Smiling Ladies & Agriculture in Zimbabwe

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The Inland North- West PET Project Home of the Rainbow PET 15123 N LiAle Spokane Dr. Spokane WA 99208 Vol VII Number 1 year old Tambudzal Tambu 42 Ziko from Zimbabwe, outproduces some of her neighbors even without draught animals to help. Over the years she has perfected a no-till method of farming for all of her crops. To plant, she drags herself by scooting backwards in a garden row as she digs holes for corn, beans, or peanuts, then plants seeds the same way. At harvest time, she uses the cargo space in the back of her PET to take the fruit of her labor home. Tambu had to crawl on the ground for the first 17 years of her life, then used crutches for Smiling Ladies & Agriculture in Zimbabwe many years. A regular wheel chair wouldn t handle the rough terrain, so when she received a PET, her freedom and ability to be productive was increased dramatically. Tambu is the mother of 3 children, all attend school. Her husband does odd jobs to help support the family. Until she got her PET, getting water required balancing a water container on her head while dragging herself along the ground. Tambu is so thankful for the freedom PET has given her. She says that the wear and tear on her body is so much less now that she doesn t have to drag herself along rough ground.

Our own Don Mortenson was in Yuma Arizona Page 2, Vol VII No 1 recently and traveled to Algodones, Mexico for the tourist stuff when he suddenly saw this almost legless man on a PET. (His right leg is only a stump and the left one very emaciated.) The man has diabetes and sits on his PET near where tourists line up to go through customs back into the US. He holds a white cup labeled diabetic and begs for money. The man told Don that the Mexican government is absolutely no help when it comes to assisting the handicapped, so he praises the Christian community for giving him the PET. As you can see, the PET shows lots of wear, but is still very functional. He uses his PET s cargo space to carry various items, and keeps his back pack from being lifted by fastening his seat belt around the pack. Good Robery ~ by Dick Carpenter A Can any theft of another s tools and equipment be characterized as good? In the Heavenly realm, an incident can be turned on its head. In Genesis 50:20, Moses writes; You meant it for evil but God used it for good. This in reference to Joseph and his brothers. I think, the same flip-flop has happened in regards to the Robbery of the PET Shop on Tuesday, January 27 (incidentally a date very close to our 10th anniversary). The robbers threw a rock through a very narrow (about 10 ) shop window. He must have been either a small child or a very emaciated man, but he wiggled through and got inside. Once inside, the door was easily opened thus allowing the theft to proceed. The crooks took all of our hand drills, batteries, chargers, brad nailers, compressor, sanders, routers, and a vacuum cleaner. Probably the most severe loss was the expensive stapler we use for boxing completed PETs. With the help of one of our PET-Kin ladies, contact was made with a local TV news channel, KHQ, which sent out a cameraman and reporter. They did an excellent story of the robbery on that evening s news. We are deeply appreciative of their sincere concern for the ministry and attention to detail. The response to their work was almost immediate. After hearing about the theft, an old friend from Tri-Cities called to ask if we could use some tools. I told him what had been taken and he said he would send us a box of tools. A few days later a heavy box arrived via FedEx. When I Empty tool shelf opened it, I was shocked to tears. The first tool I pulled from the box was a duplicate of the box stapler we had lost! It s important to realize without that stapler, we stop! No matter how many PETs the builders complete, they become Rainbow colored stones because no packing can even be started. Just one example of God s Grace in a good robbery.

Page 3, Vol VII No 1 The following is copied from a letter sent by one of our PET-Kin welders. We were sorry to hear about the break-in and can only imagine the hurt that many are feeling over this. Just last week, when I was working in my shop with our 11-year-old grandson, he asked me how long it had taken me to collect all of my tools. He was surprised when I told him 50 years. Then I showed him the first tools I had acquired; a gift from my parents when I was six years old. An open-end wrench set, a 12 oz. claw hammer, and a 6 crescent wrench. Many of my tools represent a lot of hard work, saving and sacrifice. Though it would be devastating in many ways for me to lose my tools, I take the attitude that they are not really mine but belong to God, and my prayer is that they will be used to His glory. A check is enclosed. A Good robbery? Yes, when a grandson can be taught lessons of practical Filled tool shelves life and learn a Spiritual perspective from a loving Granddad. The Friday after the robbery, Fasteners called me, We have some tools down here, can you pick them up? When I arrived, out came this cart stacked high with new tools. One of our PET-Kin had told Fasteners to replace what was on the Sheriff s report that had been stolen and charge it to his account. A man s generous heart brought tears to this old PET-Kin making a robbery transparent evidence of God s Grace. Another example of God s Grace in a good robbery. An Open Letter To Our Donors Cicero said: Gratitude is not only the greatest of all virtues but the parent of all others. On behalf of all the PET-Kin working in the North-West, I want you to know how grateful we are for the support you have given to this ministry for 10+ years. Without you, there is no us. The Inland North-West PET Project is your creation because without your faith and belief in what we build, pack and ship, there would be nothing being created for the Least of these. We have hit a bump in the road and we believe we re obligated to let you know what has slowed us down. The Trustees of PET International designed a new seat for the PETs and intended it to be standardized across all 23 PET Affiliated Projects. We decided the design of the new seat was not in the best interests of the Project nor the Recipients of our Rainbow PETs, so our PET-Kin designed and built a new seat that was not twice as heavy (11 extra pounds), nor three times as expensive nor five times harder to build and it preserved the cargo space behind the seat. The recipients creative use of this space over 20 years of PETs being shipped is truly astounding. They use it for everything from carrying babies, to hauling bricks, to selling vegetables and other foods, to taking a sister to school and two men (Ecuador and Guatemala) actually built a store around their PETs. We thought we had solved the underlying problems of pressure sores, safety and the cargo space. PET International did not agree and after much discussion and letter writing, they have threatened to disafiliate us. We managed to ship 70 Rainbow PETs before they did that and before they cut off our shipping charities. In a Team meeting on Monday March 9, we decided to forgo our design and use theirs. We are still in production but at a much slower pace and will continue to seek resolution to one remaining problem: How to ship our already built and packed PETs. We pray you will remain faithful and committed to this important ministry and if you have any questions, please call me (509-466-3425) or e-mail me (bebold@comcast. net) and I will answer your inquiries. May God continue to bless you and yours. Live Boldly and Love God, Dick Carpenter Chief PET Logistician

Grateful Visitors to the PET Shop Encouraging notes, especially from young people, are appreciated very much. Page 4, Vol VII No 1 Guest Speakers Needed? Does your church, Sunday school class, club, or organization need a guest speaker? We are passionate about our mission and love to talk to groups. We can give a 15-minute or hour-long presentation and we will bring a PET along for the ride! Call or email us to schedule your presentation. Visits to the PET shop may also be scheduled here. 509-466-3425 bebold@comcast.com PET Volunteer Spotlight To find our volunteer for this issue of PET-Kin Pathways we go to the paint shop where we find Dick Hiller enjoying the task of painting PET parts, but also enjoying the fellowship with other painters. Not only was he born and raised in Spokane, but he loves competition in sports and certainly enjoys helping other people. Dick and Karen were married in 1961 and spent their honeymoon at Schofield Barracks in Hawaii where Dick completed his military service. They have two children, Laurie (1962) and Rick (1965). Having been trained in some of the earliest computer programming methods, Dick spent the next 40 years working in systems development and data processing for various banks in the North-West, including Alaska. Finally back to Spokane for retirement in 2002, he not only enjoys participating in slow-pitch softball (he and Karen travel to St George Utah for the Huntsman Senior Games each year) and bowling, but also watching his adult grandchildren playing in their own sports and other activities. What does he enjoy most about being involved in the PET project? The fellowship with other volunteers, learning about the background of PET, telling people what PET does for those who so desperately need them, and knowing that the job we do here is so vitally needed in other less developed parts of the world. We appreciate Dick so much, especially for his enthusiasm and can-do attitude. He is a vital part of the Spokane PET shop ministry. South Sudan where civil war and now severe flooding prevent us from sending more PETs in.

10 years of Joy! By Dick Carpenter Page 5, Vol VII No 1 God uses small things to achieve His bigger goals. Ten years ago, in February 2005, a small column in the local newspaper hit my heart and soul so hard that I immediately bought a plane ticket and flew to Penney Farms, Florida. The article told of a machine called a PET, built and shipped to leg-disabled men, women, and children in third world countries. God timed publication of that article right after completion of my Agent Orange induced cancer treatment, and I was lost: No more lawyering; no more teaching overseas. I found myself in Florida for a week as Larry Hills (a PET founder) taught me about Personal Energy Transporters: why needed; how to build them; why pre-assembled jigs were necessary and much more. He also provided me with many items to get started. What has happened then, and has grown these past 10 years can only be described as A God Thing done to His glory for the least of these. The Inland North-West PET Project started as a spark in one mind, then became tongues of fire in the minds of over 100 PET-Kin (those related through the PET Project) throughout the NW United States and Canada. Contributing PET-Kin live in Alaska, British Columbia, Oregon, Idaho, throughout Washington State, and two in Michigan. These PET-Kin are not only dedicated men and women individuals, but 16 committed companies and their skilled employees without whom we would ve have survived the first cold spell...therein lies the first story. One evening at a Perspectives course, where I had taken a PET, a classmate slapped me on a shoulder asking, How many of those do you expect to make in a year? I said I was thinking, Maybe 100. Awwh he said, We can make more than that. He owned a metal fabrication company and also had a friend in the same business. A few days later, the three of us had lunch together and at the end of our sharing, between the two of them, one would make the front fork assembly and the other the pedal post assembly. In order to paint steel parts, we strung clotheslines all through my back pasture. I would then go out there with cans of spray paint and primer one day then color them black the next. Then cold and snow came. I think it was God s sense of humor since it was then he sent us a powder-coating firm. One of the owners lives less than a half mile from the pasture paint operation. He had gone through medical care far worse than mine and has continued to work. Soon after, we started taking front forks, pedal posts, brakes, and brake handles, to be powder-coated free of charge. Their powder coating painters started having fun with colors and soon we had steel blue, yellow, red, purple, and all other colors except black thus the Rainbow PET was born. The metal colors coordinated fine with the wood painters who had started a system of stacking all the wood for one PET and painting them all red, then another all blue etc. and then hanging them on wire lines strung around inside the old barn which had been our daughter s playhouse. We did learn, the hard way, that painted boards would stick together, even after they dried. By the time the builders took them from the wood racks, many had to be ripped apart making for ugly PETs. The wisdom of one of our painters taught us to use brown rice flower on the boards once they dried; problem solved.

The next part of our story started with a surprise phone call from Sequim, Washington on the Olympic Peninsula. He was a retired anesthesiologist and, from a gruff voice, I heard, My wife watches television all day and I m sick of it and I want to do something! A week later, Page 6, Vol VII No 1 he drove the 7 hours to Spokane in his old panel truck. After a week with us learning to cut the wood parts, and with a set of plans, he drove home. From then on, every two weeks, we would receive a load of parts in a FedEx truck. But, while cutting, he was also talking to the Port Angeles Rotary Club about possible donations. The Doctor took their donations and his set of plans to the local high school s shop teacher where the students constructed a complete PET from scratch all because a retired doctor didn t want to watch television. A final story came in May of our 5th year. On this one, specific day, I had called the team together to share some sad news: We had no money. We ll have to shut down the operation until we could raise some money. We all went home. No sooner had I gotten home than the phone rang. It was a PET-Kin in Tri-Cities, Washington who has been involved from the beginning. He had donated an old compressor that we still use and he built a miniature PET (1:5 ratio) on his own. He designed and built what we call a robo-chuck for welding sprockets to the wheel. Anyway, he asked on the phone (same day mind you), do you need any money? I chuckled to myself, God s trying to be funny once again. I told him what I had just told the team. He said, Hang on for a while. There s something going on down here. We did. Two weeks later we received a check for $10,000! God has kept us going (sometimes one check at a time) now into our 11th year. When you do something for God for 10 years, you learn to trust Him. And over 10 years dozens of stories emerge from within the team and from PET recipients. We have also learned that the, men, women, and children who are leg-disabled and who receive our Rainbow PETs are ingeniously creative. We must remember they are physically handicapped, but in no way are they slowwitted in the ways they use their PETs to live their new lives. We have seen stores built around PETs. We have seen a PET driven by a young man with no arms. We have seen 2 sisters share a PET on their way to and from work. We have seen a bricklayer regain his profession by wiring a wheelbarrow to his PET and putting cement and bricks in the PET. We have seen a mother raise her remaining young daughter after becoming legdisabled in an accident that killed her oldest daughter, by selling household goods by the side of the road. We have seen a legless mom crawl through the grass with her two babies on her back looking for a PET, which she received, and then returned to her village and raised those girls. The list goes on and on because their creativity knows no bounds. That s why we can say with confidence: We re lifting men, women, and children, out of the dirt into a life of dignity and hope, one PET at a time.

Page 7, Vol VII No 1 Celebrating 10 Years of Joy T he icing on the cake was our 10th year anniversary banquet. We wanted to provide a venue for people to share their remembrances of early days of PET, and also to recognize, and honor, the 16 businesses who have come along side individual PET-Kin volunteers with their products and personal expertise. Needless to say, their help has been beyond any price we could ever have paid. Three of the businesses partners we recognized are pictured here with Dick Carpenter. Each of the 16 received an engraved trophy (the one for FedEx is shown here). We can t say enough good things about these business partners. If it weren t for each and every one of them, we would probably not be here today, and we certainly would not be able to say that each PET we build carries a cost of about $250 for parts we have to buy, and for some shipping. We mentioned powder coating the frames, front forks, and peddal posts in the previous article. The business which provides the labor, paint, and great ideas for variety, is Apex Industries, located here in the Spokane Valley. One of their founders is Gordon Cudney who got curious about the metal pieces drying in Dick Carpenter s back pasture. He wrote the following about Apex and the pictures are the great folks who work there and love to experiment with different colors for our rainbow effect. That s also Gordon on the far left (holding the Apex trophy) in the picture above. Apex Industries is a precision sheet metal fabricator located in the Spokane Industrial Park. The company was formed in 1993 when Matt Matthews and Gordon Cudney purchased the Key Tronic sheet metal shop. We now occupy approximately 60,000 square feet and employ about 55 people. Apex serves a wide array of industries, including electronics, aerospace, medical, and several others. Most of our customers are OEM s or contract manufacturers. Apex is ISO and AS90 (aerospace) certified. In addition to normal sheet metal functions, we perform mechanical assembly, spray painting, powder coating and silk screening services for our customers. Our customers are primarily located in the Northwest and Northern California. We are proud to be part of the PET project.

The Inland North- West PET Project Home of the Rainbow PET 15123 N LiAle Spokane Dr. Spokane WA 99208 PET Connection Contact and Newsletter Information F or volunteer opportunities, visits to the PET shop, or to request a presentation, please call Dick Carpenter at (509)466-3425 or send him an e-mail at bebold@comcast.net. Our web site is www.petspokane.org. For address changes or comments about this newsletter, send to petnwnewsletter@onemain.com. Tax-deductible donations may be sent to WCPC-PET Project, 15123 Little Spokane Dr., Spokane, WA 99208. NOTE: In order to help with our limited funds, PLEASE let us know when your address changes. Even a wrong apartment number will usually get your newsletter returned which uses funds badly needed for PETs.