I still don't have the time or energy to write something original, but here's something from the Bangor Daily News. It should lighten up your day. A few days ago, this large moose walked into a building up the coast a bit from where I'm now living. These things weigh about a ton. After getting it sedated, they had to use a backhoe to put in in a truck.
The settling in is going reasonably well. The weather has been great and I really think I'm going to like it here.
It is quite a shock when you see your first one or two. They are huge, shaggy and weird looking. I assume the New Orleans people are snow bunnies (just get a Maine winter under your belt and if they're not they probably will be). Summer in Maine and winter in New Orleans. Not a bad way to live if you can afford it.
So far this year I've read of one that jumped off a bridge onto the interstate in addition to the Camden one. Right after I arrived in Millinocket, Maine a group of 5 or 7 (can't rembember) blocked the road into town and the police were using bull horns to try to get them to leave. About the same time a parishioner ran into one on the interstate and ended up with a broken neck (she has recovered) I saw one eye to eye last year while driving to NH to visit my sister. It flew across the road and stared at me (I drive a VW van and sit up high) through the front window. I missed it by an inch. I think every Mainiac has a moose story.
And I thought my close-calls with deer and open-range cattle made good stories! Moose are definitely more interesting. I think it's because of all the Rocky & Bullwinkle cartoons I watched as a child.
Rick, I think Moose are far more interesting. One of the pastimes in Rangeley is going out near dusk to go moose watching. One of the roads is nicknamed "moose alley."
"Laws alone can not secure freedom of expression; in order that every man present his views without penalty there must be spirit of tolerance in the entire population."
When I was ordained in 2000, my son joked "my mother is a father." So the name. I worked as a scientist for over 30 years, first in Boston, then LA, San Francisco area, Denver, D.C, Vienna and back to San Fran. Good training for an interim who has served in Eastern Michigan, Wyoming, California and now Maine.
Isabelle, the little white dog, better known as Izzie has her own blog now.
Rob Voyle has been instrumental in my work as an interim. I highly recommend Appreciative Inquiry as a way of looking at life in a parish, or for life in general.
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Science and Religion
"Yet its [science] enthralling account is not sufficient by itself to quench our thirst for understanding, for science describes only one dimension of the many-layered reality within which we live, restricting itself to the impersonal and general, and bracketing out the personal and unique." In the preface to "Exploring Reality: The Intertwining of Science and Religion" by John Polkinghorne
Icon of Our Lady of Vladimir
wrote this icon under the direction of Alekandr Kharon. It sits in the Lady Chapel of All Saints, San Francisco
New things happen in regimes that we have learned to identify as being 'at the edge of chaos.' Too far on the orderly side of that frontier and things are too rigid for there to be more than a shuffling rearrangement of already existing entities. Too far on the disorderly side and things are too haphazard for any novelties to persist.
John Polkinghorne, Exploring Reality: The Intertwining of Science and Religion.
Trinity
wrote this also under the direction of Aleksandr Kharon. Given to Bp. William Swing, California at his last visit to All Saints'
7 comments:
I imagine that the folks who moved from New Orleans to Maine may not yet be accustomed to moose encounters.
I'm glad you're settling in and that, so far, you like your new home.
It is quite a shock when you see your first one or two. They are huge, shaggy and weird looking. I assume the New Orleans people are snow bunnies (just get a Maine winter under your belt and if they're not they probably will be). Summer in Maine and winter in New Orleans. Not a bad way to live if you can afford it.
Moose encounters are a whole new way of looking at things...kinda clears ones innermost expectations from the civilized stuff. Loved it! Thanks
We've encountered mooses (or is it meese?) while hiking in the mountains in the West, but only in the great outdoors. They are huge animals.
So far this year I've read of one that jumped off a bridge onto the interstate in addition to the Camden one. Right after I arrived in Millinocket, Maine a group of 5 or 7 (can't rembember) blocked the road into town and the police were using bull horns to try to get them to leave. About the same time a parishioner ran into one on the interstate and ended up with a broken neck (she has recovered) I saw one eye to eye last year while driving to NH to visit my sister. It flew across the road and stared at me (I drive a VW van and sit up high) through the front window. I missed it by an inch. I think every Mainiac has a moose story.
And I thought my close-calls with deer and open-range cattle made good stories! Moose are definitely more interesting. I think it's because of all the Rocky & Bullwinkle cartoons I watched as a child.
Rick, I think Moose are far more interesting. One of the pastimes in Rangeley is going out near dusk to go moose watching. One of the roads is nicknamed "moose alley."
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