Friday, June 01, 2007

Ecuador 2007 - Production Trip Report!

As many of you all may know, I just went on my first overseas trip, May 14-18th. The company I am working for, Franklin Films, was hired to produce a promotional video for Compassion International in Ecuador. I was asked to be one of the two camera operators for the trip. I had a blast! Keep reading!




God's Faithfulness

The Lord was so good to allow me this opportunity and to show Himself strong on my behalf. Flying really isn't something I look forward to. In fact, I have be able to avoid it for 14 years! I trust the plane; I trust the pilots; I don't mind the heights; I just have a very, very, sensitive stomach and inner ear problems, so take-offs really bother me! I praise the Lord for getting me through all six take-offs and also helping me deal well with the high altitude during our stay in Ecuador.


Overlooking Quito, Ecuador ~ Elevation is 10,000 Ft.
Population around 2 Million


Houses in Quito - They just build on top of each other!
Click to see a better view.




The Land

Quito, the capitol of Ecuador, is at an elevation of 9,500 feet and is surrounded by mountains and volcanoes. Quito's population is around two million. Tuesday morning, we visited a Compassion project in the urban area of Quito. I was shocked to see 100+ children lined up singing and waving flags and decorations they had made just for us. They have so little, yet they give so much. We then traveled to Otavalo where we stayed the next couple of nights.


The Volcano in Otavalo!
We got to stay at a resort on the lake right next to it!


It is amazing to see the contrast between the Puertolago
resort and the surrounding community.


Director of photography: Mark Schlicher. HE ROCKS!
Here we were taking some still photo shots while the HD camera
was getting some time lapse of the clouds over the volcano!



Standing over the Equator!
Thankfully my blood in my head didn't start to go
the other direction when I crossed the line! :)


One of the cabins at Puertolago, the resort we stayed at for two nights.



Compassion International

From working with Compassion over the entire week, I must say I was extremely impressed with how Christ-centered they operate these trips, as well as how they operate the various projects helping people to sponsor needy children. The Lord is using them in a mighty way to reach these people with the Gospel and also to provide them with the opportunity to learn and to grow physically and spiritually. They have made a huge impact on the country as evidenced by the numbers of children who have grown up and are now serving in the same towns that they were raised in.



Some of the Compassion staff talking to a merchant on the street


The bus we rode in for many hours during our four-day trip



View from the window of the bus

Oh, did I mention that the roads there were very, very narrow? :)
It is amazing that we didn't fall down a mountain!





The People

The Christians in Ecuador are very gracious and loving. The love of Christ shines though their lives in the mist of their suffering and poverty. It was amazing to me to hear testimony after testimony of how God provides for them and how they view life. I heard one little girl say, "We have God and so we have everything."


Children looking on as we prepare to leave a Compassion project



A man looking down the street as we passed by in the bus


A lady tilling her land by hand

The Ecuadorian Indians are very hard workers.



After shooting video all day...
it is really relaxing to shoot some still photos!



Ken Carpenter, Director for the production shoot,
interacts with one of the little ones


The Impact

When I think back to my trip, it is difficult to put into words how I was changed by what I saw and experienced. I think if I were to boil it all down to one common thread, it would have to be: God's Faithfulness! This was evidenced as I saw the Lord Jesus the same in Ecuador as He is here in the USA.


He provides food, clothing and shelter to the poverty-stricken people of Ecuador. He is the source of comfort and peace to the believers in Ecuador.He shows Himself strong, as each child that Compassion is able to reach, grows up and begins to give back to his or her community.

The Lord IS there for these people. The Christians know that they indeed have everything because they have the Creator of the world living inside them.


By the way...
I had a blast taking photos when I had chance!



Me at our last Compassion project~
Thanks to Mark Schlicher for taking this photo


I took most of these photos through the bus window as we traveled.

It's only by God's grace that they turned out.
(Canon 30D 18-55mm)



Thank You!

This trip was bathed in prayer. I know many of you prayed fervently for me and for our crew. I sensed it. God gave me strength for the trip. He protected our team as we traveled. Thank you for praying!! Your prayers were answered and I hope this post was an encouragement to you in your daily lives as you think about God's goodness and His unrelenting faithfulness in each of your lives.


In Christ,

Nathan B.


The children loved the cameras!




Thursday, April 05, 2007

Spring 2007 Greetings!


As we enjoy this beautiful spring and reflect over the happenings of 2006 and 2007, we again see the faithfulness of the Lord in our lives. Every morning the sun rose and in the evening it set. Our hearts keep pumping, never missing a beat. We have eyesight, hearing, mobility. The list goes on and on of things that happen only because of God! It is of His mercies that we aren’t consumed. Great is His faithfulness!


Throughout this past year, our family has been spiritually encouraged as we continued to work with the ministry, Prison to Purpose. We had the opportunity to spend several days in the McPherson Women’
s Prison in Newport, Arkansas, on three different occasions during this year. We also helped with weekend conferences held quarterly in various Arkansas locations. It has been an invaluable education to us to sit under the biblical teaching of Chaplain Dewitt and former inmate, Stacey Smith, while they teach women in prison and also those who are paroled. Not only have we learned how to help those with addictions and behavioral problems by applying the truths from the Word of God, but we ourselves have been challenged tremendously in our own walk with the Lord.



Nathan and Chiree’s videography clients have kept them busy, along with their traveling jobs for the business. They invited us to go along on many of their productions this past year, so we had several short family vacations and made some great memories. It was different having our children pay for our food and lodging, but we didn’t complain at all! Besides doing the Arkansas productions for all of the Prison to Purpose conferences, they had nine weddings to video during 2006. Two of them were in Texas and one in Ohio; the rest were throughout the state of Missouri. (August 6, 2006, Weddings)


We joined them for all of the weddings, along with their production of the a 90th birthday celebration of our Bible college president, Dr. A. Ray Stanford in Athens, Georgia, in September. What a memorable time Jimmy and I had fellowshipping with friends from 35 years ago and being encouraged seeing so many who have continued to faithfully share a clear gospel message wherever God has led them!



Nathan did several other out-of-state productions in the fall and had the opportunity to travel with Franklin Springs Family Media for the shooting of a DVD documentary of Stonewall Jackson that will be released in the summer. For this production the team traveled to Virgina Military Institute when the trees were at their peak of beauty. We joined him for the 3-day production of the Eden String Quartet/Miller Family in Oakland, Illinois. We so enjoyed meeting this dear family and seeing their dedication to raising a family for God's glory.

(Visit www.franklinsprings.com to view the trailers for both the Eden String Quartet and the Stonewall Jackson documentary.)



Jimmy enjoyed watching the deer in our pasture throughout October and November as he eagerly awaited rifle hunting season. Early one morning after the season opened, just around the hollow of our hill, he shot his deer. This year he processed it himself and we were grateful to have the meat for our freezer for some great eating this past winter.



Holidays were spent with Grandma Mitchell, Granny and Papa Bollinger and several of the aunts, uncles and cousins. We treasure the times we have with our very dear extended family and are so thankful for the blessings that they are to our lives.


January of this new year brought a big surprise. When an ice storm arrived on the 12th, many Missourians found themselves faced with no power anywhere from 4-14 days during this bitter cold spell. We were without power for 11 days, which not only meant no heat but also no water, since our well is run by electricity. Carrying water from the city for drinking and allowing us to flush the toilets once each day gave us a new appreciation for running water!!! We were glad for our wood burning stove we had in the unfinished part of our basement, which became our “family room” for those eleven days. As you can imagine, Jimmy has kept busy with extra electrical work from the storm. Neosho looked like (and in many places still looks like) a war zone. We are grateful for the National Guard and the many volunteers from various organizations and churches in our nation that helped with the clean-up. May the Lord bless them for their servant's spirit.



At the end of January I was joined by my sister and her husband to take Mother to San Antonio. It was an emotional time for us as daughters to go back with Mother to the places we lived while growing up and the many special memories we had as a family, only this time Daddy wasn’t with us. Mother was blessed seeing friends she loved, many of them now widows, too. We stayed in the facility for military dependents and retirees, which happened to be the place where families now stay when soldiers are being treated from injuries due to the war. It was across the street from the huge Brooks Army Medical Center and the new Center for the Intrepid, a rehabilitation center for amputees. It was a very touching time for us to be with these families and also with some of the injured soldiers that we met. I came away with a new awareness of how better to pray for those who are serving our nation overseas and for their families back home.



While we were in San Antonio, Nathan and Chiree worked in Oklahoma City for Novo Ministries doing a promotional video for After-School Bible Clubs. What an effective ministry going into the inner city and the government housing to reach boys and girls with the gospel of Christ. The mission field truly is right in our own back yards!



At the end of February we experienced something new to our family. Nathan moved to Franklin, Tennessee, in order to work full-time at Franklin Springs Family Media for a year. We are excited for his opportunity to work in a business that has a vision for producing quality family media. The thing we knew we would miss the most with him being gone was dinner time each night since eating together has been a special time for us for the past 26 years. It has worked out well, though, as Nathan calls us during the dinner hour and we set the speaker phone on the table and talk just like we used to, sharing the happenings of the day. It is fun, too, comparing menus, and frankly, some nights we like what he is eating more than what we are! As for his business here with Bollinger Productions, Chiree is continuing to run it with their established clients and ministries. Nathan has taught and trained her well, so now she has her own new adventure.

Many have asked when Jimmy and I are having some more Labradoodles to sell. Well, last fall we decided to retire Polly and us from the puppy business. We had her neutered, but Polly’s motherly instincts are still there as she continues to nurse our kittens, even when they are old enough and big enough to be called cats! It is quite a sight! Maybe we will raise puppies again someday, but in the meantime, we will just enjoy Polly and her kittens. (For those of you interested in seeing some darling puppies, visit our sister-in-law’s website: www.pomacres.com Kathy and her husband, Kenny, raise Pomeranians and also a new breed that has no shedding, Havanese puppies. ).



Thanks for letting us share with you our year in review. It is always fun to reminisce, though, we realize how very quickly time does fly and how we want to treasure every moment. May we all be found faithful as we use that which has been given to us for God’s glory!



Yummy Hot Fudge Ice Cream Bar Dessert

  • 1 (8-ounce) hot fudge syrup
  • 10 ice cream sandwiches
  • 1 (12-ounce) container frozen whipped topping, thawed
  • 2 crushed candy bars (Butter Finger or Heath Bar)

Directions:

  1. Pour the hot fudge syrup into a medium microwave safe bowl and microwave 1 to 2 minutes on high. Do not allow to boil.
  2. Line the bottom of a 9x13 inch dish with a layer of ice cream sandwiches. Spread whipped topping over the sandwiches. Drizzle hot fudge mixture over that. Top with crushed candy bars.
  3. Cover and freeze for up to 2 months. Remove from the freezer 10 minutes before serving. Cut into squares.

Note: Ingredients can be doubled and this dessert can be layered by repeating the directions but only using the candy bars on the final layer.