Heavenly Impulsion
The start of a beautiful friendship
Exhilarating, mind blinding aviation. That's what I thought when I first took up the challenge of learning to pilot aircraft. "This will be the coolest thing in the world". I dreamt of dashing heroes casting themselves across the sky in fearless abandon. THIS,
this aviation thing
I wanted a piece of THIS. I wish I had known back in 1985 when I took my very first flying lesson just how engrossing and rapturous a skill I was beginning to acquire. I had not even begun to guess the extent of training or the depth of the rewards that lay ahead of me. In 1985 I was a factory worker, in a orange juice production plant in Bartow, Fl. I had taken a flight with my brother's friend from
I've never had a lot of money in my life. I have always been a "worker bee" you could say. Well fate, or the Higher Power, or God (call Him what you will, I call Him God) had plans for my butt, let me tell you. In 1985 I was sitting in the break room with a co-worker named Billy Finley and happened to share with him my desire to somehow learn to fly airplanes. Billy and I were working the night shift at Orange-Co, (the juice plant I mentioned in
I was very fortunate that Billy had picked Bartow Flying Service, in
Over the ensuing years of flying I discovered that I am totally addicted to this strange avocation. The avocation of piloting aircraft through the almost immaterial essence above terra firma, the air. I became so addicted to practicing this skill that many times I ran articles in the local paper to sell off my accumulated possessions so I could afford the next flight. The lessons weren't terribly expensive but being a worker bee on an hourly wage made each lesson a choice between luxuries. Each lesson required a small sacrifice that I never hesitated to make. I further accumulated flight hours and ratings to the point where I became a commercial pilot with an instrument rating.
Let's fast-forward to the year 1994. In the intervening years since those fledgling attempts in aviation several things occurred. I met and married my wife Carolyn, who is a professional pilot also. Carolyn and I moved to
Our communication with Vinny and his family culminated with Vinny arranging a trip to Honduras so that Carolyn and I could see the type of necessary flying that still occurs in the poorer parts of the world. In the years between our brief stay in Rhode Island Carolyn and I continued to advance our career and ratings, so that I now fly the Hawker business jet for a living and Carolyn flys the Citation II and V. Carolyn and I both have earned the much-coveted ATP rating and several type-ratings are attached to our certificates.
Anyone who has ever taken a trip of this sort can well understand the logistical nightmare it may soon become. This trip was our very first of this sort and was exciting, and challenging, and rewarding. Upon our return from
Carolyn's last day at work was the 9th (for that week) she flew in the afternoon of the 9th , into
Jarley "knew the ropes" and was able to expedite our passage through security at the airport. We pretty much just walked past security and right back out onto the airport ramp to put all our baggage into his Cessna 185. We had passed through immigration and customs prior to getting to baggage claim and were issued a temporary (30 day) visa for
It was about an hour flight to the east to get to La Ceiba (our first stop). Jarley needed to stock up on some supplies while he was "in town". Jarley took us to the mall to exchange some dollars for Lempira (which is the monetary unit in
We got our rooms assigned to us (we WERE going to stay in the hospital, which is where most visitors stay, but there was a group of ten missionaries from Colorado already there, so we fortunate enough, and Jarleys family was persevering enough to allow us to stay in their house). We sat around and "jawed" for the rest of the evening. They only have electricity in Auas from 7:00am to 9:00am, and from 7:00pm to 9:00pm (that's when they turn the generator on). So we pretty much called it a night at 9:00pm when the lights went out. We took showers before the electricity went off so we could have a warm shower, which seemed an unusual consideration at the time. We had not truly learned jus how luxurious a warm shower could feel yet.
We had planned on getting up early the next day and visiting as many "bush" strips (landing sites) as we could possibly visit in a day. Jarley was cutting us a break and only charging us for whatever fuel we used in his airplane. This sort of gesture was common amongst missionary people. Whenever Jarley had to take a patient to a clinic, or had another emergency flight that left open seats in his airplane, we were welcomed to "come along" at no charge. At 6:30 the next morning we found that Jarley had to take a village councilman to Caqueria village on the northeastern coast of
.
We took off from Caqueria, and headed for a few other little villages. I can't name them all off-hand, but there were about eight villages we visited that first day. The two that stand out in my mind were RusRus, and Puerta Lempira. RusRus stands out because it was the smallest strip we flew into and had a twisty crooked approach.
We had to drop below the tree line into a sort of channel. The channel twisted to the right and then to the left so you could swoop around a big tree that was in the way. After navigating the channel, you dropped onto the 1100-foot strip. The strip was VERY rutted, and it had rained the previous day so there was standing water and mud which splashed up in a wall and drenched the C-185 as we slowed from our landing. We visited the clinic at RusRus, and saw the work they were doing on the Church. We met the headman of the village and the pastor of the church.
The inhabitants of RusRus are very nice people. Carolyn and myself learned rather quickly that our language skills needed development. In RusRus, and every other place we went they mostly spoke either Spanish, or Misquito Indian. So Carolyn and I were following along as best we could. (Our Spanish needs a LOT of improvement). Vinny learned to speak Spanish fluently during his missionary work in
We left RusRus, and headed for Puerta Lempira which is a coastal community and a fairly big city. We walked about a mile to the town from the landing strip (dirt again, but in good repair). We visited the mission in Puerta Lempira and walked over to a local restaurant. Restaurant probably connotes a very different picture in your mind, than what was actually there. But the place appeared clean and the food was absolutely marvelous. Jarley asked the lady if she had lobster (coastal community, remember) and she says (in Spanish of course) grilled, garlic, fried, or smoked. We all liked the sound of that. So we had fresh lobster for lunch. After lunch we took a walk around Puerta Lempira and strolled out onto the pier (very low pier, and about three feet wide with no handrails). We walked back to the mission and talked to the hermanas and hermanos (sisters and brothers) there for awhile. Jarley received a couple of letters to deliver in his ongoing travels. It may be interesting to note here that a letter in the outlying villages of
We took off from Puerta Lempira, and headed back to Auas. We had dinner with Jarley and his family and discussed tomorrow's plans. In discussions with Jarley, we decided to make a visit to a couple of small villages that no one had ever been to before. The experienced missionaries among us called them an "unreached people group". The plan was to fly to a village called Wampusirpi, land there and hire a canoe to transport us upriver to Pimienta, Krausirpi, Krautara, Yapuauas and back to Wampusirpi. It is a two-day trip, if we rush it. We packed the evening before by taking foodstuffs, and mosquito nets, and sleeping pads and drinking water and such as that. Everything went exactly according to plan. We heard on the radio that there was a Cuban doctor that was at Wampusirpi that would wait for us with his 40 horsepower boat motor if we could get to Wampusirpi early in the morning, and if we would pay for the gas we could use it to get upriver and look around when we got there. So we planned on an early departure (getting up at 4:00am to 5:00am was common every day we were there). We took off early the next morning and flew into Wampusirpi. We landed at the dirt strip and visited some missionaries who were there named Scott and Dianne. Scott is a veterinarian, and Dianne is his wife.
Scott and Dianne have set up a system of using the villagers to make necklaces out of native seeds. The villagers string the seeds for necklaces and bracelets. We all bought some of them of course. The villagers get the money except for one dollar out of each sale. Scott and Dianne use that bankrolled dollar to buy cows. Each family that participates in the project gets a cow. The cow is like a savings account to the villagers. If ever something happens where the villager's family needs money, they can sell the cow. It is a good program because the villagers are working for themselves and not just being "given" anything. Apparently it is a big problem among villagers to help them to be self-sufficient. It is a bad thing to do to just "hand over" stuff to the villagers. They are not lazy people but, like anyone, they will do as little as they need to to get by. This program helps to make them self-sufficient, instead of just teaching them to rely on handouts from gringos. Scott and Dianne sell the necklaces and bracelets in La Ceiba, and other places.
So we talked to Scott and Dianne and the group at their house for awhile, and then met up with Dr. Alejandro, the Cuban doctor and went down to the river. Now I know that Cubans are communists, and have no real understanding of how to make their citizens free, and happy, but this doctor was just great! I do not think it is a bad thing to see people for who they are, and what they personally represent to the underprivileged people they help. It is easy under these circumstances to overlook the political differences and ideologies of the country they are from.
The river is the
After a beautiful but long trip up river we landed at Pimienta village. We just stayed there for about 15 minutes while we dropped of a villager and the doctor took care of some of his business. We took off again for Krausirpi. After more beautiful scenery and another long trip onboard the canoe, we landed at Krausirpi where we off-loaded most of our baggage, since we were to spend the night there. We loaded our stuff into a shack with plank sides and a thatched roof. Interesting place. No lights or running water of course.
We got back in the boat for a visit to the
After a time we made our good-byes and headed back to the canoe for the trip downriver to Krausirpi. We got to Krausirpi in time to grab our soap, and shampoo and head for the river for a bath. Most of the village was down there swimming, doing laundry, or taking their own baths. We bathed with shorts and T-shirts on of course, as did the villagers. The current was deceptively strong out in the middle of the river and I got carried downriver for a ways at one point. No biggie. We ended the night by heading up to the thatch-roofed cabin to make dinner. We had brought some tomato paste and spaghetti noodles so Jarley whipped up a batch of spaghetti, with Vienna sausage wienies for meatballs. It was actually surprisingly good.
While we were bathing in the river, Dr. Alejandro got called to an emergency. A village girl was having a baby and it was an exceedingly difficult delivery. So we didn't see him until much later that evening. The girl lived, but her little baby died. It was a matter of several long hours of dealing with a difficult labor and trying to arrange transportation by canoe for a three-hour trip downriver for Dr. Alejandro. Unfortunately the logistics took too long and the delivery had an unfortunate outcome. It was this incident, more than any other that sent home to my heart the importance of aviation in this land of less then adequate infrastructure.
Later in the evening, after dinner (yum, yum), Dr. Alejandro came in and we spent the rest of the evening shooting the breeze with him. Or at least Carolyn and I spent the rest of the evening trying to keep up with the conversation (the Doctor didn't speak English). It was fun and a welcome relief of stress after the incident that had occurred earlier. Jarley and Vinny and the Dr. Alejandro swapped stories and jokes and we gradually got back to our normal selves after the heartbreak.
We got up early the next morning and headed way upriver for the
We toured some likely sites for a landing strip. The villagers seemed of a different sort at Yapuauas. I was actually not too impressed. The village seemed to have a pall over it. We prayed for them and encouraged them to build a strip at their first opportunity. After an hour or so of visiting, we headed back downriver (yay!) for our airplane in Wampusirpi. It was a faster boat trip going downriver and we made it in about an two hours and 45 minutes. Over this period of two days, we got SO MUCH sun. We were all the color of cooked lobsters, and had peeling skin by the time we go back to Wampusirpi. Once we got to Wampusirpi, there was a villager who had a urinary tract infection that needed transport to Auas to go to the clinic there. He rode along.
The airstrip in Wampusirpi was too short for us to take off with him and his granddaughter and all of us aboard. Vinny and I walked about a half-mile to a nearby strip that was quite a bit longer and the group flew out of the little one and picked us up at the bigger one. Then we flew to Auas. That was it for those two days. We spent the rest of the evening taking showers (HOT!) and making plans for the next day. We planned to overfly the two main villages that we had visited to encourage them that airplanes COULD actually find them (I had fixed the locations in my GPS). Remember the problems with logistics we had at the
We left for La Ceiba for the short flight on Islena Air in a Cessna 208 (Caravan) to
That is where the journal ends and our own journey begins. Carolyn and Vinny and I have started a non-profit organization called "Casa de Servicio" which is dedicated to training missionary pilots, and used to transport missionaries and villagers to and from clinics and remote locations. The five-hour canoe trip that we had to endure was nothing compared to the length of the walk that some missionaries must take to reach some of these remote villages. The air trip to Krausirpi is merely twenty minutes. The young lady that lost her child while we were in the
Dios le bendiga grandemente en a su familia y ministerio.
Casa de Servicio, International
Aviation Medical Support & Missionary Flight Training


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