Overnight Accommodations

We are delighted to offer individual guest rooms and two beautiful suites, known as Catherine’s Cottage and “hermitages”, nestled on our peaceful property.

Thanks to a generous grant, we recently refreshed every bed, linen, and pillow, so you can look forward to a deeply comfortable and restorative night’s sleep.

Bedrooms

Overnight accommodations at our retreat center include 40 bedrooms.

Each single-occupancy bedroom is furnished with a desk, a comfortable reading chair, a sink and lighted vanity mirror, full or twin bed, dresser with hangers, and independent heating and air conditioning system.

For your comfort, we provide sheets, pillows, blankets, towels, one complimentary body soap, and an extra pillow and blanket.

Communal bathrooms and showers are located in each floor.

Guests must bring their own toiletries.

Catherine’s Cottage, “Hermitages”

Side view of a house with a small deck, surrounded by a green lawn and trees.

For those seeking a more solitary experience, our hermitage, Catherine’s Cottage, may be the answer. Catherine’s Cottage is a duplex of two single suites that include one queen bedroom and full bathroom, living room with a desk, reclining sofa, meditation/prayer space, kitchen with refrigerator, microwave oven and toaster, and an outdoor patio with views of the vast and natural beauty. The units are enhanced with skylight and windows, French doors that open to an outside deck with views of the vast and natural beauty, ceiling fans, air conditioning, and internet connectivity.

Guests are welcome to bring provisional refreshments of their choice.

“In the morning, long before dawn, he got up and left the house, and went off to a lonely place and prayed there.”

Mark 1:35

“When you are able to create a lonely place in the middle of your actions and concerns, your successes and failures slowly can lose some of their power over you. For then your love for this world can merge with a compassionate understanding of its illusions. Let us therefore live our lives to the fullest but let us not forget to once in a while get up long before dawn to leave the house and go to a lonely place.”

Out of Solitude, Henri J. M. Nouwen