THIS IS THE AREA WHERE I WANT TO BEGIN SOME "ORGANIC GARDENING" HERE AT MT. ST. ALPHONSUS. THESE FIELDS WERE POTATOE FIELDS 50 YEARS AGO. WE ALSO PLANTED AND HARVESTED TASTY STRAWBERRIES THERE. DEPENDING ON WHAT I CAN LEARN MYSELF ABOUT ORGANIC GARDENING AND THE NUMBER OF PEOPLE HERE IN OUR ESOPUS AREA THAT MIGHT OFFER TO "HELP ME" WE COULD HAVE SOME GREAT CROPS HERE COME THIS JULY....THINK ABOUT IT!
I have changed the name of this blog. I now live, since August of 2019 in the New Liberties section of Central Philadelphia. And the truth is that I have not pursued much serious birding since coming to Philadelphia. But I intend to. I am still a Redemptorist and Roman Catholic missionary priest. I believe that God wants us to love, respect and care for ALL of creation as our Pope Francis says so well in his quite long letter LAUDATO SI which is about care for all of creation
Thursday, April 8, 2010
OUR LADY OF THE MOUNT ALTAR
This is the place where we will celebrate Mass at 4 pm on this April 24th, 2010. My Workshop, "Christ and Spring Migration" will be mostly outdoors because I want to show how ALL of God's Creation has to be included in our love and concern. We daughters and sons of God have been named, since Adam got the job of being....Caretakers and Stewards of Creation
Spring Buds at the Mount
HERE ARE SOME OF THE BUDS THAT ARE BURSTING WITH LIFE AND BEAUTY HERE AT MT. ST. ALPHONSUS...ENJOY THEM!!!
Labels:
Mt. St. Alphonsus spring buds
MARVELOUS MAGNOLIAS OF THE MOUNT
Sunday, April 4, 2010
A HAPPY EASTER FROM THE HUDSON RIVER BIRDER

HAPPY EASTER ALL
Labels:
Meadowlarks; spring birds
Friday, April 2, 2010
...AND THE LAST SUPPER...JESUS BRINGS PASSOVER NEW MEANING
I hope this is alright. Just below this animation on the Last Supper is a very wonderful animation that shows what the Passover was that Jesus was celebrating with his disciples. Of course most Jewish people, even though they know that Christians share all the history of salvation and all of the Bible texts that they love and live, do not believe that Jesus was the Promised one or the Messiah... But at this Easter/ Passover time we all try to be in deeper contact with our COMMON GOD OF LOVE, MERCY AND KINDNESS. Enjoy this You Tube clip on the Last Supper which features the song, "Always Knew That I'd be an Apostle" from the play and move "Jesus Christ Super Star".
SPRINGTIME AND THE RESURRECTION OF CHRIST
meone said to me recently, "Your site doesn't always have birds, and you call it THE HUDSON RIVER BIRDER. Well, yes, that's true. But I am also a Roman Catholic priest and when springtime comes, sure I am excited about the birds. Like for instance today was such a beautiful Good Friday. It is warm. There more robins than ever. Yesterday, besides the many Eastern Wood Pewees I've been seeing I also heard a number of Phoebes. And today, if I am not mistaken, I saw some Tree Swallows flying over towards the Pell Farm. So, yes, I am the Hudson River Birder. But springtime is also the time when we Christians believe that, just as the birds return North each April we celebrate the return of Christ to life after the sad mistake of his being condemned to death. So I would like to share this very well done animated video on Passover. It is a Jewish celebration. But it explains a lot of what Jesus himself a Jew was trying to explain as he celebrated that very same Passover with his twelve apostles who were also very good and religious Jews. ENJOY!!!
Thursday, April 1, 2010
Wednesday, March 24, 2010
ABOUT THE HUDSON RIVER WALKAWAY BRIDGE
I finally did the Hudson River Walkaway Bridge across the river from Highland to Pougkeepsie, NY. It was a windy afternoon when our staff member at the Mount, Theresa and her friend Linda and I did the two mile jaunt which is supposedly the longest walkaway bridge in the country if not the world....
Here are some facts about it...from a New York Times article---(And I have added some of today's photos after the New York Times article...Enjoy!!)
The New York Times
Editorial
October 6, 2009
The View From 1889
The Poughkeepsie-Highland Railroad Bridge, built in the late 19th century to link New York and New England to the coal beds of Pennsylvania and the West, is a marvel of Industrial Revolution engineering. It fills the sky over the Hudson River, a muscular lattice of trusses and struts on giant footings, a survivor from a long-gone era before bridge mediocrities like the Tappan Zee. Anyone who has ever gazed on it from the riverbank and wondered what it was like to walk across will now be able to find out. It has just been opened to the public as Walkway Over the Hudson, the latest example of the new kinds of infrastructure - for tourism and recreation - that are reshaping the Hudson Valley. The bridge was abandoned in the 1970s and sat for decades because it was too expensive to tear down. Volunteers made fitful efforts to repair it as a walkway, but the project took off only about five years ago with big infusions of ambition and money, including federal and state aid and a $2 million corporate grant. This year's 400th anniversary of Henry Hudson's river trip helped push the $38 million project to completion.
The bridge is part of a bigger web of things to see and do up and down the Hudson River. There are trails and bike paths from both sides linking the nearby Mid-Hudson Bridge, downtown Poughkeepsie, and parks, historic homes and landmarks. To the many civic, environmental and historic organizations that look after the Hudson Valley - including Scenic Hudson, whose land acquisitions have given the region a wealth of public greenery - the bridge has two jobs: be lovely to look at (and from), and energize the economy.
The Henry Hudson anniversary sparked many plans for legacy projects, many of them - including land purchases as a bulwark against view-destroying sprawl - still unrealized. Maybe as the economic and aesthetic benefits of this once-dreamy, impractical vision - saving and fixing a big old bridge - become clearer, people will summon the will and means to dream even bigger.
Here are some facts about it...from a New York Times article---(And I have added some of today's photos after the New York Times article...Enjoy!!)
The New York Times
Editorial
October 6, 2009
The View From 1889
The Poughkeepsie-Highland Railroad Bridge, built in the late 19th century to link New York and New England to the coal beds of Pennsylvania and the West, is a marvel of Industrial Revolution engineering. It fills the sky over the Hudson River, a muscular lattice of trusses and struts on giant footings, a survivor from a long-gone era before bridge mediocrities like the Tappan Zee. Anyone who has ever gazed on it from the riverbank and wondered what it was like to walk across will now be able to find out. It has just been opened to the public as Walkway Over the Hudson, the latest example of the new kinds of infrastructure - for tourism and recreation - that are reshaping the Hudson Valley. The bridge was abandoned in the 1970s and sat for decades because it was too expensive to tear down. Volunteers made fitful efforts to repair it as a walkway, but the project took off only about five years ago with big infusions of ambition and money, including federal and state aid and a $2 million corporate grant. This year's 400th anniversary of Henry Hudson's river trip helped push the $38 million project to completion.
The bridge is part of a bigger web of things to see and do up and down the Hudson River. There are trails and bike paths from both sides linking the nearby Mid-Hudson Bridge, downtown Poughkeepsie, and parks, historic homes and landmarks. To the many civic, environmental and historic organizations that look after the Hudson Valley - including Scenic Hudson, whose land acquisitions have given the region a wealth of public greenery - the bridge has two jobs: be lovely to look at (and from), and energize the economy.
The Henry Hudson anniversary sparked many plans for legacy projects, many of them - including land purchases as a bulwark against view-destroying sprawl - still unrealized. Maybe as the economic and aesthetic benefits of this once-dreamy, impractical vision - saving and fixing a big old bridge - become clearer, people will summon the will and means to dream even bigger.
Tuesday, March 16, 2010
THE SMITH CEMETERY AT PELLS
On the Pell Farm which is the northern end of Mt. St. Alphonsus right down from the silo has existed since the 1700's what is known to us as "The Smith Cemetery". Some of the names are also Terpenning which is also an old family here in Esopus. There are twelve graves. Some of the stones are quite small. One with the name "Amanda" written on it, seems to have been a twelve year old child of this family who I understand were workers for Robert Livingston Pell, the original owner who sold it to us Redemptorists in about 1905. Above you will find some views of the cemetery that I have taken.
VOLUNTEERS ANYBODY: We would be very happy if some boy or girl scout troup were interested in helping us restore and maintain the Smith Cemetery. Or anyone who would like to help us do it just contact me through this blog..
VOLUNTEERS ANYBODY: We would be very happy if some boy or girl scout troup were interested in helping us restore and maintain the Smith Cemetery. Or anyone who would like to help us do it just contact me through this blog..
Monday, March 8, 2010
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