Saturday, February 6, 2021

Home Again

 Dear Family and Friends,

We arrived at home on 29 January, 2021; thus ending our New Zealand mission experience.



Our arrival at an empty Lexington Airport

Two of our Moko's


Los Angeles Airport - Also very empty.

The long flight from New Zealand

Forgive me but I had to include one more cycling photo!



We went from Summer to Winter
 In three days.

Tuesday, January 26, 2021

Our Final Few Weeks in New Zealand

26 January, 2021

Dear Friends and Family,

We have only a few days left here in New Zealand. Our mission experience cannot be captured in words alone. 

We formally completed our mission on 14 January 2021 then took a week to tour the South Island. Many of the photographs below are from that trip. 

We will give another update after we journey home.

Love,

Elder and Sister Baxter



Sisters making English Toffee

Priesthood Meeting



The TSS Earnslaw. A steamship in Queensland.



Lake Pukaki

Thunder Creek Falls

Pancake Rocks near Punakaki

We visited the Harrison's who are serving a mission in the South Island of New Zealand



Our most recent baptism.



The Center of New Zealand Monument in Nelson with the Harrison's

Mt. Cook - behind the clouds

Our newest Deacon - Ready to pass the Sacrament for his first time.

Sunday, December 27, 2020

More Christmas 2020

 Here are some more photographs of our Christmas Day 2020 Activities.


Our district missionaries gave us a Christmas Present. Hoodies!

This is a view from the back yard of our dear friend and branch member who lives in Omori.

We were invited to a Christmas hangi and the home of our dear friends. The beverage is sparkling grape juice with a home made,  knitted cap!


This kind shop owner donated some items that we needed at the last minute. 

My two young helpers and I are setting the tables for the community Christmas dinner.

Christmas Eve Dinner at the Branch President's house.

The Christmas Day diner at the Senior Center. We helped to set-up and serve the meal to over 100 people. 


Saturday, December 19, 2020

Christmas 2020

Dear Friends,
As we enter this Christmas time we acknowledge the wonderful gift of The Son of God into the world. 

In the days prior to Christmas we were very busy with a number of projects which we will describe in the photographs below. 


On December 14 we took a break to climb Mt. Tauhara, an extinct volcano. If you look off to the left of Sister Baxter you can see four other volcanoes (Ruapehu, Ngauruhoe, Tongariro, and Pihanga) and lake Taupo, a volcanic crater. We hope to have broken out of the rainy season. 

Elder Baxter with the lead marchers in the Christmas Parade and the float designer and organizer - our dear Primary President.

The parade crew. You will notice the beautiful missionaries who helped by distributing candy and flyers for our upcoming Christmas Sacrament Meeting. 
Elder Baxter and his young friends.
Very photogenic I might add.

Sister Baxter and some of our missionary friends. 


Our float took 2nd Place this year. $300 prize.

Our Food Box Project - In the rain no less. We received funding for 60 food parcels to be distributed to needy families.


On two separate Wednesdays we delivered 30 food parcels. These were substantial packages which included meat, fresh vegetables, and other staples. Each recipient received two large boxes and two bags of foods and dry goods.

The sign says: Donated by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints. The Church Humanitarian Fund and several other local organizations provided funding or food.

Wednesday, October 28, 2020

October 2020

 Dear Readers, 

Looking back on my last posting I realize that I need to update y'all. It's been almost two months since then.

My skin cancer removal scar finally healed which allowed me to go swimming again and to wear a cycling helmet again. Those two things have opened up exercise options that were heretofore unavailable to me for months.  

Shortly after that I was working our usual Saturday afternoon shift at the Hospice shop when I was testing a donated knife sharpener and sliced a deep wound on my left index finger. It's been about three weeks now and the wound has finally closed. 

"If it wasn’t for bad luck, I wouldn’t have no luck at all.” (Albert King)

Things aren't all that bad. In the last several months we have resumed full church services. On a typical Sunday Sister Baxter and I will either speak, teach, lead the singing, our all of the above. 

We experienced our first Tangihanga. On the first night, we participated in a funeral for the father of a dear family in our branch.  They have been so kind to us and have accepted us as one of their own. We held a short service in their home where I said the prayer,  the Branch President gave some impromptu remarks, and Ruth Ann lead us in singing a hymn. The next day we travelled to the Korohe Marae where were "called" onto the marae (powhiri). This was our first experience with this wonderful Maori ritual. It was all spoken in te reo (Maori language) but I think we understood the sentiment. We greeted everyone in the building, about 60 people, with the traditional hongi. We spent the morning visiting the family and guests then were fed a sumptuous lunch. I was asked to assist the local tohunga as he blessed the waka (literally translated as 'canoe' but was actually a minivan carrying the body).  We left for a few hours so that we could purchase and deliver a birthday gift to two children whom we are teaching. We returned later in the afternoon for another large meal. I was asked to preach a sermon. No other guidance was given so I felt impressed to speak on the purpose of life and the importance of families. 

We have been doing a great deal of driving for our missionary duties. There is a companionship of elders in Taupo that do not drive so we take them to the district council meetings in Rotorua or Tokoroa, or Taupo. We have twice driven them to Hamilton for transfers. We drove to Hamilton for a missionary conference. In the last month we drove over 2000 kilometers performing missionary support.

We are still teaching the gospel two young children on a regular basis. We are praying for them and their family.

The weather is starting to warm up and spring is in full bloom. The variety of trees in bloom is beautiful. At times the sidewalks are covered in petals giving the appearance of pink snow. 


The Korohe Marae
where we honored the passing of our Maori friend.


Our service project. Many hands make more work!


Getting around town is usually best via 
bicycle. Is that a safety violation by
Sister Baxter?

General Conference watching at our branch.
American waffles included as an added bonus.

Stores in the small towns are always interesting.
The one behind us is specializes in merino wool goods. 

A short hike to Okere Falls.
I don't think the warning is for hikers
but rather for rafters and kayakers to 
avoid going over the falls.


Our friend has built a solar-powered bicycle.
Testing starts this week.

Elder Baxter working in the "depot" of the Hospice Op Shop.
His job is to sort, test, price, and repair stuff.
Note the image in the mirror!

Sister Baxter sorting and pricing items at the Hospice shop.








Friday, August 21, 2020

August 2020

 August 2020 in New Zealand

Dear Readers,

It's deja vu all over again. New Zealand discovered several COVID cased in the general population which could not be traced to a known source so they moved the city of Auckland to Level 3 (forced isolation) and the rest of the country to Level 2 (mandatory social distancing plus other limitations). Our church services were suspended. Other than that, our daily activities are not negatively impacted. We still visit people, exercise outside, and serve in our community. 

OK. You will notice the rather obvious addition to my forehead. Looking back over photographs I can see a red mark as early as mid-may though at that time I was not aware of it. It continued to grow and become irritated. We thought it might be a boil but eventually decided that was not correct. 

!!! Spoiler Alert!!! The following contains more detail that any of you need to know. However, I wanted to document the details for my memory's sake. Skip over this if you are so inclined. 

After it had grown to the size of a large "Fruit Loop", in early June I scheduled an appointment with the local clinic. I chickened-out and cancelled the appointment not wanting to let the Kiwis think I was a sissy American thinking it was only a monster pimple. After a few days is was obvious that it was not a pimple and not going away. I scheduled another appointment. However, being a small clinic, it took another week to get to see a doctor. It was now mid June. In the doctor's office we were assigned to a young resident doctor. He looked at the lesion, poked at it, and said he was going to get a colleague to look at it. The second doctor came in, looked at it a little longer. At that point he summoned a third opinion. By that point we had every doctor in Turangi in the room. They told me it was skin cancer, not too dangerous, a Basal Cell Carcinoma. They scheduled an appointment for a week later to remove it in the clinic. 

On the day of the scheduled removal the resident doctor and his supervisor both examined the lesion. The more experienced doctor seemed concerned. He looked, thought, looked again, pondered for a few minutes and then decided against removal. I will soon tell you that was a miracle #1. 

A biopsy was taken. That in itself was painful. One stitch was used to close the wound. We waited for a week. In the day of the stitch removal we met with the doctor who now had the lab results. Squamous Cell Carcinoma which is more severe and required a larger area of removal of the cancer. That procedure was beyond the scope of the local general practice. Our doctor submitted an "emergency" order to the nearest facility that could perform the operation - Rotorua Hospital - two hours away.  

We now began waiting. The expected plan was for a team of Rotorua staff to travel to Taupo (only 45 minutes drive for us) to perform the outpatient operation. That sounded good. But it was another two weeks before we heard from the hospital. Could we come to Rotorua on Thursday? At this point, any option was good because we were starting to worry about the delays.

August 6th. We were on the road by 7 AM for a 9 AM appointment. The trip was foggy; for most of the way the visibility at times was as low as 200 meters. We arrived safely and a bit early. The staff was ready for us. We met the surgeon and two assistants, we assume nurses. The doctor was a native of Sierra Leone but was raised and trained in Britain. 

He got to work quickly. Ruth Ann was sitting is a chair not 8 feet from the operating table. He removed a mass the size of a small walnut. He said he had to go to the bone to get it all. When sewing my head it felt like the surgeon was roping and tying an unruly calf. With the pressure he was putting on the sutures, I thought he was pulling with his legs.  Within an hour we walked out of the operating room. 

So now we began waiting for the wound to heal and to hear from the lab regarding the examination of the cancer. Our hope and prayer was that the lab would tell us that all the cancer was removed. 

Thinking that we would hear from the local clinic to check up on my wound, we waited until the next day (Friday 7 Aug). We received no communication from anyone so we walked over the clinic. Miracle #2 is that at the same time we were about to enter the clinic our GP Doctor was returning from a break. We spoke to him and showed him the un-bandaged wound (with 5 stitches). He examined it on the spot and set an appointment for Monday (10 August) to have it examined again. He wrote a prescription for the antibiotic cream we liberally applied to the wound. As a side note, one young man in our branch on Sunday thought it looked like the wound was closed with "hot glue". If you look carefully at one photo below you can see why he thought that. 

Monday came and it appeared as if an infection was starting so I was issued a prescription on oral antibiotics. Another follow-up appointment was set for Wednesday. Wednesday came and so did COVID alert level 2. The clinic rescheduled my appointment to Friday while they sorted out the implications of the new alert level. 

On Friday the incision looked good and was starting to heal at the edges. The nurse decided to pull one of the 5 stitches. The pathology report came back from the operation. The margins were clean so the opinion is that the cancer was completely removed. We set another follow up for the next Monday. 

On Monday, 17 August we went in to have the remaining 4 stitched removed. THey were painfully removed. I was feeling good so we went for a walk. About an hour after the removal of the stitches, I felt stabbing pains in my head for about 30 minutes. 

The next day (18 Aug) we examined the incision and the source of the pain was revealed. The inclusion had separated by up to 1/3 inch at the widest point. I was able to get into the clinic later that afternoon. There wasn't much they could by then so they cleaned the area, bandaged it and sent me home to heal. 

At the date of this post, things look good but my incision recovery is probably a month away. I tell people that I won't need much makeup when I play a pirate at Halloween.


Trout Fishing Capital of the World


Sign Says: "Please stand on the grill! Thanks". Gotta love NZ. There is documentation for everything.

Outside the Hospice Shop where we work one shift per week.

Kia Hiwara = Be Careful!



This is the gathering place for seniors in the community. COVID restrictions require us to sign in.



Post-Op day - Skin Cancer.
Bicycle repairs

Our happy friend on his working bicycle! 


Our garden harvest of carrots 

One of my bicycle mechanic proteges.

Another beautiful winter day in Turangi.

Home Again

 Dear Family and Friends, We arrived at home on 29 January, 2021; thus ending our New Zealand mission experience. Our arrival at an empty Le...