Tony had preached in the morning and we had our weekend snacks at Mount Crest Hotel; samosas +\_ two egg omelettes or chapati. Jomo did give us a Sunday evening meal, so we got up on Monday for breakfast. Food stocks were running out such as jam and cornflakes. Jomo works on contract for visitors, and Catherine has looked after the accommodation. She is due to get married soon. Today, Thursday we gave each of them 400KSh from each of us on Becky's suggestion.
Monday I read Philippians 2:13 and shared it with the team. Bjorn had received a similare message from Norway so we shared it with the theatre team. Despite my anxieties about caring for the tiniest babies, Monday's 5kg lips went so well we finished early and I walked home with Bjorn before the rain. Tuesdays lips (& non-operation palates) went almost as smoothly for the last 4kg children. The last one held me up on the intubation, but God's grace and Bjorn's assistance were great. We came in on Wednesday prepared to do surgery, but there were no new arrivals. 10/12 Belinda who weighed 4 kg at birth arrived at the w/e weighing 3.9kg with a jutting premaxilla with bilateral cleft lip and palate. Tony had a powerpoint lecture with him of a similar case, and it is far more complicated, so she has been left on a feeding programme. We are contemplating anothe visit next October if all is well, but the Pettersens hope to take their Norwegian church group to the Gambia in week 40 in October half-term.
Gile was off sick for our last three days. She had held the nursing team together so well. Simon & Jane Daniell who have worked here for seven years came back to see the work vision enacted out. Although a general surgeon and radiologist he oversaw the hospital expansion from a clinic in September 2012, when the first soil was turned. Having had their house built to their specification, Simon got good prices and quality workmanship for the three wards and theatre. It is a tribute to his oversight. Michael Nightingale put a funding request to Guernsey for the buildings, and to a company for the equipment for theatre which Tim of MedAid brought in; old reconditioned European stuff serviced by engineers and brought out by Operating Department Practitioners. I met him at Oak Hill College in July 2013 at their mission stand at the Developing Health course that I went on.
So Wednesday was the start of tidy up, locating my theatre scrubs which had been washed and ironed, and making sure I brought back stuff I didn't want to leave. Thursday I continued to assist Ann in cleaning the lips for final post-op photos which have to be full faceview with both ears visible, and the patient looking at the camera straight on! Difficult with the babies. Don't let them fall asleep after the trauma of the clean up!
We had got to Hospital devotions on Wednesday since we didn't have operating. Bernard asked me to prepare a 10 minute talk for today. I titled it Questions that Jesus asks of us from Mark 8: 27-38. I gave my testimony and the effect of Mildred's question to me at my confirmation: "What does Jesus mean to you now?". Then the farewell started - and continued a long time with singing, dancing and garlands (Christmas decorations actually, returned to Becky's office later).
So the final clear up. Only four patients remain in the hospital, the last operated ones due to go home tomorrow. We got back to the guesthouse on the muddiest of roads after all night rain by 1045, and left after farewells to Solomon & Ruth, Becky and Jo. We loaded up the IcFEM van and Amos drove us through a busy Kimilili market, into Bungoma market. We filled up at a Total garage and got to the Kiboko Hotel at 1445. We passed Kisumu Yacht Club nearby where I took my first steps in June 1954 when I was 15 months old: late developer!
This place is beside Kisumu's inlet into Lake victoria, and comprises tents on short stilts with a concrete swish bathroom suite attached at the back. So you enter a door into a mosquito screened verandah. Inside is a zippable tent are with huge bed with mosquito net, kettle facilities for tea and coffee with a fridge, and the bathroom tiled behind! At 1850 it is almost dark and the crickets are chirping. Birds here are amazing. A brown crested heron, a nlue bird the size of a canary, and another bird with a bright yellow chest. I have my binoculars and a boat trip is a possibility tomorrow, anytime from 0600hrs! Taxi to the airport is booked for 1630 tomorrow. We passed the airport a half-hour drive away.
This is possibly good-bye from this kenya trip. Perhaps next year again?!