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One
Hundred Thirty Miles of Missing Fence ---- REPLACED!
Thousands of volunteers
helped with disaster recovery in North Dakota, South Dakota, Montana
and Minnesota during 1997-1999. Blizzards from the winter of 1996-'97
left snow-banks 20-feet-high in many places and killed livestock
of all kinds in the three-state area. The floods that followed
in South Dakota and along the Red River of the North made national
news. Orphan Grain Train and "One Good Cow" shipped building supplies,
equipment, and nearly 1,000 pregnant cows to North and South Dakota
in '97-'98. But the media did not report the lost fence-lines
of the western Dakotas.
The first blizzard covered warm soil in October 1996. A new blizzard
came each week until January 1997. Several feet of snow accumulated
though out the winter with no thaw. The resulting ice pack drove
fence-posts into the ground like "nails into a board."
Melting snow made floods the next concern. By the time "One Good
Cow" started shipping live cows in the fall of 1997, Orphan Grain
Train heard comments like, "Don't send cattle until I get my fences
fixed." Orphan Grain Train volunteers and Lutheran Social Service
(LSS) understood the need when they saw the miles of missing fence.
Braids of barbed wire stretched from sunken post to sunken post,
creating a landscape of "connect the dots." Old-timers had seen
nothing like it before.
Orphan Grain Train worked with LSS of South and North Dakota on
fence replacement. With Lutheran Hour Ministries relief money,
Orphan Grain Train purchased posts and wire at less than wholesale
cost. Donated trucking moved the materials from Utah, Texas, Oklahoma
and Arkansas to the Dakota's for use by Laborers for Christ and
Lutheran Disaster Response volunteers.
In the summer of 1998,
volunteers replaced over 130 miles of fence. The estimate in donated
man-hours amounted to over 4,000. Estimated value of donated trucking,
labor and food, as well as $86,000 worth of posts and wire, now
total more than $400,000 for this project. More fence was replaced
in the summer of 1999 in North Dakota, but on a lesser scale.
Gratitude to God has been etched on human hearts through this
effort. Gifts from Lutheran Hour Ministries and Orphan Grain Train
donors, coordination by Orphan Grain Train and Lutheran Social
Services and much toil by Laborers for Christ made this work a
blessing for those involved.
One farmer,
who could not finish re-fencing without help, thanked the Laborers
for Christ foreman in a personal way. When the final strand of
wire was hammered tight, the farmer reached into his pocket for
an old arrowhead he found years ago. A prized memento of younger
years, this gift for the foreman was his public tribute for help
received.
Other
responses to the One Good Cow and fence replacement...
"Thank
you very much for the posts & wire we recently received in Grant
County. Because of your generous efforts, approximately 35 families
in our community were given much needed supplies. Many acts of
fellowship were shown throughout the day as neighbors helped neighbors
in the distribution.
Thank you again for helping organize Such a worthwhile
project."
He who oppresses the poor
shows contempt for their Maker, but whoever is kind to the needy
honors God. -Proverbs chapter 14 verse 31
"Thank you to everyone who works with Orphan
Grain Train. Our family is most appreciative of your work. We
thank you and whomever for the gift of posts and wire sent to
Grant County, ND. It was most delightful to see total strangers
help one another load posts and wire. Please thank those who donated
time, talent, and supplies."
"And whatever you do, whether
in word or deed, do it all in the name of the Lord Jesus, giving
thanks to God the Father through Him." Colossians Chapter 3, verse
17.
Shirley Conrad, Coordinator from Lutheran Social Services, Rapid
City, SD, told us that Lutheran Social Services/Lutheran Disaster
Response has assisted people in that area since the fall of 1997--related
to the blizzards of '96-'97. The area has been blessed with 180
volunteers from 12 states working approximately 4300 hours on
people's homes, fences, and tree lines. Over 250 families were
assisted either through mental health counseling, family grants,
food distribution, energy assistance and construction assistance.
Conrad says this work could not have been done without the many
organizations that donated money, supplies, and food. She thanks
the following who joined in assisting families in this area: Orphan
Grain Train (One Good Cow), American Red Cross, Aid Association
for Lutherans, Lutheran Brotherhood, and Laborers for Christ.
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