15 June 2009



Hello friends and family,
Our visas require us to leave Thailand every three months. Here is a story about our first border run to Myanmar (formerly Burma). Melia, with help from her Daddy, typed this story so her Grandma H can use it for children's story at their church.

We love and miss you!







Dear Grandma,
Here is the story about crossing into Burma and back into Thailand. We had to leave Thailand because we had to renew our visas from outside the country. (We have to leave every three months). So, just before our visas expired we went up to the border where there is a bridge across the Mae Sai river into Burma. We got there about 3 o'clock in the afternoon and parked near the bridge on the Thailand side. Then we walked across the bridge, but of course we had to stop at the immigration check points for the guards to check our passports. At the Burma check point, the guards said they would keep our passports and that we could pick them up on the way out. So we left them there and kept walking across the bridge till we got to the other side. It wasn't very far and after we crossed there was a huge street market where they tried to sell us all kinds of stuff. Mommy and Daddy wouldn't let us buy very much though. Mommy and Daddy did find a Burmese box to use as our missionary prayer box. After we went shopping we were hungry so we looked for a restaurant to eat at. It's a good thing we had a little map because other wise we wouldn't have been able to find one. It was just a little ways away from the market so we walked there and ate some rice with vegetables. All five of us ate for about $2.30. After we ate, we decided to walk around a little bit more to see if there was anything interesting. So we walked back toward the bridge and saw some kind of monument. Mommy and Daddy took some pictures of it but I didn't think it was very interesting to look at. Then we walked some more and went a little bit past the bridge but we didn't see anything else interesting there either. So we turned around and decided to go back to go across the bridge. It was a good thing we decided to go back then and not any later. We got to the immigration check point on the Myanmar side, they gave us our passports and said that we were very late. Late for what, we wondered? As we started across the bridge, first a boy started telling us that we needed to cross to the other side, so we did. Mommy gave him 5 baht for his help. As soon as we crossed we got to the first immigration check point and the guard told us to hurry so we started walking toward him faster and he kept telling us to hurry. Daddy went ahead up to the window where the guard was and came running back with some papers we had to fill out before we could go back into Thailand. He said that the guard told him the border closed at 5 o'clock. By this time it was already about 5:15. As soon as we got the papers, we heard them slamming the gates shut behind us. Mommy and Daddy were writing very fast to fill out the papers and Daddy took them to another guard at a different window. The guard told Daddy that we were very late and the border closes at 5 o'clock. Daddy said he was very sorry and this was our first time crossing the border and we didn't know it closed. (In our defense, it doesn't say in any of the tour books or on either side of the border that the border closes at 5pm). While we were standing there waiting for him to finish our visa papers, other guards were closing the gates to Thailand in front of us so it seemed like we were trapped there on the bridge between the two sets of gates. At last the guard finished with our papers and sent us with another guard through a special door around the gates. After we got through that door, there was one more little office where we had to go in and get our passports back. Finally, about 5:30 we had our passports back and the last guard let us out of the office and closed the door behind us. There were no more doors or gates behind us and we just had to get off the bridge and walk to our truck. Boy were we glad to get back to it because all our clothes, food and water were there waiting for us. Mommy said that if we had been any later, we probably would have had to stay in Burma overnight at a hotel. But we didn't have any clothes except for what we were wearing and we didn't have our passports either. In Thailand, you have to have your passport to stay at a hotel if you are a foreigner. We were so happy to be back in Thailand after that scary part when we were crossing the border. While Mommy and Daddy were doing the papers, Marcus and I were praying that they would let us through and God answered our prayers.


Love,
Melia

14 June 2009

Please feel free to join the Facebook group "All-Asia TV studio" to follow the progress of the studio with more pictures. There is an update video link posted there which will let you see what has been accomplished at the studio thus far. For pictures of our family activities and more timely updates, please become my friend on Facebook. Find me under "Judy Bond-Hernandez" and let me know that you are requesting a friendship in order to follow the studio progress.

Wow, it has been a while since we have updated our blog! We finally got internet to our home and then one week later we had the incredible opportunity to attend Mission Institute which was held in Chiang Mai. We enjoyed three weeks of missionary training, air conditioning, no cooking or cleaning and the fellowship of awesome, God-following missionaries from everywhere who are going everywhere!!

The studio is progressing nicely, despite the fact that there are no funds. God is good!! The first coat of paint has been applied to the interior and exterior walls and all of the windows were installed on Friday. Rick has been busy extending the walls in the sounds sensitive rooms. The building has a very high r
oof. When the interior walls were built, they only built them about 1/2 of the way up to the roof and then a false ceiling was installed just below the tops of the walls. The roof has open venting which will allow sounds from the village (cows, chickens, dogs, motorbikes, etc.) as well as the noise from thunderstorms to drift down into the down-sensitive rooms. Taking the walls of the sound-sensitive rooms all the way up to the roof will help protect the sound integrity of those rooms.

The family is doing well here. The kids have adjusted and are no longer asking to go home every single day! They have made friends with some of village kids. It is amazing how much can be communicated without a common language. The kids are also loving all of the different fruits that Thailand has to offer. The favorites right now are yellow mangoes, lychees, mangosteens, finger bananas and a small round fruit that seems to have just a Thai name. Each season brings new favorites. Below is a picture of produce from a recent trip to the market.