Flying House (Casa del Vuelo)

The Flying House, or Casa del Vuelo is a BLOG that will be used to keep interested people up to date with the missions work of Casa de Servicio, Inc., in Nicaragua, Central America. Casa de Servicio is a nonprofit organization dedicated to the support of education and aviation evacuation services in the La Moskitia region of Honduras and Nicaragua in Central America. ************ http://www.casadeservicio.org

My Photo
Name:
Location: Cleveland, Tennessee

Casa de Servicio..."House of Service": A 501(C)3 nonprofit organization dedicated to EMERGENCY MEDICAL EVACUATION or TRANSPORTATION to/from the outlying villages in the La Moskitia region of Nicaragua and Honduras.

Monday, February 13, 2006

Posting list

Hi Folks,

I have just created a "mailing list" for the Casa de Servicio BLOG. YOU are on the list. If for ANY REASON WHATSOEVER, you don't want copies of posts to this BLOG...just let me know and I'll remove you from the list. God Bless!

Richard Becton

Latest from Casa de Servicio

Not much has gone on this week, however, Carolyn and I have come to the realization that our move to Nicaragua is going to have to be delayed. The schedule for achieving the support we are going to need was a little aggessive from the start, and we both knew that. So the delay is not entirely unexpected.

Things ARE progressing. We have made strides in finding avenues to enable us to "spread the word" of our upcoming mission to the La Moskita region in Nicaragua. Charles Lambert, of the Church of God has opened two doors for us in March, and we are anticipating with glee the opportunity to start a ripple of new advisors and supporters in both of those locations. Charles has also begun the process (through Brother Vaugn, of the Church of God) of setting Casa de Servicio up with a Church of God missions number. We are eagerly awaiting word from Brother Vaugn and/or Brother Charles Lambert on how THAT is going.

I have found it necessary to inform Brother Gustavo Zavala in Puerto Cabezas, Nicaragua of the anticipated delay of our arrival into Nicaragua. WE MAY STILL MAKE THE PROJECTED TIMETABLE...it just doesn't seem likey right now due to the length of time it is taking to arrange for support.

Carolyn and I are ready, eager, and oh-so-willing to get ourselves down to Nicaragua permanently. Please keep this mission in your prayers! God Bless!

Richard

Sunday, February 05, 2006

the children are starving

Just a quick update on what's been happening. I will fill you in more fully when we get back to the States. We have accomplished our mission here in Nicaragua, and Honduras. We have made broad strides in placing a missionary AVIATION base in either Puerto Cabezas, Nicaragua, or alternatively in Waspan, Nicaragua. We WERE able to get both of our pilots licenses convalidated in Nicaragua. So Carolyn and I are now officially rated pilots in Nicaragua! We had allocated 2 weeks for THAT task alone, and God blessed us with friends that enabled us to do it more quickly.
We also took a trip out to La Moskitia while we were in Nicaragua. We visited Puerto Cabezas, and toured the village and the airport there. Then we took a bus ride along a windy, bumpy, dirt/mud road to the much smaller village of Waspan.
The next day we took a forty-foot long canoe upriver (arriba rio) to several even smaller villages. The village we ended up spending the night at was called San Carlos, and if you have access to a map of Nicaragua, you can see how far west on the Rio Coco that the village of San Carlos is ... from Waspan. It was a ten-hour journey by dugout canoe...oh yeah, I forgot to mention that we were in feeder bands from Hurricane Beta for the entire day! It was ONE WET TRIP. We got soaked to the bone. We actually were blessed that we went (of course).
We had the opportunity to visit the small dirt airstrip/soccer field at San Carlos. The strip is supposedly still (possibly) mined with explosives from the Nicaraguan/Contra wars. So the pastor that was with us, through Brother Zavala in Puerto Cabezas, was able to contact the authorities in Waspan that are responsible for ensuring the safe removal of devices of that nature...and hopefully by the time we return to San Carlos we will have an airstrip that is functional. We still have to contact the engineers offices in Managua, Nicaragua to "officially" open the strip there though...more to do, more to do...more to do. ALWAYS more to do!
The native Indian people of the La Moskitia region in Nicaragua have very recently had the misfortune to have had a cyclical infestation of rats. The rats have eaten ALL the food in the region, with Waspan being one of the hardest hit. These people need your prayers and support most urgently, and right now. Please keep them in your prayers. The native Indian children in Waspan are being fed tree roots, because there is no other food. The native Indian mothers are taking the 1/2 day long journey into the forest to find the proper roots, and then bringing them home to boil, to make them edible. It is BARE sustenance, and even at that is not enough.



Dios le bendiga grandemente en a su familia y ministerio.

Casa de Servicio, International
Aviation Medical Support & Missionary Flight Training


Richard Becton

flight@flash.net

http://www.casadeservicio.org



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 Houston, TX to Houma, LA a few years previously, and my brother's friend Aubrey encouraged me to take a hands-on approach to the situation. Aubrey allowed me to actually take command of the aircraft for a period of some several minutes. I was nervous and excited, and totally had no idea what in the world I was doing! I did manage to keep the shiny side up, and he even complimented me on my "skill". I was hooked, but didn't yet realize just how hooked I was.

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 Bartow, Florida). Billy and I are both former Marines and there are no artifices, and few layers of societal nicety intertwined in our relationship. In other words, we have a no BS friendship. As our break ended and we got back to the daily grind at Orange-Co I thought nothing more about our conversation until I passed through the break-room a short while later. There, on the chalkboard as written: "Bartow Flying Service" and a phone number. It was a direct challenge as only could be issued between two good friends. In essence, Billy was saying "put up, or shut up". I stopped in at Bartow Flying Service when I got off of work the very next morning at 07:00am. I began a journey that has been more rewarding than I could possibly have imagined at that time. I intended to merely check out the situation and see what the cost would be and see if it was something that I could do. I did not realize at that moment that within the next half-hour I would step into the cockpit of the ubiquitous Cessna 152. That’s right, I actually flew on the morning I was only going to find out the “scoop” on this “flying thing”.

I was very fortunate that Billy had picked Bartow Flying Service, in Bartow, Florida for his challenge. The folks there run an excellent school with above average facilities. I worked hard and attained the level of Private Pilot, single-engine land certification, in about three months. I spent many of the first few years after becoming a pilot in the search for the elusive "perfect" airport lunch. Those of you who are certified pilots (student, private, or otherwise) realize that by that I mean I used “lunch” as the perfect excuse to rent an airplane and fly somewhere to eat.

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 West Warwick, Rhode Island. My wife and myself became devout Christians and met two of our very best friends in life, Vinny and Cathy Castellani. Vinny at the time was the Pastor of the church we attended, and became a flight student of my wife’s because of his interest in aviation. Since becoming Christians my wife and I always dreamt of using our skills in service to God's kingdom. We once shared our desire to use our aviation skills in service to our Lord with our Pastor, mentor, and best friend Vincent Castellani. "Vinny" has always encouraged our desire and since he also later became a pilot Vinny completely understands and supports us in our quest, the quest for further uses of our God-given talents in service to God’s kingdom. In life, if one thing remains certain it is the fact that nothing remains static, there is always change. Carolyn and I moved from West Warwick, RI where we were members of Vinny’s church back to Galveston, TX. Vinny after completing his doctorate degree at Harvard University moved his family from the church in Rhode Island to accept a position as a professor at East Coast Bible College, in North Carolina, and then later to Athens, Tennessee. Over a period of those several years, we stayed in contact with Vinny and Cathy and they continued to encourage us in our goal. Vinny and Cathy had previously spent a long period of time dedicating themselves to missionary pursuits in Guatemala so they both encouraged Carolyn and I to pursue our dreams by dedicating ourselves to helping others in poorer countries with fewer facilities and infrastructures.

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 Honduras I sent a letter to our relatives describing our “adventure”. Here is that letter, in part:

Carolyn's last day at work was the 9th (for that week) she flew in the afternoon of the 9th , into San Antonio. I had spent the whole day doing laundry (does it EVER end?) and packing the rest of our trip clothes. I made sure I had my passport, clothes, compass, Global Positioning System gadget, cell phone charged, pocket PC charged, etc, etc, etc. These are wonderful gadgets. I simply could not do without them. I picked Carolyn up at the San Antonio airport at about 1:00pm on the 9th. Our plane was leaving out of Houston airport at 6:33am the next morning so we had to drive to Houston (Intercontinental Airport). We chose to make the drive to Houston because the cost of the tickets to Honduras was SO much cheaper leaving from there, as opposed to flying out of San Antonio. This cost-consciousness is a guiding tenet of what later became the organization of Casa de Servicio (Home of Service). Also, it is only a three-hour drive, so we figured "what the heck". Carolyn was able to get her ticket for free (roundtrip) because of accumulated airline mileage on American Airlines. My ticket cost $589.00 (roundtrip), which we thought was really not to bad. So I picked Carolyn up at San Antonio (SAT) airport at 1:00pm. Carolyn had packed prior to going into work that week, so her bags for Honduras were already packed and in the Toyota Tundra. I was suffering from a real bad chest cold, and felt like I could hardly move, so we agreed that Carolyn should drive to Houston while I tried to get some sleep. And that's the way it worked out. We had a hotel (Holiday Inn Express Intercontinental) booked on Beltway 8 east, north of the airport. We drove to the hotel, got checked in with no problems and went up to our room. I was feeling just a little bit better at this point (thank you Carolyn for driving!). We were both tired and kind of flaked out on the bed for a second as soon as we walked in the room. We called for a 3:45am wake up call (darned airlines want you to be there two HOURS before departure time). Just about that time, Carolyn says, "did you bring my ticket". My head snapped around like a power hitter's swing. I determined instantly that she was NOT kidding. I have to admit that a word slipped out of my mouth that is usually NOT associated with a Christian person. I regained control of myself fairly quickly and advised Carolyn to call the airline and explain what had happened. We got in touch with a real nice lady in customer service who assured us that is was no problem and there would be an "e-ticket" waiting for us at the counter in the morning. WHAT A RELIEF THAT WAS TO HEAR. We had arranged for a taxi to meet us in front of the hotel the next morning at 4:15am (arghh!). We got to the airport, checked in, checked our bags, and got through security in about 15 minutes. So we waited at the gate for about an hour and 45 minutes. Hey, no problem, at least we knew we had tickets, and were getting on the airplane! We were scheduled to fly to Miami International (where we were to meet our other adventurer, Vinny Castellani) and then to fly from Miami to San Pedro Sula, Honduras. The trip went without a hitch from there on out. We met Vinny as planned in Miami at the gate, and landed (after overflying Cuba) at San Pedro Sula without any problems whatsoever. We were met at baggage claim by the fellow who was going to be our guide/pilot while we were there. His name is Jarley Hofstadt (you would think it would be pronounced "Harley" with the Latin American pronunciation, but it is actually pronounced like a "Yale" lock would be pronounced in Spanish i.e. "yawlay"). He is of Norwegian descent and he and his family have been missionaries in Honduras for the last six years.

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 Honduras. We loaded up the Cessna 185 taildragger, and took off from San Pedro Sula, headed for La Ceiba, and then to Auas (LaSayba, and Ahwass). The C185 is a six-place single engine airplane. I rode in the front right seat, Jarley in the front left seat (his plane), Carolyn in the right middle seat, and Vinny in the left middle seat. Our baggage was in the belly cargo pod. This aircraft was not in new condition. It was obviously a workhorse and utilitarian aircraft. I didn’t realize at the time just how important and useful a tool this venerable aircraft was. Airplanes are wonderful time machines. They save time by means of straight-line travel and speedy transport. The time this little airplane saves, in reality saves lives. Most of us in the more developed regions of the world consider an airplane a convenience (albeit an expensive one). The heroes of underdeveloped regions, those pilots with angels wings lodged deeply within their hearts, live a real life of caring and empathy for the people they live, work and interact amongst. We found ourselves very impressed with Jarley’s mission in Honduras. He lives and works amongst very underdeveloped villages. In Jarley’s, and other pilots like Jarley’s care are many neighboring villages. All of these villages have existed for many years and life goes on without Jarley’s intervention. The important thing is that with Jarley and people like Jarley devoting themselves to helping and caring and physically transporting these villagers, the actual lifespan of each village resident increases. Sick or injured people have a much higher chance of living through whatever catastrophe has overtaken them with Jarley’s “little time machine.”

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 Honduras, 16.2 lmps to 1 dollar). We exchanged about a hundred dollars each so we'd have some "walking around money" in the native currency. While Jarley was buying frozen chickens and stuff like that, we went to Applebee's restaurant. I know, I know, Applebee's is an American restaurant. But, it was that last little touch of home we needed to become acclimated. We had been told to be very careful of drinking ANY water while we were in Honduras unless it was bottled so we ordered our diet Coca Cola "sin hielo" (no ice). Jarley finished his business and met us at Applebee's. We got him a lemonade, and ordered a "to go" plate for his wife. Then we packed Jarley's stuff into the airplane at the La Ceiba airport and took off for Auas, which is where Jarley and his family live. The airport at La Ceiba was paved, but the strip at Auas is dirt. It is nice and long and plenty wide, although it could probably be a little smoother. They actually have a Czechoslovakian airplane (LET) that flys regular air service into Auas. We didn't find out about the air service until the next day actually. Jarley's wife Yngvil met us at the landing strip, which is actually almost in their back yard. Yngvil had their two boys with her, Tobias, and Benjamin. Tobias is three years old, and Benjamin is 11 months. The Hofstadt’s are a good looking and very nice family.

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 Jarley’s 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 Honduras. We were able to "ride along" on this trip. Caqueria village has a 1400-foot dirt strip (we wouldn't see paved strips again for some time) which is very narrow and full of ruts. We landed nicely, dropped off the village councilman and looked around a bit. Every little village we landed at seemed to come already equipped with half naked little brown children who congregated at the airstrip to see what all the excitement was about. And not just children either. The adults would often hang around to see who or what was going on. Caqueria's most distinctive feature was that there were horses running around on the runway, and we had to rev the airplane engine a few times to get them to move off so we could takeoff. We didn't really go into the village at Caqueria, just looked around a bit, and took back off. It was interesting to see our first real village

.

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 Guatemala, and Jarley speaks Spanish fluently. Carolyn and I very much appreciated Vinny and Jarley’s help in understanding what was going on while we were there.

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 Honduras is different than what we are accustomed to seeing in the United States. The letters that Jarley took possession of where simply sealed envelopes with a person’s name on them and a village name.

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 Patucha River. It is about a mile walk from the airstrip to the river. We paid about a hundred dollars for gasoline for the canoe, and loaded up and headed on our way. Dr. Alejandro is a heck of a nice guy., and really helps a lot of different villages out by visiting their clinics. It was a LONG canoe ride. The sun was blistering hot. The seats were very uncomfortable. The seats are actually not seats. The canoe was about 30 feet long, and had no seats of any sort. The canoes are just hollowed out logs that have been painted really. So the villagers took sticks (about 4 inches in diameter) and wedged them into the canoe for us to sit on. I don't know if you've ever sat on a 4-inch stick for four hours, but MAN that gets old quick. We really enjoyed the scenery every step of the way though. We dealt with the uncomfortable seating as best we could. We had two boatmen aboard, so that when we hit the shallows, they could "pole" us through them. We also had five native villagers aboard that needed to be dropped off at different places. The canoe is only wide enough to seat one abreast, so we were all lined up in single file aboard it.

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 village of Krautara. Krautara is about a 30-minute boat ride upriver from Krausirpi. Krautara is actually only about six miles upriver, but it takes a while when you are hitting shallows and stuff like that. We landed at Krautara, and were greeted by the headman of the village, a nice fellow who showed us around. The intent of this trip was two-fold. One: To see what spiritual elements were present in each village, and, Two: To help the villagers to build an airstrip so that they could get more immediate medical care if it were necessary. The villagers at Krautara had been planning on building an airstrip for about three years, but had never gotten around to it. As we were climbing the hill from the riverbank, the headman advised up that they had planned on starting the strip "today", but some of the other villagers had other things to do and they couldn't find enough people to make do. We took that information with a grain of salt. The villagers were very nice to us, and showed us where they eventually intended to place the strip (the terrain is very hilly in that area, so spots are not obvious). We used my GPS to pace off 1500 feet and helped to encourage them as to how long and wide the strip should be. When we got back to the village from the area they intend to make the strip they sent a guy up a tree and cut us some coconuts down. They chopped 'em with machetes and we drank deeply of the coconut water. After the water was gone from inside the coconuts, the villager cut them in half for us with a single stroke of his machete, and we ate the coconut inside. I didn't really care for it because it was pretty slimy, so I gave it to a village kid. I'm sure he enjoyed it a LOT more than I would have. After the coconuts, a village lady boiled us up an ear of corn each. It was a show of vast friendship for them to do this, as the village does not grow corn, and it is somewhat of a precious commodity. The village is actually pretty poor, but it is bad manners to turn down an offering of food, so we ate it. It was unsalted, and unbuttered, but very good indeed. We talked to several villagers about the strip, etc.

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 village of Yapuauas. It was something of a different story when we got to Yapuauas. We got to the landing at Yapuauas and were climbing the hill that the village was situated atop when the "presidente" met us. He advised us that we had to be very careful because there were two young men in the village that were possessed of demons. These two young men, he informed us also had machetes in their possession. The presidente wasn't sure what they intended to do, and we understandably were curious also. Fortunately, this time it turned out to not be a problem. Those two demons stayed in their hut, and we prayed for them.

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 village of Krausirpi, and the unfortunate outcome of the difficult delivery that that young lady from Krausirpi experienced? We timed the flight from Wampusirpi to Krausirpi, and it took a mere twenty minutes. What a revelation to me, and now you know why I call these little airplanes time machines. Who knows what the difference would have been had that little village already built the landing strip for that young mother. What an exciting thing it was the next day to see that the village of Krausirpi had actually already begun to clear the area for their landing strip! We overflew it several times to encourage them, and flew over the Yapuauas village also (no apparent headway there). But we noticed that the villagers DID see us flying over, so we hoped they would be encouraged also. After overflying the villages, our "work" that we wanted to accomplish in Honduras was essentially done.

We left for La Ceiba for the short flight on Islena Air in a Cessna 208 (Caravan) to San Pedro Sula where we exited the country. We got a room in La Ceiba at the Hotel Paris. It had phones, TV, HOT water, and a pool. What luxury! We went souvenir shopping at a place that Jarley knew of and then a restaurant for dinner (steak this time). Our last night in Honduras was spent talking with Jarley and Vinny and enjoying each other's company. We got up early the next morning, had breakfast at a local café and headed for the airport. We had booked a flight on Islena Air the previous evening so that Jarley wouldn't have to fly us all the way to San Pedro Sula and he could get back home to his family. We all (Vinny, Carolyn and I) got onboard the 9:33am flight (a caravan) to San Pedro Sula on Islena Air. It was interesting to fly as a passenger aboard a Cessna Caravan, because I had previously flown a Caravan for MartinAire for about 6 months. It was all very familiar. I talked to the first officer onboard the flight for awhile while we were enroute. We landed safely at San Pedro Sula picked up our baggage and checked in at American Airlines for our return trip to the United States. Upon arrival at Miami, we had to clear immigration, then pick up our bags and go through customs, and then "re-give" our bags to American Airlines for the rest of the trip to Houston. We parted ways with Vinny in Miami, after having a cup of coffee with him at the terminal. We landed at 9:00pm in Houston, picked up our bags, and our truck and I drove us to San Antonio. That was the whole trip. Carolyn and I learned an awful lot about what is necessary and the extreme importance of supplying logistical support to the heroes and humble Americans who serve the Lord, and the communities of Eastern Honduras.

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 village of Krausirpi would most likely not have lost her child had there been a dirt-strip runway in her village. There is a sense of urgency in taking care of these matters for us, we know that impact those little strips of dirt have on the village, and the health and welfare of the inhabitants. We have dedicated our organization to supporting those heroes of faith and service. Our organization, Casa de Servicio, exists to enable them to more efficiently do their jobs. We are a non-profit, non-denominational volunteer outfit that is organized under IRS code 501(C) 3. So any donations that you care to share with us is completely tax-deductible. Please visit our website at http://www.casadeservicio.org to share in our mission, or feel free to write or call for more information. This, for us is the essence of aviation at it's very finest.



Dios le bendiga grandemente en a su familia y ministerio.

Casa de Servicio, International
Aviation Medical Support & Missionary Flight Training




last missions trip

Hi everyone,
For any of you that MIGHT find it mildly interesting...here is a transcript of the presentation that was given at the Project Honduras conference in Copan Ruinas on the 21rst of last November.
Richard Becton
Casa De Servicio International
http://www.casadeservicio.org

Transcript from Casa de Servicio presentation 2005

Copan Ruinas, Honduras

Presenter: Richard Becton

Good morning. Let me open my remarks by thanking Marco and the rest of the organizers and sponsors of Project Honduras. Thank you for the opportunity to meet, and to further our existing relationships and partnerships. This conference and all of the outgrowths from this conference are the result of a visionaries efforts, … so thank you Marco, and all!

My name is Richard Becton. My wife Carolyn and I are here representing Casa de Servicio. We feel very blessed to have the opportunity to be here and to interact with each of you. Anyone here who wishes to discuss aviation or transportation will find us to be an eager participant in THAT conversation. Seek us out while you are here…I’m Richard, and this is Carolyn…stand up darling. (pause) Please come up and introduce yourselves to us while you’re here! You see, we know that YOU FOLKS here represent the GOOD people of the world and we feel privileged to be allowed here amongst you.

Carolyn and I, like those of you who have been to Copan Ruinas before, have a soft spot in our hearts for the people of Copan Ruinas, and for the country of Honduras! It is good, to be back here again…we love it!

Casa de Servicio. What a journey it has been over the last 10 years to get this organization up and running! I think that even accounting for "Latin time" it took longer than we expected! Casa de Servicio began with the desire of Carolyn and myself to give something back to God and the world for the blessings bestowed upon us. Just like almost everyone else in the room today, right? As dedicated Christian people, our organization is an outgrowth of our Christian values. Carolyn and I are both jet pilots. It is how we earn our living and is our "full-time" job. We work for a company called Flight Options, LLC, flying private business jets. Fortunately our schedule allows us the necessary time to also direct Casa de Servicio.

Casa de Servicio IS an IRS authorized 501(c)3 organization. There was a LOT of excitement in the Casa de Servicio office on the day THIS (referring to the slide) letter arrived. Of course what that means is that donations to Casa de Servicio are tax-deductible under US law. But more importantly, it gives us an avenue to partnership with other organizations. Casa de Servicio would like to aggressively seek out other non-governmental organizations to partner with. If you have an organization which has not yet surmounted the pile of paperwork necessary to achieve tax-exempt status, and you wish to be "umbrellaed" with Casa de Servicio, CONTACT US.

Casa de Servicio is a bible-based, Christian organization. We are VERY NON-EXCLUSIVE. Casa de Servicio is a non-denominational organization that works extremely well with people of all faiths and people of good spirit who happen to not have faith in God presently. We believe that God created each of us and we should work together for the accomplishment of a greater good. We believe God instills this desire in us. But we don’t expect YOU to believe as we do. We are encouraged to meet other Christians, but it is not a requirement for us to work with you by any means.

Casa de Servicio is in the business of providing efficient transportation in the country of Honduras. Casa de Servicio is currently expanding operations into Nicaragua and we will continue to expand to meet the needs of Central America and the Caribbean. Casa de Servicio can convert a 2 ½ hour drive from San Pedro Sula to Copan Ruinas into a 25 minute flight by small plane. How many of you know that there is a small airstrip just on the edge of town? In fact, it is just past the Hacienda San Lucas that we enjoyed last night. There are many more small airstrips spread throughout Honduras and the rest of Central America that Casa de Servicio will operate into and out of. Casa de Servicio can open the rest of the country up to your organization! The journey to AUHAS or Rus Rus, is no longer a 2-3 day trip. It is but a few hours. Casa de Servicio will operate this service at cost. Admittedly, the cost of operating airplanes is fairly high. But, we ARE a non-profit organization and can save you considerable time, while saving you considerable money over the cost of chartering an airplane to some of these remote locations. Casa de Servicio will transport members of your organization, within the country, to outlying areas non an at cost basis. The reason Casa de Servicio will do this is simple…Casa de Servicio’s thrust is in the La Moskitia region of Honduras and Nicaragua. Casa de Servicio is dedicated to opening up new airstrips in villages that currently have no electricity, no running water, no clinic or hospitals and no transportation infrastructure. Most of the areas we will transport sick or injured people from are a 3-4 hour canoe journey away from the nearest clinic (and sometimes 7-8 hours). A person can easily die on one of those journeys. Ask one of the doctors, nurses, or paramedics in attendance here about that. Casa de Servicio can convert that 3-4 hours of bone-jarring canoe ride into 20 minutes in most cases. So essentially, these little airplanes of ours will become time machines of a sort. Casa de Servicio will use its "time machines", these little airplanes, to give people a chance to survive misfortunes and accidents. This is a two-way process. Casa de Servicio can bring generators, short wave radios, teachers, technical personnel and missionaries to these villages also. We must be careful to encourage an elevated level of healthcare and participation in modern amenities without perverting or diluting the cultural aspects of life in these villages. We want to help, not harm. The experienced workers present here know what I’m speaking of. Honduras is a beautiful friendly country…we wouldn’t do ANYTHING to impact it negatively. This is just one more reason we wish to work closely with other, more experienced, organizations here. The last time we visited the village of Krataura, a small village 3-4 hours up the Patucha river from Wampusirpi, we were with a Cuban doctor by the name of Dr. Alejandro. Our arrival was timely, because a young woman was in the process of a difficult birth when we arrived. Dr. Alejandro did all he could, but there was a very limited supply of medical equipment available in the village. We had arrived in Krautara after a 4-hour journey by canoe. Krautara, at that time, had no airstrip. Unfortunately, Dr. Alejandro was unable to save the young woman’s baby. Had we been able to transport her to Wampusirpi by plane she very likely would have had a different outcome. The very reason we had made the arduous trip to Krautara was to see if the village would consider installing a small dirt strip for us to operate out of. By small plane, Wampusirpi is only 20 minutes from Krautara. Needless to say, the headmen of the village "got it". The next day, construction of that dirt strip, that little miraculous 1800’ long runway, had begun.

(read text from slide here):

Casa deServicio, Inc

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

"When we do not accept the full authority of God's Word, when we

do not believe the Scriptures to be inerrant, our evangelistic

efforts have no authority. The Bible becomes what is most

convenient for us."

Thom S. Rainer

The Company; The Founders; The Vision

Nonprofit and religious organizations have spent billions of dollars over the last two thousand years to spread

the good news that Jesus Christ died, and has arisen in expiation of humanity's sins. One may well wonder

where all the funding and energy goes. The expenditures and man-hours involved in the spreading of the gospel

of Jesus Christ has not gone in vain. The word IS getting out. It would be a rare person indeed who has not

heard of Jesus, our Savior. At least in the United States of America, Europe and other countries which have

very well developed communication and transportation systems in place.

It is the countries which DO NOT have the luxury of driving down to the local store to purchase his/her hearts

desire from well stocked shelves that Casa de Servicio is founded to serve. In the process of serving these

foreign nations, we found we also serve our own. We have been blessed to find a process by which the Company

may serve both our own disadvantaged inhabitants and the isolated communities abroad. We serve our own

citizens by supplying a high degree of training which enables disadvantaged or economically deprived persons

to acquire a set of skills highly prized in our nation, the skill of being able to pilot aircraft at a professional

level. While Casa de Servicio does not restrict applicants to our program to be United States citizens, it is

inherent due to the physical location of our training facility that we receive more applications from our own

country. Casa de Servicio provides this advanced training at no cost to the potential missionary pilot. Through

God's grace and bounty we are able to train each student missionary to a level of skill which is easily

translatable into the private sector workforce. We train each potential missionary pilot to accomplish the

skill-set necessary to acquire advanced Federal Aviation Administration issued licenses of Commercial pilot,

Instrument rated pilot, Multiengine rated pilot, and Tailwheel qualified pilot. Each of these well trained pilots

contractually obligates themselves to Casa de Servicio and service to God through missionary work for a

minimum period of two years. Casa de Servicio expects to establish a life-long relationship with each and

every potential missionary pilot which completes our program. Each individual potential missionary pilot is

trained in emergency medical evaluation and care in addition to language skills and piloting ability. We send

VERY well prepared pilots and missionaries out to the missions field.

Although this advanced level of training could very well stand alone as a fulfilling mission, Casa de Servicio

firmly believes that the "great commission" is one that must be taken very seriously. The great commission,

is the spreading of the gospel of Jesus Christ. Casa de Servicio, Inc. is founded to pursue this commission

to extent allowed by economic and spiritual resources made available. Casa de Servicio trains missionary

pilots, to go forth from this nation and serve the small isolated segments of human society as facilitators

in communication of the good news of Jesus Christ. Our pilots not only provide emergency medical evacuation

and expeditious transportation to fellow missionaries, but have many opportunities to spread the word of

God amongst peoples who often have yet to understand their predicament. You will see as you read through

these pages that we are earnest and humble in our approach to the goal of furthering God's work, and spreading

the gospel of Jesus Christ salvation of humanity.



Dios le bendiga grandemente en a su familia y ministerio.

Casa de Servicio, International
Aviation Medical Support & Missionary Flight Training




Flying House (Casa del Vuelo)

Flying House (Casa del Vuelo)

I am starting this BLOG as a way to keep interested parties up to date with the progress our mission in Nicaragua is making.

Of course, I'm as busy as anyone else, but I hope to have the time to keep this current. Please post when you can, or ask questions as you feel the need/urge. God bless.

Richard