We’ve been home since Friday — yeah, Friday, not Thursday as expected.
On Thursday morning at 5:30, we loaded all our luggage onto the trusty school bus and Victor, Oscar and Carlos escorted us on a three and a half hour ride to Tegucigalpa Airport. En route, we made a rest stop at a complex in the middle of nowhere which included a restaurant with an American-style breakfast buffet, a souvenir shop/ice cream stand, a pulperia and a sort of general store combined with a fundamentalist Christian Book Store. They all seemed related and we saw some American-style homes and buildings behind them. The folks in the ice cream store spoke American English and I noticed the older woman with a Mennonite-style head covering. When I asked her, she said she and her husband were the only remaining members of an Amish colony which had bought farm land and moved there in the 1970′s. They now had a church community of Hondurans plus a few other Americans who had moved down over the years.
Arriving at the airport, there were more good-byes. Checkin was simple, we paid our $38.00 departure tax, and were boarded for an on-time departure of our American Airlines flight. It was scheduled to last 2 1/2 hours. After that time had elapsed, it seemed we were “treading water” in the air. The pilot came on the PA and said there was severe stormy weather which had shut down the Miami Airport. After circling hopefully for a while, he told us we needed like all other flights to be diverted to another airport to wait and be refueled. Where were we going? Nassau, Bahamas! Sure enough, we spent an hour or two on the plane at the Nassau Airport and then were cleared to take off again for Miami.
Instead of 4:35PM EDT we arrived in Miami around 8:15PM. Immigration was horrendous. US Citizens and legal residents all go into the same line, but procedures (finger-printing, picrture-taking, multiple paperwork, etc.) are excruciatingly longer for legal residents who are citizens of other countries. Most of those ahead of us in lines were such folks. I finally got through immigration around 9:45PM.
Although our 6:45PM flight to Charleston was also greatly delayed, it did manage to depart without all 22 of us, almost half of its passengers. American Airlines informed us that since the problem was weather-related, they had no responsibility to take care of us. They weren’t sure what day they could find us seats on other flights! We tried Amtrak which was also sold out. Finally, 21 elected to drive north in two rented vans. Ten drove through the night, eleven spent a few hours in a motel and then hit the road. I decided to take a chance on staying in Miami. I got a cheap motel room and tried till 1:30AM to get an airline seat. Bottom line: I struck out. So I went to bed, and in the morning called again. After a long time on hold, Volia! I was told I could have a seat on that evening’s flight to Charleston. Glenn Bond graciously drove down there to pick me up at 8:45PM. The vans arrived at roughly 2:00 and 9:00PM in Conway.
The mission experience was too tremendous (as reported in previous blogs) for this trauma to spoil it for us. We’re happy to be home, but many are itching to go again. So I sign off till who knows when?!!!
Father ‘Rick


















