Greg & Sophie

Mangwanani, friends.

It has been a busy time since we last blogged, so much to tell you! Firstly, we are SO excited that we now have confirmed 15 registrations! A huge answer to prayer and its only the beginning of December, Zimbabweans are known for their laid back lifestyle, this includes not contemplating registering until the last minute, so we are confident that towards the end of the month further registrations will come.

We also now have funding for 2 orphans to come to the school starting in January, they will be funded through Stewardship donations, so a huge THANK YOU to those who are able to sponsor even a small amount of money each month, these children would have no access to education otherwise! No education is free in Zimbabwe, and we want to ensure our ministry reaches to as many children as possible.

As you may have seen from our Gallery – I know it’s taken me forever to work out how to set it up! – we have been blessed with some more donations and the classrooms are now looking fully set up and ready for children! It is a delight to see some of the church children and visitors trialing using the equipment and playing in the playground, we cannot wait until January to have full classrooms! check it out here, http://www.gregsophiesangwine.org.uk/gallery

We were really excited to have Mike and Sue come and visit us last week, we had a fantastic week sorting out or cottage, putting up displays in the classrooms, spending time with Pastor Gatsi, setting up the churches website, visiting the Prayer Mountain for some R&R, visiting Chengeta for a game drive and Elephant ride and spending time together as a family! It was a whirlwind few days but a pleasure to have them here and we look forward to our next visitors, whoever and whenever they may be!

Preparing the fire for dinner during power cut…a delicious meal of boiled chicken and five bean casserole was the end product!

 

Please do keep in contact, God Bless, Sophie and Greg xx

We’ve had an amazing time since the arrival of our shipping and we just wanted (rather than to ramble this time) to show you all 10 pictures of the beginning of the classroom set up. A way still to go but we’re really pleased with the progress.

We feel a little bit like this is the summer hoilday’s and we are setting up our classrooms for the beginning of a new term and a brand new class. Any teachers reading this will know what an exciting time that is and it is made all the more interesting by the lack of printers, laminators and photocopiers. You will see below hand made displays as well as donated resources from you wonderful people.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

We would like to thank our schools for our wonderful leaving cards which you can see displayed in our cosy, little office.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

It is clear to us that our school is a place that children want to be. As you can see in this picture of the kids on Sophie’s creative table and on the swings in our new playground.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

With regard to registrations we now have 7 completely confirmed registrations and have now given out 16 more to prospective parents. Zimbabwe is a last minute place so we’re expecting a rush in December before opening on Monday 7th January for our first term. We can take 60 children at One Way Pre School and we need a minimum of 35 to set ourself on a firm financial footing.

Please pray for:

1) Registration of children

2) Provision of remaining resources for school.

Thanks again for your continuing interest in One Way Pre School

Love Greg (& Sophie)

PS: @& ccocccco?,l.l”llhhuûikq – Love Clive (If you’re wondering how a cat can write a blog it simply means wandering around on an owners I pad whilst they are trying to work. He wants all the attention!)

We have now been here for over 12 weeks…and we feel at home! I am now at the stage where if we came back to England, we would find many things weird! It is nice to feel a sense of belonging and home here, which I am sure will be heightened when we move into our own cottage in 2 weeks.

I am also SUPER excited that my parents are coming to visit soon, we have a jam packed week planned for them and it will be lovely to spend time relaxing with company and enjoying the finer things Zimbabwe has to offer..like Elephants!

Today was a slow start, which then led to me running around the hotel searching for people who had seen the banner advertising the school, come in to look for it, then got lost! So I had to find them all then give them the now well rehearsed tour and spiel about the school! And praise be to God, we got 4 more registrations! We printed out 20 registration forms, and now have 1 left, which technically means we should have 19 children…we only have 4 confirmed, but at least 10 who we know are bringing the forms back. We are learning, that in Zimbabwe, there is a difference in timings. For example…

Just now – means could be whenever!
Now now – means now
5 minutes -means at least 15
30 minutes – means around 3 hours
I’m coming – means I’m somewhere in the vicinity but a few more phone calls will be needed, or a fork lift truck to come and get me, before I come and see you!

So although we have handed out many forms, we are anticipating a late December and even possibly January surge of applications. We are SO pleased that the Pre-School will be serving both the church and the local community. We have both really enjoyed spending time in the town getting to know people and discussing what we are here for and what our future here is like. So God is using us both in the school and in the community, which is nice!

Once we have opened the school, and settled into our cottage, and worked out a short term plan (do they even exist?!) I am hoping that we will be able to join in with some further projects. I have started to work with the Sunday School and am on the official rota to join the team so am looking forward to getting to know the young children through this also – there are at least 50 if not more children in this church. I am also really keen to start a babies/young children’s dance class, so am going to look into the technicalities of that! (I miss dancing!)

We are also still in the process of learning the language (not as quickly as Phil and Sue in Azer!) and we are often laughed at by our peers when we try and say words, but we are beginning to formulate some sentences, and can use some slang words! So people now tell us ‘ah you are now Zimbabwean’ which is also nice!

So please continue to pray – as we know you are – as we feel so blessed! The usual points still count, more registrations, resources need buying, our personal settling in to the community and language learning, and that we would continue to listen to God for our next steps.

We are so excited to be opening the school in January, it has been an experience!! Not many can say they have left home, left country, moved to Africa, built and opened a pre school from scratch…so thanks to God for sending us on such an exciting mission! Lets see where the next few months take us.

Much Love, God Bless,

Sophie xx Greg x Clive

I know many of you have been enjoying the wonderful blogs from our wonderful mattress topper MATTY but today I inform you of his unfortunate fall from grace. Despite this I’ll start with some good news, our shipping is now here, despite us having to pay yet more money that we didn’t even owe it all arrived, nothing was taken and nothing damaged, that was except for poor MATTY.

He was subject to a violent attack of Zimbabwe’s dirtiest shoes and an attack of sea waves. He is unfortunately never going to be the same with his nasty war wounds from his 86 day cross continent journey. He’s a shadow of his former self and therefore is not comfortable writing to you today as he soaks his troubles away in a variety of luxurious cleaning products. He wishes me to tell you he will be back to his old self in no time but that his purpose will no longer be as a mattress topper but as a comfortable book corner cushion. He is so happy to still be of use.

All jokes aside we really thank God for bringing everything here safely and as we’ve mentioned in previous posts His timing is sometimes not what we would like but it is always what is best for us. Our school was completely ready to receive all the goods and once we have finished sorting and tidying we know this school will have been transformed once more. We’re really pleased with the environment so far and this shipping has filled many holes of things we were missing. Thank-you to everyone who donated goods! Over the next weekend the man who made our playground equipment will be finished which means I can finish my fence and we’re getting our designer to put up display boards in Sophie’s classroom. We’ll post pictures of the classrooms and playground next week so you can all see.

Finally we are again up to the point where we have exhausted out funds so please pray for the continued provision of OneWayPreSchool.

 

God Bless,

 

Greg (,Sophie and Clive)

Hey MATTY here again!

Thanks for your support of the ‘SAVE MATTY’ campaign. I believe we are now right up there with the infamous ‘Free the wetherfield one’ when Deirdre was imprisoned in Coronation Street and a bit more successful and less dramatic.

I’m afraid I haven’t been let loose yet though! The document that Greg and Sophie needed to find has been found and submitted from the South African shipping company. But unfortunately the ‘bear’ from NOT ‘Bear’Bridge has to send the money he owes through his sheer incompetence.

Despite this I am hopeful I will be freed this week because for every day that I sit here the bear owes more and more money in storage fees. When I arrive with my wonderful owners I will post some pictures of my joyous home coming!

Peace out faithful readers,

Love MATTY the super dooper memory foam mattress topper!

Hi everyone my name’s Matty!

I’m Greg and Sophie’s super dooper memory foam mattress topper. I was bought as a Christmas present by Greg’s Mum and Dad and I’ve solved all of Sophie’s nighttime back problems which is probably the reason why they decided to ship me for their adventure to Zimbabwe. The only thing is this journey did not start well and hasn’t been the smoothest. Shall I start at the beginning?

It was during the London Olympics and the donated resources from the shipping had filled 7 of the 8 boxes that they had bought so Josie came up with a suggestion. “Why don’t you ship your mattress?” she asked Sophie in an excited manner. My mind filled with dread! I hate water I was thinking and I was sure I would never cope with those choppy seas. I had heard previously that this journey only takes 40-45 days so I was OK with that as a plan.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

So in to the box I was stuffed without a care in the world, wrapped around a canvas of Greg and Sophie and some pretty candles. Sure they’re safe but all that is saving me is this very questionable big yellow self storage extra large box. Not a great start. Still I heard that this very day I would be on my way. Unfortunately for me and the disgust of my owners the numpty freight company arrived with a small van which I heard Sophie affectionately refer to as “they did a Mike” (which refers to when we were all moving from our first flat and Mike hired a van smaller than a fiesta to move our furniture) “it’ll never fit in that car!” Greg shouted at Sophie from the study. Sure enough this intellectually challenged driver tried to put the large boxes into his Vauxhall Zafira despite the queries coming from Sophie and mainly Greg. Sure enough this didn’t work and this was the start of my journey.

My owners probably should have questioned the sanity of sending me all that way when this competence continued with the next driver bringing what must have must have been a stolen DHL van to pick me and the rest of my inanimate object friends on our journey to Harare. Still only 45 days (at the most) to go, right?

Anyway after a rather uneventful and sickening 3 weeks at sea, we arrived at the South African port of Durban. This was a welcome relief because I really could not stand hearing “Candle in the wind” coming from those candles I was wrapped around. An Elton John classic maybe, but try listening to it muffled for 3 weeks out to sea? I nearly squashed him to death a number of times but I’m a gentle kind mattress.

 

 

 

Next the trouble really started. In Durban we were treated to the news that a truck driver strike meant a cold, dark, dingy stay in an uninspiring warehouse. I am now struggling to settle down at night, insomnia from boredom has set in and I’m really starting to lose it!

 

 

 

It’s now been 8 weeks since I was comfortably stretched out over the large bed at 60 Kendale Road and I’m starting to look scruffy….come on how do you look without a shave for this long? My beard is proper itchy! We have recieved news that we will be on an overnight vehicle to some horrendous place named Beitbridge. It sounds like it is actually the end of the earth and the scooter in my box is worried that Beitbridge may in fact be full of bears and recalls a bloody story of a bear killing a defenceless mattress. The scooter dramatically recalls a time he saved a cat from an attack of rabid dogs due to his speed and finesse but we are almost certain that he was exaggerating! It is well though because a clever pack of pencils below me says that it is in fact the Zimbabwean border and assures me that bears aren’t resident to that area.

At Beitbridge I am appointed chief spokesman (to try to get us out of this mess and back to our owners) but I’m greeted by a man who is even more incompetent than the numpty with the stolen DHL van. His name I will not mention but this man takes a grand total of 17 phone calls to me, 5 of which are about the same thing and a total of 2 and a half weeks just to clear our goods through customs. I wish I’d never agreed to be our boxes contact because his dulcet tones are not good for my ever decreasing ability to hear properly. A trip to the mattress ear doctor is surely in order… Finally we are on our way from Not Bear-Bridge as the pencil packet (named Obadiah by the way) affectionately calls it and zooming towards Harare, the wind in our ‘hair’ and the sun on our faces! We inform all our friends via our hilarious, yet informative blog and twitter feed that our journey is nearly over and that all our transport costs are paid! We are SO excited!

That is until we arrive in Harare where disaster strikes, despite 80 days in this leaky, smelly box, and Greg and Sophie paying yet MORE money, we are stuck here for two ‘very important’ reasons. One an original document we were never given and two a payment that our incompetent ‘bear’ at the border failed to pay.

So frustrating.

 

 

I can hear the handsome Greg, he is so close to me to take me home but through ridiculous politics I hear him drive away…”noooo” we all cry. Still we wait….still we cry!

 

 

 

 

The nightmare is not over! We appear destined for another weekend in a disgusting warehouse before we can achieve our God given purposes! I love Greg and Sophie. They’ve done all they can, we’ve been patient and never moaned or complained, we understand our role here but if only the unrelenting shipping companies understood theirs, then this may have all been over for me and my friends weeks ago!

Peace out and God Bless you all!

Love Matty the memory foam mattress topper!

It’s raining, and my jobs for the day are outside! So whilst i wait for it to stop, i thought I would have a small ramble! This month we will have been living in Zimbabwe for 100 days…and to celebrate, my parents will be visiting! What a lovely treat that will be! (until they start telling me off for a messy room etc!!) what a whirlwind it has been up to this point, SO much to be thankful for and to praise god for. I can’t wait to see what he has in store for us as we continue our journey with him. I now have Clive the cat climbing up my back and trying to use his paws to input into the post. So I shall leave and continue to update later!
God Bless,
Soph xx

We hope you have managed to have a read through our newsletter and seen the progress that is being made. We are pleased with all of the work so far and look forward to putting the finishing touches so it looks like a classroom!

Many things have happened –

–  We have the official permit for the school, in writing!

– We have heard that our shipping has cleared customs (THANK YOU for praying) and we should be able to collect it by the end of the week.

– We have received nearly all the playground equipment – swings, slide, merry go round, see saw and jungle gym, which will be cemented into the playground on Wednesday.

– We have registered our first 2 children, and 3 more have a form which they are bringing back – making 5 so far.

PLEASE continue to pray. It is such a joy to see the progress being made, but the way of working here is difficult at times – so please pray we continue to hold strong to the plan God has for us and that we would continue his good works with the children here.

Please also pray that the shipping would now arrive with no further complications.

On an exciting note…my parents are coming to visit soon! (Sophie’s) We look forward to sharing our Zimbabwean life with them.

God Bless xx

Hello to you the faithful readers of our blog. The title of this blog really does describe it quite well. Zimbabwe is amazing! Yes  we have had lots to do and achieved a lot of progress with regard to the school recently, but this is only one of the reasons why Zimbabwe is incredible. Firstly is the people, secondly the people and thirdly: the people.

This could become a little Blair esc if I am not careful but Education, Education, Education is kind of why we are here. (Sorry for the awful pun.) But here in Zimbabwe the people are amazing. Sophie got up to announce that people could register their children for the school yesterday which is essentially a church notice so therefore a little un-interesting, mundane even. But whenever either of us says anything people holla and woop at us and scream with joy (A little like the American’s listening to those awful presidential debates but thousands of times more sincere) Sophie stands up and explains that they can register and it is like Christmas has come. I am so humbled by these people.

Next I was asked if I could help a child with her school revision and I said I could do this morning. She was very attentive and took on board everything I had to say, a very hard worker. (If Bev or Jane is reading this notice I have not said ‘Clever Girl’) It is wonderful to be invited in to such a lovely home! But not just that, we were fed chocolate cake, muffins, popcorn and a huge lunch which was followed by an english trifle and we still got to take home a bowl full of muffins and a chocolate cake! The wonderful family, and for that matter every family we have visited whilst we have been here, treat you like the most important visitor they’d ever had. They take as much time and go to as much trouble as if the Queen was coming for tea. I am sure if she turned up she’d have the same treatment as Sophie and I.

Now I’m fortunate enough to have had many incredible examples of hospitality to learn from in England. But here in Zimbabwe the joy is in being the host rather than the hosted and this I think is more uncommon in our country. I love hosting people but I equally, if not more, love being invited to someone’s house. Here in Zim the pride is in the hosting and after all that is biblical. “As for me and my household, we will serve the Lord” which is taken from Joshua, 24:15. I genuinely feel that you are shown God’s love and the example of Jesus whenever you enter a Zimbabwean’s home and that is another humbling lesson I have learnt from this ‘amazing’ country! Today I thank God that his love has been shown to me so often by the people in my life and I pray I can be the same encouragement all those people have been to me. I urge you to pray the same for yourselves

Love Greg x

 

Today is hot.

Love Sophie x

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Hello world.

Love Clive the Cat x

So today has been a fantastic day. Extremely hot, and very windy, but we have spent the majority of it inside our Grade Zero classroom! Painting and decorating has begun!

Here is Classroom 1 – Grade Zero before….

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

And here is how it looks now!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

We LOVE it! The colour was a yellow before…but looking at the comparison, it looks as if the room was never yellow in the first place!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

So tomorrow we will be giving some parts a second coat, and then begin gloss painting the window frames and doors. We also hope to clean and begin painting classroom 2 – which will be blue!

It’s been a joy to spend time together today painting and listening to music and discussing the future of the project and the possibilities for us. I’m very glad that God has given us this mission as a partnership – it’s a lot more fun doing something with your best friend!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Thank you for all your support, this week has been a mix match week and we value your comments. Check back soon for some more photos! (techincally I should be uploading photos to a gallery page, but my technophobe self can’t seem to work it out!!)

God Bless,

G&S x