The loving four-month restoration of the house that MAF (Mission Aviation Fellowship) missionary Nate Saint built on the edge of the jungle in 1948 is nearly complete. Hundreds from Ecuador and abroad are expected to attend the ceremony to dedicate the historic building at 3 p.m. Oct. 30.
Malaria kills
When I travel to Papua New Guinea areas where malaria is known to be present, I always take up a supply of the right pills so I dont fall victim to malaria. I just read this blog post from the guys flying around the world in an Australian GA8 Airvan, the same plane used in some of the MAF programs:
“One lady told how she had lost three boys and two daughters to malaria, another man spoke of the three children that he had lost to malaria . . . the stories went on and on. One chap said that until the missionaries came to Malamaunda, they had no access to any medicine due to their remote location, and the death toll each year was in the thousands. Even now, the villages “close” to Malamaunda are a number of days walk away, and Bob Kennel told how a man had tried to bring his child sick with malaria to the village where Bob was - a three day walk. After a day’s hike, the child died in the man’s arms and all he could do was return home to bury his little child. This is happening right now. As I write this, people here in PNG are dying from malaria . . . only a very short flight away from Australia. This should not be happening . . . this must not continue to happen.”
Lets not ask “What would I do?
Ask “What can I do, now?”
Imagining myself as that father carrying his sick child rammed home the impact that malaria has.
Around the World in an Airvan
Two men from Bendigo (Vic) are preparing for a world-first circumnavigation of the globe in an aircraft totally designed and manufactured in Australia.
And MAF will be one of only two organisations to benefit from funds raised by the epic journey.
Ken Evers 33 and Tim Pryse 51, will depart from Bendigo Aerodrome on a day to be determined in May bound for Norfolk Island.

- Tim Pryse and Ken Evers
They will continue their journey across the Pacific to California via Hawaii then on to Arizona and New Orleans. From there they will touch down to refuel in Jamaica and Barbados before heading south to Brazil, then due east across the Atlantic to Africa, on to India, Vietnam, the Philippines, PNG and back to Australia.
The history-making flight commemorates Australia’s Centenary of Flight when the famous contortionist Harry Houdini conducted Australia’s first controlled, powered flight in March 1910, changing the landscape of flying in this country forever.
Ken and Tim will fly a GA8-TC Airvan over 26,740 nautical miles in 230 flight hours. The eight-seat Airvan is manufactured by Gippsland Aeronautics in Morwell (Vic).
The flight aims to draw attention to malaria, the world’s most common infectious, mosquito-borne disease, claiming over a million lives annually. Most victims are those least able to afford preventative drugs or treatments.
The pilots hope to raise one million dollar
s
to combat the global impact of malaria by inviting donations via the millionsagainstmalaria.com website to two nominated charities - Mission Aviation Fellowship (MAF) and the Australian Foundation for the Peoples of Asia and Pacific (AFAP).
People in many of the tropical and sub-tropical areas the pair will fly across suffer from malaria including Papua New Guinea where Ken Evers grew up as a teenager and was deeply impacted by the Work of MAF.
“MAF pilots are my heroes”
“For me, MAF was the epitome of aviation. MAF pilots are my heroes,” he said.
“Living in PNG and watching the work of MAF taught me the lesson that you can use the gifts you have been given to do the right thing. And of course in the case of MAF it is using the gift of flight to help people.
“I watched what MAF did in PNG. I saw my friend’s life saved (by a MAF flight) and now I want to offer my support. I think MAF is such an unsung group. People fail to see that MAF is saving countless lives every year. ”
For further details about Ken and Tim’s epic journey and an opportunity to donate online to MAF, go to www.millionsagainstmalaria.com
Donkey Basketball: MAF Fundraiser
While in Nampa we were fortunate….. enough to be there for the Donkey Basketball MAF Fundraiser for Haiti.
I haven’t seen anything like it before. Only 1 donkey managed a professional foul on the gym floor. It gave the commentator my favourite line “We have poop. Poop on the floor”. Don’t hear that at basketball much.
sent from Apple iPhone
Ex-Missionary’s Mercy Mission for MAF
A former Kiwi missionary to Papua New Guinea is riding a motorcycle across the length of New Zealand to raise funds to buy an aeroplane to serve the rural people of PNG. Interestingly, the motorcycle that Frank Carter, 76, is riding to raise funds is the same one – a 1955 DOT Scrambler– he used while serving in the Western Highlands province in the late 1950s.

Carter Family and the DOT motorcycle - 2009
Mr Carter rode into Dunedin on the South Island on Wednesday and was expected to ride into Gore yesterday, before reaching the town of Bluff today – clocking up 2,220km in 14 days. He plans to end the ride at an annual motorbike rally called the Burt Munro Challenge at Oreti Beach near Invercargill this weekend.
So far, he has been able to raise more than NZ$20,000 (K40,000) on his road trip – far short of the NZ$1 million (K2 million) needed to by a new Australian-built GA8 Airvan and donate it to the Missionary Aviation Fellowship (MAF) for its work in PNG. Mr Carter was reported by the Otago Daily Times as saying that he was praying hard for more funds.

The DOT tackles a rough stretch of road in PNG
Mr Carter bought the motorbike in 1959 and shipped it to Mt Hagen where he and his family were doing missionary work. He said the DOT (devoid of trouble) was ideal for the remote and rugged conditions he encountered in the Western Highlands province, and it was his only mode of transport for the seven-and a-half years he lived and served God there. When it was time to return to New Zealand, the motorcycle was “a wreck”, so he sold it to the mission and left it in PNG.
Thirty-eight years later, Mr Carter had retired and was keen to relive a small part of his youth by buying another 1955 DOT Scrambler. After a long search, he found one and, to his astonishment, it turned out to be his very own old 1955 model – refurbished. “I was convinced that God was part of this reunion and I made the decision to ride the DOT from Cape Reinga to Bluff, as a fundraising venture towards the purchase of a new Mission Aviation Fellowship plane for Papua New Guinea,” Mr Carter said.

PNG men admire the DOT
Source: PNG National newspaper
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OS X Lion wont play AVI WMV files
July 23, 2011
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New Aussie Aircraft for Papua New Guinea mission
May 11, 2010
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Installing OS X 10.4 Tiger without DVD
March 13, 2011
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Floating hangar – Kalimantan, Indonesia
June 24, 2009
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HCSB Online Study Bible
September 8, 2010
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MAF Dedicates its First KODIAK Missionary Plane
May 22, 2009
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MAF Learning Technologies – Papua New Guinea
June 22, 2010
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Shot Fired at MAF Twin Otter – Papua New Guinea
August 28, 2009
- Ongoing Prezi – tools for teaching and learning January 31, 2012
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Setup Telstra ZTE MF626 USB Modem on Macbook Pro OS X Lion
January 26, 2012
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mLearning – it’s bigger than mobile…
January 18, 2012
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Creating an Android App – MAF Advocate
December 1, 2011
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Cant move IMAP email to Trash on iPad?
September 2, 2011
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What if….? Missional Church
August 27, 2011
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