Web Portal – Coming Soon!
In this day of hi-tek info-sharing and partnering, IAMA is finding itself in a very relevant, and time critical, position. IAMA has been facilitating and supporting mission aviation organizations for many years. But just recently IAMA has been able to step in to fill a need that is shared by nearly all mission aviation organizations. Enter: The Mission Aviation Portal.
First of all, the portal is not an original IAMA concept. It is the result of a partnership between Wycliffe Bible Translators, IAMA, and Finishers.org. Primarily the brain-child of people like Jamie Farr (Wycliffe) and Nelson Malwitz (Finishers), IAMA comes in to be the host and caretaker of the project.
So what exactly is a portal and what does it have to do with mission aviation? First of all, step with me into the world of recruiting – that industry that feeds us the most valuable resource we have; people. At its most elementary level, the Mission Aviation Portal is an on-line tool that will make a meaningful connection between recruiters from mission organizations and potential candidates. It is a one-stop shopping site for both the recruiter as well as the candidate. At a deeper level it is a hi-tek search and matching engine that automatically matches a candidate’s profile / resume with all available openings in mission aviation – pilot/mechanic, AMT Specialist, administrator, etc. – based on the candidate’s criteria.
At an even deeper level it is very much a ‘Facebook’ for mission aviation. And anyone that has tried to make meaningful contact with anyone of the younger generation over the last 5 years knows, that’s where you find them: On-line social environments. The portal will allow both public and private messaging that is logged for referencing years later. That’s important for a recruitment process that often takes 5 or 6 years. For the recruiter, it is one place where he can keep all relevant information about the organization, upcoming events, membership requirements and processes. He too can perform searches that seek candidates that match his criteria.
Will it work? Fortunately the concept has already been proven. MissionTeach.org, also developed by Wycliffe and Finishers, is the proof-of-concept. This portal has already been filling teaching positions for years, at a rate near 10 times faster than before, and saving the organizations thousands of recruitment dollars. The Mission Aviation Portal is one of several more ‘industry-specific’ portals that are being developed to help meet this need in missions.
But the benefits don’t stop there. Using this same technology and platform, IAMA will have the ability to better serve mission aviation by also connecting schools, vendors, donors, pilots and anyone else who wishes to be involved.
When will we see it? IAMA hopes to go live with the portal this fall. Start visiting the IAMA website (www.iamanet.org) this summer as bits and pieces of the portal start appearing. For those interested tecky-types, the technology for this tool is being provided by WM Tek, using a platform they created called Site Stacker. You can check them out at www.wmtek.com.
Fort Sherman Academy
Fort Sherman Academy (FSA) was present at the 2010 IAMA conference this year to provide hostage survival and security training. For those who participated, it was a said to be a powerful event and highly recommended for anyone planning on spending any length of time traveling oversees in potentially hostile environments. David Dose then gave a 45-minute presentation to the rest of the attendees . Having lived oversees myself, I fully recommend the high impact quality training being offered by FSA.
Consider a few statistics:
- 2009 there were 3,000,000 short-term ‘missionaries’, and 20% of them had some sort of crisis.
- Annual increase in crime against Westerners increases roughly15% each year.
- In the event of a kidnapping or detention situation, an organization can plan on spending $50,000 – $100,000. Can your ministry afford that?
Visit www.fortsherman.org for more information.
Survival Training
February 17, 2010 by jlsluiter
Filed under IAMA News, IAMA Spotlight
Missionary Aviation Aircrew Survival School
Course Information
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Survival Training Extraordinaire
This is as good as it gets, folks. Every once in awhile, a special offer comes along that simply can’t be ignored, and that’s what we have here. Thanks to a cooperative effort between MSI, Moody Aviation, and especially a dedicated team of instructors from Emergency Response International (ERI), some top-notch survival training is being made available to the mission aviation community at an incredibly low price. Trust me, these ERI guys are good. They train many of the world’s best—be it military, special ops, industry executives, or the like—and now they are using their talents to serve the mission aviation world.
The initial training session will be held June 14-18, 2010 at the Moody Aviation facilities at Felts Field in Spokane, WA. By design, this training will be broad spectrum, covering a wide variety of topics and environments. Class size is limited and priority will be given to Safety and Training staff who can multiply the effectiveness of this course by incorporating what they learn into their own organizational training.
The training is being provided at cost with those costs being divided equally among participants. Estimated costs per person for the week are between $250-300.
Course Detail
This is a pilot program specifically designed for mission aviation aircrews that operate in some of the most remote regions of the world. It is presented by Emergency Response International (ERI) in cooperation with Mission Safety International and Moody Aviation.
The course will be held 14 – 18 June 2010 at Moody Aviation, 6719 East Rudder Ave, Spokane, Washington 99212. Classes begin at Moody at 0800 on Monday, 14 June and will conclude by 1700 on Friday, 18 June. Contact information is included at the end of this list.
Students are responsible for their own transportation to Spokane, all meals and lodging, and transportation to and from the field training. Car pooling is recommended.
Training will consist of classroom discussions, field activities including an overnight bivouac, and water training in a swimming pool using the Shallow Water Egress Trainer (SWET). During field students will construct their own shelters and will spend the night in them. Certain materials will be provided to assist with shelter construction. A Survival Handbook will be provided and will be used as the course text, along with numerous handouts.
The following list of clothing and equipment will be needed for the various labs and the field portion of the survival course, adjusted as needed for weather and environment. However, we do not recommend that you buy a lot of new gear for this training. This is an opportunity to try out what you have and to find out what really works and what does not.
Pool Lab
Swim suit and tee shirt are acceptable. Old tennis, beach shoes or dive booties recommended. No leather shoes, boots or belts. Bring a towel and dry clothes to change into after the exercise.
Field Training
The field training will be conducted in a wooded area within an hour’s drive of Spokane. Weather is typically warm and dry with a chance of thunderstorms. The nights may be cool.
Student Clothing and Equipment List
Pack: Large enough for the items on the equipment list. A water proof cover, such as a large trash bag, is recommended.
Clothing: For 1 day and 1 night of field training, suitable for the terrain and anticipated weather conditions
Boots: Suitable for the terrain and anticipated weather conditions
Gloves: Leather recommended for shelter construction and other tasks
Water proof shell layer: Includes jacket with hood and pants, either Gore-tex or coated material.
Head protection: A hat with a brim for sun/rain protection. A large bandana to augment sun and wind protection is recommended and a stocking cap may be appropriate for cool nights…
Personal survival kit: Bring any items that you might normally carry for outdoor activities. This is a good opportunity to try out clothing and equipment
Sunscreen and Chap Stick: Essential!
Sun glasses: Wrap-around for maximum sun protection are recommended.
Base-plate type compass: Basic orienteering style compass such as a Brunton or a Silva. Lensatic compass acceptable but not recommended.
Multi-tool: Gerber, Leatherman, etc
Headlamp and Flashlight: A headlamp for working at night is recommended along with a backup flashlight and extra batteries.
Canteen, water bottle, Camelback, or other water container:
Cup: Metal cup that can be heated over a fire recommended.
550 Line: Also known as parachute cord or para cord, 7-strand, minimum of 50’
Signal Mirror: Glass with aim hole recommended
Whistle: Plastic, not metal
Fixed-blade knife: Durable full-shank utility knife for general use and wood splitting.
Saw: Utility saw such as the Pocket Chain Saw or Gerber or Buck folding saw
Food: Enough for 3 meals (1 day and 1 night) in the field. MREs (Meals Ready to Eat) recommended, or other high carbohydrate foods
Sleeping Bag: A light-weight bag or a bivouac sack should be sufficient.
Sleeping Pad: A closed-cell foam pad or a self-inflating pad such as a Therm-a-Rest recommended.
Applications and course coordination
Stephen Quigg, Mission Safety International
Phone: 717.284.4788
Email: CaptainQuigg@netzero.net
Questions about schedules, activities and equipment
Ralph Wilfong, Director of Operations, Emergency Response International
Office: 509.443.1377
Cell: 509.993.0092
Email: emtspec@comcast.net
Web Site: www.eri-online.com
Questions about Moody and the Spokane area
Allison Pfening, Moody Aviation
Office: 509.535.4051 Ext 256
Email: Allison.Pfening@moody.edu
Looking for a Cessna 206
October 20, 2009 by jlsluiter
Filed under IAMA Classifieds, aircraft
We are missionaries in Zambia, looking for a 1980’s Cessna 206.
Please contact Gordon Hanna if you have any information.
gordon@hannalink.net
Baby Born at 2,000′
October 9, 2009 by jlsluiter
Filed under A Day in the Life, About Mission Aviation, From the field, SAMAIR - Peru
“Sixty seconds later I looked back to see a little blue-faced baby passenger lying on the floor”
Date: 6 August, 2001
Jack Sluiter
Ya’ know, it started out like any other day. Up at 5:00 am to get the airplane ready and off the water by 7:30. Everything was going as planned and nothing was going to set this day apart as anything strange or unusual. That was until I called in to our home base at noon. I was sitting in a little jungle village (five or six houses) eating my lunch while I waited for passengers. They were coming by canoe from someplace unknown and would maybe be another hour before they arrived.
So I called Lisa on the radio to update what was happening. When I contacted her, the flight coordinator advised me that there was a medical emergency in Atsakus, another small jungle village (as if there was anything other than small jungle villages around). It happened that there was a women who had been in labor for three days and still had not given birth. They needed to get her to a hospital today or she may not live through the night. Since Atsakus was a river village without a runway, and I was sitting in the only float plane flying in Peru, it dawned on me that I might have to change my schedule.
Kodiak Kids from IAMA – Personalizing World Missions
PURPOSE
The purpose of the Kodiak Kids Program (KKP) is to provide an opportunity for local groups to be involved with missions through the raising of funds for mission aviation.
WHAT IT IS
The KKP enables groups, such as schools, churches, and businesses, to raise money for a mission aviation aircraft or project through a variety of creative means. You and your group would interact with the mission aviation organization of your choice on a consistent basis. This fosters a sense of ownership and personal connection. In this way, you and your group can have a tangible role in helping fulfill the Great Commission through aviation.
The KKP is a service of IAMA, the International Association of Missionary Aviation (www.iamanet.org). IAMA oversees the program and coordinates the initial contact between your group and the mission aviation organization you’d like to team up with.
HOW IT WORKS
1. Mission aviation organizations identify projects.
These projects could be for the purchase, maintenance, overhaul, or operation of an aircraft. (Note: See the “requirements” section below.)
The program is open to all IAMA-member organizations and can include any airplane or helicopter type.
2. Mission organizations register their projects with IAMA, who will post them in a special section of the IAMA website.
3. Your group selects a project and then contacts the IAMA Kodiak Kids Program Coordinator.
4. The KKP Coordinator will put you in touch with the project contact person at the mission aviation organization.
5. The aviation ministry organization will provide information to help your group connect with the project.
Such connection could be in the form of videos, photos, email updates, or other materials. Field trips to the organization could be arranged. Visits to your group by missionaries could be planned.
Connection is a hallmark of the KKP.
6. Your group raises funds for the project in whatever creative ways it devises.
7. Working with its organizational partner, the group will see the fulfillment of its fundraising efforts and follow the aircraft or project as it goes into action on the field.
BENEFITS
To IAMA-member organizations:
1. Funds are raised for aircraft or other aviation projects.
2. Public awareness is increased and public relations are enhanced.
3. Relationships with the participating groups/individuals are forged, potentially leading to future involvement, either on a personal or group level.
To your group (and the individuals comprising it):
1. Opportunities to be tangibly involved with mission aviation are readily available.
2. A sense of community and teamwork is fostered.
3. Individuals (particularly young people) can learn about missions and have their horizons expanded.
4. Relationships with the mission aviation organization are forged, potentially leading to future involvement, either on a personal or group level.
REQUIREMENTS
Mission aviation organizations must meet the following requirements to participate in the Kodiak Kids Program:
1. Participating mission aviation organizations must be members in good standing of IAMA.
2. Projects must be identified and sufficiently described, to include:
TITLE:
For example: Mauritania Caravan Refurbishment.
NATURE OF PROJECT AND WHAT IT ENTAILS:
For example: The refurbishment of a Cessna 208 Caravan for service in Mauritania, West Africa. The cost of this project is $400,000 and will entail an engine and propeller overhaul, avionics upgrades, and the installation of a pod, safety seats, and utility interior.
HOW THE PROJECT WILL BENEFIT FIELD MINISTRY:
This is a descriptive paragraph explaining the “what, where, who, how, and why” of the project’s outcome.
For example: This Cessna 208 Caravan is being refurbished for service in Mauritania, West Africa, where it will transport community development specialists, health care workers, and national evangelists. By providing safe, reliable transportation, XYZ Mission will be meeting the spiritual and physical needs of the isolated people of Mauritania. (Note: This is a short version; longer would be desired.)
SPECIFIC MECHANISMS FOR KEEPING THE PARTICIPATING GROUP INFORMED AND INVOLVED (e.g . email updates, photos, videos, visits, etc):
This also includes information, photos, or video of the people whom the aircraft or project will serve.
HOW THE GROUP’S MONIES WILL BE RECEIPTED AND HANDLED
3. The name, email, and phone number if a person who will be the point of contact (POC) with which the KK group will interact.
FOR MORE INFORMATION CONTACT:
Teena Ray, KKP Coordinator for IAMA. iamachristian@rocketmail.com or call my cell: 863-738-6434.
First term missionary family adventures
June 4, 2009 by admin
Filed under Adventists World Aviation, From the field
Guyana
Adventure (verb):
1. an undertaking usually involving danger and unknown risks
2. an exciting or remarkable experience
There is no question that our family’s first year in Guyana met all of the definitions of the word adventure. By God’s grace we (the Wickwire Family) have come through relatively unscathed. As for exciting and remarkable, we could write a book, and perhaps almost have if we look back at the stories posted on the website.

Adventist World Aviation’s Wings for Humanity Foundation Missionary team members: the Wickwires
So what are some of the highlights and challenges? Waking up with a rat sitting on the headboard six inches from my head; chasing a snake down the stairs and out of the house with a broom; discovering that by closing our eyes and using our imaginations, a lot of local foods can taste a lot like something familiar at home. For example: breadfruit fries = French fried potatoes; cooked ripe plantain = apples in oatmeal; soursop = sorbet; whipped coconut milk = whipped cream; dried five finger (starfruit) = raisins and so on.
Making close friends among the local people takes time. This has been particularly difficult for Jacob and Zack as they interact with the local boys. We come from such different life experiences and world views. The people are wonderful though; nearly everyone knows us and greets us cheerfully. We struggle to learn everyone’s names or at least recognize who they are. They assume we remember everyone. I will often get phone calls that start like this: “This is the mother of the girl that fly with you in the yellow plane, she ready to go outback.” Often it can take quite some time to ascertain who they are talking about, where they are, and where they need to go.
The monthly AWA boat trips 30 miles up the Barima River to the village of Blackwater have been very rewarding. We have watched the villagers become a more cohesive group as they grow in the understanding of the message of salvation. They now meet every Sabbath with the guidance of a resident Bible/health worker we placed there. Just this week we took delivery of a brand new 24-foot dugout canoe that will be used to transport the Bible worker to homes as well as collect people for meetings at the church.
The impact of AWA’s yellow, Cessna 182 airplane on people’s lives has been immeasurable. I would love to post a list of how many lives have been saved, but that is impossible to know. However, this is what we can state for certain: 207 patients were transported to advanced medical care, 63 of which were critical cases where loss of life or limb was probable; 107 Guyana Ministry of Health personnel were taken for clinics, vaccinations or patient care; 131 patients who had completed treatments were returned to as close to their home villages as we could take them. Church workers, ministry and outreach personnel and AWA’s Wings for Humanity staff accounted for 110 seats. In total for the last 12 months (August 2007 to August 2008), we carried 763 passengers on over 450 flights logging just over 400 flight hours, all with one Cessna 182 and two pilots.
One recent case involved a 12 year-old boy named Godfrey Rammit from a village called Red Hill. He had a compound fracture of the radius and ulna, and it is common to see people here with permanent disabilities from fractures that don’t get properly set. Godfrey was being sent to Georgetown alone. He had never been to the city before and was ill-equipped to deal with getting through the system of complete treatment. Our AWA Guyana Project team was concerned that he could simply fall through the cracks.

Adventist World Aviation’s Wings for Humanity Foundation Missionary team members: the LaBores
Laura LaBore, AWA’s Guyana Project pilot/nurse, asked for permission to send him to Davis Memorial Hospital under Davis Interior Medical Emergency Service (DIMES) program, which provides free treatment for patients from remote communities. The initial attempt to set the fracture was unsuccessful so he had to have surgery to have pins and screws put in place and then a cast. He spent a few days at the hospital before we could take him back to Mabaruma, where he spent a few weeks hanging around the local hospital very patiently. We then flew him back to Georgetown where he spent another couple of weeks at the Amerindian Hostel until he was able to get the pins removed. At that time, AWA’s Guyana Project team and its yellow Cessna 182 took him back to Mabaruma where he was able to catch a boat back home. It was a long process, but in the end our team sent a boy back home fully recovered and able to live a normal life with no disability.
After one year in Guyana, we are looking forward to God’s plan for us and his work here.
MAF Dedicates Its First KODIAK Missionary Plane

Nine hundred guests joined MAF in dedicating its first KODIAK aircraft at its headquarters in Nampa, Idaho May 2. The cutting-edge missionary plane will be deployed in Papua, Indonesia. (Click to enlarge)
NAMPA, Idaho – MAF (Mission Aviation Fellowship) inaugurated a new era in missionary aviation when it dedicated its first KODIAK aircraft on May 2 at its headquarters here.
MAF is a faith-based, nonprofit ministry that serves missions and isolated people around the world with aviation, communications and learning technologies. The new KODIAK is the first of the next-generation bush planes to be produced under a visionary arrangement between MAF and the manufacturer, Quest Aircraft Co. of Sandpoint, Idaho.
This first KODIAK will be deployed in Papua, Indonesia.
A crowd of MAF staff, Christian leaders and Nampa residents participated in the dedication ceremony, as well as an afternoon of activities.
“Today’s events celebrate a technological achievement that will allow MAF to be more effective stewards of the resources God has given us,” said John Boyd, president of MAF. “But this new KODIAK is more than an example of leading-edge technology. It is an example of what God’s people can do when they pursue God’s will in God’s way. The unprecedented cooperation between missionary organizations that made this day possible is a model for 21st century missionary efforts. It is both exciting and humbling to be in the midst of a project that God has blessed so abundantly.”
Paul Schaller, chief executive officer of Quest Aircraft Co., told the crowd, “Serving the needs of the missionary community and those they help is the purpose for which Quest was built. It is gratifying to see it come to fruition with this first delivery to MAF.”
Among local leaders participating in the dedication ceremony were Tom Dale, the mayor of Nampa, and Montie Ralston, lead pastor of Boise Valley Christian Communion and a member of the MAF board of directors.
The dedication ceremony marks a milestone in missionary aviation in part because the KODIAK will be significantly less expensive to operate than the planes it will replace in the MAF fleet. Most MAF planes, including the popular Cessna 206, run on aviation gasoline, or “avgas,” which is scarce and expensive in many of the remote areas where MAF operates. However, the KODIAK is powered by jet fuel, which is more plentiful and much less expensive than avgas.
Over the next few years, MAF will replace 20 of its Cessna 206s with planes that operate on jet fuel, either KODIAKs or Cessna Caravans. Because the KODIAK can carry nearly twice the cargo of the C206, MAF will transport medicine, food and disaster relief supplies much more efficiently, reducing operating costs.
Founded in the United States in 1945, MAF (HYPERLINK “http://www.maf.org”www.maf.org) missionary teams of aviation, communications, technology and education specialists overcome barriers in remote areas, transform lives and build God’s Kingdom by enabling the work of more than 1,000 organizations in isolated regions around the world. With its fleet of 130 bush aircraft, MAF serves in 55 countries, with an average of 242 flights daily across Africa, Asia, Eurasia and Latin America. MAF pilots transport missionaries, medical personnel, medicines and relief supplies, as well as conduct thousands of emergency medical evacuations. MAF also provides telecommunications services, such as satellite Internet access, high frequency radios, electronic mail and other wireless systems.
Missionary Flights International Video
May 13, 2009 by admin
Filed under Member Videos, Mission Agency Videos
IAMA member, Missionary Flights International (aka MFI), is a Florida, US based missionary aviation ministry. This is the story of Missionary Flights International – How it began, its goals, and its outreach to missions in the Caribbean.
http://www.vimeo.com/4628292Short Term Missions Trips – Africa
May 10, 2009 by admin
Filed under From the field, africa inland missions
From the four corners of America to the mysterious reaches of East and Central Africa… Professionals, students, moms, and every variety of church lay-people pack their bags and brave the vaccinations. They come to Africa on a mission.
For some it is a repeat journey, but for most it is the very first time. Their mission is often well planned and clearly defined, but what lies ahead is pretty much unknown. Maybe that’s part of what draws them here each summer, the teams of volunteers, coming to give something of themselves to a land they know very little about. The uncertainty, the apprehension, and lack of control are part of the package. But, even at the onset, there is a suspicion that what a person takes away from two weeks in Africa will be much more than what he leaves behind.
At some point in time, all of the planning and packing comes to a juncture on the ramp at Wilson Airport in Nairobi – as the team circles around the airplane for a group photo, and the bags (minus the three that British Airways sent to Australia) are weighed. The team will gather here bewildered and jet-lagged – so far from home, but so excited for what’s ahead. It’s a mix of joy, fatigue, and some small concern that the pilot for this harrowing flight into the African bush looks like he’s sixteen and just got his pilot’s license yesterday.
As I meet them at the plane, the tool of my ministry, I introduce them to the idea of a pilot who is really a missionary.
We work together to get all the baggage aboard while I entertain questions… “Yes, I’ve been here awhile… I’m actually thirty-three… from New Jersey… Well, I haven’t lived there recently, so that’s why I don’t talk funny. Yes, I’m married… Here’s a picture of my wife and kids. It’s a Cessna… About 700 horsepower. No, the weather won’t be a problem.”
In the process I find out that they are from a church in west Texas, or that they are students from different schools across the country brought together for this trip. I discover that some of them are still a little apprehensive, and I try putting their fears to rest with a confident word and a pre-flight prayer. The copilot seat is then offered up, as a bonus of sorts, to someone in the group who has always wanted to learn to fly, or to the one most unsettled about small airplanes. The front-seater gets a photo at the controls, a headset, and a new friend from north Jersey.
I am optimistic for these new acquaintances and kindred hearts because I know some things that they do not yet know.
For instance, I know that the plane will indeed pick them up in two weeks from the little unreachable corner of Kenya or Sudan that we dropped them off at. And I know that they will most likely come back a different person. They will be appalled, and amazed at what they see there. They will lose some sleep under a mosquito net, imagining every manner of creepy crawling thing in God’s creation. They will sit with lifelong missionaries and discover that they are not all that different from themselves. They will come to love the African people there, and the children will especially capture their hearts. They will cry because of the world that these children grow up in — for the first time in their lives having a picture of “what it means.” What it means to need, what it means to suffer, what it means to fear. They will take a moment sometime in those weeks to examine their own lives and their own faith. And they will inevitably fall short.
After fourteen days or so, the airplane will arrive overhead a mixed blessing. For it is the sound of relief… the sound of a good meal, a hot shower, and a decent night’s rest. But also the signal that this is goodbye. In sweat and time and love they have given everything they had to give. And now they know for sure that they could never give enough. The flight back to the city is different from the one out. My passengers are looking tired. Most are quiet; gazing out the windows, writing in a journal, or fast asleep.
One is up front with me on the headsets again. I query him about the trip and am encouraged. And then I hear him say it – words I have heard so many times, in so many ways… “I come away with so much more than I gave.” I smile and nod and think, “I know what you mean.”
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AIM AIR website: www.aimair.org






