We have not posted very much on our mission to Nevada mostly
because we don’t seem to do much besides visiting people and teaching the
gospel.
We know these are very important
things, but they are very hard to write about without revealing personal
information.
(At least, that’s our
excuse and we are sticking to it!)
We do find it hard to believe that our mission will conclude
in less than four months!
We have even
talked to the couple that will replace us.
The Meyers received their mission call a couple of weeks ago and they
called us right away to ask a million questions.
We weren’t sure when we talked to them that
they would be replacing us in Ely, but we have found out since that they
will
be.
They are 60 y/o, from Gilbert AZ, he
was an electrical engineer and they seem like really nice people!
They will arrive in Nevada in mid-April, so
we will overlap for a few weeks.
That
will make living arrangements interesting, but we know it will all work out
somehow…
One of the fun things about Ely is all the unique lifestyles
we come across and get to learn about!
Lots of miners, lots of prison workers, and one of the people we are
working with and getting to know is a government trapper.
He’s on retainer with the state, plus he gets
to sell the pelts.
He told us the
current market is $100-$1000 per pelt, with large bobcats being on the upper
end.
The picture shows some of his pelts
being prepped on the back porch, and he said he has about 70 others so
far.
It’s fascinating to talk to someone
who knows so much about something we (and probably most people) know so little
about!
He’s on the road 4 or 5 days a
week setting and checking traps, while his wife works for the school district in
special education.
They also have a son
and two grandkids living with them, so it’s a busy place (and difficult to find
a good teaching situation…).
He’s the
nicest guy in the world, and has been less-active for years, even while serving
actively in scouting for years.
Another ‘fun’ thing about Ely is working with people’s
schedules.
For example, mine workers at
the big mine work 4 12-hour shifts, then 5 days off, then switch to nights for
5 12s, then 4 days off, then switch shifts and start over again.
Even the office workers work non-standard
shifts, like the geologist we are working with works 9 straight 10-hour shifts,
then 6 days off, then repeat!
Prison
workers also mostly work 12-hour shifts. It makes it hard to have what we
consider normal lives, although it’s normal for them.
We assume the strange work schedules are a
prime reason the activity rate in the stake is only 30%.
Another interesting thing about Ely is that so many people
are connected in some way.
Ely isn’t a
suburb, but its own unique town three hours away from any other larger cities
in any direction.
Here’s a good example that
just happened to us yesterday:
We went
to the car wash to wash off the mud and grime from our trip to Elko (see
below).
There was a line of ten vehicles
(one car wash in town, nice sunny day), so we waited in line for an hour (only
one wash station) with the stereo playing. When we got to 2
nd in
line our car wouldn’t start – battery dead!
(I knew the battery would need to be replaced soon, as it was 5+ years
old.)
Two guys in vehicles behind us got
out and helped me push our car out of the way, and one said, “Wait here. I’ll
be right back with some jumper cables!”
He drove off, leaving the line after waiting nearly as long as us, went
to the sheriff’s office a few blocks away and came back with jumper cables and
gave us a jump.
(He told us he was a
member of the church and recognized our name tags when I got out of the
car.)
What a nice guy!!
So we dropped by the one auto parts store just after closing
time, and they opened up and sold me a battery, then we went home to replace the
battery.
While I started working on the
battery, Diane called the trapper guy’s wife to tell her we wouldn’t be able to
stop by later as planned.
She said, “I
know!
The guy who helped you was my
son-in-law, and he already called me to tell me the story!”
We were amazed, but that’s not all.
I needed a wrench, so I went over to the elder’s
quorum president a few blocks from home to borrow one.
While he was getting the wrench, I told the
story to his adult kids, and one young woman said, “Oh, Chris Brewer (the guy
who helped) is my brother-in-law.”
One
other thing—the sheriff who loaned the jumper cables is the son of a man we’ve
been working with.
Pretty amazing!
Quoting Diane’s Facebook post, “We will go to
church today with a dirty car, but with warm hearts!”
We got a new assignment to check elders’ and sisters’
apartments in Elko (3 hrs away), so we went there Thursday and Friday this
week.
It was fun to meet elders and
sisters that we don’t know and see where they live!
We gave them several days warning, and they
did a pretty good job of cleaning.
Missionaries are good people!
When
we finished, we were in Spring Creek, about 15 miles south of Elko.
We filled up the tank there, then told the
GPS to “Go Home”, assuming it would take us back the same way, but you know how
assumptions go…
It showed two routes
within 10 minutes trip time of each other, so we chose one, only to find that
it took us on nearly an hour of dirt (now mud, due to recent snow) roads on
another route through the mountains.
It
was spectacular scenery, but thank goodness for all-wheel drive and new
tires!!
(I thought I did a pretty good
job of hiding my concern about getting stuck from Diane, but she may have seen
through it…)
We were never so thankful
(well, maybe one time in Idaho) to see a paved road again!
Hence the waiting in line the next day for a car
wash…
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| 'Snow Moon" just rising last night |
We do love our mission!
Life goes on, and we find ourselves getting tired a little sooner than
we used to, but we feel so darn useful when we are helping people become closer
to Christ.
That is the purpose of our
mission, and we love it even during the challenges!