is especially hard during the holidays but being able to share special meals like this one really helps.  After dinner, Aaron and I put the boys to bed, then spent the evening wrapping presents.  We have had our Christmas presents here on island since the end of October and beginning of November as the mail is so unpredictable but things got hidden away and time just ran away from us.  Before we knew it we had presents to wrap at the last minute.  I am hoping we will be better prepared next year in this regard!

Christmas morning we opened gifts and spent time together as a family.  We had a nice little lunch then caught the ferry over to Ebeye (our nearest populated Marshallese island).  Christmas day is one of the big Marshallese holidays.  There are activities going on at the churches (around 6 of them on island) from morning until sundown.  The churches get very excited to see Americans visiting their churches.  We were treated like royalty at each church..sometimes uncomfortably so! Children and Marshallese adults alike were told to give up their seats for us usually in the front rows.  And we were given gifts such as shell necklaces and handmade fans (for the churches that were not air conditioned).  All of this was a special treat but at each place we would have been happy to sit on the floor and enjoy the festivities.  The Marshallese would have none of that however!

In the photo below we are walking down the street.  Some streets are pretty clean and the houses although made of plywood, or metal, look to be in pretty good form and condition.  Other streets look pretty rough with houses being made from scrap wood or even cardboard.  Most houses do not have running water or electricity.  But even those who do have water or electricity it is very primitive.  The plumbing is usually a hose being ran into the house from a holding tank outside and live wires with electricity run throughout the house without any grounding.

The first church we went to was a small little church.  We were all packed in watching the children perform a traditional Marshallese dance.  The whistle is a key part of the dance, informing the dancers when to start, stop, or change the moves they are performing. Here is a video of the dance:


The 2nd Church we went to is also a private school.  For elementary school, the cost is $40 per month.  Most Marshallese on Ebeye cannot afford this.


Here is a couple videos from this church.  They spoke in Marshallese during the program but the kids sang in English for every song.



The 3rd church was enclosed but still had windows and doors open to the outside.  So it was very hot inside! Here they not only gifted us with necklaces but with fans as well. This was the E.U.C.C (I cannot remember exactly what it stood for but it was something like Ebeye Universal Church of Christ...or Christian Church). 
 


Videos from the church: You will see in some of the videos the performers throw out candy or money to the kids.  The kids would swarm when this would happen!

Traditional Marshallese A'Capella song:

Part of a Traditional Marshallese song:

Traditional Marshallese song and dance (with whistle):

Kommol tata (thank you in Marshallese) to the churches and Marshallese who were so kind to us on Christmas day!

December 5th Kwaj Tree Lighting

I have been playing around with how I want to post videos...or more like what is the easiest way to post videos online for your viewing.  I have decided uploading videos to youtube is definitely the easiest.  So here are the links for a couple of videos from December 5th's Kwajalein tree lighting ceremony.

This first video is of the elementary school singing a song from their Christmas program.  Carson is in the back row in a neon yellow, and blue stripped shirt.  He is standing more towards the right side but several (or 5-6) kids in.

https://youtu.be/ILuZ9VSvmPM

These next 2 videos are songs written about spending Christmas on Kwajalein.  This local gal and her husband hit all the highlights of spending the holidays on a tropical island.

https://youtu.be/-GKvX1K8_1Q


https://youtu.be/BNftZBZFDUQ


Last video is of the lighting of the palm tree:

https://youtu.be/Xdnep_WuJDw

Wednesday, December 16, 2015

November and Part of December

It has been so long since I have written I post that I had to go back and see what my last posting was!  Halloween!! Yikes! The last month and a half has absolutely flown by.  In fact the last 4 months that we have been on island have flown.  There are so many activities on this island that some days it is hard to keep up.  I guess it is good to stay involved but we are trying to figure out how to dial back everything and still enjoy ourselves.

Thanksgiving was lovely.  We spent the day with friends eating good food.  The kids (and some dads too!) enjoyed Kwaj sledding (playing on the slip n slide).  The weather here is always beautiful.  It is always the same although sometimes it rains (then it feels cold!).  Now that we are heading into the 'not so rainy' season, the majority of the days are sunny.  This is also the windy season.  So with a nice wind, it helps it feel a little cooler.  We still try to avoid going outside between noon and 3 pm to stay protected from the sun.

We are trying to get into the Christmas spirit but not having any seasonal cues is definitely throwing us off.  To kick off the holiday season however, we did have an island wide tree lighting ceremony but I will post more on that later as that will need its own post.   

For now I have some pictures to share!

Yes, it almost always looks like this outside! 

We finished our advanced diving class, meaning we can go as deep as 130 feet now! 

We have started doing more wreck dives.  Most of these are from the WWII era.  Some were sunk during the battle and some were sunk intentionally.  I still haven't figured out the history behind our ski boat area wreck site pictured here:

We are starting to find more and more cool creatures on our dives!

Spotted Eagle Ray:

Shark:

On one of our night dives we found 2 sleeping octopi, one is pictured here:

Carson finished swim team with a slew of personal bests.  
He even won some overall heats!  We were very proud of him!

The boys love being in the water.  Oliver blows bubbles and swims around with his puddle jumper but hasn't worked up the courage yet to put his head under the water. 

Carson on the other hand, wastes no time going under the water...he loves to snorkel and cannot wait to get his dive certification in February when he turns 10!

One of our fun gatherings, was Aaron's work party.  We had a wonderful time with friends who are becoming our adopted family out here and enjoyed some great food too! The highlight of the party was our gag gift of a blow up pickle.  He ended up in a lot of our photos.  We wonder if he might show up at future work parties!