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thedrifter
06-12-03, 06:10 AM
Message of love gets a lift on its way to the Gulf


By Jodie Tweed, Special to Stars and Stripes
European edition, Wednesday, June 11, 2003


STAPLES, Minn. — A red balloon was a message of love from an 8-year-old Staples, Minn., girl to her Marine dad stationed in the Persian Gulf region.

Cierra Waverek had hoped when she released the balloon May 15 it would fly all the way to her dad, who was then in Bahrain.

She wrote her name and address, and the address of her father, Chief Warrant Officer 3 Mark Waverek, on a note and attached it to the balloon before setting it aloft.

Her father told her during a telephone call he would catch the balloon if he saw it flying by.

But the balloon landed about 170 miles away from Staples in Goodhue, Minn. On May 17, Goodhue farmer Bruce McNamara was tending to his cornfield and found something red next to his tractor. It was Cierra’s balloon.

Her writing was still visible on the tattered, deflated balloon as well as the note.

McNamara brought the balloon inside at lunchtime to show his wife, Marie. The couple, who own a 230-acre farm, got out a state map and figured the balloon traveled about 170 miles.

They could tell a child sent the balloon because of the handwriting.

Bruce McNamara suggested they mail the balloon back.

“I thought the little girl would be sad if she got the balloon back,” Marie McNamara said. “So I said, ‘Oh, Bruce, we have to mail it to her dad.’ I was very touched to see this little girl write to her dad and I thought, ‘Gee, I bet he misses his family.’”

On May 22, the McNamaras mailed the balloon and a letter to Waverek in Bahrain. They also sent a letter to Cierra explaining they found her balloon and mailed it to her dad.

Waverek received the balloon last week in Kuwait.

The girl’s mother, Charlene Waverek, was so moved by the McNamaras’ letter, she couldn’t get through the first paragraph.

“She was crying,” Cierra said.

Cierra came up with the idea to loft a balloon to her father following a May 15 family fun night at Staples Elementary School in Staples.

Cierra and her 6-year-old brother, Dakota, each took home balloons from the event.

During the ride home, their mother told the children that when she was in elementary school, she and her classmates released balloons bearing their names and addresses to see how far they would travel.

Cierra began to think about sending her balloon to her father.

She drew rainbows and hearts all over the balloon, writing messages such as, “I love you, daddy” and “I miss you.”

Her mother helped her attach a note.

The girl released the balloon from the back door — her 14-year-old brother, Nicholas, told her that was the way to Bahrain.

Cierra stood in the back yard and watched the balloon float away until it disappeared over the horizon. That night, she wrote a letter to her dad.

“I am sending you a balloon with my address on it and yours so if you see a balloon floating, try to grab it daddy ’cause it’s from me because I wanted to see if it would work,” Cierra wrote. “I miss you very, very, very, very much.”

Charlene Waverek and her four children, ages 6-14, moved from Japan to Staples in January; her husband remained to finish his military career.

Then the war in Iraq began, and Mark Waverek was sent to Qatar and is now in Kuwait.

Charlene Waverek hoped there was a chance someone would find the balloon, but she knew the chances were slim.

“I would say it’s a miracle,” Charlene Waverek said. “A balloon lands in a yard of people caring enough to send it. This balloon was destined to get to her dad.”

Jodie Tweed writes for the Brainerd (Minn.) Daily Dispatch.


http://www.estripes.com/article.asp?section=104&article=16003


Sempers,

Roger