A Time to Say Goodbye

Having served in the pastorate and as foreign missionaries, we know how draining full-time Christian service can be. In 1987, we returned from the mission field spiritually "beaten up". God provided a place of refuge where we could be restored in the beauty of His creation. In 2007, He granted us the fulfillment of our dream to provide a place that we could share with full-time Christian workers in need of a spiritual retreat. And that is how Leahaven came to be.


"Praise be to the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of compassion and the God of all comfort, who comforts us in all our troubles, so that we can comfort those in any trouble with the comfort we ourselves have received from God. For just as the sufferings of Christ flow over into our lives, so also through Christ our comfort overflows."

II Corinthians 1:3-4


In 2020 due to Covid 19, we regretfully suspended our Leahaven ministry. In the past two years the Lord has led us in a new direction, and He has shown us that now is the time to say goodbye. We are grateful for God's many blessings and so many precious memories. Thank you to all who have supported and encouraged Leahaven's ministry. We covet your prayers for the future.

Sunday, May 16, 2010

Same Song, Second Verse

When we last checked on the beavers, we found that their dam-building had indeed compromised the road.  When our farmer took his equipment across the dam to fertilize the hay fields, he left huge ruts in the road because the beavers have made it so soggy.
Not wanting to damage the road further, we couldn't drive out to the cabin to get a kayak, so Herb carried it turtle-style all the way back to the pond.
While Herb tied a rock to a string and I made myself useful taking pictures, the dogs helped, too.  Zephyr tested the dam by walking on it--making sure the beavers would come back out at night to fix it.
Hero was a little more useful--perhaps his "rodent radar" is honed by hunting field mice in the grass!  We figured out later that he probably actually found out where the lodge is--somewhere in that brush.
Herb paddled out onto the pond and measured the depth where the "anti beaver" pipe will go.  It's only two feet there, with the deepest part in the middle being a mere six feet.
The actual ABC (Anti Beaver Campaign!) will have to happen after school is out, so they can have their kingdom for now.  You can understand why they want it, can't you?
We stayed and did other work around the house that day, then finished up with Mexican take-out on the front porch watching the sun set.  Right before we left, we went out to the pond in the fading light to see if the beavers were working yet to repair Zephyr's damage.  The last rays of sunlight just caught the wake of a beaver (line of light in center of photo) coming out from the brush Hero had been inspecting earlier.  We never actually saw a beaver, but it was exciting to see evidence of them.  It made me think of the wind and the Spirit in John 3:8.  I've never seen the beaver, but I know he's at work!

Finally it was too dark even for wake-watching, so we left the beavers in peace in their little world and headed home.

Sunday, May 2, 2010

Surprise!

On Feb. 26 we drove out to Leahaven to check on things.  To our surprise, we found that the stock pond had risen so high that it was creeping up onto the road next to it, making the road so soggy we didn't dare drive our SUV across it.  So we walked out to see what could have blocked off the overflow.

Surprise!  Beavers had built a dam!  Zephyr, sure they had made it for her amusement, walked back and forth across it. 
What amazing creatures beavers are--another testimony to the Creator of the Universe!  Even though it's a nuisance for the road, the dam is beautiful.  So are the individual sticks where the beavers have chewed the bark off in neat little spirals.  After we got home, I learned lots of fascinating things online.  For instance, I knew that beavers don't actually live in the dam; they use it to deepen the water so they can build a lodge elsewhere in the pond.  But I didn't know they have at least two rooms in their underground home:  The first one is for drying off before they go into the second sleeping chamber.  No wet beavers allowed in bed!

Unfortunately, Zephyr's explorations damaged the dam, so I took a picture to see if the beavers would repair it overnight.  Just like the old "Highlights" puzzles, can you spot the differences?
  The top picture was taken the evening of the 26th, and the bottom one, the morning of the 27th.  Sure enough!  The busy beavers worked at night to fix the dam (notice the new large stick at left with a knot-hole in it, for one), and no more water was leaking through the dam . . .

. . . until Zephyr got busy, too!  She's irrepressible where water is concerned--in it or on it, she doesn't care as long as she can be wet!
Herb and I couldn't agree whether to leave the beavers as permanent fixtures of Leahaven or to tear the dam up right then and there.  (Guess who wanted to do what!)  So we left the beavers in possession of our pond and road--with repairs on the agenda again--and we headed home to find a compromise for dealing with the (excuse the pun!) dam creatures!

Stay tuned for the rest of the story . . .