Wednesday, December 26, 2012

Church Visit

"It looks like they have already started," says Mike as we walk into the foyer.  "Are you sure it started at five o' clock?"

"Five is what my friend told me," I say as I think to myself, Are we experiencing "rubber time"

"Should we go in?"  Our courage is starting to fade.

"We came all this way, let's sneak in the back." 

Of coarse it will be virtually impossible to "sneak in" without being spotted, seeing that we are visiting an Indonesian church in Portland and we will be the only non-Indonesians in the room.  We work up our nerve, walk through the door, and sit in the 2nd to last row in the sanctuary.  We get a few glances and smiles sent our way by others as we enjoy the last few minutes of the service.  During the service the prayers were said in both English and Bahasa Indonesian and we also (tried) to sing along to an Indonesian song.  It was pretty exciting. 

By the way we were not experiencing "rubber time" ( jam karet is a term used to describe Indonesian's attitude towards the concept of time).  We were just late, an hour late to be exact.  So much for not drawing attention to ourselves.

After the service our family was greeted right away and we were asked why we had decided to visit an Indonesian church.  We told them that we were moving to Indonesia to work with MAF and we wanted to learn more about Indonesia.  We were met with excitement and were asked if we spoke Bahasa Indonesian.  We said, "Not yet."  After assuring us that Bahasa Indonesian is very easy to learn they started to teach us some phrases right away.  Our family was then invited downstairs to eat some Indonesian food with them (which was awesome by the way).

The pastor asked Mike if we could come back and share with everybody our story and what we will be doing in Indonesia.  Mike asked, "How long do you want us to share?  5 minutes?  10 minutes?" 

"The WHOLE service, we want to hear from you."

We were sent home with a plate full of Indonesian leftovers, how often can you say that you visited a chuch and got sent home with food?  Not very often.

Wednesday, November 21, 2012

Happy Thanksgiving!





Our family is gearing up for our last Thanksgiving in the States (for quite awhile) and we are enjoying our long weekend.  Thanksgiving hasn't been quite the same for our family ever since my mom passed away a couple of years ago, and we are still coming up with a new routine for the holidays.  One constant however, has been the annual "Run to Feed the Hungry 5K" at our church Thanksgiving morning.  The past seven Thanksgivings I have found myself shivering on the starting line in the morning waiting to burn off some calories in hopes of combating some of the damage I will be doing later in the day.  It is also a great way for our church to stock our food cupboard and combat hunger.  This is a tradition that I am going to have a hard time giving up.  Perhaps next year I will have to organize my own 5K on Thanksgiving morning in Indonesia.  I'm sure it won't be that hard to convince my fellow classmates in language school to run 3 miles in the heat with me.  :)


Wednesday, November 7, 2012

Macie is two and eating bugs for breakfast!?



October was a very busy month for us!  We were home a total of ONE day and spent the others traveling on deputation.  After our first two weeks of the month spent crammed in the Jetta driving all over the Seattle area we came home, packed frantically and grabbed a red-eye flight to Anchorage, AK.  Although all of the locals in Alaska assured us that it wasn't yet winter and it was still fall, we were COLD.  The kids and I went to the zoo one morning and it was 12 degrees, yes 12!  Colton kept telling everybody he came across, "It is cold up here in Alaska!"  Although it was cold, the sky was blue and the sun was shining (which is a rarity in WA).  By the end of the trip we were starting to acclimate to the cold, 30 degrees felt a bit cozy.

It was 7 degrees when we took this picture!  
Macie turned two on our trip and we were able to have a little party for her at our friend's house.  I started to make the cake for the party, but when I got ready to decorate it Mike took over.  I think he was afraid that I would just serve it on a dinner plate and slap some frosting on it without bothering to smooth it out (which I would have).  Our friends have 4 boys and including brother that made the guest list for Macie's party 5 boys.  Macie had a blast and from a parent's perspective there wasn't as much high-pitched squealing as there would have been if the guest list included 5 girls!


We attended a church in Wasilla one Sunday and had the opportunity to share about our ministry with the Sunday School class.  I don't know if this is a normal thing to do, but even though it was 12 degrees outside that morning all of the windows were open in the sanctuary and the fans were on!  I didn't want to look like an "out of towner" so I didn't put on my jacket and I toughed it out.  At the end of the service the pastor was excited to introduce us to a person who...wait for it.  Grew up in Indonesia as an MK and flew on MAF as a child!  Out of all the places to meet a person from Indonesia, Wasilla wasn't what I was expecting.

The next day we spent lunch at his house with his family and he told us LOTS of stories about growing up in Papua, Indonesia.  He served us some coffee that was grown outside of Wamena and it was wonderful, I am looking forward to drinking more of it in my future.  They also taught us how to make sticky rice for dessert. He taught Colton a few tips on how to be a good MK, one of those tips was how to properly roast a Cicada.  In the mornings he said it was fun to run to the screen door, grab a Cicada by the wings, flick it on the head, set it on top of mom's stove, roast it, and then pop it into his mouth for breakfast!  Colton replied by yelling, "I don't want to eat BUGS!"  He was assured that they taste like Snickers without the chocolate.  When in Rome...  Or in this case when in Papau...  


Cicada it's what's for breakfast.



Friday, October 19, 2012

October Seattle Trip

October has been a busy month for the Johnson family so far.  We packed up the Jetta and traveled around in the Seattle area for two weeks.  I think we put over 1,000 miles on the car this trip, it is safe to say that I am pretty sick of the I-5 and the 405 by now!  You don't know stress until you are stuck in Seattle rush hour traffic in the middle lane and you hear the request for a pit stop from your 4 year old.

For those of you who don't know Mike grew up in the Philippines as an M.K. (missionary kid) and the big fast food chain there is Jollibee.  To have a taste of home we decided to grab Mike's cousin, who also grew up in the Philippines, and go to the South Center Mall where they have a Jollibee.  It feels a lot like the Philippines when you step inside, you can actually order your food in Tagalog (well I can't)!  They also serve the dreaded "Halo-Halo" here.  If you ever want to eat ice cream mixed with red beans, corn, the weird fruit that comes in fruit cakes, and who-knows-what else, this is the place to have that happen.  We opted for the Mango Peach Pies instead.


Jollibee!
After eating lunch we went next door to the Asian market to find some snacks that Mike grew up eating.  We also wanted to see if we could find some Indonesian goodies.  While cruising the ice cream isle we found some weird flavors such as:  Corn and cheese, avocado, and once again the dreaded Halo-halo.  It only takes a little while in the Asian market to figure out that the American palette is different, to say the least!

Gross
Grosser
Grossest

The second week we stayed with Great Grandma on Whidbey Island.  Grandma's house is great!  The coffee is always on and there are retro toys to play with (for the kids of coarse).  There is no internet at her house and only 3 t.v. stations, so we felt "off the grid".   I actually read 3 books!  Kind of sad to see what I could be accomplishing without all of the distractions we have at home.  Grandma has shelves of books and many are about the pioneering missionaries that went into Papua back in the 60's when the tribes people where still head-hunting (yikes).  It is amazing to see the transformations the tribes had after the missionaries shared the gospel with them.  Before the missionaries shared with them they were living in fear of the spirits and each other.  Imagine living in a world where you thought God didn't love you and you had to appease him at all times in order to survive.  After reading the trials the first missionaries went through in Papua it makes all of my fears and worries about moving overseas seen trivial.     

Hanging out at Great Grandma's beach

Another great thing about Grandma's house is that she lives by the beach!  The kids loved throwing rocks into the Sound and climbing on the driftwood.  Colton cracked me up too because every time before he threw a rock he yelled, "Fire in the hole!"  I have no idea where he learned that.

After staying at Grandma's for a week we drove home and dug out our winter clothes.  Next stop:  Alaska.













Thursday, October 4, 2012

End of Summer

Colton and his nameless new best friend for a day


It is getting to be that time of year again in the Pacific Northwest where one gets a sneaky suspicion that this very day might be the last time you get to see the sun again for a very long time.  Not to sound like the kind of person that is a "half empty glass" type, but the sun does disappear on us for MONTHS at a time behind grey, rainy, endless clouds up here.  Us native Washingtonians don't take the sun for granted is all I am saying, and when that ball of burning gas is out in the sky we make the most of it!

The other day I packed a lunch, Colton grabbed his big Styrofoam airplane and we headed to the park with Macie to play.  It took Colton about 5 seconds to make a new friend and they ran around the softball field flying his airplane for quite a while.  When they were done playing I asked him what his friend's name was and Colton responded by saying, "I don't know but he has a helicopter on his shirt and he likes airplanes."  If only it was so easy to make friends as adults!

It has occurred to me that this will be the last rainy winter I am going to live in for a long time since our family will be moving to Indonesia next November (not this one, the next one).  I am very excited to be moving to a place where the sun will shine year round!  I do wonder however, how long will take me to get over the feeling that the sun is going to up and disappear on me like it always has in October?  (Watch in a couple of years I will be blogging about missing the rain and cold weather).
   
Nothing tastes better than a PB&J enjoyed at the park


Friday, August 31, 2012

Our new friend

If any of you reading this post have ever had the pleasure of meeting our son Colton it doesn't take long to figure out that he is obsessed with airplanes.  (Yes, I know that he didn't have much of a chance being born into our family).  Colton has probably racked up more frequent flier miles than most adults, and can probably figure out the type of aircraft flying overhead more accurately than most adults as well.  Conversations with Colton usually involve discussions about how cool floats would look on a certain type of aircraft and whether or not it is a tail-dragger.  

Our stay at Mission Aviation Fellowship headquarters this summer only put fuel on the fire.  We have a new friend in our house and his name is "Petey the Plane."  Petey is the mascot for MAF and stars in a video telling kids about MAF.  We were sent home with a DVD cartoon of Petey and I am afraid that Colton is going to wear it out!  We also thought that it would be cute to buy him a "Petey the Plane" t-shirt and that he might like it.  He likes it alright!  It has become quite the permanent fixture on Colton and I have coax him and peel it off of him to just to wash it every-once-in-awhile.  

I wouldn't want to deprive any of you out there of the "Petey the Plane" fun so here is the video.  It is actually quite informative and even adults can learn a few things by watching it.  (There is a twist at the end you need to look for too).




Monday, August 20, 2012

Summer at MAF

Our family spent the first 5 weeks of our summer at Mission Aviation Fellowship headquarters in Nampa, ID and can now say that we are official MAF missionaries on our way to Indonesia.  We still do not know the exact location in Indonesia where we will serve, but we are very excited to be able to narrow it down to what country we will be living in!  
The MAF apartments were home for 5 weeks
There were 8 couples besides us going through the same training process that our family was and all of us lived in the MAF apartments right across the parking lot from the main office.  It kind of felt like summer camp, only there was a lot of homework to do!  Babysitters were provided for the kids so that we could actually sit down and listen to the teachers without chasing our kids.  It was the first time that I (Angie) have been away from the kids that long and got to experience what working mothers have to go though every week.  I have to give all you working gals props, because it is HARD to be away from your kids that long!  I do have to admit it was nice to get to dress up and not be called "mom" all day though.

Macie and Jack 2 peas in a pod
The kids were in heaven and had a blast with all of the other MKs (missionary kids).  Macie made a friend named Jack that was only two days older than her and they were pretty much inseparable the entire summer.  Macie and Jack loved to take turns pushing each other in the pedal car.  Macie got a little crazy and was pushing too fast and they had a wipeout the day before we had our passport and visa pictures taken, so Macie is sporting a nice fat lip in hers.  Colton hung out with the older girls (8-10).  One day I looked out and saw him sitting in an inflatable pool surrounded by girls and it made me chuckle.  

Colton and the MK girls
It was crazy HOT and wouldn't cool down until around nine o' clock at night, so the Sonic down the street got quite a bit of business from all of us.  We would sit in the parking lot and watch our friend fly his model airplanes while we sipped on slushies.  This of course has only fueled Colton's obsession for airplanes and it has reached an entire new level!  



















Colton by the model Piper Cub
Our family is back home in WA for now and will be sharing with others the exciting ministry that awaits us.  We are also viewing this year as a long goodbye with all of our friends and family.  We are hoping to be ready to leave for Indonesia by November of 2013.

Tuesday, July 17, 2012


Our dreams of serving with MAF (Mission Aviation Fellowship) in Indonesia are finally becoming a reality.  Today was assignment day, a day that I have been sweating and praying over for a LONG time.  Today after lunch Mike and I nervously walked into a room and sat down at a table with six people staring at us who had decided the day before where our family would be serving.  I held my breath as I heard the words, "We have decided to send you to...(dramatic pause)...Indonesia."  There really was a dramatic pause too, I didn't make that part up, it felt like an eternity.  That is one of the reasons I love MAF so much, every body seems to have a good sense of humor.  I think that if you get in this line of work though, it is a requirement of sorts.

Mike and I will be learning in more depth the details of our assignment in these coming weeks and will be sharing them with you soon.  For now here is a sneak peek of what Mike will be doing:






Thursday, June 7, 2012

Trip to Alaska

Passing the Technical Evaluation with MAF was very exciting for our family and we are eagerly anticipating officially joining MAF in July.  These last few weeks leading up to our candidacy class with MAF have been crazy and at times very stressful.  We have a lot to get done and very little time to do it in.  Our family is definitely in a state of limbo right now with a lot of unknowns on the Horizon.  The largest question looming for us is, "Where will we be serving?  Africa?  Indonesia?"  

It will also be a big transition for our family to live off of ministry support instead of being in the work force.  Leaving a steady job to go into ministry feels like a huge step of faith.  We know that we are in the Lord's will however, and are putting our trust in him fully to provide for our needs while we serve him through working with MAF.  God has been very faithful to us so far and has definitely had his hand in providing the means for the training needed for us to join with MAF in the first place.

Speaking of leaving the work force that means our family will no longer *sniff* have flight benefits.  I personally haven't had to purchase a plane ticket since 1997, I can feel all of your sympathy welling up for us right now (sarcasm intended).  We decided to take one last trip and visit some friends of ours up in Anchorage, AK.  The trip ended up being just what we needed and it recharged our family physically, mentally, and even spiritually. 

Macie and Colton watching the rampers in SEA
It is hard to be surrounded by the beauty of Alaska and not have this verse pop into your head:  For since the creation of the world God's invisible qualities-his eternal power and divine nature- have been clearly seen, being understood from what has been made, so that men are without excuse.  (Romans 1:20)
It is so easy to feel God's hand in creation and his presence in the vast expanse of the mountains and wildlife that surrounds you when you are outside enjoying the beauty that God made.

Quick stop for a picnic.  A hike was planned as well but a bear was spotted in the parking lot!  So hike was cancelled.

We stayed with our friends Aaron and Katie that Mike met when he went to Ecola Bible in Cannon Beach, OR.  Our friends have 4 boys so needless to say there was never a dull moment on this trip!  Our friend's Grandma owns a cabin in Soldotna right on the Kenai River so we drove down the peninsula to try our hand at fishing.  Mike and Colton tried to catch a King Salmon but had no luck.  Interesting fact:  The average cost to catch a single King Salmon in AK is $150!  We decided to switch gears and try for Rainbow Trout instead on a lake in town when we went back to Anchorage.  Our friend Aaron took Mike and Colton out in his canoe on Sand Lake and Colton actually hooked into 5 fish!  Colton's fish keep getting bigger every time he retells his story in true fisherman fashion.



Colton's first catch
Our friend Katie's parents live near an airport community where the houses have hangers below them.  We would pass Piper Cubs with big Tundra tires on them every time we visited her parent's house and we would imagine how much fun it would be to fly in one of them.  Luckily for us Katie's dad talked to his neighbor and told him how our family is going to serve with MAF and would love to go for a flight.  His neighbor was pressed for time but he managed to take Mike and Colton up for a quick flight.  They got to spot a few goats and bears in the surrounding mountains and Mike was able to fly the plane a bit as well.  Mike has been feeling grounded lately now that he isn't training for the Tech Eval anymore.


Tundra tires are huge!




Another check off the bucket list for these two

We visited our friend's church on Sunday and the pastor was kind enough to write a sermon just for our family.  Isn't it funny how it works that way?  He showed clips from the movie Groundhog Day and his message was to take life one day at a time and to live it fully for God and not for ourselves.  God has placed us in our current situation for the day we are living and we need to honor him in it.  A fitting sermon for an overwhelmed family.  One day at a time.  

Even though we aren't officially support raising yet MAF (of coarse) came up in conversation because we can't stop talking about it, and a few members of their church are very excited about our future with MAF.  The church had recently been involved in sending out a couple with MAF down to Nairobi, Kenya and a lady had just returned from a visit to the MAF base in Africa.  It is nice to know that we will have people interested in our mission and praying for us clear up in Alaska!  

We are back in Washington now hard at work preparing to attend candidacy class in July.  If you would like to stay updated with us and join our prayer/support team email one of us your address and we will add you to our mailing list. 








Saturday, May 12, 2012

Technical Evaluation with MAF

These past two weeks our family has been in Nampa, ID at the MAF headquarters going through technical evaluation.  TE is basically a two week long job interview.  It was pretty intense, but I am happy to say that we passed!  (Well Mike did most of the work).  We are not officially with MAF yet, but at this point it is about 99% certain that we will be.  It is very rare for a couple to pass TE and not end up serving with MAF.  

The next step in the process for our family is to come back to headquarters in July and go through a candidacy class.  In class we will explore in detail what MAF is doing at each of it's bases.  We will then interview with a committee and go over the different options for service and at that time voice some desires or concerns that we may have.  The committee will then decide where they believe our family will best "fit" and at the completion of the class we will be given our country assignment.  

I am not going to lie the the thought of being assigned a country to go live in is a very scary thought!  After meeting the staff at MAF though and seeing that they truly want to see our family succeed and really strive to seek God's will in the situation has calmed my nerves.  God has really given me a peace about the situation too and I know that I just need to trust him because he is much wiser than I am.

Living in the MAF apartments was so much fun.  We got to meet a bunch of really neat people in all stages of the process of serving with MAF.  We met a family that was headed out to the Congo in a week, a family assigned to Hati, a family on furlough from Indonesia, and a couple serving in central Asia.  We bonded over chicken wings one night with a few of them and listened to each other's stories.  It was very exciting to hear what God is doing through MAF in these different parts of the world and it is cool to think that we will be a part of that soon!

We would just like to take the time right now and thank everybody for the support and encouragement that has been given to our family to get us to this point of our journey.  We could not do this without you!  The generosity that has been shown to us is very humbling and in helps us tremendously to know that our friends support our family and are behind us in this crazy adventure. 



It is an MAF tradition to take your child's picture in front of this turtle every time you are on furlough to see how much they have grown.  They actually moved this turtle up from the old headquarters in Redlands, CA even though it is HEAVY to carry on this tradition.

Tuesday, April 17, 2012

Almost there

At the beginning of this month Mike still needed 15 more flight hours to be qualified to take the technical evaluation at MAF (Mission Aviation Fellowship) headquarters at the end of the month.  We were a bit stressed out because anybody from the Northwest knows that spring here is notorious for rain and clouds.  We have been praying and asking people to join us in prayer for good flying weather.  The weather lately shows that prayer actually works!  There have been sun breaks every weekend this April so that Mike has been able to fly!  Mike only needs 1.3 more hours before he hits the grand total of 400 flight hours needed.



This Saturday Colton had a slumber party with his cousin Riley so we only had Macie to hang out with.  Macie loved being the center of attention all day and was in a great mood (I think that deep-down she wishes that she was the first born).  Mike scheduled a training flight in the Cessna 206 to do some Instrument training with one of the flight instructors at Servant Wings and Macie and I decided to hitchhike in the back.  It was a beautiful day outside but Mike couldn't see anything because he was under the hood (or as I like to call it his "Darth Vader" mask).  Wearing the visor forces Mike to only look at the instruments while he is flying and it simulates what he would be able to see in bad weather.  


On Sunday Mike took Colton flying in the Cessna 152.  Remember the slumber party the night before I mentioned?  I don't think that much slumbering went on because this is what happened during the flight:




Poor little guy was so excited to go flying but he missed most of it!

This next couple of weeks Mike is going to study and practice in the flight simulator with an instructor to further prepare for the technical evaluation.  It is crazy to think that we are only two weeks away from a test that Mike has been preparing to take for the last seven years!  No pressure, right?

Tuesday, April 3, 2012

Colton is four!


It is hard to believe that we have a four year old in our house now!  We celebrated Colton's birthday this weekend with yet another "airplane" themed party.  Everybody who comes into contact with Colton soon figures out that he is obsessed with airplanes.  We had a few of Colton's friends over for some pizza, orange juice (at his request), cake and ice cream.  Colton wanted Mike and I to make his cake into an aircraft carrier but our cake decorating skills are not quite up to the challenge of that yet so we opted for a float plane jungle scene instead.

Thanks to Señora Flynne and high school spanish class I was able to make an airplane piñata for the party.  I knew that Colton would not take to his friends beating his piñata with a stick very well so in order to escape tears I thought that I was being clever and designed a door that would open and let out the candy with the pull of a string.  Let's just say that I am not an engineer and the design had some flaws to it and there were tears anyway.  Oops.  Other than that the party was a success and Colton has been requesting to have another one ever since.  

Whenever we have gatherings at our house like this I realize how much we are truly blessed by all of the friends placed in our lives and in our children's lives.  The amount of love that our friends pour into our children blows me away every time.  It saddens me to think of the future when an ocean will be dividing us from each other.     



The big 4 year old with his cake

....and yes Macie liked the cake too.


Baby sister Macie and her slice

Saturday, March 24, 2012

Free Flight Time

Mike had the opportunity yesterday to acquire some FREE flight time.  It is always nicer to fly the airplane knowing that it isn't draining your wallet every minute that you spend up in the sky!  Servant Wings is the organization we are a part of that has been helping Mike with his flight training.  Servant Wings has corporate members that pay for the aircraft rental allowing candidate pilots like Mike to build flight time without going into debt.  

The airplane that Servant Wings uses for all of it's corporate flights is the Cessna 206 which rents out for $150/hr.  The 206 is actually the type of aircraft that Mike will be taking his technical evaluation in for Mission Aviation Fellowship (MAF) in late April.  We don't usually fly the 206 to acquire flight time because it is about twice the amount to rent as the Cessna 152, so you can see why these corporate flights are so valuable.  Mike flew out to Pasco, WA and back and gained about 3.7 flight hours.  After some quick math you can see that we saved a bundle yesterday!

Mike with the Cessna 206
Some fun facts about the Cessna 206:

  • It served for MAF in Venezuela for almost 20 years
  • It transported about 4,000,000 lbs. of cargo while in service
  • 3 babies were born on it
  • Tractors, a horse, bees, fish, medicine, Bibles, pastors, and many other vital supplies were transported on it
  • A very generous board member of Servant Wings bought the plane and donated it to Servant Wings 






Thursday, March 15, 2012

Bellingham and Back Again

Renting an airplane is expensive!  When Mike and I were first married and crunched the numbers to see exactly how much it was going to cost to obtain 400 flight hours it seemed impossible.  These past seven years, however, God has provided for our family in amazing ways and has taught us to have faith that he will provide what we need when we need it.  A recent way that God has chosen to provide for us was to offer Mike field work up in Bellingham, WA.  Since October Mike has worked out of town 4 days a week.  It was definitely an adjustment for our family and not always easy, but it supplied the much needed funds to help us complete the last few flight hours needed.

As of this week Mike is working back in Portland and we are very happy to have him back home with us.  Colton and I decided to have a little adventure and fly up to Bellingham to help Mike drive his stuff back home.  Macie had a sleepover with a very brave friend of ours so the adult to kid ratio for me was 1 to 1.  I myself prefer to play man-on-man defense and not zone defense while flying, especially when a connection is involved.  

Colton with the ever-so important blue blanket in SEA
Colton and I flew standby and batted .500 for the evening.  We were bumped in Portland once which wasn't a big deal, but then we were bumped in Seattle which was a slightly bigger deal because it left us with a 4 hour layover.  Luckily Colton is a well seasoned traveler and we actually had a lot of fun in the airport.  We ate some Ivers fish and chips for dinner while watching airplanes get loaded on the ramp and then we hung out in the play area for a couple of hours.  Colton made some friends and they soon were having a jumping contest off of the slide.  Colton had so much fun in fact that he asked me today if we could go to the airport again to play. 


Colton in the SEA airport play area

Colton and I caught the last flight out of SEA and finally reached the hotel in Bellingham at around 1am and crashed.  Mike got off work at 7am and after eating hotel waffles we all piled into our little 1983 Honda Civic hatchback complete with AM/FM radio and a whopping two front speaker system and took off.  The Civic is our backup/commuter car and we never drive it as a family because it feels like we are driving a clown car when we do.  I felt a little bad making the poor old Civic go over 50 mph, but it did suprisingly well and wasn't always the slowest car on the freeway.  

Since we were passing through Seattle we took this opportunity to eat at the Paseo Caribbean sandwich shop that we have been wanting to try for awhile.  All I have to say is BEST SANDWICH EVER!  If you ever have the chance to eat there take it.  While you are there do us a favor and order the #2.  


Posing with our wonderful sandwiches at Paseos

Tuesday, February 21, 2012

First post ever

Hi, this is Mike and Angie Johnson and we are preparing to serve overseas through mission aviation. We are currently in the process of applying with Mission Aviation Fellowship (MAF). We started this blog so that friends and family can join us on our journey and get to know us a bit better along the way.

Mike and I have been married for seven years and have two little ones, Colton and Macie. Colton is three years old and is just as obsessed with airplanes as his mom and dad. Colton loves to go up in the airplane and build flight time with his dad.





Colton kicking back with Mickey and his blanket on the Cessna 206


Macie is our little girl, she is a year and a half old.  We started her early by introducing Macie to her first flight when she was just five weeks old.  She gets a bit bored and loud if the flight gets too long for her liking and we joke that it is good practice for Mike to learn to fly with "distractions" in the back of the plane.



Macie playing in the Servant Wings hanger before a flight


Our family is currently members of Servant Wings which is an organization designed to help future missionary pilots obtain the training required to serve overseas in a cost-effective manner.  The biggest hurdle involved in joining a mission is that you have to be debt-free when you join.  Servant Wings has three airplanes that we can rent to build flight time in.  For all the airplane geeks out there they are a Cessna 206, 172, and 152.  Mike still needs about 40 hours of flight time before we are fully qualified to serve with MAF.

Here we are Angie and Mike