Basically an unseasonably warm stretch, but overnight last night (23rd-24th) it snowed. Just an inch or two, then changed to fine rain, and now, at the end of the afternoon, the temperature is still low enough that the snow lingers.
One of our local Red-tailed Hawks, Buteo jamaicensis.
Lynn's photo.
Birds for the two week period from February 13-17 and 20-24th, 2012.
Wild Turkey
Canada Goose
Herring Gull
Ring-billed Gull
Turkey Vulture
Red-tailed Hawk - a kettle of seven birds, a mix of five "tails" and two
Cooper's Hawk (probably) - which did NOT include our two local Red-tails
Mourning Dove
Downy Woodpecker
10. Northern Flicker
American Crow
Fish Crow
Blue Jay
Black-capped Chickadee
Carolina Wren
Northern Mockingbird
American Robin
European Starling
Northern Cardinal
20. Song Sparrow
An old familiar tune is back on campus - the Song Sparrows are singing!
Lynn's photo. Melospiza melodia melodia
House Finch
American Goldfinch
Red-winged Blackbird
Common Grackle
Brown-headed Cowbird
26. House Sparrow
Friday, February 24, 2012
Wednesday, February 22, 2012
Niagara College
Kevin onsite at NCC |
I met with Kevin Schlechter.
Minding his own business, working on his ministerial credentials while volunteering at his church, Faith Tabernacle, he was expecting his life to take him out of Welland when Mark Collins called him up and took him out for coffee. ‘Mark told me that he had done a background check on me and that he wanted me to plant a church in nearby Niagara College. It had never occurred to me. But as we thought and prayed about it, the more it began to make sense. So my wife and I bought a house in the area and have signed on.”
The beauty of this approach is that he has been given time to do research and look for the best way to connect with the campus. He found that the gatekeeper in the college administration was dead set against a ‘Christian’ presence such as a chaplaincy but was open to creative ways of adding value to the institution. As it turns out, she was able to see the value in Red Frogs and is understandably excited about it.
The question is: what to do? So much that could be done.
Niagara college now has nearly 9000 students with a brand new, 90 million dollar, state of the art expansion. And it is well designed .
Kevin quickly discovered that:
There are 500 international students. There were 500 hundred people using the foodbank last year.
Actually, Kevin is already thinking of mobilizing people to cook for the international students who have no place to go for reading week, next week. It is a natural bridge and it meets a genuine need.
He had been in contact with Brandon Malo and Trevor Gingerich of The Embassy who have been coaching him over the phone. Kevin took a team to Waterloo to take in an Embassy service there- telling them “this could be us. This is what it could look like.”
Kevin is looking forward to running Red Frogs on campus.
He wants to help with the Food Bank and responding to student hunger
It makes sense to form a student club that will be run by the students and give them a legitimate presence on campus. Further, the goal of the club will include “adding value” to the campus.
For the church, Kevin found meeting space just off site. I respect the fact that he kept looking for new doors after the ones on campus were closed in his face. He has persistence – which is what you need when you are starting something in this environment.
I mentioned to him that if I were him ( I am not – but if I were) I would plunk myself down right in the middle of the action in the cafeteria and set up my ‘unofficial’ office there where students can easily find and access me. He can do his work onsite just as well as if he were hidden away in an office somewhere. That is something I did at UBC and it paid huge dividends.
part of the large,open cafeteria space... |
Kevin also showed me the ‘pub’ which has a stage and which is accessible to the public. It is perfect for special events and it has a high ceiling and it seems to have good acoustics. It could be an ideal place for periodic special events.
aforementioned pub with stage... |
This campus has no identifiable Christian presence onsite. It deserves one. If it is done well, it is a win for everybody. We come to serve and to add. Kevin just “gets it” and it is exciting to think of the directions it could go. His wife is fully on board. He has WOD District support. He has an anchor church nearby. He is forming a core of students and is making all the right contacts. From this vantage point the future is exciting.
Wednesday, February 8, 2012
WE HAVE MOVED- VISIT US AT OUR NEW SITE
Catch up with us at: www.cfaillinois.org - our new website which is also a blog. See you there!!
Monday, February 6, 2012
Commercials Are for...
Last night’s Super Bowl commercials made me wonder about what commercials are for. It’s always been my thought that commercials are to make you buy something, inform you about a product, improve the image of a brand, or give you a call to action. The incredibly expensive commercials yesterday mostly made me…do nothing. I had no desire to look up information about a product, I certainly had no desire to buy anything (even the Doritos commercial didn’t make me wish we had a bag at home). I did watch the car commercial with Jerry Seinfeld and think that I wanted to catch the episodes of his old show with the Soup guy…but I don’t think that was the purpose of the spot. I did watch the Go Daddy spot and wonder where Danica was going to race this year…is it NASCAR or Indy? There were commercials that were powerful (GE) and there were commercials that were just plain silly (end of the world car commercial). There were commercials that were depressing (Clint Eastwood car commercial which reminded me that most of the problems in Detroit were as a result of bad decision-making by auto executives) and there were plenty of beer and soft drink commercials. But today, in the clear light of morning, there should also be some Boards of Directors that ask some very pointed questions of CEOs and Chief Marketing Officers about why in the world they dropped $3.5 million dollars (plus the creative cost) for those spots?
Here’s what the NY Times says about the commercials.
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/02/06/business/media/super-bowl-commercials-from-charming-to-smarmy.html
Here’s what the NY Times says about the commercials.
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/02/06/business/media/super-bowl-commercials-from-charming-to-smarmy.html
Friday, February 3, 2012
Just the regulars...
The "tails" have been more noticeable these last two weeks. Three were seen more-or-less together one morning over West Campus. Lynn recently photographed this beautiful dark adult.
No snow cover, night-time temperatures in the twenties, daytime temps in the forties - this seems more like mid-March than February. The birds are usually around our feeders when it's particularly cold, or when a storm is threatening, but with the milder temperatures, they've been rather scarce.
Still we've managed a two-week list of twenty three species.
Birds seen at West Campus between January 30th and February 10th, 2012:
Wild Turkey
Canada Goose
Ring-billed Gull
Herring Gull
Turkey Vulture
Lynn caught this male Wild Turkey displaying yesterday.
Red-tailed Hawk
Mourning Dove
Rock Pigeon
Downy Woodpecker
Red-bellied Woodpecker
American Crow
Fish Crow
Blue Jay
American Robin
Northern Mockingbird
European Starling
Black-capped Chickadee
Carolina Wren
Northern Cardinal
White-throated Sparrow
House Finch
American Goldfinch
House Sparrow
same handsome fellow as above, now you can appreciate the detail
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