Maryland
Show me the honey: Maryland sisters find divine touch in beekeeping
CATONSVILLE, Maryland — With an apron defending her lengthy, black spiritual behavior, Sister Deborah Rose Rosado marveled on the regular stream of thick, golden goo she poured right into a small glass jar.
Cautious to cease the present because the sticky substance reached the container’s one-pint capability, Rosado screwed on a metallic cap earlier than one among her fellow All Saints Sisters of the Poor hooked up a label.
“Produced by bees-in-residence on the All Saints Sisters of the Poor Convent,” the label proudly proclaims. “Harvested & bottled in Catonsville, Maryland.” Lots of of 1000’s of honeybees residing in 12 colonies scattered throughout the spiritual neighborhood’s bucolic 100-acre campus helped produce the bottled honey held in Rosado’s palms.
The substance’s existence is a feat Rosado believes highlights intentionality behind God’s creation.
The bees accumulate nectar from flowers and vegetation throughout the property and over a three-mile radius, Rosado stated, bringing it again to the hives the place they rework it into honey. Over the course of every employee bee’s 6-week lifespan, every insect produces simply 1/twelfth of a teaspoon of honey. But, taken collectively, that honey is sufficient to fill greater than 200 jars.
“The method of working with nature and having this honey — this lovely, golden honey — could be very meditative,” Rosado stated. “God created these tiny little creatures which are doing a lot and dealing so onerous.”
The All Saints Sisters of the Poor first turned concerned in cultivating bee colonies three years in the past when two of their neighbors, each beginner beekeepers, requested if they might set up hives on the nuns’ property.
The beekeepers, Clement Purcell of Mount Calvary Catholic Church in Baltimore and Martin Kersse of Our Girl of Perpetual Assist in Ellicott Metropolis, deal with tending the hives and extracting the honey. The sisters’ job is to bottle the candy product, which is divvied up amongst Purcell, Kersse and the sisters.
The uncooked honey sells for $20 a jar within the All Saints Sisters of the Poor reward store, with the proceeds reinvested into beekeeping.
The honey jar labels embrace a picture of Our Girl of Walsingham, one of many earliest apparitions of the Blessed Virgin Mary particularly beloved by English Catholics and lots of Anglicans. That’s important to the All Saints Sisters of the Poor who got here to Maryland in 1872 as an American department of an Anglican ladies’s spiritual neighborhood in England.
The Baltimore sisters had been acquired into the Catholic Church in 2009 by then-Baltimore Archbishop Edwin F. O’Brien and are actually acknowledged as a “diocesan institute” of ladies spiritual overseen by the Archbishop of Baltimore.
Mom Emily Ann Lindsey, superior common of the spiritual neighborhood, stated 5 sisters spend a number of hours every afternoon bottling the honey when it’s harvested over the summer season.
The sisters have lengthy been involved about nature — nurturing bluebirds, rehabilitating injured or sick animals and fostering the preservation of troubled species. In recent times, they’ve raised monarch butterflies.
“We’re a neighborhood that’s half contemplative and half lively,” Lindsey defined. “When you’re interacting with creation, you might be really partaking in that creation another way. It feeds us spiritually as a result of it brings us nearer to our Lord by means of what he’s created. He provides us alternatives to take part virtually as a co-creator as we convey forth new life and preserve it going.”
Purcell, a biologist by coaching, stated there are lots of examples of the hand of God in beekeeping. He famous, for instance, that when the temperature reaches precisely 57 levels or beneath, the bees’ wings cease functioning.
“In order that they kind a cluster,” stated Purcell, who wears protecting clothes and makes use of calming smoke when dealing with the bee colonies. “They disengage their wings they usually vibrate and that generates warmth. They shield the queen bee. That is the miracle of God.”
Lindsey stated the honey produced by the sisters’ bees is all the time candy, however has completely different options yearly relying on what the bees eat. This 12 months’s batch is a barely darker shade of gold and is thicker than earlier years.
The toughest a part of the sisters’ job, she stated, is coping with all of the stickiness. The sisters are always cleansing bottles and protecting surfaces clear, she stated. They depend on the intercession of St. Ambrose, patron saint of beekeepers.
Beekeeping and the tedious strategy of accumulating and bottling honey takes effort and time, Lindsey stated. But it surely’s rewarding.
“It’s an ideal use of our property and helps within the conservation of bees,” she famous, “and also you get one thing fantastic in return.”
– – –
Matysek is managing editor of the Catholic Assessment, information outlet of the Archdiocese of Baltimore.
Maryland
Maryland Gov. Wes Moore warns of major budget cuts amid $3B budget deficit
ANNAPOLIS, Md. – Maryland Gov. Wes Moore has warned that massive budget cuts are on the way as state lawmakers try to solve a $3 billion budget gap.
Moore told Maryland residents Wednesday to brace themselves for $2 billion worth of cuts in his soon-to-be-released budget. But that still leaves another $1 billion that lawmakers will have to come up with to close this deficit.
Normally, the first day of a General Assembly session is a cause for celebration but this year it comes with a big challenge.
Moore said that not only does he want lawmakers to come up with a solution to close the budget gap, he also wants still fund priorities like economic growth, public safety and schools but Moore would not endorse the idea of tax hikes.
“We are not going to grow an economy on the backs of working Marylanders, on the backs of middle-class Marylanders. So I’ll work with anybody to be able to come up with a long-term solution but my bar’s high, been high and will remain high when it comes to revenues,” Moore said.
But while the governor says his bar is high for tax hikes, Democrats, who control both houses of the statehouse, and Republicans, who are outnumbered, are already fighting it out.
Republicans say they support the governor’s plan to cut spending but they will hold the line on taxes.
“I believe the Democrats are sending every signal that they are going to raise taxes and we are going to fight it, fight it, fight it,” said Republican delegate Kathy Szeliga, who represents Howard County. “Maryland is already one of the most highly taxed states in the country.”
Democratic lawmakers say no decisions have been made either way.
“You know, people get nervous because they think that automatically means raising taxes. Not necessarily. We’re going to do our job and make sure that we don’t hurt people too, we understand the budget is tight but we don’t have to keep hurting people too,” Democratic delegate C.T. Wilson, the Maryland Economic Matters Chairman.
Moore is set to unveil his budget proposal on Wednesday, Jan. 15. This General Assembly session will last for 90 days.
Maryland
Body-cam video of deadly Howard County police standoff released as Maryland AG investigates
HOWARD COUNTY — The Maryland Office of the Attorney General (OAG) released body camera footage as they continue to investigate an officer-involved shooting that left a man dead after a two-hour standoff in Laurel.
On November 30, around 3:10 p.m., Howard County police responded to a home in the 1000 block of American Pharoah Lane for a domestic incident, according to the OAG.
The 911 caller reported that a man was banging on the front door and a preliminary investigation revealed he had fired several shotgun rounds at the door. He eventually made his way inside the home through a window.
The body cam footage begins as officers arrive on the scene. The video shows an officer walking toward the home as he reports on his radio that he sees a busted window and a case for a long gun outside.
The man – later identified as 29-year-old Tyree Winslow of College Park – appeared in a second-floor window of the home as officers arrived, according to the OAG.
As the video continues, you can hear a woman cry for help, prompting the officer to move quickly toward the front door of the home. The officer then reports on the radio that he sees multiple shell casings.
The officer identifies himself as he moves close to the door and eventually reports that the door is barricaded, according to the video.
The cries for help get louder, and the officer indicates that he may have eyes on a woman in the home as he says, “Ma’am stay there…lay down.”
The video shows officers taking cover behind cars across the street from the home as the situation escalates and the officer gives verbal commands, asking to see Winslow’s hands. According to the OAG, Winslow did not comply and he and two officers exchanged gunfire.
Another officer’s body camera captured him getting close to the home and helping a person down from an upstairs window of the home. The body camera falls off but captures the sounds of the officer helping another person down.
Police previously said three people were evacuated from the home and there were no other injuries.
The Howard County Police Tactical Team responded to the scene and established a barricade, according to the OAG. Officers were not able to contact Winslow and around 5:40 p.m., they entered the home.
Once inside, officers found Winslow suffering from gunshot wounds and he was pronounced dead on the scene, the OAG said. Police said it was unclear if he was killed by officer gunfire or by his weapon.
Several loaded firearms and a knife were found near Winslow’s body.
The OAG previously identified the involved officers as Police Officer First Class (PFC) Christopher Weir, a 14-year veteran, and PFC Joseph Debronzo, a 15-year veteran. Both officers have been put on administrative leave.
Neighbor shares video
During the standoff, the neighborhood was on lockdown for several hours.
A neighbor shared video with WJZ showing the moment that tactical officers entered the home. The neighbor also said officers were using a drone to locate Winslow while he was inside the house.
Officer-Involved Shooting Investigation
The OAG’s Independent Investigations Division (IID) investigates all police-involved shootings as standard protocol.
“The idea is if you have an attorney general who is coming in to investigate these incidents, it removes the opportunity for a local agency to seem biased either in favor or against a local police department,” said Eric Bacaj, an independent legal expert who is not involved in this case.
The IID was created by the General Assembly in 2021 as part of a series of police accountability reform bills, the OAG said.
Since October 2021, the division has conducted 65 investigations into fatal or near-fatal officer-involved incidents in Maryland, including two in Howard County.
See a full list of IID investigations below:
Maryland
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