Tag Archives: progress

Of Laudie-dog, stooping non-stooping birds, and other news at HSH

laudie-dogWhen I was a little kid in Kindergarten, I had the privilege of having the great Mrs. Klaphake for teacher. I mean, do you remember your Kindergarten teacher’s name? Anyway, she presided well over the mayhem. I was especially impressed with her abilities during lunch-hour. If I had a bunch of grapes with me, and some other kid saw this, and presented a mouth yawning wide, I would try to toss one of those grapes in the direction of his or her mouth. Most often, this wouldn’t be successful, depending on how you looked at it, for then that grape would soon be tossed high into the air and the others would all try to grab it in their mouths all at once. I think I was sent to sit in the corner a few times! That did me good I’m sure. This picture of the great Laudie-dog reminds me of all that. I must be getting old. Such memories!

bird

Also in Minnesota, but this time further out in the Northern forests, where our home had some tall windows next to the garden, non-stooping birds of all sorts would — and I hate to say this — they would fly with all their might, as if stooping like a falcon in bomb-diving position, and smash against the windows, sometimes knocking themselves out, sometimes breaking their necks. :( The bangs against the window were sometimes a bit frightening, so loud would the collisions be. There were, thankfully, zillions of birds in Minnesota, much more than in the rain forest here. The solution would be to draw the drapes across the window. That really works. No drapes here. But there’s only been one bird that I’ve seen in my now over two years here that has met his demise by way of window stooping. This kind is pretty common. Not sure what it is.

In other news, I’m bound and determined to:

  • Put up a Thanks to Benefactors post
  • Put up some insulation in the hermitage
  • Put up some posts with Father Mark Gruber’s conferences
  • Put up some posts with the interview I did with a most wonderful 93 years young Holocaust era survivor
  • Re-trench the trenches on the path up the ridge to the hermitage as the promised flood-warning rains smash down on already totally drenched ground — threatening already compromised slope stability — so that there are not only flood warnings, but also landslide warnings. Yikes! 
  • Continue with Spring cleaning.  
  • Put up some Florae for the Immaculate Conception posts.
  • Continue with this novena (join anytime!) – 

The Judas Crisis: A Special Request for Priests (1-9 May, 2013)

Update: I was distracted today from my to-do list.

  • I ended up ripping off the old door of the chicken coop below the hermitage, the one’s that a pack of transmitter-collared hound dogs smashed through at the beginning of 2012, killing the rooster. The door just literally fell apart as time went by. So, another, from Habitat for humanity, almost for free, went up in its place today.
  • I totally dissembled the gradines in back of the alter and reinforced everything, and gave everything a good cleaning, and then put it all back up again. Much better. Also, the sanctuary candle was put next to the tabernacle, even while the lamp-holder was removed from the wall to make room for a more solid wall between the chapel and the wood-stove area.
  • I hauled in more firewood before the unending rains really got going. But the day is not over!

door

Update: More distractions:

  • The sanctuary candle went back up, along with Our Lady of Guadalupe (exact color and size) which I received from the sacristan of the Basilica down the way, and also the Icon of the Most Holy Trinity as written by Andrey Rublev.

chapel

  • A great boon for working on the hermitage a bit has been the ripping down of a… um… plastic tent which I had put up in the hermitage next to the wood stove. I had been living in that for the winter because of the lack of insulation. But now I’m getting to that things like insulation, so, O.K.

10 Comments

Filed under faunae, progress

Cemetery indulgence — Hermitage progress — Laudie learns to fly

This is the new Catholic section of one of the hundreds of local cemeteries, this being one of the larger cemeteries around, though you couldn’t tell it from this picture. In the first days of November, there’s a particularly easy plenary indulgence you can get for the Holy Souls: here.

This is the last big bit of plastic that served as a wall for the hermitage for the past year. It’s just been dropped to the ground from on high since — you guessed it — just about the last section of non-wall has been replaced with something more substantial (plywood and 2x4s).

That bit of plastic was not tossed or even put away. It’s now serving as a way to keep the kindling dry.

Kindling… Some of those branches are 4 inches thick. I’ll have to use the saw on them again to get them down to size. Here’s another pile about three times as large. I’ve yet to cover it up.

I’m distracted by a certain Laudie who thinks she can fly if she just flaps her ears fast enough.

Since she’s putting on weight, and she thinks she can fly, why don’t I just call her Dumbo after, you know…

Such distractions! I’ll have to get back to writing about Genesis. Lot’s of animals in that account as well.

3 Comments

Filed under Holy Souls, progress, Purgatory

Holy Souls Hermitage progress with the Baldacchino: step by step creation

L.T., who is generously going to paint the baldacchino (which will be the painting, as it’s 4 by 8 feet!) is making some good progress, well actually not her at this point. It’s her husband and young son who took charge of the stretcher bars and the attachment of the canvas. quite the project in order to relax after SAR (Search and Rescue) activities for hurricane sandy. The stretcher bars are above, and their young son is helping measure below.

Everything squared away…

O.K. So, you get the idea of how big the baldacchino will be!

Ready to stretch the canvas…

The first nerve racking staples…

The image will a representation of the alabaster window of the Holy Spirit above the Cathedra of Saint Peter in Saint Peter’s Basilica in Vatican City. You can see that the smaller painting of a chickadee (also her work!) is dwarfed by the larger canvas…

From the progress email:

Hello, Father!

It’s been an interesting couple of weeks here. Sandy’s timing made us miss my husband’s 4th Degree Knight installation. The evening before we were supposed to go, he got called in to work the hurricane prep. Sigh. All in God’s time, right?

Needless to say that between the storm and his working hours, nothing happened for a while with the baldacchino. We are grateful beyond belief that we weathered the storm as well as we did – where we live we often lose power even in summer squalls so we were quite amazed that ours remained on throughout the storm. Having lived through Katrina in New Orleans, our hearts especially ache for all those in the NE who are now dazed and hurting.

The very first thing that my husband did with his first day off yesterday was to assemble the stretcher bars and mount the canvas. A lot of (to me) tedious measurements went into it’s construction. It is as square as it comes. We laugh because this is the part of the project I wanted nothing to do with – and this was the part he was eager to do. He is the meticulous, detail oriented one, and me….not so much! Apparently as you can see from the photos, my younger son is cut from the same cloth as his father – he happily helped by measuring and remeasuring throughout the entire process, cheerily exclaiming, “That looks just fine, Dada!”

The next part is attaching the canvas to the frame. Happily, my artist friend (who had the gall to move across country right before I volunteered for this – what was she thinking?!) was back in town recently and gave us a quick run down on how to pull the canvas – you start in the middle and work your way out, pulling and tugging almost in a spiral motion from the centers of the four bars to the corners – outwards and opposites, if that makes sense. Slowly, surely, the wrinkles pull out and you are left with a nice smooth surface.

The canvas is so large that we are going to mount it on the wall in our bedroom instead of trying to cobble together an easel. It has the bonus of having the best lighting in the house, a door that keeps my little “helper” at bay (until/unless he CAN be helpful), and…well…it will provide some…ah…motivation I suppose – not like I can “forget” that I need to work on the painting! The hanging has to wait until my husband comes back from the second part of his SAR training.

Once its in position, I am going to be borrowing a projector from my church’s school to enlarge the image onto the canvas. Although I have painted murals on my son’s walls before in freehand, I’m going to “cheat” and try to get the dove of the Holy Spirit as exact as possible. Alas, the projector may also entail some wait time because I was supposed to get it early next week, however, that was before Sandy came roaring in. The projector needs a bulb replaced and calibrated and the generous teacher who is lending me the projector first must tend to report cards and who knows what else that cropped up because of the storm. Understandably, a burned out bulb isn’t going to be high on her list!

So I leave you with some photos to let you see the process before the process….

God Bless!

Wow! Thanks so much, L.T., for the illustrated progress report. Not only will this make for the best baldacchino that any hermitage ever had, but it will make the baldacchino’s of the great cathedrals and basilicas around the world rather envious. Hah! We’ll show them how to do it right!

Leave a Comment

Filed under baldacchino

Progress on the baldachin for Holy Souls Hermitage: Bernini’s alabaster window and the successor of Saint Peter

One of our faithful readers has volunteered to paint a canvas which will be fit into the underside of a small baldachin for Holy Souls Hermitage, small meaning four by eight feet!

The usual image one finds on the “ceiling” of a baldachin is the Holy Spirit. I’ve chosen this detail of Bernini’s alabaster window, which is appropriately above Saint Peter’s Cathedra in Saint Peter’s basilica in Rome. The picture in this post will help our artist, as it is twice as long as it is high, so, the right proportions, but in miniature.

The picture in this post is rather on the dark side, as I wanted to get in all the detail I could. I’m hoping that the final result will be brighter.

The artist has asked me to write a bit — if I would be bold — about the “spirit” of the Holy Spirit. Hmmm…. I had better not! However, I might be able to describe a bit of what I see going on in Bernini’s work.

Note, if you will, that the dove is not precisely centered in the circle, verifiable if you look at the wingtips. Also note the ever so slight tilt of the body, itself tensed up for the upcoming violence that is about to take place. Look at the ferocious eyes, intense and intent. He’s swooping in for the kill, as a bird of prey might do. Note what, in this case, I can only call talons[!], are ready to dig deeply into the victim, to carry him off, thankfully, unto sanctification, unto truth in all charity, unto, in the case of the Holy Father, the protection of fatherly, infallible teaching of faith and morals.

The Holy Spirit, so firey in love, forms us into the image of Mary Immaculate’s Son, Jesus, as He is now, in heaven. Yet, we are still in this world. Our reception of such a grace will, in this world, have us be crucified to our fallen nature, to the world, the flesh and the devil, so that we might aptly manifest the love of our risen Lord. Christ Jesus, mind you, still bears those wounds on hands and feet and side… in His Sacred Heart. We get to know a bit of the majesty of those wounds here on this earth in all humble thanksgiving. But we have to be killed off to our egoism to be in humble thanksgiving, no? The Holy Spirit is quite ferocious, with, of course, incomparable enthusiasm.

Anyway, since prayers and Masses go up for our Holy Father at Holy Souls Hermitage, I figured that this would be the best image to have above the Altar of Sacrifice. One of the major writing projects — by far the most important one on Genesis — has much to do with the Holy Father and the Magisterium of the Church. Yikes!

Read the great article by the seminarians of the North American College in Rome here.

Leave a Comment

Filed under Catholic, progress

NO MORE HOLY SOULS HERMITAGE BOOK EXILE!!!

That’s two deep, at about 60 pounds a box, and a couple of dozen boxes. Do the math! Yikes! More strapped to the front — the trick about distributing the wieght of the load to make it up the mountaint that I learned with the huge red oak hauled up the mountain:

Books and research and all great things. They were rotting away, so I moved them off site, until now, as things are progressing well with the interior environment of the hermitage. Oh happy day!

To get these involved a trip of some hundreds of miles to the archive room of a distant church of a good priest friend. That was yesterday. I lived to tell the tale. Even with making the trip up the mountain in the middle of the night. Yikes! But they are all inside now. Now out of the boxes, but inside, so… great!

In this case, the wood of the books is like the wood of the cross. This makes up much of the “project” if you will, of the hermitage. So, this is significant.

1 Comment

Filed under books, progress

Trip two with Jenny the Jeep (pushing Jenny to the limits)

The ascent up the mountain went so well the first time, I thought I would push Jenny a bit further. On this trip, I had to exaggerate in weighing down the front end. The Jeep is rated for 1000 pounds. The previous owner doubled the spring steel “shocks”, allowing between 1500 and 2000 pounds, which is what I guess I’ve been doing. The tires don’t like that, but hey, we survived! Here’s the… um… passenger “seat”:

From the driver’s side. Plenty of room!

And of course, from the back:

With the wood of the cross spread out like this, Jenny went right up the mountain. You might be asking what the finished wood with hinges and stuff is. O.K. I got that for almost nothing at Habitat for Humanity. I’m thinking of making all that into the sidewalls of the itsybitsy little chapel in the hermitage. So, progress is being made.

The mornings have been rather cool, though I haven’t noticed any ice just yet. I already notice that the progress on replacing the plastic walls with wood or tin is helping out quite a bit. It’s less humid inside, and a some degrees warmer than it would have been last year. Thanks to all of you who have made this possible.

For instance, some of your donations have gone to renewing insurance for Jenny the Jeep. That helps a lot. May the Lord reward you all!

Leave a Comment

Filed under Benefactors, progress

What a day! Some pictures…

Holy Mass was offered just as the first glimmerings of hope that dawn might be breaking soon visited Holy Souls Hermitage.

However, right after Holy Mass, this ad orientem view was to be seen of this blue ridge mountain rain forest.

I looked closer outside, and, sure enough, there were mist clouds hugging Holy Souls Mountain, as usual. The humidity always hangs around 99%. The forest floor is almost always soaking wet, a mat of rotting pine needles and dead trees, even while that which is alive reaches to the heavens, still full of sap, still green.

Taking a closer look… yep! It’s a rain forest all right:

I’m guessing that there are some prayers going up for me, since I all of a sudden seem to have the gumption these days to do what I haven’t done for a very long time, which is to work on the hermitage. Perhaps it’s also a fear that this winter will be very long and very cold indeed. I took a gander at the plastic high up on one “wall” and tore it down, this being the result early this morning:

Not very weather-proof, you say? You would be right on that. So, after a bit of prestidigitation with hammer and saw, this was the result:

That will tend to keep the heat from the wood-stove inside just a bit more efficiently. The first winter in the breezy loft of the barn, and the second winter under unrolled tacked-up polyurethane, and now, the third winter coming up, what with some actual wind-breaking construction, all make and will make for unique experiences of the great outdoors such that, this winter, one might even be tempted to call it indoors!

Amidst a day of sunshine, then rain, then sun, then rain, etc., this was to be seen in the evening looking to the West of the hermitage:

And this was spotted while putting the chickens away for the night. Praise the Lord for all His creatures, great and small!

Did I mention I also saw two lynx together today, about 200 yards from the hermitage? Totally cool. I’m guessing that they are this years litter of the lynx I saw last year in almost the same place.

I write this post with a somewhat heavy heart. It seems that the security of the property on which the hermitage is situated might be a bit tenuous. More news on that coming up on 30 August, 2012. We shall see. A Hail Mary for that intention, please: Hail Mary…

 

11 Comments

Filed under progress

A Baldacchino for Holy Souls Hermitage Chapel? And thanks to benefactors

The above is a picture of what’s over the seven foot wide and six foot high, one inch thick polycarbonate window behind the ad orientem altar at Holy Souls Hermitage.

The space beween the top of the window, already a good ten feet from the floor, is about 30 inches. Horizontally, it would be a good eight feet from the center of one vertical roof supporting beam on the one side to the same on the other side of the window.

If I were to put up a 4′ by 8′ sheet of plywood, with one edge along the top edge of the window, it would have to be tilted over the altar at, say, a mere 30 degree angle, with the top edge being attached to the rafters. This would more than cover the entire altar and gradines.

So, a 4′ x 8′ space to fill up, artistically. Remember, this is Holy Souls Hermitage, so, perhaps something to do with the Holy Souls. However…

Traditionally, the underbelly, if you will, of just about any baldacchino, has an image of a white dove, symbol of the Holy Spirit, with a sun burst of golden rays shining out over a backdrop of deep blue.

I’m not much of an artist, so, I don’t know about painting such a scene. I wouldn’t want anything stylized, just simple, traditional…

I wonder if anyone has such a dove made out of whatever, which I could attach over a sunburst. I could paint the sunburst with gold paint, perhaps… Perhaps craft stores sell doves like this? Perhaps there is one carved in relief, which ensemble I could attach over a painted sunburst.

But, maybe someone of you has another idea… or suggestions as to how to go about this.

Thanks to those of you who have been sending a donation in here and there, against all my protestations. I now have 307 dollars and .34 cents in the checking account. I’ve bought some materials to continue to make the hermitage a bit more habitable. Good thing I didn’t get a drivers seat for Jenny the Jeep. With tax and shipping, that would have broken the bank.

Anyway, as you can see, I’ve continued putting up some wood to finish off the wall above the altar (at least as a first step). No more plastic! That’s a blessing. I’ve also done the same on this Eastern side of the hermitage around another set of windows. I also put up a few more sheets of corrugated tin. And that’s after having put a door in the other week!

About a third of the hermitage walls are still no more than plastic sheeting. But, progress is being made. This is quite miraculous, really. I don’t know what’s gotten into me. Usually, this is all quite beyond me. I’m thanking my guardian angel for all this. I think he’s saved me more than once even just today. I was up about twenty feet I don’t know how many times on the extension ladder, and this with a pulled, if not ripped muscle attached, I’m told, to the achilles tendon (or perhaps not that much attached as it was!). And that’s on the bad leg. Yikes!

Also, thanks go to C.W., who sent in a care package for myself and the neighbors (after their accident). A prayer for them please: Hail Mary…

Thanks go to T.P.F. & R.L.F. for their regular, unsolicited gift to the hermitage. Very thoughtful.

Thanks also go to the new parish priest, Pastor, of Sacred Heart Catholic Church in Brevard, who gave me a totally unsolicited gift the other day, besides a meal out, besides having heard my confession! He’s a great confessor. He makes time for confession. You locals: Go to confession!

And this card came in with a Mass stipend. A grey or gray wolf. The Sierra crowd is trying to reintroduce them into all 49 continental states if they’re not already there. I sure haven’t seen any around here. In Minnesota we had Timber Wolves. Same difference I guess. Maybe it’s just that Minnesota wolves are smarter. If there were all of a sudden a big uptick in the wolf population, I imagine they would be concentrated around the forest ridges here. Don’t know if they are protected in North Carolina. I don’t have a gun, but I do have my trusty Ka-Bar!

5 Comments

Filed under Benefactors, progress

Benefactors, Masses, Jenny the Jeep, Chickens (sad) and great progress on the hermitage!

Thanks for directing Mass intentions my way, against all my protestations…

  • Wednesday, 3 October, 2012, Holy Mass is offered for Monsignor J.S., at the request of T.B.
  • Thursday, 4 October through 2 November, 2012, Holy Mass is offered for S. and R. at the request of F.K.

Thanks to recent benefactors, I was able to get a new battery for Jenny, as you know. Turns out, she also needs a new watchamacallit, into which all the wires go, and over which glop is poured (whatever the name of that is. The neighbor helped to install this. If any more donations come in, against all my, indeed, tantrum like protestations, perhaps I’ll be able to get a drivers seat for Jenny. The back has been broken off of it for over a year now I think… Jenny plays the mother hen once in a while.

The sad bit is that not even one of the eggs hatched. DON’T count your eggs before they are hatched! I’ll try again later, if I can finally get a heat lamp to put the eggs. My chickens are not at all good brooders, despite the size eggs they lay.

Anyway, I used Jenny to bring up 46 firebricks (to line the inside of the woodstove, to conserve on firewood!), 9 sheets of corrugated tin and four sheets of plywood, not to mention kindling, all in one trip up the mountain. She did well, not skipping a beat. This was after I carried a steel door (framed) up the mountain on my back, when Jenny was stilling ailing. This was all due to your donations, which I took advantage of, ripping out, finally, the unrolled polyurethane sheeting “door” and “wall” of the entrance of the hermitage. All this ate into what you all sent in, but, I think, it is worth it in preparation for winter. Here’s a shot of the new front entrance. Note the additional steps up which I also added. This was all done in one day, mind you…

You might be wondering why I got the plywood and tin. Here are some more pics of the rest of the Western Wall (the blue bit behind the plastic will be installed elsewhere in the hermitage, I think along the chapel wall, under the window), then a view from the South, East and North:

The “wire” you see in the picture from the South below is the old, now lightning struck and defunct Verizon antenna. I’ll have to do something about getting that new one…

Here’s the upper bit along the Eastern side. In the next week, I’m going to try to do something about the bit above the chapel at least…

Here’s part of the Northern wall. Not as bad as it looks. There is a bit of wood and a couple of windows behind all that, but most of it is open air behind the plastic…

And just in case you didn’t think there were still critters inside the hermitage just because I now have a door, here’s a shot of a hummingbird in flight inside (above the altar!). He got out safely… They’re rare up on the mountain, in the forest… A pleasant surprise.

Thank you, thank you again for supporting the hermitage. I just may be a bit warmer this winter. The first winter in the loft of the barn, and the second behind the plastic sheeting was hard on the computers and books. The door makes a great difference. Hopefully, I’ll be able to start getting settled. That will go a long way on the writing efforts. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you.

Oh, I better say it once again. I can’t solicite donations in North Carolina, since that would be against the law, since I don’t yet have a federal 501(c)3, which is due to logistics not in my control. Perhaps I will be able to get that changed in future times. Sooner than later, I hope! If you are going to force donations on me, don’t write anything out to Holy Souls Hermitage, as that can’t be cashed. It has to be to GEORGE DAVID BYERS and sent to the mailing address, which is:

GEORGE DAVID BYERS
102 COLLEGE STATION DRIVE
SUITE 3 – PMB 233
BREVARD, NC 28712

If you are sending a package, and need a phone number on the form, use the number of the UPS Store (the above address). They will sign for me. Their number is: 828 883 4701.

I haven’t started to get any firewood for the Winter yet. Soon, soon! Jenny is kind of fixed, so that will help immensely.

May our dear Lord continue to bless you all

according to the perfect intercession of the Immaculate Conception.

I pray for you all daily.

4 Comments

Filed under Benefactors, Chickens, progress

Hauling wood on Good Friday

The temps are supposed to nose-dive below freezing for the next few days, and I’ve now just run out of all the wood I had stacked up for the winter. So, I went out this morning to cut some totally dead trees into managable sizes, say, about the size of a cross. Shouldering those, I forged my way back to the hermitage and dumped them on the steps. They’re a bit waterlogged, so to speak, after all the rains this past week. Later, I hope to cut these up a bit more, then perhaps chop them up and stack them inside. As you can see, I’ve not bothered to make much progress on the hermitage “door”. I have to do something to be in solidarity with the priests who are most marginalized. This is at least one small thing. I hear, though, that there may be a pack of seminarians invading the hermitage so as to put up some real wall and doors during the summer. IF that were to happen, O.K. That’ll do them good, so I’m all for it!

Hauling wood on Good Friday reminds me, of course, of Jesus. Also of little Isaac, who carried the wood on which he himself was to be burned. You remember the story, how the angel stopped Abraham’s arm just as the knife was to be plunged into his little son. Isaac, being guilty of original sin, wasn’t worthy of being the sacrifice that would take away the sins of the world. That would have to be a lamb that God would provide. And He did. As John said: “Behold the Lamb of God who takes away the sins of the world!”

Writing about that is one of my future projects, please God. For the longest time, I’ve wanted to write about this story in Genesis, the Gospels, and then how the Qur’an totally rejected this passage, making the reversal of it the very centerpiece of Islam, so that when they bow down to pray, they are Abraham’s son bowing to get his head cut off. The difference between Judaeo-Catholic interpretation and Islamic interpretation is the difference between absolute day and absolute night, between looking to the immediate resurrection of the dead and, well, I won’t say, lest I be arrested. This has to be fleshed out in an entire volume. So, I have something to look forward to writing.

2 Comments

Filed under progress

Advanced lightning attraction: hopefully NOT

The roof was leaking, though not through the roof. It was by way of water running underneath the bottoms of the rafters from the bit of moisture collected at the very upper ends. So, up went some flashing over each rafter-end, but tucked under the ondura. Hopefully, I’ve not set up the most advanced lightning attrator in North America.

Leave a Comment

Filed under progress

O.K. One more window tacked up!

You looking from the floor to the roof, due South, on the Western corner. This is just tacked up with a 2×4 on the outside to keep it from falling down the mountain until I make a proper structure for it. It has flashing underneath, combined with a handy shelf. This is actually half of a sliding door. Very heavy, doubled paned, good insulation!

1 Comment

Filed under ., progress

Of books and shelves and mould at HSH

In moving some things around I opened up some boxes and, behold, a year’s worth of mould! So, I put up a couple of shelves with the wood at hand and put a few up to dry out. Yikes!

Brown Recluse shoulder bite, rotting away!

You can just see the sanctuary lamp between the rows of shelves. I would go into town to get more wood today — and I still might — but it’s going to be a beautiful day today, and I’d like to take advantage by putting up a couple more windows from Habitat for Humanity. They’re not in great shape, but they’re much better than just the plastic. The plastic will remain, of course, around all the unfilled in spaces. The battle plan is not so much to fend off the cold, as the stove is in operation now, but to get the place spider proof. Last year’s ongoing battle with the brown recluses — sometimes spending hours a day with the wounds — is not something I’d like to repeat. They start hatching out in a couple of months, so… Time for work! 

Leave a Comment

Filed under progress

Stained Glass Angels at Holy Souls Hermitage Altar

I put up the two stained glass angels today. They were originally in the monastery of the Poor Clares up in Portsmouth, Ohio. When they left, the angels were still there. Providential, no? God bless you, my good nuns! A Hail Mary for them, please… Hail Mary… The angels then went, of course, to none other than the great Father K.L., of Holy Family parish in Columbus, Ohio. They would have gone into the famed Jubilee Museum (the museum of Catholic identity in America and around the world). He very graciously donated them to Holy Souls Hermitage. God bless you Father! Three hail Marys for him, please… Hail Mary… Here’s Father K.L. with Father Mitch Pacwa on EWTN:

He speaks of the 1563 Vulgate, which I want, and told him so, but he still has it…

Anyway, one of the seminarians of the Diocese of Columbus up in the Josephinum was trying to work it that I would be a hermit in the abandoned Poor Clares Monastery. Such did not work out, but the angels came with me to the mountains here. As it happens, this is the same diocese, that of Charlotte, N.C., U.S.A., to which the nuns came!

They’ve revamped their web-site recently, and have a number of items available for your good donations. Some have coffee, some have soap. These nuns have habits! That is, T-Shirts! Also, good Fathers, altar breads. Visit them. You’ll be glad you did! They pray for me quite a bit. Please say a Hail Mary for them… Hail Mary… Did I mention they’re getting quite a few vocations? Very awesome.

I’ll have to do something about getting a veil on the tabernacle…

2 Comments

Filed under progress

Progress at Holy Souls Hermitage

The Angelus Bell, courtesy of Father K.L. of Holy Family Parish in Columbus, Ohio — went up today, about 15 feet up. So, the Angelus will be ringing out at 6:00 A.M., 12:00 Noon, and 6:00 P.M.

The steps were also put on a foundation and attached to the deck. However there are still other steps (just a few), to go up from the deck to the floor of the hermitage…

The energy for all that seems to have come from the Co-op care package that I received the other day. Progress was not impeded by a young Great North American Hornet. It was warm today and so he came out. I’m sorry about that. He might not make it through the winter because of that. A pity. These guys eat yellow jackets and other horrific creatures.

Sunday, which comes in a few hours, is a day of rest. Finally!

Leave a Comment

Filed under progress

Best day ever at Holy Souls Hermitage: Mass for Benefactors and… Jesus

Finally! The altar is set up in Holy Souls Hermitage. The first Mass in the actual hermitage was offered today, 1 January, 2012. This was was offered for all the benefactors, living and, in case anybody has died ever so recently, deceased. Here’s a bit of the list of the Masses from over on the Holy Mass page:

Friday, 2 December, 2011 through Saturday, 31 December, 2011, a set of Gregorian Masses in the Extraordinary Form are offered for the repose of the soul of P.B., the great apostle of the South, so dedicated to the sanctification of priests and bishops in the purgatory of this life and the next, at the request of C.W.

[[The second Mass on December 25 is for the repose of the souls of my parents, George and Ann Byers. The third Mass is, of course, offered for the Holy Father and his intentions.]]

[[Sunday, 1 January, 2012, Holy Mass in the Extraordinary Form is offered in thanksgiving for the intentions of the wonderful benefactors of Holy Souls Hermitage!]]

Monday, 2 January, 2012 through Tuesday, 10 January 2012, Holy Mass is offered in the Extraordinary Form for Father xxx and the entire Fraternitas Sacerdotalis Sancti Petri, as the best way to start 2012 afresh, at the request of C.W.

Wednesday, 11 January, 2012, Holy Mass is offered for Bishop R.M., very much alive, and other intentions, as requested by E.D.

Thusday, 12 January, 2012, Holy Mass is offered for Father Henry Donzila (R.I.P.) as requested by D. & S. & M. V.   ///////////

A certain benefactor from Down Under provided a contribution to the hermitage, no strings attached. Hmmm… I know! That can be applied for some Masses. Why not thirty Masses for our Holy Father, Pope Benedict XVI, gloriously reigning, and another thirty Masses for priests and bishops in China, who are always on the run from their horrifically oppressive government, if they are not already in re-education camps, labor camps, prisons or torture centers. With that latter intention, I’d like to include all those priests and bishops of the “Open”, that is, “Patriotic”, that is, government Church, those priests and bishops, then, who sycophantically suck up to the government, traitors of the priests and bishops loyal to Rome, traitors of our Lord Jesus, traitors of those they “serve”, traitors of themselves. I’ve spoken with many, face to face, over the years, in various countries. The reason for their inclusion is that they might convert and be enthusiastic friends of Goodness and Kindness Incarnate, Mary’s Son, Jesus. It will take me a while to put up all those Masses, but you know the intentions.

* * *

Wow… So, the Altar is up and Jesus is truly present in the Tabernacle, Body, Blood, Soul and Divinity. What a gift. Yikes! I was thinking about this while treking up some things for the chapel earlier today. It struck me very strongly — the truth of it – that the Discalced Carmelite cloistered nuns are very much given over to being intimate, enthusiastic friends of Jesus’ Virgin Mother. This agility of soul to which they are called is awesome; it enables them to be prompt in their intercession for the whole Church as a part of the Holy Family, and even for this or that specific priest. Mother Prioress, E. de la T., has offered all her prayers and sacrifices for life for my sanctification, starting many years ago. I’ll have a lot to answer for that. Yikes again!  However, not so much in contrast to this friendship with Jesus’ Mother, but, just a bit differently, it struck me at the same time that what I’m doing here on Holy Souls Mountain, a priest for priests and bishops — however insanely unworthy I am to do this — … it struck me that I will have have to have that same kind of prompt spirit of intercession as the O.C.D.s, but this because of being just such an intimate, enthusiastic friend of Mary’s Son. I’m just so nowhere near that. At all. Not at all. At all at all. Nope. However, it seems this is what our Lord wants of me. I mean, hear I am, right? That’s the way it struck me today, as if my guardian angel were instructing me (and I think he was). Jesus will have to provide the grace. I have nothing. And, even worse, on my own, I’m freakishly the opposite of whatever He wants of me. So, it’s His work, not mine. I can only hope I will be faithful in His grace.

Sorry to burden you readers with all this, but, this was a major milestone in my life this very day. Our Lord is just that good and just that kind.

The hermitage floor plan is laid out so that the chapel lies in the center, on the Eastern side, with the rest of the hermitage encircling the chapel on the Northern, Western and Southern sides. The dedicated chapel is in the midst. Jesus is in the midst. Jesus reigns supreme in the hermitage, on this mountain. He is God. It gives me great joy in knowing that, although I’m such an absolute nothing, Jesus rejoices to be here, of all places…

* * *

Here, Holy Souls Hermitage, is still nothing to speak about, as if it were some nice place. To show you what I mean, here’s a picture of the door this evening, looking due West, of course:

That’s the door, a sheet of plastic, that you’re looking through. Although this is a bit rough, I don’t believe that it is an insult to our Lord. I hope, at least, that the altar and tabernacle are entirely appropriate, liturgically, canonically, ecclesiastically, but the rest of the hermitage, well, it might remind our Lord of some of His own dwellings while in exile in Egypt. He knows well that many of His priests — who are entirely loyal to Him — are living in much worse conditions. The cold weather will push me to have actual doors and walls in the weeks to come, but, I’m not much worried about it. What are His other priests going through? So, no complaints at all. None. How could I? Jesus is here, and you’re reading the thoughts of one very, very, very happy priest.

7 Comments

Filed under Mass, progress

UPDATE: Pics of progress on the hermitage

O.K., so, the steps still aren’t attached yet.. But, some siding went up on the middle part of the Western side. No insulation, but at least it’s a bit better than the plastic sheeting. The “door” is still plastic sheeting…

On part of the Southern side, a sheet of plywood. Perhaps a window will eventually go above that.

A bit of plywood on part of the Northern side. Perhaps two windows will go above that. The chickens are snug below. They’ll move out, I hope, next Summer.

A constant distraction, but good for the health, and for the “labora” part of the “ora et labora”, is collecting firewood. Some of it seems to be driftwood. Odd in a forest, but it is a rain-forest after all!

My other distraction has been carrying up more boxes of books. Today I took up about eight boxes worth, some being liturgical. 31 December 2011 will be, please God, the last Mass at the foot of the mountain, and 1 January 2012 will be the first Mass up in the hermitage. We’ll see.

It seems that Sunday will be the last warm day for a good while. Starting Sunday night, looks like things will turn bitterly, bitterly cold. O.K. Lots to get done before that! Yikes!

UPDATE: Thanks to those who offered best wishes and prayers. However! There were some major setbacks, again and again… and again. But that’s O.K. I mean, it’s not like it’s successful work that is important. That’s not what the hemritage is about, or what our lives are about. Success is measured differently. Our Lord wants to see if we see just how weak we are, so that we might look to Him instead of to ourselves, and so that His strength might shine through our weakness. The weakness is necessary in this world because of the necessary consequences of original sin freely chosen with the sin. But Christian joy comes from seeing the Lord’s strength even while we are weak.

Having said that, I did get one of a pair of doors hung. However, I have to construct all the framing etc etc etc. That will take quite a while. Getting things at Habitat for Humanity means getting only half of what you need, as that is all that is usually all that is donated in the first place. Anyway, it’s a start of one of the four major projects I had wanted to get done today.

2 Comments

Filed under progress

Altar progress at HSH, thanks to the orphans and…

A seminarian for the Diocese of Charlotte and great Catholic woodsman showed up at the hermitage, and they offered to take up the altar from down below to up above. How could I say no? It’s really very heavy, but they threw it above their heads and up the mountain it went. Just a slip or two on the muddy trail (we’ve had lots of rain, often four to five times what is predicted and reported), but no one was hurt. Funny thing about the rain here. Sometimes it will be pouring rain and nothing will show up on, for instance, the weather.com radar. I guess this is really out in the middle of nowhere!

Anyway, the altar is sitting up on end right at the moment, but at least it’s inside the hermitage. I’ll have to move mountains of boxes of books and such to get it into place.

The altar has seen better days, and needs to be reworked a bit more. I’ll use it until then, but I’m thinking of redoing the entire top. I have an altar stone for it (two actually) from Father K.L. All these things came from the one-time great orphanage in Columbus, Ohio, which was in use for some 125 years. It was from the orphanage that the Pontifical College Josephinum came into being. Much of the woodwork in the seminary was done by the orphans. I can only suppose this altar was made in their woodshop as well. The blessings of the orphanage reach far and wide. May the Lord bless the orphans, living and deceased, and, oh yes, the seminarian and woodsman who carried the altar like a cross to the top of Holy Souls Mountain!

Leave a Comment

Filed under progress

Another ad orientem sunrise for a Christmas reflection

That’s from the chapel window. Let’s take a step back and see that window:

The bit up top is covered in plastic, and needs to be covered with some sort of material… There’s a scaffold there, but the chapel window actually goes as high as the upper bit that you see. The ladder is on the outside, at the ready for the work. One of these days I’ll get to this!

Note well, dear reader, that although you look to the East (in Hebrew: The Rising), the perspective from the sun is to look to the West, and then race to the West, to the setting, as fast as possible. Our Lord, Immanuel, God With Us, was born to die. From His birth, He rushes to His death offered vicariously for us.

And, oh, by the way, like the Master, so the disciple. We look to the East, but to be so with Him, that we might also rush to do the will of our Heavenly Father, which is that when our Lord lays down His life, He lays down our lives with His.

So, a good direction to look during the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass! Also on Christmas!

Leave a Comment

Filed under Mass, progress

Some progress in building the hermitage

A bit of plywood below triple window of the kitchen/woodstove/water area of the hermitage (to the left) and below the gargantuan polycarbinate window of the chapel (to the right). That was a bit of a trick. Guardian angels to the rescue many times! The plywood starts about seven feet up from the ground on the outside!

In the upper part of the picture you see a bit of “scaffolding” at the ready to fill in some rather large spaces above and to the sides of the windows.

Leave a Comment

Filed under progress

UPDATE: Roof progress for Holy Souls Hermitage

This picture was taken last night. As you can see, I still have to finish the top bit (by far the most complicated) and a whole section on one side. So, that’s for today!

UPDATE (1:15 PM) A start…

UPDATE (7:47 PM): The roof is finally done. Not rain-tested yet…

Leave a Comment

Filed under progress

Better progress than I thought in building the hermitage today

Just as today’s sunset was lighting up the sky before all became dark, I finished filling in the spaces between the rafters in the higher section of the roof. There’s only one slope to the hermitage, as it’s really a “movable storage shed”.  The highest side, the chapel side, of course, is up twelve feet plus the rafters. Tacking together some scaffolding for that entire length of the hermitage helped much.

The temp inside, usually not much different than outside, started to rise immediately. In one hour it’s risen more than 20 degrees Farhenheit warmer than outside. I’m not used to this at all. I haven’t had any heat either last Winter or up until right now. However, no time for complacency. If it gets down to ten below zero, I wouldn’t want to think that I could only get the temp up to 22 degrees below freezing! At the moment, the water bottles are not freezing on the inside. So, O.K.!

Leave a Comment

Filed under progress

No progress in plugging up the wide open to cold opening in the walls of the hermitage today…

The sunset at the end of another day on Holy Souls Mountain:

Not much accomplished today with building the hermitage. There were many but very wonderful distractions, including the packages from the Tyburns. I’m still waiting for a certain package full of down feathers! But, at least a fire is going, notching up the temp a bit.

One of the distractions was the ever dangerous road. When I saw this, I feared mightily, since the entire road already only one lane. How much narrower can it get without one tumbling down the many little washouts?

Ah… It’s the bridge..

O.K. So, it wasn’t washed away with the last rains. Good. Just some paint and such…

Leave a Comment

Filed under progress, road

Fire and rafters

It being a bit cold at night, I put some logs into the stove. These are red oak. They start easily and burn slowly, often with blue flames if there is anything more than coals. A great fire wood.

It’s a bit of waste, except that it’s keeping me from freezing. What I mean is that I wouldn’t have to use so much wood if only I would fill in the rest of the holes in the wall made by the rafters just under the roof. I’m working on it. Here’s a shot of some nicely filled in spaces:

I still have 15 big spaces like that to fill in, but I didn’t do it today, as was the plan. I was terribly, terribly distracted by the wonderful Mother General of the cloistered Tyburn Nuns over in London. She sent in a package. More on that, please God, tomorrow.

1 Comment

Filed under progress

As the saying goes: If you don’t know how to light a fire, cold weather will teach you

The recent weather brought a bit of snow…

The Saamis have heaps of words for snow. I wonder what they would call this!

There was also a huge increase in water volume down Holy Souls Mountain Falls, but no road washouts, yet.

It seems that even the spiders know enough to go about like woolly mammoths as the cold sets in for real…

Considering the wisdom of not freezing (very thankful for the two army blankets!), I thought I would pull an almost all-nighter last night, throwing some plastic sheeting up in the biggest open spaces. That’s not sealed at all, just enough to keep a good percentage of snow drifts out of the hermitage. The floor was puddling up due to horizontal rains coming in over what plastic sheeting I already had up. Plastic sheeting is a great invention!

The stove is working, though the full length of the pipe is not up yet. That’s raised the temps inside about seven degrees. So, if it’s 18 degrees Fahrenheit, inside will be up to 25 degrees! Hmmm… Not good enough to run the computer. So, I’ll have to continue to fill in gaps between the rafters and outside. Lots of ladder climbing. With each bit filled in, the temp goes up. If you don’t know how to build something to be protected from the cold, the cold weather will teach you.

The chickens don’t seem to mind cold weather at all.

Leave a Comment

Filed under faunae, progress