Our First Thanksgiving!

The table is set!
We hope you’ve enjoyed your Thanksgiving Monday. Here in Thailand, where no one celebrates Thanksgiving except foreigners, we managed to find a way to celebrate!
We found roasted chickens in the market (no turkeys up here in Mae Sot!), then prepared mashed potatoes, carrots, and asparagus. We avoided the frog, eel, turtle, and crickets that were also available for a few dollars. Joining us for this meal were some special guests. A new friend from Bangkok, who is teaching us how to set up the water systems in migrant schools, is here staying with us for a few days and our Burmese assistant joined us as well.
Our wonderful assistant made some delicious traditional Burmese tea leaf salad to go along with our meal. Our first Thanksgiving in a new country was celebrated with new friends. The weather was hot and humid, rather than cool, and perhaps snowy, but the spirit behind the celebration was the same. Â After supper, we read Acts 16 together and thanked God for the good times and the difficult times in our lives. We reminded ourselves to keep thanking Him in both.
In light of the reason for the season, we asked our children for what they were most thankful and least thankful…
Olivia is most thankful for her house that she lives in, here in Thailand. It is a place of security in the midst of many new surroundings (that would be my phraseology…not hers!). She is least thankful for the many bugs that crawl and fly and scare her. She definitely doesn’t like cockroaches (over an inch in length and half an inch in diameter) and she is rightly terrified of the bees…some as big as small humming birds.
Hannah is thankful for her new one-year old friend. This little Burmese girl lives across the street with her family and Hannah plays with her everyday… holding her and even bathing her from time to time. As you may already know, Hannah loves babies. Hannah is least thankful for being far away from her many family and friends that she has left behind in Canada. She misses all of you a lot!
 Ellie is most thankful for the house we live in and also thankful for homeschooling. Homeschooling is more relaxed than being at GMS (not for her homeschooling teachers…that’s for sure!). She is least thankful for the heat that continuously washes over her, like the waves of the ocean.
Isaac is most thankful for our Burmese assistant who works with us everyday and also plays frisbee and soccer with Isaac when we’re at home. Isaac is least thankful for the mosquitoes. He has the most mosquito bites of our whole family. They say that eating spicy food keeps them away. That would explain why they don’t stay away from Isaac…
And in case you’re interested…
Irislee is most thankful that we’re living the adventure that we’ve dreamed about for many years, and for the bed frames that were made for our children yesterday out of old 2 x 4’s and new plywood (so they don’t have to sleep on the floor with the bugs). She is least thankful for sweating, itchy skin.
Derek is also thankful for the beds for the children and also that he was able to share a message about Jesus, on Sunday, with 150 children (80% Buddhist) at their church/school. He is least thankful for the constant sticky, sweaty moisture that clings to him all day long, no matter what.
In everything give THANKS!
And so, Happy Thanksgiving, wherever and however you celebrate!
The Koch Kamotion

new beds....thanks guys!
Our First School!
This week we began a tour of the SCHOOLS that we’ll be helping. Kwe Kha Baung School is the one we’ll be coming alongside first (pronounced Quake-a-bo).
While many of the schools are on the outskirts of town or in the countryside, this one is right in the heart of Mae Sot…in the busy, crowded market area. Kwe Kha Baung also doubles as a BOARDING HOUSE for 135 students. One word describes this school well…CONCRETE. No grass, no fresh, country air, very little room to run around and play.
While installing a WATER purification system is a crucial priority, so much MORE needs to be done. When we met with the headmaster of the school, he bemoaned the fact that this is not an environment for children in which to grow up…but what else can he do?
His DREAM is to move the school to the countryside but that’s an expensive venture far beyond his reach. Ryan Detwiller has created a video tour and so we INVITE YOU to come along with us as we move through the different areas of this school.
Join us as we take you inside a school we doubt you’ll soon be able to forget.
Kwe Kha Baung School, Mae Sot, Thailand from Ryan Detwiller on Vimeo.
The First Few Days…
Hello everyone!
This is our first blog from Thailand! After months of planning, we’ve actually arrived. At times I blink just to be sure we’re not in a dream. We spent two nights in a guest house adjusting to the time change here and now we’ve moved into a suite in the office building of Imagine Thailand. Rather than write a few paragraphs about our many initial experiences, I thought I’d give you bulleted sentences to describe them:
- All our luggage arrived with us!
- Olivia had a fever arriving in Seoul, Korea and her fever was one degree lower than what is allowed for her to continue on travelling. (There is a great concern about H1N1 flu in Asia). Hannah also had a cough on the plane. Then it passed on to me and now Isaac. It appears that Irislee and Ellie have missed this particular Canadian flu.
- We’ve enjoyed all kinds of fruit and meat from street vendors.
- Air conditioning has been available in every place in which we’ve lived.
- The air is so humid that any amount of physical work (including walking) leaves you glistening or dripping with sweat). After loading our 9 duffle bags, 3 rubbermaid bins, and 6 rolling suitcases onto the back of a truck this week, I was a dripping mess.
- People here think Olivia is really cute. – blond hair and white skin. She has received a lot of attention including people reaching out to touch her skin just to see what it feels like! She is NOT impressed and brushes them away when it happens! Olivia has no problem with assertiveness…..:)
- Thailand has a huge awareness and openness to the spiritual world…much more so than in Canada. For example, the stairs in our building have steps of various heights, on purpose. Reason: to confuse evil spirits if they attempt to come up the stairs.
- Thai people are extremely friendly.
- Our kids have enjoyed riding in taxis throughout parts of the city.
- Over the next three days, we begin our orientation for working with Imagine Thailand and then we’ll head up to Mae Sot for a few days, to get moved into our house, before coming back to Bangkok for a staff retreat with the whole Thailand team.
- Isaac found a frog and he named him Sheldon (a temporary substitute for “Hamy” his hamster).
- Olivia saw her first lizard on the first morning she arrived. Seeing a lizard was one of her major wishes. It was a baby monitor lizard. She also saw a little gecko a while later.
- We miss you. All of our children have expressed a bit of homesickness at one time or another.
- Isaac appears to be surviving…He continues to eat and live. Eating Thai food was one of his biggest concerns before arriving. He not only is eating every time food is offered, he is also trying new foods even when “normal” food is available.
- We’re heading to church in a few minutes. We’ll wear headphones to hear the English translation of the message.
- We’re all learning “taxi” Thai here…hopefully enough to get around town. The kids are doing quite well…based on the friendly smiles and waves we’re receiving when they talk.
Well, that’s it for today. Please continue to pray for us and stay in touch.
Sincerely, the Koch Kamotion!
A Moving Story About Water
Hi everyone,
As we prepare to depart for Thailand in TWO DAYS (yippee!) we thought we’d leave you with a moving story about an elementary school teacher from BC who raised money for a water system in Thailand through Imagine Thailand, the organization with whom we’ll be working. Â She visited Mae Sot (the community in which we’ll be working) this summer to see how her money was put to use. Â Here is her story:
“Huay Ka Loke is on the outskirts of Mae Sot and as we were driving out to it in our truck, it seemed to be way out there. The area is called Baan Huay Ka Loke and is a small agricultural and farming community of people from the hilltribes. For parts of the year, the land and scenery is dry dust, but with my visit and the monsoon season, the dust has turned to mud and there is a bit more greenery.
As soon as we pulled up, children in torn clothing, bare feet and dirty faces come out to watch and stare. They are so curious, but have serious and untrustworthy looks on their faces until you give them a smile. Then, they can’t help but smile back and when they do, the beauty of their smiles, the innocence and pureness in their eyes pulls at your heartstrings immediately. These children seem happy despite the poverty, the malnutrition and the absence of their parents. They don’t know any differently. They turn to each other as family and it is so obvious that their primary attachments are their classmates. The little ones hide behind the older ones and they cling to each other’s clothing. It reminds you of a litter of kittens or puppies. I couldn’t help but wonder what life must be like amongst hundreds of children who must live like this and fend for themselves. Is there a hierarchy? Is there any sort of abuse going on, bullying, teasing? When basic survival comes into play, do you even worry about it?
I saw children climbing the walls and equipment and hanging out all over the place, without supervision, as young as three years old. I watched a child who could not have been any older than 3 jump down from a 6 foot cement wall. He was wary and it took him a few moments to get up the courage, but off he jumped down onto cement in bare feet. Can you imagine seeing this in North America? But here, they have no parents, just each other and their teachers, and there are only 12 teachers spread out amongst 363 students, 222 of which board at the school. 35 of the students are orphans whose parents have died or been killed. The rest have families in the village nearby or back in Burma or refugee camps.
My initial feelings and emotions of the children, their environment and the school was just pure shock and it was as if the wind is being knocked out of you. It’s hard to breathe for a few moments and when you get a whiff of the stench of the muddy, filthy river or stream water next to you, you actually can’t breathe because if you inhale it, you might vomit right then and there. And this is water that they used to drink from before the water filtration system, it’s just astonishing! It is one thing to hear about these conditions, to read about them, study them, but to actually see it in reality, is a completely different experience and so important to be able to truly understand poverty. The real visuals, smells, sounds, the feel of the climate on your skin and the interactions with the children and their physical touch just completes the experience. How can you not be affected for life and grow in your soul from this.
I first spoke with a group of older boys. I introduced myself and said that I came from Glen in Canada and gave them the clean water. They only understand a little English, but immediately said thank you with giant smiles on their faces and kept saying it as I moved on.
Thanks to the water system, two of the bathrooms now have toilets and showers in them, which is just amazing! They still have access to the outhouses, which are just disgusting, but they have to have more than two washrooms for close to 400 people. Something worrying is that the kindergarten students probably use the outhouses more than the other students since the Kindergarten classes are down the dirt road and right next to the outhouses. The ground is muddy in places and the path to the toilets is just disgusting and filthy and most likely contaminated. They have layed out narrow wooden planks on top of the mud to walk across it to the bathrooms. I couldn’t believe there were children running along this filthy pathway in bare feet and they don’t even flinch if their feet get some of the sludge onto them! Meanwhile, I’m tip toeing in my cute, flowery little flip flops and holding my breath as I open the broken door to the new bathrooms. The stench is unbearable and you have to plug your nose or breathe through your mouth. But if you do that then you worry that you will taste the foul odour instead. To think that they must shower in this room as well, is almost impossible.
The water filtration system is in the staff room and Jim was there to greet us. He is the Assistant Headmaster (like the vice principal) and such a delightful man. He also has the sweetest smile ever. He speaks English very well and is incredibly grateful for the water.
I was able to sit and sort of interview him about the school and the water system and how it has impacted their lives so far. They are able to save a lot of money now since it used to cost them 200 baht ($6) per 200 L of water a day and this was just drinking water. Â They now are able to wash using clean water from showers, not to mention laundry and cooking. The 4 year old children used to have to carry heavy buckets of water from the well several times a day. They now also have flushable toilets instead of outhouses. Jim also mentioned how much easier life is for Sansu, their student who is missing a leg. He is now able to clean himself properly on his own. The students can now drink as much water as they like, whenever they like, compared to drinking maybe two cups of dirty water a day.
The students receive 3 meals a day and get rice donations from the local Mae Tao clinic. They sometimes get curry if there is someone to donate it, they collect bamboo shoot and water crest from nearby and Jim fishes in the local ponds and rivers when he can. They get no fruit or vegetables other than the bamboo and water crest and get meat perhaps 3 times a month. There are no animals that they could get food from. They would like to start up a mushroom farm, but the little money that they do receive must go to food and teacher’s salaries when they can afford it. They also need to get access to the nearest cities pipeline to be able to use the water to for watering the farm, but Imagine Thailand is working on this and should have them connected in a couple of months. It would cost about $600 for them to start up a mushroom farm. I heard this and realized that our job at Glen is not over and this school is in desperate need of food now, the second most important need for survival. We have to find a way to continue fundraising money next year for food for these human beings.
The most common illnesses for the children are severe Diarrhea, severe stomach aches, and Malaria. There is no mention of malnutrition because I don’t even think they know what that is. They get 1 or 2 cases of stomach illnesses a month and 2 or 3 cases of Malaria per month. The students can go to the Mae Tao clinic and they will treat them for free and provide free medication. I wonder if there will be less stomach cases with the new water filtration system…”
Installation of water filtration systems  is one of the three projects that we have been asked to oversee in Mae Sot.  We can’t wait to get there and experience this story firsthand!
PS. Â For pictures of the water systems, please refer to a previous blog on our site entitled “Water, water everywhere and not a drop to drink.”
Luggage Limericks
There once was a family of six
who thought Thailand would be such a kick
so they packed all their things,
clothes, books and rings
To fit it was a brilliant trick
~~~~~~~
There once was a family from Home
Who decided they would like to roam
So they packed and they packed
for days- it’s a fact
including a bundle of combs!
~~~~~~~
There once was a family Kamotion
Who attempted to travel o’er ocean
So they packed their effects
Piling clothes to their necks
Then set the adventure in motion