Wednesday, June 29, 2011

Trip to Caesarea

Shalom to All:

Just a note with some pics....we did a tour of Caesarea and Acre yesterday. Learned quite a bit and took lots of photos.....we are starting to gear up for school...lots of reading to do before we arrive...still have time to go to the beach and enjoy the warm waters (and watching out for mammoth jellyfish) though...
Love to you all
This was taken from our hotel patio....

These are some of the ruins of king Herod's Caesarea. To the left is the sea and his palace

We will be going to Jaffa this week as well..it is just south of Tel Aviv. In fact, they really are one city. Jaffa is one of the oldest ports in the world...maybe you will remember the story of Jonah....anyway, you are in our prayers and we miss you all....Shalom

Saturday, June 25, 2011

Goodbye Ashkelon, hello Tel Aviv!!!

Shalom to all our friends and family:

Today we have made our way to our hotel in Tel Aviv for a week of much deserved rest and relaxation. Although the excavation was a huge experience and we do have some great stories to tell, our bodies feel like the 50 year olds they are. So time to heal the muscle srains, decompress, and gear up for northern Israel.

Right now I am looking out our patio window which overlooks the sea. The beach is literally across the street from us and we can't wait to sit on our porch tonight to view an absolutely gorgeous sunset.




Okay so now I am able to download some pics because I am on an actual internet service...the first pic is taken at Ashkelon National Park, which is where we were digging at. Melanie is walking with some others as we are given a tour of the Canaanite gate of Ashkelon, which was uncovered over 20 years ago.

the second pic is of Melanie in Jerusalem as we climbed the outer wall of the Old City. Silwan is seen behind her. The third pic is of a double rainbow over Lake Linnhe from our hotel window in the Highlands....so as your can see, we really are traveling (and very sore) Pilgrims..........until next time....Peace.

Saturday, June 18, 2011

yes we are alive!!!

Hello to All:

I know it has been a couple of weeks since the last entry. Getting an internet connection here in Ashkelon is very dicey. I finally decided to pay a pretty high rate so I could communicate.

We are in our second week of the archaeological dig at Ashkelon, Israel.  The weather reminds me very much of Arizona during monsoon season (late summer). Hot with some humidity. Our day starts at 4 am when we get out of bed to brush our teeth, do our business and throw on clothes that have already been laid out the night before. We have two other roommates so trying to get 4 women in the bathroom in just a few minutes is a trick but we are getting good at it. After our absolutions, we head down to the lobby for tiny cups of coffee and bread and jam for those who need to eat that early in the morning. We are then herded onto a bus and we are at the dig site by 5am.

Yes, it is still dark then but we clammer off the bus half asleep and load up with various tools: pickaxes, large spades called "tureas", large rubber buckets called "goufas", wheelbarrows and other odds and ends. We then lug all this stuff to our assigned site. There are 3 sites right now that are being excavated and both Mel and I are at site 47, which is the largest.

So, what do we do with these things? Well, the first week we did nothing but move dirt......a whole lot of dirt. You see, the pickaxes and tureas are used to break up and scoop the dirt into the goufas that are then carried up a whole bunch of sandbags that comprise stairs (we are about 8 to 10 feet down in the earth) and then the dirt is thrown into wheelbarrows that are then lugged to a dump site. It is very heavy, hard work. By the time breakfast break comes (at 9:30) we are already beat. But, although it is probably some of the most physically hard work I have ever done (and I have done a lot) it has actually been pretty fun. It is amazing what the body will do when pushed. Mel is finding strength she never thought she had. Most of the volunteers are undergraduate and graduate students, but there are a few of us "oldies"...in fact we have one gentleman who is about 65 with a bionic hip. He is our wheelbarrow guy because he can stand up straight and go at his own pace. But remember, we are doing all this in heat over 100 degrees with humidity so everyone is working extrememly hard.

We have one week left here before we embark on our third part of our adventure. We will be in Tel Aviv for a week to prepare for school in the Galilee which looks to be an absolute fantastic adventure. Because that hotel actually has real internet connection I will be able to be in touch a little more.........we miss you all and please keep us in your prayers as we keep you in ours.
Shalom