These weeks in Madonna House have been
all about the new life bursting forth all about us. It is the big push for
planting on the farm—in recent weeks we have had work bees after supper to
plant first onions, then potatoes, then cabbage. Broccoli awaits us this week.
For some years now the community has committed itself to a weekly farm garden
bee, and it has proven to be an efficient way for us all to work together to
plant, thin, weed, or harvest, depending on the season.
Meanwhile it is apple blossom season, and
what a year for apple blossoms it is. The central feature in the MH main house
grounds is a small apple orchard next to our parking lot and the path to our
chapel. The trees have been thick with blossoms this year, their delicate sweet
scent perfuming the air, the buzzing of many bees letting us know that the
pollinators are doing their job, too.
Best yet, the apple blossoms coincided
with the first really warm days of the year. In past years we have had late
frosts that have damaged (or in the case of last year, completely wiped out)
the apple harvest. This year, no such misfortune has occurred, and whatever
else we end up eating from our land, it would appear that we will be hip-deep
in apples at this rate.
Our guest population has had a small bump,
courtesy mostly of the men’s side of things. Several seminarians from
Philadelphia are spending a few weeks with us after their academic year; others
have come to join us as well. Now it is the women’s turn to scratch their heads
as the number of women guests has dwindled to a handful. Any young ladies out
there want to come for a spiritual adventure at Madonna House? The door is
open!
The priests have been busy guys, running
around here and there giving retreats and days of recollection. Two of them gave
or helped to give retreats to seminarians; I gave a day of recollection on the
Year of Mercy near Ottawa; we have had numerous requests lately to cover Sunday
Masses in parishes in the surrounding towns.
A big push right now is Cana Colony, our
MH family camp. For those new to the blog and unfamiliar with it, this is a six
week program we run where as many as nine families can come each week for a
vacation-retreat experience, with daily Mass and a conference and lots of time
together as families. The season starts more or less a month from now, so there
is a great deal of work to get the camp cleaned up and set up to receive the
families.
This is the one apostolic work we do that
actually has a papal mandate, having been the one specific thing Pope Pius XII
personally asked Catherine Doherty to do when she had a private audience with him in 1951. It has
always been a very fruitful apostolate, and I personally believe it is the
grace of that papal mandate at work.
Our gift shops had their big opening last
weekend, which was a holiday long weekend in Canada. This is where we sell all
the ‘nice’ things that come in donation here—collectibles, jewelry, objets
d’art and so on—as well as our MH books and handicrafts. There is also our used
book store. All the proceeds from the shops do not remain in Combermere, but go
directly to missionaries across the world.
In Canada the May long weekend is the
typical time people open up their cottage for the year, and this is very much
cottage country, so the shops were busy as can be last weekend. It is a
herculean effort to keep these shops running, but the results are beyond
value—schools, orphanages, hospitals, dispensaries, seminaries, and so much
more receive funding from these little shops tucked away in an obscure corner
of the Ottawa Valley.
Finally, the men are hard at work on the
women’s guest dorm, the upper level of which is well along with being
renovated. Dry walling and painting is occurring at this point, which is always
a good sign that the project is approaching completion. We have been grateful
for the influx of men guests, who have thrown themselves in to that project
with enthusiasm.
That’s about it for now—MH is a busy,
busy place between the farm and the rest of the summer season. In the midst and
through it all, be assured of our prayers for you all and for our troubled
world.
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