The Ground Shots Podcast is an audio project exploring our relationship to ecology through conversations and storytelling with artists, ecologists, farmers, activists, story-tellers, land-tenders and more. How do we do our work in the modern age, when the urgency of ecological and social collapse feels looming? How do we creatively and whole-heartedly navigate our relationships with one another and the land?
Episode #69 of the Ground Shots Podcast was recorded in southern Oregon this past August among old Juniper trees tucked just below a special Tableland mesa, with Nikki Hill of Walking Roots, and Sigh Moon assisting in the conversation. Link to our website where you can donate to the podcast, and find the blog post on the podcast episode with photos and bios of Nikki and Sigh Moon as well as a few photos from where we recorded the episode: www.ofsedgeandsalt.com/podcastblog/lithiummine We talk about: What is a tableland or mesa? Nikki's intention in doing survey work at Thacker Pass, a place in Nevada slated to become a large lithium mine Questioning the sustainability of lithium Seeing wild gardens and patterns on the landscape that reflect historical relationships of indigenous peoples and places How deserts have been hard for European ancestored folks to conceptualize and how this makes it easy for us to consider it a wasteland to be inverted to perpetuate modern culture Considering certain lands sacrifice zones comes from the idea that we are separate from land and that we can actually have an effect the effects of private land ownership on the water table and water flows on land seeing through a lens of botanical archaeology how archaeology is often focused on ‘settled' life evidence not nomadic life evidence how do we start to re-see why plants are on the landscape in relationship to human historical tending of those plants? the misinformed idea that hunter-gatherers (gatherer-hunters) were not sophisticated in their tending what is the point in caring about anthropogenic landscapes? Nikki's plant survey process at Thacker Pass in Nevada and some of the plants she found like Yampah, Biscuitroots, Mariposa Lilies and more. Links: Nikki's Website: Walking Roots Counterpunch article by Nikki: “Botany as Archaeology, to Stop a Lithium Mine' Nikki's instagram page: walking.roots Sigh Moon's Instagram page: tenderwildeyes Sigh Moon's Youtube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCrmu0A77ja3o8DZ32ttOsIA/videosSave Thacker Pass Campaign website ‘The Ecology of Eden: An Inquiry into the Dream of Paradise and a New Vision of Our Role in Nature' book by Evan Eisenberg, a book I read in college on critical ecology that feels relevant to this episode “The Void, The Grid & The Sign: Traversing The Great Basin” by William Fox, all about concepts of void and land value in the Great Basin Desert, a fascinating book “1491” and “1493” by Charles Mann, alternative histories to North and South America mentioning anthropogenic landscapes including ‘terra preta' in the Amazon, mentioned on the podcast Save Oak Flat and the Apache Stronghold Campaign Angela Moles Ground Shots Podcast interview mentioned on the podcast: Episode #57: Gabe Crawford interviews Angela Moles P.h.D. on the rapid evolutionary responses of plants due to climate change, challenging scientific dogma Past episodes of the podcast featuring Nikki Hill: Episode #31: Wild Tending series / Nikki Hill and Gabe Crawford on the basics of wild-tending Episode #33: Wild Tending series / Nikki Hill and Gabe Crawford on re-thinking the concept of invasive plants Episode #59: Is there such a thing as an "Invasive Species"? A conversation with Matt Chew Ph.d. hosted by Kollibri terre Sonnenblume, Nikki Hill and Gabe Crawford Music for this episode: Reverie, Spires and The Undergrowth by Juniper Blue This episode hosted by: Kelly Moody Produced by: Kelly Moody
Episode #68 of the podcast is a conversation with Adam Larue of Sharpening Stone Gathering, out of Grants Pass, Oregon. visit our blog post on the episode to see a few photos of the land where we interviewed: https://www.ofsedgeandsalt.com/podcastblog/2022/6/12/episode-68-a-conversation-in-a-camas-meadow-adam-larue Adam and I recorded this conversation in a Camas meadow adjacent to his land after I taught wild-tending and critical ethnobotany plant plant walks for a week at the Sharpening Stone Earthskills Gathering, which Adam helps run. In this episode with Adam, we talk about: How Adam got the land that he lives on and runs the Sharpening Stone Earthskills Gathering Some of the methods and madness of logging in Oregon which happens all around Adam's private inholding near Umpqua National Forest, the herbicide spraying and GMP tree planting replacing forest diversity the downfalls of profit-centered thinking vs. ecological centered thinking some info about the Sharpening Stone Earthskills Gathering which takes place on the land we do the interview on Re-wilding as a hot topic and trend right now dancing with modern technology while trying to reconnect to land Links: For one time donations to support this podcast: Paypal : paypal.me/petitfawn VENMO: @kelly-moody-6 Cashapp: cash.app/$groundshotsproject Our website with an archive of podcast episodes, educational resources, past travelogues and more: http://www.ofsedgeandsalt.com Our Instagram pages: @goldenberries / @groundshotspodcast Join the Ground Shots Podcast Facebook Group to discuss the episodes Subscribe to our newsletter for updates on the Ground Shots Project Interstitial Music: ‘I'm Moving to the Mountains' by Adam Larue Theme Music: ‘Sweat and Splinters' by Mother Marrow This episode hosted by: Kelly Moody Produced by: Kelly Moody Sharpening Stone Gathering on Instagram Becoming Wild on Instagram Sharpening Stone Gathering Adam's Youtube project: ‘Becoming Wild'
Direct link to episode with extra photos and Ted's poetry: https://www.ofsedgeandsalt.com/podcastblog/tedpackard Ted studied History and Anthropology at Christopher Newport University, got a Master's in Teaching, went on the road with the Momentary Prophets band, and then went to study with Alderleaf Wilderness College and Wilderness Awareness School. He taught various program for youth around the greater Seattle area for many years before relocating to Durango, Colorado to dry out, as he says. After some years of a break, Ted just started up a new nature connection program for youth in the Durango community. Ted does lots of things, including various handcrafts, refurbishing guitars and other instruments, music-making, writing, wood-burning and more. As college peers, we spent a lot of time together researching things like mushroom cults, the esoteric origins of Judeo-Christian religion, the anthropology of psychedelics, zen koans, and more. We both have lived in different places since and woven in and out of each others' lives so we spent some time really checking in about how we think about things now vs. when we were radical activist driven neo-pagan coyote-trickster troubadour mind-melters. In this episode with Ted, we talk about: Ted's nature connection mentorship work with youth in Washington and Colorado Ted's upbringing in northwestern Virginia Our experience in college of community: artists, philosophers, musicians, activists, and neo-pagans and our reflections on that time now seasonal ritual as a somatic map ways that Ted's anger at an eco-cidal culture has transformed over the years to a yearning for finding points of connection vs. telling someone they are wrong or how to live what is a community of mutuality in a broken society that emphasizes hyper-individualism? activism can look many ways and can even be in small moments of advocacy awareness of the isolation of capitalism is often crippling the reality that financial security is generally not available to our generation (millennials) Ted's musical projects which include Momentary Prophets from his early 20's, that had a coyote-troubadour element with community driven instigation, as well as his own solo projects paying attention to ‘nature' bringing you closer to crazy synchronicities that become signposts to keep going weaving a web of interrelated ideas and ecologies as a way of being trauma, neutrinos, quantum physics intersecting eastern philosophy, bodies as multiplicity, the mycelium nature of everything, music as ecological channeling Links: The Emerald Podcast, mentioned on the podcast Daniel Quinn, author we mention on the podcast Mystic Moon of Norfolk, VA, pagan community mentioned Terence McKenna, mentioned on the podcast Mountain Justice: organization dedicated to ending mountain top removal in Appalachia Momentary Prophets on Facebook Momentary Prophets on Bandcamp (Interstitial music featured on the episode) Ted's music on Bandcamp (he is putting out a new album RIGHT NOW, his individual music featured in the intro of this episode) Wilderness Awareness School Living Earth School Sophie Strand Ted's Patreon for his music, art, writing Ted's revived blog of writing (do yourself a favor and read and savor) Ted's Venmo if you'd like to donate to help support his musical projects : @Theodore-Packard Support the podcast on Patreon to contribute monthly to our grassroots self-funding of this project For one time donations to support this podcast: Paypal : paypal.me/petitfawn VENMO: @kelly-moody-6 Cashapp: cash.app/$groundshotsproject Our website with an archive of podcast episodes, educational resources, past travelogues and more: http://www.ofsedgeandsalt.com Our Instagram pages: @goldenberries / @groundshotspodcast Join the Ground Shots Podcast Facebook Group to discuss the episodes Subscribe to our newsletter for updates on the Ground Shots Project Music: by Ted Packard and Momentary Prophets This episode hosted by: Kelly Moody Produced by: Kelly Moody and Ted Packard
To access full blog post on the episode, full show notes and a photo diary, click below: https://www.ofsedgeandsalt.com/podcastblog/dougelliott Doug Elliott is a naturalist, herbalist, storyteller, basket maker, back-country guide, philosopher, and harmonica wizard. For many years made his living as a traveling herbalist, gathering and selling herbs, teas, and remedies. He has spent a great deal of time with traditional country folk and regional indigenous peoples, learning their stories, folklore and traditional ways of relating to the natural world. In recent years he has performed and presented programs at festivals, museums, botanical gardens, nature centers and schools from Canada to the Caribbean. He has been a featured storyteller at the National Storytelling Festival. He has lectured and performed at the American Museum of Natural History in New York, the Royal Ontario Museum in Toronto and conducted workshops for the Smithsonian Institution. He has led ranger training sessions for the National Park Service and guided people on wilderness experiences from down-east Maine to the Florida Everglades. He was named harmonica champion at Fiddler's Grove Festival in Union Grove, N.C. He is the author of five books, many articles in regional and national magazines, has recorded a number of award winning albums of stories and songs, and is occasionally seen on PBS-TV, and the History and National Geographic Channels. Links: Doug Elliott's Bandcamp page, where you can listen to and download all of his full length albums and story recordings: https://dougelliott.bandcamp.com/ Doug Elliott's website and blog: https://dougelliott.com/ Doug Elliott's Youtube channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCKpxmzq7RqmnGeW2R0UnfpQ Todd Elliott's ‘Mushrooms of the Southeast' book mentioned in the podcast Article on Bessie Jones, whom Doug mentions in a story on the podcast, national treasure and African American singer (also see video alongside others, displayed on blog post page for this episode) Support the podcast on Patreon to contribute monthly to our grassroots self-funding of this project For one time donations to support this podcast: Paypal : paypal.me/petitfawn VENMO: @kelly-moody-6 Cashapp: cash.app/$groundshotsproject Our website with an archive of podcast episodes, educational resources, past travelogues and more: http://www.ofsedgeandsalt.com Our Instagram pages: @goldenberries / @groundshotspodcast Join the Ground Shots Podcast Facebook Group to discuss the episodes Subscribe to our newsletter for updates on the Ground Shots Project This episode hosted by: Kelly Moody Produced by: Kelly Moody and Ted Packard
Episode #65 of the Ground Shots Podcast is a conversation with Dave Meesters and Janet Kent of the Terra Sylva School of Botanical Medicine out of Madison County, North Carolina. https://www.ofsedgeandsalt.com/podcastblog/terrasylvaschool After trying to get together for a conversation all summer, we finally met up in the early fall at Dave and Janet's herbalism school classroom at the Marshall High Studios, in Marshall, North Carolina. It was a frigid fall day and when I arrived, they had tea going and snacks out on a table in their beautifully lit and decorated studio space. It was obviously curated and inhabited by herbalists. Dave and Janet run the Terra Sylva School of Botanical Medicine with Jen Stovall, and have a clinical herbalism practice in the rural area where they live and the nearby city of Asheville, NC. Dave Meesters grew up in Miami, Florida and attended college at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He moved to Asheville, North Carolina in the winter of 1998. In 2003, his formal herbal training began with an apprenticeship with CoreyPine Shane at the Blue Ridge School of Herbal Medicine, and since then his experience has included organizing and staffing a free clinic in New Orleans in the months after hurricane Katrina, and starting and practicing at a free clinic in Asheville's homeless day shelter. Dave has plans to be involved with another herbal free or low-cost clinic in the future, but until then he sees clients privately and provides care to the mountain folks in his rural Appalachian neighborhood, most of whom would rather see an herbalist than a doctor. From 2013 to 2016, Dave was, with Janet, the director and primary instructor at the Terra Sylva School's summer apprenticeship program, which was held on the communal mountain land where he resides before the school moved to Marshall. He and Janet are the founders of Medicine County Herbs, an herb apothecary, medicinal plant nursery, and blog. Dave sees herbalism as a way to provide a more appropriate, accessible, pleasurable, and effective form of health care than the dominant model, and as a means to bond and integrate ourselves with plants, the garden, and the wilds. His herbalism is wedded to a life-long resistance to the forces of domination and alienation, especially domination of and alienation from Nature. His practice and his teaching reflect a deep evolving holism attained by listening to, honoring, embracing, and collaborating with the whole of Nature, and by his study of the threads connecting holistic physiology, energetics, ecology, gardening, systems theory, magic, alchemy and permaculture. Janet Kent is a clinical and community herbalist, educator, gardener and writer. The child of two naturalists, Janet grew up in the foothills of the Blue Ridge mountains, learning the amazing diversity of regional wild flowers at an early age. She began studying the medicinal uses of plants when she moved to a rich Appalachian cove high in the mountains of Madison county, North Carolina fifteen years ago. She did not set out to become an herbalist, but as she learned over the years in her forest home, if we are open, we do not change the land we inhabit as much as it changes us. The transformative healing power of the plants around her turned an interest into a calling. The vast power to heal through reconnection is the medicine she most seeks to share. Whenever possible, she encourages her students and clients to grow their own herbs, to make their own medicine, and most of all, to experience the more-than-human world first hand. Here is where deep, foundational healing is most profound. Janet views herbal medicine as a means of reconnecting to the long tradition of plant medicine in rural Appalachia. This tradition has become more relevant with the ailing state of the dominant health care system and the rising cost of herbal medicine. Janet considers herbalism the best option for addressing injustice in health care. Herbalists, being outside the biomedical system, can avoid its inequalities. Affordable care, medicine and education are central to this paradigm. In addition to being co-founder and a core faculty member at the Terra Sylva School of Botanical Medicine, Janet also runs a medicinal and native plant nursery, apothecary and blog, Medicine County Herbs with Dave. Terra Sylva combines the experience of herbalists who've done their work in very different regions: rural Appalachia and the city of New Orleans. Dave Meesters and Janet Kent founded and run Medicine County Herbs in the mountains of North Carolina and publish the Radical Vitalism blog, while Jen Stovall is one of the herbalists behind the Crescent City's Maypop Community Herb Shop. Despite the geographical separation, this team have been partners in herbalism for over a decade, going back to the first herb classes Jen & Dave taught together in New Orleans in 2004. The Terra Sylva School fulfills a dream we've nurtured for a long time, to meld our diverse strengths and perspectives to create a comprehensive, dynamic program well-suited to equip and inspire the next generation of herbalists to practice in the 21st century. Our teaching reflects both Janet & Dave's land-based herbalism practiced in a rural setting and Jen's experience caring for folks in the big city. In this conversation with Dave and Janet, we talk about: some of the culture of the holler Dave and Janet live in deep in southern Appalachia pros and cons of living remotely in Appalachia how herbalism tied them to the land they live on and kept them there when other folks involved in the land project didn't stay teaching herbalism online vs. in person the magic of tuning into one small piece of land year after year Dave and Janet's wild-tending and land-tending work over 20 years in Madison county the problem with human misanthropy in punk culture or the ‘humans suck' mentality the importance of human tending on land and Appalachia specifically the effects of capitalism on wild harvest of medicinal plants and the complex nuances of this, and effects Michael Moore's books and teachings had on wild plant populations like Yerba Mansa we geek out on Pedicularis as an example of a plant that is tricky to wildcraft because of its inability to be cultivated some of Dave and Janet's views on ‘invasive plants' and land-tending and the responsibility of human engagement why it is important to ask where the garden begins and ends? how land-tending and restoration can't be about going back to a past that is impossible to recreate due to loss of topsoil and keystone species (think Chestnuts in the east) but about working with a compass of creating diversity and resilience in a rapidly changing world, tending to baselines of the past and ever-shifting baselines of present What can disempowering the engines of disruption with other disruption look like? some thoughts on changes in ‘western' herbalism from a focus on the individual to a focus on the collective and cultural mending using ‘biomedicine' vs. ‘allopathic' to describe mainstream western medicine and some history around the use of these words Dave and Janet's podcast ‘The Book on Fire,' what it focuses on and why they facilitate it we do a mini overview of the book ‘The Caliban and the Witch,' a book they review and deconstruct on their podcast (book linked in Link list below) Links: Terra Sylva School of Botanical Medicine Radical Vitalism essay by Janet and Dave on their underlying philosophy To Fulfill the Promise of Herbalism Dave's piece on the power and potential for grassroots herbalism Uncontrollable Night: Herbs for Grief Janet's piece on working with herbs to ease the phases of grief The Book on Fire podcast “The Caliban and the Witch: Women, the Body and Primitive Accumulation” book by Silvia Federici mentioned on the podcast, reviewed in detail by Dave and Janet on their podcast ‘The Book on Fire' “Rambunctious Garden: Saving Nature in a Post-Wild World” by Emma Marris, briefly mentioned in the podcast, also mentioned in GSP Episode #53 : Wild Tending Series / Gabe and Kelly on ecological history, anthropogenic landscapes and the negative side of conservation Mountain Gardens, a regional Appalachian botanical sanctuary run by Joe Hollis mentioned on the podcast Mountain Gardens Youtube Channel, mentioned on the podcast Donna Haraway “Staying with the Trouble”, mentioned in the podcast, a book Dave and Janet review on their podcast ‘The Book on Fire' Support the podcast on Patreon to contribute monthly to our grassroots self-funding of this project For one time donations to support this podcast: Paypal : paypal.me/petitfawn VENMO: @kelly-moody-6 Cashapp: cash.app/$groundshotsproject Our website with an archive of podcast episodes, educational resources, past travelogues and more: http://www.ofsedgeandsalt.com Our Instagram pages: @goldenberries / @groundshotspodcast Join the Ground Shots Podcast Facebook Group to discuss the episodes Subscribe to our newsletter for updates on the Ground Shots Project Theme music: 'Sweat and Splinters' by Mother Marrow Guest music: Little Wind and Sea by Village of Spaces This episode hosted by: Kelly Moody Produced by: Kelly Moody
Episode #64 is a conversation with Mary Morgaine Plantwalker of Herb Mountain Farm in Weaverville, NC. This episode was recorded in person in the gardens of Herb Mountain Farm August 2021. Mary Morgaine Plantwalker is one of the main caretakers of Herb Mountain Farm alongside her partner, Hart Squire. Located in the oldest mountains on earth, Herb Mountain Farm was established in 1970, originally as an organic vegetable and flower farm, by Hart Squire and his family, in Weaverville, North Carolina. Herb Mountain Farm was a piece of land that had been overgrazed, logged and farmed unsustainably for over a century and needed a lot of conscious stewarding to build up the soil that had been washed away to the Mississippi Delta. Hart, with the help of many hands over the decades, brought in organic matter and plant diversity. For decades, Hart sold vegetable and flowers from the farm to local markets, restaurants and grocers, then built an earth-bermed warehouse on the property for the organic farmers in the area, called Hart Distributing, which eventually grew into a distribution center for organic ale and wine – long before Asheville was beer city! Hart spent several years in California, opening one of the first farm to table restaurants called ‘The Seasons' in the 1970's. In 2005, Mary Morgaine (aka Mary Plantwalker) came to work on Herb Mountain Farm's garlic production crew and first met Hart. She worked there for a few years before starting her own business, Earth Dancers, where she taught an array of “Plants as Allies” classes and workshops. In 2010, Buchi Kombucha took over the warehouse and began what grew into a very successful fermented health drink business. Buchi remained on the farm until they outgrew the space in 2016. In 2011, Hart and Mary Morgaine reconnected and fell in love. They married in 2012, and their union birthed the vision to transition the farm into a Learning Center and Botanical Sanctuary. In 2013, their daughter, Nadia, was born and has been absorbing the gardening and plant knowledge of her parents since day one and gives Hart and Mary Morgaine the inspiration to keep sailing on for the future generations. Herb Mountain Farm's website Herb Mountain Farm on Instagram United Plant Savers Support the podcast on Patreon to contribute monthly to our grassroots self-funding of this project For one time donations to support this podcast: Paypal : paypal.me/petitfawn VENMO: @kelly-moody-6 Cashapp: cash.app/$groundshotsproject Our website with an archive of podcast episodes, educational resources, past travelogues and more: http://www.ofsedgeandsalt.com Our Instagram pages: @goldenberries / @groundshotspodcast Join the Ground Shots Podcast Facebook Group to discuss the episodes Subscribe to our newsletter for updates on the Ground Shots Project Theme music: 'Sweat and Splinters' by Mother Marrow Guest music: ‘Overflow,' ‘Entropy,' and ‘The One' by Cole Sullivan This episode hosted by: Kelly Moody Produced by: Kelly Moody
Episode #63 is a conversation with Marissa Percoco out of Barnardsville, NC. Marissa (she/her) is an avid fermentation enthusiast who has spent the last 10 years exploring community and the wilds, as well as living deeply with various fermented cultures and local plants, and learning how it all comes together. Traveling through the wild places of Tennessee, Florida, the Southwest, California, Colorado, Arizona, Utah, Oregon, Washington, Hawaii and most everywhere in between with her four amazingly adventurous children, Marissa has gathered cultures from far and wide. Deeply rooted in the Earthskills movement and committed to co-creating a new culture within which we, our children and all beings thrive, they are now nesting in Barnardsville, NC, and she humbly offers her humorous experiences to you. She is also the Director of the Firefly Gathering. In this conversation with Marissa, we talk about: rural Appalachia dynamics and gentrification in a valley outside of a hip city, Asheville, NC some stories of Marissa's moving from the bay area of California to the rural south in the early 2000's and what it was like initially, the culture shock shifting from years of nomadism to mainly tending one small place in community some of Marissa's childhood experiences in California with chemically bonded parents and plant loving grandparents farming in west climates vs. arid climates tending tropical plants in a subtropical four season place, and pushing the edge of what is possible during rapid climate change the perspective gained from travel and having an awareness of the plants in those places Marissa's time in the Gila wilderness doing walks and we geek on plants we found there the pros and cons of isolation living in wilderness areas, co-dependency, addiction and depression wrapped in idealism, and how can we contribute to society living ‘out there?' Marissa's mead brewing practice on the road over the years, capturing place through brewing plants how facing the immediacy of death changes perspective Firefly Gathering, sign up for year round classes or attend the annual gathering: http://www.fireflygathering.org Firefly on Instagram: http://www.instagram.com/fireflygatheringnc Support the podcast on Patreon to contribute monthly to our grassroots self-funding of this project For one time donations to support this podcast: Paypal : paypal.me/petitfawn VENMO: @kelly-moody-6 Cashapp: cash.app/$groundshotsproject Our website with an archive of podcast episodes, educational resources, past travelogues and more: http://www.ofsedgeandsalt.com Our Instagram pages: @goldenberries / @groundshotspodcast Join the Ground Shots Podcast Facebook Group to discuss the episodes Subscribe to our newsletter for updates on the Ground Shots Project Theme music: 'Sweat and Splinters' by Mother Marrow This episode hosted by: Kelly Moody Produced by: Kelly Moody
Episode #62 of the Ground Shots Podcast features a conversation with Chama Woydak of Homegrown Families and Dancing Springs Farm, out of Asheville, North Carolina. Chama and I have a relationship that spans over a decade, which began when I landed on her farm in 2012 to go to herbal medicine school. We ended up farming together for a few years before I hit the road, and I owe a lot of my knowledge about growing food and caring for animals to Chama who has dedicated the last few decades to these practices alongside her work as a doula and childbirth educator. As you'll hear in this interview, her work as a farmer tending life and death is inextricably linked to her work as a doula re-humanizing care for others' births in a society that doesn't prioritize it or see it as vitally important. In this conversation with Chama, we talk about: Chama's journey into childbirth education and birthwork The role of doulas in childbirth The difference between a OBGYN, doula and midwife The problematic nature of the medical industrial complex in relationship to birth how doulas can re-humanize care in a culture and system that dehumanizes from the bottom up raising the bar of birth experiences the intricacies of complex medical trauma and how it trickles into our society taking a restorative justice approach to birthwork the connection between farming and birthwork how tending space in nature can help teach us how to tend and care for our human systems (we are nature) doula work is inherently justice work the power of small adjustments and interactions in making big change and how tending land can teach us about this how death and birth are parallel initiations Chama on Instagram: @chamawoydak Homegrown Families on Instagram: @homegrown_families https://www.ashevillehomegrownfamilies.com/ Support the podcast on Patreon to contribute monthly to our grassroots self-funding of this project For one time donations to support this podcast: Paypal : paypal.me/petitfawn VENMO: @kelly-moody-6 Cashapp: cash.app/$groundshotsproject Our website with an archive of podcast episodes, educational resources, past travelogues and more: http://www.ofsedgeandsalt.com Our Instagram pages: @goldenberries / @groundshotspodcast Join the Ground Shots Podcast Facebook Group to discuss the episodes Subscribe to our newsletter for updates on the Ground Shots Project Theme music: 'Sweat and Splinters' by Mother Marrow Interstitial Music: Ebb and Flow, Finger and the Bone by Brown Bird This episode hosted by: Kelly Moody Produced by: Kelly Moody
Episode #61 of the Ground Shots Podcast features a conversation with Jill Trashley out of Asheville, North Carolina. ... ... Earlier in the Spring, Jill and I met up in Asheville to distill some Lemon Balm together. First, we went to her friends' house, down the road from hers, where we had permission to harvest Lemon Balm from their very abundant gardens right in the city. The Lemon Balm was in it's prime. Jill comes to their house often to help in the gardens and harvest extra herbs to distill or to make medicine. Stepping into their yard, I thought for a moment that I was suddenly in Berkeley, California, where gardens and quirky folk abound, tucked into an urban weaving of lush flowering plants and treehouses, Redwoods and backyard nooks. But no, this was Asheville, and the treehouse was in a big healthy Eastern Hemlock tree, the carefully placed rock walls abound, the exposed dirt southern red, the hand built greenhouse off the back of the house full of desert plants one wouldn't expect deep in Appalachia. We gathered Lemon Balm by cutting bunches and dug up some young plants to transplant elsewhere. Lemon Balm tends to spread easily in some environments and Jill's friends wanted us to take some away. I later transported some of these plants back to the land where I'm living for the summer and tucked them into an empty bed and wished them well. We took our harvest back to Jill's house, where we had some mid-day Mertails drinks. (Mertails are elixirs that can be used as mixers instead of alcohol, or with alcohol if you desire, Jill talks more about this company she co-owns on the podcast) I felt so good after having one of these, as my drink was very hydrating on what was a hot day. We started then setting up the copper still Jill owns and got it heating up to prepare for distilling the Lemon Balm into hydrosol. In the time while we were waiting for the still to heat up, we sat down to chat about some of Jill's projects over the years, including working with trash disposal at festivals, starting a mobile elixir bar, living on the road with intention and more. ... ... Blog post for this episode which includes a photo diary of our Lemon Balm distillation and meetup: www.ofsedgeandsalt.com/podcastblog/jillofnohm Jill on Instagram: @herban_urbalist NOHM on Instagram: @thenohm The Mertails on Instagram: @the_mertails Shop Jill's apothecary The Mertails online Theme music: 'Sweat and Splinters' by Mother Marrow Interstitial Music: “Clay” by Rising Appalachia This episode hosted by: Kelly Moody Produced by: Kelly Moody
Episode #60 of the Ground Shots Podcast is a solo episode with Kelly, glimpsing into a window of Spring in southern Appalachia. In this episode of the podcast, I chat about paying attention to details of place and how those moments of attention become stories of reverence. Some observations late May on the current land where I'm spending time Info on and experiences with Nettle, Wood Nettles and Nettle relatives The everyday journey of land-tending in different environments and playing with cultivated/wild tending dynamics How land-tending looks so different in different places Plants are old friends! Some thoughts on invasive plants and biological invasions in the South Support the podcast on Patreon to contribute monthly to our grassroots self-funding of this project For one time donations to support this work: Paypal : paypal.me/petitfawn VENMO: @kelly-moody-6 Cashapp: cash.app/$groundshotsproject Our website with an archive of podcast episodes, educational resources, past travelogues and more: http://www.ofsedgeandsalt.com Our Instagram pages: @goldenberries / @groundshotspodcast Join the Ground Shots Podcast Facebook Group to discuss the episodes Subscribe to our newsletter for updates on the Ground Shots Project Theme music: 'Sweat and Splinters' by Mother Marrow This episode hosted by: Kelly Moody Produced by: Kelly Moody
Episode #59 of the Ground Shots Podcast is a conversation with Professor Matt Chew, and is hosted by Kollibri terre Sonnenblume, Nikki Hill and Gabe Crawford. Dubbed a ‘gadfly of invasion biology' by Scientific American, Matt Chew is known for critiquing ecology's overreliance on societal metaphors and conservationists' misapplication of notions like ‘nativeness'. Dr. Chew has a B.S. Environmental Interpretation and an M.S. Range Science (Ecology) from Colorado State University, and a Ph.D. in Biology from Arizona State University. As statewide Natural Resources Planner for Arizona State Parks, he coordinated their Natural Areas Program, researched wildlife issues, and served on interagency committees, one of which also included his future wife, plant ecologist Julie Stromberg. Julie was recently featured as a guest on Kollibri terre Sonnenblume's podcast, Voices for Nature and Peace. With Julie's encouragement, he abandoned government work to earn a biology Ph.D. based entirely on historical research. Currently employed at Arizona State University, Dr. Chew conducts a field course in ‘novel ecosystems,' lectures in ‘history of biology' and ‘biology and society', and works with postgraduate students. He was awarded an Oxford research fellowship in 2014. His articles in "Nature," "Science" and other publications have been cited in over 200 different journals. Former podcast guests, Kollibri terre Sonnenblume, Gabe Crawford, and Nikki Hill host this episode. Nikki Hill has a degree in environmental science and has worked in restoration and agriculture. Currently she invests her energy in wildtending efforts. Nikki and Kollibri co-authored a zine together called, "The Troubles of 'Invasive' Plants," which you can download for free on Kollibri's blog, linked in the show notes. Kollibri terre Sonnenblume is a writer, photographer, podcaster, tree hugger, animal lover, and cultural dissident. Past experiences include urban bike farmer, Indymedia activist, and music critic. Kollibri holds a BA in “Writing Fiction & Non-fiction” from the St. Olaf Paracollege in Northfield, Minnesota. Kollibri hosts and curates the Voices for Nature and Peace Podcast. You can read his writings focused on ecology and politics at Maska Moskska press, linked in the bio. Gabe Crawford was raised on a small homestead outside of Durango, Colorado and started learning about plants from an early age. He got launched on his plant journey by studying with Katrina Blair at the Turtle Lake Refuge in Durango. He moved to Sandpoint, Idaho where he worked with Twin Eagles Wilderness School and Kaniksu Land Trust mentoring kids. Through this, he started naturalist training which opened him up to the world of wild tending, Traditional Ecological Knowledge and the ancient and intricate relationships between humans and ecology. Gabe spent time with Finisia Medrano learning about the ancient wild gardens of the west that were and still are tended by indigenous peoples and was taught how to tend these first foods and plant back for future abundance. He collects the seeds of native foods plants, fruit trees, berries and other exotics to plant feral orchards and wild gardens. In this conversation, Kollibri, Nikki and Gabe take a deep dive into the history of "invasion biology" and reveal its scientific shortcomings and its cultural biases. This is a crossover episode with Kollibri's podcast, Voices for Nature and Peace, so we are airing it on both podcasts at the same time. I highly recommend checking out Kollibri's guests and the breadth of what he has been covering lately visiting the intersections of social action, politics, the environment, animals rights, land justice and more. Also check out Kollibri's weekly column read out loud on his platform Radio Free Sunroot. You can also find Voices for Nature and Peace on most mainstream podcast streaming platforms. Links: Kollibri's website where you can find his writings, zines and more: Macska Moksha Press Radio Free Sunroot and the Voices for Nature and Peace Podcast Gabe Crawford on instagram: @plumsforbums Nikki Hill's website, Walking Roots Voices for Nature and Peace Patreon page Call the podcast and leave a message (while you're there, if your ok with us airing it on the podcast, give us verbal permission): 1-434-233-0097 Support the podcast on Patreon to contribute monthly to our grassroots self-funding of this project For one time donations to support this work: Paypal : paypal.me/petitfawn VENMO: @kelly-moody-6 Cashapp: cash.app/$groundshotsproject Our website with an archive of podcast episodes, educational resources, past travelogues and more: http://www.ofsedgeandsalt.com Our Instagram pages: @goldenberries / @groundshotspodcast Join the Ground Shots Podcast Facebook Group to discuss the episodes Subscribe to our newsletter for updates on the Ground Shots Project Theme music: 'Sweat and Splinters' by Mother Marrow This episode hosted by: Kollibri terre Sonnenblume, Nikki Hill and Gabe Crawford Produced by: Kollibri terre Sonnenblume and Kelly Moody
Episode #58 of the podcast features Sean Croke, who runs the Hawthorn School of Plant Medicine in the Pacific Northwest. In this episode of the podcast, we talk about: Sean's herbalism practice herbalism during covid and the gain in interest in natural medicine since the pandemic started some special characteristics of Cascadia and the Pacific Northwest Sean's school, the Hawthorn School of Plant Medicine based in Olympia, Washington, a little bit on how it started and how it has evolved over time Sean's focus on propagating wild plants before wildcrafting the Olympia Free Clinic and how it used to function Links: Hawthorn School website Understory Apothecary Want to share something? Call the podcast and leave a message (while you're there, if your ok with us airing it on the podcast, give us verbal permission): 1-434-233-0097 Support the podcast on Patreon to contribute monthly to our grassroots self-funding of this project For one time donations to support this work: Paypal : paypal.me/petitfawn VENMO: @kelly-moody-6 Cashapp: cash.app/$groundshotsproject Our website with an archive of podcast episodes, educational resources, past travelogues and more: http://www.ofsedgeandsalt.com Our Instagram pages: @goldenberries / @groundshotspodcast Join the Ground Shots Podcast Facebook Group to discuss the episodes Subscribe to our newsletter for updates on the Ground Shots Project Theme music: 'Sweat and Splinters' by Mother Marrow Interstitial Music: Losgrinn by Vaughn Aed Hosted by: Kelly Moody Produced by: Kelly Moody
Episode #57 of the podcast is a conversation between Gabe Crawford and Dr. Angela Moles. Gabe Crawford, a former podcast guest, hosts this episode of the Ground Shots Podcast. Gabe has been conducting research on the history of anthropogenic landscapes, ecology, botany, and ethnobotany, and discovering bias and racism in those fields that have carried into our understanding of human relationship with the land today. This research also inevitably brings one to diving into the science and culture of invasion biology, a fairly new field of study. If you're a regular listener of the podcast, you know that we have spoken a few times on anthropogenic landscapes and visit the often controversial topic of invasive plants. We spoke about this with Nikki Hill on Episode #33 of the podcast, and on more recently on Episode #53 of the podcast. After diving into this controversial topic and realizing that it is complex and requires looking at a lot of different perspectives, Gabe decided to reach out to Dr. Angela Moles, whose articles he discovered in his research. Angela Moles in an Australian scientist doing research on plant morphology and rapid plant evolution and many of her findings are challenging previously held as true assumptions in the scientific community about the ways certain plants function under certain conditions. Professor Angela Moles is the director of the Evolution & Ecology Research Centre at UNSW Sydney in Australia. Her research aims to improve understanding of plant responses to climate change, and to quantify the ways introduced species change when they are introduced to new ranges. Angela is also a mother, and a surf lifesaver. In this episode of the podcast, Gabe and Angela talk about: Angela's research with the Global Herbivory Project and in evolutionary biology and ecology how plants and animals can evolve and change faster than we previously though, and Angela's quantifiable research on this the change in cultural attitudes towards introduced species in the last hundred years some history on the Acclimatization Society, which encouraged the introduction of non-native plants from Europe in the 19th and 20th centuries to lands being colonized, as a way to bring familiarity to settlers and with the assumption that this practice enriched foreign ecologies dogma present in the scientific community how ecosystems are dynamic and don't just stay in one place how difficult it is for scientists to make paradigm shifts some Australian anthropogenic landscape ecology, fire, colonization whether it is the invading plants that are the issue or the change in disturbance regimes of landscapes including native folks in ecology and urban ecology work the gridlock between the need for assisted migration or ‘natural' self-led plant migrations due to climate change, and the fear of invasive plants harming ecosystems Links: Gabe Crawford, guest host, on Instagram: @plumsforbums Article by Angela Moles and research team: “Invasions: the trail behind, the path ahead, and a test of a disturbing idea” Journal of Ecology. 2012. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2745.2011.01915.x I highly recommend perusing Google Scholar and reading other academic articles written by Angela Moles, of which there are many, to get more perspective on her groundbreaking research. Angela's UNSW Sydney webpage Acclimatisation society Angela's Global Herbivory Project Call the podcast and leave a message (while you're there, if your ok with us airing it on the podcast, give us verbal permission): 1-434-233-0097 Support the podcast on Patreon to contribute monthly to our grassroots self-funding of this project For one time donations to support this work: Paypal : paypal.me/petitfawn VENMO: @kelly-moody-6 Cashapp: cash.app/$groundshotsproject Our website with an archive of podcast episodes, educational resources, past travelogues and more: http://www.ofsedgeandsalt.com Our Instagram pages: @goldenberries / @groundshotspodcast Join the Ground Shots Podcast Facebook Group to discuss the episodes Subscribe to our newsletter for updates on the Ground Shots Project Theme music: 'Sweat and Splinters' by Mother Marrow This episode hosted by: Gabe Crawford Produced by: Kelly Moody
In this episode of the podcast, Gabe Crawford, a former podcast guest, catches up with Dan Nanamkin, who was featured previously on Episode #39 of the Podcast. Dan Nanamkin is from the Chief Joseph Band Of Wallowa, Nez Perce, and Colville Confederated Tribes of Washington State has been an advocate/teacher for indigenous culture, community unity, youth empowerment, racial equality, and peace for several decades. Prior to Standing Rock, Dan took one of the leads in helping to restore ancient canoe culture of the northwest plateau tribes, the River Warriors. This inspired him further to connect with the Water, something that led him to Standing Rock. He endured months of peaceful front line action at Standing Rock from September 2016 until March 2017. Dan has since traveled across the nation speaking with his two dogs and band, the One Tribe Movement. Dan advocates for people to be better informed, to get more involved, to resist racism and violence, and to support the movement to protect Mother Earth. He is a public presenter, musician and author who remains active in bringing forth awareness of Native culture. His mission is to connect modern day people with the traditions that are still absolutely relevant and critical to life today. Dan hopes to bring back traditional knowledge of the earth/plants/medicines and survival in a way to encourage healing, wellness and respect for balance with Mother Earth and all living things. In this conversation with Dan and Gabe, they talk about: Dan's new podcast “Honor All Life” update on Sovereignty Camps and the name change to Young Warrior Society organic food access on the reservation how Dan's community stepped up during Covid to support one another some #landback talk from Dan's perspective the difficulty of being able to tend and harvest native first foods with how land is now split up in modern times due to colonization, racism, access issues some updates on Dan's land projects Links: Dan's link-tree page with links to all of his projects: https://linktr.ee/nanamkin Guest Host, Gabe Crawford's instagram page: @plumsforbums Call the podcast and leave a message (while you're there, if your ok with us airing it on the podcast, give us verbal permission): 1-434-233-0097 Support the podcast on Patreon to contribute monthly to our grassroots self-funding of this project For one time donations to support this work: Paypal : paypal.me/petitfawn VENMO: @kelly-moody-6 Cashapp: cash.app/$groundshotsproject Our website with an archive of podcast episodes, educational resources, past travelogues and more: http://www.ofsedgeandsalt.com Our Instagram pages: @goldenberries / @groundshotspodcast Join the Ground Shots Podcast Facebook Group to discuss the episodes Subscribe to our newsletter for updates on the Ground Shots Project Theme music: 'Sweat and Splinters' by Mother Marrow Interstitial Music: “I am a Bird” by Fen Swale This episode hosted by: Gabe Crawford Produced by: Kelly Moody
Episode #55 is a conversation with Téo Montoya of the Indigenous Futures Podcast. Téo was our guest on episode #48 of the podcast. Episode #48 was a series of recordings from his joining Gabe Crawford and I on the Colorado Trail last summer for a couple days during our Plant-a-go walk. After that episode went out, Téo and I chatted about doing another episode together where we get deeper into some of the topics we touched on while talking candidly on the trail. Téo Montoya is a Lipan Apache(Ndé) Writer, Indigenous futurist, Electronic Music Producer, Human Design Analyst, Traditional Ecological Knowledge Student, and Educator. After completing his BA in Food and Medical Anthropology, with a focus on Indigenous diets and health disparities in Native American communities, Teo spent 5 years exploring the worlds of plant medicine, Ancestral Health Coaching, Djing and Producing music, Information Technology, working with a Native-Led Non-profits, and completing his Human Design Training. As a writer and creator he has begun the long process of writing a speculative fiction series and media project imagining future worlds and societies built upon indigenous values, ideals, and cultures. Teo believes imaging the future, specifically a future grounded in indigenous knowledge and technology, will provide us with the solutions to meet the largest challenges to the Earth and our Humanity. Today, Teo lives in Santa Fe, New Mexico, writing, producing music, and supporting people on their personal and spiritual health journeys. In this conversation with Téo, we talk about: Téo defines indigenous futurism more in-depth (you can also learn a lot on his new podcast, The Indigenous Futures Podcast, here) the role of indigenous futurism in envisioning a new relationship with land moving forward we get deeper into the concept of transcommunality, what it means, who writes about it, and how we can take cue from the ideas for community building intersections of religion and spirituality in how we see the land and treat one another religion and power the importance of having a relationship to land some talk on #landback and land reparations and how that connects to spirit technology, techné and religious awe and some philosophy of technology in relationship to Indigenous Futurism the importance of myth in creating cosmologies of reciprocity some words on Téo's current art + story multimedia projects some indigenous-afro futures writers and artists of note Links: Téo on Instagram: @humandesignreadings @indigenousfuturespodcast @teo.montoya.nde The Indigenous Futures Podcast Octavia Butler's work Call the podcast and connect with us by leaving a message (while you're there, if your ok with us potentially airing it on the podcast, give us verbal permission): 1-434-233-0097 Support the podcast on Patreon to contribute monthly to our grassroots self-funding of this project For one time donations to support this work: Paypal : paypal.me/petitfawn VENMO: @kelly-moody-6 Cashapp: cash.app/$groundshotsproject Shop the Ground Shots apothecary currently open Our website with an archive of podcast episodes, educational resources, past travelogues and more: http://www.ofsedgeandsalt.com Our Instagram pages: @goldenberries / @groundshotspodcast Join the Ground Shots Podcast Facebook Group to discuss the episodes Subscribe to our newsletter for updates on the Ground Shots Project Theme music: 'Sweat and Splinters' by Mother Marrow Interstitial Music: by Téo Montoya Hosted by: Kelly Moody Produced by: Kelly Moody and Téo Montoya
Episode #54 of the Ground Shots Podcast is a conversation with Sarah Galvin, who hosts and creates with House of Yore, formerly Forest and Fjord. Sarah hosts exploratory ancestral workshops through House of Yore, as well as sells small batch bioregional herbal medicine. *** In this conversation with Sarah, we talk about: *** Sarah's traveling years starting with leaving home as a teenager to live in Europe Sarah's experience working on various farms across the country and some pros and cons of WWOOFing (Worldwide Working on Organic Farms) How she ended up in Alaska and some of her ‘dark nights of the soul' experiences there living alone on a remote island in an off grid cabin, and what she learned about facing demons and her greatest fears The need for chaos medicine in our culture, and how making space for that instead of pushing it away is needed Sarah's experience growing up with Ayurveda and her training in it, as well as how this framework helps her see the world, especially in regards to honing in on what our individual roles are on earth How Sarah's Irish ancestry helps her connect to so-called Alaska and pastoralism Some history talk of colonialism in Alaska, and how rapid climate change is occurring there Links: Sarah's website: House of Yore Sarah on Instagram: @house.of.yore Call the podcast and connect with us by leaving a message (while you're there, if your ok with us potentially airing it on the podcast, give us verbal permission): 1-434-233-0097 Support the podcast on Patreon to contribute monthly to our grassroots self-funding of this project For one time donations to support this work: Paypal : paypal.me/petitfawn VENMO: @kelly-moody-6 Cashapp: cash.app/$groundshotsproject *** Shop the Ground Shots apothecary open until the end of February! *** Our website with an archive of podcast episodes, educational resources, past travelogues and more: http://www.ofsedgeandsalt.com *** Our Instagram pages: @goldenberries / @groundshotspodcast *** Join the Ground Shots Podcast Facebook Group to discuss the episodes *** Subscribe to our newsletter for updates on the Ground Shots Project *** Theme music: 'Sweat and Splinters' by Mother Marrow *** Interstitial Music: ‘Remedy' by Lindsay Clark *** ‘Talk to the Dead' by Soleil Ouimet *** Hosted by: Kelly Moody *** Produced by: Kelly Moody
This episode of the Ground Shots Podcast is a conversation between Kelly Moody and Gabe Crawford. We haven't done an episode together since we were on the Colorado Trail this past summer. So, we wanted to talk about the research we have been doing since we got off of the trail, and while hermiting a bit in our bell tent camp along a riparian corridor, outside of Durango, Colorado. We've been thinking a lot about what land tending means, and definitions of ‘wildness,' and ‘wilderness' since hiking the trail, and wanted to spend some time looking into the literature out there on conservation, ecology and agriculture. We've only touched the surface with our research, but wanted to talk about it on air with ya'll here, and connect some distant tendrils of what we're finding through conversation. Above all, our goal has been to try to understand why anthropogenic (human tended and co-created) landscapes are ignored in scientific literature, hence why ‘wild-tending' seems far-fetched to some folks. And, we want to understand the deeper origins of the invasion biology field of conversation and how it may be connected to ethnocentrism, racism, unexamined colonialist assumptions in the fields of history and science, and more. Since this episode was recorded and edited, we have migrated to where my family is in southern Virginia for the rest of the winter and are trying to adjust to a different culture, climate and navigating the pandemic without public land. In this episode of the podcast, we talk about: the oppressive colonizing force of the Christian church institution in Europe and how this influenced the suppression of land based spirituality some etymology of ‘heretic,' ‘heathen,' ‘villan,' and ‘pagan' how the disregard for historic anthropogenic landscapes is connected to the obsession with ‘pristine' ecology and ‘wilderness' notions how Eurocentric ideas about agriculture influenced what colonists saw as ‘uncivilized' or ‘cultivated' on turtle island and how these ethnocentric biases ignored anthropogenic landscapes the white supremacy inherent in the western scientific interpretation of human cultivation, land management and indigenous influence on ecology biases in the historical accounts of indigenous cultures and the landscapes of Turtle Island, South America, etc. by European explorers yet many of these accounts are used to determine ecological baselines in conservation goals some of the origins of emotive, moral and value based language in invasive biology and conservation fields the roots of why conservationism is wary to include indigenous peoples in its preservation of ‘pristine wilderness' and how the creation of baselines that doesn't include indigenous land management practices, even though the ecological baselines that might be their goals were anthropogenic landscapes the history of national parks extirpating natives off of their land in order to ‘preserve' an idea of ‘wilderness' and how they continue to ignore how the humans there were a part of creating and managing the landscapes the affluence associated with conservation culture and the western ideas of the museumification of ‘pristine land' the misinformation in the academic literature of invasion biology created through confirmation biases and disproven theories continuing to be referenced as facts Links: A slew of resources related to what we chatted about on the podcast can be found below. Subscribe to our email newsletter, found at the bottom of this link section, for updates on when we will be offering some classes related to these topics. “Rambunctious Garden : Saving Nature in a Post-Wild World” by Emma Marris “Beyond the War on Invasive Species” by Tao Orion “Keeping it Living: : Traditions of Plant Use and Cultivation on the Northwest Coast of North America” by Nancy Turner “The Burning Times” by Jeanne Kalogridis Southwest Colorado Wildflowers entry on Triteleia grandiflora (Wild Hyacinth, Large-flowered Onion), where the botanists mention the likelihood that the Utes brought it through trade from the Pacific Northwest and planted it to eat, given it is a very disjunct species from where it is normally found “The Ecology of Invasions by Animals and Plants” by Charles Elton “Charles S. Elton and the Dissociation of Invasion Ecology from the Rest of Ecology” by Mark Davis “Don't Judge Species on Their Origins” by Mark Davis and Matthew K. Chew “1491": New Revelations of the Americas before Columbus” by Charles Mann ECOLOGISTS, ENVIRONMENTALISTS, EXPERTS, AND THE INVASION OF THE ‘SECOND GREATEST THREAT' by Matthew K. Chew “The rise and fall of biotic nativeness: a historical perspective” by Matthew K. Chew “Invasions: the trail behind, the path ahead, and a test of a disturbing idea” by Angela Moles "Is rapid evolution common in introduced plant species?” by Angela Moles Torreya Guardians website: “Assisted Migration (Assisted Colonization, Managed Relocation, Translocation) and Rewilding of Plants and Animals in an Era of Rapid Climate Change” “Quantifying Threats to Imperiled Species in the United States: Assessing the relative importance of habitat destruction, alien species, pollution, overexploitation, and disease” by David Wilcove (this article is routinely cited as the reference for invasive species being the second greatest threat to biodiversity when it doesn't even say that, alongside Edward O. Wilson's 1992 book, “The Diversity of Life”) “Invasion Biology : Critique of a Pseudoscience” by David Theodoropoulos “Environmental determinism”: This is a wikipedia article on the history of environmental determinism in the contest of western colonialism and how this philosophy was used to justify abuses to human rights. “How conservation became colonialism” BY ALEXANDER ZAITCHIK “Forgotten Fires : Native Americans and the Transient Wilderness” by Omer C. Stewart Call the podcast and leave us a message (you give us permission to potentially air it on the podcast): 1-434-233-0097 Support the podcast on Patreon to contribute monthly to our grassroots self-funding of this project For one time donations to support this work: Paypal : paypal.me/petitfawn VENMO: @kelly-moody-6 Cashapp: cash.app/$groundshotsproject Our website with an archive of podcast episodes, educational resources, past travelogues and more: http://www.ofsedgeandsalt.com Our Instagram pages: @goldenberries / @groundshotspodcast Join the Ground Shots Podcast Facebook Group to discuss the episodes Subscribe to our newsletter for updates on the Ground Shots Project Theme music: 'Sweat and Splinters' by Mother Marrow Interstitial Music: “Big Ivy” by the Resonant Rouges Hosted by: Kelly Moody Produced by: Kelly Moody and Gabe Crawford
This episode of the podcast features the host, Kelly, solo, speaking about her upbringing in the south and her journey towards starting the Ground Shots Project and Podcast. Find the FULL transcript for this episode on our Patreon page, here. This episode of the Ground Shots Podcast is a first! It's me, Kelly, the podcast host, speaking solo about my upbringing in the South and how it plus other experiences I've had into adulthood, influenced the creation of the Ground Shots Project as an ecological art project, and the Ground Shots Podcast, a ecological storytelling project featuring guests from all over. I start off the episode speaking a bit about where I grew up, and some of my basic experiences in the enviroment where I was raised. I grew up in southern Virginia, and I even linked my hometown in the shownotes if you want to get a glimpse. I go into how my life evolved into adulthood, studying Philosophy formerly, working on organic farms, studying with herbalism teachers, and my general influences. I talk about how I originally started traveling, though there is so much more to the story than what I tell here. I speak about how my time farming, walking the Camino de Santiago, spending time with my grandmother as a child, and meeting people on the road, influenced the creation of my project. I answer some questions posed by folks who submitted them on Instagram about my project and relationship with plants, travel, connecting to place. A note: we now have a phone line where you can call the podcast and leave messages. PLEASE leave us one! If you do, you give us permission to potentially broadcast your messages on air. If you can, please give us verbal permission when you leave a message. I'm excited about this! I produced this episode entirely on my own this time, with a new program I'm trying out. It's not perfect, but I'm playing around and seeing how it goes. So, if it sounds different in any way, this is why! Also, I got a new microphone, so my voice is clearer than in the past recording from my computer. If you have a comment, question or inquiry based on what you hear in this episode, feel free to shoot me an email, comment on the blog post for this episode or call our podcast phone number and leave a message. Links: Kip Redick on CNU talks: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TcXeIgyMUoo Tao Orion (quoted at the end of the podcast): https://www.chelseagreen.com/product/beyond-the-war-on-invasive-species/ Frank Cook's work: http://www.plantsandhealers.org/ Chestnut School of Herbal Medicine: https://chestnutherbs.com/ Goldenseal Sanctuary in Ohio where I interned: https://unitedplantsavers.org/center-for-medicinal-plant-conservation/ My hometown on Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/South_Hill,_Virginia Call the podcast and leave us a message (you give us permission to potentially air it on the podcast, please be sure to also give us verbal permission): 1-434-233-0097 Support the podcast on Patreon to contribute to our grassroots self-funding of this project. Support the Ground Shots Project with a one time donation via Paypal at: paypal.me/petitfawn Donate to the podcast on VENMO: @kelly-moody-6 Donate to the podcast on Cashapp: cash.app/$groundshotsproject Our website with backlog of episodes, plant profiles, travelogue and more: http://www.ofsedgeandsalt.com Our Instagram pages: @goldenberries / @groundshotspodcast Join the Ground Shots Podcast Facebook Group to discuss the episodes Subscribe to our newsletter for updates on the Ground Shots Project Theme music: 'Sweat and Splinters' by Mother Marrow Interstitial Music: “Rainbow Waltz” by Cody Fielder Hosted by: Kelly Moody Produced by: Kelly Moody
This episode of the Ground Shots Podcast is a conversation with Ali Meders-Knight, out of Chico, California. Ali Meders-Knight is a Mechoopda tribal member, mother of five, and traditional basketweaver based in Chico, CA. She is a Mechoopda Tribal liaison working to form partnerships for federal forest stewardship contracting and tribal forestry programs authorized in the 2018 Farm Bill. She has been a Traditional Ecological Knowledge (TEK) practitioner for over 20 years, collaborating on environmental education and land restoration projects with Chico State University and the City of Chico. In 2009 she helped plan and establish Verbena Fields, a unique 17-acre interactive food forest and interpretive park in North Chico to help educate the community about the rich ecological heritage of the Mechoopda people. In this episode with Ali, we talk about: what is TEK? Ali explains the advanced nature of Traditional Ecological Knowledge which is evolving ecosystem knowledge and land tending techniques acquired by indigenous peoples over hundreds or thousands of years through direct contact with the land issues around forest management in California and the U.S. on the whole, and how money has influenced decisions made about management strategies instead of what makes the most sense for the land and the local community why forest management should be localized and indigenous led the intentions and goals of the TEKChico project: creating a trained workforce that can complete long term contracts with the USDA to manage forests locally how disaster capitalism influences land management and doesn't actually take care of people and the land the need for fire on the landscape in California modern cultural misunderstandings of fire and how trauma and racism play into these misunderstandings how the 2018 US Farm Bill increased federal support and opportunity for Native farmers and ranchers, and how this bill links federal land management needs more directly to sovereign indigenous nations Links: TEK CHICO's website: http://www.TEKChico.org 2018 Farm Bill info: https://fas.org/sgp/crs/misc/IF11287.pdf Support the podcast on Patreon to contribute to our grassroots self-funding of this project. Support the Ground Shots Project with a one time donation via Paypal at: paypal.me/petitfawn Donate to the podcast on VENMO: @kelly-moody-6 Donate to the podcast on Cashapp: cash.app/$groundshotsproject Our website with backlog of episodes, plant profiles, travelogue and more: http://www.ofsedgeandsalt.com Our Instagram pages: @goldenberries / @groundshotspodcast Join the Ground Shots Podcast Facebook Group to discuss the episodes Subscribe to our newsletter for updates on the Ground Shots Project Theme music: 'Sweat and Splinters' by Mother Marrow Interstitial Music: “Breathing Tide” by Samara Jade (ft. Aimee Ringle & Alexa Sunshine Rose) Find Samara Jade's music on bandcamp “California Hillside” by Stow Lake find Stow Lake's music on bandcamp https://www.redbudresourcegroup.org/ Hosted by: Kelly Moody Produced by: Kelly Moody and Opia Creative
Episode #50 of the Ground Shots Podcast is a conversation with the clinical herbalist Anna-Marija Helt Ph.D., who lives in Durango, Colorado. Marija has been studying herbs, mushrooms and essential oils intensely since 2008, training at the Ohlone Center of Herbal Studies with Pam Fisher, at Green Medicine Herb School with Kathi Keville and with a number of other herbalists. Prior to becoming an herbalist, she spent nearly 15 years as a research scientist, with a focus on cancer and infectious disease. She received her doctoral degree in microbiology at the University of Washington School of Medicine while studying cancer-promoting mechanisms of human papillomavirus, the primary cause of cervical cancer. Her postdoctoral research on dengue virus was conducted in the School of Public Health at the University of California at Berkeley. She was an infectious diseases trainee at the UW Center for AIDS & STD and an infectious diseases fellow through UC San Francisco Division of Infectious Diseases. Her focus as an herbal practitioner is a low-tech, simple and holistic approach to health that incorporates both traditional herbal knowledge and the latest scientific research. In this episode with Marija, we talk about: bridging tradition and science in herbalism, and some history of how this divide happened wild-tending Osha- Ligusticum porteri (Apiaceae) in the Rockies and substitutes to use instead of Osha medicinally Osha's regional abundance but big scale scarcity, and how keeping plant populations in a bigger picture is a perspective to consider Osha's deadly lookalikes - Poison and Water Hemlock Conium maculatum and Cicuta spp. (both Apiaceae) several poisonous plants found in the southern Rockies, the greater Rockies and beyond: Death Camas - Toxicoscordion venenosum (Melanthiaceae) or alapíšaš in the Pacific Northwest, Baneberry - Actaea rubra (Ranunculaceae) Corn Lily - Veratrum californicum (Melanthiaceae) Monkshood - Aconitum spp. (Ranunculaceae) Larkspur - Delphinium spp. (Ranunculaceae) or δελφίνιον in Greek Pulsatilla + Anenome - Pulsatilla spp. and Anenome spp. (both Ranunculaceae) and more. Some photographs of the plants we discuss in this episode, many taken this summer on the Plant-a-go walk I did with Gabe Crawford on the Colorado Trail can be found on the blog post for this episode: Links: This episode on the blog, along with photos of some of the plants we mentioned with their scientific names: https://www.ofsedgeandsalt.com/podcastblog/annamarijahelt Marija's website: http://www.osadha.com Some articles by Marija on Basmati: https://basmati.com/contributor/anna-marija-helt-phd The United Plant Savers at-risk list: https://unitedplantsavers.org/species-at-risk-list/ Marija on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCWNnHwGkEyV3RUNz-eGZqtg/videos Support the podcast on Patreon to contribute to our grassroots self-funding of this project. Support the Ground Shots Project with a one time donation via Paypal at: paypal.me/petitfawn Donate on VENMO: @kelly-moody-6 Cashapp: cash.app/$groundshotsproject Our website with backlog of episodes, plant profiles, travelogue and more: http://www.ofsedgeandsalt.com Our Instagram pages: @goldenberries / @groundshotspodcast Join the Ground Shots Podcast Facebook Group to discuss the episodes Subscribe to our newsletter for updates on the Ground Shots Project Theme music: 'Sweat and Splinters' by Mother Marrow Hosted by: Kelly Moody Produced by: Kelly Moody and Opia Creative
This episode of the Ground Shots Podcast features a conversation with Wren Haffner and Ini Giesbrecht of Mountain Jewel Center for Earth Connection, an 18 acre homestead in the Ozarks. I've been following Mountain Jewel for a few years now on Instagram, since before Wren and Ini started tending the land they steward. I've been consistently inspired by Wren and Ini's work on the land, as they have prolifically shared the evolution of their land project on Instagram and through blogging over the years. Wren and Ini have shared the plants they work with and the trials and tribulations of homesteading and building infrastructure that feels in harmony with the land. I've been wanting to talk with them for awhile on the nature of their work, what their goals are, some of their discoveries and more. In this conversation with Wren and Ini, we talk about: Wren and Ini's traveling life before landing in the Ozarks and their reasons for landing there some geology of the Ozarks and how it influences the ecology Mountain Jewel's land-based infrastructure natural building in a humid place, and how it might actually be a BETTER option in some instances! the perennial native and non-native food crops Wren and Ini have been working with, some include: Chinese Mountain Yam, Gumi, Indigo Bush, Comfrey, Skirret, Sunroot, Figs, Apples, Mulberry, Persimmon, Elderberries, Paw Paws, Chestnut and Ozark Chinkapin, Yaupon Holly, Aronia Berry and more. deeper talk about Paw Paws and their flavor, medicine, selected species, propagation Wren's new land race seed project focused on Squash, and more talk on land race seeds in general Links: Mountain Jewel on Instagram @_mountainjewel_ Mountain Jewel Center for Earth Connection's website where you can buy bare root seedlings of some of the plants we mention in the conversation, read their blog and more: https://ozarkmountainjewel.com/ Support the podcast on Patreon to contribute to our grassroots self-funding of this project. Support the Ground Shots Project with a one time donation via Paypal at: paypal.me/petitfawn Donate on VENMO: @kelly-moody-6 Cashapp: cash.app/$groundshotsproject Our website with backlog of episodes, plant profiles, travelogue and more: http://www.ofsedgeandsalt.com Our Instagram pages: @goldenberries / @groundshotspodcast Join the Ground Shots Podcast Facebook Group to discuss the episodes Subscribe to our newsletter for updates on the Ground Shots Project Theme music: 'Sweat and Splinters' by Mother Marrow Hosted by: Kelly Moody Interstitial Music: “Building a Bridge” by Samara Jade Produced by: Kelly Moody and Opia Creative
Episode #48 of the Ground Shots Podcast is the last recording Gabe and I conducted on our 2020 Colorado Trail Plant-a-go walk. This episode documents a few conversations Gabe and I had with our friend Téo Montoya who came to hike with us for a brief stint on the west side of the Collegiate Loop section of the trail. Téo Montoya is a Lipan Apache(Ndé) Writer, Indigenous futurist, Electronic Music Producer, Human Design Analyst, Traditional Ecological Knowledge Student, and Educator. After completing his BA in Food and Medical Anthropology, with a focus on Indigenous diets and health disparities in Native American communities, Teo spent 5 years exploring the worlds of plant medicine, Ancestral Health Coaching, Djing and Producing music, Information Technology, working with a Native-Led Non-profits, and completing his Human Design Training. As a writer and creator he has begun the long process of writing a speculative fiction series and media project imagining future worlds and societies built upon indigenous values, ideals, and cultures. Teo believes imaging the future, specifically a future grounded in indigenous knowledge and technology, will provide us with the solutions to meet the largest challenges to the Earth and our Humanity. Today, Teo lives in Santa Fe, New Mexico, writing, producing music, and supporting people on their personal and spiritual health journeys. Teo and I met at the Occidental Arts and Ecology Center in the Spring of 2019 during a multi-week permaculture training. This episode of the podcast isn't a formal interview or formal conversation with Teo, though I would like to do that with Teo in the future. This episode features snippets of the conversation between Teo, Gabe and I during dinner and then again for breakfast. In this episode, we touch on: Teo's thoughts on ‘transcommunality' and moving forward into the future by learning from indigenous wisdom but also not romanticizing it a place for modern technology in new visions of the future re-thinking the ‘anti-sacredness' of the urban and complex technologies some more Russian Olive rants (again I know) and talk more about how our culture uses invasive plants as scapegoats for our mistakes the need for indigenous wisdom in the Green New Deal talks Teo's perspective on white folks or settlers wild harvesting food and medicine and the complexity of this practice problems that arise with the ‘white-hands off' perspective on land tending indigenous peoples are innovative: in the past, present and will be in the future questioning how we define ‘wild' and ‘wildcraft' and within the colonialist concept of private land ownership Teo tells us a little bit about an indigenous futurism media project he's working on and got funding for with a grant in California I know some of the topics we dip into here will be controversial, and I personally am open to multiple sometimes contradictory perspectives at once. It is necessary in a time of such political and social polarization. Some topics require consistent critical conversation and hearing from multiple perspectives, looking at deep time and into the future, and all of the socio-economic-cultural factors at play. I think we need to be able to have different beliefs and try to understand where the other is coming from, even if you know they are totally wrong (or believe they are). Teo offers a unique perspective as an indigenous person that doesn't mean all other indigenous people agree. As humans, culturally, we are just as diverse as the plant life that shift and morph from one mountain, forest or meadow to another. Links: ‘Rekindling Native California Ecologies Part 1” with Redbird (Edward Willie) from the Native Seed Pod Podcast, a teaching we mention a few times Metapod music, Teo's project featured as interstitial music for this episode Teo's Instagram accounts: @Teomontoya.nde @humandesignreadings Support the podcast on Patreon to contribute to our grassroots self-funding of this project. Support the Ground Shots Project with a one time donation via Paypal at: paypal.me/petitfawn Donate on VENMO: @kelly-moody-6 Cashapp: cash.app/$groundshotsproject Our website with backlog of episodes, plant profiles, travelogue and more: http://www.ofsedgeandsalt.com Our Instagram pages: @goldenberries / @groundshotspodcast Join the Ground Shots Podcast Facebook Group to discuss the episodes Subscribe to our newsletter for updates on the Ground Shots Project Theme music: 'Sweat and Splinters' by Mother Marrow Interstitial Music: ‘Willow Call' by Metapod Hosted by: Kelly Moody Produced by: Kelly Moody and Opia Creative
Episode #47 of the Ground Shots Podcast features a conversation with artist and creative land-tender Sharon Kallis, who lives in Vancouver, BC, Canada. Sharon is a community engaged environmental artist. I met Sharon last year at the Saskatoon Circle ancestral skills gathering in eastern Washington. Before the gathering, one of my good friends had been telling me about Sharon and her partner David and how I should meet them. While at this gathering, they happened to set up their camp right next to the camp I made with my friends. I have to tell you, Sharon and David are A LOT OF FUN. They make cool things, have a good time, and are incredible people to carry on deep and candid conversations with. After talking for a bit and learning more about their work, I asked Sharon if she'd be interested in sharing some of what she does on the podcast. Sharon and I talked about doing some kind of in-person interview last summer, with the potential of me attempting to cross the border into Canada to visit her gardens and projects in-person, but it never happened. At least, not for now. Also, the idea of dealing with carrying my mobile home across the border with tinctures, bark and animal pelts, had me hesitant. Sharon gave me a copy of her book ‘Common Threads' last summer to read through, and I loved it. I read about her projects with ‘invasive' plants for fiber, rope and basket-making, her restoration projects in the city using those said plants, and other community oriented projects. These projects that literally weave art, ecology, place-making and craft skills together really inspired my already deep interest in gleaning what was right in front of me to make work that connects to place. I kept it in my mind to still feature her somehow on the podcast. After getting back from the Colorado Trail Plant-a-go walk this summer, she was one of the first people on my mind to contact. I wanted to hear what she was up to now, and also how the current situation in the world was affecting her mindset and practice. Our conversation here is just that. A check-in, an exploration of Sharon's work, some art + ecology philosophy talk, some untangling of what decolonizing craft could look like in one way and in one place, and more. About Sharon Kallis: (From the Earthand Gleaner's Society website) Sharon is a community engaged environmental artist (in her words). ‘With a “one mile diet” approach to sourcing art materials, Sharon works to discover the inherent material potential in a local landscape. Involving community in connecting traditional hand techniques with invasive species, tended plantings and garden waste, she creates site-specific installations that become ecological interventions. Graduating from Emily Carr Institute of Art and Design in 1996 she began working materials from the land in 1999 and has exhibited and engaged communities with her practice in Ireland, Spain, Mexico and throughout the United States. At home in Vancouver Canada, Sharon works with Vancouver Park Board, Stanley Park Ecology Society. She is one of the primary stewards of the Means of Production Garden since 2009 which is a community garden that grows art materials. She is also one of the primary stewards of Trillium North Park. Sharon has received numerous Canada Council and British Columbia Arts Council grants for both studio-based and community-focused projects. Her work has been acknowledged as the 2010 recipient of the Brandford/ Elliott International Award for Excellence in Fibre Arts, Vancouver Mayor's Arts Award for Studio Design: emerging artist, and the Vancouver Mayors Award Recipient for Studio Design in 2017. Her book, Common Threads: weaving community through collaborative eco-art,” was published by New Society Publishers in 2014 and is used in many post secondary programs as a model for creative engagement in shared green spaces.' In this conversation with Sharon, we talk about: Sharon's creative work and how she arrived at what she is doing today in Vancouver, BC, Canada how creative folks can be important connection-makers and ecological problem-solvers and how allowing room for them is important the importance of respecting indigenous peoples' relationships to their cultural weaving and fiber practices working on community garden projects in urban Vancouver focused on regional culturally significant fiber plants how ‘invasive' plants can be useful for learning to weave and for problem-solving because they are abundant free materials that you can mess up on while experimenting different ‘invasive' plants Sharon has worked with doing community craft projects in Vancouver, BC the importance of Nettles, Fireweed and Flax as fiber plants and pollinator preferred species how weeds are often seen as plants that simply don't serve the human agenda navigating connection to place and the land as a settler trying to stay buoyant during pandemic, fires and revolution Sharon offered a video how-to on Dogbane fiber processing for patrons of the Ground Shots Project. It will be available for subscribers $5 and up! Pledge here to support the podcast and learn more about processing fiber from Sharon. Links: Follow Sharon Kallis on Instagram @sharonkallis Sharon's Facebook page Earthand Gleaner's Society website Sharon's Flickr account with amazing photographs over the years of various ‘invasive' plant weaving, net-making and crocheting projects in Vancouver, BC Sharon's book, “Common Threads” Support the podcast on Patreon to contribute to our grassroots self-funding of this project. Support the Ground Shots Project with a one time donation via Paypal at: paypal.me/petitfawn Donate on VENMO: @kelly-moody-6 Cashapp: cash.app/$groundshotsproject Our website with backlog of episodes, plant profiles, travelogue and more: http://www.ofsedgeandsalt.com Our Instagram pages: @goldenberries / @groundshotspodcast Join the Ground Shots Podcast Facebook Group to discuss the episodes Subscribe to our newsletter for updates on the Ground Shots Project Theme music: 'Sweat and Splinters' by Mother Marrow Hosted by: Kelly Moody Produced by: Kelly Moody and Opia Creative
Episode #46 of the Ground Shots Podcast features a conversation between Gabe Crawford and Kelly Moody tuning in around mile 300 of their ‘Plant-a-go' thru-hike walk on the Colorado Trail this summer. To listen to their reflections on the first 100 miles of the walk, listen to Episode #43, here. In this episode of the podcast, we talk about: redefining ‘wildness' and Babylon the pros and cons of walking and wild-tending land observations land readers and books we were reading at that time and how they affected our perspective on the land what does it mean to have right relations with land? what does moderate disturbance actually look like? the struggles that long walks bring up comparing the characteristics of the east side of the Collegiate Loop to the west side of the Collegiate Loop the myth of the solitary ‘American man' and how it is a very dysfunctional myth Links: Gabe's instagram: @plumsforbums Be sure to listen to Gabe's latest IGTV video where he reflects on re-thinking the identity of ‘wild-tending' and definitions of ‘wildness' Gabe's PayPal if you'd like to support his wild-tending and seed-saving work: paypal.me/johnnyslug Kollibri's podcast, ‘Voices for Nature and Peace' which I mention in the introduction of the podcast: https://radiofreesunroot.com/category/voices-for-nature-and-peace/ Youtube video where we introduce the ‘Plant-a-go' walk on the Colorado Trail: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IPfcZ0MwiWc Rocky Mountain Land Reader that we were reading on the trail: https://www.tatteredcover.com/book/9781555663933 ‘Wilderness Passage' book that Gabe mentions he read on the trail: https://www.amazon.com/Wilderness-Passage-Forrester-Blake/dp/B00DG9PPQ6 Native Seed Pod Podcast, Part 2 with Redbird, Gabe mentions some of Redbird's insights on the podcast, Listen to his words here: https://www.nativeseedpod.org/podcast/2020/ep-11-redbird-part2 Support the podcast on Patreon to contribute to our grassroots self-funding of this project. (patreon.com/ofsedgeandsalt) Support the Ground Shots Project with a one time donation via Paypal at: paypal.me/petitfawn Our website with backlog of episodes, plant profiles, travelogue and more: http://www.ofsedgeandsalt.com Blog page for this episode, along with a few photos from the campsite where we recorded this episode: www.ofsedgeandsalt.com/podcastblog/ctmile300 Our Instagram page @goldenberries Join the Ground Shots Podcast Facebook Group to discuss the episodes Subscribe to our newsletter for updates on the Ground Shots Project Theme music: 'Sweat and Splinters' by Mother Marrow Additional music: ‘Work over Time' by Dunkin Hardee, recorded on the Colorado Trail Hosted by: Kelly Moody Produced by: Kelly Moody and Opia Creative
This episode of the Ground Shots Podcast features a conversation with the potter and artist John Mahkewa, Hopi-Tewa elder currently living in Yuma, Arizona. John and I met a few years ago at the Buckeye Gathering, an ancestral skills gathering that usually occurs in the Spring in Concow, California. Since this gathering where I met John and took his pottery class, the Buckeye Gathering has been on sabbatical, due to the Paradise fire and the Covid-19 pandemic. I decided to take John's class at this gathering because I wanted to focus on one craft for the week, and I had been introduced to land-based pottery from my friend Erin Fahey, who is pictured in this podcast episode's main photo. She spoke highly of John, having met him the year before at the gathering and offered to process his clay for him a year in advance because of a recent stroke he had had. Taking his class was a fruitful experience of immense patience and fulfillment. At first, the gathering was rainy, and there were a lot of folks who showed up for John's class, it was hard to get individual attention while working with the clay we the been given. The weather affects everything with pottery. Rainy weather makes it act differently - makes it dry slower and more likely to crack, at the same time, drying a hand pinched pot in the direct sun will also make it crack. John told stories and reminded us that our mindset affects our pots. They were children we had to nurture. Each day the class got smaller as folks got distracted by shorter and more instantly fulfilling classes. As those who stayed dedicated to the process stuck it out, we got more individual attention and feedback from John about how we were working the clay. We made ultra small pots, partly because of the weather, partly because of John's advice to start small as it is less likely to crack and dries faster. Our goal was to pit fire the pots by the end of the week, and the variable weather made it uncertain if it would be successful. By the end of the week there were less than 10 of us dedicated students showing up to John's class, not that it wasn't a good class, but because often at these skill-share gatherings folks feel FOMO for not trying to dip their fingers in everything and distraction is a reality. During these last few days, John told a lot of stories about his life growing up with his grandmother as a mentor, being hospitalized for polio, being put in a school and being away from his family, his dreams of his grandmother and various saint figures, his time in the military, his death experience(which he talks about a little on the podcast), his work as an adult re-finding his craft and seeing the goodness in humanity. I did some recordings of John at the gathering that are not a part of this episode, but maybe at some point the combination of his teachings and the in-person interview will come out on the podcast. Ever since this meeting several years ago, John and I have been in conversation about continuing our recordings of his stories. I was attached to meeting again in person, but due to Covid-19, I have let go of that for the moment. Our elders are here for us to cherish, and they can go in an instant. Not to say that John is ill or anything, he is very vibrant. Covid-19 has reminded me that older folks are more vulnerable, and their stories go with them when they go. I appreciate John's perspective from our time being Facebook friends since this meeting at Buckeye, and have kept it in my mind to continue to capture his stories. This interview is a Facebook call we did in June that touches on some of the stories John shared a few years ago when I met him. I hope in the future we continue to record stories of his for the podcast as he has a lot to share. In this episode with John Mahkewa, we talk about: John's experiences as a young child hanging out with his grandmother Grace Chapella, who was an acclaimed potter, and some things he learned from her, how she used clay to tell stories John speaks to his death experience in a Jewish hospital after a heart attack over 20 years ago, and how this experience changed his perspective on the world, and reinvoked his interest in clay John speaks to clay as a teacher, and how he processes the clay by hand with no electric machines and tools the DNA connection between clay and humans John reaching out into new art-forms, and branching beyond traditional techniques in recent years Some wisdom from John about his perspective on the Covid-19 pandemic, recent protests and riots some of John's writing projects in the works Support the podcast on Patreon to contribute to our grassroots self-funding of this project. Support the Ground Shots Project with a one time donation via Paypal at: paypal.me/petitfawn Our website with backlog of episodes, plant profiles, travelogue and more: http://www.ofsedgeandsalt.com Our Instagram page @goldenberries Join the Ground Shots Podcast Facebook Group to discuss the episodes Subscribe to our newsletter for updates on the Ground Shots Project Theme music: 'Sweat and Splinters' by Mother Marrow Interstitial music: ‘Little Flower' by West of Roan West of Roan's website: http://www.westofroan.com West of Roan's bandcamp: https://westofroan.bandcamp.com/releases Hosted by: Kelly Moody Produced by: Kelly Moody and Opia Creative
This episode of the Ground Shots Podcast features a conversation with Ramona Moonflower Rubin, an activist and forest therapist living in the Bay area of California. Ramona Moonflower Rubin walks a path woven of science, spirituality and activism connecting human and ecological health. Ramona studied Cultural Ecology at the University of Santa Cruz and has a Master's in Public Health from the University of Michigan. She founded Healing Forest Guide to facilitate a deep conversation about how we experience and relate to the natural world. Ramona lives in Berkeley California on Chochenyo Ohlone ancestral land at the ancient settlement of Huchiun. She teaches from her diverse fields of study: ecology, permaculture, California native plants, sustainable agriculture, nutrition, public health, integrative medicine, cannabis science, ethnobotany and forest therapy. Based in her Judaic heritage and influenced by Buddhist, shamanic and earth-based traditions, Ramona's approach to spirituality is open and grounded in welcoming the sensory experience of the present. Her ceremonial practice is based on the conviction that other beings embody an intelligence, and that it is our sacred heritage and right to interact with and experience this intelligence. I sat down and had a brief conversation with Ramona after we both participated in the march to Oak Flat this past February with the Apache Stronghold primarily organized by the local San Carlos Apache folks. The march to Oak Flat is a prayer-focused walk with the intention of bringing awareness to an unlawful copper mine trying to make it's way on sacred Apache land. In this episode with Ramona we talk about: Ramona's environmental activism work being involved in protecting old growth Redwoods in the 90's in northern California the different motivations behind the Redwood campaign Ramona was involved with in the 90's different ways of approaching direct action the connection between Salmon and the Redwoods how the potential for grief increases the more we feel connected to the land around us in a society that does not feel that same connection forest therapy Links: Follow Ramona on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/r_moonflower/ Ramona's website: http://www.healingforestguide.com Support the podcast on Patreon to contribute to our grassroots self-funding of this project. Support the Ground Shots Project with a one time donation via Paypal at: paypal.me/petitfawn Our website with backlog of episodes, plant profiles, travelogue and more: http://www.ofsedgeandsalt.com Our Instagram page @goldenberries Join the Ground Shots Podcast Facebook Group to discuss the episodes Subscribe to our newsletter for updates on the Ground Shots Project Theme music: 'Sweat and Splinters' by Mother Marrow Interstitial music: ‘The Gray Sea' by West of Roan West of Roan's website: http://www.westofroan.com Hosted by: Kelly Moody Produced by: Kelly Moody and Opia Creative
Episode #42 features a conversation between Kelly Moody (podcast host) and Gabe Crawford, previous podcast guest. In this episode of the podcast, we discuss our observations on the first six segments or first 100 miles or so of our Colorado Trail Plant—a-go walk. We talk about the nature and spectrum of small to extreme disturbances on the land We look at how disturbance can be a good thing in some situations and bad in others We talk about some of our favorite areas and some of the plants and animals we noticed We talk about our intent to walk slower and observe the land more intimately We talk about the zen of Beaver, and what we thought about when encountering extreme disturbances on the land by Beavers we speak to walking within the context of colonialization we talk about our culture shock in tourist towns Support the podcast on Patreon to contribute to our grassroots self-funding of this project. Support the Ground Shots Project with a one time donation via Paypal at: paypal.me/petitfawn Our website with backlog of episodes, plant profiles, travelogue and more: http://www.ofsedgeandsalt.com Our Instagram page @goldenberries Join the Ground Shots Podcast Facebook Group to discuss the episodes Subscribe to our newsletter for updates on the Ground Shots Project Theme music: 'Sweat and Splinters' by Mother Marrow Additional music: ‘We're Gonna Make It' by Dunkin Hardee, recorded on the Colorado Trail Hosted by: Kelly Moody Produced by: Kelly Moody and Opia Creative we speak more on re-thinking ‘a war' on certain plants and how plants respond to the circumstances at hand we reflect on how putting lines on the land like ‘wilderness boundaries' can affect ecology we talk about questioning concepts of ‘pristine wilderness'
Episode #42 of the Ground Shots Podcast features a conversation with Charity Cimarron, the main singer and songwriter behind the music project Mother Marrow. Charity and I met in 2013 in Asheville, North Carolina and have been friends ever since. I'm honored to feature her music at the theme song and outro for the Ground Shots Podcast. In this episode, we launch a new version of the Ground Shots Podcast theme song, featuring an updated version of Mother Marrow's song ‘Sweat and Splinters.' In this conversation with Charity we talk about: doing our work in the world while also having enough space of solitude for creative flow and inspiration charity's relationship with being connected to music and the land 'being born in this world of music' Charity's time traveling with the band Psalters around the country and in Europe/Turkey, her time homesteading in rural Missouri learning to weave finding community in the Earthskills community Charity plays two new songs not on her recent album: 'Regalia' and 'Home to Self.' She talks a little bit about the inspiration behind them, and how they came to her over time how creativity is often a play between different elements with specific parameters, and figuring out how to make them fit together how craft and music creativity feel like different processes to Charity Charity's journey with autoimmune struggles and what the illness' have taught her some of Charity's current and upcoming musical and creative projects how artists and musicians don't often get an equal exchange for the energy they shar Links: Mother Marrow's website: http://www.mothermarrowmusic.com Mother Marrow on Bandcamp: https://mothermarrow.bandcamp.com/music Psalters band: https://psalters.bandcamp.com/ Charity's instagram: http://www.instagram.com/mothermarrow Mother Marrow's instagram: http://www.instagram.com/the.long.red.thread Mother Marrow on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/MotherMarrow/ Support the podcast on Patreon to contribute to our grassroots self-funding of this project. Support the Ground Shots Project with a one time donation via Paypal at: paypal.me/petitfawn Our website with backlog of episodes, plant profiles, travelogue and more: http://www.ofsedgeandsalt.com Our Instagram page @goldenberries Join the Ground Shots Podcast Facebook Group to discuss the episodes Subscribe to our newsletter for updates on the Ground Shots Project Theme music: 'Sweat and Splinters' by Mother Marrow Additional music by Mother Marrow Hosted by: Kelly Moody Produced by: Kelly Moody and Opia Creative
Episode #41 of the Ground Shots Podcast features a story documenting my visit with Michael Ridge of Walking with Western Wildflowers August 2019 in Kamiah, Idaho, Nimiipuu country. In this episode with Michael we talk about: the importance of ecological participation as a way to belong to place Michael's way of wild-tending nomadically on horseback across the west planting the seeds of wild food and medicine plants to diversify genetics some of the plants Michael tends like Sego Lilies, Biscuitroots, different stone-fruits, Camas, Yampah and more. Links: Michael's instagram: https://www.instagram.com/walkingwithwesternwildflowers/?hl=en Michael's facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/walkingwithwesternwildflowers/ Michael's Paypal: http://www.paypal.me/MRidge711 Amanda's instagram page: https://www.instagram.com/mountain.manders/ ‘Tending the Wild' by Kat Anderson https://www.amazon.com/Tending-Wild-Knowledge-Management-Californias/dp/0520280431 The Native Seed Pod podcast https://www.nativeseedpod.org/ features some conversations about wild tending hosted by native folks interviewing native folks. A few links to learning about colonization in Nimipuu territory : Flight of the Nez Perce: https://isreview.org/issue/73/flight-nez-perce Nez Perce / Nimipuu tribal website https://www.nezperce.org/ book by Nimipuu elder: “A Little Bit of Wisdom: Conversations With a Nez Perce Elder” by Horace Axtell https://www.amazon.com/Little-Bit-Wisdom-Conversations-Perce/dp/0806132698 “A People's History of the United States” by Howard Zinn: https://www.amazon.com/Peoples-History-United-States/dp/0060838655 Support the podcast on Patreon to contribute to our grassroots self-funding of this project. Support the Ground Shots Project with a one time donation via Paypal at: paypal.me/petitfawn Our website with backlog of episodes, plant profiles, travelogue and more: http://www.ofsedgeandsalt.com Our Instagram page @goldenberries Join the Ground Shots Podcast Facebook Group to discuss the episodes Subscribe to our newsletter for updates on the Ground Shots Project Theme music: 'Sweat and Splinters' by Mother Marrow Hosted by: Kelly Moody Produced by: Kelly Moody and Opia Creative
Episode #40 of the Ground Shots Podcast features a conversation with Samuel Bautista Lazo, who was a guest on Episode #1 of the podcast which aired several summers ago. Listen to the first conversation we had with Samuel here: Episode #1: Samuel Bautista Lazo on weaving in Oaxaca, colonialism, the importance of making things. Samuel is Benizaa (Zapotec) and lives Xiguie'a (Teotitlán del Valle), located in the Central Valley of Oaxaca, Mexico. Samuel, his family and community come from a long line of weavers and farmers who have been tending the same land for thousands of years. This region is considered one of the cradles of civilization. Samuel has a Ph.d. in Sustainable Manufacturing from the University of Liverpool. I met Samuel at the Buckeye Gathering ancestral skills gathering a few years ago. On the first episode of the podcast, during an in-person interview, Samuel and I discuss weaving and natural dyes, some complexities around private land ownership in the community where he is from when the traditional way was communal tending of the land, why making things by hand is a way to combat the pressures of capitalism and more. This time around, Samuel and I speak via Zoom due to COVID-19. We go deeper into some of the issues of continued settler colonialism and corporate intrusion on indigenous peoples and the biodiverse wild lands in Mexico, as well as focus on dynamics local to the state of Oaxaca and the native peoples who live there. Since we recorded this conversation in early May, the world has erupted in revolution in support of Black Lives and in protest of police violence globally. Lest us also not forget the indigenous peoples of the lands we live, walk, protest and love on and the effects our capitalist lifestyles have on these communities as further reiterated by Samuel in this interview. In this episode of the podcast, we talk about: Samuel speaks to what life has been like during the pandemic in Teotitlán del Valle Samuel reflects a little bit on our conversation from Lake Concow, California during the Buckeye Gathering several years ago (Listen here: Episode #1 of the podcast: Samuel Bautista Lazo on weaving in Oaxaca, colonialism, the importance of making things) and the fire that has come through since Samuel's perspective on how the pandemic has caused the world to slow down and the land has an opportunity to cleanse and breathe We talk about the destructive corporate energy projects trying to push forth in the state of Oaxaca and the country of Mexico, and the ways in which these projects are abusive towards the indigenous peoples of Mexico and environmentally devastating Samuel speaks from his perspective as an indigenous person who studied industrial manufacturing (he has a Ph.d. !) about the bigger picture of needing to change our consumption and production patterns as a society, especially the U.S. which consumes more than most countries in the world The recent murder of a biology student in Oaxaca (one of many that have occurred), due to his interest in the biodiversity of the region and his love of nature (links to articles about this in the Links section below) Despite a current progressive president, the framework of Mexico's economy is still rooted in destructive resource extraction and development The potentially devastating effects of Isthmus Rail Corridor Project and Mayan Train Project that are planned for the region environmental racism how capitalism can affect indigenous populations Samuel speaks to how rain feeds land and spirit, and connection to self sufficiency coming back to the Corn and the Milpa food systems Milpa farming in relationship to wild-tending, feeding the wild animals, and definitions of agriculture, the recovery of native lands during the Mexican revolution How colonization and western ideas of how land should be taken care of affects indigenous people's ability in Mexico to keep the land they have tended for thousands of years, because it requires them to constantly work it, even though traditionally the land was allowed to rest for long periods how linear systems informed by capitalism that emphasize extraction, production and discarding don't leave room for cyclical land-based world views Links: Dixza Rugs and Organic Farm website Samuel on instagram: @sam_dixza Dixza Rugs and Organic Farm on instagram: @dixzarugsorganicfarm DIxza Rugs and Organic Farm on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/dixzarugs/ blog post for this episode: https://www.ofsedgeandsalt.com/podcastblog/samuellazo2 https://www.latimes.com/espanol/mexico/articulo/2020-05-11/condenan-asesinato-de-joven-ambientalista-mexicano-en-municipio-de-oaxaca “Condenan asesinato de joven ambientalista mexicano en municipio de Oaxaca.” (news article in Spanish about the assassination of young Mexican environmentalist Eugui Roy Martínez Pérez, whom we speak about in the podcast) http://www.borderlandbeat.com/2020/05/21-year-old-biology-student-murdered-in.html (News article in English about the 21 year old Eugui Roy Martínez Pérez, young biologist and naturalist killed, whom we speak about in the podcast) https://justiceinmexico.org/environmental-activists-under-attack-in-mexico/ ‘Environmental Activists Under Attack in Mexico' (article in English about several environmental activists and naturalists murdered in Mexico recently or in the last few years) https://www.bnamericas.com/en/interviews/hold-friday-mexicos-tehuantepec-isthmus-rail-corridor-unveils-more-infra-projects (News article about the Tehuantepec Isthmus Rail Corridor project that Samuel speaks to in the conversation) https://www.citylab.com/environment/2019/02/mexico-travel-mayan-train-yucatan-tourism-economic-development/583405/ (Mayan Train Project that Samuel speaks to in the podcast) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Milpa The Milpa farming system Support the podcast on Patreon to contribute to our grassroots self-funding of this project. Support the Ground Shots Project with a one time donation via Paypal at: paypal.me/petitfawn Our website with backlog of episodes, plant profiles, travelogue and more: http://www.ofsedgeandsalt.com Our Instagram page @goldenberries Join the Ground Shots Podcast Facebook Group to discuss the episodes Subscribe to our newsletter for updates on the Ground Shots Project Theme music: 'Sweat and Splinters' by Mother Marrow Interstitial Music: ‘Grief in Exile' by Mariee Sioux Hosted by: Kelly Moody Produced by: Kelly Moody and Opia Creative
Episode #39 of the Ground Shots Podcast features a conversation with Dan Nanamkin. Dan Nanamkin is from the Chief Joseph Band Of Wallowa, Nez Perce, and Colville Confederated Tribes of Washington State has been an advocate/teacher for indigenous culture, community unity, youth empowerment, racial equality, and peace for several decades. Prior to Standing Rock, Dan took one of the leads in helping to restore ancient canoe culture of the northwest plateau tribes, the River Warriors. This inspired him further to connect with the Water, something that led him to Standing Rock. He endured months of peaceful front line action at Standing Rock from September 2016 until March 2017. Dan has since traveled across the nation speaking with his two dogs and band, the One Tribe Movement. Dan advocates for people to be better informed, to get more involved, to resist racism and violence, and to support the movement to protect Mother Earth. He is a public presenter, musician and author who remains active in bringing forth awareness of Native culture. His mission is to connect modern day people with the traditions that are still absolutely relevant and critical to life today. Dan hopes to bring back traditional knowledge of the earth/plants/medicines and survival in a way to encourage healing, wellness and respect for balance with Mother Earth and all living things. In this conversation with Dan, we talk about: Dan's Sovereignty Camp skill-share project which focuses on educating native youth about traditional skills how Sovereignty Camp started and Dan's motivations for the project what skills are taught at the camps why creating an educational alternative for native youth away from mainstream schooling that includes a focus on cultural education is important the importance of indigenous led skills-shares why land skills are important for indigenous sovereignty Dan's visions for the future of the camps and his land project how folks can support Dan's sovereignty camp project Links: Dan's website, where you can learn more about him and Sovereignty Camp: https://www.nanamkin.com/ Support Dan and his projects via Paypal: paypal.me/warriorsong Dan on Youtube Dan on Instagram : @dan_nanamkin Support the podcast on Patreon to contribute to our grassroots self-funding of this project. Support the Ground Shots Project with a one time donation via Paypal at: paypal.me/petitfawn Our website with backlog of episodes, plant profiles, travelogue and more: http://www.ofsedgeandsalt.com Blog page for this episode: http://www.ofsedgeandsalt.com/podcastblog/dannanamkin Our Instagram page @goldenberries Join the Ground Shots Podcast Facebook Group to discuss the episodes Subscribe to our newsletter for updates on the Ground Shots Project Theme music: 'Sweat and Splinters' by Mother Marrow Interstitial Music: ‘Our Bodies Are Water' by Holy River (formerly Lobo Marino) Buy their music at either of the Bandcamp pages below: https://lobomarino.bandcamp.com/music https://holyriver.bandcamp.com/ Hosted by: Kelly Moody Produced by: Kelly Moody and Opia Creative
Episode #38 of the Ground Shots Podcast features a conversation with Jim Croft, medieval era bookbinder, hand papermaker and wonderful storyteller. This podcast episode was recorded summer 2019 in Santa, Idaho on his homestead during he and his partner Melody's ‘Old Ways of Making Books' class they host most summers. This interview was co-facilitated by Brien Beidler, who was featured along Mary Sullivan on Episode #32 of the podcast. Jim Croft is a Medieval bookbinder and papermaker. He is internationally known for his skills, and he travels annually to various locations in the USA to teach students how to make books with wooden covers and brass clasps. In the summer, he offers a two week intensive workshop teaching students how to spin thread from raw fibers, make paper, create book covers from raw wood, design and make brass clasps, and then how to bind everything together. Jim is always the first one up in the morning, and the last one to retire at night. Jim has lived in Santa, Idaho on his rural off-grid homestead with his partner Melody Eckroft, who is an accomplished basket-weaver, for over 40 years. They raised three children living close to the land and making their handmade crafts a part of daily life. I've had the honor of spending time on their land the last three summers. I first came to their homestead because I was interested in making things from the ‘ground up' after taking a bookbinding, paper-making, and printmaking Spring intensive at Penland School of Craft in North Carolina, where many folks had suggested I give Jim a call. SO, I did. And, everything changed from there. I've been doing natural brain-tanning and bark-tanning animal hides for awhile now, and I'm also interested in other crafts that engage a relationship with plants, ecology and natural materials. My work in brain-tanning and bark-tanning leather caught Jim's attention and we became friends right away. Since he focuses on period specific bookbinding that utilizes natural or up-cycled materials as much as possible, he wanted to learn more about leather and ‘shammy' (although, he already knows more than he gives himself credit). I ended up wandering to Jim and Melody's a year and a half after my Penland experience. I took their two week ‘Old Ways of Making Books' class while also facilitating the hide tanning portion of the class so that folks could learn about naturally tanning their book materials. I started the podcast the next year, and then this past summer Jim agreed to record a conversation. I asked Brien to help co-facilitate since he and Jim are colleagues and great friends with many shared experiences and a mutual love of hand bookbinding. About co-facilitator Brien Beidler: From the beginning, Brien Beidler has been inspired by historic bindings, and is consistently delighted by their ability to harmonize fine craftsmanship, quirky but elegant aesthetics, and evidence of the hands that made them. Though traditionally structured and bound with integrity, Brien's bindings seek ways to create new compositions and juxtapositions of these historic precedents. Naturally, a healthy love of the tools of the trade followed suit, and with the generosity and encouragement of toolmaking legends Jim Croft and Shanna Leino, Brien also creates a limited assortment of specialized hand tools for bookbinding and its related trades. Over the last nine years Brien has taken and taught a variety of bookbinding and toolmaking workshops, and is an active member of the Guild of Book Workers. In the fall of 2016, he and his wife upped their roots in Charleston, South Carolina and set up shop in Bloomington, Indiana, where Brien works from his home studio with Wren, his curmudgeonly Brittany. Since Ground Shots Podcast episode #32 where I interview Brien Beidler and Mary Sullivan on bookbinding and papermaking, Brien started a podcast of his own co-hosted with Amy Umbel called Cut the Craft Podcast featuring interviews with craftsfolk. Check it out! In this conversation with Jim Croft featuring Brien Beidler, we talk about: stories of where Jim grew up, when he worked on a boat, discovering bookbinding in Europe Jim's classic meandering stories on woodworking, adventures, building, fiber processing, his house fire, meeting Melody Eckroft his partner of over 40 years living off grid in rural Oregon and northern Idaho making and building as much by hand as possible investigating craft and materials through regular experimentation and engagement some history of bookbinding and fine binding, paper-making the importance of hemp and flax for paper, clothing and rope fiber making bone tools using mostly hand tools to make books Jim's relationship with scavenging from logging sites, junk yards, or abandoned buildings for materials to make things book conservation vs. repair Jim and and Jack Thompson making a water-powered hand stamp paper mill in Santa, Idaho (the only other ones basically exist in Europe) Links: Jim and Melody's website, where you can contact them about future classes out in Idaho (calling or writing letters is best): https://cargocollective.com/oldway Brien's website: https://www.beidlermade.com/ Brien's instagram: @bhbeidler http://www.instagram.com/bhbeidler Jeff Peachy, mentioned in the podcast https://jeffpeachey.com/ Guild of Bookworkers: https://guildofbookworkers.org/ Friends of Dard Hunter paper-making conference: https://friendsofdardhunter.org/conference University of Iowa Center for the Book: https://www.iowacenterforthebook.org Paper and Book Intensive: https://www.paperbookintensive.org Penland School of Craft: https://penland.org/ Stamp Mill for Paper-making, a piece of technology Jim co-built with others on his land https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stamp_mill Suave Mechanicals: Volume 2 – mentioned in the podcast, a publication Jim wrote a piece for, published by Legacy Press : https://the-center-for-book-arts.myshopify.com/collections/center-publications/products/copy-of-suave-mechanicals-volume-2 Support the podcast on Patreon to contribute to our grassroots self-funding of this project. Support the Ground Shots Project with a one time donation via Paypal at: paypal.me/petitfawn Our website with backlog of episodes, plant profiles, travelogue and more: http://www.ofsedgeandsalt.com Our blog post for this episode (featuring photos from the class with Jim in 2019) http://www.ofsedgeandsalt.com/podcastblog/jimcroft Our Instagram page @goldenberries Join the Ground Shots Podcast Facebook Group to discuss the episodes Subscribe to our newsletter for updates on the Ground Shots Project Theme music: 'Sweat and Splinters' by Mother Marrow Interstitial Music: cover of music by Simon and Garfunkel, Jim Croft, Melody Eckroft and Peter Thomas, live recording summer 2019 in Santa, Idaho. Hosted by: Kelly Moody Produced by: Kelly Moody and Opia Creative
This episode of the podcast features a conversation with Dara Saville out of Albuquerque, New Mexico. Dara is an Herbalist and Geographer with a passion for native plants, public lands, and community engagement. She is the founder and primary instructor of the Albuquerque Herbalism bioregional herbal studies program and a columnist for Plant Healer Quarterly, teaching and writing on medicinal plants, changing ecosystems, and environmental issues. She has a bachelor's degree from New York University, a master's degree specializing in southwest landscape geography from the University of New Mexico, and is a graduate of Tieraona Low Dog's Foundations of Herbal Medicine Program. Additionally Dara has many years of fieldwork and resource management experience with the National Park Service and well as a long history of community volunteer service with the City of Albuquerque Open Space and the Bosque Ecosystem Monitoring Program (BEMP). She is also a board member of the Native Plant Society Albuquerque Chapter, a mother, homeschool educator, gardener, and lover of wild places. I took one of Dara's classes that focused on ecology and climate change in the southwest at an herbalism conference a few years ago in Colorado, and I remembered the teachings in her class that day. I've been featuring conversations on the podcast that visit different ways 'wild-tending' can be interpreted and I thought it would be interesting to feature a little bit about the Yerba Mansa Project and Dara's work with the Albuquerque community restoring the local riparian corridor otherwise locally referred to as the bosque. In this conversation with Dara, we talk about: the origins of The Yerba Mansa Project and its connection to Dara's Albuquerque Herbalism project how the Yerba Mansa Project is helping to repair the local riparian ecology (the bosque) in Albuquerque, New Mexico why herbalists should also be land stewards the bosque (riparian area in the city) as a place that brings folks together why riparian areas, especially in the southwestern US, are at risk how the Yerba Mansa Project aims to connect local folks to the importance of the local ecology in order to create more folks who will advocate for those spaces some of the plants they work with or tend on the bosque as a part of The Yerba Mansa Project why Yerba Mansa is an important plant ecologically and culturally harvesting Yerba Mansa carefully how wildcrafting can also mean creating stories of place, it doesn't always mean we harvest Dara's thoughts on invasive plants Links: The Yerba Mansa Project Albuquerque Herbalism Blog page for the episode: https://www.ofsedgeandsalt.com/podcastblog/yerbamansaproject Support the podcast on Patreon to contribute to our grassroots self-funding of this project. Support the Ground Shots Project with a one time donation via Paypal at: paypal.me/petitfawn Our website with backlog of episodes, plant profiles, travelogue and more: http://www.ofsedgeandsalt.com Our Instagram page @goldenberries Join the Ground Shots Podcast Facebook Group to discuss the episodes Subscribe to our newsletter for updates on the Ground Shots Project Theme music: 'Sweat and Splinters' by Mother Marrow Interstitial Music: ‘Odd Bird (Old Man River)' ft. January Mitchell by Damiyana Hosted by: Kelly Moody Produced by: Kelly Moody and Opia Creative
Episode #35 of the Ground Shots Podcast features a conversation with Zach Elfers, an ethnobotanist who lives in eastern Pennsylvania near the Susquehanna River. Zach runs the Nomad Seed Project. From Zach's website: The Nomad Seed Project sets out to research, document, experiment, and propagate wild, native, and perennial plants which have exceptional value to humans and their ecology as food, medicine, shelter, materials, and beauty. Imagining the world of nomadic gatherer-hunters invokes to mind a patchwork landscape with oases of human habitat along pathways of migration unfolding with the pattern of the seasons, plants, or animals. For thousands of years, humans lived in this manner. Along the way, they gathered useful plants and intentionally spread the seeds as a form of populations management. Ecology has been a co-creation alongside humankind for a long time. Humans often acted as the legs of important plants, expanding them both in their range and abundance. It was humans who brought the pawpaw (Asimina triloba) out of the subtropics after the last ice age and spread it around the eastern temperate forests, and it was humans also who spread the sunroot or Jerusalem artichoke (Helianthus tuberosus) throughout the continent. Nomad Seed Project is interested in ideas of assisted migration, especially in response to climate change, and as a way to protect and conserve species in the face of a rapidly changing world. The Nomad Seed Project is a re-envisioning of this old paradigm. By gathering and planting the seeds of native, wild, perennial plants that are important to us, we as humans have the power to impact the ecosystems we are a part of in positive and healthy ways, while also meeting our own requirements for food, shelter, medicine, and materials. Neither agriculture, gardening, nor preservationism, but something in between. It may be a long time however before we can fully sustain our lives again from the wild plants growing in nature's garden. While prior to colonialism the presence and abundance of plant foods and medicines was much greater, our ecosystems today have been degraded, fractured, or destroyed in the wake of farming, ranching, mining, urban development, suburban sprawl, and the highway system. Now it is more important than ever that we act again as the legs to the plants that we love, helping them gain new ground, ahead of mass extinction and climate change. The Nomad Seed Project describes work that could also be called do-it-yourself ecological restoration, at the hands of citizen scientists acting according to their own conscience. By working with these native plants, with the same stroke we expand our own habitat. There is a lot of work to do, but it all starts with the power of a seed… In this conversation with Zach, we talk about: some natural/ethnobotanical history of the Susquehanna River watershed in Pennsylvania where Zach lives Zach's project 'Nomad Seed' which focuses on his experimental field research with native first food plants Zach's experience learning plants while traveling and being out on the land and how this helped deepen his understanding of his 'home' ecosystem specific 'wild foods' / first foods plants Zach tends and his methods for doing so like Spring Beauty, Dwarf Ginseng, Toothwort, American Groundnut, Harbinger of Spring, Eastern Camas, Chestnuts, Hickories, Chinkapins how fire-stick farming may have been a wild-tending practice in the southeast the importance of John Hershey's farm in Pennsylvania for preserving native fruit and nut species that were possibly selected at one point by indigenous peoples and Zach's research on how he thinks this happened the importance of prioritizing the preservation and propagation of bioregional foods Zach's experiments with and research on controlled 'burn' gardens on the east coast different ways one can define 'agriculture' ethnical foraging expanded: learning the plants entire life cycle and encouraging them to become more abundant by working with the plants all year choosing love over fear in a time of collapse Links: Zach's website (read his amazing plant profiles!) : The Nomad Seed Project Zach on Facebook Zach's instagram @woodlandrambler Zach's Patreon page for The Nomad Seed Project Blog page for this episode: www.ofsedgeandsalt.com/ground-shots-podcast/zachelfers Support the podcast on Patreon to contribute to our grassroots self-funding of this project. Support the Ground Shots Project with a one time donation via Paypal at: paypal.me/petitfawn Our website with backlog of episodes, plant profiles, travelogue and more: http://www.ofsedgeandsalt.com Our Instagram page @goldenberries Join the Ground Shots Podcast Facebook Group to discuss the episodes Subscribe to our newsletter for updates on the Ground Shots Project Theme music: 'Sweat and Splinters' by Mother Marrow Interstitial Music: ‘Cold Horn' by Inger S Hosted by: Kelly Moody Produced by: Kelly Moody and Opia Creative
Episode #35 of the Ground Shots Podcast features a conversation with Kollibri terre Sonnenblume, recorded in rural southern New Mexico last month in his outdoor kitchen, surrounded by friendly feral cats. I visited with Kollibri last month, where he is currently living, gardening and writing. He gave me a few of his books to read through, and after I read much of them, we got together to record this conversation. His books and zines are well written, thought out and researched and touch on topics like colonialism, history, plants, agriculture, ethnobotany, politics and more. Kollibri terre Sonnenblume is a writer, photographer, tree hugger, animal lover, and dissident. Past experiences include urban bike farmer, Indymedia activist, and music critic. Kollibri holds a BA in “Writing Fiction & Non-fiction” from the St. Olaf Paracollege in Northfield, Minnesota. In this conversation with Kollibri, we talk about: the pros and con's of permaculture wild-tending as not just using knowledge from the past but adapting to a changing world some connections between patriarchy, organized religion and slavery the blurry line between gatherer-hunter life-ways and small scale agriculture horticulture vs. agriculture some history of agriculture, the negative impacts of agriculture on health and culture Kollibri's various books and zines on farming, wild-tending, ‘invasive' plants, and place-based travel questioning victorian ideas of gatherer-hunter culture and the transition to agriculture the importance of an interdisciplinary approach and looking at things from many angles, avoiding 'silo'ing when possible the importance of practicing small scale agriculture with the fragmented ecology and culture we have right now the racist origins of wilderness, national parks and public lands, and the continued racism in these institutions or ideas what to expect from Kollibri's new podcast 'Voices For Nature and Peace' Links: Kollibri's website: Macska Moksha Press, where you can buy his books, read his latest articles Kollibri on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/kollibri.terre.sonnenblume Kollibri on instagram: @kollibri1969 One of Kollibri's latest articles: A Question of Identity: How Much Does Queerness Matter in a Crisis? Download the free pdf zine “The Troubles of Invasive Plants'“ here ‘The One Straw Revolution' by Masanobu Fukuoka, mentioned in the podcast Blog post for this episode: https://www.ofsedgeandsalt.com/ground-shots-podcast/kollibri Support the podcast on Patreon to contribute to our grassroots self-funding of this project. Support the Ground Shots Project with a one time donation via Paypal at: paypal.me/petitfawn Our website with backlog of episodes, plant profiles, travelogue and more: http://www.ofsedgeandsalt.com Our Instagram page @goldenberries Join the Ground Shots Podcast Facebook Group to discuss the episodes Subscribe to our newsletter for updates on the Ground Shots Project Theme music: 'Sweat and Splinters' by Mother Marrow Interstitial Music: ‘Thank You for Treating Me Like a Melody Drawn in the Air' by B.E.N. and Fay Petree Hosted by: Kelly Moody Produced by: Kelly Moody and Opia Creative
Episode #34 of the Ground Shots Podcast features a conversation with Hannah Schiller of Foliage Botanics. Hannah and her herbalism project are based out of the Hudson valley of New York. Hannah and I met back in 2012 when we both interned at the United Plant Savers' Goldenseal Sanctuary in Rutland, Ohio. Since then, we lived a summer together in North Carolina and have involved ourselves in the same communities on the east coast. We have written letters to one another over the years as I have been on the road and Hannah semi-nomadic for awhile, finally landing in New York. Hannah Smith Schiller is an herbalist, botanist, and all-around plant enthusiast who runs Foliage Botanics, a small herbal business in the Hudson valley of New York. Her work is a confluence of all the passions and pieces in her background—agriculture, art, clinical herbalism, land stewardship, social justice. She offers herbal products, health consultations, a seasonal apothecary-land share, and teaches classes. Each month Hannah leads a by donation plant walk at varying locations around the valley where she lives focused on botany, plant identification, and ecological appreciation. At the heart of her work is this element of education, hoping to empower others to take back their health and their food and engage more deeply with the plant world, and to provide a variety of opportunities for people to bring plant medicine and wild foods into their lives. She is a cheerleader for bioregionalism, making our communities more localized and self-reliant, breaking down capitalist approaches to ancient knowledge, and shifting our cultural mentality from endless growth to minimalist, place-based, seasonal living. In this conversation with Hannah, we talk about: Hannah's letter writing project – The Bones We Keep, and the importance of letter writing Hannah's quarterly seasonal bioregional herbal packages : A Wild and Common Place the importance of bioregional herbalism how bioregional herbalism gives us a perspective on the limits of a place Hannah's journey studying plants and herbal medicine some interesting ecological information about Black Birch Links: Hannah's website: Foliage Botanics The United Plant Savers A beautiful video capturing Hannah and her work: https://youtu.be/gIzB-fw5I10 blog page for this episode: http://www.ofsedgeandsalt.com/ground-shots-podcast/hannahschiller Support the podcast on Patreon to contribute to our grassroots self-funding of this project. Support the Ground Shots Project with a one time donation via Paypal at: paypal.me/petitfawn Our website with backlog of episodes, plant profiles, travelogue and more: http://www.ofsedgeandsalt.com Our Instagram page @goldenberries Join the Ground Shots Podcast Facebook Group to discuss the episodes Subscribe to our newsletter for updates on the Ground Shots Project Theme music: 'Sweat and Splinters' by Mother Marrow Interstitial Music: ‘Lady Death Anthem' by Damiyana Hosted by: Kelly Moody Produced by: Kelly Moody and Opia Creative
Episode #33: Wild Tending series / Nikki Hill and Gabe Crawford on re-thinking the concept of invasive plants Episode #33 of the podcast features another conversation with Nikki Hill and Gabe Crawford recorded on the hillside at Small Potatoes Farm in Paonia, Colorado. Listen to episode #31 with Nikki and Gabe on the basics of wild-tending, here. Gabe Crawford was raised on a small homestead outside of Durango, Colorado and started learning about plants from an early age. He got launched on his plant journey by studying with Katrina Blair at the Turtle Lake Refuge in Durango. He moved to Sandpoint, Idaho where he worked with Twin Eagles Wilderness School and Kaniksu Land Trust mentoring kids. Through this, he started naturalist training which opened him up to the world of wild tending, Traditional Ecological Knowledge and the ancient and intricate relationships between humans and ecology. Gabe spent time with Finisia Medrano learning about the ancient wild gardens of the west that were and still are tended by indigenous peoples and was taught how to tend these first foods and plant back for future abundance. He collects the seeds of native foods plants, fruit trees, berries and other exotics to plant feral orchards and wild gardens. Nikki Hill can be found chasing wildflowers throughout the western US. She is not sure when her adoration of plants began, but they share a kindred spirit. Nikki earned a bachelors degree in environmental science and botany which led her to the field of habitat restoration nearly 16 years ago. Disillusioned by methodology that focused on eradication, she struck off on her own. She spent six years growing food and medicine, first as an urban farmer and then as a nomadic rural farmer, and co-founded Daggawalla, a seed and herb company. Since 2014, she has been exploring her feral roots as a wildtender, planting gardens outside agricultural boundaries. Her hope is to foster habitat resilience by sowing a living seed bank for the future, in a spirit of collaboration with the non-human world. Her website can be found at www.walkingroots.net. In this episode with Nikki and Gabe, we talk about: unpacking the common use and colonialist origins of war-making language when talking about 'invasive' and 'native' plants the political influences at play in the current narrative around invasive plants the relationship between migration and climate change the economic commodity associated with the 'war' on 'invasives' or 'illegal aliens' how even 'native' plants are called 'invasive' based on cultural and economic agendas informed by capitalism how the desire to protect sage grouse and sagebrush habitat is being turned against other native plants like pinon juniper forests how native juniper trees are treated as invasive and 'encroaching' because it is thriving during climate change and expanding it's range succession changing when the conditions change – a place for invasives scapegoating invasives instead of facing the massive fragmentation and devestation we've caused the environment in the past few hundred years the influence of bias on ecological and restoration research how and why people and other animals, birds move plant species including invasive species around considering deep time when thinking about what is 'native' or 'natural' or what the land is supposed to look like moving forward in time how awesome Russian Olive is! using 'invasive' plants as medicine how 'invasive' plants often mend and remediate damaged soil, water, air some ways to integrate Traditional Ecological Knowledge into invasive species interaction Links: ‘Tending the Wild' by Kat Anderson Tending the Wild Broadcast special on YouTube Finisia Medrano on Youtube Gabe's instagram @plumsforbums Gabe's facebook page, where he occasionally share wild-tending info Nikki's facebook page, where she occasionally shares wild-tending info Nikki's website: http://www.walkingroots.net/ ‘The Failures of Farming & the Necessity of Wildtending' by Kollibri terre Sonnenblume ‘The Troubles of ‘Invasive' Plants' by Nikki Hill & Kollibri terre Sonnenblume, free zine download, or buy a hard copy in the store on Kollibri's website Support Gabe via Paypal for his wild-tending efforts: paypal.me/johnnyslug Support Nikki via Paypal for her wild-tending efforts: paypal.me/nikkiphill ‘Invasive Plant Medicine' by Timothy Lee Scott ‘Healing Lyme' by Steven Buhner A few plants mentioned in the podcast, and links for further study: Russian/Persian Olive Japanese Knotweed Salt Cedar/ Tamarix Kudzu/Kuzu Support the podcast on Patreon to contribute to our grassroots self-funding of this project. Support the Ground Shots Project with a one time donation: paypal.me/petitfawn Our website with backlog of episodes, plant profiles, travelogue and more: http://www.ofsedgeandsalt.com Our Instagram page @goldenberries Join the Ground Shots Podcast Facebook Group to discuss the episodes Subscribe to our newsletter for updates on the Ground Shots Project Theme music: 'Sweat and Splinters' by Mother Marrow Interstitial Music: ‘Nijidema' by Joe Hedges Learn more about the story behind Joe Hedges' piece ‘Nijidema,' which is one out of five pieces in a work influenced by Joe's time in a small village in China: https://joehedges.bandcamp.com/album/nijidema Extra banjo tunes by Gabe Crawford Produced by: Opia Creative
This episode of the Ground Shots Podcast features a conversation with craftsfolk Brien Beidler and Mary Sullivan at the off-grid rural Idaho homestead of Jim Croft and Melody Eckroft during their summer 2019 ‘Old Ways of Making Books' class. Brien, Mary and I sat down at the end of a three week workshop period where we all had different roles as both teachers and students during Jim and Melody's yearly or bi-yearly ‘Old Ways of Making Books' class. Brien and Mary are highly skilled bookbinders who came to assist Jim Croft and also continue to learn and be mentored by him. I've mentioned the old ways class on the podcast several times and posted about it on the blog over the years. Alyssa Sacora and I talk about the Old Ways class on the podcast, here. I posted a photo diary three years ago of my time at Jim and Melody's homestead, here. I posted a recent photo diary documenting the hide tanning portion of the class from this summer, here. ********************************************* From the beginning, Brien Beidler has been inspired by historic bindings, and is consistently delighted by their ability to harmonize fine craftsmanship, quirky but elegant aesthetics, and evidence of the hands that made them. Though traditionally structured and bound with integrity, Brien's bindings seek ways to create new compositions and juxtapositions of these historic precedents. Naturally, a healthy love of the tools of the trade followed suit, and with the generosity and encouragement of toolmaking legends Jim Croft and Shanna Leino, Brien also creates a limited assortment of specialized hand tools for bookbinding and its related trades. Over the last nine years Brien has taken and taught a variety of bookbinding and toolmaking workshops, and is an active member of the Guild of Book Workers. In the fall of 2016, he and his wife upped their roots in Charleston, South Carolina and set up shop in Bloomington, Indiana, where Brien works from his home studio with Wren, his curmudgeonly Brittany. ***************************************** Mary Sullivan grew up in Nashville, Tennessee and was one of those children who always seemed to be making something. After completing her BA in Fine Art from Maryville College in 2006 she worked as a designer and printer at the legendary Hatch Show Print, one of the country's oldest continually operating letterpress poster shops in Nashville, TN. After several years absorbing the history, materials, and tools of the trade she left Nashville temporarily to pursue an MFA in book arts at the renowned University of Iowa Center for the Book in Iowa City, Iowa. Over the next 3 years she studied bookbinding, paper-making, printmaking, calligraphy, and book repair and was taught by some of the most respected practitioners in my field. Upon completing her MFA in Book Arts in 2014, she moved back to her hometown in Nashville and founded Crowing Hens Bindery, where she designs, makes, and sells everything from blank books to letterpress printed stationery, decorative papers, art prints, and tools; all made by hand, one at a time. In this episode of the podcast, we talk about: how Brien and Mary met the bookbinder and papermaker Jim Croft and how he affected their relationships to bookbinding, printmaking, papermaking, and craft in general. how learning about bookbinding and craft processes at Jim and Melody's homestead in northern Idaho is unique because of their land-based lifestyle how Jim Croft's books are modeled after medieval era books, but are unique to him and the landscape of northern Idaho the scavenge nature of Jim Croft's craft process Brien talks about his focus on bookbinding, toolmaking etc. and his preference for making his books and tools accessible Mary speaks on her work of bookbinding, printing, and art making; as well as her graduate school research on paper-making production how industrialization affects the slow craft of bookbinding especially when using materials from the land and doing the process by hand and with the focus of quality books in mind the effects industrialization has on the consumer's expectations of perfectionism, something that didn't always exist in bookbinding and paper-making historically some bookbinding history the responsibility of carrying on the trade of bookbinding and not losing the knowledge of how to make different styles of books how capitalism affects our understanding and treatment of books some talk on the value of art vs. craft in our culture Links: Jim and Melody's website, where you can contact them about future classes out in Idaho (calling or writing letters is best): https://cargocollective.com/oldway Brien's website: https://www.beidlermade.com/ Brien's instagram: @bhbeidler http://www.instagram.com/bhbeidler Mary's website: https://www.crowinghensbindery.com/ Mary's instagram: @crowinghensbindery http://www.instagram.com/crowinghensbindery Penland School of Craft: https://penland.org/ Friends of Dard Hunter paper-making conference: https://friendsofdardhunter.org/conference University of Iowa Center for the Book: https://www.iowacenterforthebook.org Support the podcast on Patreon to contribute to our grassroots self-funding of this project. Support the Ground Shots Project with a one time donation: paypal.me/petitfawn (include your email so I can send you a thank you note!!) Our website with backlog of episodes, plant profiles, travelogue and more: http://www.ofsedgeandsalt.com Our Instagram page @goldenberries Join the Ground Shots Podcast Facebook Group to discuss the episodes Subscribe to our newsletter for updates on the Ground Shots Project Theme music: 'Sweat and Splinters' by Mother Marrow Produced by: Opia Creative
Episode #31 of the Ground Shots Podcast is a conversation with Nikki Hill and Gabe Crawford, recorded on a sunny day in Paonia, Colorado on the wild edges of Small Potatoes Farm this past November. Gabe Crawford was raised on a small homestead outside of Durango, Colorado and started learning about plants from an early age. He got launched on his plant journey by studying with Katrina Blair at the Turtle Lake Refuge in Durango. He moved to Sandpoint, Idaho where he worked with Twin Eagles Wilderness School and Kaniksu Land Trust mentoring kids. Through this, he started naturalist training which opened him up to the world of wild tending, Traditional Ecological Knowledge and the ancient and intricate relationships between humans and ecology. Gabe spent time with Finisia Medrano learning about the ancient wild gardens of the west that were and still are tended by indigenous peoples and was taught how to tend these first foods and plant back for future abundance. He collects the seeds of native foods plants, fruit trees, berries and other exotics to plant feral orchards and wild gardens. Nikki Hill can be found chasing wildflowers throughout the western US. She is not sure when her adoration of plants began, but they share a kindred spirit. Nikki earned a bachelors degree in environmental science and botany which led her to the field of habitat restoration nearly 16 years ago. Disillusioned by methodology that focused on eradication, she struck off on her own. She spent six years growing food and medicine, first as an urban farmer and then as a nomadic rural farmer, and co-founded Daggawalla, a seed and herb company. Since 2014, she has been exploring her feral roots as a wildtender, planting gardens outside agricultural boundaries. Her hope is to foster habitat resilience by sowing a living seed bank for the future, in a spirit of collaboration with the non-human world. Her website can be found at www.walkingroots.net. In this conversation with Nikki and Gabe, we talk about: exploring the concepts of 'wild' and 'wild-tending' what it means to participate in a cultured landscape seeing the fabric of the landscape as a mosaic of gardens how wild-tending practices can challenge and/or reinforce certain accepted mainstream narratives around sustainable wild-crafting re-looking at what 'wild-crafting' even means in the context of prioritizing planting back the connection between mental health and wild-tending a brief introduction to some specific wild-tending techniques like seed collection and replanting, root division, burying branches and more. 'poop' talk – the importance of poop in wild-tending and planting back how anyone can wild-tend anywhere Links: ‘Tending the Wild' by Kat Anderson Tending the Wild Broadcast special on YouTube Finisia Medrano on Youtube Gabe's instagram @plumsforbums Gabe's facebook page, where he occasionally share wild-tending info Nikki's facebook page, where she occasionally shares wild-tending info Nikki's website: http://www.walkingroots.net/ ‘The Failures of Farming & the Necessity of Wildtending' by Kollibri terre Sonnenblume ‘The Troubles of ‘Invasive' Plants' by Nikki Hill & Kollibri terre Sonnenblume, free zine download, or buy a hard copy in the store on Kollobri's website Support Gabe via Paypal for his wild-tending efforts: paypal.me/johnnyslug Support Nikki via Paypal for her wild-tending efforts: paypal.me/nikkiphill Support the podcast on Patreon to contribute to our grassroots self-funding of this project. Support the Ground Shots Project with a one time donation: paypal.me/petitfawn Our website with backlog of episodes, plant profiles, travelogue and more: http://www.ofsedgeandsalt.com Our Instagram page @goldenberries Join the Ground Shots Podcast Facebook Group to discuss the episodes Subscribe to our newsletter for updates on the Ground Shots Project Theme music: 'Sweat and Splinters' by Mother Marrow Interstitial Music: ‘Furnace Creek' by Marisa Anderson Extra banjo tunes by Gabe Crawford Produced by: Opia Creative
Episode #30 of the Ground Shots Podcast features a conversation with Laura Pendell, writer, artist and partner of the late ethnobotanist Dale Pendell. Laura and I got together after several meet-ups last year to record this conversation in their shared library and studio in Penn Valley, California this past summer. We intended to record a conversation that celebrates Dale's work, perspective and unique way in the world. Dale Pendell was most known for his books in the Pharmako trilogy (Pharmako/Dynamis, Pharmako/Poeia, Pharmako/Gnosis) a project that explored the use, history, pharmacology, sociology, personal experience, chemistry, and alchemy of most plants or substances considered 'psychoactive.' He also wrote novels and poetry. Dale had a unique writing style that mixed his own experience, research, poetry and old folklore. I'm grateful Laura took the time to record a conversation with me about Dale's work and way in the world. I think that fans of Dale's work will gain some unique insight from out conversation here. In this conversation with Laura, we talk about: Dale's nature of exploration and the way he navigated his interests the Pharmako trilogy and their demonstration of Dale's experimental nature with plants Dale's ability to combine different facets of things together in his work Dale's unfinished and unpublished works including a book on his prison experiences in Mexico and the U.S., and a collected writings book that is in the works Dale and Laura's camp project called 'Oracular Madness' during the early years of Burning Man and Dale's book 'Inspired Madness' as a reflection on the camp Dale's book 'The Great Bay: Chronicles of the Collapse' and how it is a unique view of a possible future scenario and it's telling stories of our modern times Dale's talks on 'Horizon Anarchism' at Burning Man Dale's artist book 'The Gold Dust Wilderness' one of the first works he published and silkscreened and based on his experience living off grid on a mining claim in Trinity county, Ca in the 1970's. This book was the genesis of his unique writing style of information, imagination and poetry (it's so cool to see this book in person!) Dale's herbal root beer, elixir, and absinthe projects Laura's connection to poetry and absinthe Dale and Laura's connection to Zen Buddhism Laura reads some of Dale's poetry including 'The Ballad of the Hungry Ghosts,' 'Medicine,' and 'Stonecrop' the herbarium collection that Dale compiled over decades in Nevada county, Ca and beyond (over 1000 specimens) Dale's relationship with the psychedelic and drug database Erowid Links: Dale Pendell's blog: http://dalependell.com/ Pharmako trilogy by Dale Pendell: https://www.amazon.com/gp/bookseries/B00CKD4JLQ/ref=dp_st_1556438052 Dale's lecture on ‘Horizon Anarchism' at the 2006 Burning Man: https://soundcloud.com/lozo-382782666/055-dale-pendell-horizon-anarchism Erowid resource library (There's also a physical location where the Erowid library is located, near Auburn, CA) https://erowid.org/ Apache Stronghold Oak Flat: http://apache-stronghold.com/index.html Signal Fire: http://www.signalfirearts.org Support the podcast on Patreon to contribute to our grassroots self-funding of this project. Support the Ground Shots Project with a one time donation: paypal.me/petitfawn Our website with backlog of episodes, plant profiles, travelogue and more: http://www.ofsedgeandsalt.com Our Instagram page @goldenberries Join the Ground Shots Podcast Facebook Group to discuss the episodes Subscribe to our newsletter for updates on the Ground Shots Project Theme music: 'Sweat and Splinters' by Mother Marrow Insterstitial Music: ‘Drawing the White' by The Momentary Prophets Produced by: Opia Creative
Episode #29 of the Ground Shots Podcast features a conversation with Marc Williams, who is based out of Asheville, North Carolina. I took a trip to the Southeast this past September, where I visited my folks in southern Virginia and friends in Asheville, NC. Marc and I met up for an interview in West Asheville, NC, in the backyard of our mutual friend. I've known Marc since 2012 or so, when I moved to Asheville to attend herbalism school. According to the Plants and Healers website: Marc Williams is an ethnobiologist. He has studied the people, plant, mushroom, microbe connection intensively while learning to employ botanicals and other life forms for food, medicine, and beauty. His training includes a Bachelor's degree in Environmental Studies concentrating in Sustainable Agriculture with a minor in Business from Warren Wilson College and a Master's degree in Appalachian Studies concentrating in Sustainable Development with a minor in Geography and Planning from Appalachian State University. He has spent over two decades working at a multitude of restaurants and various farms. He has travelled throughout 30 countries in Central/North/South America and Europe and all 50 of the United States. Marc has visited over 200 botanical gardens and research institutions during this process while taking tens of thousands of pictures of representative plants. He is also Executive Director of Plants and Healers International www.plantsandhealers.org. Marc has taught hundreds of classes to thousands of people about the marvelous world of humans and their interface with other organisms while working with over 70 organizations in the last few years and online at the website here. His greatest hope is that this effort may help improve our current challenging global ecological situation. In this conversation with Marc, we talk about: the green path as a way to live life and as a physical gathering that is nonlinear and open to anyone Frank Cook's influence on the ideas behind the green path way of life what is the green path? fermenting processes, 're-skilling' for living closely to the land, donation based or free plant walks, the sharing that happens at earthskills gatherings, folk schools, botanical gardens, a camp at the rainbow gathering, and more different opportunities for education about the natural world and our connection to it issues around accessibility at earthskills gatherings and with the 'green path' the urgency of 're-localizing' and learning skills of sustainability Asheville, North Carolina as an incubator for the 'green path' the role of permaculture in the 'green path' the importance of pilgrimage and how a pilgrimage can be interpreted in many ways pilgrimage as a form of meditation and rite of passage addressing the reality of how travel has a large environmental footprint, even travel with good intentions! learning skills as a form of activism Links: 7Song's The Northeast School of Botanical Medicine and CALM first aid camp at the rainbow gathering, mentioned in the podcast: http://7song.com/ Green Path facebook group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/145910154568/ Plants and Healers International: http://www.plantsandhealers.org/ Botany Everyday: http://www.botanyeveryday.com/ The United Plant Savers and Goldenseal Sanctuary: https://unitedplantsavers.org/ The Cabbage School: http://thecabbageschool.net/ Listen to Turtle T. Turtlington's podcast episode (#4) on his pilgrimage walking across California NuMundo: NuMundo https://numundo.org/ podcast hub, and of sedge & salt blog where you can find photo diaries, ethnobotanical plant profiles, more on past podcast guests: http://www.ofsedgeandsalt.com Our Instagram page @goldenberries Join the Ground Shots Podcast Facebook Group to discuss the episodes Subscribe to our newsletter for updates on the Ground Shots Project Theme music: 'Sweat and Splinters' by Mother Marrow Produced by: Opia Creative
Episode #28 of the Ground Shots Podcast features a conversation with Tamara Wilder, who is based out of Ukiah, California. Tamara has been teaching various ancestral skills from wild foods preparation, primitive fire-making, hide tanning, cordage and more for several decades. She co-wrote the book 'Buckskin: The Ancient Art of Braintanning'' with Steven Edholm. She co-founded the organization Paleotechnics with Steven, who is a past podcast guest. Paleotechnics functions as an educational resource on the art of simple, ancient and universal ancestral technologies. Tamara tirelessly travels and teaches classes all over the west coast of Turtle Island every year with suitcases full of cordage samples, wild food preparations, fire-making supplies, and primitive tools to teach others how to use them, tons of books and pamphlets to share on permaculture, ancient living skills, craft and more. I've assisted her teaching before and she pays such great attention to detail and process. She cares deeply for sharing these skills as much as possible so others can feel empowered to participate more directly with our natural environment. She has a heart of gold and goes out of her way to help others and be in service to the land. She also facilitates conversations about IUD awareness. We sat down outside of her light clay straw infill cabin near Ukiah, California this past Spring to record this conversation for the podcast. In this conversation with Tamara, we talk about: defining 'ancient technologies' and how many are universal and how others are regionally specific the importance and abundance of wild foods in northern California bay nuts, madrone berries, manzanita berries, acorns how eating the wild foods around us connects us deeply to the land 'mast years' with certain wild foods, including this past year's huge bay nut crop the importance of acorn processing to the cultural identity of many indigenous folks in northern California how Tamara went from punk rock vegan to teaching about animal processing the ancestral relationship many folks have around the world historically to consuming animals legal issues around picking up roadkill, why there are laws making it illegal in some states how abalone is poached and over-harvested the historical wild management practices of indigenous folks in northern California like controlled burns, and the importance of these practices to ecological health how overpopulation affects the ability for humans to live in balance with the land Tamara's teachers: Jim Riggs, Margaret Mathewson, Melvin Beattie fiber and cordage as pandemic technologies and Dogbane's importance as a superior fiber plant that grows across turtle island Links: Paleotechnics website: https://www.paleotechnics.com/ Paleotechnics on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/paleotechnics/posts Paleotechnics on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Paleotechnics/ Paleotechnics Blog: https://paleotechnics.wordpress.com/ Tamara on Instagram: @wilder_tamara https://www.instagram.com/wilder_tamara/ Buckskin book by Tamara and Steven 'The Ancient Art of Brain-Tanning': https://www.amazon.com/Buckskin-Ancient-Braintanning-Steven-Edholm/dp/0965496554 ‘Tending the Wild: Native American Knowledge and the Management of California's Natural Resources' by Kat Anderson: https://www.amazon.com/Tending-Wild-Knowledge-Management-Californias/dp/0520280431 Support the podcast on Patreon to contribute to our grassroots self-funding of this project. Support the Ground Shots Project with a one time donation:paypal.me/petitfawn Our website with backlog of episodes, plant profiles, travelogue and more: http://www.ofsedgeandsalt.com Our Instagram page @goldenberries Join the Ground Shots Podcast Facebook Group to discuss the episodes Subscribe to our newsletter for updates on the Ground Shots Project Theme music: 'Sweat and Splinters' by Mother Marrow Music: ‘On my Knees' by Mother Marrow Produced by: Opia Creative
Episode #27 of the Ground Shots Podcast features a conversation with Katie Russell, the founder of the Buffalo Bridge Project on the ongoing work of the Buffalo Bridge Crew. We sat down to chat in my camper behind the laundromat in Twisp, Washington while we ate cherries and saskatoon berries. Katie Russell lives in the Methow valley in Washington state, on the east side of the Cascades, which is in the rain shadow of those towering mountains. It's an area with expansive rolling hills and mountains with dry and desert like conditions but also features a diversity of eco-zones with various conifers, quaking aspens, Ceanothus and more. Katie currently runs the Saskatoon Circle Gathering, an ancestral skill gathering that is held in the valley every year. Katie has a homestead in the valley, teaches ancestral skills and has such a cute family! (Thanks to Em for babysitting her child Ranger during our laundromat-camper hosted chat.) I've known Katie informally over the years and went to the Saskatoon Circle Gathering back in 2016, this summer being the first time I've been back in awhile. I've also been following the Buffalo Bridge Project for some time. Katie often will do presentations at ancestral skills gatherings about what the work entails, so I've learned a bit about it. Katie agreed to do an interview about Buffalo Bridge LAST year when I asked her (Spring of 2018) and we finally were able to sit down and do it this summer. To give you a little bit of a background to the project, I'm going to quote whoever wrote the description of their indigogo campaign (perhaps Harmony?) to raise money for the expenses involved, because they wrote it so poignantly: (words taken from BBP's indigogo campaign:) During the winter of 2013, Katie stumbled upon the native buffalo hunt outside Yellowstone National Park. After meeting a few of the hunters and diggin' around in some gut piles, she knew she HAD to return to explore the possibilities. In winter of 2014, Katie gathered a small crew and returned to Yellowstone to make use of the left-behind pieces of the hunt - hides, skulls, bones, fur, organs, and more. The crew set up camp right outside the hunting grounds, ready at any time to help, to share knowledge, and to offer skills in anyway the families needed. In the process, BBP began making connections with the buffalo, the native hunters, the Buffalo Field Campaign, park officials, tourists and townsfolk alike. Focused on using every part of the animal, The Buffalo Bridge Project is building a bridge between cultures, factions, and political lines in the common recognition of the innate worth of the buffalo, and our own shared humanity. The project has continued every year since the initial camp outside of Yellowstone National Park. Less than 200 years ago, 60 million buffalo roamed the country. Their grazing patterns maintained the integrity of our native grasslands. They recycled nutrients back into the soil with every step, planting seeds, fertilizing and watering as the herds migrated over the prairies. Their wallows created much needed prairie lakes and ponds with precious freshwater ecosystems. They provided food and shelter for innumerable species, from frogs and lizards to antelope and beetles. The buffalo were one of the most important keystone species in the ecology of the plains, often referred to as "large scale ecological engineers." Many of the nation's First People depended on the buffalo for most of their survival needs. Because they provided so much, the herds of bison became integral to almost every part of human life; they offered food, shelter, clothing, children's toys, silverware, blankets, clothing, rope, bags, water carriers, bowstrings, glue, tools, fire fuel, and more. The herds once numbered in the millions, and provided a comfortably abundant life for many of the buffalo hunting people. By the early 1900's, however, European colonization had almost completely eradicated the species. Within a few generations, as few as 23 wild Bison remained. These solitary animals had survived by finding refuge deep in Yellowstone National Park's boundaries. The decimation of the wild buffalo was crippling to the cultural biosphere of the First Nations. The very fabric of the native's way of life had been destroyed, and as a result, much of the culture of the buffalo people was lost, relegated to the memories and stories of the people who still remembered the way it once was. Today, through many years of political conflict and ecological turmoil, the bison population in Yellowstone has grown to around 4,900. These are the last truly wild bison in the country. Yet every year, there is a state-funded culling of the bison, in which Yellowstone officials ship portions of the buffalo herd out to slaughter. Very recently, several Native tribes have started exercising their treaty rights to hunt the wild bison, just as their ancestors have for hundreds, if not thousands of years. After almost 200 years of being severed from the very animal that was once the very heart of everyday life, many families are finally able to reclaim their traditions and reconnect with their cultural heritage once again. Buffalo Bridge is dedicated to honoring Buffalo Culture by remembering the traditions of the Buffalo People who have been living with and hunting buffalo since time immemorial. The Buffalo Bridge Project wishes to celebrate the sophistication, ingenuity, and resilience of these people by attempting to reconnect with these Old Ways of living and being. BBP also recognizes that these traditions are not our own, and think that its important to re-imagine our own ways of connecting with the land we now call our home. BBP feels that all of humanity has a shared past; one in which we all hunted animals and transformed animal skins into clothing, used stone knives, gathered plants, and made friction fire, and through enacting these very ancient patterns, we are able to remember our shared humanity. In this podcast episode with Katie, we talk about: what the Buffalo Bridge project is and how it started the different perspectives on how the buffalo should currently be treated a little on the history of the intertwined genocide of the buffalo and indigenous peoples who lived with the buffalo some information on when the state of Montana sued the federal government for the buffalo crossing out of federal land the area where Yellowstone National Park is as the 'cradle' of where buffalo spring from the earth, and where the last wild herd of buffalo still live the treaty that gave rights to indigenous people to hunt buffalo on their own ancestral lands and how that treaty was revived with the intentional revival of buffalo populations in the 90's how the folks at Buffalo Bridge navigate the cultural and political bridges in buffalo country how the folks at Buffalo Bridge play a role as scavengers in the buffalo hunt the 'ship and slaughter' baiting practice happening during the buffalo hunt to keep the buffalo numbers at a certain population and how it is a politically charged issue navigating why certain people fear the wild the important role of the buffalo ecologically Links: Facebook page for the project: https://www.facebook.com/oldwaysbuffalo/ Outside magazine article on the Buffalo Bridge Project: https://www.outsideonline.com/2086566/montanas-grid-bison-scavengers @buffalobridge https://www.instagram.com/buffalobridge/ @saskatooncircle https://www.instagram.com/saskatooncircle/ Saskatoon Circle website: https://www.saskatooncircle.com/ Buffalo Field Campaign, mentioned in the podcast: https://www.buffalofieldcampaign.org/ Support the podcast on Patreon to contribute to our grassroots self-funding of this project. Support the Ground Shots Project with a one time donation: paypal.me/petitfawn Our website with backlog of episodes, plant profiles, travelogue and more: http://www.ofsedgeandsalt.com Check the podcast page for beautiful photos of the Buffalo Bridge Project taken by Matt Hamon. Thanks for permission to use these photos, Matt! Check out Matt Hamon's photography here: http://www.matthamon.com/the-gleaners Our Instagram page @goldenberries Join the Ground Shots Podcast Facebook Group to discuss the episodes Subscribe to our newsletter for updates on the Ground Shots Project Theme music: 'Sweat and Splinters' by Mother Marrow Insterstitial Music: ‘On my Knees' by Mother Marrow Produced by: Opia Creative
Hey ya'll, Episode #26 of the Ground Shots Podcast is a mixtape of work composed by the musician and ecologist Lisa Schonberg influenced by soundscapes from the land where she does scientific research. Lisa is featured in conversation in Episode #25 of the podcast. Listen to our conversation about Lisa's music and research in #25, and then listen to this mixtape to enjoy Lisa's work. Lisa plays with Secret Drum Band, a collaborative music project called Pattern Ecology, and UAU. More info and artwork can be found on our website: https://www.ofsedgeandsalt.com/ground-shots-podcast/lisaschonberg **************************************** Playlist: boulders (UAU) vons tundra (From Secret Drum Band's ‘Dynamic's' album) Surface of Abyss at Ducke (From UAU's Music for percussion // Soundscapes and ant acoustics of the Brazilian Amazon) dadada (From Secret Drum Band's ‘Dynamic's' album) multispecies (Ants) with percussion (From UAU's Music for percussion // Soundscapes and ant acoustics of the Brazilian Amazon) kīpukapuaulu (From Secret Drum Band's ‘Dynamic's' album) polihale-kilauea-south point (From Secret Drum Band's ‘Dynamic's' album) **************************************** Links: Lab Verde Brazil : an art immersion program in the Amazon: https://www.labverde.com/ Secret Drum Band: https://secretdrumband.bandcamp.com/ Lisa's website that features info on ATTA, the Hylaeus Project, Pattern Ecology and more: http://www.lisaschonberg.com/ HJ Andrews Experimental Forest https://andrewsforest.oregonstate.edu/ Signal Fire http://www.signalfirearts.org Digital Naturalism Conference we mention in the episode: https://www.dinacon.org/ @secret drum band : https://www.instagram.com/secretdrumband @patternecology: https://www.instagram.com/patternecology @lisaannschonberg https://www.instagram.com/lisaannschonberg/?hl=en @atta________ https://www.instagram.com/atta________ Support the podcast on Patreon to contribute to our grassroots self-funding of this project. Support the Ground Shots Project with a one time donation: paypal.me/petitfawn Our website with backlog of episodes, plant profiles, travelogue and more: http://www.ofsedgeandsalt.com Our Instagram page @goldenberries Join the Ground Shots Podcast Facebook Group to discuss the episodes Subscribe to our newsletter for updates on the Ground Shots Project Theme music: 'Sweat and Splinters' by Mother Marrow Produced by: Opia Creative
Episode #25 of the Ground Shots Podcast features a conversation with Lisa Schonberg. We sat down at her home in Portland, Oregon, in-between her various research projects in the tropics. Lisa is a composer, percussionist, field recordist, teacher, and writer with a background in entomology and ecology. Lisa has traveled extensively to carry out fieldwork and perform environment-informed music. She earned her Masters in Environmental Studies at the Evergreen State College in Olympia, WA with a focus on ant biodiversity in the Neotropics. She documents soundscapes, insects, and habitat through music composition, writing, and multimedia collaboration. She strives to draw attention to endangered species, habitat loss, and other environmental issues through a merging of artistic and scientific practices, often in collaboration with ecologists. More info and artwork can be found on our website: https://www.ofsedgeandsalt.com/ground-shots-podcast/lisaschonberg In this episode of the podcast, we talk about: Lisa's ATTA fieldwork (Amplifying the Tropical Ants), a project in collaboration with Brazilian entomologists investigating ant bioacoustics in the Amazon, the ecological and cultural relevance of “sons escondidos” (hidden sounds) and how they can impact our perception of non-human species and our decision-making processes the importance of acoustic ecology and combining music composition and ecological field research how Lisa performs her place-based compositions with her ensembles Secret Drum Band and UAU. The Hylaeus project and Lisa's study of endangered bees that are endemic to Hawai'i Developments in citizen science in Hawai'i for the Hylaeus bees How research on the bees in Hawai'i can help to raise awareness about behavioral changes people can make to protect the bees' habitat The current administration's push to weaken the Endangered Species Act and how this is extremely problematic How cross-discipline collaborative research can make questions and findings more accessible Making art from scientific data to make it more fun for folks to learn about The pattern ecology project and the exploration of making art about science and through the scientific process As an additional component to this interview with Lisa, we're including a Ground Shots mixtape episode with a selection of music from the various projects Lisa mentions. Download that episode and enjoy listening to Lisa's compositions that utilize her field recordings in the Amazon, Hawai'i and beyond. (next episode) Links: Lab Verde Brazil : an art immersion program in the Amazon: https://www.labverde.com/ Secret Drum Band: https://secretdrumband.bandcamp.com/ Lisa's website that features info on ATTA, the Hylaeus Project, Pattern Ecology and more: http://www.lisaschonberg.com/ HJ Andrews Experimental Forest https://andrewsforest.oregonstate.edu/ Signal Fire http://www.signalfirearts.org Digital Naturalism Conference we mention in the episode: https://www.dinacon.org/ @secret drum band : https://www.instagram.com/secretdrumband @patternecology: https://www.instagram.com/patternecology @lisaannschonberg https://www.instagram.com/lisaannschonberg/?hl=en @atta________ https://www.instagram.com/atta________ Support the podcast on Patreon to contribute to our grassroots self-funding of this project. Support the Ground Shots Project with a one time donation: paypal.me/petitfawn Our website with backlog of episodes, plant profiles, travelogue and more: http://www.ofsedgeandsalt.com Our Instagram page @goldenberries Join the Ground Shots Podcast Facebook Group to discuss the episodes Subscribe to our newsletter for updates on the Ground Shots Project Theme music: 'Sweat and Splinters' by Mother Marrow Produced by: Opia Creative
Episode #24 the Ground Shots Podcast features a field recording of a morning spent with Epona Heathen and her child Rainan outside their camp at the 2019 Saskatoon Circle Gathering in the Methow Valley, near Twisp, Washington. Epona sings a few striking and emotive songs for me, and speaks about her intentions behind her music. This episode is especially focused on Epona's song ‘Our Lady of the Sunflower,' an ode to the Arrowleaf Balsamroot, Balsamorhiza sagittata (Asteraceae), a common and gloriously beautiful plant of western turtle island that paints the hillsides yellow in Spring. In this conversation with Epona, we talk about: octave mandolins and Epona's relationship with the instrument some occasional comments and conversations from Rainan, Epona's child, in the background some of the seasonal and life cycle themes that inspire Epona's music Epona's journey writing music for Rainan and connecting with her ancestors for him Epona's Irish and West African roots in the mountains of western North Carolina opening up to the love of the land faces us with the grief of it's loss too Epona's relationship with the Arrowleaf Balsamroot plant Sitting with the land when grief arises Epona sharing some of the wisdom that Finisia Medrano shared with her over the years an experience Epona had in Hell's Canyon a few thoughts on tending the wild food gardens 'hoop' in the west thoughts on the coyote and modern culture Links: The Heathen Family on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/the_heathen_family/?hl=en Epona's personal instagram: https://www.instagram.com/once_epona_tone/ A collaborative music project of Epona and Alex Heathen: Mirror Fauna. https://mirrorfauna.bandcamp.com/ Bob Gernandt instruments– octave mandolin/ irish bazooky: http://www.gernandt.com/ A book I think folks should read to follow up on our coyote talk in the conversation: 'Coyote America' by Dan Flores Movie trailer on film being made about Finisia Medrano called ‘The Life of Fin:” https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7Vv9V-K7wc0 Support the podcast on Patreon to contribute to our grassroots self-funding of this project. Support the Ground Shots Project with a one time donation: paypal.me/petitfawn Our Instagram page @goldenberries Join the Ground Shots Podcast Facebook Group to discuss the episodes Subscribe to our newsletter for updates on the Ground Shots Project Theme music: 'Sweat and Splinters' by Mother Marrow Produced by: Opia Creative
Episode #23 the Ground Shots Podcast features a conversation with Steven Edholm who homesteads outside of Ukiah, California. Steven co-runs an educational land skills project called Paleotechnics with Tamara Wilder and a skills-based YouTube channel called Skillcult which focuses on axes, fruit trees, grafting, hide tanning, primitive fire making, making lime for the garden, among many other topics. Steven has been researching and teaching self-reliance skills for several decades. Steven Edholm and Tamara Wilder co-wrote a book on brain-tanning buckskin. The book is currently out of print, but they hope to get the popular guide reprinted soon! It's one of my favorite guides to the art of naturally tanning animal skins. If you can get a hold of one, I HIGHLY recommend it. I housesat for Tamara Wilder for a short stint this past Spring. While on the homestead she shares with Steven, he and I sat down and recorded a conversation about bark tanning leather. It's a topic I'm really interested in and a skill I have taught a little bit over the years. It was a treat to chat with someone I consider an expert in the craft and ask them questions. In this conversation with Steven, we talk about: how natural bark tanning methods fell out of mainstream commerce why naturally tanned bark tanned leather is superior to chemically tanned leather Steven's history with various forms of hide tanning and reasons for getting into ancestral skills the basics of how to bark/vegetable tan leather using plants (we get super geeky here!) examples of possible plants to use in the leather making process some botanical tannin science troubleshooting bark tanning issues that come up ideas for a sustainable closed loop natural tannery network that integrates the garden why care about bark-tanning animal skins and other similar processes? philosophy: we were made to interact with the natural environment – what is it to be human? the importance of reviving old world craft processes accepting that we are nature too, and being involved with handcrafts gives a sense of deep satisfaction Links: Steven Edholm's website: http://skillcult.com/ Paleotechnic's website: https://www.paleotechnics.com/ Skillcult on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/SkillCult Steven's free Youtube channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCFZ-LGULm1gGhd3uOjiZr-A Lotta Rahme, Swedish author on bark-tanning leather mentioned on the the podcast: http://www.lottasgarveri.se/English.html info on sudden Oak death, a disease inflicting Oaks currently with possible devastating effects ecologically, mentioned in the podcast. Support the podcast on Patreon to contribute to our grassroots self-funding of this project. Support the Ground Shots Project with a one time donation: paypal.me/petitfawn Follow our Instagram page for info on plants, the podcast and our travels: @goldenberries Join the Ground Shots Podcast Facebook Group to discuss the episodes and topics we visit Subscribe to our newsletter for updates on the Ground Shots Project and general rambles The theme music for the podcast: 'Sweat and Splinters' by Mother Marrow Interstitial music: ‘Strong Like Sinew' by Pterodactyl Plains Pterodactyl Plains on bandcamp : https://pterodactylplains.bandcamp.com Here's short film featuring Jessica Kilroy, one of the musicians behind Pterodactyl Plains, and a glimpse into the process behind the album ‘Creek Sessions' from which ‘Strong Like Sinew' comes. The album features sounds from open lands and natural soundscapes, while communicating the need for their protection. Watch here: https://youtu.be/ypOPRjsf8AQ Produced by: Opia Creative
Episode #22 of the Ground Shots Podcast This episode of the podcast features a conversation with Alyssa Sacora of the Patchwork Underground, who lives near Asheville, North Carolina. Alyssa came out to northern Idaho to take Jim Croft's 'Old Ways of Making Books' class held every year or every other year on the homestead of Jim Croft and Melody Eckroft, where I have been teaching the leather, parchment and brain-tan buckskin portion of the class. Alyssa makes books and paper, weaves baskets, and homesteads on her small property. We met back in 2013 when we both attended the Chestnut School of Herbal Medicine's in-person summer immersion program which at the time was held out of Leicester, NC. It was sweet to catch up with Alyssa, an old friend. We decided to do something different for this episode, where we chat informally and candidly about life, my project, our motivations for things and generally processing our shared experiences being at the class together in northern Idaho. This episode gets extra vulnerable for me, and you hear a lot more about my process and experience doing my work on the road. We have some guest mosquitoes buzz by the mic! In this conversation with Alyssa, we talk about: some of my own personal stories around trauma, travel what is love? Alyssa reflecting on her experience at the 'Old Ways of Making Books' class exploring what it means to make things for your life linear vs. non-linear ways of teaching and learning the nature of acceptance and letting go, leaning into vulnerability and discomfort how we can plant seeds of inspiration for one another trusting in the mystery of the process Links: Alyssa Sacora's website: https://www.thepatchworkunderground.com/ Alyssa Sacora on instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thepatchworkunderground/ Interstitial music for this episode is Pretty Polly by Marisa Anderson Marisa Anderson on Bandcamp: https://marisaanderson.bandcamp.com Jim Croft's 'Old Ways of Making Books' class in Santa, Idaho where I taught hide tanning and visited during the month of July 2019. This is where I mention I edited and recorded the intro/outro for this and the next few episodes of the podcast: https://cargocollective.com/oldway Support the podcast on Patreon to contribute to our grassroots self-funding of this project. Our Instagram page @goldenberries Join the Ground Shots Podcast Facebook Group to discuss the episodes Subscribe to our newsletter for updates on the Ground Shots Project Theme music: 'Sweat and Splinters' by Mother Marrow Produced by: Opia Creative
Episode #21 of the Ground Shots Podcast This episode of the Ground Shots Podcast features a conversation with Alicia Toldi, who currently lived in Oakland, California. Alicia co-runs Piney Wood Atlas. According to their website: "Piney Wood Atlas is a collaborative project between citizen artists Alicia Toldi and Carolina Porras and was formed out of a desire to help spread the word about the magical world of artist residencies. Through a series of regional road trips, we travel across the country unearthing small, emerging and unconventional artist residencies. Visiting is essential in absorbing the atmosphere, embedding into the space as if we were residents ourselves. We share meals, conversations and experiences with facilitators and artists. So far, we have visited around 45 residencies across 15 states and plan to visit the whole country in the next two years, representing alternative residencies through annually printed regional guidebooks, online content, and workshops. Alternative residencies offer individual character, personalized experiences and room to experiment. Featuring these kinds of spaces allows us to connect creative thinkers with places where they can become visionaries, unlocking fresh ideas that only come from being in a new environment, and thus engaging in a symbiotic relationship between the artist, the residency locale and the outside world. Piney Wood Atlas' intention is to bridge the gap between residency databases and word-of-mouth, ensuring that attending a residency is an attainable, productive, and fun adventure for all." We did this interview in Alicia's art studio in Oakland, California this past Spring after we both completed a Permaculture Design Course (PDC) at the Occidental Arts and Ecology Center in Occidental, California. I first met Alicia when I stumbled upon Piney Wood Atlas online. We have communicated online about the project over the past couple years and both decided to sign up for the Spring PDC at OAEC without realizing the other had also. It was a sweet surprise to finally meet Alicia. She hosted me a bunch this Spring as I came through the Bay area for interviews and meet-ups with folks. I appreciated being welcomed by Alicia and her partner and able to fit my big truck camper home in her tiny driveway by the freeway in the heart of Oakland. In this conversation with Alicia, we talk about: a little bit of the story of how Alicia co-found Piney Wood Atlas the nature of artist residencies and how they can be designed in many ways, including their ability to be accessible to everyone some of Alicia's favorite residencies featured in the PWA zines. So far the Pacific Northwest and the Southwest zines are out, and the Midwest themed zine will be out soon adventures in road-tripping for the PWA project Alicia's personal story of living in different places as an artist on the east and west coasts, and coming back home to the Bay area a few of our post-permaculture training reflections Alicia's relationship with spoon carving and making things We're giving away one copy of the Piney Woods Atlas 'Southwest' zine to a Ground Shots Project Patreon subscriber. Comment on the post for the giveaway to be entered, here. Links: Alicia's personal website: http://www.aliciatoldi.com Piney Wood Atlas' website: http://www.pineywoodatlas.com Alicia on instagram: @t0ldi Piney Wood Atlas on instagram: @pineywoodatlas Email Piney Wood Atlas: contact@pineywoodatlas.com Sierra Nevada College low-residency interdisciplinary MFA program and where PWA received a grant Elsewhere Studios in Paonia, Colorado The interstitial music for this episode is 'Mojave' by Marisa Anderson Marisa Anderson on bandcamp: https://marisaanderson.bandcamp.com/ Jim Croft's 'Old Ways of Making Books' class in Santa, Idaho where I taught hide tanning and visited during the month of July 2019. This is where I mention I edited and recorded the intro/outro for this and the next few episodes of the podcast: https://cargocollective.com/oldway Support the podcast on Patreon to contribute to our grassroots self-funding of this project. Our Instagram page @goldenberries Join the Ground Shots Podcast Facebook Group to discuss the episodes Subscribe to our newsletter for updates on the Ground Shots Project Theme music: 'Sweat and Splinters' by Mother Marrow Additional Music: 'Mojave' by Marisa Anderson Marisa Anderson on Bandcamp: https://marisaanderson.bandcamp.com/ Produced by: Opia Creative
Episode #20 of the Ground Shots Podcast. This episode of the Ground Shots Podcast was recorded at the Kaua'i Food Forest on a volunteer day one Saturday in May 2019. Freddie Mango Roots is one person in the core volunteer collective that tends the food forest on the island. He utilizes Korean Natural Farming techniques at the food forest as well as at his own gardens at home. We spend some time together going into Freddie's personal story, and venture into philosophy about our culture and the choices we make to work with the earth. We end the conversation with a recorded plant walk through the Kaua'i Food Forest. In this conversation we also talk about: Freddie's stories of living in the wilderness for many years on the island of Kaua'i including a story about a helicopter crash more on plants and the food forest in addition to the sharing Paul Massey and Rob Cruz did on episode #17 being a product of your upbringing and a certain environment growing up in the deep south fermenting in the garden and kitchen how microbes are our ancestors Korean / Hawai'ian natural farming ferments the importance of cultural and ecological diversity and symbiosis the lessons of the garden for life – accepting constant change and shifting Make sure to check out the photo diary of the Kaua'i Food Forest on the project blog page to see what some of the plants look like that Freddie mentions on the audio plant walk. Links: Freddie Mango Roots on instagram: @f.m.roots Kaua'i Food Forest facebook page Kaua'i Food Forest's website: http://www.kauaifoodforest.org View the Kaua'i Food Forest hashtag: #kauaifoodforest Support the podcast on Patreon to contribute to our grassroots self-funding of this project. Our Instagram page @goldenberries Join the Ground Shots Podcast Facebook Group to discuss the episodes Subscribe to our newsletter for updates on the Ground Shots Project Theme music: 'Sweat and Splinters' by Mother Marrow Additional Music: "Pepeiao Cabin' by Lisa Schonberg and Secret Drum Band, of the Hylaeus Project Check out Secret Drum Band's music here Check out the Hylaeus Project here, a creative study of the endangered native Hawai'ian Hylaeus bees Produced by: Opia Creative
Episode #19 of the Ground Shots Podcast. In this episode of the Ground Shots Podcast, I chat with Hannah Smith, a writer, naturalist, hiking and climbing guide who lives seasonally working outdoor jobs or doing artist residencies in different parts of the country. I interviewed Hannah while we camped together in Big Sur, California early April 2019. Hannah and I studied papermaking and printmaking together at Penland School of Craft in North Carolina a few years ago. Since our time together at Penland, Hannah has continued to write, make artwork, and also work in wilderness settings while incorporating her creative practice in those places. In this conversation, we touch on a few big experiences she has had in the past few years working. Hannah also reads some of her poignant and thoughtful poetry commenting on a dying earth, our disconnection from the land and history and the relationship between our human body and the earth body. In this conversation, we talk about: Hannah's meditation practice in relationship to the land how 'watching' is the heart of it writing as an act of noticing and medium for connecting to the land giving care to a dying earth working as a climbing/hiking guide in Switzerland with the International Girl Scouts Hannah's job working on a storytelling project in Alaska Hannah's thoughts on making the outdoors and land accessible to all physical abilities working as a hut caretaker and naturalist in the White Mountains of New Hampshire for the AMC (Appalachian Mountain Club) Links: Hannah's writing site: https://imaginedlanguage.wordpress.com/ Hannah's Etsy page: https://www.etsy.com/shop/blueskypress Hannah on instagram: @hannahbluesky International Girl Scouts : https://www.scout.org/ Story Works Alaska : https://storyworksak.org/ Support the podcast on Patreon to contribute to our grassroots self-funding of this project. Our Instagram page @goldenberries Join the Ground Shots Podcast Facebook Group to discuss the episodes Subscribe to our newsletter for updates on the Ground Shots Project Theme music: 'Sweat and Splinters' by Mother Marrow Additional Music: 3 Free by Jacob Cohen Shoutout to Joshua Milowe for connecting me to Jacob's music. Produced by: Opia Creative