M3 Start

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Kamakura to Sendai

Help the Oshika Peninsula.


for the past 2 missions, we’ve been searching for the most secluded and most devastated areas. some places were getting lots of help, and some places were being neglected. along the Oshika Peninsula, there are about 10 or more fishing villages along the coast that ALL have been wiped out. driving along that beautiful coast is heartbreaking. that point A is a place called Kobuchihama. we were the first volunteers to arrive there dropping off supplies. 5 weeks later!!! 400 people live there and were cut off from supplies for 2 weeks because of the roads. no electricity, no water, no phone service. i’ll be up there next tuesday and i’m hoping that things will be better since the last time we were there.

this is where KITV hooked up with us and shot the video. see the bunch of houses in the middle? it’s on the hill so luckily got spared from the tsunami. the rest of the town got totally wiped out. we asked the people living there “why do you stay here and not go into an evacuation center?” their reply “we’re waiting for our missing loved ones to either be found, or to come home. and if they come home, we have to be here.” no water, no electricity. sad.

this place is called Kugunarihama. we passed by and seen a few fishermen sitting up the hill so decided to stop by. 5 weeks later, we ask “why does everything look the same?” they reply, “we can’t start cleaning up because the military still has to come and look for the dead bodies.” 5 weeks later? sad.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
this town is called Ayukawahama. half gone, half there. on some streets, one side is totally devastated, and the other side is untouched. the power of the tsunami is unbelievable. i’ll never forget this town because we camped here on mission 2 on the coldest nights ever. it was freezing below 0 degrees and somebody forgot to roll up the window in the van i was sleeping in. i was freezing cold all night long. hopefully next time will be much warmer.

Jack @ Midnight

12:30 am here in japan. got on the airplane at 6pm hawaii time, ate
dinner, closed my eyes, 9 hours later, i was arriving in tokyo. a long
but much needed sleep. hiked 3 hours with no water today so i’m feeling
it now. getting ready for bed but can’t stop thinking about tomorrow.
meeting mission 3 volunteers in kamakura, loading up 2 vans, and heading
up to sendai and tohoku. going back to hawaii for the past 8 days was
good for me. i’m now back to normal, ready for mission 3, and ready to
make people happy. i just sipped the last of my 2nd jack/coke and i’m
ready to call it a night. mission 1, i was nervous. mission 2, i was a
little nervous. this mission, i’m feeling great! i can’t wait to go
back up there and see the wonderful people i met along the way. our
vans will be loaded tomorrow as we make our way to see old friends, and
make new ones. as the donations keep on pouring in, i want to say from
the bottom of my heart, THANK YOU VERY MUCH! i’m happy, but yet
emotional from all the support. i still didn’t have the time to rethink
everything. no time to be emotional, no time to think back. i’m just
thinking ahead. after seeing all the things i seen, my life has
changed. i don’t look back anymore. i only look forward. the future
is a bright light and that’s all i can see. live happy! good night.