Scripture

All this is from God, who reconciled us to Himself through Christ and gave us the ministry of reconciliation: That God was reconciling the world to Himself in Christ, not counting men’s sins against them. And He has committed to us the message of reconciliation.

2 Corinthians 5:18,19

Wednesday, December 9, 2020

December Update


We cut down our Christmas Tree!


Hello Family and Friends, 

Happy December to each of you! We are grateful to be celebrating this advent season once again in the US with our family, awaiting the birth of a new baby who is due at the end of February.

We have somethings to update you on, so let's get started:

1. Back in Uganda

Since returning to the states in June, Eric has been in communication with his coworkers about their ongoing community garden projects. He will share more about the success of the plots in a video in the coming weeks. He also has been making sure that our home and compound are in good hands by communicating with his coworker and our helpers who are overseeing care of our place. While in the US, Eric is working on his parents dairy farm.

I continue to work remotely here in the US on the primary school curriculum that I am helping to develop. The curriculum is trifold including modules of spiritual, character, and leadership development lessons. Schools in Uganda have been shut down since March because of Covid-19, so any training or meetings that I would have planned to have would not have happened. I am grateful to be able to work away at this project that I am passionate about and I hope that we can roll out a drafted version when school opens back up at the beginning of 2021.

A major struggle that Uganda is enduring right now is the campaigning season for the upcoming mid-January elections. While we are not there, we are getting information on how tense the situation has been and how violence is unfolding as a result of campaigning. The current president is well into his 70's and has served for three decades and counting.  There is a serious opponent coming up to vie for the presidential position. This is a threat to the established president and his party, therefore it is creating unrest nationwide.

2. We bought a house!

While it may seem crazy that we would buy a house since we have a (rented) home in Uganda and very much have our lives and work there, this has been a goal for us to own in the US. There are several reasons why. This house will be a space for us to settle for now until we go back to Uganda. Also it will be a place to come back to when we do travel back and forth. And it is an investment that we have been wanting to make. We pray that this home is a blessing to others as we welcome new and old friends in and as we rent it out when we are back in Uganda. Our home is in Mifflin, PA and it is about 10 minutes from the Ranck family farm. A fun fact: in Aubrey Anne's 11 months of life, this is her SIXTH home! She's adjusted so well :)


Move in Morning
Aubrey Anne loves her books!














3. Looking Ahead

We plan to be in the US for several weeks after our 2nd child is born; that brings us to about mid April. Upon arrival back in Uganda, we will settle into our new routine as a family of four. I will return back to work in early June. Eric will continue his agriculture work with the garden plots in the communities and other work with World Renew. 


Prayers 

  • The birth of our baby due in February
  • Relationship with our new neighbors here in Mifflin
  • Peaceful election campaigns in Uganda
  • Our return to Uganda in April

Gratitude
  • The provision of buying a house
  • Good communication with people in Uganda taking care of our house
  • A healthy pregnancy as I am now in my third trimester
  • For YOU, for friendship, care, support, love and prayers for us!

 

With lots of love and joy to you this season, 

Lauren, for the Rancks

Happy Thanksgiving!

Monday, August 24, 2020

Ranck Family Update

Dear family and friends,

 As we write this, we reflect on that fact that we have been in the US for two full months!

 

We always had the plan of coming back for three weeks for a family wedding until COVID hit and the Uganda airport shut down. We were only able to get out on a charter flight with the hope that the airport would soon reopen and we could return back home to Gulu, Uganda. Yet in the same vein, we knew that there was a real possibility that it may be months until we got back. The airport is still shut down, therefore we are not able to return, even though we attempted to get back on a repatriation flight, it seems that we are in the US for an extended period of time.


As with all of you, our life has taken many unexpected turns in the last several months. Although we do long to be back in Uganda with our community, work, and home there, we are here and we have been so grateful for our time. Aubrey Anne has spent wonderful days with both sets of grandparents and her aunts, uncles, cousins, and extended family! Eric has been busy at work on his family farm and I had been able to do my work from here. With schools still shut down in Uganda, there is no opportunity of training and school visits, so I am doing the best I can with curriculum development from here.

 

Our days are pretty simple with work and attending to the daily duties of life. We have had a lot of family gatherings and celebrations including the beautiful wedding of Eric’s brother, Andrew and his wife Kiersta!  We have been staying in an Airbnb close to Eric’s family’s farm and then we will move into a small home on one of the farm’s properties in the coming weeks.


Another joy is that we are expecting a new addition to our family! I am just finishing my first trimester and we plan to welcome our second child into our arms at the end of February. This surprise is one of the main reasons that we are now planning on staying in the US for the next several months. We think it is wise to stay here for prenatal care, the birth of our baby then return back to Uganda around mid-end of April.


You may be wondering what our current financial situation is, now that we are no longer in Uganda, especially those of you who are supporting us on a regular basis. Currently, Eric is working full-time on our family farm which is covering our expenses while we are here in the US. However, there are still a few ongoing expenses we have in Uganda. Secondly, we were a bit behind on our support raising when we came back to the US in June. We are asking that those of you who are giving on a recurring basis, continue to do that, as you are willing and able. This will help us cover the few expenses that we still have in Uganda and help us catch up and get ahead in our support for when we go back, Lord willing next year. If you have any questions or concerns in this area, please feel free to contact Eric. We would like to thank all of you who have and are faithfully supporting us financially. Finally, Eric has been able to participate in some exciting work with farmers in Uganda earlier this year that he will update you on in a later post.





Praise God with us that:

-      We were able to make it back for the wedding 


-      For a job for Eric while we are here

-      For good workers in Uganda who are taking care of things for us while we are away

Please pray with us:

    -       For us in this extended time away from our home and work in Uganda

    -       For the health of our growing baby

    -       For our home in Uganda, that our things would stay safe there

We are so grateful for each of you!


With lots of love and joy, 

Eric, Lauren, and Aubrey Anne 

Friday, May 15, 2020

Quarantine in Uganda


By Lauren

Hi dear friends,

First, let us say that we miss you and we pray that our Father has sustained you in this season. We hope that He has shown you more of His love and care. We pray that He has continued to cultivate a deeper posture of gratitude for those around you and for the provision that He has over you each day.

I just finished reading through 1 Peter- in chapter 1:3-4 the verses say, "... we have a Living Hope through the resurrection of Jesus Christ to an inheritance that is imperishable, undefiled, and unfading.." How incredible to know that our Hope is in the finished work of Jesus on the cross and that Hope does not diminish, does not go bad, and this Hope is the purest of pure.

It seems that most of the world has been forced to be in hibernation over the last few months.  Here in Uganda, it has been no different. When we got back to our home in Uganda in mid February, we jumped right into working hard to settle back into our home- to set up things and our life again and we both got back to work while trying to navigate a new rhythm with a newborn.

We had Eric’s sister, Susanna, with us who was supposed to participate in a 3-month volunteer stint here that was quickly diverted when lockdown started, her opportunities diminished, and we got her on an emergency flight out of Uganda (since the borders and airports had closed down).

Here is what life has looked like for us recently:

Eric’s work:

I (Eric), will give you a short update on the farming that I've been doing, followed by pictures. I will explain each picture in the caption below the picture. I am mainly farming right now and not traveling to the communities because it is illegal to gather and meet with more than 5 people. I have my 1/4 acre garden on our compound, a 1/3 acre garden outside our gate, and a 2 acre garden/field that I'm helping with on Reverend Kenneth's land. Reverend Kenneth is the man I worked with in the communities before the lockdown. He has a large piece of land. His sons do a lot of the labor, but I go twice a week to instruct on the next phase, and help when I'm there. I've enjoyed getting to know Reverend Kenneth's family.
We live next door to a government owned property, where about 10 soldiers stay. Two months ago, a soldier, named Awilo, came and asked me if I could help farm the piece of land outside our gate. It's been a great opportunity to teach him while also demonstrating for all the people that walk past on the road.
I'm again planting things on our compound, as a way to get produce, but also to try different methods of growing crops.

This is Reverend Kenneth's 3/4 acre of corn, intercropped with cassava. 
Reverend Kennth and I.
At Reverend Kenneth's field, we planted maize and put DAP (a fertilizer that has phosphorus and nitrogen) on part of the on maize after we covered. The maize on the right had the DAP and the maize on the left did not, the difference is quite stark.

We planted cabbage and then covered them with pieces of banana stalk. This shades the fragile transplants from the hot sun; after several days, we remove the banana stems.

Inside our compound, we intercropped ginger and cilantro. Ginger takes over a month to germinate, so I want to see if I can harvest a crop of cilantro before the ginger becomes too large.

This is our neighbor, Awilo, in the garden plot in front of our house. Here, we are planting corn in the dug rows, and sweet potatoes in the mounds, between the maize. The idea is to intercrop in such a way so that plants are occupying the plot vertically (maize) and horizontally (sweet potatoes) so that the net production per acre is higher, than if the plot was split in two and each crop was grown separately. I want to see if the sweet potato vines and cover the ground, helping to preserve moisture and smother the weeds, while the maize grows. Stay tuned!

This picture is from the same field as the picture above, 2 weeks later.
Several weeks ago we had a chameleon in a small mango tree in our compound.

They can change colors so quickly. This picture was taken only 1 minute before the picture below (he is on the stick to the right of the picture).


Collard greens (right), tomatoes (left), and butternut squash and passion fruit (back). Here is another intercropping setup where I'm growing crops horizontally and vertically. Butternut squash is a vine that crawls on the ground. The passion fruit are beginning to climb up the arbor.

More butternut squash outside. I was starting to get what I believed were snails eating the squash. Insecticide does not work on snails, since they are mollusks, I put chicken manure around each plant, hoping that the "saltiness" of the fresh chicken manure would deter the snails just long enough, for the squash to grow bigger to the point where snails wouldn't bother them anymore. The chicken manure will then become fertilizer for the squash. I did end up losing one more hill of squash to something, so I'm not sure if it worked so well.

This is at the base of a banana plant. We dug these holes and planted Turmeric. Another example of intercropping. My goal is for the turmeric to benefit from the manure and mulch that I add to the bananas, while increasing the net production of bananas and turmeric, compared to if each was grown separately.  

Lauren: We are grateful that I am still able to work! My work is curriculum writing from home for an organization that is based in the capital of Kampala. Therefore I spend a few hours each day writing and creating on my computer! I am also still able to meet with my prayer group in the area (online) and of course, I have the joy of being with Aubrey Anne each day. Since we are not able to drive anywhere or participate in public exercise, all of our activities are around our compound, including stroller rides.  We do take a walk to town as a family about once a week to go to the grocery store or to stop at a coffee shop for a coffee/tea date!

Aubrey Anne loves doing leg lifts!

Here we are at the coffee shop, she had just woken up and had a very confused look on her face! 

Family Life: We have loved living life and interacting with our little (and definitely growing) 4.5 month Aubrey Anne! We may have way too many photos and videos on our phones yet there is much to document from her each day (and we need to keep grandparents updated :) ) We have also had the joy of zoom calls and Facetiming a lot of friends and family both near and far!


Eric took Aubrey Anne in the truck to pick up bamboo poles just down the road.

We also get to participate in the Psalms Devotional each afternoon with our community from Grace Fellowship Church (GFC) in State College, PA as well as Worship Wednesday with The District Church in Washington, DC. We also are able to “attend” church with these two communities each week since churches are closed here and online worship is not an option.

During our Psalms Zoom call, Aubrey Anne was so alert and watching our teacher on the computer.

A special thank you to each of you for your prayers and love. We would especially like to thank our Advocacy Team at GFC for their overall support and care for us as we are in Uganda.

With love and joy, 

Eric, Lauren, and Aubrey Anne