Tag: Lynn Hurry

Mamma Fox

photoshop of Mamma by Lynn

Mamma Fox

Some followers of this blog will be familiar with photos of the ‘Latton Foxes’ which we have published from time to time. The antics of last year’s fox cubs was particularly fun.
The foxes live in the garden of Latton Vicarage and they have received regular care from Vicar Lynn – who also took the photographs.
She has kept them well fed with ‘Mamma Fox’ being the go between as you carried the food from the Vicarage to the far end of the garden. It’s a great take-away service! The foxes are especially fond of eggs, some chicken (shop bought, not the product of scavenging) and jam sandwiches.

Sadly, Mama fox has disappeared and after over 12 days of absence we have to presume that she has died, maybe as a victim of a road accident.

Lynn says that she arrived in the garden as a cub in 2017.
She has lived in our garden since then and has had 4 sets of cubs here in the last 4 years. Her 4 cubs from this years’  litter are still living here and we are taking good care of them. They are getting very big now!
We miss her so much. She was here snoozing in the afternoons and loved to have a raw egg and some other bits from us.

Not everyone loves foxes but those who have been following their antics have come to see the Latton Foxes as rather special. Through the photos people have built up quite a following both on this blog, other postings and the church facebook page.

Mamma Fox in particular gave us a picture of motherhood which was both delightful and salutary. Almost the last photo that I have posted of her was when she was washing one of her cubs with a tenderness that was rather beautiful.
Of course, we can simply say that  she was just doing her duty and in both animal and human kingdom, care and protection of the young is what we creatures do.

I agree but there was something more about Mamma. Something which St. Francis would understand as would  the Desert and Celtic saints of earlier times.
It could easily be called, Spiritual.

I was reading something about this recently.

What do foxes mean spiritually?
According to the Celtic religious belief, the fox is an animal that serves as a spirit guide and can assist you to find your way through the afterlife
As a spirit animal, the fox reveals itself during times of great and unpredictable change. With its heightened sense of awareness, the fox compels you to turn up your own senses, gather the information you need, and act swiftly on your decision. The fox symbolizes mental responsiveness.

That not only tells us something  about our present time of turmoil in the world but also about how the fox can teach us to respond.

St. Francis points to animals’ roles as reflections of God’s love, the inherent value they possess, the interconnectedness humans have with all of God’s creatures and humankind’s misunderstanding of “dominion” as described in the Book of Genesis.

“Be­cause all creatures are connected, each must be cherished with love and respect, for all of us as living creatures are dependent on one another,” Francis wrote, later adding that God giving humans dominion over the Earth doesn’t justify “absolute domination over other creatures.”

This was a view echoed by his namesake, Pope Francis in his encyclical  Laudato Si’ (Praise him)  At one point, the pope lamented development projects that do not consider the impact on biodiversity, “as if the loss of species or animals and plant groups were of little importance.”

In Laudato Si’, Pope Francis states, “The ultimate purpose of other creatures is not to be found in us. Rather, all creatures are moving forward with us and through us towards a common point of arrival, which is God, in that transcendent fullness where the risen Christ embraces and illumines all things.”

“Eternal life will be a shared experience of awe, in which each creature, resplendently transfigured, will take its rightful place (Laudato Si)

Pope Francis also said that he couldn’t envisage heaven without animals and birds.
Creation belongs to God and it would be very arrogant of us to believe that we have sole rights to be there. Or even soul rights! How boring that would be for God!

Mamma’s family are still with us. One of her daughters from last year appears to be stepping up but we will miss her and hope that she is in God’s hands.We thank God for creating Mamma Fox who brought us such joy and thank you to Lynn who shared that joy with us.

‘Even birds and animals have much they could teach you;
ask the creatures of earth and sea for their wisdom.
All of them know that the Lord’s hand made them.
It is God who directs the lives of his creatures;
everyone’s life is in his power’.

Job 12:7-10

Mamma Fox, rest in peace

[Mr G, Lynn and others]

Strawberry squirrel

photo: Lynn Hurry

Squirrels – a reflection from my friend Lynn Hurry

I’ve been thinking about squirrels lately because they keep nicking the vicarage strawberries and they don’t even mind if they are still green,  as seen in the photo above.
A lot of people don’t like them, but I love them!  We call them ’Tree Monkeys’ here at the vicarage and delight in watching their playful antics.

I Have watched them in our garden for years burying all sorts of things they find to eat, not least acorns and peanuts.
And I’ve often wondered if they ever, for a moment, stop to think about their little acorn and wonder if it might turn into a tree at some point.
I doubt it! But there was one acorn that got away when the squirrel forgot where he had buried it. It’s well on the way to being a large oak tree now in our garden.

When I’m in the garden I often praise God for creation and the joy it brings and I think that squirrels can become reminders to us to spend more time in nature. 

The spiritual writer Thomas à Kempis wrote :
“Every creature can be a mirror of life and a book of heavenly teaching.”

I reckon for sure they can become a window to glimpse a bit of the divine and I’m sure God was smiling when he made squirrels!

Lynn


Squirrel
the squirrel is a busy guy, 
too occupied to to stop 
or wave 
or even say hi! – 

always on the move 
in a very focused searching groove – 
up the tree, down the tree, 
scamper here and there, 
bushy tail alive itself 
flagging everywhere! 

Harlan Simantel

Playtime at Latton

A people who dance before their God
are generally freer and less repressed
than a people who cannot.

Harvey Cox : The feast of fools

Playful foxes in Latton Vicarage Garden. They are just starting to emerge from their dens.
Personal sadness and some despair for the world, whilst devastating is never the final word. That belongs to God. In God’s heart there is always room for festivity. The foxes are embracing life on a path of discovery where everything is new and joyful.

We are a bit longer in the tooth and are more anxious and fearful. That can take the edge of the dance of life. Let the foxes remind us that when we have no control, we have God. How important it is that as a famous saying puts it, “Let Go, and Let God”. I used to think that was just a bit twee but now I understand it..
Come what may, there is always joy to be found. God holds everything in love and even in profoundly difficult places – Ukraine, Russia, Afghanistan etc – God will bring us through it.

Harvey Cox, quoted above, said something profoundly important:
God laughs, it seems, because God knows how it all turns out in the end.”
Perhaps that’s another way of expressing what Mother Julian of Norwich said : All shall be well, all shall be well and all manner of things shall be well.

All photos by The Revd Lynn Hurry. Series 2 : Foxes of Latton 22

Kite in flight

Phto: Lynn Hurry

This photo of a Kite soaring high in the sky over Norfolk was sent to me by my friend, Lynn Hurry.

It’s majestic  and breathtaking in a seemingly effortless pose as it rides on the wind. Sheer freedom.
Lynn adds this comment:

The Kite resembles our hope and desire to be caught by God’s love and lifted to heights unimaginable.

Quite an exciting January thought when so often our spirits are dampened by the darkness and by the cold.
Here’s a prayer reflection from Piers

God our Creator,
As the kite rides the thermals
soaring high above us,
eyes scanning the vast majesty of creation,
So, by the breath of your Spirit
lift us high to soar heavenward,
our vision wide and expansive
with fresh perspectives.
Help the eyes of our souls
to pierce through the shrouding
mists and troubles of this world
and there see hope and goodness,
and, as the kite stretches wings
to catch the rising warmth,
so help us to stretch our arms wide
with the uplift of your love.
Amen.

[PN]