Tuesday, December 28, 2010

The path I walk...

I walk the path less traveled, the wind in my hair and the sand warm beneath my feet.  Sage brush covers the land and Navajo Tea grows all over.  The majestic rocks come out from the sands, and the mesas glow in the setting suns.

This is the land I love, my homeland, though not born to it.  Here I have found belonging, though it can be lonely at times.  It is here I hope to raise my future children, it is here I pray to grow old.  It is here I am home...

~ Traveller Gal, out!

Monday, December 27, 2010

Coal/Wood Stoves...

Out here at the trailer in Kayenta we stay at, and most of the other homes, Coal/Wood Stoves are the norm.  I grew up with Daddy using the wood burner in the basement, but he never taught me out to run it.  Rob grew up having used a coal stove as a teen.  It has been hard but fun relearning the old art of keeping a stove running through the night, but we are getting there.


I always as a child told my parents that most likely I would be living where I needed to have a wood/coal stove.  I use to pretend to gather wood.  I never guessed how hard it would really be.  To make sure the wood pile stays dry, and how painful it can be to carry a big pile inside in my arms.  The worst was when I got a blast of coal smoke in the face when we had to adjust the coals, and learned some were still hot.  Good fire place tools would be such a blessing to both Robby and me right now.

~ Traveller Gal, out!

Friday, September 10, 2010

Journey to Flagstaff

Flagstaff


We have left for Flagstaff, AZ stopping off at Broken Arrow Bible Ranch to work for the last week of this summer of 2010! Flagstaff lies just beyond the southwestern boarder of the Navajo Rez, and was nested in the southwestern scared mountains of Dine Bikeyah called the San Francisco Peaks.  Here Robby and I are going to begin to get more training to aid us in our future ministry.


Flagstaff was an awesome city, a mix of Hippyishness with Old Westerness meeting in a modern college town, and though it is beautiful, and traditionally part of Dine Bikeyah, it still is not "Home".  After a year dwelling here we hope to return to Broken Arrow Bible Ranch for a summer, and hope to settle in sight of the southeastern sacrade mountain of Dine Bikeyah.

What does this journey hold for us next?  Little do I know, save He who created all of Heaven and Earth, tis He who charts our course and show us the path to walk,.. May we His servants but listen to His guidance, and follow His path.

~ Traveller Gal, out!