The Mighty Cessna at the Mayalan Airstrip
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(Reposted from March, 2020)
From the late 1970s to the early
1990s I had a relationship with the World Missions Department of the Church of God that took me to 26 countries on four
continents and resulted in the production of more than 60 audio-visual programs
to promote and raise funds for the Church's mission efforts.
In March, 1989, I met
American missionary Frank Tyson and Guatemalan doctor Jaime Gomez at a small
airfield high in the mountains of northern Guatemala. We loaded ourselves and
some boxes of supplies into a small, single-engine Cessna, with Frank and Jaime
sitting on the boxes because the back seats had been removed for hauling cargo and
set off over some 8,000-feet-plus mountains to the highland village of Mayalan.
Our pilot, a Guatemalan "air
cowboy," a spiritual kinsman of Alaskan bush pilots, was not one to waste
fuel on higher altitudes. He skimmed the mountain tops so closely that I could
have picked blossoms from the jacaranda trees. Nonetheless, he deposited us
safely on the soccer field-cum-landing strip at Mayalan, fortunately catching
it between games.
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A warm welcome from the Mayalan villagers
includes water for washing hands. After receiving a warm welcome
from the villagers, we each went to our work.
Jaime set up a clinic in the
village church and Frank met with the village elders. I wandered around with my
camera observing village life.
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Dr. Jaime Gomez gives a mother diet
supplements for her undernourished infant.
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Weaving in the traditional way.
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Butchering a wild pig.
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When evening came, there was a
service in the church with Frank preaching. I put a Vivitar 283 flash on my
camera and another on a lightweight stand and photographed the village
believers at worship.
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A worship service at the Mayalan Church. After the service, it was bedtime.
The church's "pews" were split logs mounted on short pegs. My bed was
two of them placed side-by-side. Frank and Jaime had sleeping bags, but I,
having not been forewarned, put on the warmest clothes I had, covered myself
with my bathrobe, and settled in for the coldest, most miserable night of my
life. (It gets very cold at night in the Guatemalan highlands!)
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Sunrise at
Mayalan There was a silver lining, though. As the
pre-dawn light began to filter into the church, I had absolutely no incentive to stay in bed!
I was up and out with my camera as the sun rose, documenting the village as it came to life. I photographed the women cooking
breakfast, the men going off to their fields, and the children beginning their
school day.
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The women at Mayalan cook breakfast on an open
firepit.
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The school at Mayalan provides nourishment for
bright
young minds formerly doomed to illiteracy.
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Kids and puppies are the same everywhere. All too soon the air cowboy
returned in his Cessna and it was time to leave. We had been in Mayalan for 24
hours and I had everything I needed to make one of my all-time favorite audio-visual
programs.
But there was one final surprise:
as we neared the end of the airstrip the engine faltered and we appeared about
to drop into the very deep ravine at the end of the strip. But the little
Cessna regained power and we were off. I hardly even noticed -- I was busy
snapping aerial photos of the village.
Photographers are like that.
You can view the
Mayalan A-V program here.
(Photographs made with Olympus OM cameras and lenses and a Vivitar 75-205 f3.8 zoom. Fujichrome 100D film.) Signed copies of my book Backroads and Byways of Georgia
are available. The price is $22.95 plus $3.95 shipping. My PayPal
address is djphoto@vol.com (which is also my email). Or you can mail me a check to 8943
Wesley Place, Knoxville, TN 37922. Include your address and tell me how
you would like your book inscribed.
Check out the pictures at my online gallery: https://davejenkins.pixels.com/ Looking is free, and you might find something you like. Photography and text copyright 2023 David
B.Jenkins.
I post Monday, Wednesday, and Friday unless
life gets in the way.
Soli Gloria Deo -- For the glory of God alone.Tags: photography Travel Guatemala Fujichrome 100 film Mayalan Olympus OM camera Vivitar lens Missions | | |
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Dave, I enjoy photos that show people living their everyday lives, and yours show you are good at making them comfortable.
ReplyDeleteWow! 26 countries on four continents, you could blog on your adventures for quite some time. You sure got around! 😄
Thanks, Greg. I don't intrude or ask anyone to pose, but if someone is doing something that I think has possibilities I may ask or motion him/her to keep on doing it as if I were not there.
DeleteI also went to other countries for other agencies, but most of that travel took place within a three or four year period. Then the people who were giving me the work moved on to other jobs and we got involved in building a house. . .