Full Of Beans
The bounty continues.
And above, an example of how a big igneous rock formed deep in the earth, slowly becomes sand.
And below, Greta’s speech to the U.N.
The bounty continues.
And above, an example of how a big igneous rock formed deep in the earth, slowly becomes sand.
And below, Greta’s speech to the U.N.
Outdoor showers (a bit wet), dog walks (in the intervals), plus the more indoor rainy-day stuff like reading, writing, napping, sitting on the porch experiencing rain while staying dry, and watching an episode or two of our new TV binge—Kim’s Convenience.
What made traditional economies so radically different and so very fundamentally dangerous to western economies were the traditional principles of prosperity of creation versus scarcity of resources, of sharing and distribution versus accumulation and greed. Of kinship usage rights versus individual exclusive ownership rights. And of sustainability versus growth.
This was a relationship model, a kincentric model, one in which we are all equal, but we have different jobs to do here on earth.
—John Mohawk
Sue has been wandering around looking at mushrooms, of which we seem to have considerable variety. Photos by Sue.
A warm one today, even warm enough to try swimming. And tonight, off to the Cafe In The Woods for a performance by a multiply-instrumented solo instrumentalist.
After a sunny and summery day in Kagawong.
With Murray, Elaine, and Ian.
And today we mostly took the part of the ant.
Acorns gathered prior to planting. Road ditch cleared prior to spring runoff. Woodshed filled in anticipation of fall chill and spring cold.
Back in the day, not so many years ago…
…the human people wondered where all the bird people went when the days grew short and the leaves began to turn. One theory suggested that they tunneled underground and waited out the winter there. Another held that they sank themselves below the waters, like frogs and turtles, until the coming of spring.
But then came the arrow stork, or pfeilstörchen, showing up in Germany carrying arrows from Africa.
Gross, yes, but conclusive—birds migrate.
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Translated by Jacob Rogers
I, wearing heron symmetrically opposed over my chest,
swore to the five emperors that there was no such thing as balance,
that if herons upheld
the rivers on all Chinese porcelain it was
simply due to
a locking mechanism in their joints.
they awarded me for risking everything in my defense.
I wrote to you a few years later. I said:
Rostock, sixth of July,
it’s awful of me to interrupt, but I just
need you to understand how certain kinds of wounds can be useful.
I’m finishing up an essay
on pre-modern explanations for bird migration,
and all the species seen since Aristotle’s time as either moon travelers
or sailors that very rarely return.
I even studied a pamphlet from 1703
that argues for the communion of swallows,
that they gather in wetlands
and follow a specific choreography to perch on top of the rushes
until they sink.
they spend winters underwater, in the hypnotic calm of the muck,
and that’s why they emerge so klein damp in spring.
but in 1822 (I carefully attached the photograph),
an arrow pierced the neck of a stork in central Africa
and the bird began its flight bearing both weapon and wound.
when it reached Germany, someone identified the origin of the
projectile,
and went on to form a scientific hypothesis.
I don’t remember much more of the letter, except:
pain and brightness are distributed in equal parts,
and lightness only exists because of past excess.
Since it’s the migratory season (I concluded)
I hope you don’t mind if I bypass the formula for farewells—
Atlantic in between us,
every anemone is fluttering along with the currents.
And the actual last of this year’s boat work.
Some epoxy work on the toe rail.
And, for dinner tonight corn soup, featuring Farmer Kens’ s corn, which, because of the slow spring, is now abundant.
Beautiful day, but hot in the sun kneeling and crawling along the deck with a roll of masking tape and then a paint roller. A few sweat drops mixed in with deck paint.
Warblers in the treetops, kingfishers along the shore, and an osprey moving fast up high.
Other wildlife as well:
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From the book Original Instructions: Indigenous Teaching for a Sustainable Future
Remembering the Original Instructions I wept repeatedly at the beauty and wisdom painted by the voices and visions of the First Peoples and their allies in these numinous pages. They reveal a “house made of stories,” in N. Scott Momaday’s phrase. They embody some of the most ancient wisdom on earth from the world’s “old-growth cultures.” It’s precisely what humanity most needs now to slip through this epochal keyhole of history where the stakes are the very survival of our species and countless other beings in the web of life. It’s a journey to retrieve the Original Instructions for how to live on earth in a good way, in a way that lasts. It’s a journey to recover the sacred.
As we enter the turbulent onset of global environmental collapse, these teachings remind us that what we do to the earth, we do to ourselves. Of equal importance, what we do to each other, we do to the earth. We’ll have peace with the earth only when we have peace with each other, as Chief Oren Lyons says. And we’ll have peace with each other only when we have justice.
Part of the Original Instructions resides in Traditional Ecological Knowledge (TEK). For millennia, Indigenous Peoples have acted as guardians of the biological diversity of the planet. They’ve successfully managed complex reciprocal relationships between diverse biological and human cultures, with their eyes on the time horizon of seven generations to come. This is high-TEK that has already solved many of the environmental challenges threatening humanity today. It shows how human beings can actually play a richly positive role in the web of life as a keystone species that creates conditions conducive to life for all beings. As Native American restoration ecologist Dennis Martinez observes, humanity has never faced global ecological collapse before. To get through this keyhole, we’re going to need the enduring knowledge of Indigenous science, as well as the best of leading edge Western science. It’s high-tech meets high-TEK, and in many cases modern science is affirming what the keen empiricism of First Peoples has long known.
This is the sacred geography of a world where all life is revered and animated by spirit. There is no separation between the technical and spiritual. It’s a world of kinship where all life is related. Its instructions seem so simple: to be grateful—to practice reverence for community and creation—and to enjoy life.
The Original Instructions remind us that it’s not people who are smart. The real intelligence dwells throughout the natural world and in the vast mystery of the universe that’s beyond our human comprehension. Humility is our constant companion. The Original Instructions celebrate our interdependence and interconnection with the diversity of life and one other. They help us remember who we are, that we were all Indigenous to a place not so many generations ago. They invite us to re-indigenize ourselves to our common home, Mother Earth. That is the keyhole we must slip through. It’s very small, and we’ll have to make ourselves very small to pass through it.
Rain, squalls, windshifts, black clouds, patches of blue, south wind backing to west, clear sky, evening chill—atumn on the Island.
Log splitting and path chipping the major accomplishments.
But…breakfast at Mum’s (met Therese), a little fire in the stove, reading, napping, the occasional dampish dog walk, and stir-fry for dinner. Endurable.
Big NE blow all last night and all day today.
While nothing like what is happening elsewhere, we are experiencing erosion too.
The raft formerly anchored in front of the senior Lloyds’ place broke loose. Glen came and got us, and then we called in quad-equipped reinforcements. High and (almost) dry now.
And, on a sadder note, Pinebox moved onto the mobile unit and then headed on down the road (headed for points south). (Even though the lights don’t work.)
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Going to watch the debate tonight (thanks to a VPN). Top of the list for me right now: Buttigieg, Yang, and Warren.
First time for me all year. I was happy to see her, but she did not seem that happy to see me.
As above, she has been busy dropping seeds, of which there are unlimited quantities since this is apparently a mast year for cedars.
In additional news, Pinebox has pulled their waterline and are prepping for departure.
Heavy morning rain followed by warmishness and humidity, with the threat of more weather. Pax off balance all day.
When you have all the time in the world, you can spend it, not on going somewhere, but on being where you are. So I stretch out, close my eyes, and listen to the rain.
—Braiding Sweetgrass
…errands? Actually for anything, though errands muscled out most other things. Morning fire, a few open windows in the afternoon. Split a lot of recently cut cedar for kindling. Blackbirds flocking. Autumn.
…with the help of Mark and Lisane.
Also with helpers Ava and Emma.
And it was chilly! Overall, however, a fine fall day, wrapped up with a little confab with Pinebox on the lower deck.
Bracket fungus discovered (and photo’ed) by Sue.
And a wattle hurdle made by me for no reason except to provide an opportunity to use my bilhook.
The hurdle is made of poplar saplings, about 4 years old. Seemingly a lot, but all harvested honorably. They are clonal sprouts that have grown up since the big Hydro clearing job, and they were all growing under the wires, thus with no hope of maturity. Further, the harvest took only a tiny fraction of the sprouts competing for the newly available sunshine.
…and late morning, too. Another good bit of moisture, necessitating the bailing of dinghies and kayak.
Mimi is nurturing the two chrysalises resulting from two tiny caterpillars captured by grandkids. Word has it that hundreds (maybe thousands) of monarchs are staging on the south shore of the Island and feeding voraciously in preparation for their journey south, including many miles across open water. I hope our fledglings make it to the south shore, and then across the big lake, and then all the way to Mexico.
…and piles of wood mulch.
Nothing like spring boat work in the fall. Repainted the cabin top with non-skid.
Meanwhile, tree trimmers were here taking down a trio of moribund ashes and a quartet of deceased balsams.
But, as the old stuff comes down, we continue to plant new—a few decades from now this little bit of forest will be slightly different from what it once was.
Cloudless sky, warm sun, cool west wind. Did it really rain all yesterday?
And the closed bottle gentian. In time, we can hope, to be pollinated by a muscular bumblebee.