May the New Year bring to all our friends and family health, joy, prosperity and everything good in life. Rosh Hashanah 2012 5773 May the coming year be filled with health and happiness for all my family and friends. 12 S hanah Tovah! which marks the creation of the world in nature, is very meaningful for me." While on the trail — typically for at least half the day — Comins does "a lot of the traditional davening," pray- ing, "journaling, chanting and per- sonal prayer." "Part of the beauty of praying in nature is that you can stop and lis- ten," he said. "Most people say they don't hear a response from God to their prayers, but if you hang up right when you're done talking, how do you know?" Comins says he knows the response has come "when my energy lifts." Others trek to the woods for holi- day experiences that combine formal traditional services with the informal- ity of being in the wilderness. The Boulder, Colo.-based group Adventure Rabbi, for example, holds Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur retreats in the Colorado mountains, while ' the Isabella Freedman Jewish Retreat Center in Falls Village, Conn., hosts observances for Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur. Tiferet Gordon, 29, has attended the Isabella Freedman retreats twice. A rabbinical student at Hebrew College in Newton, Mass., she'll be leading the center's music-filled Reconstructionist-style service this year. Not only does Gordon, of Brookline, Mass., find spirituality in nature, she says that attending the formal services Those attending High Holiday ser- vices at the Isabella Freedman Jewish Retreat Center in Falls Village, Conn., may find solitude for prayer at the center's Lake Miriam. at the retreat is more meaningful than being in synagogue at home. In Brookline, she says, "If you want to take a break, you go outside and there are cars and people are living their lives; it's still Wethiesday, if it's a Wednesday," she said. "Here you go outside and it's still Rosh Hashanah. Here, walking up and down the paths, it's like walking in Jerusalem. You see someone walking and you know you can say `Shanah tovah. ' Experiencing the holidays out- doors doesn't always mean climbing a mountain or going to a remote retreat. For some congregations it means a nearby park on the second day of Rosh Hashanah. Cherie Brown, 62, of Silver Spring, Md., belongs to one such synagogue, Am Kolel, a Jewish Renewal congrega- tion in nearby Beallsville. She loves both the more formal service on the first day and the smaller outdoor ser- vice on the second day that includes lots of singing and discussion groups rather than a formal sermon as well as a potluck lunch. "You're outside; you're in nature," Brown said. "It has this totally relaxed feel." May the coming year be filled with health and happiness for all our family and friends. 17Shanah Tovah! " ❑ G1Sl1Gtna May the coming year be filled with health and happiness for all our family and friends. I2Shanah Tovah! Nancy & Kenneth Lipson Honora Lipson Aaron & All Lipson David & Sara Lipson September 13 • 2012 77