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�Promoting Student Investigation
of Local Environmental Issues
EMERGING RMTERNS
IN THE
SOUTHERN Hit
A Reference All.
•nd ActvrtM lor
Edt»c*noft SKM
through the
Southern Highlands Environmental
Project
Project Report
Appalachian Consortium, Boone, North Carolina
�The Appalachian Consortium was a non-profit educational organization
composed of institutions and agencies located in Southern Appalachia. From
1973 to 2.004., its members published pioneering works in Appalachian studies
documenting the history and cultural heritage of the region. The Appalachian
Consortium Press was the first publisher devoted solely to the region and many of
the works it published remain seminal in the field to this day.
With funding from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation and the National
Endowment for the Humanities through the Humanities Open Book Program,
Appalachian State University has published new paperback and open access
digital editions of works from the Appalachian Consortium Press.
www.collections.library.appstate.edu/appconsortiumbooks
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons BY-NC-ND license. To view a
copy of the license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses.
Original copyright © 1993 by the Appalachian Consortium Press.
ISBN (ebook): 978-1-4696-4131-7
Distributed by the University of North Carolina Press
www.uncpress.org
�111
Promoting Student Investigation
of Local Environmental Issues
through the
Southern Highlands Environmental
Project
Project Report
by Woodward S. Bousquet
Project evaluation by Diane C. Cantrell
Co-sponsored by the Appalachian Consortium, Boone, North Carolina,
and Warren Wilson College, Swannanoa, North Carolina, with support from
the Z. Smith Reynolds Foundation, Winston-Salem, North Carolina.
Additional copies of this report are available from the Appalachian Consortium,
University Hall, Boone, North Carolina 28708 (704/262-2064). Please enclose $1.00
for postage and handling.
June, 1993
�IV
Project Staff
Woodward S. Bousquet
Institute Director and Project Co-director
Chair, Environmental Studies Department, Warren Wilson College
Barry M. Buxton
Project Co-director
Executive Director, Appalachian Consortium
(currently Executive Director, The Health Adventure, Asheville,
North Carolina)
Diane C. Cantrell
Project Evaluator and Institute Instructor
Assistant Professor of Education, The Ohio State University at Newark
(currently Assistant Chief, Office of Public Information & Education,
Ohio Department of Natural Resources)
Kristin Copeland
Graduate Assistant, Appalachian State University, 1988
Ralph Jarvis
Exchange Associate, Atlantic Center for the Environment, 1986
�Summary
From 1985 through 1990, the Appalachian Consortium developed and
sponsored a different approach to inservice teacher education — the Southern
Highlands Environmental Project (SHEP). Its purpose was to prepare and
support Appalachian teachers in leading their students in investigations of local
and regional environmental concerns.
The Project began with a needs assessment survey. Results of this survey
were used to design a five-day teacher institute, which was held in July, 1988.
During the 1988-89 school year, teachers assisted their students in investigating
environmental issues in their home communities and, when appropriate,
becoming involved in addressing those issues. Most student groups shared the
results of their work through science fair projects, PTO meetings, or articles in
local newspapers. Participating teachers submitted project reports when their
environmental units were completed. An evaluation, which included a two-hour
telephone interview with each teacher, documented the implementation and
results of the Southern Highlands Environmental Project. The evaluation
demonstrated that the Project's basic goals were achieved.
This report describes the Project's initiation, needs assessment, teacher
institute, classroom implementation, outcomes, and dissemination. Elements of
its success are presented as a model for the introduction of community-focused
environmental education in schools.
�V I
Table of Contents
page
Project Staff
iv
Summary
v
Table of Contents
vi
Introduction
Environmental Education
The Appalachian Consortium Becomes Involved, 1985
1
Needs Assessment and Project Design, 1986-87
Needs Assessment
Project Design and Funding Proposals
3
The Teacher Institute and Classroom Projects, 1988-89
5
Project Evaluation, 1989-90
7
Extending the Project's Impact, 1989-1993
11
Toward an Inservice Teacher Education Model for Investigating
Local Environmental Issues
13
References
15
Appendix
Needs Assessment Questionnaire
Follow-up Letter for Needs Assessment
List of Participants
Teacher Institute Schedule
17
�Introduction
Environmental Education
Environmental education sprang from the environmental activism of the
late 1960s. It was not entirely new, however. Its practitioners borrowed ideas
from, and its proponents built upon the accomplishments of, nature study,
conservation education and outdoor education -- three educational movements
that had originated a half-century or more earlier.
The phrasing may differ, but most educators agree that the purpose of
environmental education (EE) is to help citizens understand natural and cultural
environments, become aware of environmental problems, and develop the
motivation and the skills to work toward their solution (Roth, ei al.. 1980).
Although EE can take place at parks, nature centers and camps, and it can be
presented through newspapers, radio and television, a great deal of energy has
been devoted to incorporating environmental issues and concepts into the K-12
school curriculum. "Get it into the schools" is repeated almost mantra-like by
many environmentalists, politicians and educators.
Short-term workshops and institutes have been the most popular vehicles
for helping teachers "environmentalize" their classroom programs. These forms
of inservice teacher education have taken on a variety of formats (Rakow, 1985)
and have met with varying degrees of success (Ham, el al.. 1987-88). The
standard approach has been a Saturday session in which activity guides are
provided and teaching methods are demonstrated. Longer-term formats such as
weekend workshops and semester-long graduate courses have also been utilized,
but they make up a small percentage of the total number of inservice education
opportunities offered.
The Appalachian Consortium Becomes Involved. 1985
The Appalachian Consortium is a nonprofit educational organization
serving 156 counties in the mountainous portions of seven southeastern states
(Figure 1). Dedicated to preserving and protecting the heritage of southern
Appalachia, the organization was founded in 1971 by a group of concerned
citizens and educational leaders. Currently, the Consortium has 15 institutional
members. This diverse group consists of three government agencies, two
artisans' associations, seven colleges and universities, two environmental
organizations, and a historical society.
The Consortium's primary objective is to provide services to the region to
improve the quality of life, promote regional cooperation, and raise the pride of
Appalachian people in their traditions and region. Activities of the Consortium
have included summer institutes for teachers, conferences and seminars on
regional scholarship, travelling museum exhibitions, and historic resource
studies. The Appalachian Consortium Press, a Consortium division, has
published over 50 manuscripts dealing with southern Appalachia.
1
�2
Figure 1
Appalachian Consortium Service Region
NC
GA
SC
The Consortium expanded its efforts during the past decade to work with
public school teachers and administrators. The organization, with funding from
the National Endowment for the Humanities, offered two Southern Highlands
Institutes for Educators, one dealing with Appalachian studies and the other
dealing with cultural values in American literature. Both institutes brought
public school educators together with regional scholars from member colleges
and universities.
Late in 1985 the Appalachian Consortium's Committee on Regional
Cooperation and Development met to explore how the Consortium could support
another educational effort - environmental education -- in its service region.
Committee members agreed that EE efforts sponsored by the Consortium should
deal primarily with regional issues rather than, for instance, species
identification or outdoor adventure skills. An issue-oriented focus would match
the organization's objectives and fill a suspected gap in existing school programs.
The Committee formally endorsed an environmental education project and
formed an EE subcommittee.
Warren Wilson College, an institutional member of the Appalachian
Consortium, began its environmental studies program in 1977. Environmental
education is available as one of seven concentrations within the environmental
studies major. Thus, the College is one of the few institutions of higher education
in the Southeast to offer an EE program. In light of Warren Wilson's
membership in the Consortium, its own longstanding commitment to
Appalachia, and its activities in environmental studies, the College's leadership
in Consortium activities related to EE was considered appropriate.
�3
Needs Assessment and Project Design, 1986-87
Needs Assessment
No hard data existed on EE needs and priorities across the Appalachian
region, so a needs assessment was necessary. Consortium members and a
seven-person review panel developed and refined the survey questionnaire. A list
of the region's school districts was complied from Patterson's American
Education (Moody, 1977). From the 211 districts identified, a random sample of
105 (49.8%) was drawn for the study. Survey materials were sent to district
superintendents, who were asked to give them to an appropriate teacher or
curriculum coordinator to complete and return.
A second population was also sampled. This group was teachers who had
taken part in the Consortium's past educational programs. From a mailing list
of 118 participants, a random sample of 59 (50.0%) was drawn.
Each superintendent or teacher was sent the questionnaire, directions and
a stamped return envelope. People who did not respond to the survey by the date
requested received a follow-up letter, duplicate questionnaire and return envelope.
(See Appendix for the needs assessment questionnaire and follow-up letter.) By
the final deadline, 70 of the 105 school district representatives had responded, and
29 of the 59 teachers from the Appalachian Consortium mailing list had
responded — an overall return rate of 60.4%.
Although environmental education turned out to be a low priority in actual
practice, the survey respondents supported a greater emphasis upon EE in their
classrooms, schools and districts. Nearly four-fifths (79.4%) agreed that an EE
workshop focused on regional issues would be valuable, and 89.1% said that they
would recommend such a program to other educators. Approximately one-third
(34.1%) even indicated a willingness to share a lesson or teaching resource at
such a workshop.
Probably the most revealing and useful data came from responses to
questions about teachers' interests in various environmental topics relevant to
Appalachia. The questionnaire presented a list of 17 possibilities. Persons
completing the survey were asked to rate each issue in terms of their interest in 1)
learning about the topic itself, and 2) learning methods and resources for
teaching the topic. Seven topics attracted particularly high ratings (Table 1). A
more detailed description of the needs assessment process and its results appears
elsewhere (Bousquet and Jarvis, 1986).
Project Design and Funding Proposals
The region's educators were clearly interested in EE, and they wanted to
learn more about particular issues confronting Appalachia and their home
communities. These findings helped guide the design of the what eventually
became known as the Southern Highlands Environmental Project (SHEP). The
Consortium's Environmental Education Subcommittee established the four goals
for the Southern Highlands Environmental Project that appear in Table 2.
�4
Table 1
Environmental Topics Receiving the Highest Ratings on the Needs Assessment
Toxic Wastes
Endangered Species and Natural Areas
Wildlife
Environmental Ethics
The Relationship between Appalachian Cultures and Environments
Air Pollution and Acid Rain
•
Water Resources
Table 2
Goals of the Southern Highlands Environmental Project
1. Improve each participating teacher's understanding of local and
regional environmental issues facing Southern Appalachia.
2. Enhance each participating teacher's confidence, interest and,
competence in teaching students about local and regional
environmental issues.
3. Increase the understanding that students in each participating
teacher's class have of local and regional environmental issues.
4. Involve participating teachers and their students in studying
their local community and the environmental issues it confronts,
thereby increasing their motivation and ability to identify, analyze
and become involved in resolving these issues.
Although the long-range goal of the Project is to reach schools in all seven
Southern Highlands states, the Consortium decided to test the initial effort with a
small number of educators in a limited area. Funding proposals went to three
foundations. In May, 1987, the Z. Smith Reynolds Foundation of Winston-Salem,
North Carolina, awarded the Consortium a $20,000 grant to start the Southern
Highlands Environmental Project in western North Carolina.
�The Teacher Institute and Classroom Projects,
1988-89
Investigating environmental issues requires some basic conceptual
background and an ability to deal with abstract ideas, but the concepts and
investigation process can be taught through a variety of instructional approaches.
Therefore, the EE Subcommittee decided to target students in grades 5 through 12.
A brochure was designed to invite their teachers to take part in SHEP. Brochures
were sent to elementary school principals and to science and social studies
department heads in western North Carolina's middle and secondary schools.
Each Project applicant was asked to submit a statement of intent, a resume', and
an administrator's letter of support. Twenty-two teachers from western North
Carolina, two observers from 4-H, plus a participant from Maine sponsored by the
Atlantic Center for the Environment (Ipswich, Massachusetts), were selected.
(The Appendix contains a list of participants.)
A five-day teacher institute at Warren Wilson College in July, 1988, opened
the Project. (The complete schedule for the institute appears in the Appendix.)
After an introduction to the geology and human settlement of western North
Carolina, the teachers used the first volume of Emerging Patterns in the
Southern Highlands (Lovingood and Reiman, 1985) to gain insight into the
region's geography. The group then drove to Asheville and climbed a hill that
provides a sweeping panorama of the city below. This dramatic setting served as
the site for discussing Eller's "The Problems and Promise of Regional Life" (1985),
a paper that the participants had read before the institute. To set the stage for
studying community issues, participants met with the director of AshevilleBuncombe Discovery, an organization involved in issues related to community
growth, protection and development.
Back at Warren Wilson the next day, a panel discussed the problems of
managing toxic and hazardous wastes. One of the most popular institute
sessions turned out to be the poster session featuring various EE teaching
resources and regional organizations and agencies that deal with the
environment. Curriculum specialists then led teachers in examining and trying
out a number of instructional materials. Each teacher received copies of The
CLASS Project (National Wildlife Federation, 1982), Roth and Lockwood's
Strategies and Activities for Using Local Communities as Environmental
Education Sites (1979), and Investigating and Evaluating Environmental Issues
and Actions (Hungerford, g_t al.. 1985). The teachers also took part in a
simulation on siting a low-level radioactive waste disposal facility (Okun, 1988).
The group visited the Great Smoky Mountains National Park to explore the
relationships between Appalachian settlers and the environment at the
Oconoluftee Pioneer Farm, and they studied air quality problems at the Park's
high-elevation air pollution monitoring station. For many teachers, the
institute's highlight was a day-long examination of environmental issues in
Asheville. In small groups, the participants selected and designed studies of
planning and zoning, water supply, open space preservation and riverfront
development. Conducting and reporting on the investigations themselves
5
�6
allowed teachers to practice the skills and evaluate the curriculum materials they
had been learning about in the institute.
The institute closed with a planning session. Teachers reviewed the North
Carolina Department of Public Instruction's K-12 curricular guidelines,
identifying objectives and competencies that specifically mentioned or related
directly to environmental quality, the local community and citizenship skills for
their grades and subject areas. Each teacher began designing a "community
investigation unit" to carry out with his or her students during the 1988-89 school
year. Final plans for the units were submitted in September, 1988.
The teachers rated the July institute as very helpful in implementing their
subsequent school-year activities. The field trips and Asheville investigation
were seen as the most worthwhile institute sessions. Most of them wanted even
more time spent on developing ways to integrate community studies into their
classroom curricula.
Enthusiasm often runs high at the end of a teacher workshop, and the
SHEP institute was no exception. But would that interest sustain itself through
all the demands of the school year? How would the participants actually
implement their plans? How would students respond?
The SHEP objectives were demanding. Teachers were expected to do
without textbooks and most prepackaged instructional materials. They and their
students were to investigate real environmental problems in their home
communities and get out into those communities as much as possible.
One teacher later explained,
/ wasn't sure about how much success I would have. It was new to me.
It was hard to think about integrating it into what I had been doing.
Stated another participant,
You can't get too many irons in the fire, so I was a little worried about
keeping it [the unit] together ... plus taking care of all the other
responsibilities I have at school.
�7
Project Evaluation, 1989-90
Teachers play the key role in translating an educational innovation, such
as EE, from theory into practice. Their role as implementers is central to the
process of curricular change (Crandall, 1983; Cantrell, 1987). Fullan (1982, p. 41)
wrote, "Implementation is the means to achieving certain outcomes; evaluations
have limited value and can be misleading if they only provide information on
outcomes [emphasis in the original]." Therefore, in order to understand the
Project's impact, it was important to know both what the teachers did as well as
how their students responded.
Dr. Diane Cantrell of The Ohio State University's Newark campus carried
out the evaluation. She had served as one of the teacher institute's curriculum
specialists, so the participants knew her well. Since both the implementation
process and the project outcomes were of interest, the standard pretestposttest/analysis-of-variance research design was not the best approach for
investigating how teachers incorporated SHEP into their curricula. A qualitative
study was more appropriate. Three broad questions were examined:
1. How effective was the Institute in reaching the Project goals?
2. To what extent and in what manner did participating teachers
implement programs and practices from the Institute into their
school curricula, specifically through community investigations?
3. To what extent are the goals of the Project evident in the teachers'
implementation?
Cantrell conducted two-hour telephone interviews with each Project
teacher after the teacher had finished his or her unit and submitted the required
final report. These interviews were taped, transcribed, and then analyzed for
categories and themes present in the teachers' responses. Cantrell also
examined the Project's written documentation including the teachers'
applications, the institute syllabus and other handouts, evaluation forms,
community investigation unit plans, and each teacher's final project report.
Did the teachers implement their community investigation units? Of the 18
teachers who were expected to complete projects, 15 (83%) did so. One of the
teachers who did not carry out a SHEP unit was expecting a baby, another moved
out of state during the school year, while the third felt inexperienced and found it
difficult to match students' expectations with hers (she was a vocational
education teacher). An additional teacher wrote a proposal for his students to
develop a nature trail on county property. The project remained unfinished at the
end of the 1988-89 school year because of heavy spring rains and the school and
county government's "red tape." He and his students completed the trail the
following year and held a public dedication ceremony.
In general, the five-day July institute accounted for almost half of the ideas
that participating teachers incorporated into their community investigation units
during the following school year. Slightly more than half of the ideas came from
the teachers' own resources including textbooks, lectures, audiovisual materials,
�8
laboratory experiences, childrens' literature, bulletin boards, music, and teachercreated activities. The teachers differed in how the investigation units fit into
their overall curricula. Four teachers incorporated SHEP throughout the year,
sometimes with concentrated blocks of activities. Three spoke to the evaluator
about correlating SHEP goals with North Carolina's educational objectives. The
two teachers with self-contained classrooms said that they integrated the project
with all academic subjects. Two had no specific curriculum and, therefore, had
the freedom to develop their classroom programs as they wished.
What kinds of issues and projects were involved? All of the students'
projects reflected the goals of the Southern Highlands Environmental Project. In
each case, students studied environmental issues of concern to their local
community. While the topics chosen varied, almost all of them related directly or
indirectly to the seven environmental topics identified through the needs
assessment (Table 1) and listed in the grant proposal to the Z. Smith Reynolds
Foundation.
An Iredell County class, for example, selected recycling because their
county's landfill was approaching capacity and students felt that solid waste was
a problem they could do something about. The recycling program they set up
earned over $100 that spring, and the money went for science equipment. The
program continued during the next school year. Students in a Transylvania
County middle school worked with a local garden club to improve their school's
nature trail property for wildlife habitat. A high school class began an acid
precipitation monitoring program. In a downtown Asheville school, students
conducted several projects related to soil and water conservation. They attended
local hearings on obtaining drinking water from the French Broad River, they
circulated a petition against cutting trees along a highway, they invited people
with different viewpoints on various issues to speak to their class, and they
carried out several science fair experiments related to local conservation issues.
Most classes presented their projects at local P.T.O. meetings or obtained
newspaper coverage about their activities
How community-focused were the units? After an analysis of the types of
activities the students carried out, Cantrell developed a "continuum of community
involvement" (Figure 2) to characterize what took place. At one end of the
continuum was writing to a government office for information or inviting a guest
speaker to class. Little or no direct student contact with the local community
happened. Examples of middle-range community involvement included going on
a field trip, attending a public hearing, or inviting a community member to class
and having small groups of students interview that person. Activities
representing high levels of local contact were conducting opinion surveys and
giving public presentations.
�9
Figure 2
Continuum of Community Involvement
High Involvement in the Community
Implement community action project (6)*
Conduct community study (3)
Conduct survey or interview outside the school (7)
Attend public hearing (1)
Go on a field trip (11)
Implement school-oriented action project (3)
Do class activities reaching beyond the school (7)
Involve parents (6)
Conduct survey or interview inside the school (3)
Listen to a guest speaker (8)
Write to an agency (1)
Read and/or watch local news media (4)
Do activities or projects in the classroom (14)
Low Involvement in the Community
* The number in parentheses indicates how many of the 15 teachers
who carried out their units during the 1988-89 school year had classes
that took part in each activity.
This continuum illustrates the range of activities engaged in by the
teachers and their students. The teachers did involve their students in the local
community and the community became involved with the students. The majority
of activities, however, fell towards the "low involvement" end of the continuum,
reflecting the high number of regular classroom activities that the SHEP teachers
continued to conduct. Nevertheless, all teachers reported that they had moved
"up" in the continuum during the 1988-89 year as a result of participating in the
Southern Highlands Environmental Project. That is, their activities dealt with
the students' local communities to a greater degree than had been true in the
past.
Prior to taking part in the Southern Highlands Environmental Project, only
five (36%) of the teachers said that they taught about environmental issues, and
only three of these teachers indicated that their lessons focused on the local
community in some way. The remaining teachers (64%) stated that they taught
�10
little or nothing about environmental issues. After completing the teacher
institute, carrying out the community investigation units with their students, and
submitting their final reports, all of the teachers expressed positive feelings about
studying environmental issues in their local communities.
As far as the community investigations themselves are concerned, the
length and richness of teachers' comments speak to their success:
When we started doing the community study [during the July
institute] I felt like this is really an imposition on people who are
busy. I think when I got home I would have continued to feel that
way had I not actively done it myself and gotten the response that we
got from the people. That made me feel totally different.
I think the students' interactions with each other certainly helped
with their maturity level. When we did our interviews, there was no
silliness
When you teach .,, you want them to become self-motivating. You
show them the way and they go out and do it. ... [I didn't tell]
them about cutting the trees. They recognized the issue and then
they got together and did something about it.
The Institute helped me to get a little more confident to actually try
a few community investigations because I went out and did one
myself. . . Maybe in my mind I thought people were going to be a little
more hostile or more untouchable than they were. . . I learned a lot
and it really helped me in the upcoming school year.
The students realized that they should recycle [because] it's a very
current issue in our county if not all over the country ... They have
improved their parents' awareness. When children are concerned
about it [recycling], they go home and talk to their parents.
There were several issues that were voted on or finalized during the
year, and the kids felt they had some part in the process ... a
personal knowledge and interest in it. They would come running in
and say, 'This is the way the vote came out.' ... If I hadn't done the
project they wouldn't have cared.
�Extending the Project's Impact, 1989-1993
Teachers were expected to broaden the impact of the Project in two ways.
First, they were asked to involve their students in organizing a culminating
activity, such as an environmental forum or festival, to share their investigations
with the general public. While every teacher except one shared the results of the
project in some way, no teacher's students achieved the level of organization and
publicity implied by the terms "festival" and "forum." The highest level of
sharing was making presentations to outside groups. This level included a
presentation to a regional garden club meeting, mailing of two student-produced
reports to local agencies, and a display of posters at a mall.
The second means of broadening the impact of SHEP was requesting that
participating teachers make at least one presentation to other professional
educators. A videotape was planned to assist the teachers in these presentations.
The video was not developed, however, because of the unanticipated time and
production costs involved. Some participating teachers informally shared their
work with other teachers and supervisors. Two gave a presentation with the
institute director at an Appalachian Studies Association conference. Overall,
though, this expectation was not well met.
Nevertheless, several formal presentations about the Southern Highlands
Environmental Project have been made, and a journal article has been accepted
for publication. These are listed below.
Bousquet, Woodward S., and Diane C. Cantrell. 1989. The Southern Highlands
Environmental Project. Presentation at the annual conference of the North
American Association for Environmental Education, August 20-23, 1989, Estes
Park, Colorado.
Bousquet, Woodward, Dorinda Cartin, and Samuel Cathey 1990. Promoting
Environmental Education through the Southern Highlands Environmental
Project: An Inservice Teacher Education Model for the Region. Presentation at
the Thirteenth Annual Appalachian Studies Association Conference, March 2325,1990, Helen, Georgia.
Cantrell, Diane C. 1990. Community Studies Serve as Vehicles for Moving
Teachers and Students to Action. Presentation at the annual conference of the
North American Association for Environmental Education, November 2-7, 1990,
San Antonio, Texas.
Cantrell, Diane C. (in press). Community Studies Serve as Vehicles for Moving
Teachers and Students to Action. Connections Journal.
An additional means of extending impact of the Southern Highlands
Environmental Project is this report. Although its completion has been delayed,
primarily because of the author's increased responsibilities at his home
institution, the report will present the Project's design and results to a wider
audience. It will be distributed to curriculum coordinators in southern
Appalachian school districts, Appalachian Consortium members, participating
teachers, persons attending various conference presentations about the Project,
11
�12
and others interested in environmental education or Appalachian studies. It will
also be submitted to the Educational Resources Information Clearinghouse
(ERIC) so that it can be considered for inclusion in the ERIC database. By
documenting SHEP in written form, it is hoped that people interested in
community-focused EE will benefit from the experiences of the Project's
facilitators, participating classroom teachers, and students.
�Toward an Inservice Teacher Education Model
for Investigating Local Environmental Issues
As explained in the introduction to this report, the Southern Highlands
Environmental Project differs from most other EE teacher inservice educational
efforts in a number of ways. The evaluation strongly suggests that several
aspects of the Project's design have been — at least in part ~ responsible for its
overall success in assisting teachers in involving their students in investigating
environmental issues in their home communities. These aspects include the five
described below.
Teacher Input
The Project was not a "top-down" effort. Responses to the needs
assessment provided a basis for tailoring the Project to the 1988-89 participants'
needs and interests. Two-hour interviews with each SHEP teacher at the end of
the year revealed important Project strengths and identified areas needing
improvement.
Specific Expectations
Identifying trees or reading about the depletion of the Earth's ozone layer
were not part of the SHEP teacher institute - as worthwhile as these EE activities
are. Instead, teachers were asked to plan a unit that focused on local and
regional issues and ways the students could become involved in investigating and
possibly helping to address these issues. Research has shown that if community
investigation and action are desired outcomes, then the teacher must build
specific investigation and action skills into his or her unit plans (Hungerford, e_t
al, 1985; Hines, el al, 1986-87). Students do not develop these skills
spontaneously just because their motivation to help solve environmental problems
may be raised through nature appreciation lessons or discussions of global
problems.
Active Involvement
The curriculum materials and issues in the five-day teacher institute were
not simply talked about. The teachers tried out many lessons themselves, shared
them with their colleagues, and matched state-mandated competencies for their
grades and subjects with the curriculum materials they examined. They visited
an air pollution monitoring station in the middle of a dying forest to better
understand the complex causes of forest decline. And, probably most important,
during the teacher institute they planned and conducted their own studies of
issues facing Asheville so they would feel more comfortable in assisting students
in doing similar studies in their home cities and towns.
13
�14
Extended Contact
The Project did not end at the close of the July institute. Teachers
completed proposals for their community investigation units at the beginning of
the school year and sent them to the institute director. Many contacted the
institute director during the school year. After the units were completed,
participants prepared and submitted final reports and received feedback. If the
Project continues with additional groups of teachers, several teachers from the
1988-89 group will be asked to serve as resource persons for future SHEP
institutes.
Incentives
All participants received a $200 stipend. Four graduate credits from
Appalachian State University were also available Only one teacher, however,
identified the stipend or credit as a primary reason for participating in SHEP.
Nevertheless, these incentives appeared to function in more subtle, but still
significant, ways. Teachers received only half of their stipends after the July 1988
institute; the $100 balance was sent after the institute director received the
teacher's final report, usually near the end of the 1988-89 school year. Similarly,
graduate credit was awarded only after the teacher wrote his or her final report.
Although no comparative study was carried out on this question, common sense
supports the conclusion that withholding credit and half the stipend until the
entire year-long project work was completed helped assure that teachers would
actually carry out the activities with their students.
These five aspects of the Southern Highlands Environmental Project offer
some direction for efforts with similar purposes. Most environmental issues
cros~s the borders of a given town or city, extending across entire regions. Many
continue further to national and global levels. Thus, SHEP can serve as a model
for other inservice EE projects that focus on local connections while building
regional perspectives. The Project illustrates how an understanding of teachers'
needs, careful planning, a diversity of resources, enthusiastic school teachers,
and an extended project format can foster an understanding of and concern for
local environmental issues in both students and their instructors.
�References
Bousquet, Woodward S., and Ralph W. Jarvis. 1986. Conservation and
Environmental Education in Southern Appalachian Schools. A Report of a Needs
Assessment. Unpublished manuscript available through the Educational
Resources Information Center (ERIC) database, ED 271317.
Cantrell, Diane C. 1987. A Case Study Analysis of Curriculum Implementation
as Exemplified by Project WILD in One Midwestern State. Unpublished doctoral
dissertation, The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio.
Crandall, David P. 1983. The Teacher's Role in School Improvement.
Educational Leadership 41 (3): 6-9.
Eller, Ronald D. 1985. Looking to the Future: The Problems and Promise of
Regional Life. Keynote address to the Forum on Buncombe County and the 21st
Century, Warren Wilson College, Swannanoa, North Carolina.
Fullan, M. 1982. The Meaning of Educational Change. New York: Teachers
College Press.
Ham, Sam H., Mary H. Rellergert-Taylor, and Edwin E. Krumpe. 1987-88.
Reducing Barriers to Environmental Education. Journal of Environmental
Education 19 (2): 25-33.
Hines, Jody M., Harold R. Hungerford, and Audrey Tomera. 1986-87. Analysis
and Synthesis of Research on Responsible Environmental Behavior: A MetaAnalysis. Journal of Environmental Education (18) 2: 1-8.
Hungerford, Harold R., ej, al. 1985. Investigating and Evaluating
Environmental Issues and Actions. Skill Development Modules. Champaign,
Illinois: Stipes Publishing Co.
Lovingood, Paul E., Jr., and Robert E. Reiman. [1985.] Emerging Patterns in the
Southern Highlands. A Reference Atlas. Volume 1. Introduction. Boone, North
Carolina: The Appalachian Consortium Press, Inc.
15
�16
Moody, Douglas, ed. 1977. Patterson's American Education. Mt. Prospect,
Illinois: Educational Directories, Inc.
National Wildlife Federation. 1982. The CLASS Project. Washington, D.C.
Okun, Melva. [1988.] Low-Level Radioactive Waste and a Simulation Exercise of
the Issues Involved in Siting a Disposal Facility. Chapel Hill, North Carolina:
Institute for Environmental Studies, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill.
Rakow, Steven J. 1985. A Review of Teacher Inservice Education in
Environmental Education: 1970-1980. Journal of Environmental Education 16
(4): 7-10.
Roth, Charles E., and Linda G. Lockwood. 1979. Strategies and Activities for
Using Local Communities as Environmental Education Sites. Columbus, Ohio:
ERIC Clearinghouse for Science, Mathematics, and Environmental Education.
Roth, Robert E., Diane C. Cantrell, and Woodward Bousquet. 1980. Impact on
Environmental Education. In Hammerman, William M., ed., Fifty Years of
Resident Outdoor Education: 1930-1980. Its Impact on American Education.
Martinsville, Indiana: American Camping Association.
�17
Appendix
Needs Assessment Questionnaire
Follow-up Letter for Needs Assessment
List of Participants
Teacher Institute Schedule
�<|ir•!•'>"•' £•» UMwiMy
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APP.5IACHLS3 ^^ CONSORTIUM
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WM«m N C HMoncd Amc
CONSERVATION AND ENVIRONMENTAL EDUCATION QUESTIONNAIRE
In conjunction with the Appalachian Consortium , Warren Wilson
College is conducting a conservation and environmental education
needs assessment in the Southern Appalachian region.
If significant needs are demonstrated, the Appalachian Consortium
and Warren Wilson College plan to develop proposals to fund a series
of conservation and environmental education teacher institutes in the
region. These workshops would follow the approach and format of the
Consortium's recent Appalachian Studies Teacher Institutes which
have assisted teachers in incorporating Appalachian studies into their
classroom activities.
We want to match our workshops to your particular needs and interests. Therefore, we need your assistance in completing the enclosed
survey.
Please use the return envelope provided. In order to meet deadlines for planning the workshops, we need your response by April 4, 1986.
The return envelope has a code number to enable us to contact people who haven't returned their questionnaires by April 4th. Your individual responses will be kept confidential.
If you have any questions about the survey you may direct them to
Woodward S. Bousquet at Warren Wilson College (704/298-3325). Thank
you for your time and cooperation.
Sincerely,
Woodward S. Bousquet
Chair, Environmental Studies Program
Warren Wilson College
Ralph W. Jarvis
Exchange Associate
Appalachian Consortium
Preserving, Protecting and Promoting Southern Appalachia
University Hall • Appalachian State University . Borne, North Carolina 28608 • 704/262-2064
�10. If support is weak, what prevents a stronger emphasis on conservation
and environmental education in your district ?
11. Do you think that a workshop on conservation and environmental
education for the Southern Appalachian region would be valuable ?
Yes
No
Undecided
12. If this program were offered for five days during the summer, would
you:
a) Be interested in attending yourself ?
Yes
No
Undecided
b) Recommend it to other educators ?
Yes
No
Undecided
c) Share a lesson or resources at the program ?
Yes
No
Undecided
13. REGIONAL TOPICS
you would be in :
Please indicate, using the scale, how interested
Learning some methods
and resources for
teaching this topic ?
Learning about the
Topic itself?
Not at all Somewhat Extremely
Southern Appalachian
Geology and Geography
1
Natural History o f the
Appalachian Region
2
1
3
2
4
3
5
4
Not at all Somewhat Extremely
1
5
Principles of Ecology
1
2
3
4
Relationships Between
Economics and Environmental Quality
1
2
3
4
2
3
4
1
5
Relationships Between
1
Southern Appalachian
Cultures and the Environment
2
5
5
3
2
4
3
5
4
5
1
2
3
4
5
1
2
3
4
5
2
3
4
5
1
Forests a n d Forestry
1
2
3
4
5
1
2
3
4
5
Energy a n d Energy
Resources
1
2
3
4
5
1
2
3
4
5
Water Resources a n d
Water Pollution
1
2
3
4
5
1
2
3
4
5
( Continued on the next page)
�Conservation and Environmental Education Questionnaire
1. Please supply the following information:
a) Number of years spent teaching:
2. Subjects taught:
Language Arts
b) Grades taught:.
Social Studies
Mathematics
3. To what extent are topics related to conservation
education currently included in your:
a) Classroom :
Extensive
Moderate
b) School:
Extensive
Moderate
c) District:
Extensive
Moderate
Science
Vocational Education
and environmental
Little
Little
Little
Not At All
Not At All
Not At All
4. How many hours per week do you provide conservation and environmental
education instruction ?
5.ln your classroom.which of the following areas of conservation and
environmental education do you cover ? (Check all that apply)
a)
Nature Study and Ecology
b)
Conservation Methods
c)
Environmental Issues
d)
People's Relationship to the Environment
e)
Other (specify)
6. Please check the method(s) you use to present this material.
a)
Classroom instruction
b)
Field trip
c)
Laboratory
d)
School site study
e)
Other (specify)
7. Have you ever participated in a conservation or environmental education
course or workshop ?
Yes
No
8. To you. how important is a stronger conservation and environmental
education curriculum in your:
a) Classroom :
Very
Moderately
Slightly
Not At All
b) School:
Very
Moderately
Slightly
Not At All
c) District:
Very
Moderately
Slightly
Not At All
9. To what extent are conservation and environmental education
empasized and supported locally by your:
a) State board Of education
b) School board
C) Superintendent
d) Pripcipal
e) Student's parents
f) Fellow teachers
Strongly
Strongly
Strongly
_ Strongly
Strongly
Strongly
_ Moderately •_ Slightly _ Nol at all
_ Moderately _ Slightly
Not at all
_ Moderately
Slightly
Not at all
Moderately _ Slightly
Not at all
_ Moderately
Slightly
Not at all
_ Moderately _ Slightly
Not« all
�Topic
Methods
Not at all Somewhat Extremely
Production a n d Disposal
1
of Toxic and Hazardous
Wastes
Litter, Solid Waste a n d
Recyling
1
Wildlife a n d Wildlife
Management
Endangered Species
and Natural Areas
2
Coal Mining a n d Related
Environmental Issues
2
2
1
1
A i r Pollution a n d
Acid Rain
3
4
3
2
4
4
2
1
4
1
2
1
5
Land Use a n d
Planning
1
2
3
4
Environmental Ethics
and Responsibility
1
2
3
4
1
5
1
2
4
3
3
5
5
4
2
2
4
3
3
5
5
4
2
1
5
3
3
2
4
4
2
1
5
3
3
1
5
4
2
2
5
4
3
1
5
3
3
Not at all Somewhat Extremely
5
5
3
2
1
4
3
1
1
Mineral Resources
2
5
5
4
5
4
4
3
5
5
14. GENERALMETHOD6:
Please indicate, using the scale, how interested you would be in
workshops dealing with the methods and resources for:
Organizing a 1/2 o r 1 D a y Reid Trip
1
2
3
4
5
Organizing a 2 to 5 D a y Field Trip
1
2
3
4
5
Studying Conservation a n d Environmental Issues
in your Local Community
1
2
3
4
5
Using your School Site for Conservation and
Environmental Education
1
2
3
4
5
15. If you would be interested in further information about this project
please provide the information below.
Name:
Address:
Telephone: Office
Home,
Please use the back of this page for additional comments, suggestions
and recommendations for persons to contact.
Thank you for your assistance. Please return this questionnaire in the
envelope provided by APRIL 4. 1986. Return to:
Woodward S. Bousquet, Warren Wilson College
701 Warren Wilson College Road
Swannanoa, North Carolina
28778
�Appalachian State University
Lees-McRae College
Blue Ridge Parkway
Mars Hill College
East Tennessee State University
X^LAC^V
Mountain Regional Library
APPALACHIAN (1$) CONSORTIUM
N. C. Diuision of Archives & History
^SjriO?^ Warren Wilson College
Southern Highland Handicraft Guild
Western Carolina University
United States Forest Service
Western N. C. Historical Assoc.
May 12, 1986
Dear Superintendent:
Six weeks ago we mailed you a Conservation and Environmental
Education Questionnaire to give tc a teacher or curriculum
coordinator to complete and return.
Our records indicate that we have not yet received a response.
We would still appreciate your assistance.
Could you give the enclosed materials to an appropriate teacher
or curriculum coordinator? A duplicate questionnaire and return
envelope are provided in case the originals have been misplaced.
In order to meet our planning deadlines, we need .a response no
later than May 24. 1986.
Sincerely,
Woodward S. Bousquet
Chair, Environmental Studies Program
Warren Wilson College
Ralph W. Jarvis
Exchange Associate
Appalachian Consortium
Preserving, Protecting and Promoting Southern Appalachia
University Hall • Appalachian State University • Boone, North Carolina 28608 • 704/262-2064
�Appalachian State University
Lees-McRae College
Blue Ridge Parkway
Mars Hill College
East Tennessee State University
X^CAC^N,
Mountain Regional Library
APPALACHIAN |jg| CONSORTIUM
N. C. Division o/ Archives & History
^£m^X
Warren W//son CoHege
Southern High/and Handicraft Guild
Western Carofina University
United States Forest Service
Western N. C. Historical Assoc.
May 12, 1986
Dear Teacher:
Six weeks ago we mailed you a Conservation and Environmental
Education Questionnaire to complete and return.
Our records indicate that we have not yet received your response.
We would still appreciate your assistance.
A duplicate questionnaire and return envelope are enclosed in
case you have misplaced the originals.
In order to meet our planning deadlines, we need your response
no later than May 24, 1986.
Thank you for your time and cooperation.
Sincerely,
Woodward S. Bousquet
Chair, Environmental Studies Program
Warren Wilson College
Ralph W. jarvis
Exchange Associate
Appalachian Consortium
Preserving, Protecting and Promoting Southern Appalachia
University Hall • Appalachian State University • Boons, North Carolina 28608 • 704/262-2064
�Southern. Highlands Environmental Project
ENVIRONMENTAL EDUCATION INSTITUTE
at Warren Wilson College, July 25-29, 1988
LIST OF PARTICIPANTS, PRESENTERS AND GUESTS
PARTICIPANTS
John A. Allen, Jr.
109 Edgewood Ct.
Arden, NC 28704
(704)687-1676
Sandra S.Brauer
Route 1, Box 655
Marion, NC 28752
(704)652-1548
Dorinda K. Cartin
128 Westwood Rd.
Asheville, NC 28804
(704)253-0956
Samuel 3. Cathey
Route 1, Box 214
Lake Toxaway, NC 28747
(704)966-9441
Maxine Cleveland
119 Wolfe Cove Rd.
Asheville, NC 28804
(704)253-7590
A. Kirk Emmons
180 Hillside Terrace
Waynesville, NC 28786
(704)452-7071
Scott Griffin
Route 4, Box 303-A
Crab Creek Road
Hendersonville, NC 28739
(704)693-6893
Claire-Marie Hannon
Pern 4-H Center
Route 9, Box 249-X
Reidsville, NC 27320
(919)349-9445
Debbie Hay *
Quality Foward
P.O. Box 22
Asheville, NC 23802
(704)254-1776
Kay Harbison
Route 10, Box 190-A
Morganton, NC 28655
(704)437-7964
Martha T. Kane
Route 1, Box 64-38
Conover, NC 28613
Linda M. Marshall
240 N. Oak St.
Statesville, NC 28677
(704)872-7203
Roland Flory *
North Carolina 4-H
1412 MacDuff Ct.
Gary, NC 27511
Charles O'Connor
23 Summerglen Court
Asheville, NC 28806
(704)667-0044
Sheila Y. Sherman
P.O. Box 13
Todd, NC 28684
(919)877-1155
Sharon M. Stewart
P.O. Box 64
Pineola, NC 28662
(704)733-4239
Carol Wallen
24 Deer Run Dr.
Asheville, NC 28803
(704)274-4651
Mary Aw Wilds
Route 1, Box 448
Candler, NC 28715
(704)667-0327
Lila D. Young
P.O. Box 44
Bakersville, NC 2S705
(704)688-2776
Margo Murphy
Lincolnville Beach, ME 04849
Marsha Gregory
Route 3, Box 7
Burnsville, NC 28714
(704)682-958-7
Janet Ouzts
655 Coxes Creek Rd.
Marion,, NC 28752
(704)756-7294
"Guest Observers
�Institute Facilitators
con't Guest Presenters
Woodward S. Bousquet
Dean, Warren Wilson College
701 Warren Wilson Rd.
Swannanoa, NC 28778
(704)298-3325
Donald Higgins
Visual Imagery, Inc.
P.O. Box 18173
Asheville, NC 28814
(704)254-3090
Diane C. Cantrell
Education Department
The Ohio State University
Newark Campus
University Drive
Newark, OH 43055
(614)366-9^00
Robin Purcell
Hazardous Waste Officer
Buncombe County Courthouse
Asheville, NC 28801-3559
(704)255-5087
Appalachian Consortium Staff
Dr. Barry Buxton
Executive Director
Kristin Copeland
Graduate Assistant
Appalachian Consortium
University Hall
Appalachian State University
Boone, NC 28608
(704)262-2064
Guest Presenters
Robert Reiman
Community Planning and Geography Dept.
Appalachian State University
Boone, NC 28608
(704)262-3000
Karen Fields
Excutive Director
Ashevills-Buncombe Discovery
46 Haywood Street, Suite 336
Asheville, NC 28SOI
(704)254-1133
Laura Temple Haney
Environmental Studies Program
warren Wilson Collage
701 Warren Wilson Rd.
Swannanoa, NC 28778
(704)298-3325
Jenny Rominger
Clean Water Fund
138 E. Chestnut
Asheville, NC 28801
(704)251-0518
Michael Adams
Visitor Services Supervisor
Oconoluftee Visitor Center
Great Smoky Mts. National Park
Cherokee, NC 28719
(704)497-9146
Melva Okun
Institute for Environmental Studies
311 Pittsboro St, C3# 7410
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7410
(919)966-3332
Marnie Muller
Katuah Journal
170 Worley Cove Rd.
Marshall, NC 28753
(704)683-1414
�Organizations
Appalachian Consortium Press
Ms. Karen Lohr
University Hall
Appalachian State University
Boone, NC 28608
(704)262-2064
Southern Appalachian Highlands Conservancy
Mr. Stanley A. Murray
P.O. Box 3356
Kingsport, TN 37664
(615)323 3677
Carolina Power & Light Co.
Ms. Ruth Petty
P.O. Box 1551-14C3
Raleigh, NC 27602
(919)836-7797
Toecane Ranger District
Mr. David Purser
Assistant Ranger
U.S. Forest Service
P.O. Box 128
Burnsville, NC 28714
(704)257-4200
Clean Water Fund
Ms. Jenny Rominger
138 E. Chestnut
Asheville, NC 28801
(704)251-0518
North Carolina Wildlife Federation
Mr. Michael Corcoran
Executive Vice.President
P.O. Box 10626
Raleigh, NC 27605
(919)833-1923
Sierra Club
Mr. Mike Petelle
Route 7, Box 586
Fairview, NC 28730
(704)628-1636
(Chair: David Blanchard-Reid,
(704)686-3211)
Western- North Carolina Alliance
Mr. Ron Lambe
P.O. Box 18087
Asheville, NC 28814
(704)258-8737
Western North Carolina Tomorrow
Ms. Rose Hooper
P.O.. Box 222
Cullowhee, NC 28723
(704)227-7492
�Southern Highlands Environmental Project
ENVIRONMENTAL EDUCATION INSTITUTE
Monday, July 25 - Friday, July 29, 1988
at Warren Wilson College, Swannanoa, North Carolina
REVISED SCHEDULE
Monday, July 25;
9:00am
10:00am
10:20am
ll:00am
noon
l:00pm
2:00pm
3:00pm
5:30pm
7:00pm
10:00pm
Arrival, registration in Sage Dormitory
Welcome
Introduction (schedule, expectations, participants)
Environmental Education: What Is It and How Does It Fit In?
Lunch
Geography of Appalachia
Some Regional Concerns
Emerging Patterns in the Southern Highlands (using the Southern Highlands atlas)
Guest: Dr. Robert Reiman, Appalachian State University
Communities as Classrooms: Setting the Stage (field trip to Asheville)
The Transformation of Western North Carolina (Beaucatcher Cut)
A Present-day Perspective—Ms. Karen Fields, Asheville-Buncombe Discovery
Supper
Getting Started: Identifying and Classifying Issues
Strategies for Community Study
Evening session ends
Tuesday, July 26:
7:30am
8:30am
10:30am
noon
l:00pm
3:00pm
3:30pm
5:30pm
8:00pm
Introduction
Regional Issues and Some Resources for Studying Them
Student Center opens for breakfast
Panel Presentations and Discussion: Toxic and Hazardous Wastes
(overview, video, panel comments, questions)
Regional Organizations (presentations followed by exhibits)
Lunch
Environmental Education Curriculum Workshop": The CLASS Project
Break
Simulation: Siting a Waste Disposal Facility
Guest: Ms. Melva Okun, Institute for Environmental Studies, UNC-Chapel Hill
Supper
Night Walk (optional)
Wednesday, July 27;
7:30am
8:30am
10:30am
noon
l:00pm
2:00pm
4:30pm
6:00pm
9:30pm
Great Smokies Field Trip
Student Center opens for breakfast
Depart Warren Wilson College
Arrive at Great Smoky Mountains National Park (GSMNP)
Appalachian Cultures and the Environment: Pioneer Farm
Host: Mike Adams, GSMNP and Great Smoky Mts. Natural History Association
Lunch
Depart Oconoluftee Visitor Center
Arrive at Clingm^n's Dome parking lot
Managing the Appalachian Forest (air pollution monitoring, GSMNP staff)
Appalachian Cultures and the Environment: Cherokee
Picnic supper
Arrive back at Warren Wilson College
(continued)
�REVISED SCHEDULE
(continued)
Thursday, July 28;
7:30am
8:30am
9:30am
10:00am
10:30am
10:40am
noon
l:00pm
5:30pm
7:00pm
7:30pm
8:30pm
10:00pm
Student Center opens for breakfast
Dealing with Values and Balancing Opposing Viewpoints
Sharing Session (tell about your "tried and true" teaching ideas)
Different Places, Similar Regions: Appalachia and the North Atlantic
Guest: Ms. Margo Murphy, Atlantic Center for the Environment
Break
Preparing for Asheville Investigations
Lunch
Asheville Community Investigations (participants study issues in Asheville)
Supper
Preparation time for Asheville Reports
Asheville Investigation Reports
Identifying Solutions and Taking Action
Evening session ends
Friday, July 29:
7:30am
9:00am
10:30am
ll:30am
noon
l:00pm
2:30pm
3:00pm
Community Investigation
Planning and Evaluation
Student Center opens for breakfast
Move out of Sage Dorm by 8:45am
Bioregionalism: Putting It All Together
Guest: Ms. Marnie Muller, Katuah Journal
Overcoming Barriers to Studying Communities with Your Students
Community Festivals, Forums, and Other Ways to Share Your Results
Lunch
Planning Your Community Investigation
Beyond next June ...
Institute Summary and Evaluation
Departure
�
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Appalachian Consortium Press Publications
Description
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This collection contains digitized monographs and collections from the Appalachian Consortium Press.
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Appalachian Consortium Press
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Appalachian Consortium Press
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June 1, 2017
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<a title="Digital Scholarship and Initiatives" href="http://library.appstate.edu/services/digital-scholarship-and-initiatives" target="_blank">Digital Scholarship and Initiatives</a>
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Digital Republication
Appalachian State University
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Promoting Student Investigation of Local Environmental Issues through the Southern Highlands Environmental Project: Project Report
Description
An account of the resource
Originally published in 1993, this report is a compilation of a survey evaluating issues with the local environment in the Southern Highlands. The report is based on a five-day teacher institute and a 1988-89 school year assessment. Teachers assisted their students in investigating environmental issues in their home communities, and helped the students share their research results through science fair projects, PTO meetings, or articles in local newspapers. Teachers submitted project reports when the environmental unit was completed, and evaluations of the teachers took place during a two-hour phone call. The report published by Bousquet includes the project description and initiative, needs assessment, teacher institute, classroom implementation, outcomes, and dissemination. <br /><br /><a title="Epub" href="https://drive.google.com/file/d/1w1hbVnuspvEWitv3RzMtKiV-G38f5hBh/view?usp=sharing" target="_blank">Download EPub</a>
Creator
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Bousquet, Woodward S.
Language
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English
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Appalachian Consortium Press
Subject
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Environmental education--Appalachian Region, Southern
Date
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1993
Coverage
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Appalachia
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PDF
E-books
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Text
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https://www.geonames.org/12212302/appalachia.html
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<a title="UA 76 Appalachian Consortium records" href="https://appstate-speccoll.lyrasistechnology.org/repositories/2/resources/9" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"> UA 76 Appalachian Consortium records </a>
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<a title="Appalachian Consortium Press Publications" href="https://omeka.library.appstate.edu/collections/show/82" target="_blank"> Appalachian Consortium Press Publications</a>
Education
Environment
Students
Teachers
WNC
-
https://omeka.library.appstate.edu/files/original/bd92e4fbc33066336189ab94cb2cebd3.pdf
faafa5c5af75e827adb96e85cb965890
PDF Text
Text
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Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians Records
Description
An account of the resource
<em>Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians</em>, later simplified to <em>Katúah Journal</em>, was published from 1983 to 1993. A quarterly publication, it was focused on the bioregion of former Cherokee land in Appalachia. <br /><br /><span>The early issues of the journal explain the meaning of the Cherokee name, </span><em>Katúah</em><span>, and why the editors wanted to view the world through a bioregional lens, rather than political boundaries. A volunteer production, the editors took a holistic view in tackling social, environmental, mental, spiritual, and emotional topics of the day, many of which are still relevant. </span><br /><span><br />The <em>Katúah Journal</em> was co-founded by Marnie Muller, David Wheeler, Thomas Rain Crowe, Martha Tree and others who served as co-publishers and co-editors. Other key team members included Chip Smith, David Reed, Jay Mackey, Rob Messick and many others.</span><br /><br />This digital collection is only a portion of the <em>Katúah</em>-related materials in the W.L. Eury Appalachian Collection in Special Collections at Appalachian State University. The items in AC.870 Katúah Journal records cover the production history of the <em>Katúah Journal</em>. Contained within the records are correspondence, publication information, article submissions, and financial information. The editorial layouts for issues 12 through 39 are included as are a full run of the Journal spanning nearly a decade. Also included are photographs of events related to the Journal and a film on the publication.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
This resource is part of the <em>Katúah Journal Records </em>collection. For a description of the entire collection, see <a href="https://appstate-speccoll.lyrasistechnology.org/repositories/2/resources/937" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Katúah Journal Records (AC. 870)</a>.
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
The images and information in this collection are protected by the Copyright Law of the United States (Title 17, U. S. C.) and are intended only for personal, non-commercial, and educational purposes, provided proper citation is used – i.e., Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians Records, 1980-2013 (AC.870), W. L. Eury Appalachian Collection, Special Collections, Appalachian State University, Boone, NC. Researchers are responsible for securing permissions from the copyright holder for any reproduction, publication, or commercial use of these materials.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1983-1993
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
journals (periodicals)
Language
A language of the resource
English
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
<em>Katúah Journal Index, 1983-1993</em>
Description
An account of the resource
This document is a topical index to all 38 issues of <em><a href="https://omeka.library.appstate.edu/items/browse?collection=79" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians</a>. </em>
<em>Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians, </em> later simplified to <em>Katúah Journal, </em>was published from 1983 to 1993. A quarterly publication, it was focused on the bioregion of former Cherokee land in Appalachia. The early issues of the journal explain the meaning of the Cherokee name, Katúah, and why the editors wanted to view the world through a bioregional lens, rather than political boundaries. A volunteer production, the editors took a holistic view in tackling social, environmental, mental, spiritual, and emotional topics of the day, many of which are still relevant.</em></p>
Subject
The topic of the resource
Bioregionalism--Periodicals--Indexes
Sustainable living--Periodicals--Indexes
North Carolina, Western
Appalachian Region, Southern
North Carolina--Periodicals
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Rob Messick
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1993
Language
A language of the resource
English
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
periodical indexes
PDF
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
<a href="https://appstate-speccoll.lyrasistechnology.org/repositories/2/resources/937"> AC.870 Katúah Journal records</a>
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
<a title="In Copyright – Educational Use Permitted" href="https://rightsstatements.org/page/InC-EDU/1.0/?language=en 8" target="_blank" rel="noopener"> In Copyright – Educational Use Permitted </a>
Is Part Of
A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included.
<a title="Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians" href="https://omeka.library.appstate.edu/collections/show/79" target="_blank"> Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians </a>
Acid Deposition
Agriculture
Alternative Energy
Appalachian History
Appalachian Mountains
Appalachian Studies
Bioregional Congress
Bioregional Definitions
Black Bears
Book Reviews
Cherokees
Children's Page
Community
Death and Dying
Earth Energies
Ecological Peril
Economic Alternatives
Education
Electric Power Companies
European Immigration
Fire
Folklore and Ceremony
Forest History
Forest Issues
Forest Practice
Geography
Glossaries
Good Medicine
Habitat
Hazardous Chemicals
Health
Hunting
Katúah
Katúah Organization
Permaculture
Pigeon River
Plants and Herbs
Poems
Politics
Radioactive Waste
Reading Resources
Recycling
Sacred Sites
Shelter
South PAW (Preserve Appalachian Wilderness)
Stories
Transportation Issues
Turtle Island
Villages
Water Quality
Western North Carolina Alliance
Wilderness
Women's Issues
-
https://omeka.library.appstate.edu/files/original/5f3f8b62bd6a3f9c717ec7bce721dab8.pdf
8dbe5987ca218068d745dd7a80a3c280
PDF Text
Text
PUBLISHED QUARTERLY
ISSUE THREE
SPRING 1984
ONE DOLLAR
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Dublin Core
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Title
A name given to the resource
Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians Records
Description
An account of the resource
<em>Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians</em>, later simplified to <em>Katúah Journal</em>, was published from 1983 to 1993. A quarterly publication, it was focused on the bioregion of former Cherokee land in Appalachia. <br /><br /><span>The early issues of the journal explain the meaning of the Cherokee name, </span><em>Katúah</em><span>, and why the editors wanted to view the world through a bioregional lens, rather than political boundaries. A volunteer production, the editors took a holistic view in tackling social, environmental, mental, spiritual, and emotional topics of the day, many of which are still relevant. </span><br /><span><br />The <em>Katúah Journal</em> was co-founded by Marnie Muller, David Wheeler, Thomas Rain Crowe, Martha Tree and others who served as co-publishers and co-editors. Other key team members included Chip Smith, David Reed, Jay Mackey, Rob Messick and many others.</span><br /><br />This digital collection is only a portion of the <em>Katúah</em>-related materials in the W.L. Eury Appalachian Collection in Special Collections at Appalachian State University. The items in AC.870 Katúah Journal records cover the production history of the <em>Katúah Journal</em>. Contained within the records are correspondence, publication information, article submissions, and financial information. The editorial layouts for issues 12 through 39 are included as are a full run of the Journal spanning nearly a decade. Also included are photographs of events related to the Journal and a film on the publication.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
This resource is part of the <em>Katúah Journal Records </em>collection. For a description of the entire collection, see <a href="https://appstate-speccoll.lyrasistechnology.org/repositories/2/resources/937" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Katúah Journal Records (AC. 870)</a>.
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
The images and information in this collection are protected by the Copyright Law of the United States (Title 17, U. S. C.) and are intended only for personal, non-commercial, and educational purposes, provided proper citation is used – i.e., Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians Records, 1980-2013 (AC.870), W. L. Eury Appalachian Collection, Special Collections, Appalachian State University, Boone, NC. Researchers are responsible for securing permissions from the copyright holder for any reproduction, publication, or commercial use of these materials.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1983-1993
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
journals (periodicals)
Language
A language of the resource
English
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
<em>Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians</em>, Issue 3, Spring 1984
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1984
Subject
The topic of the resource
Bioregionalism--Appalachian Region, Southern
Sustainable living--Appalachian Region, Southern
Corn--History
Seeds--Appalachian Region, Southern
Sustainable agriculture--Appalachian Region, Southern
Organic farming--Appalachian Region, Southern
Forest management--Appalachian Region, Southern
North Carolina, Western
Blue Ridge Mountains
Appalachian Region, Southern
North Carolina--Periodicals
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Sylva Herald Publishing Company, Sylva, North Carolina
Description
An account of the resource
The third issue of the <em>Katúah Journal</em> focuses on topics such as corn and its importance in through the centuries, heirloom seeds and organic farming, and human impact on forests. This issue also includes an interview with then Jackson County (North Carolina) Commissioner, Veronica Nicholas, on power companies and women in politics. Authors and artists in this issue include: R. Otto Wylie, Martha Tree, Thomas Rain Crowe, George Ellison, Judith Hallock, Jody Segal-Friedman, Clyde Hollifield, Robert Zahner, and Snow Bear.
<br><br><em>Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians</em>, later simplified to <em>Katúah Journal</em>, was published from 1983 to 1993. A quarterly publication, it was focused on the bioregion of former Cherokee land in Appalachia. The early issues of the journal explain the meaning of the Cherokee name, Katúah, and why the editors wanted to view the world through a bioregional lens, rather than political boundaries. A volunteer production, the editors took a holistic view in tackling social, environmental, mental, spiritual, and emotional topics of the day, many of which are still relevant.
Table Of Contents
A list of subunits of the resource.
<p>Selu, The Corn Mother.......1<br /><br /> A Sustainable Agriculture.......2<br /><br /> Rebirth of the Sun Sister.......6<br /><br /> The Spirit of Corn.......7<br /><br /> Human Impact on the Forests of the Southern Appalachians...8<br /><br /> Good Medicine: Allies.......10<br /><br /> Kingfisher's Return (poem).......11<br /><br /> Power and Light: Veronica Nicholas.......12<br /><br /> The Little People.......18<br /><br /> Children's Education.......21<br /><br /><em>Note: This table of contents corresponds to the original document, not the Document Viewer.</em></p>
Language
A language of the resource
English
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
<a href="https://appstate-speccoll.lyrasistechnology.org/repositories/2/resources/937"> AC.870 Katúah Journal records</a>
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
<a title="In Copyright – Educational Use Permitted" href="https://rightsstatements.org/page/InC-EDU/1.0/?language=en 8" target="_blank"> In Copyright – Educational Use Permitted </a>
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Appalachian Region, Southern
Is Part Of
A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included.
<a title="Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians" href="https://omeka.library.appstate.edu/collections/show/79" target="_blank"> Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians </a>
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
PDF
Journals (Periodicals)
Agriculture
Appalachian Mountains
Appalachian Studies
Bioregional Congress
Education
Forest History
Forest Issues
Forest Practice
Good Medicine
Katúah
Poems
Politics
Reading Resources
Stories
Turtle Island
-
https://omeka.library.appstate.edu/files/original/cb0662a1107e02a736e92f90cdc2f90f.pdf
ef8b9a0b28d5d27d2222512b00b4eb12
PDF Text
Text
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Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians Records
Description
An account of the resource
<em>Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians</em>, later simplified to <em>Katúah Journal</em>, was published from 1983 to 1993. A quarterly publication, it was focused on the bioregion of former Cherokee land in Appalachia. <br /><br /><span>The early issues of the journal explain the meaning of the Cherokee name, </span><em>Katúah</em><span>, and why the editors wanted to view the world through a bioregional lens, rather than political boundaries. A volunteer production, the editors took a holistic view in tackling social, environmental, mental, spiritual, and emotional topics of the day, many of which are still relevant. </span><br /><span><br />The <em>Katúah Journal</em> was co-founded by Marnie Muller, David Wheeler, Thomas Rain Crowe, Martha Tree and others who served as co-publishers and co-editors. Other key team members included Chip Smith, David Reed, Jay Mackey, Rob Messick and many others.</span><br /><br />This digital collection is only a portion of the <em>Katúah</em>-related materials in the W.L. Eury Appalachian Collection in Special Collections at Appalachian State University. The items in AC.870 Katúah Journal records cover the production history of the <em>Katúah Journal</em>. Contained within the records are correspondence, publication information, article submissions, and financial information. The editorial layouts for issues 12 through 39 are included as are a full run of the Journal spanning nearly a decade. Also included are photographs of events related to the Journal and a film on the publication.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
This resource is part of the <em>Katúah Journal Records </em>collection. For a description of the entire collection, see <a href="https://appstate-speccoll.lyrasistechnology.org/repositories/2/resources/937" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Katúah Journal Records (AC. 870)</a>.
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
The images and information in this collection are protected by the Copyright Law of the United States (Title 17, U. S. C.) and are intended only for personal, non-commercial, and educational purposes, provided proper citation is used – i.e., Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians Records, 1980-2013 (AC.870), W. L. Eury Appalachian Collection, Special Collections, Appalachian State University, Boone, NC. Researchers are responsible for securing permissions from the copyright holder for any reproduction, publication, or commercial use of these materials.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1983-1993
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
journals (periodicals)
Language
A language of the resource
English
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
<em>Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians</em>, Issue 11, Spring 1986
Description
An account of the resource
The eleventh issue of the <em>Katúah Journal</em> focuses on community planning for a sustainable future: what, why, and how. Floyd County in Virginia is highlighted as an example of a progressive community. Authors and artists in this issue include: Judith Hallock, Marnie Muller, J. Linn Mackey, Tom Hendricks, Rob Messick, Will Ashe Bason, Jane Avery-Grubel, Katherine Chantal, Judy Cox, Rob Yard, Cotton, Colleen Redman-Copus, Michael Red Fox, and David Wheeler. <br /><br /><em>Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians</em>, later simplified to <em>Katúah Journal</em>, was published from 1983 to 1993. A quarterly publication, it was focused on the bioregion of former Cherokee land in Appalachia. The early issues of the journal explain the meaning of the Cherokee name, Katúah, and why the editors wanted to view the world through a bioregional lens, rather than political boundaries. A volunteer production, the editors took a holistic view in tackling social, environmental, mental, spiritual, and emotional topics of the day, many of which are still relevant.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1986
Table Of Contents
A list of subunits of the resource.
Why Community Planning.......1<br /><br />Digging In: A Model.......2<br /><br />Cities and the Bioregional Vision.......6<br /><br />Recycling: Garbage in Transition.......7<br /><br />Community Gardening.......9<br /><br />The World Village: A Poem.......10<br /><br />Seeing the Future Village.......10<br /><br />Floyd County, VA.......12<br /><br />Gasohol.......14<br /><br />Two Bioregional Views.......15<br /><br />Earthquake: The Nuclear Supplement<br /><br />Natural World News.......18<br /><br />Good Medicine: Visions.......20<br /><br />The Children's Page.......21<br /><br />Review: Foxfire Games.......23<br /><br /><em>Note: This table of contents corresponds to the original document, not the Document Viewer.</em>
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Sylva Herald Publishing Company, Sylva, North Carolina
Subject
The topic of the resource
Bioregionalism--Appalachian Region, Southern
Sustainable living--Appalachian Region, Southern
Community life--Appalachian Region, Southern
Community development, Urban--North Carolina, Western
Radioactive waste disposal--Appalachian Region, Southern
Community garden--North Carolina--Asheville
Floyd County (Va.)
North Carolina, Western
Blue Ridge Mountains
Appalachian Region, Southern
North Carolina--Periodicals
Language
A language of the resource
English
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
<a href="https://appstate-speccoll.lyrasistechnology.org/repositories/2/resources/937"> AC.870 Katúah Journal records</a>
Rights
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<a title="In Copyright – Educational Use Permitted" href="https://rightsstatements.org/page/InC-EDU/1.0/?language=en 8" target="_blank" rel="noopener"> In Copyright – Educational Use Permitted </a>
Spatial Coverage
Spatial characteristics of the resource.
https://www.geonames.org/4759449/floyd-county.html
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
||||osm
Floyd County (Va.)
Is Part Of
A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included.
<a title="Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians" href="https://omeka.library.appstate.edu/collections/show/79" target="_blank" rel="noopener"> Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians </a>
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
PDF
Journals (Periodicals)
Agriculture
Alternative Energy
Appalachian Mountains
Appalachian Studies
Bioregional Definitions
Book Reviews
Cherokees
Children's Page
Community
Education
Good Medicine
Habitat
Hazardous Chemicals
Katúah
Poems
Radioactive Waste
Reading Resources
Recycling
Turtle Island
Villages
-
https://omeka.library.appstate.edu/files/original/e7f01928de6c753c09827e4dfd0aace1.pdf
ef599a4389ecc1498b620fa99229c8b9
PDF Text
Text
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ATUAH
ISSUE XVI
SUMMER1987
Coming of Age
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INTERVIEW: HELEN WAITE. .............................................................3
POEM : "VISIONS IN A GARDEN"....................................................5
THE VISION QlJEST............................................................................6
FIRST FLOW .........................................................................................8
THOUGHTS ON INITIATION.............................................................9
ARCHETYPES OF MALE INITIATION.............................................9
LEARNING IN THE WILDERNESS................................................. 12
CHEROKEE CHALLENGE ..................................................................15
NATURAL WORLD NEWS................................................................16
VIEW FROM THE CORNERS: "VALUING TREf;:S"......................19
TURTLE ISLAND TALKING ............................................................20
YOUNG PEOPLE'S PAGE..................................................................25
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ATUAH
ISSUE XVI
SUMMER 1987
f'om time immemorial,
aJ the onset of sexual maturity
the young peopk would leave
the tribe and go out, each one
alone, into the world to meet
the elements, be tested a11d
taught, and find out who they
really were.
They would make a bond,
often expressed in the form of
an animal spirit ally, with their
homeland that would be a
foundation for their adulthood
and a continuing source of
strength. Thereafter, for all
their lives, they would know
with a deep and certain
awareness that the waves from
their every gesture rippled to
the farthest reaches of creation
and that the power that flowed
through them was the force of
the all of life.
These expeditions into the
wild te"ain of the soul were
ritualized and became an
important part of community
life. The community was
revitalized and the social bonds
were strengthened as the old
ones offered their wisdom to
the young, and the young ones
dedicated their exuberant life
energy to the continuance of the
tribe and the life ofthe world.
In our times, the continuity
has been broken.
The land is still there • all
knowledge lies just outside our
doorway, just off the side of the
road - and life continues to
pulse in the bodies of the young
ones coming of age. But that
crucial connection in which
these were joined is largely
missing. Today we must drill
into our intelkctual minds the
message that was aJ one time a
matter of cellular certainty:
KATIJAH - page l
that we are part of a wider
community of life, and we need
to take responsibility for our
participation in the Earth
family.
But that urge to seek
ourselves in the wild and to
touch the wild in ourselves is
instinctive and deep, and there
are yet those willing to bring
the young ones to the threshold
of the world, to the edge of
their own being, and say, "You
must take the next step alone,
but I will be here. I will wait
for you, and I will be
watching."
Even without the benefit of
the old traditions, these leaders
of the coming generation are
woking for new forms and new
guidance to re-establish the old
continuity and reunite the two
circles, the circle of the world
and the cyc/,e of our lives, and
make them once more single
and whole.
In this issue of KatUah.
some of these teachers and
guides speak to us ofhow they
are bringing young p eople out
from civilization to meet the
world and some of the lessons
that are there lo be learned. In
speaking of these things, they
offer to us the same challenge
that each young person meets
when they stand on the brink of
adulthood: to open to the
world, to kt iJflow through the
body into the soul, to feel its
power, and by following that
power back to its source, to
once again come upon the
essential nature of our
existence and touch our deepest
roots.
Summer 1987
�H
EDITORIAL STAFF nus ISSUE:
Snow Bear
Scott Bird
Julie Gaunt
Judith Hallock
Rob Messick
Mamie Muller
Michael Red Fox
Chip Smith
Brad Stanback
Manha Tree
David Wheeler
EDITORIAL ASSISTANCE:
Sylvia Fox
Than.le you again, Kathleen!
Special lhanks 10 Bob Wiesclman
EDITORIAL OFFICE
nus ISSUE:
Asheville, NC
PRINTED BY:
Sylva Herald
Publishing Co.
Sylva, NC
WRITE US AT:
Katiiab
Box638
Leicester, NC
Katuah Province 28748
TELEPHONE:
(704) 683-1414
COVER: "One must become chaos, ro give binh ro a dancing
star....." (Picasso) - by Manha Tree
Diversity is an important element of biorcgional ecology, both
natural and social. In line with this principle, lWWib cries IO serve as a
forum for discussion ol rcgiooal issues. Signed articles express ooly the
opinioo or the authors and are n<ll oecessarily the opinions of the
KaWab ediLOrS or Stlff.
The Internal Revenue Service has declared Klu.Wih a non-profit
organization under section 501 (c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code. A II
coniributions IO KA1UWi are deductible from personal income tax.
CORRECTION
We apologize to Milo Guthrie and to our readers for
neglecting to put his name as author of the excellent article
''The Promise of Biosexuality" on page 12 of KruYfil! #15.
'Ult{VOC~TWN
lHE SOUTHERN APPALACHIAN BIOREGION AND MAJOR EASTERN RIVER SYSTEMS
Statement of Purpose
Here in the sowhem-most heanland ofthe Appalachian
mountains, the oldest mountain range on our continent,
Tunle Island, a small bw growing group has begun to talce
on a sense of responsibility for the implications of that
geographical and cultural heritage. Tlris sense of
responsibility centers on the concept of living within the
natural scale and balance ofuniversal systems and laws. We
begin by invoking the Cherokee name "KatfLah" as the
old/new name for this area of the mountains and for its
journal as well.
The editorial priorities for us are to collect and
disseminate information and energy which pertains
specifically to this area, and to foster the awareness that the
land is a living being deserving of our love and respect.
Living in this manner is the only way to ensure the
sustainability of our biosphere and a lasting place for
ourselves in itS continuing evolutionary process.
We seem ro have reached thefulcrwnpoinrof a "do or
dieH sirnarion in terms ofa continued qU111iry standard of life
on this planet. lt is the aim ofthis journal ro do itS part in the
re-inhabitation and re-culturation ofthe Kamah province of
the Somhern Appalachians. This province is indicated by its
natural boundaries: the Roanoke River Valley to tlte north,
the foothills ofthe piedmont area to the east,· Yona Mottntain
and the Georgia hills to the sourh; and the Tennessee River
Valley 10 the west.
Humbly, as self-appointed stewards with sacred
instructions as "new natives" to protect and preserve its
sacredness, we advocate a centered approach to the concept
of decentralization and hope to become a support system for
those accepting the challenge of sustainability and the
creation of harmony and balance in a total sense, here in this
plaa.
We are nourished by OUT Mother the Eanhfrom whom
all life springs. We must understand OUT dependence, and
protect her with our love, respect, and ceremonies.
The natural law says that the Eanh belongs ro our
children seven generations in the future, and we are the
caretakers wJw must understand, respect, and protect
E Te No Ha for all life.
The faces ofthe future generations are looking up to us
from the Eanh, and we step with great care not to disturb
OUT grandchildren.
from a mes.rage to the Unittd Nations
GtMral Assemblyfrom the
Navajo-Hopi
Traditional Circle ofElders,
August, 1982
KATUAH - page 2
We welcome all correspondence, criticism, pertinent
inforrnaJion, articles, ariwork, etc. with hopes that Kmflah
will grow to serve the best interestS of this region and all its
living, breathing family members.
- The Editors
With the next issue, the K.WAh journal will be changing
from a tabloid format to a magazine format. This will mean
better quality paper and more durability, as welJ as a
two-color cover. We're looking forward to the shift and we
hope you will be pleased with it. Coincidentally, this
upcoming issue, Autumn '87, will also mark the fourth
anniversary since KfilYAh began publishing.
Summer 1987
�The Eagle has always represented the soaring
spirit.....
Of all the birds who fly between Heaven and Earth,
the Eagle ascends the highest.....
But even the Eagle, born to fly, hatches from the
egg into a nest .....
Now, on a bright day in the early summer of his
life, the young eaglet crouches on the edge of
the nest.....
Until this moment, the woven circle of sticks has
been the bounds of his world.....
Within the nest.food came; all the young bird had
to do was wait.
Within the nest, it was familiar; if the young bird
stayed, mother would always return.
Within the nest, it was always safe; all the young
bird had to do was not look outside.
Now.for the eaglet, hesitating there, the nest is a
center point in a much greater circle that
extends to the horizon in every direction unknown, dangerous, exciting, and free.
The young eagle spreads his wings and leaps into
the boundless sky.....
To the American Camp Association, Helen Waite is the
director of the Eagle's Nest Camp near Brevard, NC, an
accredited summer camp for boys and girls that is now
entering its sixtieth year ofoperation and its third generation
ofcampers.
But during the summer months, to the young people
attending Eagle's Nest Camp, Helen Waite is "Bending
GrassH, medicine woman of the camp tri~. a leader and a
~cher by virtue of the love and respect offered to her.
Helen Waite works confuJe111ly and capably on both levels
of her life, giving the young people who attend Eagle's Nest
an excellenl place in which to explore, grow, and change,
and then e111ering with them into that special place and rime to
help guide them through their changes.
Helen: One of the important clements we utilize in camp is
"myth-time". This is an underlying aspect of every camp
activity.
I see a summer camp experience as being about
relationships: relationships between the camp members,
relationships between ourselves and the Earth, relationships
between our split inner selves, etc. In order to learn from
anything or anybody, one must first acknowledge one's
inter-relationship with that other. Once this connection is
recognized. the relationship can be seen as the bonded space
between the two. The speed of learning is the quality of lhat
space. Camp is the connection field, and we put our attention
into creating quality bonding.
"Myth-time" is what makes this possible. It is "the time
before time", the beginning of lhings. By being aware of the
"myth-time" that always lies beneath the surface of our camp
activities and our relationships. we create a circle, a tribal
circle, within which our relauonships grow - honest, strong,
and deep.
We humans arc like gods and goddesses in that we can
create prodigious amounts of constructive effort or
prodigious amounts of chaos. I think we have to return to
"myth-time" to relearn lhe true nature of things and to
re-connect the two halves of our soul, before we can
undertake "initiation", which is talcing a big step "forward"
into the next stage of life.
~: How docs this sense of "myth-time" make itself
felt in the course of camp life?
Helen: "Myth-time" appears in some situations more
clearly than others. All the campers do routine ch.ores as part
of the camp flow. They learn to take care of themselves by
making their beds and taking care of their cabin areas, but
they also take part in camp maintainence, doing dishes,
making bread, carrying out the compost, tending the
gardens. These are tasks that simply need to be done, but
they also build relationships. The campers arc learning to
serve and to take care of others, and although they may not
realize it, they are going back to beginnings. By baking bread
they learn the basic nature of bread - the primary
relationships that exist before the plastic wrap goes on. The
gardens teach them that the Earth is a patient giver. By caring
for the animals, the campers come to know them and learn
the relationships between all species. By doing subsistence
work, the kids learn basic things about the world with the
right side of their minds, even as they are consciously
acquiring basic skills with the left side of their minds.
The presence of "myth-time" is more easily seen when we
do story-dramas in the evenings. We start from old Indian
tales, creation stories usually, but as the kids go from there
and create their own stories, these dramas begin to present in
mythic terms what is happening in the camp at the moment.
The kids write their own scripts and make their own
costumes. We encourage them to use natural music - drums,
flutes, and sometimes guitar - to emphasize the basic
relationship with the Earth.
Katiiah: One of the main driving forces of the adolescent
transformation is the awakening sexual energy. Do you deal
with that at the camp?
Helen: Very much so. First of all, groups are co-ed. We
want to have the boys and girls interacting together. We want
to encourage strong, natural relationships. In the greater
culture young people usually follow roles that on the one
hand deviously try to ensnare someone of the opposite sex,
and on the other band domincerin&lv try to ensnare someone
of the opposite sex.
At camp and on field trips the kids are involved in real
situations that often demand courage and physical stamina.
When everybody is pitching in on a difficult task or talking
openly together in a group circle, the sham tends to fall
away, and they deal with each other more as individuals and
allow each person to make their own, unique contributions.
- continued on page 4
KATUAH - page 3
Summer 1987
�• COlllim.aed fiom NC 3
Relationships arise that arc based on friendliness and arc
deep and enduring. We see big changes. The girls in
particular become more assertive.
Often in a group there is one girl, whom I call the
"goddess" or the "queen of beans", who takes an active role
in the other girls' lives and relationships.The "queen" takes
confessions from the other girls - I'm amazed sometimes
about how frank they are! - and negotiates relationships.
Sometimes she gives her blessing; other times it's "Off with
his head!"
We talk about siruations like this in the girls' circle, and I
ask them, "Do you like having her decide on your life and
decide whom you should like?"
Usually they say "No", but if they say "Yes", then it's out
in the open, and we set up basic ground rules about bow to
carry it on.
Another approach is to act out the
situation. I sometimes say, "Sarah, you
be Betty. Jane, you be Sue. Now what
would you say, if she came up and said
this: ..... " It's often very educational for
the kids to see how the others perceive
siruations they're all involved in.
There are also times when a boy will
do something like go into a girl's trunk
and snatch out her underwear, because
be thinks that that is a powerful act. But
it's actually an act of domination. The
girl has bad something that's close to
her, something very private and
personal, exposed against her will.
In a siruation like that, I might take
the ones involved apart from the group
and talk with them about the different
levels and the different meanings of the
word "rape", trying to be very frank
and open so it can be seen as something
manageable and not a dark sin someone
will be condemned for. I might express
it in terms of old stories of gods
abducting goddesses, or I might
suggest they act out parts of Troilius
and Cressida or another story like that something so that the basic relationships
are very clear to them.
These arc valuable experiences .....if
we confront them. So we always try to
confront them when they occur. We
spend a remarkable amount of time
doing that. Of course we do horseback
riding, swimming, and all the regular
camp things, but we spend a great deal
of ti.me in learning siruations like these.
But to be learning experiences, there
bas to always be someone there who is
aware and understands the implications
of the siruation in order to take advantage of it and bring it to
a satisfactory resolution.
In the evenings when we have our shows or
entertainment, the kids will let it all out, and we'll see them
really strut their stuff. That's great - that's up front and real,
and if a camper does have some attra.ction as an actor/actress
or a story-teller, that's quite valid. That's their real self
coming out
KllWlb: "Initiation" is used to mean peak moments that
mark stages in a process of transformation that is acrually
gradual and happening continuously. But at certain key
points one can stop the action and say, "A change is
happening here," by recognizing and celebrating the occasion
with a ceremony or ritual. Arc there cenain ways these
moments are recogniz.ed in camp life?
Helen: The first major initiation is for a camper to leave
home. This is "moving into the tribal circle". Our society is
so fragmented that this sometimes is a major growth-change
for a child and often the most important single event of the
camp experience.
KATUAH - page4
Every camper receives a camp name. I work with an
Indian lore group, which is a "tribe within the tribe". They
receive their names in a little ceremony which is held at a
small waterfall. Each camper has already chosen their name,
and they crawl through the waterfall into a small crevice
behind, getting completely wet in the process. They are then
called back out by their new name.
I start with the campers to whom this is a challenge of
medium proportions. This docs not make it seem like a light
thing of no consequence, but at the same time it encourages
those who are more afraid. Because the situation is a
ceremonial one, the lcids all go through with it, even though
it may be a big step for some. There is something about
ceremony and ritual that brings out the deepest and truest
aspects of people. The sense of "myth-time" gives meaning
to the situation.
There is also an element of sacrifice
in the ceremony. That is one reason it is
hard for some of the kids to go under
the waterfall. Beyond just thinking
about getting their clothes wet. there is a
part of them that realizes that they have
to give something up, that "something"
being their old identity, to receive a new
name and a new identity.
For the older kids, we have a
program called Hanre, which is roughly
analagous to the "walkabout" or other
ancient puberty rites in which the young
people went out to seek power and to
learn about themselves in the context of
the natural elements. But while young
people in ancient times who had grown
up in the circle of the tribe went off on
their own as individuals, our campers
go off in a group of kids their own age.
Hante challenges their physical abilities,
which gives them a feeling of
accomplishment; it gets them outside in
close touch with nature; and, not least
imponantly, it tires them out. They do
activities like rock-climbing, whitewater
kayaking,
making
a
mountains-to-the-sea bicycle trek, and
hiking. The "Odyessy Trek" is an
11-day, 100-mile walk along the
Appalachian Trail.
Being able to take care of yourself
completely is an important part of that
stage of life, and the Hante group
provides for itself totally: they live in
their own area, and they cook all their
own meals. That means if they come
back late from somewhere, and they
decide they want supper, they have to
decide to prepare it, too. They also
prepare and pack alJ their own food for the "Odyssey" hike.
We have two food dryers, which the campers built for
themselves, and they dry food and make "pemmican" (which
is actually my grandmother's fruitcake recipe with a lot more
fruit and nuts added) to take with them on the trail.
While they're hiking, each camper carries their own food
and equipment for the whole 11 days in a 45 pound pack on
their back. The group cooks supper together over a
communal fire, but each camper is responsible for their other
two meals each day. They have to ration their food for
themselves. If they cat it all up before the bike is over, then
it's gone.
The mountains and the woods have an effect on the
kids.The "Odyessy" is a journey back to our first home, the
wild places. These mountains are very special. They are
powerful teachers, and they will work on anyone who will
make the effon to get off into the backcountry.
Body movement itself is important Jusr the rhythm of
feet on the trail can set up a meditative state that changes the
kids' consciousness.
On the trail we always have a sunset ceremony each day.
We gather and pass a "talking feather" so that each camper
- continued on page 28
Summer 1987
�Visions in a Garden
A light green voice
lihs my eyes from the leaves:
the Goddess of Green Things
is approaching me.
Between okra and squash
and tomatoes she comes
smiling at the com rows
through the green song she hums.
She·s the mistress of mustard greens
an oracle of onions
proctor of pumpkins
serenader of squash.
She·s the governess of garlic
enchanter of eggplants
leading the lettuce
in a growing symphony.
With no written rhythms
of the cycles and seasons
she sings to tempt the turnips
and beguile the green beans.
With leafy green lyrics
highlighting sunshine and rain
she conducts the orchestra
of my garden and
fertilizes my brain.
Tat& Andres
�by Snow Bear
Conirary to what others may say, the
dominant culture has evolved cenain "rites
of passage" for young people. Drug,
alcohol, or toba.cco abuse; early sexual
relations; and the thrill of fast and reckless
driving are ways that our youth sometimes
signify to themselves and to their parents
that they are emerging into adulthood. These
things arc glorified by the television,
movies, and advertising that control the way
children of the dominant culture think.
I was initiated by my father into the
world of men when I recieved a gun from
him at the aic of twelve. This is still an
imponant moment for many young men
in this area. It is a statement of trust for
a father to place a gun, and therefore the
power of life or death, into his son's
hands. It is a major responsibility to
accept a gun, for if it is used carelessly,
a human life could be ta.lccn.
But hunting is also an excuse for
the father and son to go out i.nto the
woods together. It was a very
meaningful time to me. When one is
hunting, one is very quiet and sensitive
to the presence of other living things.
Of course there is the adrenalin rush of
squeezing the ttiggcr and ending a life,
but, for me, a large pan of the initiation
consisted of being alone with my father,
silent in the forest
Today, I have come to feel that
receiving a gun is not a good token of
maturity. Our forests arc small and
ovcrhuntcd. Where I live we can nor
afford to continue killing the few
remaining animals. I strongly believe
that today our young people need a
siitnificant emcrience i.n1Q. life; we
should not place such an emphasis on taking
life.
Before, when hunting was a way of
life among the native people, a successful
hunt was a matter of human survival;
hunters took the lives of their fellow
creatures with a spirit of thankfulness based
on revcrancc. Today the gun removes us
from panicipation in the life and death of the
animals we hunt. When someone shoots
down a buck from 100 yards away, they do
not have to know the animal as well as if
they had to get within bowshot. They arc
removed from the pain and terror in the
animal's eyes at the time of death.
I put down the gun at 14 years of age
when I discovered I would rather sec
squirrels jumping through the treetops, and
the deer grazing peacefully under massive
oaks.
HELPING TROUBLED TEENS
MAKE TIIE PASSAGE
Part of my family's work is to reach
out with understanding to youth at risk and
adjudicated youth. In our Second Home
Program we take young people into our
family (my wife Khalisa, Jody (14),
Leilana (6), Johanna (3), who is
handicapped). For two months to a year,
they arc part of our life and work. We tutor
them in all their school subjects; if they are
high school graduates, we do remedial work
and indepcndant academic study. They learn
agricultural and building skills, receive daily
counsel, and extend their physical and
emotional limits through wilderness
challenge activities - backpacking,
KATUAH - page 6
visioN
QU£ST
being self-centered to thinking of things
ouLSide themselves and providing for needs
other than their own.
Another challenge is to see that whatever task they are given is done well. The
kids that come to us often do the minimum
expected of them at home or in school and
make linle effon at personal achievement. In
school, when a student "fails", it is
assumed that they cannot do any better.
Usually they do not~ to do better. In our
one-on-one tutoring, we carefully go over
every mistake made, and the work is redone
correctly. The result of this has been that in
a four hour learning day, kids who were
labeled '1earning disabled" passed the
achievement level of their peers going to
school seven hours a day.
We are also, literally, a "second
family" to the kids. We live in a family
context, and we spend most of our time
at home. We grow food and make
meals together, clean house and cut
firewood together, and serve the people
who come to the school group
programs, seminars, and summer
camp. Teenagers from the city are used
to having school, the movies and
hangouts be the setting for their lives.
In our experience, the kids with the
least family life are the most messed up.
We give them membership in a family
that is physically together. There is a
feeling of having an extended family
built on a foundation of understanding
and acceptance, trust and love. It is
something solid to move out into the
world from, and a place to return to
when things get hard
TirE VISION QUEST
whitewater canoeing, horseback riding, and
primitive camping skills.
Most of these young people have
come from the urban culture and have been
damaged by negative "rites of passage".
We try to replace those negative rites with
positive qualities that will serve them
wherever they choose to live.
The first order of business is to
introduce them to the real world. Not the
"real world" as they thought of it • which
was largely concrete and fast action, but the
living world that sustains us.
Connectedness with the earth is healing to
human beings, no matter where they are
from or bow they grew up. When a person
is surrounded by the beauty of living things
and the songs of wind and water, the spirit
begins to heal. no matter how wounded it
is. I try to bring knowledge of the plants
and animals to these young people, because
it is easier to feel close to familiar things.
Along with this, we present them
with personal challenges: responsibilities
successfully fulfilled, communicating
honestly and openly, showing energy and
initiative in all their work. We extend our
trust to them unless they have betrayed it by
being dishonest with us.
Responsibilities successfully fulfilled
usually lead to a feeling of confidence and
strength. As teenagers become proficient at
handling responsibility, we tum over to
them more responsibility for their own
lives, and with that comes more freedom,
which is what they keenly desire.
A good beginning is taking care of the
horses. Keeping them watered, fed and
exercised takes a young person beyond
As a single rite of passage, the Vision
Quest is the form I most strongly relate to,
simply because of what it did for me and the
influence it had on my life. My
understanding of the Vision Quest is that it
is a time of solitude in the wilderness, of
fasting and prayer, of self examination; a
time of discovering one's beginning gifts
(strengths and virtues), and limitations,
one's medicine name, and how to be of
service to others.
Two of the teenagers with us in the
Second Home Program chose to go on
Vision Quests. One boy tried to do a
four-day quest fasting alone in the woods,
using only water and sage herb. When he
began, be thought it would be an easy thing
to accomplish, but he returned after a day
and a half in the woods. The fasting had
been bard, but the "aloneness" was what
had driven him back.
He said he had been scared of what I
would say, but I told him, "What I think
matters very little. The important thing is not
to be ashamed. The Vision Quest is a
teacher. You thought it would be easy to be
with yourself alone, and you found that it
was not so. You learned something about
yourself, and therefore the experience was
not a failure."
The other person to attempt the Vision
Quest was a woman 20 years old. She had
stayed with us when sh.e was 15, and had
been visiting us regularly ever since, so she
was truly "family" to us. She completed her
vision quest, in the course of it facing up to
some difficult things about herself, and
came through in a very strong way.
Nowadays few people pass directly
Summer 1987
�into adulthood from pubeny. I know that
was true for myself. My body was mature
quite awhile before I was, and I am still not
finished! I have had six people ask me to
help with their Vision QuesL Most of them
were in their twenties or thinies before they
began even asking the 4uestions that led
them to make the passage.
In the old days when a girl reached
the age of 13 or 14 it was time to begin
raising a family, and she had to be ready for
it. Now there are people in their fonies
looking for answers and feeling that they
have missed something. Whenever these
people ask me, I tell them that they have not
missed out, that this change does not come
at a set time for everyone, and that it is
never LOO late to go through the transition.
Those people who come to me
asking my help with their Vision Quest,
come because they k:now me, and they
know the effect my Vision Quest had on my
life. The first thing I tell them is that there
are other people who can help them better
than I could. Then, if they persist, I warn
them that, because we are not the Old
People, what worked for them in one way
may not work for us in the same way. I
warn them not to expect dramatic,
thunderous visions. Then, if they still want
the experience, I make sure that they
themselves choose the conditions of their
quest.
There are two main possibilities. One
is a quest for a personal vision to gain better
self-understanding and a purpose in life and
to find a beginning place on the world
medicine wheel. This is best helped by
fasting, personal prayer, song, and selfcxamination. The other possibility is to fast
for the benefit of all living beings. In this
fast I encourage people to make a medicine
wheel and walk, first LO the east where they
make a song or prayer, then back to the
center, and then to the south, where they
make a song or prayer, continuing in this
way around the medicine wheel for the
whole day, or as long as their strength holds
out. Several people have mixed the two
ways, doing the first for two days. and then
the second for two days more.
PREPARING FOR THE JOURNEY
We prepare for the Vision Quest first
by exploring the person's purpose in
choosing to do the quest, agreeing to the
conditions of it (how long, in what place)
and passing on any necessary instructions,
such as how to build a medicine wheel or
how to bless the Vision Quest site. Then we
go to the sweat lodge together with a few
carefully chosen friends to help us. In the
lodge we sing and pray to strengthen and
purify ourselves for the healing work ahead.
After the sweat lodge, we fill the prayer pipe
in a sacred manner. If the person has their
own, we fill it, seal it, and that person holds
that pipe every waking moment of their
quest. My prayer pipe is filled and scaled,
and every sunset during the Vision Quest I
hold it to make prayer and song to send my
power to them. Also at sunset I leave water
and sage for them at a place near the site of
their Vision Quest
At the end of their time I meet them,
carrying my prayer pipe. We do not say
anything until we have smoked in silence,
then the person relates what has happened
during the time of the Vision Quest.
Of panicular importance to me is to
KA TUAH - page 7
know what living things visited them in the
course of their fast and what they thought
and felt in the presence of these beings.
Even the smallest messengers of the spirit
arc imponant., and often they have very
strong powers. I tell people, "Until you can
receive a fly or an ant as one of your
relations, you won't be able to receive the
eagle or bear."
One woman was visited by a spider
that dangled just in front of her eyes. She
watched it for hours as it went about its
work. They became sisters and she learned
much.
drumming of
the woodpecker
echoing
always there
with the trees - yakking
laughing
i don't know where
a feeling
ifollow
i am the forest
around me
the activity
i am the creek
the mus
the violets
and the bees
i am the branches spreading
into the sky
the sun in your eyes
which vanishes suddenly
the clouds
birds come around
a rabbit
Only after we talk of these things do
the people tell me about their dreams. Even
on a Vision Quest, most people's dreams
that I have heard have been quite ordinary. I
am not a spiritual dream interpreter, but I do
give my thoughts and observations as a
fellow human being. Dreams arc valuable
because they arc often the battleground
where peop.lc contend with the fears,
doubts, and things they do not like about
themselves.
In consenting to aid people in their
Vision Quests, I am not trying to set myself
up as a teacher. I do this with people whom
I feel arc my. brothers or sisters. I do this
first as a friend. Today many people cannot
find elders who know the way of the Vision
Quest to aid them. Lacking thi.s , I consider
that for them to have this experience with
the help of a friend is better than not to have
it at all.
Everyone I know who has taken a
Vision Quest has returned from it
strcnghthcned, humbled, and deeply
moved. On the Vision Quest we come to
know ourselves and our world in a way
words cannot express.
they don't mind
the rain
somethingfallsfrom a tree
and lands with a thud
stay here long enough
and you will know
there are no secrets
i can't describe whaJ
i understand
the entire meaning
seems to be
almost here
coming
from
everywhere
a/la/once
i can't even see
guided by the wind
whispering in my ear
- Patrick Clark
Snow Bear has bun co·dirtctor of
Farm Camp with hU wife Kh.alisafor
niM years. lie is a naturalist, htrbologist. and
/
follower tf native Earth ways.
Pep~rland
Medicine s.h.i~ld by Snow Beu
Photo by Rob Mcuick
Summer 1987
�..
an experience that was hidden for them ...and where they can
pass onto her, my daughter, in an atmosphere of empowerment,
something that they will in a sense be giving to themselves that
they have learned in their own time. I love any and all
ceremonies.
Do you have any specifics as to how or where you'd
li ke to shar e this ceremony with your daughter? W h o
would you invite? Where will you hold your ceremony
?
Bonnie: When the event occurs, my daughter has requested that
she would like to go out with the family for a special dinner at her
favorite restaurant. We have quite a few younger daughtefll also
and I think it would be beneficial to them co be a part of this
celebration and to understand that this is a "big" day --their
sister's special day.
My daughter and I would then create within the following
few days a ceremony for her and some women friends, mutual
friends, and we would come together in our teepee.
How do you feel about this?
Hannah: A little strange...
Bonnie: What is strange? Do you think this ceremony will help
you to feel less strange?
Hannah: Probably
Do you feel this way because you know tha t other
girls your age do not have this type olf ceremony?
first flow
We are here today 10 ta.l k about something very special
Hannah: Yes
Do you want to gather together with other girls your
age?
10
a
Hannah: No, grownups, but not girls in my class.
Bonnie: Would you like to share with us an impression that you
woman --her initiation into womanhood. Two friends are here
got from the Amazon lndians?
with me .. .Bonnie Freed, mother and her daughter Hannah, 12
years old. We've come here to discuss the celebration for this
daughter's soon-to-come puberty.
Julie Gaunt , interviewing for .Katu.ah
Hannah: Yes, I watched this movie called Emerald Forest
about this boy who got lost in the Amazon and these Indians
kidnapped him and he grew up with them in their tribe and when
he got old enough, they put ants all over him and this made him
change into a man.
Bonnie: That was the symbol of his passing into adulthood.
What is it that has inspired you to want to celebr ate
your stepdaughter's coming into womanhood?
Would you like to go through that?
Bonnie: I read a wonderful article in Mothering magazine about
a community in California that celebrates the coming of age of the
young men and women in their community, boys when they tum
13 and girls when they experience their first menses. It just really
inspired me because I feel that whenever we put out or put in
front of us an intention, it draws to itself 'like energy'. ln other
words, if we choose to celebrate a certain time or coming of age
and we do it with an energy, we draw in real positive energy and
we give it emphasis. ln a loving and powerful way, my daughter
will gain some of that strength in her experience.
I believe that it is important, in whatever way we can, to
acknowledge and reconnect ourselves to the rhythms of our
bodies and also our Earth. These acknowledgements are
powerful for us as human beings. There is a rhythm to our lives,
our bodies, and to our planet . As a culture we have become very
disconnected from these rhythms. So it is very helpful for us to
create our own ceremonies from our own instinctive beingness
and to empower each other to enact them.
I felt very attracted to this particular ceremony as it is
presenting itself in my life--having a daughter who is coming
along very much into puberty. I feel this could be beneficial to all
of us. I want to say though that we do not have to follow any
certain ceremony. although we can draw from other ceremonies
and learn from them. We should go ahead and create out of our
hearts, our love, and our own instincts, ceremonies for passages
so that all of us feel connected to our deep inner rhythms.
I can re-affirm my own feminine wisdom, my own ageless
womanhood, and bring my daughter this celebration that will
create a groove..or a flow .. where her life can have a
direction... where other women will also come together and
affirm for themselves an experience that was difficult for them, or
KATUAH - page 8
Hannah: No. (laughter)
Bonnie: l think it's important to acknowledge that it is a bodily
symbol of passage into adulthood.
Hannah: It's scarey!
Bonnie: Why do you feel it's scarey?
Hannah: I don't know.
Bonnie: Do you feel it will be less scarey if you share with other
women about how they felt and what becoming a woman meant
to them?
Hannah: Yes.
What 's often scarey is the unknown. We a r e talking
abou t somethin g that you h ave not yet e:rcperi enced.
This is something you've never been through, so it's
na tural for you to be scar ed.
Bonnie: So many adolescents don't have an acknowledgement of
their passage and so they use other ways to try to establish it, like
rebellion and pushing the parents away. Nothing they do seems
right to them and they drive too fast, do drugs or whatever they
can. If we as parents take that opportunity to acknowledge this
passage, perhaps it will free them from these confusing times
where they are trying to prove they are adults--if we allow them
to become adults.
Resources: "Self.(jenerated Ceremonies", Foster, S. & Little, M. in
Molherlng. Winter 1986. The article is excerpted from an upcoming book
by Foster & Little entitled Crossjng !be Threshold; Contrnrnvrarv
7
Rites of Passage and lnjtjation at SjgniCicant Stages oC !.jCe.
Also Earth Wisdom, Dolores LaChapelle.
Summer 1987
�THOUGHTS ON INITIATION
In connection with the topic of initiations, I have been
having thoughts, particularly in relation to young people coming
of age, and, I agree, it's vital work. In the past year I've spent a
lot of time growing toward an understanding of what's lacking
for teenage kids these days and how to provide opportunities for
them to find and follow their own visions in a positive cultural
context.
Today's adolescents are the Pluto conjunct Uranus
generation born into the nuclear/mass media age of insanity and
deep global transformation.• They need to develop the inner
resources necessary to cope with the unbelievable stress built into
our social environment. They don't need more information. They
don't need dogma in any form. They need iniuanon mto their
own private, collective mysteries. There's a fierceness of spirit in
kids these days that demands to be grounded in timeless reality to
enable them to find strength, compassion, and clarity within,
while chaos and change rage unchecked about them.
What is initiation?
ft is a self- or group-induced experience that frees one to
encoun1er one's highest self, one's deepest truth, and one's most
expansive vision of reality.
What are the functions of such an experience?
To provide opportunities for people to find and trLtSt their
own myths to live by and to aid them in all life transitions by
leading them 10 their own connection with rhe Great Mystery.
. l~IJI
And ritual?
Ufe is a ritual, wherein we learn to bring feelings and ideas
into physical reality and to enjoy the process. Along the way, we
are all constantly being initiatied into greater awareness and
responsibilicy by every instant's dreams. Occasionally we take
the time to recognize the miracle of the moment and to honor it:
ritual.
We need more of those moments of recognition and
remembering. We need to do it for ourselves and for each other,
and a group ricual provides a structure and context in which it can
happen. It is exciting and comforting to be with others who are
also daring to get back to their essential selves. It confirms the
power, beauty, and reality of the experience we are all sharing.
Someday I wish to do initiation rituals with young
adolescents. I would ger them our into nature, let them go wild,
and then bring all that energy back to Earth in grounded group
mediui.tions. I would teach them how to focus all that fine cellular
energy in healing ways by channeling it through their hearts. I
would give them time, space, and encouragement to find their
own deep connections with both the Eanh and the Stars. We
would explore and share our discoveries through artwork,
poetry, music, and dance. The initiation would be into our
infinitely creative selves and into the healing power of love.
Rituals would grow out of each person's dreams and
awakenings, deaths and creations. The ri1uals would be each
person's narratives of reality as experienced both inwardly and
outwardly and would serve as bridges between the two.
Thank you for existing Maggie Schneider
ARCHETYPES OF MALE INITIATION
by Rob Messick
The first initiation of a human being into the world occurs
at binh. At this sacred time an infant instinctively needs to bond
with parents. As with other primates, this bond is made through
touch and is crucial to the healthy and associative development of
an individual throughout his or her life.
Due to the large skull and brain size of our species, we are
born somewhat prematurely, so that we can pass through the
pelvis. The infant is helpless for many months after birth and
must have support from parents or other adults for the survival
not only of the body, but also for the transmission of human
culture through language and other customs.
Likewise in human evolution, puberty has also become
premacure to the begetting of an adult into responsible life in a
community. We can reproduce before our highly structured
societies can accommodate the effect of this urge. Near puberty
we need a bond slightly different from that required at childbirth.
We seek relationships with other adults in the community and
with peers of both the SlL!lC and the opposite sex.
There are three basic themes in initiation rites of a youth
into adulthood: sepfJation from parents and siblings;
transformation of roles and attitudes; and integration into the
village or community through apprenticeship. The main purpose
of initiation practices for young men is to start them on paths into
the community, away from the influence of their immediate
families, yet still being in proximity to them. Many cultures of the
past, and some today, recognize this coming of age time as basic
to the health and longevity of a people. The industrial era, or
"civilii.ation" in general, has created an environment where these
essential bonds are easily jeopardized. It is deprivation at 1hese
important junctures that can lead to isolation or disinterest in the
cohesive contacts human beings need.
Adolescence is basically a result of our descent into
"civilization" and the hyper-industrialiw:I era which has created a
kind of extended dependency. This period starts after puberty and
can last into a young person's twenties. Through schools, jails,
factories, and military posts we have institutionalized the
spontaneity out of a boy's rite of passage until it hardly exists any
longer. Instead of a sudden initiation near puberty, the process is
dragged out over many years, which sets up obstacles that can
block an individual's ability to integrate into a meaningful role
within a community.
It is doubtful that we will ever be able to give up
adolescence and fully initiate young men into adult roles a1
puberty. There is much to be absorbed of what humans have
learned about Universe and our place in it. Yet the initiation
process must be started at or near the time of puberty t0 avoid
confusion. Some cultural event needs to happen, so that a boy
knows that be is accepted and that the other members of the
- continued on page 10
KATUAH - page 9
Summer 1987
�"Initiation is a critical time in
which the direction is set for the
next generation of humanity."
•
:..:- .J.'
J1.t;.'
... ~ - -- ----
._..!_;i.}..:...
lllusintion from a painting by Greg Smith
ARCHETYPES OF MALE INITIATION
corthJed flan precedlrG page
community are ready for him to change. It can be done through
tests or trials of strength or endurance, or through vision quests
in times of fasting and searching.
Initiation is a critical time in which the direction is set for
the next generation of humanity. Adults in a village or community
need to give great attention to young people going through these
changes because the time of cultural bonding can pass swiftly,
and for a youth the complexity of finding worth in the world is
already frustrating. In these times of great emotional intensity,
neglect is the root of misery for individuals and societies. The
effects may be delayed for a time, but the response, assistance or
abuse, that is offered to a human being in time of need shows the
true health or illness of a society. If we mishandle these
responsibilities, we cause suffering.
For the initiation process to fully flower, a boy must find a
role model or set of role models with which he can readily
identify. The archetypes, or pre-existing forms., that manifest in
these role models are basically those of the Warrior and the
Husbandman. Throughout all human systems these
complementary aspects exist
An individual becomes a miniature of the whole human
experience, re.fleeting into and being reflected by all that is good
and all that is bad in it. Each person has the capacity to give life
and to take life as well. We live out the full circle of our decision
to die with peace or with killing. Either path requires great
courage.
The Warrior is partially represented in the range of
de.~b1.lctive role models offered by the present dominant western
culture. Militarism is the primary culprit in this psychological
tragedy, not only in terms of wars fought among nations, but
also in communities, the family, and especially within a man's
soul. Militarism seeks to break the spirit and split the heart and
mind of an individual and then call these powers back in the
allegiance of a state or cause. This is done by manipulation
through fear and rupturing or perverting lhe ties with family,
peers, and community. There is a false discipline in this
alienation from deep human bonds, which ultimately denies a
sustentative initiation into life. Militarism also perpetuates the
myth that the only evil enemy is somewhere outside the self,
neglecting the necessary struggle to conquer the enemy within. A
real initiation should clearly teach that the potential for doing
wrong exists in everyone, but that the power of choice exists
also. It is only through self-examination that the faults of our
species can be clearly identified and transformed.
KATUAH- page 10
The personae that arise from a long-standing tradition of
militarism become deceptively enticing, and appear to offer roles
that are important and economically worthwhile to those on the
verge of initiation. These destructive male role models ultimately
weaken and often tear apart the social fabric of human beings and
the sacred web of life on this planet.
There is a need for strong, alternative male example in this
society. The archetype of Husbandman offers a vital option. The
practice of Husbandry is defined as male caretaking, not only in
helping to raise a family but also in tenns of growing food,
caring for other species, and being a contributing member in a
community. This involves a deep and spontaneous motion away
from the trodden paths of destructive male energies toward those
that plant good seed and provide a place for them to grow. Also
"Sensitivity and the ability to love
and be compassionate are essential
to human survival, as are the
qualities of being determined and
forceful."
involved in this creative process is the wisdom that recognizes the
generations to come. Planting for the future joins the human path
with other life in such a way that humans become a kind of
permaculture, adapting and innovating within a bioregion as an
interconnected yet distinct structure.
The Husbandman attempts to integrate and heal within the
human community. This does not mean that men should become
effeminate and passive. It means that the strength of male energy
can be expressed through beneficial roles within a community. It
is important for a male to be in balance with the female part of his
soul. Sensitivity and the ability to love and be compassionate are
essential to human survival, as are the qualities of being
determined and forceful The love within the heart of our species
can flourish when we respect our connectedness.
Initiation is a call to face the Wanior and the Husbandman.
This initiation rite should exist to allow a boy to listen to his inner
voice, with guidance and wisdom from elders, to determine what
path he must take. Initiation for a male is successful when it
evokes conscience even in the midst of fear; when it shows that
both archetypes exist within him.
Summer 1987
�Katuah Spring
Gathering
KATIJAH - page 11
Summer 1987
'( .,'.Lq • 111\U l IVI
�ADVENTURES IN THE REAL WORLD:
LEARNING IN THE WILDERNESS
SLICKROCK EXPEDmONS
and so perhaps our adolescent rites of
passage should be less specific and less
strucrured than in a deeply-rooted society.
On the trips I lead, our goal is to learn
about ourselves. I keep the groups small.
There are five boys or three father-and-son
pairs in each trip. The fathers and sons take
a siit-day trip, and the boys take an
eight-day trip, of which five are spent
hiking and three in canoes. I supply the
people taking part with everything except
their clothes.
The Joyce Kilmer-Slickrock
Wilderness Area is an ideal place for our
exploration because it is high, rugged
country and contains one of the largest
remaining stands of old-growth forest in the
Southern Appalachian Mountains. This is a
portion of the Appalachians that remains
unaltered, and with Lake Cheoah to the
north for canoeing, I feel that this area
offers a deep experience of the basic
elements of the natural world.
On the trips I emphasize survival
skills blended with experiences of naturt!. I
want the kids to learn how to make a camp,
how to cook, and how to clean the site so
that there is no trace of camp remaining. At
the same time, I want them to learn to
identify plants and animals and to know
which plants are useful to the camper.
complete the trip. After two or three days it
is as easy to continue up the mountain as it
is to go down, and each boy wants to keep
up with the others.
When we SW1 out, the boys have a
hard time concentrating on any one thing.
They are noisy, and their minds are going in
20 different directions at once. But when
they get out in the deep woods among the
mountains, there is a sobering effect. When
we are camping out on Stratton Bald, for
instance, which is a 5,000 foot high grassy
bald, there are miles of unbroken forest all
around us, and it gives a sense of the
enduring strength of these Southern
Appalachian Mountains. It is humbling to be
up there on your own resources, so far
away that the nearest town is just a small
glow on the horizon and overhead is all of
the immense, dark sky. lt makes one feel
not quite so gigantic in the world, but more
a part of the world.
I would also like the boys to gain a
sense of the world in and of itself. I hope
that more than once on every trip each boy
has an opportunity to forget aU about
himself in contemplating some aspec1 of
nature, whether it is a butterfly, a tiny
flower, or something as awesome and
frightening as being on top of a mountain
and seeing a thunderstorm come in at eye
level.
by Bun Kornegay
Burr Kornegay is an experienced
wilderness guide, having led trips since
1971 when he started taking people into the
Adirondack Mountains of New York Stace.
Now he takes groups of boys 11-16 years
ofage and f ather-a11d-son groups to explore
rile Slickrock Wilderness Area in Graham
County, NC.
We visited and talked wirh Bun, and
he told us how he brings boys to and
through a particular rite of passage. This
initiation helps the young adolescents to
discover and work with a new, mature
perspective.
There is nolhing that one could call an
"ideal initiation" as such. An initiation
implies a very definite idea of the status that
a person is being initiated into. There are
some very elaborate and enduring initiation
rites among tribal groups. The ceremony for
boys who are passing into manhood in the
Masai tribe of Kenya is an elaborate ritual
that lasts several days. The Masai have, in
the course of a long, unbroken tradition,
come to a very clear idea of what a man is,
and their initiation prepares the boys for
that. Perhaps for them that is an ideal
initiation, because it makes everything very
definite. The boys know exactly what they
are heading for, and are led there by a
carefully defined procedure.
The way our society is, I do not
believe we can have that sort of thing. And
perhaps it is not so desireable anymore to
know so clearly what a man or a woman is,
KATUAH- page 12
"Any kind of rite of
passage slwuld be a challenge
to the young people
involved. It should test them
to what they believe is their
utmost to utilize both their
mental and physical
endurance and to draw out of
them qualities that they did
not know they had."
At the end of the trip the boys will
know a way of camping that works. The
next time they go out, they can add their
own ideas and do things their own way, but
they always have the basic knowledge that
they can live well in lhe wild.
Any kind of rite of passage should be
a challenge to the young people involved. It
should test them to what they believe is their
utmost to utilize both their mental and
physical endurance and to draw out of them
qualities that they did not know they had.
While hiking, I have had boys say that they
were going to literally die right at that
moment at that very spot on the trail, but I
have never yet had a boy who did not
Summer 1987
�"It is humbling to be up there on your own
resources, so far away that the nearest town is
just a small glow on the horizon and overhead is
all of the immense, dark sky. It makes one feel
not quite so gigantic in the world, but more a
part of the world."
I want them to sense the age of these
mountains. That is another aspect of
learning their place in this world: to
remember how long these ridges have been
here.
Another thing I hope to bring to the
boys is some degree of organization and
self-discipline. This is an important aspect
of attaining adulthood, because another
name for a teenage boy is "disorganization".
Camping is literally an exercise in getting
one's life together for a time. Trips demand
a lot of attention to details, or else a boy
might find himself unable to locate that
poncho or that flashlight at a time when he
needs it.
When we are on the expeditions we
do everything as a group. The boys do not
carry their own rations or cook their own
meals.We rotate duties, and the meals are
packed so that in one package is everything
for a complete meal for the whole group.
I run a tight ship when we are in the
woods. I do not allow the boys to run off
this way and that, because that is taking a
chance that they would get bun or get lost.
The boys soon realize that they are going to
have to work and play together to be both
safe and comfortable in the woods.
When I am leading these groups of
boys I have to remember that I'm offering
myself as an example to them. When I was
young and in Scouts, I remember how I
looked up to my Scout leaders. It's a natural
thing. This is an imponant influence for a
young person's behavior. Out in the woods
I try to set an example of an "outdoorsman"
in the fullest and best sense of the word: one
who is not only a skilled camper, but
someone who sees nature as more than just
something to exploit
KATUAH - page 13
I have to be a teacher, a guide, and a
counselor, but sometimes I like to just be
one of the boys. I like to swim and play
"king of the mountain". I like to have fun
too.
J have had boys who were considered
"problem cases". One boy who came the
first summer had been diagnosed as
hyperactive and was on two or three
different types of medications. He had been
in a lot of trouble at school, and the
psychiatrist who was working with him
advised me to not accept him on the ttip.
He was an active fellow. It was hard
to wear him out, but there was not a mean
bone in his body. That first year, I saw he
took his medicine every day, but he was still
as hyperactive as any boy could be. It
appeared that the medicine was having no
effect at all
He came out again the next summer,
bringing all his medicines with him, but I
did not remind him about it, and he did not
take his medicine the whofo time we were
out. He was so much better! Calmer, mvre
responsible, much more pleasant to be
around.
I told his grandfather about this when
he came to pick the boy up. The boy's
mother later told me on the telephone that he
bad not been on any medication at all since
that trip. That was a kind of initiation weaning from Ritalin!
Many of today's outdoor recreation
activities reflect a desire to conquer or
dominate the world, a trait that runs deep
within our culture.
The world does naturally present us
with obstacles, and surmounting these
obstacles as they confront us is very
imponant to our development. But on my
expeditions I downplay external thrills.
There is a lot of challenge and adventure in
living outside and exploring rugged, wild
country. If someone goes out with the
purpose of dominating or overcoming
nature, they are using it to build up their
own ego. There is a big difference between
that and going out to humbly learn about
oneself.
For mQre information on Slickrock
Expeditions, wntact:
Burt Kornegay
P.O. Box 1129
Cullowhee, NC 28723
-recorded by Stephaen De/or, Didier Cuzange, and
David Whttkr
Summer 1987
�more
ADVENTURES IN THE REAL WORLD
WOLFCREEK Wll.DERNESS SCHOOL
by Curry Morris
Wolfcreek Wilderness School in
Blairsville, GA has been offering programs
for teenagers for 15 years.
The school recognizes the natural
environment as the ideal locale for
self-realization and offers a variety of
outdoor courses to promote self-reliance and
personal growth. The school also has
mountain heritage programs that teach
aspects of the land-based cultures of the
Cherokee Indians and the early white
setllers.
"I'd like to leave you with a little
thought I've been thinking about ..... it's
about finding the "rhythm of life" .... .'The
Rhythm oflife" is like truly good music: if
you have to ask what it is, you'll never
know. You and the people at Wolfcreek
showed me how to find my "rhythm of
life". Thank you." - C (Sclwol course)
One of the school's most specialized
offerings is a 26-day outdoor exploration
program for teenage boys in trouble with the
law. For many of the boys the program is a
last alternative to long jail sentences. The
program is not specifically therapeutic or
rehabilitory, but is based on the premise that
challenging experiences in contact with the
world of nature can put a boy in touch with
deeper and truer inner resources untapped in
life on the urban streets, that can serve as
the foundation for a new awareness of self
and can lead to a new relationship to
society.
During the summer one- to
three-week courses are open to individual
youths of all ages.
Wolfcreek Wilderness School
Rt. I, Box II90
Blairsville, GA 30512
KATUAH- page 14
OU1WARDBOUND
by Doug Silsbee
Outward Bound was conceived when
a British shipping magnate observed that, in
several instances when his ships were
torpedoed in the North Sea, it was often the
older, more seasoned sailors who survived
in the lifeboats, while younger, physically
stronger seamen perished.
Outward Bound founder Kurt Hahn
began the program as an experimental
approach to train younger seamen - not in
survival skills per se, but in fully utilizing
their own tenacity and inner resources in
difficult circumstances. The program was
continued in British private schools as a
training course for adolescents. Hahn's
vision was to strengthen society by
improving the individual's self-concept,
sense of responsibility to others, and
awareness of Lhe potential to achieve
seemingly impossible goals.
There are now 30 Outward Bound
schools in the world, one of which is
located on Table Rock Mountain, NC. The
North Carolina Outward Bound School runs
wilderness-based courses in a number of
places in Katiiah, from Linville Gorge and
Grandfather Mountain to Standing Indian
and the Chatooga River. The goal of the
school is to create powerful emotional and
spiritual experiences for the 2,000 students
that take part each year.
The programs offered by the organization
are personal growth and values oriented,
and wilderness is an important component
of the training experience. Participants,
many of whom have never slept outside in
their iives, spend from 4 to 23 days outside
with a group of 10 to 12 other students and
two instructors.
Courses take place in the wilderness
because of its inherent spiritual value, and
because it is a new and unfamiliar
environment for most of the participants,
and it is a much less complex emotional
environment than civilized society in which
to learn about oneself.
fears: of falling, of not looking good in
front of their peers, of being alone, of
failing. By dealing with the external
challenge of the activities, and the internal
challenge of their own fears and perceived
limitations, participants come to better know
themselves.
Other activities focus much more on
the group, and impel group members to
come to terms with conflict, to look hard at
their own decision-making processes, and
to find new and more effective ways to
work together towards a common goal
Outward Bound experiences are
different from most initiation rites in that
they do not occur at a set time in a person's
life, and are (usually) not proscribed by
someone else as a prerequisite for coming of
age. There are special c-0urses offered for
educators, adult women, people over age
55, corporate executives, alcoholics, and
cancer patients, but a majority of Outward
Bound participants are adolescents, and for
these the course provides a powerful and
meaningful "initiation rite" into adulthood.
NC OurwardBound School
121 N. Sterling St.
Morganton, NC 28679
,y/1
p
Course activities are designed to place
people under a manageable, yet significant,
degree of stress. Rock-climbing, a specially
designed ropes course, whitewater
canoeing, hiking. solitary time in the forest,
and runs on mountain roads and trails are
new and challenging experiences for most
of the participants. Many of the activities
require inctividuals to confront their own
Summer 1987
�adventure, education about the tribe's
cultural heritage, and community service.
In 1979 Gil Jackson, head of the
Family Services office on the Cherokee
Indian Reservation, and Earl Davis, a
former Peace Corps worker, began the
Cherokee Challenge program in response to
problems they saw among the youth of the
Eastern Band of the Cherokees.
"Most of the kids felt poorly about
themselves," said Davis, "and that feeling
arose specifically because they didn't feel
good about being Indians. Any time they
saw Indians portrayed, it was in a negative
way - the image they had was that Indians
were at best poor and slovenly and at worst
public drunks.
"Cherokee Challenge was begun
initially because the kids needed to know
that there was a lot in their Indian heritage
that they could be proud of. We want the
young people to feel good ~of who
they are, not in~ of who they arc.
"That was in 1979. Now the
organization's concept has broadened
somewhat, because we have found that
when the kids think better of themselves,
they do better in school, they're more fun to
be around, and, in general, they're bener,
healthier people."
The Challenge groups from each
township on the reservation and in
Robbinsville are organhed into gru ups
called"clans", after the fu~cient Cherokee
clan system. Participants arc 11-14 years of
age and mostly boys. One clan has a mixed
membership of boys and girls. The others
meet separately.
Cherokee Challenge activities stress
KATIJAH - page 15
All aspects of the Challenge program
are group oriented, and the canoeing,
rock-climbing, hiking, and caving
eitpeditions, said Davis, "help the group
members to learn about themselves and
about each other. The trips get the kids
outdoors, where they learn new skills and
learn how to get along with others."
On one caving expedition the group
went to cast Tennessee near Craighead
Caverns (now the tourist attraction Lost Sea
Caverns), which archeological excavations
have revealed was formerly used for council
meetings or ceremonies by the native
inhabitants.
'The group went into large caves near
there," Davis related, "so they could
experience the wonder of the caves and feel
the annospherc their ancestors felt 200 years
ago when they gathered there for an
initiation or a meeting."
Service work - picking up trash,
splitting wood for the elderly, visiting at the
old people's home, to name a few of the
activities - helps the children in getting along
with the community and points them toward
worthwhile ways to fit in. "It shows them
that they, too, have a role in the life of the
community," said Davis.
As a part of reclaiming pride in their
native heritage, the children have been doing
sweat lodge ceremonies under the tutelage
of Nora Montelongo and her son, who is a
pipe-carrier for the Cherokee nation. The
sweat lodge is a sacred rite of bodily and
spiritual purification that in fonncr times
was practiced before any important mission
was undertaken. In the lodge the children
learn chants and songs in the Cherokee
language, which otherwise is not widely
spoken among the young people on the
reservation.
In speaking of the ceremony, Davis
said that the young people are expected to
approach it seriously and that "they are
taught that the sweat lodge is a valid way to
communicate with God, the Great Spirit, the
Life Force, or whatever we want to call that
part of ourselves."
The Cherokee language has proven a
stumbling block, however, in the cuhural
preservation project "Fading Voices", which
is an interview program fun ded by a
foundation grant in which young people
from Cherokee Challenge were to go among
elders of the tribe to record their stories,
reminiscences, and details of the way tribal
life used to be.
"We haven't been able to get as much
participation by the kids as we had at first
hoped," explained Davis, "because the old
people are more comfortable speaking in
Cherokee. It is their native tongue, and they
can express themselves beuer in their native
language. Since so few of the kids know
Cherokee, many times they got left out of
the conversation.
"Since we have been under some
pressure to produce materials in order to
comply with the conditions of the grant,
much of the work has necessarily been
taken over by adults familiar with the
language. However, I hope that later on we
can turn the kids loose with tape recorders
to get interviews in the way they want to.
This oral history program is extremely
valuable - any time one of those old people
passes away, something irreplaceable is lost
- but it would also be valuable for the kids
to have the experience of communicating
with the ciders, even if we don't get a foot
of tape from it."
"We want the young people
to feel good because of who
they are, not in spite of who
they are."
Material from the "Fading Voices"
interviews will be printed in a special issue
of the Journal of Cherokee Studies
published by the Cherokee Historical
Museum.
Working on a shoestring budget and
relying largely on volunteer help from the
community, Cherokee Challenge has made
strong beginnings in the formidable job of
picking up the broken threads of Cherokee
tribal tradition and reweaving them into a
meaningful community life for the youth of
the tribe today.
/
Cherokee Challenge
P.O. Box507
Cherokee,NC 28719
Cheroue Challenge is a Mn·fJl'ofil organization.
Summer 1987
�NATURAL
WORLD
NEWS
THE BUTTERNUT IS DYING
by Clyde Osborne
The white walnut, another of
America's great nut and timber trees, seems
headed for extinction, says Bob Anderson,
a plant pathologist at the Southeastern
Forest Experiment Station near Asheville,
NC.
Better known as the butternut tree,
this walnut species has been hit by a fungus
disease known as the butternut canker.
"And no one is doing.anything about
it," Anderson said as he pointed out tree
after tree in the Bent Creek drainage basin
being devastated by the disease.
"There's not a single scientist in the
nation trying to find a solution to this
problem. A pathologist at the University of
Wisconsin worked on it for 10 years, but he
retired three years ago, and no one has taken
up his work," Anderson said.
The disease was first found in 1967
and has spread rapidly. In 1966 a survey in
North Carolina and Virginia found 7 .5
million butternut trees in the two states.
A new survey which has just been
finished found that there are only 2.5
million left, and almost all of them are
diseased.
Cankers spread around branches and
trunks, eventually killing the infected trees,
although each canker lasts for only one year
and then heals over. Eventually the trees are
girdled by canker after canker in the bark
and the cambium "right down to the wood",
according to Anderson.
The chestnut tree, decimated by a
blight disease, has continued to live because
it continually sprouts from the roots left in
the soil. But the butternut doesn't send up
sprouts from the roots.
And sadder yet is the fact that the nuts
of diseased butternut trees are not viable.
The disease puts the trees under extreme
stress. The nuts produced are useless for
propagation. "So unless some answers are
found by someone, it looks like the tree is a
goner," said Anderson.
A pathologist in Virginia told
Anderson that he had found a few butternuts
which seem to have some resistance to the
disease.
If these resistant trees could be
propagated, he said, they might be used to
restock forests where butternuts have been
eliminated or are being killed.
The butternut tree is basically a
northeastern American tree. Like many other
northeastern species, it grows in the
Appalachian mountains, but is uncommon
in other parts of North Carolina.
KATUAH-page 16
Butternut has been used for furniture,
cabinets, fine woodwork, and panelling. Its
wood is lighter than that of black walnut.
But it has been an economically valuable
tree just like its cousin over the years,
although it has never been as prevalent .
The black walnut seems to be
resistant to the butternut canker, Anderson
said, "although you can infect the tree
manually by intrOducing the fungus into it"
And occasionally, black walnut
saplings, if under stress, will show signs of
the disease. Still the disease does not seem
to be a threat to the black walnut.
Reprinted from the Asheville Ci1ill.l1 by
permission.
THE AMERICAN CHESTNUT
Nawral World News Seivice
The American Chestnut was the: most
generous tree in the forest., giving nutritious
nuts for humans, livestock, and wildlife.
The wood was lightweight, rot resistant,
and had a beautiful grain. The bark was an
excellent source of tannin. The native
chestnuts grew 30% faster than oaks, and
even surpassed the rate of growth of Tulip
Poplar. A mature American Chestnut tree
could be over 100 feet tall and have a
diameter of 10 feet or more. And
furthermore, the chestnut composed 25% of
the Appalachian forest trees, growing
everywhere from deep rich coves to dry acid
ridges.
The American Chestnut is now extinct
within its native range, except for the
shrubby sprouts that grow from the old root
systems. It is the victim of a fungus disease
called "the blight" that was accidentally
imported on some Chinese Chestnut trees
around the turn of the century. The blight
kills the trees by forming a canker just
underneath the bark, which spreads until it
eventually girdles the tree. The Cninese
trees evolved with the blight for thousands
of years, and are resistant to it, but the
American Chestnut had no resistance. The
root systems of the trees survive and
continue to send up new sprouts, but the
blight usually kills these before they grow
large enough to produce nuts.
Because of the American Chestnut's
generosity and dominance of the eastern
forests, its demise is considered the greatest
biological disaster in recorded history.
There have been many disappointing
attempts to bring the trees back, but it seems
that the time has finally come for a
breakthrough in blight-resistant American
Chestnut trees.
The Chinese Chestnut is
blight-resistant and produces large nuts, but
it is a cultivated orchard tree and could not
survive or reproduce in a wild forest
ecosystem.
The American Chestnut
Foundation is undertaking a "backcross"
breeding program that will result in a tree
with the blight resistance of the Chinese
Chestnut and the forest-type timber growth
of the American Chestnut. The initial step
in the backcross breeding program is to
cross a Chinese with an American chestnut.
This bas been done before, but the offspring
usually resemble the Chinese parent in their
growth pattern and only about half of them
are able to resist the blighL With backcross
breeding, the blight-resistant half of the
Chinese X American offspring are crossed
with a pure American Chestnut.
Approximately half of the hybrid offspring
of this cross are blight-resistant, but since
they are 3/4 American Chestnut, they will
exhibit more of a forest-type growth pattern.
Working with only the blight-resistant half
of each generation, the backcross step is
repeated to bring in more and more of the
American Chestnut growth pattern while
retaining the blight resistance acquired from
the original cross with the Chinese parent.
If the American Chestnut Foundation can
get the financial support it needs to continue
the backcross program for 20 years, we
should have a blight resistant chestnut tree
that is almost identical to the native
American Chestnut. (Then we'll have to get
out our hoedads and stan planting chestnut
trees on those Farce Service clearcuts.)
There is yet another ray of hope for
the American Chestnut. The blight, a
fungus disease, has become infected with a
virus disease in some areas of the country.
The infected blight is known as
hypovirulent, and even the non-resistant
chestnut trees are usually able to survive
infestation by bypovirulent blight. If the
hypovirulent blight spreads and replaces the
killing blight, then the old American
Chestnut root sprouts that are already here
in the forest will be able to grow to
Summer 1987
�maturity. The drawback to hypovirulence is
that there appear to be many different strains
of the blight fungus, and each strain of the
blight can only be affected by a compatible
strain of hypovirulent blight The American
Chesmut Foundation is sponsoring research
on hypovirulence aimed at isolating
hypovirulent strains that can spread
naturally through the forests.
The American Cllestnut Foundation
publishes an annual joumal and accepts
tax-deductible contributions. Contact:
Dr. David French, Treasurer
The American Chestnut Foundation
c/o Dept of Plant Palhology
University of MinllCSOla
St. Paul, MN 55108
For more information on chestnuts,
subscribe to:
Cheslllutworks
RL I, Box 341
Alachua, FL 32615
($10 per yenr - 2 issues)
NATIONAL FOREST PLAN:
CONTROVERSY CONTINUES
TIIB GYPSY MOTii COMETH
Nalllral World News Service
The "public input" meetings were
well attended, yet an eerie silence persisted
throughout. Most had already heard of the
millions of acres defoliated in the
northeastern states. Few came to debate or
question the proposed treatments. AU came
to find out just what was to take place.
At stake was the fate of 11,000 acres
of private and federal lands in Clay County,
NC. The Fires Creek watershed bad become
the site of a "spot infestation" of the feared
gypsy moth and had received a personalized
environmental impact statement and a
custom-made "eradication program".
The gypsy moth, Lymantria dispar
L., was imponed into this country in 1869
in an attempt to create a silk-producing
moth. The rest is history. What the future
bolds for us here in Southern Appalachia
may come as a surprise, for the gypsy has
arrived.
The gypsy moth is more than an
out-of-state transplant. It is a symbol of our
mobile society. It is highly adaptable and
has no natural predators here. The larvae
spin silken threads and are carried by the
four winds. The adult moth lays eggs on
any object near at banct, thus hitching a ride
to faraway and exotic places.
Natunl World News Service
The 15-year management plan for the
Pisgah and Nantabala National Forests was
made official in April and immediately
elicited another storm of protest from both
local and national environmental watchdog
groups.
At issue were three points insened
into the plan in Washington after a
compromise draft plan was submitted from
the US Forest Service regional office. The
first point said that if timber demand
increases, the maximum acreage liable for
cutting could be raised from 586,000 to
846,420 acres. The new plan also called for
a study to assess that demand, although the
last study was completed only two years
ago. The new plan also called into question
the status of three areas declared as
wilderness in the draft plan. A brief
statement insened into the final document
said that wilderness designation for Craggy
Mountain, Lost Cove (Avery Co.), and
Harper Creek (Avery-Caldwell Co's.)
would be subject to review and "possible
modification by the Chief of the Forest
Service, the Secretary of Agriculture, and
the President."
The Western North Carolina Alliance
was already intending to appeal the plan
because of the high level of clearcutting
called for in the Pisgah and Nantahala
forests, but the Wilderness Society, a
national environmental group, said through
spokesman Ron Tipton that the insertion of
the three points into the plan would almost
cenainly result in an appeal from that group
as well. Tipton indicated that other
environmental groups might join in the
action.
Its food source is primarily the
foliage of oak trees, but it also feeds on
hickory, poplar, birch, and cherry leaves,
while a menu of 500 species of shrubs and
vines is also available. Fruit trees, some
nursery stock, and evergreens such as
spruces, helmlock, and pines are selected as
well by older larvae. The primary goal. of
the larvae is to eat, and after the first molnng
this becomes a twenty-four-hour-a-day
obsession.
The effects of defoliation are varied
and depend on several factors. Dry sites
with shallow soils seem to be more
susceptible than protected sites where
moisture and organic matter are adequate.
Yet, slow-growing trees may survive
repeated defoliation better than fast-growing
timber. Healthy trees can withstand one or
two consecutive defoliations while stressed
trees and evergreens succomb after one
attack. Even the healthiest tree will exhibit
dieback and a 30 to 50% reduction in
diametric growth. Defoliation weakens trees
and valuable energy reserves are used to
refoliate. Weakened trees are attacked by
other opponunistic pests and usually die.
Defoliated areas are subject to
increased levels of runoff and
sedimentation, increased temperature, and
ultra-violet light levels at the forest floor and
waterways. Larvae droppings are a stream
pollutant Mast crops would be drastically
reduced. The overall change in plant and
animal species composition would be
cataclysmic.
It was obvious that some action had
to be take.n. The Southern Appalachian
region is considered to be more favorable
than any other area previously occupied by
the gypsy. Conditions in Clay County we~
shown to be more than adequate to sustatn
very high population levels. AdditionallY,
clearcutting to favor oaks, the current
management technique iJn the National
Forest lands, encourages infestation and
timber loss while mixed hardwood stands
are less susceptible.
Unless remedial action against the
moth was taken, the Animal and Plant
Health Inspection Service (APffiS) of the
US Department of Agriculture, acting on a
congressional mandate, could quarantine all
timber products, nursery stock, horticultural
and agricultural crops, and regulate the
movement of mobile homes, RV's, and any
object that could harbor eggs and increase
the spread of the insect The result of this
quarantine would be socio-economic chaos
in the region.
Because of the large acreage of the
Fires Creek tract, aerial spraying was
accepted at the public meeting as the o.nlY
viable method of attack. Several chenucal
and biological alternatives were proposed to
curb the infestation. Each came with its own
dangers.
The dangers of introducing synthetic,
chemical insecticides are widely known,
thus the treatment was not seriously
considered. The idea of biological control
was the preferred alternative.
It was agreed that two foliar
applications of a liquid formulation of
Bacillus thuringiensis (Bl) and Dimilin
(Diflubenzmon) would be sprayed 7 to 10
days apart at the onslaught of larval
feeding. Bt would be used along waterwars
and Dimilin throughout the steep mountatn
terrain.
Bt is a naturally-occurring bacteria
which when eaten by the larvae, induces
digestive paralysis and death by starvation
within three days. It has a relatively small
target group of insect species. EPA bas
given it a "full registration" and has not
assigned precautionary restrications for use
over water. The Bt spores are degraded by
sunlight in 3 to 12 days bot may persist in
the soil for several months before passing
into the food chain. It is "essentially
nontoxic" to mammals, birds, fish and other
animals. Treated areas may be re-entered
once the spray has dried.
.
Dimilin is a harsher but more effecnve
treatment. It belongs to a group of
insecticides known as growth regulators. It
targets insects having exoskeletons and kills
by interfering with the molting stage of their
life cycle. EPA considers Dimilin to be
"moderately to extremely" toxic to insects
and aquatic invertebrates and "slightly" toxic
to mammals, fish and birds. lt has a soil
half life of 1 to 3 years and "will not
accumulate in organisms as it degrades and
passes through the food chain." Research
on the use of parasites and sterile male
moths as natural controls has shown
promise, but the methods are still oriented
towards small "hot spots."
It was the opinion of the expens that
this treatment would control the gypsy moth
with minimal environmental impact. A
- continued on page 18
KATUAH - page 17
Summer 1987
�--------- ,;::II_.·.
.
w--- _i_ _ trca - cn - co-n- u _ i_ _l_ 8 4 8 5 - - -tsim lar _ -tm -t, - d -c-ted n 9_ --- . ---"""""
.;~,~~~=·--------C- &_ - - E- -- -A
- P L_RAT- S ARE over thousands of acres along the
Tennessee-North Carolina line (cast of
Johnson City and west of Boone), provided
hopeful results.
In early May spraying on Fires Creek
was completed. Monitoring of the area will
continue for several years. The local feeling
is "what's done is done and it had better
work."
But the gypsy moth is advancing
south at the rate of 6 miles per year.
Rcgardlcssofthcdcgrccofcontrol achieved
in watersheds such as Fires Creek, the
gypsy moth will enter Katuah in
approximately 20 years and within 35 years
will become well established throughout the
bioregional province.
WASTE TRANSPORTATION
Natural World Newi
The Monitored Retrievable Storage
(MRS) facility that the US Department of
Energy wants to locate in Oak Ridge, TN
may rum into a semi-permanent repository
for all of the nation's high-level nuclear
waste.
Faced by widespread citizen
resistance, DOE hopes for completing a
nuclear waste repository by their 1996
contract deadline have faded into the
distance. The MRS is currently the favored
alternative as a storage place for the spent
nuclear fuel rods that will be passed over to
the government in that year.
If the MRS were to be built, 13,400
shipment-miles of radioactive nuclear waste
in railcars and 6,200 shipment-miles in
trucks would pass through the Katiiah
mountain area annually, according to figures
released by the Southern States Energy
Board. Without an MRS facility,
3,700-5,400 shipment-miles of wastes
would pass through the mountains annually
during the next few years.
Responding to this threat, citizens
from 13 states met in Maryville, TN in
response to a call by the Blue Ridge
Environmental Defense League to devise a
strategy to counter the proposed MRS and
the problem of nuclear waste transponation.
The group coalesced into a new
organization,
the
Southeastern
Environmental Network and agreed to work
on nuclear and hazardous waste
transponation problems and to encourage
alternative fuels and energy sources.
The new organization represents a
consensus that local people need to take the
initiative in determining new directions for
energy policy. The feeling was that if the
people did not do it for them.selves, nobody
would, and that local groups needed to
make their needs clearly felt in the legislative
chambers and, in effect, "lead the leaders"
to better solutions to questions of energy
generation and waste disposal.
KATUAH- page 18
.[:\_f;~~; .··
~:f-'"''"..
.
. ; ·'1:·
.-:).:• ·~
..,,
• ".:!.: :.-. ,•
.·!~·::··;-. ~,
· ti·
·:.,.,.~.~
;;~t:~Y ·
STATE ENDANGERED LIST
·z~;!:: .#~. NC Wildlife Resources Commission
r"i ,..
!~J/_.
The North Carolina Wildlife
Resources Commission is seeking
legislation that would create an official state
list of animals that arc endangered,
threatened, or of special concern in that
state.
A bill now under consideration by the
NC General Assembly would allow the
Commission's Nongame Advisory
Committee to name members to a council of
wildlife scientists. Those experts would
develop and use standard criteria for
identifying and placing animals and birds in
the three categories.
Debbie Paul, manager of the
Nongame Section of the Division of
Wildlife Management, said, "We have rare
species of particular interest in North
Carolina that aren't on the federal list. There
are several unofficial lists of rare animals,
but none developed under scientific review
or using standard criteria."
Some animals already considered
endangered in Nonh Carolina include the
peregrine falcon, the bald eagle, and th~
eastern cougar.
•
,
MOUNTAINS GET THE SHAKES
NUCLE A_ .....,
- - _ R
WASTE," SAYS DR. SMELLO
Nauual World News Sa-vice
How far away is the Shearon Harris
nuclear plant from the mountains?
As close as your electric bill, CP&L
ratepayers learned at a NC Utilities
Commission hearing in Asheville May 20
when company representatives told a
stunned audience that they were seeking a
26% rate increase over the next two years.
The revenue is largely to pay for the $3.8
billion Shearon Harris facility, which went
into operation on May 2.
CP&L spokespeople did offer to give
customers a reduction in fuel rates and an
overcharge refund, -which would panially
offset the effects of the increase during the
first year, if consumers agreed to swallow
the proposed rate hike.
Many of the people who jammed the
hearing were elderly people on fixed
incomes who may have remembered the
exuberant early days of nuclear power when
officials promised "power too cheap to
meter".
The Harris plant was criticized
throughout its construction for consistently
running over budget, but only later will
consumers learn about the "hidden costs" of
the Harris plant, which are not figured into
cost estimates for nuclear power: the price
of radioactive waste disposal and of
"decommissioning" (tearing apan and
disposing of the irradiated building
structures) in 40-50 years when it must be
taken out of service. Environmental coSts,
of course, never show op in corporate
accounting.
Or. Smcllo, a colorful clown ,
attended the meeting wearing a sign saying,
"CP&L rates are a nuclear waste". Smello
accurately summed up the feeling of the
meeting at the end of his address when he
said, "I may look like a clown, but CP&L is
areal joke."
/
Narural World News Service
An earthquake registering 4.2 on the
Richter seismic scale shook parts of Katiiah
during the early-morning hours of March
29, 1987. Sheriffs' departments and rescue
squads received several calls from alarmed
residents, but damage by the tremor was
limited to pictures shaken off the walls.
The quake centered
30 miles
southwest of Knoxville, TN, but the effects
were felt as far cast as Andrews, NC.
Katiiah is located in the Appalachian
Seismic Zone. According to the Tennessee
Eanhquake Information Center, this wne is
a weak spot in the Earth's crust where two
major tectonic plates meet and overlap.The
two plates generate great stresses where
they press together. The seismic rone is an
area where that pressure is likely to be
released in the form of an earthquake.
The last major quake in the
Appalachian Zone was a movement of 5.8
magnitude in 1897 that was centered near
Pearisburg, VA. The March tremor was the
first to register over 4.0 in 13 years.
According to the eanhquake center,
the Appalachian Seismic Zone is an active
area, recording 25 to 30 shakes per year,
but most of the activity registers under 2.0
on the Richter scale and is not perceptible to
humans.
NEWS
The senate was held hostage
today
by strongwomen who fired
brilliant bursts of metaphor
over their heads
and then escaped
into a waiting
Future.
The Right Hemisphere Liberation Army
has claimed responsibility.
• Will Ashe Bason
Summer 1987
�MONITORING TIIE 'CIDE
SEASON
It's summertime again in Katuah!
Time for sunshine, birds, flowers .....and
poisonous chemical sprays.
Many farmers, companies, and
government agencies use herbicides and
pesticides for fast, effective, and highly
tocic weed and insect control. Farmers
spray pre-emergent herbicides to discourage
weeds in their com and tobacco. Railroad
companies and state transportation
departments regularly spray railroad beds
and roadsides, utility companies poison
powerline right-of-ways to keep them clear,
and the US Forest Service blankets selected
areas in the National Forests with herbicide
sprays from helicopters. Throughout the
growing season, farmers protect their crops
with pernicious, long-lasttng pesticides.
Suspended particles of these liquid
sprays drift great distances through the air.
They enter the food chain by being inhaled
or ingested in contaminated water and food.
The sprays are highly foen, carbon-bound
chemicals, so instead of being broken
down, they accumulate in the bodies of
humans and animals.
Acute exposure to pesticides and
herbicides cause a burning sensation in the
skin, eyes, or throat, and forms congestion
in the head and lungs. There may be
swelling and aching in these areas and
coughing.
Sub-acute exposure may cause only a
listless, achey feeling and a low resistance
to virus. This level of exposure is possibly
more dangerous in the long run, because the
cumulative effects may result in cancer or
other degenerative diseases years later when
the cause is hard to pinpoint.
A group in Floyd County, VA
is surveying the effects of toxic
sp rays among their community
members and encourages groups in
other parts of Katuah to do the same
by keeping records of spraying dates
and locations and watching for any
apparent differences among family
and friends.
"If we all do this and compile our
records," they say, "we may notice a
pattern, and we will have more information
with which to stand up and say that most
spraying is unnecessary and unsafe."
Contact: Nancy Barnhardt
P.O. Box 417
Floyd, VA 24091
A VIEW FROM THE
by Mchael Hockaday
CORNERS
Valuing Trees:
A Thought Burl Had
Nowadays I was thinking: what Is
a tree worth anyways, In the year of its
cutting, and in its lifetime, that being a
history of everytime we change it? One
half a tree becomes a stud framed In a
wall as long as it stands, forever worth
about a dollar twenty-nine. That's what
you paid for it. Sure, it helps (or
doesn't help) hold up a wall, a door, a
window, but its inherent value as a
stud has been fixed, done with,
forgotten behind a layer of fabric,
sheetrock, paneling. Done for. Gone.
Another soldier of the forest bites the
dust of anonymity. Other trees, or
half-trees, quarter-trees, trunks,
boards, cherished in their dead state
more than when they grew alive, are
used, touched again and again,
changed, utilized in continually
various ways; these have a life in
history as various as many lives.
This winter, after Christmas
mostly, I started cutting up the gnarly
little yellow pine poles a neighbor
used some years ago to hang that
season's crop of tobacco in my barn. I
had mentioned in the fall he'd better
come get them, else they'd be dust by
spring. More nitrogen in the garden.
Gone. Done for. I decided to handcut
them to stove and hearth length with
my bucksaw that's been hanging
around doing very little since I made it
more than a year ago.
It's work, in-between, after-work,
work that's harder as their girth gets
bigger, but chainsawing them hasn't
been a joy either. And it's quiet at
least, a task more aimed at viewing
and appreciating the winter sunsets,
end as they may.
These poles (trees) 1 was
rendering into kindling had been
grown, whether by God and nature or
man 1 don't know, cut down, trucked
around, de-limbed, nailed up to
support a cancer-causing agent, left to
rot, then taken down, de-nailed,
dragged from the barn, sawed Into
length, and carried again inside to
quickly burn into ash. Makes a hot fire.
Good start for winter mornings. Can't
be used to hold up much anymore.
Gone. Glad to have it. And what a
store of time and labor went into the
using of those trees, each one a part of
the shade we love in summer, helping
to sustain some forest's mystery. What
attention we have given them.we who
are In need of trees, maybe more
attention than some people and
animals get. So what 1 the worth of
is
those trees that cost the original user
nothing but the time spent getting
them? And another thing: the same
parts of a tree that may be less than
their worth to use them - a real waste
of time
twisty, doughty ,
unmanageable for building needs maybe the very material made into
items that become collectibles - the
life-size carving of a saint, a sparkling
oaken
threshold,
or
the
delicate-colored, uniquely shaped
panel, screen, or fan. What is the worth
of only that sort of tree? How
expensive is shade?
So is it irony, fate, wisdom, or
simply a matter of economics that the
ugliest, most hard-to-get-to, orneriest
trees become the survivors,
landmarks, or sacred ones? Some
trees are not made for studs, but
mostly all wood bums if you get it hot
enough.
When summer came and that
shade that is woven by a community of
trees appeared, beckoning in its cool
appeal, I left off the burning of
deadwood to go and just sit under
such a precious canopy of living
wonder. I sat content awhile, having
for a spell no further need to cut,
change, bum. There, in those healing
depths of forest - or was it a wood? who cares? - the creek chuckled as it
sparkled along to the sea, and I could
not but agree that things seemed fine
in such a greenwood, while the sun
blazed and wind shimmered the
heatwaves. "What is the worth of these
trees?" I was thinking.
Gr1tphics by Rob Mcssiclt
KATUAH- page 19
Summer 1987
�Resource Directory
Hurrah!
Plan et Dr um Foundation has just published
A Bioregiona l Directo ry listing bioregional groups,
publications and contact persons in Nonh America. The directory
includes a brief description of each listing and it also includes a
map of the represented areas. To purchase a directory ($2) or to
fi.nd out about joini.ng Planet Drum ($15), contact: P lanet Dru m
P.O . Box 31251, S an F r a ncisco, CA
F oundation,
9413L Here are some selections from the Directory:
Mattole Watershed Salmon Support Group,
P.O.Box 188, Petrolia, CA
95558
(707)
629-3514
Restoring near-extinct native populations of Ki.ng and
Silver salmon through the use of low-tech propagation
techniques and habitat repair, MWSSG focuses on
salmon as an indicator species in order to raise local
watershed consciousness. Established in 1980, the
group has released over 100,000 salmon into the Mattole
River.
Ohio River Basin Info rmation Service, 103
Gibson Lane; Wilder, KY
41076
(606)
781-5502
ORBIS gathers and distributes information that is
pertinent to the health of both the natural and social
ecology of the Ohio River Basin. It is concerned with
water pollution, soil erosion, and ways in which the
human community can promote healing the bioregion.
ORBIS runs Sunrock Farm, a bioregional educational
center, which hosts a program on "Fanning and the
Natural World" including activities, tours, songs and
hayrides for lhe kids.
ORBIS will eventually publish a resource newsletter,
"The Heartland Teacher", to promote bioregional
education at the elementary school level.
The Hopi Epicentre for International Outreach
The Hopi E p icentre fo r I ntern ational O u t r each has
opened its doors under the authority and auspices of the Hopi
Traditional Leaders from the village of Mishongnovi on Second
Mesa. Its purpose is to educate the national and international
communities about Hopi culture, history and spirituality in
relation to current events and how each individual must take
personal responsibility towards the healing of the Earth and all
her inhabitants.
Directed by spokeswoman Marilyn Harris from
Mishongnovi, the office is currently worlcing on a film project
ba~ed on the "Hopi/Dine Neighborship Gathering". It is an effon
to inform, educate and share important spiritual perspectives of
Natural Law with the hope of stimulating creative solutions to the
problems facing humankind today. Also, there is an effort to gain
entrance to the UN as the Sovereign Hopi Nation to address an
official meeting of the General Assembly in order to deliver the
Navoti (Hopi prophecy and knowledge).
To inquire or connibute:
Hopi Epicentre for International Outreach, 22 S. San
Francisco St., Suite 211, Flagstaff, AZ 86001. (601)
TILTH Association, P.O. Box 218, Tualatin,
OR 97062
TILTH is a non-profit association on the Pacific
Nonhwest which links urban and rural people who
support a sustainable, regional agriculture. Members
include commercial organic farmers, small holders,
market and home gardeners, landscape designers and
many others who either practice or support biologically
sound and socially equitable agriculture for the region.
TILTH publishes a quarterly journal and periodic
newsletter updates.
TILTH ASSOCIATION/SEATILE
4649 Sunnyside Avenue North, Seattle, WA 98103
SEATILE Til.,TH is an urban chapter within Til.,TH's
regional network that is interested in city-based food
production. Its office contains a resource library of
books and journals devoted to urban gardening and
animal husbandry. Seattle TILTH .aJso has a
"Demonstration Garden" featuring raised-bed vegetable
planting, espaliered fruit trees, composting
demonstrations and a solar greenhouse.
774-2644
Earth Island
Earth Island Journal, An International E n viron m en tal
N~ws Magazine is an invaluable resource for keeping in touch
with the ecologicaVcultural health of the planet--including
rainforests, sustainable development, indigenous peoples,
appropriate technology, etc. Earth Island is a network
(computer and otherwise) of individuals, projects, ideas, and
places that promote ecological consciousness and action.
Ea r t h Island I n stitute, 13 Columbus Avenue, San
Fran cisco, CA 94111
KATUAR - page 20
NABC Il Proceedings
The NABC II P r oceedings from the North American
Bioregional Congress, 1986 is now being published. It is a
90-page quality paperbound book which contains highlights of
the week-long Congress, including reports, resolutions, and
summaries of presentations as well as photos. The topic areas
ran;l:e from alternative economics, eco-feminism, permaculture,
nauve peoples and people of color to bioregionaJ envisioning and
poetry. Price is $l0eacb plus $1.50 p&h.
Contact: Alexandra Han/ Proceedings, P.O. Box 1010,
Forestville, CA 95436
Summer 1987
�m
Big Mountain
"Our way of life is our re ligion, and our
teaching. If we are r elocated by force, we will
all die slowly. The people wo uld not be in
bala nce with Mother Earth and Father Sky and
t he spirit ual people. In ever y way, he re we are
connected to t he la nd. We belong here."
Ma ry T. Begay, Dine elder
Background:
Just south of the Peabody Co:i1 Company strip mine at Black Mesa
(AZ), the U.S. government is forcibly relocnting 10,000 Navajos (Dine) nnd
100 Hopis in what has come 10 be known as the Navajo-Hopi land dispute.
In 1974, Congress passed Public Law 93-531, which crcntcd n
Relocation Commission and declared that Navajos and Hopis living on I.he
wrong side or Lile panition hne c1rawn by Congress would have to move.
Native leaders charge that the relocation is designed 10 facilitate access 10
minerals, primarily coal, underlying the disputed lands. Relocation is
cwrently being accelerated by livestock seizures, fencing by government
crews, a housing construction ban, and harassment of Navajos resisting
relocation. Nnvajos who hove voluntarily moved to nearby cities have fallen
victim 10 fradulent real estate deals and loansharking. (frotn Th e
Workbook, Southwest Research & Information Center, P.O. Box 4524,
Albuqucniue. NM 87106)
Big Mountain suppon groups around th~. contin~nt
continue to renew their effons to suppon the traditional Dine
(Navajo) and Hopi peoples in their struggle against forced
relocation from lheir homelands.
Currently, a lawsuit is being filed which challenges the
constitutionality of forced relocation by demonstrating the
inseparable relationship between the land and the religious
practices of the traditional Dine. All attorneys involv_ed a;e
donating their services, but funding for offices, etc. is sull
needed.
Both the US House and US Senate arc planning to conduct
field hearings this fall in the Joint Use Area (JUA) and Hopi
Village Nations, concerning this issue. In the House, the
commiuce which will be conducting the hearing will be the
House Interior and Insular Affairs Committee. Three
representatives from around the Katuah arc~ are on this
committee: Clarke (NC); Darden (GA); and Lewis (GA). These
hearings could possibly be an imponant way for ~c traditional
Hopi and Dine voices to be heard. If you want to wntc to express
your concerns, write: Rep_ _; US House; Washington, DC
20515.
Although the Dine arc usually self-sufficient, government
harassment in recent years has created a serious need for food,
clothing, wool, and tools. A slide show "In Defense of Sacred
Land" (30 min w/ tape) is available for sale ($65) or rent
($20/wk). It offers a close·up look at 1he traditional Dine cult~re
at Big Mountain and features the complex reasons behind
relocation and the people's acts of resistance. A video "The
Wrong Side of the Fence" (VHS, 60 min) is also available for
sale ($50) or rental ($20).
For general information on Big Mountain and to make
contributions, contact:
Big
Mounta i n
Legal
Defense/Offense
Committee, 2029 N. Center St.,
Flagstaff, AZ 86001
(602) 774-5233
Prophecies
The coming of great eanh changes ( canhquakes, upheaval, polar
shifts, etc.) in this period of our canh history has been spoken of
in the prophecies of many cultures including_ Hopi, Mayan, ~s
wcli as Christian. In the Mayan tradition, this August, 1987 is
regarded as an extremely significant time. In all the traditions.
great emphasis is placed o~ the period lc_ading up !o these
changes as an important ume for conscious cleanng a_nd
hcaling... a rime for getting in _balance with the Earth an~ w11h
oncsclf...a time to make a special effon to walk evenly With one
anothcr...a time to acknowledge and live within the ways of the
Great Spirit ... to remember the Great Mystery. Even now, Tunle
Island and the whole planet is experiencing great stress. It is
imponant that we listen keenly to what is occurring. Ho!
KATUAH-page21
Green Politics
"Throughous our country aNJ our region there is a deep Med /0 reclaim tht
word 'politics'. Politics does /IOI hove 10 conjure up images of special
illteresu. corporOle affiances aNJ short·range vi.sum. It can begin 10 mean
self-gowrnance, day-kH/ay ciliunshipaNJ long-range understanding. Politics
can begin 10 reflect and align itself with nature and tht Earth instead of
actively defying it. Wt can begin to see pofilics.. .as if people mal/ered...as if
tht biotic community mauered...as if tht Earth mO/ttred.
from "Tht Politics of Participation"
~ Autumn, 1984
H
Currently, there is a thrust towards a new/old dimension to
politics...one that speaks to ecological wisdom, grassroots
democracy, and personal & social re5P0nsibility. It promotes
regionally-based cultures as well as community-based
economics. It encourages an envisioning of the present and the
future, in terms of bioccntric sustainability. The movement here
in North America and around the globe is called "Green Politics".
In North America, both in Canada and the United States,
the activity and focus is more regional and local rather than
national. In the United States, though, there is a Committees of
Correspondence Clearinghouse which serves as a national
networking center for local and regional groups and individuals
in the country. Groups around the continent are working on
many levcls--some arc running local and regional candidates,
others arc drafting political platforms, while others arc forming
study groups, addressing specific environmental and economic
issues, etc.
This summer 1987, Building the G reco Movement
will be the first open national meeting of the Greens in the US,
and will take place July 2-7, 1987 in Amherst, Massachusetts. It
will be an educational conference rather than a gathering to make
decisions for the Green movement. Sponsored by the
Committees of Correspondence, it is open to all Greens and
activists in kindred movements. It will include plenary panels,
workshops, and group discussions as well as music and
celebration. For conference infonnarion and general inquiry:
Na ti o n al
C learinghouse,
Comm i ttees
of
Correspondence, P.O. Box 30208, Kansas City, MO
64112
The ten key values which have been drafted by the
Committees of Correspondence and are being discussed and
stmtcgiz.ed by local Green groups around the country arc:
*Ecological W isdom •Grassroots Democracy
*PersonaJ & Social Responsibility •Nonviolence
•Decentralization •Community-Based Economics
•Postpatriarchal Values •Respect for Diversity
*Global Responsibility
*Future Focus &
Sustainability
Richard Harrison, from the Katiiah region, is planning to
attend the national conference as well as assist in forming a
regional ·11oca1 Green Discussion group . The first meeting will
be held on Wednesday, July 22 at the Pack Library meeting
room in Asheville, NC from 7:00 -9:00 pm. For more
information: Richard Harrison, 183 Edgewood Road, Asheville.
NC 28804 (704) 254-6910.
Resource reading: Green Poli!ks. The G(obnl Promjss:,
Capra and SprellUllc. Bear & Co, S:111t:1 Fe, NM, New cdir.ion t986;
Secjo g Green; The Polj!jcs or Ecology Exp(pjncd.
Porritt, J. Basil Blackwell, Inc. NY 1984 ; The Sojrilunl
Dimcosjon or Green Po(il!cs, Spretnak. Bear & Co, 1986
... periodicals: Green Lfllrr. ed. Jerry Gwnthney. P.O.Box
9242, Berkeley, CA 94709; New Options , ed. !'.tuk Satin.
/
P.O.Box 19324, Washington. DC 20036
Turrie Island is the native name for the continent of Norrh
America.
Summer 1987
�DRUMMING
LETTERS TO KATUAH
Following are portions of a letter sent to the editors of
community papers in Georgia and Tennessee as well as to
Katuah:
Dear Editor,
In order to keep my family off food stamps, I've had
to leave my home in southwestern Virginia for the past three
winters and set pine seedlings on clearcut National Forest
land in the Southern Appalachians.
We use an axe-like tool called a "hoedad" and get paid
by the tree, so we hustle over mountainsides and through
briars, bushes, and the tops of fallen trees. It is hard work,
but the pay is good.
The land we plant has usually been clearcut of any
vegetation over three inches in diameter and then burned over
so that when a planter looks up from planting the view in the
distance is often like a picrure postcard, while the closeup
Looks like a scene of nuclear devastation.
At fll'St I thought that the government must make a lot
of money doing this, but in truth it costs tire taxpayers a lot
of171()ney to clearcut National Forest land!
In the fll'St place, the timber or pulpwood is usually
sold cheaply because of the remoteness of most National
Forest land. Then there is the cost. both environmental and
economic, of the roads that the Forest Service puts in to the
site and the cost of a new gate and Ioele to keep the public
out. Then there are the salaries of various people who mark
the boundaries, bum the site, replant pines, people who
oversee the people who replant pines, and often people to cut
away or poison competing hardwoods a few years later.
The cash from the timber sale only barely begins to
pay the money price and could never pay the environmental
price of the cuttings.
Replacing the mixed hardwood forests with rows of
pines reduces the food resources available for many animals.
Cutting the hardwoods also reduces the brilliance of the fall
colors in the mountains. The new pine forests are made of
trees genetically similar to each other, which are more likely
to fall prey to insects or disease before they are scheduled to
be cut When this happens, the Forest Service sometimes
sprays large areas with insecticides, and this has a large
economic and ecological cost
The Appalachians can never really compete in growing
pulpwood with the deeper soil and warmer climare of the
nearby Piedmont or the Coastal Plain, and in the misguided
and federally-funded attempt to do this we will lose priceless
mountain topsoil into our streams and lakes and also lose a
lot of money.
rm not advocating an immediate end to clearcutting,
rather a slowing down to think it over and an end to
automatically favoring pines over hardwoods.
The policy of clearcutting was begun in a sincere
attempt to help our local economies. 11 is certainly true that I
need the money I make at my job. So let's invent some more
wholesome employment for ourselves:
- Perhaps we could pay people to replant ginseng on
suitable mountain sides in the national forest. This could
KATUAH-page 22
conceivably make more money than timber sales with vastly
less environmental impact. Harvest could be by permit or by
free foraging. This could greatly benefit all kinds of local
people and even earn needed foreign eithange, as
Appalachian ginseng is esteemed the world over as the very
best.
- Perhaps people could be employed seeking out the
surviving American chestnut trees and helping them survive.
Perhaps some of the new blight-resistant hybrids of
American and Chinese chestnuts could be planted.
- Perhaps the Forest Service could hire more people to
extend and maintain hiking, bicycle, and horse trails.
- Perhaps the Forest Service could help local people set
up more efficient sawmills, solar kilns, and small
woodworking industries to make better use of the hardwoods
we do log.
- Perhaps the Forest Service could establish small,
local nurseries for treeS and shrubs that benefit local ecology
and economy.
- Perhaps the Forest Service could do more work
educating itself and the people about the terrible realiiy of
acid rain, which has already killed the trees on the tops of the
highest peaks and is threatening the entire forest.
- Perhaps the Forest Service could foster the
development of a few small, viable, village communities
within the National Forest which use local energy sources
and are built to suict environmental standards to teach us
how to live with the forest instead of off it, and offer the
people wholesome alternatives to living in trailer parks at the
bottoms of mountains or in cabins in beautiful bu1 lonely
hollows.
If any of these ideas seem far-fetched, remember that
we could save taxpayers a lot of money by deciding 10 give
the land back to the Cherokee Elders who, after all, did a
very good job of land stewardship here for thousands of
years and would probably take the job at no pay!
The Forest Service is composed mostly of fine
outdoor-loving men and women who hate the bureaucracy
that siymies them more than any outsider possibly could.
They have been caught between a rock and a hard pince with
a charter that demands economic benefit of the local
communiry, the reality of local timber economics, and the the
basically similar needs of sponspeople, conserv:uioniStS. and
tourists.
Remember, only you can prevent runaway
bureaucracy! The Forest Service was set up to nuke policy
based on feedback from local people, and when we don't
offer this feedback, we short-circuit a very good and
idealistic system.
Please write down your ideas about National Forest
land use and send them to:
Chief Forester, US Forest Service, USDA
P.O. Box 2417
Washington, DC 20013
Help return the Forest Service to the service of the
forest.
Will Ashe Bason
Check, VA
Summer 1987
�Dear Katiiah,
rocks
only by shoring their silence
ond solitude
or e we invi ted into
their deep time
their woy of being before god
whot they do
they do well
keep time
w eor w eother
guard secr et s
mark the eorth
whot we see them d o
is nothing
our senses ore too human
their shopes t oo eternal
t he life t hat flow s too hidden
for all our owareness
we have little understanding
of how such life Is sacred
so they fall split open
sit p atiently until
w e come ond hear
the universe w i thin them
groan Its sacred groon
- Thom as Dal e Cowan
Pho10 by Rob Messick
This information is im~t! Can you include this, in pan,
in the 'Solstice' issue of Katiiab? Please try to find room!
(Excerpts from material senr in)
The canh operates as a resonant function of the interface
of two metaprograms, the solar and the galactic, whlch
together comprise a single field.
A resonant frequency phase shift (RFPS) is scheduled
to occur August 16/17, 1987.
The RFPS will alter the molecular resonance patterns of
all living phenomena. By their plasmic nature, most
biological fonns will be able to absorb this shift and
adjust to the new frequency pat1ern. However, much
that has been artificially constructed according to stress
specifications not accounting for RFPS may well be
disintegrated.
In prepara.tion for Phase Shift '87, it is important to
reactivate spirit guides and human-to-human bonding
programs; to reactivate biopsychic maintenance of
planet nodes and crystal gridwoik so that new
frequency imprinting can be received by the earth itself
in order to activate and monitor the new phase. This is
to be accomplished by groups of people in common
attunement attending to all planetary nodes-power
points, shrines, sacred sites; to alert people by whatever
skillful means possible concerning what is about to
occur. Ultimately this means the evacuation of the
cities. since their artificial structures will be largely
destroyed Therefore, plan a crusade--a phase shift
crossing--that is a completely hannonic operation, one
that can synthesize the old frequency into the new. The
Crusade should be in motion by Summer Solstice,
1986. (transmission)
1987-- 144,000 Sun Dance enlightened teachers will
totally awaken in their dream mind bodies. They will
begin to meet in their own feathered serpent or winged
seipent wheels and become a major source of the light
to help the rest of humanity to dance their dream awake.
A Sun Dance teacher is any human being who has
awakened, who has balanced their shields, who has
gained the dream mindbody and who honors all paths,
all teachers, and all ways. (from Prophecies of
lntenribal Medicine Societies of Native American
Indians)
Beginning at Dawn everywhere on the canh on Sunday,
August 16, 1987, 144,000 humans arc being called
upon to create a complete field of trust by surrendering
themselves to the planet and to the hlgher galactic
intelligences which monitor the planet At that time and
continuing through Monday, August 17, the higher
galactic intelligences will be transmitting a collective
planetary vision as well as messages of personal destiny
to and through these people, the rainbow humans.
(Open letter)
Harmonic Convergence: World Harmony Days Aug
16-17, 1987
Join in the Celebration of Harmonic Convergence, a
conscious bonding of people to support an evolutionary
shift from separation to unity and from fear to love.
World Harmony Days include celebrations at local,
regional and international levels which will focus
healing energies to the earth. At the core, 144,000
people will gather at sunrise on Aug 16 at sacred sites
around the globe. They will join at these Earth
"acupuncture points" to create a resonating link between
Universal Energies and the Earth. For info: Harmonic
Convergence, P.O. Box 6111, Boulder, CO 80306
(303) 443-4328.
Anonymous
DRUMMING -conlinuedpage24
KATUAH- page 23
Sammer 1987
�Dear Follc-
1 really enjoyed the latest issue of KatUah. Il
continues to give me great joy to think of the time,
energy, spirit, and blood that is cycled through each
issue. It is a great labor oflove and work. I liked the
"Coverlets" anicle a great deal. I learned much.
But the letters on "More Wilderness" in the
"Drumming" section seemed to me to be shon-sighted.
Sometimes I am confused by what most people think of
as being a "whole system", since the word as it is
commonly only used often seems to have little to do with
the world of good science. (I'm ralkjng about responsive
scientists who care about the land, and there are more
than a few out there.)
I wonder if those writers have any idea how
complex a proposal it is to suggest that cougars could
once again roam "the wild areas of the Appalachian
Region"? Let them take a trip to south Florida and take a
look at how hard it is to support a couple of dozen
cougars in an area as large as .illl of western North
Carolina! Who knows how common cougars were in
this area? They are primarily "big package" predators by
preference, which would suggest that white-tailed deer
would be a major food source. The scat of healthy
cougar cats consists of 90% "big packages" and 10%
small game. So maybe to establish a Fe/is concolor
population in Katuab, we should put them in Cades
Cove instead of in a "wilderness area".
Like Henry Thoreau, I feel now is the time to stop
building castles in the air and start putting in a few
foundations. I'd as soon see us use our energy to create
a "working community" of people, plants, animals, land,
and life in the Appalachians with what we have now. We
already have a wonderful predator moving into our area:
lhe coyote. What"s wrong with a few coyotes?
I would suggest that people who care about the
wildlife in our area go out with a good .410 shotgun and
kill every feral housccat in the region. These "wild" cats
take a huge toll on songbirds and small mammals.
John Lane
,
fKJl iffl)J~(}={f !NJ!ElfWO!RlK
~fPJflOfli1@~
ffrr©m
@~qfhl@rrnfli1@Jrq
Over 125 adults and children gathered at
the Pepperland Farm Camp in Farner, TN
for the Katiiah Spring Gathering. It would
take quite a while to describe in depth the
things we learned, the experiences we
shared, and the spirit we felt there. But we
can say that, there, the beginnings were set
to help the Katuah bioregional organization
grow and become more firmly rooted in our
daily lives and in our local communities.
A network of local contact people is
developing... to help nurture a bioregional
vision in their communities, to help bring
the Katiiah journal to more people, to
encourage more local input into the journal,
to pass around the word about events and
actions, and to sponsor bioregional speakers
and events in their local communities.
Write to the Katiiah journal to find out what
being a local contact per son means.
Volunteer, if you can.
People are also coming together into
" speci fic interest" groups to discuss
particular areas of bioregional life and
culture. The emphasis is on educatin g
themselves as to the most a ppropriate
strategies for living in the mountains. It
includes keeping up with news, events, and
new developments in that particular interest
area as well as lively discussions of how it
relates to this r egion. Hopefull y, it will also
mean submitting articles on that topic so
that each aspect of mountain life is
represented in the Katuab journal. to
"Specific interest " topics include:
Forestry and Wildlife, Agriculture and
Regional Diet, Water, Sustainable
Economics, Healing, Education/Personal
Growth,
Communities,
Ene rg y,
Spirituality, Bioregional Theory, Regional
Politics, and Shelter.
Luke Staengl of Floyd County, Virginia agreed to
coordinate a Katuah regional phone tree to be
used as a networking tool for issues that require
immediate attention such as environmental defense
issues, legislative action, and other special events.
Luke emphasized that when an issue comes
up locally and yet receives regional attention and
response, it is much more likely to be taken
seriously. He encourages all of us to make use of
this kind of networking.
Already, there are over 70 names on the
phone tree list. Some people have agreed to
simply receive a phone call and act on it (write a
letter, etc.). Others have volunteered to call others
in their community, as well. If you would like to
participate in this important regional phone tree
send name, add ress, phone number to:
Luke Stacngl,
Rt.3, Box 120·2, Floyd, VA
24091.
KA11JAH - page 24
Write to the Katiiah journal if you
have an interest you would like to discuss
with other people in the region or if you
would like to participate in this budding
regional network in some way:
Katiiah , P.O.Box 638, Leicester, NC 28748
Summer 1987
�TRANSITION
The hawk flies over me and up
it sings silently soaring; "Spring!"
I have died from lack of flight
from lack of green
it grows.
I see the new and turn my head
the old has clasped my soul
strength welling up and
tears that are not wet but
fall like acid rain, scorching
emotions and stunting growth.
The hawk flies over me and east.
I turn to see what it sees - taking
on the sorrows all around and
shaking and testing my new wings
I cannot fly
yet.
I turn east, thirst overcoming, I
long for water. Mirages appear
in front of me and I think I
have found what I am looking for but it is not water in my mouth,
it is stars.
The hawk flies over me and up
singing, silently soaring, springing
from ashes and into lightning.
I am becoming light
free as the clouds, soaring.....
I am learning to love with
the intensity of fire. Hawk,
energy condensed, shadow threatening
those like me who laugh and
put if off. Shadow comforting
those like me who cry, and my tears
are sizzling like hot oil on the water
of transition.
Wustration by Misha Wilson
- Mara Bradburn
LESSONS IN PEACE
Young
Pe op I e's
Page
Wanted: a world of peace.
I say peace - easily,
freely, the word stems out
and perhaps is used too
often. Wanted: Peace.
I crave it. Freely.
I create it. Sometimes.
Peace is when my anger
turns back on itself and
cries for wisdom. When
anger thinks logically and
knows it's not worth it.
Anger, mushrooming, exploding
in my body, turning,
facing, understanding .....
Wanted: A peaceful world.
The earth is crying.
Peace is when my sorrow
grows into the trees
the leaves absorb it
and say; :"rejoicer·
When sorrow is channelled
the tears become song Peace is when I ache
but I walk, singing, in the
woods anyway.
Wanted: Peace.
I say peace as if I know
what it means.
But when I listen, instead
of talking, Peace says that no one
knows. No one.
Peace is when my resentment
lets loose its harsh ties
and becomes forgiveness.
Wanted: a world of peace.
I dance. I talk. I laugh. I act.
I create. Peace is
when you're doing everything
you can and the only one
listening Is Peace.
- Mara Bradbu,
KATUAH- page 25
Summer 1987
�f't't~'t'f'f't'f'ft'tf't'f'ft'f't't'f't
events ~:::~::r~JUNE
9-8/16 ASHEVILLE, NC
19-21
CULLOWHEE, NC
Appalachian Writers' Association
meeting. Contact: Jim Nicholl; Dept. of
English; Western Carolina University;
Cullowhee, NC 28723
21
SUMMER SOLSTICE
Local gatherings everywhere!
21-27
BRASSTOWN, NC
Music/Craft Week. Contact: John
C. Campbell Follc School; Brasstown, NC
28902 (704) 837-2775
JULY
1-7
G R AHAM COUNTY, NC
Continental Rainbow Family
Gathering. For information, contact:
Rainbow Family of Living Light
Box 1097
Newpon, TN 37821
Center on the Blue Ridge Parkway. For
ticket info., write: The Follctellers, P.O.
Box 2898; Asheville, NC 28802
10
CELO, NC
Full Moon Gathering.
Mount.ain Gardens, 6/24.
See
11
HIGHLANDS, NC
"Nantahala Week". Education,
exploration, raft trip. Contac1: The Mountain
Retreat Center; 841 Highway 106;
Highlands, NC 28741 (704) 526-5838
21-27
23-24
SWANNANOA, NC
Second Annual North Carolina
Alternative Earmin& Fjeld Days.
Workshops:
Marketing
Green Manure Crops
Spccialiry Crops
Grceobousc Management
Tools..... more.
Exhibits, demonscrations.
At Warren Wilson College campus.
Contact: Dr. Greg Hoyt; Mountain
Horticultural Oops Rescareh Station; 2016
Fanning Bridge Rd.; Fletcher, NC 28732
2-7
AMHERST, MA
"National Conference for a New
(Green) Politics" - workshops, strategy,
principles. Write: New England Committees
of Correspondence; P.O. Box 703; White
River Jct., VT 05001
3-5
WAYNESVILLE, NC
"The Bliss of Freedom" meditation
retreat. Stil-Light Theosophical Rc1rcat
Center; Rt. 1, Box 326; Waynesville, NC
28786
11
ROAN MOUNTAIN
Roan Mountain Day Hike. See
Nature Conservancy, 6111
11-12
LINVILLE, NC
The Highland Games. Scottish
piping, dancing, Highland athletics
("tossing the caber", "putting the sheath",
more). $7.00. McRae Meadows (US 221 two miles north of Linville, NC)
13-18
~",r
,-....,.,..-,
CELO, NC
"Building and Planting Stone
Walls" workshop. Joe Hollis; c/o Mountain
Gardens; 3020 White Oak Creek Rd.;
Burnsville, NC 28714
24
~"
,£~
HOT SPRINGS, NC
A Rinzai Zen Retreat. Contact:
Southern Dhanna Retreat Center; Rt 1, Box
34-H; Hot Springs, NC 28743
24-28
MARSHALL, NC
Timber Framing Workshop.
Contact: Country Workshops; 90 Mill Occk
Rd.; Marshall, NC 28753 (704) 656-2280
15
CELO, NC
"Building and Planting Stone
Walls". Mountain Gardens, sec 6/24.
GREAT SMOKY MT'NS.
"Mosses and Related Plants".
Smoky Mountain Field School, see
6127-28.
18-19
22
27
BAT CAVE, NC
Day bike. Contact: NC Nature
Conservancy; P.O. Box 805; Chapel Hill,
NC 27514
CELO, NC
"Art in the Gnrden" - drawing and
painting class. Saturdays through 8/1.
Rhea Rose Ormond; Mountain Gardens, see
6/24.
3-12
HOT SPRINGS, NC
" Breathing and Meditation".
Southern Dharma, see 6124-28.
ASHEVILLE, NC
Formative meeting for Green
Politics Discussion Group. 7:00, Pack
Library. Contact:. Richard Harrison; 183
Edgewood Rd.; Asheville, NC 28804
(704) 254-6910
5-11
27
T ROUTVILLE, VA
"When Modem Medicine Fails What Then?" Exploring alternatives.
Rainbow Chapel; Rt. 4, Box 87-A;
Troutville, VA 24175
GREAT SMOKY MT'NS.
"Research on Wild Mammals of the
Great Smokies" workshop with Dr. Michael
Pelton. Smoky Mountain Field School;
Dep't. of Non-Credit Programs; 2016 Lake
Ave.; Knoxville, TN 37996
CULLOWHEE, NC
"Landscaping with Native Plants"
seminar. Contact: Jim Honon; Dept. of
Biology; Cullowhec, NC 28723 (704)
227-7244
BRASSTOWN, NC
Black smithing Summer Craft
Session. JCC Folk School, sec 6/21-27.
25
HIGHLANDS, NC
"Folks, Lore, and Truth". Sec The
Mountain, 6/21-27.
23-25
5-18
BLUFF MOUNTAIN, NC
Day hike. Nature Conservancy, sec
6/27.
27-28
8
CELO, NC
"Dancing on the Deck" - morning
and evening dance classes. Wednesdays
through August 12. Rhea Rose Ormond;
Mountain Gnrdens, see 6/24.
MARSHALL, NC
Ladder-back
Chairmaking
Workshop. Country Workshops, see
7/13-18
27-31
f't't'f'f'f'f'f't't'f'tf't't't't't~'t't't
KATUAH - page 26
Summer 1987
�AUGUST
1-2
GREAT SMOKY MT'NS.
"Mushroom Identification"
weekend and "Big Game Observation"
backpacking trip. Smoky Mountain Field
School, see 6/27-28.
2-15
CELO, NC
Full Moon Gathering. Mountain
Gardens, see 6/24
9-14
GREAT SMOKY MT'NS.
19
"Forests and Trees of the
Smokies". Smoky Mountain Field School,
see 6/27-28.
23-30 WA YNES VILLE, NC
"What
is
Theosophy? "
seminar/retreat. Stil-Light, see 7/3-5.
19-20 GREAT SMOKY MT'NS.
"Research on Wild Mammals of the
Great Smokies" with Dr. Michael Pelton.
Smoky Mountain Field School, see
6/27-28.
24-28
MARSHALL, NC
White Oak Basketry Workshop.
Country Workshops, see 7/13-18.
HOT SPRINGS, NC
"Vipassana and Hatha Yoga".
Southern Dhmna, see 6/24-28.
8
NORTH WEBSTER, IN
"The North American Conference
on Christianity and Ecology". Write c/o
P.O. Box 14305; San Francisco, CA 94114
BRASSTOWN, NC
Blacksmithing, Knife Making
courses. JCC Folk School, see 6/21-27.
7-14
19-22
26-30 HOT SPRINGS, NC
"Satipatthana Vipassana Meditation
Retreat" . Southern Dharma, see 6/24-28.
29-9/4 BRASSTOWN, NC
"Eanhworks" (Fiber and Clay
Week). JCC Folk School, see 6/21-27.
MARSHALL, NC
20-26 BRASSTOWN, NC
Blacksmithing and Early American
Crafts. JCC Folk School, see 6/21-27.
25-27
WA YNES VILLE, NC
"An Introduction to Spiritual
Astrology". Stil-Light, see 7/3-5.
29
ASHEVILLE, NC
"Is There a Future for the Black
Bear in the Southern Appalachians?"
conference. $5.00. 9 am - 6 pm.Owen
Conference Center; UNC-Asheville. See ad
this page.
Windsor Chairmaking Workshop.
Country Workshops, see 7/13-18.
10-15 FARNER, TN
"Backpacking Adventure" (ages
11-18); tracking, foraging, primitive
camping with Snow Bear. Pepperland Fann
Camp; Star Route; Farner, 1N 37333
"IS THERE A FUTURE FOR THE
BLACK BEAR
IN THE SOUTHERN APPALACHIANS?"
SEPTEMBER
3-7
FARNER, TN
"Touching the Earth Mother".
Retreat with Shahabuddin Less. See
8/10-15.
~~~tt
RECLAIM YOUR P£RSONAl POWER AT A NUA1\JRING MCM.NTAIN RETFtEAT
°""""" -
AUGUST17-23 $285
am. U 81Y OUT\.AW, UIT, MICHAEL.A&CHMlOT
CHR1$TIHE 9YRD. C.H.C.. HERBALIST PAM MONTGOMERY,
4-7
BRASSTOWN, NC
Labor Day Music and Dance
Weekend. JCC Folk School, see 6/21-27.
CAROLYN MOOR£,
INOIAN VAUEY RETREAT
6
CELO, NC
Ill 2 eox sa. WI.US, VA. 24390 fnl3l .,...295
PleMt tMJ.11• 04/I bfocAn ICW oet.MI
Full Moon Gathering. Mountain
Gardens, see 6/24.
14-16 ELKINS, WV
Augusta Folk Festival. Augusta
Heritage Center; Davis and Elkins College;
100 Sycamore St.; Elkins, WV 26241
11-13 GREAT SMOKY MT'NS.
"Spiders of the Great Smoky
Mountains National Park". Smoky
Mountain Field School, see 6127-28.
16
GREAT SMOKY MT'NS.
"Summer Wildflowers of the Great
Smokies". Smoky Mountain Field School,
see 6/27-28.
16
HARMONIC
CONVERGENCE
Join with others at sunrise and
share your vision of world peace and
harmony.
16-19 HIGHLANDS, NC
"Dare to Explore". Rock climbing,
whitewater canoeing, hiking. The
Mountain, see 6/21-27.
Issues Facing the Black Bear and
Mountain Habitat
Its
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1987
Owen Conference Center, UNC-Asheville
11-13 WAYNESVILLE, NC
"Henry David Thoreau and the Tao
of Simplicity" seminar at Stil-Light. See
7/3-5.
16
CELO, NC
"Dividing Perennials and Making a
Flower Garden" workshop. Mountain
Gardens, see 6/24.
18-20 ASHEVILLE, NC
New Priorities Conference on
Peace, Social Justice, and the Environment.
Contact: The New Priorities Center; 54
Starnes Ave.; Asheville, NC 28801
Invited Speakers Include:
Dr. Michael Pelton
(University of Tennessee)
Dr. Roger Powell (NC State University)
Ms. Lauren Hillman (US Forest Service)
Dr. John Collins
(NC Wildlife Resources Comm.)
Jim Noles (NC Bearhunters' Ass'n.)
Admission: $5.00
Sponsored by:
Dept. of Environmental Studies, UNC-A
Bear Action Networlt
Kal(iah
�gets a chance to speak. They talk about things they are
feeling, experiences of that day, or whatever they want to
speak about The simple ritual of passing the feather puts a
lot of meaning into that little gathering. It makes it
ceremonial, and I find the Jcids often talk of very deep things
that are on their minds. Again, it's the power of the mythic
that seems to bring out people's deeper selves.
We always try to have a fire in the evenings when we're
traveling . It's not just for the practical necessity of cooking
our foocl. nor only because the fire is a center for the group
circle, but we make a fire because it is in itself such a basic,
important element that I want to invite it into our circle and
introduce the Jcids to it. And fire is a teacher. In mythic tenns
it says to us very starkJy, "That which would give light must
endure burning."
~: Besides the external recognition, there is also an
initiation that happens within the adolescent at this time of
change. These private initiations are perhaps the most
important Do you run into examples of these at the camp?
Helen: Kids want to be heroes and heroines. They will do
a lot to achieve a victory. And they want to be good
grown-ops, so they will respond to a challenge to prove
themselves.
Kayaking and rock-climbing provide a different type of
challenge. Rather than testing endurance and encouraging a
reflective, meditative state, they bring the campers very much
into the immediate moment They have to extend tlleir senses
and concentrate on putting all their energies 10 the task at
always some point where they have to meet that fear and
overcome it to be able to continue. At that crisis point there is
a sudden sensation of becoming very calm and objective. As
the Hopi Indians say, "The soul comes out of the top of the
head" through the fontanelle and looks down on the body
clinging there with a single, perfectly clear eye that
transcends all fear or questioning.
Kat\Jah: So these experiences actually coun that fear to
generate energy for an initiatory experience.
Helen: They inevitably do that, but they also demand total
physical exertion which often exceeds what the camper
believed to be his or her physical limits. The world is
perceived very clearly when one is hanging on to a
finger-hold crevice, and a single climb can shift the terms in
which a young person defines his or her identity, creating a
new acceptance of self. And all these elements together add
up in some way to a spiritual connection with the God force,
which, while it is not readily defineable, is the strongest
source of personal power.
Bot we don't have to seeJc these situations out. They are a
naturally-occuuing part of camp life. One time I was with a
group of the younger campers. The thing we were going to
do that period was to climb trecS. They all started going up,
except for a mentally disturbed boy named Jimmy. He was
standing on the ground malcing climbing motions with his
hands, ~oing "Uh, uh, uh," like a monkey.
I thtnk it's very important for the kids that, once we say
we're going to do something, we do it. I realized that this
was an important moment for him; it was very imponant that
he at least got to the first branch.
So I called the other Jcids around. Some of them were
already way op in the tops of the trees, but they all gathered
around, and we talked about this. We made it a group
project. Jimmy didn't mind the group talking about his
problem, in fact I find that the kids seldom mind having the
others talk about them in the circle. We talked about it, and
then with a lot of reaching, hoisting, and encouragement,
Jimmy made it up into the tree. It was a group effon, but it
was also a personal victory for him.
hand.
11
The river is a good teacher of
humility, because in a kayak, the ldds
have to recognize and use that force.
11
Groups go k.ayalcing in the fast rapids in several of the
mountain rivers. On the water, the kids have to concentrate
on their movements, their techniques, while always being
aware of the rapids coming up ahead. They have to be
constantly sensitive to the river. It's an immense, strong
force. The river is a good teacher of humility, because in a
kayak, the kids have to recognize and use that force. TI1ey
have to flow with it, if they're going to avoid being thrown
under.
Rock-<:limbing is another challenging activity that tests the
kids' abilities. When they're pulling themselves up the side
of a cliff, the campers have 10 rely on their own strength and
have to watch their own motions in the same way as on the
river. They have to control their fear, so their body can be
completely relaxed, and they can continue 10 climb. There's
KATUAH - page 28
These experiences come up, bot for them to have a
positive effect, there must be a teacher present who can
interpret and resolve them. "Education" in its Latin
beginnings derived from educatus, part of the verb educare,
"to bring fonh from within". Education does not mean to
superimpose knowledge that belongs to others on top of the
initiate. It means to bring out the eternal truths that lie hidden
in every relationship. So there must be relationship and it
must be experiemial. Now that's a school!
,,
- Recorded by DIV
Summer 1987
�w€BWO~
ENVlRONME.NTAL IN'raRNSHIPS available at
Long Branch Environmental Education Center in
pcnnaculllR. wildlife ad'JOCIC)', 80lid and ha%ardous
waste issues, appropriate technology. Room and
board. Coruacc Paul and Pal Gallimore; RL 2, Box
132; Leicester, NC 28748 (704) 683-3662
ORGANlC FERTILIZERS, herbs, and
organically-grown, local produce at the WNC
Farmers' MJutetl Look for the Fa.irglen Farms stall,
uniis F and G in the wholesale area of the Farmcn'
Market: 570 Brevard Rd.; Asheville, NC (704)
252-4414
ELEMENTARY SCHOOL TEACHER, cenified,
creative, self-motivated, and organized needed at
Valley School, a parent-governed alternative school
in Monongahela National Forest, WV. Resume,
refeicnces to: Teri KulSko; I Kirk St.; Elkins, WV
26241(304)636-2979
THE APPALACHIAN HERB NEWSLETTER:
exploring the potenlial for herbs as cash crops in
Appalachia. Subscriptions $12/yr.. Write:
A!)J)a!acbjan Herb Newslcttcr - ASPI; RL 5, Box
423; Livings100, KY 40445
acres near
Boone, NC sccting families with SIJ'Ol1g visions and
resources to manifest a peaceful place for our
children to grow in love and to survive the corning
of the new age. Paul and Susan Del Rios; RL 2,
Box 314; Vilas, NC 28692 (704) 297-4937
LAND TRUST in the forming on 57
PURE HONEY - unhealed and unfiltered. Poplar,
locust, and sourwood. One of nature's blessings!
Price and ordering info from Jimmy Holladay, the
Beekeeper; P.O. Box 908; Black Mt'n., NC 28711
(704) 669-9788
INDIAN VALLEY RETREAT- 140 llC(CS in Blue
Ridge mountains with facilities available to rent for
groups or individual retreats, either guided or
unstructured. Send for information and seasonal
calendar of healing, transformative evenis to: Indian
Valley Holistic Center; RL 2, Box 58; Willis, VA
24380.
"AS WE ARE" - Women's music by Pomegranate
Rose, a four-woman group playing lively original
music. Casseue tape available for $9.00 ppd. from
RL 2, Box 435; Pittsboro, NC 27312
A Bil.L is under consideration in the NC legislawre
that would affect lhe future of homeschooling in the
state. For info, call: Candy Boehm (704) 667-8826
or Tricia Sommerville (704) 658-0809
Tiffi CENTER FOR NEW PRIORITIES - now
open, in Asheville, NC, for all groups dedicated to
wort:ing towards genuine, life-oricnl.cd, change for
lhe community. Office space, small meeting space,
and ltitchen facmties are available. For more
information, call (704) 254-4714 or write the
Center, 54 Starnes Avenue, Asheville, NC 28801.
The Cenier appreciates donations, large or small, to
help with iis upkeep and activities.
PEPPERLAND FARM CAMP - a unique summer
camp experience for chi.ldrcn 6-16 years. AdvenlWI:
trips, riding, Indian lore, swimming, more.
Delicious vegetarian meals - special diets
accomodated. Also seeking counselors and slllff. For
info: Pepperland Fann Camp; Star Route; Farner,
TN 37333 (704) 494-2353
WINGED HEART HOMESTEAD - 283 ICl'CS in
Indian Valley district, SW Virginia. On this Cann
we want IO start a self-reliant community of
families emphasizing organic farming melbods and
creative personal and spiritual growth. Contaet:
Muzawir; RL HC-67, Box 171: Alum Ridge, VA
24051.
APPRENTICESHIPS • offered in large, organic,
m3Jket garden business and home subsistence/
preservation garden. Gardeners have eight years
experience teaching organic, biodynamic-French
intensive, labor intensive gardening. Housing.
Contact: Bob and Sandy Gow; Rt. 2, Box SI;
Zionvillc, NC 28698. {919) 385-6606.
CLINCH RIVER EDUCATIONAL CENTER offers
counseling for individuals, couples, groups. Also
classes in personal growth and body awareness. P.O.
Box 993; Abingdon, VA 24210.
FARM FOR SALE - 43 acres, Calhoun Cty. WV;
5 room older house, deep well, 30+ apple trees,
indoor hot water and bath, outdoor toilet, FREE
NATURAL GAS, hilltop. 1/4 mile well-maintained
access road. Allan &: Carol Freeman, (704)
FLOWER ESSENCES - Harmony with Nature &:
SpiriL Gentle emotiortal support during transitions,
specific issues, relationships. Opens
communications. Self-adjusting, non-toxic,
awareness "tools" for improving the ionCl quality.
Correspondence to: Elaine Geouge, c/o Patchwork
Castle, Celo, 3931 HWY 80 So., BumsvWe, NC
28714
At ARTHUR MORGAN SCHOOL 24 studenlS and
264-5726. $30,000.
KA11JAH - page 29
SOCK-A-DOOZ PUPPET PETS - Walk 'cm, talk
'em, make 'cm Oy. Wag their tails, you can try.
They will love you, hug you if you're blue. Now
PUPPET PETS can be your friends too.
Handcrafted by Bonnie Blue; 78 1(2 Patton Ave.
(#10): Asheville, NC 28801
"CELEBRATION SPACE: Songs to Celebrate
Life" - A casset.te tape completely produced,
performed, and recorded by members and friends or
lhe Floyd County community to raise money for
the Floyd County Community Hall. This audio
songbook contains 15 original songs and chants and
3 traditional songs to learn and sing in your own
community. The sound quality is uneven, but the
c:ncrgy. spirit, and joy shine through.
For the cassette 1ape with lyric sheet (ppd.), send
$10.00 to the Floyd County Communi1y Hall
Projca; RL 1, Box 735; Floyd, VA 24091.
CREEKSIDE PRESS - Assistance for authors and
poctS in editing, computer scrvices, and submitting
manuscripts for publication. Lori Ward Hamm;
P.O. Box 331; Abingdon, VA 24210.
PARM WANTED - young family seeks
owner-financed, low down payment (SSOO or less)
small acreage (10 acres or less) in the N.C.
mountains for home, gardens, fruit tree, and peace.
Also, we would appreciate info on jobs and/or job
offers in the area. We are young, hard-working and
dependable. Please write Mr. &. Mrs. Jorge
Velazquez: 174 Countrywood, Cleveland, TX
77327.
ARCHITECTURAL ADVlCE AND DESIGN:
Adam C.ohen; RL 2. Box 217; Check, VA 24072
14 staff learn together by living in community.
Curriculum includes creative academics, group
decision-making, a work program, service projccis,
extensive field trips, challenging outdoor
experiences. Write: 1901 Hannah Branch Rd.;
Burnsville, NC 28714.
Shell gorget llJlelJ1hod 11 IM Orcat MoWld. ScvieiviUe. TN
WEBWORKING continued next page
Summer 1987
�WEBWORKING cootinucd
ASTROLOGICAL
CHART S.
7-page
interpretations of planets in signs and houses with
planetary aspects. Easy to read. Great gift for the
newly-born. Send SIS, name, date. time, and place
of birth to TouchslOOe; Rt. 2, Box 314-K; Vilas,
NC 28692
OAK LEAF WORKS - hand-crafted futon
mauresses, zabolOO noor cushions, yogamats, and
buckwheat bull pillows; SUllldard & custom sius
available, to suit your needs. Write or call for our
free brochwe: Oak Leaf Works; Star Route, Box
43; Floyd, VA 24()1)1; (703) 763-2373.
DA YSTAR ASTROLOGICAL SERVICE - niual,
transit, comparison charts. Very accurate. Only
$3.00 each. Chris and Will Bason; Rt. 2, Box 217;
Check, VA 24072 (703) 651-3492
ROSE AROMATICS - cssentiai oils have been
healing body, mind, spirit, since ancient EgypL A
most pleasant therapy! Dabney Rose; 108 Church
Rd.; Asheville, NC 28804 (704)2S4-9SS I
WEBWORKING Is free.
Send submissions to:
Ka1W
MOON DANCE FARM HERBALS - herbal salves,
tinctures, & oils for bitthing & family health. For
brochwe., please wrire: Moon Dance Farm; RL l,
Box 726; Hampton, TN 376S8
P.O. Box638
Leicester, NC
Katliah \ Province 28748
SCOTT BIRD
GREG BLACK
(704) 683-1414
683-4795
Mebtcltte of tne
farlfJ ~Spirit
Ul.TIIAVIOLET PUAlflCATIOH AHO ALTElllMG SYSTEMS
cus~m
beabeb nystal
MCklaces
SOLAR PRODUCT'S · WATER AHALVSIS
RANDA~ C.
704-~5912
LANIER
_.._..
~
131 r.,_ -..,..,, 1111.
- l l o. N C. 2*4
. HWY. 107
RT. 88 BOX 125
CULLOWHEE, NC 28723
(1041 291-103'
Chinese
Acupuncture
and
Herbology
Clinic
NaturaJ Food Store
& Deli
160 BroadWay
Asheville, NC 28801
MALAPROP'S
BOOKSTORE/ CAFE
BOOKS -
342 Merrimon Avenue Asheville, NC
(704) 258-9016
CARDS -
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
Monday-Saturday: 9am·8pm
Sunday: 1pm-5pm
RECORDS
61 Haywood Street, Asheville, NC 28801
(704) 253-7656
(704) 254-0134
'Jlja!?~ 'J\!1~1
BOBCAT
l'ruvoJ1na PttM>nol ~<Vt«
Fllloni
Book Nttds
In Spcclahzecl Fle!Js
704-264-5866
'Nat!lr<\ls
y,..,
T-SHIRT
SHORT SLEEVE T: $10.00 ppd.
Colors: Ecru, White, Sliver,
Seafoam (It. green) Tea/
LONG SLEEVE T: $14.00 ppd.
(Include• Paw Print on Sleeve)
Colors: Ecru, Sliver, Tea/, White
Satisfaction assured or return for full refund.
PleaH Indicate size, color,
sleeve length, quantity.
B ~)OkD Q""'
Thin(s L, .. .
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IN ADULT SIZES S,M,L,XL
We a/so have a /In• of aweanhlrts and kid• T-Shlrta
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t-----------------t
FRIEDMAN &
Introducing the BOBCAT
This full color design Is hand-screened on
T-SHIRTS OF 100% PRESHRUNK COTTON
KAlUAH - page 30
Where Broadway mMts
Merrlmon Ave & 1-240
8
DESIGN, INC.
ENUGY SYSTEMS
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Summer 1987
�Kmflal1 wants to communicate your thoughts a11d feeli11gs to the other
people in the bioregional province. Send them to us as letters, poems, stories,
drawings, or photographs. Please send your contributions to us at: K.atiJ11.b; Box
638; Leicester, NC; Ka!Uah Province 28748.
For fall, Katflah is looking for facts.feelings, and amazing tales about
Yonah, the black bear, totem spirit of the Southern Appalachians.
In the winter issue, the focus will be on "Sheller". Please send drawings,
designs, thoughts, or ideas on what is appropriate she/1.:r in the mountains.
Medfclnt" ;illfes
BACK ISSUES
ISSUE NINE - FALL 1985
The Waldee Forest - The Trees Spealc Migrating Forests - Horse Logging Starting a Tree Crop · Urban Trees Acom Bread - Mylll 'Time
ISSUE 1WO- WINTER 1983-84
Yona - Bear Hunters - Pigeon River Another Way With Animals - Alma Becoming PoliticaJly Effective Mountain Woodlands - Katiiah Under the
Drill- Spiritual Warriors
full color
ISSUE TEN - WIN11'ER 1985-86
Kate Rogers - Circles of Stone : Internal
Mythmalting - Holistic Healing OD Trial Poems: Steve Knaulh - Mythic Places The Uktena's Tale. - Crystal Magic "Dreamspcaking"
ISSUE THREE - SPRING 1984
Sustainable Agriculture - Sunflowers Human Impact on the Forest - Childrens'
Education - Veronica N"icholas:Woman in
Politics - Lillle People - Medicine Allies
T- s&frts
In the traditional Cherokee Indian
belief, the creatures in the world today are
only diminuitive forms of the mythic beings
who once inhabited the world, but who now
reside in Galuna'ti, the spirit world, the
highest heaven. But a few of the original
powers broke through the spiritual barrier
and exist yet in the world as we know it.
These beings arc called with reverence
"grandfathers". And of them, the strongest
are Kanati, the lightning, the power of the
sky; Utsa'nati, the raulesnake, who
personifies the power of the earth plane; and
Yunwi Usdi, "the little man", as ginseng is
called in the sacred ceremonies, who draws
up power &om the underworld.
Each is the strongest power in its own
domain. Together they are allies: their
energies compliment each ocher to form an
even greater power. As medicine allies, they
represent the healing powers of the
Appalachian Mountains.
The medicine powers of Katuah have
been depicted in a striking T-shirt design by
Ibby Kenna. Printed in 5-color silkscreen
by Ridgerunner Naturals on top quality,
all-cotton shirts, they are available now in
all adult sizes from the Katfiah journal.
"To show respect for this supernatural
trinity of the natural world is to in turn
become an ally in the continuing process of
maintaining harmony and balance here in the
mountains of Katuah."
To order, use the form below.
ISSUE ELEVEN - SPRING 1986
Community Planning - Cities and the
Bioregional Vision - Recycling Community Gardening- Floyd County,
VA - Gasohol - Two Bioregional Views Nuclear Supplement - Foxfire Games
-Oood Medicine: Visions
ISSUE FOUR - SUMMER 1984
Water Drum - Water Quality - Kudzu Solar Eclipse - Clearcuuing - Trout Going to Water - Ram Pumps Mierohydro- Poems: Bennie Lee Sinclair,
Jim Wayne Miller
ISSUE FIVE- FALL 1984
Harvest - Old Ways in Cheroltee Ginseng - Nuclear Waste - Our Celtic
Heritage - Bioregionalism: Past, Present,
and Future - John Wilnoty - Healing
Darltness - Politics of Participation
ISSUE THIRTEEN - Fall 1986
Center For Awakening· Elizabeth Callari
- A Gentle Death - Ro.spice - Ernest
Morgan - Dealing Creatively with Death Home Burial Box - The Walce - The
Raven. Moelter - Woodslore and
Wildwoods Wisdom ·Good Medicine: The
Sweat Lodge
ISSUE SIX - WIN'IBR 1984-85
Winter Solstice Earth Ceremony Horsepasture River - Coming of the Light
- Log Cabin Roots - Mountain
Agriculwre: The Right Crop • WilJiam
Taylor - The Future of the Forest
ISSUE FOURTEEN • Winter 1986-87
Lloyd Carl Owle - Boogers and Mummers
- All Species Day - Cabin Fever
University - Homeless in Katuah Hommade Hot Water - Stovemaker's
Narrative - Good Medicine: Interspecies
Communication
ISSUE SEVEN - SPRING 1985
Sustainable Economics - Hot Springs WOTker Ownership-The Great Economy Self Help Credit Un.ion - Wild Turkey Responsible Investing - Worlting in the
Web of Life
ISSUE FIFTEEN - Spring 1987
Coverlets - Woman Forester - Susie
McM.ahan: Midwife - Alternative
Contraception - Biosexuality Bioregionalism and Women - Good
Medicine: Mauiarchical CullUl'e - "Pead"
JSSUE EIGHT - SUMMER 1985
Celebration: A Way of Life - Katiiah
18,000 Years Ago - Sacred Sites - Polit
Ans in the Schools - Sun Cycle/Moon
Cycle Poems: Hilda Downer - Cherokee
Hcriiage Center - Who Owns Appalachia?
Celebration
KAWAH: Bjoreruonal Journal of the Southern Appalachians
Box 638; Leicester, NC; Katuah Province 28748
Regular Membership........$10/yr.
Sponsor..........................$20/yr.
Contributor.....................$50/yr.
Name
Address
City
Area Code
K.AWAH- page 31
Enclosed is $
to give
this ejfort an extra boost
State
Phone Number
Zip
I can be a local contact
person for my area
Back Issues
Issue# _ _@ $2.00 = $_ _
Issue# _ _@ $2.00 = $_ _
Issue#_@ $2.00 = $_ _
Issue# _ _@ $2.00 = $_ _
Issue#_@ $2.00 = $_ _
Complete Set (2-11, 13-15)
@ $19.00 = $_ _
T-Shirts: specify quantity
color: tan
S_ _ M_ _
L_ _ XL_ _
@ $9.50 each............$_
TOTAL PRICE=
postage paid
_
$_ _
Summer 1987
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians Records
Description
An account of the resource
<em>Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians</em>, later simplified to <em>Katúah Journal</em>, was published from 1983 to 1993. A quarterly publication, it was focused on the bioregion of former Cherokee land in Appalachia. <br /><br /><span>The early issues of the journal explain the meaning of the Cherokee name, </span><em>Katúah</em><span>, and why the editors wanted to view the world through a bioregional lens, rather than political boundaries. A volunteer production, the editors took a holistic view in tackling social, environmental, mental, spiritual, and emotional topics of the day, many of which are still relevant. </span><br /><span><br />The <em>Katúah Journal</em> was co-founded by Marnie Muller, David Wheeler, Thomas Rain Crowe, Martha Tree and others who served as co-publishers and co-editors. Other key team members included Chip Smith, David Reed, Jay Mackey, Rob Messick and many others.</span><br /><br />This digital collection is only a portion of the <em>Katúah</em>-related materials in the W.L. Eury Appalachian Collection in Special Collections at Appalachian State University. The items in AC.870 Katúah Journal records cover the production history of the <em>Katúah Journal</em>. Contained within the records are correspondence, publication information, article submissions, and financial information. The editorial layouts for issues 12 through 39 are included as are a full run of the Journal spanning nearly a decade. Also included are photographs of events related to the Journal and a film on the publication.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
This resource is part of the <em>Katúah Journal Records </em>collection. For a description of the entire collection, see <a href="https://appstate-speccoll.lyrasistechnology.org/repositories/2/resources/937" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Katúah Journal Records (AC. 870)</a>.
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
The images and information in this collection are protected by the Copyright Law of the United States (Title 17, U. S. C.) and are intended only for personal, non-commercial, and educational purposes, provided proper citation is used – i.e., Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians Records, 1980-2013 (AC.870), W. L. Eury Appalachian Collection, Special Collections, Appalachian State University, Boone, NC. Researchers are responsible for securing permissions from the copyright holder for any reproduction, publication, or commercial use of these materials.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1983-1993
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
journals (periodicals)
Language
A language of the resource
English
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
<em>Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians</em>, Issue 16, Summer 1987
Description
An account of the resource
The sixteenth issue of the <em>Katúah Journal</em> focuses on the initiations and rituals surrounding the coming of age and the maturation of young people. Authors and artists in this issue include Tata Andres, Snow Bear, Patrick Clark, Maggie Schneider, Rob Messick, Burt Kornegay, Stephaen Delor, Didier Cuzange, David Wheeler, Curry Morris, Doug Silsbee, John Lane, Clyde Osborne, Will Ashe Bason, Michael Hockaday, Nancy Barnhardt, Thomas Dale Cowan, and Mara Bradburn. <br><br><em>Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians</em>, later simplified to <em>Katúah Journal</em>, was published from 1983 to 1993. A quarterly publication, it was focused on the bioregion of former Cherokee land in Appalachia. The early issues of the journal explain the meaning of the Cherokee name, Katúah, and why the editors wanted to view the world through a bioregional lens, rather than political boundaries. A volunteer production, the editors took a holistic view in tackling social, environmental, mental, spiritual, and emotional topics of the day, many of which are still relevant.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1987
Table Of Contents
A list of subunits of the resource.
Interview: Helen Waite.......3<br /><br />Poem: "Visions in a Garden".......5<br /><br />The Vision Quest.......6<br /><br />First Flow.......8<br /><br />Thoughts on Initiation.......9<br /><br />Archetypes of Male Initiation.......9<br /><br />Learning in the Wilderness.......12<br /><br />Cherokee Challenge.......15<br /><br />Natural World News.......16<br /><br />View from the Corners: "Valuing Trees".......19<br /><br />Turtle Island Talking.......20<br /><br />Young People's Page.......25<br /><br /><em>Note: This table of contents corresponds to the original document, not the Document Viewer.</em>
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Sylva Herald Publishing Company, Sylva, North Carolina
Subject
The topic of the resource
Bioregionalism--Appalachian Region, Southern
Sustainable living--Appalachian Region, Southern
Puberty rites
Outdoor Education--North Carolina, Western
Camps--North Carolina, Western
Youth development--North Carolina, Western
Cherokee youth--North Carolina, Western
North Carolina, Western
Blue Ridge Mountains
Appalachian Region, Southern
North Carolina--Periodicals
Language
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English
Type
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Text
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
<a href="https://appstate-speccoll.lyrasistechnology.org/repositories/2/resources/937"> AC.870 Katúah Journal records</a>
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
<a title="In Copyright – Educational Use Permitted" href="https://rightsstatements.org/page/InC-EDU/1.0/?language=en 8" target="_blank"> In Copyright – Educational Use Permitted </a>
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Appalachian Region, Southern
Is Part Of
A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included.
<a title="Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians" href="https://omeka.library.appstate.edu/collections/show/79" target="_blank"> Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians </a>
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
PDF
Journals (Periodicals)
Appalachian Mountains
Appalachian Studies
Bioregional Congress
Cherokees
Community
Education
Electric Power Companies
Folklore and Ceremony
Forest Issues
Geography
Habitat
Hazardous Chemicals
Katúah
Katúah Organization
Poems
Radioactive Waste
Reading Resources
Turtle Island
Western North Carolina Alliance
Wilderness
Women's Issues
-
https://omeka.library.appstate.edu/files/original/3bb540dcdbeaaaf1f14ddae1dc0e4557.pdf
a36e851f2b8b17710f0753e60cf20014
PDF Text
Text
Postage Paid
~UA~)OURNAL
Bulk Ma~
Permit #18
Leicester, NC
P.O. Box638
Leicester, NC
28748
Katu ah Province 28748
ADDRESS
CORRECTION
REQUESTED
ISSUE 20 SUMMER 1988
$1.50
BIOREGIONAL JOURNAL OF TH E SOUTHERN A PPALACHIANS
�THE TRACKS OF THE PANTHER
Will Mark the Length of the Appalachian Range
..... and Beyond
CONTENTS
The Tracks of the Panther............... 1
"Wilderness is not a land-use designation!"
Alphonso Lubek
Highlands of Roan ..................................6
Celo Community:
50 Years on the Land ..................... 8
Celo. lnterview.................................... 1O
Land Trust: Tenure for Our Time.. 11
Learning Community......................... .12
Mountain Landscapes at Risk ......... 13
Rest in Perpetual Wilderness ....... 14
"The Ridge"............................................15
Farmers and the Farm Bill... ........... 16
Good Medicine:
"Relating to the Land" ............. 17
"It Comes in a Mist" ...........................18
Duke's Power Play.............................. 19
Cherokee Micro hydro Project... ..... 21
Drumming: Letters to Katuah ........ 22
by David Wheeler
Photographs by Gil Leebrick
Leave for awhile this world of
damaged and broken life cycles, and step
into a different time frame. Leave the
deranged pace of our society - the quick
buck, fast food, the instant replay - and
move to another rhythm. In this time
perspective, forests and glaciers flow and
recede. Slowly and ponderously the
mountains breathe, inhaling and exhaling
through the ages. Species migrate across the
face of the Earth, through time in which
there is no time, only an endless procession
of seasons and the stars circling overhead.
This is evolutionary time. From this
time space we can see indusaial society as a
sudden wound that tore open the Eanh's
flesh and let in dangerous poisons,
diseases, and putrefactions which threatened
our planet's very existence. But the wound
is now slowly healing over. The last traces
of infection and sick, decaying tissue arc
now disappearing.
See a new race of human beings, few
in number, their bodies strong and sensitive
to the world, their intuitive faculties awake
and aware to every shift in the energy
patterns around them. These people are not
driven by goals or guilt from artificial
motivations or formulations of good and
evil. They live simply, keeping their senses
unencumbered to fully receive the greatest
delight: the gift of existence in a world that
is whole, that informs and provides every
motivations or formulations of good and
evil. They live simply, keeping their senses
unencumbered to fully receive the greatest
delight: the gift of existence in a world that
is whole, that informs and provides every
facet of their lives.
These people live in small tribal
circles surrounded by the powerful forces
of the natural world. They see themselves
as the eye at the center of the world - the
part of the whole that can look back on
itself, see itself jn its entirety and delight in
the intricacies and movements of the life
pattern mandala.
The camps of these humans are small
islands in the midst of the flow of the
world. Wilderness to them is not a rare and
specialized category. Wilderness is their
reality • sometimes fearsome, but never
alien or forbidding. Wilderness is the central
fact of their existence. It provides for them.
It shapes their consciousness as well as
their physical existence. And when the
time comes, wilderness takes their lives.
Wilderness is habitat is home.
Life at the center of the world can be
sustained forever, if the people think and
live in evolutionary time.
The step into this vision of the world
may seem like a long one to us, situated as
we are in this time, but in actuality it is not
so far. We are only 400 years removed
from it on this continent. And we need to
think in these terms, for this is ecological
reality. This is a vision of the world in
balance. We need to think of it, aspire to it,
before we can achieve it
It is from this perspective that we are
offered the proposal "Preserve Appalachian
Wilderness" (PAW) authored by Jamie
Sayen of Stratford, NH and first published
(continued on page 3)
KATUAH- page 1
SUMMER- 1988
�CARRYING WATER:
Scott Bird
Christina Morrison
Chip Smith
Rob Messick
Marnie Muller
David Wheeler
EDITORIAL ASSISTANCE:
John Morris
Jack Chaney
Michael Red Fox
John Lang
Colleen Williams
Will Ashe Bason
Judith Hallock
Michael Hockaday
Oliver Loveday
Cover Photo by Gil Leebrick of the
Environmental Arts Center, Highlands, NC
Invocation by kore loy mcwhirter
STATEMENT OF PURPOSE
EDITORIAL QFFJCE nus ISSUE:
Worley Cove, Sandymush Creek
PRINTED BY: Sylva Herald Publishing Co., Sylva, NC
WRITE US AT:
Katuah Journal
Box 638
Leicester, NC
Katuah Province 28748
TifE SOlll'HERN APPALACHIAN BIOREC!ON
AND MAJOR EASTERN RIVER SYSTEMS
TELEPHONE:
(704) 683-1414
Diversity is an imponanl element or biorcgional ecology. bOth
natural and social. In line with this principle, the Katuab Journal
lries to serve as a forum for the discussion of regional issues. Signed
anicles express only the opinion or the authors and arc not nccessnrily
!he opinions of the Katuab Journal editors or stare.
The Internal Revenue Service has declared KatiJah a non-profit
orgnniMtion under section 50t(c)(3) of !he Internal Revenue Code. All
contributions to KatUah are deductible from personal income tax.
'LNVOCA.TWN
summre solstice songe
I speake forre the darke forces
I amme the seede
the light-mongres have forgottenne theirre purpose
we gathre ande growe
no one canne live withoute oure beinge
evenne the sma!Jeste glimmre
is made greate
inne oure presence
a!Je muste returne to us
you maye dance ande dragge atte youre sbadowes
wishlnge themme awaye
whenne you wearye of the battle
forre supremacye and separationne
you wille come to reste inne oure annes
we wille rocke you to sleepe
to the songe of the moones' darke face
she singes of youre memorye
thatte we are one
Here in the southern-most heartland of the
Appalachian mountains, the oldest mountain range
on our continent, Turtle Island; a small but growing
group has begun to take on a sense ofresponsibility
for the implications of that geographical and
cultural heritage. This sense of r~sponsibility
centers on the concept of living within the natural
scale and balance of universal systems and
principles.
Within this circle we begin by invoking the
Cherokee name "Kantah" as the old/new name for
this area of the mountains and for its journal as
well. The province is indicated by its nawral
boundaries: the Roanoke River Valley to the north;
the foothills of the piedmont area to the east; Yona
Mountain and the Georgia hills to the south; and the
Tennessee River Valley to the west.
The editorial priorities for us are to collect
and disseminate information and energy which
pertains specifically to this region, and to foster the
awareness that the land is a living being deserving
of our love and respect. Living in this manner is a
way to insure the sustainability ofthe biosphere and
a lasting place for ourselves in its continuing
evolutionary process.
We seem to have reached the fulcrum point
of a " do or die " situation in terms of a quality
standard of life for all living beings on this planet.
As a voice for the caretakers of this sacred land,
Katuah, we advocate a centered approach to the
concept of decentralization. It is our hope to
become a support system for those accepting the
challenge of sustainability and the creation of
harmony and balance in a total sense, here in this
place.
We welcome all correspondence, criticism,
pertinent information, articles, artwork, etc. with
hopes that Katuah will grow to serve the best
interests of this region and all its living, breathing
members.
- The EdiJors
KATUAH - page 2
SUMMER - 1988
�(continued from page I}
in the Eanh Firsr! Journal. The PAW idea is
simply to create a continuous wilderness or
habitat area from the Florida Keys to the
Laurentian Mountains in Quebec, using as a
foundation the present protected route of the
Appalachian Trail. The idea seems
outrageous in the present social context, but
it is actually a modest transitional step
toward ecological sanity.
A continuous wild habitat the length
of the Appalachian Range could provide the
first requirement for wilderness, space, and
in time enable the return of unique plants
and large animals - panthers, bears, wolves,
moose - that have been exterminated
throughout all or parts of the mountain
chain. lf the PAW plan became a reality,
plant and animal species could migrate
freely from Karuah to the Gulf of Maine
bioregion to the north, and likewise to the
Aorida Peninsula bioregion to the south.
"The 'backbone' for this wideranging habitat," says the PAW document,
"already exists, albeit plagued by slipped
discs and cracked vertebrae. The
Appalachian Trail runs for over 2,000 miles
from Mt. Katahdin in nonhem Maine to
Springer Mountain in northern Georgia.
"Wild areas along the Appalachian
Trail must be expanded, buffered, and
protected in perpetuity as wilderness. Only
then will the backbone suppon the weight of
the massive wild areas throughout the
C3Stern reaches of Tunic Island which will
be joined to the Appalachian Trail
'wilderness backbone' by means of wild,
natural corridors. In this way the
Adirondack wilderness (in NY) can be
linked co the Appalachian Trail in the Green
Mountain National Forest (VT) via Lake
Champlain and other riparian and terrestrial
wild corridors."
KA1UAH - page 3
A continuous wild
habitat the length of the
Appalachian Range could
provide the first requirement
for wilderness, space, and in
time enable the return of
unique plants and large
animals - panthers, bears,
wolves, moose - that have
been
exterminated
throughout all or parts of the
mountain chain.
Of the Katuah province, PAW says:
'The Southern Appalachians.....are home to
the most varied deciduous forest in North
America. Due to the extraordinary range of
plant habitats and climates, 2,500 tree,
shrub, moss, and lichen species occur there,
1.500 of which are flowering. There are
over 200 endemic species, including 40
wildflower species.
'There are more than 25 wilderness
preserves in this area, but, unfortunately,
most are of the usual variety, i.e., less than
10,000 acres. Almost the entire length of the
Appalachian Trail from Springer Mountain
to the northern tip of the Shenandoah
National Park traverses National Park,
National Forest, or designated wilderness.
There is enormous potential for 'big
wilderness' in the southern Appalachians.
"This is the good news. The rest of
the story is more familiar. Roads parallel or
bisect much of the Appalachian Trail.
National ForestS and Parks are not managed
for wilderness, and most designated
wilderness is fragmented and confined to
mountain tops with spectacular views. The
lower reaches, drainages, swamps, valleys,
and less scenic areas - in shon, the areas
with the greatest biological diversity and
species richness - are generally
unprotected."
The proposal also mentions
re-establishing the American chestnut tree,
once a dominant species in the Appalachian
woods and a major food source for the large
wildlife populations that inhabited the
mountain forests.
PAW activist R.F. Mueller and olhers
in Virginia have proposed a 65,000 acre
"Shenandoah Wilderness Area" in the
northwest corner of the present state
boundaries. The PAW proposal states that,
"This proposal is PA W's highest shon tenn
priority even though the Shenandoah
Wilderness lies approximately 30 miles
from the Appalachian Trail. Appropriate
buffering and connecting corridors in
National Forest land will connect it to the
backbone. It should be noted that in the long
run PA W's vision calls for greatly
expanding this core area.....
"The Cranberry Back Country in the
Monongahela National Forest in West
Virginia, fifty miles as Raven flies from lhe
Appalachian Trail in Virginia, will also be
joined by natural corridors to the
backbone..... (The Cranberry Back
Country) offers promise of supporting a
healthy wolf population which could begin
to radiate to other wild areas such as
Shenandoah Wilderness, and then up and
(continued on page 4)
SUMMER- 1988
�(c.ontinued from page 3)
down the Appalachian Trail Wilderness
network.
"The Cranberry Back Country is
composed of the 35,000 acre Cranberry
Wilderness and the 45,000 acre Cranberry
Back Country which merits immediate
wilderness designation. Surrounding the
Cranberry Back Country is a large block of
roaded, but wild, Monongahela National
Forest and other public and private lands
which provide good buffer to the core
wilderness..... "
The northernmost of the large,
protected habitat areas would be a Northeast
Kingdom Wilderness Park and Biological
Preserve in the northeast quadrant in the
present state of Vermont. The PAW
document says that this area is particularly
important, because "For four of the most
wilderness-dependent species - cougar,
lynx, wolf, and pine marten - blocks of
400,000 acres or more in wilderness are
needed to maintain viable, stable
populations. For the cougar, a 400,000 acre
wilderness is needed specifically in Vermont
to assure thriving, interbreeding populations
elsewhere in the Appalachians, because this
species has a country-wide distribution and
prefers mountain realms."
Below Springer mountain the habitat
zone would continue south to link up with a
proposed habitat area for the Florida panther
and other native life forms that would
comprise most of central Florida.
"One possibility," mentioned in the
proposal, "would be to continue the
Appalachian Trail southwest from Springer
Mountain into eastern Alabama's Talladega
National Forest and thence eatsward to the
Chattahoochee River south of Columbus,
Ga.
"A similar priority exists at the
northern end of the Appalachian Trail A
route north of Katahdin, hopefully
incorporating the St. John's River and the
fabled Allagash in Maine to the Gaspe
Peninsula region must be devised The goal
is to ultimately reach the Canadian tundra.
Then the tropical will be truly rejoined with
the tundra, just as migratory birds have
KATUAH - page 4
continued to keep them joined throughout
the centuries of ecological fragmentation and
destruction."
"We must consider the
natural history of the region
and the ecological needs of
wild/ife and the landscape,
rather than continuing to ask,
"What is politically realistic
in the context of industrial
.
A merzca.?' . . . . . we must
consider the whole system,
not what sort of a
compromise we can sneak
through Congress."
"Our basic strategy," says the PAW
manifesto, "is to identify large, core
wilderness areas which are to be protected
in perpetuity as federally-designated
wilderness. Surrounding these cores will be
buffer zones. The inner buffer zones will be
managed as mature forests, thus increasing
the effective size of the wilderness core.
They will mitigate the impact of civilization
on the core areas and will mitigate the
depredations of wildlife species on humans
and their possessions. Appropriate benign
human activities like canoeing will be
permitted.
"Outer buffer zones would border on
human settlements. Primitive hunting and
long-rotation forestry might be permitted in
the inner portions of these outer zones. The
outermost sections, which actually border
on developed areas, might permit more
intensive forestry, including tree farming,
recreation, and possibly low-density
housing.
"These buffered wilderness cores
would be linked by wild corridors to other
nearby cores. These corridors must be wide
enough to permit the flow of species,
individuals, genes, and energy, and to
provide space for habitat patches."
Elsewhere in the PAW document
author Sayen explains the need for massive,
undisturbed habitat areas:
"The issue of predation points out the
importance of large wilderness preserves,
preserves of 400,000 or -more acres. As is
well known, many plant and animal species
undergo periodic fluctuations in population
and range. During periods of unusually
favorable weather, species tend to expand
their ranges and populations. When
conditions change adversely, range and
population contract to below-average
numbers.
"Herbivores like moose and deer feast
off early successional plant species that
colonize natural disturbance areas. But after
a number of years the plants mature and
grow out of reach of the herbivores, or the
SUMMER- 1988
�browsing pressure causes a decline in
vegetation locally. Large moose and deer
populations can no longer be supported. and
they either decline or go localJy extinct and
move on co another, more hospitable
locales. The decline of the herbivore
population affords plant communities a
chance to recover.
"Meanwhile, the decline in prey base
causes the wolf population to decline or go
locally extinct, as it follows its shifting
prey. Gradually, the herbivore population
builds up in favorable new feeding areas
and the wolf population follows. The cycle
goes on endlessly, and in time herbivores
return to the first site, whicb by now has
recovered from earlier overbrowsing. It is
essential that wildlife and wilderness
managers recognize this cyclic phenomenon
and that a wide range of ecosysteµis in
differing states of succession be inclulied in
a wilderness preserve to insure chis dypamic
process. This requires that we manage for
processes rather than for individual
species."
The PAW proposal is a challenge to
us to dare to break the boundaries on our
thinking imposed by the current social
order:
"We must consider the natural history
of the region and the ecological needs of
wildlife and the landscape, rather than
continuing to ask, "What is politically
realistic in the context of industrial
America?'.....We must consider the whole
system, not what son of a compromise we
can sneak through Congress."
The vision embodied in PAW is also
a challenge to our society as a whole,
because "Merely setting aside large
wilderness preserves will be fruitless if we
continue to generate acid rain; nuclearwaste;
pesticides and herbicides; overpopulation;
and a violent. exploitative attitude towards
others (human and non-human)."
Can our species live up to the
standards of wilderness? This question is
crucial to the success of the venture to
"Preserve Appalachian Wilderness," but it is
also the ultimate question of our species'
continued survival in the world.
KA TUAH - page 5
Jamie Sayen, the author of the PAW
manifesto, is also tlu! author of the book Einstein in
America. lie is a member of Conneeticut Valley
Earth First! and was a spawner in the Salmon
Revival Run up the Connecticut River this
summer.
Gil Lubrick is residenf plzofography
teacher and workshop leader at the Appalachian
Environmental Arts Center in llighlonds, NC. lie
has fought of Honolulu Community College and
NC Cenrral University. His landscape photographs
hove been nationally exhibited and reside in
numerous public and private collections.
Copies of the complete PAW
proposal are available for $3 .00 ppd. from:
Gulf of Maine Books; 61 Maine St.;
Brunswick, ME 04011
In addition to the outline of the
wilderness plan, the paper also contains
valuable background information on the
formation of the Appalachian mounrain
chain, a brief history of the Appalachlan
Trail, thoughts on the importance of
wilderness and the need for large,
wuJisrurbed habitat areas, and more specific
specifications for wilderness in the
nonheast.
THE POSSIBLE WILDERNESS
For more information on the
importance of large-scale wilderness
habitats, read The Fragmented Forest by
l.Arry Harris (University of Chlcago Press,
1984)
Potential Wilderness Areas in Appalachia
SUMMER-1988
�Xnown as the Highlands of Roan, the Roan Mountain
massif is a magnificent isolated mountain mass of 23,000
acres located in Caner County, Tennessee and Avery and
Mitchell Counties, North Carolina It is a vast high country
with huge grassy areas that roll and undulate in every
direction. Winds, averaging 25 miles per hour year-round,
ripple the tall sedges and hair grass ...like seaweed in a great
tide. l n late June, Catawba rhododendron blooms color the
ridges purple. Flame azalea and mountain laurel splay orange
and pink against blue-grey backdrops. In winter, the winds
pile snow deep in the protected valleys while rime ice clings
to exposed twigs on the summits. Unaka, the Cherokee word
for "white", gives the range its name. Season by season,
almost moment by moment, the Roan reveals itself, always
displaying a wide spectrum of mood and ecological treasure.
The Roan provides a haven for an extraordinary
diversity of plants and animals, many of which are rare and
endangered. Each year researchers, teachers, and amateur
ecologists come to the Higltlands to study the many species
and seek new finds. Throughout the nineteenth century,
botanists from around the world visited the Roan in their
studies of Appalachian flora. The quote (on next page) from
Elisha Mitchell, for whom the East's highest mountain is
named, is indicative of the high regard these botanists held
for Roan Mountain.
The balds are treeless areas of sedges, grasses and
wildflowers covering several hundred acres along rounded
KATIJAH - page 6
ridges and peaks from 5,400 feet to 6,100 feet above sea
level. Wild, yet tranquil, rugged yet fragile, this place is not
like any other. Great rocks, weathered and timeworn into
strange and fascinating shapes, jut from knee-deep grasses.
Wind-wracked, rocky crags edge the balds. Ancient
many-colored lichens, centuries old, creep across the rocks at
the rate of only 1/16 of an inch every 25 years.
Season f>y season, almost
rnom.ent f>y m.om.ent, the '.R.oti.n
rnvealS i-tsd f , alwa y s d:i-spCa.yi-fl-9
· a wi-d:e sp ectrum. of mood: and:
ec0Co9i.cal t r easure .
For fifteen of its 2,100 miles, the Appalachian Trail
traverses the Higltlands of Roan. It crosses the great balds
and moves into the conifer-covered Roan High Knob-Roan
High Bluff area, providing hikers with some of the most
striking natural vistas along the entire Trail. lo season,
wildflowers carpet the Highlands. Acres of white fringed
phacelia cover the ground in May, accented with splotches of
may apples with white and purple violets, trout lilies and
many other early spring flowers. A month later the balds are
streaked yellow and red with hawk weed and other
sun-loving flowers.
·.
SUMMER- 1988
�'Lt ts the most &ea.u.ti.fut and will
& r epay the Ca&or of ascendi.~ i.t of
est
aU ou.r h.i.qh. mou.ntai.ns. 1Ji.th. the
except w n. of a &
oc:Cy of roe~ Coo~i.~
[ ilt,e the rui.ns of an o[c:C casUe near i.ts
sou.th.western. ex.t remi.ty, the top of th.e
R oan may & c:Cescri.&ec:C a.s a vast
e
meadow wi.th.ou.t a tree to obs t r uct a
prospect, w h.ere a person may 9a.[[op
fl.ts fwrse for a m ile or two wi.th. North.
Caro[i.na. a t fl.ts f eet on one si.c:Ce and
Tennessee on. the other and a 9rea.t
ocea.n of mou.n.ta.i.ns ra.tsec:C i.n.
tremendous &tllows i.mmedia.tay
a.rou.nd h.f.m . 1.t t.s the eLyst.u.m of the
southern &ota.nt.st, a.s a. nu.m&er of
From a boianist's perspective, the Roan Mountain
massif is superlative because of the outstanding diversity and
the exceptional quality of plant communities found there.
Over 300 species of plants a.re found on the Highlands,
including the very rare Gray's lily (lilium grayi) as well as
spreading avens (Geum radiatum) and Blue Ridge goldenrod
(Solidago spithamaea). There arc more nationally or
regionally ranked rare species on the Roan massif than any
other site in the high mountains of the southern
Appalachians.
Roan Mountain also has varied and abundant wildlife,
a fact which can be attributed to its exceptional habitat
diversity-a product of latitude, altitude, geology, vegetation,
and even history. At least seven of the thirty rare mammals
listed in Endangered and Threarened Plants and Animals of
North Carolina have been reported in the Highlands. The
Ronn massif is a vast, high altitude island surrounded and
isolated by low and narrow valleys and rolling hills. Because
its slopes vary in steepness, soil composition, orientation,
and drainage, it suppons a mosaic of vegetation types and
microhabitats, and these are of sufficient total area to sustain
substantial animal populations.
Ice Age History
Roan's dynamic Ice Age history transformed the
18-mile ridge into a fauna! melting pot of northern relics,
southern invaders, and local isolates or endemics. The Roan
was left a northern island in a sea of southern deciduous
forests. These factors as well as the low level of human
activity have created the living space for a spectacular array
of animal species. Roan Mountain's major habitats arc
generally described in terms of their dominant vegetation.
Distinctive attitudinal plant zones, from the spruce-fir forests,
grass balds, and rhododendron heaths at high elevations,
through northern hardwood and oak forests to valley
hardwoods and old field sites, largely simulate the Latitudinal
sequence of habitats from southern Canada to southeastern
US. Thus a few species, such as the New England cottontail
and the bog lemming, arc at or near their southern limits and
may be relics of a past ice age. Others, like the opossum and
southern flying squirrel, are warm-climate species which
periodically invade the upper slopes.
Some species arc confined to one type of habitat on a
pennanent or seasonal basis. For example, meadow mice
inhabit the grass balds, a habitat used by the rare snow
bunting only in winter. Other species occupy the adjacent
pans of two vegetation wnes: the threatened northern flying
~----.1
pCa.n.ts a.re fou.nd 9rowt."9 t.n th.ts co[c:C
and h.u.mt4 a.tmosphere wnicn a.re not
seen GCJGt.n. u.n.tU we ha.ve 9one
h.u.ndrecls of mUes fu.rther north."
- EUsh.a. M.t.tcheU, 1839
squirrel frequents the lower spruce-fir and upper northern
hardwood forests. Still other animals-shrews, jumping
mice, salamanders and many invcncbrates--require ccnain
micro-habitats within a zone to provide special foods or
refuges. Finally, active carnivores (least weasels, spotted
skunks), large species (bears, bobcats, and foxes), and fliers
with special needs (owls, bats, hummingbirds) must range
widely over the mountain and, in fact, would probably not
survive if confined to a single area. The Roan also provides a
haven for over a hundred species of birds during nesting,
migration and wintering. Bird sitings include the bald eagle,
golden eagle, peregrine falcon, snow bunting, raven, alder
flycatcher, and saw-whet owl.
Need for Protection
This whole extraordinary area is in great need of
protection. Fortunately, the Southern Appalachian Highlands
Conservancy is working to preserve it. The Southern
Appalachian Highlands Conservancy (SAHC) is a
non-profit, tax-exempt organization founded in 1974 with
two goals in mind: to ensure the means whereby the
Highlands of Roan wiJl be protected in perpetuity against
development and other incompatible uses and to establish a
continuing program of stewardship for these lands.
Efforts to protect the Highlands were begun under the
auspices of the Appalachian Trail Conference (ATC) in 1966.
Most of the initial preservation work of the Highlands was
directed toward the proteetion of tracts along the Appalachian
Trail in preparation for their purchase by the ForeSt Service.
Conservation efforts were carried out by the Roan Mountain
Preservation Committee of the ATC, with the cooperation of
The Nature Conservancy. In time it became evident that the
Highlands of Roan project would require a greater cffon than
could be accomplished through a committee of an
organization concerned with the entire Appalachian Trail. As
a result, the SAHC was organized to take responsibility for
fund-raising, land acquisition, and land management
In the mid 1960's, the US Forest Service, cooperating
with the ATC, instituted an acquisition program on Roan
Mountain. So far, SAHC has assisted the US Forest Service
in acquiring 4,300 acres. When combined with the Forest
Service's previous holdings, a central core of 11,800 acres
has now been acquired as public lands. The remainder of the
protection effon is focussed around this core area. As most
of the Forest Service's planned Appalachian Trail corridor
acquisition work has been completed, it is now up to other
organizations and individuals to complete the mountain's
protection.
(continued on page 2.S)
pho10graphs councsy of SAHC
KATUAH - page 7
SUMMER- 1988
�C 1981 John M. Morgan
CELO connu.Nt'Jy:
50 YEARS ON THE LAND
by Marilyn Cade
While fireworks were exploding for the bicentennial
anniversary of the United States Constitution, in a small
valley at the feet of the Black Mountains in Yancey County,
NC another anniversary slipped by quietly, almost
unnoticed. 1987 was the fiftieth year of existence for the
Celo Community, the oldest land stewardship community in
the nation, but life flowed on as evenly as the South Toe
River, which winds through the valley.
Celo Community, Incorporated (CCO is an eclectic,
occasionally eccentric, collection of people who all unite on
the idea of saving and preserving the land. They are painters,
carpenters, architects, glass blowers, poners, weavers, and
farmers by trade. Some are staff at the Arthur Morgan
School, an alternative junior high located in the community.
The school grounds are also the location of the Celo
Press, a small publishing firm. Rural Southern Voice for
Peace, a newsletter published by members and non-members
of Celo Community, has its offices on the campus as well.
The Barrus family runs a summer camp for children
with an emphasis on interlinking with handicapped children
and children of different races and socio-economic
backgrounds.
The Celo Community land base is owned, not by
individuals, but by the CCI. An individual or family cannot
purchase title to any of the community land, but rather leases
a "holding". The price is actually a "deposit", calculated
according to the local price for a similar piece of land in the
surrounding area. But community agreements govern the use
of the land, and land speculation, subdividing, clear-cutting,
abusive agriculcure, etc. are not available options.
If a member withdraws from the community, the
amount they paid as a deposit is refunded, without regard to
any appreciation in land value since the original holding was
taken. Any buildings or homes are treated separately, with
refunds equalling the cost of replacement value including
depreciation.
For members, the advantages of community
landholding outweigh the loss of traditional ownership.
Residents are attracted by the concern shown for the present
and future well-being of the land. They want to live on a
protected large tract, where certain areas are kept wild. And
they enjoy sharing the community life.
Cooperative ownership is contrary to the notion that
KATUAH-page 8
hwnans arc given dominion over lhc Earth. It is based
instead on the idea that we arc given stewardship over it, that
we are accountable for our actions. This principle is now
being advanced in the land trust concept, a new model for
land tenure currently being practiced in Lhis country.
Ernest Morgan, a community member and son of
Anhur Morgan, says, 'The land trust is designed to avoid the
exploitive nature and abuses of individual land
ownership...The land trust concept is something lhat western
society urgently needs to face up 10."
Celo Community advocates the establishment of more
land trusts and cooperative ownership arrangements in the
region and beyond. The population of the community bas
stabilized and they are no longer actively seeking new
members. They hope that their role at the present time could
be as an inspiration and a model for lhe development of other
community experiments.
Depression Roots
The Depression and the t 930's were years of great
economic and social turmoil. ELhics in daily life seemed
desirable and even practical. People, especially young
people, were ready to experiment with new ways of living
and working outside the failing mainstream economy.
W illiam Regnery, a Chicago philanthropist, at this
same time sought suggestions for new charitable causes from
Arthur Morgan.Then Presidc.nt of Antioch College in Ohio,
Morgan had been an engineer who built successful flood
control dams, later becoming Chairman of the Tennessee
Valley Authority. He was a Quaker who had already thought
a good bit about the difficulties of leading a fulfilling life in
the modem world. He felt that there should be an opportunity
for young people to try new approaches to making a living.
Morgan told Regnery of an idea conceived in
conversations during 1932 and 1933 with Clarence Pickett,
the Executive Secretary of the American Friends Service
Committee. They wanted to somehow provide a situation in
which the young people then seeking answers from them
could instead work out their own solutions to leading a
fulfilling life.
With the general industrial collapse of the Depression,
they decided a rural piece of land suitable for families to
develop into individual farms would be most practical. This
whole idea appealed to Regnery, and he agreed to finance the
land if a suitable spot could be found and if Morgan and
Pickett would serve on the board of directors.
Morgan envisioned a small community situation. He
SUMMER- 1988
�wanted the land to be located in an area sufficiently isolated
that the settlers could pursue new goals without the
distraction of old habits reinforced by the wider world. A
small community would have more influence on how its
children grew up. A small community could support positive
values and beliefs among the adults.
If Morgan sounds utopian, that was not his intent. He
denied being io any way a visionary. He stated from the
beginning that there would be no religious, political, or social
code binding the community together. In a memorandum for
the community written in 1937, he said, "It takes more than
economic need or craving for congenial society to hold men
together. Set religious or political dogmas tend to be a
dividing influence. Above all other reasons for living and
working together, there needs to be a strong common
purpose..."
As to the land itself, Morgan desired a location that
was arable, affordable, had wholesome neighbors, and was
blessed with a natural beauty.
After several months of combing the Southern
Appalachian Mountain region for such a site, the search
ended in the valley of the South Toe. ln 1937, 1200 acres
of woods, somewhat exhausted farmland, streams, and
pasture were bought in the Celo area of the valley.
Land-sharing was not a clear objective when the
community first began. The earliest residents were renters
who were already living on the land when it was purchased
by the community. One of them was appointed a manager.
The goal of encouraging young families to be self-sustaining
was the primary object. However, most of the first families
who came had no financial resources. The struggle for
simple swvival prevented them from taking a larger view of
the community and its future.
Managers succeeded one another in frequent
succession, each one recruiting different kinds of people to
pioneer the community. Tenant farmers, socialJy troubled
families, bible colJegc graduates, and ex-missionaries came
for short periods of time between 1937 and I 945, with
largely unsatisfactory results. The community tried and then
gave up farming, dairy herds, a sawmill, timbering, and a
nursing home. By 1945, only five families remained in the
community.
Community Revival
1945 was clearly a watershed year for the Celo
Community. After some early members withdrew their
membership but kept title to their land, the first steps toward
community ownership were taken.
Conscientious objectors moved to the community after
the war, bringing with them a new idealism about the
community and land use, and they supported the land
cooperative idea.
It was also in 1945 that the land manager system was
finally abandoned at Celo as well. It was replaced by a
steering committee of fi vc people, one from each household.
The committee met once a week, and the whole membership
met once a month. The meetings have continued without
interruption since that year.
Members regard the meetings with varying degrees of
enthusiasm. One of the ongoing problems for the community
is maintaining a much higher level of group involvement than
most people have previously experienced. But since all
decision-making power rests with the meetings, they arc an
indcspcnsable part of the Cclo Community life.
There are also four standing committees: Finance,
Membership, Property, and Land Use. It is evident that half
the specific concerns arc about land.
Sara Smith, a daughter of a Celo family, wrote in a
college paper that "the single common bond for CCI
members now is the land they hold in trust".
During the 1950's more people came to Celo and
swelled the population to 20 member households. The "back:
to the land" movement and disaffection with prevailing
political and social conventions in the 1960's brought still
more members. Others came after being introduced to the
area while resident craftspeople at the Penland School of
KATIJAH - page 9
Crafts in nearby Mitchell County.
As the new members came, they tended to build their
houses in tucked-away comers of the woods. There was a
strong sense of wanting to pioneer and to feel self-sufficient.
However, the spreading population could quickly have made
the forest into a suburb. Realizing the danger, the community
about 17 years ago began to set aside land for a wild area. Of
the community's 1,200 acre land base, at least 300 acres arc
now in forest preservation.
Within this wild area, overseen by the Land Use
Committee, arc examples of the usual and unusual wild flora
of the Southern Appalachian Mountains. There are plant
communities that date back to the time of the glaciers. There
are endangered species found in some of the coves and
bogs. Use of the proteetcd area is limited to bikes and nature
walks.
Much of the community is bounded by National Forest
land. At ti.mes this has been seen as an asset, as for years at
a time there is no activity in these areas. However, the
National Forest is managed land, and the Forest Service
builds new roads and marks off timber sales for clearcuttlng.
Community members sec these actions as a threat to soil
stability as well as destruction of valuable forest. They lobby
the government and the Forest Service co limit this manner
of land use. They arc concerned 001 only with the land they
hold in trust, but with all the valley and the wider mountain
area.
Many members of the Cclo Community are active in
various organizations and strongly support local efforts to
preserve the environment, such as the Friends of the Toe
River. Bob Johnson, a wildlife enthusiast who is on the
Land Use Committee, has observed that "this is prime condo
country". AU around the county there is unprecedented
growth. County political leadership has expressed little
concern with curbing this development, and in fact probably
encourages it. The Southern Appalchians were economically
deprived for many decades, though chere has been much
improvement over the last 20 years. Still, it causes leaders to
sec any growth as a good thing.
Arthur Morgan, 50 years ago, predicted that decades
of upheaval lay ahead for the nation. Among his many
concerns he included land conservation, endangered species,
alcernative living opportunities, animal rights, and the need
for a new cornminment. He once remarked bow much he
would relish being a 25 year old starting ouc life in the Cclo
Community, ready to take on the challenge.
Morgan had some final thoughts on Celo when he
wrote a brief history of his experience with the community:
"It seems co me that Cclo Community and the surrounding
neighborhood is a favorable setting for an interesting human
adventure lasting through generations, which will not be a
retreat from life, but an adventure in living."
C 1981 John M. Morgan
SUMMER- 1988
�r--~·-·--
1
I
A Conversation
Ruth Ostrenga and Rio Alden have
Jived in Celo Community since 1985. In
February of this year they became official
members of Celo, where they now run a
plant and flower business called High
MoUnJain Greenery.
Christina Morrison of rhe Katuah
Journal spoke with them one afternoon
about how it feels to belong to a land
stewardship community.
with
Ruth and Rio
of Celo Community
Katuah: What does living on a land
cooperative mean to you?
Ruth: I've lhought about it a lot lately
and I've realized that its so much about
relationships. It's preserving a large piece of
land and looking to see what's the best use
for lhe land with people who have pretty
common values. And that requires working
lhings out in a community fashion where
you come together and have to really
communicate and see more sides than just
your own. I value that a great deal-growing
and moving through my stuff by being in
relationship-so what better place to be than
in a community where I'm pressed with it a
lot?
K: I understand that the. Forest
Service doesn't actually sell the land; they
sell lumber companies the right to clear-cut
And then the Forest Service builds the roads
for them and reseeds the land and actually
ends up losing money on the deal. And we
all lose the forest
Ruth: Exactly. Those are the kinds of
things we really have to take a look at. And
I know that lots ofus he.re don't approve of
this mis-use of government land and feel we
don't have the say we should have in it.
Ruth: I've had a dream for a long
time of growing good food for a large
number of people. And now that we're here
it's starting to seem feasible ...The idea is to
put up several composting greenhouses that
can grow food al l year round. They're
self-heating and also create C0 2 for
optimum growing conditions. I've already
asked to lease one of the open fields so we
may soon be growing enough food for the
whole area. Fresh vine-ripened tomatoes in
January! I know I'll need more energy than
mine to make it work, but I also know there
are others here who'd get excited about it
too.
/(: Sharing land seems to open up so
many possibilities. It's surprising that lhere
aren't more communal projects going on
that utilize th~ land.
Rilth: J ~c;e Ce!o,as )c.ind of divided
iMo two spaces--there are long-time
members who've.already figured out bow to
make it and then there are young ones wilh
families wJ\o are t;trusgling to 9uild houses
and take Qare of kids...so there's not a lot of'
extra energy for even things like stopping.
the clear-cutting. People are still doing
things they'd be doing anywhere and that is
getting their acrs togeiher.
K: How about your relationship wilh
lhe land itself?
Ruth: That's something lhat took a
while to sink in... that it's my land--all of
this is my land--yet it's not. A big thing is
that I have a voice in deciding anything that
happens in regards to it. That feels really
good. I feel the importance of taking
responsibility in all respects for what we're
doing right now to the Earth...and if I have
a band in a pretty good size chunk, then that
feels good to me. Also, because we're a
community, we have a wider influence than
just within the land trust. We can be an
example to others who want to do the same
thing - preserve large pieces of land.
We can also help to influence what
happens to other areas around us. Most of
our land backs right up to the National
Forest. land that the ~Forest service has
control over (that is actually ours too - only
not as directly), and they're going to be
selling off parcels to the lumber industry for
clear-cutting not far from here. That feels
really awful
K: Any dreams of what you'd like to
see here?
Rio: T here's been a lot more
cooperation lately about almost everything
though .... childcare, building projects-it
seems like a growing trend to give here and
take there and trade.
So....and this is kind of a wild idea, but I
thought perhaps the community could buy
rights to that land instead of the timber
companies. What better use for a chunk of
money? And if we bought the land they
wouldn't have to build a road or any of that
- so that could be subtracted from what
they'd normally charge and they'd actually
end up owing us money! (laughs) I can't
wait to run this by the land use committee.
K: So when you take care of a piece
of land you realize how connected it is to the
whole area.... Even though I'm not a
member, it's great to live near Celo and
have so much land to walk on with fewer
roads and fences and no "No Trespassing"
signs. It's a real feeling of freedom and
welcome. Living here, you can even forget
what it's like out in the "real world" where
land seems so arbitrarily divided up.
Rio: I think I would call this the real
Ruth: We've started a small garden
club of organic growe~--and there's even a
local person down the road who has joined.
It's a real nice thing to be connecting wilh
others in the area-feels like starting to reach
out and cover the whoJe planet in terms of
cooperation and doing things in a good
way....
Hey, there's the osprey! (points
above river) They've stayed around for
three weeks now--they might be raising
babies.
K: Are there any areas where you'd
like to see change?
Ruth: Some members would like 10
see more things done communally. We have
workdays once a month for 4 hours and
they're a great way to get things done and
help each other out. They'd really been
fizzling out, lately - like 2 people showing
up. But the last workday was really good,
Rio: I think it was partly your
enthusiasm...
Ruth: Yeah, I got really fired up at
lhe last meeting and presented it as a
wonderful opportunity for everyone.
world.
K: What was the job?
Ruth: I bet the trees would agree.
(continued on page 24)
KATIJAH-page 10
SUMMER- 1988
�LAND TRUST:
Tenure for Our Times
Among primitive tribal societies the
world over, the Earth was seen as a living
being, as alive and conscious as we. There
were no "resources," but the mother planet
gave her children what they needed to live.
The natural forces were potent elemental
beings. The idea of "owning" land or
"resources" never came to mind until the
development and spread of European
society.
lo our western culture land is
parcelled out and sold, and once money has
changed hands, owners assume it is their
right to have their way with "their"
property, whether or not it is in the interests
of the land, the wider human community, or
the life community as a whole.
In 1945 the members of the Celo
Community saw that individual land
ownership threatened the continued
existence of their community, and put their
land base into common ownership.
Members of Celo now lease a "holding,"
which grants a holder the right to live on
and the right to use the land within
guidelines set up by the community's
Property Committee.
This arrangement was a forerunner of
the land trust concept, which was developed
by Roben Swann and Ralph Borsodi during
the 1960's. A land trust is a corporate entity
(usually incorporated as not-for-profit)
which is empowered to hold land.
Land trusts are set up for a variety of
purposes:
- in rural areas they can be used to
make homes and fanning land available to
community people as the Community Land
Association is doing in Clairmont in
nonheast Tennessee.
- in cities they are a powerful t.ool for
resisting gentrification and making homes
available to low-and moderate-income
people. The South Atlanta Land Trust,
which is restoring a declining neighborhood
in Atlanta, GA is an example.
-Conservation land trusts put Large
tracts of undeveloped land into trust to
preserve them in perpetuity
The Ozarlc Regional Land Trust of
Canhage, MO is an umbrella organization
worlcing to foster all three approaches in the
Ourlc mountains, as well as initiating
educational projects in ecological land use
and farming practices appropriate to that
bioregion.
In each of these situations the
essential purpose of the land trust is to
remove the land from the speculative
marketplace so that. for whatever reasons, it
can no longer be treated as a commodity.
In a conservation land trust, human
access to the Land is strictly limited. In rural
community Land trusts, pans or alJ of a tract
are made available for human residency and
appropriate use such as ecological
agriculture. In an urban setting, land trust
holdings are dedicated to uses most
beneficial to the community, whether for
residences or community service areas.
The non-profit land trust corporation
retains title to the land and leases rights to
community people, subject to land use
KATUAH-page 11
Drawing by: Laurie Pierce
guidelines of varying strictness depending
on the purpose of the land trust. These
leases are usually long,term contracts that
may be passed on to descendants.
Leaseholders who wish· to terminate a lease
are allowed to sell the equity they have
earned (i.e., the value of buildings and other
improvements). Often tbe land trust reserves
first options on these equities and buys them
to re-sell to the next leaseholder.
Land trusts can slow down runaway
developmenL Land trusts can enable farm
families to gain access'to agricultural land
where Land speculation (as on vacation
home properties) has caused highly inflated
land prices. Land trusts can also preserve
wild areas far beyond the lifetime of an
individual owner.
It is now a widely accepted principle
that we cannot own ~nother of our own
species as propeny. Someday we may
evolve to the point where it would be
incomprehensible to own an individual of
any species as propehy. And someday,
someday, we may progress to a stage where
we once again regain the primitive sense of
a free and living Earth that cannot be cut into
pieces, cannot be bought or sold.
The land trust, then, is a
stepping-stone to the re-sacralization of the
natural world. It is a legalistic mechanism
suitable to the complexities of modem
society, but it offers a way forward into a
new and ancient relationship with the land.
RESOURCES
to help in unch:rstanding and implementing
land trust:
BOOKS
The Community Land Trust
Handbook by the lnstitwefor Community
Econormcs (Rodale Press; Emmaus, PA;
1982 - available for $6.00 from ICE, see
address below). "Through land trusts,
co171171Wiities can regain control oflocal land
and Jwusing. This book tells how.for both
nual and urban communities."
New OrJaniutional Prospects for
Community and Conservation Land
Trusts by Gregg Galbraith (available for
$12.50 ppdfrom the Ozark Regional land
Trust, see address beww). "A legal study of
the nl()tUI of a regional land trust to assist
the development of other regional land
trusts."
PERIODICALS
Communit1 Economics - quarterly
newsletter with articles abow develo~nts
in community land trusts, community
revolving loan funds, and other community
development issues. Available by donation
from ICE (see address beww).
ORGANIZATIONS
Jnstituiefor Communil)I Economics
151 Montague City Rd.
Greenfield, MA 01301
Oz.art Regional Land Trust
427 S. Main St.
Carthage, MO 64836
Solllhe.asr.un Land Presuvali,on Trust
305 Buclchead Ave. NE
Atlanta, GA 30305
The School ofLiving (land Com11Uttee)
do Common Ground
Rt. 3, Box 231
Lexington, VA 24450
The Katuah Regional Land
Trust is looking for charter members. This
new organization is dedicated to "serving
first the land, and then the life nourished by
the land" by "reserving and restDring narural
habitat areas; the ancient sacred sites and
places of power; and a land base, whether
rural or urban,for humans to conduct their
lives in accord wilh the conditions of nature
as found in the KatUah Province of the
Appalachian bioregion." Please respond to:
KatUali Regional land Trust; Rt. 2, Box
108-A; Whittier, NC 28789
~
SUMMER- 1988
�LEARNING COMMUNITY
by Judith Hallock
Arthur Morgan School is a unique
boarding school for 24 girls and boys in
grades seven through nine. Named after an
innovative American educator and activist,
the school is based on the principles of
Maria Montessori, Mohandas Gandhi,
Arthur Morgan, and the Religious Society
of Friends (Quakers). The stated central aim
of the school is to help each student grow
into a confident and responsible young
person.
The school property is part of Celo
Community, an intentional land stewardship
community. The 100 acre campus consists
mainly of woods and meadows and is
largely surrounded by national forest.
Elizabeth Morgan, Anhur Morgan's
daughter-in-law and founder of the Arthur
Morgan School, did not go to school until
she was the age for eighth grade. She had
been lightly tutored by her parents, but she
had mostly played around her home, helped
her mother, read books, and made music.
When she finally did start school, she found
it exciting and raced through high school in
three and one-half years as an honor student
Elizabeth oommeoted that the amount
of time children spend in school is usually
out of proportion to what they learn there,
and that most schools are a great waste of
children's time. School, she said, is mainly
a gigantic baby-sitting operation designed to
keep children out of circulation in a society
in which children no longer have any
meaningful function except to grow up.
It was her experience as a public
school teacher that inspired her to found the
Arthur Morgan School in 1962. She felt that
adolescence is a particularly crucial time in
the development of the whole person. Patty
Keene-Windsor, school clerk, a central
administrative position at the Arthur Morgan
School, defined some of the special needs
of puberty-aged young people:
"The years between 12 and 15 are
KATUAH- page 12
crucial years for developing a sense of self,
and to do some brt;alcing away from family.
It's a time of questioning habits and ways of
doing things, challenging the way your
family does things. It's a time of change and
rebelling."
In meeting these special needs, the
Arthur Morgan School offers a
community-based response.
"The main focus of the school is for
staff and students to create this community
together," said Patty.
Through conscious commuoitybui lding, the school becomes a
working/living/learning/caring place. in
educating the whole person, a whole life
approach is taken, and the loving, healthy
oommuoity becomes the core of the learning
experience. At the same time, a I :2
staff-to-student ratio suppons individual
needs.
Values, which have been largely
separated from education in the public
schools, are an integral part of the Arthur
Morgan School, and are directly related to
community ideals. Cooperation, respect,
openness, sense of self, responsibility, and
interdependence are all qualities of a healthy
community, and are learned by participation
in the school oommunity life.
''By creating this oommunity, we are
teaching community skills. We are giving
the students an experience and a model that
they can carry always. If they have
experienced hearing each other, working on
problems, being interdependent, in a small
oommunity like this, they will Temember
that when they move into a bigger
community, or when they start thinking
about the world," said Patty.
Housing at the school is in family
groups, with each composed of several
students and two houseparents who share
housekeeping functions as well as teaching
and/or other staff duties. These families live
in wood-heated homes on campus.
Margot, a houseparent at Arthur
Morgan School, wrote of her experience,
"Ideally the job of a houseparent is to create
a harmonious family environment for the
students dwelling under her roof. We try to
offer the students a secure and supportive
place to return to after their school day.
Since many of our students are seventh
graders leaving home for the first time, we
strive to maintain a family setting. The
boarding houses are not dormitories, rather
individual homes with structure and rules
varying with the different houseparents.
"What I find unique about
houseparenting these young adults is that I
can give them both support and positive
criticism in a more or less objective manner.
Their exposure to other peers of different
backgrounds expands their universe and
encourages social responsibility. The
houses reflect the philosophy of the school
in microcosm."
Breakfasts are cooked and eaten in the
houses, as are weekend lunches and two
dinners each week. All other meals are eaten
together in the school dining hall. The diet is
largely vegetarian, with an emphasis on
fresh whole foods, natural sweets, and
organic produce from the school's large
organfo garden.
Weekdays begin with a short
community gathering to share songs, skits,
and announcements. All students attend
classes in four core subjects - English,
social studies, science, and math. Though
individually designated by grade levels,
students are grouped in these classes only
by ability and interest. Class sizes are small,
so teachers can focus on individual needs.
Students are encouraged to see connections
between their classwork and the outside
world.
Academics are supplemented by an
electives program. Each student can choose
up to six classes a semester from such
offerings as music, drama. arts and crafts,
shop, languages, sports, and dance. Neither
electives nor core subjects are graded.
Students and parents receive instead
periodic written evaluations of the student's
work.
Leisure activities include special
Saturday night activities such as a dance,
talent show, group game, or sweat lodge. In
addition, weekends often include soccer
games and housefamily outings. Much time,
both on weekends and weekdays, is spent
outdoors.
The mountain forest surrounding the
Arthur Morgan School provides students
with a wide variety of outdoor experiences.
Extended trips in the fall and spring are
supplemented by periodic day hikes and
overnights.
Patty said, "We provide challenges in
this area that we are pretty sure the students
can meet: like being able to stay out in the
mountains for six days, or walking or
canoeing certain distances. At this age,
when these kind of physical challenges are
met, and the students feel they have
succeeded, there is a great feeling of
exhilaration."
Each spring the students explore the
world beyond Katuah on a three-week field
trip. In recent years they have put on a
travelling show, canoed the Florida
Everglades, and assisted at a refugee camp
on the Texas-Mexican border.
(conlinucd on page 26)
SUMMER-1988
�Land Use Planning in
Buncombe County, NC
by Carol Lawrence
Whether or not it is mentioned by
Asheville promoters recruiting new
businesses, one of the attractions of
Buncombe County - along with the clean air
and water, year-round temperate climate,
and stunning natural beauty - is the freedom
to develop land outside the city in any way
the owner sees fit.
There is, in other words, no overall
counry zoning plan.
The last attempt at county-wide
zoning was made in 1973. It was not
successful. Johnny Robens, a Flat Creek
resident who worked against the recent
zoning proposal there, remembers that
attempt.
"It went down like the Titanic," he
recalls.
Buncombe County Board of
Commissioners Chairman R. Curtis Ratcliff
recalls it the same way.
"When commissioners held hearings
on that proposed zoning plan, the further we
got into the county, the more opposed
everyone was."
"I doubt that there is currently enough
pro-zoning sentiment to revive the
county-wide plan," says Jim Coman,
County Zoning Administtator. "There is not
a consensus among the commissioners on
county-wide land use planning and
regulation. Undoubtedly, some are more in
favor of it than others. Among residents,
there's certainly limited desire for zoning
out in the rural areas. What I hear over and
over is 'We don't wanr anybody telling us
what to do with our land_"'
As a result, land use in the regions
surrounding Asheville is a matter left up to
each individual township. And the recenr
events in Flat Creek point up exactly how
difficult it can be to develop land use
planning on a local basis.
Earlier this year, the Vulcan Materials
Company of Birmingham, Alabama took
out a long-term lease option on a 99-acre
parcel of land in the Flat Creek area. Their
intent: 10 quarry granite and produce
crushed stone. Controlled blasting would
open up a large pit, eventually going down
some 200 to 400 feet. The granite in the
substrata would be extracted, crushed, and
hauled away in trucks.
In compliance with procedures
established by the North Carolina
Department of Natural Resources and
Community Development (NRCD), Vulcan
sem notice of its plans to all Flat Creek
residents owning adjacent land. Upon
learning of this intended development, area
residents became concerned. In fact, they
were so concerned that when the NRCD
sponsored a public bearing in the elementary
school on the hot, muggy night of August
6, the auditorium was packed with 400 area
residents. Another 400, unable to fit in,
remained outside.
Overwhelmingly, those attending
disapproved of the proposed quarry.
Together, they began to investigate what
they could do to prevent the coming of the
quarry. Thar's how Flat Creek residents
started what is called a community planning
program. This option, open to any
KATUAH - page 13
AT RISK
Photo by: Chip Smith
Buncombe County township, allows
residents to establish a community planning
council, which, in tum, can draft land use
(zoning) ordinances.
On October 17, after two months of
work by a 15-member planning council and
community input at the Buncombe County
Planning Department, a comprehensive
zoning ordinance was presented to the Flat
Creek residents for approval. As evidence
of the interest sparked by the zoning
question, 1,560 residents - 600 more than
cast ballocs in the last Presidential election turned out to vote. The proposed land use
ordinance was defeated by a margin of
nearly 3 to 1.
Manha Claxton, an Asheville
pediatrician who lives in Flat Creek, served
on the community planning council and
continues active volunteer work against the
proposed quarry. She explains the move
toward zoning this way: "We started
looking at zoning because of that quarry.
We were concerned about things like the
effects the quarry would have on the fragile
water table, whether the blasting would
cause basemenr walls to crack, how safe the
children would be in school buses that share
roads with large rock 1:IUcks, not to mention
the nuisance of noise, dust, and blasting
vibration."
"We knew, even in early August, that
passing of the zoning ordinance would not
necessarily keep Vulcan out; they started the
application process before we started the
zoning process. We proceeded because we
hoped that strong anti-quarry sentiment
combined with a zoning ordinance
prohibiting quarry expansion might cause
Vulcan to rethink that particular site."
Johnny Roberts, a 43-year resident of
the Flat Creek area and owner of a local
store, agrees that local sentiment ran against
the quarry. Yet he, like many others, voted
against zoning.
"The main thing is that people here
own their land, they pay for it, and they
don't want people telling them what to do
with it," he says. "The County has very
strict rules about building and construction
and people just feel that's enough."
There will be no zoning in Flat Creek.
And Flat Creek residents - who by and large
still oppose the proposed quarry - have not
solved the problem of persuading the
NRCD to refuse Vulcan's mining permit
application. Further, Flat Creek citizens
could find themselves in this sicuation again,
should another company announce plans to
build an asphalt production facility, for
example, or open another tavern adjacent to
the elementary school, or develop a
multi-acre mobile home park.
In every case in Buncombe County
where there has been interest in
community-based zoning, it has been in
response to unwelcome development. The
two communities in the county that enacted
local zoning, Beaverdam to the north and
Limestone to the south, did so out of
concern, the former about housing
development and the latter about a junkyard.
IUnkVard.
Currently, residents of an area on
Goldview Road are investigating zoning
because they do not want the new Craggy
Prison located in their neighborhood. They
approached the Commissioners for help in
developing prohibitive zoning. The
Commissioners responded by asking them
to try to establish a community planning
program for the whole French Broad
Township, rather than just the Goldview
Road area. Given strong anti-zoning
sentiment present in rural Buncombe
communities, it may be impossible to do
that
"Because of the differing opinions,
zoning is a difficult question," says County
Attorney Keith Snyder. "For the most part,
where there's interest in zoning is in
portions of townships that are highly
urbanized. In the outer perimeters of the
county, they are against it.
"Rather than have piecemeal, partial
zoning, I recommended to the Commission
that they do a comprehensive analysis of the
county. We know which areas are becoming
urbanized. We know where the large tracts
of undeveloped land are. Looking at all
those things together, the Commission
could then develop policy on where industry
should locate and where there should be
shopping centers and where there should
only be residential building."
In the meantime, county residents though in favor of protecting their
community's water supply, clean air, and
propeny values - may have little say in what
happens in their neighborhoods.
Reprinted from the Winter, 1988 issue of
Dircovery
News
a publication of
Asheville-Buncombe Discovery; 46 llaywood St.
(Suite 336); Asheville, NC 28801.
~
SUMMER - 1988
�REST IN PERPETUAL WILDERNESS
by Billy Campbell
In the densely popula1ed highlands of
the island of New Guinea in the lands of the
once cannibalistic Fore ( pronounced
"!or-AY") tribe, there are still pockets of
untouched wilderness. These are the sacred
groves, or pies masalai, near which the
bodies of their dead are buried. The Fore
regard these areas with/ear, believing that
here the ghosts of the dead are waiting to
possess the bodies of any who enter.
Because of their fear, beamif11l, wild,
untouched stands of the original forest still
exist in the midst ofagricultural lands and a
teeming human population.
When my father died, the funeral
director, a decent person and a friend from
childhood, steered us toward his
top-of-the-line casket It cost more than a lot
of cars do. We settled instead for the only
wooden model that he had. He cautioned us
that it was not "watertight," but consoled us
with the fact that Dan Blocker (Hoss
Cartwright on the TV show "Bonanza") was
buried in an identical casket
could we not put the money that is spent on
expensive burials and sterile plots into the
purchase of natural settings that could also
act as protected habitat areas?.....Sacred
groves, certainly. The money that we invest
in funerals and "perpetual care" today is
considerable. The Wall Street Journal stated
in May of 1985 that there is more than $4
billion invested in funeral trusts in this
country.
I live where the mountains drop to the
piedmont in South Carolina. Land here goes
for $800 per acre. Together, one thousand
members of a memorial society, each
contributing $1,000 (which is only
one-quarter the cost of my father's burial)
could purchase l,250 acres of land: a
The pies masaJais of the Fore inspired
me with a different idea. I would rather
have laid my father's body to rest in a wild
setting, full of the quiet and peace of
nature...a place reached by a trail instead of
a road, where trees would stand guard over
my father's remains and in turn be
nourished by him to stand tall in his
memory. Why is this not possible? Why
While some might want their remains
cremated and their ashes scattered, others
would want a marker designating a specific
place of interment. Instead of the usual
tombstones, more natural markers would be
appropriate. ln keeping with the concept of
creating vigneues of wilderness, living
plants, or colonies of plants, might be best.
A particular burial site might be graced by a
colony of orchids,for example, or perhaps
trilliums.
Living memorials could be
coordinated by a resident restoration
ecologist in areas that have been heavily
impacted. ln such a setting, an American
chestnut tree might make a particularly good
memorial. Because of the continuing blight
problem, native chestnuts will probably
need human help if they are to survive
outside of orchards. The setting would offer
a rich source for ritual. Imagine a
communion ceremony using chestnut bread
and muscadine wine. Limited harvesting of
stunted rrees from the forest would yield
materials to make heirloom baby cradles,
marriage beds, or even caskets. While it is
consistent with most religious beliefs, the
practice of using funeral parks could be
transforming, "greening" Christianity,
Islam, or other spiritual practices.
Next he showed us the vaults. The
first was Italian scrolled, guaranteed not to
leak for 100 years and able to withstand
thousands of pounds per square foot of
overpressure. I cold the director that it all
seemed silly. First of all, who was going to
check to see if it leaked, and who cared if it
did? Such strength might come in handy if
we were trying to protect the corpse from a
direct nuclear strike. but otherwise it seemed
pretty useless. I suggested that we not have
a vault.
The director seemed aghast at the
idea. "Billy, the casket you picked is not
watertight. If you don't get a vault, in a few
years the ground above will.....sink. in.
Family members would have to deal with
the fact that din and water are.....going
in .....on the loved one." Ultimately, my
father's body was pumped full of toxic
chemicals, placed in a casket, which was
placed in a vault, buried in an
over-manicured graveyard, and covered
with pea gravel. The whole affair cost
$4,000.00.
parks are hazardous waste dumps, filled
with small, sealed capsules of toxic
chemicals, the grass abpve artificially
maintained a perfect green with another
assortment of toxic materials.
significant parcel of land that would serve as
a lasting (and, to my mind, a fitting) legacy
for furure generations.
Large undeveloped tracts near towns
would be the first sites to be considered as
memorial forest areas, especially those
unlikely to be protected by government or
other private programs. Unprotected Indian
mounds, especially those in proximity to
extensive woodland areas, would be prime
sites. The membership in a given area might
sponsor a survey and biological inventory
of significant sites.
Burials in this memorial forest would
have to be simple. Bodies could not be
preserved, and any containers would have
to be built of easily degradeable materials.
Formaldehyde, with which bodies are
preserved in standard practice, is a
poisonous material. Present-day memorial
I wish my body to nourish a part of
the Living forest, marked only by a colony
of trilliums or a chestnut tree, in an area that
would be pleasant and rejuvenating for
others to visit, in which they would be
reminded of life's continuing cycles of
growth and death, decomposition and
rebirth. This would be truly a sacred place.
Any others who are interested in
joining a memorial forest society may
inquire (send no money, please) of:
Dr. Billy Campbell
P.O. Box 152
Westminster, SC 29693
or write to the:
Katuah Regional Land Trust
Rt. 2, Box 108-A
Whittier, NC
Katuah Province 28789
~
p
(see page 11)
Dr. Billy Campbell practices family
medicine in Westminster. He is a good Scot
and true to his clan.
Drawing by: Wes Wyau
KATUAH - page 14
SUMMER - 1988
�r
THE RIDGE
There is a ridge in southern Virginia over which I enter and leave my
farm. Deer leap and call on this ridge, ground hogs scurry to their holes,
wild turkeys range. An almost white skunk lives in an old pile of handmade
brick, which I would like to use were they not his home. I've seen a silver
fox on this ridge, and thought a 'possum really dead, and sat spellbound as
deer walked close and looked at me.
Here the moon rises damp and close and the stars seem near touching.
The unseen life of night lingers in the early dew and the sun rises with
ringing echo from two ridges and a river over, where a farmer calls his
cows. Unless fog has quietened the world, a blue line of distant ridges
separates the sky from all the fields and tree tops that lie before it. The
day's last color slips westward behind a mountain that humps large and
green, protective.
Breeze skips up the pass to this high place or shifts to wind that
rushes in from the woods to the north. An unmaintained road cuts beyond
those woods down to the house, too steep in ice or mud for my jeep. I park
atop the ridge and climb a split rail fence. Pasture grass nods as I walk,
and halfway down the familiar path, cool air from the spring dampens my
face. Grouse flap the air as they rise. I glimpse my house in the hollow
below.
The ridge is more than passage to my home and place where I walk at
each days beginning and end. The land itself is a friend to talk to and the
animals answer. Here I learned to stand alone and discovered myself joined
to all life. It is my place of beginning and entry to a larger world.
© 1988 &y Nancy Bcir nharcit
KATUAH - page 15
SUMMER-1988
�FARMERS AND THE FARM BILL
By Chip Smith
Late in 1985, the U.S. Congress
passed into law the Food Security Act, or
"Farm Bill." According to the U.S.
Department of Agriculture, the
administrating agency, the intent of the bill
is to "reduce soil erosion, minimize the
amount of wetlands and grasslands being
converted to cropland, and reduce surplus
commodities, which in rum will strengthen
the overall farm economy.''
The impetus for this bill was the
realization that the governme.nt has actually
encouraged soil erosion and loss of
wetlands by allowing farmers to include
highly erodible lands and converted
wetlands as part of their "base acreage" for a
variety of farm support programs. This
policy contributed to the crop surplus and
falling commodity prices which have fueled
the recent era of unpaid loans and farm
forecloswes.
To Congress, "farm" means the
corporate superfarms of the west, midwest
and coastal regions, but agriculture in
Karuah is affected as well.
Legislation passed in Washington
cannot afford to be sensitive to special
problems and paradoxes on the local level.
But in Kanfah, implementation of the Farm
Security Act is rife with paradox. While the
goals of the act are necessary and valid and
the principles on which it is based are
admirable, the sweeping generalizations in
its provisions are causing hardship and loss
and may force more small farmers off their
mountain landholdings.
In Katuah, agriculture is a
small-scale industry that is no longer the
major contributor to soil erosion problems.
A "Land Development Security Act" or a
"Road Construction Security Act" would be
more effective in controlling soil loss and
stream siltation.
Yet, the conservation provisions of
the Farm Bill state that fields with a slope
greater than nine percent are "highly
erodible land" and are to blame for
excessive erosion and lost productivity.
Furthermore, if farmers are to receive
the benefits of the various farm support
programs, they must submit approved
conservation farm plans by 1990 and have
them implemented by 1995. The locaily
governed Soil and Water Conservation
Districts, with assistance from the U.S. Soil
Conservation Service, are in charge of plan
approval. The Conservation Reserve
Program has also been established for those
who wish to be subsidized for retiring
croplands to pasture or tree farms.
At the head of Long Branch in
Yancey County, North Carolina two old
timers, Raines and Eugene Hughes tend
burley tobacco. Their farm is an original
version of small-scale mountain agriculture.
They bought it as a gullied-out and
overgrown depression farm in 1936.
KATUAH-page 16
Today, the pastured hills, neat garden, and
"baccer" patch reveal much of their
independence and stewardship.
Proud and outspoken, they resent
what they feel is a judgment passed on their
farming abilities.
"Well, I tell you - I don't think too
much of that Farm Bill myself," said
Raines. "You don't have much freedom
anymore, do ya? Somebody telling you
something what to do all the time, seems
like.
"Anytbing's gonna get eroded, if it's
not got a cover on it"
And Eugene said, "We've always
farmed that way, ever since we were kids.
Our dad was the first man to start that in this
section here. It looks like a plan to cut us
small farmers out, is what it looks like."
Today, the conservation provisions of
the Farm Bill require the installation of
erosion control practices such as terrace
systems, grassed water ways, field borders,
and/or alternate year crop/cover crop
rotations. For mountain farmers already
short on tillable land, conservation
compliance means fewer crops, smaller
profits and a questionable future.
Tobacco has been a staple of
mountain agriculture for generations,
because tending burley is a labor intensive,
family operation. It requires very little
mechanization: a borrowed tractor and
planter and the garden tiller will do. The
labor needed for weeding, cutting, hanging,
and grading the leaf is provided by family
members.
Tobacco growing is possible with
resources mountain people have, and a
productive season can bring a profit of at
least $2000 an acre.
"To fellers like us it means a lot," said
Eugene. "It goes right back on the farm,
what we get from tobacco. That's what we
set aside to pay our taxes, buy our fertilize,
and such.
"People here in these mountains
depended on tobacco until these factory
plants came to town. We're one of the few
who still live off the farm."
Raines and Eugene realize the good
intentions of the Farm Bill, but as Eugene
put it, "Those fellers haven't been outta
Washington in a while:
"lf we was younger we'd kick more.
We always looked forward to farming all
our life. People say anymore: Well, I may
farm this year and I may not next year.'
Nowadays a feller will just get him a job at
the plant."
Raines said, "It's a haphazard way to
farm. It's just turned around from the way it
used to be."
Realizing
an too well the
consequences of noncompliance, Eugene
lamented, "We're gonna try to comply with
the law. Take two fellers that's 75 and 77
years old - we've not got too many years to
grow, have we? We're Appalachian
paupers, but proud of it."
In the midst of renewed interest in
stewardship and small-scale mountain
agriculture, many of our teachers are
packing up shop. These mountains are no
longer a barrier to the fast paced "outside
world." An inflated land market has pushed
propeny values out of the reach of local
Plant jobs are pulling family
people.
members off the farm, and discount stores
entice them away from agrarian values.
Tobacco abuse kills, but an alternative
crop to fill the place of burley in mountain
agriculture hasn't been found. In short,
while the Farm Bill may help clear the
streams, in the Appalachian mountain
country it is inadvenently contributing to
the demise of a way of life.
SUMMER- 1988
�"Relating to the Land"
(These are the words of a traditional Cherokee medicine
person)
My grandfather told me that one day when his
grandfather was sick and they knew that he was going to die,
he called together some friends and the members of his
family and spoke to them. My grandfather was jost a boy at
the time, and he could not hear what was said, but his
grandfather got up and he looked strong and healthy. The old
man gathered a group of men and boys, and, though he was
young, my grandfather was allowed to accompany them.
They walked and camped for a month through western NQitb
Carolina and parts of eastern Tennessee. They carried his
grandfather some of the time, but most of the time he walked
by himself.
They went to places that, seen through a boy's eyes,
seemed insignificant to my grandfather. They would go to a
rock and his grandfather would look at it and rub all over it,
and then maybe he would tell them to take him to some little
creek up in a cove someplace, and he would peer around in
there.
He was tcliving bis history. These were places that
were familiar to him, that represented part of his life, and
each place was important to the old man. To him, the land
was personal. These places wetc a part of himself. They
were alive as the world was alive.
Western culture sees the world as dead. But the Indian
People know the Earth as a living organism. The screams are
the Earth's blood. The soil is the flesh. The plants and the
leaves are the hair. The rocks are the bones. The wind is the
breath. The Earth is one living organism, and the human race
is part of that organism, not something set apart.
Everything has a spirit. Everything that is living seems
to be an in. ividual entity, separate to itself. Each of us seems
d
to be an individual. bot actually, we are each made op of
trillions of parts - things that can be seen and things that
cannot be seen. And all those pans are dependant on one
another. The planet is the same way. It is the same kind of
life just larger. And the human species is just one of the pans
of the Great Life.
Collectively, the individual spirits of everything that
lives make up the Great Spirit When you conjure, and you
hook into power, that is your power. But you have to feel
part of it first. We get our power from being able to move
evenly with the other pans of the Great Life. There is no trick
or magic to it, other than knowing yourself as a pan of this
life.
KATUAH-page 17
Our gifts of intelligence and creativity were given to us
so we could be caretakers, so we could perpetuate the Great
Life. It is our role, our pan of the plan, to be conscious. The
side effect of that is ego. Some people call it lust or sin, but
it's separation from God. It's true, because what we have
here is God, whatever it is.
At some time the human race reached a point in its
developement where our ego overrode all the innate
understandings we had held since we were primeval slime,
or whtaever we first were. Now, our biggest conflict is to
concrol our intellect that has grown by such leaps and bounds
in such a short period of time.
Our shortcomings are reflected in the culmination of
European or western culture, which is highly individualistic:
Western culture makes people believe that the Earth begins
when they are born, and is over when they die. They have
the most incredible notion that there is a God up in the sky
that serves us alone and, the ultimate of ego, that we are
created in his image. He made everything on this planet for
our use, and if we can't use it, it's a weed or crash.
The best story my grandfather ever told to show the
difference between European and Indian ways was to say
that when an Indian man bunts the bear, and be kills the bear,
be gives thanks, and promises the bear to use all the parts of
his body, for that is the bear's gift to us.
If an Indian man goes out to hunt the bear, and the
bear rips him down and eats him, there is no hostility against
the bear. It wasn't the bear's idea that be was to eat meat
The Creator.put this notion in him.
.
.,
The people would mourn the man and grieve for him,
but there was no anger toward the bear. It was just the
creature's nature, just like it was the man's nature to be out
hunting him. There was no separatiQn from the bear at all,
If this were to happen to a white man, the others
would go out and comb the mountains and kill any bear they
saw.
We arc all predators. But western man cannot tolerate
another predator. Wolves, mountain lions.... white people
don't want them out there as competitiou. They don't eat
them. The only other predators western man eats are fish.
They aren't going to eat a wolf, but they will kill him off. If a
creature can be domesticated, controlled completely, and
made useful to humans, then it's from God. If it can't be
made useful, then they eliminate it God made a mistake
there.
·
For European culture there. is no concept of balance,
no concept that we are pan of a greater whole. It is alien; it's
like they arc from another planet. Look at how they throw
their crash and litter around! Would they do that at home? It
all goes back to the ego that says we are made in the image of
God and all this was created for us.
In the body of the world, we are cancerous cells.
Cancer is when a group of cells in the body goes crazy for
one reason or another. There are environmental reasons for
why we are acting so crazy, reasons which we created
ourselves. But there are still some deeper reasons why we
are susceptible to this disease of the spirit. After all, we are
the product of millions and millions of years of evolution,
and everything else is evolving along with us. We m
responsible for ourselves. We may not be able to stop
accidents, or something somebody else does to us; but the
sickness and disease, we are responsible for all that.
The world was not made for us alone. My
grandfather's grandfather said that we are mainly observing
what is happening in our own lives. We can dodge things a
little bit to the left or to the right, but the major aspects of
things we are just observing. Observation....tbat's what we
are doing.
SUMMER - 1988
�- Soil acidification could release
bound aluminum in toxic amounts.
- Nutrients could be leached out and
lost from acidified soils.
- Excess nitrogen, acidification, or
released heavy metals could deplete or
destroy soil microorganism populations or
the mycorrhizae fungi, which Live in a
beneficial relationship with the roots of the
spruce and fir trees, causing nutrient
deficiencies.
NATURAL WORLD NEWS
REPORT
"IT COMES ON A MIST..... "
"The bottom line is that someone at
some point has to make a decision as to
whether or not the evidence is strong
enough to do something about acid rain .....
"We have a lot nwre informarion now
than we did two to three years ago. The
nwnality of trees has increased tenfold over
the past five years. But we could spend
another 50 years studying this issue and
never gather enough proof to slww that A
plus B equals C."
- Roben Bruck, to the
AsbeyWe Ciifilul, March 5, 1988
Since 1983 Dr. Robert Bruck has
been coordinating a team of field scientists
from North Carolina State University
(NCSU) investigating the mysterious
dieback of the spruce/fir forest that was
once a grand mantle draped over the
shoulders of Mount Mitchell and the other
peaks of the Black Mountain range (see
KatUah Journal #9).
Using the most sophisticated
equipment, the researchers have been testing
the soil, soil microorganisms, and the trees
themselves, to determine the amount of
airborne pollution the mountaintops are
receiving and the effects of this pollution.
Their field work is supported by
experiments in climate control chambers and
greenhouse tests to determine the tolerances
and parameters of the tree species. Another
team of NCSU scientists funded by the
Environmental Protection Agency doing
intensive studies of the chemistry of the
orographic (associated with mountains)
cloud cover that shrouds Mt. Mitchell and
the Blacks for 250 days of the year.
The data these scientists have
produced are chilling. During the year
1986-87 Ml. Mitchell received
approximately 122 kilograms/hectare
(roughly equal to pounds per acre) of
acidified sulfates. Ouring that same period
approximately 65 Kg/ha (lbs/a) of nitrates
were deposited on the mountaintop.
Ozone, when in the lower
atmosphere, is a gaseous pollutant
panicularly damaging to plants. It is formed
when nitrogen oxides are combined with the
hydrocarbons produced by auto exhaust in
the presence of sunlight. Ozone is
frequently present at concentrated levels at
the top of Mt. Mitchell. Of 3,000 readings
taken during 1986, one quarter approached
or exceeded a level of 80 ppb (parts per
billion), which was shown in greenhouse
tests to be acutely toxic to young fir and
spruce trees.
At the same time the mountaintops are
bathed in an acidic mist which registers a
2.5-3.4 pH level. Because pH is figured
KATIJAH - page 18
Cm.tree
logarithmically, the clouds' lowest pH
levels are 1,000 times more acidic than
normal atmospheric conditions.
Precipitation, which is more diluted, ranges
from pH 4.0-5.0.
Those clouds, so gentle in
appearance, are panicularly threatening to
the upland forests. They are formed by
moisture-laden air, which, as it rises over
the mountains, cools and condenses into
fog. In the process it attracts and bonds with
particles of airborne, water-soluble
pollutants, and this concentrated, poisonous
broth settles on the tree needles, where
much of the toxic payload is absorbed
before the droplets fall, branch by branch,
to the soil.
The variety of chemicals in the mist
solution could affect the trees in different
ways at each stage of their journey to the
eanh:
- Acidification could damage or
destroy foliage, as was observed after one
highly acidic cloud covered the
mountaintop. Forty-eight hours later the rips
of exposed spruce needles were brown and
dead.
- Acidic oxides, alone or in
combination with ozone, could leach
nutrients from the foliage.
-The chemical pollutants could
interfere with the tree's metabolic processes.
- Excess nitrogen could increase
susceptibility to frost and freeze damage.
Pollutants can also work through the
soil. In one experiment. seedlings were
planted in soil taken from the top of Mt.
Mitchell to a lower elevation. 93% of the
seedlings died. Examination of the soil
showed that it was highly acidified and low
in the nutrient elements calcium and
magnesium.
Toxins in the soil could damage trees
by some or any of these means:
To come to grips with the problem of
the airborne pollutants, " ..... the scientific
and policy-making communities wilJ have to
find common ground in dealing wich
'imperfect knowledge,"' wrote Dr. Bruck.
He is warning us that, although his
team and other scientists will be keeping up
the intensive investigations they have
maintained for the last five years, it would
be a mistake co postpone decision-making
until a clear and simple cause-and-effect
relationship is proven. The situation is
simply too complex. That the high-altitude
boreal forest is being subjected to massive
doses of airborne pollutants is clear. But it
is impossible to isolate a single chemical
compound or a single process as being the
sole culprit for the forest decline. The
different chemical permutations and
possibilities are endless, as would be the
wait if positive proof of the reasons for the
tree dieback were required.
It has been clearly shown, however,
that a great percentage of the sulfates being
carried on the air currents are produced by
coal-fired utility plants and smelcing
industries.
It is also known that most free nitrates
are put into the air by automotive exhaust
emissions.
There are sophisticated scrubbers
presently on the market that, if installed in
the tall industrial smokestacks, could
remove much of the sulfates now being
spewed into the air. Catalytic converters are
now being developed that could reduce the
level of nitrates produced by automotive
traffic by 85%, according to Bruck.
Nothing is going to avert the need for
a basic change in the way we live our lives,
but we are not going to have the chance to
effect a change, unless we take steps to
alleviate the ecological catastrophe we are
creating. And, meanwhile, we are
sacrificing other species daily to our
wantonness.
Again quoted by the Ashcyil le
~Bruck said:
1:
0
300
j
200
E
£
"The technology is available today,
right now, to clean up the vast majority of
the problems I am showing you the daJa on.
Tlrat is what can be done if you decide as a
society that this is a problem and that we
need to do something abouz it."
100
5 15 25 35 45 55 65 75 85 95 1~ 115 125
0.-IPl>DI
SUMMER- 1988
�NATURAL WORLD NEWS
REPORT
Duke Power Company of Charlonc,
NC, intends 10 purchase the Nantahala
Power and Light Comany (NP&L) in
Katuah Province. The Linc is proposed 10
carry bulk electricity from Duke installations
on the piedmont to Nantahala's service area
in the mountains. But scratching away the
surface reveals that there is more, much
more, at stake in this project than the needs
of a small rural utility company.
The Linc is 10 be 26 miles long,
strung from hilltop to hilltop on towers that
would range from 125 10 175 feet in height
and 100 feet wide at the base, costing at
least $30 million to construct. It will carry
two 230 kilovolt (KV) high-tension lines
from Duke installations in the Jocassee
watershed to a point near Cashiers, NC,
from which point a single 161 KV line
would continue on to tie in with a
sub-station planned for construction in the
small community ofTuckascgee in Jackson
County, NC.
The Line would climb out of the
Jocassee Watershed, leaving an ugly scar
through the basin of the Toxaway River.
Along its route The Line would march up
the sides and over the top of Toxaway
Mountain, marring the face of that mountain
beloved by residents and summer people
alike in Transylvania County, NC. It would
stretch along the sides of the Pamhcnown
Valley, a spectacular area that harbors sights
of sheer cliffs and rare vegetation not 10 be
found anywhere else in the cast.
The Linc would bisect imponant wild
habitat areas in the Greenland Creek
drainage and the Tuckascgee River Valley,
which arc large areas of uninterrupted forest
that would be cut in two and laid open
forever after to disruption by humans and
their machines. Fanher down the valley,
The Line would swallow up property and
homes and heedlessly push aside families
who have lived on the same farms and
homesites for generations.
One evening in May representatives
of citizen and environmental groups and
residents of the NP&L service area came
together to talk about The Linc. As the
conversation moved around the table, and
each participant spoke of his or her own
perspective or fears on the issue, the pieces
of the giant jigsaw puzzle that is Duke's
master plan for the Kauiah Province, fell
into place.
Ripped Off by Alcoa
Veronica Nicholas, a county
commissioner in Jackson County, told of a
decade-long struggle between a group called
Citizens for Low-Cost Power and the Alcoa
Aluminum Company, the industrial giant
that presently owns NP&L (sec Katuah
Journal #3). Originally, Alcoa had set up
hydroelectric generating facilities on the
TV A lakes in the Tuckasegee River
watershed as a public utility, which meant
DUKE'S POWER PLAY
that the company had certain privileges in
acquiring land and setting rates that went
along with the obligation to provide power
to the residentS of the area.
However, soon after the generating
facilities were completed, Alcoa split its
holdings into two companies, Tapoco
Company and NP&L. Tapoco, although it
was originally established as pan of a public
utility, was kept to feed Alcoa's voracious
energy appetite. NP&L remained a utility to
provide for the area residents, but it was
clearly a "neglected stepchild" of the parent
corporation.
When Tapoco was a utility, almost all
of the area's electrical needs were met with
hydroelectric power generated in th.!
mountains. After the split, NP&L's
generating capacity had to be supplemented
by power purchased outside the region.
This resulted in the ludicrous situation of
Alcoa siphoning cheap electric power from
the mountains, while ratepayers in the hiUs
paid to have nuclear power "wheeled in"
from the Tennessee Valley Authority. Not
only did the nuclear power cost more, but it
had to pass directly through the Alcoa plant
on its way back to the mountains!
NP&L ratepayers finally rebelled in
1977 and began legal motions to regain the
use of Tapoco's generating power and 10
recover the money with which they had
been subsidizing Alcoa. The case went
through extended litigation, until the
ratepayers were flatly denied by an
unsympathetic conservative bench on the
US Supreme Court in 1987.
"II feels that (with this sale) we arc
simply changing masters," said Nicholas.
"It is becoming increasingly clear that we
are losing our power to determine the use of
our natural resources. That's what my main
input will be tonight: Tapoco is not included
in thjs sale to Duke Power. Alcoa is trying
to relieve itself of itS public obligations, just
as it did in the l950's when it tried to sell its
transmission lines to Duke. If this sale goes
through, Tapoco will be supplying the
power Alcoa needs for smelting aluminum,
and our ability to provide for ourselves will
be forever gone."
Biology professor Dan Pittillo,
chairman of the Western North Carolina
Alliance and a resident of Jackson County,
added, "NP&L has never been funded
properly, and it has not been able LO keep up
with their maintenance as they should, so
that there is S40 million in maintenance that
needs to be done in the next ten years.
"Duke promised us that when they
purchased the company, ratCS would remain
stable for five years. rm thinking, though,
that after that time the rates we will have to
pay will go up from the 4.5-5 cents per
kilowatt/hour that we arc paying now, to
8-9 cents per kilowatt/hour, which is about
what Duke's rates arc at present"
Pittillo also displayed a copy of a
Duke Power annual report, published in
February, 1988, which boasted that, "If
regulators approve the acquisiton, we expect
that NP&L will become a wholly-owned
subsidiary of Duke Power. The company
(continued on next page)
KATUAH-page 19
SUMMER- 1988
�HOLD THAT LINE!
WHAT'S ON THE OTHER END
OF THE DUKE POWER LINE?
- HABITAT & SCENIC AREAS
DESTRUCTION?
- NUCLEAR DEPENDENCY AND
NUCLEAR WASTE?
- RATE HIKES FOR EXPENSIVE
IMPORTED POWER?
- MORE DAMS? ENERGY
EXPLOITATION OF THE MOUNTAINS?
)!
~;
- ..
c:
• ·c
LET'S GET THE FACTS BEFORE DUKE BUYS OUT
NANTAHALA POWER AND LIGHT
S! •
-
Write to the public staff of the NC Utilities Commission.
Support their request to postpone hearings on the
Nantahala sale until, September.
Address: Antoinette-Wike, Public Staff, NC Utlltltles
u
c •
2
S!
,, >
c( .Cl
Commission, P.O. Box 29520, Ralelgh, NC 27626
M ,... fOf ttf HO\.D THAT llNIJ l o• -
Otll• "°" NC tUU
(continued from page 19)
will in turn supply bulk power to
supplement NP&L's hydroelectric
generating system. To deliver that power,
Duke will build a transmission line to the
NP&L system and gain a direct link.for the
first time with the 7VA, which serves more
than 3.1 million customers in seven states.
That link will create the opportunity for
other bulk power sales to the west."
(emphasis ours)
Showdown at Coley Creek
Sitting near Pinillo was Bill Thomas,
public lands chair for the NC state Sierra
Club chapter and a co-chairman of the
Jocassec Watershed Coalition. Duke has
nlready damaged a pristine wilderness area
in that basin with a pumped-storage project
on Bad Creek.
Thomas said, "The Jocassee
Watershed Coalition is tied up with this
transmission line in some fashion, because
Duke is considering putting a second 2100
megawau pumped-storage facility on Coley
Creek at a cost of $3.3 billion dollars. We
thought aJI along that they were jiggering
their electrical demand forecast to make it
appear as if they would need a 5,000
megawatt output in their service area by the
year2000.
"What I'm thinking now, when I sec
this NP&L move, is that there is no penalty
co Duke for over-forecasting if they have
this pipeline to the west. What we are seeing
is the use of North Carolina resources being
used for Duke's profit, as they extend their
tentacles to the west. That's a matter of
public policy that needs to be debated quite
fiercely."
Thomas continued, "Jim Hendricks,
principal engineer of Duke's design
division, and others have told us that the
ultimate plan is to put in a 500 KV line.
That means that any route that is chosen will
have two sets of towers and a 1,000·1,500
foot right-of-way.
"500 KV lines are up in the voltage
range where possible adverse health effects
are something you can't just brush off. I
don't know much about electromagnetic
KATIJAH - page 20
radiation fields, but it has been brought up
as a possible cause for health problems in
other places."
"Why, western North Carolina is
being set up like dominoes!" someone
exclaimed. "If they can get that line in, then
they can justify Coley Creek. And, while
they've been saying they need it to supply
NP&L, all along they've been wanting to
sell power to TVA and even further west!"
''What we are seeing is the
use of North Carolina
resources being used for
Duke's profit, as they extend
their tentacles to the west.
That's a matter of public
policy that needs to be
debated quite fiercely."
"We Didn't Want to See lt"
A woman resident from the Sapphire
Community, located along the route of The
Line as it passes through Transylvania
County, said, "It would have been just
above our house. We didn't want to see it,
but we didn't know what effect physically
living under those lines would have. So we
sold our house because of it
"Duke gave us a very good price. We
asked them if we should price it without our
furniture, but they said that they wanted co
keep the furnishings, because they were
going to use the house for an executive
retreat. That doesn't sound like a public
service company to me."
Dan Pittillo said, "A main issue in this
discussion is the attitude that Duke is taking.
Duke is working like an aggressive business
1hat is interested in selling power and
keeping people working on their projects.
They are doing what is good for business.
Their interest is not the people whom they
are supposed to be serving. They are not
interested in conserving energy. Why, if
Duke were on a conservative bent, they
would have no need for this whole system
whatsoever!"
Others in the room spoke as well.
Several Jackson County residents were
unalterably opposed to Duke Power's
nuclear record and the company's lobbying
effons to bring the Southeastern Compact's
low-level radioactive waste dump to North
Carolina. They wanted 1he NP&L sale
stopped completely.
Some of the most vigorous
opposition came from members of a
property-owners' group around Lake
Toxaway, whose main interest was in
maintaining the value of their area as a
vacation spot. They complained of Duke's
high·handed methods in not consulting with
local people as The Line was being planned,
buying the right-of-way propenies under
false pretenses, and announcing the project
only after the property was purchased and
the company was already commi11ed to a
specific route. Although Duke's publicity
said alternate routes were being considered,
the propeny-owners said that the company
could produce no alternative plans when
asked to do so.
The group gathered together that
evening represented different people from
different points of view, but each piece
added co the puzzle made the whole picture
of Duke Power Company's plans for the
"development" of Katuah become more
frighteningly clear.
David Wheeler
SUMMER 1988
�Tiffi CHEROKEE MICRO-HYDROELEC1RIC
DEMONSTRATION PROJECT:
An Appropriate Community Energy System
(Readers are referred to the article
"llomemade Electricity• by Richard llotaJing in
Ka11jah Journal #4 concerning the value,
simplicity, importance, and •how-10• of
micro-hydroelecrric power gtner01io11.)
Tucked away in the shade of a cool
mountain holler on the Cherokee Indian
Reservation is a prototype of an advanced
technology still little-known to the world.
It 1s not made with circuits and
capacitors, but rather with concrete, plastic
pipe, and common sense. It is a
micro-hydroelectric system that taps the
kinetic energy of the Galamore Branch, a
small creek flowing down from the Great
Smoky Mountains National Park into the
Raven Fork in the Big Cove Community.
Electricity produced at the site powers
the Big Cove Head Stan Center, the Big
Cove Community Center, and the Big Cove
Volunteer Fire Department building. The
project has been developed through the
cooperation of Appalachian State
University, the Energy Division of the
Nonh 01rolina Depanment of Commerce,
and Save the Children, lnc ..
by Michael Red Fox
With its abundant water supplies and
steep slopes, the Katuah Province is ideally
suited by climate and topography for
micro-hydro power production. It is hoped
that the Cherokee project will serve as a
model that will help increase popular
awareness that micro-hydro is a benign,
narural, and renewable energy resource and
will encourage the development of
micro-hydroelectric sites in other areas of
Kan1ah.
The site on Galamore Branch was
located in an early study of
micro-hydroelectric si1es in Katuah. The
study found 1,950 suitable micro-hydro
sites in the mountains that would be capable
of producing a combined potential output of
34,000 kilowaus of energy if developed.
Fifty-three of these sites are on the
Cherokee Indian Reservation and represent
a combined potential output of970 kilowaus.
The Big Cove micro-hydro system
divens a design flow of 1.2 cubic feet per
second through a six inch diameter PVC
penstock (pipe) for a distance of 2,500 feet
10 develop a net head (drop) of 210 feet
The intake structure is located at a
point where the streambed is less than six
feet wide and consists of a poured concrete
dam, which divens water into a concrete
seuling basin.
The energy generated by the falling
water is convened by a Pelton turbine wheel
into a design power output of 12 kilowaus.
The small turbo-generator is located beside
the Head Start pre-school building, which is
the primary load center that utilizes most of
the electricity produced The maximun load
for lhe pre-school is 7.4 kilowatts, which is
currently being reduced somewhat through
load management devices and more efficient
lighting.
Under federal law, small electricity
producers have a right to be connected into
the commercial power grid. However, the
Galamore Branch project is too small for
interconnection to be cost-effective.
Operating on a "stand-alone" basis (not
connected to the larger utility grid) requires
a ballast to prevent the electrical generator
from over-speeding when the load is low.
Currently the ballast load is divened
into two three-kilowatt resistance space
heaters mounted on the basement wall of the
Head Stan Center. However, plans call for
an integra1ed system in which the
micro-hydro plant will complement a
passive solar greenhouse to be built on the
side of the school building, which will
include water containers for a solar algae
pond aquaculture operation.
The water absorbs solar heat directly
and will not need backup heating in the
winter. But electrical resistance coils buried
in a bed of sand below the containers will
act as electrical ballast for the micro-hydro
system and will provide additional heat for
the tanks.
It is fitting that the Cherokee people
are developing this energy alternative. By
utilizing lhe natural products of the
ever-circling environment, they are
following the traditional values of their
culture in a modem context.
Micro-hydroelectric power is a
liberating technology. lt is a technology
scaled to living and working in place. It has
minimal negative environmental impacts and
could be a significant resource in developing
the new, land-based economv of Katuah.
Micro-hydroelectric power production
is site specific: each unique stream site
determines a different configuration for a
micro-hydro system. But the principles are
everywhere 1he same. The Galamore Branch
project provides descriptive exhibits and
workshops on micro-hydroelectric power
generation.
For information on visiting the
project, contact:
Save the Children
Box33J
Cherokee, NC
Ka/Uah Province 287I 9
or call (704) 497-6092
Michail Red Fox Is a whitt person
living on the Cherokl!e Indian Reserva1io11. fie was
involved in the design a11d construction of tht
micro-hydroelectric instal/Olion 011 Gal.amore Branch
aN1 is now head opera/or of the project.
KATIJAH- page21
SUMMER-1988
�spruce mountain song
DRUMMING
LETTERS TO KATUAH
~
If I could take this broken world
and give it back it's trees
it's gentle healing summer rain
f
~
it's clear, cool, autumn breeze
then I could rake the magic of the wood
the magic of the mind
and spread it then to ail my kin
to all of humankind
~
~
.i
And yet I know even as I speak
that this cannot be done
J.
I feel the earth through every pore
my healing bas begun
we start out as a candle flame
we will become the sun
~~i
~
~
~ ::°'b::::g: ~ethe
~
l
~.
-
earth
Mara Bradburn, 16
~
Robert Stough
Deny.PA
'..t
:rl·
~~
;~
~
~
4
~
~
;
~.g
~.~ i·
~
~
.... .It's funny how I picked today to read this issue of
Katuab, because I took a long walk through the woods
today with my neighbor (I live in the mountains of north
Georgia). We walked an old road that runs by Sharp Mt.
Creek I often stopped to wonder what life was like here in
these woods hundreds of years ago and how peaceful it must
have been to be one with nature, in this sacred land.
I will be looking forward to bearing from you.
Valerie Ansted
Jasper, GA
~
~
~
kt.
~
!§
t~~~~~~~~~.\t:19~..~~~~ .
Dear Kattlah,
We're busy in this area trying to repel the
Superconducting Supercollider the governor of this state
thinks should be in Durham, Granville, and Person counties.
We're talking forced relocation of (at least) 100 or so
families, some who have lived here for 5-7 generations
already.
The SSC is an atom smasher (53-mile underground
circle), that will produce particles of energy called muo.ns,
that will penetrate soil, rock and groundwater tables. It will
only be used for 25 years, at which time they have no idea
bow they will deal with the leftovers (our children).
Please help us pray for the Eanh and our children here
in the flatlands.
Tara Clayton
Rougemont, NC
KATUAH - page 22
summer morning dew, the nightclouds gone,
dawnlight glowing on the old sugar maples,
tree-snails stiJTing in its thick moss-fur,
i take the deer-trails through soaking meadows,
thoughts flowing with the yellow swallowtails
over hucklebeny meadows bumming with bees,
past moccasin orchids, young ferns in the sun,
through flame azaleas and wind-twisted birch
into deep spruce shadows, mossy and still,
then down a ways along a faint grassy trail
to a cool spring among ancient spruce/sages,
and rested there awhile. a stone for a pillow,
a feather in the hair of the wild old nx>untain,
then wandered on, sailing with the ravens
over jwnbled rockfields and tangles blowdowns,
by flowering witch-hobble, snow-petaled comets,
sparrows chatting in gnarled gray hawthorns,
a lone swallow skimming the crest
above the broken wing of the old wrecked plane,
i a thoughtless seed drifting on the wind,
each moment a cosmos sprouting,
waves of gn:cn mountains rolling me home,
soaring free, clear blue sky in all my mind
Dear KatUa b,
Thanks so much for the time and interest you are
giving to help make our vision become a reality. Without
such concern of kindred spirits we know that very little
would ever be accomplished.
As I mentioned to you, we need any useful donations
of building materials, hand tools, garden tools, heavy farm
equipment. livestock, and even workers to help clear and
build shelters on over 18 acres, recently purchased to provide
needy people with a "farming community home"!
Thanks again,
Cherie & Tom Lowry
Rt.#5, Box 216 T
Ellijay, GA 30540
(404) 838-4636
SUMMER- 1988
�APPALACHIAN SLEEP
In sleep,
each tree
becomes
the one cree,
each flush
of rhododendron,
color for the cheek
oflhedream
I rub with
dozing fingers,
each mountain,
something to climb
without thinking,
to soar above it
effonlessly
as a brash-feathered bird.
I do not leave
the glorious ou~lde
as I slip beneath ,
the sheet
but bring it w\tb me,
to wearcomfonabJy,
to wrap round
the child's soft body.
John Grey
C RMDESIGNS
Spring Equinox Dream 1988
There is a group of us out on a kind of platfonn and
we are watching a performance: dancing and farting around.
It feels more like a show than a performance. There are some
of the kids among us participating in the performance that is
going on to music. It is a kind of trapeze they are playing on
that is pulling them over humps in the straps etc. They seem
to be having fun playing on it, though the apparatus does not
seem to be working very well. At some point we realize that
!here is an authority that is about to impose a soning on us.
We each have numbers and are seated on these smooth
rounded pebble like soners that glide easily on the floor
surface. As we are being sorted we go through openings in
which we can not see the ends or where they come out. I
realize that I do not have a number, and begin to also realize
that I am being sorted toward the low end of the numbers.
People with low numbers or no numbers are soned for
extinction by the brutal authority. As I am finally sorted into
this category 1 become restless and begin to search for ways
to get over to the groups with higher numbers, such as 8 or 9
and find it very intimidating and difficult. There seem to be
no physical police yet their presence is still felt. I have with
me a metallic object that has on it a symbol like a planet or a
rounded form and a there is a feather sticking out of it It
becomes a spirit guide to me as 1 get a rush of energy from it
and find my way to survival. This magic symbol in metallic
form spoke to me with wisdom and 1 easily made it to the
group that slipped past the authority. It showed me that I had
my own energy with which to escape the trap that was made.
Later we are walking through a passageway and I am so
amaz.ed that we made it through alright. I remember the spirit
guide and its assistance. Together some friends and I realize
that this is all a movie of ourselves that we are watching, and
we are walking out of a kind of theatre in the earth. Soon we
are all together in the yard of our house around a fire. There
is a friend who is burning huge sticks of incense and we are
talking, and eating, and laughing.
RM
You know
Sometimes
in the quiet cool of summer dusk
I sit oo the porch after a rain
has washed the dark mountains and covered them
with quiet mist
a restless dream
rising and rolling
and the still hum of a million trees
lulling to the milky sky
like
This moment
as the river murmurs in its sleep
a hot tongue of lightning licks a distant ridge
the husky voice of far off thunder
sends a shudder through the bedded earth
she turns and breathes a long green sigh
and in her subtle sleepy way
Whispers the answer
- Tony Fisher
KA TUAH - page 23
SUMMER- 1988
�A Conversation
with
Ruth and Rio
of Celo Community
continued from p. 10
Ruth: It was one of the worst things!
-the worst! How to deal with multiflora
rose.
K: lt seems that people here have
very different lifestyles and interests that
keep them busy and not as involved with
each other as they might be. That may make
support difficult. Yet diversity can also be a
strength ...
the dark. Someone put a flashlight in the
middle of the circle and there were just
shadows... and there was such a difference
in the way people were sharing! That was
when I talked about the next workday...and
I was able to be real vibrant and alive 'cause
everyone wasn't staring at me. It was like I
was in the dark by myself talking to I don't
know who.
Ruth: Yeah- I really value the large
age diversity here. You have the wisdom of
people who've been here so long and have
been through all the processes and then you
have the young sprouts wilh new ideas and
energy--it's such a nice mixture.
K: Because some want to use
herbicides and some don't?
Ruth: Yes, and some don't even care
if we get rid of it
Rio: What's neat about the older
members is how open they are to new ideas.
And how they can even joke about
themselves and the community and how
crazy it is here.
Rio: And some say, "We've been
fighting it forever and it's getting away from
us so let's have careful use of chemicals and
just get rid of it "...and it's become such a
touchy subject people don't even want to
bring it up anymore.
Ruth: I remember hearing an older
member talk about the process in the
meetings being just like in a family--how
you're certainly going to have
disagreements so you just go ahead and
have them and move on. And you still love
each other because you're a family.
Ruth: So it took some new people to
say, "Let's go folks ... those who wanna do
it, come on out - we'll have a great time!"
K: So what'd you do?
Rio:
And knowing that the
difficulties not only pass but that they're
useful. And that new energy is coming in
and things are moving constantly.
Rio: We cut and grubbed... and got
rid of a Jot!
.~
Ruth : Life would be like that
E anywhere, only there are more rewards and
Ruth: And the same day a big group
also cleaned up the river. People were really
enthusiastic and had a fun time together. I'd
like to see that trend continue.
~ more possibilities here than I can imagine
:i
d
Ruth: People not being open with
how they feel.
Rio: I tend to say very little in the
meetings because I'm often intimidated.
Ruth: But you're loosening up.
Rio: I have to-I'm secretary of the
Property Committee so I have to read my
minutes and if people think I didn't do it
right I have to go through that.
K: It's great you're doing it.
Rio: It is. I do see it as a good
process for me.
Ruth: One of the best meetings we've
had recently was last month's. There was a
thunderstorm and the lights went out and
three-fourths of the meeting took place in
KATUAH-page24
K : Making a commitment to land is
.9
Rio: Some of the complaints now are
about how group process in the meetings is
so difficult. ..
K: Because of communication
problems?
having anyplace else.
seems to give a blessing to whatever
happens there. It almost assures success
because the land is so giving in return.
1i' such an important thing to do these days .. .it
!
K: Sounds like you should hold all
of them that way! You mentioned
relationships before and how important they
are in communities ... yet some people
probably came here panly to avoid deali.ng
with others as much ...aod suddenly find
they're as close as ever!
Rio: That reminds me - Billy
Bernstein wrote a hilarious song after he'd
been here awhile -·it goes something like "I
thought I was dropping out but it looks like
rm dropping in"!
Ruth: Celo is also getting fairly large
and that makes group process all the more
difficult
Rio: And there arc so many opinions
and the aim is to reach consensus on
everything. It also seems that with groups in
general it's hard to make commitments and
follow through on what you say you'll do.
It really takes supporting each other.
Ruth: That makes me think about
owning land. We owned some land in
Minnesota and I never even felt like I owned
it even though it was in my name. Holding
land as a community feels much closer to
true ownership. I want to call it
stewardship. It's about taking care of land
the way it needs to be taken care of and not
about saying, "I can do whatever I want
with it!" That doesn't even make sense to
me.
I'm really grateful to Arthur Morgan
and the others who started this place - and
all the work that's gone into it over the
years. And the longer fm here, the more I
appreciate it. It's such a healing
place... there's healing going on, and you
can't even put your finger on it - it's just
happening.
SUMMER - 1988
�The "'i4Jhtan4s of Roan
continued from p. 7
The SAHC is leading the way in securing this
much-needed protection. Examination of a broad range of
alternatives has led SAHC to conclude that protection can
best be accomplished through a blend of federal, state and
private ownership. SAHC encourages governmental
protection where appropriate, receives gifts of land and buys
land from willing sellers using donated funds. To date,
SAHC has protected approximately 900 acres through private
means and has partially funded a 693-acre acquisition by the
state of Tennessee. Approximately 9,500 acres still remain to
be protected.
SAHC's protection strategy Involves four approaches:
I. Receive gifts of land, including conservation
easements and other partial interests.
2. Encourage additional acquisition by Federal and State
agencies.
3. Purchase lands or interests in lands with donated
funds; own and manage such lands. The bulk of the
protection will be accomplished by this means.
4. Register lands under the respective Stare Namral Area
Registry programs; since registry is nm binding upon the
registrant, it may be considered only temporary
protection.
Cooperating with SAHC in saving the Highlands are
state agencies in North Carolina and Tennessee as well as the
US Forest Service. Endorsing the program are the National
Audubon Society, the Garden Club of America, the
Appalachian Trail Conference, and numerous state 8Jld local
organizations.
Without an active plan for preservation, it is likely that
much of the area now unprotected would eventually be
purchased by developers. In the early days of the
preservation effort, a part of the area was purchased by
developers. Fortunately these tracts were since acquired by
the US Forest Service. To date there have been two kinds of
development pressures: 1) second homes and 2) high density
recreation. Development activity bas been particularly strong
o.n the North Carolina side of the mountain. The largest
stngle development is on Beech Mountain, about 10 miles to
the aonheas1 of the Highlands of Roan. A particularly
controversial development is that on top of Sugar Mountain
where a concrete ten-story condominium is visible from
many points. Public outcry against this intrusion was so
great that the NC Legislature passed a "ridge law" restricting
construction on mountain tops; however, there is no
equivalent law for the slopes. Numerous smaller
developments are in the vicinity. Throughout the
Newland-Linville-Boone area, second homes are appearing
on many ridges and in rural areas.
The high density recreation developments have so far
been primarily oriented toward skiing. One large tract within
the preservation project boundaries was earlier surveyed as a
possible ski resort and determined to be among the top ten
sites in the southeast. (The same tract was considered as a
site for a Tennessee Regional State Prison.) There are large
ski developments on nearby Beech Mountain, Sugar
Mountain, Big Bald, and at Seven Devils. If skiing business
increases, development pressures will escalate.
The adverse consequences of developments within a
unique natural area are worth recounting: First, developments
limit accessibility by the general public. The owners of
second homes want privacy. Other facilities may be limited to
club members or pacrons. Second, it is clear that the health of
the animal populations within the Roan massif depends upon
an adequate range over which they can roam and feed.
The entire massif provides protection for certain
species that individual tracts a lone cannot provide.
Rare plant and animal species are more likely to survive in a
large area of protected tracts. Third, the views from the
higher summits depend absolutely on the absence of
incompatible development on the massif itself, particularly
within the project boundaries adopted by SAHC. High
density recreation facilities, public or private, could be so
heavily used that the present naturalness-would disappear.
KATUAH- page 25
'lt is cCea.r that the health of the
ani.mat poputati.ons wi.thi.n the
.Roan massi.f depends u.pon an
adequate ran9e over which they
can rnam and feed. The enti.rn
massi.f prnvi.des prntecti.on for
certai.n. speci.es that i.ndi.vi.du.a[
tracts a!on.e cannot provi.de.
SAHC realizes that the task of land protection cannot
be accomplished simply by acquiring lands and conferring on
them a certain conservation status. A continuing stewardship
program must be exercised to prevent damage from
ever-present threats to existing natural values. SAHC's plan
is to keep the Highlands of Roan the way they are: to
maintain the balds, to leave the forests undisturbed. to
encourage retention of fanning and other rural activities on
the lower slopes, and generally to let the lands be available to
the visitor on foot. The overall goal of SAHC's stewardship
program is to accommodate nondestructive scientific,
educational, and recreational uses of the Highlands of Roan
while protecting their biological and physical features.
To assure survival of the rich fauna and flora of Roan
Mountain, SAHC is keenly aware that management plans and
preserve boundaries must consider both habitat diversity
and t he total size of the a rea to be protected.
Boundary and acquisition decisions based on the narrow
distributions and requirements of individual plant species and
a few special plant communities will not suffice. A broad
view of the protection zone-·one which considers
wildlife habitat, animal mobility, and critical
population size--is more likely to ass ure
preservation of both the flora and the vast wildlife
legacy.
Vital to the success of SAHC's plan to preserve the
Highlands of Roan is a strong and successful fund-raising
program. SAHC has launched a major effon to raise the
approximately $10 million needed to complete the private
share of the protection plan. Nearly $1,000,000 has been
raised so far mainly from individuals. Individual
memberships in SAHC are available from a $10 minimum
Subscribing Membership to $1,000 or more as a Life
Member. Currently SAHC bas approximately 1800
members in 40 states.
SAHC also receives donations. The project is an
excellent vehicle for individual tax-deductible giving.
Appreciated land, securities and other property may be
donated without payment of capital gains tax; donors may
take a tax deduction on the market value of the gift as well.
The donation goes into the land fund and is used for the
acquisition of tracts within the project. SAHC also maintains
a perpetual register of memorial gifts. Also a number of
members have named SAHC as beneficiary in their wills; no
estate taxes are payable on bequests to tax-exempt
organizations. Another common form of giving is to take out
a life insurance policy and make SAHC the beneficiary and
owner of the policy. Such donations are tax-deductible as
well as the premium payments.
Becoming a member of the Southern Appalachian
Highlands Conservancy and volunteering time and skills is
an excellent way to participate in the protection of this
excraoidinary treasure-the Highlands of Roan.
~
Southern Appalachian Highlands Conser vancy
P.O. Box 3356, Kingsport, TN 37664
(615) 323-3677
This ar1icle was compiled by Marnie Muller of
Katuah
Journal Crom SAHC materials, panicularly
the SAHC Case Statement. Special thanlcs to Stan
Murcay of SAHC.
SUMMER-1988
�LEARNING COMMUNITY
-Arth ur Morgan Schoolcontinucd from p. 12
'The reason we have such a variety of
experiences and such an openness about
giving the students choices is because we
know that there arc things that each student
can do well. We make an effon to help find
out what they are, and we let them know in
a sincere way that they arc good enough,"
said Patty.
ttEvery situation is approached
slightly differently. We try to give
everybody involved a chance to talk about
their perspective. We try to clarify all the
specifics of any problem. We might use the
chalkboard for writing 'this is his problem
with the issue, and this is what he would
like to see happen' and 'this is her problem
and what she would like to see happen' to
get everything clearly out
'This can be done in a small group,
or in the all-school meetings which happen
weekly. It is a consensus process and deals
with the issue in a way that can satisfy
everybody. Discipline often comes in the
form of a proposal that is carried on during
a trial period, such as from one all-school
meeting to the next. and then re-evaluated."
In this way students have the opponunity to
participate significantly in making decisions
that affect them.
Cooperation is another quality needed
in a healthy community. This means sharing
the work as well as the play. Students arc
involved in all phases of community
responsibility - cooking, cleaning, wood
gathering and spli11ing, and gardening.
Wor k teaches responsibility and
interdependence as well as practical skills.
Patty said. "If a student doesn't want
to do their chore at lunch, and their job is to
wash dishes, then that throws everything
off. It means that whoever is drying and
potting dishes away can't do it, or has to
wait In practical ways like that we try to
poi.n t out that each student's personal
actions affect everyone dse.
"This isn't the right school for
everybody. We want to be clear about what
the school is. We're flexible in trying to
meet each student's needs to an extent, but
if a student has a problem with stealing
things, for example, we're not willing to
lock everything up so that ccnain student
can remain here. If a student can't cope with
the 'freedom within a structure' that we
offer here, we're not going to change our
whole philosophy."
Elizabeth Morgan in her notes
referred to a quote from Mahatma Mohandas
Gandhi that summed up that philosophy: "A
school should be built by the children,
should seek to be self-supporting, and
should never be finished!"
,
DE.SIGNS
by Rob Messick
1
1tus1ra1lon & Design
in Pen & Ink and Colored Pencil
P.O. Box 2801 •
Boone. NC 28007 •
(704)7~;
111.TMVIOLET l'UWICATIOtl AHO fllTBllMO IYITfMI
GM PlflODUCTI • WATSI AHAL\'Ill
.HWY. 107
RAN~
C. LANIER
~2
RT. II IOX 125
CUL.1..0WHEE, NC am
T-SHIRTS, SWEATSHIRTS
For ADULTS and CHILDREN
15 ORIGINAL
HANO-PRINTED
NATURE DESIGNS
EACH COWRFUL
DESIGN IS
PRlN'IED ON
QUALITi T' s
AND SWEATS
Chinese
Acupuncture
and
Herbology
Clinic
M. C. Majebe
Licensed Acupuncturist
78 East Chestnut St. Ashevllle, NC 28801
(704) 258-901 6
KATIJAH - page 26
S~R-1988
�. ........
NABC ill
From Aug 21-26, 1988, Lhe Third North
A meric an Biorcgio na l Con gress
(NABC III) will draw Turtle Islanders
from all over the continent to Vancouver,
British Columbia, for a five-day celebration
of their varied cultural forms and their
commitment to the restoration of ecological
harmony on this pan of the planet
NABC Ill will adopt a cultural focus,
encouraging panicipants to express their
bioregional identities by telling their stories,
presenting displays and mapping projects,
exhibiting their arts and craflS, and sharing
their cerebral and ceremonial activities.
For more information, write NABC III,
Box 99, Lillooet, BC, Canada VOK !VO.
Individuals or groups wishing to contact
other NABC participants from Katliab may
phone (704) 683-1414.
For a copy of NABC ll Proceedings, a
112-page report on the 1986 Congress,
send $11. 50 (p & h included) to Ha.rt
Publishing, Box 1010, Forestville, CA
95436.
Cry, Sacred G round: Big Mountai n
U.S.A. (© 1988) by Anita Parlow js a
compelling oral testimony of Navaho
sheepherders who describe the religious
beliefs that underlie the impressive
resistance to stop a disinheritance from their
sacred ground. The Navahos who share
l11eir stories do so to make certain that what
is happening will not be forgotten - and that
it be stopped. As one Medicine Man told the
author, "our children will know that we
knew how to live.as' Navahos and we knew,
too, how to die as Navahos.
Cry, Sacred G ro und, produced by the
Sacred Lands Project of the Christie
Institute, includes 50 photographs and
artwork by award-winning artist William
Franklin.
,
.
The Sacred Lands Project of th.e Christie
lnstiuae, 1324 North Capitol Street, N.W.,
Washington, D.C. 20002
Who Owns North Carolina is a
420-page guide to the largest landowners in
the state's 100 counties, tile result of the
most exhaustive land ownership
investigation ever undertaken for a state or
region in the U.S.
Maps, charts, data analysis, and
interpretative essays offer statistical details
and comparative ranlcings of each county's
largest landowners, data on forestry and
farming in each county, rankings of the
counties by 25 different social, economic,
and political characteristics, and discussion
by the project's investigators of the cultural
significance of their findings.
The book is available for $30 for
Katuah readers (mention our name). Write:
lnstitme for Sowhern Studies, P.O. Box
531, Durham, NC 27702
The International 4th World
Assembly will hold its seventh assembly
this summer, July 31-August 4, 1988 at
Meredith College in Raleigh, NC. The 4th
World is an informal group of people from
all over the world who affirm the right of
urban neighborhoods and rural villages to
make their own decisions abopt their own
Jives. The theme this year is "Community
Economics As If the Earth Mattered".
Registration is open to all. Full conference
fee including meals, lod ging and
proceedings is $150.
For more info: School of Living, 7th
assembly; 3030 Sleepy Hollow Rd, Falls
Church, VA 22042.
Economics as If the Earth Really
Matte r e d is the first in a new series of
books from New Society Publishers
exploring the possibilities for creating an
accountable economy. The book by Susan
Meeker-Lowry offers hundreds of
suggestions of how average people can
invest their money and/or their time in
building a new economy in harmony with
life-affirming values. Subjects covered
include boycotts, shareholder action,
socially responsible investment funds,
small-scale investing, projects i n local
economic control and worker-ownership,
new community economics, tools for
reinvestment and.revitalization, alternative
exchange systems, and seeds for the future.
Dozens of names and addresses and
resource lists round out this unique and
exciting book.
Meeker-Lowry, publisher of Cara/yst-a
quarterly newsletter for those interested in
small-scale socially responsible investing,
offers us new glimpses of ways in which
people are using their participation in the
economic system as a vehicle for the
expression of consciously chosen values:
living in harmony with the earth, fighting
poverty and injustice, combatting feelings of
helplessness and hopelessness, and building
lives which combine diversity and
synthesis, integration and balance.
New Society Publishers, P.O. Box 582,
Santa Cruz, CA 95061-0582
The Ca r olina Associa tion fo r t he
Ad va ncement of Midwifery (CAAM)
is a grassroolS organization whose goal is to
remove the current legal restrictions that
prevent direct-entry midwives from
practicing in North Carolina. CAAM's goal
is to promote competent and legal midwives
to serve the women and families of North
Carolina. CAAM wants members from all
over North Carolina. Membership ($10/yr)
entitles one to receive future issues of
Midwifery News as well as contribute to the
effort to make North Carolina a state where
parents have real choices about giving birlll.
CAAM, Rt.1, Box 201 M, Durham, NC
27705
A unique
summer comp
uduenture
Natural Food Store
& Deli
160 Broadway
Asheville, NC 28801
{704)683-1414
68:M795
Where &oadWay rMets
Merrlmon Ave & 1-240
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
Monday-Saturday: 9am·8pm
Sunday: 1pm-5pm
ror
young people
6 - 18 years old
Woods, water, trail experiences,
horses, crafts, Indian lore
free brochure available
Pepperland Farm Camp
Star Rout e Fiimer, TN 37333
{704) 253-7656
KATUAH - page 27
SUMMER - 1988
�€V€0t'S
7-10
LINVILLE, NC
The Highland Games at
Grandfather Mountain. Caber toss, sheepdog trinls,
Highland dancing, bagpipes. $8.00/day. For more
info, call (704) 733-2013.
9
HELEN, GA
·Appalachian Mountain Music
Festival" at Unicoi State Park; Helen, GA 30545.
Call (404) 878-2201.
GREAT SMOKY MOUNTAINS
"Big Game Observation." S4S.
Smoky Mountain Field School Sec 6/},5-26.
9-10
JUNE
19-2S
BRASSTOWN, NC
"June Music and Dance Week" at
John C. Campbell Folk School; Brasstown, NC
28902.
SUMMER
20
CELEBRATION
SOLSTICE
22-26
HIGHLANDS, NC
"The Art of Landscape
Photography" workshop with Gil Leebrick and John
Scarlata. $2SO incl. accommodations. Appalachian
Environmental Ans Center; P.O. Box 580;
Highlands, NC 28741
GREAT SMOKY MOUNTAINS
"Wild Mammals of the Great
Smokies" field instruction with Dr. Michael Pelton.
$45. Smoley Mountain Field School; 2016 Lake
Ave.; Knoxville, TN 37996.
25-26
29
Full Moon
29
RABUN GAP, GA
"Wild Fems" expedition with
Marie Mellinger. $8 incl. lunch. The Hambidge
Center; P.O. Box 339; Rabun Gap, GA 30568 or
ca1J (404) 746-5718.
13
New Moon
13
RABUN GAP, GA
"Materializing the Shadows."
Investigating stream life with Dr. William
Mcl.arney. The Hambidge Center, SQC 6(29.
17-23
m G HLANDS, NC
"Transcendentalism on the
Mountain" seminar at The Mountain; 841 Highway
106; Highlands, NC 28741
29-31
CELO, NC
"Midw i fery
in
the
Mountains" conference. Workshops on
"Herbs in Pregnancy and Binh," "Medical
Questions," "Body Work," "Tricks of the
Trade," more. With Lucinda Flodin;
Barbara King, MD; Lisa Goldstein; Pat
Roy; others. $55 incl. meals. Lisa
Goldstein; 823-C Hannah Branch Rd.;
Burnsville, NC 28714. (704) 675-5316.
30.31
GREAT SMOKY MOUNTAINS
"Mushroom ldcntific.ation," for
beginners. $45. Smoky Mountain Field School, sec
6/2S-26.
22-24
HOT SPRINGS, NC
"Rhinoceros Glances at the Moon:
The Art of Movement as Meditation.• Tai Chi
weekend with Jay Dunbar. $75. Southern Dharma,
see7/l-4.
22-24
GREAT SMOKY MOUNTAINS
Family Weekend at Great Smoley
Mountains Institute at Tremont. Hiking,
siorytelling, music, more. AdultS:· $4S. Children:
$35. Write at Townsend, TN 37882 or call (615)
448-6709.
RALEIGH, NC
Fourth World Conference
("break down all the big powers into their
ethnic or bioregional areas") - bioregional
sp~ers, including Jim Berry, Peter Berg,
Susan Meeker-Lowry, and Mamie Muller.
At Meredith College. $150. For more info,
write School of Living; 3030 Sleepy
Hollow Rd.; Falls Church, VA 22042..or
call (703) 237-7507.
24-29
JULY
1-31
ASHEVILLE, NC
"Mountain Sweet Talk," a two-act
play with The Folktellers, Barbara Freeman and
Connie Regan-Blake, at the Folk An Center on the
Blue Ridge Parkway. Advance LickctS: S8.00. Call
(704) 258-11 13.
GREAT SMOKIES PARK
"Teacher and Naturalist
Week" (and anyone interested in learning
more about the natural world). Joseph
Cornell (Sharing Nature with Children),
guest instructor. "Learn about the natural
history of the Smokies and ways of
effectively motivating people toward a
deeper appreciation of the natural world."
$145. Great Smoky Mpuntains Institute at
Tremont. See7/22-24
31-8/4
24-30
1-4
HOT SPRINGS, NC
"Writing Down the Bones."
Writing, meditation and yoga retreat with Natalie
Goldberg and Frances Kean. SJ20. Southern Dhnrma
Retreat Center; Rt 1, Box 34- H; Hot Springs, NC
28743.
ROANOKE, VA
"Celebrate Love• conrerence
sponsored by Visions or Tomorrow at Hollins
College. Cllls.<:es, events, conccrtS. Program: S165;
w/ food, acc. $290. Contact: Jan Settle; Rt. I, Box
310-A; Goode, VA 24556
28
AUG.UST
l
LAMMAS
FESTIVAL
1-28
ASHEVILLE, NC
"Mountain Swee1 Talk," sec
7/1 -31.
1-31
C HEROKEE, NC
"The Art of Cherokee
Fingerwcaving" cxhibil at the Cherokee Heritage
Museum and Gallery; Box 477; Cherokee. NC
28719.
5-7
GREAT SMOKY MOUNTAINS
Naiuro Siudy Workshop fOI' adults.
$45. Grct1t Smoley Mountains Institute al Tremont,
see 7/22-24
Full Moon
12
KATUAH- page 28
DAY ( Mid s ummer )
New Moon
SUMMER- 1988
�27
ELKrNS, WV
August.a Fcs1ival - 11adilional
music and dance wilh all the 11immings. Write
August.a Hcriiage Ccn1cr, Davis and Elkins College;
Elkins. WV 26241.
Full Moon
12-14
22-28
WILLIS, VA
"Women's Wellness Week"
with Libby Outlaw (massage therapist);
Carolyn Moore, MD; Katherine Chantal
(herbalist); Christine Byrd (nutirtional
counselor); much more. Pre-register: $295
incl. food and acc. Indian Valley Holistic
Center; Rt. 2, Box 58; Willis, VA 24380
26-28
LOUISA, VA
· women: Cclcbra1ing Our
Divcrsily - A Multiculiural Galhcring•
wi1h
workshops, performance, dance, culwml sharing.
S35·75 sliding rec. Wrile Women; Twin Oaks
Communi1y; Louisa VA 23093 (703) 894-5126.
10
New Moon
1-30
CHEROKEE, NC
"Ayun'ini (Swimmer): Cherokee
Shaman" exhibi1 al Cherokee Hcrit.age Museum and
Gallery. SceS/1-31.
2-5
BRASSTOWN, NC
"Labor Day Music and Dance
Weekend" wilh Pelc Sulhcrland, Karen Billings,
Marlha Owen, olhcrs. John C. Campbell Folk
School, sec 6/19-25.
3-5
HIGHL ANDS, NC
"Pinhole in lhe Landscape,"
pinhole camera workshop wilh Eric Renner. "/ use
no viewfinder or exposure meter; I rely upon the
passion and the timing within myself and the belief
that it will worlc." Environmcnllll Aris Ccn1cr, sec
6{22-26.
17-18
HARRISONB UR G, VA
"Restoring Wilderness in the
East: A Deep Ecology Perspective"
conference featuring Dave Foreman (Eanh
First!), Gary Lawless (Gulf of Maine
Bioregion), Jamie Sayen (PAW), Barbara
Dugelby (Earth First!), David Wheeler
(Kataah). Sponsored by Virginia Earth
First! and Virginians for Wilderness;
co-sponsored by Karuah. At James Madison
University in Harrisonburg. Registration:
$10 advance, $15 at door. For more info:
write VA EF!; Route 1, Box 250; S1aunton,
VA 2440 I or call (703) 885 6983.
17-18
HE LEN, CA
"Native Americans of lhc
Soulheast• a1 Unicoi St.ate Park, see 7/9.
4
GREAT SMOKY MOUNTAINS
"Wild Mammals or lhc Grcal
Smokies," see 6125-26.
/'
TU~
f~LL GATME~NG
RND THROE FRIR
SEPTEMBER 30 • OCTOBER 2 , 1988
in Floyd County, VA
Actiuitie s, Music, Dancing, Workshop s
Bring: camping equipment, musical instruments, trade goods
For more information, contact:
Katherine Delauney
Will Ashe Bason
Travianna Farm
Rt. 1, Box 217
Check, VA 24072
(703) 745-2708
(703) 651-3492
Need a ride? Share a ride? Call your local Katuah contact person or:
Eastern slope (NC, GA, SC): David Wheeler (705) 586-3146
Tom Hendricks (704) 689-5382
Western slope (TN):
Sariah Loveday (615) 688-7408
KATUAH - page 29
SUMMER- 1988
�STARSPAN ASTROLOGICAL PROFILES:
Relationships, life chans, forccastS. ChartS and
proCcssional taped readings also available. P.O. Boll
10413; Raleigh. NC 27605
WANTED: LAND in western NC. Flllllily seeks 5
or more acres, preferably near Cullowhee, to
preserve and evenwally inhabit U you have or know
or affordable land, contaeL Bob and Mary Davis; 213
Wesunorcland Ct; Georgetown, KY 40324 (502)
863-4267.
MOON DANCE PARM HERBALS - herbal salves,
tinctures, & oils for birthing & family health. For
brochure, please write: Moon Dance Farm: Rt 1,
Box 726; Hampton, TN 37658
FUTONS by Simple Pleasures - affordably priced.
Send SASE for info 10: Simple Pleasures; RL. l,
Box 1426: Clayton, GA 30525 (404) 782-3920
FREE CATALOG - Our books cover solar energy,
natural foods, mCUlphysics, fiction, and poetry. The
latest project is Black Mountain Rtvitw, with
!hemes on lhe individual vs. society. Write: Lorien
House; P.O. Box I 112; Black Mountain, NC 28711
EUSTACE CONWAY- Guide and 1eaeher of
primitive Earth Skills with emphasis on fire
building, hide tanning., shell.er, and foraging. He
teaches at public schools, parks, environmenlal
cen1ers, and classes of au kinds. For more
information contact him at: 602 Deerwood Drive,
Gastonia, NC 28084 or call Allein Stanley al (704)
872-7972
POLE STAR RETREAT CENTER available for
rental. Days. weekends, or weeks. Conferences,
workshops, CIC. in privalC, rural setting. 30 ft yurt,
camping, swimming. Localed near Boone, NC.
Contact: Rt 2, Box 59: Zionville. NC 28698
(904) 385-2071.
GARDENERS are encouraged to visi1 our Paradise
Garden for instruction and inspiralion (free) and/or
perennial plan1 sale (cheap). ArtistS are inviied. IO
come and crealC in lhe garden - painting, drawing,
and photography are encouraged. We also have a
cabin available in exchange for working in lhe
garden. Mountain Gardens; 3020 While Ouk Crock;
Burnsville, NC 28714 (704) 675-5664.
M. TREE DESIGNS: Illustrations and Design Beyond the pages of lhis journal, I work in pencil,
colored pencil, ink, cul paper, and batik. Fine and
graphic an to express and enhance our lives. Logos,
brochures, books, portrailure, window and wall
hangings. Contae1 Martha Tree (704) 754-6097.
DAYSTAR ASTROLOGICAL SERVICE - natal,
transit, comparison chartS. Very accurate. Only
S3.00 each. Chris and Will Bason: RI. 2, Box 217;
Check, VA 24072 (703) 651-3492
ALTERNATIVE COMMUNITY in the Smoky
Mt'ns. of east TN. 10 acres with creek, springs,
views. good neighbors. Be a part for $8500. Call
Leslie (615) 453-1538.
STIL-LIGHT TREOSOPHJCAL RETREAT
CENTER - a quiet space for personal meditation,
group inLCraction lhrough s1udy, and community
work, and spiritual seminars. Contact Leon Frankel;
Rt l, Box 326; Waynesville, NC 28786
WOMANSONG - ongoing choral group forming.
Songs of bcau1y, meaning spiril, fun, peace.
cooperation, sisterhood. Come and sing! Mon.
evenings, 7:30-9, Asheville, NC. (704) 254-7068.
CRAFTSPEOPLE - send price listings 10 Gifted
/lands of NC, 331 Blake S1; Raleigh, NC 27601
(Au'n: Bern Grey Owl) - unique shop presenting
35-40 craflers' works in Raleigh's City Market All
crafts considered.
HAND-CARVED WOODSPIRITS. mys1i:al
hiking staffs, and wall hangings by Steve Duncan.
For brochure, please wri1e Whippoorwill S1udio;
Rt 4, Box 981: Marion, NC 28752.
ASTROLOGICAL CHARTS - natal. progressed, or
solar re1um. 4-page prin1ou1 includes wheel wilh
planetS and houses, aspecLS, midpoin1s, and
keywords. Specify name, binh time, date, place, and
chart type. StO 10 Phoenix Productions; Rt 2, Box
59; Zionville, NC 28698.
RM DESIGNS - I use the media of pencils, colored
pencils, gouache, pen and ink, and photography in
creating unique fine and graphic art I can make
diagrams, logos, finished prints, and designs for
brochures, calenders, cards, books, CIC. Mandalas and
symbols are my 1cndency among other styles.
Contact Rob Messick (704) 754-6097,
LAND TRUST in lhe forming on 57 acres near
Boone, NC seeking families wilh slrOng visions and
resources to manifest a peaceful place for our
children to grow in love and to survive lhe coming
of lhe new age. Paul and Susan Del Rios; RL 2,
Box 314; Vilas, NC 28692 (704) 297-4937
LETTERS OF FRIENDSHIP AND SUPPORT
would be appreciated by incarcerated brothc.r. Write
10: Rick Whitaker #85670; Box 2000; Wartburg,
TN 37887
DRUMS - Custom handcrafted ceramic dumbccks &
wooden medicine drums. Call Joe Roberts at (704)
258-1038 or write LO: 738 Town Mountain Rd.;
Asheville, NC 28804.
ALTERNATIVE COMMUNITY now forming in
the mountains of norlh GA. Join olhers seeking
greater cooperation and self-sufficiency. Based on
spiritual and ecological values. Properly is now
available. (404) 778-8754.
BLIGHT RESISTANT CHESTNUT - hybrid
American/Chinese Dunstan chestnu1 trees - blight
resistant, timber growlh form, productive orchard
crop with large, swee1 easily-peeled nutS. Chestnu1
Alli Nursery; RI. J, Box 341-K; Alachua, FL
32615 (904) 462-2820
BLOW YOUR MIND wilh "Medicine Wind."
Finc-1uned bamboo nu1es and soothing musical
recordings masterfully 1rancemit1ed 1hrough
"Medicine Wind"/Gcorge Tortorelli; 86 NW 55 SL;
Gainesville, FL 32607 (904) 373-1837.
ORGANIC FERTILIZERS, herbs, and
organically-grown, local produce at the WNC
Farmcss' Markell Look for the Fairglcn Farms stall,
unitS F and G in lhe wholesale area of lhe Farmers'
Markel; 570 Brevard Rd.: Asheville, NC (704)
252-4414
"ESSENCE" - the all-one skin/dress/
jumper/pantaloons wilh nursing pockCIS. Earlhwcar;
ROI, Box 75-CI; Carl1on, PA 16311
SMALL HOUSE on land trust in rural NC
mountains in exchange for pan-time farm chores and
occasional companionship to creative, joyful,
mentally handicapped adul1 (or olher labor, such as
carpentry). Quaker Camily. Meeting nearby. Write:
Bob and Dot Barrus; Cll!llp Celo: 1349 Hannah
Branch Rd.; Burnsville, NC 28714
ARCHITECTURAL ADVICE AND DESIGN:
Adam Cohen; Rt. 2, Boll 217; Check, VA 24072
"TREASURES lN THE STREAM" - a casset1e tape
of songs by Bob Avery-Grubel. SIO to Rt. I, Box
735; Floyd, VA 24091.
WEBWORKJNG is free. Send submissions to:
KatUah Journal
P.O. Box 638
Leices1er, NC
Kauiah Province 28748
ORM DESIGNS
KATUAH - page 30
SUMMER - 1988
�Mtdlcln,..
The KatUah J ournal wants to communicate your thoughts and feelings to the
other people in the bioregional province. Send them to us as letters, poems, stories,
articles, drawings, or photographs, etc. Please send your contributions to us at: Kat:Uali
Journal, P. 0. Box 638, Leicester, NC, Katuah Province 28748.
.?tllfts
In the fall, Katuah will look at Castanea dentata, the American chestnut
tree, and its importance in restoring Appalachian habitat. Any information about this great
tree's past and future will be welcome.
"Hand Made," exploring the benefits of living simply and creatively, will be the
focus for the winter issue of the Katuah Jo um al.
·BACK ISSUES OF KATUAH AVAILABLE
ISSUE THREE - SPRING 1984
Sustainable Agriculture - Sunfl~wers - Humm
Impact on the Forest - Children.s' Eduution
Veronica Nicbolu:Woman in Politics - Little
People - Medicine Allies
full C'olor
ISSUE FOUR - SUMMER 1984
Waler Drum - Waw Quality - Kudzu - Solu
Eclipse - Clearcutting - Trout - Going to Waicr
Ram Pwnps - Microhydro - Poems: Bennie
Sinclair, Jim W ayne Miller
T-sfilrts
w
In the traditional Cherokee Indian belief,
the creatures in the world today are only
diminuitive forms of the mythic beings who
once inhabited the world, but who now reside
In Galuna'ti, the spirit world, the highest
heaven. But a few of the original powers broke
through the spiritual barrier and exist yet in the
world as we know it. These beings are called
with reverence •grandfathers·. And of them,
the strongest are Kanati, the lightning, the
power of the sky; Utsa'nati, the rattlesnake,
who personifies the power of the earth plane;
and Yunwi Usdi. "the little man•, as ginseng is
called in the sacred ceremonies, who draws up
power from the underworld.
Each is the strongest power in its own
domain. Together they are allies: their energies
complement each other to form an even
greater power. As medicine allies, they
represent the healing powers of the
APPalachian Mountains.
The medicine powers of KattJah have been
depicted In a striking T-shirt design by Ibby
Kenna. Printed in 5-color silkscreen by
Ridgerunner Naturals on top quality. all-cotton
shirts, they are available now in all adult sizes
from the KatUah Joumal.
"To show respect for this supernatural trinity
of the natural world is to in turn become an ally
in the continuing process of maintaining
harmony and balance here in the mountains of
Katuah."
To order, use the form below.
ISSUE AVE - FALL 1984
H:irvcsl - Old Ways in Cherokee - Ginseng Nuclear W ute - Our CeIlic Heri111ge Biorcgionallsm: Put. Present. and Future John Wilnoty - Healing Dlllkncss - Politics of
Participation
ISSUE SIX - WINTER 1984-85
Winier Solstice Earth Cct'cmony - Horscpasturc
River - Coming of the Light - Log Cabin
Roota - Mountain Agricul1ure: The Righi Crop
- William Taylor - The Fururc of the Forest
ISSUE SEVEN - SPRINO 1985
Sustainable Economics - Hot Springs - Worker
Ownership - The Great Economy - Self Help
Credit Union - Wild Turkey - Responsible
Investing - Working in the Web of Life
ISSUE EIOHT - SUMMER 1985
Celebration: A Way of Life - Katuah 18,000
Years Ago - Sacred Sites - Folk Ans in the
Schools - Sun Cycle/Moon Cycle - Poems:
Hilda Downer - Cherokee Heritage Ccnicr -
Who Owns Appalachia?
ISSUE NINE - FALL 1985
The \Va.Idec Forest - The Trees Speak Migrating Forests - Horse Logging - Starting•
Tree Crop - Urban Trees - Acom Bre.od - Myth
rune
ISSUE TEN- WINTER 1985-86
Kate Rogers - Circles of Stone - lnicmal
Mythmalting - Holistic Healieg on Trial Poems: Steve Knauth - Mythic Ploces - Tbe
Uktcna's Tale - CryJtal Magic -
I'"
ISSUE ELEVEN - SPRINO 1986
Community Planning - Cities and the
Bioregional Vision - Recycling - Community
Ocdcning- Floyd County, VA - GllSOhol Two BioregioMI Views - Nuclear Supplement
Foxfire Oames - Good Medicine: V'tSion.s
ISSUE THIRTEEN - Fall 1986
Cenicr For Awalccning - Elizabeth Calllri - A
Gentle Death - Hospice - Ernest Morgan .
Dealing Creatively with Death - Home Burial
Boit - The Wake - The Raven Mocker Woodslore and Wildwoods Wisdom - Good
Medicine: The Swea! Lodge
ISSUE FOURTEEN - Winier 1986-87
Uoyd Carl Owlc - Boogen and Mummers - All
Species Day - Cabin Fever University Homeless in Katuah - Homemade Hot Wau:r
Stovema kcr's Narrative - Good Medicine:
Interspecies Communication
ISSUE FIFTEEN - Spring 1987
Coverleis - Woman Forester - Susie McMahan
Midwife - Alterna tive Contraception Bioscxuallty - Bioregionalism and Women Good Medicine! Maniaclwial Culwie - ~
ISSUE SIXTEEN - Swnmcr 1987
Helen Waite - Poem: Visions in a Garden Vision Quest - First Flow - Initiatjon Leaming ie the Wilderness - Cherokee
Challenge - "Valuing Trees"
ISSUE EIGHTEEN - Winier 1987-88
Vernacular Architecture - Drums in Wood and
Stone - Mountain Home - Earth Enc.-gics Earth-Shch•m'<I Living - Membrane Houses .
Brush Shelter - Poems: Oc1obq Dusk - Good
Medicine: "Shelter"
ISSUENINETEEN-Spring 1988
Per!eandra Garden - Spring Tonics -Blueben:ies
WildDower Gardens - Granny Herbalist Flower Essences - "The Origin of the Animals:
Story - Good Medicine: "Power" - Be A Tnoc
"Dreamspcaking"
~~'
~UA~URNAL
For more info:
call (704) 683-1414
P.O. Box 638 Leicester, NC Katuah Province 28723
Back Issues
Issue#_@ $2.50 = $_ _
Issue#_@ $2.50 = $_ _
Issue#_@ $2.50 = $_ _
Issue# _ _@ $2.50 = $_ _
Issue#_@ $2.50 = $_ _
Complete Set (3-11, 13-16,
18-19)
Regular Membership........ $10/yr.
Name
Sponsor.........................$20/yr.
Contributor.....................$50/yr.
Address
Enclosed is$
to give
this ejfon an extra boost
City
State
@ $25.00 = $_ _
T-Shirts: specify quantity
color: tan
S_ _ M _ _
L_ _ XL_ _
@ $9.50 each............$_ _
Zip
I can be a local contact
person for my area
Area Code
KATUAH - page 31
Phone Number
TOTAL PRICE=
$_ _
postage paid
SUMMER-1988
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians Records
Description
An account of the resource
<em>Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians</em>, later simplified to <em>Katúah Journal</em>, was published from 1983 to 1993. A quarterly publication, it was focused on the bioregion of former Cherokee land in Appalachia. <br /><br /><span>The early issues of the journal explain the meaning of the Cherokee name, </span><em>Katúah</em><span>, and why the editors wanted to view the world through a bioregional lens, rather than political boundaries. A volunteer production, the editors took a holistic view in tackling social, environmental, mental, spiritual, and emotional topics of the day, many of which are still relevant. </span><br /><span><br />The <em>Katúah Journal</em> was co-founded by Marnie Muller, David Wheeler, Thomas Rain Crowe, Martha Tree and others who served as co-publishers and co-editors. Other key team members included Chip Smith, David Reed, Jay Mackey, Rob Messick and many others.</span><br /><br />This digital collection is only a portion of the <em>Katúah</em>-related materials in the W.L. Eury Appalachian Collection in Special Collections at Appalachian State University. The items in AC.870 Katúah Journal records cover the production history of the <em>Katúah Journal</em>. Contained within the records are correspondence, publication information, article submissions, and financial information. The editorial layouts for issues 12 through 39 are included as are a full run of the Journal spanning nearly a decade. Also included are photographs of events related to the Journal and a film on the publication.
Source
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This resource is part of the <em>Katúah Journal Records </em>collection. For a description of the entire collection, see <a href="https://appstate-speccoll.lyrasistechnology.org/repositories/2/resources/937" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Katúah Journal Records (AC. 870)</a>.
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The images and information in this collection are protected by the Copyright Law of the United States (Title 17, U. S. C.) and are intended only for personal, non-commercial, and educational purposes, provided proper citation is used – i.e., Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians Records, 1980-2013 (AC.870), W. L. Eury Appalachian Collection, Special Collections, Appalachian State University, Boone, NC. Researchers are responsible for securing permissions from the copyright holder for any reproduction, publication, or commercial use of these materials.
Date
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1983-1993
Format
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journals (periodicals)
Language
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English
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Text
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Title
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<em>Katúah Journal</em>, Issue 20, Summer 1988
Description
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The twentieth issue of the <em>Katúah Journal</em> focuses on preserving wilderness in Appalachia with a look at land trusts, the Preserving Appalachian Wilderness (PAW) proposal, and Cherokee perspective on relating to land. Authors and artists in this issue include: David Wheeler, Gil Leebrick, Marilyn Cade, Christina Morrison, Laurie Pierce, Judith Hallock, Carol Lawrence, Billy Campbell, Nancy Barnhardt, Chip Smith, Martha Tree, Michael Red Fox, John Grey, Rob Messick, and Tony Fisher. <br><br><em>Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians</em>, later simplified to <em>Katúah Journal</em>, was published from 1983 to 1993. A quarterly publication, it was focused on the bioregion of former Cherokee land in Appalachia. The early issues of the journal explain the meaning of the Cherokee name, Katúah, and why the editors wanted to view the world through a bioregional lens, rather than political boundaries. A volunteer production, the editors took a holistic view in tackling social, environmental, mental, spiritual, and emotional topics of the day, many of which are still relevant.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1988
Table Of Contents
A list of subunits of the resource.
The Tracks of the Panther.......1<br /><br />Highlands of Roan.......6<br /><br />Celo Community: 50 Years on the Land.......8<br /><br />Celo: Interview.......10<br /><br />Land Trust: Tenure for Our Time.......11<br /><br />Learning Community.......12<br /><br />Mountain Landscapes at Risk.......13<br /><br />Rest in Perpetual Wilderness.......14<br /><br />"The Ridge"........15<br /><br />Farmers and the Farm Bill.......16<br /><br />Good Medicine: "Relating to the Land".......17<br /><br />"It Comes in a Mist".......18<br /><br />Duke's Power Play.......19<br /><br />Cherokee Microhydro Project.......21<br /><br />Drumming: Letters to Katúah.......22<br /><br /><em>Note: This table of contents corresponds to the original document, not the Document Viewer.</em>
Publisher
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Sylva Herald Publishing Company, Sylva, North Carolina
Subject
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Bioregionalism--Appalachian Region, Southern
Sustainable living--Appalachian Region, Southern
Human ecology
Wilderness areas--Appalachian Region, Southern
Celo Community--History
Land use, Rural--Appalachian Region, Southern
Land trusts
North Carolina, Western
Blue Ridge Mountains
Appalachian Region, Southern
North Carolina--Periodicals
Language
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English
Type
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Text
Source
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<a href="https://appstate-speccoll.lyrasistechnology.org/repositories/2/resources/937"> AC.870 Katúah Journal records</a>
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<a title="In Copyright – Educational Use Permitted" href="https://rightsstatements.org/page/InC-EDU/1.0/?language=en 8" target="_blank"> In Copyright – Educational Use Permitted </a>
Coverage
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Appalachian Region, Southern
Is Part Of
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<a title="Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians" href="https://omeka.library.appstate.edu/collections/show/79" target="_blank"> Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians </a>
Format
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PDF
Journals (Periodicals)
Acid Deposition
Agriculture
Alternative Energy
Appalachian Mountains
Appalachian Studies
Bioregional Congress
Community
Economic Alternatives
Education
Electric Power Companies
Geography
Good Medicine
Habitat
Katúah
Katúah Organization
Poems
Reading Resources
South PAW (Preserve Appalachian Wilderness)
Turtle Island
Wilderness
Women's Issues
-
https://omeka.library.appstate.edu/files/original/8a5a4fec25f2fc73cddbd86819a283ba.pdf
bf0a8b567e8a648b583874aca5cd8629
PDF Text
Text
,.
·.
~UAl:i~ ®URNAL
...
ISSUE 22 WINTER 1988-89
seeds of survival
$1.50
�When strong-hearted people keep on singing the Song of Creation,
they will find the true path, forgotten by many,
so Grandpa David says.
When prayer and meditation are used rather than relying
on new inventions to create more Imbalance,
they will also find the true path.
Mother Nature tells us which is the right way.
When earthquakes, floods, hailstorms, drought, and famine
will be the life of every day, the time will have then come
for the return to the true path ...
-from Meditations with The Hopi
~LJAH JOURNAL
P.O. Box 638 Leicester, NC Katuah Province 28748
ADDRESS CORRECTION REQUESTED
Postage Paid
Bulk Mail
Permit #18
Leicester, NC
28748
�Global Wanning and Katuah .......... 3
by Kim Sarulland
Fire This Time ............................. 5
by lyfich Crabawr
Bioregions: The Context
for Reinhabiting the Earth .............6
by Thomas Berl)
Earth Exercise .............................9
by Marnie Muller and
2.oa Rockensrein
Poems and Drawings
by Kore Loy McWhirter.............. 10
Drawing by ESTHER
An Abundance of Emptiness......... 12
by Richard lowenJlia/
Reviews:
Thinking like a Mountain
Talkfog with Nawre .................... 14
Options For Regional Currency:
The LETSystem .......................... 15
by Fred MignoM
"Chronicles of Floyd" .................. 16
by "Granny" DeLauney
Knife, Axe, and Saw.................... 18
An lnrerview with Dorry Wood
Natural World News ................... 20
111c Bear Clan ...................•........22
Poem by luci11da Flodin ................. 23
Drumming: Letters to Kalllah ....... 24
Wcbworking .............................. 30
the Earth stirs in her dream
she wakens and arises.
she comes! she comes!
great in her gifts, striding with purpose.
each step an age in the evolution of life.
she is moving.
she will not remain to stagnate in our wastes.
she would be healed.
and we would break
through our brittle egg casings of separateness
to rejoin this planetary life community.
we are too powerful
to remain so ignorant
the change is begun.
we can cry out in pain or rejoice in our healing.
we Loo need to move. to work for the change,
to pray that the balance be restored
and, moving. we will be swept up and carried in the
wave of her motion.
�STAFFTI-IIS ISSUE:
Will Ashe Bason Rob Messick Mamie Muller
David Wheeler Chip Smith Christina Morrison
Kim Sandland Richard Lowenthal
EDITORIAL ASSISTANCE:
Scou Bird MlU'lha Tree Jack Chaney John Creech Andy Half-Baker
Lisa Franklin Sam Gray Michael Red Fox Marsha Ring
COVER by Martha Tree
INVOCATION by Andy Half-Baker
PUBLISHED BY: Kart1ahJournal
THE SOUTHERN APPALACHIAN BlORECION
ANO MAJOR EASTERN RIVER SYSTEMS
PRINTED BY: The Waynesville Mo1111tai11eer Press
WBITEUS AT:
KatWih Journal
TELE Pl JONE:
(704)683-1414
Box 638
Leicester. NC
Kaufah Province 28748
Diversity il> an impor13111 clcmcn1 of bion:gional ecology, both
n3tural and social. In line with this princ;iple, the Katiiah Journal
tries 10 serve as a forum for the discussion of n:gion:ll issues. Signed
article.~ express only the opinion of the authors and are nol ncccs.o;arily
lhc opinions of lhe Katuab Journal editors or staff.
The ln!Cmal Revenue Service ha.~ dcclru-ed KaJU4h o non profit
organization under sccuon SO I(c)(3) of the In LemaI Revenue Code. A11
contributions IO Kartlah arc deductible from J>C™lll3I income uu.
invocation
From the deep dark place in ourselves,
Through the darkest part
of the changing year,
Through the darkness
of the turning world cycle,
We know of troubles facing us,
and of hope bearing us on.
Birth, death, rebirth.
Spring, Summer. Fall. Winter.
STATEMENT OF PURPOSE
lltrt in tht southern-most heartland of the Appaluchian mounlllins. thl"
oldest mountain range on our continent. Turtle Island, o small bur growing grmip
has begun to take on a stn.ft of responsibiliry for tht imp/icarions of 1ha1
geographical and cultural heritagt. This .ftnse of ruponsibiliry ctnters on 1~
conupt of living within the natural scalt and balance of univtnal system.1 a.1d
principles.
Within this circle wt begin by invoking the Ch1•ro~e nam11 " Katiu.ih"
as the oldr
new nameforthi.1 area of the mountains and/or iu journal at well. 1he
provmce u indicated by its natural bawuJaries: rhe Roanoke River ~'allt•v ta th~
narrh: ti~ foothills of the piedmont arta to the east: Yona Mountain and the
Georgia hi/1.1 to the sowh: and the Tennessee River ~'allq 10 the we.11.
J'he editorial prioririu for u.1 are to colleet and disseminate 111/ rmatirJn
o
and energy which ~rtains sptcifically 10 this region. anJ rofoster the awarelll!u
that the land is a living being deserving of our love and respect. Lfring in thi.s
manner is a way to insure the su:uailrability of the biosphere and a lasting place
for ourselves in its continwng evolutionary process.
We seem to have reached the fulcrum point of a• do or die • situation in
terms of a quality sta/ldard of lift for all living beingson thi:r planet. Asa voice
for rhe carttak.trs of this sacred land, KariJah. we advocate a centered approach to
the co11cept of tkcentralizaiio11. /1 is our hape to become a .1uppor1 system/or
rhase accepti11g the challenge of su.staiMbilil)' and the creation of harmony and
balance in a total sense, here in this ploce.
We welcome all co"espondence. criticism. perti11e11t informa1io11,
articles. arrwork, etc wirh hopes that Kariuih will grow 10 urve rhe best intt:rms
of this regio11 and all its living. breathing mtmber.1.
-The Editors
We all grow and change.
Darkness is followed by light,
Sickness is followed by healing.
As Gaia goes around the circle
We reap what we have sown,
and plant new seeds for the coming light.
rrs NOT NICE TO FOOL MOTilER NATURE
�-~·
~
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{~~~~~ ... ~··· ....--~
·~.··
...~ .. .
GLOBAL WARMING AND KATUAH
By Kim Sandland
Just to satisfy a yearning for the breaking down of
barriers, this wricer is currently taking classes in the
beautiful, dramatic language of signs. a language
expressed with the bands and body and interpreted with
the eyes and the heart. My "sentences" arc stiJI a little
sluggish, my rtngerspclling a little awkward, and my
boots rattle around my ankles at the thought of
confronting a real live deaf person with no one's hands
around but my own. But someday. when I'm good
enough. sign language will allow me to enter the world
of the deaf and communicate with them. They will
understand me and I will understand them. It's all a
matter of knowing how.
There is another world that this human being would
like to know how to enter, another barrier to break
down. It is the barrier that prevents many people from
seeing and understanding the impact of human activities
on their Earth. It is the world in which many humans are
unable to interpret the language of the Earth, nor to hear
the voices of despair, cries of defilement, and pleas for
care.
Gary Miller, of the Depanment of Environmental
Studies at the University of North Carolina at Asheville,
hears the voices. In a recent interview, Miller outlined
the here and now of the global warming trend, the
depletion of the ozone layer, the increase of ozone
pollution, and acid rain - - all are similar in their origin
and require the same solution, says Miller. For Kauiah,
the pressures of environmental catastrophe are already
apparent, and growing worse.
Oak decline is taking place on our slopes, and
drought like that we experienced over the pa.~t <;everal
years may exaggerate · and acceler,11e - that decline.
Miller a!lributes chat decline to a number of different
factors, including poor forest management practices
earlier in this century. like the harvest of prime trees,
leaving poorer trees which are more vulnerable to
adversity. If the greenhouse effec1 has staned, the
climate will only get warmer, and intense summer heat
and drought may make plant communities vulnerable to
wiY1h@1e ecosystem~ !\!re :irlll
je@pudy, !l!lld m!ly ~sa;p]pem ....
S1l!lclb. as the s:plrl.1ce-ffir ~osyitem
~yjpical @f aihe lb.ii.gh.er S@11.11tllaem
ApJP!lh1clmh1llll elev!lti~:ins, tfot
exm!I!ljplle. 111ds we bow."
invasion by disease, insects, and fungi. Plants and the
animal communities they suppon may not make the
necessary adjustments to severe climatic shifts in a shon
period of time. They need long-term evolution, Miller
says.
Whole ecosystems are in jeopardy, and may
disappear - - such as the spruce-Cir ecosystem typical of
the higher Southern Appalachian elevations, for
example. This we know. We have known, says Miller.
about acid rain since the 1870's, and about the
"greenhouse effect" since before the turn of the century.
Unfonunatcly we arc only now monitoring the changes
induced by these pollution effects and may yet be a
couple of years away from cfTectivcly implementing new
control legislation.
In 1988 we experienced the effect of increased water
temperatures and decreased water volume in our streams
and reservoirs, Miller says. Higher water temperatures
mean less oxygen concentrated in the water; less oxygen,
increased coxins, increased temperatures will mean less
fhh. For Katuah, this affects not only our fishermen.
but our trout industries as well, Trout fisheries ha\'e
already begun relying on well water, which has less
oxygen capacity than stream water, and so have turned to
(con1111ucJ on nest pegel
W1.NT£R. - 1988-89
Drawing by ROB MESSICK
Jeot.Uan Journa!
p~ 3
�(continued from previous page)
oxygenation systems, powered wilh electricity, powered
by fossil fuels.
Increasing populations, resulting in higher nitrogen
pollution from the burning of fossil fuels in power
plants, factories, and automobiles, coupled with the
temperature inversions characteristic of mountain
valleys, will fill our mountain air with unbreathable
substances, says Miller. During lhc past summer ~zone
pollution reached the highest levels ever recorded in our
"Refusing to learn the issues, refusing to raise
taxes and refusing to commit resources to
resolving environmental problems, will result
in an uninhabitable planet. Deferring action
until later will only cost us more in the long
run."
area. More air-conditioning will be desired by people as
the years go by; more air-conditioning means more
burning of fossil fuels, and more pollution, in a
never-ending cycle of waste and want. It's already
happening.
More people will be here, too. Miller believes it is
impossible to consider the ramifications of current trends
for the Katuah bioregion alone, because what happens in
other bioregions will have a direct effect on Kattiah.
Rising ocean waters, increasing greatly over the next
20-50 years, are likely 10 flood coastal areas. Coastal
communities, both marine and human, may be
devastated. Our wetlands, the coastal estuaries, the hean
of lhe seafood industry and the basis of the foodchain for
all species, will be destroyed by advancing seas. Sixty
to 65% of harvested fish and shellfish now spend pan of
their life cycle in the estuaries, says Miller, and they will
be affected. People have already begun flocking to the
mountain areas to escape hot climates; people will come
in droves, bringing their indusuies with them, as the
coastal economies and environments are changed. There
will be more fossil fuels consumed, more water
consumed, more native habitat destroyed here in Kattiah,
in the face of an already-shrinking resource base which
is falling 10 the effects of global warming and global
waste.
We know about all lhis. We know about hot
summers [which will grow hotter), and about
temperature inversions [which will only serve to make i1
hotter and harder to breathe, for all species), we know
about increasingly severe storms and drought and
landscapes of fallen trees and wi1hered undergrowth.
We know because we have read it, heard it, we have
already seen it. But is it 100 late for Katuah? Gary
Miller has some defini1e ideas.
There arc 1hree keys to understanding and action,
according to Miller, which m3y not undo what is already
upon us, but may save a pan of whnt we have for future
generations. The first is education. Gary Miller believes
that we should have a national required curriculum in
environmental science in all our schools. Says ~iller,
"The future of our planet depends on how well people
understand the issues." Many people are not aware;
they don't read, and they don't understand. lf we read
and understand, we can change our own wasteful
behaviors, and we can demand more of our politicians.
Part of education, says Miller, is comprehending the fact
that solutions are expensive. Refusing to learn the
issues, refusing to raise taxes and refusing to commit
resources 10 resolving environmental problems, will
result in an uninhabitable planet. Deferring action until
later will only cost us more in the long run. This has
always been the case.
The second key is consuming less, doing with less.
As Miller says, every time you lhrow it away, you waste
energy, because it must be recreated, using virgin
resources and more fossil fuels. And waste must be
disposed of, or incinerated when we run out of room for
disposal. More air pollution. Miller believes that all
people could cut their use of elecuicity by 40-50% today
and srill live comfonably, provided they give up their
need 10 live in a totally regulated environment with
temperature fluctuations of only a few degrees. Miller
calls it, "a new e1hos--try 10 live with less or do
without," and we can begin it in Karuah. It's not so
new, because some of us have been hearing it for years.
We can participate at any of several levels of activity:
recycling, avoiding plastics, wearing sweaters inside in
the winter. We can promote mass transit and drive our
personal cars less. We can conserve fossil fuels by
pursuing solar energy and other alternative energy
sources, excepting nuclear power. In the realm of
electoral politics, we need to investigate politicians'
records carefully, vote for pro-environmental candidates,
and demand more leadership from them. We can send
money to organizations trying to save lhe rain forests
(and those working on behalf of the temperate forests as
well), which are vital to our atmosphere.
"If we do not, we will lose our freedom of
choice as nature takes over, causing hurricanes
of magnificent force, high temperatures we can
not tum off, ultraviolet radiation and skin
cancer, air we can not breathe, a scarcity of
drinking water, and deserts where once there
were forests."
And the last key, says Miller, is planning. For
Katliah, this means that local and regional officials must
decide what is the true human carrying capacity of this
region, taking into consideration dwindling water
supplies, protection of habitat, and disposal of waste.
This is not being addressed by local planners and
officials, says Miller. An obvious example is lhe plan to
have incinerators handle the solid waste overload--and
anything, says Miller, with lhe potential of c?ntrib~ting
to air pollution, compounded by temperature inversions,
should be ruled out. Indiscriminate promotion of the
area in an effon to attract new mdusuies and more people
should be curtailed, until we understand what a
shrinking resource base will mean to us in the near
future.
We must make these difficult decisions now, says
Gary Miller. If we do not, we will lose our freedom of
choice as nature takes over, causing hurricanes of
magnificent force, high temperatures we c~ not rum off,
ultraviolet radiation and skin cancer, air we can not
breathe, a scarcity of drinking water, and desens where
once there were forests.
To those who don't hear, we must find a way to
communicate, a language of respect, conservation,
pro1ec1ion, and realization, to be shared among all
species. We must find that language soon, lest our
message have no ears to fall on.
WtNTDt - 1988- 89
�FIRE THIS TIME
by Lylich Crabawr
"God give Noah tM rainbow sign.
No more willer, fire~ time.•
• Block spiritual
Looking around at the forest about
me, l soe great imbalance. I see the forest
suffering as a result of acid rain,
clearcuuing, and the drought we have been
having. These are clearly the result of
human influence. The world is in need of
healing.
But each imbalance has within it the
conditions that will restore equilibrium. That
is also true in this case. There is a change
coming, and it is coming on much faster
than people think. We are presently caught
up in a cycle of drought. This is not going
to go away next summer. We might get a
reprieve next summer. it might not be as bad
as this year, but the following summer will
be, and the summer after that will be as
well.
Some drastic climatic shifts are in the
making. Different areas might become
weuer, drier, colder, or hotter. These
changes will occur for no apparent rilyme or
reason. The Southern Appalachians happen
10 be an area that is becoming hotter and
drier. In fact, I think this area is going to
dry up severely.
There is going to be a massive die-off
of the forest. We are seeing that already.
The Black Mountain Range is being
denuded by acid rain. Already there are
streaks of dry places on the ridgetops.
panicularly around rocky cliff areas, where
the water drops out quicker. If there is no
rain, those dry ridges have no source of
water. Lower down on the hillside, water
collects and drains down. But as the
moisture falls off and the water table drops,
the ridges suffer the mosc.
Already, the dries! varieties of plants
live on che ridgecops: scrub oak, scrub
pines, mountain laurel, and grasses. Those
are the species that are adapted to living up
there. Ginseng. the orchid species, or big
poplar IJ'CCS do not live up there.
ln effect, what is going 10 happen is
that the dry ridgecop conditions are going to
move down the hill. As the climatic change
intensifies and conditions become more
severe, the poplar cove associations will
become scarce as 1he dry ridgetop
community moves down into what were
once rich, moist coves. The moisture-loving
species will hold out longest alongside the
creeks. But then 1he smaller, higher
watersheds will dissipate, and 1he dry
conditions will move fanher and fanher
down. There will be a terrible decline in the
little streams now running through the hills.
r do not know if major rivers will dry up,
but they are going to become a 101 smaller.
How far ii will go, J do not know.
We have somewhat of an advantage in that
we have a number of micro-climates and a
vancty of different plants here in the
mountains. That will help lo offset the worst
aspects of the change.
When the forest dies off on 1he
ridges, greal amounts of dry tinder will be
left on the.hillsides. And as the dry weather
continues, there will probably be
tremendous firestonns burning off that
highly flammable material. That is going to
create an incredible amount of pollurion over
the temperate forest 1,ones, which will speed
up the degradation of the atmosphere and
intensify the "greenhouse effect" a1 an
exponential rate.
On these steep slopes, if the tree
cover dies off and fires burn off the organic
maner on the top of the soil layer, the soil
will be washed down the hillsides very
quickly, because the vegetation and the leaf
mulch is what holds the soil in place. If rhe
vegetation dies on the ridgetops, the soil is
going to come down. Strip a hillside now
and see how fast it gullies; see how fast the
streams silt up and die. There is always
more erosion in time of drought.
The situation here is going to be
similar to that in the island nation of Haiti
where the native people cut the wood off th~
hills for cooking fuel. With the vegetative
cover removed, che tropical rains washed all
the soil off the mountainsides, and the forest
could never grow back.
The Appalachian mountaintops are
basically granite rock with a couple of feet
of soil on the top. They will be eroded
down to bare rock. This is already
becoming evident. Mt. Mitchell has two to
three times as much rock showing on its
face as it used to have.
Eventually I believe we will have an
environment here similar to that of northern
New Mexico: bare, rocky mountaimops and
fenile valleys. There will be perhaps trees
and streams in the valleys, but all around us
1he hills will look like New Mexico. It
won't be unattractive. New Mexico is a
wonderful locale in its own way. But it is
going co be sad 10 see the species disappear
that live here in these rich coves.
Conditions might stabilize before
then. They might become more disastrous
than that The weather is not necessarily
going 10 be consistcnL Just because our
summers are going to be horter, that does
no1 mean tha1 our winters arc going to -be
warmer. We may have even colder winters,
but with more drastic changes, like sudden
storms followed by warm spells, or terrible
fronts coming down out of Canada.
I do not perceive the greenhouse
effect as causing worldwide desert,
however; ii is causing worldwide drastic
weather changes. Tl is not getting hotter
everywhere, but climate fluctuations arc
getting more extreme.
The Carri bean and the Gulf of Mexico
recently experienced the wors1 hurricane
within memory, Hurricane Gilben. Gilben
produced the lowest pressure ever recorded.
But as the climatic shift progresses, we may
see cyclones and hurricanes the likes of
which we cannot imagine at this time.
Massive thunderstorms may produce
corrential rains. There may be floods like
thO'iC this area experienced in 1916, but the
effects may be worse, because there will be
no vegetation on the hillsides to hold the
water and the mud.
The Anasazi and other pueblo Indians
in New Mexico and Arizona had a similar
experience. They suffered a drought and the
vegetation died off on the tops of the mesas,
so that when it did rain, nash noocts came
down the valleys, destroying their crops and
gullying out the fields, before the land
became dry again. Where they once had
com and squash growing at the edge of the
creek, the water was now running in a
trickle at the bonom of a gully 20 feet deep.
This made irrigation impossible for them,
and the uncontrolled erosion would carry
away more of their precious bouomland
(c;onunucd an pqc 26)
1.Jl.NTER - 1988-89
Eiching by ROB MESSICK
XAt.i&M Joul'~ p~ 5
�Bioregions:
The Context for Reinhabiting the Earth
by Thomas Berry
Tlwmas Berry's new book The Dream of the Earth has recenrly
been published by Sierra Club Books. Ir is regarded as a major book
of our time. This excerpt provides an excel/em introduction to his
work on bioregional thought and humans' relationship with the
planet.
T he universe expresses itself in the blazing radiance of the
in the vast reaches of the galactic systems. Its most intimate
expression of itself, however, is in this tiny planet: a planet that could
not exist in ilS present form except in a universe such as this one, in
which it has emerged and from which it has received its life energies.
The planet presents itself to us, not as a uniform global reality, but as
a complex of highly differentiated regions caught up in the
comprehensive unity of the planet itself. There a.re arctic and tropical,
coastal and inland regions. mountains and plains, river valleys and
desens. Each of these regions has its distinctive geological
formation, climactic conditions, and living fonns. Together these
constitute the wide variety of life communities that may be referred 10
as bi0tegions. Each is coherent within itself and intimately related to
the others. Together they express the wonder and splendor of this
garden planet of the universe.
Slar'S and
The human species has emerged within this complex of life
communities; it has survived and developed through participation in
the functioning of these communities at their most basic level. Out of
this interaction have come our distinctive human cultures. But while
at an early period we were aware of our dependence on the integral
functioning of these surrounding communities, this awareness faded
as we learned, through our scientific and technological skills, to
mnnipulare the community functioning 10 our own advantage. This
manipulation has brought about a disruption of the entire complex of
life systems. The norcscence that distinguished these communities in
the past is now severely diminished. A degradation of the entire
natural world has taken place.
Even though humans as well as the other species are in a
stressful situation, few of us are aware of the order of magnitude of
what is happening. Fewer still have any adequate understanding of
its causes or the capacity to initiate any effective program for the
revitalization of these life systems upon which everything depends.
Disruption of the life process has led to a severe disruption of the
human communicy itself. If social tunnoil and international rivalries
have evoked significant concern. the disruption of the eanh's life
systems remains only a vague awareness in the human mind. This is
strange indeed when we consider that the disruption of our
bioregional communities is leading to a poisoning of the air we
breathe, the water we drink, the soil and the seas that provide our
food. We seek to remedy our social ills with industrial processes that
lead only to further ecological devastation. Indeed our sensitivity to
human conflict over the sharing of earth's resources has di~tracted us
from the imperiled condition of these resources themselves. a peril
associated with the loss of topsoil, the destruction of forests, the
desenification of fruitful areas, the elimination of wetlands and
spawning areas, the exhaustion of aquifers, the salinization of
irrigated areas, the damaging of coral reefs.
The urgency of a remedy for this situation is such that all social
groups and all nations are called upon to reassess the entire
human-earth situarion. As was indicated by Edwanl Schumacher, we
must rethink our industrial approach to "development." This
rethinking involves appropriate technologies, but also appropriate
lifestyles, and, beyond those, appropriate human-earth relations.
The most difficult transition to make is from an anthropocentric
to a biocentric norm of progress. If there is to be any true progress,
then the entire life community must progress. Any progress of the
human at the expense of the larger life community must ultimately
lead to a diminishment of human life itself. A degraded habitat will
produce degraded humans. An enhanced habitat suppons an elevated
mode of the human. This is evident not only in the economic order,
but also throughout the entire range of human affairs. The splendor of
eanh is in the variety of its land and its seas, its life forms and its
atmospheric phenomena; these constitute in color and sound and
Drawing by ROR MESSICK
loltNTER - 1988- 89
�movement that great symphonic context which has inspired our sense
of the divine, given us our emotional and imaginative powers, and
evoked from us those entrancing insights that have governed our
more sublime moments.
This context not only activates our interior faculties; it also
provides our physical nourishment. The air and water and soil and
seeds that provide our basic sustenance, the sunshine t.hat pours its
energies over the landscape--these are integral with the functioning of
the fruitful earth. Physically and spiritually we are woven into this
living process. As long as the integrity of the process is preserved,
we have air to breathe and water to drink and nourishing food to eaL
The difficulty has come from our subversion of this integral life
communily, supposedly for our own advantage. In the process, we
have tom apart the life system itself. Our technologies that do not
function in harmony with earth technologies. With chemicals we
force the soil to produce beyond its natural rhythms. Having lost our
ability to invoke natural forces, we seek by violence to impose
mechanistic patterns on life forces. In consequence of such actions,
we now live in a world of declining fertility, a wasted world, a world
in which its purity and life-giving qualities have been dissipated.
The solution is simply for us as humans to join the eanh
community as participating members, to foster the progress and
prosperity of the bioregional communities to which we belong. A
bioregion is an identifiable geographical area of interacting life
systems that is relatively self-sustaining in the ever-renewing
processes of nature. The full diversity of life functions is carried out,
not as individuals or as species, or even as organic beings, but as a
community that includes the physical as well as the organic
components of the region. Such a bioregion is a self-propagating,
self-nourishing, self-educating, self-governing, self-healing and
self-fulfilling community. Each of the component life systems must
integrate its own functioning within this community functioning to
survive in any effective manner.
The solution is simply for us as humans to join
1he earth community as participating members, to
foster the progress and prosperity of the bioregional
communities to which we belong.
The first function, self-propagation, requires that we recognize
the rights of each species to its habitat, to its migratory routes, to its
place in the community. The bioregion is the domestic setting of the
community just as the home is the domestic setting of the family. The
community continues itself through successive generations precisely
as a community. Both in terms of species and in terms of numbers. a
certain balance must be maintained within the community. For
humans to assume rights to occupy land by excluding other lifeforms
from their needed habitat is 10 offend the community in its deepest
structure. Further, il is even to declare a state of warfare, which
humans cannot win since they themselves are ultimately dependent on
those very lifeforms that they arc destroying.
The second bioregional function, self-nourishment, requires
that the members of the community sustain one another in the
established pallerns of the natural world for the well-being of the
entire community and each of its members. Within this pattern the
expansion of each species is limited by opposed life forms or
conditions so that no one lifeform or group of lifeforms should
overwhelm the others. In this function of the community we include,
for humans, the entire world of food gathering, of agriculture, of
commerce, and of economics. The various bioregional communities
of the natuml world can be considered as commercial ventureS as well
~\NTt:R. - 1988-89
as biological processes. Even in the natural world there is a constant
interchange of values, the laying up of capital, the quest for more
economic ways of doing things. The earth is our best model for any
commercial venture. h carries out its operations with an economy
and a productivity far beyond that of human institutions. It also runs
its system with a minimum of entropy. There is in nature none of that
sterile or toxic waste or non-decomposing liner such as is made by
humans.
The third function of a bioregion is its self-education through
physical, chemical, biological and cul rural patterning. Each of these
requires the others for its existence and fulfillment. The entire
evolutionary process can be considered as a most remarkable feat of
self-education on the pan of the planet earth and of its distinctive
biorcgional units. An important aspect of this self-educational
process is the experiential mode of its procedures. The eanh, and
each of its biorogions, has performed unnumbered billions of
experiments in designing the existing life system. Thus the
self-educational processes observed in the natural world fonn a model
for the human. There is presently no other way for humans to
educate themselves for survival and fulfillment than through the
instruction available through the natural world.
The fourth function of a bioregion is self-governance. Ao
integral functional order exists within every regional life community.
This order is not an extrinsic imposition but an interior bonding of lhe
community that enables each of its members to participate in the
governance and to achieve that fullness of life expression that is
proper to each. This governance is presided over in much of the
world by the seasonal sequence of life expression. It provides the
order in which florescence and exuberant renewal of life takes place.
Humans have iraditionally inserted themselves into !his community
process through their ritual celebrations. These are not simply hu1l13ll
activicies, but expressions of the entire panicipating community. ln
human deliberations each of the various members of the community
should be represented.
The fifth function of the biorcgional community is self-healing.
The community carries within itself not only the nourishing energies
that are needed by each member of the community; it also contains
within itself the special powers of regeneration. This takes place, for
example, when forests arc damaged by the great storms or when
periods of drought wither the fields or when locusts swarm over a
region and leave it desolate. In all these instances the life community
adjusts itself, reaches deeper into its recuperative powers and brings
about a healing. The healing occurs whether the damage is to a single
individual or to an entire area of the community. Humans, roo, find
that their healing takes place through submission to the discipline of
the community and acceptance of its nourishing and healing powers.
The sixth function of the bioregional community is found in its
self-fulfilling activities. The community is fulfilled in each of its
components: in the flowering fields, in the great oak trees. in the
night of the sparrow, in the surfacing whale, and in any of the other
expressions of the natural world. Also there arc the seasonal modes
of community fulfillment, such as the mysterious springtime renewal.
In conscious celebration of the numinous mystery of the universe
expressed in the unique qualities of each regional community, the
human fulfills its own special role. This is expressed in religious
liturgies, in market festivals, in the solemnities of political assembly,
in all manner of play, in music and dance, in all the visual and
performing ans. From these come the cultural identity of the
bioregion.
The fururc of the human lies in acceptance and fulfillment of the
human role in all six of these community functions. The change
indicated is the change from an exploitive anthropoccntrism to a
panicipative biocentrism. This change requires something beyond
environmentalism, which remains anthropocentric while trying to
limit the deleterious effects of human p~nce on the environment.
�(continued from previous page)
We have limited our discussion so far to the inner functioning
of the regional communities because these provide the most
immediate basis of survival. If these communities do not fulfill their
most essential functions, then the larger complex of biorcgions cannot
fulfill its role. Each of these bioregions is. as we have noted.
re/a1ively sclf-suscaining. None is fully self-sustaining since air and
water flow across the entire planet, across all its regions. So it is
with the animals. Some of them range widely from one end of a
continent to another. Birds cross multiple bioregional, and even
continental, boundaries. EvenruaJJy aJI bioregions are interdependent.
Tllls interdependence is presently accentuated by the toxic waste
poured into the environment by our industriaJ society. Such toxic
materials are borne across entire continents and even across the entire
planet by water and atr. Such an extensive continental problem
would not exist, of course, if each of the various bioregions
functioned properly within its own context.
The larger functioning of bioregions leads to a consideration
that the canh be viewed primarily as an interrelated system of
bioregions, and only secondarily as a community of nations. The
massive bureaucratic nations of the world have lost their inner vitality
because they can no longer respond to the panicular functioning of
the various bioregions within their borders. A second difficulty with
these large nations is the exploitation of some bioregions for the
advantage of Others. A third clifficulry is the threatened devastation of
the enrire planet by the conflict between bureaucratic nations, with
their w~aponry capable of continental, and even planetary,
devastation. To break these nations down into their appropriate
biorcgionaJ communities could be a possible way to peace.
The bioregional mode of thinldng and acting is presently one of
the most vigorous movements taking pince on the Nonh American
continent. Its comprehensive concern is leading toward a reordering
of aJl our existing establishments: political-legal, commercialindustriaJ, communications, educa1ional and religious. At present all
of these establishments arc involved in the devastating impact of
indu~trial society on the natural world. The human arrogance they
manifest toward the other natural members of the life communities
remains only slightly affected by the foreboding concerning the future
expressed by professional biologists and by others who have
recognized that the imminent peril to the planet is not exactly the
nuclear bomb, but the plundering processes that are extinguishing
those very life systems on which we depend.
Yet the numbers of those speaking and acting and leading
in. pro~rams of reinhabiting the eanh in a more benign
relauonshtp with the other members of these natural communities are
growing constantly. This movement, often referred to as the Green
Movement, is fostering an ecological or biorcgional context for every
as~~t of life, for educarion, economics, government. healing and
rehg1on. So far, the movement remains a pervasive and growing
m~e o~ consciousness that is groping toward a more precise
an1culanon of its own ideals, its institutional fonn and its most
effective programs of action.
othe~s
. Of primary imponancc in Nonh America is identifying the
vanous bioregions. To do that requires a sensitivity akin to that of
the s~amanic personality of tribal peoples. While bioregions have
~nai~ geographic boundaries, they also have cennin mythic and
h1stoncal modes of self-identification. This idenrification depends on
ourselves as we participate in this process, which only now we begin
to understand or appreciate.
/
Excerpted by permission of Sierra Club Books from The Dream of
the Earth, e>I988 by Thomas Berry.
Available 11 bookslOfes around the region or by d!rec1 mail from: Sierra Club
Store Orders. 730 Polit Street. San Francisco. CA 94 IOCJ. (Prepaid orders only,
enclose S 18.95 plus SJ.00 for pomge and handling.)
Towards the Legal Recognition
of the Rights of All Species
Finally. II 1s beginning to dawn on us humans that the wider Earlh
communlly with whom we exist have nghts, IOO. Afl species have rights··such
as the right IO habi1a1. the right to breathe clean air, the right to have access 10
good water, elC.··and it is lime for these rights IO be legally rocognued.
In The Dream of the Ear1h, Thomas Berry refers to The World Charter
fur :>lalure which was adop1ed by lhe U.N. in 1982. This chnncr can be a
valu:ible. dynarmc tool for draftJng a regional or local Ch.:incr for Nature. Citucns
groups. study grou~. 13Sk forces or individunls could speamcnd this effort IO 3dap1.
the charter lO 1he specific region where they live (or t0 draft an entirely new one).
The document can then be submitted to one's !Own council, county commission,
state legislature. etc. for adopuon.
Having the righ1s of other species be lcgnlly rccogni1.cd is an imPortnnl step
111 bnnging ourselves and our species more in balance with the Life community m
which we part.icipal.C.
If you arc interested an receiving a copy of The World Charter for Nature,
wr11e: Mamie Muller. KatUiJh Journal, P. 0. Box 638. Leicester, NC 28748,
Katililh Province.
Earth exercise:
a guided exercise designed for
personal/community/Earlh healing
Getting in touch with our own interior heaJing resoun:es as
well as those of the planet itself is an imponant facet of any
environmentaJ, political, or social effon. Often we see ourselves
as bucking the cultural ride and feel a sense of futility. Yet, it is
important to see the work that we each do, as an individual and as
pan of an organization, from a wider perspective.
The body wants to heal itself, the planet wants to heal
i1self. We need to let ourselves feel a pan of this wider biotic
system of self-healing. We don't have to invent or create a
"make-believe" connection, all we have to do is give ourselves
the opportunity to see these wider connections that eiUst.
There are many "spontaneities" within us that can be
tapped into in order to pnnicipate consciously in this heaJing
process but we need 10 get beyond our "everyday" mind to do
this. Exercises such as the one here can provide a
non-threatening, comfonable way to begin this process of getting
in touch with these resources.
As we become more familiar with this way of seeing, our
"everyday" self can more easily shift into this wider perspec1ive
as well. Even our breathing in and breathing out can gently
remind us of our intimate connection to the wider Earth process.
Another aspect to invite into this conscious participation is our
dreamworld, which so often remains isolated from our "regular"
consciousness.
This (next page) is a guided exercise for groups assisted by
a facilitator which was originally designed for and used at the
afternoon sessions of the second Annual New Priorities
Conference held this fall in Asheville, NC. The Conference
theme was: "Wake Up and Dream!" The exercise is intended for
both experienced as well as inexperienced facilitators.
-Mamie Muller
W'\JlfJ'Ejl - 1988-89
�Let every pan of your body feel a sense
of being relaxed .. .let an inner smile
come to you.... to every pan of your
body. (wait I minule or more)
Now that you arc becoming deeply
relaxed.... let yourself settle in to
yourself... ...to a place that feels very
secure to you....... very loving......very
beautiful... ...Let yourself feel "at
home" there. (pause)
Experience fully a sense of your own
well-being. Feel i.mmcrsed in it. Let Lhat
weU-beingness pour over you like
sunshine.
( wait 1 minute or more)
Earth Exercise I
cksUjnd blJ narnie nuller
cuut Zoa R.ocfunsui-n
In.structiollSfor faci/ital()r
Design the selling in the form of a circle whethu
indoors or out.Side. If'JOU/eel it is appropria1e.
have some taped music quietly playing as people
come in and se11le down (for uample. Kitaro's Silk
Road or some othu soothing music). Once all are
present. have everyone get corr(ortable. llandbags.
books. papers, should be m owsilk of the
bo1uularies of the circle. You, asfacilita1or, should
be si11ing as part of the circle. A.s 'JOU share this
t'.Urcise. be sure to speak slowly and distinctly in a
quiet. gentle manner. Be sure to leDW! quiet time
bcuween each phrase.
As you are feeling your own sense of
well-being...of joy.... begin to feel the
well-being of those around you ...feel
wannth and sunlight coming to this
circle hcre...immersing us all in a sense
of Life and well-being. (pause)
As you breathe in and out... .feel the
water coursing down from the
mountains... bringing life and
well-being to all....feel the roots of
trees as they grow deeper into the
soil..... feel the autumn leaves laying
themselves one on another as they
become pan of the eanh....ex.pericnce
Lhe plants around soaking in wamuh
and light from the sun.... making food
for themselves and for all... .listen 10 the
melodic call of the birds in the forest
trees. Watch the hawk circle in the
sky.......Feel the wind blow gently
across your face ....(pausc)
llere is a suggested "script" which you are
welcome to adapt for your own use.
...............Ex.er-ci.se.................
Right now, we will do a
relaxation/guided exercise having to do
with your well-being, the well-being of
others and the well-being of the planet
Just relax and enjoy it. Images,
thoughts or feelings may come to you;
don't be concerned as to whether you
are getting visunl images or not, just let
it happen. If at any time in the process,
you feel uncomfortable with this
ex.ercise, simply open your eyes and
wait for the rest of us to finish.
Let's begin.
Close your eyes, if you'd like..... And
begin to relax ...Take a deep breath
in .... pause for a moment .. then breathe
out ...Breathe in again .... pause.....and
breathe out Continue to breathe in this
way, and let yourself begin to relax as
you do this breathing. Breathe
in.... pause....and breathe
out..... Breathe in... pause....and
breathe out
Focus your attention on the place inside
yourself where you are pausing
... between breathing in and breathing
out.
(wait 1 minute or more)
Let your muscles begin to un-tighten
and relax .....Lct your whole body feel
free and comfonable.......... Breathe
in..... pause.....and ...... breathe out.
IJ\NTER. - l 988 - 89
•
Feel the self-healing that has been going
on....on this planet... for thousands of
years .... (pause) Feel yourself a pan of
this process.....(pause) ...you are pan
of this life-giving process...even your
breathing in ...and your brca1hing
out.. .. brings life.....
(I minute or more).
Now let us together imagine that this
sense of well-being is being restored
throughout our entire community
..... throughout our whole mountain
region. (pause) Let us imagine
well-being nowing through any painful
or distressed areas of our community
---both our human community and our
wider ecological community..... Let us
feel a healing an<l a strengthening taking
place.... Let us feel a sense of
empowenncnt coming to all who are
afflicted. The well-being of each of us
is integral to the well-being of all of us.
Feel a sense of health and sufficiency
being available to all in our community
here.
Envision yourself as an importanl pan
of this healing and restoring that is
begiMing to take place in our
community. Sec how you, in an
on-going way, fit into this process.
(pause)..Fecl yourself a pan of the
Life-giving energy that will help ~tore
this community to a full state of
weU-being.
(1 minute or more)
Now imagine the entire planet........fecl
the tangible. intricate connection of all
life.... .Fecl the planet itself being
restored to a state of well-being
...(pause).........Though it is much
threatened right now, the planet is
working vigorously towards
self-healing. As your own body acts to
heal itself... from a cut or wound
...sense the planet's ability to work
towards self-healing.... Begjn to feel the
undercurrent well-being of the planet
itself....Feel yowself a pan of this
process.
(1 minute or more)
Return now to your secure place within
yoursclf...and let your own well-being
be strengthened.....and be renewed
...(pause). Experience deeply the
well-being that is at the hean of things,
and let yourself remember this sense
fully. (pause)
Now, gently, come to this circle
here...... Begin to arise out of this
meditation. (pausc)....As you begin to
arise out of this meditation. let yourself
know that this ability you have to see
things in this way is available Lo you
whenever you need it. ..... Now come
and be fully present Lo this circle, here.
-end-
InstructiollS/or facililator
Agiun. you may want to play sootl11ng music softly
for a few momtnts to give people timt to -come
bock". Lock aroUNJ the entire circle Olld ma.Jr.t f~#
each ~rson ts alnght and is 'with you".
;crediisc
The concqxof"ll\lltt smile" is dn..,, from TOO<ll WO)<llO
Traruform Strus Into ViJa/111 by ManW. Ch1a. The
imagery or autumn leaves layina lhcrruel•cs one on
anolhcr comes from lhe poem "Autumn" by Ycvgcny
Ycvlahenko.
l'CSOlll<JCS'.
A good ldvanccd l'C9QWCe is Wor.tiitg l/Uilk O..i (Applibl
MtdllaJ1on for f111ui11vc Prabla..-Salvifll) by Margo
Adair. Wingbow Prus. 1984 Available from Boolq>eoplc
2929 ri!lh S1r«1, Bcriu:ley, CA 94710.
Mtdita1/ng wull Cliildun by Deborah RoU\an and
Spwsilig 1-d by Mmy Mwdock ltC good for begimeo
mdcbMen.
�we are buUdinge a house
I wondre wille we evre real/ye live inne rharre place
wille we die inne ine
I nevre go rhere
ine is imaginarye space contained
I amme ftdfilled
imagininge irtefromme thisse distance
looking uppe ane ine as w the nighte skye
baskinge...no, skewered ande roasringe
inne irres vasre brillianre promise
I canne imagine livinge there
butte I cannorre imagine tllisse bodye
seuinge f oote inne the doore
we are buildinge rhisse house withe oure handes
withe woles moved bye oure bodies ande oure lives
closinge oute the skye
we looke oute the windowes
ro gette oure bearinges inne the worlde
we enrre tlzroughe the doorwaye to become sometlunge
otlzre thonne whane we have beene
I muste come zo ourgrowe tllisse comainre
we are makinge
lilce anye orhre cru.slllCeanne
mye lwde shelle
I amme softe inside
I musre reste ande growe winges
inne tllisse place tharre keepes oute the worlde
thenne openne a/le the doores ande windowes
takinge mye daughrres bye the hande
flye oure everywhere
I aname thisse womynne
I speak withe herre voice
she has beenefarre
she has seene the manye wayes
110 one beinge cannefarlwme a/le herre visionnes
I amme rhisse womynne
I canne feele a/le man11re ofherre senses
swellinge ande flowinge inne herre bloode
she is worthye ofyou.re deepeste arre11do.11ce
a/le creanues grea1e and smalle
va.sre ande f ewe
are honoured bye herre giftes ande blessinges
I amme thisse womynne
I canne see through alle herre harde walles
o\·re alle herre higheste rampartes
the warmrhe inne the brigluc roomes ofherre hcarte
the joyouse wisdomme
abundan1e ande ge11ero11Se
inne the da.rke ferrite groU/lde o/ lierrc soulle
I amme thisse womynne
I COJllU! telle you
she bearres no mysterye or angre so greaie
thatte itte deserves none youre moste trusti11ge
ande rendre regarde
I amme tllisse womynne
emered ande conJained
I speake withe herre voice
~iUM Jo\lrna.£ P"'Jll 10
W\.Nn:Jt - 1988- 89
�"
somerimes the goldenn.e-handed one
wille arrende you
she wille rouclli! youre woundes
ande tlieye wille openne
bloominge like tlli! manyejWwres
a place w reste
cradlinge youre sorroM-'t!S
she canne do no wronge
alle lierre ministrationnes
are rlie rainnes' attendance
onne thirstye growule
she willes you tender/ye backe to life
you cann.e joinne thisse downpourre
amonge the greaifulle herbes ande grasses
reachinge joyous/ye
withe youre manye-petalled woundes
goinge to seede
thisse softe-spokenne invirationne
w 1111! springe
ofllJ!rre unconditioMOlle generositye
....
.....
.....
"•
-~
thisse lwu.se is tire cauldrenne
where we drive 01ue lives inne withe everye 11aille
a/le horde lessonnes are learned inr1e iues newe raftres
withe oure booces onne
we walke inne or oute 011ne the dayes irte ope1111es irres dnores
irtes walles ca/le to us inne oure sleepe
come 111110 me I wille give you reste
I .amme watchinge tire vaste surface of yo1u face
like the oceamU! forre signes of re11u11e
yorue habintalle morio1111es to a11de fromme mye shores
are so like the tide
tharre I waslie owe to sea ande re11une smootlw
Olide more rare eache time you release me
the hmLl·e standl!s onne the edge ofshore ande sl11Jllnwes
irce is the liglulumse visible
inne the dangerouse ande beawiftule fogge we trm:elle
to reaclie orie tJJwthre
sometimes I amme the lande creature/you rite sea 011e
the house is wliere we meete ande pane
inne otLre bootes and inne 01uejinnes
washinge inne ande owe ofi11es dnores ande windowes
like anye commormefLSlre
or mysteriouse glwste watchre-womynne we/le sunge
who changes herre skinne to jinde love owe of herre elemente
wlw longes forre a place to harboure
a/le tlU!se unruleye weedes ande l11Juntes/11eedes ande wantes
you are bttildingtll amme imagininge 1/iisse house
011ne the slwre ofoure lives givenne ovre
we are maldnge oure betides
le11e us lie inne themme tellinge tW lies
k>'LNTER. - 1988-89
• I slil11ed wmingc withe t's mne
highc <;choolc bccnusc I wns bored antic I
hked lhc rrcnche and<: oldc cnglishc wayc
of domgc 1.l11~e; the waye the wordes
lookc antic rcctc ... htr.c lhc!yc don1.c stoppe
butte s1ghc into !he! nexte a huJc. Nowe I
~ulle do iue to slowe mysclfc ande the
wortdc downc ju.st a little.•
poems and drawings by Kore Loy McWhirtcr
�completion.
Thus, paradoxically, consumerism is actually the undoing of
prosperity and abundance because it both fosters and feeds on the
feeling of lack., and of identification with only human creations
instead of the whole of creation. This leads to enslavement to
unending desires and to the frantic acquisitiveness of our culture.
How can we avoid panicipating in this mad delusion of
"consumerism" and "conquest"? l low can we be psychologically
heahhy and ethically aware? Undeniably, we are all somewhat
susceptible to the massive hype and pervasive illusion that surround
us. Under this influence, we tend either to resist our society and its
materialistic preoccupations or to acquiesce and "go for it".
Unfortunately, either way we end up trapped in reaction, and
emotionally chained, because both resistance and acquiesence involve
a kind of bondage.
ln order to neither resist nor acquiesce, we need to learn to
identify with that within us which is already complete, already
fulfilled, and to gradually merge with this inner Being which does not
always need "more". Without this inner development, it is very
difficult, if not impossible, to avoid being "possessed" by the
dominant thought-fonns and desires/reactions of mass culture.
An /1bu11d arice. of
€mpti11es5
by Richard Lowenthal
Our planet's deepening ecological crisis has recently been
forcing us to reassess our culture's most basic assump1ions and
attitudes about nature, society, technology, and prosperity. In
particular, it is now urgent tha1 we understand our culture's
pathological preoccupation with consumerism.
In earlier times, "consumption" referred 10 a disease, namely
tuberculosis; today it refers to an accepted social norm. Tuberculosis
was called a "wasting disease" which caused a person to gradually
weaken and "waste away". Is it possible that modern mass
consumption is also a wasting disease, causing the human spirit and
the Eanh itSClf to "waste away"?
Through this consumer mentality, our cul1ure has become so
out of touch with nature that we arc threatening the Eanh's capacity to
be a functioning suppon system - not only for ourselves, but for the
entire Life community of the planet.
Consumerism can easily be likened to parasitism, in which the
parasitic organism (the human species) lives off of and gradually
destroys the host organism (the Earth). In fact, Western industrialism
and "prosperity" has always been based on a profound disregard for
the Eanh and an unbelievably arrogant intention to "conquer nature".
What really concerns me most is the feeling behind labelling
people "consumers". For any culture to identify its members as
"consumers" is quite degrading. le reduces the complexity and
grandeur of being human down 10 the lowest - and saddest · common
denominator. To be a "consumer" is to feel anxious, hollow, waiting
to be filled ... cons1antly trying to fill the void inside, desperately
buying things to block lhe feelings of emptiness and isolation. ft is a
state of continual, ceaseless hunger without any lasting satiation or
X.Otuah Jo14rnQ£ pa<Je 12
I am here reminded of Homer's Odyssey and his story of
Ullysses' encounter with the Sirens. As Ullysses' ship approached
the island of the Sirens, he recalled the warnings of the sorceress.
Circe. She had told him that if he and his men listened to the
hypnotic singing of the Sirens, they would steer towards those
rapturous voices even against their will, and be smashed to pieces on
the rocky shore. It took considerable ingenuity and strength of will
for Ullysses and his crew to get safely past them.
So how do we, on our own Life journeys, get past the Siren
songs, the hypnotic allure of consumerism and immersion in
appearances? Ullysses' tale dramatically shows us that we mustn't
delude ourselves into underestimating their influence upon us. One
of the most dangerous characteristics of modem materialism is its
insidious seductiveness, its open-armed invitation to those places in
us that feel most insecure and needy. "Come," murmur the Sirens of
consumerism in unison, "I will feed you, care for you, fulfill you,
satiate you. What you need, I can supply! I am yours ... (and you are
mine!)".
Obviously what we really need is the awareness and inner
resolve to steer clear of the hypnotic spell of our modem-day Sirens.
Just like Ullysses, we need to understand the nature and power of
these forces which can lure us into a spiritual 'wasteland' of illusion.
Jn order to free ourselves from Life-denying, illusory "consumer
prosperity". we need to face and identify our modem-day Sirens.
Here are some that J have identified for myself....
The Siren of Induced Need and Desire
We are subc.onsc1ously l13incd by advertising (and ofttn school and family)
to believe that we always need something ouisidc of ourselves to help us feel
okay. The undcnmble purpose of commercial advertising is to get us to foci
vulnerable and 111COmplctc, usually by playing on our <:exual and social desires and
fears. And the purpo:>e behind &his, of~. is to crtalt "n~· and &hen make
money from the "needy" in any way possible. Jn the swkes1 tcnns, whnt'~
happening is lha1 our $C11SC of inner self wonh and dignny 1s deliber:uely being
undermined, so we will buy lhctt message and thcirproducL Adverti:;crs know lhal
fulfilled and self-assured people aren't c:isily hocked; thus, their job is to nmplify
our fears and m'iCCuntie~ v.hilc prc1cnding to .\tn:nglhcn and help us.
The ltUly diabolical lwisl in this sccnano is &hut when our needs and
de~res ate increased, our capacity for happiness and contcnuncnt co11cspondingly
decreases. What rcsulLS is a preposterous but deadly catch-22: we arc told, in
innumerable sublle ways, "You aren't happy, bill you could be happy by chBngmg
your ouiu circumstances .••.Of course. since there ate alway:; bt11tr eircums1D11Ccs
to aspire to, what you have and who you 11IC 1s never good enough, so you aren't
happy, but you could be by...eic."
So, ·round and 'round we go-unul we choo.i:e to get off this vicious
•merry• -go-round. llS viciousness shows up in painful and continual comparison
of who we are wilh who we supposedly could or should be-as well as in
1.11.NlDl - 1988-89
�judgement and comp:irison of Olhers. It presents appearances as ultimate reality,
denying the inner essence. IL affirms only what we IW and havt, not who we
inherem.ly art.
This judgemental aunospherc is all around us in our socicty--at school, at
work., at home, even in bed. In fact. oftcn 11's such an integral pan or our lives
that we aren't even aware of this subtle negauvity unless we're the obvious
victims of judgement .
The way to recognize compllllSOO and judgement is that it is always
sep:uative and contracting rat.hec lhan inclusive and exp:ins1vc. IL causes us to feel
defensive. different. "better" or "worse". and to close our hcarlS oo real hum31l
conlllet-and it inclines olhets to react t0 us in the same way. To avoid lhis Siren.
we need to cultivate discernment and empathy, which are humane responses
instead ofjudgemenull reactions, and t0 embrace this moment, os it acrually i.s.
'Ln many ways our f!Ujht from nature
ancl c!esire to remake the wort:<£
arises from our fear of the unknown, the
uncontrollable, and ultimately of death.
The Sirtn or Unlimited Prognss and Technological Sah·ation
One of our most cherished modem beliefs is thru the natural world is not
designed for hum:111 comfort and lhus needs cictens1ve remodeling. This belief was
our key LO Pandora's boit. and it h3s motivated our rclcntlc.~s b3ttlc with nature,
with all ilS ierrible and unforeseen con.sequences. We h:lve acted as if the Earth and
a.II its plant and animal life exist to be used or abu.~ by humans, and we h3ve
ignOICd the fundnmental oneness and iolCtdependcncc of all life.
Underlying all this is a profound misunderstanding of the Structure of life:
we have ignored the foct that nature - including human mllun: • is inherently
imbued witll form, limits, structure, and boundaries. We apparently forgot - or
wiUfully denied - that we too are bound by ccnain nntural and ~iritual laws. rn
Greek tragedy, the hero is always brought down by a tragic naw known as
"hubns"··a blind arrog;incc which denies limits and auempts to usurp the power of
the gods. The desire for power over ll3lUl'C is our tragic naw--and a nlllll'al proccs.~
of rctribuuon has been set 1n motion. The uue place for limitless creative
'progress' is in our social and spiritual m3turation.
in mampulnting and
"conquering• physical n:ality.
.
£ven proponents of "prosperity consciousness• can be mesmcriied by this
Siren. lf one secs the universe as absolutely unlimited, doc:; this automnucally
mean that Lhc Earth's resources are also unlim11cd? ...that every person has a
"divine right" lO unlimited wealth and prosperity? Will we continue to ci1pcrience
"abundance" if, through our own doing, our p131lct's ecosystem becomes mcapable
or supporung life?
Allowing oneself Lo become a participant once agnm m the vibrancy of
lhe 113tural world and to begin to appreciate the beauty and wisdom of limit and
form is a step toward freedom from this Siren of "No Limiis".
"°'
The Siren or Domestication and lnsu1111ion rrom Reality
In many ways our night from na1urc and desire to remake the world arises
from our fear or the unknown, the unconuollable, and ulumately of dcalh
I once wa' on the Slaten Island ferry. cm.~g New York h:lrbor at n1ghL
when suddenly I had a vision of all those immense towers and all lhJl light and
glare functioning tO obliterate the mght. to !iOmehow shut out and dwarf the
darkness. the realm of death and lhe unkllown. Daylight helps us feel safe and m
rel31lvc conucl--everything is clear. distinct, visible, and the ego likes thaL Night
is a different mauer aliogethcr-disunctions and shapes blur and blend. the familillr
becomes unfamiliar, nnd the sun disappears. leaving us "in the dark". And then...
thousands of star.1 appear in lhe heavens, rem1nd1ng us of mlimtc ~. not only
'out there', but within us as well.
This is quite intolerable for lhe ego bent on conuol. to order 10 preserve 11S
illusion of omnipotence. lhe ego mu.st crcate an altcmntive reality which shuis
out change. decay, death. silence, diutness. And lo and behold, with modem
technology bolstered by advertising, we have seemingly accompli$hed !hi.~. We
insulate our homes so we don't h3ve to feel lhe heat or the cold; we light up our
houses and our strcelS lO negate lhe night, and lhe glow from our c1ues blocks out
the stan; we have radios. TV's, lape players. etc. 10 enien.am us and keep silence
at bay: we wash and scrub and dcodoril.e and disinfect our bodies, our dishes, our
clothes, our noors until everything is spotless-so clean that there is no place ror
germs and decay and death tO g;un a foolhold·-or so adverli<;tt$ would have us
imagine.
k1tNTER. - 1988-89
We also shut away the darker side of ourselW!s--1.he irrational, angry,
lustful, sad or murderous rcelings that m1gh1 puncture our illu.~ion of control--and
uy our best to be "nice". always in control. Of course, this means it simply
won't do to be spontane00s and child-like. No, when we "grow up" we have to
behave like adults and plan everything. But boring and dcrulcning as this may be,
111. lcast it's safe-and lhe ego despcr.uely need!. to feel safe, because deep down we
know that this separate ego is itself an illusion. So nuher th31l face this and get
catapulted inoo another level or awareness, we cleverly devise count.less avoid3nce
mechanisms to distract us from the uuth.
There 1$, however, a huge dose of divlllC humor in au this-because having
to be in control actually feels terribly consuicting and uncomfortable, while
letting go of control and entering the !low of the moment feels bolh liberating nnd
very safe-after we eitpcriencc lhe fear and move through 1L Every time wechnnge,
every umc we let go of lhe past, we die a liule-but we're also reborn: and if we
continually ICL ourselves die t0 lhe past. we're also continually reborn. The cosmic
joke is: this is the power and immon.a.lity lhe poor frightened ego is constantly
wanting, but II has lO be willing to "let go" lO get lO 1L
Tbt Sirf'n or Over-orodutlivlty and Wasterulntss
This siren has had a dcvasm1ing impact on the environmcnL Its internal
"logic" goes like lhts: Westerners arc led to believe th3l somelhmg temble will
happen if they don't continually 111cn:ase their GNP, so they·re always pushing LO
grow. construct, or manufacture more and more goods. These goods are
increasingly dc.~igned to be disposable or 10 qUJCk.ly become obsolete. Afier all, if
people throw more things away, thcy11 have to buy more later, and I.his increases
production and profits. Perfunctory hp service is paid to the Idea of recycling. but
the dommant message sull "in lhe lllI" in this cuhure is that 1t is perfectly fine t0
waste resources 1r this increnses bolh eonvcrucnce and production. Even fwther, if
we're really "prosperous• m this cuhun:. we're able to throw things away at wall
and replace them (with "new, improved" ones. of course!)
:Every time we "throw somethiruJ
away " (where is "away"?) ... we add to
the out-of-control "9arha9t,fi,cation" of
our planet Home.
In olher words, waste, squandering, conspicuous consumption, gadget
mania, ond total d1~n for the environment are our measuring sticks for llow
"prosperous" we are! This attitude has more to do with ecological suicide than
prosperity. Every Lime we "throw somctlung away" (where 1s •away"?),
especially non-degradable pla~ucs and styroforun, we add to lhe out-of~ontrol
"g:irbagilication" of our planet Home. If lCllAnlS ever ucaled a house the way we
treat our planet. they'd be evicted immcda:ncly, and the Board of Health 11oould
prob:lbly condemn lhe property!
We've been vainly trying lO send our garbage abroad and to p:iy other
nauons to take 11 off our hands. In 1988 we've witnessed the sad spccll!Cle of
masses of g:irbage and medical refuse washing up on our beaches. again and again.
Thus, it's now impossible not to recognize that our garbage and our attitudes are a
major ecological problem. Yet the visible garbage is only the 1ip of the
iccberg--what about nuclear contanunatlon and other invisible, highly t0xic
effluvia?
True prospcnty would never give nse to such an absurd and ecologically
harmful "modus operandi". Conscious pl:lncwry 51ewardship clcrnands th.11 we be
awarc of waste and ac11·v~/y srop supponing 1L We can recycle most house.hold
wastes: we can simplify our live~ nnd decrease our "needs•: and we can help
Olhcrs do lhe same. In this way conscrvatlon can go hand-in·h:lnd with a d«pcr
prospenty that honors Life.
The Siren or Pain Avoidance and Addklion to Pleasure
People have always sought plca.wre and tried tO avoid pain, but modem
society has turned this iendcncy into a quas1·religious and fanatical faith. On
every side we are beset by messages and infCICllCCS that pleasure is "good• while
pam is "bad", and that we should always feel eitcited, happy. and carefree-which
mean~ that we must deny and suppress our pain at all co:.IS. This attitude can be
br117cnly obvlOU.,, as in most advcrus1ng; it can also opcr.llC very subtly, so 11 can
be difficult to pinpoint and counteract iL, effccis. One effect, though, is feeling
illi.IJy about eitpcriencing pain--it somehow <;CCII\~ almos1 un-American to be in
pain! But growing up can at times be difficult and painful. In order to become
mature adults. we sometimes have LO go through and learn from painful
�Book Review:
11iINKING LIKE A MOUNTAIN:
Towanls a Council of all Beings
by John Seed, Joanna Macy, Pat Reming, Ame Naess
1988; New Society Publishers; 128 pp.; $9.50.
Thinking Like a Mow11ain is a deep ecologist's prayer book.
Running Lhrough ils collection of essays, poems, rituals and
workshop notes is a pervasive sense of the emergence of Gaia, the
living planel, not as a quasi-scientific hypothesis, but a living
presence, a goddess.
The book's opening invocation by John Seed is a good
example:
"We ask for lhe presence of the spirit ofGaia ...Wc call upon
the spirit of evolution...We calJ upon the power which sustains the
planets in their orbits, that wheels our Milky Way in its
200-million-year spiral."
Directly relevant to the defense of eanh, Gaia is experienced
not only as presence pervading all, but as Seti', the larger Self of
which everything is pan. Experiencing the planet body as one's own
is for Seed the radical bean of deep ecology and something he
discovered Lhrough his own direct action defending the rainforest near
his home in New South Wales. "J was literally part of the rainforest
defending herself." "... we arc the rocks dancing."
This point 1s most powerfully made in 'The Testimony of
Graham Innes" which includes a p1C1ure of Innes buried up to his
neck as part of a campaign defending the Da.intree Rainforest against
the onslaught of bulldozers. "A slow dawning of awareness
(occurred) of a hitheno unknown connection. Eanh bonding. Her
pulse became mine, and the vessel, my body, became the vehicle for
her expression."
In addition to direct action, Seed suggestS a variety of
methods for inspiring the experience of deep ecology including
prayer, poetry, wilderness vision quests, and ritual of the sort
provided in thjs book.
Indeed "The Council of AU Beings" ritual developed by Seed
and Joanna Macy and described in the book by Macy and Pat Fleming
deserves detailed auemion. The ritual consists of three stages. The
first is entitled "Mourning."
Drawing on her experience with despair workshops. Joanna
Macy observes that the destruction of our life suppon systems is the
deepest and most pervasive source of anxiety in our time, that this
destruction is happening now, felt in our bodies as depression and
despair that we fear expressing because of the taboos set up in our
society. The first stage of the ritual acknowledges this despair - the
pain involved in the devastation of our soil. the loss of our forests,
the extinction of species, the poisoning of our breathe and blood, air
and water. The aim of the ritual at this point is to have the
participants "hear within themselves the sound of lhe eanh crying."
The second stage of the ritual is entitled "remembering."
Through both guided fantasy and active mimicry, panic1pantS reenact
the entire evolutionary journey of the cosmos, the planet and life on
earth acknowledging the real physical links of this journey built into
the coding of our genes.
The last stage of the ritual is the council itself with each
participant speaking for another life form and acting out the drama of
the contemoorarv olanetarv situation from a non-human perspective
as well as taking rums playing a human.
Jn addition to the ritual, the book contains poems by
Robinson Jeffers. Gary Snyder and Joanna Macy. an essay by Ame
Xatuah Journal pQ.CJe 14
Naess, beautiful rainforest illUSII'lltJons by Duilan Pugh and much else
useful for all of us working to generate the experience of deep
ecology.
It is interesting that in a collection of eanh prayerl> and
mvocauons to Gaia such as this, the selections are. w11h one
exception, the work of contemporary Western poets and authors
rather than excerpts from various Native American U'llditions which
have long revered the Great Spirit, Father Sky and Mother Earth.
(That one exception is a rcnrution of Chief Seattle's 1854 Duwam1sh
speech.) While the authors have undoubtedly been influen~ed by that
tradition, they represent what seems 10 be a new revelation shaped
both by contemporary science and contemporary vision. Their
poems, prayers and ritual evoke a spirit and offer a general fonn
rather than provide verbatim formulas. They begin to forge a path
into the teachings we must all be about the task of discovering and
inventing if the world of our children, let alone the world seven
generations hence is to survive as the rich luxuriant planet we have
known.
l must add that there is a healthy emphasis in the book that
ritual is not an end in itself but preparation for action by generating
deeply felt recognition that defense of the earth is self-defense. To
this end we join in the book's invocation: "O stars, lend us your
burning passion."
~
-Amy Hannon
Prinls by PAM and LIU TllOMAS
Book Review:
TALKING Wfl'H NATURE:
Sharing the Energies and Spirit ofTrees, Plants. Birds, and Earth
by Michael J. Roads
1987; H.J. Kramer, Inc.; 151 pp.; $9.95 (cloth)
The night was cloudy and I was alone with a book by the fire. So
l feh preny good Lo begin with,considering that's one of my favorite
places to be. but I was oot prepared for what the book would d~ to
me. As I read into it my heart opened and my sense of bemg
expanded. At midnight and half way through Lhe book, 1 could
contain myself no longer. I jumped out of my seat, rushed out the
door and flung my arms out 10 the night just as the wind blew the last
cloud from the moon and rushed past me in unbounded joy.
Ir's ha.rd to know what else to say about this book that really
matters. It is not as simple as the title implies, and yet in a very
deeply powerful way, it is simply about "talking with nature". It
brings that whole concept into an accessible reality. It is a sharing of
an unfolding that will touch you as deeply as your own untoldmg lies
within you. h holds vital pieces of wisdom, cruth and lighL It is
~
sweet nourishment.
• reprinted from 1~ EducOlional Resourct COOJ>(T(JJivc N~.tlt111er
IJ'\.N1£R. - t 988-89
�.. ..., ...
·~
•
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. . . . . . . 'N.
r;:!:'1-~••.•.·~-'\..
IN
~~~i:r~ST
I
,i";'>. ................,
An Original Idea For Ka!Uah Oirrcncy
Options for Regional Currency:
A Look at
Local Employment Trading System
(LETS)
This network also increases the amou nt of personal contaet
between neighbors.
Reminding us of our true
interconnectiveness, it's a tool for the reweaving of ancient
pauems.or !Jibe and village. l~'s about simplifying and taking
respons1b1hty for our collective economic behavior. T he
LETSy~tem is an altemalive as well as a supplement to rhe
convennonal economy that can be implemented right now.
A LETSystem is a network whose members use a local
currency to allow them to 1rade foods and services without
necessarily having access to federal dollars. Members have
accounts which start with a balance of zero. Goods and services
which members want to obtain or provide arc listed in a monthly
mailing.
There are currently about 50 LETSystems operating around
the world, with much experience to draw from. Computer
software for operaung the ne twork is readily available. A
videotape, and a game which models the workings of the system,
can be used in educating folks about iL
Prices are stated in 'green dollars', a quasi-currency
equivalent in value to federal dollars. The lOtal of all member~·
account balances always equals zero. At any one point, there are
some accounts with a positive balance ("in credit") and some
accounts with a negative balance ("in commitment"). A stntement
of one's transactions and balance is received with the momhlv
mailing. A charge is deducted from each accoun1 monthly,
according 10 use, to cover the operating cos1s of the ne1work.
For example: John cu1s firewood. Pe1er 1s a weldcr, and
he wants wood bu1 has no money. John doesn'1 need any
welding done. Thai's usually where ii stops. However, if John
and Pe1er are members of a LETSystem, then John delivers the
wood, and Peter picks up the phone. He dials the LETSy,tem
answering machine and says, ''Hi, this is Peter, #48, plea~c
acknowledge John, #83, $75 for firewood. " This informauon 1s
fed to a computer. which increases John's account by 75 green
dollars and decreases Peter's account by 75 green dollars. In
tum, John employs a carpen1cr. the carpenter has a haircut, gels
some clothes made. buy~ food from a farmer. The farmer now
has a way to pay for a welder. so Peter gets to work again. In
this network people need never be unemployed because of a lack
of federal dollars in the communily.
Many transactions are likely to consist of pan green dollars
and pan federal dollars, as members take care of their needs for
cash. The LETSystem is compatible with the conventional
monetary system and simply increases the amount of local
economic activity.
What I sec happening as a next step is people who are
juiced up about tltis taking the time to consider the details. Then a
group of peo~le who feel clear about it can get the ball rolling by
actually starling a LETSysiem and organizing an educational
workshop designed to ium larger numbers of people onto the
network.
We are c~rr~ntly ro:m.in.g a LETSystem for the Floyd
County community in the Vtrg1ma portion of Katuah.
compiled by Fred Mignone
-rtprinrtd from Educauonol Rtsouru Coopt'raJi\'t', Box 80, Floyd. Virginia
24(~/
If you wo uld like to know more abo ut LETSvstcms
tha l a re c urre ntly fun ctioning in Cana da a nd the L.S.
as we ll as audio-vis ual ma te rials, send a d olla r to:
Lands man Community Servi ces, Ltd., 37 5 J ohnston
Avenue Courtenay, BC V9N 2Y2 C anada.
Olhcr rosourus:
Economics as If tht Earth Rtally Ma11utd: A Ca1alyst Guide 10 Socially
Conscious lnvtsting. Su'ian Meeker-Lowry. 1988. New Society Publishers,
P.O. Bo~ 582, Sama Crur., CA 95061
"The Local Employment Trading System•. Wholl! Earth Revitw, r-;o. SS.
Summer 1987.
Oraw1na by ROB MESSICK
W'l.N'J'ER - 1988- 89
X.OWah Journot pGCJe 15
�tft.e cft.t'ontcie.s of fCoycL
At the time of the change there were so many
wildly imaginative approaches 10 transformation; all
worked some, some worked a 101! What a time for
adventure and opponunity.... shining days.
One thing I remember, there was n lot of knitting
and darning going on. People just staned to draw up
the rough and tattered edges of the life cloth and sewed
them back together. One of the signs of it was the
coming of prosperity; all over people got together good
shelter and strong gardens, 1here was a 101 of local
commerce and baner. health re1umed 10 1he land and
birds came back. and bear. The people 1hrived no
maner what the weather. The seasons began 10 make
sense 10 1he people and they noticed the changes and
understood themselves.... they were able 10 help each
other, so prosperity returned.
The apprentice pa1h came into focus again. People
all of a sudden began to think of what they knew as a
gift and a tool of their trade. The work people did was
recognized as a pan of 1heir lifesong and deserved 10
be honored. Quality returned, and guild houses;
young folk traveled from guild to guild getting a taste
Text reprinted from EducatiolllJI R~ouret Ctnru Nt'Wslcutr:
Bo~ 80: Floyd, VA
24091
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of the difference, then they would take their pick. At
first everybody kept jumping from one 10 the next,
midst alot of smoke and dust, but it settled pre11y
quickly and folks could hear their intuits, which
always speeds things up. Now the choices usually are
clear. Of course, all the decision-making was helped
along greatly when we re-connected with our ancestral
helpers: the others or our group in the past, present and
future, who all want the same thing. They reminded us
that discipline Le; just remembering what you want.
And, of course, a big, big change came with the
passing of the age of leadership. We know now it was
really just a thought, but it projected such substance
and energy it was difficult to see thru it for a while....
like a heavy fog on the ridges. Bui by and by it lifted
and nobody needed a leader anymore, we all fell a
sense of purpose and had a plan, of course that
brought order - real orderliness like the way water
moves along, or fire bums, or a rock splits along a
line.
When I look back to the before rime, it's hard to
believe how all our lives were ordered by confusion.
Our power circuit was unplugged. So. or course, the
~
change was awesome at first, but 11 quickly became
normal... ..i1's easy to forget
I'm so glad 10 have seen these times.
-by Granny DeLauney
p
�.KNIFE, AXE, AND SAW
•
or
" Getting Pocketknife Religion"
Recorded by David Wheeler
Darry Wood thinks of himself as an
anisan. The word is French and refers to
someone who works in the middle ground
between an artist and a craftsperson.
"/ am happiest when I am creating
fimct1onal objects that are beautiful," he
says. And that sums up his work, whether
it is his house built of hand-hewn logs.
drawings, sculptures, cabinetwork,
museum-standard replications of the
eighteemh and nineteenth century clothing
of the Sowheastern Indian tribes, or the
self-made hand tools that he uses in these
projects.
Darry is also a master of primitive
camping techniques and the ancient native
technologies that have come w be known as
"Earth skills."
To whatever project he undertakes
Darry brings his fme sense of observation,
an intense power of concentration, and a
love for natural materials. These personal
qualities are constantS in all of his work.
As we calked at his homestead on
Buck Creek in Clay County (NC), Darry
scraped hair off a deer skin stretched tight
on a wooden frame preparatory to
brain-tanning the hide to condition it. The
rhythmic scratching of /us wahinle, as the
hide-scraping tool is called in the LAkota
Indian language. pwicwated his words as he
e.tplained that primitive skills were not
simply techniques, bill a way of life.
Katl1ah. You've JUSt returned from
doing an "Eanh Skills Workshop" wilh
Snow Bear and Bob Slack at the Unicoi
Staie Park in north Georgia. How do the
skills that you teach at those workshops
benefit the students?
Dorry Wood: We focus on making
fire without matches, going into the natural
environment and finding food, making
shelter without the use of metal tools,
brain-tanning, and 01her practical affairs of
life.
To me, these are primitive skills in the
highest sense of that word. People often
think of "primitive" as being crude or
obsolete. and I suppose a lot of people
would say that what we do in our
workshops is obsolete. h's not something 1
would care to debate with people who have
n much different system of values. But I see
what we are doing ill> "primilive" in the
Latin sense of the word meaning "the first,"
"the most basic" - "primary."
In practicing these ancient teehniqucs,
people inevitably touch back with
themselves, with who they really are. In this
day we are so insulated from lhc natural
world by plastic. aluminum, concrete, and
glass. we forget that we are of the Earth,
and that it is not Wi nn-Dixie and the Blue
Rjdge Mountain Electric Co-op and other
X4c.UM Jou.rna! p~ l 8
institutions !hat sustain us. It's the Mother
Eanh that sustains us, and by practicing
Eanh Skills people begin to see that in a real
way.
As we cook over an open fire, put our
hands into the flesh and blood of the deer,
and learn how to sharpen our knife and our
axe so that they'll serve us in the best
possible way, we can feel the simplicity of
life as it was in another time, and yet still
retain a feeling of just how relevant it is for
us in this time to take pan in the life process
as it has been continuing on this Eanh for
lhousands of years.
Our lifestyle has become so
dis-integrated, that living on a primitive
level for just 48 hours helps people
reintegrate in a way that lhey didn't realize
was possible.
What r teach are the basic skills of
life. It's home economics; it's rediscovering
our birthrighL
K: Even the practical techniques that
you talk about are highly sophisticated on
some levels. You showed me an adz.e in
your workshop that was made out of a
branch that was growing off the tree at just
the right angle, and showed me a ncshcr
that had a thong which went over your
wrist, so that it made your forearm into an
actual pan of the tool. Those tools show an
awareness of engineering lhat is more than
logical.
DW: Perhaps a more precise example
of what you arc talking about is the sticks
that make fire. Everybody has heard about
making fire by rubbing two sticks together,
it's almost legendary. Ir the knowledge of
how to create fire by friction were lost, it
would be very difficult to reinvent. There's
no telling how many thousands of years
human beings Strived to do this before
somebody succeeded. It must have been a
magical moment when a human being first
brought fire into being with his or her own
hands.
To actually bring fire, everything has
to be just so. h's not something one can
fake. The design of the tools has to be just
right. All the details of the fire-making
process have to be followed carefully or no
fire appears. This sk11l, or science,
whichever you want to call it, evolved over
lhousands of years. and while there arc
minor variations in method based on local
traditions and local material:., the basic
technique is always the same. Although this
is primitive, it is very specific. Like so
many things, it's easy when one knows
how and when one pays auention.
One of the basic facts of life in
America today that 1 have yet to face up to is
the operation of a computer. I know nothing
about it. And yet everywhere people are
doing it, and for a lot of people it has
become second nature, yet for me it's still a
great mystery. But ever since I was a kid I
have been making fire by friction and
preserving hides by brain-tanning, and all of
that is about as lhrcatening to me as making
a sandwich.
K: But operating a computer involves
only the pan of our brain that works with
logic. If someone is walking out in the
woods and sees a certain crook in a certain
kind of tree, and says, "Hey! There's my
adze handle," that involves knowledge and
logic but also an intuitive sense that does
not come into play in operating a computer.
OW. Let's say ii like this: to live in
the natural world requires a much greater
level of awareness than what most modem
people are used to manifesting.
I've thought about this a lot. In my
boyhood I was around some native people
who came as close as anything I could think
of to being prototypical savages. These
were native Creek and Seminole people
living in the Everglades of Florida, who,
unlike the Cherokees of these mountains,
were not exposed to the white people's
schools and churches throughout the
nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
Yes, they had some European goods;
they had guns and they had cloth; but they
spoke very liule English. The old man who
taught me how to make moccasins, for
instance, was named Billy Bowlegs III. He
welcomed me to watch him at his work,
from which I gathered that my young
sma.n-alecky level of awareness was preny
shallow compared to the level of this
100-year-old man, who from behind could
tell that a crow was in his com, grab his
single-barrelled shotgun and, hardly
glancing more than once at the crow, could
knock it dead
l.1tNJER - 1988- 89
�I saw that happen !>CVeral times when
people to go into the forest and create a
lifestyle. Put me down in the American
• hardwood forest with these basic tools.
primitive hunters in the times before
give me a linle time, and I couldn't imagine
European contact must have maintained a
a more ideal situation.
remarkable intensity of awareness to be so
totally at home in the wild environment. It's
It shocks people when I begin a
workshop by saying that w-hen they get
hard for us to imagine how finely-tuned
home from the hardware store with a
were the senses of those native people, w-ho
brand-new, American-made knife, they
lived with, and in some ways like, the
don't have a tool that is ready to use. The
animals · on the Eanh in a natuml way.
assumption is that a tool comes from the
store ready to go. The one cutting tool with
K So a simple thing like sharpening
which that is probably the case is the saw.
your knife 1s a staning point 10 reawaken
Saws work on a different principle, and
some of thnt.. ..
come from the manufacturer as good as they
DW: Surely. If I have anything real
arc going to geL
at all to offer people, something that the
But axes and knives need a whole lot
of work. It's very subtle, but the basic issue
average modem person docs not know and
needs to know, it is the knowledge of how
is the angle to whlch the manufacturer has
to sharpen a knife. That is the basic lecture
ground the bevel of the cutung edge. !l's all
that I give at almost any workshop situation
wrong for-doing practical work. h's way
that I'm in. h's the opening hand; it's the
too thick:
Before I use a br:ind~new knife or ~
foundation from which all the rest builds.
If we are going to create a viable
axe,) first do considetable filing OP it to
••
lifestyle in a natural environment, the basic : •
remove the n)etatjust behind the edge, So as
operation, upon which all the rest are built,
to taper it and thin ii down, .so it will
is to rune up a knife so ii will be performing
peni:trate wuhouL resistance. Once 1 've
done that, l hone a fine cutting edge on it
at the highest level. To do otherw11;e 1s like
asking a concen violinist to go on stage and
~with 11 stone. American.made knives
play Paganini with an inslJ'Umcnl that is out
genccally come with the bevel ground to
of tune. It's just not reasonable to do. And
40-45°, which is much too obtuse for most
cutting operations. So I immc0u11ely take a
yet that same level of ignorance is where
file and readjuSt that to an 20.25u angle.
most people are operating when they an: out
in the woods with a knife or 'an axe. Their
almost half as thick as the epge tMt they$11
tool is dull, because they don't know how
you. before I put ir 10 w6rlc. Most people
to manage it in a way that will make life
don't know to do that , h's not in the BfJ}'
easy and comfonable.
Scout Haiidbook. lt'i; not in '3ny of the
Witness the choice of word~ that we
common pl:tces where B ~rson might
have developed in the English l:in~age to
Cl';pc<;t lO iud such a thing.
say "in trouble" or "in danger." We ~·
"Sharpening the Ktiife" s my basic
"We're not out of the w6ods yet," imJ>ly"ng
sermon. It's a beginning)Jlace. It's a key
for us to open ourselves up so that we can
that to be in the wood. is to be in a
hazardous state and that we are~e and free
begin to look oeeper.
If someone is seekin& enlightenment
when we get out of the wOOds. That's the
implication. But l totally reject rhat pq1nt of
11 nd their kl!ife is dull, they have the
view, for I am safe and at home when I am ~roverbial canoe~ the horse.
~
in the woods.
\
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.It 1s .ror thnt reason that I don't
K: This priruidve lifestyle involves
an awful Jot of sophi~ticnted physic~ and
pamc1pate in any workshop where I am
advenised, and this has happened, as one engineering !
who is teaching "survival skills." That's
\
._
how the army writes its manuals dedicated
DW: That's beCnuse these arc thing
to teaching people how to hve m the narural ~ lhat peopTe haven't rhouglit vet)'. much
. nbo\lt. To sharpen a knife rcg_ujres ~IJ!Y.
environment. They call it "survival skills."
But to me survival skills are knowing how
two-minutes, once someone knows liOW.1
0
to cross Peach_tree Street without getting run
do lL
J. . , . . /
It's all relative io v.hat one bas been
over by a taxicab or how to walk through
the ci~y at night wi~out getting mugged.
exposed 10 and what one's condluoning is.
But give me my knife and set me down
It takes me at least one hour lO communicate
to someone else an understanding of what's
somewhere in the eastern hardwood forest,
going on down there where the steel meets
and I'm just like Bre'r Rabbit in the briar
patch. I'm home.
the stone. I find, however, that if someone
pays attention for an hour, then they can
K: And so "keeping your knife
bring a knife to useable condition in just a
sharp" is a way for people to live their lives,
few minutes.
even in a modem context.
K: But it's not just the knowledge
DW: Right. l call this "pocketknife
and the understanding, it's also nece!>sary to
religion."
practice the motions.
The folding knife is our basic unit. If
we have our pants on, our knife is with us
DW. That's right. Mastery comes
at all times: that's the fundamental tenet of
with repetition, but there's nnother element
pocketknife religion. Proceeding from there
as well.
to the axe and the saw, we build our holy
fn hunting, even when someone
trinity. It is knife, axe, and saw that enable
acquires a skill and can perform it well, that
I was a kid, and I've often thought that the
1
of itself is not enough. When the moment
comes to strike. one has to be able to bring
one's full auention to bear on the necessary
action. One has to be there with awareness,
or else the arrow doesn't shoot the deer
through the hean. Mastering skills like that
requires practice beforehand, but that
split-second moment of action aJso requires
a "present awareness" of an intensity most
people can't comprehend.
That is one reason I go outside and
either shoot my blowgun or shoot my bow
and arrow at least once every day. It helps
me to tune myself up, because these are
things that I have done for a long time, and I
know that I can hit the bullseye when I get
myself very calm and very still and
concentrate on that bullseye with what I
think of as "a savage intensity!
It's the same reason Ted WilJiams had
such a good batting average. A sponswriter
asked Ted one time how he could hit the
baseball so well, and Ted offered what I
thin~ is one of the most famous quotes in
Qa.seball, "I keep my eye on the ball."
Jt's simple, yes, but the difficulty lies
in hllving the presence of mind to do it in the
J>recisc moment. I know how to shoot the
bOW and the arrow, but I don't hit the
bullseye every time, because most of the
time I'm up there loafing - manifesting
verage flakey behavior. But there arc
momen~ when I wake myself up, and I
look intensely at that bullseye. I don't have
to thmk about technique at that moment; I've
practiced the technique for year.;. What is
required is tile determination, in that
moment, 10.put into practice what I Jcnow
how IO do. If· I can concenuare my aucntion
for that one split instant, the arrow goes
clean Into the center of the target. But
oftentimes I don't seem to have the
motivation to oo it at that level. Of course
ihe,old-time P,Cople living on the Eanh lrad
to do it, or they would have starved.
It may not be a weapon; it may be a
tQOI that l have in my hand. If I intend to fell
a tree with an ~e. to do it efficien~ly I have
to deliver the bu of my axe precisely to a
little pinpoint-sized spot that I pick out on
the bark. Then the next cut has to intersect
first precisely. The way most people flail
away at a tree with an axe, it looks like a
be~ver's been working t~ere, whereas a
skilled axehandler leaves JUSt a few large.
clean chips.
fill e
K· Some people are predicting an
economic collapse. saying that our whole
economic system is going to be changed on
a scale more catastrophic than the Great
Depression. Do you think that these ~kills
and the awareness they engender would be
of great practical value in a situation like
that?
DW:
I would think: so. The
awareness these skills create would be
particularly valuable. I'm not prophesying
it, but should such a coll3pse come, there is
no doubt but that we would have to do
things much differently. How we would
live, God only knows. There are not
enough deer in the woods that everyone
could wear deerskin clothing. In fact there's
((DllJinucd on p.tg~ 23)
WlNJER - 1988 89
Drawing by ROB MESSICK
JCAl.Ucm Jol.lrna!
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WORLD
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"WATCHIN' 'DEM
BOMBS GO BY"
Nlllllt&I World News Savia:
A convoy of three ~ked trucks
accompanied by five escort vehicles pulled
out of the Pantex plant in Amarillo, Texas.
The trucks carried nuclear weapons or
nuclear weapons parts. There was no way
to identify the trucks or their cargo except
by the distinctive "goalpost" antenna~ tha~
extended up the sides and over the dnvers
cabs, but they were being watched: As they
emergl!d from the plant gates, a smgle car
swung in behind the convoy, and word
flashed ahead along !heir route.
As they proceeded east along the
interstate, newspapers were alerted ~nd
sign-carrying dcmonstrntOr.> called at.tenuon
to I.lie presence of the bomb ~ruck:; m each
major city as the nuclear shipment roll~d
through town. The single sedan stayed. with
the trucks and their anned guard vch1cle$.
sometimes talking pleasantly with the
drivers over the CB radio and staying in
contact with a central switchboard in
Oklahoma City by cellular phone.
Before sunrise on the morning or
November 5, 1988 the convoy approached
their destination at Oak Ridge, Tennessee.
Thiny miles west of the town 12 more
vehicles joined their esc?"· but these cars
were unanned, full of noisy protestors. and
carried signs warning "H-Bomb Trucks
Ahead." As the trucks entered the town
limitS, the unofficial escort pulled ahead,
and as the big rigs pulled up to the gates of
the Y-12 Nuclear Weapons Components
Plant, they were greeted by shouting
demonstrators waving signs and banners.
This was Nukewatch.
During the week of October 31 November 5, tlie Oak Ridge Environmental
Peace Alliance (OREPA) joined the
nationwide Nukcwatch action by monitoring
the Y-12 Plant in Oak Ridge. Volunteers
maintained conslllllt surveiUancc at the Y-12
gates waiting for the specially designed,
unmarked "safe secure trailers" (SSTs) that
transport nuclear warheads, weapons
components, and nuclear ingredients for the
Department of Energy (DOE) .
Communication networks between Oak
Ridge. the Nukewatch headquarters at
Oklahoma City, OK and other weapons
:Kcitiuah JolU'f\Ot PQ'}e 20
installarions trncked nuclear convoys across
the nation.
. .
On the first day of monnonng,
OREPA truckwatcher Stephen Clements
followed a weapons transpon vehicle and
escon cars from the Y-12 gates, through
downtown Knoxville, and north ~n
Interstate 81 to Gaithersburg, Maryland in
the suburbs of Washington, DC. The
Washington Post followed up on the stozy,
and a reporter learned from a D~E
spokesperson that the truck wa~ carrying
97% pure, bomb-grade uranium to a
research reactor ai the Bureau of Standards
in Gaithersburg. A rcpon appeared in the
Post the next day.
The public scrutiny makes the DOE
nervous. They give possi?le t~s!'l as the
reason for their paranoia, but It 1s mo~
likely that they would rather that people did
not know that unmarked radioactive
shipments are passing down the highw~ys.
Nukewatch believes that people have a nght
to know how close nuclear war is to th.cir
personal Jives. Nuclear weapons production
becomes real to people when they realize the
truck they arc passing on the interstate 1s
loaded with parts for n~clea_r warhe~ds.
When shipments of radtoactt~e uranium
passing through an urban neighborhood
suddenly become visible~ it .brings home the
lesson that the first v1cums o f nuclear
confrontation are those affected by the
environmental hazards of nuclear production
and nuclear waste.
The Oak Ridge Enviro11mental
and Peace Alliance
Bo:c 1101
Knoxville, TN 37901
Call (evenings): (615) 588-9370
ISN'T IT OBVIOUS?
Nawral World NcWfl Savic:e
The North Carolina Forestry
Association has announced that with the
Western Nonh Carolina Development
Association's Forestry Commission it will
be launching a $30,000 "educational
campaign" to convince people in the
mountain area or the state of the benefits of
the clearcu11ing technique or logging. the
method preferred by loggers and the US
Forest Service for its economy, speed, and
ease of managcmenL
The camP,aign will be panially funded
by a $9,000 grant from the US Forestry
Association.
Clearcuuing has been coming under
strong and often bitter auack from all
manner of people in the mountain area or
Katuah. Besides being aesthetic~lly
unpleasing to humans, clearcutttng
diminishes already scarce wildlife habitat by
fragmenting valuable cover areas and
favoring yellow poplar and other
non-food-producing tree species over
valuable mast-producing species, like oaks
and hickories.
The US Forest Service: has also been
criticized for clearcumng trees on a short
rotation schedule, causing mast·bearing
trees to be removed before Ibey can enter
their period of highest produ~tivity •. and .ror
replanting clearcut areas wtth whne P.tne
trees which create vezy poor habuat
coodltions for most wildlife species.
USFS PLANSTOINCREASE
HERBICIDE USE
N.wn! Wodd News Service
The US Forest Service (USFS) has
released a draft environmental impact
statement that indicates that the age~cy
intends to increase the use of chemical
herbicides and prescribed bums in the
National Forests of the Southern
Appalachian Mountains.
The "vegetation management"
proposal covers the National Forests in. the
mountain areas of North Carolina,
Tennessee, Georgia, Virginia and Kentucky
and isolated areas in South Carolina and
Alabama a total of 5.2 million acres. It
defined V:ork in the areas of site preparation
(for planting of white pine ttees). corridor
(trails, roads, and utility linc:s> '!lainten~ce,
hazardous fuel reduction, wildlife clennngs,
and timber stand improvement operations.
The statement also considered the
impact of mechanica! and manu.al methods
of land clearing and stte preparation.
The statement was in the form of
eight alternative plans for management,
varying in intensity. The plans ranged fr~m
"no clearing" 10 clearing or preparing
173,000 acres each year. Under the most
intense regimen proposed, 3.3% of the
forest lands under study in the mountains
would be cleared or worked each year.
Herbicide use options varied from no
chemical treatment to treating 57 .~ acr~s
each year. Aerial spraying. by heh.copter 1s
considered in three of the eight opuons, and
1he alternative preferred by the USFS
provides for aerial applicauon~ ?n ru~ged
terrain and along some u11l11y lines.
Herbicide brands to be used would include
2,4-0; 2,4-DP; Tebuthiuron; Triclopyr. and
others.
.
The draft impact statement designates
a lOO·foot unsprayed buffer area around
wells, screams, springs, and private land
boundaries. and a 300-foot buffer .~ea
around private residences. No prov1s1on
was made for herbicide drift. The report
deemed that the poisonous spra}'.S ~ou!d
have "no significant effect" o~ w1ldhfe_ m
the spray areas and that se!ecuve sprar1ng
would minimize accumulauon of chemJcals
in the food chain.
These standards are unrealistic and
inadequate, and the persistent ~isoM being
used will have a strong negauve effect on
the plant and animal communities that live
on and in the forest soil and water.
Using heavy chemicals for economy
and convenience connicts with the USFS
mandate to protect the area's water sources.
The Appalachian public lands repre~~ts the
last large-scale habitat areas rem:.umng to
many species of wildlife. The l?resence of
str0ng and persistent toxic chemicals :vould
only contribute to the general degradauon.of
these already weakened and embattled hfe
systems.
.
.
Removing vege1a11on by chem1ca1
means takes money that could have
provided j~bs for moun~in ~sidents. The.se
jobs could improve the s11uat1on for counues
that have a low tax base because they
contain large percentages ofNati~nal.Forest
lands. Money spent on chcrrucals is divened
16'1.NTER. - 1988-89
�away from 1his region 10 gian1 chemical
manufac1uring conglomerates that arc major
producers of highly hazardou~ waMes.
The USFS draft environmental impact
sm1cment on vegeiation managcmcn1 seems
di-conceived and irresponsible. The public
will have the opponunity make commcnis
on the proposal until f-cbruary 17, 1989.
"Altcm:uive A," which provides for
"no treatment" is the only one of the
alternative plans that docs not in,'Olve the
use of 1ox1c chemicals. This is the bes1
choice for the fores1s until the USFS can
come up wi1h a be1tcr proposal 10 safely
manage the lands under their care.
Subm11 your comments to:
Bjorn Dahl, Fort·st Superl'isor
USDA Forest Scn•ice
Box 2750
Asheville, NC 28802
MRS HEARINGS
HeJrings on the proposed Monitored
Retrievable Storage facility for high-level
nuclear waste will be held in Atlanua, GA at
the Westin Peachtree Pl111.a Hotel from 9 am
- 5 pm on January 17, 1989.
For cronsponarion i11/orma1ion, write
Bo:c 291: Mars I/ill, NC 28754.
Biodiversity Bill Dies Will It Rise Again?
Nllllnll Wedd News Scr'liicc
HR 4335, the Nn1ional Biological
Diversity Conservation and Environmental
Research Ac1, did not pass the Congress
this year. Perhaps, however, i1 was a taste
of legislation to come as Congress auempts
to remedy what is now commonly
recognized as an environmental crisis of
monumental proportions: the mass
extinctions of other species stemming from
pollution and overdevelopment by the
human race.
The bill, sponsored in the I louse of
Representatives by Rep. James Scheuer
(D-NY) outlined a national policy for the
conservation of biological divcrsi1y and n
federal strategy for maintaining living
~ies and their habuat~ . The bill called for
a national research center devoted
exclusively to promoting understanding
about the conditioni. necessary to maintain
biological diversity and setting government
conscrvn1ion priorities. It also would have
amended the National Environmenial Policy
Act 10 insure that biological diversily y,ould
be required as a salient fac1or in preparing
environmental impac1 siatemcnis.
Ahhough the bill failed to pass the
Congress this year, it had wides11rcad
suppon and should be 11 s1rong contender
for passage in the next session of the
legislature. Write your representatives!
1"'lNTt:R. - 1988- 89
EIS ORDERED BEFORE CUT
BELOW CHEOAH BALO
Natural WDlid News Service
In 1979, during the days of 1hc
ill-fated Roadless Arca and Review
Evaluation II procedure (RARE II), the
Cheoah Bald area was the largc:.1 roadlcss
area in the National Fores1 lands in l\onh
Carolina, measuring 23,000 acres of
unbroken wild terrain. Roadlcss tracts
provide valuable wildlife habitat,
particularly for black bears, which arc
na1urally shy of roads, scnsi1ive 10 human
access, and rcquin: large, continuous range
areas in which 10 move.
Bui Cheoah Bald did not receive
wilderness designation in 1979, anCl when
the RARE II procer.s was nbandoncd, the
Fores1 Service moved quickly to cut roads
into 1hc area so that large tracts would be
removed from "roadless" status. Some
clearcuuing has already been earned out m
the area.
In 1987. however, when 1he US
Forest Service (USFS) announced plans to
clearcut ano1hcr 400 acres in 16 lr:J:CIS of
varying sizes in the Cheoah Bald area, the
Wilderness Society and other conservation
groups raised an outcry, and the USFS
consented to carr.• ou1 an cnvironmen1al
impact statement·(EIS) on the proposed
logging. This move sets a precedent,
because never before has 1he USFS
presented a full EIS for a clcarcuning
operation.
The usual procedure before a timber
sale is for a cursory "environmental
'ascr.sment" which inevi1ably produces a
verdict of "no significant impact" on the
environmen1 and rubber-stamps the timber
sale proceedings without serious
examination.
The crucial difference 1hat won the
Cheoah Bald area special consideration was
that the Appalachian Trnil passes through
the timber sale a~a. and some of the cuts
would be qui1e close to the trail, while
01hcrs would occur in vistas considered to
be among the mos1 spectacular along 1he
l,OOO·mile length of the trail. The Forest
Service's preccdcnt-seuing move, then. was
ra1her the resull of an aesthc1ic, rather than
an environmental, impact.
Other areas studied in the RARE II
proposal, the Big Creek area in Madison
County, NC, the Nolichucky area on the
.Nonh Carolina-Tennessee state line near
r:twin, TN. and the Wildcat area, which
adjoins the Great Smoky Mountains
National Park, also lie along 1hc
Appalachian Trail. Big Creek is a valuable
habiuu area as well as a scenic asset. as it
borders a wilderness area in the Cherokee
.National Fores1. that would be cxp:inded to
create an unbroken habitat area of 25,000
.acres if Big Creek were also designated
wilderness. Timber sales are planned in the
near future in Big Creek and Wilclca1, and
2,000 acn:s of the Nolichucky area arc to be
designated as available for logging, but
because of possible scenic disruption to tmil
hikers, these areas have an advantage in
their fight to ~m:Un primarily habirac :uus.
Aesthetic beauty does denote a
healthy. functioning forest community, and
it also is important for humans 10 find solace
from a ubiquitous civilization. However,
environmental needs ~ist even when they
arc no1 vi~iblc to human beings. There arc
01her roadless areas slaccd to be opened up
for clearcu1ring that will receive no special
consideration and no environmcnial impac1
Statements. Roads and timber sales will both
be pushed through in these areas, unless
citizeni> stand up for the rights of \\ildlife
and the habitat that suppons them.
Some of these areas are:
• Upper Wilson creek - 6,530 acres.
inventoried in the RARE U s1udy. A timber
sale will be proposed for this area m 1989.
• Linville Gorge Extension - 2, 138
acres adjoining the Linville Gorge
Wilderness Arca now slated to be opened
for timbering.
• Balsam Cone - a 13,529-acre area
on the eastern slope of the Black Mount.a.ins,
adjoining Mt. Mitchell State Park and
encompassing six peaks over 6,000 feet, of
which 3,400 acres arc to be managed for
shon·ienn or longer-rotation logging.
• Middle Prong Extension - 2,265
acres near the Sunburst Recrca1ion Arca on
the Pigeon River in Haywood County tha1
will be opened to longer-rotation logging.
• Snowbird Wilderness Study A~a a large 8.490 tract high in the Snowbird
mountin of Graham County, NC and
adjacent to a roadless area in the Cherokee
N:uional Forest of Tennessee containing
prime habitat area, some natural balds, and
groves of virgin timber. Thi:. area was
studied for formal wilderness designation
by the Forest Service, but wilderness sta1us
was declined in the 15 -year draft
management plan, which is presently under
appeal.
• Tusquitce Mountains - a
16,720-acrc area studied under RARF. II
;;outheas1 of Andrews, NC.
• Chunky Gui - 12,446 acres near 1he
Tu~uitcc Mountains area. 5,600 acre:; arc
slated to be opened to intensive logging.
• Southern Nantahala Wilderness
Extcnsionr. - tracts totalling 11,402 acres
that adjoin the Southern Nantahala
Wilderness Area, the Chunky Gal tract, and
wilderness areas in Georgia, studied as pan
of RARE II. 8,000 acres are proposed for
short-1enn or long·term logging, and the
'Trail Ridge road and timber sale is soon to
go up for bid.
• Fishawk Mountain - 4,890 acres
southeast of Franklin, NC that is to be
opened for shon-tcrm and longer-term
logging rotations.
For illfom1ation on how you can
participate in habitaJ preunurion ejfons on
t/1£ public lands, conuzcr:
Forest Voices
Box 1275
West Jefferson, NC 28694
{T
Petc.r Kirby
The Wilderness Society
1819 Peaclllrt'e Rd. NE
Atlanta, GA 30309
,..
p;I/
XAti&ah Journm p'"JC'- 21
�t
t:t
1
tt
41..li.r.i
lhe honeybees. Can you gather those without being s1Ung? And
lhey also cal odle.r inseclS, grubs, and rotting carrion. Do you have
lhe SIOmach for those foods?
•And in lhe fall !he bears eat lhe mast, the acoms end !he
nuts or the forest trCCS, lO ge1 faL for the win!Ct. The bears also
love lhe persimmons, pawpaws,and gropes lhlU grow in the woods,
bul the mast crops are what keep lhe bears alive in their dens.
"Wild foods arc powerful foods. Although they e.a1 li1lle
meal, black bears can grow lO 500 pounds In siz.e in these
mounlllins, although the females are generally less than I 50
pounds and the males less than 250 poWlds. Bears are strong! They
brealt branches from oak trees IO reach the tasty acorns. Bears are
fast! They can nm for eight to ten hours and can ouldisl!UlCe several
p:icks of dogs if need be. Bears are agile! They like best to run
through the thickets of lawcl and ivy IO lose their pursuers. Wild
foods give the bears their strcngth and endwance.
•Because you do not grow a black fur robe lhnl is warm and
beautiful, but are naked and hairless, I feel SOIT)' for you. You must
use olhcr furs and materials for clothing, and you musl have a den
to live in lhe year round."
And lhc Bear Old Man told them more things, and some of
the people listened carefully. and these in their own minds called
themselves the Bear Clan. and they put small images of the blnck
bear among the other objects on the swen1 lodge aliar and by their
sacred springs from which nowed their pure drinking waler.
And these humans began IO create a habimt for themselves
based on the word.s Yonah had 10ld them. They bulll lhemselvcs
dens 10 live in that were m3dc of rock boulders or heavy logs. so
1ha1 their homes were massive and cave-like, cool in lhe
summertime and wann in lhe wintcrS.
They walked I.he woods in the spring and found the wild
ramps, buL instead of enllllg !hem all, they replanted some in lhc
fore.q~ near lheir home den.~. and lhe ramps multiplied and sixcad.
They followed the c:rccks and picked lhe early branch leuuce
and ne11le leaves, but they would leave a number of lhe plant
people growing and kept lhe Slrenms running clear and
unobstructed, and always spoke a word of thanks to lhc plant
people as they gathered them, so !11at the green things would
conunuc tO feed the humans.
In their hollows and coves lhcy grew fruit 1recs, bolh
cu!Livatcd and wild, and among lhe trees they placed h1YC.10 or bees,
for they knew that this would please the Bear Old Man.
In olher fields they culLivalCd blnckberries, blueberries, nnd
raspberries close 1ogclhcr, as they grow on the mounminlops. and
m the summer they moved among the berry bushes foraging their
food much tn the manner of bears.
They tended gardens of corn, spring greens. squash,
climbing beans, and lhc roo1s of potatoes, onions, and
rich-smelling garlic. They let the polcewced. creasy greens, and
bmb,;quancrs grow, for Yonah told them the.~ greens were some
of the mo'l nutriuous of foods. Bul bccau.-.c the humans did no1
have the suong digestion of the bears, they had 10 hnng heavy
loo~ of wood lO their home dens 10 cool these foods 10 mnke them
pablllble.
In the woods the Bear Cbn encouraged lhc wild fruit trees.
The)' helped these trees wherever they found them growing by
keeping down the other uees around them 10 give lhc fruil uces
sp:icc nnd light. They spent a 101 or ume wandering through lhe
woods. jusl watching the IJ'CCS, plllDLS, and animals growing, and tn
I.he proper seasons they would come upon feasts of the succulenl
THE BEAR CLAN
Long ago, a young boy of the Chcrolcecs led his entire clan
away from I.he SCllled life of the village IO live in I.he forest. and
these people were lral'ISfonned inlO blaclc bears. Thus, says the old
Oicrokee legend. ~ the bear nation first crcalCd.
The spi:ril of the Wild Boy. who first led his people to their
new life in I.he wild, grew old and changed int0 YOO!lb, the Bear
OldMan.
Yonah returned once more 10 the sculemenlS where he had
lived before. He found his rebtives, I.he humans, much changed.
The villages were now large, and many new people lived there,
suange and different from the native people, with skins as pale as
fall mushrooms and hair of all shades of color instead of the
lustrous black of his own people's hair. Yet YoMh spoke lo lhe
humans, newcomers as well as the remnining native people, and
those who wanled IO live closely wilh the lnnd heard his words.
"You cannot wm int0 bears and come live in the foresl
with me as my people did once before. Times have changed; lhnl
way is closed, and ii perhaps may never be opened again. Bul I will
tell you what I.he bears know about living in the moumam forcslS,
Md, if you follow my insuuelions and conlinue 10 give the bears
honor and respect, you will be able 10 live here forever."
And the Bear Old Man lOld the People;
"The stcepesl mouniain land can support one female bear
for every six or eighl square miles. Males arc more of a luxury, and
the mounl3ins allow one only every 30-50 square miles.
"lmngine bemg able lO find all you needed for life within
six or eighl square miles of tnnd! You humans may no1 be able IO
do this. You do not have a warm fur coot growing on your back.
You do no< have the strong digestive system of a bear, who CM\ cal
anytlUng!
•And you humans have seriously overbrcd beyond the
capabilily of the land lo sustain you. You need to reduce your
numbers so lhat you can live with the land. lkmg crowded 10gclhcr
so closely is a filthy and dismal way IO live. Your numbcn> are so
great lhal you cannot forage in the open woods, bul must lend
certain plants and humbly serve their needs, in.'tcad of the plants
serving you, as il should be m the world.
"Truly, your lives arc going to be miserable ones indeed
until you learn IO control your numbers. The firsl duly of any
specie) of l:irgc animal is 10 cn~ure that enough off$pnng live 10
conlinue lhe Cllislcncc of the species. Bul lhe second duty of the
species is to limil lhc1r number' to what the land can pro,ide for.
Paying Ollention 10 those simple rcahues would <1erve you far
bcu.cr than your prcoccupalion with "good and evil," which in truth
do no1cx1st m the world. Yet, if )'OU aire for the water and the soil
ond lend your plants, you will be able 10 make a living in l11e
mountain.\, although you will never know the true freedom of
being a block bear m the wild world. Bui do not complain aboul
your lol, ror you have brouglu this on yourselves by your own
doing.
·em as lhe belll'S cat. Bears ea1 the CMly greens m I.he spnng
·branch lcuuce and sungmg ncu.lcs from lhc cn:cks - and dig ramps
from under the leaves on the forest noor. Squawroot is a special
food reserved for I.he bc3rs, and you canoot cal that.
"lo !he summer the bears cal the many bClncs and the fruits
• serviccberries, wild plum~. wild cherries • thaL grow on lhe
moum.ainsides. They alw fca.\t on the sweet honey 8lld lilrVae of
(conunucd on p. 26)
Print by ULA 11-IOMAS
WtNTER.. - 1988-89
�(conllnucd from page 19)
not enough wood in the woods for
everybody to heat with wood! Those of us
who do these things arc taJc.ing advantage of
unique situations which in no event would
be available to the greater population.
So I would not want people to think
that learning these skills would guarantee
their survival. The real value of learning
these old techniques is to gain a feeling of
greater self-reliance. I don't usually use the
tenn ''self-sufficient," because it would be
foolish under any circumstances to uy to be
totally sufficient unto one's self. But I think
that to be more self-dependent is a great
virtUc. Going into the woods and learning
to identify ccnain plant and animal species
can help you in your life - even if you never
have to know them to survive.
Another economic shakedown is
certainly possible. I don't know whether it
will ever come to that, but 1 do know that
when I am able to do something even as
basic as being able to identify the plants and
the other animals of the forest, I gain a kind
of self-respect that helps me go on and face
up to whatever it is that has to be done.
K: But doesn't it also add a sense of
depth and meaning to the processes of life?
DW: It cenainly does for me.
Strangely enough, when I am doing my
thing right, concentrating totally on what I
am doing, I sometimes get a linle flash of
insight into the fact of our monali1y. Death
is an aspect of life that is important to face,
but most people in our culture prefer to
avoid it. We would rather live as if we were
never going to die, as though we could
maintain our present state of existence
indefinitely. But if we look at it for just a
moment, the obvious conclusion is that we
are mortal: our bodies arc going to perish
and in some way go back to the Eanh. And
when I am living my life correctly, I am
preparing for my death by getting myself a
little calmer and a little bit more in tune with
the overall plan.
K: Coming to terms with that has a
lot to do with achieving that "savage
intensity," doesn't it?
DW: I think it does. Exactly! To live
life to the fullest is what we are talking
about. That's what real "savage intensity"
is: right there in that moment to let this fine
brain that our species has inherited be
working in such a way that it's got us
breathing the most air, hearing the most
sounds, smelling the most smells, and
seeing all that we can see in that moment,
fully. And when that happens we are not at
all self-conscious about it.
K : If one were self-conscious, it
wouldn't be happening.
DW: That's right. In that state the
brain is not thinking as much as it is
processing the natural senses. Then
anything we do and anything that happens
arc spontaneous responses.
K: There is also a beauty to a
spontaneous action, because it is instinctual,
naturally graceful, and right.
DW: Often times I get too romantic
about this aspect of my work, but I do
believe that there is enough substance there
that I can insist 1ha1 when everything i~
1. st.um&Ce4 upon tt.
wnUe watcfil.rn.J a &I.rd t.n fCLcfot.
on one of those flrst. wuUl.s t.firou!Jh t.fie wooc!s
of my mountoln home
reU int.a l.t mmost.
&ut was lns tont(y &«Mn &y Us lmmcnsi.ly
Thls 9l.anl.. remnant of fmun &.fell, r..runfl. sia(a(;Jmtus rcad1lntJ
t.ft.yward
um( trotted over surrounded by Hs ci..rcfo
aU of me f ithnlJ msidc the cirdc
ant( 1 watd\a( the
uy
und h .r.t.crwd t.o llw voi.ccs from whuc the r oo ts had. &«.n
and r..hcy t.oCd m e thc st.or I.cs
. . . of the 9i.unt trees •. of thc t~mc when thc chcstnut.s
towued over thc mounwins
.... uu 'i'-'"ns
anc! l f t!t part of I.he cages whU:fi arc t.hi.s (Qnd
and h."'w 1. was welcome.
kllNTER. - 1988-89
Drawing by MAR1llA TREE
flowing just right, I have momenlS lha1 arc
almost ecsraric.
When shooting the blowgun,
sometimes as I raise it up, I can feel where
the cen1er of lhc target is. And when I shoot
il, I can sense the flight path of the dan, my
consciousness follows i1 all the way 10 the
bullseye, and I know even before it hits that
it's going to be right on the mark.
Other times I might be working on a
piece of wood at my bench, and, although I
know I am shaping it, I'm not aware of any
intellcc1uaJ process going on. I'm just aware
that my body is moving in a rhythm, and
that a wonderful result is occurring between
this natural material and the tool I am
holding, which m many cases I have made
myself.
Even though I will never get rich
doing what I do, the possibilicy for making
a modest living and at the same time
enjoying myself is going to keep me a1 it the
rest of my life, as long as I have eyes and
breath. Again, it's what I think people are
seeking through spirirual disciplines that are
supposed to lead to enlightenment or
happiness. When it's done well, this very
ordinary, everyday process of creating
useful things for a living can accomplish
that.
That's why I, with mock seriousness
and yet with real sincerity, say that this is
religion 10 me, this business of tools and
material and trying to c:1;trac1 the best I can
from them. In doing so. I realize my highest
potential and that of the tools and the
material - having them all working together.
�DRUMMING
LETIE RS TO KATUAH
Dear KO!Uah,
Have you ever wondered why so few Americans have suff.cient
interest in environmental problems, and their solutions, to join
organizations, such as the National Audubon Society, (one of the largest
environmental organizations with a membership of only about 0.2
percen1 or our population) and support i1 in its efforts to solve our
environmental problems?
Dear K01Uah,
... I found the Ka1Uah Journot at a restaurant named Stooc Soop in
Ashe,•ille, NC and was nourished by both. J found the work you are doing very
empowering and wish you all good energies in continuaLion. Tiie EARTH is
healing thanlcs to us all!. ..
Sincerely,
Maria Tncp:icz
DearK.J.,
Greetings in the light. I'm writing to thank you for the Fall issue. Also
thanks for printing my letter in the "Wcbworking" section. The Kim Sandl:ind
anicle "Gin of the Chestnut• was very informative. My prayers arc with you.
I'm the prison librarian. I place copies or KJ. on the magwine rack when I run
through with them.
With love, in peace,
Riek
And upon Mocher Earth I crouched,
And the Voice wns within ....
New Beginnings
from the Drum quietly echoed.
New Begionings
from the fcathcrcn:atioo in prayer.
New Beginnings
in lhecircle of service for my
brothers and sislefli
as
my oolh providcth for mankind
your feather lay gently
when the Drum had 'llOken....
simply the lasting vision,
New beginnings,
all my relauves.
- Bern Gn:y Owl
Dear KatUah,
...I was in W. Virginia for the fll'St ume this spring for
the Wildflowcr Festival m Blacltwater Falls State Parle- it was
grc:u Cun! Met a man there leading a field trip who had this
lfemendous encrgy...a native of W. Virginiit..He said he got up
every morning and said: "This day is gomg to be a 101• and
added "It usually is.• This prompled the following poem:
Yesterday is aln:ady gone ..•
Tomorrow will get here when ...
Today is all I've really gOL..
And It's gonna be a 10!
Many than.ks,
Barbara Wickersham
Knoxville, Tenncsste
Drawing by ROB MESSICK
You could take any 300 Americans, load them on n jumbo jet LO
some dcstinatioo, and there would be immediale and great con<:cm when
they had the slightcsl awareness of any problem with lhe plane's
environment. indicated by such events as decrease m cabin pressure,
increase in cabin temperature. sudden appcamnce or unnatural odor, etc.
And everyone, or course, is concerned when there are immediate and
obvious changes in the earth's environment in their vicinity. Who is
bored when they arc aware of an eanbquakc. volcanic eruption, tidal
wave, hurricane or tornado?
Yet very rew people I know, especially from my former habitat
(Long Island, NY) exhibit any emotlon, other than polite, sbon-term
interest, turning tO boredom, when I try to discuss the implications of
the discovery of a large bole m the 01.one layer in the atmosphere over
the South Pole. Their general viewpoint is something like •1 don't sec
how they can say It LS caused by escape to atmosphere of chemicals used
as refrigerants or aerosol propellants. Anyway, it is all to teehnical ror
me, and I don't believe there's anything to worry abou1 anyhow.•
A high government official, when told destruction of the ozone
layer could cause a great increase in the incidence of skin cancer.
responded with "People will have to learn to use more sunmn cream,
wear hats and wear datlter sunglasses.• This, or course, is hardly a viable
solution to the problem
In regard to the acid rain problem: it is rather difficult for the
non-teehnically oriented person to undcrsllll1d and accept bow smoke
from powethousc stacks containing combusuon products or a fuel
contaminnm (sulfur) can be convened, at very high altitudes, through
contact wi1h the ozone layer in the presence of the ultra-violcl
component of sunlight. into another gas. This. when absorbed into
water (rain, snow, or fog) in the aunosphere produces sulfuric acid.
Up on Long Island I listened to radio station WNEW. The ir
weather man seemed to be environmentally con<:emcd, so I wrote and
suggested he give. as a pan of his repons. the acidity (ph) of the most
recent precipitation to indicate its potcntial to cause acid ram damage.
He replied, · 1 think it is a good idea, but since acidity is expressed as ph
few people would under.;tand whal I was rallcing abouL Therefore, there
would be liule interest in the data.•
People, when faced with problems hard 10 understand and whose
solutions will cost them and change their lifestyle prefer, instead, to
look for and emphasi7.e reasons, mostly irrelevant, which will allow
them to believe there are really no problems and to proceed on the basis
that everything is alright.
II might be well to reeall tha1 in January 1987 ano1her
spaceship, the Challenger, and its crew were destroyed because lhosc in
ch3rge ( exccutiv~ of NASA and M<>rton-Th1okol) refused to listen to
their engineers about a problem with its boostet rockc1 seals. They
continued to proceed with the launch to save money. save face. and
maintam a good press. One of the results or their proceeding was that
they did none of the above.
One can only hope the same fmc does not befall the spaceship
Earth because of the ~me short-sighted, mista.ken awwdc on the pan of
the go,'CITlmcnt and the public m, so far, refusing to heed the advice and
warnings of expens and envll'Ollmentalists on the problems mcntJoncd.
as well as on many more.
There is one cond1uon that might prevent it. Those "m
authority" might come to their senses soon enough to prevent it because
they, also. arc ridmg this space ship. (edited)
J. J. Combes
Newland, North Carolina
ltJlNTER. - 1988- 89
�The Third
Dear Sirs:
t-.1r. Runer was in town last week nnd solved my puulemcnt. Earlier in the
month I hlld received the autumn issue o( your journal and had no idea who sent ii.
Wh:it a ~utiful piece of work on my favourite subject • the American Chc.~tnut.
I re:id every word nnd learned so much. Would you please sent me four copies
of this issue tO be used in my missionary work with <;0mc friends in Pcnnsylv:mia.
There are st.ill rolks up there who remember the talcs their folks told of this
1ru1gnificen1 tree.
Yours truly,
J.N. Salv1ro
Kensington. MD
NEW ZEALAND(IP
CHESTNUT
GROWERS ASSOCIATION INC.
P.O. Box 1328, lnvercargill
New Zealand
Dear Sir:
We would be pleased 1f you could supply us w1lh a copy or the Fall 1988 ediuon or
the KatUah Jourlll.ll which has cx1ensive nniclcs covering chcslllut rcscatth.
Cordially yours.
NEW ZEALAND CHESTNUT GROWERS ASSOCIATION INC.
ERNEST NEW
Executive Director
Dear KmUah,
Carolyn and I just got your letter and papers t1us morning. The enclosed
paper has been in circulat.ion for two years:
"You art invittd to con1emplme tht idta btlow, to sinctrtly short your idtas
about a just and ptactful world:
Cltarly lift on tht planet is in jeopardy. What will it takt to revtrst tht /tar,
tht weapons, the pollution, tht monopoly, tht inttr'Vtn/Wn ...and project Uft toward
abundance, coopuation, and environmental and social compassion? /low can wt
txperience such a miracle? "Consciousness crtatts form" /Seth/. PleaJe bt
prac11cal. fless than 500 words/ Art you willing to bt published? __yes _no.
Please include your llD.ml!, address. and a short tkscriptwn ofyourself.
It is our intention to circulate tht comributions, to create a conllnuwn and an
on-going forum
Facts. feelings. ideas. positivt creations art welcomed.
Transformation is inevitable. It is cltarly the will of the human race to live on
abundantly wt// into thtfuturt. Spirit awakn!
Send your responses to:
NamMt~ Consciousness
Box578
Ctnter Barnsttad, NII 03225
P.S Feel fret to copy and distribute"
My answer is: That best friends must bond around common pnnciples: to
share. care, heal, and enhance life locally in BIOCELLS by the thousands in every
BIOREGION. Each aulonomous cell is joined to the biorcgion by commitment to
the values.
Please share this invitation to respond with your readers.
Thanks,
Bruce
Center Barnstead, New Hampshire
I've got news for you. A Higher Jntclligencc has hlld me to know some
information about the way the Universe functions. What I learned was tha1 the
computers that we arc all growing so fond or arc a Gacan trick. The plan is Iha! the
h~man race will dump all their intelligence into those neat plastic boxes, then Gaea
will tum off the power. and it all will be gone. Then we'll be free! And we'll find we
dJdn'l need It anyway.
love.
l
..,'\.NTER. - 1988- 89
hildegardc
North American
Bioregional Congress
by Lisa Franklin
This summer I represented Katuah at the third Nonh
American Bioregional Congress (NABC Ill) held in a small
outdoor school nonh of Vancouver. B.C. Magical things had
happened to me while traveling on route to the congress, so I
came expecting more. 1 wasn't disappointed. It seemed that
an incredible exuberance just bubbled out of everyone.
At the morning circles we shared songs. information
and a sense of harmony that spread 1hroughoul 1he day. The
committee mceungs revealed an amazing array of qualified
and .in~onne~ individuals s~aring their ~nowledge. Some
spectaltzed in water qual11y, some in permaculture,
education, forest management, green cities, herbs. dow~ing,
etc.
Ideas were bounced around, scenarios entenained, and
a lot of creative. intellectual energy zipped about. The
previous congress resolutions were reviewed and any
proposed changes were brought before the plenary during the
last couple of days. This process was an inspiration to me
personally, and several different projects are now a part of
my life due to these idea sessions.
1 have begun working on an All Species Project in the
Asheville Alternative School and have been working with
education about organic agriculture and promoting local
production of organic produce. The proceedings from NABC
111 will be published in the spring of 1989 and will give
explicit deiails of the comminee discussions, their decisions,
and 1he plenary votes on issues brought before the whole
assembly.
Throughout the congress we were honored with
presentations from various native peoples from Tunle Island.
During many of these, we wept openly for the pain in their
lives which they shared with us. We took to heart the plea for
help that was extended by them. These people are asking to
be allowed to live their Lnlditions, as arc all native peoples
around the world, so that this spirituality can help to heal the
planet. May we each do whatever we can to let il be so.
The evening biorcgional presentations were a stream
of creative, honest ways of sharing the pain, humor and love
felt for the different partS of Tunic Island and the state of the
environment. The presentation for lhe Karuah bioregion was
well received and consisted of a Cherokee welcome song, a
creation myth, a slide show accompanied by banjo picking,
poetry, stories of home and family, and slides wi1h
commentary on lhe soulhem Appalachian trail
Late night drumming and dancing helped folks
loosen up after lots of intellectual discussion. It was a time
for physical expression and fun.
In the shon period of one week, we 300 or so people
bonded togclher into a tribal group, which no one wanted to
leave. Throughout 1he week, each person was working,
talking, lhinking, living, and breathing to find ways for all of
us to exist in greater hannony with our Mother Earth and all
the living things on it. We realized that we were seeds to help
the next shifl in consciousness happen and that we can help
the earth survive by loving her and not getting discouraged,
and by allowing that love to come lhrough our intellect to
solve problems. So at the week's end, reaffirmed in the
purpose that brought us together, we allowed the wind to
scatter us again so that each could set in motion the changes
needed everywhere to evolve life lo another level of
awareness. This is the energy that can help prevent worst
case scenarios in world problems and bring about change. I
am honored to have been a pan of it.
To obtain a copy of the Proceedings ofthe Third North
American Bioregional Congress, send $8.00 to:
Seth Zuckerman, P.O. Box 159, Petrolia, CA 7555
¥
Xo"'°" Journal ~ 25
�(continued from page 5)
each time it rained, so they moved on. They
still had water enough to drink, but the land
would no longer produce food.
Flash floods might come through my
little cove and take out my bottoms, as
happened to the Anasazis. The creekbcd
might suddenly become such a gorge that I
couldn't build a bridge across it, because it
was draining such a big torrent each time.
On the other hand, a mudslide might come
down the valley, and where my house and
fields once were, might suddenly be tree-top
high with ~ clay and boulders. That might
be the way of it I am not very optimistic.
As the cycle deepens, big fronts of
weather will be created. When big fronts get
moving, they move farther before they can
be dissipated. Strong, fast-moving cold
fronts could come down out of Canada. The
Sll'Onger they are, the further south they a.re
going to go. There may be routine freezes
in Miami at that lime, because the turbulent
weather will suck the winter fronts further
south, meaning more violent snow, cold, or
whatever, with each approaching front As
soon as a cold front dissipates, there may be
a SIJ'onger front approaching from the south,
bringing up warm, moist air or rainstorms
that thaw the ground and confuse the plants'
growing cycles. All one can say for sure is
that the climate will become turbulent and
unpredictable.
In ages past as the Earth evolved and
the climates changed, as in the wanning and
freezing periods in the time of the ice ages,
the process of change was a gradual one
talcing place over thousands of years. Plants
and animals had a chance to migrate, and
everything could adjust to maintain the
equilibrium. Species were extirpated,
cenainly, but many life-forms were able to
maintain their range in suitable habitat
conditions.
That is not the case this time. The
most disastrous element of these changes is
that everything is happening so fast, that
this time the desen plants in Arizona will not
have a chance to migrate to Kauiah to
replace the forest trees. And the plnnts here
are not going to have a chance to migrate to
New England or to some place more
habitable. They are simply going to die! The
difference is that this change is an artificial
one; it is not induced by natural causes. The
whole world is threatened, and, like a
patient thrashing around in a fever delirium,
the change is going to be convulsive and
simultaneous. There are not going to be safe
havens to flee to, because the change is
going to be happening everywhere at once.
It is going to be world-changing. It is going
to take a high toll on the animal and plant
species we live with today.
With the vegetation gone and the
soil gone from the hillsides, the damage
done will be permanent. There will come a
time when the world will get weuer again,
but it might be in 100,000 years. Of course,
we might get lucky and it might take only
10,000 years. To regenerate the vegetation,
of course, would take eons longer than that,
but I do not believe that conditions here will
ever again be the same as they are now.
The greenhouse effect is a cycle
already in motion, and it's not going to
Stop. The government does not even admit
that there is a problem yet The government
admits we are in a drought, but they assign
it to natural causes and will not admit that
the pollution, the ozone, or the nuclear
waste, are threats to our survival. The
government has just begun to mention skin
cancer as a possible effect of the degradation
of the atmosphere. Skin cancer is the least
of it! It may take 20 years to get skin cancer,
and someone could starve in six weeks.
The governments will recognize the
problem in a few y~ when it is too late to
do anything about it. Even if they said
tomorrow, "We've got a serious problem.
We're going to cut all traffic, you can only
use your vehicle half as much. Burn half as
much gas. Bum half as much wood. We're
going to shut down half the plants. We're
going to cut worldwide energy use in half,"
it would still be too late.
In the first place, a cutback in energy
consumption will never happen as long as
the profit motive is the first priority. But
even if we could make an immediate change
in the way we live, we might slow the
oncoming cycle down or we nU$ht not slow
it down at all, but we are not going to avoid
it. At this point it is snowballing. The
causes are all tied together, they are already
in motion, and I do not see any way that we
are not going to have to bite the bullet. We
caused the problem, and we are going to
have to face it. Basically Tdo not feel called
to conjure or to pray for relief from this
problem, because the only relief now is a
healing, a realignment of the Earth's
energies.
AJJ that we can do now is to try to
avoid contributing to the problem, do what
we can on behalf of the world environment,
let people know what is happening, and
prepare ourselves physically, mentally, and
spiritually for whatever future is coming.
But just in case, I'm going to plant
some cottonwood trees around my place and
put some western chokecherries in along the
creek.
Lylich Crabawr is an Appalachian
native of Scottish descent. He lives with his
family in a moUlllain cove also inhabited by
turkeys, hawks, owls, a pileated
woodpecker, gnomes, and others of the
Little People. He wrote on "Circles of
Stone" for Katuah Journal 1110.
_,
(continued &om page 22)
wild fruits freely offered.
They also encouraged the young nauve chestnut trCCS with
prayers and songs, and whenever they chanced t0 find a U'CC bearing
nutS, these were e:igerly distributed to all parts of the region and
planted, wntchcd. and aided. Their efforts began to produce results.
for more and more cheSUlut trtcS began to grow without the killing
disease cankers. The magic of the Beat Clan was known to be
powerful, because it was causmg the chesuwt trees IO appear where
they h3d dlsappeared before.
In olhcr fields the Bear Clan planted nut uec.~ • cultivntcd
chestnulS. filberts, and walnuts - and they mode sure to gnlbcr
acorns from the foTCSt each year (su K:11Uah /19 - ~ds.), so that in
the fall among the Bear Clan lhcrc was a frenzy of activity when,
lilce the bears, they hurried to store enough food for the winter
But, because they could not line their bodies. with fnt like their
relatives the bears. they lined the insides or their home dens with
dried foods and nuts tO last them through the winter months when
snow covered the mountaintop.s and nothing grew through the
frozen ground.
Because they did not have the powerful mow teeth of the
bears lha1 could crush hickory nuts and acotru1 to a fine powder,
they hlld to grind lhe.ir foods between stone wheels. This they did
and combined the com and nw flours together inlO the llllt cakes
they tiokcd in their healed ovens.
One winier sciveral families tried swallow111g fecal plugs. a.~
the bears do to close their systems, so they oould fast and steqi
through the winier months, but that expcrimCTit came to a messy
end, and they round thnt they were humw after all. with human
limitations and a human nature that they hnd IO follow.
By living like the bears. the Bear Clan came to be more
like the bcnrs in their bodies and their ways. They tended 10 be
heavy and hairy. The men were strong, oftentimes quanelsomc, and
sometimes ferocious, even among others or their own clan The
molhcrs were wide. soft, and co1y, with enormous laps to snuggle
into. Tiie young women were also large, and were known as strong
fighlCIS if aroused, and ricrocly 1ndcpendcnt. Tiie women ruled the
home dens, and the cave-like shcllCIS were wann retn::11S where food
was plentiful even 111 wanter, and the young ones grew rapidly.
Among their own the Bear Clan were mostly jovial.
fun-loving, and playful. But lil:c their relatives in the woods, they
were somcumes moody. seemingly inOucnced in a dramatic wny by
the cycle of the seasons and the tides of the moon.
Bear Old Man saw the many changes, and he was glad. He
visited the Bear Clan often and brought them the best dreams
during the long nights of winter. Many or the dreams were
personally enhghlClling. others granted special powers of healing or
working with the elements, while others were strange or prophetic.
so that the Bear Clan shared a deep knowledge among themselves,
although 11 was never spoken.
And the Bear Old Man spoke ID the mount.ain spirit.s, and
they provided well for those who followed the way of the block
bears, and the Bear Clan lived full lives for generations beyond
counung In the hills of Katilah.
,,#
p
WtN'TEJt - 1988-89
�(corwnucd from page 13)
experiences as well as pleasurable ones. So if we deny our p:un, we never get lO
grow up. we never have to grow up (we 1maginc)... wc'll be "forever young" ...
The cruel irony is that this "faith" has been turning us int0 a culture of
spoiled, self-indulgent "takers" who want nothing more than to suc..le at the
breast of our bountiful tcchnolog1cal "mother". Think about TV-bound "couch
potatoes"; tremendous use of both legal and illegal drugs: the fanuwic rise in "Cast
foods". "convenience" storCS, and quick fixes of every description. The need for
immediate gratification is an infantile trait, and inability to dc:il with p:iin is a
sure sign of emotional and spiritual imm111.urity.
This siren of pain avoidance can be extremely elusive and dangerous
because its message often comes across in a cheerful, breezy, thoroughly
innocuous way, as if getting rid of pain was such an obvious benefit that nobody
could even question iL The real meaning is far from cheerful, though. The
underlying theme invariably implies that life on Eanh i.\ difficult and painful, so
we need to create an artificial, human-made reality to escape from our fear and
pain. This is expressed quite openly in most drug advcrtisemenis--and then people
nnively wonder why we have such a "drug problem" m this country! In one ad for
a "p:iin-ltiller", a jaunty, successful businesswoman is portrayed in action. while
the background music sings. • r haven't got time for the pain, I haven't got room
for the pain, etc.".
But what happens to the pain we supposedly get rid of? What if pain is a
messenger, come 10 tell us of a potential or present problem in our lifestyle?
What then? Answer: we've lost (at least temporarily) a clue LO our health and our
inner identity. But the pain will show up somewhere (or sornellmc) else, JUSt hke
our garbage on the beaehcs--thc problem is merely put off and avoided, not really
gotten rid of at all. Obviously, we haven't succeeded in our quest 10 eradicate the
problems and pain of living-in fact, we seem to have increased them, if we look
at what's happening around us. The truth is, It's impossible to outwit nature, and
pain and pleasure arc both natural aspecis of life. Pain is a signal, a vital
indicaior. Denial of pain is really denial of information that is being relayed to us
by our body/being.
Only if we're willing lO embrace the full range of cmotions--lO experience
the hcighLS of rapture and the depths of pain-are we able to reach full maturity.
Our planet and our cul lure is in a massive "healing crisis", and we as individuals
need to be able to empathize with the p:iin our world is expcriencing... thc pain of
the animals, the planlS, the sky, the oceans.... not deny it, if we arc to be able lO
assist in the healing. And we need to feel our own pain and the pain of our
brothers and sisters everywhere. if we arc to develop compassion, wisdom. and
wholeness. There is no quick fix, and the only way out 1s through.
The Siren or lud ividualibm 1o1ud Nou -com mun io ri
This Siren works to undermine our sense of interrelatedness and
community. The frontier-era ethic of "rugged individualism" seems lO have given
way to a consumer-Oriented ethic of "p:issive individualism" ·-which combines the
isolation and separateness of the former with the neediness and passivity of the
"ideal consumer".
There arc, however, powerful human needs which can only be met through
communicauon and interaction, and when community breaks down, no amount of
consumption of things can fill this gap. The truth is that we arc individuals and
members of many diffeccnt communities-both social and natural. But in western
culture we've made individualism our god and tried Lo banish the idea of
community, even associating it with "Communism".
Some striking examples of individunli.sm run ramp:int are:
The glorijicaJion of the auJol'fWbile and the tkcline of railroads, trolleys and other
forms ofpublic transportOJiorr. Most cars on the road have only one or two people
in them. walled off from others within their mobile mctalhc box. Work. home,
friends arc often great disl3Jlccs from each other and so the dependency on the
aut0mobilc is reinforced. Urban design often glorifies the car more than human
interaction so the isolation becomes more "set in stone".
The tkJ)<ndency orr recorded SOWlds. Creating music used to mcan getting togc1hcr
with other people. either to listen or 10 play an instrument or sing. But toda> it's
much simpler to JUSL put on a record or a casscue without having LO socialize or
put out any cffon. This is wonderful up to a point-·but when people arc out in
public with tiny earphones in their ears, oblivious IO the sounds of life :iround
them, and intent only on lheu inner cxpcnencc, perhaps it's become another way
to create separation and isolation and to deny rclatiomhip.
"/he corrtinued diminishment of J)<Oplts' ho~ life. The M>Cial dimension of
homclifc has been steadily shrinking--from the cxtcndcd family, lO the nuclear
family, lo :.inglc-parcnt familie:., t0 couple$ living together -..ithout children, to
people living alone. The extended family has practically disappeared m western
culture. And aclual homelessness has been increasing at a very frightening pace as
well.
JlNTER - t 988-89
the l'fWVt towards instantarrtous food. Eating used LO be a basic, shaied form of
communion. But today, cooking and c:iting togclhu i:; no longer nccessruy-cxccpt
for rare holidays. Instcad,the food industry offers us thOU!i:lllds of prcfabricalCd
foods. Wlmt we've lost in term~ of nunurance nnd nourishment 1s noc made up for
by the variety and convenience of industrial food products. There is also a
profound difference between supcrmarkelS and old-world style markets
-supermarkclS are not conducive lO socializing.
Siren or Spir ilual Mater ialism and Dependency
Even those who are "aware• can be caught by consumption mania and the
drive for "more", whether it is material . psychological, or spiritual.
Mother Teresa, while visiting the US, felt strongly that Americans are the
poorest people she'd ever seen-lost amidst a multitude of possessions. separated,
starving for love, she said. With little cultuml acknowledgement or suppon of
the non-material dimension, it's often hard to maintain awareness of our inner
essence. Thus, we may be 1ost' in this deeper sense as well. This loss of self leads
directly lo the povcny of soul Mother Teresa describes.
The result, of course, 1s that we look outside ourselves for our power and
satisfaction. We often project our own power onto authority figures or 'sy~tcms'
such as churches, astrologers, psychics, doclors. 'channelling', and spiritual
groups. We then look to these sources for dirccuon, validation. The guidance
received may be quilc helpful. but the use being made of 11 fosterS unheahhy
dependency. The emptint$ and hunger underneath IS sull there, as is the denial,
the desire to gloss 11 over. But u is only through jOUmeying inio the hean of that
emptiness that the cycle can be broken, and our inner abundance can f1owcr.
To be and feel abundant is a state of experienced "beingness•-a stat.e of
wholeness, fullness. satisfaction. love, gratiludc. Gratitude is the essence of true
prosperity consciousncss--to embrace all of life, to be humbly and truly
appreciative of our daily food. our breath, our friends, our growth--even our pain.
It is a deep reeogn1uon of, and rcspecl for, the inter-connectedness of all living
things.
The
All of these Sirens, and others, are best able to entrap us when
we feel ourselves alone, separate from the human community and
from the wider Eanh community. When we feel rooted in the wider
Reality of the true human spirit and of nature, the consumption
mentality has less of a hold on us. In fac1, it becomes decidedly
unreal.
Our culture wilh iLS emphasis on constant consumption hides
an elemental cruth from us -- one 1hat is essential for us to rediscover
in breaking our bondage to the consumer mentality: namely, that
"emptiness" is an imponnnt aspect of any essenrial growth cycle. It is
only when we are able 10 appreciate a stale of true emptiness (the
'creative void') ... thal we are capable of seeing what we need and
what we don't need...that we are able to see the amazing abundance
of creation. It is then, in a spirit of gratirude and humility, that we are
able to experience our own inherent abundance.
When we experience this 'beingness'., we no l?nger ha~e lo
heavily iden ifv ourselves with our belongings, beliefs, projects,
money, etc. We no longer need to create our identity that way.
Human beings do seem to be "identifying". creat.ures, 1hough--so our
only option is to upgrade what we. tdenufy with. As.we l~am lo
identify with more universal, fulfilhng values and re~nt10nsh~ps, we
can honestly feel complete with or without those things which we
"consume" or have been "atLaChcd to".
We who believe in conscious growth and a deeper sense of
prosperity for ourselves and lhe planet ha~e the res.ponsibility of
re-creating community and ways 10 share this sense ~th each other.
Ritual sharing, celebration, and all the . vaned forms of
communication/ communion are things we need in order 10 feel 1n1ly
alive to feel prosperous and fulfilled. This is so imponant--and we
have 'so much to unleam...and so much to learn about living together
and with ourselves and the Eanh. But we've got to do il, if we truly
wish to enjoy the abundance that's available to all of us an<! the entir~
Life community. True abundance is a fonn of love, and like love, .tt
grows when we share it, and it withel'!t when we gra~p and clutch 11
tightly 10 ourselves.
�The Planetary Initiative
The Watauga
Land and Water Conservancy
"Open land and pure water for
all...for all time to come" is lhe motto of lhe
Waiauga Land and Water Conservancy, a
group forming to work in the upper
drainage basin of lhe Watauga and New
Rivers.
The group is not an advocacy group,
and want to reach out across all political
lines to form a broad-based group to acquire
wilderness and agricultural land through
donation and purchase. They envision
leasing land to farmers when appropriate
technology would be employed.
The Conservancy is still in the
fonnarive stage. 501 (c}3 non-profit status is
being sought.
For more information, contact: Gay
Gingrich (704) 963-5614 or Lowell Hayes
at (704) 963-5835.
• Su.son Rttd
DE.51GNS
by Rob Messick
lllus1ra1lon & Design
In Pen & Ink and Colore<I Pcnc II
An estimated 1.5 billion people will
be participating world-wide for the third
annual World Healing Day, an international
observance aimed at raising our awareness
of global issues. The event is unique in that
all participants will be located around the
world in more than I 00 countries, and all
services will be held at 12 noon Greenwich
time, 7:00 AM EST. More than 500
peace-related organizations and all major
religious faiths will be included in lhe event,
with emphasis on prayer, meditation, and
song creating a global mind link ac one hour
in time to express the desires of people to
live on planet Eanh.
The initiative was originally taken by
the Texas based Quanas Foundation in
1984. The first World Healing Day was
held on December 31, 1986. with more than
500 million participants. The size of the
global event grew to 800 million in 1987.
The event is presently coordinated by
the "Planetary Commission", a world-wide,
non-denominational, non-political organization without headquaners, structure, or
fundraising activities.
Interested persons are invited to
attend the local observances.
(In Asheville, NC: local
observances will be December 31, from
6:30 11111il 8:00 AM at Central United
Methodist Church, 27 Church Srreet. For
further information contact Gloria Free ar
(704) 274-7539, or James Cassara at (704)
252-2819.)
Workshops. ..
at Ille NC BiodomeCommuniJy
Waynm-lflt, NC (704) 916 0273
Integration of Creative Landscape
Design
Instructor: Bob Gow
The family's food & family fun; Landscaping
shelter for animals and friends; Food
production as an artistic expression; Designing
our evolving bioregional landscape
J a n. 21 $30 (or $25 w/ other garden or
herb workshop)
The Herbal Medicine Chest
lnstructor: Cindy Heath
Herbal Remedies that may ta.Ice lhe place of
aspirin, antihistamines, antibiotics. pain killers
and other commonly used drugs.
We will be making an herbal remedy to take
home.
February 4 $30 (or $25 w/ other garden
or herb workshop)
Relationship Enrichment
lnstructors: Jofannie Karla & Marie Rocchio
A workshop for commiued couples.
Overnight arrangemcntS available.
For infonnation: (704) 926-1625
March 4 & S $185 per couple
The Nursery for Home Use and Profit
Instructor: Bob Gow
Exploring gounnct vegetable production,
flower and herb cultivation, rock gardens, &
landscaping with native cultured materials.
March 28 $30 (or $25 w/ other garden or
herb workshop)
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�WORKSHOP ON
FORMING A
LOCAL LAND TRUST
The Nonh Carolina Natural Heritage
Foundation announces a two-day training
conference on March 17-18, 1989 to assist
people in forming a land trust (local land
conservancy) and designing land prote~tion
projects. The goal of the conference 1s to
assist the formation of more non-profit land
protection organizations and to strengthen
the communications network between
people and organizations interested in
protecting the land.
.
Topics covered at the workshop will
include: definition and history of landtrusts;
organizing, building, and maintaining a land
trust organization; land protection methods;
and tax laws. A training manual and
extensive reference materials will be
provided.
The workshop will be held at the
Ka nuga Episcopal Center near
Hendersonville, NC. The event is expected
to cost $90 per person, which includes two
night's lodging and five meals.
For registration information, write to:
The NC Natural Heritage Foundation
P.O. Box 11105
Raleigh, NC 27604
or call
The NC Natural Heritage Program at:
(919) 733-770 I
'.M-'.EDlClN'.E ALLl '.ES
In the traditional Cherokee Indian belief.
the creatures in the world today are only
diminuitive forms of the mythic beings who
once Inhabited the world, but who now reside
in Galuna'ti, the spirit world, the highest
heaven. But a few of the original powers broke
through the spirilual barrier and exist yet m the
world as we kno w ii. These beings are called
wilh reverence •grandfathers·. And of them,
the strongest are Kanatl, the lightning, the
power of the sky; U/sa·nati, the rattlesnake.
who personifies the power of the earth plane:
and Yunwi Usd1, "the lit/le man·. as ginseng is
called in the sacred ceremonies. who draws up
power from the underworld.
Each is the strongest power in its own
domain. Together they are allies: their energies
complement each other to form an even
greater power. As medicine allies, they
represent the healing powers of the
Appalachian Mountains.
The medicine powetS of Katuah have
been depicted in a striking T-shirt design by
Ibby Kenna. Printed in 4-cofor silkscreen by
Ridgerunner Naturals on top quality, all- cotton
shirts, /hey are available now in all adult sizes
through the Kalanu bioregional mail-order
wpplier.
Order shirts from: KALANU
Box 282; Sylva, NC
Katuah Province 28779
Please specify size: Sm.. Med., Lg.•
X-lg.
~~
~ WINGS WAY CONSULTANTS
Multi-Level Wellness
Nutrients for Body, Mind, Spirit
J..~~
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Mnklon. NC Z8734
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.,,~B.irbara R<'nnen,nycfpr PhD
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Ashiko Dr ums
738 Towu Mou.nl&i.A Rd.
Aabnille, N.C. 28804
(704) 258-1038
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Natural Food Store
&Deli
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c ~RAMIC
Ou111bcc.k$ ...
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Member NC Water Ouahly AS$0Ciatlon
RANDALL C. LANIER
704·293-5912
1.11.NTEJl - 1988-89
HWY. 107
RT 68 BOX 125
CULLOWHEE, NC 28723
KRLRNU
Soec1J1z1N9
Woo,f eN
WATER PURIFICATION EQUIPMENT
SOLAR PRODUCTS
Send requests to: Lucille Griffin;
Rt. 2, Box 42; Newport, VA 24128
KHLRNU
(704) 688-7016
All natural
ANNOUNCEMENT
The American Chestnut Cooperators'
Foundation reports a very good harvest of
American Chestnut seeds this year and has
nuts available to willing cooperators. The
seed is free and will be shipped with
planting a nd care Instructions. The
Foundation requires only a brief annual
progress report on the seedlings each
September.
P 0. Box 282; Sylva, NC;
Katunh Province 28789
LUCHIA MAISON
1>i...A .. f1
.....
'/-a fumf- 'L Jf(lltL
841 Highway106
Higlilands, NC 28741
(704) 526-5638
Write for a f ree price list,
f rom :
Send $3.00 & long S.A.S.E. for Samples
& Catalogue
Box 1477
Old Fort, NC 28762
Members of the Elders' Circle of the
American lndlan Council will speak at a
weekend event at The Mountain Camp and
Conference Center in Highlands, NC on
March 17-19. They will present the native
perspective on important environmental,
social, and political issues.
The fee for the two-day meeting will
be $128, which includes two nights lodging
and six meals. For registration infonnation,
contact:
The Mow1tain Camp and Conference Cenrer
BI OREG I ONRL BOOKS
AND TOOLS FOR LIU ING
IN RPPRLRCHIR
Cost· $9.50, includes postage
P.O.
NATIVE ELDERS TO SPEAK
D~ vMcAses
'-
RAftl es
SeNd
160 Bl'Olldw8y
JI
,~~
-f R CA-f Afo j
o
-
AsheYllle, NC 28801
wi... a-dwlry....MlrTtmon Ave• l-240
~
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
Monday·S.urday: hrn·8pn>
Sunday: 1pm-Spm
(704) 2.53-7656
�-ef6BWoR/S!t!g
APPROPRIATE PASSIVE SOLAR design,
blueprints. and foll working drawings for homes,
shops, and sheds. Creative drafting.....your ideas or
ours. Harmony Sunbuildcrs; P.O. Box 194; Sugar
Grove, NC 28697
MOTHER'S BREATH HERBAL PRODUCTS high quality herbal extracts, ointments, and oils,
lovingly created.. Send for free brochure 10 RL 2,
Box 25 I; Vilas, NC 28692.
ALTERNATIVE COMMUNITY on bcauliful lnnd
near Cherokee, NC seeking families desiring grcalet
cooperation and self-sufficiency. Based on SpirilUal
and ecological values. Property now available. Call
(404) 778-8754 for info.
WANTED: LAND in western NC. Family seeks 5
or more acres, preferably near Cullowhce, to
pn:scrve and evenllla.lly inhabiL ff you have or know
of affordable land, coniact Bob and M3Jy Davis; 213
Wesunoreland CL; Georgeiown, KY 40324 (502)
863-4267.
RM DESIGNS • I use lhe media or pencils, colored
pencils. gouaehe, pen and ink, and pbOtOgraphy in
creating unique fine and graphic an. I can make
diagrams. logos, finished prints. and designs for
brochures. ~dcrs. cards. books, etc. Mandalas and
symbols are my tendency among other styles.
ContaCt Rob Messick (704) 754-6097.
r:o:
SI~ LIFESTYLE CALENDAR • The photos
on llus page appear with Olhcr striking portraits or
moumnin people in "The F:iccs of Appalachia•
c:alendar. Procccd.s support lhe work of Appabchia.
Science in the Public lnlCJ'CSL To receive your
calendar postpaid, send $7.00 to: RL 5. Box 423;
Livingston, KY 40445
"TREASURES IN THE STREAM" • a casse1tc iape
of 50ngs by Bob Avcry-Orubcl. $10 10 RL I, Box
735; Floyd, VA 24091.
M TREE DESIGNS: fllustrallons and Design .
Beyond the pages of !his journal, I work in pencil,
colcwed pericil, ink. cut paper, and bauk. Fine and
graphic an tO express and enhance our lives. Logos,
brochures, books, por11aiturc, window and wall
h;)ngings. Coniact Manha Tree (704) 754-6097.
HAND-CARVED WOODSPIRITS. mystical
hiking staffs, and wall hangings by Steve Durican.
For brochure, please write Whippoorwill Studio;
RL 4, Box 981; Marson, NC 211752.
...And Tk Earth Lived llappily Ever Aflu ·stories
from foll: traditions all around the world chosen tO
help protect all living beings by bringing the world
socie.ty a few steps closer 10 peace and respect for all
life. Edited by Floating Eagle Fealhcr. $7.00 ppd.
(All profits go to Green peace and lhe Peace
Museum.) Order from: Wages of Peace; 309 Trude.au
Dr.; Mctatre, LA 70003.
JOURNEY INTO THE SLICKROCK Wildcmcss
Area. Boys, fatbtt-son, falher-daughtcr expcdillons.
Learn observation and woodcraft in the deep w~.
Burt Kornegay, experienced guide. Sliclcrock
Expeditions; Box 1214; Cullowbce, NC 28723.
AMRITA HERBAL PRODUCTS • Comfrey,
Eucalyptus, or Golden Seal salve, Lemon or
Lavender lllcccream. Made wilh natural and ~llal
oils and love. Send for brochure: RL I, Box 737:
Floyd, VA 24091.
MOON DANCE FARM HERBALS • herbal salves
tinctures, & oils for binhmg & family health.
brochure, please writc: Moon Darice Farm; RL 1.
Box 726; Hampton, TN 37658
FUTONS by Simple Pleasures - affordably priced.
Send SASE for info 10: Simple Pleasures; RL I,
Box 1426; ClaylOll, GA 30525 (404) 782-3920.
STIL-LIGHT THEOSOPHlCAL RETREAT
CENTER • a quiet space for personal meditation,
group interaction through study, and community
work, and spiritual seminars. Contact Leon Frankel;
RL I, Box 326; Waynesville, NC 28786.
EARTH REACH EDUCATION ASSOCIATION
teaching primitive skills tO children and adults.
Robert Martin. Jr. and Jeanne Moore; Rt. I, Box
178-A: Ferrum. VA 24088.
llEIRlOOM GARDENING and Saving Your Own
Suds, pamphlet with specific Instruct.ions on
growing, harvesting, and storing non-hybrid seed.
Sl.00 w/ SASE. Also, SEEDS . Sl.00/packec
velvet bean, wormsced, mullein, brown cotlOll,
luffa. All from Hoedown Organic Fann. Rt. 1, Box
188·1: Quincy, FL 32351.
CAROLINA MTN. MACROBIOTIC CENTER
offers natural foods cooking classes, dietary
oounsclliog, cducntional lectures for a helnlhitt life.
Tom or Debbie Alhos. Call (704) 254·9606.
WANTED: SOAPSTONE for carving and
sculpting. Wiii pick up. Barter or cash. Please call:
Scott BU'd (704) 683-1414
"ESSENCE" • the all-one skirt/dress/
jumper/pantaloons with nursing pockets. Eanhwcar,
ROI. Box 75..CI; Carlton, PA 1631 1
FREE LABOR - I would like to learn about
beekeeping and building New Age Housing. Willing
to worlc for- free during lhc summer All I a"1c is a
place for my tcm and an occasional meal. Contact
Chris Irwin: 1712 White Ave.. Knoxville, TN
37916 (615) 673-0653.
INDIAN VALLEY RETREAT - 140 acres in Blue
MEDITATION CUSHIONS from Carolina
Morning Designs. Tradittonal and innatablc i.afus.
For fr~ brochure. write; Rt. I. Bo~ .31-B; Hot
Springs, 11\C 28743.
A~TERNATIVE
COMMtlNll Y in the Smoky
Mt M. of Cl.SI TN. 10 acre.~ with creek. springs,
vie"':s· good nc1ghboc~. Be a part for S!!SOO. Call
whe (615) 4S3·1S38.
Ridge mountain~ with facilities available to n:nt ror-
groups or individual retreats, c11hcr guided or
unstructured. Send for information and c;ea.<ional
c:ilcntlar or healing tr.IClsfonnativc e•·ents to: Indian
Valley Holistic Center. RL 2, Box 58: W1lhs, VA
2-l3!!0.
MOU/ER £ART// N/ilVS " no longer rcJ1r1nung
back issue<:. AJpha.B11 ha' many, at co~cr pnce plus
postage. Wntc Alpha·B1t; Box 465; Mapleton, OR
97453.
Grurhk• ~OIVlaJ ofApfdl.Ji·>UaSc1mu in 1>.c Pub/re
/N.,,~JJ from the "Arralacltia, /0&9 • Slf1l('lc LJ/~
C""7dir."
\\'EB WORKING 1s free. Send subrn1ss1ons to:
Kattiah Journal
P.O. Box 638
U:scc,tcr, NC
Katliah Pro•·1nce 28741!
kllN'TEJl - 1988-89
�Send articles, drawings, and photos of what interests you about
the Katuah region for the spring issue of the journal.
The KatUtih Journal wants to communicate your thoughts and
feelings to the other people in the bioregional province. Send them
to us as letters, poems, stories, articles, drawings, or photographs,
etc. Please send your contributions to us at: Kau'lalr Jo11.mal. P. 0.
Box 638; Leicester, NC; Katuah Province 28748.
The summer issue of the Kati1aJ1 Journal will deal with the menning
of.1h.e word "Peace" a~ a dynamic process that can replace
e:iusung structures of domination with vibrant new relationships.
BACK ISSUES OF KATUAH AVAILABLE
ISSI IE 11-IREE ·Spring 1984
Sustainable Agricuhurc - Sunnowers Ruman Impact on lhe Forest - Childrcns'
Education - Veronica Nicholas:Woman in
Politics· Lui.le People - Medicine Allies
ISSUE FIFTEEN ·Spring 1987
Coverlets • Woman Forester - Susie
McMahon· Midwife - Altermuivc
Contracepuon - Biosexuality •
Biorcgionalism and Women - Good
Medicine· Mauinlchal Culwrc - Pearl
ISSUE FOUR· Summer 1984
Water Drum • Wnter Quality - Kudzu Solar Eclipse • Clearcuuing - Trout Going 10 Waler - Ram Pumps ·
Microhydro - Poems: Bennie Lee Sinclair,
Jim Wayne Miller
ISSUE SIXTEEN - Summer 1987
Helen Wane • Poem V1s1ons in a Garden
• Vis ion Quest • First Aow • Initiation •
Leaming in the Wilderness - Cherokee
Challenge· "Valuing Trees"
lSSUE FIVE - Fall 1984
Harvest - Old Ways in Cherokee Ginseng • Nuclear Waste • Our Celuc
Heritage • B1orcgionalism: Past, Prescm,
and Future • John Wilnoty • Healing
Darkness - Pol iucs or Participation
ISSUE EIGHTEEN· Winter 1987-88
Vernacular Architecture - Dn:ams in Wood
and Stone • Mountain Home - Earth
Energies • Enrth·Shellercd Living •
Membrane Houses Bru~h Shelter ._
Poems: Octobu Dusk - Good Medicine:
"Shelter"
ISSUE SIX - Winter 1984-85
Winter Solsuee Earth Ceremony
Hor.;cpaswre River· Coming of lhe Light
• Log Cabin Roots • Mountain
Agriculture: The Right Crop - William
Taylor - The Future of lhe Forc~t
ISSUE SEVEN - Spring 1985
Sustainable Economics • Hot Springs Worker Ownership - The Great Ecooomy Sclr Help Credit Union • Wild Turkey Responsible Investing • Working :•1 the
Web of Life
ISSUE EIGHT· Swnmer 1985
Celebration: A Way of Life • K:11iiah
18,000 Years Ago - Sacred Sites - Folk
Ans in the Schools • Sun Cycle/Moon
Cycle Poems: Hilda Downer - Cherokee
Heritage Center - Who Owns Appalachia?
ISSUE NINE- Fall 1985
The Waldee Forest - The Trees Speak Migrating Forests • Horse Logging •
Starting a Tree Crop • Urbnn Trees •
Acom Bread - Mylh Time
ISSUE NINETEEN ·Spring, 19&8
Pcrleandra Garden - Spring Tonics •
Blueberries· WildOowcr Garden$ - Granny
Herbalist - Rower Essences • "The
Origin of the Animals:• Story - Good
M.:<.licm.:: "E'U~cr· - Be A Tree
ISSUE THJRTEEN - Fall 1986
Center For Awakening· Eliuibcth Cnllllri
- A Gentle Death - Hospice · Ernest
Morgan - Dealing Creauvcly wilh Death Home Burial Boit - The Wake - The
Raven Mocker - Woodslore and
Wildwoods Wisdom - Good Medicine; The
Sweat Lodge
ISSUE TEN· Winta- 1985·86
Kale Rogers - Circles of Stone - Internal
Mylhmaking · Holistic Healing on Trial .
Poems: Steve Knaulh - Mythic Places •
The Uk1ena's Tale - Crystal Magic • Drcamspeaking.
ISSUE ELEVEN - Spring 1986
Community Plnnning • Cities and the
Biorcgional V1s1on - Recycling Community Gardening- Floyd County.
VA • Gasohol ·Two Biorcgional Views •
Nuclear Supplement • Foxfire Games •
Good Medicine: V!Sioos
ISSUE FOURTEEN - Winter 1986-87
Lloyd Carl Owlc - Boogcrs and Mummers
- All Species Day • Cabin Fever
University - Homeless in Ka1iiah •
Homemade Hot Water • Stovemakcr's
Narrative - Good Medicine: Interspecies
Communication
ISSUE TWENTY· Summer, 1988
Preserve Appalachian Wilderness
Highlands or Roan - Cclo Commuruty Land Trust • Arthur Morgan School Zoning ls.~ue - "The Ridge" - Farmers and
lhe Fann Bill • Good Medicine: "Land" .
Acid Rain - Duke's Power Play Cherokee Microhydro Projcc1
ISSUE TWENTY-ONE· Fall, 1988
Chcslnuts: A Na1ural History • Restoring
lhc Chestnut • "Poem of Presetvntion and
Praise" - Continuing the Qucs1 - Forests
and Wildlife· ChestnUlS in Regional Diet
- Chcslnut Resources - Herb Note • Good
Medicine: "Chnngcs to Come• - Review:
W~rf: legends Li~
/'
~UA~QURNAL
P.O. Box 638
For more infonna1ioo:
(704) 683-14 14
Leicester, NC KatUah Province 28748
this effort an txtra bOosr
I can be a local contact
Address
City
Back Issues
Issue#_@ $2.50 = $ _ _
Issue#_@ $2.50 = $ _ _
Issue# __@ $2.50 = $ _ _
Issue#_@ $2.50 = $_ _
Issue# __@ $2.50 = $_ _
Complete Set (3-11, 13-16,
18-21)
@ $30.00 $_ _
Regular Membership........ $10/yr.
Sponsor.........................$20/yr.
Contributor.....................$50/yr.
Name
Enclosed is$
State
Zip
person for my area
Arca Code
Phone Number
to give
=
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians Records
Description
An account of the resource
<em>Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians</em>, later simplified to <em>Katúah Journal</em>, was published from 1983 to 1993. A quarterly publication, it was focused on the bioregion of former Cherokee land in Appalachia. <br /><br /><span>The early issues of the journal explain the meaning of the Cherokee name, </span><em>Katúah</em><span>, and why the editors wanted to view the world through a bioregional lens, rather than political boundaries. A volunteer production, the editors took a holistic view in tackling social, environmental, mental, spiritual, and emotional topics of the day, many of which are still relevant. </span><br /><span><br />The <em>Katúah Journal</em> was co-founded by Marnie Muller, David Wheeler, Thomas Rain Crowe, Martha Tree and others who served as co-publishers and co-editors. Other key team members included Chip Smith, David Reed, Jay Mackey, Rob Messick and many others.</span><br /><br />This digital collection is only a portion of the <em>Katúah</em>-related materials in the W.L. Eury Appalachian Collection in Special Collections at Appalachian State University. The items in AC.870 Katúah Journal records cover the production history of the <em>Katúah Journal</em>. Contained within the records are correspondence, publication information, article submissions, and financial information. The editorial layouts for issues 12 through 39 are included as are a full run of the Journal spanning nearly a decade. Also included are photographs of events related to the Journal and a film on the publication.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
This resource is part of the <em>Katúah Journal Records </em>collection. For a description of the entire collection, see <a href="https://appstate-speccoll.lyrasistechnology.org/repositories/2/resources/937" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Katúah Journal Records (AC. 870)</a>.
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
The images and information in this collection are protected by the Copyright Law of the United States (Title 17, U. S. C.) and are intended only for personal, non-commercial, and educational purposes, provided proper citation is used – i.e., Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians Records, 1980-2013 (AC.870), W. L. Eury Appalachian Collection, Special Collections, Appalachian State University, Boone, NC. Researchers are responsible for securing permissions from the copyright holder for any reproduction, publication, or commercial use of these materials.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1983-1993
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
journals (periodicals)
Language
A language of the resource
English
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
<em>Katúah Journal</em>, Issue 22, Winter 1988-1989
Description
An account of the resource
The twenty-second issue of the <em>Katúah Journal</em> focuses on the relationship between humans and the environment. Authors and artists in this issue include: Kim Sandland, Lylich Crabawr, Thomas Berry, Marnie Muller, Zoa Rockenstein, Kore Loy McWhirter, Richard Lowenthal, Fred Mignone, "Granny" DeLauncey, Lucinda Flodin, "Esther," Rob Messick, Amy Hannon, Pam Thomas, Lila Thomas, David Wheeler, Martha Tree, Bern Grey Owl, and Lisa Franklin. <br><br><em>Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians</em>, later simplified to <em>Katúah Journal</em>, was published from 1983 to 1993. A quarterly publication, it was focused on the bioregion of former Cherokee land in Appalachia. The early issues of the journal explain the meaning of the Cherokee name, Katúah, and why the editors wanted to view the world through a bioregional lens, rather than political boundaries. A volunteer production, the editors took a holistic view in tackling social, environmental, mental, spiritual, and emotional topics of the day, many of which are still relevant.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1988-1989
Table Of Contents
A list of subunits of the resource.
Global Warming and Katúah by Kim Sandland.......3<br /><br />Fire This Time by Lylich Crabawr.......5<br /><br />Bioregions: The Context for Reinhabiting the Earth by Thomas Berry.......6<br /><br />Earth Exercise by Marnie Muller and Zoa Rockenstein.......9<br /><br />Poems and Drawings by Kore Loy McWhirter.......10<br /><br />An Abundance of Emptiness by Richard Lowenthal.......12<br /><br />Reviews: Thinking Like a Mountain | Talking with Nature.......14<br /><br />Options for Regional Currency: The LETSystem by Fred Mignone.......15<br /><br />"Chronicles of Floyd" by "Granny" DeLauney.......16<br /><br />Knife, Axe, and Saw: An Interview with Darry Wood.......18<br /><br />Natural World News.......20<br /><br />The Bear Clan.......22<br /><br />Poem by Lucinda Flodin.......23<br /><br />Drumming: Letters to Katúah.......24<br /><br />Webworking.......30<br /><br /><em>Note: This table of contents corresponds to the original document, not the Document Viewer.</em>
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
<em>Katúah Journal</em>, printed by The <em>Waynesville Mountaineer</em> Press
Subject
The topic of the resource
Bioregionalism--Appalachian Region, Southern
Sustainable living--Appalachian Region, Southern
Human ecology--Appalachian Region, Southern
Global warming--Appalachian Region, Southern
North Carolina, Western
Blue Ridge Mountains
Appalachian Region, Southern
North Carolina--Periodicals
Language
A language of the resource
English
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
<a href="https://appstate-speccoll.lyrasistechnology.org/repositories/2/resources/937"> AC.870 Katúah Journal records</a>
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
<a title="In Copyright – Educational Use Permitted" href="https://rightsstatements.org/page/InC-EDU/1.0/?language=en 8" target="_blank"> In Copyright – Educational Use Permitted </a>
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Appalachian Region, Southern
Is Part Of
A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included.
<a title="Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians" href="https://omeka.library.appstate.edu/collections/show/79" target="_blank"> Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians </a>
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
PDF
Journals (Periodicals)
Appalachian Mountains
Appalachian Studies
Bioregional Congress
Black Bears
Community
Ecological Peril
Economic Alternatives
Education
Forest Issues
Habitat
Hazardous Chemicals
Katúah
Poems
Politics
Radioactive Waste
Reading Resources
Stories
Turtle Island
Water Quality
-
https://omeka.library.appstate.edu/files/original/2f5c7a65526cf67e7320e0c5525d2492.pdf
a25df4140491bff73a4b9d4c92436ab2
PDF Text
Text
ISSUE 23 SPRING 1989
$1.50
BIOREGIONAL JOURNAL OF THE SOUTHERN APPALACHIANS
�~LJAHjOURNAL
Postage Paid
Bulk Mail
Permit #18
Leicester, NC
28748
P.O. Box 638 Leicester, NC Katuah Province 28748
ADDRESS CORRECTION REQUESTED
�THE PISGAH VILLAGE:
A Window into Ancient Ways
..~..-··-·-···-"·-·- ··..·-----··-··-..··-......~..
......
·'
- .......
-
-......· -..
Pisgah Village:
A Window into Ancient Ways ..............!
by Kim Sandland
Planet Art in Katuah............................. 5
by Denise Newbourne
The Green City as Thriving City.........8
by David Morris
Poplar AppeaJ .................................... l 0
lJy Doug Elliott
Written and Illustrated by Kim Sandland
Clear Sky: A Composite Portrait... .... 13
by James Rhea
"A New Earth" ................................... 14
by Jerry Trivette
College as Community Resource .......16
by C.B. Squire
Wild l ovely Days ............................... 18
Poems by Elizabeth Griffin
Photographs by Gil Leebrick
Natural World News..........................20
Reviews:
Sacred Latu/ Sacred Se.x
Rapuue of the Deep .....................23
Stopping the Coming Ice Age ............25
Drumming: Leuers to Kafllah ...........26
''Sudden Tendrils" .............................28
a poem by Michael Hockaday
Events Calendar................................32
Webworking .....................................34
On a low rise above the Catawba River there
was a village .....Once, long ago, the village
flourished ..... Flanked by magnificent forests,
with mountains rising abruptly on the western
side, it stood on floodplain soils, with fields and
gardens enriched by seasonal deposits of sih..... lt
has long since been abandoned. and now it lies
underground, a ghost town enslirouded in the
mystery of its demise.....Remains of posts in 1he
ground delineate where homes once stood. cold
heanhs contain fragments of roasted nuts and
seeds and the bones of deer and small game
animals.....Picces of hand-formed and decorated
clay ea.nhenware. tempered with the sands of
village paths, litter old floors .....When one stands
in what was probably once the cemcr of the
village, there is a pervasive aura of kindred
association and the lingering question of why was
this village abandoned by its rcsidcnls 600 years
ago.....
The old town has been named the Pisgah
Village by mhaeologists presently excavating the
Cn1awbn River site. Ken Robinson of Warren
Wilson College and his field workers are only
now uncovering the village, and it will be some
time before a thorough picture of its rcs1den1s'
wiy of life is pieced together. Excavation hns
already taken months of work, and the project will
continue through October of 1989. Laboratory
study of the artifacts recovered from the site,
photography. drawing, mapwork, and
comparisons with other sites will take much
longer.
NOTE. The exact locOUO!t of the "Pisgah VI/Inge"
article 10 protect tlit #le fro111 po.r3iblt
di!.turlJanus before ucawJlion rs c:ompltttd.
is 1101 11l•tlf 111 thU
Archaeology allows us to reconstruct the
lifeways of chose who lived here before us. II
allows us to determine the distribution,
availability, and use of natural resources by
peoples of 1he past; climatic conditions; cultural,
behavioral, and spiritual traditions and their
material representations. Archaeological fieldwork
can also tell us when - and possibly even why •
such cultures dlsappeared.
The Pisgah Village is one of thirty
promising sites that were identified in McDowell
County. North Carolina. Three of the sites were
tested for future study, but this is the only one
currently under inrcnsive study.
The site is interesting. says Robinson,
because of its location at the edge of the mountains
on the boundary between 1 very differe nt
wo
geographical situations. This was not typical of
late prehistoric settlements. The Pisgah village
presents lhe first opportunity for study of what is
possibly a definitive boundary between the
ancestors of the Cherokee and the ances1ors of the
Catawba peoples. whose culrurcs were evidently
very differenL
Anifac1s so far recovered indicate two
occupations of I.he village sire - the first from about
500-1000 AD, the second from about 900·1500
AD. The focus of the current research is on the
later occupation, says Robinson. He hopes to shed
some light on why the Pisgah Village site was
ab3ndoned.
Widespread disruption of narive settlements
throughout the Southeast occurred around
1450· l 550, and the dissipation of such
(oonunucd on p:ige 3
�~LJAHjOURNAL
·-
EDITORl AL STAFF THIS ISSUE:
Will Ashe Bason
Michael Red Fox
Richard Lowenthal
Rob Messick
Christina Morrison
Marnie Muller
Kim Sandland
David Wheeler
EDITORIAL ASSISTANCE:
Scou Bird Manha Tree Jack Otaney John Creech Jay Joyce
Marsha Ring Patrick Clark Chip Smith
COVER by Rob Messick
INVOCATION - a poem, •world.~ by Elizabeth Griffin
PUBLISHED BY: Kauiah Journal
PRINTED BY: The Waynesville Mow11ainecr Press
WRITE US AT:
Kail1ah Journal
Box 638
Leicester, NC
Katuah Province 28748
!ELF.PHONE:
(704)683-1414
D1vcrsi1y is an 1mport:tn1 elemcm of bioregional ecology, both
nawrol and social. Tn line wath Iha~ principle, lhe KaJ1'ah Journal uics 10
~e as a forum for the discussion ot regional Issues. Signed arucles e~rcss
only lhe op111ion of the aulbors and arc not necesSill'il)' Ille opanions of the
Karliah Jounw/ tduors or stnff.
The lmcmal Revenue Servtce bas declared Kat11ah a non·pront
organiza1ion under seer.ion SQl(cXJ) or Ille ln1cmnl Revenue Code. All
conuibwions lO Katiiah are deductible from person.al income tl.it.
tNVOC.ATWN
the vJorld is as W9- are
TH£ SOtll'HERN APPALACHtAN BJORECJON
AND MAJOR EASTERN RJVER SYSTEMS
STATEMENT OF PURPOSE
Herc m lhe souLhcm-most hcattlund of Lhc App:ilnchian mounuins, 1he oldest
mounlllan range on our continetll, Turtle lslnnd; a small bu1 growing group h:is begun
IO mke on a sense of responsibilhy for Ille implicau(ln.~ of lhl11 gcogr.tphicnl nnd
culturol heritngc. This sense of responsib1li1y c:cnu:rs on lhe conccp1 of hvmg w11hin
the ruuural ~ and bal3nce of universal sysiems Md pnllClJllcs.
Wilhan dus circle we began by invoking Lhc Cherokee mime • K;u.Ualt' a.~ lhe
old/new name for this nrca of the mouniains and for ii.s joU!Tllll as well The province is
indicated by •L~ naUDUI boundarie$! the Ro:inokc Ri~cr Valley 10 the nonh; the foollulls
of the piedmont area IO the cast: Yona Mount.am nnd lhc Georgia halls lO lhc :>0u1h: and
the Tennessee Raver Valley to the west.
TI1~ editorial pnootieli ror u:; arc t0 c:o!Ject and disseminate mfonnar.ion Md
energy which pcrL'llllS specifically LO lllls region, nnd IO ro.u:r IJ1e awareness 1h:u 1hc
land i~ a hvmg be.mg de$CMng of our love and rcspeeL Livmg in this manner is a way
IO ansuro the su.~n:ibility of the bao.~phcrc and a la.rung placc for ourselves m 11.S
continuing cvolutlonary process.
We seem IO h3ve readied Ille fulcrum Point of a• do or die • si111t1tion m t.cnrn;
of a quality standard of life for all living beings on !his planeL A~ a voice for lhc
can:lakcrs or llus saarcd land. Kaniah. we advoc:uie a c:enlefed approach 10 Ilic cooccp1 of
dccenlnlli1..otion. II is our hope 1 become a support sysicm for those acocpong lhe
.0
challenge of SUStninabilhy and lhe creation of harmony and balance an a total sense,
here an this place.
We welcome all correspondence, critlcism, perunen1 infonnation, articles,
an work, etc. with hopes th31 K.a.tWib will grow ID serve lhe best in1eres1S of lhis region
and all us li11'11lg, breathing members.
-The EdilOrS
let us desire only
that consciousness
,r
Of life
in which the cosmic will
and the will to be
are.,one
Some of lhe K01iiah JourfllJ] Staff: (le1i IO right)
Foreeround: Andy Ha!I-Bak.cr Middlr: David Wheeler, Mamie Muller, Rob
Messick Standing: Will A.She Bason. Christina Morrison. Chip Smith,
Rithiud Lowenlh3l. Lisa Franklin
Sprt"'J, 1989
�(continued from page J)
well-developed, thriving cultures has never been
fully understood. Robinson feels lhat CJCcavauon
of the Pisgah Village may lend some support 10 the
theory that early Spanish explorers had a
devastating effect on native aboriginal peoples.
lt has long been surmised that Spa.nish
explorers, led by Hernando De Soto and Juan
Pardo among others, came up from the east and
Gulf coasts through South Carolina and then
inlMd to the Little Tennessee River. The routes of
these explorers have lately been re-evaluated,
however, and much evidence now indicates that
they came along the eastern edge of the mountains
~ perhaps even as far east as the Catawba River.
Some of the ac!ual records from the DeSoto and
l>ardo expcdhions contain references to what are
now believed to be villages in McDowell County.
a hand in decimating these large animal
populations.
The burgeoning human population.
unchecked by disease and nunurcd by abundance,
reached a saturation point. The time from about
8,000 BC to I AD is called the Archaic Period.
when human living took on a very different
approach. In the woodlands the Archaic peoples
hunted small game - primarily deer - fished. and
collected plant foods. They were only seasonally
nomadic, capitalizing on the migrations of
animals, the spawning of fish, the maturing of
nuts, and the flush of ripening benics.
The people of the Archaic Period were
efficient enough in their hunting and gathering that
the search for food did not take up all of their time;
they also pursued other endeavors. They made
basketS and mats which have been found
preserved in sites in the dry Southwest desen.
They made hand-polished stone articles - some
done very anistically, others left undecorated fo~
utilitarian use. Graves from the Archaic Period
contain tools, weapons, red ochre (a pigment
associated with ceremonies), beads, pendants, and
dogs - all mcticulo_usly placed to accompany the
dead into an aflcrhfe. Their stone hunting points
were made with stems to be attached to sbaftS, an
innovation from the time of lhc Palco-Indians.
The earliest evidences of human occupation
in the Southern Appalachian Mountains date from
the Archaic Period. They consist of isolated find.~
of a distinct type of projectile point used for
hunting - the Morrow Mountain type - dated to
4500 BC.
The Woodland Period
The Woodland Period of human habirotion
The Spanish brought conflict and murder
along wi1h their pack trains. They also brought
Q.iseases - smallpox, measles, tuberculosis, and
influenza - the likes of which the native population
had not experienced on this continent. The
Spanish, according to their own writings, burned
villages, kidnapped and enslaved natives, abused
the native cullure, and spread their imponed
diseases. They formed trade alliances with some
of the native tribes and introduced European
materials. The full extent of the cultural and social
disruption caused by the introduction of these
trade goods is only now being realized. Robinson
hopes that study of the Pisgah Village site will
provide new links in the chain of undenaanding.
extended from about I AD to 1600 AD. Three
primary developmentS marked the transition from
the Archaic to the Woodland cuhural iypes:
· the development of pottery for cooking,
storing, and transporting food and other items:
- the cultivation of vegetable crops to
supplement hunting and gathering:
- and the first pcnnanent settlements.
People of the Woodland phase settled in
river valleys, where seed-bearing plants thrive.
and became almost sedentary. cultivating native
grains and then com. gourds, and squash as these
crops were passed nonh from Mexico. Projectile
poinis became smaller and more finely crafted.
The bow and arrow replaced the spear and the
dan.
Woodland peoples traded across long
distances. Mica from the Southern Appalachians
and shells and fossilized shark's teeth from the
coastal areas appear in archaeological sites
throughout the southeast
Burial practices continued the tradition of
placing grave goods to accompany the dead. Some
individuals were bwied in elaborate earth mounds,
indicating some status or rank among their feUow
villagers.
Some of the Woodland Period peoples built
tremendous carthworlcs for purposes that are still
unclear to archeo-historians. They show a
remarkable diversity, some being mathematically
executed, others shaped like serpents. birds, and
other figures. The full extent of some of these
landscape sculptures was fully realiz.cd only after
observers could fly above them.
In some pans of the Southeast during the
Woodland Period, clements of what is called
"Mississippian culture" appeared. Mississippian
culture was characterized by temple mounds
(eanhworks which were the foundation for
ceremonial centers). village) fortifLed with
encircling palisades of stakes. copper tools and
jewelry, and inrncruely designed ceremonial an.
The v.intings of early European explorers of
the 15th century describe palisaded towns with an
ehtborate soctal development and material culture.
(continued on JXl8C 4)
The First People
During the last lee Age a land bridge JOined
Asia and Nonh America acrosi. chc Berin~ Strait.
Many scientist:. believe that prehistoric people
followed the large game animals into the new
continent by this rou!e, and by the year 10,000 BC
the first humans were well-established in both
Nonh and South America. These Palco-Indian
people. as they arc called. were nomadic hunters.
They had no settlements, and the only evidences
of their culture that have been round arc hunting
weapons (stone spear points and darts), chipped
stone knives, choppers and scrapers used for
processing game meat and cutting wood, and
animal bones thnt are evidence of their big game
kills.
By 8,000 BC the glaciers had retreated, and
the climate became wanner. Many of the big game
animals - species of horse. camel. rhinoceros, and
bison not seen today. the great ground sloths and
the woolly mammoth - became extinct on this
continent Some scientists believe that humans had
Spr~"'J. 1989
Ken Rotmisnn and
visiring school class
t!t.Omi1U! parrially
ew1WJ1ed grid
.fllUl1re OJ PiSgaJ1
Vi/Inge.
Pho•o by Morme1 Mulltf
�(col\Ullucd from p:ige 3)
In the Southern Appalachians, lhis Mississippian
tradition, borrowed from cuhural influences 10 the
west is called "the Pisgah tradition" by
arch~eologists. Peoples of the Pisgah tradition
were the direct ancestors of the Cherokee.
The Pisgah tradition of lhe late Woodland
Period with its Mississippian influences, marks
the pi~nacle of the cultural evolution of native
peoples in the Southern Appalachians. Although
some cultural traditions persisted until the rime of
the Cherokee Removal, the native way of life was
altered forever with the arrival or white explorers
and seulers.
Pottery fragments, called sherds, cons~ilute
the majority of anifacts from the Warren Wilso11
excavations. Pottery vessels were fashioned from
coils of clay, shaped and rounded. Some of the
containers hnd handles or thickened runs and were
tempered with sand before firing for extra
s1rCng1h. Some were plain and undecorated, while
others bore complica1cd panerns created by
stamping the unfired vessels with carved wooden
paddles. Cords or nets were also used lO l~ve
fiber impressions in the wet clay, and des1~ns
were also incised with small, sharp. marking
tools.
Plnin and decorated clay tobacco pipes have
also been recovered, as well as small s1one and
clay discs. believed to be counters or gamepieces.
Also found were clay and soapstone beads and
polished stone gorgeis. A hole was drilled into
each of the ornaments so that it might be worn
around the neck.
The Pisgah rradition was a way of life
which allowed individualized expression of talent
and beliefs. During this phase livelihood was
secure enough to allow time for artistic
embellishment of functional tools. Carved
soapstone bowls were made in sizes to hold from
Relics AJong the Swannanoa
The Pisgah tradition is best represented by
archaeological discoveries made on the campus of
Warren Wilson C-0llegc in Swannanoa in Kan'.iah.
Artifacts found there preview what might be
uncovered at the Pisgah Village site along the
Catawba.
The Warren Wilson site snw four penods of
habitat ion by native peoples. The earliest
occupation daies back nearly to the beginning of
!he Archaic Period, The snc has been disturbed by
erosion, dig~ing. and more recently by plowing.
Disturbed sues are more dlfficull to interpret,
because artifacts are misplaced, and feature.~ such
as building foundations, heanhs and r::rosh pits are
scauered. Despilc such disturbances,
archaeologists have learned a great deal from the
Warren Wilson site. No anifacts later than the
Pisgah phase have been. recovered ~1 Warren
Wilson. Its residents vanished someume 1n the
mid- l600's and never returned.
two quaris to 1wo gallons of liquid. Polished stone
axes were found, some grooved to be anached to
shafts, others designed to be hand-held. The
excavation yielded monars and pestles of stone for
grinding seeds, nuts, and drie(benies. and caches
of red and yellow ochre and graphite used for
paint pigments.
The villagers who occupied the Warren
Wilson site lived in rectangular dwellings. Over
the years. the sunken posts rotted and left dark
circular Stains in lhe earth, like perfect shadows.
ghoslly visions of the past. The walls were Likely
made of waule-and-daub, a mixture of clay and
grasses. Mose of the dwellings were not within the
village itself, but in outlying farmsteads.
In lhe center of each house was a raised clay
fire basin for warmth and cooking. The heanhs
and the storage vessels buried nearby contained
evidence of the foods these early people utilii.ed,
among them hickory nuts, waJnucs, buuemuts,
acorns, persimmons, maypops, grapes, bl~ck
cherries. and chesmuts. There were also remains
of com, squash, beans, and sumpweed, all of
which were cultivated. Trash pits contained the
bones of 30 species of animals, including bear,
deer, bobcat, weasel, mountain lion, squirrels.
turtles, snakes, frogs, and turkeys. From the
distribution of foods, it is sunnised that the Pisgah
(conbJlued oo page 24)
EXCAVATION
OF A PREHISTORIC SITE
An archneological cxcavarion site is chosen
because of the discovery of surface artifacts.
because of a promising location that looks likely to
yield evidence of occupation, or because th.e area
is threatened by development or by destruction by
vandals.
Fieldwork begins with a surface collection
of artifacts. Surface finds are ploued on a detailed
map of the site, because their distribution may in
itself reveal important information.
The plow zone is scraped away and sifted
through mesh screen 10 separate out any artifacts.
Below the plow zone may lie a surface
undisturbed by the activities of lauer-day humans.
A grid of stakes and Jines is then laid out
over the site, usually in a true nonh-south
alignment, to correspond with grid l~nes mark~d
on a site map. The area of each gnd square 1s
usually one square meter.
Soil samples may be taken with augers to
determine distinct strata and/or the presence of
hidden constructions or features (visible item
which cannot be removed from the site and taken
to the laboratory, such as house floors. burials,
cooking fire pits, etc.).
Selected grid squares may be excavated at
random if the site is large. Small sites may be
excavated entirely. Test excavations help 10
determine where to concentrate digging e!Tons.
As the squares are excavated, the wall of
each square 1s left intaCt m display lhe stratigraphy
(visible layering) of the soil.
Small layers, and sometimes whole strata,
of soiJ are removed using shovels or trowels, and
the exposed surface is levelled. M~terial from each
level is sifted and soned. The an1facts recovered
are bagged, labelled with their exact location in the
soil stratigraphy. Soil samples are taken from each
stratum 10 be examined in the laboratory. for even
mJcroscop1c elements in the soil {such as pollen
grains) may reveal information about the nora of
the area and the climate (such 11s periods of
drought and rainfall).
Each exposed surface level is mapped and
photographed, and details arc recorded in field
notebooks.
Features arc very carefully u~covcred ~s
they appear in the strata. To d1~turb lh_e1r
placement would be 10 destroy the rnformauon
they contain. Small dental picks, 1ooth~:ushes,
and even fine paintbrushes may be uuhzed to
remove the soil from artifacL~ and features.
Laboratory analysis of the artifacts. notes,
maps, drawings. and photographs may take
months, possibly years, of additional work once
the fieldwork is completed.
.
Artifacts and features from each gnd and
srratum and their relationships to the other finds
through~ut the site, will reveal the lifeways of the
people who once lived there - their t<?Ols,_ trades,
rituals, subsjstence. An archaeologist literally
delves into the relationship that ancient peoples
maintained with the world around them.
Archaeological fieldwork reveals details .of th~t
relationship. It may te~ how lo~g lhat ~elauonship
was sustained, and Dllgh1 possibly potnl to clues
as to why it came to an end
;st:t'
Sprtng, J!189 •
�Art
by Denise Newboume
Dream f rQl}ment . ••
Slt.e fell oslup that mghl and as she dre<uttM her spirit was
luult'd through the long spiral tunnel and inII) till! scars.
M1uri-dimtJtSional ribbons with Jhimmering citcu.ils drifted past
aJ incompreJumsiblt spuds Slie realized she was in 1/ie center of
the 1rwi.rplanetary in~rface, a place similar to a radio sroJibn
w/ll!re lJfU! can nW'. into past <JNlfimue choices and possibilities
for any piaMt, and/inc tune w tlic path ofgre01esr harmony.
"Hmmm," she wondered, .,what can that p01h possibly be
for the eartlrr Finding ow ~·as as simple as speaking the roMS
that most corresponded with Earth's vihrationaljreqrumcy ar tlie
prese111 tu~. No soonu had llll! said "John Wayne" than she
fo1uld lu:rself in a lwlogram oftill! Earth.
Her SU&Sitivc a.11ral rectpum M-Ve overw/11:/med a1fv.~t
with an almost 1111/Jearablt colkaion of hurrlingferocities,
terrified srreaming, and lrnpelt!Ss fwiliry. She re111(Ji/led calm,
knowing from experience tll/Jl often tire jint reception ofsuch
planets was the hardest lmagu of marching soldiers appeared
before her, rows ofmen 1n unifonns, who turned on their heels
and became long rows of ballerinas, all dressed in the same rum
dolng rl~ uact SOllW hops and twirls while myriads of musicians
all played variatwns of the SattU'! song. A smal I number of
"others" hod them wrapped in strings, wl11ch the>• kept rig/rt, and
twisted tfl/!nt this Wtl)' and tllDt, like puppets. Then she noticed
thOl'-fand:. of beings sitting i11 tlie darkness.paralyzed The
dancers and musicians wen' used to dii-en rheir anention from
tll/!ir dl!.rperarely repres.ud condition.
Then di/! Sct!nario began to change
the people in
darkness bt:gan to wake 11p and cw the strings. They swpped
allowing tl.e cloned do.nurs and arrisrs to llypnoti:e them and
started dancing tlll!mSelvts. Nor imuating any form, they simply
followed wh1tre their own bodies led tht!ITI. The "official" artisu
also stopptd their/~en.sh reprodJJJ:twnr ofprescribedforms
long en1mgh w listen to the songs and dances from wid1itt They
all begD11 listen.ing to and performing thdr own unique songs and
danus. and helping otlll!rs learn
tlll! s~. More and 1111>re
strings were cw. and tlle ligliJ gr~ brigluer wilh t!llch ""e's gift
of color. until of/ the beings became a mandala ofilrlerw<J\'tn
harmony and beawy.
Her anelllion tllrMd to a man in a belly dancers silks and
veils, doing rhl sinuous, anciefll dance of binh She looked
closer and saw it war .. John Wayfll!! "What a nice resolurilln,"
slie mused to herself. "It doesn't seem so hard looking at ft from
oUlhere.··
"'do
We are now witnesses to the ultimate dead-end created
when reason attempt~ to dominate spirit, men to dominate
women, science to dominate an. and "civilized" peoples ro
dominate "'n:uive" ones. The5e are all external eumples of a
fundamental split and sttuggle within e:ich of us. We have come
so far from our primordial heritage of wholeness. that many of us
arc at a los:. as to how to regain it We are still StrUggling to learn
lhnt our fundamental problem is not any category of people. but
the \'Cry existence of ~~teg~es.. 9ur problem ~s nOt science.~
power. not an, not ~pintuahty; n 1s the pcrcepuon of these tlnngs
as sepanuc rather than facc1~ of a unified whole.
,\ key clemenr of the 1houglit sys1cm in which we perceive
each Other ns lw lhan whole 1s the notion lhat some people arc
creative and Olhm arc no1. Thi:. is extremely discmpowcring
becllusc the power to cn.:.ltC is a cenrral attribute of divinity in all
n:ligions. Thi~ c~tivc now from within provides us with 1he
knowledge of our own power. b:iJance, and self-wonh. lf we
believe that we do not have this rcgcnenitive power, then we
promote scarcity for ourselves and others. So here we all nre
amidst terrifying psychological scarcity collectively creaccd by the
majority of the population who for one rcawn or another do no:i
belie~ they arc creo.rivi- nnd powerful The planet cnn only a1wn
the pence thut com~ from wholenes.~ when the beings who
comprise it acknowledge •heir own and each others' wonh
An. ai. we know 11 today. b a mirror for our plnnewy
condiuon. There arc some people who do it. and they are n:vercd
:is if they have something others do not. There is a funher
dhtinction between "fine" an and "folk" an, with the unplicarion
that fine an is somehow nobl~-r and better than folk., because it is
non-funclionnl. TIUs 1s the alienating idea that an is only real if it
is removed from the daily now oflifc.
When a peoplCli: he.1.rlfclt. arti~ cxprcs.sion is_ lo;-t or
s~tenurically extingu15.hcd, they begin to feel empty inside and
often beccmc caught up in a funle effon to saiisfy themselves
with utemal g~. 11us exu:mal grasping often IC3ds lO the
phenomenon o! ~ictiveness The fact &tlat ~e !'ow ha~oe whole
societie~ c:."pcncnang desperate levels of addlCtlOn :uid_
1is
a11endan1 destruction is a signal that it is ume forchoosmg to heal
ourselves. One way we can do this is by tapping our unique
expression~ and bl~ing ourselves llild the planet ~;th the
creative energy that Oows from our spinL
Our culrural definition of an needs to expand from the
activiucs or an elite few to that or all people. Jose ArgueUes, in
his latest book Surfers ofthe luvuya, provides such a definition:
"You've all gott.t undcrsuind th:tt you're artists. Nothing fancy,
but anists of life. anists of reality....Anything that's harmoniwl.
that's an. This is an imponnn1 point ... since the planet's got to
(conunllCld on PQ&ll 6)
SJJrin9' 1989
~ ~~~ - 1'.!'9'1 ~ y
�be cleaned up and rehnm1omzed, there isn't any1hmg that isn't
Planet An." With this kind of definition. an becomes intrinsic to
the flow of life. \Ve are now beginning to realize that a11y
expression that comes from our own spirits i'> valid, even if it
docs not confom110 formerly prescribed ideas of'' an".
To see an as a force for hnrmonizing our world is also to
odd a higher di~s1on '?f social respon~i~ility to it. 111~.
question "Will this conmbute to harmomzing our plam:t?
becomes a standll!"d pan of the creative process, and an irnpon:mt
criteria for whether or not 10 mar.ifest nn idea. Also integral 10 a
holistic perspective is the understanding that an and science are
not separate but are indivisible facets of a life-oriented culture.
This understanding would ~1e a much-needed ~1al . .
responsibility for everyone m all areas of human producuvny
What exactly is Planet An? It is about reclaiming our
concept of an to encompass all forms of exchange with our
world. An is the language our species has used to communicate
with the universe for thousands of years. Primitive an focussed
on the intimate relationship of a tribe to it~ particular homeplace
and all of its inhabitants. Now our homeplace has become the
entire planet and beyond...aod our an has begun to rcllect this
reality.
Planetary an is a conscious awareness of the whole Life
community in which we participate and a strong intent to
.
hannonize with it. lt is vital to our species' survival that we shift
to this more active engagement and interplay with the universe. Jn
this way. the many facets of our reality become intimately woven
toget.hcr...our own interior world, our human cultural
communiry, our planetary life community and the rest of the
universe.
How does the Harmonic Convergencu fit in with all this?
Broadly speaking. the purpose of the Converge.nee wa.s 10
reactivate our ay, an:ness of the earth as a consc1ou~ b<:ang and to
pro-.idc a time to rcatlirm our choice to co-create with her. Those
who consciously made that cho1ce at that umc are the people
Arguelles is now calling the "Eanh Force".
By next year, Arguelles feels that this Earth Force will
begin to manifest itself as a global and cultural phenomenon. He
also feels that all need 10 move in a much more direct, mobilized
way. By the second anniversary of Hannonic Convergence, he
sees the opponunity for a Rainbow Peace Event. That would
signal that the Campaign for the Earth has coalesced and bonded
enough in the underground to begin 10 manifest as an alternative
force of allied, planetary, non-government organizations moving
in concen to take measures int0 our own hands.
When I think of "art camps" and the "alternative force of
allied, planetary, non-government organizations", the bioregional
movement comes to my mind. We are a ready-made resource of
diverse people who are awan: of the Earth's aliveness and are
choosing to assist with her healing process. Karuah is a very
supportive communuy for Planet An, and a strong network is
already fom1ing. Here are some examples of Planet An going on
inKatuah...
Heart Dance
Pat Sharkey, who lives in Floyd, Virginia, makes beauoful
jewelry from crystals and stones. One lhing she has learned from
working with crystals is that our own bodies operate in a similar
way ... that is, they can be programmed, and they amplify
energy. These conceptS have inspired her to create ways for an
and science to become pans of a whole... through sacred dance.
"Dance is like a gridwork, a system of conduction," she
iold me. "By encompassing tones, using our bodies as
conductors by arranging them in specific geometric
configurations, employing corresponding herbs and stones, and
consciously utilizing the energy gridwork of Icy lines on the
planet, we can attune oarselves to move any specific energy
through, and use it for healing."
This kind of work could be done at key sites alJ over the
eanh ...those places that amplify energy as well as those in need
of healing. She Stressed the impon.nncc of a disciplined
preparation of daily meditation for at least a month before coming
together to do sacred dance.
"The more preparation, the clearer the channel, the more
juice we all reccive...the more we personally understand
-something, the more authentically we can put it out to others."
One way that planetary art is manifesting is through
networking. Jose Arguelles, one of the key figures in the 1987
Harmonic Convergence, helped to found The Planet An Network
in 1983. According to Arguelles. it is far too late for anything
else save for artists, from all medias, 10 converge and produce
inter-media performance rituals and other forms of planet art.
He feels that these performance rituals should be simulcast
via satellite to as many cities as possible to raise the
consciousness of humanity. He sees this as a higher purpose of
our extensive system of mass communication. When we are able
10 liberate this media system from the forces of fear and
domiruuion we will have an incredible tool for dispersing
immediate visions of peace.
Astrologer Amero Alli envisions "the emergence of
multiple 'art camps' ...clusters of resonant core groups dedicated
to varied forms of planet an." Again.. the indicauon is that this
an js a grassroots, collective phenomenon.
Some of the elements for such activities could be music,
dnnce, comedy, drama and sign language, combined with visual
an. lighting, costumes. holograms. crystals and audience
participation. There is no limit lO the possibilities!
Drawing by Sbe.IJ Lodge
The example she gave is for a Hean Dance, in which men
and women would come together nnd fonn into a Star of David
...men forming one triangle, women the other. Rose quru:ii;
would be in the center. Pora month beforehand each pamcipant
would have spent time meditating daily on healing between men
and women. They would then come together in meditation and
symbolic movemenrs. and allow their energies to interact for the
purpose of healing. The same concept can be used with any
symbol, for any healing purpose, anywhere on the planet.
Groups could begin travelling 10 other countries f~ the expres.s
purpose of performing sacred dance there to amplify the energies
of hannony and healing.
"This is a way we can utilize all the systems we've learned
- astrology, numerology, the tarot...and combine them in
perfonnance through our bodies. High technology has become
so overspecialized that no one can see the whole anymo.rc. By
using our bodies as holographic componenis we are going back
to lhe source of all recbnology...our inner beings."
Pat is interested in organizing an Earth Dance gathering,
and in exchanging inspiration and info with others interesled in
this idea. Her address is P.O. Box 606, Aoyd, Virginia, Kaulah
Province 2409 l.
SprLf19, 1989
�Orandmottu
A planetary art exhibit ...
The popular Gmndmothc:r band in Asheville, North
Carolina is a group tha1 is already doing visionary planet an. The
group is composed of four women who each play several
different insD"Uments and sing h:innonics 1ogelhl'r. They arc a
visual, muhi-me<lia band. incorporating inro !heir performances
creative movement, sign language. masks, costumes. acting and
comedy. Their inclusive approach 10 music provides an
enthusiastic vision of peace. leaving nudiences with a tremendous
feeling of satisfaction. l talked with Deb Criss. one of 1he
founding members of Grandmother, on her thoughts about Pl:lnet
The People of Lhc One Song
UV!NG ART F!Xll/B!T
An.
Her inspiration for Grund mother crunc to her when she
was visiting lhe pyramid sites at Palenque. Mellico. She sa1 for
long periods of time in the part of the complex that had been the
Mayan's theatre. There :;he had visions of "blending ri1ual art
into a music concert with respect to 1he four elemems and a ~ensc
of oneness with 1he eanh, using costumes and masks. and
finding ways io reach ou1 and dec~se 1he distance be1wecn
audience and performers.''
''The original vision l had was for an intentional way of
doing a show, beginning by smudging the area, a group prayer
and quie1 rime of positive thought We could then play with
1oncs, color, and lights, blended with modem-day music 10
induce frequencies tha1 unify heart, will, and higher mind.
People of1en become uncomfonable when things are quiet,
sacred, and serious for 100 long, so comedy is also an important
part of our shows."
Grandmother is very community orienled ... at one of their
shows !his past fall four women joined 1he show for theatre and
signing. One of them was an 89-year·old woman from
Waynesville, the "honored Grandmother" of the evening. "I feel
1hat i1's important 10 in1cgra1e all ages, so that we all have a fuller
understanding of the circle of life," said Criss.
Their group is a dynamic process of consensus, and
chooses to be open to additional aclS (with prior pl!lnning) being
part of the show. "Grandmother is the ancient spiri1 of the winds
Lhrough lime that speak through the earth to all people ... if
s..meone feels that inner voice speaking through them. it is good
10 claim it and find a way to express ii. We hope 1hat
Grandmother is a catalystic agent to inspire others 10 do this."
For more information about Grandmother, call Deb Criss
at (704) 253-4831.
Contact Improvisation
Also going on in Asheville is the quie1 revolution of
Contact Improvisation, a newly arising dance form. Its emphasis
is on releasing individual and group creativity through
spontaneous movement rather than following a specific 1echnique
or choreography.
More than traditional dance forms, Contact relies heavily
on suppon and cooperation among the dancers. II strengthens
both the "I" and the "we" because the movements come from
one's own center as well as being shaped by one's interactions
with the other dancers. It's a way for 1 physical body to learn
he
trust. •. in a literal fashion, through physical imerac1ion. rn
Contact, there are no wrong steps or movemcn1s---1here is only
more or less fiowing, depending on how relaxed, trusting, and
sensitive the dancers allow themselves 10 be.
Contact is also p:utidpatory rather th:m perfoml!lnccorlented. fl is primarily an expenence for the d:lncel'li instead of
for an audience. The movemenlS spring from deep v. ithin and nre
a continual source of surprise, even 10 1he dancers This makes 11
nlJ the more dynamic to Y.itness. Audience and dancers are
brought together llS both expcnence in different ways the
everchanging now of movement coming from spiri1 into form.
Leigh Hollowell and Christina Morrison are co-1e.'lching
the first Conmct Dance class in Asheville. Chrisuna had auendcd
a Dance New E11gland Conmc1 ln1ensivc la.~1 summer and
rerurned home excited 10 share this fonn with others. She
immediately began teaching friends in Celo and talking with
Marnie Muller abou1 the possibility of a regional Dance Kn11"1Ji.
Spring, 1989
(continued on pago 29)
Who are the People of the One Song?
They are ILf a1ul nwre ...They are inspiratian ...
/>a.rt 14ah.ng into furure ..Funue leaking into
past. We invite rlrem into prese111 being ro help
us remember rite word.f to The One Song Singing
in rite liearrs and mitids ofall Earth's People.
Tile People of rlie One Song is an art exhibit centering
on the clay pottery faces and masks by artisl/poner Jane
Avery-Grubel. The faces, strikingly adorned with
beadwork, .shells, and feathers by artiM Jeri Dewey,
represent a culture of people dr:Jwn from archetypal memory
of natural tribal living. and from the vision of a futuri.~1ic
tribe we may become.
Out of lhe faces have come stories, written by local
poet Colleen Redv.onun, tha1 1ell of the uibe's dreams,
ri1uals. roles. and relationships. The exhibit will also fua1ure
many local crafts people's works such as baskets, jewelry.
clothing, musical insuurnents, pottery and herbs that v.ill
repre~ent the tribe's anifacts of everyday living and
celebration.
The People ofThe One &mg is a \ision of a tribe
leading resourceful, crea1ive, peaceful lives in relationship
with the Earth and each other. The concept is an expression
of 1ime transcending--a merging of pa~r. pn:o;en1, and future
10 cn:ati: a cuhure of our wildcs1 d~a~...one that may have
been...could be.
The artists involved sec Thr People nf'The o~ Snr.g
as a modcl....''Through art we can nffirm a fuum: that i~ noc
so dependent on modem 1echnology. Most c~cry1h1og
cxhib11ed can be made, grown, or found m na1ure 111e
show is a ·work in progress that we are continually crra1ing
and recreaung, jus1 as we create our every day rc;tli1y. It's
like opening our minds and doing an archeolog1cal dig into
1hc: future."
Open through April 1989 at Old Church Glllery. M:un
Street. Floyd, Virginia, Katuah Province 24091. For more
infonnation or to schedule additional gallery engngcments: _-~
(703) 7-i5-4849 or 745·3316
~
e
•
"-I
...
>Can.ah Jourrnal pCMJe 1
�THE GREEN CITY AS THRIVING CITY
Implications For local Economic Development
by David Morris
This April, David Morris ofthe I nstiture for Local Self-Reliance will
be the key1Wte speaker for the WNC Environmental Summit '89.
Here is an article from the conriner110/ bioregionat publication Raise
the Stakes that highlighis some ofhis thoughrs.
In discussing the greening of ciLies. one is reminded of Lhe
slogan Lhat the French s1udents used in 1968. On their posters they
said "all that we want to change is every1hing," which comes from
that famous ecological dictum, "everything is connected to everything
else." When we pull a thread, we may in fact unwind a sweater.
The 1wo fundamental assumptions underlying the way we've
designed our communities nre the assumptions of cheap energy and
cheap disposal cosis. Jn constant dollars, a barrel of oil that cost five
dollars in 1910 cost a little over a dollar in 1965. The cost of
lhrowing away a ton of garbage remained preuy much the same from
1900 to 1960. We could lherefore ignore lite operating inefficiencies
and wastes of the systems that we developed.
Cities reflect that inefficiency and waste. Our cities are
dependent creatures. A city of 100,000 people impons 200 tons of
food, I 000 tons of fuel and 62,000 ions of water a day, and dumps
100,000 tons of garbage and 40,000 tons of human waste a ye:ir.
We've accepLed long disaibution systems as the price we pay for
progress and development. Jndeed, we've elevated separation to
Lhe status of vinue and internalized those principles into our way of
thinking about our local economies.
J was recently reminded of how much we take 1ha1 state of
affairs for granted when Twas in a SL Paul, Minnesota res1auran1.
After finishing lunch. 1 got a toothpick, and of course all toothpicks
now have an obligatory plastic wrapper. The word Japan was primed
on the wrapper. Now, I thought to myself, Japan has no wood, bur
it has been considered economical 10 take pieces of wood and send
them LO Japan, wrap them in plastic and send lhe whole thing back: 10
Minnesota. Thal toothpick embodied 50,000 miles within it. Well,
not to be outdone, Minnesota just set up a fac1ory. Ir's producing
chopsticks and it's sending them to Tokyo.
This brings to mind an image of two sh1ps passing each other
in lhc Pacific, one carrying lildc pieces of wood from Japan to the
United States, and the other carrying linle pieces of wood from the
United Slates to Japan. That is economical only if one acceplS the
twin assump1ions noted at the outset - those pillars upon which our
economic system has been established.
This impon-expon paradigm is the way our economy runs. It
is also the way our waste economy runs. Washington, D.C., for
instance, was becoming overwhelmed by its. hum:in wastes, and paid
a consulWlt $150,000 to come up with a solution. He suggested they
barge them to Haiti. That recommendation was approved by D.C.,
but Haiti vetoed lhe idea. Haiti decided though they'd been offered
the wastes of the c:apiLal of the Frtt World, they preferred nOL to be
shat upon.
The integrated planetary economy was supposed to make us
more secure, but has it? Global trade expands and so do planetary
tensions. For example, developing counaies arc now exporting more
and more food to the developed counaics to eam the hard currency
necessary to repay debts that they incurred primarily to build up their
expon indusaies. lndusaial development and utilizacion both have
increased. The developed counaies are in an inlCTesting protecrionis1
free trade dance, a pas de deux of late planelruy economics. in which
each country tries desperately to preserve ac lease some amount of ils
sovereignty and its productive assets. at the same rime trying not to
interfere with free trade and the mobility of resources.
Capilal has become the lubricant for the planetary economy, the
grease that lets the planetary machine functioo. We fervently believe
lhat capital should flow at least as freely as raw maLerinls and
products. Last year 20 times more currency was iraded than was
needed to underwrite world trade.
We are more reluctant to embrace the unimpeded rnobili1y of
the third factor of production: labor. But we're inching up to it Six
months ago the Council of Economic Advisors recommended
abolishing all barriers LO migration in order t0 improve the economy.
JC.cu .(ui.h ) o"rnal. p~ 8
We've lost sight of the underpinning of a society - lhe sense of
community. Mobility is not synonymous with progress. Weve
ignored Benjamin Franklin's advice: those who would trade
independence for security usually wind up with neither. We have
made tha1 crade and in the process have become an increasingly
dependent and insecure people.
But now the rules have changed. Cheap energy and cheap
disposal are no longer available. Despite the recent drop in oil prices,
lhe cos1 of energy has risen more than 1000 percent in the last 15
years. Disposal costs have risen even more dramatically. In 1975 it
typically cost about three to five dollars to dispose of a ton of
garbage. Today in the U.S. it costs between $30 and $50 to dispose
of that ton of garbage. In 1970, to dispose of a barrel of hazardous
waste cost berween $5 and $10 a barrel •• although most companies
just spilled ii on the side of the road. Today, to dispose of hazardous
waste costs abou1 $300 a barrel, and for many companies the
disposed hazardous wasce now has a legal liability attached to it that is
po~ntiallyenormous.
What's imponant to note about these price changes is that they
have changed not because or the real world exhaustion of supply, but
because of a change in political a1tirude. The rising price of oil did
not occur because oil began running out, but because OPEC
artificially limired the supply. The cost of W3SlC disposal did not rise
because we suddenly ran out of dump space but because
communities, by establishing new disposal rules, anificially limited
the supply. We consciously and willfully changed the cost of doing
things the traditional way.
One of lhe enduring legacies of the environmental movement is
that it bas managed to begin to move the price of doing things to the
cost of doing things. The price is what an individual pays; the cost is
what the community pays.
Let me give you a specific example of price versus cost Rock
salt is used 10 de-ice roadways. lls price is very cheap: one to rwo
centS a pound. There is at least one alternative to rock salt, made out
of plant mau~: calcium-magnesium acetate. It can be produced a1
present for abou1 20 cents a pound · 10 to 20 times more than rock
salt. That's ilS price. However, rock salt has some problems. It
corrodes the undcrbody of cars, it corrodes bridges, and ill New
York City, Coosolidnted Edison has found that it causes a great many
problems in the electrical supply system which runs through the
sewers.
Sprlf\9. 1989
�Sewer water, c1111yi11g dhsulved rock sah. can corrode
insulation and lay bare wires. A neoprene gas can be genmued and if
a spark occurs. an explosion can send manhole CO\et'S flying. By
one estimate Consolidated Edison spends S75 million to n:pa.ir
damage caused by rock sah. Thu's part of the cost of roclc salt.
Another cost is polluted groundwater and the devastation of
vcgetntion. New York S!Atc has made an informal esumate that the
acruaJ, internalized cost of rocl salt is 80 ccnlS a pound. Which
de-icer should you buy?
The individual is unt1warc: of this cost. It is the n:sponsibility
of the community 10 make price and cost similar.
Even though the rules have changed, we haven't yet adopl.Cd a
new paradigm, a new way of organiting our knowledge and our
information. One of the principles of that new paradigm should be to
extract the mnximum amounl of useful work ecologically possible
from the local resource base. Thar sounds like a very modest
proposal, but it has profound repercussions. As we begin to obtain
more and more u~ful work, we (ind thnt we've begun to be more
and more self-reliant and self-conlll.incd.
ls self-reliance economical? Whnt do we mean by eoooornics?
Whnt do we value in our economic system? Those who praise the
global economy and trade as the underpinnings of our economic
henlth invariably point to the benefits of comparnrive advantage and
just 11s invariably point to the example of bananas. Surely local
self-reliance docs not mean raising our own bananas in the United
States when the clirruue 1s so much more favorable in Guatemala.
Il may be cheaper to impon those bananas. once again,
depending on what the price is versus the cost. Bananas that come
from Central America cooie from countries that do not pennit unions.
arc produced by companies that do not pay any iaxcs, and are grown
by production methods that have no environmenta: regulations. I
submit that if you ca.lcuhued the number of dollars that have been
spent by the Unil.Cd Sratcs in military intervention in Central America,
and dh'ided by the number of bananas that 11.rC imponed into the
United States, you would find that it's very costly co tmpon bananas
rather 1h:ln 10 grow them you~lr.
When we look at c<:onornic signals, we need ro look at them in
a holistic sense. first, we arc leamio&, as our s)",\tems get ever
larger, tlw the downi.hle rhks get com:spondingly gru.icr. Twenty
years ago when we wked about a cau1strophe, it meant a flood or an
earthquake. Today when we talk about a catastrophe we mean the
end of the ozone layer. the end of the human species. Local
self-reliance also has a downside risk: you could try '>Omething and it
might not work. but the risk Is modest.
Second, locnl self-reliance leads to a diversity of
cxpcnmenmion. As communities experiment with differcn1
technologies, we advance on the learning curve. Third, local
sclf-reliBnCe by definition reduces pollution by improving efficiency.
Fourth, local sclr-rcllancc Is economical because It recycles money
internally for more productive purposes that would otherwise have to
be spent on maintaining the system. A crude estimate that r made
recently :;uggcstcd that 15 years ago the United States was spending
between one and three percent of its overall income for system
maintenance and cleanup. Today we're spending almost 15 percent
of our income fOI' that purpo~.
And finally. an advan1.1gc of local self-rcli.tncc is that we begin
10 channel our ingenuity into developing new bodies of knowledge
that may be appropriate 10 a world that is in a vef} dlITcn:nt cond1tioo.
The technologies that we're developing 1n North America, for
example, art technologies appropnatc to ruuions that arc resource· rich
and pcople·poof. But ISO percent of the world's popufauon li\lcs in
countries that 31C rc~·poor nnd peoplc·nch.
ff you try 10 make the United State~ !>Clf-~ufficicnt or
sdf·reli:mt, the technologies you develop tO do so will be neither
appropnaic nor comp:inble wnh the needs of dc\•eloping nat.tons.. Bui
if you move towazd m:tking our tknsely populated and rcsou~-short
cities sclf·rcliant the i«hnologicsdcvc:lopcd \I.Ill be appropnate to a
resource-poor 1.1.orld. The kno1.1. lcdge generated can become a fll!ljor
export commodity.
But the pnmary benefit or local sclf·rcliancc J~ not economic;
it's psychological and ~oc1nl. II improves decision nuldng because
the costs or the decision fall on the smne community. We do not
separate the productive process over long.dhtllllC~ Psycho.logicall)'.
we improve the setf-<XX1fidencc 11nd socunty of our commuruues. We
begin to miniaturize the economy. h means achieving v.hat Fritz
Schumacher, one of the great cconomim of our time, dreamt of:
local productton tor local markets from local rcsourct$.
SprU\9• 1989
ls that theory or is that pr3Cticc? ..yeu: it rums out that in ~c
scrap metaJ industry, the scale of producuon IS much smal~ than 111
the raw matcrittls industry. The best ex.ample J know of is 1he steel
industry, where the newest technology is called the mini-mill. They
used to be called neighborhood mills. but the industry decided t.h:u
that would rais.c the image or Mao 1.e-<long's backyard fumaus. aod
they didn't feel this was good advertising.
Miru-mills use 100 percen1 scrap, and arc very sm:all- 200.000
tons a year average produc1ioo. A raw ore-based, vcnically
integrated steel mill produces between two and three million ions a
year. The healthiest. fastest-growing pan of the steel indu~try is
based on scnp that comes from regional matb:ts and products often
sold regionally.
Another example 1~ the chemurgy movement, created SO yean
ago by scienlisti-. from around the world concerned with using the
then-large agriculrural surpluses lb mdustrial products. In 1932. the
ltalian ambass3dor 10 Oreat Bnlllin arrived at the coun of St James
dressed in a sun made or milk. That is, Italian scientists had
discovered how to weave the casein in milk into clolhes.
Tn 1941, Henry Ford, a devotee of the chemurgy movement,
unveiled his biological car. The car body was made or soybeans. lhe
fuel came from com, and the wheels were made of goldenrod. The
soybean plastic body weighed hlllf as much as a steel-bodied car, so
the car was more fuel·eflic1cnt. lf you dented it modestly, the dentS
could be knocked back out. The C11r was wanner in the winter and
(COISinuoj ... pq• lO)
Green C ily
11
How-To 11 Mnnual---Just Published!
"Cities need to be<ome more 'green'. They must be
transformed illtu places that are life-enhancing an<l
regenerarfre." • PelCr Berg
<:rr~a Ci11 as a "how-to• m~nual (Of mdlv1<tUllts and O(JJ.n11AllOns
antcmo1ed an a :iuswnablc future. tis intnl3C i.s &hat urban att.aS Cllll Cl.isl
lunnonlou\I)" with na111nll 1ysu:im • :md 111nctudca bolb practical mid visL;xury
:aw1tcut1on1 lh11I •re uppllc•btt 1;; ny ci17 or 1ino11. lbcte ts also 1
~ 1ts11ng of volllllUlet o.:uv11a with i:lc:a. llbout gctllftS: wried and womns
0
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31251, Son 1'111nt11COCA 9413t
�POPLAR APPEAL
written and illustrated by Doug Elliott
W hen I tell northerners Lhat 1 built my house almost
entirely of poplar, including the framing, rafters, interior
panelling, and exterior siding, they seem confused. When I go on
to say that there arc a 101 of old log cabins in 1hc Carolina
mountains built from large poplar logs. they look a1 me like I'm
crazy.
I'm finally learning that to a nonhcmer, the word "poplar"
refers to the aspens and other related trees whose wood is light,
soft. and vinually useless for house construction. After a bit
more discussion, we finally ge1 our terminology straightened out,
and I get the response, " Oh, you mean 'tulip tree'".
Yes, this magnificent tree has many names and even more
uses. It is not a crue poplar, but was so named because iis leaves
are attatched to its branches by long petioles (or leaf stems) that
allow the leaves to move m the breeze in a manner not unlike that
of a quaking aspen.
The tulip poplar is actually in the Magnolia family . ' l ts
scientific name, Liriodendron tulipifera, translates roughly to
m~ "tulip-bearing lily tree". This is a fitting name for the ttee
because itS flowers look like a combination of a tulip and a lily.
They are a light greenish yellow and each of the six petals has a
blaze of orange at its base.
OUJ ofa giant tulip tree
A grem gay blossumfalls on me;
Old gold andfire iu petals are.
Ir flashes like a/al/Ing swr.
- Maurice Thomas
A large tulip poplar lit up wilh hundreds of these large,
cup-like blooms in spring is a magnificent sight indeed.
The tulip poplar is the king of the magnolia family. 11 is
considered to be the tallest hardwood tree in North America. In
the old forests of the southern Appalachians il has been known to
attain a height of 200 feet with a straight ttUok 1en feet in diameter
and clear of branches for eighty to one hundred feet .
The largest tulip poplar on record is the "Reems Creek
Poplar" in Buncombe County. It was I98 feet 1all with a ttunk IO
fcec I I inches in diameter four feet above the ground. When it
was burned in April.1935, it was believed to be the largest tulip
poplar in the world, possibly over a thousand years old.
"But despite the splendor of its dimensions. there is
oothing overwhelming about the Tuliptree, bm rather
something joyous in ilS springing straightness, in the
candle-liU blaze of its sunlit flowers, in the fresh green ofus
leaves, which being more or less pendulous 011 long slender
sralks, are forever IW'ning and rusrling in the slighres1 breeze;
this gives the tree an air ofliveliness, lightening iJS grandeur.
So even a very ancieltl tUlip tree has no look of tld abou1 It,
for not only does it make a swift growth in youth, but in
maturity it maintains itself marvelously free of<kcay.
This look of vitality comes partly from the vivid paleue
from which tire Tullptree is colored. The flowers which give
it 1/Us name are yellow or orange a t base, a liglu greenish
shade above. Almost as brilliant are the leaves when they
first appear, a glossy, sunshiny pale green: they deepen in
tint in summer, and in awwnn tum a rich, re1oicing gold.
Even in winter the tree is still flOt UJllldorned.for the .•.cone
remal'ns, candel/Jbrum f as/Uon, erect on r/le bare twig
...(1111Iil) all the seeds have.fallei1."
- DoNJld Culross P~
Each of the seed cones 10 which Pcauic refers can produce
l 00 or more seeds. Each seed is located a1 the end of a
blade-shaped wing, called a samara, which keeps it airborne. On
windy days 1hcse seeds whirl like tiny helicopters and are
dispersed over great distances. Because they are released
gradually all through the winter, the seeds arc important to
wildlife. They are ca1cn by many kinds of birds as well as by
squirrels, chipmunks. and other small rodenlS.
On a bright snowy day rwo friends cross-countty skiing in
the Pisgah National Forest were surprised to see a white-footed
mouse scampering all over I.he snow, so busy collecting and
devouring freshly shed tulip poplar seeds that ir seeme~
eomple1cl y unaware of their presence.
Old Uses
Indians had many uses for the rulip poplar. Us.ing fire and
stone tools, they carved dugout canoes out of large straight
sections of the ttunks and taught pioneer se1tlers the an. One of
the first accountS of this was in 1590 in Thomas Harriot's brief
and true report of the new-found land of Virginia:
" ... rite irrhabitams that were neere 10 us doe comrtlQnly
make tlleir boars or Canoes of the fomi oftrowes (troughs), only
with the helpe of fire , ltarcl~IS of stoMS and shels; we have
known soml! being so great ...tluu they have carried well XX men
at once besides much baggage· 1/ie timber being greor, ta/,
streight, soft, lig/11, & yes tough ...".
Captain John Smith in 1612 reported canoes large enough
to hold 40 men.
Daniel Boone made such a canoe 60 feet long, capable of
carrying five tons. Into it he loaded his family and all their
possessions and in 1799 they floated from Kentucky down the
Ohio River and on into what was then Spanish territory. The tree
is still known as "canoewood" in some areas.
Poplar blossom time is very important to beekeepers. The
poplar is one of the most dependable sources of nectar in the
Southeast The yield of nectar per bloom is possibly the highest
of any plant on the continent and has been calculated at an
average of 1.64 grams - or about one third of a teaspoon - per
flower.
During a favorable season, poplar nectar is secreted so
abundantly that honey bees and other insects cannot carry i1 away
as faSt as it appears. Sometimes one can feel the nectar dripping
down like a gentle sticky rain when sranding under a blooming
wlip tree in a light breeze. (People who park their shiny new cars
under tulip trees often complain about this.)
Because the poplar blooms early in the season, many
honeybee colonies are not strong enough 10 fully utilize the
abundance. For StrOng hives, however, harvesLS of 100 pounds
of hooey per hive have been recorded during just the three week
poplar bloom. The honey is dark in color and is sometimes called
Spf'tn9. 1989
�"black poplar honey". When held up to the light, however, it can
be seen tha1 it is actually a deep amber-red in color. Though it is
not as light as locust honey nor as sought-after as sourwood
honey, it has a rlch full-bodied flavor that can sweeten fruit
salads, yogurt, tea, and other beverages. Poplar honey goes well
on pancakes, waffles, cereal, biscuits, cornbread, and other
baked goods. Rarely a day goes by that I don'1 eat some.
If you want the ultimate tulip-poplar-tasting experience, sip
the nectar straight from the flower like the bees do. You need to
find a freshly opened blossom within reach. Pick or lower the
blossom carefully without josrling it. Then lick. the drople1s on
the inside of the petals, and taSte tha1 ambrosial Sometimes the
nectar collects in a puddle on one of the lower sepals. If the air
has been warm and dry, the nectar will often be thick like syrup.
After one taste, you will know you have imbibed the nectar of the
gods!
In European gardens the tulip poplar is one of the favorite
"exotic" American ornamental shade trees, and it has been so for
mOTC than 300 years. In fact, the tulip poplar was first described
botanically in 1687 from a specimen that had been brought from
the New World and was growing in an English garden.
In the early part of the 18th century John Lawson,
Surveyor-General of North Ol.rolina, reponcd a hollow tulip
poplar "wherein a lusty Man had his Bed and Household
Furniture, and lived in it till his labor got him a more fashionable
MMsion." Of course the senler's "more fashionable mansion"
would probably have been no more than a log cabin made of tulip
poplar logs. There is many an old tulip poplar log cabin still
standing today and new ones arc still being built
Using Poplar Lumber
The first significant cutting of poplars in the new world
was by settlers who were clearing ground for farming. They
knew that where the tulip poplars grew, the soil was the richest.
Today this still tends to be true. Ginseng hunters look for stands
of tulip poplars when SC'Jnning distant mountainsides in search of
the moist soil that characterizes good ginseng habitat
lt was not until two decades after the Civil War, when the
r:>ilroads began 10 penetrate the rugged mountainous areas of the
Southern Appalachians, that the huge poplars and other southern
hardwoods were harvested. In those days only trees over 30
inches in diameter, each yielding more than 400 board feet in
lumber, were accepl.ed at the mills.
In some areas tulip poplar grows in almost pure stands. In
1912, a tract of land near Looking Glass Rock in Transylvania
County yielded 40,000 board feet of tulip poplar lumber per acre.
Nowadays loggers are pleased IO get 10,000 board feet per acre.
Foresters call tulip poplar a hardwood because it is a
broad-leafed tree, like oaks and maples. Pinc, fir and other
conifers arc called softwoods. The wood of tulip poplar
however, is as soft and workable as white pine. Because the
extensive heanwood is a yellowish tan in color, it is known as
"yellow poplar" in the lumber business. The sapwood is creamy
white and has been used as interior panelling. When used in this
capacity, i1 has been called "whirewood". Because of its lighmess
and strength. ii is used for boxes and crates. Yokes for oxen
were often made from tulip poplar, because it was so easily
carved. lt was one of the favorite materials for building aircraft in
the days when airplane bodies were built of wood. Poplar wood
has the ability to return to its normal shape after being
compressed under great pressure. This property accounts for the
wood's popularity for building barrel bungs.
Poplar lumber is used extensively in the furniture-making
industry. Its porosity and ability to take glue makes it an ideal
core upon which to glue fine wood veneers, and, because it
talces a polish beuer than any orher native wood. poplar wood is
itself often used as a veneer.
Kiln-dried yellow poplar wood makes a good framing
lumber for house construction. It is moderately lightweight, yet
stronger than spruce, fit; or white pine. Unlike the whole poplar
logs used in cabin construction. milled, dry poplar lumber has
little tendency to split when nailed. The Nonh Carolina Building
Code accepts graded poplar lumber as a framing material.
However, it has been infrequently used in recent years because of
the.abundance of low cost softwood timber, such as Douglas fir
and spruce, shipped in from the western Sl4tes. As the supply of
western softwoods decreases. tulip poplar may come back into
more common use.
Dead and Rotting Wood
Tulip poplar is also valuable when dead and rotting. The
stumps decay quickly and provide an ideal habitat for various
wood boring beetles. These beetles and their larva are one of the
favorite foods of the majestic pilca1ed woodpecker (often called
"wood hen" by mounroin folks). The pileated woodpecker is so
named because of its brilliant red crest. It 1s our largest
woodpecker. almost as big as a crow. These and other
woodpeckers regularly visit decaying tulip poplar. and some
people purposely cut poplar slumps high or use the Jogs in
gn:rden beds near the house in order to artmct them.
Dead tulip poplar is also the favorite growing medium for
cenain fungi. most notably the delec1nble oyster mushroom
(Pleurorus osrrearus). Oys1er mushrooms arc one of my favorite
'Aild mushrooms. l learned to identify them by Clll'Cfully studying
them in mushroom field guides. They arc f.urly easy 10
recognilC, hence they are one of the safest of the edible wild
mushrooms. They grow in cluster:., usually out of the sides of
logs or stumps. They vary from a creamy. "oyster" whi1e to 1.1n
or gray in color and arc distincbve because the gills run down the
entire length of the stem. They arc delicious in soups. on p;ista.
and can be saut6ed and gently stewed lO make an elegant side
dish. Once l had oyster mushrooms fried in fritter batter, and
(conunucc1cmJllil&e30)
they actually tasted like oyster mttcn..
~'°"""
J--'
9"'JS t t
�The bark of the poplar tree can be remo1Jed in the spring
and early swnmer and has been used in many ways. Large sheers
of Ir were used by the Indians as CO\'trings for wigwams,
wickiups, lodges, and orher living quarrers. In the Nonfl
Carolina mountain.s, poplar bark has bun used as siding on
frame houses. When I first disco11ered it on some homes near
Burns11ilfe in Yancey County, I was suuclc by ir.s rustic, }'et
eleganJ beaury.
As I was building my own house at the time, I wonted to
/ind ow how poplar bark siding wa.f made and how long it wollld
last. Wizen l asked around, however, it seemed tlw.t most of the
builders of these hauses Jw.d long since passed on, but t~y had
left a legacy ofpoplar bark. siding thol was sdll holding up well
qfter 70 or more years.
1 finally found one older man who was a poplar bark
crafts11w..n, and he tk.scribed tlie process UJ me. In early swnrner
when the "sap's running", large sheers of the bark are removed
from mediwn-sized trees. The bark is carefully pried off tlie trunk
with a to0I know11 as a "tan bark spud". This tool hark.ens back to
the days w}ien the collecting ofoak, chestnut and hemlock bark
was o pan ofevery timber cutting operation. The bark was sold
to tanneries as a source of tannic acid. A spud could be
Improvised mu of a stout curved stick with a chisel-like edge
carved on one end. Those made by blacksmiths look somewhat
like a small-lieaded spade.
After 1/ie bark is remo11ed, it is cut illro large rectangular
sheets, taken ro a barn or other dry p/act and "stacked and
stickered" like green lumber with na"ow strips ofwood between
each sheet of bark to allow air to circulate. Rocks or other
weights pilled on rop of the stock ofbark en.sure that the sheets
stay flat and do not curl up as they dry After a month or two of
drying, rhey can be cut 10 length and nailed like slung/es onro the
building.
Armed with th8se minimal instructions. and a lift·long love
of tulip poplar, I knew I had to onempt co/leering bark 10 cover at
lea.rt part ofmy house. A friend who was building ms own lwuse
was about to CUI some poplars on his land 10 use as suppon
beams. He told me that if I'd help him cut them and haul them
down to the building site, he'd help me get the bark.
The first tree we/tiled was aboUI afoot in dianieter, and it
fell uphill. We trimmed off the upper br01iches, until we had a
length ofclear trunk abou1 30 feet long. With 1he chainsaw, we
mode one long CUI throught the bark down the entire length ofth4
l.og. Then, staningfrom the bonom, with one of us on eilkr side
of the log, wt wenr at it with the bark spuds, ourf111gers, hate/let
blades and whatever else we collld improvise to genJly pry the
bark from the log.
. .. -
TIU! nt•wly formed cambium layer benn•e11 the bark and the
sapw(l(Jd was sofr, slippery and Yer)' juics. As the: bark gave way
10 our efforts arul .tepararedjrom ti~ rrunk, it made a slurpy
hissing noise. !Ve gradll(l//')! worked our Wll) up the log . The
bark was coming ojf bc:outifully. When wc:j1r1ally reached the
11pper end oftlu: log, tire remaining section f1f the bark StpcJrated
wirh a rtsowuling hollow "pop"
We stood up and ~ere congrarularing ourselves on a job
well dmu:, when we heard a noise. lt>okinR down we sow our
newly-skinned log heading off down the hi/IT ltsfreshl)• removea
bark had created a trough t/IQJ was slick.er tlllJll any bobsled run,
and b>· rhe time that log left that piece of bark, it had picW up a
terrific amo1u11 of speed and momenlltm.
It we111 careenin,g down the mountainside, and all we co11Jd
do was watch in astonisl11T1enl as thoJ log leapt over rock ledges
and crashed through thic~ts. It fi111Jlly .rropped uh0111 fl!ry yards
down the hill when i1 collided with a srump jusr above rhe house
.tire.
We breathed a huge sigh of relief. If it had nor been
sropped by the s111mp, that .flippery bauering ram would hove
done considerable damage to rhe ho11se founda1io11. Afrer rhar, we
senved a rope to each log before we removed ilS bark.
I found ow larer rluJt mountain loggers hove a word/or a
log sliding down a nwu111ainside. TluJt log is nball·hootin'," and
it is recognued as a serious danger in logging steep f1W11n1al11
,f/opes during spring and s1unmer. As one old logger told me,
'Them poplar logs is bad/or that. Wilen the sap's up, that bark
can slip off a log you're dragging and if tha1 log gets loose and
goes a balf-Jwotin' down the mou111ain, buddy, 'hit can kill a
ma11l"
The bark of small poplar trees can be scored and folded
into carrying 11essels ofall sizes from berry baskets to backpacks.
/11dia11s daubed the seams with pine pitch and used them as W(ller
buckets.
I was first introduced to bark basketry by my mountain
neighbor and friend Paul Geouge, wlio has been mak.i11g baskets
for years. I was enchanted by the way he explained their simple
practicalily;
"So you've been out fishing all morning .following the
creek up in.lb the nwuntain.t. You're cau:hlnJl some of 1/iem nmive
speckled trour, bUJ afrer a while the srream gets too small. So you
call it quir.s and head up onto the ridge/or rhe long walk home,
There you TUii into the biggest patch of ripe huckleberries you
halle ever seen.
~You'd 1011e to take some of them berries lwme, hut you
ai11'1 go11101hing to carry 'em in. Whor collld you do?" Paul asks
wirh a twinkle in his eye. "Well, if you knew how 10 make a
berry basker, you'd just find you a young poplar rree, make you
a poplar bark basket, and tote tllUn berries home. Now they'd
taste mighry g()()d after a fish dinner! ...
Between the ower layer of the bark and the sapwood is a
layer rich in fibro11s vascular material known as bast. When
rorred under controlled condirfons it can be used to mah ropes.
twine and other cordage. Ir was high/}' valued by Native
~ricansfor rhese tiles
Poplar bark has also been 11sed medicinally as a tonic and a
remedy/or fevers, stomach ailments, dysentary, rhe1unari.sm and
gour. It is a source oftulipiferine, an allt:aloid that acrs as a heart
stimulanr.
/
2
! ff.'"
• Doug Elliou's most recent book, (that includes step-by-s1ep
instruetions on how to make a rulip poplar bark basket) is entitled
Woods/ore and Wildwood Wisdom. It can be ordered from him
at Possum Productions; R1 1, Box 388; Union Mills. NC 28167
for $10.00 post paid.
Sprl·"'J· 1989
""''
.... -
�CLEAR SKY
a drawing by James Rhea
The concept for the drawing derives from my years
growing up in the southern foothills and hearing Cherokee
follclore, and being fascinated by their lifestyle and contributions.
I have always been inspired by other culrun:s, especially so called
primitives. This picture is pan of a series of portraits of healers or
philosophical leaders, who arc inspirational to their people,
representing cultures throughout the world.
From that I envisioned a change of bean from a life of war
and bloodshed to one of service and ~ce. This choice was
indicauve of several individuals who laid the foundation for the
later culturnl flowering of the Cherokees.
Clear Sky is more of a composite of an ideal figure lhan a
definite ponrait. The Cherokee people in the late l700's were in a
state of despair and desperation because of the encroachment
upon their lands and military defeat by European scnlcis. SC\'Cral
individu:tls came to the forefront to encourage and inspire their
people. To the Cherokee. they were lcnown as beloved persons.
both men and women. They felt a need for a transition or
integration into white society, but at the same time they hoped to
retain the best of their past for cultural survival.
Clear Sky's dress is typical for the time. He wears a blue
EngltSh bro3dcloth shin and has a Spanish trade blanket around
his waisr. The necklace is wampum with a silver gorget. The
eamngs are archaic beaten copper with slit earlobes. The hair is
trimmed with a dyed egret feather ornament In his band he holds
a turkey feather (an with natural bead work. a sign of respect and
dignity.
lsk.agua CJtr Clear Sky was listed in Duane K. King's book
CMrolcee Indian Na1ion as being present and signing a document
protesting the tt'Catment of Chickamauga Cherokees by the
Americans. The petition was sent to King George m of England
aslcing his government to intervene. At the time of the signing, or
thereabouts 1789-1791, he changed his name from NeMnoataah,
or "Bloody Fellow" to lsk.agua. "Clear Sky."
Spr~nAJ.
I used several sources Ill compiling his dress, ornaments
and general demcaner. but the most informative was the JnditlJIS
of the Southeastern Un11ed States by John R. Swanton,
Smithsonian Anthropology.
James Rhta lives in an old farmhou.st in a rural pan of
Cabarras CoUllt)'. Ht is illlertsttd in organic gardening and
environmental issul!S and spends time canoeing and hiking for
inspiration and peace of mind. His artwork includes tM subfecrs
of wildlife as well as portraits. "In gentral" he says •1 favor
world peace and holistic liftstyks".
,/
1989
Xat-~ )o\UnoL ~ 15
�II
a
Early, al tine o'clodt IWO sbocb ol-an
anbqaUe Wlft felt. Tbc boule D
cuM:d mid
ew:rytbing WU ID mowmelll.
The bcns fell to the paid fJOm lheir room
ud set up a pi.tifol cry.
You cm see chat the white people mR
diffaalt bc:ings from us, we are made
or.red clay. they of white sand.
About lbe J'Cll' 1811 IOIDC of the
Cleroba cbamed ud Olha'S
RCtiwd. in various ways.
cQ11111mictricw from lhe Oral
Spirit. all lr:Dding IO discredit die
ICbane ol c:ivilization.
See 10 ll dw you get back your old
Beloved Towns.
Yoor mother is not pleased you punish
each other so ha1d.
I have told you what the Gn:ac Spirit's
will is, and you are 10 pass on iL
la on:tcr that you might know bow things
want to tell you
what happened bcrc in the Nation ju,st the other
day.
~Pl in die Wkl IDday, I
Jusr dne rughis ago I was at a Wk in
C>o&1mally. To tha1 place came~ man and two
women who to1d that while they were on 11
journey, Ibey came eo an unoccupied house near a
hill called Rocky Mountain and enlCttd it in order
to spend the night thcte.
Just as it had become dark, they heard a
violenl noise in che air.•.As !hey went outside to
sec abou1 ii they saw a whole crowd of Indians
~g on I.be hill from the sky•...
nding on small black horses...their leader
beating a drum. .•came very close.• .They were
much frightened .•.•.
"Don'1 be afraid. we arc your brothers
and have been sent by the Great Spirit
10 spcalc co you.
The Great Spirit is dissatisfied that you
arc n:ceiving the white people into your
lnnd•.•..
You sec that the hunting is gone, you
are planting lhe corn of the white
people. go and sell ii back to them and
plant Indian com and pound it in the
manner of your forefathers. do away
with the mills.
The Mother of the Nation h~ fOtY.lccn
you. •. her bones are being broken
through the grinding. She will return co
you if you put the white people out of
lhe land and return to your fonncr
manner of life.
If you don't believe my words then
look up at the sky."
They did and saw the sky open...an
indescribably beautiful light and in it four white
houses.
"Such houses you are to build in your
Beloved Towns...
for white men who can be useful to
the Nation.. . ."
I mn not Ible IO delcribe lhe creat
perplexity into which we C11D11 Jasa ...L
Our dwelling bowie was in die most violent
mDVellXIH IO lhu it seemed IO be Deir II> be
falling in.
.. .a strongviolent noise beard
from the W.N.W. _ .and stteaks of
l.ighlning.....
This morning between 7 and 81>'c1ock we
felt tw0 more shocks without the sli1thtcst noise.
...our house was r:rembling..•the roof moved.
The m:es were in movemen1 wilhout !he
slightest wind.
It is true, the white people must all go from
lhe Nation; boWevcr, 4 smiths, S()tne school
ceachers a.rid those who arc building mills
for us a.re to be toleralbd. but later. they too
must return to their own country..•..
Some of them anribuce the occurrence
co the sorcerers; some, to a large snake
which must have crawled under their house;
some to the weakness and old age of the
eanh which will soon cave in.
. •.they held a grand feast and celebrated a
great medicine dance. .• ..
. . .if they believed and obeyed, then game
would abound, the white ll1!ll1 would
disappear. . • .•
.• .instead of beef and bacon they would
have venison, and instead of chicken they
would have turkeys.
. . •we heani today from a traveler
tb:u in Taloni. •. thiny miles from here
along the road to Georgia. in a field 13 sink
holes appeared as a result of the earthquake.
the largest of \\<hich is 20fcet deep and 120
feet in circumference and is. • .full of
gn:enish water.
. . .he would like
to know whether
lhe end of 1hc world
were not near. .•• •
sprin9. 1989
�J
...many lndians believe that the white
people were responsible because they had already
taken possession of so much of the Indian land
and wruned still more.
The Great Spirit is angry...and be wanted
to put an end to it through eanhquakes.
, Soon after the eanh had tremble4 an Indian
was silting in his house in deep thought, his
children were lying sick in front of the fire.
...a tall man appe~ clothed entirely in
the foliage of ihe trees, with a wrca1b on his head.
..carrying a small child in his ami.~ and had a
larger child by the hand.
"The small child on my arm is the
s
ClJC:it Spirit.
l am not able to tell you whether the
Great Spirit will soon destroy the
earth or not.
1be Great Spirit is not pleased that
tbc lndillll$. have sold so 111uch land
to the white man.
:rugalo, wl!K:I\ is now possessed by
white people, u; the r~t place the
Great Spirit created.
There in a hill he placed the firs& fire.
for all fin: comes from the Great
Spirit.
. . .the white people have built a
house on th3t hill. They should
ab:lndon th~ place; on thru hill there
~hould be grass growing. only then
will there be ptaee.
...the Indians no longer thank the
Great Spirit before they enjoy the
fust fruits of the land. They no
longer have dances in his honor
before they eat the first fruit~.
You arc sad because you thin.le your
childn:n m ill, they are not renlly ill.
but have only taken in a. little dust.~
•.. he gave him two small piece5 of bark from a
certain tree ••• and told him to cook them and to
give the drink to his children. and from that they
became weU right then.
7
...the residents of one wwn fled into the hills and
tried to crawl into hiding in the ho!~ of lhe rocks
in order to escape the danger of I.he hail stones, the
size of half bushels. which were to full .••..
...numbers of the aibe.. .abandoned their bees.
their orchards, their slaves, and everything else
that might have come to them through the white
man, and...took up their toilsome march for the
mounwns of Carolina.
..•mills. clothes, feather beds and iables
- worse still •.. books, and domestic cats!
This was not good· theieforc the buffaloes and
other game were disappearing. The Great Spirit
was angry. and had withdrawn his protection.
The Cherokees must return to the customs
of their fathers. They must kill their cats, cut
shon their frocks, and dress as became Indians
and warriors. They must discard all the
fashions of the whites, abandon the use of any
communication with each other except by word
of mouth, and give up their mills. their houses,
and all the ans learned from the white people.
~ Oicrokecs arc at this time in a
rcmarlc.able manner - occasioned by the late
shocks of the eanh ·endeavoring to appease
the Anger of the Ore3t Spirit
They have revived thcnr religious
dances of ancient origin to appease the
Anger of the Great Spirit....with 115 much
solemnicy as ever was seen in worship In
our churches. They then repair to the water,
go in and wash. These ablutions arc
intended 10 show that their sins are washed
away and that they are cleansed from all
defilements.
These fanatics or prophelS tell them
that the Great Spirit is :ingry with them for
adopting the manners, customs, and habfo;
of the white people who, they think. are
very wicked.
Some of the females an: mutililting
fine muslin drcsses and arc told that they
must discontinue dancing n:cls and country
dances whieh have become very common
ampn~l the young people.
. . .!here is llllk
...in the space of 3 months the moon
would again become black. and thereafter
hail stones as large as hominy blocks would
fall, all cattle would die Md soon the earth
would come to an end.
A sorcerer said uncil then there would
be peace; how things would be after thnt he
did not know.
that a new earth
will come into being
in the Spring.••..
•• ,it has bc!en revealed by the Great Spirit
th:u there would be an intense darkm~ss and that it
would last three day~ - during which :lll white
people would be snatched away as well as 1111
Indians who had any clothing or household
articles of the white man's kind.•••
•.• they should put aside everything that i:.
similar to the white people and that which they had
learned from them, so that in the darkness the
Great Spirit might not mistake them and snatch
them a~ay.
... many llre doing away with
their household articles and
clothing.•.•
The above ma1trial if parr fJf a /011ger work in
progress. Jr is drawn entirelyfrom actual occounLS
uf the events ~ntitmed, a.s recorded in ltrrers and
diaries from the period, many of wlrich were
locared in rhe Mortn•ian lfrchh'es In
Winsron·Salem, North Carolina.
5
�Imagine what could happen over, say, the next five
years, if similar projects were begun in cities and
communities all around the region and beyond....
A Look at the Black Swan Center
By C.8. Squire
College students encouraging community economic
development in the community that surrounds their campus? Thai
is exactly what's happening in the Swannanoa River Valley. The
effon is being carried out by student-faculty teams from Warren
Wilson College working ou1 of the BlacJc Swan Center.
The Black Swan Center. named for Black. Mountain and
Swnnnanoa, !he two towns in !he Valley it embraces. is currently
located on the Wnrrcn Wilson campus and serves as a community
resouN:e organization for the entire area. A key ob)ective is to
explore how small colleges can "serve as catalysts in their own
backyards for community and ce-0nomic development projec ts,"
according to Black Swan directors Laura Temple Haney and Louise
Solomon.
Initially funded by grants from the Z. Smith Reynolds
Foundation and the Broyhill Family Foundation, the Center
operates with a work/study crew made up of students and faculty
advisers responsible for various individual projects of the Center.
This "work crew". made up of fifteen students majoring in
Sociology, Environmental Studies, Social Work, Political Science,
and English, meets regularly to review their various projects
centered around !he "community economic developmem" concept.
The Black Swan Center grew out of lhe Swannanoa Valley
Projcc1 (SVP), a land-use planning and economic development
study carried out in 1985 by Swannanoa Valley residents and
Warren Wilson College Staff, faculty, and students. Funded by the
Mary Reynolds Babcock Foundation and TV A, the SVP found that
most project participants wanted the Valley to reverse its downward
economic trend "while remaining an essentially rural area wilh a
viable economic base." It became apparent thm what wa!"> needed
was an ongoing community resource center to serve these needs.
Thus, the Black Swan Center was born.
The vital importance of a community planning and resource
center such as this cannot be overestimated. Tf we wish to
preserve and enhance the quality of life here in Kaniah, in ways thar
nre ecologically and economically sound, we can no longer allow
the haphazard and Shon-sighted type of growth and development
that has predominated for decades. The key factor in reversing this
trend and in finding truly workable solutions is to encourage local
initiative, self-reliance, infonnalion exchange, and cooperative
effort. This can be a very powerful grassroots movement, with
far-reaching effects, but it demands susmined local commitment and
involvement. This k:ind of sustained effon can best be supported
JCQti&Qh
Journot pc:M)e
by citizens and businesspeople acting in concen with local academic
institutions. After all, should we not make the mo.st of all of our
available local resources, in order to assure the contin ued
well-being of our communities? Only in this way can we
intelligently deal with the tremendous forces of change that are
confronting us. It is now critical !hat we re-learn and re-create the
an of community - and projects such as the Black Swan Center arc
beginning 10 lay the groundwork for !his crucial renaissance. In
fact, this dynamic pilot project has already achieved tangible
results. Imagine what could happen over, say, the next five years,
if similar projects were begun in cities and communities all around
lhe region and beyond. ...
A key objective is to explore
how small colleges can "serve as
catalysts in their own backyards
for community and economic
development projects" ...
In its first year, the Black Swan Center has been focusing on
three essential components: (I ) A community economic
development class for Warren Wilson students to prepare them to
work in the Center; (2) development of a college work crew made
up of faculty and students which operates and coordin:ncs Black
Swan ruitivitics; and (3) a community-based education course for
Valley residents designed to promote new business ventures,
develop rural leadership Skills and teach community economic
development concepts. AU three components are in place, with the
community-based education course starting in March.
Organalcd by Lisa Waners, a Sociology mnJOr, the course,
"Community Development and the Economy in the Swannanoa
Valley,''. is ~imed at .~elpmg Valley residents (l) "gain the
leadership skills and ab1hoes that can make positive changes in the
lives of the people that live in the Valley; (2) explore the
Swunnanoa Valley community and its resources; (3) understand the
problems facing the local economy; (4) seek: solutions. and; (5)
determine what small businesses might succeed in the Valley."
16
Sprl.n.g, 1989
12
�As Lisa points out. this type of course was designed by the
Highlander Center in Tennessee and has been used in such
co~uniri~s. as Jellico,_Tennessee, and Dungannon, Virginia.
Unlike tradiuonaJ educauon, the course doesn't separate learning
from doing, theory from practice and education from work. "When
Y?U put 'community' in front of 'economic development'," says
Lisa, "it means ordinary citizens revitalizing their communities and
stimulating quality economic development from within rather than
waiting for the 'expens' to do it, or for outside industries 10 come
in and provide jobs." In the long run, "community economic
development doesn't only mean jobs. because ic can aJso make the
difference in peoples' environments and quality of life."
exploring options for municipal structures for the community of
Swannanoa. He is also helping to draft a legal document that can
be used as pan of an offical petition to the state to incorporate
as a township.
Christy Allred, an Environmental Studies major, and
Katherine Crum, a Social Work major, are working with TV A 10
identify fanners in the Valley who are interested in growing
specialty crops such as shiitake mushrooms and baby
watennelons. Two workshops are planned, one in May, the other
in the fall of 1989, that wiU bring Canners from Buncombe and
Madison County together 10 discuss agricultural problems and
trends facing the area and how to effectively market specialry crops.
The 10.week course will be fnciJiiated by Louise Solomon
and Laura Temple Haney, both faculty members at Warren Wilson,
and Marilyn Bass, of the YMJ Cultural Center in Asheville. In the
second part of this course, they will be joined by Tim Richnrds, of
the Small Business Technology Development Center, and Dana
Smith, of the Self-Help Credit Union, who will specifically instruct
participants on how to work with a business idea.
One of the more impn:ssive activities growing out of the
Black Swan Center is a waste management center, directed by
Melissa Gildersleeve, an lntercultural Studies major. Alrendy in
operation on the College campus, the Center includes a processing
pavilion for rccycleable items, including a baler for cardboard and
specially designed "drop-off' bins for recycling glass, cans and
newspapers. The waste management center grew out of a class
exercise in an Environmental Policy cl:iss artd has resulted m the
recycling of much of the 25,000 lbs/yr. of ttash generated by the
collegc--trllSh that had been caned to the county landfill at a cost of
up to Sl2,000/yr. Melissa bcheves that within a couple of years the
college's waste management costs will be entirely covered by
n:venucs from recycling. Her bu.~iness plan includes e~panding the
College's program by establishing five more "drop·off' collection
sues in the Swannaoa Valley, possibly as early as this spring.
While important to carrying out the aims of the Center, the
course in communicy economic development th.is spring is by no
me~ns ~h~ center's sole: agenda_. A small ~usincss development
project is in progress with the rum of "keeping more money in the
Valley" by encouraging businesses in the area to buy from each
other whenever possible, explained Brad Brock. another Sociology
major and one of the Business Development coordinators for the
Center. He added that the Black Swan Center and the Swannanoa
Valley Ch:tmbcr of Commerce have almost completed a business
directory of the Valley with one section made up of chamber
members and the other. "the green pages". listing all valley-owned
businesses.
Brad and his partner. Rebel Bailey, an Environmental
Studies 1113jor and owner of a flourishing backpack business. have
a!so been working with Nonh Carolina REAL Enterprise (Rural
&onomic Alternative Leaming, localed in Raleigh, North Carolina)
10 design a curriculum on developing student-owned enterprises for
Wam:n Wilson College. Fffty people attended a five-pan series of
workshops called "Business Basics''. Post-workshop follow-up
has resulted in consulting sessions with four entrepreneurs with a
"good strong prospect" for getting a business up and running in the
Valley. Still another project for Brad and Rebel is the Stan-up of a
breakfast club, modeled after the Briarpatch program on the west
coast, that will provide networking opponunities for local
entrepreneurs and owners of small businesses in the Valley.
Another Black Swan project, headed by Heidi Erick.son. :in
Environmental Studies and Education major, is a literacy program
with a new twist-worlting directly with the business community to
improve literacy. Heidi explains that those unable to read and write
are often reluctant to tell their employers or their lack of reading
skills. But one area employer, Charles D. Owen m, has agreed to
have a literacy project operating at his plant site, with employees
receiving half-pay for the time they spend on learning to read.
Heidi's project has already trained 12 people at Warren Wilson
College to teach such courses.
Still another project of the Center involves working with the
Alternative Energy Corporation. based 1n the Research Triangle
area, in developing a "Community Energy Campaign~ for the
Valley. This project plans to help weatherize non-profit buildings
anc,1 to audit heat loss in college and community
buildings-including the former Carver Alternative School property
in Black Mountain which the county has just acquired from the
town's Parks & Recreation DepanmenL Eventually, with this
campaign, the Center hopes to help the community save much of
the 40 miJlion dollars a year or so lhat leaks out in energy cosrs in
the Swannanoa Valley.
Dan Scbeuch, a Political Science major, has been working
with Swannanoa Valley residents and the Nonh Carolina
Department of Natural Resources and Co1TUI1un1ty Development in
Sprt.nq. t989
Although all the ~tudents working at the Black Swan Center
have different 'main' projects they are working on. they all have
one thing in common. Each panicipates in one another's
programs... wch as lending the experti~e the1y have gained in
desktop publishing, to knocking on doors of local businesses. to
picking up the College'!\ waste and recycleablcs from around
campus once a week.
For the future, chc Black Swan Ccnu;r hopes 10: organize n
Swannanoa Valley community work day: perhaps relocate the
Center more into the heart of the community: encourage other small
colleges in Appalachia to explore setting up a similnr program. and,
in general. coordinate the community development projects and
courSCS and the starrup of at least one student-run entesprise.
One of the most promising aspects of this entire project is for
the Black Swan Center to serve as a working model for other
insututions in the region. They. too. may want to embark on a
similar cooperative program of community development that., in the
words of the Center's grant application, "will overcome the
'LOwn-gown' barriers that separate so many colleges from their
neighbors."
To quote Gnscom Morgan, son of Arthur Morgan who
founded the Cclo community in Yancey County. and who bjmself
for the last four decades has inspired and assisted the cause of
community through his association with Community Service. Inc.;
"We need fol,k colleges-people's colleges...not jus1 for intellect.uals
or whites, b11t to do what Highlander College (now Clllled
Highlander Center) has done for Appalachia and the South. lf we
had folk colleges 10 which the working class and rural people from
across a region could come and htive association with the
intellecruaJs--then rerum to their local communities with the strength
and conviction of their own culture--tbese different groups of the
common people could reinforce each other.•
Morgan's dream is being rcallz.ed by a group of pioneers:
so~ fifcecn students with very diverse background.<>, two faculty
advisors, and an involved community•..... You are welcome 10 visit
this dynamic center or call for more infonnation.
The Black Swan Ctn1er, 701 Warren Wilson Road, Swanrwnoa,
North Carolina 28778. (704) 299-9306
�wlld lovely days
the wild lovely days
come
with a wind tossed violence
they awaken
a tantalizing bitterness
of memory
the spring morning of lilacs
the wilting high noon
of orange poppies
the late afternoon sun
of autumn marigolds
and now
the great wheel of night
spins with dazzling circles
of blue and gold light
�dancer
the tender talents
of earth swelling
with rapture
birdsong and blue sky
fluttering encore
a thousand thousand
leaves turning
rich dark colors
awaiting
opulent carnage
exalted limbs rising
against dark skies
crucible
answer
I who hurried thru lhe years
running this way and that
sometimes strangely knowing
sometimes weeping beside the road
spent at last, alone
bereft of all I sought
you came to me
slowly without my knowing
you touched me
the stream carries me
my face is wet
I am submerged
I will not let
fear of drowning
darken the bright water
all that rs bright and clear
filters thru the translucent waves
of faith, the ineffable substance
that fills the
yearning crucible
with timeless light
endless peace
Selections from the book Wifd Lovely Days. portraits of moments In time and nature expressed in complementary words and images.
THE POET·
THE PHOTOGRAPH:R;
Ellmboth Griffin Is an artist, poet, and former lawyer residing in
Highlands. Katuah Province.
Gii Leebrick is an environmentally concerned falher, husband, mediator,
photographer, and director of the Appalachian Environmental Arts Center in
Highlands.
�.:•····;••·....................................
.,....
..
....
....
.~~·
~
~
i{ NATURAL \~.
: wORLD :
~
~
~
~
·!
i:
\. ..
:I
..
NEWS
..
..
·~.
.(
.~ ..
"!,
·:.
.:
~~~~~.·~··· · · ~·.·.·.•.•.•.·.·· · · ....~::::::!:
.!·
?·
PANTHERTOWN RESTORED!
Nllllnl World NCWJ Str-i=
In one Inst expression of disdain for
Congress and the Appalachian b1orcgion, the
Reagan administration m the la.~L days of its reign
took away money slated for the pun:hase of the
Pa.nthenown tract high in the headwaters of the
Tuckasegee River.
Through an arrangement with Duke Power
Company, which wants to run a high-voltage
power line across pan of the Panthenown area,
Congress hod appropriated $8 million to buy the
remainder of the propeny for inclusion in National
Forest Jnnds. Under a rechnicaliry the our-going
administration stole away that money. plus $47
million for other land appropriations. to pay the
costS of fighting the famous Yellowstone fire and
other fires that occurred in the summer of 1988 in
drought-soicken western states.
On March 13. 1989, however, the Office of
Management and Budget reversed the order, and
put the money back into the special Land and
Water Conservation Fund, where it is once
available for land acquisition purposes.
It is expected that the Panthcnown purchase
will be able to be completed this summer.
COLEY CREEK IS SAFE!
Systems Research Group, to review the Coley
Creelc plan. The study group pointed out that fuel
prices would have to escalate considerably lO make
the Coley Creek project economically viable.
However, cbe consultants' review found
that the most economical approach would be to
emphasize "demand-side programs." These
programs hcreate" extra energy by promoting
conservation on the pan of utility customers
through steps such as rewarding customers for
efficient energy use pancrns and helping to cut
down on energy consumption by wealherization
programs, promoting energy-efficient appliances,
etc. A more careful and judicious use of energy
reduces the need for increased energy production.
The report showed that through energy
conservation Duke could make avnilable the same
amount of energy that the Coley Creek pumped
storage project would have provided. but at
one-third the cost. The repon outlined five
different demand-side programs and gave
srep-by-srep directions for their implement.arlon.
Bill Thomas, co-chair of rhe Jocassee
Wate~hed Coalition, said, "h could be very
imponant for a company like Duke to stan a series
of pilot programs in energy conservation. Even if
they weren't completely convinced that this was
the best way to go, they should :u least experiment
and find out for themselves what programs wo11ld
work and what wouldn't."
"In September the Nonh Carolina Utilities
Commission will hold a series of six hearings at
locations across the stare to gather public comment
on a proposed least-cost planning rule that will
include demand-side management items. A good
tum-out by people s~ak.ing on behalf of these
measures wouJCI show the COinmission where the
public suppon lies."
The Jocnssee Watershed has obtained a
reprieve from funher depredations by Duke
Power, but efforts continue to gain binding
legislauve protection for the basin through
designation of the Thompson and the \v'hitewater
as Wild and Scenic Rivers. (The Horsepasturc
River already has protected stntus.) Preliminnry
studies have already been completed, and show
very definttely that further srudy is justified.
"We need to g~t legislacors to press the
North Carolina Natural Resoun:es and Community
Development Department to complete their sruclies
so that the lcgislat.ion can proceed," said Thomas.
"We arc asking people interested in the future of
the Jocnssee Watershed to contact their state
n:presentatives and ask them to get involved with
this.''
...AND NOW CHAITOOGA
Duke Power Company has announced that it
is postp<>ning indefinitely the Coley Creek Pump
Storage Project, which would have done
devastating environmental damage in the beautiful
Jocassee Watershed area in the foothills of the
Blue Ridge.
Officially, the company said that a review of
fuel prices and the economics of the pumped
storage alternative convinced them that providing
power by coal plants or combustion turbines was
economically more advantageous. What the
company did not mention was that they had met
stiff resistance to the project every step of the way
from the Jocassee Watershed Coalition, a
broad-based organization of hikers, hunters.
fishermen, and environmental groups. which may
also have influenced their decision. With a grant
from the Babcock Foundation. the coalition had
hired an independent consulting firm, the Energy
~
)o"'nat P • 20
Officials of Rabun County, Georgia and the
Associated Consulting Group are conspiring to
build a jetpon on a mountaintop in the upper
reaches of the Chattooga River, which is
designated as a Wild and Scenic River.
Preliminary design studies of the site
illegally conducted by Associated Cousulting at the
request of the Rabun County government have
detennined that they would need t.o level the entire
mountaintop to make room for the jet planes to
land. The jets would take off and land directly
over the river and roar over remote wild areas in
their flighL
The potential impacts on the Chattooga
watershed would be devastating. They include
massive sedimentation, wildlife habitat
destruction, and noise pollution, as well as the
fouling of the water and air. The remote and wild
character of the Chattooga whitewater run would
be severely degraded by the low-altitude
overflighcs.
The US Forest Service has refused ro talce a
position to protect the "wild and scenic" status of
the Chattooga despite their legislative mandate
under the Wild and Scenic Rivers Act to do so.
The agency has even backed down from an earlier
comrninment to require an Environmental Impact
Statement for actions affecting any Forest Service
site. The American Rivers organization and a
coalition of local citizens is working on behalf of
the river. They say, ''Since t.be Forest Service has
refused to direct the county away from the
Chanooga site, citizen voices are essential to
prevent the Chattooga site from bemg selected.
The county and Associated Consulting are known
to have a bias in favor of the Chattooga site, and
only overwhelming public sentiment against lhe
site can change their minds."
Make yourfeelings known! Write:
Associated Consulting Group
3 I5 W. Po111::e de Leon Ave. (Suite 125)
Decatur, OA 30084
Kenneth Henderson, Forest Supen·i,s()r
Cl111ual100d~e National Forest
508 Oak St. NW
Gainesville. GA 30501
American Rivers
801 Pennsylvania Ave. SE (Suire 303)
Washington. DC 20003
WHAT'S AN EIS?
(or JUDGE HALTS VULCAN)
There will be no rock quarry in Flat Creek nt least not anytime soon.
Vulcan Matenals Company had planned to
dig a 58-acre, open-pit quarry near Weaverville
despite protests from local residents until
Buncombe County Superior Coun Judge Roben
D. Lewis voided Vulcan's state permit early this
'd
year. Some 450 North Buncom be rest ents
snowed up at the last public hearing in October of
1987. Most were against the quarry projecL The
group fonned the North Buncombe Association of
Concerned Citizens, which filed suit against
VuJcan, a Fortune 500 company, and several state
officials. Residents claimed in their suitS tha1 the
mining permit was issued 10 the company despite
evidence from expens that the quarry, which
would have been sited about two miles nonh of
the town of Weaverville, would deplete and
pollute area groundwater.
Spri-n9, 1989
�INCINERATORS THREATEN
AIR QUALITY
Jllmnl World News Service
"Cloudy skies" would be the long-term
weather forecast for meb'OpoliUUl Knoxville and all
points downwind if four new waste incinerators
were to come into operation in the area.
Three proposed incinerators in the
Knoxville area and one that is already constructed
1hrea1en 1he Great Smoky Mounrains National
Park, only 40 miles downwind, and the already
beleaguered mounrains of the Kan1ah province.
Cum:n!ly, air in the Smokies ranks it among the
ten most polluted of all the National Parks. It used
to be that the Park was only "smokey" during the
summer months when natural chemicals from the
forest vegetation combined with panicles in the
air. Now, even on a clear winter day, the view is
noticeably hazy. An estimated 70% of the pall is
due to air pollution.
The Department of Energy (DOE) has built
an incinerator at the K-25 Gaseous Diffusion Plant
in Oak Ridge, Tennessee. According to engineer
John Patton of the Division of Air Pollution
Conttol for the State of Tennessee, it is licensed
under the Toxic Substances Control Act to burn
radioactively contaminated polychlorinated
biphenyls (PCB's) and other wastes which are
generated at the DOE facilities at Oak Ridge,
Paducah, and the Ponsmouth Gaseous Diffusion
Plants. The incinerator bums only propane gas
now, but when it goes on line in the summer of
1989, it will burn 3000 pounds of r.idioactive
waste every hour. A similar incinerator was
defeated in Rocky Flats, Colorado through public
opposition.
A private company mis-named the Safe
Ecology Group is proposing to build another
incinerator on Bear Creek Road in Oak Ridge that
will bum low-level radioactive waste for volume
reduction. According to Lisa Finaldi of the Nonh
Carolina Clean Water Fund, this incinerator will
take low-level radioactive waste from states that
are members of radioactive waste compact
agreements, such as North Carolina and New
York, reduce the volume of the waste, and then
send it back to the states for disposal. The
capacity of this incinerator will be 10,000 pounds
of radioactive waste per hour.
Also in the site selection stage is the East
Knoxville mass burn incinerator that will be
operated by Foster-Wheeler Power Systems of
New Jersey. The proposed incinerator will bum
900 tons of municipal garbage a day.
According to a Solid Waste Authority
spokesperson in Knoxville, "The incinerator and
recycling will be used to decrease landfill
dependency.''
Opponents of the incinerator,
however, declare that incineration will decrease the
recycling incentive, since the operating company
has a flat guarantee from the city and the county
that it will receive a certain amount of waste to
bum 10 produce electricity. Recyclers fear that
quota will be filled by waste that would otherwise
be potentially recoverable.
. Electricity sales will not cover operation and
maintenance costs for rhe incineraror facility. A
group called CARE in Knoxville claims that the
Solid Waste Authority did not compare the cost of
incineration, which will come to $370 million over
a 20-year period, with the coStS of alternative
methods of reducing solid waste, i.e. commercial
Sprl.ncj, l989
and household recycling, baling (compressing
THE FATE OF THE ROSE
garbage), and composting (brush, leaves, etc.).
Even with an incinerator, about 40% of
from• n;iort by N~ Blmhlrdl
solid waste must be landfilled. A new landfill will
Years ago the Agriculture Depanment
be needed in Knox County whether there is an
incincr.1tor or noL Incinerators actually raise the brought the multiflora rose into Virginia for soil
cost of disposal, because incinerator a.sh is a conservation and to attTact wildlife. Now the state
hazardous waste and must be sto1ed using encourages the eradication of this plant and may be
expensive protective techniques in special making a mistake that will tum out to be far more
serious than the spread of the shrubby muhiflora
landfills.
The CARE group also points out that, even bush. Montgomery and Grayson counties have
with air pollution conttols, incinerators pose a passed, and Floyd county is considering,
risk to public health that carries an incalculable legislation to force landowners to keep the plant
cosL The most dangerous chemicals cannot be from scrting seed on their propeny.
Farmers say that the roots of this plant arc
seen or smelled.
hard to lc:ill. Pulling multiflora roots out of the
Finally, next door to the proposed site for ground usually causes tbero to start new plants.
the Knoxville mass bum incinerator, the Dixie The multiflora grows in too many out-of-the-way
Cement Company may bum bai.ardous waste in a places to keep it all cut. Therefore, the st.ate
convened cement kiln.
recommends herbicides to lcilltbe plant - herbicides
that are particularly apt to contaminate
groundwater. Dicamba and 2,4-D arc both on the
list of pesticides which the Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA) considers most lillely to
leach into groundwater. Piclorfam, which is also
on the EPA leaching list, is conrained in the pellets
ofTordon, a restricted-use herbicide.
SLUDGE ISSUE STILL STEAMING
Though 2,4-D is not restricted and is
classed only as a "possible carcinogen," it may
soon be reclassified, because recent studies by the
National Institute of Cancer have shown a link
There is a new development in the bat!le between 2,4-D and cenain types of cancer. As
over the fate of Buncombe County's sewage 2,4-D breaks down, it can form products of
decomposition rhat are more toxic than the original
sludge: Advanced Alkaline Stabilization.
With encouragment from the Buncombe formulation. Like Tordon and Dicamba, 2,4-0 can
County Commissioners, the Buncombe also be contaminated with nitrosamines, which are
Metroplltan Sewerage District (MSD) has agreed cancer-causing. or more immediate concern is the
stress which pesticides put on rhe kidneys and
10 hold a hearing on this waste treatment process,
which mixes sludge with kilned lime dusr other pans of the human body.
William
(quicklime). ~ng pathogens and raising the pH agronomy at Wes1 Bryon, associate professor of
Virginiu University Wiil> quolcd
of the mixture, thus binding heavy metals and
making the resulting material suitable for in the Roanoke TimtS of January 29, 1988 that
herbicides cannot eradicate the multiflora rose and
spreading on farm pastures. The hearing is are not wonh using. He also mentions a natural
scheduled to be held in Asheville on March 21.
rosette disease
Foes of che sludge incinerator say that che control called Missouri. Thiswhich is spreading
this way from
disease, spread by
outcome of that hearing will detennine their future a mite, can accomplish what the herbicides can't
strategy. "If the MSD continues to favor the and kills the multiflora in a few years.
incineration process," said Paul Gallimore of the
(conlinucd on next .-ae}
Long Branch Environmenral Education Center,
"we will push for a review of the Environmental
Protection Agency's health risk assessment that
OK'd the incinerator proposal.
"The EPA assessment is flawed. They
looked at only one possible pathway for airbome
pollution from the incineraror to enter the body by air inhalation - when actually there are four
other possible parhways - through direct
contamination of food, food grown in
contaminated soils, dermal exposure, and
inhalation of contaminared soil or dust.
"After some method - any method - of
sludge treatment is chosen, the next step is to put
pressure on the MSD to righten up industrial
pre-ueatrnent standards for wastes. Carcinogens
and heavy metals should not be allowed to leave
the point of origin regardless of the waste
treatment technology selected."
The MSD has agreed to institure a pilot
operation to tesc the feasibility of composting
sewage sludge no mauer what treatment process is
used for the bulk of the county's wasre.
"This is very positive," said GaJJimore.
"Where an incinerator will give out in 20 or 30
years and have to be completely replaced at great
expense, a composting operation just keeps
turning out the humus. Biological microorganisms
just don't quit."
�(CQn.tinucd from pag$ 21)
MOUNTAIN PEOPLE SAY
"CUT THE CLEARCUITING"
Nanni Wcxld News Savice
The Western Nonh Carolina Alliance
(WNCA) bas launched a public campaign to
Fuade the US Forest Service (USFS) to change
us primary timber management technique,
even-aged management. Under that scheme
patches of the National Forests up to 40 acres in
size an: cut to the ground so that the resulting
regrowth is of uniform size and easier 10 harvest.
Alliance members held an anti-clearcuuing
protest demonstration in front of the Forest
Service headquarters in downtown Asheville.
Banners and signs proclaiming "Cut the
Clearcutting" were hoisted by the protesters who
want the Forest Service to adopt a timber
management strategy that relics heavily on
uneven-aged management, which is based on
careful examination of individual siteS and logging
prescriptions that call for the thinning of
undesirable trees as welJ as the removal of good
sawtimbcr. so that future growcb is improved.
Uneven-aged management requires greater
expertise and auention to detail on the part of
foresters, and the Forest Service claims it docs not
have the budget to suppon these extra demands on
its staff.
Demonsttators lined the sidewalks in front
of the USPS offices with tree stumps to ~give the
flavor of what a forest of stumps looks like," said
WNCA member Monroe Gilmour. Also displayed
was a 90-foot long petition containing over 1,700
.names of Katuah residents opposed to
clearcuning.
The campaign was also carried into local
ranger districts at several meetings held to give
local community members a chance to speak about
proposed clearcurs in their immediate areas.
Over 100 Clay County residents auended a
community meeting in Hayesville to protest
planned clearcutting in their county. Retired
fores1cr Walton Smith, chair of the WNCA Timber
Management Taste Force, told the gathering that
since the clcarcuuing method was iniri:ued the
qualit) of the timber production had substanrially
declined. Smith noted that the growth of sprouted
limber, as found in clcarcuis. was substantially
faster, but produced trees of poorer quality than
trees grown from seed. Sprouts produced a
cross-grain growth that created a weakness in the
lumber, he said.
Smith recently walked scveml clearcuts with
USFS Regional Supervisor Bjorn Dahl. Smith
said Dahl was "quite surprised'' to see a tract under
uncven-:iged management thnt W3S full of young
seedling trees. whereas the clearcut areas were full
of sprouts.
In another meeting with Forest Service
personnel and a.ides to legis!Ative representatives,
150 Madison County residents met to protest
proposed road construction and clcarcuning at the
top of Bearpcn Ridge. The residenis complained
that the road and the clearcutting operation would
cause sedimentation in Hickey Fork Creek and
would destr0y the trout hatchery there. The cold
creek waters offer challenging fishing for rainbow
and native brook trout
The steep. remote forests in the Hickey
Fork Creek watershed ~ovide excellent habiiat for
bears and other wildlife, and the area is popular
with bunters. Many in the assemblage were bear
hunters who were concerned that the new roads
and the clearcutting would cause bears to shy
away &om the area. They were especially alarmed
JGcitilah 'o~Ml P • 22
to learn that a stand of large white oalcs on top of
Bearpen Ridge were t0 be included in the clearcut
The hunters. who were all familiar with the woods
and wildlife in the area. agreed that this .stand was
one of the most imponant mast-eroducing areas in
the region and that it was heavily used by bears.
After hearing their concerns, Frank Roth of the
USFS indicated that he would set aside an acre of
so of the largest trees so that they could continue
10 provide wildlife food.
The WNCA is plannning a "Cut the
Clearcuuing" rally on April 15 at 11 :00 in the
City-County Plaza with music, talks, and
presenta1ion of a protest pe1itioo to USFS
officials.
For copies of the petirion in favor of uneven
-aged forest management, or more informt111on
on the "CUI the Clearct1tting" campaign, write or
aJil:
The Wesrern Nonlr Caro/iM Alliance P.O. Box
18087 Asheville, NC 28814 (704) 258- 8737
To win $50 in the "Ugliest Clearcut Photo
Contest," send entries 10 tlU! Alliance by April I.
Bjorn Dahl, Regional Forester US Porest
Service Box 2750 Asheville, NC 28802
(704) 2574200
.
.............
PEREGRINE FALCONS FLEDGE
While the Natural World News often seems
gloomy. here is a linle light:
Scott Ball. a temporary eml'loyec of the NC
Wildlife Resources Commission's Nongame
Program, perched high up on Whiteside
Mountain, observed lhe first confinned
naturally-bred peregrine falcon to fledge in the
Kal\fah province since 1957.
With the help of volunteer falcon wa1chers,
wildlife biologists found five pairs of peregrine
falcons defending territories at mountain cliffs last
ycor Three of these pairs made nesting attempts.
Two pairs each raised a single chick to fledging
age.
Wildlife biologists seem cau11ously
optimistic. While this level of reproduction will
nol sustain 1he newly-established peregrine
population, these successful auempts may augur
well for the fuwre of this magnificent predator in
Karuah.
Biologisis will continue releases of young
captive-bred peregrines for several more years. but
will release a smaller number each year. ln 1988
18 young falcons were released along the Blue
Ridge near Mt. Mitchell and on Grandfather
Mountain. Biologists have released 63 young
peregrine falcons in the mountains since the
restoration effort began in 1984.
If five breeding pairs can be csmblished in
the Southern Appalachians, the program's
emphasis will then switch to protection and
management of the nesting peregrines.
Excerptedfrom a report by John_ Alderman
\..:
CHEMTRONICS SPEWS POISONS
Toe infamous Chemtronics plant in
Swannahoa. North Carolina has dumped hundreds
of thousands of potinds of a highly toxic industrial
solvent into the air over the past several months,
despite pleas of a company chemist to install
equipment that would h.ave caught 90 percent of
the chemical.
.
The plant has released 256 596 pounds of
tetrachloroclhylcne, which is acutely or chronically
toxic. according to \he US, Environmental
Protection Agency '<EPA). The .solvent i~ also
believed to destroy ozone in Jiu; high atmosphere,
allowing increased pen~~at1on 9[, l;larmful
ultra-viol~t radi;nio.o from ~he sun.
Terrachloroethylene is also a suspected carcinogen
and contribwes 10 s111o,g and air poJtutfon close to
the Eanh's.$urface.
.J
•
,
Cbemtronics senior sc1entiSt, John Tylldall.
who charted the releases. said a11
9ne.poln1t 'The
cnvfronmental . impac~ (<~f the (eleases) is
enormous. and wt:. need \o act on this situation
immediately." He has since beep laid off by
Chemtronics.
Plans were approved for the installation of a
recovery system to capture the escaping solvent,
but Chemtronics' parent company, Halibunon
Corporation. never advanced the money to pay for
the lnstaUa1ion, according to a ~ll_en;llronics
official.
rn other recent and' rel~ued news,
negotiauons between the companies responsible
for dumping toxic industrial wastes at the
Chemtronics Supcrfund site in Swnnnanoa have
broken down, delaying clean-up of the former
military munitions plant there. according to the
EPA. Chemtronics, along with former owners
Northrop Corporation and Ce~nese Corporaiion
cannot agree on who should pay how much.
The breakdown in ncgotialions means a
delay of months and possibly years in the clean-up
operation if the disagreement 1s submiued to
litigation. according to EPA official John
Bomholm.
Celanese Corp. bought the now-polluted
propcny in 1959 and made explosive!\, solid
propellants, shells, rocket motors, and chemical
agents the.re. Northrop Corp. bought 1he facility in
1965 and continued the military contracts. Jn 1971
Ainronics. Inc. leased the site and continued the
work through its Cbemtronics division.
Chemtronics bought the plant from Northrop in
1978, about the same time the EPA discovered the
presence of more than 50 organic chemicals which
had leaked into the surrounding soil and
groundwater.
In another recent corporate shuffle, the
Halibl.lrlon Co. has dissolved its Chemtronics
branch. and has turned the Swannanoa plant over
co its Je1 Research subsidiary
"We'rl! going LO be a lot more responsible
company environmentally," said Bob King, Jet
Research vice-president. "Jct Research makes
warheads and other explosives for the military, but
the processes will not involve the release of
dangerous substances into the air and
groundwater, as was the practice at the plant for so
long."
-SprLnq, 19U
�REVIEW:
Sacred Land Sacred Sex RapIUTe ofthe Deep:
Concerning Deep Ecology and Celebrating Life
by Dolores LaOuipelle
(Pinn Hill AIU; Silvcncn, CO; 1988)
'7n this kind of learni11g, there is no knowledge, in the usual
stnse, to process and convey; thert is instead a deepening of
anenlion to the pattern ofall lift around you, so tltat you ~gin to
/Jw 'JOllT life accordUtg to thal pattern.• - DoWu LaC•Ue
"Biorcgion" is a word of power. It encompasses what
scientists call an "ecosystem," but goes beyond the mechanistic
limitations of scientific nomenclature. A bioregion is clearly a
community, a land alive - plants, animals. soil, water, sunlight, all
the elements of life womng tOJCther. each sustaining the others.
"Bioregion" is a word with the nng of rightness to it.
The word "biorcgional" follows. It is descriptive, "panalcing
of the qualities of the lioregion," but it is a little longer and the truth
that resonates in the original noun is just ever so slightly
diminished.
But "bioregionalism" is a word that cmies no force
whatsoever. Whenever the odious "-ism" is added to an otherwise
usefuJ root idea, it completely drains whatever value for powerful
communication that original word may previously have possessed.
That simple suffix, just three letters, hardens a worthwhile
approach to life into a dogmatic school of institutionalized thought,
limits flexibility, and rums a life-giving relationship with the natural
world into a set of precepts to be debated pro and con in sterile
classrooms.
"Deep ecology" is an alternative phrase inspired by
Norwegian philosopher Arne Naess to define the auth of our
individual and collective relationship to the natural world.
The phrase has drawbacks. It is based in part on the Greek
word meaning ''study," because ecology was developed as an
interdisciplinary course of i:nstroction to explain the relationships
between the different elements of a place and how they work
together to sustain life. Now, however, the word "ecology" has
grown beyond the idea of "a course of study" to mean an acrual life
community and the web of relationships on which i1 depends.
"Deep ecology" lacks the evocative sense of a phrase like
"furure primitive," which describes people living in the world.
"Future primitive" predicts a technology thar is sophisticated to the
point of simplicity. It refers to a people whose culture is beautifully
complex rather than needlessly complicated, because it is based on
primal values as well as biologically accurate observation.
Yet, while the actual choice of words may be somewhat stiff,
the definition of "deep ecology" is eloquent. lt is ecology with a
difference. The essential tenet of deep ecology is that there is
intrinsic value to life in all its fonns. To fully understand deep
ecology one must identify one's "self" as "all that lives." This in
tum demands perceiving the world with more of our brain than the
neo-conex, the seat of the intellect. Sensual and instinctual
responses are as valuable for survival as intellectual analysis. It is
also assumed that a full realization of the principles of deep ecology
requires that one acts on them - it is necessary to defend the Earth
and to work at changing our culture.
This is what living is all about. This is "bioregionalism" as it
should be.
"Deep ecology" is useful as a t:ranSitional concept to describe
our odysse.Y back into the world. It is not the perfect turn of phrase,
but usage ts what lends definition, and those who are maJctng the
strongest stance for the Eanh are doing so in the name of deep
ecology. It is deep enough to suffice until we simply can say
~being," and other people undersmnd.
~ing,
Because that is what it is all about, isn't i1? Being, simply
here. Yet in these times that is such a complicated mauer.
And it is the hardest of all things to express. The sages have always
said, "The Tao that can be told is not the eternal Tao.•
And that is where Dolores LaChapelle steps in. She has
attempted the impossible - and done it valiantly. Her book Sacred
Land Sacred Sex Raprure of ti~ Deep oies to communicate in
words what can only be known through experience: the essence of
deep ecology.
Dolores LaChapelle herself is well aware of this paradox,
which is faced by anyone who writes. And, like all writers, sbe
feels compelled 10 wrestle with iL
So in writing about deep ecology she takes another approach.
Like a hawk, Dolores circles, circles. She first describes the
essential mystery by describing the conditions of itS absence, and
tells us the story of how we Lost touch with it. She then directs us
10 teachers who can demonstrate ic our animal relations in their
rituals; authentic members of primitive cultures; scientists and
psychologists who explore our deeper self And she introduces us
to guides who can help us to find our own way: sage, the drum, the
gourd rattle, Tai Chi, ritual, and, of course, the mounulins.
Sacred land Sacred Sa Raprun of the Deep is a beautiful
book - as deep in the telling as in the subject maner - created
through a blend of hard scholarship, an unswerving dedication to
the sacred, fierce passion, and the life experience of one of the true
elders of our clan.
(continued on next page)
�(continued rrom page 4)
(cantinuad fJom ~ 23)
It is a difficult book, because I.he closer one approaches lO the
essenr:ial truth, the more do ideas become unbound. ~e more do
words betray their meanin&. But Doto~ La Chapelle is a_
woman
of great intellectual stamma. Th~ stones and observatt.o ns we
encounter along this convoluted JOume.Y arc ~th ~mg and
wonderful. and each episode of the book is absorbing m itself. But,
tnken together, the insights delineate an infonnational fiel~ that
conveys a full sense (not mctely a pinned-to-the-board analysis) of
what deep ecology is all about
Impossible as it is to transmit an experiential stnte through
linear type, the book Sacred land. Sacred ~G ROf~"e of tlu! Deep
expertly i.rtfoans inclividuaJ cxpenence. It 1s a trauung manual that
reaches the reader how to open up to the deepest elements of his or
her own life joumey.
After reading Dolores LaChapelle's book, we know the
danger signals to watch for in our culture and in our own psyche.
We know where io look and how to call for instruction. And we
know what it feels like when we reach hannony, the center of the
world We arc prepared to experience the sacred.
Hopefully, the day will come when the concept "deep
ecology" is obsolete, books will no longer be needed, and our
minds won't be enmeshed in ideas. Then we won't have 10
sacrifice U'CCS to our earnest attempts IO explain the Mystery. Then a
story, a night of love, a smile, or the wind moving a leafy branch
will be communication enough. But until then we should be glad
we have teachers such as Dolores LaChapelle.
• reviewtd by David Whultr
#'
"AFFORDANCES"
From
Sacred land Sacred Sex Rapture of the Deep
phase peoples cultivated most of their food, and supplemented their
crops with native foods hunted and gathered from the forest.
There was a ceremonial center with room coougb for large
gatherings, built on raised earthen mounds. Ther~ wer~ semisubterranean eanh lodges. progenitors or those bwlt dunng the
historic Qualia phase by the Cherokee.
.
.
Pisgah phase peoples ma.de cane mats, the 1~prcssions of
which were found in graves, even though the actual amcles no longer
remained. Graves were dug in the floors or dwellings, and the dead
were usually buried in a flexed posicion (lying on their sides in foetal
position). They were accompanied by turtle shell rattles, bone
neck.laces, tools of srone and bone, and pottery.
Support Your Local Ar<:haeologist
The Pisgah Village sue in McDowell County has been
excavated primarily with volunteer labor, much of on the pan of local
residents. Robinson is grateful for such suppon; in fact, it was local
interest that made excavation possible in the first place.
Archaeologists usually receive funding to conduct retrieval of
information only when n site is threatened by development The rather
comical image of the archaeologist busily sifting through the din in
front of a moving bulldoi.eris all too real
Robinson urges everyone who discovers artifacts or a possible
archaeological site to contact him at Wam:n Wilson College, or get in
touch with any archaeology laboratory. such as those located at
Western Carolina University in Cullowhee, the University of
Tennessee at Knoxville, or Appalachian State University io Boone.
Archaeological sites are resources to be preserved, protected,
and revered. It is only by careful recovery of the infonnatioo they
contain, which often takes many years of study, that we will benefit
from these historic resources. At a time when population saturation,
disease, and decimation of our narura.I resources threatens our very
survival, we cannot afford to desrroy the evidences of our region's
past, which might perhaps offer answers for our fu1ure.
Persons i111erested in leaniing f11()re abow archaeology can
contact the Archaeological Society of Norrh Carolina; Research
Laboratories of Archaeology; Universiry of Non/1 Carolina, and the
Friends of North Carolina Archaeology, NC Depanmenc of Cu/rural
Resources; 109 E. Jones St.; Raleigh, NC 27611.
Archaeologist Ken Robinson may~ co111acted by writing him
a1 Warren Wilson College, SwannallOQ, NC 28778 or calling (704)
298-3325.
~
"The affordances of the environment are what it offers
the animal, what it provides or furnishes, either for good or ill."
"Afford." as a verb, is found in the dictionary, but (James J.)
Gibson (of c.ome11 University) made up I.he word ''ajforda.nce." He
explains that this word refers to both the environment and the
animal (including the human) "in a way that no existing tenn does.
It implies the complementarity of the animal and the environment."
This is precisely why I think this word is so important In
our culture, we tend lO think that humans have discovered all these
amazing things; in some ways we believe that these things didn't
even exist until humans found them. I've been trying 10 break
down this laner presupposition throughout this work; first, by
showing how the affordancc we call the gourd gave us agri.culture
and later with other examples. Once you begin using this word,
you will find that every day you will realize how nature provides
affordances for us to use. It's all there before us - it's not
dependent on humans to figure it out This is a giant step forward
in overcoming our culturallr,-induced split from nature.
These affordanccs 'arc the way specific regions of the
environment directly address themselves to particular species or
individuals. Thus, to a human, a maple tree may afford 'looking at'
or 'sitting under,' while 10 a sparrow it affords 'perching,' and '? a
squincl it affords 'climbing.' But these values are not found inside
the minds of the animals. Rather I.hey are...a reciprocal interchan~e
between the living intentions of any animal and the dynamic
affordances of its world ...The psyche .. .is a property of the
ccosysLCm as a whole."
_,
- Dolores LoChopelle
'
FOR FURTI!ER READING:
Dickens, Roy S .. and J(JJ'MS l. McKinley. Frontiers in the
Soil: The Archaeology of Georgia (Chapel Hill; Fronriers Pub. Co.;
1979)
Hudson, Charles. The Southeastern Indians (Kn<>xville;
University o/Tennessu Press: 1978)
Keel, Bennie C .. Cherokee Archaeology: A Study of the
Appalachian Summit (Knoxville; University of Tennessee Press;
1976)
Mathis, Mark A. and Jeffrey J . Crow. The Prehistory of
Nonh Carolina: An Archaeological Symposium (Raleigh, NC Div. of
ArclUvesandHistory: 1983)
McHargue, Georgena and Michael Ro~rrs. A Field Guide to
Conservation Archaeology in North America (PhUadelphla: J.B .
Uppincorr Co.; 1977)
Wetmore. Rwh. First on the Land: The North Carolina Indians
(Winston-Sa/em; l<>hn F. Blair, PublishQ; 1977)
Wa.m:n Wilsoo College will offer an archaeologic:al f"icld 1thool 1his
summer lhnt wdl focus on the Pisgah Village site. SllldclllS will lc4m survey
and excavation leehniqucs mid will also be involved in lhe aruilysls of altifact
and site da.13.
Contact: Kt11 Robinson. Proj«t Dim<:t.or; Box 5277; Warren Wiison
College; Swanannanoa. NC 28778 (704) 298-3325.
s
�Video Review:
"Stopping the Coming Ice Age"
Dirccled by l.JuTy Ephron
Produced by the Institute for a Future (57 minules)
Looking back, it ~eems tha1 1988 was ~ ye:ir for
important, "new" environmental issues and concerns to surface.
ln particular, ibis was the year in which the idc.i or lhe so-called
"greenhouse effect" finally gained public acceptance. if not
notoriety- a year lhat saw record-breaking drought. hurricanes,
and forest fires. Suddenly, the idea of global warming was
appearing everywhere in che media, and it seemed that concerned
scienliSlS and poliricians were unanimous in their suppon for the
global warming scenario.
However, this unanimity is an illusion, media coverage to
the contrary. ln fact, there is much contr0versy within the scientific
community ns to the chmatic effects and socio-polilicctl
nunificalions of the greenhouse effect. It is far from cenain that the
climate changes we're seeing arc leading to/caused by global
warming. In fact, there is ac1ually considerable evidence that points
to a very different conclusion: lhn1 1he planet may be teetering on
the brink of another Ice Age.
One of the foremost proponents of this laner view is John
Hamaker, a mechanical engineer who has cx1ensively analyzed
clima1e and ecological paucms, and hn.<; developed a comprehensive
and holistic approach to understanding global climate change. His
lheories, expressed in h.is book The Survival of Civiliza1io11, arc
now being supported and dissemina1ed by a foundation called
"Institute For A Fu1urc", which re<.-ently created a remarkable video
pr~ntation: "Stopping the Coming Jee Age".
This video is inspiring, frightening, challenging, and very
infonnative, as it takes us around the world in search of answers.
While Hamaker agrees that the greenhouse effect is a very real
Lhrea1, he believes - and backs this up with hard data and expert
opinion - that it will [ll2l.warm ihe Eanh unifonnly, but instead will
increase the temperarure differential between the equator and the
poles, causing increased thermal convection, atmospheric
turbulence, and rapidly shifting and biz:zare weather patterns.Jn
this scenario, high winds moving from the equator tow111ds the
poles will drop their abundan1 moisture in the h.ighcr latitudes in the
form of snow and ice, often creating drought condicions in the
temperate regions. He believes that lhe tropical and sub-tropical
zones will indeed get hotter, but the tempenue zones arc likely to
get cooler and drier.
Hamakcr"s understanding of the greenhouse effect talces us
far beyond the popularized, watered-down information available
Lhrough the mass media because he explores deeper levels of cause
and effec1, process and purpose. The mos1 profound information
presented in this video concerns the connections beiween lhe
greenhouse effect and the development of an ice age, and the
importance of understanding long-tmn cycles (100,000 years!) of
clima1e change. The video demonstrates the causal connections
linking together all the different environmenuil/atmospheric
phenomena that combine to bring on an ice age:
1) soil erosion and demineralizntion
2) the subscquem weakening and dying of the forestS
3) the resulting increase in insect inrestations, forest decay,
and massive fortst fires
4) I.be dramatic increase in C02 released into the atmosphere
by these na1ural causes, which induces the greenhouse effecL
5) and m the 20lh century - as opposed to 100,000 years ago
man-made pollution and our destrUCtive tampering with the natural
balance of life are intensifying and hastening the process.
According 10 Hamaker. an ice age performs a vitally
necessary natural function. As tbe glaciers advance and then
retreat, they move and grind up immense quantities of roclc,thus
spreading gravel and rock dust over much of lhe Lcmperate zones.
This process, along with the winds that help distribute lhis rock
dust even further, gradually l'Cllllneralizes the soil· which feeds the
planis and forests, promoting rapid and healthy growth • during
which lime the plants breathe in much of the excess C02 in the
atmosphere • wh.ich gradually stops the greenhouse effect! The
plants of the world breathe in C0 2, use the carbon, and release the
o>cygen back into the air whlch we, and all other animals, breathe!
SprLnq, 1989
Thus, n primary function of glaciation i~ to ttminerali1.e and
help reforest the Eanh. The reason this video is called "S1oppfng
the Coming Ice Age" is that Hamaker thinks we humans can indeed must. if we wanr our cwilization to survive • reminemlizc
the Earth oursefres. We ourselves can fulfill the vital rolt pluyed
by an ice age, rendering ~uch a geological event obsolete.
This means, however. that the government~ and peoples of
nil countric:; and regions would need to make it a top priority to
remineralize our depleted ~ils, and also to engage in massive
reforcs1ation projec1s, planting billions of trees worldwide.
Without hc:aJthy forests, we have no chance at all of slowing the
ttemendous C02 buildup which fuels the greenhouse effect. As the
video pu1s it." The trees of the world are our best friends now. and
only they can save us". Obviously, then, we also need 10 i;iop
clear-cutting our foresis. both here and in the tropics, and to limit
our fossil fuel burning, wh.ich has been accelerating the greenhouse
process. Only by doing all these things, says Hamaker, can "e
avoid horrific consequences for humani1y in the very near foture.
The audacity of this theory and lhis proposal lies in its utter
simplicity and common-sense quality. Yet many people may not
heed H.ama.ker's message and information because we have become
so enamored of "high- tech" solutions and shon-tenn planning,
gratification, and profit. Hamaker's plan demands a clear
understanding of our planetary dilemma. and a deep comminnent t0
creating a viable future, as well as some sacrifice or comfon and
convenience. The video concludes with these questions: "Have we
got the guts to do it? How much do we really want to be here?"
Whether or not Hamaker's proposal is ever implemented on
a large scale, we can all do things individually and collectively to
help educate people and help heal the planet. The video pointS out
1hat even if these theories aren't totally "provable", or even
completdy accurate, we should X1ill do the things Lhat Hamaker
suggests, for 1he sake of ecological balance, conservation, and
planetary sanity.
rn addition to the ideas discussed in this review, this video
explores JDl!.W! other aspects of our ecological and social dilemmas •
many more than can be dealt with here. There is so much vital
information presented, within such a comprehensive framework,
that this video ranks as a definite "must see'· for anyone at all
concerned about environmental issues and social change.
• "Stopping The Coming Ice Age" is available for $20 from:
lnstitue for a Future, 2000 Cenfer St. Berkeley, CA 94704. For
info on other offerings of the lnstirutc call 1·800-441-77Cll
• To arrange a showing or this video in the Asheville area, or for
more information, call Richard Lowenthal ar(704) 251-2526. ~
LOCAL RESOURCE I ACTION INFORMATION
• The December t988 issue or "American ForeSIS" m;igirant (published by
the American Forcsuy Association) 11 cle110~ almo~1 ent.Ucl)' IO tropical
defore.suuion, lhc gJCCnhou.sc effll(:I, and lhc prc.~ng n~ to ref~ the e:inb.
II highlights the AlSOCiotion's nx:ently-formcd Olobal Ro-Leaf prognun, which
aims to cducaLC Americans aboul Ille vil,DJ 1mpc:111.a11CO of rcfottsuulon. lllld to
"cl'Cl!IC a new ruulon31 nctwort. (If c1ti~n aetiv1su· whU:h will, 11 i• hoped,
plant at l~t 100,000.000 ll'Ce.$ nntiOCl·wiclc over the ne~1 sc~eral ycatt. For
more informalion, wriie to: Amcriciln Forestry Association, PO Box 2000,
Washinguin, DC 20013
(202) 667-3300
· WNC Alliance "Cut l.M ~Jng" c.imJiaign (st.o pege22 ! :
P.O. Box 18087, A&be\'IUC. NC 28814
(704)2$8-8737
• Forest Voices - •an /;jormatlon netW'Ofk lhat assi.sls citiz.cm m pal'_llcipating
in
1hc planning and managcmcmt or the Pisg:ih and Nant.ahala .h'!uional
(919j.182-36'33
Fol'CSIS"· P.0 Box 1275. West. lcffttiOn. NC 28694
• Adopl a Tree· a muhi-faceted ~on which "works 10 make the vital
connection between (IC(ll>lc 111d ttee•' and wcrts &c!;tly will\ rtfon:St3tion:
P.O. Box 144, Supr Gnwc. NC 28679
• The Fctwwy 1989 publ~ "Mounuun ~Al Risk! the FulllTC of
the Southern Appalachlari National ~13" )160+ pages, intludina 1ru1ny
cxccllentchart$ and appendices). Available on rcqucst from:
The Wilderness Society. 1819 Peaclusee Rood N.E. (Suite 714) Atlanlll , OA
30309
Drawing by rob mcJSlc:k
(404) 3SS-178l.
�What a wondetful journal! - a beanening combination of slwp-eycd
icalism and full hearted poetry. I feel rve encountered a true compt111ion.
Thanks IO D3ve Albert who passed iL on with your review of my book.
J0311na Macy
Bctb:ley, CA
DRUMMING
LETIERS TO KATUAH
Friends in Kallia.h -
"In the field or opponuni1y, it's plowing lime again.·
Those or you working in the cnwonmenllll. public henlth, resource
ma.nagcment fields may be questioning (tllllhority?). 1f your profe.~slOllal
orienllllion is on the same path as your human development and land~lhie
perogntivc.
My Friends at Katliah Journal·
Your publication is beautiful and 111Spirlng. I n:c:eived a
complimentary copy {Auwmn, 1988) conceming the great chcsmul n:vival.
and enjoyed lhe entire journal.
I visil I.be Kaul.ah bioregion each year (feeling very Sll'Ongly lhat I
was and am "born" lheic.) I am so cooccmcd about lhe negative human
impact on this n:gion, and would be in~ed in anylh1ng I could do for
l'CSIOnllion. rd<Xallll.ion. pl'CllCCUon, eu:..
Blessings.
Nancy Llgnitt
Olalhe, KS
P. S. • Forgive my ignorance-.could you please lei me lmow the
correct pronunciation of "Kanlah1"
(Sure! Probably o lot of otltu ~pie have b4ie11 woNlerilog, IOO. bul
Soy, "lea - TOO • ah.•
jiut did11'1 d/Jre IO osk. Reody, fl/JW?
Guruu!Mil!
• eds.)
Dear Kat.Udl •
Many friends or mine propose pcrfeclioo (In lhe ronn or intcrpCtS0031
peace) as a .solution 10 Ille llul:aL or wincllOCl. I tell them, "Hey, I don't
think we've got Ume.• l think I saw the snmc thing happening In Katli.ah
JourMl 22 bul in an opposilC way. Thete the dhugence of individual,
corpome. and govtmmcntal behavior from the ideal was plCSClllCd so
forcdully as tO make any suggesuon of solutions ou1 or place. i wnnl tO
argue lh41 in both lhcsc in.~ ideals malfunction when they an: mnde
JWOX}mn1e goals rather !ban guiding beacons.
One p;ndox of idealism is lhlli lhe greai.cr the con1ras1 bdWllCll lhc
IC.Ill and ldCal behavior of people, the more wfficuh it Is to argue lhal Ille
JdcaJ is naturul (to them). the mon: claboralC mast be the explanation as to
how they got so aberrant. and lhe tw rusonablc it IS to hope Ibey will Ulkc
the 1113Jly.111lUly steps from one to lhe other. Usually the conimst is sortened
:wt hope ~by thc stnuch or cenlUries, millenia or aeons presumed 10
inluvcne between ~ and ideal But in the presclll crises the conuast and
~are ui=ased. Wh'fl
Wlw I see happcnmg 11 thal lhe apocolyplic p0!>'iibili1y of our
cnviroomcn141 and mililllrist trues is malung people shnnk the middle
ground bctwcoo rc:il and ideal, mlllung them tlunk the ldeol m1m be nuained
right away, u we are to survive. The resuh Is that the I~ ome lhctl) is left
for clunge. the mocc of 11 is demanded. We use ideals to get at wlufs trul)'
wrong bul then in a cnsis rrusiake lhcm Lo be a pracllcal progTI1111 for se1ung
thmgsright.
In conuas1. thc closer we appro:ich disaster 1he mote focused should
be our analysis, the less suidcnt OU/ Judgcmcnl.s, the more specafte and
llmillld our prcscripuons. Out ideals C:tll still gwdc 11$ bu! from a dl$UIJIOC.
subonlloate to a goal of swvival as a ~ics w11l1 a 5uswnable OIOde or
exislcnc:c. Once that is a,s_'>ll'Cd weC1111 resume lhc ncYCJ endulg wOlt or
moving oursclvt$ and the world IOW8td the 1dc;al
Respectfully yours.
JlcltOwley
M:idison County, NC
I would like to begin gcncmting plans fora small compt111y of
icsponsiblc people co promote land S?ewardsbip lllld conscrvlltion of natural
resources. We11 provide professi01131 and 1.CChnico.I consulUttion and CSU!blish
bioregi.oJllll criteria for environmerually sensitive site devclopmcnl
silviculturc, archiiecturc. fanning. wau:r use. nnd small Cl\C.f&Y production.
rm intcreSICd in communicating with others who an: ready with ide:is
for lll!lking ~ TRANSmON to perpetual livelihood in a Clll'CCr lh;t1 will
reward our f11111ilies as well as our PLANET.
Sincetely.
Steve Ovcndcn
Box;JS
Pntmcuo. Ft. 34220
Dear Katllah Friends ·
I saw the "Sheller" issue of your journal and especially love and use
the Invocation (to WlnlU) - k's so beautiful to say. l was CMCCived and born
8lld also love those moun1auJS and tree$ tllld fresh air and flowing creeks.
1banlc you so much- .. the issue I saw wns bcauuful. iruly.
Blessings,
JUlllUI Forest
Octr0it. Ml
Docs my dog bite1
Lady. Lhat dog's so old
lllat he'd only gum you
If he caught you
if he even hnd the gumption
toehaseyou
which he don'L
Why do I keep him?
Hah!
Lady, that'~ the best watehdog
ICYCJhad
bar none.
How do yau mean?
Why, he don't chnsc chldtcn•
or run hvestoek
or keep me awake
barking all night.
Burgl:!n7
Lady, 1fyou see
anylhing around here worlh r.i.cahng
point ltOUI
and l'll nulc:e )'OU
a 11!31 good price on 1L
'Ccpl mlybe my dog.
• RonJohnson
Spn."9, 11109
�:
..
equal "p:lttllCrSlup" with all Olher living entities. I dream of a world whcie
long-sllllldmg cu1Lu!'111 tr3d11ions are honored and s upponcd, bolh in
hCICIOgcncous groupings of oil kinds of people living 1.ogcthcr and in more
isolntcd, sell-conlllined indigenous communities.
h 1s being said · and even channeled · lhal we are entering o pcnod
of 30 to 50 years of ca1BClysmic changes on the eanh. Some beings will
pass on in this ume of purging, while othetS will come in to !like iheir
place. Some or us wiU sUllld in the forefront of change and IJUllsmut.ation
while others of us wiU follow close behind. Let us begin then LO create the
v1s1ons that will ullimaiely provide the blueprints for our future on !his
planci., and begin to eultiva1e the liUlc poclu:IS oC mmly and wholeness Lhal
will evemually be the models from wrueh the rest of humanity cnn draw
msp1r.11ion and duectioo. The time has come_ dear comrades, lei us dream
...
together·
Jay Joyce
Asheville. NC
·.
Dear Friends·
c.ome. dream 11 liuJe dream with me.
As we all sil~ inexornbly tnLO thc not-so-nif1y nmcties. its becoming
clearer nnd c:ltlim dial life as we trow it mLISI be draWcally altered if we ait
to reverse the lides or ecologic:il desuuction gaihcring fon:e nround the globe.
h is clearly ume for us iocn:aie new visions for the rurure. lO look iownrd
the 2 lst centW')' with a sense of hope and purpOSe and direction, and OOl just
foreboding. And it i.~ in this spirit that I'd like to offer a few personal images
far a new bcguming, an altcmru.ive futun: - and LO invite compatriots
everywhere to color in these prclimm111Y skcu:hes fwther.
Farst of all, I sec a plllce where boclc:ynrd fences have been lOOI down,
and neighborhood gmdens, quiet ~cs, play SUUCUUCS. and gathering pl:ices
sprawl acro&s the land insicad. Theo l see community ocntcJS blossoming
:i.mong the dctri~ of ab:lndoncd school buildmgs nnd agmg warchow.es,
where recycling proJCCU, compost dumps, and communru gardens repklce
blllciclOp parking lots; and where weekend Ilea mnrkel.nnd bloclt panics.
moon celebrotions, and ecology fairs fill those huge l<>nely spaces. where
computer nctwolks and refemil scrvtCCS and gallery car~ keep people in touch
Greetings Brochers and Sisu:ss of Ka111ah •
r love you all and pray with you always, and alwoys my heart is so
full wbeo I receive my copy of Ka1Uah JourMl. ll takes me back to the
Appalachians and the memories flood m.
r thought tha1 if your magazine came OUI be fan: Lbc equinox, you
could pnn1 something from • Aoccwoo,• the Maori name f<W" New Zealo.nd.
since ii seems 1hc chcslnut arucles (KOJiiah Journol #21 · ed.) cre:it.ed some
communicauon.
We rue organizing o gaihering on a friend's propeny 111 lhe end of o
rood in a Nal.iOlllll Par1t, one or the mos1 beautiful places m lhe world. This
is the only gruhcring this year as our annual "Towards 2000"
workshop-oriented gathcrin~ wcrcn'1 held this yu.T. The annual nonh island
"Tc WaiOU3" glllhcring hosn't happened foe lhc l3Sl two yClll'S or our "Hui
Waiata." which is a musical glllhcring.
Although there arc loL\ of open-minded folk and mony good things
bnppcning here. we are going through a phase of fcwct gnthcrings ond feel the
need for folk t0 gel tQgct.hcr to share their ideas and views and feel strong in
their commitment to healing lhe Earth along with other brother! and !isters.
Hopefully, our pthcring will provide llus opponuru ty, as it's mo
progre$$ive area wilh communities. ocgaruc forms. and iCs a long way rrom
any ctties or polllllion. so a lOt of naturul beauty along wilh a good growing
climiue which has aurnc1ed 1'11311Y ovcneas follt. so we have an opponuouy to
share Lbcir visions, as ITIOSl of them come from a vccy comamintued Northern
Ht.maspbcrc.
As USUllJ, alu:malive folk find 1t hard to deal with local authorities,
but this is one of the few areas where people can make the effort ID be pin of
local dc:cislon·makmg and help make folk fll01C aware of what is hnppcrung
to our Mother and the roles W$ can play IO bcal Her and OUl1iClves.
with each other.
t look forward also LO a time when we all learn LO lhink about each
thing we "tlvow away" long enough to decule how u can be recycled or
properly disposed of. I imagine a place· ll Smithsonian of the mind. if you
will • whc:re a few old TV's, microwaves, electric am-openers. wa1apiks,
air-purifiers, etc. are kept in a museum lO remind us of whal we almost
buried ourselves in . .• while the rest oC them ~ no longer nccdcd or
wanted. I dlcll!n or a time when we no longer use tars, and freeways a.re no
longer necessary eitcept roe skalcboordulg, sledding, skhng, bicycling, and
wllldsurfing. I envision a scienlifx: communny thal seeks ou1 ways to gel
rid or the nukes, cleanly, lO biodegradc the phlsuc. 10 trunsfOJ111 ihe 10X1e
chemicals, IO clean up thc :ur and w.ucr, to cure the diseases, and IO develop
stmplincd, life-nunuring ways Cot all ihe criUCIS still 3.m0f18 us LO reinhabil
the pbneL
I look forwllr<l to a lime when children learn IO love leaming, when
they arc iniegmtcd into ihe life of their communities and when !hey Ill'!:
openly adcoowlcdged and supponcd ror the grC&l comnbutions they mlllcc to
our lives. 1 imagine a ume when people enj()y learning a> much ttbout lheir
loctll ccosySlCITI as they now blow about the plol developments of the lalCSI
soap opelilS and lhe lifcstyles or lhc rich and famous. I envision a time: when
bUIDQll betn.gs 1cam LO QCCepl I.be Cllc:1 lha1 !hey tnhab11 one small niche m the
pta& an:le of the eanh's ccosysicm end therefore leam IO uucmct m loving,
Drllwmp by Sheli Lodge
Love,
Pc1ctOay
16 Jarrow Plac;c
Christchurch 3 New 7.ea1ruld
�Earliest February I begin
searching along a neighbor's hedgerow
for just a tendril of the coming miracle.
Or gatlog as one stricken upon the si Us of morning
when the fir'lt dreamy memories of daffodils return.
l breathe a wisp of a vast movement stirring and alluring me.
Deep in e veins of southern sloping woods.
I know beside the coldest laughing waters
bubbling and glittering in the soft. buucry sun
some rich, mysterious. fragile awakenings unfold.
Long before the geese come winding surely homeward,
I discover and behold an anicle of r.ransfonnation
that by narure disregards mere joy or faith or sorrow,
to which uncr defeat or sheer victory remain the same.
So even in this old hean of winter full of woes.
the barrer1 season ofdui.t and frost is washed clean away.
And this, I suppose. is why l wander seeking ccnitudc.
ruming a 11one over by the path, or gazing above treetops.
or gliding clflike lhfouJh the forest's solemn ~lonnadtli.
for in this ~un-goW rime as the eaith starts siirring,
c:ven the ~' n dcith of my brother is cased and gree
the
ve, delicaie, relentless mari:h of Spring.
Alt. 1i\U..
~ '""
1'4Wah )ournal p«UJe 28
- Mitliattl Hockaday.
Sp rlfMJ, l 989
�Planet Art
conunucd rrom page 1
Christina then found Leigh Hollowell who had srudied Contact
extensively on the West Coast and who was also very interested
in seeing Contact happen in this area. Leigh enthusinstically
agreed to co-teach a ContAct class with Christina. They knew
that if they wanted to have people to do Contact with, they would
have to help create a Contact community first.
Leigh love:; Contact because "it's natural - it'~ not based on
socialized preceptS but on an open exchange with other people in
the reality of the present moment." She is aware that for many
people dance classes and physical education have been
emotionally painful and repressive, because they were not
encouraged to learn their own natural movement but to imitate
others. Her main goal is "to provide a positive movement
experience for people so they can become friends with their
bodies and learn to perceive it as a resource of creativity."
I asked her how she felt that Contact would affect the
larger community, and she said. "Because it is not based on any
one culture's movement and is a form naruraJ to all human
bodies, it is an effective way to trunscend barriers between
people..• it would simply create a more trusting, and therefore
more peaceful, community."
l have been panicipating in this dance class since
November and have been able to experience it "first hand". ln
Contact dance, we maintain a ''point of contact" with another
person, and it constantly shifts as both move. When we try to
control where the movement goes with our minds, it becomes
stiff and awkward. When we stop trying to control and simply
focus on the point of contact, that point guides us in a flowing
way towards movements that are easy and spontaneous. Our
minds are shocked at how well we can do without their control.
Imagine a society in which we allowed our interactions to come
from our point of connection instead of our differences!
For more information about Contact Improvisation, call
Leigh Hollowell at (704) 252-4475.
Art here in Karuah has begun to reflect the reality of our
connection wilh the planet.... making art-all fonns of creative
expression and ritual-a pan of our daily lives. By
acknowledging the sacredness of our co-existence with the rest of
~Water Systems
WATER PURIFICATION EQUIPMENT
SOLAR PRODUCTS
Membar NC Water O~lty AasoclaOon
RANDALL C. LANIER
704-293-5912
HWY 107
RT 68 BOX 125
CULLOWHEE, NC 28723
che universe, we are beginning 10 harmonize with it
Many of us, though, have closed off our energies to the
vision of a hnrmonit.ed planet because it seems so elusive and far
away, and we don't like feeling disappointed. Others have
refused to sec and accept the truth of the planet as it is because il
is painful .. and think that if they "shut their eyes it will go away.•
The tnJth 1s that the sooner we open our eyes and accept what is
there, the more effectively we will be able to deal with iL
In a book called The Path of Ltas1 Resistance, a simple
and effective method for manifesting a choice is given. This
method can apply lO planetary as well 3S personal mmsfonnation.
lt is lO constantly hold in our minds two things ... exactly what
our vision is and the full truth of our current reality. It is based
on the idea that "in order 10 ge1 where you want to go, you need
to know where you are."
Since we are all planet anisrs, this technique needs to be
widely understood. As we hold our vision firmly in mind and
continue to acknowledge what's happening now, new nod
unexpected ways of achieving our goals will come to us. Jn order
10 do this, we need co be aware of the deep, undercurrent
regenerative processes that exist around and within us that we can
tap into. As more and more of us choose to love and accept our
planet and all her inhabitanlS no matter what is happening, the
easier it will be.
A lot is happening in our region, and J'm sure there are
many more people here with ideas and enthusiasm to contribute
towards a biorcgional program of Planet An. Some suggestions
arc... a traveling multi-media show that would tour the region to
network and share bioregional idens...communicy rituals for
healing the la.ad... restoring our environment with "Clean-Up
An" events... synchronizing with planetary peace and art events
... All Species Day with parades and festivals ...Joining in the
preparations for Earth Day '90. There is no linu1 to what we can
dol...there is no shonage of things to rcharmonizel
It's time to find out who we all are as anists and get our
networks in place. At the next K.atuah Gathering we can come
together and bntinstonn. t can be contacted by wrirtng P.O. Boll:
278, Asheville, North Carolina, KatUah Province 28802 or _,,
~
calling (704) 253-4831.
~
DE.S IGNS
by Rob Messick
Illustration & Design
In Pen & Ink and COiored Pencil
Po eox 2eoi • Boone Nt. 28W7 • 171l41r...i 1>0117
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For ADULTS and CHILDREN
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l\ta&icRob6
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THE ALTERNATIVE HEALING HOT-LINE
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l'bollt' I~ HOT-UN£ fo Rr>d Cltli how yo1it pr•cti«,
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N•tloMI Oirttto •
Sprl.fMJ, 1989
.u
Jler/Jg11J111 eti1tit
'lljaee, 'Ry~r 'Na@r~
FREE COLOR CATALOG
e1ti1te1t At11p1Utct11re
Drt~PillOW'I
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Fur R/J1111I, ThtalT~, & S11f-&mpow1rmtt11
Send S 2 ror fuU-<:olor caulog/ Custom onlcrs llYlilablc
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P.O. Box 178, Asheville, NC 28801
(70-4) 25).431
�POPLAR APPEAL
Green City
conunucd rrom p.9
cooler in the summer. and it wai. quieter - if you knock on steel and
then knock on a soybean, you unders1and the sort of deadening
chMIClerislics on the inside of lhat car.
The dreams of Henry Ford and the rest of the chemurgy
movement were postponed. but they seem to be resurfacing again.
Russell Buchanan. a scientist in Maryland, envisions the rise of
botano-chemical complexes, as he calls them, rather than
pcrro-chemical complcitcs, as we learn to eittract from cellulose the
same things that we extract from pcuoch~micals. One ts a
hydrocarbon; the other is a carbohydrate. Compare these words and
they're basically the same. One of the differences. however, between
a botano·chcmical complex and a pcrro-<:hemical complex is that it's
easy 10 transport oil over long distances, whereas it's not easy to
transport plant mauer over long distances. So botnno·chemical
complexes will tend to be locally based and rurally based near their
sources of raw material~ and supplies.
Local self-reliance can become an economic developmem
strntegy, and cities ate the best place to try it out, for several J'C3.'\0llS.
Mose of us live in cities. Cities tend to be large enough 10 have an
internal market, and can in fact become laboratories. Cities are
concentrations of science and technology. They have the ingeouil\',
the expertise and the machine toolshops to build prototypes and try
them out. Bur what is your nearest city's research and development
budget? h's probably zero.
The local self-reliance scenario is not inevil3ble nor is it even
probable. It depends on political decisions. Economic development
must be seen as a means to an end and not an end in itself. Alben
Einstein once said that perfection of means and confusion or cods
characterize our age. We're so mesmerized by technology and
development that we forget to ask, "Technology for what?" and
"Development for whom?" We have become consumers of change,
bul we don't know the difference between change and ,erogress. To
Bertrand Russell progiess is ethical and change ls scientific; change is
inevitable, while progress is problematic. In other words. progress is
valw:·laden and as we change, we need to ask ourselves, "Will we
progress?" We can have a green city within a brown world by
moving all or our production and disposal systems for away from our
city. But 10 truly embrace the ecological motivation behind a green
city, we must ~ome responsible for the wastes that are generated
for our convemence. And the only way to do that is 10 begin 10 return
that loop of production, use and disposal, b.'ICk to the community.
Marcel Proust once said that the voyage of discovery consists
nm In seeking new lands but in seeing with new eyes. It is in seeing
O!Jf communities and our citi~s with new eyes, in pursuing a globe of
Vlllag~s and not a global village, that we begin to create a new
paradigm.
@ lnsli1utc for Local Sclf·Rcli:incc. 2425 Ulm Sucet, t<W WllSbinguin. DC
2000!>. Also w1lh pcnnission fl'Ofll Raise IM Stt1lls. Planet Drum Foun<bLinn,
P.O. Box 31251, San fran(isco, CA 94131. This anlclc appc:arcd 1n Winter 19118
issue.
M.El>1.CtNE ALLtES
'J-SK1.1t'J
tQllUnued from page 11
h wru; always a rare
oy~rer mushrooms - that is.
und special occasion when I found
until I su1J1cd roaming the hills with
my older mounuineer buddy Theron. Theron was rai~ed
gathering roots and herbs at his grandmother's knee, and he
knows the woods well, but he had ulw11ys been wisely hesitant
about sampling unidentified wild mushrooms •tllc first few times
in our wanderings when we found some oyster mushrooms.
Theron would help me gather them and he would carefully
examine them, but be always declined to share the harvest nnd
rnke some home to em. However. after heming me talk so much
about how good they were (and seeing that I was still thriving),
he finally tried some. He and his wife enjoyed them immensely,
and from then on it seemed that. with Theron's help, I was
hardly ever without oyster mushrooms.
From Theron I learned 10 visit areas 1ha1 had been logged a
few years previosly and look on tulip poplar stumps after a spell
of rainy weather. In the$C Meas we could find man)' pounds of
the savory mushrooms in any season of the year. We often found
enough to dry and store for times when the fresh ones were
scarce.
When Theron and I sn down together and share a meal of
oyster mushrooms and other wild edibles, I think about what a
strongc pair we make: me, a naturalist from the Oat land with a
university education, and him, a tradjtional mountain wood~man
and fanncr who barely finished eighth grade. Yet we both realize
that if we hadn't met and been open and receptive 10 each other's
knowledge. neither of us would be earing this delicious wild
mushroom supper. Traditional knowledge and book learning can
go well together.
©1989 by the tlJ.Uhor.
Reprl111edfrom Wildlife in North Carolina Magazine.
"Ranger Doug" EUiolt, as he is known to rite cltildren i11 the
group, is an excellent naJuralist, but is also known as a lively~
storyteller and ''a real nice feller."
p
A Directory to
North Carolina's Natural Areas
(published by 1.he NC Natural Heritage Foundation)
As pan of its important work in rare and endangered
species identification and habitat preservation, the North Carolina
Natural Heritage Foundation, a non-profit organization, has
compiled the guidebook, A Directory to North Caroli11a's Namral
Areas. The compact guidebook features dC!ieripcions of more than
100 natural areas open to the public in the state. The descriptions
of each aro:i include infonnntion about natural history, geology.
1111d uuvcl information.
To obtain copies of the book, send S5.00 10 the NC
Natural Heritage Foundation; Box I I 105; Raleigh, NC 27604
Each is tl1c suongcst power 1n iis own domain.
Together !hey lll'C allies: !heir C1111tgics complement each
01hcr m rorm an e\'et1 greater power. As medicine ollics,
they rcpre«ent 1he hc;Uing powers of lbC Appalnahian
In lhe tr.1d1uonal Cherokee Indian belief, lhe Moun1:11ns.
TI111 medicine powers of Kl!uiah Juve been depicted
crca!Ure\ in the world lOclay arc only d1minu11.ive forms or
the mythic beings who once mlUlbucd the world, but who in o ~1r1l.;ing T-shin design by Ibby Kcn11:t. Printed in
now fC$idc in Oal11na'IJ, lite 5pmt world. the highest 5-coloc silksi;irccn by Ridgerunncr Nnwr.ils on top qu:ility,
he;ivcn. BuL • few of the ongmal powcr~ broke lhrough !he all-couoo shin.~. 1hcy arc avallnble now in all adul1 shes
!!p1riLUAI barrier and exist yet m the world a~ we know il. from KALANU; Boit 282; SylYll, NC 28779.
These beings arc called with rcv.:rcncc "grandfalhas" And
or tl1cm. the suonges1 arc K.allilti, lhc ligh1mng. thc power
Pl~ specify ~ir.t: Sm .• Med., Lg.. X·Lg.
or the sky; utsa·nau, 1he r:mlcsn:tke, who pcrsoniries the
Prke: S9.SO pOStf131d
power of lhc cnnh pL'lllc: lllld Yunwi U!ldi, "I.he li1Llc !Mn".
W.98 pns1pa1d for NC re.-i!knts
as ginseng is called in I.he S!Crcd ceremonies. who draws up
JlOYo er from lhc underwocld.
"To .f/ww TU~l"lftx lhlS lll{lctflOllll'DI /Tinily of thl:
Miura/ world iJ 10 111 111111 bcc0t1v t111 ally tn thl: con1i11w11g
fll'OUS!. of niai111<Un111g harmony and bal1111Ct htrt 111 thl:
moll/IJJJJJU of Ka1Uah"
Spri.f19. 1969
�Emironmcntol Politics:
11Vlou.nttiln Ug'hl H!!:twork
Lessons from the Gras.'>routs.
Bob Hall. Editor
Mountam Light Network is an eclec1ic, 1n1entionally
group of people living in the Kaulah srea. Th<:
tntercsts of the group include 3 deep commilnlCnl to 1nd1vidu:il
llnd planct:u) peace. and to ecological hannony, with emphasis
on coopera1ion between human, animal, plant and mineral
kingdom~ . Other areas of interest include subtle energies,
h~::iling, and techniques for utilizing new forms of power. Many
w11hin t~c: g_oup n:lion::ite wi1h N?tive Indian philosophies and
r
;;eek to h~c in ~~c1ous balanl'c ~nh the land. The mu;ority are
involved in hohsuc heallh, explonng new paths now developing.
Some _ re invot:--ed in the Anciem Wisdom and spiritual
a
<li-•c1phnes. Survival and food 11toragc are also of interest to
many individuals
We meet 4 times a year at the Franklin Communitv Center
on Sundays. at 2:00 PM near the Sol"iccs and Equino11tes. There
iU'C tables for those who wish to 5ell products or promote ideas;
many books arc available a!; welt. We feature a speaker at each
meeting. We have a directory of names. skiUs and intrn-~1~ Our
aim is to provide a time and place for communication and
exchange of ideas to become neighbors in a loose-I.nit network
of people in our area.
Part1c1pauon in meetings is free and open to all people of
Like mind. This year our meetings an: on March 19, June 18.
September 17. and Dcccmbct 17, 1989. For more anform:uion,
call (404} 746-2454.
~structured
ln.'itltule for Soul hem Studies, P. 0. Bo>< SJl,
Durham. f\C 17702. 1988. ~7.00. 12? pgs.
Whal can you do when an our·of·slalc corporation
an_nounc~
plans for a hazardouli was1c rrearment facility a few
nulc:s from your home. or when stare officials ~ay 1hey wan1 to
pave 11 highway through your neighborhood? Where can you
mm for help if real esta1e developers wuh close ties 10 local
politicians decide to build a condominium or shopping center in a
sensitive water;hed are;i?
_
How much energy should you devote 10 door-to-door
organizing, or seeking auention from the media, or gelling
involved in elecrorul pohtics?
For rhe past three yc:.m;, lhe lns111u1e for Southern Studies
has conducted an investigation of environmental and land·u>e
controversies in one state, Nonh Carohna. rn a remarkable
number of cases. locnl citizens groups · even lhosc in relatively
!solatcd. rural areas • have won s1gnifican1 victories ag:unst
1mpress1ve odds. They h:ive beaten well-endowed corporations
and forced state policym:ikcu to change regulations, enforce
ex1snng standards, and enact new laws.
_Th~y have built ad hoc coalitions and enduring
orgamzauons, occas1onally across rucc lines, more often across
class and cultural divisions within the white community. And
they have moved from crisis-oriented, hit-and-miss organization
to sophisticated political lobbying and effective electoral activi~m.
The key ingredients of these successful citizen-led
camprugns are described in dwlll in the first chapter. The next 10
chapters chronicle the episodic. fragmented, yet growing
cnv1rorunental movcmenr in consc.rvwve North Carolirui. The
focus h less on the grim threats to life as we know it than on why
pe~p~e respond, whar they do to win, and how grassroots
acuv1s_m and electoral politics (including lobbying and voter
educanon) imersec.1 to produce i.nstitutionru change.
The result 1s a storybook of grassroots experiences. a
handbook that lets our own past teach us bow to wodc. for a bener
future. And while the location may be Nonh Carolina, the
common lessons running through these stOrics are plainly uc;cful
to people throughout the Soulh Md beyond.
- excerpted from tlie preface
,..0 &..ot4(;t" WA.) I " '
..nw i-c.t
t,_f
------
TPC.. two ~Kt H~O M&.L.01.0
AMO I loll', 1' C.111''1 HO!ISf..l
SprL119. t 989
JUST RECEIVED'
Mountain Treasures at Risk:
The Future of lhe
Soulh~rn
Appala&llian Nalional Fonsts
by Laura E. Jackson
The N:uional Forests of the Southern App11lachian
Mountains are the last remaining habitar area available for many
species of pl3Ilts and wildlife. The book Mountain Treasuru ot
Risk says that these valuable habitat areas should be managed
from a regional viewpoint and offers valuable infonnation tQward
rcaliting n new vision for forest management which emphasizes
the values of life suppon and ~gional biodiversity.
Handsomely bound, profusely documented with photos,
tables, and charts.
Copies free on requ~t from The Wilderness Society; 1819
Peachm:c Rd NE (Suite 714); Atlanta, GA 30309.
... Katuah Journal is not just lull of Information. It is
also full of images, and we appeal to all visual artists
interested in ennching lhe pages of this journal, plus some
exposure for you, to send us copies of your work Many
times we need graphic images that are specific 10 a given
article, yet there Is often space to put Images that are not
specific You would be surprised the kinds of
synchronicities that can happen when you send wori< in•
Drawings in Ink. prints, photographs, borders, symbols.
and cartoons that you think have some relevance to the
journal are all welcome Don't be shy. we need your talent
and image·ination to help visual-eyes a clearer relation
with Katuah ...
�evencs
2-8
BRASSTOWN, NC
Spring Music and Dance Week. Music.
StOries, dance, nature. John C. Campbell Folk School
28906.
8
BLOWING ROCK, NC
Ocan-up of the Glen Burnie Falls Trail .
Blue Ridge Group. Sletra Club. Call (704) 264-3931.
MARCH
8·9
HIGHLANDS, NC
Chiefs from the Native American
Elders Circle meet at the Mountain to discuss
Ecology and An. ''TIJU care how you place your
17-19
moccasins upon tM Eanh,step with care,for the
faces oftM I unve generarions are looking up from
Earth waiting their turn for life." $137. The
FARNER, TN
Leam "Wild Foods and Earth Medicines" with
Snow Bear at Pcppcrland Farm Camp: Sw Route: Farner,
37333. (70<!) 494-2353.
™
IJ.16
GATUNBURG, TN
Womyn·s Weekend Rctn:at: Spccilll Gu=
Grey Cal, Lucinda F1odin. Write 10 P.O. Box 936:
Gatlinburg. TN 37738 for more info.
Mountain; 841 Highway 106: Highlands, NC
28741 (704) 526- 5838.
NEW MARKET, TN
sn> (Stop the Poisoning!) School a1 the
Hishlander CcnlCf. Learn bow to figllt 1nduslrinl pollution
For more info, call (615) 933-3443.
30
UNICOI, GA
"Spring Earth Skills Workshop''
with Snow Bear, Darry Wood, Doug Elliott, and
Yanna. Leaming the ways of the woods. $65.
Comact Bob Slack at (404) 878-2201.
31·1
HENDEltSONVILLF., NC
Workshop on Local and Regional Land
Trusis. Kanug.a Episcopal Center. For more info call
(704) 692-9136.
WAYNESVILLE, NC
Kanna m Daily Life-A Spiritual Rctrcal,
with John Algeo. Stil·Light Tbcosopbieal RCllC41 Cent.er,
Rt I, BOA 326: Wayncsy1lle, NC 28786 (70<!) 452-4569.
Neighborh ood" confcronce sponsored by Asheville
League of Women Votcts. Time and place TBA. Call (704)
258-8223.
ASHEVILLE. NC
A six-we.:k course. "Finding Your Path
with HC3rt", begins a.t the Spiritual Growth Foundation.
(sce4/l). The focus will be on finding our "lruC vmce• and
expressing Lhc lifc-affinmng energy of l1W" Heart's desire.
17·18
ASHEV l LLE, NC
Red Foll/Second ll.311gin', play prcscnltd by
I.be Roadside ThcatTC. S)l3rU'lnburg. SC. For ume and
location. call (606} 633-0108.
nLACK MOUNTAIN, NC
Robm Williamson. •a wl1.lltd of words and
music:.· "'I h~ hunter ond the hu11ted howl 011e howl.•
McDibbs'; S6 tdYanc~ door. 8pm, 119 Cherry Si.,
Black Mtn., NC 28711: (704)669-2456.
ASREVlLLE, NC
" Betw"n a Rock and a Hard Place:
Westtrn
No r th
Carolina's
Noclur
17
14-16
21-23
IS
ASHEVCLLE, NC
"Cut lhe Clearcutting!" says
WNCA. From 1t am. Music, dancing, speakers.
City/County Plaza, Asheville. Write Western
North Carolina Alli:lncc; Box 18087; Asheville,
NC 28814, orcall 258-8737
15
ASHEVILLE, NC
The Enrth First! Road Show wilh
Roger Featherstone and Susan Grace Stoltz,
audio·visuals, news on EF! issues and actions.
Lipinsky Auditorium, UNCA. 7:30 p.m.
Students $1. General admission $3. For more
info, call (704) 251-6144.
18
31·2
APRD..
1·30
CHEROKEE, NC
William Holland Thomas.
"little
ASlll-:VlLLE, NC
Hum.an Potential Education Foundation
Spring 1989 Conference, "Healers and the Healing
Proces:~." For regiwation and brochure conw:c Human
Poumlial Educlllion Foundation, Inc.: R1. s. 89 Tt1nyrud
Rd.: Greenville. SC 29609.
white
chicr or lhe ChclOkec. cxhibiL OicroJcoe H~14Sc MUNCwn
and GaJlcsy.
I&8
28-30
ASHEVILLE, NC
'Commumcation and Healing." a lWO·Jllll
28-30
NEW MARKF.1', TN
STP (Stop I.he Poisoning!) School Bl the
Highlander Ccntcr. Learn how to fight tndu.suial pollution.
~3/21-23.
wotlcshop focusing on inner commumon and outer
communicauon as Yilal tools for bcaling ourselves Md our
rclalionsh1ps.
10-Spm each day.
Led by Richard
l.owenlhBI. M. A. Spiritual Growth Foundation: 891
Haywood .Rd. (704) 252-3508.
2-5
PISGAH FOREST, NC
Rockclimbing clinic for beginners
Tedmiques, safely, gear. S28S. Eagle's Nest Camp; 43 Hart
Road: Pisgah °Fon:.'ll: NC 28768. (704) 877-4349.
X.~.Jo~
pgqe 52 ·
29-31
FARNER, TN
KATUAH SPRING GATHERTNO.
Come celebrate. dance, play, meet. and talk with
the family from all over the region (see
announcement next page).
mustratlons by Jackie Taylor-
�JUNE
29
MOUNT AIRY, NC
18th
Annual Ml. Airy Fiddler~
Convention. A weekend of lrod1tion:il Appal3chian Music.
Bring instruments. tenlS, food. Regiwruion SlO.
2-3
SWANNANOA, NC
Environmental Summit '89: Ethics,
Economics and the Environment. This 5th annual
summit will focus on environmental problems of
immediate interest in WNC. and on how
environmental and economic realities affect each
other. Keynote speaker: David Morris of the Inst.
for Local Self-Reliance. Warren Wilson College.
9am-4 pm. $5. For more info or to preregister call
(704) 298-3325, ext. 250.
9· 11
CLOUDLAND CANYON
Caving weekend w11h Snow Bear as
instruc1or and guide. Equipment provided. Call (704)
494-2353 for more info.
9-11
WAYNESVILLE, NC
"Mythology - The Modem Search for the
Holy Grail" with Joy Mills. Stil-L1ghL See 3/31-4/2.
MAY
llRASSTOWN, NC
June Homecoming Music/Dance Weck.
English counuy dancing wi1h Jim Morison. John C.
Campbell Folk School, 28906.
11·17
5-7
WAYNESVILLE, NC
"Music as Meditation" with Diana
Dunningh:un. S20/day. Sul-Light Center: See 3{31-4/2.
21-25
HIGHLANDS, NC
Nature Photography Workshop.
Prc.rcgisicr. Appalachian Environmental Ans Center. Sec
5/12-14.
6
LINVILLE, NC.
Grandfather Mountain Prorilc Trait
wildflower hilce. Blue Ridge Group, Sierra Club. Call (704)
2974098.
6-10
PISGAH FOREST, NC
Whi1ewa1cr Canoe Clinic for novices and
m1crmedia1es. $455. Sec 4/2-5.
12-14
lllGllLANDS, NC
Spring Landscape Retreat Photography
Workshop. Pre-regisicr: Appalachian Environmental Arts
Ccnicr; Drawer S1l0: Highlands. NC 2874 I (704) 526-4303.
19-21
BLACK MOUNTAIN, NC
The Black Mouniain Spring Festival.
Three days of traditional music and dnnce at Black
Mountain College/Camp Rockmont. Brave
Combo, The Horsenies, Grandmother, David
Wilcox, Phil and Gaye Johnson. For advance
tickets call Grey Eagle and friends, (704)
, 669-4546 from 2pm- IOpm.
o~ ~3. &q o.ncL 3o
o± -p e.p~et' la.rd.. ~ t()J\ft'l
7f.n
~
u.a -to
~~N.b..ooY
19·21
flfGllLANDS, NC
Wildflower Pho1ogruphy Workshop.
Pre-rcg1s1er. Appalachi$ Env1Tonmcnt.al Arts C..:nicr. Sec
qy'~
5/12-14.
u.ou.aL I~~
~ o..cliN~ a.r0.wo¥k shO(:.>s ~ o...d.uJtto
19-21
MILLBORO, VA
EARTH FlRST! Appabchian Rendezvous.
Talk, drum. s.we au things wild. For more info, write: Box
2(>6; Millboro. VA 2.4460 or call (703) 997-9448.
BRASSTOWN, NC
May Crafl/l)ance week. John C. Campbell
Folk School 28906.
27-29
WHITTIER, NC
Cclebralion on lhe land al Union Acres
Communuy. All friends of Kauiah welcome. For more
Info., ca11: Cynthia and Roy Gallinger, (704) 293-9230.
spil.NJ,
1989
µ~~.
~ u.;tl.L ~ -t:hL-
NEW MARKET, TN
STP (Siop the Poisoning!) School a1 lhe
Highlander Ccnier. Leum how IO figh1 indu.~trial poll111Jon.
Soc3nl-23.
19-21
21-27
().rd_
a.rd. ch.U.dA.t.n '
Pre-registration, by April 15: $15.00 adult
$10.00 child under 12
After April 15:
$17.00 adult
$12.00 child under 12
.For mon: infonnalion,
write: Snow Bear and Khallsa; Pepperland Farm Camp; Siar Route: Farner. TN 37333
or call: (704) 494-2353 or (704) 586-3146
�vfEBWO~
SEEKING TO JOIN OTHERS m a mlllllally -.upponivc
comml.INly. Singl.c mamn: womon. ll'lis1-1eac.htt can offer
skills: early childhood education. llU, earth llb111:, wri!Jnl
Wn1c Alwyn MosJ., 1007 Turner SL, Blacksburg, V/>
24060: ("10'3) SS2·6331
VAGABOND GUJBETR01TTNG Stale of tlw Art.
Revised Edition., by M.L. Endicoll. One of lhc moll
compRhensivc insuucticm manua!J ror <yro uavelcrt
SUS; Enchlridlon lntemational, Cullowhcc, NC 28723
ASCENSION Beg1111ttr's Mon.uJJ. a self-help boo1t for
auaining lhc touchable ruii1y of lhc ASCENDEO <taic.
usually lhou&ht to be bt!yood Raeh. By Theodore A
lluoody, Ir~ $13.SO pp; &lcctic: Pren, 205 Pigeon SI.
Waynesville. NC 28786.
WlNCS WAY bttbal products. For pnce list. wme: Box
1477; Old Fon. NC 2.876Z
EUSTACE CONWAY- Ou.ide and !Udler of (ll1lnit1ve
£arlh Skills wilh cmphasi.t on rue blll1dln,. hide tanning
she.Iler. and fongilla. He ILachti at public schools, parks
cnvimnmencal oont.en, .and cJuscs ol .all tinds. For tllOl'C
informllion coniact lum II' 602 Deerwood Drive,
Oastonii. NC 28084 or oall Allcln Sianlcy al (704)
872-7972
FUTONS by Simple Pte.uuru affordably priced. Send
SASE for Info io: Sunplc PICU\lrtJ: RL I. Box 1426
Clayton. GA 30S2.S (404) 782·3920.
APPAJ..ACHIAN GINSENG CO.• sua.tified seeds.
PEPPERLAND ofrcn a variety of ouldoor cdu.eation
po,grams for chl.Wdl, school. or cMc gn>Up& ycu· round.
Wo will help you ~pl a pogrom for your group. Send
for infonnwon J*1c.ct to: Pcppcrland Fum Camp; Sw
RoUlA!; Farner, TN 37333.
R£AllERS' REACTIONS AND INSIGHTS wanic.d
i.ganling lhc "consum«" culun we five in, and lhc idea of
"consumaism" u a lifestyle.. Plcue write to Richard
Lowenthal, 53 Greely St.. Asheville, NC 28806 (or call
seedlings. roots. Send for price li51 io: P.O. Box S47
Dillsboro, NC 28725.
M. TR& DESIGNS: UlllSIJlliom and Der;gn • Beyond lhc
p!l&CS of lhis journal, I work DI penal. colored ponril. ink. QI\
paper. md t.lik. F'mc and graphk an to cxircu and cnh...,.,
our livea. Logos, btochuru, boob. ponnl1ure, window and
wall h&ng~. Concct Manha Tree (704) 7S-4-«l97.
STit.·UGHTTHEOSOPHICAl..RETREATCENTER -a
qu1c1 spaeo for JlC'nOnal medilali<m, aniup inc.cractioo
lhrough study, and community .-011<. and spintual
smiinU$, Contact Leon Frankel; Rt. I. Box 326;
Wayncs•ilk. NC 28786
WANTED: LAND 111 WQt.cm NC. Famlly f«b Sor mon:
ICtCS. prd"crobly near Cullowhee. IO pr<S<TVC and evcnlll.ally
inhllbil. U}'OU have or kno..•of afford.&blc l111d, oonlll:t Bob
llld Miry Davis; 213 Wcrunorcland Cc., Ccorgetown. KY
40324 (502) 8634167.
MOON DANCE FARM HERBAl..S · herbal salvC$,
tinc1111cs. & oil• for b1nh111g a: family health. For
bcochure, pt.,,.e wrii.:: Moon Dance Farm; Re. I. Box
726; Harnpcon. TN 37658
FREE t..ABOR • I would like ID learn about beekeeping and
building New Ag< Housing Willing to wo1'k for free during
summer. All I ask b a pl- for my tcnl and .., occasional
muL Con11e1 ClvU Irwin; 1712 Whhc /we.; Knoxville:. TN
37916 (6lS) 673-0653.
BUCITT RESISTANT CHESUIUT ·hybrid
AmcricanlCluncS 0wman c:hcstnut treea • blight rcsisW\I
timl>C!r pc>wth form. productive orchard crop wilh luge.
sweet CQily·pcc\ed nuu. Cbutnut Hill l'luncry; RL I, Bo>.
34 l·K: Aadiua, FL 3261.S (904) 462·2820
ORGANTC FERTIUZERS. belts, and arganically-groMI.
local produce 11 the> WNC Pannen' Marked Look for the
FaiJglcn Fanns slllll. units F and 0 in lhc wholesale 1tU of'
lhc F.umcn' Matkrl; 570 BteVud Rd.; Asheville, NC ("104
252-4414
Trudeau Dr.; Mc.Wrc, LA 70003.
CENTEJl FOR AWA.KENlNC scck:ing 2 full-time, live.in
volunlccn w/ main1cnance and/or n11ural food prep
eitpericnce. RmManl. Wri1e; Human Services Allianoc
Bo• IS42; WinSIOn.Salcm. NC 27102 (919) 761-874S.
APPROPRIATE PASSIVE SOLAR des1111. blueprints
and full wor.king dnwings for homes, shopt. and sheds
Cr.,•llve dr1fling .....yow- ideas or ours. Harmony
Sunbuildets; P.O. Bo• 194; Suiv Grove. NC 28697
SONGS OF LOVE ANO NATURE by Ron Lambe
fcawring the voice of Hearuingcr wilh Slcphen Klein,
Pi&no. Lavaul<r Lieder Records; R1 I, Box I JS;
Bakcnvillc, NC 28705. (704) 6884791.
B~c I01J.r111!1 inlo o f«alm of Evolution.ary lodvt:llllD'e
by Pauick Clerk. A inu: -=ounl of a bicycle tnp from
NATURAL FOOD SlORF. for ulc in Brevard, NC.
E•ccllcnt IOCllion. $80,000 CJOS1 sales. Growlh poienti&I
Owncn n10ving. mus1 p•U ii on. Call IDiubcth (704)
293·9534 evcnin&J.
ORCANlC FOOD PRODUCING CO-OP
land.
aqwprncnl, apcrienced fannen provided for members The
Bioclomc Pannet~lup; Rt. 2. Sox 184; Waynesville.. NC
28786. (704) 926-935$.
ECO HELP NEEDED Long 8r111Ch Envlfonmcn1al
Education Ccrue:r D«dJ volwileetlN!ICnlS 10 help "'•lh
orchards, gardens, farmworl. rainbow 1tou1.
cmrgy-efficimc bllild1ng. cnvimnmmtal/wildlifc/pmn1·
cul11m issues and organizing. Room and boatd negntiable.
Paul Calllmoce; l.BF.EC; RL 2. Box 132; ~icc.icr, NC
28748
YOU CAN CO HOME AGAIN· A Down To &rth
JOURNEY INTO THE SLICK.ROCK Wildcmcu Atca
Boys. falhu-son. falher-daughter cxpcdttJoN. Learn
ob<•rvttion and woodcraft in lhe deep woods. Bun
~gay, upericnced guide Slicktock ElpeditionJ; Box
1214; Cullowhec. NC .28723.
AMRITA HERBAL PRODUCTS · Comfrey. EucalyplUS
Oii C.olclcn Seal salve. ~mon ar LA•cncler (ICIC ctam. Medo:
wilh natural and c=nlial oih and love. Send for brochure
Rt I. Box 737; Floyd, VA 24091.
HAND.CARVED WOODSPIRITS. ln)"ucal hiking ital~
FINDING OUR "PATH WITH HEART" c.QI be v11al t0
O\lt health Ind ~•lfoxprasion. I offer guidcl<:e lhrou&h
courueling, spimual 111uncmm1. ..1rolog1cal rcadings
WOJbhops, common·llCJUC ftedbt.ell. For more info or an
appoin1mcnl, call Richard Lowenthal , M.A . (704)
2Sl·2526. Sliding scale fcea.
ALTERNATIVE COMMUNITY on bcauuful land~
Cbualccc, NC sr<king r1milirs domring gi:c11tt
c:oopenlicm and self·sufficlen<:y. Based on Jpiricual Ind
ocological valuea. Pcoperty now av11f1ble. Call (404)
77S.S7S4 for info.
Wuhinglon, D.C 10 Ille au1boc's native home of
Cullowbcc, NC. following muah of lhc Bluc Ridge
Parkway. Avai1oblc for $7.95 pose paid from Dandylion
Publicatio111. 47 Pmola. Sc., Ashcvillc NC 28801.
COMMUNION WITH NATifRA • Long proclauncd to be
cclcsual •tan &fOllllding their radiance on Mot.bcr !!viii
flowers ""' the rcvcl11ion of lhc plan!. Come •hllfe in
NATURA'$ sacred play. moyonunUJe facililJtin&. 3931
Hwy 80 S. Toe River, Bunuvillc. NC 28714 ("104}
6~-4806
CARDE.NERS arc ..-UJated t0 v11u our Parad~ Gardens
for insirucuon and inspirauon (!'reel and/or peicmial plan11
sale (cheap). Artisu .re 1nvncd IO c:omtt and c:ru1c 1n tile
gllda> • painUng. drawing. and phDioanplty arc cnMunged
We oho ba,·• • cabin avtJ.IAblc mcxcrumgc for warlcin& in
lhc ganlcn. Mount.m Gardens; 3020 White Oak Creek;
Bunuvillc, NC 28714 (704) 67S·S664.
and wall hAAgmp by SICVc Dunc111 For broch1... plcuc
write Whippoorwill Swctio; llt 4, ~ 981; Manon. NC
28752.
MEDITATION CUSHIONS Crom Carolina M<>mUll
Do.signs. Troditionll ancl mllwblo 1.afus For free bnx:hurc
wrii.e; RL I. Boa 31·8: Hot Spnng1, NC 237<13.
HANDMADE RATTI..ES fot the 'JMlual warrnor or hcal~r
made wilh maic.rial• provadcd by !he animal ltin1dom.
<;:oncact: Jc._ HltnS Bathrict.-; SW Cm.notill AttifilC~
1307 lvcnon St.: Allmta. GA (404) 588-0296
•
INDIAN VAUEY RETREAT· 140 acrci in Blue Ridge
mountains wilh faeilitiea available to rent far group1 or
individual ll!lra!S. dlha 3J.1ided or unstn1C;1Ul1>d. Send for
infom111ion and seasonal c1lo.ndar of h.e aling,
transfl>ITil&live evcnlJ lo: lndu111 Vllllcy Holislic Center
RL 2. Box S8; Willis, VA 24:180
h.Alld TN! Earth Li•ci /lappity Ever After - .caries from
folk lrlditioni all ltOWld the wtidd chosen to help prolt:Ct
all living beings by bringing 111'1 world soc1ecy a few steps
do5Ct to peace and ~l for 1111 fife. Edited by Floar.ing
Eagle Femhcr. $7 .00 ppd. (All profits go IO Clrempacc IJ1A!
!he Pcau Museum.) Order &om: Wages of Peace; 309
704.251 ·2526).
•
MOTHER'S BREATit HERBAL PRODUCTS high
quali1y b"fbal c•"'""· oin1ments, and 011J, lov1n1ly
aa1cd. Send for free brochure 10 Re . 2. Ro• 251. Vllas.
NC2K692
EARTH REACH EDUCATION ASSOCIATION 1cae1Un1
pnmitivc skills 10 children md adulu.. Roben Manin. Jr
and JC&1111C Moo!\!'. RL I, Box 178-A. Fcnum, VA 24088.
BEAUTIFUL EUCIUOE MOCCASINS Custom aitcd to
your f~• AO narural ma1erials. Sof!SOle $2.5/lw<holt
SSO. Send tncm& of your fool to Na1ivc American
FoQ1wcar, 47 Panola St., Alhevillc NC 2.8801; 7~
2:Sl·22.SO
WEBWORK!NO is &cc 5""J •ubmis.1u1cu to:
K01"4Jt J<><1rnal
P.O. Bo• 638
ui=ler.NC
Kall!ah Pro"incc 28743
SprinlJ, 1999
•
�The Kaulah Journal wants to communicate your
thoughts and feelings to the other people in the
bioregional province. Send them to us as leners. poems,
stories. articles. drawings, or photographs, etc. Please
send your comnbutions to us at: Katuah Journal; P. 0.
Box 638; Leicester, NC; Karuah Province 28748.
•
The summer issue of lhc Ka11iah Jo11.rlllll will deal with the
meaning of the word "Pence" as a dynamic process lhal can
replace cxisung SU"Uctures of donunation with vibrant new
relarionships.
Please send us descriptions and contact infonnarion for
individuals and groups in your pan of the province that are doing
lhings that are helping co create peace Ill the world.
We would also Hke to know what is your definition of
pence. We would like to get a collection of the mo.~t interesting and
accurate definitions of that elusive idea.
BACK ISSUES
OF KATUAH AV All.ABLE
$1.50
-··
ISSUE FIFTEEN Sprin& 1987
Coverlets - Woman Porcsler - Susie McMdwl
Midwife . Alternative Conlncqmon •
Bio>CJtualily - 81orcgionalism ~ Women Good Mtdic:inc: MmWdlal Clll~ ,_,
WWJ[fl~-
ISSUE THREE SPRJN(l 1984
Sustain.thlc Agriculture . SunOowas Human
lmpac1 on lhc: Forut - Childrcns' Ed11c111ion
Vct0nlca Nicholu·Woman in Politics Llitlc
tsSUESIXTE:EN-Summerl987
Helen Wauc: Poem: Visions 111 • O~ .
Vision Que,r1 - Fim Flow - ln11ia1ion •
1.umina in lhc Wildemeu • Cherokee
Cllallcngc "Valuing T,_.
People. Mcdlrinc Allies
•
ISSUE FOUR - SUMMER 198'1
W11c1 !>nun Water Quably Kudtu Solar
Ecli~c Ctc:arcuttin& T1out • C.omg IO W111r1
Ram PllmP" • Mic:rohydro - Pocnu: Bennie
l...ec Sinclair, Jim Wrync Mnlcr
ISSUE EIGITTE.EN WUUO' 1987 88
VcmacuIIT Atchiittl\ITC - Dl'c;ams an Wood Q!
Sione - Mount&Jll Home - E.Ulh l!ncrJi.. •
Eanh-S!u:hcrcd Livmg • Mcmbr- Houses
Brush Shchci - Poems· Ot:to«r Du.d • C'oOOd
ModX:.nc: "Sheller"
ISSLF. FIVE - FALL 191!4
llarv1:11 • Old Ways in Chc1ok"" GinKng
Nuclear Waste: • Our Cchic Hcri1•ge
Biorcgionalism: Put. Ptuc:nt. and Fu1ure Jahn Wilnol)' • Healing Dlltkness Politics or
ISSUE NINETEe.N -Sll'Ulg. 19811
Pcrloandra Cltdtn Spring Tonics · Blueberries
WUdOo11>cr O•rdcns Granny Hcrbalis1 •
Flll"'l:r Es.cncea • lho Origin of lhe Animal :
Stoty -Good Malicmo: "Po.. cr" • Be ATroe
Paructp:iliDn
ISSLIE SIX. WTNTER 1984-85
Wini.:r Soi.ti« Eanh Ceremony· H0<scpiu1u;i,
ISSUE TWENTY · S11m1na. 19811
l'reM!rve App.alathilll WildcnlU.J • Hi,ghbnll
of ltoan - Cel<1 Community - L.nd Trun •
Arthur Miqan School • Zoning 'Wuc • ·'"The
Ridgo" - Fanncrs Ind lhe Fann Bill • Cood
Mcdir.:lnc! ''Lind" · Acid Rain · Duke"• Po..,cr
Play Chaoic< Microhydro ProJCCI
Rt\CT Com1111 ol lhc Llshl • Log Clbm
Roo1a- MoUlll&in Apicullurc: Tho Righi Crop
- W11l1am Tayl11< The Fuiun: of lhc: Forc.t
ISSUE SEVEN SPRING 1985
Su.'ll&JA•blc Ec:onomic:J Hot Srrinp - Worlte;
Ownership - The Great &onomy - Self Help
Crccjj1 Union Wiid Turlt.cy - Rcsponslbl•
lnvuting Workitlg in Ilic Web of Lite
JSSUE EIGtrr - SUMMER 1985
Celebra11on: A Way of Life - Kat\Wl 18.000
Ye&l'J Ago • Sacred Sil.Cl - Follc Ans in lhc
School& - Sun Cyc:l~oon Cycle • Powu:
Hilda Downer Chcsolcu Heritage Caw:r •
Who Owns Appaladlhl?
ISSUENTNE- FALL 1985
The
Wal~
Forest - Thi> Tfl'cS Spc:alt •
Milf&llng Foruts • llcme Logging - Stanmg a
Treci Crop Urb&n Trees · l\oom Btc«I - Mylh
Tane
~-
ISSUE Et.EVEN SPRINO 1986
Community Planning - Cities and the:
Biotcgional Vision - Roc:yclmg Community
Gardening- Floyd County, VA - Ouoliol Two Biottgional Views • Nuclear Suj)plema11
FoiU= Oarne.s. Good MtdldM: Visions
Box - The Wake - TI1c Raven Moclcor
Woodslorc and WildwoodJ Wildom Oood
tsSUETWEHTY-ONE · Fall, 1988
Chc:stnu~ A 1~i.1ura.1 Hl11ory • Rostoring w
Cheiulut. ·p~ orl'rcs<!rvation Uld Praise"
Canunuing the Quesl Farella and Wildlife
Chos1ru111 in Regional 011~1
Chcsuuu
Ruoun:u - Hctb Noic - Good Mcdn:mc:
"Changes 10 C<!me" • Rev~ Wkr# le&~Nls
Medicine: The Sweat lodge
ISSUETBN ·WINTER 19l!S-86
Ka1c Rogas • Circles of Slone • lnicmal
Mylhmalcing - Holl•lic: Healing on Trial
Poem$: Sieve Knaulh • My1Juc Pbc:c:s The
Uklona's Talc:
Cry11al Magic -
Li~
ISSUE FOURTEEN - W-mi« 1986.t7
Uoyd Cul Owlc. Boogers and Mwnmcn - All
!SSUETWENTY TWOWin1ct", l9S8-89
Cilobal Wmnaig and Kat4ah .irire This T~ •
Thom.u Deny on "Biorcgsons" - Eanh E.xcrase Ko~ Loy McWluru:r • All Abundance oI
l'..mplincSJ - LETS • Chninicl.. or Flo)'d - o.ry
Wood lnlcrf!ICW The 9.,.., Clan
ISSUE THIRTEEN · Fall 1986
Ccnlcr For Awakening - Elinbc:th Callari A
Clc:n1lc Dca1h • Hosp>CA! Eincsl Morgan
Dealing Crcalivcly with Dcalh Home Bunal
Species Day - Cabin Fcve1 Uni•aaity •
Homelcu !JI Kaiuah • Homcinadc Hos Wiler
S1ovanJtkCf'5 Narrauvc • Good Meche.inc::
lntmpcci.. Conununication
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - ,,
~UA~
QURNAL
0
-- - - - -
~
--------
For more info: call Mamie Muller (704) 683-1414
Boie 638; Leicester, NC; KatUah Province 28748
Regular Membership........ $10/yr.
Sponsor........................$20/yr.
Contributor.....................$50/yr.
Name
Enc/Med is$
Address
City
Area COde
Sprl.nq, 1989
ro give
this ejforr an extra boost
State
Phone Number
Zip
l can be a local contact
person for my area
Back [ssues
Issue#-_@$2.50= $_ _
Issue#_@ $2.50 = $_ _
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Issue# __@ S2.50 = $ _ _
Choose any 5 issues:
SIO.OO=S_ _
Complete Set (3-11, 13-16,
18-22)
@ $35.00 = $_ _
XAwaf1 Jou~ncit Pt«J~ ~s
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians Records
Description
An account of the resource
<em>Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians</em>, later simplified to <em>Katúah Journal</em>, was published from 1983 to 1993. A quarterly publication, it was focused on the bioregion of former Cherokee land in Appalachia. <br /><br /><span>The early issues of the journal explain the meaning of the Cherokee name, </span><em>Katúah</em><span>, and why the editors wanted to view the world through a bioregional lens, rather than political boundaries. A volunteer production, the editors took a holistic view in tackling social, environmental, mental, spiritual, and emotional topics of the day, many of which are still relevant. </span><br /><span><br />The <em>Katúah Journal</em> was co-founded by Marnie Muller, David Wheeler, Thomas Rain Crowe, Martha Tree and others who served as co-publishers and co-editors. Other key team members included Chip Smith, David Reed, Jay Mackey, Rob Messick and many others.</span><br /><br />This digital collection is only a portion of the <em>Katúah</em>-related materials in the W.L. Eury Appalachian Collection in Special Collections at Appalachian State University. The items in AC.870 Katúah Journal records cover the production history of the <em>Katúah Journal</em>. Contained within the records are correspondence, publication information, article submissions, and financial information. The editorial layouts for issues 12 through 39 are included as are a full run of the Journal spanning nearly a decade. Also included are photographs of events related to the Journal and a film on the publication.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
This resource is part of the <em>Katúah Journal Records </em>collection. For a description of the entire collection, see <a href="https://appstate-speccoll.lyrasistechnology.org/repositories/2/resources/937" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Katúah Journal Records (AC. 870)</a>.
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
The images and information in this collection are protected by the Copyright Law of the United States (Title 17, U. S. C.) and are intended only for personal, non-commercial, and educational purposes, provided proper citation is used – i.e., Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians Records, 1980-2013 (AC.870), W. L. Eury Appalachian Collection, Special Collections, Appalachian State University, Boone, NC. Researchers are responsible for securing permissions from the copyright holder for any reproduction, publication, or commercial use of these materials.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1983-1993
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
journals (periodicals)
Language
A language of the resource
English
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
<em>Katúah Journal</em>, Issue 23, Spring 1989
Description
An account of the resource
The twenty-third issue of the <em>Katúah Journal</em> focuses on varied topics such as the ancient ways of the first people groups in Appalachia; "Planet Art;" tulip poplar trees; the Black Swan Center; and environmentally-friendly economics. Authors and artists in this issue include: Kim Sandland, Denise Newbourne, David Morris, Doug Elliott, James Rhea, Jerry Trivette, C.B. Squire, Elizabeth Griffin, Gil Leebrick, Michael Hockaday, Sheli Lodge, Rob Messick, David Wheeler, Dolores LaChapelle, Martha Tree, Laura E. Jackson, and Jackie Taylor. <br><br><em>Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians</em>, later simplified to <em>Katúah Journal</em>, was published from 1983 to 1993. A quarterly publication, it was focused on the bioregion of former Cherokee land in Appalachia. The early issues of the journal explain the meaning of the Cherokee name, Katúah, and why the editors wanted to view the world through a bioregional lens, rather than political boundaries. A volunteer production, the editors took a holistic view in tackling social, environmental, mental, spiritual, and emotional topics of the day, many of which are still relevant.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1989
Table Of Contents
A list of subunits of the resource.
Pisgah Village: A Window into Ancient Ways by Kim Sandland.......1<br /><br />Planet Art in Katúah by Denise Newbourne.......5<br /><br />The Green City as Thriving City by David Morris.......8<br /><br />Poplar Appeal by Doug Elliott.......10<br /><br />Clear Sky: A Composite Portrait by James Rhea.......13<br /><br />"A New Earth" by Jerry Trivette.......14<br /><br />College as Community Resource by C. B. Squire.......16<br /><br />Wild Lovely Days: Poems by Elizabeth Griffin | Photographs by Gil Leebrick.......18<br /><br />Natural World News.......20<br /><br />Reviews: Sacred Land Sacred Sex Rapture of the Deep.......23 Stopping the Coming Ice Age.......25<br /><br />Drumming: Letters to Katúah.......26<br /><br />"Sudden Tendrils" a poem by Michael Hockaday.......28<br /><br />Events Calendar.......32<br /><br />Webworking.......34<br /><br /><em>Note: This table of contents corresponds to the original document, not the Document Viewer.</em>
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
<em>Katúah Journal</em>, printed by The <em>Waynesville Mountaineer</em> Press
Subject
The topic of the resource
Bioregionalism--Appalachian Region, Southern
Sustainable living--Appalachian Region, Southern
Cherokee Indians--History
Excavations (Archaeology)--North Carolina, Western
Mixed economy--Appalachian Region, Southern
Poplar--North Carolina, Western
Community development--North Carolina--Swannanoa River Valley
Human ecology in art
North Carolina, Western
Blue Ridge Mountains
Appalachian Region, Southern
North Carolina--Periodicals
Language
A language of the resource
English
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
<a href="https://appstate-speccoll.lyrasistechnology.org/repositories/2/resources/937"> AC.870 Katúah Journal records</a>
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
<a title="In Copyright – Educational Use Permitted" href="https://rightsstatements.org/page/InC-EDU/1.0/?language=en 8" target="_blank"> In Copyright – Educational Use Permitted </a>
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Appalachian Region, Southern
Is Part Of
A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included.
<a title="Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians" href="https://omeka.library.appstate.edu/collections/show/79" target="_blank"> Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians </a>
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
PDF
Journals (Periodicals)
Appalachian History
Appalachian Mountains
Appalachian Studies
Book Reviews
Cherokees
Community
Earth Energies
Ecological Peril
Economic Alternatives
Education
Electric Power Companies
Folklore and Ceremony
Forest History
Forest Issues
Geography
Habitat
Hazardous Chemicals
Katúah
Poems
Politics
Reading Resources
Recycling
Shelter
Turtle Island
Villages
Water Quality
Western North Carolina Alliance
-
https://omeka.library.appstate.edu/files/original/1f2e1b45f5e29afd5e7816d6d6f26b51.pdf
e62be1d7412c88f48ec27a25918ab429
PDF Text
Text
ISSUE 26 WINTER1989-90
CHILDREN
$1.50
�~LJAt-t JOURNAL
P.O. Box 638 Leicester, NC Katuah Province 28748
ADDRESS CORRECTION REQUESTED
Postage Pa1d l
Bulk Mail
Permit #18
Leicester, NC
28748
�Coming of Age in the Ecozoic Em .............. l
by Tlwma.1 Berry
Kids Saving Ratnforest................................4
b) Sama/a l/ir.H
Kids' Treccyding Company............ .......... 5
ConOirt Resolution and the Family............ 6
by Ellie Ki,,cade
Developing the Creative Spirit. ...................!i
h\· /.i1uia J1c1mer
The Balloon is a Unicom ............................9
b) Art.1p1ri1 Swdio
Birth Power.................................. ............ 10
b) luc111da Flodin amt .Wanlru Pnk111s
Birth Bonding........................................... 11
b\ Jan \'erJiaexhe
Coming of Age in the Ecozoic Era
The Magic or Puppetry:
An Interview with Bonnie Blue................ 12
by 111omas Berry
by Chriltinll \.forri.w11 uiul Karc11 n mk1m
Horne Schooling..................................... 15
II) 001111 Wnmiward and Trilli Scver111
Ceremony................................................ 16
Trailin/llud
Mother Earth:
The i\atur;1l Classroom.......... ..... .. ... . •IX
111 Sma11 Grie.mwicr
Bmdegradable Diapers............................ 1R
lw Al'l\'a .Ill/ Romm
Resources............ .................................. 19
Gardening Tips tor Children ............ ..... 19
by T<>m )'n1111gblood-Pe1er.e11
\
i\atural World News............................... 20
"From the
Diary of a ~1odem Child".......... .. 24
by Roh Messi< k
Pocket Culture::.......................................24
by \Viii A.1/ie Basm1
Drumming......................................... ..•. 26
Fon:st Rescue:
An Ecological Manifesto.............. 29
Webworking.......................................... .30
We are now at the end of the Cenozoic
Era of the planet Eanh's 4.5 billion year history.
During the Cenozoic time which has been
occuring for the last 65 million years. most all of
the lire fom1s with which we are familiar came
to their foll development. The Cenozoic is nlso
when we humans came into being. I lowever.
this era is rapidly being tcm1inated.
Not only the human, but even more so.
1he functioning or the entire planet is being
altered. The climate, the chemistry of the
atmosphere. 1he wa1er and the soil, our relation
to the sun, all the bio~ystem' of the planet, e\en
the geological structure of the planet: all 1he'e
are being altered in the most extensive
transformation that has ta.ken place on the planet
Eanh in the last 65 millicm years. So extensive
is the d1ssolu11on of the life systems of the Earth
during the past century that the viability of the
human cannot be taken for gr-Jnted.
T he long-term survival of our children
depends on understanding the depth of what is
happening to the planet at present--it is essential
to admit that what b occuring 1s nothing less
than biocide. It also depends on rekindling a
relationship between the human and the natural
world that is far beyond the exploitive
relauonshi ps of the industrial mode. A different
kind of prosperity and progress needs to be
understood which embraces the wlwle Life
community. All our human institutions,
professions, all our programs and acti vities need
to funcuon now m this wider Life community
context.
It is time to evoke the emergence of a new
E.'Uth period which can be identified as the
Ernzoic era. Even now the shift is beginning to
1;ike place in which a relationship or mutual
enhancement between humans and the naturnl
world is being regarded no1 only as possible but
essential to planeiary survival. I low do our
chtldrcn fit in wilh 1his change . .
Hea/1hy £111"irm1me111
Our children need a healthy Eanh in
which to live. A sickened planet is not
conducive to healthy children physically, or to
their emotional or psychic security. Continued
conu1mination of water, soil, air and other life
syMems by unnecessary and unsound
production practices is jeopardizing their future
existence ao; well as that of the planet.
Children need pure air and water and
sunligh1 and fruitfu l soil and all those living
fonns that provide the context in which human
existence can be properly nunured. Only if this
context is kept intact and an appreciation of it is
passed on will we fulfill our obligations to our
children and to the planet.
Membership in the l ife Community
Our children need 10 be able 10 see that
they are members or the whole Life communiiy
of the natural world about them, not just
members of a local or even global human
community. Human society as such is an
abscraction. The only real community is the
entire community of the natural world. No pan
of this integral community has either existence
Dra1< tng by Rub Mo.nick
t 98S
c:ontu1ucd an p. 3
�J<eLlAHJOURNAL
~STAFF THIS ISSUE:
Andy Half-baker
Rob Messick
Marnie Muller
Rodney Webb
Chip Smith
Richard Lowenthal
Christina Morrison
James Rhea
David Wheeler
Heather Blair
EDITORIAL ASSISTANCE:
Stephen Bartlett
Will Ashe Bason
Susan Griesmaier
Michael Havclin
Scott Bird
Jack Chancy
COVER by Zack Brick, age 6, of Floyd Community.
Reprinted from the Blue Mountain School Calendar
(for sale from Colleen Redman; Box 634; Floyd, VA 24091)
THE SOUTHERN APPALJ.CHIAN BIOREGION
ANO MAJOR EASTERN RIVER SYSTEMS
PUBLISHED BY: Kanlah Journol
PRINTED BY: The Waynesville Mountaineer Press
EDITORIAL QFACE nus ISSUE:
Worley Cove, Sandy Mush Ouk
WRITE US AT:
Ka1Wih Journal
Box 638; Leicester, NC; Katuah Province 28748
TELEPHQNE: (704) 683-1414
Ka/UahJournaJ is on SkYland BBS, Asheville, NC.
For information, call (704) 254-6700.
Diversity iJ an important clcmeot or bioregional ecology, bolh
nalUral and social. ln line wilh !his principle, the Kataah Journal tries
io serve m a forum for lhc discussion of regional issues. Signed aniclcs
express only the opinion of the authors and arc not necessarily lhe
opinions of lhe Kataah Journal edilOl'S a staff.
The ln1U1181 Revenue Service has declared Kataah a non-profit
organiulion Wlder section SOl{cX3) of the lnicmal Revenue Code. All
contributions IO Kataah are deductible from pcrsooaJ income tax.
'LNVOCA.TWN
I think ouer ogoin my smell oduentures,
My fears,
Those I thought so big.
For ell the ultol things
I hod to get
And to reach,
And yet,
There Is only one greet thing The Only thing To Hue,
To see the greet doy thot downs ,
And the light thot fill s the w orld.
- Inuit song
STATEMENT OF PURPOSE
Here in the southern-most heartland of the
Appalachian mountains, the oldest mountain range on
our continent, Turile Island; a small but growing
group has begun to take on a sense of responsibility
for the implications of that geographical and cultural
heritage. This sense of responsibility centers on the
concept of living within the natural scale and balance
of universal systems and principles.
Within this circle we begin by invoking the
Cherokee name " KatUtih" as the old/new name for
this area of the mountains and for its journal as well.
The province is indicated by its natural boundaries:
the Roanoke River Valley to the north; the foothills
of the piedmont area to the east; Yona Mountai11 and
the Georgia hills to the south,· and the Tennessee
River Valley to the west.
The editorial priorities for us are to collect
and disseminate information and energy which
periuins specifically to this region, and to foster the
awareness that the land is a living being deserving of
our love and respect. Living in this manner is a way
to insure the sustainability of the biosphere and a
lasting place for ourselves in its continuing
evolutionary process.
We seem to have reached the fulcrum point of
a "do or die " situalion in terms ofa quality standard
of life for all living beings on 1his planet. As a voice
for the caretakers of this sacred land, Kat"'1h, we
advocate a cenlered approach to the concept of
decentralization. It is our hope to become a support
system for those accepting 1he challenge of
sustainability and the creation of harmony and
balance in a total sense, here in this place.
We welcome all correspondence, criticism,
pertinent information, articles, artwork, etc. with
hopes thaJ Ka/Uah will grow to serve the best interests
of this region and all its living, breathing members.
-The Editors
~
k)t,nt.er ,1989-90
�Coming of Age in the Ecozoic
E r a-continued from p. 1
or life apan from the other members or the communiry.
We arc awkward at this manner of thinking because many
of our religions as well as humanist traditions carry a cenain
antagonism toward the natural world. But now the refusal to
acknowledge the intimate membership in the corrununity of Earth
is leading to their own destrucrion as well as that of the planet.
The next generation can survive only as functional members of
this larger community. Our children are instinctively aware of this
wider sense of identity. We need only foster I.his awareness.
Earth Literacy
Our children also need to be literate about the Eanh. They
need to learn not only how to read books composed by human
genius but also how to "read" the Great Book of Nature. Again,
absorbing this Great Book is natural to children. Alienation from
this primary educational experience has been, in our generation,
the source of unmeasured disaster to every aspect of human
existence.
A true prosperity requires being able to understand the
language of nature. Native peoples know this language. II is
primarily the language of the Earth, a language of living
relationships that extend throughout the universe. We have here
within this Nonh American conrinent a superb natural setting in
which our children can become Eanh-literate, capable of
undemanding what their world is telling them.
Energy Awareness
Our children need to understand how to function with the
energy of I.he sun and wind and the water rather than with the
energies of fossil fuels or of nuclear processes. Our inabilny to
use these other energies properly has led to a situation in which
the planet Earth is covered with grime and poisons. These toxins
are not only eating away with their acids the very stones and
structures of all the great cities of the world, but they are also
harmful to the planet itself.
The understanding of more benign energy forms and the
skills to interact with them effectively are absolute necessities for
the survival of our children in a sustainable life context. In
addition, it is imponant 1ha1 these energy systems be designed
with sensitivity and a sense of appropriate scale.
Our children also need to understand the healthy limits of
their bioregion's capacity to provide energy and to suppon life.
They need to be encouraged to envision a way of life that can be
compatible with Lhose natuml limits. Helping children get in Lhe
habit of conservation as well as recycling is an imponant step tn
encouraging them to co-exist with the rest of the life community.
Food
Our children need to learn gardening. The reasons for this
reach deep into their mental and emotional as well as into their
physical survival. Gardening is an active participation in the
deepest mysteries of the universe. By gardening our children
learn that they constitute, with all growing things, a single
community of life. They learn to nurture and be nunured in a
universe Lhat is always precarious but ultimately benign. They
leam profound reasons for the seasonal rituals of the great
religous renditions.
More immediately, however, i'> the question of physical
survivaJ. With the ever-increasing loss of soil on which
food-growing depends, with the rising innaiion in the economic
sphere, with the need for food grown in a proper organic context,
and with the crowded situation in our urban centers, the capacity
of our children to grow a significant umount of their o~n food on
very limited areas of Eanh will become an increasing urgency.
Elementary education especially might very well begin and
be developed in a gardening context. How much the children
could learn! A language related to life! Emotional responses 10
blossoming and fruitful plants. social cooper:11ion, death as a
source of life. They could learn geology and biology and
ascronomy. They could learn the sources of poetry and lner.iture
and the ans. They might even be saved from the sterile and
ephemeral world of Atari.
WUller. 1989- 90
Participawry Role
Our children need to be prepared for their role in the
fruitful functioning of the Great Earth itself, the first and greatest
of all "corporations". They need to learn that the underlying role
of all human corporative enterprises is to enhance the functioning
and meaning and value of this primary corporation, the planet in
which we live. If the Eanh becomes bankrupt there is no future
for anything that lives within the Earth.
The remarkable achievement of the Earth in its natural state
is its ability 10 renew itself and all its living forms. There is a
minimum of entropy in the Earth system_ Energies arc cycled
recycled indefinitely. The infrastructure renews itself. No
human process can do this. NeiLher automobiles nor Madways,
nor subway systems, nor fossil fuels, nor railways, n..ir power
plants, nor nuclear generating plants renew themselves_ They
Inst but a few years and then rust away and the resources of the
planet arc no longer sufficient 10 renew them.
A completely different role of the human in relation to the
Earth begins to identify usclf. One which functions in a different
fashion and with different ideals from the highly entropic,
exploitative manner in which our culture functions at present.
Recognizing our intimate membership in the whole Life
community and becoming literate in its wisdom and language,
our role becomes that of dynamic panicipator. ln recognizing this
intimate connecLion, we begin 10 understand and align ourselves
with 1he natural world's capacity to be self-emerging,
self-propagating, self-nourishing, self-educating, self-governing,
and self·hcaling.
Experience of the Sacred
Our children need to understand the meaning and grandeur
and sacredness of the Eanh as revelatory of the deep mysteries
and meaning of the world. Rather than teaching them to disdain
the natural world as unwonhy of their concern. it would be most
helpful if our religious traditions would move toward a stronger
emphasis on the glorious phenomena of the universe about us as
modes of divine communicauon.
In a special manner, through celebration and ceremony,
our children need to observe and esteem the spontaneities of
nature in our own bioregions here in the different areas of Nonh
America; spontaneities that give expression 10 genetic diversity
which is the most precious endowment of the living world.
Without 1he marvelous variety of living forms that swim in
the sea and live and move upon the Eanh and ny through the air,
our own human understanding, our emotional life, our
imaginative powers. our sense of 1he divine, our capacity for
verbal expression; these would all be terribly diminished. If we
lived on 1he moon, our sense of the divine would reOcct the lunar
landscape: our cmouons. sensitivities and imagination would all,
in a similar manner. be through a lunar mode of expression.
So with our children, they are what they are and have such
remarkable expansion of life because of that share in the natural
world that they have here within the Nonh American continenL
The radiance of their surTOundings is even now reflec1cd in the
radiance of our children's countenances.
Sc11se of History
Our children need a sense of their historical role in creating
this coming ecological age. 1hc F..cozoic. This future world is
something that has never existed before within the context of the
whole planeL We are involved in an irreversible sequence of
planetary developments. For the first time an integral form of the
planet Earth wi1h all its geological contours, its living forms and
us human presence has become possible as a vital, functioning
plane1ary whole expressing itself in its unbroken sequence of
splendors tn movement and song and an infinite variety of color
in the sky and throughout the continents.
There 1s truth in the expression--· The Dream is at the heart
of the Action. The greatest gift we can give our children is to
assiM them in their dreams of a planet of pure air and water and
sunlight and soil. where the community of all living beings can:.,;l!I'
~·
nourii.h in the celebration of existence.
A
Thomas Berry noted geologian and awlwr of The Dream of the
Earth (Sierra Club Books, 1988), is presently collaboraring with
physicis1 Brian Swimme on a new book, The Universe Story.
l'lb •'lnoenu Reny
�~iftFJ. §trfilkT~ ~ftfp
$11~~ ~ ~~T:P41
in
'!8~&11.
illus~uon
by Jermain Mosely
Mrs. Woods' science class at
Asheville Alternative School has
been studying forests and
rainforests in particular. We went
to the "Discovery Place" in
Charlotte to see an exhibit on
Rainforests and have studied
about forestry in class and at
Holmes State Forest.
We have learned that if all the
rainforests are destroyed then our
oxygen will decrease a whole lot.
We have also learned that the
rainforests are ancient. They are
very special and important to us.
They give us many products as
well as 1/2 the world's animals
and plants.
Our class is getting together and
making money to help save these
forests So far we have almost
made $300. With that we will be
able to buy 10 acres of land out of
a rainforest in Belize .
Jc.iiWcih Jo1Ul1Q( pllc:Je 4
'
•I
We have been raking people's
leaves in our neighborhood for
$1.50 or more if the yard is really
big. All of the people's yards we
have raked, have given a little bit
extra. One boy in our class raked a
medium size yard with his friend
tor a man and got $30.00.
We have worked very hard on this
project and hope that we will
encourage other people to pitch in.
We put pictures in the halls of our
school. A few nights ago we had a
woman named Mrs. Jeanne
Cummings come to our school to
show some slides of her
'Earthwatch' trip to a rainforest in
Borneo. We had live entertainment
and refreshments that night. It
was very exciting for all of us.
Do whatever you can to help save
the Rainforests, it is important to
all of us and we hope that these
Rainforests will survive.
/
By Samala Hirst
kll-ntcr, 1989-90
�Ph""'' b~ Karen W•tkin'
Hey, all you people out there,
have you heard of the new business Kid's T reecycling Co.?? !!
It all started when our teacher started talking about
how imponant trees and recycling are. We think 1hat
this is a great Saving-The-Trees business and a grea1
class project.
We sell all sorts of recycled paper producls like paper
1owcls. rissuc and 1oilet paper. On 1hc lirst day we
only got two orders. Then we got more and more
orders every day and week. We have $65.00 so far.
Do you know when we get older there won't be many
trees lefl? There won't be hardly any paper. Don't let
1hat happen! We all need to recycle. S1art now at
Kid's Treecycling Co. We are in third grade at
Asheville Alternative School. South French Broad
Avenue. A ... hcv1llc. NC 28801. Ourtcacheris
Victoria Maddux. You can call her in the evening at
{704)- 645-4593. Call now and become a "Recycling ..
Ci1i1en"
-·-hy: llana Craig. l.arJ Weaver, Ken;. Wahcr,\Vill lknnen.
Molly Ru ... h and Alesia Summey.
l./UlU:t, 1989-90
�Conflict Resolution
and the Family
Conn1ct. Every family has it. Household chores,
homework, messy rooms, schedule connicts, ~pace invasion~.
values collisions, power struggles, and scape-goating have all
been long-srnnding and universal sources of stress in 1hc
American family. The quality of family life. though, is
detennined not by \.\hethcr or not a family has conflict but by
what they do with it.
It is commonly recognized that parents have a great
innuence on the overall process of dealing "'ith the inevitable
conflicts that plague families. What is frequently overlooked.
however, is the contribution that children have 10 make in the
conflict resolution process. Children are our greatest source of
inspiration and creativity; they have internalil.ed fe\.\er rules and
limitations and "yes--bu1--tha1 wouldn't work bccause"s and have
a natural spirit of discovery that can set the stage for new and
more expansive ways of thinking.
This article is based upon my own experience as a par.:nt
and as a conflict management consultant and educator. coupled
with the perspectives of my daughter Dana. age 14, and my son
Nick, age 10. We will citplore three imponant variables which
operate to affect an individual\ or a fomily'~ response to conflict:
Spirit, Personality/Well·Being, and Skillfulnes5.
by Ellie Kincade
Spiritff he Spirit of Possibilit)
Spuit is the auitude with which we approach problems and
conflicts, and is the foundation of the process of resolution.
Thomas Crum, author of The Magic of Conflict. makes two
imponant points about the nature of conflict:
ConOict js a na111ral phenomenon. We see it everywhere in
nature - the magnificent beauty of mountains, canyons, beaches
was formed by eons of connict. In our human relationships,
from the intra- and interpersonal through global levels, the
choices we make determine whether the intense energy inherent
in conflict will be a del.tructive force or as Crum says. will be
"the best sandpaper around for smoothing out our lives"
ConOict js noi a comest. Winning and losing are goals for
games. 001 for connict resolution. Resolving connict is rarely
about \.\ho\ right: it's aboul the acknowledgement and
appreciation of differences.
Dana's summary of a positive spirit toward conflict is:
*Trust one another.
,. Approach problem situations with lo\'e. (Y?u can
love someone and be angry at the same nme.)
t.n.rtrt'r',~90
�•Be flexible and willing lO undersl:lnd another's
point of view.
Nick adds:
•Take responsibilny for your own "stuff' and
realize thal whal you do affects others.
•Anticipate your own and others· needs and try to
prevent conflicts from happening.
•Have a sense of humor, even when there are
problems!
Every family has to find its own unique way of
discovering and fo:.tering a spirit of possibility for dealing with
issues. Families who creatively integrate faith, hope. charity. and
love, and playfulness into their everyday lives develop the
flexibility. willingness and perspective to change gracefully and
powerfully over time. They bring this creative power 10 every
conflict or advei;ity they face.
The family who believes that it is possible to find win/win
solulions (rather than win/lose solutions) to their conflicb. finds
them! A fringe benefit of lhis philosophy about confl1c1 1s that
children (and eventually 1heir parents too!) learn that what they do
and say makes a difference, thnt conflicts can be resolved v. ithout
baules and that problems lhat seem "impossible" to solve arc
really just challenges to human flexibility. compassion and
creativity.
Dana defines respect as the wtllmgness to allow each
person the freedom to express their true and unique self.
Affirrmng differences, making allowances, and building on those
differences facilitate conflict resolution. We've grown up with
homogeny as an ideal. Think about the all-American metaphor of
the "melting pot" where cliversity becomes lost ma kenle of drab
glop. Consider, instead. 1he image of a salad where each
ingredient maintains its discrete qualities while adding volume,
texture, nourishment, variety, and beauty to the whole.
Each individual's personality de1ermines their preferences
and style in dealing with conflict. Nick emphasizes that often he
needs space and wants to be left alone when conflict arises; when
he "cools orr· he is better able to talk about it. Dana usually
wants to talk things out nght away, bu1 sometimes wants time 10
think things out alone. She stresses the importance of asking one
another for what we need and being considerate of our different
needs. Individual differences rue, in fact, one of the greatest
resources in problem ~olving. Division of labor conflicts can
often be easily resolved by having family members volunteer for
their "favorite" chore. For example, Dana and Nick bo1h like to
cook: I much prefer the mindlessness of cleaning up afterward.
Dana likes carrying in the firewood and Nick builds and tends the
fire. or cour.;e those preferences and inclinations do change in an
evolving household, so frequent communication and negotiauon
arc a musr.
In a favorite 'Peanuts' car1oon. Sally is complaining, "I
hate everything! I hate the whole world!" Charlie Brown
responds. matter-of-factly. "I thought you had inner peace."
Sally replies. "I do, but I still have outer obnoxiousness!" We all
have outer obnoxiousness. the level and intensity of which is
directly relatec.! 10 our general state of well-being. One's state of
well-being (or lack 1hereof!) may be lhe most significant factor
affecting the individual's ability to respond to conflict with
tolerance, flexibility, creativity and a "Spirit of Possibility."
The three of us agree thnt a bad day at school or work,
exhaus1ion. pressures of upcoming events, or a general sense of
malaise is often the root of our outer obnoxiousness which can
lead 10 conflict. Here are several things families can do to
enhance 1he well-being of individuals and the family unit:
Herc are some fun ways families can develop and exercise
the "Spirit of Possibility":
•Play games like, "There's Not Only One Way 10 Do Anything".
Discover throogh brruns1onnmg the many f>O"-s1h1l111cs m a snuauon.
How many different wa)'~ arc there to m:ike p<1ll<!akcs? To plant a tree?
To w~h a window? Wc"vc ycl IO find an acuvity lhal can he done m
JUSl one way. Make the jOlhl)' or brrunstonnmg commonplace. so tl1'1l
11 occurs more na1urally in connict snuauons.
•Keep 1rnck of "Impossible Things• that happen an the world Read and
d1SCus.s news s1orics, historical evenL~. sporting accomplishmenb.
amazing inventions, ulcs of survival and raniaslic JOumcys, and mo~l
1mporwuly, personal life cxpcncnccs m lhc accomplishment or "The
Impossible". For example:
Remember when ...
..."Nick almost gave up finding a shark's t0olh at the beach-and then
found live!"
·~"Grandma 105t her diamond ring m lhc gnx:cry ~iorc parking 101 and
wcnL b:lck lhat nighl and found 1L"
..."Dana though I she'd never be able to afford her trip to the Soviet
Union and !hen raised all the money for tile lrip by selling hct pocll)
books."
Our true contcmpornry heroes arc ordinary people in ordinary
cin:umslallCCS who occomplish cx1100td1nary tilings.
• Acknowledge. and celebrate seasonal changes and cytlical
llllnsfonmuions, e.g. watch 1hc moon wax and wane. gardcM grow.
birds migraic. cocoons spin and haich. seeds di\-pc.rsc. Notice and honor
developmental changes in ram1ly member;: e.g. have celebrations m
honor or landmark events. bcginnmgs. endings. and annavcrw1cs-·
there's always something IO cclcbrutc, rrom lo<;t w:cth to maJor rites of
passage. American l1'3d1tion I\ lacking in mual. Look to other cultures
and uad11ions and creaic your own! Gncve the losses and welcome the
new growth !hat rollows
Personalil~ Factor~
and Well-Being
(I) Eyeball the week ahead 10 alert one anolhcr abou1 high ~lre5' limes
and ask for cxlr'd supJ10n, e.g. Nack mak<:S school lunches when Dana
has a track meet so she can get some cxtnl rest: Dan3 covers dinner
when I need to prepare for a worlc'\hop. Communic~ning m advance
•Experience and affinn your conna:ledn~ to tile world·•ll·latgc Mike
family dcc1s1ons about what contnbuuons io m:t.lcc 10 commumty and
global service projects. The needs, a~ we look around u•. arc
overwhelming. Learning lO make choice~ aoout how to u<c: our
personal energy and rc~rces 1s a b;i~1c hfc skill for hvang m th" age.
Remember the story of 1hc person at the edge of the '>Ca, tossing
beached si.arfish back mto the occan. A man appro:1chcd und '"I.ell,
"Why arc yoo bothering to do tha11 Then: arc so mnny. Whm d11Tcrcncc
docs it make io save a few?" 11ui person p3uscd. thought. smiled nnd,
tossing ano1hcr \lllffitj\ mto 1hc sea, replied •1t make' a diffcrcnc.: to
that one:
•explore mull1-cuhurnl perspectives by cncuuragmg c~changc~
through pen.pals. ho,11ng mtcmauonal ''i\ltOrs, or travel D.> your
g1fl·shopp1ng lhrough catalog., that \upport collage mdu\trlC\ 1n
,·nrious cuhures around the world. Dana involved our cnurc famil)·.
from C03Sl to coast, in her ci111..cn-diplnmacy trap to lhe Soviet Union
lhis past summer She enhanced our ·spirit or Po~1l>1hty" by making
her own dream come true and ~he created a network of connectedness
bctwc:cn many Sovic:ts and Americans \\ho share the larger dream or
world peace.
&.>Lnte.r, 1989-90
about schedules 1\ connic1 pn:vcnuon!
(2) Milke \tree;,; mnnagcmcnt a family alTair. Take walks. have joint
"temper tantrum'· 10 let off sicam. talk about your drc3111s, give one
anolhcr massag~. have ·,1op-:icuon hug~· (prionty hug> can mltrTUp!
any ac11vi1y, C\cn an argument). Plan healthy menu.' together, hsien lO
music. dance. LAUGll A LOT! llavc nightly snuggles before bed.
Every f;tmily ~ds to discover and invent 1ts own 'tlC'' managcmcn1
plan Suppon one another's mdl\·1du.al \l.l'CSS marugcmcnt programs,
IOO. Dana ruid Nick ga>c me space for mcd11auon, racqlldball, or naps.
Tran.•;pona110n to tllcir 'JX>rb. academic and ~ul cvcnL~ is a pnoruy
for me.
(3) Learn w1lh your ch1IJrcn wmc tools for ccn1ermg. n:laxauon 8lld
sp1r11ual renewal Pra)'Cr. mcd1ta.t1on, visunli1.ation, brealhmg, }Oga,
dance. ~ns. and CCr1ilm man1al JI'\.\ (p:llllCUlllfly the nuid, powerful
and non-v1oleni ans suc;h as a1k1do and T11.1 Cha). arc all ways to
develop a relaxed, Oc.ublc. balanced. aucnuvc, and strong poMllre.
From tl11$ ccnicrcd siate at is easier to move with confidence and care
through life's ngors.
(oontiml<d an~ 23)
�Developing the Creative Spirit
by Linda Metzner
Imagine a warm, lazy summer's day, sky very blue.
You are on your back watching clouds roll by. What do you
sec there in the clouds? How docs it sound to you? Can you
move the way the clouds move?
What are the possibilities? Can your imagination take
you places you've never been before? Are there new ways to
get there?
If we are not utilizing the body-mind's creative
capabilities, we are allowing ninety percent of the nco-conex
--the largest and most recently-developed pan of the brain--to
go unused, an ocean of untapped potenrial. The work of a
lifetime, in tenns of mind evolution, is to make new
connections, to use the heart-mind, the whole brain and the
nervous system, to crave! to new realms on new paths, 10
envision and create ever-greater inter-relationships among
things.
A deeper goal of the teaching of creativity. and of an,
is to offer a starting-point, a vocabulary of the spirit, tools
for climbing through the changing terrain of the mind. The
dilemmas of our lives are dealt with by looking not just or the
problems but with them, around them, inside and outside of
them, and beyond them.
Imagination, "the ability to create images not present to
the sensory system;· involves the creation of thousands of
physical connecting links between neurons in the brain. If the
neurological structures for creative thinking are allowed to
develop in childhood, regardless of the end product of the
imaginative thought, then the resulting system of abundant
connecting links will be available to the adult as well.
Joseph Chilton Pearce, m his book The Magical Child.
speaks about a cenain point in childhood, especially between
the ages of seven and eleven, where vmually any suggestion
can be adopted and utilized by the child, if it is given without
doubt or ambiguity. Wnlking through fire, healing ~·ith the
hands, clairvoyance, many typ;!S of "paranormal" abilities arc
really extensions of creative thinking exhibited by children
given "pennission" to experience them.
Here are a few travel tips for the lifelong journey of
nunuring the creative spirit within ourselves and others:
Play. relax, go slow. New ideas will come from places
that are beyond your conscious control. Make time for
them.
Listen to your dreams, your flashes of insight, your
intuition. Try not to label mind processes as weird or
useless. Don't be shocked if you hear of other sounds,
colors, or beings a child is conscious of. You arc tapping
into a world Edith Cobb calls "common-plus-cosmic".
Give yourself guidelines for creative activities.
AJlow the mind to play with one or two small features,
and explore all the possibilities: a few colors. a few
textures, a musical interval or timbre.
Try to have material that presents ever-increasing
challenges, but stay grounded in past work. In teaching
music, try to stan with the body, with movement. for
every new idea introduced.
JC.Qiiuih
Journat p1t9e 8
"Compe1itions are for horses, not anists" (Picasso).
Don't compare, rate, evaluate or "improve" anyone's
work. Ask the anis1 to tell abou1 ii and get some insight
into her/his thinking.
Have some open rime, some open space, and some
open materials. Keep a box of bright colored papers,
scissors, glue, fabric. markers, pencils; loose clothes for
movement: a variety of sound-makers; typewriter or tape
recorder for stories.
Study and learn. Be aware of how others are taking
new leaps and exploring new territory.
Look for examples in life of an going outside old
boundaries: murals, mobiles, architecture, pantomime,
storytelling. This is the same evolutionary process found
in frogs, flowers, and blue-footed boobies.
Look at how it's been done in other places. In Africa,
animal forms become patterns on cloth; in Bali, girls
dance as goddesses in a trance state; in China, a five-note
scale played on bamboo pipes forms an orchesrra. Other
cultures have already transcended some of the artistic
boundaries that we've inherited in ours.
After working alone, try working with one or two
others. Your ideas may expand synergbtically, way
beyond what you had alone.
Learn simultaneously to respect others' crearions as
you create your own. Sometimes this calls for quiet
listening or watching others, or spending time with
someone else's finished work. What new ways does
he/she open up 10 you?
A mind that craves new solutions, new paths. can leap out
of trenches of conditioning and make miracles happen. This.
after all, is how the Universe 1s being created, even as we
speak!
RESOURCES:
CATALOGS
• Animal Town CoopcraU\'C Ventures
PO Box 2002. S:tnlll Barbara. CA 93102
• Chmabcny Book Scrvice
2830 Via Orange Way Su11.c B, Spring Valley, CA 92078
• Geode Educational ()pllon~
PO Box 106, We.~1 Che.qcr, PA 19381
• Music For Lillie People
PO Box 1460, Redway, CA 95560
• Suzuki Musical lnsuumcnis
PO Box 261030. San Diego, CA 92126
• World Music Press
11 Myrtle Avenue, PO Box 2565, Danberry, CT 06813
SUGGESTED READING
Adams, James. The Cart 01ld Feeding of Ideas. Addison· Wesley. 1986.
Amabile, TCIC.~ Growing Up Creative Crown Publishers, 1989.
Cobb, Edith. The Ecology of lmDgina11on in Childhood Columbia
Umvcrs11y Press, 1977.
Gardner. Howard. Frames of M111d: Tht TMory of Multiplt lnttll1gtncts.
Basic Books, Inc. 1983.
Pearce. Joseph Chihon. TM Magical Child and TM MallU;al Child Matures.
E.P. Dunon, New York. 1977
Piening, Ek.lcchan:I and Lyons, Nick. Educating as an Art, The Rudolf Si.cincr
Mciliod. The Rudolf Si.cuicr School Press. NY. 1979.
Reck, David. TllL Music of tM IVholt Earth. Charles Scribncr'5 Sons, NY.
1977.
~
lmdo Merzner reaches Orff music and co.directs Anspirit, a
srudio of creorive orrs in Asheville. NC. She is a composer 011d
arranger and direcis rlie choral group, Womansong.
H.l~nter, 1989-90
�The :Balloon Ls A. Unworn
These ukas /or cJ.vfik>plrJ.9 c:reattvit!I i.n mlldrcn '""
s!Jared U'ith us from A.rtspu1t, 11 i;reato-e art..s studio 1n
Asm:i•1Jle, NC. 1'!4:mbcrs 1nc{Ulk: 1'frls A.rrwld. (day). 'BarrU:
'Barron (m<wcment), Norma 1Jradky (paper), Vicki.
aadh~UIJ (ft/x:r ), and lmdu 1'f4Urwr (musu;).
Xak.e a sefJ-portrait with pieces of coCored.
paper. Choose the coCors that
you.. IJorr.. as smaU:
' - mmn the most to
or as i.ur9e as ~ou Llke.
1.nter , 1989- 90
�by Lucinda Aodin and Martha Perkins
We need co recognize how imponant it is that women
take back their power· the natural power of creation is ours.
While a woman feels most in concrol of the birthing experience
in her own home, it is most important that she be able to
exercise her power wherever a binh should happen.
Women often do not realize the tremendous reservoir of
power that is theirs to tap into when they are delivering a
newborn. Birthing a child is the most powerful activity that our
bodies can perform, and a woman who can binh with power
will be a better mother and a stronger woman. No matter where
a baby is born, the mother should be able to accomplish it with
the full power that is inherent in the act and with the dignity of
womanhood.
We recently viewed a slide show of binh as represented
in an throughout history from cave glyphs to modem
obstetrics. Traditionally women are shown birthing upright,
strong and confident. A woman helper ·or sometimes a man •
is behind her; a midwife is below and in front of her. Paintings
and drawings from around the world and throughout the ages
of history all depict this trinity of birth... until modem times.
As the picrures draw closer to the present, the woman
sinks fanher and farther back into the images until she
disappears from the picture altogether. In recent photographs of
operating room situations the woman giving birth is not even
visible. She is flat on her back. her whole body draped except
for a gaping vagina, which usually has been cut. She is not
mother or a person, but a thing. Watching those slides brought
home instantly what has happened since our birth power has
been stripped from us.
functions of her body, mind. and spirit, and she is delivered.
She is not giving birth, or delivering her new-born life. She is
being delivered, which implies that she is being set
free ... "Deliver me from this childl" ... who is then taken away
to the nurseries, to the bath, to be re-warmed after its small
body is chilled.
This separation creates much emotional hardship for both
parents and child. But the love of a mother and a father is
amazing. It reaches beyond the hardship and bonds in love
with their child • but childbirth and bonding does not have to
be so hard.
We tend co think of power in terms of its mis-use rather
than thinking of power as being healing and strong. A
woman's birth power is power in its pure sense: power that is
not manipulative, not selfish. Birth power is selfless. Labor is
a series of overwhelming surges of energy, powerful waves.
Binh is a power act. It is one way in which a woman quests for
a vision and finds her pince in this life. In giving birth a woman
must exercise the ultimate strength of yielding. In yielding to
her labor she draws on the energy of the life foroe. Our culture
tends to consider yielding as an act of weakness. But in giving
birth, yielding is the strongest act. h is the strength of the
whole uruversc that brings a baby into chis world.
When birth is a narural act of power, a woman is not
delivered. She embraces the power of her womanhood, yields
to the strength of her body and her spirit, and gives her baby
passage into his or her own life. Watching births we have
learned that a midwife's job is to guide a woman into her
power· to work with a mother, to educate her, and to help her
to use her innate knowledge. It is amazing to watch the change
in a woman as she comes into her power.
Entering a hospiial a woman feels small and
insignificant, like a pebble amid the looming technology. It is
unnerving. The situation is out of her control and her mate's
control as well. Every intervention tells her that she knows
nothing about the procedures of birth and that her instincts arc
not to be truSted. The hospital staff is in command. She is not
IO yield tO the power of birth. Rather, anaesthesia takes over the
We arc successful as midwives when at the end of a
birthing the woman says, "I did it. Thank you for helping me."
If a woman says,"I couldn't have done it without you," we
have not done our job well enough. The mother deserves the
credit. After all, she has done all the work. If someone were to
ask us, "What is the job of a midwife?", we would reply, "To
give back chc power."
.
~t.UA.h
.
.
JounwaC p"'.JS 10
�•
To rcali1.C the binhing power we must first relearn the
birthing process. It is an ancient process, a wise way, and
generations of humaniiy have proven that it works. Then,
anned with our knowledge, we must demand 1ha1 our
institutions change with us. Our hospitals. doctors, nurses, anJ
midwives have to allow us as women to have control over our
own health - no, we as women must take control.
Families will never be srrong until we take back the
power of birth...and until we have power and strength in the
family. we will never truly heal the Eanh.
Lucinda Flodin and Manha Perkins art both motlU!rs a11d
work togetlier as a midwife team in the area s11rrn11ndi11g their
lwmes in the Doe River watershed.
by Jan Verhaeghe
Midwives nuending home binhs know the success of
their calling-the welfare of the mothers and babies in their
care-depends in pan on the special time immediately after
birth. No midwife worth her salt, excep1 in a m.iner of life or
death, would take a b:lby from the mother.
What exactly is binh-bonding? Birth-bonding is the
uninterrupted time immediately following binh when 1hc
mother and baby establish the foundation for their
relationship by re-connecting in every aspec1 of their now
separate lives. The most intense and the most important
period for birth-bonding is the firlit two hours but cenainly
Iasis until the baby falls into 1he deep steep infants experience
St!Veral hour.; after binh.
During bonding, mother and child becollll! linked
psychically in a way that defies our ability 10 analyze the
experience. The newborn is extremely impressionable and
everything that happens during this period leaves a deep
imprinL The natural longing of 1he baby is to re-establish i1s
cquilibrium--to be wann, 10 be held, to suck. to hear a
familiar heartbeat. To be separated from the mother at this
time must leave a la.sung and discressed memory. I believe
bonding is visual, tactile, aural, oral, olfactory, and
hormonal and occurs most easily when the mo1her holds her
baby and interacts wi1h it through the senses during 1hc
sensitive period immediately following birth. The "en face"
posilion--touching and being touched, hearing and being
heard, feeding and being fed. learning each others
smells-are complex interactions that occur with case when a
baby is placcd--and left--in its mother's arms.
The mos1 immediate person to bond wiih a newborn i~
the mother, but it is very important that fa1hers also bond
with their infantS. Fathers who have had 1he opponuni1y to
bond with one child but not with another 1ell 1he same storie_,
as the mothers of these children. Fathers of C-sccuon babies
often are better·bonded with their infants than the mother
simply because a woman who has just undergone major
surgery cannot give her full allention to her infant Siblings
bond wi1h an infant v.ith outsianding positive results as .... ell.
Many well·mcaning physicians and hospnal personnel
feel tha1 a mo1her's holding her baby for a few minuies on
!he delivery table constitutes "bonding". However, true binh
bonding means mother and baby are nm scpara1ed for hours
or even days following 1he birth. While the imponance of
binh-bonding has caugh1 the auention of many hospitals, us
~,it.er,
l 989•90
specific meaning and significance has often become sacrificed to
hospital routine. For citample, the widespread use of anaesthesia
in hospiial binh.s continues to be common practice.
My first three binhs in 1hc 60's were under Demerol
and Scopolaminc, an amnesiac. With "scope;• a mother
"forgets" the birth Cltperiencc and is too drugged to look at her
baby who is also drugged. Twenty-four hours later, I was given
my first look at my baby. I had no memory of the binh, and the
baby seemed a perfect stranger. Having missed out on sucking
during the minutes following birth, the baby seemed not to know
what to do the first times at the breast, and I invariably felt
rejected by each of my babies. I also felt inadequate as a mother.
With each baby, a kind nurse suggested trying again later and
went off to the nursery to give the baby a bottle. As a result I and
many other women often questioned our ability not only to
breastfeed a baby but to care for an infant. Later on many of us
found little satisfaction in raising our young children.
b:lby but to care for an intan1. Later on many of us found
linle satisfaction in raising our young children.
I am fonun:11e to have had another chance at childbinh
and an opponunily 10 experience birth-bonding with two
babies. With these babies or the 70's, one born in a hospital
but with no drugs, the other born at home attended by a
midwife, 1 breastfed with ease and confidence. In addition, I
never felt any alienation from my babies, never knew
post-partum depression, and experienced child rearing as a
joyous and fulfilling experience--in my 40's.
As a result of my mid-life binh experiences. I became
a labor suppon person, childbinh educator. and activist.
Undoubtedly the most important a.~pect of my las! 1wo binhs
was the binh-bonding I had with my babies. Meeting and
observing many mothers and babies over the last eigh1 years,
I am convinced 1hat bonding has a profound effcc1 on how
we parent and on how our children grov. spiritually as well
as mentally and physically.
When I first became nctive with childbinh in the RO's,
I could not help bu1 noiice that mothers who expressed joy
and who had an air of serenity about them as they dealt with
their children were mothers who had drug-free deliveries and
who were not separated from their newborn. ln 1nlking and
corresponding with moihers who had experienced binh
bonding with one child but no1 with another, I found the
same story over and over. There were many more
difficulties of every kind where there was linle or no
bonding. These babies had problems feeding, cried more,
were often unhappy as toddlers. The mothers often fell
rejected by the babies, were frequcnily depressed, and
questioned their abilities 10 mother Where there was
bonding, the opposite was true.
While no one wants a mother to experience any more
pain than is necessary, the use of anaesthesia in whatever form
is 1he factor most likely to prevent bonding. While an epidural
anaesthetic (injected between the layers of the covering of 1he
spinal cord) allows a woman 10 be awake, it canies with it
many risks that make funherintervention likely. With an
epidural, a woman mus1 lie almost motionless for a long time
which compromises the baby's oxygen supply often making a
C-section necessary. Even if she avoids surgery, she has no
control over her body from the waist down and often
experience~ headaches which further inccrfen: with the bonding
process.
Natural childbirth may seem an impossibility 10
women v. ho have been taught 10 fear the experience.
However, with preparation and loving suppon. the great
majori1y of women experience childbirth a:; an exhilarating
even! with binh·bonding the a.\pcct that has the most positive
long-term effect.
Jan \'erliaeghe lives in tlw Hendersonville, NC are.a and
provides c/Uldbirrh prepara1im1 for ho~ and hospilJl/ bin/~
XcltUM )o"-rt1.GL PIMJC
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�The Magic of Puppetry
An Interview with Bonnie Blue
by Christina Morrison and Karen Watkins
Karuah: How did you become a professional
puppetee11 You said it was a gradual process?
Bonnie: J used 10 be an extremely shy,
sensitive, unself-confident person. And going
from 1here 10 an outrageous puppe1eer... you
could ask why such a change?
Kanlah: Was it the positive response to your
gift with puppetS?
Bonnie: I didn't have the confidence to see my
gif1s. ll was playing with children. And by
doing voice exercises, breath exercises, mime,
developing charac1er, realizing what my body
was doing when I was hunched over and
covering my hean. And just grokking those
things, understanding them, made me open
up. That's all. I just got to break my own
rules.
Katuah: And do all those things your puppets
were doing!
Bonnie: Yeah, through the puppets I got to do
them. And I got 10 realize how fun it was to
run around my universe smashing my rules
and "supposed to's." And then I got to see
this whole new person in here that I liked!
You know, self-likin~. It's so much fun
teaching self-liking. Kids like themselves...
they say, "I made rhis puppet and irs great!
Bonnie says it's great. I know it's grear!"
Kau1ah: Do you make your own puppets?
Bonnie: Yes. Snooge was the first puppet I
built. He's a three foot tall abominable
snowman with a 2 year-old personaJity. So he
says things like, "You! Come! Give me hug!
Oh ho, that tickle Snooge; that make me
happy!" (laughter)...That kind of lovable
fella. And the show was a take-off on
Scrooge; that's bow we got his name.
Ka!Uah: How do you manipulate them? On
strings?
Bonnie: I know ... well, I'm glad you're here.
(laughter)
Frog: You know, its a funny thing about
peoplc--thcy'll laugh al anything, won't you?
AHAHAHA!! Oh, look at that- there's a gnat!
Bonnie: No there's not ...
Frog: No wonder I've got a headache...
Frog: Right up thcre ...comc on you liule
guy...(hystcrical laughter) HUSH! You
might sea.re him away! ... bcre be comes!!
(buzzzzz·---slurp!I) 1 LOVE GNATS!!
Bonnie: And the other hand makes your ann
move, and T don't have more hands to rn:ike
your feet \lr'alk.
Katuah: Oh that's great! The kids must go
wild. I bet they can talk to him for hours and
cell him all their feelings...
Bonnie: Yeah, they do. and I.hey wanna touch
him a loL.
Frog: Get their hands in my mouth ...
Bonnie: These arc moving mouth puppets so
they·~ not on strings. I play with Mr. Frog
most often in the classroom- he's a good lap
puppet. Snooge is hard lo put on my lap, but
Frog here...
Bonnie: He does a series, Frog here. He comes
to the classroom and helps me teach. First of
alJ, l teach three forms of character. Physical
character-when they build their own puppets
they think about how we look and our
differences, like hair color, etc. The second
fonn is vocal cbaractcr-nol just talking but
sound effects:
Frog: Hi! (deep, froggy voice)
Frog: .... Nyaat...... ncooow .....secceccuurp! !
Kawah: HL Frog!
Bonnie: And the third form is movcment--how
lo move their hands when they're making it
talk. And within moving character you have
the concept of gravity. For example, you
Frog: Hello...about time I got outta my basket.
);:Q Li4an
l
''
( .
don't let a puppet float because frogs don't
float - they jump up, they come down. So we
do this and he helps me teach gravity. The'
way I do it is he begs me 10 make him walk:
and I say, "I can't, I only have one hand-one
hand's in your head, see?
Frog: Aaarrghhh!!.... But I wanna walk!
Bonnie: I'll make you hop!
Frog: I don't wanna hop. I never liked to hop.
I wanna WALK!!
Bonnie: So then he'll say, "Hey. haven't you
been teaching these kids how to use puppcts7"
And 111 say "Yeah". And he'll whisper to me
-and I love making puppelS whisper cause the
whole class is listcning·--hc'll say...
Frog: ...Maybe a couple of them could help me'
walk ...??!
Bonnie: So we do. A couple of kids come up
and each takes one of his sticks and I say.
"Now before you sum, remember we have lb
exaggerate everything with a puppet. We're
gonna lift each leg high in the air, bringing It
far forward ... "
Frog: Jllicelegs,huh?
Jomrm! pa«Je 12
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Winter, t 989-9l
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�Bonnie: And then down just a linle in front of
the other leg... And then I get them going
really fast and Frog'll say, "Oh this is so
exciting! So exciting! I get 10 walk!" And his
legs are going everywhere and he goes
"AAAHHHHI!" and falls down! Major
crash!... And then he goes:
Frog: .... UUUUHHH ..... .AAARRRGHHH!!
....(painfully pulling his legs up) How long
have you two been walking, anyway? Don't
you know you don't pick up both feet at the
same time? That's hard on the old frog belly...
(J1ysrerica/ laughter)
Bonnie: (to us) Are you alright? h's a
wonderful way to show teachers how 10 use a
puppet to teach a concept.The kids don't even
know they're learning about gravity... they'rc
having fun.
try, even when it comes to folding a piece of
cardboard. Third graders will say, "I can't; do
mine!" And I'll say, "Silliness!, of course you
can! If r gave you a snowy hill and a piece of
cardboard you'd bring it back to me loonng
like a rag!" And then every time, no mauer
what it looks like, I'll say, "Perfect!,
wonderful!, you guys are so good!"
Katuah: Do you stage any productions in your
program?
Bonnie: No, I don't have time. First I do a
demonstration of puppet types. I bring in
shadow puppets, string puppets, rod puppets
and scenery puppets--trccs that talk. And full
size body puppets like Momma and Baby
Dragon.
Ka!Uah: And they're getting their bodies into it,
so it's not just this abstract concept.
Bonnie: According to Dr. Joseph Chilton
Pearce, who wrote The Magical Child,
children ICMn best when rhey use their bodies.
That's why they'll be banging, clicking,
rocking ... and then they're told to sit ~till! But
a lot of rcachers now are using this idea. They
say,"When r reach syllables, we drum!
Katuah: And your kids also make their own
puppets, right?
Karuah· They must love having a puppet to take
home.
Katuah: And do their kids get out of hand when
they're with you ... because they need to let
loose?
Bonnie: No, actually they don't. The thing is
that Lhcy're not very creative - they're afraid to
try. In classrooms where the teachers are
saying "very good," "good for you," "my
class is so great!"-- the kids can't wair. They
Slllrt throwing their voices right away, they're
anxious 10 explore new ground. But where
the teachers are afraid and need to have
"proper" behavior, the children arc afraid 10
Wlnter, 1989-90
Bonnie: I encourage the teachers to follow up.
And after creating and learning to use I.heir
puppet I let each one come up and do
something wilh their puppet for the class. So
they really discipline themselves and focus on
it and create an imaginary friend ... and. you
know?, its not really imaginary anymore.
Katuah: Most kids are taken out of their
imaginations and into "reality" way too soon.
And all the creative potential that's losL..
Bonnie: It's true. The imagination is a preuy
special space. C first learned this watching
mime anists. Totally blank scage and they
create imagcs...pulling ropes, falling in love,
picking a flower. And the audience secs the
flower, a yellow flower and it smells like a
daisy ....
I do a story called "The Fishes' Wishes",
where puppets are by a nver, going fishing
and there 's a troll under a bridge and all that.
And once a 3 year old came up afterward and
said, "How come your feet aren't wet after
standing in that river all that time?" So there's
a magic that goes on between audience and
performer... that realm of imagination where
you can walk without your body and be there
with other people. And it's a place of extreme
pleasure.
Katuah: It's also unportam for kjds to work
through their feelings with fantasy. Like dolls
--it's play therapy. But \\.hen they get past
second or third grade they get messages that
it's not ok to pretend. they're not supposed to
play dolls (especially boys). And puppets give
them that okay.
Bonnie: Yes. They bring in an old sock,
knick-knacks, buttons, lace, etc .. and I
provide the furl) hlllt and moving eyes.
Bonnie : Oh gosh, they love these puppets.
First they glue the fabnc mouth pieces
together, which 1s prcuy challenging, and I
take it as an opportunity to affirm them.
Number one, when you're working with
puppets you cannot fail. Anything you do 1s
brilliant, and the more you do of it, the beuer.
So they make brides, punk rockers, little
girls, a lot of dragons. Then I say, "Go home
and empty your junk drawers!" And the next
day they bring in all kinds of stuff to decorate
them. Fabric, nut shells, boule tops, yarn ...
and we lay a big pile on the table and I insist
that the children do all the choosing.
And some teachers just can't sra11d it. They'll
say, "Red and orange don't match". So I say,
"But it doesn't maucr with a puppet- the
wilder the beuerl Let's see what it looks like."
Its just the "shoulds" we all learned as
children that they're passing on ...
Kaniah: So you leave them t0 create plays on
their own.
Bonnie: 1 think kids are pretty willing to
pretend up until third or fourth grade. Mostly
sixth grade is the oldest age I work with.
People are afraid to try puppets with older
kids.
Kauiah: Why?
When I introduce Momma Dragon I
say, "One of the things we're going to study
is character- physical, moving and vocal
differences". And while I'm doing that I'm
putting her head and hands on and I say, "Has
my physical character changed, by the way?"
And they say, "Yeah!" And I spread my body
out and start breathing really deep and take a
big, slow step. By then they're backing up,
staning to squeal. Then I slowly tum around
and make her look at one of the kids who's
not backing up 100 much. And then I come
forward and swallow that child!
Katuah: Oh my Goddess! You're kidding!
Bonnie: No--the head is so big it could
encompass your whole body. And then she
stands up and says "YUMMM• " And that's
how I begin the program.
Then they stan thinking about what they want
to make, and the second day, we glue the
mouths of the hand puppctS together. Then the
third and founh days we finish the puppets
and the fifth day we do skills ... breathing,
talking, eye contact, gravny, moving. sound
effectS.
Bonnie: In America, people think puppets are
for children ... in the European countries
people know puppets are for all ages. And
puppetry is also fairly new here, whereas it's
thousands of years old in Europe and the
Orient.
I love the origin stories. I know there used to
be puppets of Jesus that opened and closed
their eyes and mouths, and most of these were
burned during inquisition times--and I
imagine so were the puppeteers! And in Java
the puppeteer has been their spiritual teacher
for cons. He goes from village to village and
sets up his scrim and docs a shadow
production for 2 or 3 nights ... and of course
they don't have lights, so they use the fire. In
India and Java they call the veil of the shadow
scrim the "veil of the worlds".
Kauiah : There arc so many ways to use
puppets that most people aren't aware of. I
taught French 10 a kindergarten using a puppet
who only spoke French. He'd tell me he was
embarasscd cause he couldn't speak English
and was afraid the kids wouldn't like him. So
immediately the children said, "tell him we'll
continued on next page
JC:ol.UM Jo14rnoC pcaqe 13
�speak in his language!" And they all wanted to
learn French so they could talk to Giuseppe.
Bonnie: How perfect. I'd really like to work in
the depths of the education system and give
teachers the tools to usc ...altcmatives. Most
are so frustrated with all the paperwork. They
say, ''I used to be able to do art work with the
kids but I don't get to have fun with them
anymore."
gone into ans. And their parents have grown
up with very little ... but through this program
they meet so many different kinds of artists. It
gives them an idea of the world other than
T. V. and their own backyard.
When I first staned "'ith Mountain Ans I was
just going to perfonn and teach abou1 puppets.
And then I gor the idea for having kids make
1he1r own puppets and so much has come out
of it--all the characters- I had no idea.
Katuah: Do you ask teachers to stay in the
room while you're there?
Karuah: Getting the kids involved ... expressing
rhemselve~. Thar's the magic of i1.
Bonnie: I like the teachers to be there and pick
up on it and help our. And I've also had
teachers inhibit the class wnh their "supposed
to's". Especially with the sound effects. That
drives teachers crazy 'cause they've spent all
year teaching the kids not to do those things.
And then I'll say,"Lct's hear your voice. let's
hear it loud!", and the kids arc going wild and
the teacher's looking at the door...(laughs)
But they've got to realize they can let it all
loose. They can take a puppet and be fun and
make the kids laugh and they won't lose
conrrol or respect, they will gain it. If they
dare to share with a child in their realm, then
they've gotten inside and can teach much more
effectively. If they'll go into the child's world
rather than criticizing the child for not being m
the institutional world ...
Bonnie: The primary value is definitely
expression--in every form. in any form--and
the accep1ance of that expression. Self
acceptance: teachers accep1ing their
self-expression, children accepting theirs.
teachers accepting children. and children
accepnng teachers.
At the end of my program when the kids
introduce their puppets 10 the class. every
once in a while I'll get a teacher who'll do it,
too, and the kids love it! They'll say."Wow!.
she made a voice for her puppet"' And I know
the teacher might feel like an idiot. especially
when she's supposed to be a standard in a
group and she's asked to do things that are
real weird and silly. So going through and
daring to feel that sillinesi. and create an
expression--daring 10 do that is. I think, the
greatest transformer. I've seen it first of all
with myself, ho11. brave I've gouen, and I've
seen it with the cluldren.
In 1his process I've taken a close look at life
and how we hold ourselves, the way we look.
our hean area. With a puppet. if the bean's
covered you know how Lllat feels • it's sad.
And with love you're throwing it out. With
anger, you cover it, tum it away. look down
the long nose. I teach those types of
expression.
Katuah: Their world ...
Bonnie: It's not even the teacher's world - it's
the 'supposed to be' world. And they were
taught 11 and they're still trying to be very
good at it. But there are lots of exceptions...
like Mrs. Thompson in Brevard. She takes her
lcids out and teaches them to plant trees and
grow seeds and mke care of animals. She
teaches respect for nature. And she docs ii on
her own.
Katuah: What's your feeling about the
Mountain Arts Program?
Karuah: You're reaching a 101 about human
relations and the self--much more than just
"puppets".
Bonnie: h's wonderful. The thing I love about
it is we're touching the really rural
communities. If it wasn't for Mtn. Ans those
kids wouldn't be gelling hands-on contact
with artists very often.They have strong
spons programs but not a lot of funding has
Bonnie: Teachers will say, "Kids that never
talk have their puppets talking!" Or, "I learned
so much about this child from his puppet and
what it's saying."
Sometimes I see children who might be abused
at home and they'll punch their puppet or the
JC.citiwh Journa! pciqe t 4
puppet 1s very aggressive and wants 10 chew
and bite. So I might say to the puppet,
"What's your name?" And the puppet says.
"None of your business". And I say, ''Well
aren't you glad to have a boy like this?" "No.
I hate him." And I say, "But he sure did a
good job making you. that I can say for sure".
And the puppet gets quieter, softer ... So I
plant a little seed of positive. It's all I get ume
to do but it could be taken so much funher.
That's why I encourage them to hug the
puppet...
Katuah: And make friends with their puppet.
Bonme: Yes. Because they're expressing to
themselves, talking 10 themselves. Another
1hing about problem children ... If you have a
class of twenty-eight kids and one or two are
hyperactive or disruptive, the teacher usually
puts them in the hall because she doesn't have
1ime to deal with them. So I know that child is
lacking love. Love really heals a battered
child. So the disruptive child I find. which
doesn't happen much 'cause with puppets
even those children arc usually pretty
engrossed ...
Karuah: They just want a little more attention
from you.
Bonnie: Exactly. And that's what I give them. I
give them what they wanr. I make them come
up front and hold my hand. I'll pat 1heir hand
or put my hand on their shoulder if they'll let
that happen. And I'll say, "you need to hold
my hand, that way if you don't hear my
message with your cars, you'll feel it from my
energy". I reach them about communication
without words. I'll use gesture and mime and
rouch because the problem children need to be
touched.
Katuah: Do you wish you had more time to
spend wnh each group?
Bonnie: Definitely. It'd be nice to teach
puppetry as a full time cumculum. If you have
a good puppet teacher you can have art and
thearre in the same school. .. and you don't
have to use only puppets. You could combine
creative writing, theatre and an .•. And you
might be doing Midsummer Nigl11's Dream so
conum:cd on p. 28
WLntcr, 1989-90
r
�by Doug Woodward and Trbh Severin
There arc many different reasons pan:nts
might want to teach their children ut home. As
parents, the two of us panscularly want to
nurture in our children the 4u.1lities of love
crcativuy. mdcpendcnr thinking, enthusiasm for
learning, a po~11ivc ..elf-1mage. and a spim or
co-opcra11on (rather than compctiuon) with
others.
As there is no altcmauvc school in Macon
County where we live, we at one point were
seriously considering moving to an arc:1 that
offered a good choice in alternative education
Then we heard mention or homeschooltng and
decided that maybe the quality education we
sought could best be provided right here at
home.
The "social problem" often mentioned in
connection with homeschooling gave us pause.
however. We were afraid that our young one>
might become isolated at home and not have
enough interaction with other children. Our
worries were needless. We found that there
were many other families involved in
homeschooling m our area, and that there were
plenty of activities planned to bring the
homeschoolers together. The more we read and
the more we interacted with other families, the
more assured we were that the "social problem"
of homeschooling was not a problem at all. As
we watched the children interactmg in small
groups, we could not help but think it was a
favorable co.1trast to the usual social experience
found in a classroom of 25 or 30.
If, like us, your family is interested in
homeschooling, you might find that you are not
as alone as you might think at first. Even in rural
Registration
The suuc of North Cnrolina requires that 11 child
be registered by age seven for public, private, or
homeschooling. For informauon on Ille requ1remcnis f0<
regis1ntlion of homcschoolcrs, wmc:
Staie of North C..olma Division or Non·Public EdllCllltOn
c/o Ron Helder, DIJ'CCtor
532 N. Wilmingion SL
Raleigh, NC 27604
(919) 733-4276
The states of Virginia and Tennessee regmcr
homcschool children through the county bonrd$ of
education. Contact your local board for mfonnalioo.
areas the homeschooling population h
significant, and chance~ are that the.re will be a
support group dose by.
Homeschooling support groups can serve
1heir member' in a number of ways. l.c:r's loClk
at the children first ·1 hough it\ true that the
parents can direct the kids toward rradit1on:d
mu~ic cla;scs, sports activities, and classes for
special skills. socializing with other
homcschoolers has benefits all its own. When
families get 1ogc1hcr, the age grouping is vertical
and scattered. not horii.ontal as is found in an
onhodox classroom. A ~ix-year--0ld might learn
1he needs of an infant. share thoughts with a
teenager, and deal with adults on a personal
level r.ither than as authority figures. Harmony,
tolerance, and cooperation are fostered.
Even wuhin the fun activities,
opportunities for learning abound. For example,
our group pressed apples this fall. Children
involved in the ga1hering, washing, chopping,
pressing, and bouling of organically grown fruit
are likely to come away with more than just the
mste of juice in their mouths!
Adult members of a support group always
have their own skills 10 share, whether they use
these skills in the course of earning a living, or
whether these are activities that they just love
doing. And do not forget the emerging skills of
the children. They, too, have something
imponant to teach the adults. if we will listen.
Family activities • planned so that bo1h
spouses can panicipate - are the heart of the
social opportunities in a support group.
Potlucks, field trips, campouts, and service
projects are but a few of these.
On the other side of the coin, mcntorship
Finding Help
for Your Homeschooling Program
Magazines
llomt EdJ<c011011 MogortM
Box 1083
Tonaske!, WA 98855
programs offer a one-on-one growing and
learning experience. Here a child can select an
adult who offers a skill m which he or she 1s
interested. The child makes the contact and
together the child and the adult work our a time
when that skill is being used and the young one
can ohscrve or participate.
Support groups also offer the parents
infoimation to help them get staned and to aid in
dealing with legal requirements. The group can
also provide curriculum help, creative ideas,
workshops, connection to state or national
homeschooling organizations. and plain old
empathy!
We greatly appreciate the nexibility and
choice involved in homeschooling. The
children's love and enthusiasm for learning has
been fostered by studying subjects in which
they are most interested and when the readiness
is there. We srudy subjects in an integrated
manner. always making it "hands on" as much
as possible. If the children become interested in
Indians, we get involved in native dance,.music,
cooking, crafts, st0ries, and more. Since we
continue to be actively involved in bicycle
touring, canoeing, and ,backpacking, we just
take the cllildren along. We can spontaneously
take off on an adventure withowt the hqsS'le of
school schedules. A family field trip is a highly
educational expcriem.:c:! •
Leaming togettier continues to be exciting
and challenging as our falJlily-continues io.make
its own path into eCluca[lpn'. No longer do we
~lk about relocating to anoiher ~a in S8anfh of
an education that fits our children's needs, for
we've found it right here ~t home.
A Bcka Book Publications
Box 18000
Pensacola. fl.. 32523
Calvcn School
IOS Tuscany Rd.
Bnllimorc. MD 21210
Oak Meadow School
Bol 712
Blacksburg, VA
24060
Gr11wing Witlwut Sclwo/111g
2869 Massnchuscus Ave.
Cambridge. MA 02140
The Sycamon: Troe
Ttaching Books and Matt rlals
CoSta Mesa. CA 92627
Rainbow Resource Center
The loc:al library is a good place to begin your
search for aYllllable homeschooling mrucrials. Some local
libraries have worked with homeschooling groups in
pun:hasing books, petiod1cals, and assisting in the
Organlu t ions
National Homeschool Assiocialion
Box58746
Seattle, WA 98138
(SOO) 486-135 I
(S<rvius: o quarterly newsle11u. teoclttng rt-'Ourct
file, homuclwol trove/ directory, tttn·IO•lttn program,
apprtnticeslups and mtntorships for homtschooltrs.
student uchan~, oN1 o 11twslt11tr digest ~rviu.)
k'lnwr, l 989-90
Box 365
Taylorville, lL 62568
2179 Meyer Place
John Holt's Book and Music Siorc
2269 Massachuseus Ave.
dcvelopma11 or vcrucal files on homc.schoolmg.
Cambridge, MA 02140
lnrorma tlonal Book1
Educational Spccuums/
JltNnlSdtool RtDtkr
Bluestocking Press
Box 1014 (Dept. AF2)
by Mad: and Helen Hegener
Ttaclt Yowr Own by John Holl
Pliurvillc. CA 95667
�-If! 1' SUI., J11,,t'J1, Sf
(If/ ye fl1•f -nt•i/e ~ ff, , -Ae"
·Ceremony
/ 6it1 rP'U -Aeor ,,,, e.t
/1t fo r~11r 11'1/t(f (
~I J
Ct1'>Ht.
c'"'J'"' ye, I httf /.rL
1v?Ake 1~~ pt1fh $wt"o'/I, tf,.f ii
fhe br~w 'J' ffte f 'r jf ,
1
ff! f: M~Js, CJ,"Js, ~,>t, y;,,.Jf
fJ/ f' lf,.f
111 ftt.
I /;/II rtsf "'",...;-...,I
/h'/o 1""" >tt/J$f 1ft4J
e '14W '4/e..
On f ye, I iyl"re,,.
Sf,lf
11
/11'1v1
Cini
4 ir
Q
11J4~t Ifs?"#, Sht~"1, tf,.f if '114 r,4d
'!
ifte hnnJ "/ /(,e se<n.J hill
~! ~t
Jf lls Valle~s, 1?.ivtrf, L~s,
1
7fe,~, C/r4'~eJ; 1df
r of 7'e f4rft.
e
/ /,/&/ r,#11 ftear n.e !
/hfo 'f""4r m//{ff ~o au..~ ti '1e~ /,(~
Ohse,,f '/'' I iH>tff.,rc..
"WJii<~ ii~ /'"'It, SmooH,1 f/,o/ if Jn'!J read
-/4t br~w 1 /f,e
tJ,1 hi//
rJ
tk Omalia 1"£an prayer Urtmtm!J introtfucine a
new6orn dsi!tf to tk natural worUf.
Ofun, in cqnttmporory cultuns, tk new5orn is fo~
introtfuutl w tk fiuman cOtlflflunity and to tk tfiviru
orrftr··out not spu.ifially to tk natwTJl ul0rl4.
!Here in tliis urem.ong, tk naturof wo& is atftfresstd
rllrectly in anrwuntin9 tk arrival of tk diilrl into tk
mUfst of tk wfwfe Lift community.
'Ifijs is
Illustration by James Rhea
.t, '
==
........
Q .,,,.
��Mother Earth The Natural Classroom
Early one morning, I sat outside with my
dnughtcr reading a children's ~tory .. h "'as a
story dealing with bircb, habitat, animal
adaptations. predators, and camoullag_c. In the
middle of the story. we nouccd the 11n1est bare!
dan under the eaves of our garage. How did ii
get lhrough? It :.queaked underneath such a
small space. !low hard to believe. More careful
observation ~howed uo; there was indeed a
hidden nest. We could h.'lrcly see the bits of
l\\igs showing through. What a pcrf.:ct
accompanimem far the story we were reading.
It was one of those wonderful examples of
~ynchronici ty. One 1.hat Nature is so famous
for, if only v.c arc patient and obscrvan1
CnOUl!h .
~ If only classroom tC.'lching could h:ivc
more moments like that in science or
environmental studies. In my teaching
experience, I have noticed how attuned to nature
students become when they arc allowed. More
often than not, experiences like that arc reserved
for "field trips," and those occur too
.
infrequently. We are usually forced to bnng
natural science inside the classroom rather than
r.ake the students directly to the Eanh.
Twenty years ago, when l first read Si/enc
Spring, 1 was amazed nt how we were S?
closely intenwined to the Eanh. Why didn't we
pay nuention back when it was written?
Couldn't we have avoided many of our recent
environmental pitfalls? Now, as we enter the
L990's, having had some very harrowing
cnvironmenrol disasters, it is clear that schools
can no longer ignore the imponance of teaching
and providing hands-on experiential
cnvironmenlal programs. Leaming has to extend
beyond the boundaries of the classroom.
For the past three years, I have been
involved with the Nonh Carolina
Adopt-A-Stream Program which is part of lhe
National Save Our Streams Program. The
Strcam Program activities are primarily
bands-on, very environmentally conscious
lessons. Since our school is a five-minute walk
from a stream, we are able to rcgulnrly take
advantage of the opportunity to visit the stream.
The children considered the activities
wonhwhile and fun - and could see that they
were making a difference. The program
integrated well into our second and third grade
cwriculum by including science, social studies,
languuage ans. creativity, and problem-solving
skills.
In order to allow children to realize what a
unique and precious place our Eanh is and to
understand their participation in it, we need to
step outside of our classrooms. Mother Eanh
can teach us about our home, but we need to
make provisions for being th.ere in direct contact
with her. Students need to be outdoors ·
observing, listening, sensing - when Mother
Eanh shares her synchronistic lessons with us.
Second grade .mlllem Quinn \Vardin andpre-kindergarrner Anna Srein cleaning a srream ne.ar rhe_r
1
scltool on Clean Streams Day, 1988.
Photo by Tun Reid
Biodegradable Diapers:
Not What They Say They Are!
It sounds like a dream come true disposable diapers that are environmentally ~fe.
"Degradable is a wann and fuzzy word, hke
organic and natural," said R.A. Denison, a
senior scientist at the Environmental Defcnst:
Fund.
Unfonunately, "These plasucs are being
sold as a way to reduce waste and that is a
hoax," says Jeanne Wirka of the Environmental
Action
Foundation.
A truly degradable material breaks down
into basic constituents like water and carbon
dioxide through natural pr~esses. The n~w
diapers do indeed break down 1mo...smaller b11s
of plastic. But in the dry, oxygen·~tarved
environment of modem landfills, they might not
break down much at all.
"Li11lc is known about what happens
during and after the degradation process to
chemical additives, toxic heavy metals. and
other plastic ingredients," said Ann Beaudry in
an anicle in Motlutring Magazine. And "even the
eventual breakdown inr.o small pieces of plastic
offers no solution to the landfill capacity crises
because the breakdown of throwaway diapers,
disposable or biodegradable, take up just as
much room in the landfill as the original."
Large amounts of human waste arc also
- Susan Schneider Gries~!# deposited in the landfills possibily b!'Ceding
virulent strains of pathogens such as poho virus
fr'
Suggested Rtadint:
which may find 1.heir wny to underground water
SltariJtg Nt111Ut with Children by Joseph Bh3tat Cornell
sources. Toxic chemicals also follow the snme
Keepers oftlu! Earth by M. Caduto
route to the water sources.
Streamwalkingfor Kids by Gwen D1ehn and Susan
There has been a large eco-marketing
Gricsmaict (NC Stn:am Watch Program, 1988)
campaign for single-use "biodegradable diapers"
C!IMtcling people ONl nlJIJVt, Lesson plans. (Great
targeted at natural food stores and environmental
Smoley Mll\S. !nstirute at Tremont, Gre:u Smoky
catalogs, aimed at reaching environmentally
MlnS. National Park. Townsend, 1N 37882)
conscious parents.
Xl••Unh 7ournnt PIUJ'- 111
For four and a half years our family has
"recycled" cloth diapers in the wnshing machine.
You can use 1.hem from one child to the next,
tum them into rags when they're worn out, and
let them truly biodegrade when they're no longer
usable.
Of course cotton production often uses
pesticides, but there is little comparison betw~n
that and the daily disposal of 5 to 15 plasuc yes, PLASTIC! · diapers.
Most kids are in diapers for 2-3 years.
The cost comparison is nbout $84 per month for
disposables, $26 per month for clor.h through a
diaper service, or a one time cost of about $50
for a few dozen cloth diapers if you buy and
wash your own.
"Each family that chooses natura l,
recyclable conon diapers for their child prevents
I ton of waste from entering the solid waste
stream each year," wrote Benudry.
I hope this makes you reconsider whether
f
you want to buy into this fal~e dream o_ the
disposable diapers or the reality of creaung a
healthy environment . Let's stop trying to take
the easy way out.
For more resources and infonnarion on
how and why to use cloth diapers, feel free to
call me at the Traditional Binh and .Natural
Family Health Colleccive; 36 l Sterling St.;
Atlanta GA 30302 (404) 880-9172.
'
- Aviva Jill Romm
"Doubts are Voices on Dcgracbblc Ptasuc: W3SJ.c." NY
Tim(S, 10/25~9
"B1odcgr11dablc Diapers: A Pseudo Soluuon." Ann E.
Beaudry. Molhtring Magam1t, Fall. 1989
•
"The Ethics or Diapering," R.W. Hollis, Motltering
MaglWM. Fall, 1989
~
Wi.nt..er , 1989- 90
�RESOURCES
Tips for
Gardening with Children
Parenting
from Tom You11gblood-Pe1erse11
.\lo1huU1J: \lag;vmc
P.O. Bo~ lo'IO; Santc Fe. NM 87'>0-l
Start i.mall - a 6' x 10' garden can be a perfect ·
size for a liule one.
N11n1inng Tf>d.1~
187 Cao;clh Ave.: San Fmnc1S1:0, C,\ Q-l 11-l
Have fun! I put this toward the top of the list
because remember, beauty b in the c:yc of the
beholdl.'r. This means no garden is perfect, and
it's as much the proceH as ii is the results, for
children.
Education
/'h(' C)t 11/The Chtld., Rulh \fueller
(!'le" Soc1c1y Publishers)
The best garden layout is narrow beds - no more
lhan three feet wide so the children can work
from the edges - and wide paths that can fit two
willing and eager workers.
Ch1ldhodd- l lu. l\'aldorf Pc·r.1{1('Cli>-c, by ~ancy Aldri.h
R1. ::?. Bo~ :!675; We>.iford, VT 05-19-l
Grc:en J~ic/Jcr
c/o Tim Grant: 95 Robcn Succt; Toronto, Onwrio
M5S 2K5, Canuda
What to plam? Whatever the children like toe.at
and nibble. lf that list 1s shon, you can
supplcmem wtth vegetables and flowers 1ha1 are
especially fun to grow. Like cherry tomatoes,
sunflowers, ever-bearing srrawbcrries and
nastuniums. All of 1hese can be nibbled
fresh ..... tmmedia1e gratification is one of the
easiest ways to keep children interested in the
garden.
National Dirtctory of Alttrnative SchocfJ, National
Coahuon of Al1crnauve Community Schooh
R.D. I. Bo~ 378: Glcnmoorc. Pa. 193-l 3
1lorne ~1wn Magaw11:
P.O.Box IOIB: Tona.tj{e\, WA 98855
\1t:rlyn s Pt!n
P.0.Box 1058: Ea~t Greenwich, RI 02818
Skipping Stones
80574 H:11.c1ton Road: Coungc Grove. OR 97424
Our Fwur<' al Stake: A lunugtr's Gwck 10 Stopping the
Nuclear Arntf Rare, Melinda Moore & Laurie
Ol'i<:n, ti tJ/ , (New Soe1e1y Puhfohcrs)
l.111/e Fritnds for Pt!aa
4405 29th Street; Ml. R.1n1cr, MD 20712
Kid'IArt Nt!WS
P.O.Box 27-l: Mt.Sh:lsm CA 96067
Nauonal Home School Assocwuon
P.O.Box 167; Rodeo, NM 88056
American Montcsson Sococty
ISO Sib Ave.: New York, NY 10011
Waldorf lnstilutc
260 Hungry Hollow Road
Spring Valley, NY 109n
Stop War Toys Campaign
C/o Wur Re''-'lCrs' Lcaguc - NE
Box 1093: Norv.•11:h. CT 06360
Who's Calling tilt Sho1.1: /lo" to Re~nd £f/wn·tly 10
Children's Fascina11on Kllh Illar Play and War toys
by N311ey Crls.<oon-Pa1ge and Diane Levin
(New Society Publishers)
Stopping Abuse
Nallonal Child Abuse HOl Linc, l-800-4AC-HILD
National Association for I.he
Educ111ion or Young Children
1834 Connccticul Ave. NW
Wa~ing1on, D.C. 20009
Children's Defense Fund
122 C St NW; Wa.'>hingion. DC 20001
The Nalionnl Association for Mediation 1n Educauon
425 Amity St.; Amhcrs1, MA 01002
Child Welfare League of Amcnca
440 First SL NW (Suue J 10)
Washington. DC 20001
Nnlional Coaliuon or Altcrnouvc Community Schoch
58 Schoolhouse Rd.: Summertown, Tn. 38483
End Violence Agamst lhe Next Gcncruuon, Inc.
977 Kcclc1 Ave.; Berkeley. CA 94708
Changing Schools
Teacher; College 918
Ball Struc l.inivcrsity
Mu11cie, IN 47306
ramily Violence Research Program
Family Rc=h UiboralOry
Univcr~11y of New Hampshire
Durham, NH 03824-3586
Peace and No n-viole11ce
An OutbrC'alc of fi:aci:. Sarah P1nlc.
A "fanual on Nonv1oltnci: and Childrtn.
compiled ancJ edited by SitphanicJudson
(New Society Publishers)
,,li..n t.er, 1989-90
Kidsrights
3700 Progi:c~ Blvd.: Mount Dora. FL 32757
N3UOnal Chtld's RighlS Alliance
P.O.Box 17005; Durham, NC 2no5
National Commiu.ce for the Prevention or Child Abuse
332 S. Michigan Ave.; Chicago, 0. 6060
Get real 1ools. (small ones), not toys for your
children. No matter how young, don'1 waste
your money on flimsy plastic 100ls in toy stores.
Purchase smaller-sized good quali1y tools for
$4-$5.00 from hardware or garden shops.
Have the children wear old clothes and shoes.
I telp the child clean and put away all tools when
finished.
Again, HAVE FUN!
Tom Youngblood-Perersen ls director of
the MAGIC Commu11iry Garden programs in
A!iheville. NC. fie and his wife Berh eat
11aswriw11 buds in their own garden with their
five year-old so11, Evan, and plan to imroduce
the1r newbofll. Campbell, w rhe fun of it, as
well
Childre11's Media
Four Arguments for tht Elimination of Television
by Jerry Mander
Action fat Children's Television
20 Unh·ersity Rd.; Cambridge, MA 02138
Council on lnitrracilll Books for Childn:n
1841 Bro:idway; New York, NY 10023
Lollipop 'PoWCJ Press
30S £.Chapel Hill St.; Durllam. NC 2no1
Much of I.he information for these resoiuces came from:
lloliftic Educa1ion Rt!'oli<"W,
P.O.Box 1476; Greenfield, MA 01302
'Ifuml;s to X/n.!JO'l 'Xlfl9for fufp in cmnpili119 tfiis
resourus listintJ.
/
X4ti4ah ) o'4rnat palJtl 19
�HOSTAGEPANTHERTOWN
FREED
ACTION FOR BEARS BRINGS
RESULTS
Nlllrll World News Savice
Nlllrll Worid News Service
With the aid of the Nature Conservancy and
national politicians, negotialions for a major hostage
release wcre compleled Monday, No~cmber 27 when
6.295 acres of the Panlhcnown Valley in the headwaters
of lhe Tuclcascgcc River WllletShcd were tnWfcrrcd IO the
US Forest Scrvke.
The valley has been the sub.)CCt of controversy
since 1988 when Duke Power Company bought Ille l.r1ICt
as part ol ilS land acquisition program for a high-voltage
11811Smission line IO go lhrough the hcan of Transylvania
and Jackson counties In North Carolina. Much
opposition IO the pawer line cenicrcd lllOWld lhc idea of
"Save Panlhcnown Valley."
Oulte bought the propeny suddenly in 1988.
Ownership of the whole property was a powerful
negotiation IOOI 10 help Duke secure 11S preferred route
for the power line. Once the route was established.
selling the propcsty to the Nature Conservancy was easy
for the ginnl energy corporauon, as 11 only required an
800 acre comer of the land for the tmnsm ission line
right-of-way. The sale softened some opposition 10 the
power line, which 11"ill cause ml1JOT habi1a1 disruption
along its route and spur damaging development in its
service area, nnd gave Duke ihe appearance of being
syrnpnthetic IO cnvironmcnial issues.
However, Panlhcnown is a unique and scenic area
and home IO several rare plant species. IL~ future appcnrs
10 be much more secure. The Forest Service will
temporarily manage the land under a 4-C land
management classification, which restricts use 10
non-motonzod recrcauon and favOlli black bear habil31,
and promised IO preserve its 'ICCnic beauty and unique
geological and biological features. The publrc attention
the valley has received will most likely be a strong
guarantee for lhn1 promise.
A demonstration on behalf of black beats cag
on the Cherokee lndioo Reservation for tourist auraction
bas apparently brought results. The September
demonst.ration, led by PETA (People for the Ethic
Treatment of Animals) and allCnded by 100 maJChers
including many Crom the rcserva1ion, wallccd from
Oconoluf1ce Visitors' Center 1n the Great Smok
Mountains National Park to the infamous Saunooke'
Bear Land, cited as providing some of the wors
conditions for animals among CAhibits tn this country.
Chief Ed Taylor mcl the group and told them no
ID meddle with internal affairs on the reservnlioo and
go home. The response to this was a chorus of shou IS
"We are home!" from many of the dcmonsi.nuors wh
were residents of the reservation. The Chief then told lh
group ihat Indians were tired of outsiders telling the
what lO do, app:ircruly forgetting lhal. the exhibit owners
on whose behalf he was speaking were all while pcopl
who hnd leased space on the rcscrvntion IO cash in on lhe
summer tourist now. Muuenng, Taylor then got into hi
car and retired from lhc scc.ne.
But Taylor was affected by the dcmon~tration.
The following month he brought a resolution into th
Tribal Council thnt wou Id hnve required that bears
kept in "natural habitat areas" on penalty of SI ,000 fo
''iolallon. The Council. however, replaced this rcsolu tio
with one that said the caging o( bears 1s "presenting
problem• and nuthorized the Council 10 invcs1ig:ue th
pol>~ibility of the habitat area.
BENTON MacKA YE TRAIL
After nine years 3 dedicated group of volunteers
has comptcu:d a 78.5 mile hiking trail from Springer
Mountain, Georgia Lo the COhuua Wilderness Arca on
the Tcnncs.'iCC "lllle hnc.
The hiking p:ith is called the Benton MacKaye
Trail after ihe founder of the Appalachum Trail system.
Pans of the trail follow an early fll3n for the Aflll3l3chian
Trail. which was later ch311ged IO ilS prcscn1 route.
The remarkable aspect of the Benton MacKaye
Troll is that it was constructed entirely by voluntcc~.
who have worlccd steadily over a nine-year period to
complete the uaJI through the Goorgia mounuuns. Much
work still needs Lo be done 10 bring the path 10 11s
proposed termination po101 in the Great Smoky
Mountains National Park, but trail votun1cers were
jubilant to have completed lhc first ~uge of the route.
Officials of the Southern Region of the US
Forest Service agreed early rn the llllil's hisiory Ihm they
would back the propo:;ed route if the Georglll segment
were completed.
A Tennc.'iSCC chapter of the trail volunlecrli has
been formed IO extend ihc trail nonhwan:t through the
Unicoi MounUlill.\ IO reach the Smokies.
• scurce: article by John llarmon (n 1hr Atlanta
Journal-Constitution, October 14. 1989.
FOREST PLAN REMANDED
Narlnl World News Service
The Chief of the US Forest Service, Date
Robenson, on September 28, 1989 sent back the
bclcllgucrcd Land and Resource f\.lanngemem Plan for the
Nantahala-Pisgah National Forests, saying in panicular
Ihm the plan places too much emphasis oo clC31CuWng
as the method of choice for lumbenng and 3Jso allows
projected umber sates that would fail 10 recover their
CO~ts.
While not spcc1ficnlly outlawing clcarcutting or
any limits on its use. Robcn.o;on dircctcd the N-P
National Forest staffs 10 research altcmauvcs w the
clcarcutting technique and to be more nex1b!e m their
thoi~ of logging methods. His denial Ytllidatcd yc:ITS of
work by conscrvation groups, parucul:irly the Western
North Carolina Allianc~. to convince the Forest Service
to stop 1ts smgle-minded reliance on the clcarcuumg
ux:hnique.
The Chiefs directive also said the rorcst rtan did
not adequately JUstify proposed timber sales Lha1 would
have resulted in the loss of additional tax money IO
subsidi1.e clcarcuts in the Southern Appalachians. In
1987 the Nantahala·Pisgah National Forests lost a total
of S2.5 million in bclow-<:ost limber sales. (l1lc For~l
Service accounung procedure was changed in 1988 lO
make it more d1fficull 10 dctcnmnc the economic swtus
of timber SJlcs 1n indl\·1duat rorc.sts. hut 11 Is csumated
that tosses held steady or rose slightly in that year.) A
rccelll study author11cd by the Forest Service, Tiie
Southern Appalachian Timber Study. documented a
decade-long price drop in hardwood lumber in the
Southern Appalachians. Robcnson's memo duected the
Nauonnl Forests ndm11ustrauve siaffs to incorporate these
more recent figures m their review of timber ~les
policies and umber qUOlaS.
Chief Robertson's remand order showed most
clearly the political nature of the US Forest Service. for
the issues of clcarcutung and below~t salcs that he
dealt with in his administrative order were drawing much
negauve publicity IO the agency. However, the Chief,
white urging caution in the construction of fore.~ roads,
did noc suggest any specific changes in road pohc1e.s in
the N3ntahala-Pisgah Na11onal Forc.,ts. Alw, white he
called for specific plans 10 provide hab11111 for 12
threatened and cnd:lngercd ~pccics, he did not cnll for a
forests-wide roadlcss areas survey IO determine the noed
for wildcmcss areas and undisturbed habnat. as called ror
m particular by the rcgion:ll office of ihe Wilderness
Society. Thc.sc 1s~~ arc as 1mponan1 as lhc clcarcumng
issue. but 11 ~med th31 ihcy were neglected m ihe
Chiefs repon because they had not aroused a vociferous
public outcry ag111ns1 the For~t Service as h3d the umber
policies.
The message is clear; 10 bring chnnge to the
nauonal forests, stir 11 up.
~uing
II
WE BRING GOOEY THINGS
TOLIFE II
Narunl World Ne"'• Service
South of Hendersonville Nonh Carolina, in th
below the East Flat Rock comm unit
where some I 50 peorle draw their drinking water
concentration~ of a canccr·causing mduslnal solvcn
exceed the siatc stnndard by at least 3.500 times
The General Electric lrghting fixtW'Cl> productio
plant in lfcndcr,on County has ~ixu:cn undergroun
Storage t.anks, two waste water trcaunent ponds, and
sludge 1mpoundmcn1 on land owned by the plant. Tw
landfills. a recently reported le:tlcing drain pipe, and
1983 chemical spill arc all contribuung factors to lh
!isling of this s11c by the Nonh Carolina Clean Wate
Fund as one of the 22 WOrsl groundwntcr contaminatio
site.~ in Nonh Carolina.
The Fund has also C!\llmaled ihat 35,000 peopt
in lhe stale arc drinking water w11h some degree 0
contamination. Nonh Carolina has the c;ccond highcs
number of household wells in the United States
(822,000) as there is a ready supply of gruund water
SOlllil of which is working 115 way to the sea from lh~
mountains of the Katuah region. It appears iha1 we Ill'
playmg a dcm11I game of "chemical do-or-dare" wnh
untamtcd war.er, esscnunl to our health and lhnt of lhc
groundwntc~
b~hcre.
A~ one of the "toxic 22" shes of sever
contamination in Nonh Carohnn, General Elcctri
contmucs to release poisons inio the underground wnters
which participate in lhe cyd1c now of water through Lhc
E:uth. It tna)· seem like these chemical ·sotu11ons' are
gone from 'sne', yet when they rc.•wface will G.E. really
be bnnging good things 10 life?
. To register comments concerning G.E.'s
you can ca.II the G.E. coMumer products
IOll·frcc number 1-800-626-2000.
praeucc~.
�PICKENS DISTRICT
FOREST WATCH
Nanni World News 5cr'1ice
WHAT'S H.A.A.P.-ENING??
Narural World News
ELA (Ecological Living Ahemativcs), a broad·
based eco-forum rccenlly ronned in East Tcnncs.'ICC, is
addressing some local problems lhal threaten the Holston
River 00..tjn and area rcsidcncs' heallh. One of the group·~
firs1 ac1ions was an 1nformnuonal demonslra1ion to
promoic press coverage of an upcoming pubhc bearing
concerning a permit rc-issunl for the was1e-wa1er
1tCalmen1 facility or 1he Hols1on Army Ammuniuoo
Plani (H.A.A.P.). located in Hawkins and Sullivan
counties. The plan1. managed by Easunan Kodak,
manufactures RDX, Composiqon B, HMX, HMX·TNT,
RDX-Plaslicv.cr and other spe(:1fteally ordered exple>sive
compounds used m the U.S. and sold on the in1cmational
weapons markc1. The action consis1ed or 15 ELA
members cxh1b111ng signs reading "National Dcfen~ al
Whose Expcn~?" and "Don'1 You Wish You Could Ea1
The Fish?" as well as posters promoung the lime and
d:llc or Ille publt<: hearing. Mcmbcts handed OUl lcallclS
to employees ond mo1ori~1S pa~smg through I.he busy
faciory inu:rsccuon.
!\.lost hearings m Ille o.rca receive small aucnd:ulCe
and liU!e or no public eommenL However. the heanng.
held Nov. 30. auracicd approx1ma1ely 30 people,
indicating the success of the group's action. Al the
beanng, comments were scheduled 10 be limi1cd to
subject maucr rclevan1 lO NPDES Permit #TN0003671
only, relating specifically to water polluuon control
guidelines. Activ1s1S speaking, though, insisted on
citing several problems at the plant which contribuLC 10
water pollution. even though they were not included 1n
the pcnniL
Among these problems is a huardous waste
landfill at the plant that has recently been re1llrflCd to
service. ft is feared that leaching from this area. as well
as other runoff from the 5800 acre plant, could cause
additional accumulauons of 1oxins in the river. Among
the elcmenis seeping from the munilion~ plant are vinyl
chloride, chromium, cyanide and nickel. Some IOxins Ind
heavy metals occur m the daily discharge crtlucn1 in
amounts grca1er than one pound per day; some occur in
ci1cess of 10 and 15 pounds per day. All discharge goes
inlO the HolslOn River which must absorb other wastes
as well. Eastman Kodak's PET plastic factory lie.:; just a
rew miles upstream. On Nov. 15 Easunan cxpcnenced a
"typical" spill loosing 36,000 pound., or acetic acid in10
the Holston. These accumulations, as well as ogncuhural
run-off, together contaminate the river which is the
source or lite Ci1y of Morrisiown's drinking waLCr
supply.
1f you would hke IO register comments on Ibis
and other problems concerning water pollu11on in
Tennessee, wri1e to: TN Dept. or Heallh and
Environment (Div. or Water Pollution Conttol); 150 9th
Ave. North: Nashville, TN 37219, or call (615)
741-7883.
If you would like IO know more about ELA and
upcoming activiues, write to: ELA; P.O. Box 851;
Jonesborough, 1N 37659.
k'i.nur, 1989-90
1
1l
'.'
While the "Up State" may be viewed as ju~t a
smllll comer or South Carolina. it holds a promineni
place along 1he cas1.em cscnrpment of the Soulhcm
Appl3chain Mountain Range. It is 31so home 10 a
growing number or bioreg1onal folks actively involved'"
the "public input" process of the Sumter National
Forest's Andrew Pickens Dislnct.
South Carolina Forest Wa1ch is presently
appealing two comparunen1 plans in the Chauga River
watershed. 1xlscd on the lack of a prcharvcst "hydrologic
survey•. which would have addressed the prot.cCtion or
two brook trout sucams and the conversion or the forest
IO a pine plantation. Additionally. the planned umber cut
was based on a study conducted in the piedmont and not
on steep mountain slopes.
"Those who arc only good with hammers sec
every problem as a ruul." Quoting Abraham Maslow.
Forest Wruch ttca..~urcr Richard Cam eqilamed that the
1985 Long Range Pinn for the district reveals a narrow·
minded approach to muluplc use. "The Plan relics
heavily on the conversion or milled hardwood and pine
forests to pllllltations or hybrid pines plan1ed on ten by
ten foot spacm~ Wildlife received very llUle auenuoo .•
"In order 1ha1 we might co1ribu1e to the
re-educa11ng of the Fores1 SCfVicc, we've done a 101 or
Sllldy on our own. Aside lrom our meetings with the
USFS and private timber interests. our bimonthly
mce1ings host a variety or speakers and lcanung
experiences. We also manage 10 gel out and cruise
management companrnenL~ in the Picltcns Oistr1c1."
For more information on the South Carolina
Forest Watch, wntc:
P. 0. Box 657
we.,tmmstcr, South Carolina 29693
CLEARCUTTING
HAS ABAD DAY
Natural World News S..,.jc.,
Research findings reported at a US Forest
Service-sponsored work.shop in September di.o;putcd the
notion that clcarc:utling provides crucial forage for cen.ain
species of wildlife. The audience at the "Wildlife
Considerations in lmplemcnung the Land and ReSOUtce
Managemcn1 Plan" mccung was addlCsscd by =hers
from various soulhcastcm universities.
Recent work Bl the Univen1ty or Georgia has
shown that deer appear IO be very adaptable 10 a wide
variety or forest types. Contrary to popular belief, deer
depend less on the type of browse found in clcarculS than
they do on a variety of hard mast (acorns and nuts)
provided l'y mature forests. Turkey research 11 Clemson
h:l.s also revealed tha.l 1urkeys make liulc use or clcarcuts,
needing a variety or hard and soft mast.
Similarly, Univcrsi1y of Tenncsscc reseateh ha~
shown that bears make very ligh1 and seasonal use of
forage in clcan:uts. depending more heavily on a good
selection or hard mast. Furthermore. the roads as.<;0eiBICd
with logging have proven IO have a severe impact on
bear populatlon.s. Bears have been found to use rough
woods roads and skid lnlib as they LrBvel in scarth or
forage, but they avoid ~ystcm roads, whether open or
closed to vehicle traffic. Thus, roads affect bear
populations by effectively reducing Ille size of their
range. as well as by providing easier access for hunLCr.>
and poachers.
Representatives from the NC Wildlife
Commission also spoke and indicated their concern
nbouc the effect of the Forest Servicc·s !'03d·building and
harvc.qing practices on wildlife population<.
THE CASE OF THE
DISAPPEARING TRJTIUM
Natural World News SetVice
The US Dcparuncnt of Energy (DOE) has again
suspended 311 commcrciai ~hipmcnts of 1ritium. the
radioacti"e ~ used in nuclear wlll1lc::lds, after significant
quantities of it turned up missing. Tritium is used in
biological and energy research and in making luminous
lights, signs. dials and w:u.ches as weU es being used to
increase the power or nuclear warllcads.
The halt in tritium shipments was 111nounccd in
July or 1989 after an inconclusive search for: five grams
or the element that laboraiory records said had been
shipped to commercial customers. bu1 which buyers said
had never arrived. ln August. the DOE said it would
resume mosi shipmcnis after bilS or the missing malerial
were found. The dcpartmcnt discounlcd the likclihood or
theft at that time. Only a few special shipmenis have
been made since then.
An in1emal lab rcpon said d~pancies in the
shipping records d:lted at least IO 1985. In some cases.
customers reportC<I they h3d received 40 percent ~
tritium lhan they had paid for.
A copy or the confidential July 20 report and
rclalcd Oak Ridge documcnis were obtained through a
legally enforceable request under the Freedom of
Information Act. lnvesLigators for Martin Marien.a Energy Systems, wtuch nms opcr311on:; at the Oalt Ridge
nuclear complex, said in the report that a significan1
amount of 1r11ium had been losL m a lest shipment
bc1 ween buildings. It appeared lhat Ille I~~ amounted to
abou1 two grams. approxima1ely half thc amoun1 used in
a smglc aiomic warhead.
According 10 the conliden1ial rcpon, workers
loaded the Lriuum into a container, which was sent to
another bu1ldmg. There pan of the contents of the
coniamer was unloaded for sampling, then repacked and
scn1 back 10 11.s ong1nal locauon. Thrcc-qW111CrS of the
tritium was lost in that round trip. Leakage and
procedural jXUblcms wcte ruled OUL
Reprcscniative Edward J. Markey (0) or
M3ss3chusctts swd, "You have IO \l/Olldct what kind of
Keystone KOJl!I operntion the Dcpanment or Energy ha!.
down at O:ik Ridge. when they lose more than 22,000
cunes or tntium in a I.Cl;! designed IO find out why DOE
keeps on losing l.nlClt or tritium."
DON'T CROSS
DA GREAT PUMPKIN
Nuunl WorldNcwsSavlcc
The WCSICnl North Carolina Alliance undcrsoc:ml
lhe gTOUp's opposjuon to wide.~ead clcarcu1ting in the
na1ional forests by staging a Halloween day
dcmonsLretion in front or the US Forest Service
headquaners m Asheville. The action specifically
protested a proposed clearcut near thc popular Craggy
Gardens area on thc Blue Ridge Parkway. The clcen:ut
would be in full view or tourisis at the visitor cerucr.
"Even the Great Pumpkin says, 'Don"1 cu1
Craggy.'" rc3d a sign held by young David Gilmour of
the group. The Alliance noted that lhis panicular cut.
which would be 12 acres in $tlC and less than a mile
away from the visitor center, is especially mappropriatc.
(Other acuvists were of the opinion. however, that the
Forest Service should be required 10 do oil their
clearcutting within sight of major IOW'i.\t auractions.)
As a result or the aucntion the Craggy clearcut
has received, the Forest Service is re-evaluating the
!ituauon. lrutcad of allowing the ll'BCt IO be clearcut, the
agency may n:quuc selective culling. which would lca.-e
~ or the trccs standing • or 11 may spare the enure 12
11CrtS. The decision is yet 10 be announced.
JC.at~
, l
Jo\&rnaL p1i9t1 21
...
'
�Natural World News
SPE C IAL REPOR T
ALARKA CREEK
CONTROVERSY
by David Wheeler
The headwaters of Alarka Creek rise high on the
Cowee Ridge, where !he North Carolina counllc.~ or
Swain, Jackson, and Macon comer. The creek\ origins
are on !he Alarka Laurel properly, l1lOtC than 2,000 :icre.~
of IJlnt.I which includes 35 :icre.~ of a unique red
spruce-bog association. The creek runs lhrough 2,000
acres or watershed uninhabited by human bemgs, along
!he way wmbting over the Alarka Falls. once a place for
fasting and p111ying held sacred by lhc native Chcrokcc
people. Until 11 reaches the Alarb Community in Swam
County. lhe wate.rs of lhc croelc are clear and support a
nallll'lllly-reproducing populntion or brook IJ'Oul
However, Alarka Creek is in clanger. The Alarlc.:J
LaW'Cl propcny, owned as an invcStmcnt by a panner.;hip
or land speculators, has been on the market for years.
Only now is a developer showing <iome interest in the
acreage. The identity of the developer is a catefully-kcpl
~ret. but it is known lh:lt plans for the Almb Laurel
propcny include a golf course and a luxury resort.
At the request of William Mcl.amey, an aqu:ttic
biologist living in Macoo County, biologists from the
NC Dcpruuneru of Envuoruncntal Management {DEM)
visited Al:uka Crcd: and ~led the wnu:r.;. Biological and
chemical tcsL:i confirmed that lhe wntershcd met the
stringent standards for qualirica1ion as a state
"OulSlanding Resource Water• (ORW). Streams 11ut
11\CCI ORV/ standards arc lamentably very few. and.
clearly, Alarka Crock is an lllca worlhy of protection.
But omcu1J efforts 10 preserve Alarka Creek have
run Into an ob!<lllCle. There is still resentment in Swain
County towards the insensitive acuons or big
government, which m the mid-1940\ condemned !;ind in
Swain, OSl.CllSibly for the citpans1on of !he Great Smoky
Mountains Nauonal Part, but which in ac1U3!11y lumcd
OUI IO be largely for lhe bencn1 of lhc Tcnnc.'--« Valley
Authority for lhc creation of Fontana Lake.
The focus for 1hc ire of 1his generation of Swam
County citi7.cns is a promise made by the govemmcm i.ll
the time of the land acquis1tOl1$ for a road that would p;is~
on the north side of 1hc lake. now within lhc Park
boundaries. That promi~ was never fulfilled, althoogh
lhc infamous North Carolina Senator Jesse Helms ha,
blocked a bill lhal would have finanC13lly compcnsalcd
the cow11y.
The uprc_o;s1on for 1h1s anger 1s a group called
"Citizens Against Wildemc.~~: which ha.~ a siorcrrom
office in Bryson Ci1y. lhc Swam county _,eat. The group
owes 1l1 existence and probably much of 1L~ crroc11vcncss
to the slrollg wppon of Senator Helms Alway' on the
lookout ror a political situation IO man1pulau: 10 has own
advantage. Helms took the "Ci111.cn~ Against Waldcmc.s"
under his ••mg and has fanned 1hc fires of their
rcscntmcnL The group's baule-<:ry 1s; "We are ltvmg
poorly because 85% of our county 1s under federal
control."
Abrka Creek lw been caughl rn the whirlwind
This ,.."a$ clc;arly revealed when a reprcscmauvc from the
Trust for Pubhc Land journeyed up tO lhe mountains to
look at the an:a at William Mcl..amcy's !QQUCSL
"He thought he was coming up to look at <1 pn:Uy
creek with a waterfall," said Mclarney. "Bui when he
51,.. the area. he said. ilus )!)ould be a national priority
fo •ur organi1.ation!' When he communicated h1~
lin1' "I'' IO the nntional office. they agreed w1lh hi$
II.\
<r.lcnt and gave cooseru 10 the project Bui to make
a lnJnsfcr, they needed sponsorship from some
appropriau: n:itional political figure. such as a senator or
a congressional reprcscn1J11Jve but none was to be found.
The reason: Jesse Helms. So efforts by the Trust for
Public Land to help A!arlca Creek have been stalled:
The Alarb Creek issue came to a head when lhe
DEM held a public hearing on lhe ORW classification 111
the Bryson City courthouse on the evening or November
2. 1989. The district couruoom was p3Ckod. Over 250
people aucndcd the hearing, mos1 of 1hem on short
notice, because the public announccmcn1 or the mceung
h:id nol been published in the county newspaper until the
week before the hearing dale. Mosl of lhe speakers
present were from Swam County, and m~l expressed
strong opposition to an ORW classilicauon for Alnrka
Creek. Regnrdless of the ickology behind 11. local power
is a fonnidablc force and noc to be underestimated.
The proposed development on Cowee Ridge
seemed to be synonymous with economic pro~rity m
lhe mind.~ or most or those who spoke agams1 the ORW
classific:iuon. Several dccned the opinions of "oul'idc~·
from ncighbonng M:lcon and Jackson counties when they
spoke in support or prou:cuon for Alarka. "You're JUst
saying that because !'.iacon alre.ady ha.' six malls." called
a woman from !he audience at one poim.
"!l's very ironic." eommcnlCd William Mct..amcy.
"They were calling people who laved 20 miles away
'outsiders.' while a California developer who ha..,n't even
revealed his name 11nd was rcprescnicd only by 1wo
Georgi.i lawyClS is considered one of lhcir own.
"PCISOllally. I would l\OI favor any ~lution to the
ultimaic fate of the Big Laurel lh:11 would lock Swain
County people out. and a big development would do lh;al
more effoctivcly than nnything else anyone could do. The
kind or people who would frequent that place don't want
locals around Swain County rcsidcnis couldn't afford to
buy a membership. and even If they were w gc1 m !here,
they wouldn'l find whnt they were lookmg for . 1 don't
think any or lhc.<;c people play golf.
"There would be short·lerm jobs building lhe
resort complex and a few permanent JObs taking care or
!he buildings and lhe grounds. Bul by all acounLs 1he
m3m access rood is more than likely going LO go down
!he Macon County side of the mounuun. Until 1t reaches
the Alarka Community. the road into Swnin Cou.nly is
cxuaort.11nari!y ~lcep. A four-wheel drive vehicle can
make ll prcuy casily...whcn lhc roat.l's dry . However, 11
would be a tremendous JOb to put a first-<:lass. paved
highway in lhcn: th:11 would be comrorublc anti snfc ror
expensive car;.
·1 feel SltOngly that lhe economic benefits ror
Swain Counly are being grcally exnggemte.d. Swain
Coumy would receive an addition to their tax base and a
few minimum wage jobs, bul lhen lhey would also gel
all the run-off and all the golf course pcsuc1dcs, and lhe
county would have a 101 of add1t1onal costs for
ma.inu:nance and county service.~.
• Anolher element of irony 1s lhal dcvclopmcnlS
arc rrcqucnlly ralionnlizcd wi1h lhe argumeni lhat
property values arc going to go up (which in lhis cnse I
am sure 1s true), as if that were a good thing. For a
l'C311or or person who has a piece or property and is
interested in selling ii, a rise in property value.~ is a good
lhmg. Bui for an)•onc else who is Uying 10 hold property
or 1s m the market to buy property. a rise m costs is an
unwelcome development These people may not be able
to alTord to buy land or may lose propeny they already
own v.hen the land values go up. The grca1 majority or
people from Swnin who spoke up in favor of
development arc acwally ca.~ing themselves out the door
by calhng for big monc) IO move mto thcll'county."
The hcanng in Bryson City did not tell the whole
story. When they heard of the Alarka Creek dilemma.
other local people, largely from Jackson and Macon
coumies, responded with a massive leuer-wnting
campaign to tho DEM c;ilhng for protection or 1hc
watcr,hcd. Apparently Alarka Creek is well·known and
:ipprcc1111ed as o spccanl place by many people in its
\·icinuy.
There was also $0me reaction 10 1he strong
pressure exercised in Swam County by the Ciuzens
Aga1ns1 Wilderness group. One local woman lOOk lhc
swnd a1 the publu: hC.lling and lCMfully told the audience
to pay aucn11on 10 what they value and be cautious about
what they would lhrow away. It was obviously a great
effort of will for her to male such a swtcmcnl, and she
wns the only speaker m support of the ORW mc:isure
who received applau:;c from the crowd.
111crc were othcn; who did not dare 10 lake 1h:11
courageous suind. Wilhom Mclarney said lhat he
received phone calls after 1hc mecung from Swai n
County nntives who had attended the h.:aring, but felt too
mumidated IO publicly voice support for Alark.a Creek.
"It's a complicated issue." s:iys Mcl.amcy. "The
people of Swain County have real grievances.
parti,ulatly in rcgnrd to Fonwl\3 Lake. Unfortuna1cly,
these gricvanres arc being man1pul3tcd.
"The wider issue to 'TIC. which gives me pause
when I lhmk about it, ts whnt has the greater soc1cly
done lO the...: people 10 create the situation 1hu1 c;cpn:.. \Cd
...
1lo;elf at th;it hcunng?"
~
Or1wmg by Junca Rhc•
�The synergy that 1s created when each family member take!)
responsibility for their own well-being and suppons the
well-being of others, is another resource that serves the process
of resolution when conflict docs arise. And of course, the greater
the level of well-1>¢ing in the household. the less obnoxiousness
and conflict there is!
Skillfulness/ Talking it Out
According 10 Dana and Nick, "talking it out"--and
sometimes over. under. around and through--is the main process
for conflict resolution. There are three aspects to that
communication process: lisrening, Expressing, and
The quality of family life is detennined
not by whether or not a family has conflict but
by what they do with it.
Problem-solving.
lisrening. Although the most powerful communication
skill, listening remains underused by us all. It is still much easier
to give advice, preach, argue, moralize, lecture, or change the
subject than it is to reaJly listen 10 what someone else is saying.
"We listen with our answers running," a colleague of mine said
recently. Reflective or ac1ive lis1ening, on the 01her hand. is
listening with your heart, listening for the unique essence of the
speaker's experience, and letting the other person know that they
have been heard by repeating back to 1hem their message as you
heard it.
It is particularly challenging to lis1en to another person's
point of view in the mids1 of a conflict situation; i1 is, however,
the cornerstone for resolution. Listening acknowledges and
validates (not necessarily agreeing with) the other person's
perspective and encourages important data in the conflict to
emerge.
Expressing. The other side of listerung is expression statements about perceptions, interpreta1ions, thoughts, feelings,
wams, and actions. In conflict situations, it is helpful to state
your experience in a way that gives specific information that can
be clearly understood by the other party. Such direct expressions
arc commonly called "I Statements," (as opposed to accusatory
"You Statements.")
Nick is the resident expert on "I Statements" in our house
these days. His fifth grade class is studying conflict and its
resolution in a Mediation Center program called "Fuss-Busters."
Through the guidance and modeling of a gifted and committed
teacher, the students are learning to express their anger and
frustrations in an "l feel
when, _ _ __
because
" format. The objective of the "I Statement" is
to communicate your feelings in a way that does not put down or
attack the other and engages their assistance in resolving the
conflict. Nick explains that if the other person does not respond
helpfully, then it's time to ask the teacher for help. As the year
progresses, trained student mediators m the classroom will be
available 10 help resolve those conflicts.
Dana reiterates that being assertive and letting your family
and friends le.now what you're feeling and what help you need
from them prevents conflict from building up. Communicating
immediately and specifically and in a non-blameful style opens
the door for positive resolution.
Problem-Solving & Conjlicr Resolurion. Frequently, the simple
expression of feelings or needs and a chance to vent or be heard
dissolve would-be conflicts. Just as often, however, living in
these bus~, high-stress, complicated times, family members need
to put their heads together to solve problems. We've noticed that
unsolved problems become conflicts to become resolved· if
Confl~CtS arc ~Ot fCSOlved, they re-emerge, often growing in
magrutude until .a blow-up occurs, or, worse, family members
separate and distance themselves from one another in an
avoidance pattern.
.
. Consider these typical modes of responding to conflict
snuanons:
I. Competition - "I win,• J get all rrry needs !Mt; you get 110thi11g.
2. Accommodation - "You win," I give ui; you get everything.
3 Avoidance - Neithu of ws geu a.ny1hing.
4 Compromiu - EtUh of ws gi11es a /i11/e fJJld gets a li11le.
.S CollDbor(JliJ)n - "Win - Win,• we wief111t IN probum aN.i
fwJ a crtasive sollllion that sat4fies both of our Mtds.
lollnter, J 989-90
~!though each o~ these a~proaches may be appropriate at
some umc, ~oU:iborauo~ provides the m~st longlasting and
mutually sausfyang soluuons. In collaborauon. the problem is
auackcd - not the people! And what would it be like if the
problem were embraced as an opportunity to fine-tune family
functioning, rather than attacked?
In the process of collaborative connict resolution, a critical
stel? is for ~II concerned to clearly define the problem in terms of
their own interests and needs. After carefully listening to each
person verbalize their side of the conflict. then all can come to an
agreement on the definirion of the problem.
In their book Gerring To Yes. Fisher and Ury recount che.
example of t~o sisters fighting over one orange. Finally, in an
effort to be farr, they compromise and cut the orange in half. One
sister takes her half, peels the orange and cats the orange. The
other sister takes her half, throws away the fruit and uses 1he peel
to bake a cake. Clearly, a far superior solution would have
emerged had they identified what each person's interesis were.
The more accurately the problem is defined in terms of basic
interests and needs, the more easily and quickly it can be solved.
The process of creatively managing conflict, stress and
change in families is a dynamic and continuous one. The more
enriching, supportive, compassionate and fun that process is. the
less resistance we feel coward it. When conflict is approached in a
"Spirit of Possibility" toward healthy change, when individual
differences and personal well-being are protected and honored,
and when families are committed to using the skills of open
communication and problem-solving, conflict becomes a resource
for growth rather than an clement of disintegration.
Ellie Kincade 1s assisrant director of 1he Counseling Cemer ar
UNC-Aslll!ville. She is also a consulranr in t/11! Aiki approach 10
creQlive corf/lier resolutwn. conducring workshops in the fields of
edµcarion and human services.
SUGGESTED BOOKS
Ct11ing 10 Y1.s Roger Fisher and William Ury
TllL Magic ofCofl/liCI Thomas Crum
Parent E/ftctiveness Traimng Thomas Gordon
Swttl D'eamsfo' Lillie Onts: Btdlimt! Fan/IJJks
10 Build Self Estum Michael G. Pappas
RESOURCE ORGANlZATJONS
Childrcn"s Ctcativc Response to Conflict
c/o Fclbwship ofRcconcili.11.IOn
Box 271, Nyack. NY 10960 (914) 358-4601
Na-th Carolina Ccn1e1 for Peace Education
214 Piusboro Street, Chapel Hill, NC 27514
(919)929·9821
The Eanh.stcwanis Network
cto The Holycatth Foundation, PO Beu 10697
Bainbridge Island, WA 98110 (206) 842-7986
The Mediation Cciucr
408 County Court House. Asheville, NC 28801
(704} 2S 1-6089
The Nauonal Association for Mediation in E.ducation
425 Amity Sueet. Amherst. MA 01002
Parents llld Teachas for Social Rcsponsib.ility
PO Box St7. MOtCIOwn, VT 05660
�From the Diary of a Modem Child
How can I find a moral sense
when falsehood lives
protcetcd in governments?
\\'hen playing false becomes the norm
kids begin 10 wonder what's the form?
Our role model> have been S10len
our culture hns been stolen,
corponue bored rooms determine
our feeding, our clo1hing,
tnmsp<>rting, and :;chooling style
A way of gathering in council
has been stolen by govcming images
or faces we never see
Menning ha:; been
~laced
by scllini;,
polling. and man ipulaung ...
Waste bas been accelerated
a~ we consume resources
and spil out the remains
on pi lcs of rock idols.
profiteering religions.
and streams of vidio Ulpc
Is then: any way we can reclaim our live.~
from corporate and industrial wastelands
or pictures that lie,
jobs that don't work, :ind 'inter uiinment'
tha1 teaches escapism a.~ a way of life
that rcsponsibilily is boring·
doesn't move fast enough •
requires too much undeNanding ...
Who is more immature
the grown or the growing?
At times it is in·sensing 10 think and feel hov. much and
how quickly some aspects of human ~ociety are vanishing. It is
as though the forces of our ungainly comple~ evolution arc
usurping our ability to Ulke the time 10 recognize 1he v.onder and
POCKET CULTURES
by Wtll Ashe Bason
When we look seven generations away we first sec ourselves
and our children and then the grandchildren that are on tne Way.
This is where our impact on the future is. I low arc we raising
ourselves and our children and prepanng for our children's children
Now? How can we restructure our lives so as to bener nunure
ourselve:. and our children and our children's children? What sort
of environmcm is best for growing whole and healthy humans?
How do we bring this environmem into reJlilV in Katuah?
Many of us "grew up" in the false commumries of modem
amcrican cities or suburbs. These were and arc cnvironmenL<; which
foster alienation. Almost everywhere is owned hy someone. People
are "at home" only at home! lllc streets arc the only common
ground around, and they belong 10 cars. There 1s relatively dense
population without the community spin1 which would make such
density bearable or even pleasurable. In reaction against this, some
of us have chosen to live in rurul areas. We have tned to isolate
and insulate ourselves from the dominant culture. Our children
don't really underswnd this but they do understand that they want
to be able 10 sec their friends more often then they do now, living at
lhe end of funky driveways at 1hc end of long din roads. Fulfilling
this need usually means school and spons and other activities
which are driving us to drive. But the driving is not the worst of it,
How can we build a new society, one without the faial dis eases of
the old, if we send our children during their fol'TTl.llive yC41l'S to
institutions whose very nature fosters competition, where
s:icredness of place and being arc not even on the graph. Modem
)C"I
uon Jo~r~
pn9~ 24
necessity of simple enduring cultural bonds. Child "forwaroing"
in the context of a dominating culture, or absence of culture, can
be a very unsettling, frustrating, and paradoxical experience. Do
we re-invent human cullurc again to satisfy the need to bring
rights and meaning through the symbols we put into practice? Do
we attempt some kind of symbiosis with a decaying power
structure that needs a dose of creative innovation? Or do we just
open the floodgates and let the grimy warer of predigested images
and infonnation come into our senses without any sense of
becoming in-sensed?
The ad-age of images and sounds coming across screens
and speakers 10 thousands of people each day may seem "cool"
and scintilating but what arc their effects on the long-range
accretion of mind, feeling, and decision for a child? Is it possible
10 create a suppon network that promotes family healing in the
face of squashing pressures from a society that apparently
doesn't represent or value many of the vital aspecb of its own
being? Some of these impon-ances are sustainability, care for
those less privileged. more extensive ecological well being,
relevant work. a sense of the biological region we inhabit as
home, and a healthy supponive extended family.
What is the c:ltect of poverty on families m the Katuah
region (and not just for us SCRUFFIES or Smanemng
C:1retakers, Rurally Urbane, Fueled For Impoverished Ecological
Survival)? What is the real effect of turbulence in 'broken
homes' and 'instant familes' full of conflicting and compromising
inrerests between close relatives and step-relatives on the gcner.il
patterns of society?
Perhaps 1hese questions arc 100 deep, yet these are the
kinds of far-reaching ques1ions often coming to awareness these
days. A major difficulty in trying 10 summon the context in
which our vitals can flourish, wilhou1 being continually
smothered in stress, manifests in the allure of electTOnic media,
and its exrensive computer manipulation of visual and acoustic
"space" that we all share. As this auruo/video gaming sucks in
more and more attention it is essential io realize that it is not a
clear expression of the whole mind of our species. The complex
whole fields of human life encompass far more than movies.
sit·coms, ads. and canoons could ever fuUillingly u:mslate.
Commercial media is IJ'Uely an aucmpt by the few to dominate or
falsify for the many. The right of choice in the means and content
of any particular kind of media hypnotism should be considered~
primarv to essential responsible hum:in freedom .
~•
Corporeally. Rob Messick
American public schools are lhe melting po1 lef1 on 100 long to boil.
They arc tee vec reali1y. At their best. they are only capabk of
teaching the parts. Meaning lcs> lhL~ of wurds and dead f~g.
organ:.. Our children only choose them because we haven t given
them an alternative. We have presumed and pretended that
providing an ahemative to school was mostly a mauer of legality
and academics. In fact tt means providing a commun11y in which
children can find friends as well as intellectual stimulation and
emotional security.
11 is no1 enough 10 m~ulute ourselves from the dominant
culture. We have 10 create new culture. Not another candidate for
dominam culture. but hundreds and thousands of pocket cultures.
Pocket cultures that anfully represent unique hum:in ad:ipiarion to
unique and sacred places. Cultures m harmony with their
environments and thus in harmony with each other. A iangihle
culture of l'C.'.11 relationships between people and animals and plants
and water and din and stone and architecture and real stuff hke that
there and not a culture of tapes and magazme.~ and books and
workshops and videos and seminars and full-Oedge~·n8J'$. etc. The
culrurc that we have built m each other's heads is beautiful and true
and meaningless unless it leads to way of life, which it will.
The world is changing rapidly. Humans arc very. very
numerous and on the move almost everywhere. Everyday we hear
about more refugees and more homeless people. Earth's cities are
overcrowded and choking on their own waste. It is a world of
villages that will emerge from this nigh1marc. A world in which
people once again know their neighbors.!'- ~orld ~ sobered by the
environmental con sequences of our unthmking acuons. that respect
for and worship of nature will once again be no1 the dommant bu1
lhe only religion.
(c:on11nucd on ncxc P•&•)
kllnter, l 989 - 90
�I know lll3Jly people of good ecological conscience who have
bought land and wish 10 have a comm~nir_y. yet insist on living
miles from each other. If a person ts wishing to move 10 one of
these communities. about the fauxcs1 pas one could make would be
t0 pick a house s!~t I~ near 10 a!1 ~i~ting home, ~nd 100 near
usually means vmhin sight of. This 1ns1s1ence on d1s1a~ce seems .
downright unfriendly when J_udged by '!ie Cherokee. T1beun. Thai.
Dogon, Greek. Zulu, or Zuni (to name 1us1 a very few) standards.
There is a very good book called A Pmtern Language by
Christopher Alexander and some ~f his friends: and this l?ook i~
very highly respected among arch11ecrs and designers for its radical
and coherent approach to archi1cc1ural planning. There is a paucrn
called "connected play space"' and the book goes on to cite
information to the effect that there is a direct corm;pondencc
between neurosis and the number of friends that a child has
growing up. Alexander and company used some statistics on family
size and average 11ges of children and came up with the figure of 64
families as the number needed 10 insure that all children would have
a good chance to find friends. They suggest that what children need
is a community of this size in which each home borders on a
continuous play area. In such a place, children would do much of
the work we now call childcare. This is a much more time-honored
and natural arrangement than the pauems we sec non-functioning
around us at present. Children learn responsibility in taking care of
other children. They also generally have a whole 101 more fun
tllnte.r, 1989-90
hanging ar&ind with other kids. Saner and happier kids could help
spread these virtues 10 the older folks.
Adolescents have a compelling need to be around their own
kind, which suits the rest of us just fine. This is sure easier 10 bring
about in a small community than in isolated fanns1eads. Young
people have a terrible SIJ'Uggle just trying to exist economically
IOday. In villages and small communities young people can get
good jobs and sec their friends regularly without the expense of a
car. The ttansition from child 10 adult can be more gradual and
na1ur.t.l 1han the current IJ"Cnd which is usually to move away from
parents and friends who can function as a suppon group. Perhaps a
101 of suicide and depression is related to fear.; of nor being able 10
"make it on one's own'.' In a village or small community \\C: make
it on our own 1oge1her, a much more reasswing and slllblc
arrangemem.
Perhaps future generations will look back at the dominant
culture's concept of land ownership with the same horror with
which we now view slavery. Up until fairly recently most of the
\\Orld's people lived an agricultural village communities in which
some or all of the land was owned or used in common. This
common usage certainly more clearly reflects the basic biological
reality of 1he planer we share. Children growing where some of the
land is ~hared have a bener chance of learning ro see land as an
en111y in it's own right.
�Dear KatUah,
Another excclltnt issue (Fall, 1989) ·But I mu't Like exception with
lhc statement m Pnmck Clark's otherwise Cine arucle on the Eastern
cougar/panther/paint.er. He wn1es: •Although it seems fitting and right for
panthers tO be inh:lbiung the southern mountains. not one official sighting
has been made. Until lhcn, panther ad"ocat~ have no basis for demanding
protection for cougar habita1.0 (p.18)
Wrong. The burden or proof is on the government to "prove" !here nr.:
no pamhcrs. Until then. we must err on the side or lhc cml:ingcrcd cnt1er :llld
manage as though lhcrc arc cougnrs.
Curr.mil)· wildlife managers go by the dictum, •Extine! until proven
ext.anL • We must rever<;e this: "Extant until pro"cn e~tincL • 01hcrwise,
unscrupulous and/or incompetent managers c:in ignore even the best
sightings. awruung the day someone brings in a cougar carcass to prove ther~
1ll'C (oops, wue) cougan here.
No compromise,
Jwmc Saycn
Prt.ltnJt Appoluchian IVildl!l'MSS
DRUMMING
LETTERS TO KATUAH
Yts, wt agru. f hanks. Jamie. ·eds.
Dear Kaui3h.
At first. thank you for sending me a copy of the Katlinh Journal and
the U.N. Charter for Na1Urc.
I agree wilh your "StatemenL or Purpose·'. I enjoyed about all lh.:
Joumal's articles, you're really on the right way; I wish every 81oregions
should have a journal like yours.
Herc in ltaly, the BiOregional Movement is ju.st starting. That's fine.
but I lhink. they're sull a bit humon-ccnu:rcd.
I. as member of lhe Italian Wilderness Association's D1rec11ve
Council. am trying hard to spread an ccoccnuic awarcncSl; among i~
members..
O.K. Happy llllils tO all of you.
Cioo,
Morcul Giuseppe
Mantova, Italy
Dear Folks,
Congratulations on your grc:it "For All Things Wild issue!
I, IOO. am deeply concerned nboul the "Norlh Carolina road binge."
The same insanity grips Virginlll. We need 10 form a coohuon ag:Unst the
most environment.ally dcslIUCtivc clement in technology. (I wrote an article
about it in lhc earth First' Jow-nal, Vol. IX, No. II. 1988).
The on-going and looming cnv1ronmcnuil destruction is truly
pl:inct-shalung and i~ the mojor clement in lhc "grccnhot1~ effect" when the
infrastructure is considered
Unfortunately there seems to be a strong block, e"cn among
cnvironmcntahSlS, r.t. the automobile. We need t0 overcome lhis nnd tach
individual mu.it act to reduce dependence drastically
Tunnies ngoin for a great issue.
Enrlh Firstl
Bob Mueller
Dear Kaltiah,
I have enclosed several pamphlets explaining lhc Na11onal Peace T3X
Fund Bill. This bill 1s designed to allow !hose persons consc1cn1iou.~ly
opposed IO war IO have thc military ponion Of their taxes dirccled toward
peace rclaled proJCCl.S. Over onc-lhird of our 1ru1 dollars arc going for current
military expenses, 10 say nothing or lhe add1tionnJ 19% t0 take Ct11e of past
military expenses.
Fof mon: inform:iuon aboul lhc Peace Tax Fund Bill, please write io:
National Campaign for 11 Peace Tax Fund
2121 Decatur Pt. NW
Wa-.hington. DC 20008
(202) 483-3751
Mrs. llarold Sir.Idler
Dear Ka.Wah People.
I think you JUSt keep geuing better and bcuer! Congrntula11on~ on
puumg t.ogethcr an cons-1stently fine JOUmal.
But I'm upset! I can't believe Kataah of all plaec.,. lhousht 11 wns ok
to pnnt a want ad for "Christions Only." J really gOt goosct>umps when I '1111\
that ad. I wonder why none among you removed 1t from pnnt Did you think
it would offend no one? (Why?)
l~s so out or your charnctcr 10 print something discnmin:itmg "'h1ch
could only be painful to members of our emerging community I'm sure you
won't do u ngain. bu1 I want to let you know how I feel.
Sincerely.
Randee Brenner GoodslJl<h
Thanh for )'011.r kind words for 1~ Kaulah Journal. l\'t fttl that
inc/1Uw11 of 1~ ad is not 11uusarily n11.1 of choracta for ·1\'eb,.·orl11111"
which fr 111tt.ntkd to h('/p connect people cf t~ rtgwn with rach mhu. Thll.S
ii rtfkcu the divusity ofpeople and 111tuc1.11111~ rtgio11.
To i11dicatt that a f1U1ctio11 is "for chrwians 011/y" dot.< not
necessarily co1Utit11.1t discrimlflaJiDn. bw rather Is 1ntt!ndtd to connut
"'.t:mbus cf a s~cijic interest group. • tds
JC.a• ah Journm ptu)e 26
l.ltnlcr, 1989-90
�Hau Kauiah,
I am wriung lh1s lcllcr to you m reference to our ncwslcucr called
'echoes of lhc drum'.
I am interested m pulling 11 m the wcbworkmg section of lhc Katllah
Journal. Bui I wlll explain a liulc about ii before I go any further.
'echoes of lhc drum' 1s no1 your onlinnry ncwslcucr. It is not hke the
of the ocwslcucr~ that only put news in 11. The news thnt we put in the
newsleucr revolves around und1tional teaching or the Ntui\'C American
Indians and lho1r Sacred Red Road. h eamo 11bou1 as a need to be able to get
1r.1du1onal tcachmgs m10 the iron houses (prisons) throughout Tunic hlJlnd.
rcs1
I was a member of the Thunderbml Pmon Alliance. but when I saw
that their goal was ne>I to tench but to become an acthl't sort of group. I
separated myself from thc organi1.a1ion. And followed the mcditmc teaching
thu1 I was brought up in. As a Lakot.a and descendent of several medicine
icachers and trad1uon;ll leaders of my people, I left the radical a' u vi st ways
behind and chose 10 seek a more aauvc involvement in gcmng the trnduional
tcoch1ngs ms1dc the 1ronhouscs. And since money wns a big factor 111 not
being able to buy books frQm publishers. I <;ought a \•isie>n "hlte I was
inside lhc solitary confinement MX"llon of the Staunton Corrccuonal Center.
As I fasted and prayed to Wnkan Tan~a. the vision came 10 me. And m the
vision l saw the Ancestors calling out 10 me 10 tca.:h the teachings of all
indigenous tribes. and not just only the Lakota way,. Because 111-.dc the iron
houses there were more than JUSt Lakol<ls and behind the iron doors. The
vision told me 10 remember bad. to when the drums sounded out with
messages 10 the different villages. To become one with th•· 'ound of lhosc
drums. And Ihm was the bcgmmng of the' ision or which I now follow. And
1hal 1s where the ncwslcucr got 1lS name from. II h called 'cch<X!s of 1hc
drums'.
The hardcM pan afterwards wa.~ to spc.ik to the Eld.: rs and TClKhcrs of
the different tribes, to help me in this end<'.a,·or. And they saw the sUlt'Cfll)' in
whal I wa.~ doing. And th.:y have all come 1ogcth.:r and pro' id~ me 11. ith
teachings I will cnclo'e a copy of the ncw,lcuer. The next part was 10
resolve the issue or nm to wruc each and every warden of the different iron
houses 1hroughout Turtle hland. So I went to the Lihrary of Congress m
request for an I S S.N permit. And u 11.as granted. and therefore clc;mng
another step m getung the teachings inside the iron houses by way or a
ncwslcucr
And from the initial 75 ncwslcncrs that were sent lo 1hc guys and
women 1hroughou1 Turtle hl:md, the ncwskncr has grown to a ma1l111g l"t
of over four-hundred and flfiy now. And 1hc 1mponan1 thing 1s thal 1hc
ocw~lc11er 1s free or chargc. This is in ;icc;ordancc wnh the traditional 1c:11;hcrs
that I have gi,cn my word to, that I would m no way ~II what 1~ given to us
by th.: Grl'lll Sp1nt. And therefore I have done so. And II will be the pohr~
thal th.: newsleucr will never be sold, nor will then> Ile a -.uhscripuon r.i1e ror
ll.
The one message " 1hu1 the ncwslcuer is nQI onl) for 1nmale<. bu1
for ull who wisll to lcum from the teaching th:u arc in the newsletter>,
We don't a.sk for any donation for the ocw~lcncr. we asi.. that 1f
anyone wishes IO receive the ncwslcuer, tha1 lhcy help with the postage of it
We give to all that Wl.'h 11, whether they can aHorJ to send postage or not. It
will not be denied to anyone that wants 11. And our mo1lm1t hst 1s growing
daily. So 1f an)·onc who wishes to rccc1\'C it. they c311 do so by writing the
following people and they will be pul on the mailing li\t.
I.) Thundcrhawk, 157372, Editor
Rt.2Box Ill BIWld, VA 24315-9616
2.) Moonyccn Scay, Publi:>hcr
P.0 Box 860; Vcron;i, VA 2441!2
3.) Zandc Griffith, AsM. Editor, 'echoe.~ of the drum'
R.R. 1; Box 11 l·B: Pamphn. VA 23951!
From v. hat I ha\'c 11. riucn you may lake anylhmg oul of 11 and put 11
the Wcbworkmg scc1ion. Or 1f you choose 10, you may me and wnt.:
nhou11hc ncwslcucr once you have read 11. I will do~e thi' lcuc-r for now.
lllld m clo~1ng I Jlf8Y that th.: Four Wm<;h do grant you the People of Kat~1
Jllany of beautiful 'iOngs of joy. \\'akan Tanl;a ntCI un wclo.
I rClld your wonderful papcr and was cxcucd by it. You arc really
doing a grea1 thing by pubhshmg the kind~ of things you prin1. One
cmicbm: 11.hy nOI prim on recycled p:ipcr'!
Sintetcly,
Lonna Richmond
Kno~villc, Tcnncs.~
Good question! Ont wt've often cn11sidertd. With all our local
pruittr.<, rtcycltd paper would nu:an tlrat 1<-e would havt to bu}' o full roll of
rtcyclt:d new.<print UI an enormous prirt wt cll!lnot anywhere near afford.
Rccytlahlc f'<ll'e.T u tht be.ft wt con dQ riRht now. ·eds.
Dl:ar KatU.lh,
I just had 10 write and express appreciation for your summer '89
issue. It 1s a very thorough message mspinng all who read 11: to act rather
than to ri:act. JOin wilh others for peace, listen mlhcr th.an shove. Welcome
messages to a world or people rc.idy to run if we ,,lightly scno;c a hmt of
bcm!l pushed. And lhcn ...as I looked for your address I saw a book review on
/hr Chaliu arid Tiit Bladt--an incredible book I'm currently rtadmg Some
things ju,1 fall in place, don'1 they!
My heartfelt th:inks,
Brcc1.e Bum.\
Quincy, Florida
in
Visual comments on tefc~·ision by Thom Preston (left)
and Rob Messick (above).
Muakyc Cya.,m.
Thunikrhawk
1t K.Ul®n • 1.1 nDI paqd 27
;r.
''
Jour r '~
ft
�New ELF In Town
For six years Franklin and Susan Sides
have been head gardeners at the Mother Eanh
News demonstration gardens in Hendersonville
in the upper reaches of the French Broad River.
Now they have taken the first steps to distill their
collective experience into a self-published
newsletter that, in their words, "chases the soul
of gardening."
Rather than emphasizing the "how-to"
aspects of gardening, their small publication will
concern itself more with the delights and fears,
the successes and mistakes, the small revelations
and moments of humor that gardening brings.
The Sides are asking for help for their
infant publication. Quotes, shon articles, humor,
poems, prayers, leuers, diaries are all eagerly
solicited.
And, of course, chan er subscribers are
also welcomed. The first issue of this infant
publication is scheduled for March, 1990.
To contact Franklin and Susan Sides with
submissions or inquiries, write them at: Rt. I ,
Box 57; Fairview, NC 28730.
continued from p. 14
The increasingly critical planetary
environmental situation has led many activists,
both young and old, to the conclusion that polite
protestations are not enough ro solve our present
ills and that means of direct action arc necessary
to save life on Earth in all its many
manifestations.
This holds true for the Ka1uah Province as
well. A core group of fifty activists has fonned a
Southern Appalachian chapter of Earth First!, a
continental group known for its srrong stands
and creative actions on behalf of the planet and
all its species. The local chapter has taken the
name Earth Liberation Front (ELF).
The new group is action-oriented. At its
first meeting the chapter decided to make its
initial focus the controversy over cleareutting in
the watershed from which the city of Asheville
draws its drinking water and took 11 field trip out
to the area the following week.
"This is only a beginning," said one
activist, identified only as Roadkill, "The
natfonal forests are being decimated by roading
and habitat destruction, and rampaging
development is taking over more and more
available habitat area. Our goals are to bring an
awareness of the ecological law of 'carrying
capacity' to the human population he~ and to
restore wild habitat hy creating a large biosphere
preserve in the Southern Appalachians that
would be linked by connecting corridors to other
preserve areas up and down the whole
Appalachian Range "
To jom ELF in its effons as pan of Eanh
Fu-st! or for more information ahout the group,
write them at Box 17 I: Alexander. l\C; Katuah
Province 28701.
'-''=
'I $
~~ BARE
.~
..=.,.;
11'
:J
ESSENTIALS
Natural Foods
.~
..
Wine Making
The Spirit of the Wild
James Rhea's artwork that was the logo
for the "Restoring Biodiversity in the Southern
Appalachians" conference and the cover of Issue
25 of the K011iali Jmmw/. is now available to ;ill
as conference posters and T-Shins.
The poster. are beautiful. four·color 11" x
17'' renditions of the native species portrJll with
conference information below and are available
for $2.00.
The T-shins arc heavy-duty, all-cotton.
silkscreencd by Ridgerunner Naturals. Only
large and extra-large sizes remain. They are
available for$ l 0.50.
Prices include postage. NC residents
please add 5% sales tax.
All proceeds from the sale of these items
will support rescue actions for native habitat in
the Southern Appalachian forest.
Order fmm· KALANU
Box 282; Sylva, 1\C
Katuah Province 28789
•: Bulk Herbs, Spices, & Grmns
Vicamins & Supplcmcnrs
Wheat, Salt,
& Yeast-Free Foods
Dairy Substitutes
•• Hair & Skin Care Produus
•
I11 200 west Kini! Street. Boone NC 28607
.. \....
~\)-=-
:c
:c
111
__)~
704-264-5220
~·
=4'..
1
124 broadway
ashevJlc. nc
28801
]04-252-8..(04
carolina costume
compa11y
Katuah: Approval - giving 100% approval so
there's no failing involved - that's what's
lacking in our schools and why there's so
much fear. It's incredible when you see how
receptjve kids are to approval • 'cause Lhey
have so much to give.
Bonnie: It's attitudes. As the teacher walks
through that door - how the children respond
as a group is directly related to her attitude.
Directly. I've seen it so many times that l feel
it's an absolute truth. If the teacher is
affirmative and listens to the children and
inspires creativity then the children are eager
to learn.
Teachers all have to take psychology but if it's
not their interest they may nor use it. But
everybody's interested in what's fun and
funny. They say people learn 80% mo~e
effectively when they're laughing! Ev~~ tf
you're not using puppets you l'lln be pos111ve
and have joy in th.: classroom more often than
not.
Katuah: Could you say what you love most
about your work?
Ilonnie: h 's fun' I have a great time. ll's
definitely not something I cho:,;e - the puppet:;
chose me.
/
~
Beer &
Supplies
you could get literature in there, 100. But
there's so much specializing in schools that
you don't get to put things together. And
puppetry puts it together.
I'd like to see the<ltre become a standard pan of
elementary education ... for teachers to have to
take puppetry in order to be educators. I've
created workshops where I teach teachers how
to use puppets in the classroom and Textend
that to counselors and therapists ... anybody
who works with people. I'd like to get rid of
some of the rules and standards and replace
them with imaginative, affirmative attitudes
and teaching methods... then you're right on
the crux of the whole problem in the
institution.
801111ie Blue ca11 he camacted a1
PO Bo.\ lo57.
Asltcville. NC 28802 (7()./) 6./5-9918.
l\10LNTAIN ARTS PROGRAM
C'rc.1w.I 1n I IJ1!3, lh~ Mouniam Mts Progr-dm
(\!AP) ha." 'J'O!Nm.'d hundred' of ani,t·m rc,11kncc
rrogram< for sd1ool • in wc,tcm 1'C. \' isu;il anisl< .
dr~mall\IS, Jugi:lcr'. clo" ns, rn1111~'· mu,1cians,
crafl<Jl<.'Of>l.: and wr111 ""orl. in >ehool\ r11r a wc.:I••11
;i umc, 1yricall> '11<.·nJmg al kasl l\\O week' In a
rnun1v. Rcs1Jcnc1c' i:"c -iudcms an opponuniL}' 10
r:it1ic,1patc m tfifktcnl an forms With \\Or~ing
profc""onJh who ha'c ll tugh lc,cl of energy :inJ
,111hu,,..1.,m for their a.t. An) one intcrcslCJ m ha•mg
.1n ar11s1 1n their .s<. hoot may coma< I a "chool
.1dm1ni,1talor :ind rcq11~,I a 'l.tAP rrogr.un C'urrcntl)·
\IAP 1s .;cr,·mg 14 coun11c' with 27 .ir1""· An"tlrom ;ill d1sc1pllnc\ arc cnrnuragcd 10 a[>f>I). For
inronnouon or to reqllr\l llll ap1•ha111.. n, ""tc \11\P.
no, 11611. Bumw1lk:, ;-;c 21!71.!, (7(>1) f.8~·721'
t.>rntlr . t 989-90
�FOREST RESCUE IN THE KAT UAH PROVINCE
(An Ecological Manifesto for the Southern Appalachian
Bioregion)
These are program ideas drawn from the discussion at the
forest rescue action workshop. "For All Things Wild," held on
Saturday, OcLOber 28 at Warren Wilson College. The workshop
was held on the day following the conference "Restoring
Biodiversily in the Southern Appalachians: A Strategy for
SwvivaJ" and drew heavily on the ideas and analysis presented at
the conference.
All human use wirhin the biosphere preserve area must
conform to the demands of old-growth habita1 10 maintain ample
numbers of all native species. A grassroots initiative will be
needed to bring this issue before the federal Congress.
2) There can be no funher road construction within the
regional biosphere preserve, and we must begin clo~ing exi~ting
roads that in1erferc with the needs of old-growth habuat species.
The context for these proposals is the Preserve
Appalachian Wilderness proposal envisioned by Jamie Sayco of
New Hampshire. Put simply, the PAW proposal calls for a
system of large evolutionary or biosphere preserve areas along
the AppaJachian Mountain Range connected by wide mignuion
corridors to enable the movement of individual species and
genetic information up and down the length of the mountain
range. The preserves would maimain a variety of viable habitat
areas and characteristic ecosystems in protected landscapes large
enough to suppon the largest native carnivorous predators and
diverse enough to maintain all representative native species. (For
a more detailed explanation of the PAW proposal, see Ka11iah
Jour1111/, Issue 20.)
The "Restoring Biodiversity in the Southern Appalachians"
conference clearly demonslTated the necessity for profound and
immediate change. The Appalachian hardwood forest is being
severely compromised by human activities It may soon be unable
to fulfill its integral role in local and planetary life support. We
arc already in a crisis situation, and we need to think .and act
boldly to meet the ecological demands of our time. The current
political and social realities are self-serving and irrelevant due 10 a
distorted world-view which values the continued dominance of
Lhe human species al any cost. To conform to these present
realilies would only lead us further along a suicidal course. A
bold new vision based on ecological reality is required instead.
To correct the imbalance beLWeen the human inhabitants of
these mountains and our natural habitat, and to preserve the
original inhabitants - the native species - we must act. These arc
necessary first steps toward ecological sanity in the Katuah
Province:
l} A// the 3.5 million acres of public lands in the Southern
Appalachian Mountains shall be mandated to be a regional
biosphere reserve. AU inholdings need to be incorporated a~d the
national forests shall be extended to the purchase boundanes to
complete the biosphere preserve area.
'lljaee, '1\!tllngl 'Na@raj,s
T-S HIRTS. SWEATSHIRTS
For ADULTS and CHILDREN
ORIGINAL HAND·PRINTED
NATURE DESIGNS
3) Commercial logging in the biosphere reserve area must
cease. This would not be an undue economic hardship for the
region, as only 10% of the wood cut in the Southern Appalachian
region comes from the areas presently in national forest.
Compared 10 the ecological and social value of a large preserve
area, the dollar value of logging in the national forests is
inconsequential!
4) The Southern Appalachian Biosphere Preserve must be
connected to other natural areas. To this end:
- create a wide, viable wildlife corridor between the
Cherokee National Fores1 in Tennessee and the Jefferson
National Fores1 in Virginia
- re-define all major waterways as aquatic habimt corridors
from the mountains to the sea
- and create a corridor connection between the Southem
Appalachian bioregion and the Florida Peninsula biorcgion.
5) Bring human population lo a level within the ecological
carrying capacity of the bioregion - a size which does not
interfere wi1h the integrity or functions of the natural life
community in the Southern Appalachians.
,
Rather than promote accelerated growth, we must work to
decrease human numbers and impact to bring our species to its
proper level of influence within the region.
6) T ake a leading role in efforts to end atmospheric
deposition/air pollurion that is destroying the Southern
Appalachian forest and contributing to global warming.
7) Change our individual and social consciousness and
lifestyles to harmonize more closely with the natural conditions:#
the Southern Appalachian bioregion.
p
..
- David Wheeler
t!lti11ue At11p1111t/11re
all
Jler/J111D111 t!li11it
CALL or WRITE for
FREE COLOR CATALOG
DE..5 1GNS
by Rob \lessic.k
Jllus1ra11011 & Design
in Pen & Ink and Colored Pencil
Natural Food Store
& Dell
160 Broedw9y
Ashevllle, NC 28801
Wher9 Broedw9y ~
Mmmnon Ave & ~40
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
Mond.)'·S.un:lay: lllim-8pm
Sund.y; f ptn-Spm
(704) 253-7656
Wl.ntcr, 1989- 90
~t.Uah )ournGt P'"Je 29
�RECYCLED PAPER! - Directory of products
sources for the sou~ Suggcsacd donation S 1.00
ao Western Norah Carolina Alliance, PO Box
18087. Asheville. NC 28814 (7~) 258-8737.
HOMESCHOOLING FAMILIES gaaher on a
weekly basis. weather permitting, at Lake Louise in
Weaverville, NC on Wednesdays from 11:30 am
until 1:30 • 2:30 pm. We arc a small group, very
mfonnal, and open to anyone who wanas to join us
to exchange energy, infonnauon, ideas. and
playume. For more information, call Alice
Coblcnu (7()4) 6S8-2676.
BIODYNAMICALLY GROWN Com seed.
Mini-pops to giant fillers. Varieue.~ for no-aill
wilhoua hclbicidcs • and fOf compos1 ralher lhan salt
rcnilization. For caaalog please send SASE 10 •
Union Agriculwral lnstituae, Ra. 4 Box 463S,
Blairsville. GA 30512.
MOUNTAIN DULCIMERS • m3de of black
walnua, red cherry. or maple. Tops available in
wormy chestnut. buuemut, swcctgum, o;o~fras.
western cedar, and other woods. ConlllCt: Mize
Dulcimer Company; RL 2. Box 288; Blounaville,
37617 (615) 323-8489.
GREENING CARDS· concspondencc and advocacy
cards for people who care. Onginal an reproduced m
color. (10% of proc;ccds don<lled ao proJCCLS ror peaoc
and jus11ce.) Wriae to Ginny Lentz. LovEanh
™
SEA KAYAKfNG ·Come enjoy peace and solitude
llllvehng wiah lhe rhylhms or lhe sea. Classes. day
trips, overnight aours, cusaom charters.
Kayal;/Sallboat tours 10 lhe Bllhamas. Knyak tours
to Cosaa Rica. For more informntion contaca:
Charlie Reeve:;; Sea Level Inc.: POB 478; Tybee
Island, GA 31328 (912)786-S8S3
Creations: Box 144S: Black MounaaJn, NC 28711.
MOON DANCE FARM HERBALS· habaJ salves,
tincaures. &: ojls for birthing cl family health. For
brochure, please wriac: Moon Dance Fann: RL I,
Bolt 726: Hampton.
37658.
™
SCffiNCE TEACHER, ecologically aware, dcsm:s
land in KatUah, preferably E. Tenn. or W. North
Carolina for evenaual il\Mbiaauon. Mu.~1 lie well
w/ road fronaage. Conaaca: B. Bicmullcr: Soulh
Brunswick H.S.: Mammoch JcL, NJ 08852.
AUTHOR SEEKING RECIPES for wild fOOds
10 comribuaors JR book
upon publication. Recipes needed for fi'lh. game,
wild plants. Thomas K. Squier, N.D.: Ra. I, Box
216; Abcrdc<:n NC 28315.
cookbook. Will give c.rcdia
CONSCIOUS COUPLE & infana, wish 10
learn/wort on organic farm for housing + slipcnd
OR carelake a residence on acreage. Very comm1aed
and sincere. Wana to leave ahc cuy and profcss10ns
to work IOW8rd scU sufficiency. Can rcloc:ue Cllrly
June '90. Open to Options. Please Con13c:1; Dan &
Barb Umbcrget: 347 Sinclair Ave. N.E.; Allanm.
GA 30307. (404) S21-2971
SKYLAND • log on to the computer bulletin board
or the Smokies. Networking. plus new~ on the
environment. natwc photography. giuncs. compuaer
utilities, much more. Conaiiet Michael Havelin.
sysop, (704) 254-7800.
NATIJRAL CHILDBIRTH CLASES 'PCCiali1mg
In Lile Bradley Method. Classes arc small and
include nutrition physiology. consumerism.
parenting skills, and rclaxaaion and labor SUJll'O'I
techniques. For more informaaiOn call or write
Maggie Sachs; 808 Florida Ave.: Bri~tol, TN
37620. (61S) ?M-2374.
"THE GREENHOUSE EFFECT" • a complete
report on our changing cmironmcna for lhc ncxa 60
years. $17.00 po~tpaid, or write for more
information. Lorien House; POB 1112; Blac~
Mountain, NC 28711-1112.
•
PURE SORGHUM - and sorghum based dcsscr~
toppings and chocolates. Handmade m the
Appalachian (OOthiUs. Free sorghum recipe bto.:hure
send SASE. Candy sampler (2-KY Buckeye~ &
2-Bourbon Balls) S2.00 J>Cl'\lpaid. Golden Kcntuc:ky
Products; POB 246: livmgslOO, KY 40445. (606)
453-9800.
X.Oti&ah Jo\4rno! p"'Jl' 30
WANTED: HOUSE TO RENT. Profo..
"S1onal ccllha
and arust with one child are IOOking for a country
house. m lhC SUITOUn<ling A1.hev1llc, NC area from
June I, 1990. Please conuact Ron & Rachel
ClearfielJ: 7800 Colhn.~ Avenue; Miami Beach Fl..
33141 (305) 86S-048 I.
CIRCLES RETURNING • a new cassette by Bob
Avery•Grul>cl' This JS music 10 touch lhc soul and
heal ahe heart. Lynes included. To order send SIO
per casscuc to: Bob Avcry·Grubcl; Rt l Box 735:
Floyd, VA 2400 I
St..~FOODS • fresh. hand-made herbal skin
prepwaaions at '="able onces. Send for price list~
106 E. Ma111 SL. Johnson City. TN 37601
REMEDY FOR rnE COMMON COLD?· I've
found one; it\ natural and 11 works Send S3 and
your SASE to: Heaven on Enrah; 482 Whue Oal.
Cle Rd.; Burnsvlllc, NC 28714.
RENEWAL PROGRAMS· I prov1Jc mdiv1dual and
corporate renewal programs for bus1ncsse~ &
organi1.ations interested m hcahng thcmsclvc~ and
providing cmpowcrmcna 10 oth.:~. Wrote· Kalh1c
Pieper c/o Pieper A~~oc1ntcs: Ra I, Box 238:
Waync.~v1llc, NC 28786.
CREATION SOAP- lund·crnfacd herbal soaps from
the Blue Ridge Mounwn.~. Rose and bvcndet soaps,
mo1>1uri1.mg bar, slumpoo/cond1t1oncr bar. Contnet
Anna: RL I, Box 278; Blowmg RoU, NC 28605
(7™) 262-2321.
YOGA FOR ALL AGES- Ongoint; cla.<;:;C.S m the
Asheville lllC;l, workshops for group~. aml rnvaac
sessions. Give your..clr the s1fa or wellness and
peace. For more 1nfonna11on .:all Bo~ Kelly
(704) 2.S4-8698.
ORGANIC HONEY· Tulip Poplar, Sourwood,and
Wildnowet. From Patrick Counay, Virginia. No
chemicals. no white sugar, no hC11t, ever. Strained
through cheesecloth and packed JR heavy glass
canning J31'S. For a 4-oz. sample of our premium
sourwood and our catalog, send S4 10: Wade
Buckholas & Megan Phillips; Route 2. Box 248:
Stuart, VA 2A 171. (703) 694-4571
STIL-LIGHT THEOSOPHICAL RETR EAT
CENTER • a quiet sp3Ce for personal mediaalion,
group inaerneaion through study, and community
won:. and ~p1titual '1Cm1rnir;. Conmca Leon Frankel;
RL I, Box 326; Waynesville, NC 287116.
MOCCASINS, bnndcruftcd of elkhide in ahc
trlld1lionnl Plains Indian style. W:ucr rc,~iswna,
resoluble, and rugged • gtC<lt for hiking! Children's
and infana sizes available. \'/rue: Blue Feather
Mocca~ms: Box 931: Asheville. NC 28802, or call
Pollick Clark Bl (7~) 2S3-5<};7.
NATURE LOVERS' COMMUNITY • Chrisainns
only. S1000 gives you hfctimc owncl'>h1p righlS on
.S acres. Whole propetty consists of -is acres of
wooded calm and privacy. Write: Gospel Ministry;
P.O. Box 6S4: Clinton, TN 37717.
RHYTHM .6LIVE • Handcrafacd African- Style
Drums, workshops. learning tapes, drumbng_~. and
aacssoncs. Please send SASE IO Rhythm Ahvc!;
SS Phaux Cove Rd.: Weaverville, NC 28787 {704)
645-3911.
NEW AGE · group forming. All mtcrc~aed m
\haring about spirit to spirit commun1cotion,
channchng. v1suah1auon, hc;ihng, chokrns, IMOI,
etc. Emphasis on spmt and our connccaion to
Mother Earth, v1suaH1mg po~11ivc growth and
nurturing Conaact· Thcrc"a Carlson; ?SOI Ruic
Rd .. Knoxville. TN 37920.
WJ:BWORKING 1s free. Send submLssioos to:
Kattlah Journal
P.O. Box 63R
Lc1.:.:,acr. NC
Katllah Province 211748
Wint.er, 1989- 90
�The Kan1ah Journal wanrs ro communicate your thoughts and
feelings to the other people in the bioregional province. Send them
to us as le11ers, poems, stories, articles. drawings. or pliowgraphs,
etc. Please send your comributions to us aJ: Kati/ah Journal; P. 0 .
Box 638; Leicester, NC; Kati/ah Province 28748.
The Spring 1990 issue of the Ka11foh Journal will be
focusing on "Wellness in the Mountains." We are looking for
information and aniclcs on !hose who contribu1e to the heahhful
quality of life in our southern mountains; especially through
activities which promote self-responsibility and a high level of
wellness as the normal living state.
Issue 28 of the KatUa11 Journal (Summer, '90) will take up
the topic of "Carrying Capacity" and the burgeoning impact of the
human presence and human teehnology in !he mounrains. The issue
will look beyond the last induscrial smoke-cloud and past the end of
real estate, when we apply !his imponant ecological principle to our
own selves.
BACK ISSUES OF KATUAH JOURNAL AVAILABLE
ISSUE THREE · SPRING 1984
Sustainable Agricuhure • SunJlowcn • HWTWI
Impact on Ille Fon:st • Cltlldrcns' Education
Veronica Nicholas:Wom1n m Poli11cs • Linle
People • Medicine Allies
ISSUE FOUR · SUMMER 1984
WateT Drum • WalCT Quality . Kudzu - Solu
Eclipse • Clc.vcuuing · Trout • Going IO Waler
Ram Pumps - MICIOhydro - Poems: Bennie
Lee Sinclair, nm Wayne Miller
ISSUE FIVE . FALL 1984
Hll'Vcst • Old Ways in Cherokee . Girucng ·
lofuclear Wu1e • Our Celtic Heritage ·
Bioregionalism: Past, Pre""t, and Future •
John Wilnoty • Healing DatlaiC$S • Politics of
Participation
ISSUE SIX · WINTER 1984-&s
Winier Solstice Eanh Ceremony • Horsepastur<
River • Coming of the Light • Log Cabin
Rooia • MO\llll&in Agiculture: The Right Crop
- William Taylor ·The Future of the Forest
ISSUE SEVEN · SPRING 198S
Sustainable Economics - Hoi Springs • Worker
Ownership - The Great Economy . Self Help
Credit Union - Wild Turkey • Responsible
Invuting • Woricing in lhc Web of Life
ISSUE ElGIIT - SUMMER 198S
Cclcbntion: A Way of Life · KauW. 18,000
Ye«n Ago • S-W Sites • Folk Arts in Ille
Schools • Sun Cyclr./Moon Cycle • Poems:
Hilda~ . Chuobe HaUa&e Cenll::r.
Who Owns Appilachia?
ISSUE NINE· FALL 198S
The Waldu Forest - The Trees Speak •
Mi&ratin& Forata • Hone Louina - Swtini a
TrecCrop • UtbanTrea -AQQQI Bn:.od . Myth
Tmo
ISSUE TEN · WINTER 198S-i6
Kate Rogers • Circles of Sionc • Internal
Mylllmaking • Holistic Healing on Trial •
Poems: Steve Kmulll • Mytltlc Places • The
Uktena's Tale • Crystal Magic
"OrcamspW.ina"
ISSUE TWENTY ..ONE • Fall, 1988
Chutnuts: A Natunl Hwory • Restoring the
Chc:AAut . "Poem or Preservation and Praise"
Continuing the Quest - Forests and Wildlife
Chestnuts in Regional Diet - Chestnut
Resources • Herb Note . Oood Medicine:
"Changes to Come" • Re•iew: Wliuc legmds
Live
ISSUE ELEVEN · SPRINO 1986
Community Pl1nning - Cities and the
Bioregional Vision - Recycling • Community
Gardening· Floyd County, VA - Gasohol •
Two Bioreglonal Views • Nuclear Supplement
Foxfire Games · Ooocl Medicine: Visau
ISSUE TWENTY-TWO · W°U11er, '88--89
Global Warm.ing • Fire This Tune - Thomu
Berry on "Bioregions" · Earth E.xcrc:is4' . Kort
Loy McWhiru:t - An Abundance or Emp<inea
LETS - Cllroniclea of Floyd • Darry Wood .•
TheBIOlltClm
ISSUE THIRTEEN . Fall 1986
c - For Awakening • Elizabelll Callari - A
Gentle Death • Hospice • Ernest Morgan Dealing Creatively with Death • Home Burial
Box • The Wake • The Raven Moc.ku •
Woodslorc and Wildwoods Wisdom • Oood
Medicine: The s.._ Lodge
ISSUE TWENTY-THREE - Spring, 1989
Pisgah Village • Pl111e1 An - Orcen City Poplar Appeal - "CllOllt Sky" · "A New Eulh"
Black Sw1n • Wild IAvcly Days - Reviclwa:
Socred Land Socr«d Sa; Ice "6«. Poem:
"Sudclcn Tc:ndrits"
ISSUE FOURTEEN . Winter 1986-87
lJoyd C.rt Owle • Boogers Ind Mummcn • All
Species Day • Cabin Fever Univonity •
Homeless in Kaulah • Homemade Hot Wat..Stovemalter's Narrative - Oood Medicine:
Interspecies Communic:alion
ISSUE EIOITTEEN. Winter 1987-88
Vamcular Archilecture • Dreams in Wood and
Sione • Mountain Home • Earth Energies •
Euth-She.llcred Uving • Membrane Houses •
Brush Shelter • Poems: Octobu DWJt. • Good
Medicine: "Shell.Cr"
ISSUE FlFTE.E.N • Spring 1987
CoverlelS • Wom1n Forester - Susie McMahan
Midwife • Alternative Contraception •
Bioscxuality • Bion:gionalism 1nd Women Oood Modicinc: MAlriudW Culture - Petarl
ISSUE NINETEEN · Spring. 1988
Perelmdra Cl~ · Spring Tonics • Blueberries
WildOower Gardens - Cranny Herbalist •
Flower Eucnces • "The Origin of lhc Animals:
Siory. Good Modlcinc: "Power" - Be AT"'°
ISSUE SIXTEEN · Summer 1987
Helen Waite • Poem: Visions in a Garden •
Vision Quest - First Flow • lnitillion •
Leaming in the WUclemess • Cherokee
OWJcnp - -Valuing Trees"
ISSUE TWENTY · Summer. 1988
l'luave AppaJacru.n Wildr:mw · HiaJ!landl
of Roan • Cclo Community - l.IDd Trust Anh11r MOf1111 School - Zonin1 luue • .,,,_
Ricl&e" • Farmers and \he Farm Bill • Good
Medicine: "lMld" - Acid Rain - Duke's Power
Play · Chaokee Miaohydro Projoc:t
ISSUE TWENTY ·FOUR - Summer. '89
Deep Listt:rting · Life in AIOmic C"lly - OiftlCt
Actlonl · Tree of Pe.ce • Commuruty Buildlftg
Pcaccmaltcrs - Ethnic Survival • Pairing
Project • "Ba.tllesong" • Growing Peace in
Cullurea · Review: Tltc Clta/iuOlld IN Blatk
ISSUI! TWENTY-FIVE· FALL. 1989
The Gn:at Forest • Resl.orina Old Orowtlt •
Regional Planning • Tunbcr • Forest Roada
Poem: Sparr- Hawk. · A Pl..:e f« Bun •
'7/uu FLU 1/tc RtWi HLaElfl" • l!utern
P1nthcr • Oak Decline • People md Habiw
Wtld S--n.s - Daner Fair
- - - ---- - - - - - -- - - - - -- - - - - - - - -- ---- - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - ~UAtt)OURNAL
P.O. Box 638 Leicester, NC Katuah Province 28748
Formo~info:
Name
Regular Membership........ $10/yr.
Sponsor.........................$20/yr.
Contributor.....................$50/yr.
Address
City
call Mamie Muller (704)683-1414
State
Zip
Enclosed is $
to give
this ejfon an exua bOOst
I can be a local contaet
Area Code
loll.mer, 1989-90
Phone Number
person for my area
Back Issues
=
Issue# __@ $2.50 S_ _
Issue# _@ $2.50 = $_ _
Issue# __@ $2.50 = $_ _
Issue# __@ $2.50 = $_ _
Issue#_@ $2.-59= $_ _
Complete Set (3-1 J, 13-16,
18-25)
@
S3s.oo =s__
1
�
Dublin Core
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Title
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Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians Records
Description
An account of the resource
<em>Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians</em>, later simplified to <em>Katúah Journal</em>, was published from 1983 to 1993. A quarterly publication, it was focused on the bioregion of former Cherokee land in Appalachia. <br /><br /><span>The early issues of the journal explain the meaning of the Cherokee name, </span><em>Katúah</em><span>, and why the editors wanted to view the world through a bioregional lens, rather than political boundaries. A volunteer production, the editors took a holistic view in tackling social, environmental, mental, spiritual, and emotional topics of the day, many of which are still relevant. </span><br /><span><br />The <em>Katúah Journal</em> was co-founded by Marnie Muller, David Wheeler, Thomas Rain Crowe, Martha Tree and others who served as co-publishers and co-editors. Other key team members included Chip Smith, David Reed, Jay Mackey, Rob Messick and many others.</span><br /><br />This digital collection is only a portion of the <em>Katúah</em>-related materials in the W.L. Eury Appalachian Collection in Special Collections at Appalachian State University. The items in AC.870 Katúah Journal records cover the production history of the <em>Katúah Journal</em>. Contained within the records are correspondence, publication information, article submissions, and financial information. The editorial layouts for issues 12 through 39 are included as are a full run of the Journal spanning nearly a decade. Also included are photographs of events related to the Journal and a film on the publication.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
This resource is part of the <em>Katúah Journal Records </em>collection. For a description of the entire collection, see <a href="https://appstate-speccoll.lyrasistechnology.org/repositories/2/resources/937" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Katúah Journal Records (AC. 870)</a>.
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The images and information in this collection are protected by the Copyright Law of the United States (Title 17, U. S. C.) and are intended only for personal, non-commercial, and educational purposes, provided proper citation is used – i.e., Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians Records, 1980-2013 (AC.870), W. L. Eury Appalachian Collection, Special Collections, Appalachian State University, Boone, NC. Researchers are responsible for securing permissions from the copyright holder for any reproduction, publication, or commercial use of these materials.
Date
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1983-1993
Format
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journals (periodicals)
Language
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English
Type
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Text
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
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<em>Katúah Journal</em>, Issue 26, Winter 1989-1990
Description
An account of the resource
The twenty-sixth issue of the <em>Katúah Journal</em> focuses on children and parents: their roles in family and in the bioregion. Authors and artists in this issue include: Thomas Berry, Samala Hirst, Ellie Kincade, Linda Metzner, Lucinda Flodin, Martha Perkins, Jan Verhaeghe, Christina Morrison, Karen Watkins, Doug Woodward, Trish Severin, Susan Griesmaier, Aviva Jill Romm, Tom Youngblood-Petersen, Rob Messick, Will Ashe Bason, Jermain Mosely, Marnie Mikell, James Rhea, Martha Tree, and David Wheeler. This issue also features an interview with Bonnie Blue, puppeteer. <br><br><em>Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians</em>, later simplified to <em>Katúah Journal</em>, was published from 1983 to 1993. A quarterly publication, it was focused on the bioregion of former Cherokee land in Appalachia. The early issues of the journal explain the meaning of the Cherokee name, Katúah, and why the editors wanted to view the world through a bioregional lens, rather than political boundaries. A volunteer production, the editors took a holistic view in tackling social, environmental, mental, spiritual, and emotional topics of the day, many of which are still relevant.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1989-1990
Table Of Contents
A list of subunits of the resource.
Coming of Age in the Ecozoic Era by Thomas Berry.......1<br /><br />Kids Saving Rainforests by Samala Hirst.......4<br /><br />Kids' Treecycling Company.......5<br /><br />Conflict Resolution and the Family by Ellie Kincade.......6<br /><br />Developing the Creative Spirit by Linda Metzner........8<br /><br />The Balloon is a Unicorn by Artspirit Studio.......9<br /><br />Birth Power by Lucinda Flodin and Martha Perkins.......10<br /><br />Birth Bonding by Jan Verhaeghe.......11<br /><br />The Magic of Puppertry: An Interview with Bonnie Blue by Christina Morrison and Karen Watkins.......12<br /><br />Home Schooling by Doug Woodward and Trish Severin.......15<br /><br />Ceremony: Traditional.......16<br /><br />Mother Earth: The Natural Classroom by Susan Griesmaier.......18<br /><br />Biodegradable Diapers by Aviva Jill Romm.......18<br /><br />Resources........19<br /><br />Gardening Tips for Children by Tom Youngblood-Petersen.......19<br /><br />Natural World News.......20<br /><br />"From the Diary of a Modern Child" by Rob Messick.......24<br /><br />Pocket Cultures by Will Ashe Bason.......24<br /><br />Drumming.......26<br /><br />Forest Rescue: An Ecological Manifesto.......29<br /><br />Webworking.......30<br /><br /><em>Note: This table of contents corresponds to the original document, not the Document Viewer.</em>
Publisher
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<em>Katúah Journal</em>, printed by The <em>Waynesville</em> <em>Mountaineer</em> Press
Subject
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Bioregionalism--Appalachian Region, Southern
Sustainable living--Appalachian Region, Southern
Puppeteers
Conflict management
Natural childbirth
Child rearing--Appalachian Region, Southern
Home schooling
North Carolina, Western
Blue Ridge Mountains
Appalachian Region, Southern
North Carolina--Periodicals
Language
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English
Type
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Text
Source
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<a href="https://appstate-speccoll.lyrasistechnology.org/repositories/2/resources/937"> AC.870 Katúah Journal records</a>
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<a title="In Copyright – Educational Use Permitted" href="https://rightsstatements.org/page/InC-EDU/1.0/?language=en 8" target="_blank"> In Copyright – Educational Use Permitted </a>
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Appalachian Region, Southern
Is Part Of
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<a title="Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians" href="https://omeka.library.appstate.edu/collections/show/79" target="_blank"> Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians </a>
Format
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PDF
Journals (Periodicals)
Agriculture
Appalachian Mountains
Appalachian Studies
Bioregional Definitions
Black Bears
Community
Education
Electric Power Companies
Folklore and Ceremony
Forest Issues
Habitat
Hazardous Chemicals
Health
Katúah
Poems
Politics
Radioactive Waste
Reading Resources
Recycling
South PAW (Preserve Appalachian Wilderness)
Transportation Issues
Turtle Island
Villages
Western North Carolina Alliance
Wilderness
Women's Issues
-
https://omeka.library.appstate.edu/files/original/6ac3b2d6326ea4a47a252670915b7c24.pdf
39d93874ae21ffbb586dcabe91047fcd
PDF Text
Text
ISSUE 27 SPRING 1990
$1.50
BIOREGIONAL JOURNAL OF THE SOUTHERN APPALACHIANS
�Postage Paid
Bulk Mail
Permit #18
Leicester, NC
28748
P.O. Box 638 Leicester, NC Katuah Province 28748
ADDRESS CORRECTION REQUESTED
�Personal and Planetary
Transformation:
A Holistic Model of Healing.......... !
by Richard Lowenthal
The Healing Power...................... 4
by David Wheeler
Peace to Their Ashes .................... 6
by Sam Gray
Healing in Katuah........................9
by Doug Aldridge
"When Left to Grow" ................. 10
a poem by Rob Messick
"Calling to the Ancestors,
Calling Our Relations" .......... 11
poems by Stephen Wing
PERSONAL AND PLANETARY
TRANSFORMATION:
A HOLISTIC MODEL OF HEALING
The l3elly .................................. 12
by Lisa Sarasohn
by Richard Lowenthal
EARTH DAY 1990 !!. ................ 15
a special pull-ow supplement
Food From the Ancient Porest.. .. .19
by Snow Bear
Natural World News ..................20
Good Medicine .......................... 24
Drumming ................................ 26
Leners to Katuah Journal
Events ...................................... 29
Webworking ............................. 30
It is abundantly clear that the Earth is in
the midst of a tremendous ecological crisis.
Human societies the world over are also
experiencing phenomenal changes and crises as are the individuals who live in them. Our
collective destiny seems to be shifting rapidly,
and may well be careening out of control. A
very good question, at this point in our
evolution, is "What is happening to us and to
the planet - and where are we heading?"
Our planetary crisis, like all crises,
combines great danger and great opportunity.
If we are to meet the challenge successfully,
we need to understand both the dangers and
the opportunities - and learn how to deal with
them.
The best model I have found, to help us
approach comprehension of this planetary
crisis, is derived from the holistic
understanding of health, illness, and the
healing process. In order to better understand
what is happening on a global scale, we need
to consider the recently-articulated possibility
that the Earth may in fact be one huge living
being, with its own self-regulating systems.
Both the Gaia Theory of Lovelock and
Margulis, and Peter Russell's work on "The
Global Brain", point in this direction. If the
Earth is truly an individual, indivisible being,
the processes of personal and planetary
healing may mirror each other in many ways even more, they may be inseparable.
In the holistic view, physical i!Jness is
often the result of unresolved emotional and
spiritual issues, as well as the build-up of
toxic waste-products in various organs and
tissues of the body. Our increasing
understanding of the human psyche, and of
the interaction between mind and body (if
indeed they can even be separated), has
shown that suppressed emotional traumas and
long-buried negative self-concepts have a
constricting, deadening effect upon the
body/mind. They, too, may thus be
considered powerful toxins which 'poison'
our entire body/mind system. Their effect is
reflected in, and amplified by, the
accumulation of chemical toxins in the body an excellent example of the mirroring effect
implicit in the holistic model of healing. That
is, our body/mind system is an integrated
whole, in which toxins on one level indicate
(continued on page 3)
�STAFFTinS ISSUE:
Susan Adam
Heather Blair
Rob Messick
Mamie Muller
Lisa Sarasohn
Scott Bini
Jim Houser
Richard Lowenthal
James Rhea
Chip Smith
Rodney Webb
Manha Tree
David Wheeler
EDITORIAL ASSISTANCE:
Will Ashe Bason
Trip Halbkat
Michael Red Fox
Phil Ross
Jack Chaney
Michael Havelin
Marsha Ring
Kim Sandland
COVER by Martha Tree
Special thanks Kitty Boniske for providing a home for this
issue, and to Phil and Allen for their hospitality and
forbearance.
PUBLISHED BY: Kat"'1h Journal
PRINTED BY: The Waynesville Mounraineer Press
EDITORIAL OFACE JHIS ISSUE:
The Cenier for New Priorities, Asheville
WRITE US AT:
Kar"'1h Journal
Box 638; Leicester, NC; Katuah Province 28748
TELEPHONE: (704) 754-60')7
KalUah Journal is on Skyland BBS, Asheville, NC.
For information, call (704) 254-6700.
Diversity is an important clement of bioregional eoology, bolh
natural and social. In line with !his principle, lhe KatUalt Journal 1rics
IO serve as a forum for !he discussion of regional issues. Signed anicles
express only lhe opinion of lhc aulhors and are not necessarily lhe
opinions of lhe Ka1Ualt Journal edilOrs or slaff.
The lnlCmal Revenue Service has declared KatUalt a non·profit
organization under section 50l(cX3) of lhc lnlCmal Revenue Code. AU
conlributions IO Ka1ao1t aic deductible from personal income tax.
'LNVOC:ATWN
From the dark below
The young stem curves upright
Green into light
Leaves open their cluster
In the sun they sing
Wisdom of the stars
And blossom in the life of all creation
1l!E SOUTHERN APPALACFDAN BIOREGION
ANO MAJOR EASTERN RJVER SYSTEMS
STATEMENT OF PURPOSE
Here in the southern-most heartland of the
Appalachian mountains, the oldest mountain range on
our continent, Turtle Island; a small but growing
group has begun to take on a sense of responsibility
for the implications of that geographical and cultural
heritage. This sense of responsibility centers on the
concept of living within the natzual scale and balance
of universal systems and principles.
Within this circle we begin by invoking the
Cherokee name " Kat1'ah 1' as the old/new name for
this area of the mountains and for its journal as well.
The province is indicated by its natural boundaries:
the Roanoke River Valley to the north; the foothills
of the piedmont area to the east; Yona Mountain and
the Georgia hills to the south; and the Tennessee
River Valley to the west.
The editorial priorilies for us are to collect
and disseminate information and energy which
pertains specifically to this region, and to foster the
awareness that the land is a living being deserving of
our love and respect. Living in this manner is a way
to insure the sustainability of the biosphere and a
lasting place for ourselves in its continuing
evolutionary process.
We seem to have reached the fulcrum point of
a " do or die " situation in terms ofa quality standard
of life for all living beings on this planet. As a voice
for the caretakers of this sacred land, Katuah, we
advocate a centered approach to the concept of
decentralization. It is our hope to become a support
system for those accepting the challenge of
sustainability and the creation of harmony and
balance in a total sense, here in this place.
We welcome all correspondence, criticism,
pertinent information, articles, artwork, etc. with
hopes that Kat1'ah will grow to serve the best interests
of this region and all its living, breathing members.
-The Editors
"'-t\&nh )ournaL Pci<Je 2
/
SprLnlJ, 199 0
�(conlinued Cmm peac 1)
toxic build-up on other levels as well. Spiritual, emotional,
mental, and physical problems :ire completely intertwined and
interdependent. There 1s no separation between them, yet there is
a twist to this scenario - there is usually a "time lag" involved in
physical manifestation.
This idea of "time lag" is imporunt, because it indicates
that we may not sec visible, outer effects or iMer trauma or
constriction for a long time. Conversely, when we do see outer
effects, or when we consciously "feel bad," we can be pretty sure
that toxic ideas or feelings have been poisoning us inwardly and
subconsciously for some time, and/or our bodies are
overwhelmed by toxins and stress.
Since all the various "levels" of our being are interacting to
produce "disease" (dis-ease). the most effective healing method
addresses what is happening on each level simultaneously. In
particular, it deals quickly and directly with any physical
"presenting problems", especially those that are imminently
life-threatening. (This is the fort.e of modem medicine.) It would
also - and even more importantly - prescribe a process of gradual
detoxification, "remedial learning", and therapy to help the
person heal on the deeper, more intangible levels as well
These deeper levels of healing present some problems,
usually of a psychological nature. What happens is this: as the
body/mind starts releasing toxins - physical or emotional - we
enter a "healing crisis" which can take many forms. Often there
be brief l'CCUJ!Cnccs <?fold illnes~s which were suppressed
with drugs; chemical toxms st.an coming out through the skin,
which can brcalc out in pimples, boils, or rashes; and we may
experience nausea, weakness, and dizziness. These physical
symptoms are not "problems" in themselves • in fact, they arc
pan of the solution. Problems arise when we give in to fear and
believe we arc "getting sick", instead of understanding that we
are releasing toxins as we heal.
But here's the rub: since repressed emotions arc
themselves mental and emotional toxins, it is likely that we will
experience a lot of fear - or anger, or sadness - as buried
emotions are surfacing to be released. We wiU also be releasing
and experiencing our cultural fear of emotion, and our training to
be afraid of our fears! For this reason, we need extensive
preparation and prior education about the nature of a healing
crisis: what it means, what to expect, and how to deal with the
emotional discharge. The crucial clement is that we learn to look
beyond OUlU appearances or the temporary ill feeling, and ro trust
that the body/mind krwws very well how ro heal itself when it is
w!"
properly supported in doing so. Withour this krwwing, this faith,
healing is much more difficult.
4) Simultaneously, humanity as a whole is starting to
awaken to the mind-boggling depth of the issues involved.
Tremendous social problems such as drug and alcohol addiction,
di~i~tegration of the familr, distrust of government, teenage
suicide and pregnancy, SOCJal apathy, and overall deterioration
of education and our quality of life arc spurring people to seek
new ways, new answers. The success and rapid spread of the
Alcoholics Anonymous movement, its many off-shoots, and
therapy and support groups is one facet of this process.
The primary toxin being released is
our toxic belief in separation - our
misunderstanding of our relation to the
universe, nature, and other people.
5) The entire planet and all of humanity is going through a
healing crisis involving the generation and release of toxins on
every level. The crucial issue seems to be this: whatever we
refuse to deal with inwardly MUST eventually appear outwardly,
and KEEP appearing outwardly until we 'get the message'. This
means that our 'inner' psychological reality and the 'outer'
ecological reality are in fact ONE reality. Because we have
allowed such a toxic build-up within ourselves and our societies,
and have NOT dealt with our inner and interpersonal realities
effectively, our world is mirroring our internal denial--by
manifesting externally the pain we believe we've 'avoided'. Thus
unbelievable amountS of deadly toxins arc being produced either
intentionally - i.e. plutonium and chemical/biological weapons or as industrial wastes. And these toxins arc either stored away
for 'safe' keeping or dumped directly into the planetary
ecosystem, with disastrous results.
This process is the 'outpicturing'- the outer result - of
psychological toxins that have been accumulating for several
thousand years. The primary toxin being released is our toxic
belief in separation - our misunderstanding of our relation to the
universe, nature, and other people - and with it the overwhelming
fear and defensiveness this disempowering belief generates.
6) As humanity's emotional negativity and toxic belief
systems rise up from the depths of the collective unconscious and
come to the surface (become conscious). they at first cause an
increase in violence, immorality, greed, exploitation, and
narcissistic behavior. Initially, people identify with these
surfacing negative patterns and act accordingly; they may
temporarily become even more fearful, self-centered, and
exploitive (as we've seen during the 80's). This 'regression' is
Now, if we apply chis practical, yet visionary, model of
healing to our planetary crisis, we might arrive at the following
"diagnosis":
part of the healing, difficult as it is to accept; it is making our
inner reality outwardly visible and tangible - and inescapable.
1) We arc now experiencing on a planetary scale the
destructive outer effects of long-standing, toxic beliefs and
feelings operating within us, and within our social structures.
The intensifying pollution and degradation of the Eanh is a
reflection of humanity's inner pain, denial of interdependence,
and emotional and spiritual degradation. The outer problems we
arc generating arc mirroring back to us, in no unccnain terms,
the concrete, tangible, and inevitable results of our arrogant and
divisive belief systems. This outer reality is making our
intangible INNER reality visible. Though we have prided
ourselves on our 'enlightened self-interest'. we arc now being
forced to see that our modern way of life is neither enlightened
nor in our best interests - or the best interests of the planet.
2) Some of these outer effects are threatening our survival
and the life of the planet - effects such as tropical deforestation,
over-population, the "consumer mentality", acid rain, the world
arms trade, erosion of topsoil, production of huge amounts of
nuclear and chemical hazardous wastes, etc.
3) These life-threatening problems should be dealt with
immediately, to at least reduce their impact and buy time so the
body (of humanity and of the planet) has the time and strength to
recuperate somewhat. This would require ecological, political,
and social activism on a very broad-based, grass-roots level. It
would also require that we institute educational processes that
help people oo COMMUNICATE and COOPERATE more easily.
~~S!J'UCtivc tendencies we have set in motion may really be the
We thus need to recogniz.c that all the "terrible" events and
SprLnq, 1990
1moal messengers of a far deeper, positive change; we need to
remember that appearances are not always what they seem. And
we especially need an educationaJ approach that can help us get
through the darkest moments - or years - of this planetary
"healing crisis." A vision of the positive end result - the
proverbial "light at the end of the tuMel" - will be absolutely
necessary, if we arc not to lapse into judgementalism, impotent
rage, or despair.
Fonunatcly, we already have such visions available to us.
Many writers and 'futurists' are exploring and communicating
a~ut the incredible transformations already occurring in such
diverse fields of human endeavor as physics, biology, the
psy~hology and treatment of addiction, 'citizen diplomacy',
sohd-waste management', economics, and world politics.
All these developments have one thing in common: the
gradu~I shift from a mechanistic, separative, controlling mode of
consciousness to an ecological, holistic, relationship-oriented
mode. This shift aligns us with the Earth; it is the fundameotal
inner shift which will allow us, as it progresses, 10 adapt to the
immense changes we arc experiencing. The old order based on
separation, exploitation, and fear is dying. Let us assist in this
tremendous transformation process, and panicipatc in the birthing
of the new, with courage, determination. and love.
,,
JGQt®h Jo1Mnat
PQl}e
s
�THE HEALING POWER
by David Wheeler
The Appalachian Mountains are old, and their power is
subtle. But their power is yet strong. Standing over the eastern
seaboard of the Turtle Island continent, the intangible influence of
~e Appalachians racli~1es out over all the lowlands so thickly
mhab11ed by human bemgs. As surely as that power is invisible
and inexplicable, its subtle influence is also vital 10 maintaining
the balance of life of the eastern half of Tunle Island.
To the original inhabitants of the Southern Appalachians
"medicine" meant power, and the mountains were always know~
to.~ sacr~ and powerful. Traditionally, Cherokee Indians of a
spmtual mind would plunge every morning into the river that
flowed by each village. Thus they partook of the medicine of
water and mountains. They ate wild foods and healed bodily
ailments with roots dug from the ground, roots lhat were full of
the medicine of the mountains.
C:Cnain peaks or waterfalls or other special spots in the
mountams were known as sacred sites where the spiritual energy
of the mountains was concentrated. The native people went to
these places for fasting and prayer, to find who they were when
they came of age, and, if they could, to die when their time was
at an end. They knew that these were sacred places, for they
could sense the energy directly. And did not Grandfather Eagle,
the most sacred of creatures, choose to live on the mountain
heights?
The ftrst white people who came to the mountains were in
awe of the imposing presence of the Appalachians. On the
~urface, the fi~t immigrants who followed 1he early explorers
mto the mountain coves and "hollers" seemed to be too engrossed
!n sim~ly making a livelihood .fo~ themselves, and too caught up
m praying to an abstracted Chnsuan God, to recognize the power
of mountains - but inside, deep down, they knew.
Others, coming 100 years later, recognized the power of
mountains and came for healing. First by carriage, then by
~I, they came to escape the flatland heat and to cure a variety of
ailments - most often tuberculosis, for which the only cure
known in both Europe and North America was to retreat to the
mountains. Well-known resort centers, spas, and sanitariums
were .built, an~ their prospe~ous ~de became an important early
cash mdustry m the mountains. This type of commerce was at its
peak when the lumber barons were just beginning their
exploitation of the region's timber trees.
Only the rich could afford the healing offered in the
mountains, so the patrons of the fashionable resort/healing
centers were largely southern aris1ocra1s with a sprinkling of
northern industrialists. The Line between "healing" and "vacation"
often became quite blurred. It was sometimes hard 10 tell a
popular spa from a resort hotel, as the same building often served
both purposes.
The warm springs of the town now called Hot Springs in
Madison County, and other mineral springs along the French
Broad, became known as healing places, and several spas were
constructed during the middle 1800's for people to "take the
waters."
Wilma Dykeman tells of the great resort/healing centers in
her regional history, The French Broad. She wrote:
"Health and pleasure were the attractions of the watering
places: the first providing a worthy excuse for the indulgence of
the second. Advertisements of the period mentioned immediate
cures, upon use of the mineral waters, for 'Diseases of the Liver,
Dyspepsis, Vertigo, Neuralgia, Opthalmia or Sore Eyes,
Paralysis, Spinal Affections, Rheumatism, Scrofula, Gravel,
Diabetes, Consumption and Chronic Cough, Diseases of the
Skin, Tetter, Indolent Ulcers, General Debility, Sleeplessness,
and Nervous Prostration.' The waters of many places were
reputed good for barre nness in wives and impotence in
husbands.
th~
Drawing by Rob Messick
Spri:rMJ1 ! 999.•
�''The Wann Springs, most famous of all the French Broad
watering places, mentioned in one of their brochures that
partaking of their minerals would 'bring the bloom back to the
chec_k, the lustre to the eye, tone to the languid pulse, sr:rcngth to
the Jaded nerves, and vigor to the wasted frame.' From all
co~tcmpo_rary accounts of t~e social life of the place, its patrons
amved with cheeks already in full bloom, eyes overflowing with
lustre,_ and pulses. in no need of stimulation beyond that of
moonlight on the nver or the shady tum in a lover's walk."
The city of Asheville became the hub of both the health and
society circles. In 1888 a German doctor named Carl van Ruck
established the first large tuberculosis sanitarium, arid, as word
got out about the beneficial mountain climate, others soon sprung
up around the area.
. . . To ~he wealthy visitors, who knew only the highly
c1v1hzed life of the lowlands, the mountain landscapes were
exotic and wild. The fine "foreign folk" thrilled at the rugged
scenery, the waterfalls and swift-running creeks, and the
mountain air, so cool and crisp even in the summertime.
T?<1ay, muc~ the same attractions bring people to the
mount~1ns. Ostensibly, they say they come for tourism and
rccrea~on, but the deepest _need is for healing: the healing of
relax~on from ov~·paced lifestyles; healing from crowdedness,
poll~uon, and existen?Cs overfull of people and machines;
healing from banal rouones, fast food, and TV-screen lives· but
most of all, healing from an inner emptiness of which they~ no;
know the source.
Easy accessibility has brought the culture of civilization
~eep into the m.ountains. They are no longer strange, exotic,
isolated, and wild, as they were to the early socialites who
thronged the fashionable watering spots during the late I800's.
But there are what seem to modem urbanites to be great expanses
of unbroken forest. There is water that is actually drinkable as it
~m~s out from a spring! This is a functioning native habitat this 1s wholeness, the world as it could be.
There are so few examples of natural native environments
in the eastern pan of the continent that the forests and mountains
of ~ppalachia serve ~ ~ important grounding point for urban
v1s1tors. From a hfe in which the human influence is
omnip~nt, from an environment that is largely manufactured or
synthesized by human hands, the Appalachian hardwood forest is
a d.ose of reality. The ~~man spirit needs places like this by
which to refresh our sp1ms and to judge our actions - a mark
from which we can see if our culture is straying.
This sense of wholeness could be the cornerstone for a
whole new relationship between the human species and the
mountains. As it becomes increasingly rare, that sense of
wholeness becomes increasingly precious. Restoring the heaJth
of the. Appalachian forest by ending commercial exploitation and
allowing the forest to grow towards its natural climax state would
be the key to this new relationship. It would transform the
physical landscape of the mountains and would perhaps also
work to change the inner landscape of human society as well.
This new balance would require a greatly reduced human
prc~nce in the n:iountain habitat area. The primary use of the
region at present is as a resource base to support a large number
of human beings - but this is obviously not the purpose of
existence for the mountains. This has to change.
The "resources" of the area, the continuing life cycles arc
needed instead to support large numbers of trees, herbac~us
plants, and native wildlife. There must be a core habitat area that
is no.t violatc;ct by human beings, but used only in ways that are
consistent with the demands of the natural habitat - a biosphere
preserve. With conditions throughout the world already under so
much pressure from the human presence, the mountains should
be primarily a place for restrained visits.
But there is a possibility that a greatly limited number of
humans could create a right livelihood in a buffer zone that
surrounded the central preserve by leading others to the
wholeness .~f the land - relating specifically through healing.
learning, spintual exploration, art, recreation, and initiation.
SprlrMJ, I 990
. These kinds of activities need, of course, to be approached
with great care. When the value of an experience is in the
wholeness of it, then practitioners must be careful that the sense
of wlwle'!es~ is not ruined by the number of people arriving to
take part in 1t. Access would need to be carefully rationed. This
level of experience is obviously not to be degraded with crowded
parking lots, souvenir snips, or giant ridgctop condos. People
come to the mountains to treasure what is rare and special - and
strong - about them. It destroys their special ambience to make
them over to appear just like every other place frequented by
humans.
At the Cumberland Island National Seashore off the coast
of south Georgia, ~mping is by permit only and reservations
must be.made well 10 advanc~. This policy is intended to protect
the fragile nature of the seaside habitat. A similar policy would
serve well in the Appalachian biosphere preserve to protect the
fragile sense of wholeness.
This sense of wholeness could be the cornerstone
for a whole new relationship between the human
species and the mountains. As it becomes increasingly
rare •. that sense of wholeness becomes increasingly
precious.
Thinking .in t!tis vein leads to visions of the possibilities of
a new way of life 10 the buffer zone - a way of life that could
partake of the power of the mountains without diminishing it
The beginnings arc already in place. Carefully and respectfully,
the rest can grow.
Th~re are .~dy many summer camps and several outdoor
leadership tra1mng programs that draw on the natural
surroundings and provide challenging expeditions, environmental
education, and initiation experiences for young people (sec
KatUahJournal #16).
There are already several major colleges and universities in
the Ka!Uah province. They need to re-orient their direction of
study to focus on the ~l~gical context of their region, but they
represent excellent fac1h11es that arc already available. Like the
University of Tennessee in Knoxville and North Carolina State
University do at present, the learning institutions of the region
could provide headquarters and support for extended field
expeditions and field schools in the wild. Like the Great Smoky
Mountain Institution at Tremont they could teach the knowledge
and the values of the wild.
Other courses of study could be les$ fonnal such as
tracking sch~ls that taught skills and deepened awarcn~ss of our
plant and animal relations, and nomadic primitive Eanh skills
schools that created their own camps wherever they were.
A new vision for the mountains would also include more
~calin~ centers scauered among the hills, where people could
retreat to convalesce, or choose among a variety of healing
programs. These centers could also be used for educational
seminars and conference/retreats.
.
Spirit~al centers, like the existing Southern Dharma Center
m Hot Spnngs, NC, could also hold seminars and spirituaJ
retreats, as well as guide long prayer fasts and vision quests deep
in the uninhabited biosphere preserve area.
In this way the mountains could contribute to the
r7juvenation and ~nrichment o.f the human spirit. At the same
ume. by approaching the land m a manner that was once again
respectful and reverential, the humans could continue the work of
transforming our relarionship with the land.
The mountains will heal themselves, if we allow it. If we
can bring ourselves to allow it, then the mountains will be here
with all their power to heal us when we need their healing.
It. all could come around. The ghosts of the grand old
mountain health resorts could return once again to inspire a new
transfonnation in mountain life.
�Peace To Their Ashes
by Sam Gray
The earliest myths of the Katuah bioregion
available to us are those from the Cherokee people
collected by James Mooney a century ago (1887-1890)
on the Qualia Boundary in interviews with tribal
elders who were among the last surviving links
with the most ancient oral traditions of the tribe. It
~011/,' be fitting to observe the centenary of this
important cultural transmission with an invocation
of gratitude to these elders: John Ax, Swimmer,
Taywadihi, Suyeta, Ayasta, and to the spirits,
creatures, all our relations about whom tl1ey so
eloquently spoke. In Mooney's words, "peace to
their ashes and sorrow for their passing", for wit/I
them pa~sed away a universe of animated grace,
subtle wit, profound teachings, and recitative power
that will not come tllis way again.
James Mooney was an ethnologist, a skilled
tta.nsmittcr of oral traditions, who included ethnographic and
historical data in his book Myths of the Cherokee. He
refrained from interpretive comment about the meaning of
various themes within the narratives.
Int~rprecive th~o~cs about mytholo~ical discourse arc
very ancient. Hellerusuc and Roman wnters as diverse as
E~emerus, Ovid, and Pausa_nius made interesting, though
bnef, comments on the funcoon and nature of myth. Within
the last century a great many, more complex ideas about
myths have been developed by anthropologists,
psyc~ologis~s. and culrura_l hi~torians. An unbiased survey
o_f this vast liter.uurc leads inevuably to the conclusion that no
single theory, idea, or typology can satisfactorily account for
all the myths of a given culture. This literature. as a whole,
does estab~ish that ~yths have imponant links to various
psycholog1ca1, social, and cultural themes within and
beyond th~ society of o~gin and that the centrality of
mytbopocs1s to the evoluuon of human consciousness is
indisputable.
For the anentive there is, somewhere within the
mythological narrative, an opening - a door through which
the things spoken of in the narrative connect with things
unspoken inside ourselves. The legacy of the Cherokee
elders, transmitted by Mooney, and the accumulated
awareness of the function of myth in consciousness permit
us to respectfully approach the ancient myths of KatUah.
JUDACULLA
.
On Caney Fork Creek in Jackson County, NC. there
is a large stone about the size of a recumbent bison. h is of
steatite-sandstone composition and is covered with incised
graffiti, pictographs, pcuoglyphs, or "Indian writing." The
local name for this stone is Judaculla Rock. A few miles to
the east, high on the ridge above the Caney Fork watershed
at a ~lac~ _wh~re Jackson, Haywood, and Transylvania
Counties Join, 1s a cleared area known to the white sculcrs
as Judaculla Fields which was often used by them as a
summer pasture for livestock. This ridge, grassy bald, and
the vast watershed beneath was generally known as the
abode of him who some thought of as "The Indian Satan":
Judaculla.
I have known this place and the name Judaculla since
binh, having descended on the maternal side from those
earliest white settlers in the Caney Fork the Scotch-Irish
clans of Parker and Coward (cow-herd). My grandmother
grew up on the farm that included Judaculla Rock and her
brothers, father, cousins, and uncles used to drive livestock
up the long trail each spring to take advantage of the lush
grass covering Judaculla Fields. My grandmother related to
me that when she was a li!tle girl she was told to sweep and
clean the rock. Whether this was to occupy an energetic child
on a long summer day. or expressed the notion that it was
better to have the satanic writings exposed to the christian
light of day than be covered by din and undergrowth, to lie
there, eventually forgotten and unsuspected, and work some
mischief on later generations, I never learned. She also told
me that on occasion, groups of Cherokee Indians would visit
the rock, camp beside it and "sing and wail all night long".
These and other stories were told me about this place when I
was a boy, and at ftcqucnt intervals over the four decades of
my life I've visited the rock and the Caney Fork watershed,
drawn there by an energy I could neither wholly identify or
describe.
It was upon reading Mooney's Myths of the Cherokee
that I learned further truths about the place. Judaculla is an
English corruption of the Cherokee name, Tsul'ka/u
me~ing "slant-eyed," and he was a mythic hero of th~
ancient Cherokee. The Judaculla Fields arc known in
Cherokee as Tsunegun'yi, meaning 'white place', referring
doubtless to the uninterrupted whiteness of the snow-clad
bald in the winter and resonating further with the ancient
Cherokee cosmology in which the color white was associated
with peace and well-being. It was in the peaceful fields of
Tsunegun'yi that the slant-eyed giant Tsu/'kalu had his
abode.
TSUL'KALU
. A giant, a great bunter, lord of all the game, wild,
sohtary, of monstrous aspect, never seen, but heard often
enough during summer storms, rumbling around up there on
Tsunegun'yi ; this was Tsul'kalu. And like all who are
solitary and monstrous, Ts"l'kalu knows loneliness and in
time, goes looking for a mate. There is a beautiful Cherokee
girl, call her Sada'yi, who lives with her mother down
(continued on page 8)
Sprl."'J, 1990
�.,~(~)
Spc~. 1990 ~
�(continued from page 6)
along Caney Fork. Sada'yi has begun to sleep apart from
her mother in the asi, the cave-like dugout made of logs and
earth that was a common feature of Cherokee homesteads.
By sleeping in the asi, Sada'yi indicates the autonomy of her
young womanhood and her receptivity to the unknown. So
one dark night Tsul'ka/U comes to her. She tells him that
her mother has said whoever she chooses for a mate must be
a great hunter and provider.
"I am that," says Tsul'kalu and, though she has not
yet seen him, she senses his power and his truth and she lets
him enter. His huge body fills the darkened asi and there is
just room for her own small body to lie beside him. ln the
morning, he is gone and outside hangs a freshly killed deer
on the drying poles. They continue in this way for many
ni~bts.
Eventually Sada'yi's mother, ever practical, points out
that they have enough meat, could her mysterious and still
unseen lover possibly provide some wood for the winter
fires? The next morning they find whole trees, tom roots
and all from the eanh, piled in the clearing. The mother,
though puzzled, is pleased and $he presses for funher
se.rvice: could he chop the wood for \hem? Next morning all
the wood has been removed; the clearing is empty. Chopping
and stacking wood is an activity embedded in the human
order, and Tsul'kalu has emphatically pointed out that he is
not of that order.
Sada'yi's mother, an irrevocable voice of the human
order, begins to insist upon seeing her daughter's strange
lover. She wants to know more about him, take his
measure, encompass him, and harness his prodigious
powers. Sada'yi conveys her mother's request to the giant
and after some persuasion he is willing. He insisrs that she
(the mother) must prepare for a shock and above all she must
not react to the sight of him by losing control and screaming
out, "USGA'SETJ'YU!" meaning "frightful". So next
morning, he remains in the asi past daylight, and when the
mother lifts the flap to peek at him she, of course, goes away
screaming, "USGA'SETl'YU! USGA'SETl'YU!" In spite
of her intentions, the encounter with this intrinsically wild,
monstrous, disproponionate being from outside the human
order obliterates her control. Tsul'kalu vanishes and does not
return for a time.
Meanwhile Sada'yi has her menses and there is a
copious flow of blood. Her mother, disappointed there's
been no conception, and meddling now ever closer into the
affairs of the lovers, gathers the blood and throws it into the
river. When next Tsu/'ka/u visits Sada'yi, he asks,
"Where's the child?"
When told there's been none, he asks, "Where's the
blood?"
She takes him to the river bank where the blood was
thrown in. Something calls silently to him from the river
and he goes into the dark waters, dives down seven times
and emerges with a small worm, which he carries cupped in
his hands toward the asi. By the time be has reached it, the
worm has grown into a baby girl which he hands to Sada'yi
saying; "Your mother does not like me and abuses our child,
so come, let us go to my home."
She embraces the child, takes leave of her mother, and
they go together up the mountain to peaceful Tsunegun'yi ..
T he New Garments
Although the figures and events in a mythic narrative
arc usually distinct, the narrative as a whole sometimes
seems inconclusive and directionless, as if it were silently
linked to other myths or to moments outside itself. The myth
connects with ourselves and with the world but in ways that
are elusive and not always subject to articulation. In this, the
myth is like the dream. Upon waking we often feel that
remembered elements of the dream are meaningful; chey
connect with and inform consciousness. Sometimes a patient
analysis of the dream will elucidate these connections but this
process is never free of a potential collapse because we know
there is always more; that the recollected dream arose from a
region that remains disordered, directionless, and connected
to material we cannot reach. Recognizing the original unity
of myth and dream, the Australian Aborigines call the source
of their myths and scories, "The Dreaming".
The myth of Tsu/'kalu connects us with the
relationship between the human order and the wild, almost
incomprehensible order of nature itself. Tsul'kaltl is of this
latter order. He is, in a sense, lord of it by virtue of his
disproponionate, monstrous aspect, his magical energies that
supply food and create life from what the human order
discards (menstrual blood), and his refusal to be fixated by
human seeing and judgement. Tsul'kalll's huge hands can
make love to Sada'yi , silently kill the deer of the forest for
her sustenance, and fonn a womb for the gestation and birth
of their child. Like the forces of nature, be sustains the
human order and, at the same time, is irrevocably in
opposition to it. There is but one way the human order can
experience and comprehend Tsul'ka/u's order, and that way
is indicated by the monster giant himself in the final episode
of the myth:
Sada'yi's brother has come to Tsunegun'yi to see
her. He asks to see her husband also. She relays the message
to Tsu/'ka/u and he instructs: "You must put on new
garments in order to see me."
The brother indicates he is willing to do this.
"Go then," says Tsul'kalu , "and tell your people to
gather in the townhouse and fast for seven days. During that
time they cannot leave the townhouse or raise the war
whoop. At the end of seven days I will come to them with
the new gannents and then they can see me."
The brother recurns and explains all this to the people.
They very much want to see this giant lord of the game and
immediately gather into the townhouse to begin the fast.
Now there is one man among them who is not of
them. He's from another place and of another clan. This
man steals out of the townhouse at night and eats. On the
seventh day the people hear a great roaring coming down
from Tsunegun'yi. As it comes closer it becomes deafening
and they are all terrified. Suddenly, he who has broken the
fast can bear it no longer and runs from the townhouse and
the village shouting the war cry. The roaring ceases, then is
heard receding back up into the high mountains around
Tsunegun'yi where it is silent. The people never c lothe
themselves in the new garments, and they never see
Tsul'kalu.
The meaning of this episode offers profound insights
into the nature of Cherokee spirituality. The new garments the purified desire of the people - have no exact equivalents
in contemporary secular experience. They are the necessary
transformation that a people must undergo in order to face
sacred power. Sada'yi was made "new" by the purity of her
erotic surrender to the god. The people as a group were co be
transformed by their surrender to the God's discipline. It was
this discipline that would have sustained their well-being,
their courage and their silence in the face of the
mind-destroying power of the slant-eyed monster Tsu/'kalu.
WA DON'
8prLfl9, 1990
�HEALING IN KATUAH
by Doug Aldridge
Hin the search for wisdom, the soul must sojourn upon the
earth, and dJUing this stay it will be enlightened as to the purpose
and care of the earthly temple, the body oft/ie soul, or the body.
Children can be taught the uses of growing things and their
prepara1ion. Many have not the desire to learn them, and seek not
the knowledge which is all abow them. These then must rely
upon the medicine man, such as I, to help correct the results of
ignorance. Mankind must experience and grow through all
phases of wisdom before becoming evolved into the higher
realm. If the spirit is moved, then shall the knowledge be
acquired. The Grear Spirit speaks to all."
- Mauzsan
Powhatan shaman, 1603
I - A Karuah Healing
I am a relative newcomer to Katuah. In seven years here
my family and I have taken root, and with each passing year we
have found greater aliveness in our relationship with the land and
its people. This growth has emerged primarily through a
closeness to the eanh - found in gardening, foraging, wood
gathering, and living in increasing harmony with nature. Two of
our three children, Autumn-Leaf and Forest Hean, were born at
home in an old house perched at the edge of Cherokee Forest.
The attendants at their births were friends, not technicians, and
they came to suppon us in the growth of our family. The skillful
assistance of Lucinda Aodin (see "Birth Power" issue 26 Winter
1989-90) was instrumental in the success of our homebirth
experiences.
Living this close to nature - a half mile from the nearest
neighbor, a half-hour from the nearest four-lane road - cultivates
a trust in unseen powers. We sense that we are surrounded and
supponed by the same forces that suspend the stars in the clear
depths of the heavens above our house, that sustain the grasses
through the freezes and thaws, that warm the eanb from within,
while they hurl the sun in its daily changing arc above the
ridgetops.
Our home wasn't built here for convenient access to
anyplace else. It's a steep, winding mile of a dirt road down to
Highway 321 as it curves around the mountainsides that drop
down to Watauga Lake. And the TV reception is about the worst
on the East Coast. But it is well situated in other, more important
ways. Abundant springs, up behind the house, kept us in plenty
of water through the driest days of recent drought. Strong winds
rarely reach us in the shelter of the ridges. Water flows into the
house by gravity, and the kitchen stove doesn't care about power
outages, because it bums wood. In winter, a sheet of plastic
around our front porch cuts our heating needs and creates a
sunroom for the whole family.
Closeness to our environment has had a profound impact
on our faqlily's health of body, mind, and spirit. Plenty of fresh
air, pure +.tater, sunshine, and relative freedom from noise and
light pollution make this a nunuring place for a young family and
contributes to our peace of mind. Spiritually, our homeplace
draws us closer to the Oneness of All Life. It is that spirit - The
Great Spirit - that called us here six years ago. And the lessons
we've learned here prepared us to find another home, larger in
proponion to our growing needs, and well-watered, wellSprl."'J, 1990
sheltered by the lay of the land, with good southeast exposure
and plenty of garden space - another old homeplace where
generations of Kauiahans have been born, raised, and grown old.
"Seek ye first the Kingdom of God," said Jesus of Nazareth,
"and all these things will be added unto you." I believe that. I
also believe that seeking the Kingdom, today, means returning to
the source, and I thank God that it is still possible in KatUah.
II - Seeking Guidance
In the winter of 1987-88, friends from Charlotte, Nonh
Carolina recommended that we get in touch with Harold Green, a
healing ans practitioner. While the family was thriving, we hoped
Harold could teach us more ways of preventing disease and
promoting our own well being. We had never had cause to turn
over our responsibility for our children's health to anyone else.
My wife Barbel and I felt we needed more guidance than we
could get from books.
When Barbel first spoke with Harold on the phone, he
looked inward for guidance, as he often does when asked
questions; he "got a yes," and agreed to come up from Charlotte,
where he was teaching healing ans and giving personal health
consultations, working - as always - for donations. I have seen
him work for no personal gain, and I have seen him accept a
feather and a stone with the same sincere thanks he gives for an
offering of money. The most imponant thing, in his view, is that
each individual take responsibility for his or her own welJ being.
Harold Green, it turned out, practiced Native American
healing ans. He is an associate of Chief Two Trees at the Native
American Studies Institute in Old Fon, North Carolina. Both
Harold and Chief Two Trees teach that each individual must
become a healer in order to be cured of "dis-ease." As the Chief
put it when I asked him recently about the philosophical basis of
this teaching:
"Everyone is a healer - everyone - but the art of healing is
studied only by a few. What we're about is to teach people to
heal themselves. The Christian Bible says 'Physician, heal
thyself.' So everyone becomes a healer. Now the art of healing
has been passed down through generations and generations."
Commenting on the surrender of personal power involved
in our transition from an agricultural to an industrial society,
Chief Two Trees said, "People got into the habit of paying
somebody else - to raise their garden for them, to manage their
health for them, to spend their money for them. They even pay
their minister to manage their spiritual being for them. They gave
away all their power, kept nothing for themselves. So what we're
about is to teach people again to go back to growing their own
garden, even in the smallest amount. Learn how to identify, to be
in harmony with nature through a garden. I don't care if it's in a
window, in an apartment Know the value of fresh food with life
force in it, freshly harvested within a few minutes of being eaten.
Second, we also teach people to think for themselves in a
spiritual way. Because no one can walk in your moccasins."
Harold Green's first visit to our home in the winter of
1987-88 was an experience that opened up for our family new
avenues of knowledge and practical, usually simple, techniques
of healing and preventive medicine. We quickly recognized in
him the teacher we bad been seeking. The home remedies he
(continued on next page)
Drawing by Rob Messick
�(continued from page 9)
taught us 10 concoct from leaves and roots, berries and bark,
herbs and flowers, brought us greater strength and vitality. And
the act of gathering and preparing natural tonics and remedies
deepened our kinship wilh the land, making real the concept of
the interconnectedness of narure, humanity, and spirit. Gathering
black walnut leaves and hulls in summer 10 dry and hang in the
pantry can be mere ritual (which has value). Drinking black
walnut tea, on the other hand, can be merely medicinal. But
when I gather them myself and prepare a tea and drink it and
serve it 10 my family, then I combine lhe healing virtues of rirual
and medicine, and the benefit is greater than the sum of the pans.
Harold's work with us has helped our whole family 10 heal
huns ranging from physical to spirirual dis-ease. Sometimes
through common sense advice, a1 other times through the
intuitive gift by which he channels divine guidance, and always
with a rich fund of practical knowledge, he has 1augh1 us to
reclaim personal power and heal ourselves.
The responsibility for ta.king or not taking his advice is
ours, and we do what we think and feel is right. Although we
were strict vegetarians, we have introduced medicinal quantities
of meat into our family fare at his recommendation. We have
been strengthened by it More slowly than he would have liked,
we have taken to sharing the knowledge of healing arts nutrition, iridology, herbology, reflexology, acupressure,
massage, crystal therapy, dream analysis, hydrotherapy - that we
have been building over 1he years.
ill - A Katuah Healing Continues
When I slatted seeing Harold Green, I thought I was in
good heallh, despite a bout of blood poisoning a year before that
could have killed me had I not gone to a hospital. By the time
Harold came there was only a scar on my right hand to remind
me that when it came to preventative medicine, I had a 101 10
learn. In fact, my immune system was still dangerously weak. I
began my own healing by taking responsibility for my condition
and accepting Harold's guidance. I attacked parasites first with
herbs and later colonies. I strengthened organs, whose weakened
condition showed in my irises, with specific foods and
supplements. l treated my ears and mouth, which had bred a
systemic yeast infection, with tea tree oil (mixed, for use in cars,
with castor oil in 1:10 proportion). All this strengthened my body
and helped eliminate toxin-producing, energy-sapping parasites.
(Chief Two Trees maintains that 85% of all diseases are caused
by parasites.) Gradually, I made gains in overall vitality.
. \'(hen I was strong enough in spirit, mind, and body
(whtch 1 really one strength), I entered a deeper level of healing.
s
My new-found strength was drawn inward, focusing on the
work of healing from the inside out. The ground I had gained
physically was apparently lost during this time. I feh weak and
listless. I developed rashes as toxins were discharged through my
skin. I had to trust my intuition that I was getting better, because
I felt sick.
At that time, in the fall of '88, I intensified my use of
therapies Harold taught me. lridology helped 10 identify organs
and systems that needed nutritional suppon. The "laying on of
hands" through massage, acupressure, and reflexology improved
energy flow through my body. Hydrotherapy sped up the
elimination of 1oxins. Through dream analysis I was able to lay
hold of the taproot of my trouble, a parasitic liver condition.
This period of intense healing lasted about cwo months and
subsided in the winter of '88-'89. The evidences of its passage
are 1he presence of healing signs in the irises of my eyes, along
with a general reduction of iris discoloration associated with
toxicity. I now have a new vitality that includes a much stronger
immune response and heightened energy and productivity.
Through this experience I have learned that medicine which is
limited to relieving symptoms maintains the underlying causes of
disease. True healing leads back through the symptoms to the
underlying cause, making the cure complete.
The ripples of my well-being have spread outward into
other areas of my life where progress was blocked. I'm writing
for a wider audience. More money is coming in. We will soon be
moving to our own home from a rented one. Barbel and I are
sharing more widely in the healing ans movement, and we have
found another teacher in Rudolph Poss, Ph.D., Director of
Boone's Life Energy Center. We are both working at the Life
Energy Cemer as therapists. Barbel recently returned from the
first of a series of trips to New York City where she shares her
knowledge of healing ans.
Yes, the ripples of my own healing carry the work of
teaching and healing far beyond my horizon. Change starts in
your head and works its way out from y.our guts. But it doesn't
stop with you. Heal yourself and you'll heal your world.
Physician, heal thyself.
Doug Aldridge is afather, a healer, and a writer. He also
teaches at The Kid's Country School (a homeschool in Doe
Valley), and is a lecturer in English at Appalachian State
University. He practices pressure point therapy at the life
Energy Center in Boone.
~
WHEN LEFT TO GROW
Surrounded by forest
That clothes the land
Wilh fallen leaves
From sleepy trees
The warming sun
An occasional breeze
The ever flowlng creek
By this peacefully calm day
Closely following this windey stream
Us cool motion over rounded stone
That makes a constant sound
Coursing the way lo an open sea
Hovering in the wind
Being like lhe white cloud
In clear blue sky
Gliding over rolling countryside
These hairs like limbers
When left to grow
Become long and full
This body like rolling hills
When lefl to grow
Becomes intrinsically well and appealing
A mind like integral relations
When left to grow
Becomes clear and tuned to pattern
JC.atUah Journal: pc:iqe 10
Poem and Drawing by Rob Messick
Sprl.nq, 1990
�Calling to the Ancestors, Calling Our Relations:
Poems by Stephen Wing
Feather and Shadow
We have come to the lime of the choosing
of ancestors.
This is the place where my ancestors came down
from thcir square hole in the sky
The world is
bigger than we can see, that
long horizon promised.
So they built ships.
My ancestors grew com here, this is the clearing
where they danced the year
Preparing to abandon
their bodies, they built cathedrals
where the ancient groves had been.
The world is bigger than we can see...
One by one the monks
fell unconscious in thcir cells.
My ancestors camped here in the Winter
of the Early Snow, they knew th<? spot by the stars
The unknown continent grew
vaster as they conquered,
the invisible cities grew richer
in their delirium: each
Crusad<?r, each Conquistador
conjuring a private mansion,
lying in his fever and his cloud of
mes.
This is wh<?re the young men came
fasting and singing, alone in the sacred land
It might have been my great-grandfather
bending, the boy at the plow
too young to remember that horizon
of unbroken acreage, hanging back
against the pull of the mule
to pluck a flint-shard from the vanished prairie grass -
Visiting the Deer
This is where my ancestors came
to honor their dead, this windy ridge in the sky
He looks up. Douds break
into feathers, streaking over
the horizon. He sees one
sweep across the sun and the bright land of his father falls
into shadow.
We have come to the time of the choosing:
This is my native place.
This mountain. This creek.
This is my native place.
•
Sp r Lr19, 1990
Going up to visit the long view
at the top of the hill
today I have
travelled the deer-trails:
bending to duck under
where the deer duck under
branches,
leaping where the deer l<?ap
dry ravines, coming at last
in to open sky:
gazing down where the deer gaze
down on human hospitalities
with wild shy suspicionWhen I caught my breath
I looked down and saw only
the houses of my
neighbors, the loop of road.
Going back I travelled
as usual down the track of tires
in the dirt.
Drawing by James Rhea
JC.atUah
Journm
pQ4Je 11
�Pabllillg ofVislutM Krisluta
Jaipur, India
The Belly
Your Belly Pulse ls The Earth Mother's Heart Beat
Your belly pulse
is the earth Mother's
heart beat.
Press into yourself:
exit the breath, expireand sink,
sink down in to
the consecrated center
intense, dense, compressed,
the consolidated possible;
life engaged unto itself,
life drawing light unto
itself, life compacted to the
one still one point.
And press yourself out again:
be filled by the breath, inspired--
to live,
to live in to
the world that's ever being born from you:
galaxies expanding, stars chasing stars,
filling, bursting the radiating joy,
life swelling beyond
itself, life exploding
light, life spiraling outward,
the turning world.
Your belly pulse
is the earth Mother's
heart beat.
The earth trembles
her rhythm
through us; our feet skip
along her surface
while beneath she beats
her molten drum.
-Lisa Sarasohn
C Lisa Samsohn 1990
by Lisa Snrasohn
Our bodies are a gift from the earth: the solid substance
of who we are comes from the soil. By the powers of sun,
water, plant and animal life, the soil's minerals undergo a
change in fonn and we incorporate them as organ and gland,
corpuscle of blood, muscle fiber and bone. Our bodies arc the
gift of a woman's belly. It is in a woman's womb that our
Lives begin to take on form. The umbilical cord links our
bodies to our mothers, bringing nutrients directly into our
bellies.
The belly is the measurable center of our bodies: it is at
the mid-point between the crown of our heads and the soles of
our feet. Healing traditions the world over -- the ancient
cultures of Egypt, India, China, Japan, Greece, and the
Americas -- know the belly to be much more: the center of our
vitality, the place from which we live. These ancient traditions
recognize the belly as the source point for our physical and
emotional well-being. for our sense of individual wholeness.
Clearing and strengthening the belly through movement and
breathing techniques leads to resrnenl health, freedom from
fear, self-mastery, and the power of personal presence.
These same traditions also recognize the belly as the
source point for our spiritual well-being. Clearing and
strengthening the belly allows us to experience our individual
Sprl.f\9, 1990
�connectedneu to the universe, to sense our intimate
participation in the Great Life. Although our original. physical
connection with our mothers' nourishment has long been
severed, there's a subtle cord mnaining between our bellies
and the mother-world. A vortex of primordial. creative energy
swirls into and out of our bellies, feeding our spirits and
sustaining our vitality - if we allow it to do so.
A clear, strong belly provides a secure feeling of being
"at home" - at home in the body, at home on this Earth,
well-rooted and generously nurtured, kin to the creatures with
whom we share this planet. In this light, attending to the
strength and health of the belly not only enhances our personal
immunity from disease, such attention also brings fonh our
personal contribution to healing the planet When we embody
the knowledge - when we feel it in our bones and know it in
our guts -- that we are one with the Earth, preserving the
integrity of our natural systems will no longer be a political
issue. It will be a mauer of self-respect.
Jn writing this anicle, my intention is to inspile you to
honor your body, and particularly your belly, as you would
have others honor the Earth. Drawing on my studies of
biology. regional planning, yoga. and lhcrapeuric massage, I'll
outline the anatomy of the belly, indicate a range of cultural
attitudes regarding lhe belly, and explore their influence on our
well-being.
What's In a Belly?
The Vital Organs
The abdomen ranges from the pubic bone of the pelvis to
the muscular diaphrngm at the base of lhe rib ca~e. It houses
the vital organs of digestion, elimination, and reproduction:
stomach, liver, gall bladder, pancreas, spleen, small intestines,
large in1estine, ovaries, uierus. The digestive organs process
and absorb nutrients, satisfying our hungers and providing the
energy and substance we require for all our life processes. It is
here, too, that toxins and waste products arc neuttalized, soned
out, and prepared for discharge.
Without regular physical exercise, mental stress and
shallow breathing tend to increase muscle tension and reduce
circulation throughou1 the body, increasing the accumulation of
toxins and unbalancing the flow of glandular secretions. These
factors can contribute to a host of abdominal dysfunctions,
including common ones such as indigestion, intestinal gas,
constipation, and menstrual discomfort.
From the poini of view of Western anatomy and
physiology alone, exercising 1he body, wilh particular attention
10 the belly, would seem to offer substantial health benefits.
The Body-Mind Connection
Jn her books You Can Heal Your Lift and Heal Your
Body, Louise Hay suggcs1s the specific patterns of thinking
which set the stage for various physical conditions. She
indicates lhat the accumulation of fat in general represents a
person's excessive sensitivity and his or her need for
protection. The fear a person feels, lhough, may be "a cover
for hidden anger and a resistance to forgive," she writes. ln
particular, a fa1 belly may reflect "anger at being denied
nourishment." She offers a positive affirmation to replace the
negative partem of though1: "I am always safe and secure. I
nourish myself with spiritual food and I am satisfied and free."
The psycho1hcrapis1 and bodyworker Lyn Davis Genelli
considers lhat the "pot belly" or "beer gut" which some men
develop reveals their "need to protecl their vital organs from an
attack." A large belly, she suggests, offers a sense of
protection in "the 'wars' of the production plan1 and corporate
suite..... Despite 1heir protesta1ions, men unconsciously love
their fat [belly) and feel tha1 the ownership of one... is a sign of
security, prosperity, and survivorhood."
My experience working with people who come to me for
therapeutic bodywork is in accord with the ideas these writers
Sprl."'J, 1990
have proposed. The condition, shape. and inner sense of the
belly reflect a person's willingness and ability to nouriJh himor herself emotionally, to digest new expcrieoces, to release the
past, to be courageous in the presence of risk, to generate the
self-approval which helps a person feel safe and secure.
ln working particularly with women, I find that
imbalances in the belly often relate to issues regarding
creativity. A bloated belly is like a storehouse, the place where
enormous creative power has been stuffed because expressing
that power has seemed to be either impossible or unbearably
risky. A woman who has not yet found a satisfying way to
express the fertility of her imagination may well embody the
image of the "pregnan1 virgin."
A woman's belly also ponrays her feelings abou1 her
sexuality and womanhood. Conflict.s related to sex,
pregnancy, child-bearing, rape, incest, and abortion will often
influence the belly's health.
The Belly Center
Japan: Hara
ln Japanese cuhure, the point two inches below the navel is
named "tanden". To indicate the whole abdominal region, the
Japanese use the ierm "hara," which literally cranslatcs as
"belly." Hara refers to this central physical region of the body,
and 10 much more: the rich human potential for psychological
and spiriiual development. The person wi1h hara is, as
approximated by our language, "gutsy." He or she has
developed the clari1y of his or her "gut feelings" and
consistently acts on the strength of this inner knowing.
In Hara: The Vital Cenier of Man (sic), Karlfried Graf Von
Durckhcim details the role of hara in the Japanese tradition and
also characterizes the physical, psychological, and spiritual
benefits of developing hara 10 people of all cultures. According
tO Von Durckheirn, the qualities of a person with hara include:
a feeling of boundless energy; enhanced immunity from disease
and rapid recovery from illness; easy and graceful movement;
creative imagination; tranquility, pa1icnce, inner calm and
flexibility; confidence, endurance, conienonent; penetrating
insight; a capacity for quick and mature decision-making; the
experience of security and lhc ability to mee1 changes with
equanimity and poise; a sclf-<:ollected harmony.
Von Durckhcim indicates that hara is significant for us on
two levels. For the individual, possession of hara "gives one a
special strength for living in this world." And on the universal
level, through hara "one is enabled to realize consciously one's
own being in the Great Being which is the ultimate meaning of
life." As hara develops and a person senses his or her own
immersion within, and identity with, the Great Being, he or she
"joyously experiences a new closeness to the world, to people
and lhings, to nature and God..."
India: The Ch.okras
The spiritual and healing traditions of Japan have evolved
from their initial source in yoga, the science of
self-development origina1ing in India more than 6,000 years
ago. Yoga recognizes a subtle core of life energy moving
through lhc body from the base of the spine to the crown of the
head. Along this column there are seven energy centers - seven
"chalcras." Each chakra corresponds to a location in the body
as well as t0 specific issues and concerns.
The belly region includes the firs1 three chalcras. Muladhara
chalcra is at the base of the spine, and rela1cs 10 our sense of
physical security and our individual survival, issues of trust
and mistrust. When lhis chakra is weak or congested a person
may typically experience fear - including fear of death, worry,
anxiety, and a fear of !erring go: "I feel threatened by ..." On a
regional and global level, solid was1c disposal and pollution
control seem to be "firs1 chakra" issues.
When it is clear and strong. the energy of lhis first chakra
generates self-sustaining instincts, urges, and initiatives; a
respectful awareness of the body and its functions; and a
healthy concern for self-preservation. I think of wilderness
survival training as a healthy "first chakra" activity: "l can take
(continued on next page)
JCQtUah Jo1.4mat PacJ'I 13
�(continued from page 13)
care of myself; I am always safe and secure."
1be second chakra is Swadhislhana, corresponding to the
reproductive organs and relating to sensuality. When energy is
congested here, a person typically experiences boredom,
frustration, and disappointment, often as the consequence of
overindulgence: "I feel incomplete unless I have ..." On a
larger scale, the problems related to over-production and
over-consumption of material goods arc "second chalcra"
issues.
In its clear expression, the second chalcra suppons the
faculties of imagining, generating ideas, recognizing
distinctions, and making choices. Enjoying beauty - savoring
tasty foods, appreciating good music, talcing delighi in vibrant
colors and rich texrurcs -- seem to me to be a healthy "second
chakra" expression: "Everything I need is already available to
me; the Universe supports me with abundant joy."
lower body, and belly center--between Heaven, Earth, and
the condition of being human. In order to perfect any pose,
holding its alignment with minimum cffon and maximum
relaxation, a person must discover for him or herself how to
intensify and use the strength of bis or her own belly. In this
process, a person also discovers how to sustain a balanced
relationship among upper body, lower body, and belly center.
1 see the belly as the point where energy descending
from the heavens through the torso meets energy ascending
through the legs from the Eanh. Such is the condition of being
human: living between the poles of heaven and earth,
embodying spirit, enfolding energy into matter, incorporating
consciousness.
The Cultured Belly: Views From Around the World
"If we are to heal the Earth,
let us start as close to home as possible:
let us start with the portions of Earth
which are our bodies."
The Wisc Woman tradition of herbal healing seems to
take a similar view. This ttadition perceives the intention of
Life to be so nurturing that our immediate environment
provides exactly the plants we need for promoting our
well-being. And these plants arc so abundant that we tend to
regard them as common weeds.
The third chakra is Manipura, ar the navel. It relates to
issues of personal will and the sense of emotional security.
Energy congested here often reveals itself in feelings of
jealousy, anger, resentment, hostility, and greed, resulting
from comparison and competition: "I bet I can make him
do .... " In a regional and global context, a third chakra issue is
political domination of one group of people over another.
As the energy at the third chakra clears and resolves, an
individual feels a secure sense of personal identity. I think of
healthy third chakra expression as self-empowerment - taking
assertive action in one's own best interest, motivated by self
esteem, and acting upon one's values no matter how unpopular
they may be: "I am at peace with my own feelings; I approve
of myself."
The stretching and breathing exercises of yoga energize
and clear the first three chalcras by bringing awareness to the
belly and by stimulating the flow of life energy up through
the central core. Some poses, such as Standing Leg Stretching
and Shoulder Stand, invert the torso and so apply the force of
gravity to draw the flow of energy down from the base of the
spine towards the crown of the head. Other poses, such as
Bow Pulling and Balancing Stick, require standing and
balancing on one leg while raising the other; they are difficult
to do without maintaining a sense of the belly as the pivot
point around which the body turns. In order to maintain
balance for more than a few seconds, a person must compress
the belly in towards the spine, increasing the density of the
belly center.
Poses such as Cobra, Locust, and Bow clear the
abdominal energy centers and also develop the power of
muscles in the abdomen, buttocks, and lower back. While in
these postures, a person must press the belly into the floor,
grounding it securely. Given this firm central contact and
support, the upper and lower portions of the body can lift
almost effortlessly: establishing the connection of the belly
with the Eanh allows the spirit to soar.
The poses of yoga bring the body into a configuration
which demonstrates the relationship between upper body,
As already mentioned, Oriental and Asian cultures
regard the belly with greatest respect, understanding it as the
center of life itself. Other cultures have given special attention
to the significance of the belly as well: belly dancing in the
Middle East and the vigorous ttaditional dances and midsection
massage of the South Sea Islanders ensure that the abdominal
muscles remain well-toned. I understand that two Australian
aborigine women will greet each other when they meet by
touching their bellies and foreheads together.
In American and European culture, the prescription for
physical beauty has included "belly in, chest out", as if the best
belly were an invisible one. Current fashions-high heels, tight
jeans, "tummy conttol" devices in underwear and pantyhose-work to flatten the belly, increasing the relative volume of the
upper body.
Hiding the belly and bringing attention to the upper body
signify the value our culture places on mental activity, speed,
and agility. Our attempt to raise Lhe body's center from the
belly to the chest, says Von Durckheim, reveals how we reject
our relationship to the Eanh: "The urge to transcend gravity is
quite natural to man (sic) as a spiritual being, but the desire to
break loose from the vitalizing bond with the solid earth is in
conflict with the law of his (sic) terrestrial existence."
European culture did not always consider the belly with
such distaste, however. Von Durckheim writes: "In the
Romanesque and Gothic sculpture the belly is clearly stated and
expresses strength...and calm acceptance of the bond with
earth....The Gothic belly seems 10 say: 'You cannot win
Heaven if you betray Earth."'
In The Obsession: Reflections On tire Tyranny of
Slenderness, Kim Chemin links our cultural attitude about
women's bellies with attitudes about pregnancy and childbirth.
She suggests that a womanly appearance-including a naturally
round and ample belly-- is threatening. It reminds us of a time
when as tiny infants we were helpless, totally dependent for
our survival on this huge, looming, rather frightening creature
called our mother. To see a woman with a large belly is to
revisit a primal sense of woman's awesome power.
Conclusion
A friend of mine often says, "How we do anything is
how we do everything." How we relate to our bodies and to
our bellies tells the ttuth about how we tend to the Earth and its
natural resources.
If we arc to heal the Earth, let us start as close to home
as possible: let us start with the portions of Earth which are our
bodies. Going beyond conceptions of good and bad, of
opposites and adversaries, to recognize the sanctity of all that
exists--including our very selves--this is the consciousness
which heals our bodies and will be healing our planet. And
we have a practical way to develop this consciousness, by
clearing and strengthening our bellies.
~
8pf'l-n4j, 1990
�~~
~UA~Jjf>URNAL
.
SPECIAL EARTH DAY 1990 EVENTS SECTION
Earth Day Just Dawning........ .
Earth Day affords us the opportunity to
publicly recognize our home planet as our source of
sustenance and nurturancc, and to acknowledge the
need Cor it to be honored, protected, and
appreciated. It is a time to admit that it is home
and life support systell\not just ror us humans, but
for the whole ecological life community in whjch
we participate. It is a time to celebrate its beauty
and diversity and its incredible cvolvement.
It is also a time to take responsibility for
this richness which we have been given. We must
recognize tha t our Insatiable demands are
darkening the future of life on this Earth. Even as
we accept that grim reality, we can rejoice in the
fact that by realizing our responsibility, we also
realize our power-that when we begin to change
ourselves and our lifestyles, the planet can begin to
renew Itself.
Let us mark Earth Day 1990, not as a
one-day affair, but as the beginning of a decade of
change, a decade of action toward an ecologically
sound future. Earth Day has the potential to be a
significant catalyzing influence. It can help to
mobilize an ongoing, citizen effort towa rds
~luating our environmental crisis and responding
to it. Earth Day can also provide an opportunity
to engage a much broader constituency on local and
regional levels.
Environmental action, the green pledge, the
environmental audits for home, business, and
institution, the pledge of allegiance to the Earth,
the Earth flags .... All of these need not become
"have-beens" artcr April 22; ra ther, they need to
become habits. Earth Day provides practical
guidelines and tools which can be shared with the
wider community --on an ongoing basis.
Our actions on behalf of the Earth during
the decade lo come are what will make Earth Day
1990 a mearungful even t. The problems we face
are global in nature, but our actions must begin here
at home in o ur own region:
• The extinction of Sp<'Cies threatens the
future of evolu tion. We can work to slop the
extinction of species by helping the black bear
here.
•Exploitation of the Earth as "rcsoun:cs• is
eroding the basis for life. We can help to stop
exploitation by protecting the forest here.
•The life cycles of the Earth arc being
poisoned by our pollution. We can join the effort to
stop the poisoning by demanding the beginning of
the end of acid rain. We can do something to stop
the poisoning by purifying our waler here.
It is almost 400 years since European people
first stumbled upon this continent. The invading
culture has been changing the face of this land
ever since. Now it is time to change ourselves. As
we celebrate the Earth, let us also accept our
responsibility ror lt.s future.
• The Editars of the Karuah Journal
....·..·:::·.·.·.::::::·:-:.:~..----······ ········..•
·····...
...
·········...
·.
'R.1-tu/uina a/ 1111~/wi4 ww1wns afW. '.UIM. inWuli"8 •IS ""'iJru!ir.fol4 (will• taj/) ill rtfatiDn 10 W. pfantti
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�Join in the celebration...
EARTH DAY
April 22, 1990!!
Celebrations and events will take
place "locally" all around the planet. In
our Katuah bioregion, there will be a
variety of events on Earth Day and
surrounding it. Here is a partial
listing ...Come join in the celebrations!
WATAUGA COUNTY, NC
APRIL 17 *Children's poster exhibit and Area
environmental exhibits. At Boone Mall. •concert by
Bill Oliver, well-known educator and environmental
follcsinger. At ASU Rosen Conccn Hall, BroyhHI
School of Music. Cont.act Harvard Ayers (704)
262-2295.
APRIL 18 • Environmental Exposition all day •
Earth Day storytelling with Karen Wallace. Al
Watauga Public Library. •Bill Oliver, mid-day conccn;
Judy Hunt, St.ate Represent.alive, speaking, 12:30 .
12:50 pm ; Earth Garnes, I - 2 pm. At ASU Mall.
•Speaker: Michael Robinson, Director, Na1.ional Zoo.
8:00 pm. Reception to follow. At ASU Fanhing
Auditorium. Contact Melissa Banh (704) 262-3098.
APRIL 19 •Environment.al exposition a.11 day: Janet
Hoyle, speaking 12:30 - 12:50 pm; Children's concen
with Bill Oliver, 1:30 - 2:30 pm. At ASU Ma.II.
•8:00 pm, Speaker: Thomas Berry, in1emationally
known speaker and author of TM Dream of IM Ear1h.
Reception to follow. Al ASU Farthing Auditorium.
Contact J. Linn Mackey (704) 262-2418.
APRIL 20 •s1eel drum band, 12 noon, a1 ASU Ma.IL
Tree planting on lhc ASU Mall, then moving to the
Boone Greenway. •Plant sale. a.i Rankin Gn:cnhouse.
• Awards, Children's poster exhibit, 7:00 pm. At
Boone Malt
APRIL 21 •Music on the ASU Mall. Bike-a-thon.
New River and Watauga River Clean up.• AJJ Species
Day Parade, starling 10:00 am, al the parking lot at
inlefSCCtion of King and Water Sts.. ending a1 ASU
Mall. Prizes for elerncnt.ary, middle, and high school
lellehers and studcnts...everyone invited to participate.
11:00 am, free ice cream. Cont.act Karen Lohr (704)
262-4089.
APRIL 22 EARTH DAY •Morning, Interfaith
worship.• Fun Run/Walk.• Earth Day ceremonies,
Earth games, storytelling, and music, beginning 12
noon. At ASU Mall. Cont.act Karen Lohr (704)
262-4089.
APRIL 22 EARTH DAY • Sunrise Ceremony with
stories and song. *Nature and wildlife hikes
throughout He nderson County. •Earth Day
Celebration, hands-on activities, storytelling, music,
recycling demonstration. Jackson Park,
Hendersonville, NC. Coniact Ms. Freudenberger (704)
693--0135.
BUNCOMBE COUNTY, NC
MARCH 19 • APRIL 30 Tree Planling. ConLact
Monte Wooum, Quality Forward (704) 254- I 776.
MARCH 29 Asheville-Buncombe EARTH DAY 1990
Community Meeting, 5:30 pm at the Unitarian
Univcrsalist Church (Charlolle SL). AJJ are encouraged
IO plan events for our own neighborhood or area and IO
voluntccr to help with local projects and events. To be
included in an area-wide calendar of Banh events, call
Dory Brown (704) 622-713 1 or write:
Asheville-Buncombe EARTH DAY 1990, P.O. Box
5855, Asheville. NC 28813.
APRIL 2 • 7 River Awareness Weck sponsored by
Warren Wilson College. Culminates with Swannanoa
River Clean-Up on SalUrday. Info: (704) 298-3325.
APRIL 7 Glad-Bagalhon open 10 groups and
individuals wanling 10 participate in litter clean-up
project and weigh-in contest. Contact Jane Wilson,
Qwilily Forward, (704) 254-1776.
APRJL 9 • 13 Project Pride Weck. sponsored by
Quality Forward and Asheville-Buncombe EARTH
DAY 1990. Experiential environment.al education
through lhe ans and sciences for students of Buncombe
County Schools. Info (704) 254·1776.
APRIL 16 *Free day al lhc Nature Center, Gashes
Creek Road, Asheville. (704) 298-5600. • Artisl°s
Earth Day exhibit unveiled; artists will exhibit !heir
environmental an in the unoccupied storefronts on
Haywood St. and Pack Square, Asheville.
APRJL 16-20 • Earth Weck at Aficrschool Programs;
Monte Wooten of Quality Forward is willing to come
to Asheville afl.erschool programs to give t.alks on our
earth and its environment. Cont.act Monie Wooten
(704) 254-1776. *Landfill Tours for EducaJOrS: group
or organization opportunity to tour local landfill.
Cont.act Steve Heisclman, landfill recycle coorinator,
or Monie Wooten, Quality Forward, (704) 254-1776.
APRIL 20 Conference: Resources a1 Risk: The
Effee1s of Acid Precipilation and Ozone on 1he
SoUJMrn Appalachians. 8:30am-4:00pm UNCA Owen
Center. Sponsored by: Western North Carolina
Tomorrow, USDA Fores t Service-SE Forest
Experiment Station and UNCA Environmenlal Studies
Program. Registration $5.00....Caten:d Lunch $5.00.
Contact: Fn:d Huber (704) 251-6104.
HEN DE RSON COUNTY, NC
APRIL 21 Art Auel.ion. Work donated by notable
area artists, proceeds go to saving the wetlands in
Henderson County. Cont.act David Malpass (704)
697-9557.
APRIL 20 Ctltbra1 IM Earth Story Thomas Berry,
ing
intemalionalJy-known spealce.r and aulhor of The
Dream of IM Earth (Sierra Club Press, 1989), will
give a talk at Owen Conference Center. UNC-A as pan
of community-wide Earth Week aclivities. 7:30pm.
No charge. Reception follows.
APRIL 21 The Sixth Annual Environment.al
Summit: Al IM Crossroads: lmpacl of Devtlopmenl
on Environmenlal Qualily. Speakers include.: Thomas
Berry, Cynthia Sullivan, BilJ Holman and others.
UNC-A Owen Conference Cent.er. Cont.act: (704)
251-6104.
APRIL 21 "Earth Energies" talk by Morgan Eaglebcar,
an Apache medicine man and great grandson of
Geronimo. 10:00-12:00pm; Opponunity to partake in
a sweaL Two lodges builL Beginning 12:00 noon.
Love offering accepted. At Eanh Center, Swannanoa,
NC. Cont.act: Zoe&. Jim Martin (704) 298-3935.
APRIL 21-22 Chez Op1 ion plans to show
environmental videos and distribute pamphlets in
SLOrcfront location on Haywood SL, Asheville, NC.
APRIL 22 EARTH DAY Celebration!! EvetyOllC is
invil.ed to wear Green for show of Earth solidarity!
• Bike ride for children and adults through downtown
Asheville. 12:30 pm. Contact Steve Millar (704)
254-0414. •Earth Day parade begins a1 2pm in
Downtown Asheville and marches IO City/County
Plaza. Everyone encouraged Lo join in!! • Earth
Games, Rainbow Games, and environmenlal exhibits
geared toward children. after the parade, at Radisson
Plaza Parking LoL •RALLY, wilh music, speakers,
sLrCCt lhealcr, and booths offering food, environment.al
products and information. •Bring your recyclables;
Scot Sanderson will have a recycling booth and will be
accepting plastic milk jugs. green and clear plastic
soda boules, aluminum, and sorted glass.
Pr oj ect EARTH (Environment.aJ Arrangement
Requiring Transportation that's Homemade) will aeate
a moveable environment.al display and show it in the
parade. ConlllCt: Project Eanh, PO Box 5855,
Asheville, NC 28813.
Re-invent Fair Have fun creating inventions from
recycled malCrial. Ideas can be pratical like making
sandals from old I.ires, or imaginative, like making a
perpetual motion machine from odds and ends. For
form and details, cont.act: Quality Forward, PO Box
22, AshcviJle, NC 28802 by April 16.
KNOXVILLE, TN AREA
APRIL 16 Murray Bookchin will speak a.t University
Center, UT campus. 7:00 pm
APRJL 21 • 22 EARTH DAY ECO-FAIR. Earth
Day Office: (615) 974-0643.
APRIL 21 EARTH DAY Benefit Concert. Earth Day
Office: (615) 974-0643.
APRIL 22 EARTH DAY Events • 5-K "Run for the
Earlh", sl8rtS a1 9 am a1 UT Vet School • Dance
againSt DeslrUCLion Marathon Benefit Dance• Video
festival •Earth Day Office: (615) 974-0643 or Center
for Global Sustainabili1y: (615) 524-4771.
�JOHNSON CITY, TN
NORTH GEORGIA
OTHEll RESOURCES:
APRIL 22 EARTH DAY CELEBRATION,
Downtown Johns on City, 1:00pm -5:00pm.
T~·planting, Music, storytelling, displays, recycling
fundraising, and Adopt-a-planter program. Contact;
Beuy Anderson, Director of Downtown Association
(615) 926-8546.
APRIL 17-22 Earth Skills Gathering. Twelve
individual ~ showing a wide variety of Native
American skills. Contaet: Darry Wood (704)
389-0428.
Eco-Net, an international computer network
link, will carry a national bulletin board for the
sharing of information, graphics, and ideas for
EARTH DAY events. EcoNet, 3228 Sacramento
Street, San Francisco, CA 94114/ (415) 923-0900.
KINGSPORT, TN
Earth Day Activities and events throughout Nonh
Georgia, contaet: Jirn Sneary (404) 226-0116, Dalton,
GA; Andrea Timpone (404) 535-1976 Gainesville,
GA; Christa FrangiJunorc (404) 351-3456 Atlanta.
GA.
APRIL 19 "Young Ecologist" Action Award presented
at Watauga Audubon Society Meeting.
GREENVILLE, SOUTH CAROLI NA
APRIL 21 EARTH DAY ACTIVITIES at Bay's
Mountain State Park, near Kingsport. Info: (61 S}
229-9447. Also Glad Bagathon and Recycling evenLS
in Tri-Cities area. Then. gathering at Davy Crockeu
Stale Park.
APRIL 22 EARTH DAY CELEBRATION sponsored
by Watauga Audubon, State of Franklin Sicmi Club
and ochers. Bluegrass music wilh cnvironmenUll lyrics,
storytelling, T-shins, 1-5pm at Bruce Park in
Kingsport.
FLOYD COUNTY, VA
APRIL 2 1 EARTH DAY AcnVITIES/ FUN DAY
FOR KIDS Kite flying. rccycUng exhibits, music,
food, local speakers. Contaec Mary Day (703)
763-2000.
EnvlroNet sponsored by Greenpeace Action and
open to the public. Greenpeace Action, Bldg. E,
Fort Mason, CA 94123. (415) 47U767.
APRIL 21 Earth Day Activities at Roper Mountain
Science Center. Speakers, music, booths, distributing
ttceS, ceremonial ucc-planting, free Ben & Jerry's ice
cream, living farm demos, and organic gardening,
nature walks, 9am-3pm. • Recycling Fa ir at
Greenville Braves Stadium, 8am-3pm. Contact: Linda
Elmore (803) 281-0090 . •Parade from Ci1y Hall lO
Heritage Green, 3pm-5pm. Contaet Jay Rogers: (803)
232-3690
APRil.. 22 EARTH DAY CELEBRATIONS around
the area. • Music at McPherson Park, 3pm-5pm.
Contact Mary Ellen Settlemycr (803) 240-4326
*EvcntS at Furman University, coruact: Amelia Fusaro
(803) 233-1232. Otl>cr Earth Day Activities &: related
events, contaet: Earth Day Steering Committcc for
OTHER EVENI'S
IntemaUonal ECO-City Conference will take
place in Berkeley, California, March 29- April
1, 1990. Keynote speaker. Dennis Hayes, Earth
Day Director. Info: Cerro Gordo Dorena Lake,
Box 569, Cottage, Grove, OR 97424. (503)
942-mO.
Earth Day Wall St. Action on Monday, April 23.
Contact: Brian Tokar, P.O.Box 93, Plainfield,
VT 05667.
Greenville, George Actehef (803) 288-8782;
OTHER EARTH DAY CONTACTS:
BLACKSBURG, VA
APRIL 17
Rainforest Sympos ium. Conl8ct:
Si.ephanie Trimmer (703) 951-5173.
Klds Netwotk Students all over North America
can share environmental data. National
Geographic Society, Ed. Services, Dept. 1001,
Washington, OC 20Cll7. (800) 368-2728.
Earth Day 1990 National Hdqtrs (415)321 -1990
Earth Day 1990 SE Regional HdqLrs: (404) 352-4080
Earth Day Southeastern Campus Coordinaior: ~i
Calloway (404) 876-8634
EARTHWEEK "MESSAGE OF THE DAY"
Earth Weck will nationally focus on an
"EnvironmcnUll Message of the Day": Monday (April
16} Energy; Tuesday (April 17) Recycling; Wednesday
(April 18) Waicr, Thursday (ApriJ 19) Alternative
Transportation: Friday (April 20) Toxics Information;
Saturday (April 21) Outdoor/Recreation. For more
info: Diana Aldridge (41S} 321-1990.
APRIL 18 Environmental Teach-In. CEC Auditorium.
1:30pm-9:00pm.
APRIL 20 •Earth Grove Dedication. Tree-planting.
ConL&ct: Heather McEllroy (703) 552-7897. •
Rainforest Benefit Concert. Buddy's ResL&urant
9:00pm.
APRIL 21 •Broomln' & Bloomin' Clean-Up 9:00am1:00pm •Bike Parade 2:00pm-3:00pm •Earth Festival
at Duck Pond 3:00pm-6:00pm. Contaet: Linda Binner
(703) 961-0586.
APRIL 22 PEACE-EARTH DAY CELEBRATION
Noon 'ti! Dark. At Amphitheater, Virginia
Poytcehnical Institute. Contact: Elizabeth DuFrane
(703) 232-2338. Environmental Audit Information for
Arca Colleges and Businesses. Conlllct: David
Hirschman (703) 951-8949.
ROANOKE, VA AREA
(jreen P{etfge
I pfeage to /Q my sfiare in savin9 tfu plamt 6y
f.tttin9 rny conum for cfu environment sfiape fww !:
Jilct: I pf.t49e to tU1 my utmost to recycle, UJnserve
tMl'//!J• saw fl/OUr, use efficient transportation, arul try to atfopt
a Gfestyf.t as if every tfay were 'E.arlli 'Day.
Purcfuue: I pfuf9e to 6uy l11llf use only tfwse proi{uct.s
feast fuzrmful to tfu environment. ?rlorwva, I wilI tlo 6usiruss
witli corporation.s tliat promote 9{06a{ environmental
ruponsi6ili ty.
'J/ote: I pk49c to vou arul support tfwse uuufufaw
wfw tkmonstrau an a6itflne UJnurn for tfst erwirrmment.
Support: I pfufae to support tfu pass49e of louJl. stau
arul fuftrol laws ana inurnational treaties tliat prouct tfu
environment.
Earth Day Activities &t related events. Coniact: Chris
Barlow (703) 774-0581 or 989-0802.
You COii return this pledge to your local Earth Day group or
mail ii 10 Earth Day 1990, P.O. Box AA Stanford Uni..,ersity, C.4
94309
�SUGGESTIONS FOR
PERSONAL INVOLVEMENT
·ElkinglOll, John, et al. The Green Conswner. Penguin,
1990.
•Capl:in, Ruth and Staff of Environmental ActK>n. Our
Earth, 011rstlwts. Bantam, 1990.
'.You tTUtJ(u want tQ.........
~ a hih - ~ a 6~ - diiM a tru - /Jiflt. t1ie
'Lartli a !Jift - (U{qpt a struzm - plant a tru 6e a utter·critter - astfast footf places tq use fess
protfur.t padc.Jiuitlfl - fimit use of pesticitles ion't tn:at soil fi{(J 4irt - avqjtf petro·cfilmicDl
transportation - fast for t1ie tlay -wal(.. G9fitfy.
jl
Recycling
• Help start a recycling routine at your school or
workplacc...aluminum cans, office paper, glass, CIC.
•Encourage your city and county governments lO set
up a curbside recycling program • Get your local
newspaper to print on recycled paper • Help gel a
"boUle biU" law passed by your Stale legislat.ure
Alternative Transportation
• Get bike lanes adopted for your city and county
Have some streets closed periodically, open only to
bicycles. • Ask that public uunsponation be improved
in your area and that mini-vans be explofed as part or
the solution.
Pfeage of jt{{egiance
to tfie 'FArtfi
I p(eage affegiance to tft.e
'F,artft., arul to tfie /fora, fauna
arul fiuman (ije tftat it supports,
one pfanet, irulivisi6(e,
witfi safe air, water ana soil
economic justice, equal rigfits
arul peace for a«.
Education
• Encourage your school to use the Earth Day '90
Lesson Plan and Home Survey which looks at energy
conservation, home toxics, transporuilion, water
conservation, and recycling • Encourage schools and
colleges in your area to conduct the Environmcnial
Audit • Adopt-A-Stream or other environmenllll project
at a natural area near your school • Tree-planting
aroWld school, and food for wildlife landscaping
Community Awareness
• Award businesses that use environmentally sound
practices • Help convert an urbnn vacant 101 inio a parlc.
or community gardens space • Support regionally and
locally owned businesses. • Buy products grown or
produced t11 lhc region • Invest in regionn.I businesses
Flying the Earth Flag!
Now is lhe time to encourage businesses,
schools, scout troups and others in the
community to get in the habit of publicly
displaying the Eanh Flag.
Sizes available: Large 3'x5' durable
nylon for inside or outside use; Medium 2'x3'
cotton for parade or inside use; and small
6"x9", on 15" stick. Available regionally and
nationally.
One regional source is: AshevilleBuncombe EARTH DAY 1990, P.O. Box
5855, Asheville, NC 28813.
Corporate Accountability
The Valdez Principles
A coalition of leading environmental organizations and
social investment firms have drafted a set of ten
guidelines for corporalC conduct concerning the
environment. They ore referred to as the Valdez
Principles. They address the issues of pollutants,
sustainable use of natural resources, rcducuon and
disposal of waste, energy efficiency, conservation, riSk
reduction IO employees and surrounding communities,
maarketing of safe products and services, damage
compensation, disclosure of poienulll hazards, need for
environmental representatives on corporate boards of
directors, and the value of annual corporate
environmental audits.
A copy of the Valdtz Principles is available from local
Earth Day groups as wrell as the Earth Day 1990
national ojfi~.
MAGAZ I NES
•Earth Island Journal. Enrth Island lnsutuLC, 300
Broadway, Suite 28, S:in Francisco, CA 94133
•£ -The Environmental Magazine P.0.Box 6667,
Syracuse, NY 13217. (800) 825-0061
•Raise the Stakes. Planet Drum Foundation, P.O.Box
31251, San Francisco, CA 94131
•World•Watch. Worldwateh lnslltut.c, 1776 Massachu:.eus
Ave., NW, Washington, OC 20036.
THINGS TO DO...
•The Earth Works Group. 50 Simple Things You Can
Do To Save The Earth. Box 25, 1400 Shlmuck Ave.,
Bcrlceley, CA 94709.
•MacEachcm, Diane. Save 011r Planet: 750 Everyday
Ways You Can llelp Clean Up the Earth. Dell, 1990.
-Council on Economic Proiorities. Shopping for a Beller
World. 30 Irving Place, New York, NY 10003
GOO D BOOKS...
•Raven, Peier H. The Global Ecosysuim in Crisis. The
MacArthur Foundation, 140 South Dearborn St.,
Chicago, n.. 60603, 1987.
•Berry, Thomas. The Dream of the Earth. San Francisco:
Siena Club Books, 1988.
•Sahtouris, Elisabet. Gaia: The Human Journey from
Chaos 1 Cosmos. 1989.
0
•Lovelock, J. E. The Ages of Gaia: A Biography of our
Living Earth. W.W. Nonon & Co., 1988.
•Myers, Nonnan Dr., Gen. Ed. Gaia: An Atlas of
PlaMtary Manageme/I/. New York: A(IChor Books. 1984.
•World Commission on Environmentand"DevolopmenL
Our Common Fui11re. Oxford: Oxford Uni.vcrsity Press.
•Nash, Roderick. The RighJs of NaJurt, A History of
Environmental Ethics. Madison: University of
Wisconsin Press, 1989.
•Taylor, Paul W. Rts~ct for Na111re: A Theory of
Environmtntol Ethics. Princeton: Princeton U. Press,
1986
•Berger, John J. Restoring the Earth: /low Americans
Are Working to Renew our Damaged Environmtnt. New
York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1986.
•Register, Richard. Ecocily Berkeley: Building Cities for
.4 lleaJtlty F"""'°~· BcrJco!Qy, Nortll Atlllntic Books,
1987.
•Berg, Pe1er, et al. A Green City Program For San
Francisco Bay Area Cities & Towns. San Francisco:
Planet Drum Books, 1989.
•Tokar, Brian. The Green Alternative: Creating on
Ecological Future. San Pedro: R. & E. Miles, 1987.
•Renner, Michael. Rethinking the Role of the
Automobile. Worldwaich Paper #84, 1988.
•Todd, Nancy Jack and John. Bios/1e/1us, Ocean Aries,
City Farming: Ecology As The Basis of Design. Son
Francisco: Sierra Club Books, 1984.
•Margolin, Malcolm. The Earth Manual: /low io Work
on Wild land Without Taming It. Berkeley: Heyday
Books, 1985.
•LaChapellc, Dolores. Earth Wisdom, 1978. Also Sacred
I.And, Sacred Sez-Rap111re of the Deep, 1988. Finn Hill
Arts, P.O. Boll 542, Silverton, CO g1433.
•Henderson, Hazel.The Politics of the Solar Age.
Alternatives to Economics. Doubleday Anchor, 198 I.
· Sale, Kirkpatrick. lluman Scale . New York: G. P.
Putnam's Sons. 1980.
· Fulc:uolca, Masanobu. The Ont-Straw Revoluiion. An
ln1roduction 10 Natural Farming. Emmaus: Rodalc Press,
1978.
°:Meclter-Lowry, Susan. Econo1T11cs as If the Earth Rl'ally
Mallued. Philadelphia: New Society Publishers, 1988.
•Sprctnalc, Charlene. The Spiritual Dunensions ofGrun
Politics. Santa Fe: Bear & Company, 1986.
•Seed, John, Macy, Joanna, et al. Thinking like A
Mountain : Towards A Council Of All Beings.
Philadelphia: New Society Publishers, 1988.
This regional EARTH DAY 1990 EVENTS section
is compliments of Kaluah Journal; Bioregional
Journal of /ht Southern Appalachians , P.O. Box
638, Leicester, NC 28748. Published Quarterly.
Subscription: $10/year.
�FOOD FROM THE ANCIENT FOREST
by Snow Bear
In all the seasons, these mountains speak to us of their
beauty and sacredness. But ln the springtime rebirth of the
plant people, that beauty is projected in vibrant colors,
awe-Inspiring forms, fantastic abundance, and incredible
diversity. It is a good time for human beings to go to the coves
where ancient trees stand, to rest and watch, listen, and learn;
there Is strength, healing, and sustenance to be found there.
Some of the richest soil on Earth can be found In these
coves; In one such place I pushed my arm into deep, black loam
up to my elbow. In such soil grows Incredibly nourishing, vllal
foods. As you gather food from these coves, remember that the
old forests are disappearing beneath the chain saws and
bulldo:ters of a nation hungry for lumber and profit. I have been
told to speak prayerfully and announce my intention to the
spirit running through the life of that mountain. Pass over at
least four plants before picking one. Restore earth and leaf mold
to any holes left from digging roots - in fact, leave no visible
traces of your plant gathering. Do not gather plants in a heavily
trafficked area, such as hiking trails. I have been taught to
acknowledge the taking of any life with prayer and a gift (of
sage or t. bacco).
o
•In April and early May, the flowers known to botanists
as the spring ephemerals blanket the mountainsides. Many of
them are choice edible plants that grow abundantly to allow
gathering for food. Some of these Include:
TR0UT ULY (Erythronlum americanum) A yellow lily emerges from between two green and brown
mottled leaves. The leaves have a sweet flavor and may be added
to salads or cooked as potherb. The leaves that have no blossom
are choicest; after blooming there may be a slightly bitter
aftertaste. The bulbs are edible when cooked.
TOAOSHAOE TRILLIUM (Trillium sessile) •
The young leaves before fully unfolded have a sugary, sweet
taste. Bitterness makes the leaves unpalatable when the
blossom emerges. This trillium (and T. erectum, T.
grandiflorum) are good raw or cooked, but harvest only where
abundant.
SPRING BEAUTY (Clayton/a virgin/ca and caroliniana)
and RUE ANEMONE (Anemonella lhalictroides) - can often be
found together in immense patches on wooded mountain slopes.
The pea-sized tubers are an excellent addition to soups, stews,
and steamed greens.
•The ephemerals described above grow, blossom and die
quickly. Their growth cycle ends when the trees leaf out. Other
edible spring wildflowers have a longer growing season. These
include:
INOIAN CUCUMBER ROOT (Medeota vlrgln/ana) This wildflower occurs in so many different plant tribes such
as: mixed hardwood climax forest, hemlod< glade, dry oak soils,
or moist creekbanks. It often grows in large patches that may
be thinned. Its root ls while, crispy, and watery, similar to
cucumber or water chestnut in flavor and texture. It is best
eaten raw.
(continued on next page)
Sprl.ncJ, 1990
Drawings by K.im S111dland
�SC FOREST WATCH GROUP
WINS APPEAL
Nlllnl World News Savico
The South Carolina Forest Watch group worting
foa.<£.sfia<f:e
-Jr.ill i u,m,
(continued Crom page 19)
SOLOMON'S SEAL (Polygonatum biflorum) Until the end of August, the leaves and roots may be harvested.
In spring, harvest only lower leaves to avoid disrupting the
flowering cycle; after seeding, the top leaves are more tender.
The leaves, like the root, are sweet and slightly mucilaginous.
The roots are often three-quarters of an inch thick and ten
inches long. Try harvesting the oldest (back) end of the root,
leaving two-thirds of the root undisturbed. The root Is a good
source of complex carbohydrates when cooked In soups and
stews.
RAMPS (wild leeks - Allium ttioocum) Ramps are the only wild plant still honored with festivals by
entire towns! At these festivals, people may saturate every cell
in their bodies with the pungent, garlic-like smell of ramps
without being shunned by family, friends, or neighbors. I have
found this mountain gourmet food in huge quantities in moist,
gravelly soils (subsurface springs) and in the yellow
birch-grass meadows of the high mountain gaps. Cream of
"potato• (Solomon's seal root) leek soup with bluff mustard
greens or ramps steamed with puffball mushrooms on the side
makes a gourmet foraging meall
The raw ramp bulbs are very strong and health-giving as
a blood purifier and tonic.
BROAD LEAF TOOTHWORT (bluff mustard - Dentaria
diphylla) - The white, cross-shaped flowers are abundant in
late April. The plant grows in shallow leaf mold on creek rocks
and banks. The leaves are available throughout the winter, but
the hot mustard taste gets milder in the spring. The
Interconnected roots of the bluff mustard patch taste just like
horseradish - finely grated with mayonnalse and vinegar it
makes a good hot sauce or dip.
To eat the food of the mountains where the beings of
nature live in the undisturbed patterns of the long-ago forest
attunes our bodies with the seasons and climate of Katuah, our
minds with the beauty of Katuah, and our hearts with the nature
spirits of Kaltiah.
May we walk In beauty and balance in these ancient
mountains.
in the Andrew Pickens District of the Sumi.Ct National
Forest in South Carolina has successfully placed itself
between the chain saws and trees of Compartment 43 in
the Chauga River walelShcd. The proposed timber sale
would cut three different timber siands tomlling 90 acres
in one of the two largest unfragmented mauue hardwood
stands in the Sumter Forest. fl consists of 300
contiguous acres of mawre hardwood irees and contains
the oldest hardwood sLBnd in the forest. The cul would
divide mature stands almost in two and would border on
lhe oldest group of uees on two sides.
Late in September, 1989, Forest Wa!Ch members
heard about the sale only nine days before Lhe appeal
period was to end. A flurry of activity produced an appeal
based on four factors: fragmentation of Lhe forest
resulting in deleterious edge effects on native forest
species. lack of a site-specific analysis, overcuning of lhe
site, and Lhe impact of the clearcutting on the water
quality of Crooked Creek.
The appeal was quickly sent o(f to the regional
forester's office in Atlanta, and four months later, the
Forest Waich group received a five page reply that
seemed to be almost a complete vindication of the Forest
Service's position. The only concession to the Forest
Watch appeal was a statement saying that the .district
ranger had not documented his cumulative effects analysis
on water quality. Therefore, the group was surprised to
read at the bottom of the last page, "For these reasons,
lhe appellant's claim is upheld."
However. tile victory is only a panial one for the
Forest Watch group and the forest. The appeal was
upheld on only one of the four basic contentions set fonh
in the document: the water quality issue. The regional
forester's decision said Lhat, as there was no mention of
Lhe other issues in Lhe Sumter Forest's Land and
Resource Management Plan, they were not legitimate
bases for appeal.
The Forest Waichers fear Lhal forest supervisor
Donald Eng, a hardline timber man, will quickly return a
revised timber sale plan for Comparunent 43, so the
saws are delayed as little as possible.
Undaunted, lhe group has decided Lhat by refusing
to consider the issues or forest fragmentation and
overculting, and other possible uses for the old timber
stand and Lhe forest as a whole. the Forest Service has
escalated the action. SC Forest Watch feels that since
such imponant considerations have been neglected, Lhe
forest plan ilSClf needs to be amended.
The Sumter Forest Land and Resource
Management Plan is up for a live-year review this year,
and the Forest Watch organization is requesting
amendment or a complete revision of Lhe plan. If the
Forest Service denies Lhat request, the group will then
appeal Lhat decision. SC Forest Watch is determined to
bring about a long-term change of policy in Lhe Sumter
National Forest..
Contact
SC Forest Watch
Box657
Wesaninster, SC
KatUah Province 29693
SNOW BEAR Is a herbalist, naturalist, environmental educator,
and director of the Pepper/and Farm Camp. He can be contacted
by writing to Pepper/and Farm Camp; Rt. 4, Box 255-B;
Murphy, NC 28906 or by phone st (704) 494- 2353.
Sp r1.n9, 1990
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DIOXIN vs THE ENVIRONMENT
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NATURAL
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(PART2)
Nani World News s.vice
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HELMS "STUMPS" NC FORESTS
As pan of an experimenlal pilot project, Ille Bush
administration recently released a list of southeasiem
national fon:slS where below-cost timber sales would be
slOppCd for two years.
North Carolina forest.s were mystenously
removed from that list. despite a Congressional study
showing that the Pisgah-Naru.ahala National ForeslS lost
$2.S million in 1988. h toter came to tight that,
although originally on th.at list. the Pisgah and Nanuthala
forests wcre om1ued aflcr sarong persuasion from Scnaior
Jcs.sc Helms.
A Nonh Carolina Forestry Associauon (NCFA)
newsletter article titled "Helms Helps National Fon:slS
in N.C. • reveals, "Helms used leuers from NCFA
members, Appalachian Multiple Use Council, and the
Appalachian Hardwood Manufacturcl'S Associauon to no1
only remove Pisgah-Nanlahala, but to force a review of
the whole below-cost initiative."
There arc 12 southeastern forests on the
below-cost liSt. including the Cherokee in Tenncsscc, the
George WashinglOll in Virginia, and Lhe Chatahoochcc in
Georgia. Bjorn Dahl, supervisor of Ille national forests
in North Carolina. was uncertain why Nonh Carolina
forests were rcrnoved Crom the program. "I know we
were on Ille original list." Dahl said. "We were advised
we were on, but when Lhe list came out we were off."
The proposal in the fiscal 1991 budget submiued
IO Congress in January would reduce the amount of
timber removed from the Wgeted foreslS by about 38
pcn:ent during a one-year test. One method of offsetting
the loss of pronts in timber sales was a pilot project that
will experimentally increase recreational use of the
forests. The prognun would mean higher fees for some
recreational uses and new fees for previously free
activities, such as picnic areas, boat ramps. and parking
lolS.
According IO the Forest Service the program will
have insignificant impacts on timber interest.s around the
12 national forests. Should the program continue for the
Delli five years an estimated S2S jobs would disappear.
Mary Kelly of the Western Nonh Carolina
Alliance poinlS out that the Pisgah-Nanuthala may have a
more sustainable future in recreation rather than timber
hqwdation. Kelly states, · we have a large number of
bade country and whitewaier outfitlCIS, and a large lOUrist
economy that 1s much more important than umber
resources IO our local economy, and it's unfortunate that
we weren't given the same chance to Lest out our ability
to manage for these resources."
Sowct: Asheville Citizen, Mat'ch 2. 1990
Spr L"'J. 1990
In the continuing saga of wa1et quality vs. dioxin,
we fmd owselves, once again, at a pulp and paper
processing plant. This time, we've moved over the
l1IOWllain from Canion and Olampioo Colporalion IO Lhe
Ecusta Corporation mill, on the Davidson River in
Transylvania County, NC.
The story is quite familiar. Chlorine is used as a
bleaching agent on wood pulp which, in tum, is used to
produce white paper products··m this case, lightweight
paper for bible pages and cigarette papers. Diollin. a
highly carcinogenic IOXin, is produced during lhis ~
and subsequently rclc.ased in the plant's discharge. In the
case of Ecusta, dioxin has been found in fish sampled
downstream from the plant in the French Broad River.
A considerable amount of wrangling has been
going on between Ille NC Department of Environmenlal
Management (DEM) and the EPA over whether or not
Ecusta's waStewater needs to be monitored. In February
1989. the DEM released a list of the state's toxic
discharge sites which would be required to clean up their
acL Ecusta was not on the lisl.
The EPA disagreed with this decision and 1n June
released ilS own clean-up list which contained Ecusta and
nine other Nonh and South Carolina mills. EPA then
informed DEM that Ecusta must also be included on the
state list, or they would overrule the state and seize
control of Ecusta's was1ewater permit, as allowed by the
Oc.an W31.Cl Act of 1979.
In July, the state capitulated and included Ecusta
on an amended but still preliminary tisL Finally, in
February 1990, the state released its final list, which
included both the EcUSta and Champion mills, and EcUSLa
was given a deadline of June, 1993 to comply with
newly developed state limits on dioxin discharge.
In a scenario familiar from Champion days,
Ecusta's parent company, the P.H. Glatfelter Company,
based in Pennsylvania, claims ii may be forced to close
the plant if required IO meet Ille st.aodards by 1993.
The EPA 's rote in pressing the state IO control
Ecusta's wastewater permit has been the focal point for
much of the prolCSl by those rallying to the side of the
county's largest employer. In a front page anicle io the
Asheville Citizen on 1/17/90, Esther Wesley, cxecutivc
director of the Transylvania County Chamber of
Commerce, was quoted as saying "Ecusta doesn't have a
problem-EPA has a problem. They rcally expect entirety
IOO much from a manuf.acturing planL •
The Glatfelter Company apparently agrees with
Ms. Wesley and filed a fcdcral lawsuit in January asking
US District Judge Richard Voorhees to prohibit the EPA
from invalidating OEM's original decision not to include
Ecusta on its cleanup lisL Much of the dissension among
Ecust.a, the state, and the EPA centers on confusion
about bow and where to measure dioxin in the river.
Fish sampled last year just below the plant had
up to eight times more dioxin than fish sampled 4.4
miles downstream. However, state and mill officials
point out th.at farmland and the town of Brevard's
wastewater treatmenl plant could pocentially contribule
diollin. To confuse mauers further. periodic samples of
Ecusia wastewater have not revealed mcasurcable levels
of diollin (although dioxin is more rctiably detected in
fish tissues than in waler samples).
In addition, there is liule agreement over how
much dioxin is IOO much. Despite insisting that Ecusta
discharge should be controlled, the agency has never
established wastewater limitations for l'lax·pulping mills,
or which Ecusta is one of two in the U S.
The DEM did not adopt a diollin standard until
October. It is not a uniform standard, but one based on
the quantity of a plant's efOuent and the receiving
waterway's ability to dilute iL
ract
Tbe one
which la 1101 coolusillg is that
dioxin is a very dangerous substance., especially when it
is on tbe loose in unknown quantities in the
envilOnmenL It is ""' acceptable to have communities
along Lhe French Broad River living in fear of dioxin
conramination.
The NC Division of Environmental Management
(DEM) is seeking comments on 1 proposal to identify
and set special proccctive standards for stmuns in the
SllllC iclcnliflCd as "High Quality Waiers." Over 900 miles
of streams in the western part of the state are up for
n:classificalion.
Write 10 the DEM in support of the High Quality
WalCtS rcclassifteation. Address comments to:
Greg Thorpe
NC Division of Environmental Management
Box 27687
Raleigh, NC 27611
THE DEFENSE OF WRIGHT
SQUARE
Nlllnl World News Service
Wright Square was a small green arc.a amid the
mini-malls in Highlands, NC. Sill 45 year old dogwood
trees and one old arbor vitae tree stood there until the
Town Board decided it needed additional padcing places for
downtown shoppers.
The November elections had brought some
changes to Lhe Lown. Voters had made their choices clear.
For the first time a woman and an
environmentally-leaning candidate were elected IO the
Town Board. The old board members saw that there was
going to be some opposition in their ranks, and decided
that before the new board was convened they would take
care or one tittle project: Wright Sqwirc.
Townspeople had thought th.at the square would
be one of Lhe fll'Sl topics IO be addressed when the new
Town Board was installed, so they were surprised one
Friday when bulldozc:n appeared in the square and started
to work demolishing the trees. Immediately women from
local garden clubs came to the defense of the bit or nature
left in the square. It was a school holiday, so they were
joined by some high school students, members of a
studen t environmental group, Youth Advocating
Planetary Improvement (YAPI).
Carrying a few Earth flags, the townspeople
stopped the demolition work for the day. Workers
lounged about their machines as the women clustered
around the trees, and a few of the students occupied the
branches of the dogwoods.
At the end of the day the workers left, and the
protc.slOrS also went home, congratulating themselves on
a job well done. However, unknown to anyone, during
the night Lhe bulldozers plus worters with chainsaws
were ordered IO return to the scene, and when morning
broke the town woke up to find Wright Square leveled to
the pavement.
The Town Board may have won a temporary
victory, but they stirred up a furor in the town of
Highlands.
As one woman put it, "Certainly we're concerned
about the trees, but it wasn't just about the uus. It wa<1
about a large number of people who cared deeply about
their environment not being liStened to by the governing
body of the town. It was also about the issue or
representative govcnwent.."
(continued on neut pigc)
Xat~
Journa£ pCMJ"- 2 1
�"~, '1051 ! P\R. ll~D. W ~"° 01111.
LUNCH "10 KEEP IT
(continued from page 21)
F~ESM
!"
Canoon by Docta 1)'
HAYWOOD COUNTY P ROPOSES
GARBAGE FEAST FOR BEARS
Na11nl World News Service
County and municipal govcmmenis lhroughou1
Ka1Uah arc wrcsl.ling with the looming specter of
mounlains of trash, and no place lO pul lhem. Haywood
Coun1y in western Nonh Carolina is no exception. The
prcsen1 IMdfill (i.e.• dump) 1s Casi approaching capacity
and will be closed wilhin lwo ycnrs.
Efforts by Lhc coun1y commissioners lO siie o
new dump in lhe CrabU'Ce community failed. Sirong
opposition, well-developed during Lhc "Siop Lhc Nuclear
Dump• efforis, derailed 1hc comm1ssionecs and lhe11
handsomely-paid "front man•. engincct Gary "Mackie"
McKay. Not lO be dclencd, McKay (who n:poncdly will
receive IO'h of the engineering COSIS LO site a dump)
proposed a new site in Lhc While Oak community on
Fines Creclc.
While Oak is lhe most isolated and leas1
populaled area in lbe county. It is adjacent 10 Lhc
once-magnificent Pigeon River. close 10 the Grea1
Smoky Mounlain National Parle, and lbe Hannon Den
Bear Sanctuary. It is here lhat McKay proposes a
IOO·acre dump. A representative of Tribble and
Riclwdson, lbe engineering company McKay h11ed lO
conduct groundwaicr lCSLS at lhe site, bas said, "We
couldn't have found a belier loc4tion for a landfill.•
The inhabitants of While Oak community
disagree. One residcnl, Bob Hessler, is worried aboul
pollution leaching from lhe proposed dump into lhe
Pigeon River. Hessler approached lhe county
commission wilh lhe idea of municipal trash composting
and was amazed lO find that no one knew what ii was.
Composting garbage reduces disposal problems
greatly. Through a biological fcnnentation process.
municipal waste producLS (liquid sewage, sludge. and
garbage) are Lransformed inlO a valuable, marketable
produce "Class r composL. Additionally, comp0s1ing
roduccs the built of garbage IO a mere 15% of ilS original
volume, which would require a much smaller landfill sile
for the remaining plastics and non-biodegradable wasteS.
As an al1cmative disposal method, composting a a
s
proven, eost-cffcctivc solution.
McKay seems oblivious to 1be fact thal
composting works. As County Commissioner Noland
put ii, "There may be a connict of interest with McKay."
There are olher problems with the location of the
proposed landfill. White Oak residents sought the
opinion of black beat researcher Mike Pelton, a professor
m lhc University Of Tennessee's Dcp:1rtmem ofForesuy,
Wildlife and Fisheries. In a prepared stalCment he swd.
"Landfills, garbage dumps, or any olber conccnLraled
source of human food or ~e serve as an awaction LO
bears. Throughoul Nonh America, wherever lhe two
occur in close proximi1y, problems have arisen. These
problems tend LO be particularly bad in or near zones of
protection for bears, such as national parks or designated
sanctuaries.
"The proposed landfill on Fines Creek in
Haywood County, NC meets all the criicria for being a
polential problem. Its proximily to lbe Great Smoley
Mounlains National Parle and the Harmon Den Bear
Sanctuary in lhe Pisgah National Foresl are of special
concern. ln addition Lo the above prollimily lO areas of
pro1ec1ed populaiions and high bear numbers, olher
factors add 10 the concern over lhe location of the
proposed landfill. One is its proximity to historic release
siu:s of problem bears by lhe National Park Service, and
the other is lhe vulncrobilily of bears attracted lO lhe site
while trying 10 cross 1-40.•
Because of lhe limited road system in the Park,
there are only lhree areas to relocate problem bears A
landfill adj3CCnt 10 lhe CaUlloochee area, where almos1 30
percent are released. could hnve sign1fican1 implications
regarding bear management. A majority of visLorlbcar
interactions occur on lhe central or wes1 end of lhe Park.
Therefore, ii is importanl lha1 a remOle rclocallon area be
available oo the easl end. Caialoochee is the only
reasonable area for consideration.
An ongoing study wilhin the Harmon Den Bear
Sanctuary suggests lhat lhe landfill as also wilhin the
reach of mosl snnclU31)' bcrus. Breeding-age fcrnales could
be drawn ou1 of lhe prolCCted confines of the sane wary,
where they would be exposed 10 much higher nsks of
mortality. Hunters frequent lhe borders of lhe sanctuary
area, and a ncarl>y landfill would encourage more bears to
aucmpl lhe dangerous crossings over lntctsta1e 40.
In response, McKay has suggested ughl.ly
bundling the garbage and wrapping ii in plastic--a la
Saran Wrap--to conlain the auractivc aromas.
Additionally, McKay proposes hiring a game
warden to patrol Lhe dump, to educate the local folks
aboul "dump bears," and 10 control poachers.
Presumnbly, this warden would also act as a traffic guard,
halting traffic on 1-40 lO allow bears to cross over from
lhe Hannon Den 8CM SanclU31)'.
Reahsucally, a composting opcrauon offers
Haywood County a much safer disposal mclhod thal
could be more centrally located on a smaller S•le tha1
would not present a danger lO the alrcady·abuscd Pigoon
River or to the local bears.
say, have been CSUlblished in geographic areas other lhan
lhe mountains and are not valid in lhe mounl3Jn locale.
Despite well-organized. suong opposition, lhe
Deep Gap generators will be buih if lhcy receive
approval in early March from the NC Utilities
Commission and lhc federal Rural Elecuification
Administtation. The "deep gap• widens ....
DON'T GO NEAR THE WATER
Nawral World News Servoc:c
Sedimenta1ion is the Kaiuah region's mos1
common form of waler pollution.
Until January I, 1990 state and private forestry
operations were exempt from any lcmd of sedimentation
cooirols • namely, the NC Sedimcniauon Pollution
Control Acl (NCSPCA) of 1973.
Now, even on privale and state con1111Cts, loggers
must adhere LO the following provisions 10 prevenl
sedimentation due to land-disturbing acuv1Lies:
I) Establish Bild mllinlain a sLrCWnsidc manage men I zone
along all bodies of waier.
2) Prevent any debris and wasies from entering bodies of
walCt.
3) Consuucl occess roads and skid trails so lhal
sedtmentation is minimized.
4) Apply pesticides and fcruliu:rs according to labeled
uses, and in such a way as 10 prevent adverse
impacis on water quality.
5) Leave shade over streams.
6) Provide erosion control for all large-scale din-moving
projcclS within 30 working days after ceasing
any phase of an operation or when bcgiMing a period
of inacuvity.
The NC Slllte Forestry Commission is
rcsponsable for reviewing loggang operations, writing
individual sedimentation conirol plans, and referring
CLOSING THE DEEP GAP
Na11nl World News Service
Moonlain People for Clean Afr (MPCA) and the
Blue RR!ge Envaronmcntal Defense League (BREOL) arc
leading the effortS lO s1 construction of diesel
op
generators in lbe Docp Gap area of Watauga Counly. The
generators are planned by lhe Nonh Carolina Electric
Membership Cooperative lO supplemen1 electrical power
supplied to lhe Deep Gap area by Dulce Power.
Opposition lO the proposal has been voiced for many
monlhs, and has included protests presented at public
meetings and picketing in fronl of the electric co-op's
Raleigh offices. The NC Division of Env1IOnmental
Management hlls altc3dy issued a pcrm11 lO the CCH>p lO
build the generatOrS.
Protesicrs state I.hat Ibey have nol received fair
representation from 1he state organi1.a1ion sci up LO
mediate between lhe people and the utili1y companies.
MPCA and BREOL have both taken the stand thal
lhcrmal inversions and fog common 10 the Occp Gap area
should prohibit the building of diesel gcncnuors and lheir
inevitable discharges of sulphur and nitrogen oxide acids.
The co-<>p has argued it will comply wilh state
emission standards, but the opposilion groups say lhat
these standards arc not sufficienL These regulations, they
non-compliant opcra1ions 10 the NC Division of
Environmental Management (DEM). Your assistance in
notifying lhe county foresicr or the OEM of violations
will malte lhis new "non-exempt" law work. Contac1:
NC Division of Environmental Man3gcmen1,
Land Quality Secuon
59 Woodfm Place
Asheville, NC 28801
(704) 251-6208
Drawing by Rob MC$$iclc
Sprl.nq, 1990
�YOU OTTER BE THERE
Nlllnl World News Savice
"They're cu1e and cuddly. bul lhey're wild
animals, and they'll bi1e," says wildlife biologis1 Mike
Carraway. River OllcrS lllC once again making a saand in
the mountains and foothills of KatLiah's eastern slope.
Ouers have been released by b1olog1S1s mos1
rcccnlly in the Ca1awba River in Burke County. Plans
include future releases below Lake James near
Morgan1on. Oucrs were once bunted for lhe1r beautiful
fur eoais, and !hey have been absenl from Kn1uah since
lhe early I 900's.
Rcmuoduccd oners seem to be strongly
eslllblishcd in lhc Great Smoley Moun1ains. where they
have migrated over high ridges and through forests IO
slake oul new ierritones far from lhe1r original release
si1cs. As lite newly-rclcnsed ot1ers make !heir way
upsueam. 1bey wi ll pencira1e in10 01her mountain
wa1ersheds. Since Ibey are now proiecied from pell
huniers, ouers should be able to conunue !heir strong
comeback in K.aUiah·s walCrS.
Drawin& by Jomes Rhea
PROTECTING BLACK BEARS
OAK RIDGE ON TRIAL
NC SOLID WASTE BILL
N.nnl World News Savice
Nlllnl WOfld News Savice
Nllll.nl World News Scrvi<ie
On May 2, 1990 lhe NC Wildlife Resources
Commission will bold special public bearings on lhe
topic ol raising the minimum hunting limll for blaclt
bears from SO pounds IO 100 pounds. Thac will be two
hearings tba1 nigh!. one scheduled for 7:00 pm at lhe
Smokey Mountain High School in Sylva, Jackson Co.,
and anolhct at lhe same time a1 KinSIOll High School in
Lenoir, Caldwell Co.
The entire Sou1hem Appalachian black bear
population is estimaled a1 2000 bears. The number of
cubs born each year varies widely depending on lhe food
supply, bu1 averages approximately 200-300 cubs per
year. Given the legal kill of 300 bears each year and a
poaching ra1e llta1 is llto ugh1 10 equal lba1, lhe bear
population appears 10 be barely holding its own or even
declining at !his time.
Yc1 habi1a1 stresses such as loss of bard mast
production due to oak decline, damage from lite
oncoming invasion o f lhe gypsy molh, increased road
construction and use, and continued clcarcuuing promise
10 pu1 additional pressure on lhe existing black bear
population in lhc near fu1ure.
Research by wildlife biologists bas shown that
lhe average age of female bears being killed in the
moun1ains is between 3.5 and 4.6 years. The average
female docs no1 bear young until age four. For a creature
wilh a poiential hfe cxpcclllncy of 20 or more years, lltis
early age mortali1y drastically reduces reproductive
capabiluy and lltrcaiens lhe species' abilily 10 rebound
from babitn1 pressures.
There is much to be done to guaranlCC lhal lhe
black bear will forever roam lhcse mounLains. Raising
lhe minimum hunting limil for black bears 10 100
pounds is one measure lhlll is now up for deb:ue. Those
who arc willing IO speak up for lite black bear should
aucnd lhe special hearings on lhe evening of May 2.
Those who canno1 auend lite hearings can cornmunicale
lhc1r opinion to the:
NC Wildlife R~ Cornm1~~ion
S 12 N. Salisbury S1.
Raleigh, NC 27611
Renders may well remember lhe announcement
for the Hiroshima Day demonstration al Oak Ridge
(Ka1iiall Jow nal #2A). Over 700 people joined in diRc1
action io procesl lbc Oalt Ridge facili1y's manufacwring
of nuclear weapon components. Of lhe more lhan 700
demonstrators, 29 were ancsted for crossing lbc line a1
lhe galCS of lhe Y-12 plan! in a ges1ure of non-violent
confron1:11ion. Two of the 29 arrested, Bonnie Kendrick
and Kathy Brown, enlCICd a plea of "llOI guil1y• and an:
preparing for lhcir trial, which is scheduled for June 7.
The women hope their uial will successfully
ques1ion lbe morali1 of the manufac1
y
unng and
deploymem of nuclear wcnpons. They plan to focus on
lhc environmental problems associated willt bringing
these implemenis of ca1astrophic destruction into
The Staie of North Carolina approved new solid
wasie managemen1 policies a1 the las1 session or lite
General Assembly.
Legislation adopted SlalCS lltat lhe preferred
melhod for handling the swe's solid waste problems is IO
reduce waste volume al the source. Following tbal. the
nex1preferable mclhod is recycling and reuse. If malUials
caMOI be reused, then composting is lhe preferred
disposal SU'al.Cgy. The least-preferred melhods of disposal
arc ancincralion and landfill dumping.
The solid W8SIC managemen1 legislat.ion also SIClS
an objective for 25~ of the slalC's wasie IO be recycled
by 1993. Local governments lhroughoul 1he SIBIC are
required 10 institulC recycling programs by July of 1991
to help achieve this goal.
The legislation also stipulates lltal large plastic
containers will have 10 bear labeli ng indicating !heir
composition, in order to help in recycling. h bans the
sale of packag ing containing halogena1ed
chloronuorocarbons (CFC's) and polys1yrene food
containers effective Oc1ober I, 1991. II also stalCS lhai.
beginning in October 1990, used oil will noc be accepted
&1 landfills; by 1991, lead-acid b:wcrics will be forbidden:
and lh:ll, beginning in 1993, yard trash will no longer be
Sprl"'J, 1990
existence.
Kendrick and Brown will base !heir plea on the
grounds of necessily. and will bring up case histories
from the Nurcrnburg Trials. The defendants arc galhcring
evidence of Ibo radioactive and toxic dangers in lhe Oak
Ridge area. They also have cxpcn willlesses who will
verify lheir plea of lite neccssi1y for civil resis1ance.
Among the witnesses appearing will be Robert Aldridge,
who designed lbc missile delivery syslCm for lhe Triden1
11-05, bu1 is now an ardcnl anti-nuclear pcaoc activist.
Francis Anlhony Boyle, a professor of inLCmational law
and author of lhe book Defefldjng Civil RtsiJtanet Under
Inttrnaticnal Law will also take lhe Sland.
The women feel lba1 we canno1 afford to carry on
"business as usual" while industrial pollution and
weapons production lhrcaien lhe life cycles of lhe planet.
Unul the threat is stopped, !hey say, lhcre will be ever
more public ou1cry, and more trials lhal raise lhe
imponan1 quesuons of cnvironmentnl safely, communi1y
heallh, and moral responsibilily.
Anyone who i~ inLCrcslcd in rinding ou1 more
aboul 1h1S trial or wishCli to make a dona1ion to the
defense fund, please coniact:
Oak Ridge Envuonmenllll Pe:ice AllUlllCC
P.O. Box 1101
Knoxville, TN 37901.
8CCCplCd.
The solid was1e management bill also aulhoriz.es
suppon and training activity 10 help s1a1e agencies and
local governments fulrill lhe objectives of lhe new slalc
policies on solid wasLC. This will be 1mplcmcnLCd by the
NC Dcpartmenl of Environmeni. Health, and Natural
Resources and lhe Commission of Hcallh Services. II
also charges the NC Department of Economic and
Communi1y Developmen1 to assist in rinding and
developing markets for composlCd products and recycled
mmcria.ls.
Source: News/ti/tr of tht IVattr Resourcts
RtSearch lnslitutt of TM Unilitrsity <!North Carolina
�HEALING THE WHOLE SELF
These are the words of a traditional Cherokee medicine person...
Sometimes to understand something, it's necessary to
dissect it, to take it apan into pieces. Western culture does that
well. But they have become so expert with the parts that they
have forgotten how the pieces fit together as a whole.
Western medicine dissects people by seeing them as
spiritual, intellectual, emotional, and physical. But there is a unity
between those pans. If a person gets sick spiricually, and if he or
she ignores that, the imbalance will evencually show up in his or
her emotional and psychological make-up. And if that person
keeps building walls to avoid facing their problem, eventually it
will manifest itself on the physical being, where it will put the
person into such a situation that he or she can't ignore it
My grandfather used to say that what we call the common
cold isn't a sickness or a disease at all. It's the Spirit's way of
saying, "Stop! Slow down! Here's an opportunity to see what's
going on in your life."
When you have a cold, you feel too bad to go rush and run
about But if you take the time to sit down, examine your life,
and be really honest with yourself, as you come to some kind of
conclusions, that so-called "cold" or sickness will go away.
But not all sickness comes from the inside, because one
half of the world is eating the other half right now, and there's
viruses and bacteria and accidents that can happen to the body.
A part of well-being is to be spiritually strong,
psychologically and emotionally. You do that by not avoiding
things. You make peace with your mother and father, if they've
messed you over. You forgive them, and you forgive yourself
most of all, because of the bad feelings you had, because they
didn't meet your expectations, real or not real. You come to peace
with that You can come to peace with the other expectations that
have not been met in your life, and other people who turned out
to be not what you thought.
Then, if something attacks you, it's less likely to be
severe, and your recuperative powers will be much stronger.
We have been placed in this world to strengthen our spirit.
We are here to learn, to overcome, and to take responsibility for
being here. People who totally neglect their spirit, and do nothing
to carry out the purpose for which we are here are more likely to
be susceptible to those external things that attack us. They might
stop a bullet, be attacked by viruses or diseases. Of course
anybody who makes love continuously with someone who's got
AIDS is likely to get it. We still have to learn common sense, and
take care of our own selves on that basic level.
Then there's the mental part of ourselves that comes in two
pans: there's the up-front, linear/critical, intellectual mind, and
then there's the emotional part.
The linear/critical pan of our brain is very limited in its
function. Its job description is that it deals with problems. If it
doesn't have a problem, then it makes one. And 99 times out of
100, the problems that it creates are negative, because that part of
our brain only wants to solve things. The Creator gave us this
ability so we would have a better chance of survival, so we could
figure out how to keep a lion from eating us or how we were
going to survive this freezing winter. It's a gift The lion's got
his claws and teeth; we've got this conex. Solving problems is
what it does. So to be healthy, you have to present that pan of
your brain with a problem - a positive problem.
The other part of our mental self is the emotional part. This
pan contains all our emotional feelings, positive or negative. The
catch is that the linear/critical part of the brain acts as a
doorkeeper. It locks the door to bad news. It locks the door to
things it wants to avoid. If I mistreat someone, even if I know
it's not good to mistreat people and HnowT did it .wrongly, my
mind may not want to admit to that. lncidentstike thar stagnme in
my emotional mind. All the feelings that arose when other people
injured me or hun me, all the anger and frustration from incidents
that 1 have not yet resolved with myself, all of that is hidden
away in my emotional mind.
I cannot avoid those feelings, even if my linear/critical,
problem-solving brain doesn't want to hear about them. So if I
build walls around that stuff with my conscious mind, it waits
there until night-time when my defenses arc down, and then it
comes out through the back door, through my dreams.
To maintain spiritual health, resolve as many of those
things as you possibly can up front. That's hatd, but it makes it
easier if we recogniu that we are going to make mistakes in our
lives. All life is is an education. We arc here to learn from this
experience. But sometimes we punish ourselves our whole lives
for mistakes we have made.
As much as possible, we need to deal with all those
incidents and the feelings they raise consciously at the moment,
because what happens to us in our dream state is as real as what
happens in daylight, and it's just as important Deal with those
things and go on.
That is the way to be where your power is. Personal power
is when we stop and take responsibility for our own actions. We
have a tendency to blame other people for things we do or don't
do. We blame other people or events outside ourselves for most
of the things that happen to us - particularly the bad things.
Actually, most - not all, but most - of the good or bad that
happens in our life is dependent on our own level of attention and
caring. But as long as people relinquish their responsibility by
attributing events that happen in their own life to something or
someone else, then they will never have personal power. They
are giving it away.
Along with personal power go happiness, sadness, and joy
- all those things are our responsibility. They arc created
internally, not externally. My wife is not responsible for my
happiness or my sadness. rt is me. It is happening inside here.
This is where I create these responses to the circumstances of my
life.
SprLrM), 1990
I
�Most people walking around in the world are separated
from their power. Their power is far in the future, or their power
is the past dealing with regrets and pains, unfulfilled
expectations, a lack of love, or whatever else is troubling them.
The result is that, while they are right here, they have no power.
They are always ahead or they are always behind. because they
are waiting for a future opponunity that never comes, or their
energies are behind them dealing with yest.erday.
If those people had their power right here, they could deal
with things. The only place we can deal with things is in the
present. We cannot spend our lives behind or ahead. We have no
personal power if our power is not located in the present
Otherwise, life is a question of "Eat, shit, sleep, and die."
People like that are the same as one-celled creature. That kind of a
life is a waste of soil and energy. That kind of person can do
nothing.
The way of healing used by the old Cherokee medicine
men involved conjuring. Conjuring means manipulation.
"Manipulation" is a bad word in the dominant culture. You don't
say you manipulate people even if you do.
But manipulation is alright as long as it is used for the
benefit of the patient and not for one's personal benefit A good
conjurer never conjures for himself. If a medicine man conjures
for himself, avoid him, because he will manipulate a situation for
his own personal gain. If a medicine person charges you for
anything, he's profiting from the experience of another person's
suffering. Traditional native people won't have anything to do
with that kind of person, unless it's a maintenance-and-repair
doctor practicing western medicine. That's just the way those
doctors do it.
The old Cherokees used to say that the white doctors
caused disease. They knew it, because the doctors charged for
their help, and obviously they didn't wanr their patients to get
well. That was how they made their living.
There are three levels of conjuring or manipulation. People
use the elementary fonn of manipulation every day to get their
way. A man often uses bis manliness, bis male aggressiveness.
That touches primal instincts in women or children. When the
dominant male is rowdy, they have a deep programming that
prompts them to split for cover. If a woman wants to manipulate
a situation, she uses her feminine sexuality. Those are
oversimplified examples of conjuring. In actual life we do it
mucl\ more subtly.
There is a higher fonn of conjuring, and that is by using
knowledge. Understanding how things work allows one to
manipulate a situation. A lot of things that western doctors or
scientists do seem like magic to us, because we do not
comprehend the principles involved. It isn't magic to them,
because they understand how it works.
It operates in another manner as well. Everybody has
within themselves a force that I call the Physician Within. If a
healer or a conjurer has a deep understanding of people, he or she
can contact and activate the Physician Within inside their patient.
But it talces a great degree of understanding.
For example, I knew a young fellow once who fell off a
rock cliff and was badly hurt. He was carried to a bed and Jay
there, drifting in and out of consciousness.
A medicine man came and looked at him, and then came
over to us and said, "I don't think he's going to live. He's hurt
bad inside."
They called another medicine man, a really old guy. He
came over there. He talked with the first medicine man. Then he
went over there and studied the victim, looked him over. He
knew the boy well. knew his situation.
The old man leaned over and was talking to the victim for
quite some while. The young man started moving around a little
bit He moved his body, and after a while he sat up and was
looking around. He was weak, but that old man had provoked
the instinct to survive just by saying some words to him.
Spr""'J, t 990
It took me three years to find out what words the old man
had whispered to that boy. Finally the old man told me. What he
had said was, "Your best friend, Everett, is messing around with
your girlfriend. I know it. I've seen him slip in there a couple of
times, and before you die I want you to know that he's been
putting one over on you all this time."
It seems so simple when you know the secret. But that was
a powerful statement for that boy. It made him mad. The old man
understood that. He had a practical understanding of the laws of
nature. If he did not know what was said, a western doctor
would not have understood. He would have thought that the old
man had been using some form of magic.
We all have cenain requirements as human beings. We all
want warmth, we all require nurturing. It's just as imponant to us
as supper. We want that hugging, we want that gentleness. A
good healer understands these things. The better we understand
these instinctual requirements, the better we will be able to
understand other human beings, and the better we will
understand ourselves and why we do what we do.
The spiritual form of conjuring, which is the most
powerful and the hardest to explain, is when individual healers
pull their whole being together - they are not hindered by their
limitations, their human nature is not getting in the way, their
self-interest is not getting in the way, nothing is blocking their
potential - and then they arc able to hook into the power of the
whole universe, the One.
When it all comes down to equations, the answer is One there's but One, and we're a pan of that One. There is incredible
power in being able to move that energy into the patient. This
energy provokes the Physician Within to give the energy center a
boost when nothing else will. This is a direct transmission of Life
Force.
The old Chinese conception of the Tao is much like what I
call "medicine." In this sense "medicine" is something very
different from the way the western people mean it
There's yin and yang. We might be tempted to call them
"good" and "bad," but they refer to the pairing of any and all
opposite forces, whatever they are.
The two forces come together. They come close to each
other, but they never touch. One comes moves toward the center
and becomes dominant. It stays until it's fulfilled, and then it
pulls back. As it pulls back, the other one is pulled in. It's a
dance. Everything is moving. What moves that process is call~
the Tao. And the center, or the space between the two opposite
forces, is medicine.
When traditional healers study medicine, they study
everything in between the two opposite forces. Without that
action there is no life. My grandfather said, "God is the energy
that started movement Whatever started motion is God." And the
motion God started was this.
From that space in the center, we can tap into the energy of
the Whole. When we do it ceremonially, we can concentrate the
energy of a group of people on the healing process that needs to
happen. A group of people can create a powerful phenomenon
when they can stop their own personal self-indulgence, even for
one split second, and move collectively on the same issue. It
doesn't happen often anymore, but when it does, it is uplifting.
Things happen that defy the understanding of the rational mind.
There is an old saying, "Magic comes when all doubt has
been removed from the mind."
�DRUMMING
LETTERS TO KATUAH
Dear KatUah,
I was reading in the Wildlife in North Carolina magazine
about the Chestnut trees and I hadn't thought about them much,
but I think it would be nice to have some big ones around. I
saw your address in there and they said that you had an old
issue of the Ka!Uah JourNJJ, which was about the Chesmut
tree. I would like to get one if you have any more.
I live out in the country about ten miles from Statesville,
a couple of miles from the small town of Catawba. It is across
the river though in a differen1 county. Let us hope that the tree
can make a comeback.
James Ford
Editors' note: We were pleased and surprised to receive over
75 requests for the ChestllUl Issue due to that menti()n in
Wildlife in North Carolina .
Dear KanJah,
I was recently adopted into the Seneca Nation, and I'm
seeking information on the Seneca People. Their language,
dress, spirits, and everything else I can find out. I would also
like to receive information on KatUah JourNJ/ to be sent to my
fianccC who got me very enthused in researching Native
People. She enjoys collecting artifacts or anything that
resembles Indian an woric. While I helped build her collection I
became interested in the reading of the history. She is part
Indian, but I forgot the People. I am now in prison and me and
her went our separate ways before my arrest, but I have not
stopped caring for her or sending infonnation I uncover to help
her. I get out of here in 5 months, and hope the Great Spirit
will rejoin us once again. I would very much like you to send
her a subscription of your Journal as a gift from me. Please bill
me for it and I will cover the cost as soon as I can. There is a
friend on my dorm who is starting to receive your Journal, so I
will be sharing his. Please send me any information you can on
real books on the American Indian. Than.le you for your time
and help in this matter.
Sincerely,
Robert Stigleman
Dear Kazuah Journa.J,
I am writing to lei you know about the establishmen1 of a
new organization in South Carolina, the Action Research Forum.
Our aim in founding this group is to promote peace,
justice, and environmental pro1ection through research,
education, and communi1y-based action.
We are currently compiling information about effons in
the deep south to achieve greater social and economic justice , ro
end racism, and to protect the environmen1. We hope that your
organization will send us some of your recent pubhcations and
reports, and that you will add us to your mailing list so that we
may receive regular news of your work.
Jn exchange, we will spread the word as best we can about
your organii.ation through our resource listings, and we will keep
you up to date about our effons (we plan to have a newslener).
We also plan to eventually have enough funds to make donations
to organizations such as yours.
If you have any questions, please feel free to write us or ro
get in touch by phone.
We look forward to hearing from you.
Sincerely,
Bill Hall
Dear KanJah,
Recently, on a trip to Georgia, I came across an issue of
the KmUah Journal. I was very excited to find a publication
with such infonnation. Though I don't live in the area, rm
interested in the information you are compiling.
I eventually plan to move, and I may well move to the
Southern Appalachians. I am interested in self-sufficient living,
organic farming (which I am doing now), and similarly minded
people who don't worship the microwavable, plastic shrink
wrapped, computerized world.
I've enclosed money for a year's subscription and two
back issues. If you would kindly send me addresses about
organjc farming and small self-sufficient communities in the
bioregion I would be much obliged.
May the Great Spirit bless you for doing such work,
Daniel Shoag
Action Research Forum
P.O.Box 176
Starr, S.C. 29684
(803) 352-2757
Dear Kanlah,
Your statement of purpose tingled my bells, and
scanning the sample copy you sent clinched it. Now I'll go sit
in the garden and read every word of the issue. But first, here's
my SI0.00.1 want to see more.
Blue Sky
Sprlcn(}. 1990
�STONESCAPE
Dark morning tangled with the mind A labyrinth by wind designed.
But like a storm the window of the eye,
Shattered a depth beyond the will to cry.
Pale light littered the rooftops with our grief.
The wonder of it mirrored in each leaf.
We saw ourselves in shadows of a chill
Flickering the stonescape of our will.
- Sandra Fowler
.>ear Katuah,
We have been fortunate enough to receive your paper from
a friend who lives near Washington, D.C., where it is more
available than in our area.
I was so happy to see your issue on children and wished to
comment specifically on the article "Binh Power" by Lucinda
Flodin and Manha Perkins. The predominant misconception is,
in this piece and others like it, that midwives, free of the
sociological trappings of organized medicine will permit women a
more natural embrace of birth as a life changing force. It is true
that midwives often permit a couple to birth more in the setting of
their choice-what appears as untruth is that they give parents back
their power.
Birth is the completion of a circle, a psychobioecosystem if
you will, as fragile and complex as the Gaia. This circle, begun
in the embrace of conception, requires no orchestration or
observation by a 'professional", either in its beginning, or in its
completion in the act of binh. Do it yourself homebirth, as
presented by Marilyn Moran in her 1st book, entitled the same,
and in her collected birth accounts, entitled. Happy Birth Days, is
the tuest form of empowerment. It is no wonder, considering our
socially promoted birth norms (from hospital technology to
midwife at home) that the world is seeing more and more divorce
and breach of commitment. Instead of Poppa caressing Momma,
and assisting the life of their love into the world, the father is
assigned some minimal position behind mother while either a
doctor cuts, or a midwife massages the mother's genitalia.
Through the binh of our first child we experienced such
transcendental communion, such ecstacy, such fulfillment as one
in the universe. This would have been impossible should anyone
else have been present besides my husband and myself.
Midwives do not give back power by assisting binh - they
would empower by providing prenatal care and encouraging
fathers to fulfill their position as soulmate and companion in the
act of binh. True empowerment comes through accepting
complete responsibility.
I would love to see this view presented in your journal.
Marilyn Moran is a wonderful and eloquent woman, who I am
sure would appreciate the opportunity of presenting our
conflicting view - should it be your policy to provide open forum
in this way. Her address is:
Marilyn Moran
c/o The New Nativity
P.O.Box 6223
Leawood, KS. 66206
Thanks for all the wonderful work you do!
Praying for Peace,
Teresa A. Rasmussen
Nore: The editors would like to caUJion couples to be aware of
safety considerations when considering undenalcing an
unassisted birth.
Sprl.nq, 1990
The Fourth Turtle Island Bioregional
Congress (NABC JV)
will be held August 19-26, 1990
at Lake Cobbosseecontee,
near Augusta, Maine
in the Gulf of Maine Bioregion.
Faced with the developing ecological
crisis, the Congress sees its mission as
deciding whether the bioregional
movement is to become a ''visible
and viable social/political/ cultural
transformational movement" (and
creating the bioregional and
continental organizing strategies to
fulfill that goal) or to be primarily a
philosophical concept that permeates
other movements for change.
The movement does not need to
further refine its resolutions.
Rather, it is time to apply these
principles in practice in our
bioregions and across the continent.
People from the Karuah Province
will be attending the NABC IV, so
please contact the Katuah journal
(Box 638; Leicester, NC; KatU.ah
Province 28748) if you are going, so
that we may coordinate
transportation and consider how we
will represent our region at the
Congress.
Mail Congress queries or registrations
to:
Turtle Island Bioregional Congress
Gulf of Maine Books
61 Maine St.
St. Brunswick, ME
Gulf of Maine Bioregion 04011
Places for the Congress are going
quickly, so register immediately, if
you are interested in attending this
important event. Registration is $175
for adults, $100 for children.
�ENVIRONMENT-AL PHOTOS
WOMEN'S INTERNATIONAL
LEAGUE FOR PEACE AND FREEDOM
The Spirit of the Wild
James Rhea's artwork that was the logo
for the "Restoring Biodiversity in the Southern
Appalachians" conference and the cover of Issue
25 of the KatUah Journal. is now available to all
as conference posters and T -Shirts.
The posters are beautiful, four-color 11 .. x
17" renditions of the native species portrait with
conference information below and are available
for $2.00.
The T-shins are heavy-d uty, all-conon,
silkscreened by Ridgerunner Naturals. Only
large and extra-large sizes remain. They are
available for $10.50.
Prices include postage. NC residents
please add 5% sales tax.
All proceeds from the sale of 1hese i1ems
will suppon rescue actions for native habitat in
the Southern Appalachian forest.
Order from: KRLRNU
Box 282; Sylva, NC
Katuah Province 28789
The Womens International League for Peace
and Freedom (WILPF) is 75 years old this year.
The group was organized in 1915 at the Hague,
Netherlands. It has been an interracial
organization throughout its history.
The League came about when more than
1,000 Women's Suffragist leaders from 12 nations
met at the Hague to mount a campaign to abolish
war. Jane Addams of the U.S. chaired that
Congress. The participants chose the name
'Women's International League for Peace and
Freedom' and resolved to work to end intervention,
promote disarmament, negotiate regional conflicts,
and work for peace and freedom by non-violent
means.
Those resolutions and our commitment to
undoing racism as an influence in our society still
form the basis of the programs of WILPF.
The Asheville Branch of WILPF meets for a
pot luck lunch on the third Saturday of each
month at 12:00 noon at the Friends Meeting House;
227 Edgewood Rd. (off Merrimon Ave). Join with
us.
For further information call Dorothy (704)
298-9082, Brita (704) 667-0287, or Mary Kay (704)
667-04630.
SEE "EVENTS" for details a bou t WILPF's?Sth
BIRTHDAY FUNDRAISER on APRIL 71
The Appalachian Environmental Arts
Center is issuing a call for environmental
photography to be entered in an Eanh Day
photography exhibit to open in Greeneville, SC
on April 22, 1990.
The exhibit is intended to bring attention
to abuses of the natural world as well as to
celebra1e !he environment
Complete details on photo categories and
entrance procedures may be oblained by writing
Gil Leebrick at !he Appalachian Environmental
Arts Ce nter; Drawer 580; Highlands, NC
28741 or calling (704) 526-4303.
THE BURNING QUESTION
...AND JUST WHAT IS A
YAPI??
A YAPI (Youth Advocating Planetary
Improvement) is a species of concerned and
aware high school student committed to making
beneficial changes on the planet.
The idea began in Highlands, NC. where
the Y API's have organized and publish their
own newspaper, Reflections, for others of their
ki nd. They stand for world peace, the
environment, and an end to world hunger.
Y API supporters or individual Y APl's
wishing to stan a new chapter can contact the
group at this address:
Youth Advocating Plane1ary Improvement
Box 2136
Highlands, NC
Katuah Province 28741
MYLES HORTON MEMORIAL
t!lti11ae .,4(11p1111e/11re
ul
Jler/111"1111 t!li11k
74 EAST OESTMJT SmEET
ASHEVIU.E. NC 29801
70t·251MIOIG
EU.EN Hlf'IES, M.Ac.. ~ M,
UC. .MU'UNCTURlST
HUMMINGBIRD
The career of Myles Horton, Jong-lime
radical activist and co-founder of the Highlander
Research and Education Center, ended with his
death early this year. Myles was well-known
nationally as well as regionally for his work in
the causes of labor organizing and civil rights.
Friends and admirers of Myles Horton will
gather at Highlander early in May for a memorial
service dedicated to his memory.
Any who arc interested in attending the
event may call Alissa Keny-Guyer at (615)
933-3443 for details.
Bulk I terbs, Spices, & Grains
Vitamins & Supplcnwn1s lf?!~faw
WhC<ll. Sall & Yeas1-Frf'C
1-cxxfs
Dair} Subs11tu1cs
I lair & Skin care
Natural Food Store
&Deli
160 Bl'Olldway
Asheville, NC 28801
Wher'9 BroedWlly 11*ts
Mlrrlmon Ave• ~240
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
Monday·Slllurd.y: 9 am·8pm
Sunday: 1pm-Spm
(704) ZSS.785&
_,
f]\iagei 'JWtt~r 'Natyr<\l~
130 N. Main Street
Waynesville. NC 28786 (704) 456-3003
'Tht' t\ft'';ffl';:
S~~~
Oldl'SI & Ull<WSI
N111urc11 FoocLs Gmn•n(
704-264-5220
200 W. Klng St. Boone, NC
3 Bloclts from Campus
SprincJ. l 990
�€V€0t'S
18-2 1
BLACK MOUNTAIN, NC
The Black Mountain Festival.
Traditional and folk music weekend with Tim
and Molly O'Brien, Ethel Kathy Austin (black
vocal), Liz Carroll (fiddle) wilh guitarist Daithi
Sprouce, Figgy Duff, Harry and the Cajuns,
The Buzzard Rock String Band, Summe.r
Puppetry Caravan, more. Ans and crafts
festival, 5/21-24; contemporary and international
music weekend, 5!25-Zl (see lhose dates). Cost:
$12/day on weekends (vehicle camping $5
extra); $40 for weekend w/ tent camping or
bunks; $5/day Mon.-Thurs. For more info;
Grey Eagle and Friends; Box 216; Black
Mountain, NC 28711.
MARCH
WESSER, NC
Nanl.3hala lnlCmalional River Rally. Paddlers
from the Soviet Union and Othct countries will compete.
Sponsored by Nanlllhala Outdoor Center. Call fOC' dclails:
(7().1) 488·217S.
I S-26
17
ASHEVILLE, NC
Shadow puppet workshop and demonsll'ation
for children 7 and up with Hobie Ford and the Goldenrod
Puppeis. 10:30-11:30. Free.
22-23
BROWNS SUMMIT, NC
Lex Mathews Conference on Theology and
EnvironmenL Keynote: Thomas Berry. $25. Call The
LMd Stewardship Council (919) 821-4391.
19
GREAT SMOKIES PARK
"Forests and Trees of the Smokies." Visiting
lhe various forest associations of the Great Smokies.
S25. Sec 4/21.
2A
ARDEN, NC
"Bringing A Course in Miroclts into
Application," workshop with Aliana Scurlock at Unity
Center of Arden. 10 am • 4 pm. $65. Write: Dr. Frank
Trombcua; 671 Balsam Rd.; Hendersonville. NC 28739.
25-27
25
SWANNNANOA, NC
Willaru Huayu, lncan spiruual messenger
from Cuzco, Peru, will speak on lncan prophecy and
spirituality at The Earth Center; 302 Old Fellowship
Rd.; Swannanoo, NC 28776 (7().1) 298-3935.
28
Brevard, j\IC
The Traveling Ecological Road Show
featuring lhe YAPl's, hjgb school students for the
environment, at Brevard Episcopal Chun:b, 6:30 pm. For
information, call: (7().1) 526-92482.
21-22
GREAT SMOKIES PARK
"Wilderness Wildflowers.• Two-day
instructional wildflower identilicat.ion. Easy 8-milc hike,
camping. $50. Coniact Smoky Mountain Field School;
University of Tennessee Non.Credit Programs; 2016
Lake Ave.; Knoxville, TN 37996 (800) 284-8885.
APRIL 22 IS EARTH DA y THROUGHOlJf
THE KATUAH PROVINCE· SEE SPECIAL
PULL-OUT SECTION, PAGE 15, FOR DETAILS
APRIL
7
JOHNSON CITY, TN
"Wizard of the Wind," an environmental
fairytale, and shadow puppet workshop on dental care.
Museum BClmission fee. For info, call: (615)928-6508.
7
ASHEV ILL E, NC
Fundraiscr Concert fOC' International League
fOC' Peace and Freedom with David Wilcox. Joe and Karen
Holbert, Womansong. Jubilee Center. S7. Call (7().1)
298-9082.
HOT S PRINGS, NC
"Daily Life as Spiritual Practice," four-day
Zen retreat wilh Cheri Huber. Sl60. For more info,
write: Southern Channa Retreat Center. Rt. I, Box
34-H; Hot Springs, NC 28743.
23
ASHEVILLE, NC
The Tra veling Ecologicnl Road Show
featuring lhc YAPl's, high school students for lhc
environment.. at lhe Asheville School. For info, call
Evereu Gourley (7().1) 254-6345.
TUXEDO, NC
"National Forest Service Reform The Time l s Now!" Randal OToole, J eff
DeBonis, David Wilcove, Leon Minckler, Ned
Fritz, panels, field trips. Camp Green Cove.
Registration; $10. Meals and lodgi ng; $49. For
more info, call Western North Carolina AUiance.
(704) 258-8737.
2.S-27
BLACK MOUNTAIN, NC
Block Mountain Festival contin ues!
Contemporary and international music with Leon
Redbone, Ephlat Mujuru (mbira player from Zimbabwe),
Aor de Gana (Latin band), Lucy Blue Tremblay, Stark
Raven wilh lhe Twister Sisters (folk rock), White Boys
in Trouble, Goldenrod Puppets, more. See 5/18-20.
26-28
MADISON, VA
"Woman/Earlh/Spiri1 • gathering on
feminine spirituality. $210. For info, contaec Sevenoaks
Pathwork Center. RL I, Box 86; Ma<lison, VA 22727
(703) 948-6554.
MAY
JUNE
4..S
17-22
HELEN, GA
"The River Cane Rendezvous," the
Eastern Eanh Skills Gathering for 1990. Jim
Riggs (wilderness skills advisor for Cla11 of the
Cave Bear), Darry Wood, Snow Bear, Steve
Wans, Scott Jones, Eva Bigwitch, and Eddie
Bushyhead and other practitioners of aboriginal
ans will teach flintknapping, firemaking, plant
lore, native hide-1anning, split cane basketry,
primitive weapons and tools, and more.
Pre-rcgis1er: $125. Contact Bob Slack; Unicoi
State Parle, Helen, GA 30545 (404) 878-2201.
Sprlnq, 1990
5
FRENCH BROAD WATERS HED
Clean Streams Day • clean-up effons
throughout lhe French Brood River wniershcd. For info:
Transylvania Co.· Rich Fry (7().1) 884-3156
Henderson Co. · Jim Volk (7().1) 684-1423
Buncombe Co. ·Quality Forward (7().1) 254-1 TI6
Madison Co.· Jane Morgan (7().1) 689-5974
1·3
HOT SPRINGS, NC
"Non-Duality and Social Awareness"
workshop wilh Catherine Ingram. WOC'kfog for social
change while living in an understanding of non-duality.
SIOO. Southern Dharma Retreat Center. See 4/4-8.
5
GREAT SMOKIES PARK
"Geologic Evoluuon of the Great Smokies.•
Learn the language of the rock record to lnlCC the history
of the Smokies from one billion years ago. Dr. Don
Byerly, instruct0r. $25. See 4/21.
10
ASHEVILL E, NC
Matthew Fox of Lhc Center for Creation
Spirituality to spcalc ot Jubilee Center, 46 Wall SL. For
more info, call: 252-5335.
Drawin& by Susan Adam
NOTE: Tlie Founh North American Bioregional
Congress (NABC N) will be held August
19-26, 1990 at Lake Cobbosseecontee in the
Gulf of Maine Bioregion. Those who want to
attend should register immediately, as space is
filling up fast. See page 27 for details.
J{.Qt.Ucih Journot JXlCJll 29 •
�SUMMER
CAMP,
July
9th
thru
20th.
EnVironmeoaal ICtivitica sbated with die Eanh, plus
swimming, hilciq, bones, locs or run. Send
brochure to: Cllnp Wildlirc in the Meadow; lobo
IDd Dory Brown; RL l, Box 184-B; Hot Springs,
NC28743.
ror
DREAM TABLE GROUP on Western Carolina
University campus. Cullowhee, NC. Next meetings
Jn.2, 3/l9, 4/S. For more infomwlon, call Joyce
Prcwiu al (704) 293-5403.
RA WKWIND
RENEW AL
JERUSALEM ARTICHOKES (Sunroots)
organically grown • to eat or as seed tubers for
spring. contact Sicvco Knopp; S06 Menimon Ave.;
Asheville, NC 23g04 (704) 2S8-2S86 or (704)
682-3573.
EARTH
CO-OPERATIVB • g7 8Cre primitive rweat IDd
working community rarm in northern Alabama
mountains, j ust 1 lS miles nonhwest or ~ta.
Classes on alternative lifestyles and Nauvc
American philosophies. Earlh Renewal gatherings
planned on a quancrty basis. Facilities availiible for
private organizational use. For craft catalog or
schedule of events, call (20S} 635-6304.
SPIRITUAL PERSONAL ADVICE. Correspond
with your Native Gnndfather. All questions
addressed Crom Medicine Pctspcctivc. No charge
ever. SASE with teuer to: Blue Sky; Box S387;
Largo, Fla. 34649.
ADVENTIJRES FOR EVERYONE· Backpacking,
canoeing llama ltddting in the NC mountains, SC
barrier ~lands. Congaree Swamp. Families wi!11
young children and seniors wclcoc_ne • ~ w~
cany your gear. For moce informatson wnte: Magitt
TrUs; P.O . Box 6876; Columbia, SC 29Ui0.
MIND MAPPING • on-going classes in wriuen
ICChniquc integrating right and lei\ hemispheres Of
the brain. Groups and organizations welcomed. Call
Catherine Faherty at (704) 298-0077.
BIODYNAMICALL Y GROWN Corn seed.
Mi.n i-pops to giant fallers. Varieties for no-till
without herbicides , and for compost rather lhan salt
fertilization. For caialog plcau send SASE to:
Union Agricultural Institute, Rt. 4 Box 463S,
Blairsville, GA 30Sl 2.
WOODSCRAFT • Seeking to correspond with
persons interested in primitive woodscraft s~ills
such as, bow/drill rirc-making, t rackang,
snarc/deadraJ I trapping, cic. Have auended Tom
Brown's basic class. l.T. Garrison; RL 4, Box 667;
Spring City, TN 373g1.
ORGANIC HONEY · Tulip Poplar, Sowwood and
Wildflower. From Palrick County, Virginia. For a
4-oz. sample of out premium sourwood and our
catalog, send $4 to: Wade Buckholts cl Megan
Phillips; Route 2, Box 24g; Stuart, VA 24171.
(703) 694-4S71
I AM LOOKING FOR A POSITION with an
environmental awareness/action organization in
Asheville or neaiby. Prefer pan-time, beginning In
summer or fall 1990. Please contact laneicc Ray;
RL I , Box 1gg.J; Quincy, FL 323S l (904)
442-6474.
CREATION SOAP- hand-crafled herl>al soaps from
the Blue Ridge Mountains. Rose IDd lavender soaps,
moisturizing bar, shampoo/conditionct bar. Contact
Anna: RL 1, Box 278; Blowing Rocle, NC 2860S
(704) 262-2321.
YOGA FOR AU. AGES- Ongoing classes in the
Asheville area, workshops for groups, and private
sessions. Give yourself the gin or wellness and
peace. For more infonnation call Bonnie Kelly
(704) 254-869g,
WHITE CANVAS MATERI AL • 42 yards of 12 oz.
unused canvas, 6 ft. wide. Enough ror a full-size tipi
or very large tenL Cost $380. Wilt sell for $220.
(704) 29g.7639, Asheville.
SEERSUCKER BABY SUNG, with colonul beads
auachcd for baby's tccthing pleasure securely nestles
newborn through young child. For immediate
delivery, send $ 12.00 and parental shin size (S·XL)
to COZY CRADLES; P.O. Box 514; Tahlequah,
OK 74465.
SKYLAND • tog on lO lhe computer bulletin boanl
of the Smokies. Networking, plus news on the
environment, nature photography, games, computer
utilities, much more. Coniact Michael Havelin,
sySOp, (704) 254-6700.
MOUNTAIN DULCIMERS • made of black
walnut, red cherry, or maple. Tops available in
wormy chestnut, butternut. sweetgum, sassafras.
western cedar and other woods. Contael: Miu
Dulcimer Company; RL 2, Box 288; Blountville,
TN 37617 (615) 323-8489.
MlNl-FARM with beautiful mountain views. IS
acres: tn. woods, ln. fenced pastures. Modem
2-story Log House. 45 min. to Asheville. Please
contact: Pat Palmer: 409 N. Trade SL; Tryon, NC
28782.
90 ACRE MOUNTAIN PARADISE • We arc
seeking environmentally conscious buyers lO share
and help protect a unique cl beautiful ttact of land.
Call (704) 258-2586 or (704) 682-3S73.
RHYTHM ALIVE • Handcrafted African-style
Drums, workshops, learning iapcs, drum bags • and
.
accessories. Please send SASE to Rhythm Alive!;
SS Phenix Cove Rd.; Weaverville, NC 28787 (704)
645-3911.
NEW AGE COMMUNITY FORMING on 57 acres
of land. Located on sacred Cherokee Stone
Mountain. Visions of healing the earth cl our
children. Contact Sue Ann Ritter; Rt 2, Box 314;
Vilas, NC 28692.
CONSCIOUS COUPLE cl infant, wish to
lcam/wolt on organic £arm for housing + stipend
OR Clrelake a ~dence on acreage. Very comrniled
and sincere. Contacc Dan & Bast> Umberger; 347
Sinclair Ave. N.E.; Atlanta, GA 30307 (404)
Sll-2971.
VEGETA.RIA.N
MASTERPIECES •
tacto-vegetarian cookbook designed to provide
recipes for Slandard rare as well as gourmet dishes.
Over 300 recipes. Spiral bound, 403 pp. $ 14.9S ppd
from: 2122 Forest Dr.; Owloltc, NC 28211.
ENVIRONMENTALLY SENSITIVE LANDSCAPING SERVICE • Lawn maintenance, trees,
shrubs, nowc.cs cl edibles. Organic. Patrick Clark,
254-8116.
NATURAL CHILDBIRTH CLASSES specializing
in the Bradley Method. Classes are small. and
include nutrition physiology, consumcnsm,
parenting skills, and relaxation and labor suPP?"'
techniques. For mon:: infonnation cal~ or wme
Maggie Sachs; 808 Florida Ave.; Bnstol. TN
37620. (6 lS) 764-2374.
ASTROLOGICAL CHART with aspect grid and
key to astrological symbols. Send SIO, SASE, and
birthdate (mo/day/yr), binhlime (00:00 AM/PM},
and birthplace (city, state} to Sw Charts; P .0. Box
18205; Asheville, NC 28814.
NEW AGE GROUP forming. Emphasis on spirit
and out coMection to Mother Earth, visualizing
positive growth and nurturing. Contact: Theresa
Carlson; 7501 Rule Rd.; Knoxville, Tiii 37920.
MOCCASINS, handcrafted of clkhide in the
traditional Plains Indian style. Water-resistant,
rcsoleable. and rugged - great for hiking! Children's
and infant sizes available. Contact: Pauick Clark;
Earth Dance Moccasins; Box 931; Asheville, NC
28802 (704) 254-8116.
RECYCLED PAPER! • Directory of products
sources for the southeast. Suggested donation S 1.00
to Western North Carolina Alliance, PO Box
18087, Asheville, NC 28814 (704) 258-8737.
WEBWORKING is free. Send submissions to:
Drawing by Rob M~slclt
KotUah Journal
P.O. Box 638
Leicester. NC
K:uUah Province 28748
Sprl.nq, t 990
�The KatUah Journal wan rs to communicate your thoughrs and
feelings to the other people in the bioregional province. Send them
to us as letters, poems, stories, articles. drawing~ . or phowgraphs,
etc. Please send your conrriburiollS to 1LS at: Kattiah Journal; P. 0 .
Box 638, Leicester, NC; Kattiah ProvirLCe 28748.
Issue 28 of Lhe Karuah Journal (Summer, '90) will take up
the topic of "Carrying Capacity" and the burgeoning impact of the
human presence and human technology in the mountains. lf we are
to continue after the last industrial smoke-cloud and past the end of
real estate, we have to apply this important ecological principle to
our own selves.
Articles deadline: April 25 - Editorial meeting: May 12 Layout: June 2 until...
"Water ls Life" is a principle with which we are all familiar.
Issue 29 of the Kat"'1h Journal will concern itself with water and
watersheds in the Southern Appalachians - the blessing of water,
how it affecLs the lives of all of us who live here, and what we can
do to protect iL
BACK ISSUES OF KATUAH JOURNAL AVAILABLE
ISSUE THREE · SPRINO 1984
Sustainable Agncultutc - Sunnowcrs • Human
lmpacl on the ForcJI · Children.I' Educalion
Veronica Nicholu:Woman in Polilics • Liule
People • Medicine Allies
ISSUE FOUR · SUMMER 1984
W11cr Drum Wa1er Quali1y . Kudzu - Solar
Eclipse • Clcucutung • irout • Ooing io W11a
Ram Pumps · Microhydro · Poems: Bennie
Lee Sinclair. Jim W aync Millu
ISSUE AVE · FALL 1984
Harvest • Old Ways in Cherokee • Oinseog •
Nuclear Wu1c • Our Celtic Heritage •
Biorcgionalism: Past, Present. and Furure •
John Wilno1y • Healing Darkness • Politics of
Participation
ISSUE SIX · WINTER t984-8S
Winiu Solslice Earth Ceremony • Honcpasturc
Rivu • Conilng of the Light • Log Cabin
Rooca • Mountain Agricullurc: The Righi Crop
• William Taylor . The Furureoflhc Forest
ISSUE SEVEN · SPRINO 1985
Suslllnlblc Economics • Hot Springs - Worker
Ownenhip • The Orcat llconomy • Self Help
Credit Union • Wild Turkey • RcspoNiblc
Investing • Working m the Web of Life
ISSUE EIOHT · SUMMER 198S
Celebration: A Way of Life • Ka1l1ah 18.000
Years Ago • Sacred SilU • Folk Arts in lhc
Schools • Sun Cycle/Moon Cycle • Poems:
Hilda Downer · Cherokee HeriLage Center·
Who Owns Appalachia?
ISSUE NlNE · FALL 1985
The Waldee Forest • The Trees Spcalr.
Migrallna Forais • Horse Logging • Starting a
Tree Crop • Urben Trca • Al:«n Bread - Myth
Time
ISSUE TEN . WINTER 1985-86
Kate Rogers • Circles of Stone • internal
Mylhmaking • Holistic Healing on Trial ·
Poems: Sieve K.nauth • Mythic Places • The
Uk1cna·s Talc • Crystal Magic •
"Drcamspcaking.
ISSUE EIOIITEEN . Winier 1987-88
Vernacular ArchilCCrure . Dreams in Wood and
Stone • Mountain Home • Earth Energies •
Earth.Sheltered Living • Membrane Houses Brush Shelter • Poems: Oc1obu DMSk • Oood
Medicine: "Shcl1cr"
ISSUE TWENTY-THREE - Spring. 1989
Pisgah Village • Planet Art • Orecn Chy •
Poplar Appeal • "Clear Sky" • •A New Earlh"
Black Swan • Wild Lovdy Days • Reviews:
Sacred Land Sacred Sex, Ice Age • Poem:
"Sudden Tendrils"
ISSUE ELEVEN · SPRJ.NO 1986
Community Planning • Ci1ies and the
'Biorcg1onal Vision • Recycling - Community
Olldcrun&· Floyd County, VA • Ouobol •
Two Bioregional Views • Nuclear Supplcment
Fo.Uue Oames · Good Medicine: Visions
ISSUE NINETEEN · Spring, 1988
Pcrelandta Carden · Spring Tonics - Blueberries
WildOo wCT Oarden.s • Oranny Herbalis1 •
Rower Eucnces • "The Origin or the Animals;
SIOry • Good Medicine: "Power'" - Be A Tree
ISSUE TWENTY-FOUR · Summer. '89
Deep Lis1ening · Life in Aiomic City . Direct
Aclionl · Tree of Peace • Community Building
Peacemakers • Elhnic Survival • Pairing
PTOp:t • "Baulesong" - Crowing Peace ill
Cllltures · Review: TMCMUceOJtd IN Blode
ISSUE THIRTEEN · Fall 1986
Ccniu For Awakening • Elizabeth Callari • A
Ocnllc Dealh • Hospice • Ernest Morgan •
Dealing Creatively with Death • Home Burial
Box • The Wah • The Raven Mocker •
Woodslorc and Wildwoods Wisdom - Oood
Medicine: 'Tlic Sweal Lodge
lSSUE FOURTEEN · Winter 1986-87
Uoyd Carl Owle • BoogCTS and Mummen • All
Species Day • Cabin Fever Univenity •
Homeless in Kalolah • Homemade Hot Water
Siovemaker's Narrative • Oood Medicine:
lnu:rspccies Communication
ISSUE TWENTY · Summer. 19&&
Prcsctve Appalachian Wildcmcss . Highlands
of Roan • Celo Community • Land Trust •
Arthur Morgan School • Zoning Issue - 'The
Rid8c" • Farmers and the Farm Bill • Oood
Medicine: "Land" • Acid Rain • Duke's Power
Play • Cherokee Microhydro Project
ISSUE TWENTY.ONE · Fall. 1988
Chcs1nuis: A Natural History • Restoring the
Chestnut · "Poem of Preservation and Praise"
Continuing the Quest • Forats and Wildlife
Chestnuts in Regional Diel - Chestnut
Resources - Herl> Note • Oood Medicine:
"Changes lO Come" · Review: Where ugmd.s
Uve
ISSUE AFT'EEN · Spring 1987
Coverleu • Woman Forester • Susie McMalw\
Midwife • Allemativc Contraception •
Biosexualily • Bioregionalism and Women •
Cood Medicine: Malri.vchal Culture · Pearl
ISSUE SlXTE.llN - Summer 1987
Helen Waite • Poem: VisioN in a Oarden •
Vision Quest • Firll Flow • Initiation •
Leaming in lhe Wilderness • Chcrokeea
Olallengc . "Valuing Trca"
~UAttJOURNAL
For more info: call Rob Messick at (704) 754-6097
Name
City
Regular Membership........ $10/yr.
Sponsor.........................$20/yr.
Contributor.....................$50/yr.
Area Code
Spr LrMJ, 1990
State
Enclosed is$
to give
this effort an exrra bOost
Zip
I can be a local contact
person for my area
Phone Number
..
".,
....
lSSUllTWENTY..SDC- WINTER. 1989·'90
Coming of Age in the E<iotoic Eta • Kids
Saving Rainforest - Kids Tree.cycling CornpMy
• Conllict Resolution • Developing the Crcativ&
Spirit • Dinh Power • Dinh Bonding • The
Magic of Puppetry • Home Schooling • Narnint
Ceremony • Mother Earth's Classroom •
Oatdening for Childrcra
ISSUE TWENTY-TWO · Winter, '&&-89
Olobal Warming • f'tre This Time • Thomas
Betry on "Bioregions" • Eanh Excteisc • Kor6
Loy McWhirw • An Abundance of Emptiness
LETS • Chroniclea of Floyd • Oury Wood
The Bear Clan
Box 638; Leicester, NC; KatUah Province
Address
ISSUE TWENTY -FIVE • F.All., 1989
The Orcat Forest . Restoring Old OroWlh •
Regional Planning - Timber - Forest Roads
Poem: "Sparrow Hawk" - A Place for Bean
"There Fell the Rain Healing" · Eastern
Panther • Oak Decline • People and Habitat
Wild Sanctuaries · BllUI" Fair
28748
Back Issues
Issue # _ @ $2.50 = $_ _
Issue# _ _@ $2.50 = $ _ _
lssue# _@$2.50= $ _ _ ·
Issue#_@ $2.50 = $ _ _
Issue# _ _@ $2.50 = $_ _
Complete Set (3-11, 13-16,
18-26)
@ $40.00 = $_ _
postage paid
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians Records
Description
An account of the resource
<em>Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians</em>, later simplified to <em>Katúah Journal</em>, was published from 1983 to 1993. A quarterly publication, it was focused on the bioregion of former Cherokee land in Appalachia. <br /><br /><span>The early issues of the journal explain the meaning of the Cherokee name, </span><em>Katúah</em><span>, and why the editors wanted to view the world through a bioregional lens, rather than political boundaries. A volunteer production, the editors took a holistic view in tackling social, environmental, mental, spiritual, and emotional topics of the day, many of which are still relevant. </span><br /><span><br />The <em>Katúah Journal</em> was co-founded by Marnie Muller, David Wheeler, Thomas Rain Crowe, Martha Tree and others who served as co-publishers and co-editors. Other key team members included Chip Smith, David Reed, Jay Mackey, Rob Messick and many others.</span><br /><br />This digital collection is only a portion of the <em>Katúah</em>-related materials in the W.L. Eury Appalachian Collection in Special Collections at Appalachian State University. The items in AC.870 Katúah Journal records cover the production history of the <em>Katúah Journal</em>. Contained within the records are correspondence, publication information, article submissions, and financial information. The editorial layouts for issues 12 through 39 are included as are a full run of the Journal spanning nearly a decade. Also included are photographs of events related to the Journal and a film on the publication.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
This resource is part of the <em>Katúah Journal Records </em>collection. For a description of the entire collection, see <a href="https://appstate-speccoll.lyrasistechnology.org/repositories/2/resources/937" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Katúah Journal Records (AC. 870)</a>.
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
The images and information in this collection are protected by the Copyright Law of the United States (Title 17, U. S. C.) and are intended only for personal, non-commercial, and educational purposes, provided proper citation is used – i.e., Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians Records, 1980-2013 (AC.870), W. L. Eury Appalachian Collection, Special Collections, Appalachian State University, Boone, NC. Researchers are responsible for securing permissions from the copyright holder for any reproduction, publication, or commercial use of these materials.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1983-1993
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
journals (periodicals)
Language
A language of the resource
English
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
<em>Katúah Journal</em>, Issue 27, Spring 1990
Description
An account of the resource
The twenty-seventh issue of the <em>Katúah Journal</em> focuses on holistic healing: personal and planetary. Authors and artists in this issue include: Richard Lowenthal, David Wheeler, Sam Gray, Doug Aldridge, Rob Messick, Stephen Wing, Lisa Sarasohn, Snow Bear, James Rhea, Kim Sandland, Sandra Fowler, and Susan Adam. <br><br><em>Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians</em>, later simplified to <em>Katúah Journal</em>, was published from 1983 to 1993. A quarterly publication, it was focused on the bioregion of former Cherokee land in Appalachia. The early issues of the journal explain the meaning of the Cherokee name, Katúah, and why the editors wanted to view the world through a bioregional lens, rather than political boundaries. A volunteer production, the editors took a holistic view in tackling social, environmental, mental, spiritual, and emotional topics of the day, many of which are still relevant.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1990
Table Of Contents
A list of subunits of the resource.
Personal and Planetary Transformation: A Holistic Model of Healing by Richard Lowenthal.......1<br /><br />The Healing Power by David Wheeler.......4<br /><br />Peace to Their Ashes by Sam Gray.......6<br /><br />Healing in Katúah by Doug Aldridge........9<br /><br />"When Left to Grow": A Poem by Rob Messick.......10<br /><br />"Calling to the Ancestors, Calling Our Relations": Poems by Stephen Wing........11<br /><br />The Belly by Lisa Sarasohn.......12<br /><br />EARTH DAY 1990!!: A special pull-out supplement.......15<br /><br />Food From the Ancient Forest by Snow Bear.......19<br /><br />Natural World News.......20<br /><br />Good Medicine.......24<br /><br />Drumming: Letters to Katúah Journal.......26<br /><br />Events.......29<br /><br />Webworking.......30<br /><br /><em>Note: This table of contents corresponds to the original document, not the Document Viewer.</em>
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
<em>Katúah Journal</em>, printed by The <em>Waynesville Mountaineer</em> Press
Subject
The topic of the resource
Bioregionalism--Appalachian Region, Southern
Sustainable living--Appalachian Region, Southern
Cherokee mythology
Holistic medicine
Health resorts--Appalachian Region, Southern
Alternative medicine--North Carolina, Western
Mind and body
Wild plants, edible--Appalachian Region, Southern
North Carolina, Western
Blue Ridge Mountains
Appalachian Region, Southern
North Carolina--Periodicals
Language
A language of the resource
English
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
<a href="https://appstate-speccoll.lyrasistechnology.org/repositories/2/resources/937"> AC.870 Katúah Journal records</a>
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
<a title="In Copyright – Educational Use Permitted" href="https://rightsstatements.org/page/InC-EDU/1.0/?language=en 8" target="_blank"> In Copyright – Educational Use Permitted </a>
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Appalachian Region, Southern
Is Part Of
A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included.
<a title="Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians" href="https://omeka.library.appstate.edu/collections/show/79" target="_blank"> Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians </a>
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
PDF
Journals (Periodicals)
Appalachian History
Appalachian Mountains
Appalachian Studies
Bioregional Congress
Black Bears
Cherokees
Ecological Peril
Education
Electric Power Companies
Folklore and Ceremony
Forest Issues
Good Medicine
Habitat
Hazardous Chemicals
Health
Katúah
Plants and Herbs
Poems
Radioactive Waste
Reading Resources
Recycling
Stories
Turtle Island
Western North Carolina Alliance
Women's Issues
-
https://omeka.library.appstate.edu/files/original/e8b264ef4ec25f6e96204d3ae515c995.pdf
da3b1c41e52d67bec48c8df227746edd
PDF Text
Text
/-�
�UAWURNAL
P.O. Box 638 Leicester, NC Katuah Province 28748
Postage Paid
Bulk Mall
Permit #18
Leicester, NC
28748
�FromMountains to the Sea
uy uafMyczack........................•....•
1
Profile of a Southern Appalachian Watershed:
The Little Tennessee River
(An Interview with Dr. William Md.amcy)
rtcortkd by David Whttlu.....................3
Freshwater Canaries: The Spotfin Chub
b y William Mclarney.........••.•.........•..5
Mudwatch and Fmoount: The Environmental
Survey of the Little Tennessee
6
by William McLarnq.......................••
Headwaters Ecology and Blgh Quality Habitat
by Mary Kelly.........................•.••....?
"It All Comes Down to Water Quality"
by Mitlit Buchanan............................8
Water Power: Ac.tion for Aquatic Habitats.... IO
Dawn Watchers
uySncw Bear ................................ 11
Adventures on the River
uy uaf Myaack.............................12
Accessory toMurder: Watts Bar Lake and the
Public Trust
uy LeafMyczadr........•.........•......••...14
Poem: "Country S10re"
by Witliam MU/u...••.......•........•......14
The Nonh Shore Road: Environment or
Development in the Great Smokies
by Pmrick Clark..............................15
The Long Branch Composting Toilet
by Paul Gallimore ..•...............•.....•... 11
GoodMedicine: The Long Human Being....18
Katuah Sells Out!!
by Bud Young and Rodney Webb............ 19
Watershed Map of the Kauiah Province......20
Namral World News. ...........................22
Green Spirits: Karuah Rains
by Lte Barnts................................26
Off the Grid
uy Jim lloustr ...............................21
Drumming (Letters (O Katuah) .................28
Early Warning: The Gypsy Moth ls Coming!
uy Ed lytwack..•......•....•............•...30
Poem: "Unbound"
by Gaston Siniard............•........••.....31
Events.............................................36
Webworking.....................................38
TaUMint.u, 1990
FROM MOUNTAINS TO THE SEA
by LeafMyczack
It begins as dense, moist clouds riding
the prevailing winds 11p from the Gulf of
Mex.ico. Meeting the Corest updrafts from the
AppalachianMountains, the clouds release their
wet cargo over the rich forest below. The rain
drips to the ground through the leafy canopy,
seeps into the dark soil, gathers, and begins to
triclcJe down the mountain slopes. Ct is here
where the River is born. SmaJJ riwlets become
streams, splashing and tumbling down rock
strewn beds. When enough of these feeder
streams converge, creeks form, and Lhey in rum
•
receive additional aibutaries.
From the slopes of the old mountains of
Kanlah, the growing rivers bring their watery
gifis 10 the valley lands. But rivers do not lend
themselves to arbitrary beginnings. The health
of a river is the culmination of an ongoing,
cyclical process. The health of rivers depends
on atmospheric as well as ground conditions.
Sulfates, nitrates, and toxic gases are washed to
eanh in the form of acid rain. Here the
contaminated water combines with herbicide
residues used by forest abusers and with din
paniclcs from bulldozed land. The first stream
f ormed is already poisoned. Add industrial
chemicals, silt from road construction, salt
fertilizers, utility company herbicides, raw
sewage, and the result is a river much
diminished in itS capacity 10 suppon life. Even
before the rivers leave the Appalachian foothills,
their health is often severely compromised.
Most humans have forgouen that we arc
dependent on the interplay of all life. We think
we can clear the forest without harming the
river, or that we can diny the atmosphere
without harming the forest. Even when
confronted with historical evidence of
environmental impact, ecologically destructive
patterns continue unabated, especially when
there is money involved. Greed seems to be the
engine of destruction. Cut, rape, slash - "How
much money are we making?"
Rivers, in order to be healthy, must have
a healthy watershed. The atmosphere and the
ground must be clean in order to maintain the
aquatic environment. To protect the life of the
river, steep slopes musr be closed to logging
and development. The less roads, the better, for
roads only promote the migration of ecologically
abusive people and materials. Rivers are
intended to be pathways for rich organic
nutrients leached from the mountain slopes to
feed the diverse aquatic communities living in
the estuaries. Damming rivers inhibits this
cycle. In place of nutrients, rivers now carry
water-soluble toxins that are deposited in delta
and estuarine habitats.
This Katuah region, sacred in all its
biodiversity, is in great danger. The forest ones
and the river ones call out for help. The scream
of pain is almost constant among them. But their
voices are not going unheard. Joining these
voices are human voices - Lhe voices of
caretakers, poets, Earth defenders • aU
advocaLing a respect for all of'life.
Ycs, brothers and sisters, trees and rivers
do have rights Lo life and good health. Let us
sing and dance to life in aJJ its many forms. The
dance of life must supersede the chant of death,
for without our relatives we are diminished in
spirit, mind, and body. It is not a political
struggle we are engaged in, but a spiritual quest
to find the wellsprings of our soul. Listen
closely, and you will hear great wisdom from
Karuah. Be creative with your work and your
life. for these are your honor song.
- illustration by Cielo
(canlinucd p, 12)
XAtuah Journot � t
���������������������������������������
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians Records
Description
An account of the resource
<em>Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians</em>, later simplified to <em>Katúah Journal</em>, was published from 1983 to 1993. A quarterly publication, it was focused on the bioregion of former Cherokee land in Appalachia. <br /><br /><span>The early issues of the journal explain the meaning of the Cherokee name, </span><em>Katúah</em><span>, and why the editors wanted to view the world through a bioregional lens, rather than political boundaries. A volunteer production, the editors took a holistic view in tackling social, environmental, mental, spiritual, and emotional topics of the day, many of which are still relevant. </span><br /><span><br />The <em>Katúah Journal</em> was co-founded by Marnie Muller, David Wheeler, Thomas Rain Crowe, Martha Tree and others who served as co-publishers and co-editors. Other key team members included Chip Smith, David Reed, Jay Mackey, Rob Messick and many others.</span><br /><br />This digital collection is only a portion of the <em>Katúah</em>-related materials in the W.L. Eury Appalachian Collection in Special Collections at Appalachian State University. The items in AC.870 Katúah Journal records cover the production history of the <em>Katúah Journal</em>. Contained within the records are correspondence, publication information, article submissions, and financial information. The editorial layouts for issues 12 through 39 are included as are a full run of the Journal spanning nearly a decade. Also included are photographs of events related to the Journal and a film on the publication.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
This resource is part of the <em>Katúah Journal Records </em>collection. For a description of the entire collection, see <a href="https://appstate-speccoll.lyrasistechnology.org/repositories/2/resources/937" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Katúah Journal Records (AC. 870)</a>.
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The images and information in this collection are protected by the Copyright Law of the United States (Title 17, U. S. C.) and are intended only for personal, non-commercial, and educational purposes, provided proper citation is used – i.e., Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians Records, 1980-2013 (AC.870), W. L. Eury Appalachian Collection, Special Collections, Appalachian State University, Boone, NC. Researchers are responsible for securing permissions from the copyright holder for any reproduction, publication, or commercial use of these materials.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1983-1993
Format
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journals (periodicals)
Language
A language of the resource
English
Type
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Text
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
<em>Katúah Journal</em>, Issue 29, Fall/Winter 1990
Description
An account of the resource
The twenty-ninth issue of the<em> Katúah Journal</em> focuses on water quality: the Little Tennessee River watershed; Watts Bar Lake; development in the Great Smokies; and solar composting toilets. Authors and artists in this issue include: Leaf Myczack, David Wheeler, William McLarney, Mary Kelly, Millie Buchanan, Snow Bear, William Miller, Patrick Clark, Paul Gallimore, Buck Young, Rodney Webb, Lee Barnes, Jim Houser, Ed Lytwack, Gaston Siniard, Rob Messick, Bob Clark, Marnie Muller, Marlene Mountain, and Susan Adam. <br /><br /><em>Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians</em>, later simplified to <em>Katúah Journal</em>, was published from 1983 to 1993. A quarterly publication, it was focused on the bioregion of former Cherokee land in Appalachia. The early issues of the journal explain the meaning of the Cherokee name, Katúah, and why the editors wanted to view the world through a bioregional lens, rather than political boundaries. A volunteer production, the editors took a holistic view in tackling social, environmental, mental, spiritual, and emotional topics of the day, many of which are still relevant.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1990
Table Of Contents
A list of subunits of the resource.
From Mountains to the Sea by Leaf Myczack.......1<br /><br />Profile of a Southern Appalachian Watershed: The Little Tennessee River (An Interview with Dr. William McLarney), recorded by David Wheeler.......3<br /><br />Freshwater Canaries: The Spotfin Chub by William McLarney.......5<br /><br />Mudwatch and Fincount: The Environmental Survey of the Little Tennessee by William McLarney.......6<br /><br />Headwaters Ecology and High Quality Habitat by Mary Kelly.......7<br /><br />"It All Comes Down to Water Quality" by Millie Buchanan.......8<br /><br />Water Power: Action for Aquatic Habitats.......10<br /><br />Dawn Watchers by Snow Bear.......11<br /><br />Adventures on the River by Leaf Myczack.......12<br /><br />Accessor to Murder: Watts Bar Lake and the Public Trust by Leaf Myczack.......14<br /><br />Poem: "Country Store" by William Miller.......14<br /><br />The North Shore Road: Environment or Development in the Great Smokies by Patrick Clark........15<br /><br />The Long Branch Composting Toilet by Paul Gallimore.......17<br /><br />Good Medicine: The Long Human Being.......18<br /><br />Katúah Sells Out!! by Buck Young and Rodney Webb........19<br /><br />Watershed Map of the Katúah Province.......20<br /><br />Natural World News........22<br /><br />Green Spirits: Katúah Rains by Lee Barnes.......26<br /><br />Off the Grid by Jim Houser.......27<br /><br />Drumming (Letters to Katúah).......28<br /><br />Early Warning: The Gypsy Moth is Coming! by Ed Lytwack.......30<br /><br />Poem: "Unbound" by Gaston Siniard.......31<br /><br />Events.......36<br /><br />Webworking.......38<br /><br /><em>Note: This table of contents corresponds to the original document, not the Document Viewer.</em>
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
<em>Katúah Journal</em>, printed by The <em>Waynesville</em> <em>Mountaineer</em> Press
Subject
The topic of the resource
Bioregionalism--Appalachian Region, Southern
Sustainable living--Appalachian Region, Southern
Watersheds--Tennessee, East
Watersheds--North Carolina, Western
Watersheds--Virginia, Southwest
Human ecology--Appalachian Region, Southern
Water quality--Appalachian Region, Southern
Gypsy moth--Control--Environmental aspects
North Carolina, Western
Blue Ridge Mountains
Appalachian Region, Southern
North Carolina--Periodicals
Language
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English
Type
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Text
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
<a href="https://appstate-speccoll.lyrasistechnology.org/repositories/2/resources/937"> AC.870 Katúah Journal records</a>
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<a title="In Copyright – Educational Use Permitted" href="https://rightsstatements.org/page/InC-EDU/1.0/?language=en 8" target="_blank" rel="noopener"> In Copyright – Educational Use Permitted </a>
Spatial Coverage
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https://www.geonames.org/4666185/watts-bar-lake.html
Coverage
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||||osm
Watts Bar Lake
||||osm
Appalachian Region, Southern
Is Part Of
A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included.
<a title="Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians" href="https://omeka.library.appstate.edu/collections/show/79" target="_blank" rel="noopener"> Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians </a>
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
PDF
Journals (Periodicals)
Alternative Energy
Appalachian History
Appalachian Mountains
Appalachian Studies
Bioregional Definitions
Book Reviews
Community
Economic Alternatives
Education
Folklore and Ceremony
Forest Issues
Geography
Good Medicine
Habitat
Health
Katúah
Katúah Organization
Plants and Herbs
Poems
Politics
Radioactive Waste
Reading Resources
Recycling
South PAW (Preserve Appalachian Wilderness)
Stories
Transportation Issues
Turtle Island
Water Quality
Wilderness
-
https://omeka.library.appstate.edu/files/original/598a93ab849d56cc32fb22505a37f177.pdf
35ca04365bb9bc976cdc8ee253cc5a52
PDF Text
Text
ISSUE 30 SPRING 1991
$1.50
�=·
- ·
=
•
Drawing by D.avid Opalccky
~UAt1 JOURNAL
P.O. Box 638
Leicesler, NC
Postage Paid
Bulk Mail
Permit #18
Leicester, NC
Katuah Province 28748
ADDRESS CORRECTION REQUESTED
28748
�lONTENT5
Econorny/Ecology...................... " .............. l
by David Whulu
Avoiding Lhe Passive/Helpless Approach
to Economic Developmcnt.........................4
by TlwmllS Power
Ways 10 a Regener:uive Economy.............5
by Rob Messick
Sacred Oconomy........................................6
by Will ~c Bason
"Money Is 1he Lowest Form of Wealth":
lnt.crv1cw wilb lvo Bnllcn1ine Bnd Robin Capc.....7
by Rodm:y Webb and llcnry EcJJcr
The Clarksville
"Miracle".......... ........................................ ]O
by Gri.rcom Morgan
Self-Help Crt!dit Union............................ IO
The Village......................................." ...... 11
by Snow Bear
"1hrough dreams, through magic''............ 12
Poc,m by Gary l;awler.t
Food \-1overs.............................." .. .......... 13
b) DU!lul II hul.-r
Poems hy Jim CJark.. ..... " ........................14
Life\Vork .................................................. 15
by Ernr.rt Wom1c.l; and Mtlflt. Sundstrom
Green Spirit,;: "Kntuah Pl:inting
Calendor".................................................. 19
by I.Le Barnt.S
Good Medicine: "Villogc Economy".......20
On Eco-cconomics...................................21
by David llaellke
Thoughts on Work, Productivity,
and Development.....................................22
by Richard Lowenthal
Natural World News................................23
Shelton Laurel. .........................................25
byRodneyWeJx,
Off The Grid: ''Regional Fuels"...............26
by Jim Houser
LETS..........................................." ...........27
Rtsources................................................. 27
Drumming................................................28
Eanh Energies: 'The Great
Lover"...................................................... 31
by Cha.rlo11e llomsMr
Events.......................................................33
Webworking.............................................34
Sprtng, 1991
by David Wheeler
"Economy" means the basic, natural
processes lhaLsupport life in the world. This is
where we begin. The wind in the trees rain
dripping through the leaves, mounrain~ silen1and
tal.11 the moon sailing 1hrough the sky - these are
basic factors of life in Lhe mountains.
These elemental powers are refined and
individuali~ed int~ a~oms ~nd whirling poplor
seeds, lwmnous cnlhums, insect larva crawling
un?:r strea~ rocks, a .grouse thrumming in the
twilight - beings 1hat live and die, eat and are
eaten, closely bound to the web of existence.
Thi~ is the living economy of lhe Soulhem
Appalachian Mount.ains.
The human "economy" is how we live in 1he
W?rl~. It is simply an accounting of how we live
within the greater economy and utilize itS energies
to support our own existence.
Tn conversation, human economy is of1en
contraI?Osed to the natuml ecology, as if they
were dtfferent and antagonistic 10 each other. But
both words share a common root from the Greek
word oikos, ·•household." This is not a
coincidence; this is observation of a fundamenral
~ity. The two conceplS are simply clifferent
views of lhe same system seen from diffcren1
perspectives and on a differem scale. The first
principle of Lhe human economy is "preserve the
system that gives life to all."
The human economy. being a smaU
er
segment of the natural economy and working
through the same laws, mirrors the health of the
greater economy. Once human economies were
dependen1 on the health of the regional
ecosystems from which they grew. Then some
humans learned to expand their sphere of
infl_uence, so lhat by drawing energy from other
regions they were able to maintain artificially
healthy economies in the midst of failed
environments.
The Southern Appalachian Mountains know
this process well. The human economy we know
as the industrial growth system has not been
good ro the mountains. The relatlonship of the
~ rull? Province lo the central economy has
histo~cally been tha1of a colonized territory,
exploucd for raw materials and cheap labor;
always for the benefit of the same urban elites
who rule the economies of Uruguay and
Indonesia, Nigeria and the Philippines - and all
the other miliLarily weaker and technologically
less-developed countries.
1n the Soulhem Appalachians, the timber
boom of the early pan of the nineteeolh century is
the clearcs1example of the "rape and run"
mentality of resource extraction. And though lbe
tech niques nave been refined, there is little
difference between the mentali1 of the old-time
y
timber barons and the current-day land developer.
But the industrial growth society has
reached rhe end of ils rope - or, more aptly, the
bollom of the barrel. There are no new bioregions
to conquer, and any funher expansion and
growth only weakens lhe condition of the
already-stressed global ecology. The industrial
growth sysLem has taken a terrible toll on !he
world - !he ecologicnl collopse is underway, the
economic collapse follows.
The planetary economy of human hobitation
i~ once again a retlection of Lhe planet's natural
ll.fe suppon system. We are now going lO have to
give attention 10 the first principle of human
economy and make a rcaJ commitment 10
"preserve the system that gives life to all."
Change is happening. Ahhough waning
govemmenrs srill dominate the headline news
their struggles over the dregs of ao obsolete '
energy source are only the dea1h agonies of the
industrial grow1h system.
The recent war, recessions, and depressions
are ~e symptoms of change. Like continenLS in
moo?n, me forces actuaUy driving this change are
moving slowly, ponderously, deep beneath the
surface - jusl as powerful and jus1 as inexorable.
The planetary life system is moving lo preserve
iLSelf.
While we can see the shadow of the
approaching change, we cannot see i1s shape, and
we know only that the future will be like nothing
that has gone before. We need to prepare.
That we are aware this transition is coming
does noLmean that it will be easy or comfortable
for us; in fact just !he opposile appears more
likely to be the case. It will help to rell1CIIlber thai
we are in the midst of a monumental
transfonnacion, and although it will be diffi.cuJ1, it
offers an opponuni1y for us to supplant the old
ioduslrial growth system with one much more
suilable - one that is ecologically viable and more
spiritually fulfilling.
During the throes of tra.nsi rion we need 10
remember that the second principle of eoonomy is
"the survivaJ of species." This refers not only to
the human species, although our kind is included
as well, but the survival of all species - each
constantly growing, changing, making its own
conoibution to the continually creative process
we call evolution. "Survival of the species•· also
does not require the survival of every individual
of a species, for that would in fact be
counter-productive. It refers instead to the life
(conlinucd on ~
3)
:l(.Qtuah Jotu"nm pa'}&
�i<eLlAHjOURNAL
EDITORIAL STAFF THIS ISSUE:
Susan Adam
Patrick Clark
Oiarlotte Homsher
Lorraine Kaliher
Rob Messick
Jeff Smith
Rodney Webb
Lee Barnes
Andy Half-baker
Jim Houser
Richard Lowenthal
Mamie Muller
Manha Tree
David Wheeler
COVER: by Rob Messick © 1991
PUBLISHED BY: Ka1ualr Jo1unal
STATEMENT OF PURPOSE
PRINTRD BY: The Waynesville Mountaineer Press
EDITORIAL OFFICE Il::0$ JSSUE: The Globe Valley
WRITE US AT:
Kat(I/Jh Journal
Box 638; Leicester, NC; Karuah Province 28748
TELEPHONE: (704) 754-6097
Katuah Joiu110I is on Skyland BBS, Asheville, NC.
For information, call (704) 254-6700.
Diversity is an important element or bioregional ecology, both
natural and social. In line wilh this principle, lhe Katuah Journal tries 10
serve os a forum for the discussion of regional issues. Signed articles express
only the opinion of lhc authors and are not necessarily the opinions of the
Kat~Jaurnal edil0!'$ or ~taff.
The lnlCmlll Revenue Serviu h:is declared Ka1dah Journal a non-profil
organization under section 50l(cX3) of the tn1emal Revenue Code. All
conliibutions 10 Katitah Journal are deductible from personal income tax.
Articles appearing in Katuah Journal may be reprinted ill olher
publications with permission from the Katuah Journal slaff. Contocl the
journal in writing or call (704) 154-f:,(1}1 or (704) 683-1414.
Here,
in the Karuah Province
of these ancient Appalachian mountains
where once the Cherokee Nation lived in freedom
between th.e Tennessee River Valley and the Eastern
Piedmont
between the Valley of the Roanoke and the Southern
Plain
on this Turtle Island continent of Mother Ela, the Earth
Here,
In this place we dedicate ourselves to remembering our
deep connection to the spirit of the land.
We bring this connection into the being and the doing of
our daily lives
When the land speaks, we listen and we act
We tune our lives to the changes, to the seasons
We respect the limits of the land
We preserve, defend, and restore the land
We give thanks for all that is good
Harmony with the land is no longer an ideal; it is an
imperative.
The land is a living being. She is sacred.
As the land lives, so do we.
As the spirit of the land is diminished,
our spirits are diminished as well.
'LNVOCA.T LON
In a house of bones we
call down the spirits.
and the plants grow.
and the animals move freely.
We light candles, calling for the return,
and the flame of life
burns through the buildings,
nothing but ash,
and the plants grow,
and the animals move freely.
The Katiwh Journal sends a voice...
with articles, stories, poems, and artwork
we speak to the spirit of all the living, breathing
inhabitants of these mountains
in hopes that we, the human beings,
may find our place in this Great Life.
- Gary Lawless
The Ka16ah Journal wants to communicate your thoughts
and feelings to the other people in the bioregional province. Send
them 10 us as le11ers, poems, stories, articles, drawings, or
photographs, etc. Please send your contributions to us at: Katuah
Journal; P. 0. Box 638; Leicester, NC; Kattuih Province 28748.
,.
,i
- The Editors
The summer issue of 1he Katuah Journal will feature
stories about the sub1le energies of the Appalachians and the
Eanh - those invisible forces that, whether we choose 10 be aware
of them or not, exert such a powerful influence on our lives.
Please send in .your stories, drawings, or poems of
dowsing, eanh changes, sacred sites and their legends, vonexes,
and other accounts of encounters with the pulsing heartbeat of the
world by April 30 to Ka11wh Jotunal; Box 638; Leicester, NC
28748.
Spr tmJ, 1991
�(COminued &om pqe I)
and health ot the species as an organism unto
itself.
Pictured as an individual organism, our own
species, at this point in time, is in deplorable
health. We an: gluuonous and grossly far,
physically soft and out of shape, ridden with
cancer and other degenerative diseases, subject 10
numerous natural resource addictions, beset by a
severe attitude problem. and (among the more
advanced sectors in panicular) badly neurotic.
One of the side effects of the transition now
underway appears to be that Mother Gain as drill
sergeant is about to shape us up. In order to
maintain its place in the world, the human species
and the human economy of the future will
necessarily be lighter, quicker on its feet, more
alert, and more aware of its surroundings.
Technology will not be able to effect this
change for us. In fact an increased dependence on
fancy technology would be n debilitating
influence at this point. This change is going to be
made inside our collective psyche - in our mental
condition and our spiritual values.
Because the third principle of economy is:
''Do it well."
Consequent to redefining our idea of
"economy" is redefining our criteria for the
success of that economy in maintafoing its place
in the biosphere.
For one example: the phrase "quality of life"
as used in these mountains at one rime referred to
the health of the streams, the health and number
of the animals, the health of the forest But today,
even as the world about us is being degraded and
destroyed, we are constantly told that our "quality
of life" is improving
For a second example: what is meant by
"living well?"
At one time "living wcll" meant the manner in
which a person carried himself or herself in the
world • what a person said, what a person did, in
other words, the quality of their actions. In these
days "living well" means what and how much a
person eats, drinks, and owns • in other words,
the quality of their consumption.
ln order to correctly judge the success of our
economy, we need to revise the standards by
which we detennine our basic needs - not in
terms of goods, services, and the medium of their
exchange, but in terms of the purpose of our
daily transactions: health, satisfaction,
fulfillment, and happiness.
Here m the Southern Appalachians we are
lucky: we have a model for change. For as long
as humans have inhabited these mountains, the
removed from a time when people lived by
hunting, gathering, and small-scale agriculture.
One hundred yCtlrS ago the majority of the people
here lived a pastoral, self-sufficient lifestyle.
The Appalachian culture of that time gave rise
to the image of the "independent mountaineer."
That stereotype is still cherished today. but it is a
joke in these rimes when we buy our food from
supermnrketS, borrow money from urban
banking canels 10 buy vehicles from Detroit or
Yokohama, are dependent on job wages, send
"It's a sad situation whe11 humans in a
society like ours find thnt they can
survive only by destroying the basis of
existence.
''The basic goal of our economy is to
take the greatest possible amount of
natural materials as quickly as possible
through the consumer economy to the
junk heap. The main idea is to mnke
junk. All our jobs are keyed to making
junk...
''I'd like to say just a word about jobs:
we don't need jobs! We need food, we
need clothing, we need housing, we need
education, we need health care, we need
all these things. Now my proposal for the
Southern A7JPD.laclriat1s is to get out of the
whole consumer economy and establish
014r own internal economy based in
bioregion.
"There's no reason why we can't build
an economy here and a culture here
independent of bringing all this
extravagant consumer economy and
technology and productivity into this
region. We don't need those! All we need
are food and clothing and fun and
celebration and necessities like that.
That's wl1at we need, and there's no
reasorr why Katuah Province can't
provide it."
- Thomas Berry,
tu the 1990 "Em·ironmtntal Summit
Confertntt," UNC Ashtvilfe
monthly insurance premiums to Hanford, power
our commerce on fuel that is carried halfway
around the world, and absorb our culture from
TV programs that come to us from big-city
broadcasting stations through giant satellite
receivers. Our regional economy presently is
flaccid, lame, and unsmble.
To be independent means t0 take
responsibility for one's self. We need to
re-examine our situation literally "from the
ground up." How are we going to provide the
clean air we need every minute, the pure water
and good food we need every day, shelter,
healing, education, nns and entertainment that are
enriching and fun, and a spirituality that
recognize:. our place in the Creation?
We will provide for these needs by getting
together with friends and community, doing for
ourselves, and trusting in the land. We will
restructure our economy by methods that will be
sustainable in the mountains for many
generations to come in a variety of different living
situations. And we will renegotiate our economic
contract with the land, the foundation of all our
existence. If our relations with the land are not in
order, then we will not survive to see what the
next era will bring.
In the rimes to come, although conditions
may seem hard and the shadow of oppression
may loom large, it is important that we keep our
spiritS up and do not give in to fear or
depression. We cannot wait for someone else to
give the orders or someone else to fund the
budget We have to worlc together for our
communities and for the life of our region.
There will be a strong temptation tO "simply
survive," "get by." or "muddle through." But we
have a responsibility 10 the future and to those
who will follow us to "do it well," for we are at a
· cusp in the planet's history, and the techniques
we use to bring ourselves through the maelstrom
of transition will be the foundation for the
regional economy to come.
We need to keep compassion - that our
knowledge might be used to better understand
this world and find our place in it. We need to be
guided by wisdom - that our technology more
closely mimic the biological than the mechanical.
We need 10 keep our spiritual center - that our
vital drive be directed to care for our community
(human and natural), rather than strive to place
the individual above all.
This is a rich land. lf we embody the real
values of the natural ecology in the economy of
today, Kauiah will provide well for the needs of a
lean and healthy human population.
r.8"
fact of Appalachia as a region has dominated the
local economy. We are not two hundred years
Rob Messic~
Sprttig, 1991
Xat.i«ih Jouma( Pa«Je 3
�Avoiding the Passive/Helpless Approach
to Economic Development
Advocates of extractive uses of the
national forests have defined an approach to
economic development that has become widely
accepted. In fact, advocates of preservation have
largely accepted the developers' view of the
mechanism of economic development.
The approach I am concerned about might
be called the "pass.ive-helpless" approach.
According to lhis view, we and our fellow
citizens follow passively and helplessly the
geographic pattern of job creation provided by
commercial businesses. The commercial
business community, in tum, is seen as an
outSide force over which we have linle control
and of which we are not a pan except as passive
employees or consumers.
This should all sound familiar: In this
widely held view of the economy, the business
community creates jobs for us and we
lhankfuUy, even gratefully, take them. Once this
view is accepted. the primary economic question
raised by the conflict between extractive
development and the preservation of
environmental quality on national forest lands is
simply one of figuring out which businesses
create the "most" and/or the "besl" jobs. The
advocates of ongoing extraction tell us that it is
the timber or mining industries, while advocates
of preserving environmental quality insist !hat it
is me tourisr/recreation industry.
1.r:11Howeven thit•oppmnclr.mi~\arleau .,,rr
half of the economic reality. Moreover, it may
miss more than half of the political and social
reality that we ought to be trying 10 create. To
explain lhis, let me present four basic principles
or facts about the economies we live in.
First, people care about where they live.
The quality of the natural and social environment
is a dominant force in determining where people
locate. The evidence for this is all around us.
Consider the move to the suburbs. to the deserts
of the Southwest, to the Sunbelt, or to the hill
country of the South. Initially these mass
movements of millions of people represented
movements away from both jobs and
commert;ial centers. They also represented
movements from high wage areas to relatively
low wage ar~ People took significant risks
and made :.ignificruit sacrifices to obtain the
living environments they wanted.
Second, most jobs involve "taking in each
others' wash" or "scratching each others'
backs". not scratching at the Earth to extract and
make valuable lhings which are then exponed 10
the rest of the world. In recent years, 70 to 80
pen:ent of American jobs are in locally-oriented
(as opposed to export-oriented) service jobi;, no1
manufacwring. There has been a long term,
ongoing trend which constantly increases the
dominance of this type of economic activity.
The third principle is tha1 people can and
do crea1e jobs for themselves and their
neighbors by engaging in small-scale
entrepreneurial activity. In fact, this has been
one of the primary so~ of job creation in
some of the states most heavily hit by the
recessions of the 1980's. In Montana. for
instance, during the first half of the l 980's wage
and salary jobs shrank by tens of thousands
Xotiulh )ournat pO<JC 4
by Thomas Power
while total employment increased. All net new
not be available. Passive communities of
jobs were self-employment jobs. In North
helpless people who do what large corporations
Dakota. small new businesses were also the
tell them to do don't survive the inevitable
dominant source of job creation.
decline that accompanies shifting business
The final principle is that 40 10 50 percent
winds. "Company towns" are never dynamic,
prosperous places.
of all personal income flowing into our
Finally, it must be kept in mind that a
communities doesn't come in the form of
growing number of residents are "foot-loose" in
wages, salaries, or profits. It comes from return
the sense that a substantial source of income
on past investments. including pension and
follows them no matter where they choose to
retirement plans, and from transfer payments
live. Retirees are the most obvious group. Their
from government programs such as social
residential choices can be guided almost entirely
~urity. This flow of income into our local
by their preferences for natural and social
~nomies is far larger than any single industry
or combination of industries, but is NOT caused
environments. They bring with them major
0ows of income that support the economic
by current employment.
activities of others. In dollar terms, a single
This is a dramatically different picture of
retiree who chooses a panicular community as
the local economy than the one we are usually
his or her new home is worth hundreds of
given. People choose to live in places they like,
tourists streaming lhrough the community. In
where they support themselves through jobs
addition, rather than disrupting the community
they, themselves, create. These jobs primarily
as tourists do, the new resident's productive
serve the needs of their neighbors, much of
activities are likely to make a contribution 10 the
whose incomes are not tied to local jobs. Taken
vitality of the community.
together, these factS have imponant implications
Based on these ideas. T would suggest a
for how we view local economic development.
few rules for those concerned about both
For instance, maintaining and creating an
attractive social and natural environment for
preserving environmental quality and enhancing
residents is critical to the future of our
the economic well-being of their communities.
"forest-dependent" communities. Butcher the
narural environment, and we lose the qualities
Firs1, don't give away the store to
~
that draw and hold people and economic activity
outsiders, whether those outsiders be extractive
here. This iuffltical poim: we-protect the
u
' industry or tourists. That will only destroy lh~
natural environment nor for 1ouris1s and outside
things we have going for us.
r1•
recrearionalists but for us. the people who live
here. We do it so that we and others will find
Second. siop talking about tourists.
lhis an attractive place to live, work, and do
Nobody loves a touris1, no1 even tourists, and
business. The natural environmem created by
no one looks forward to cleaning up after
our forested mountains contributes to our
1ourists. We do 001 impress our fellow citizens
ecomomic well-being first and foremost by
\\ith talk about putting them to work making
being available for us to enjoy directly.
motel beds, cleaning toilets, and washing
dishes. Talk instead about ourselves. why we
If we are interested in attracting more
are here, and what is imponant 10 us.
people, we have to ask what we have to offer
that sou them California or the eastern
megalopoli do not. We clearly are not going to
Finally, as we work co protect the nationaJ.
compete by providing stripped and rdvaged
forests, Ice's take back the economic argument
from those who see our forested landscape only
mountainsides. silted streams and polluted
as a source of raw material for shipment to the
rivers, and noisy, dirty plants belching
res1 of the world. In taking back the economic
foul-smelling gases into the air. It is the general
argument. we must be careful not to buy into the
ugliness and pollution of our largest population
centers from which people are seeking to
vision of ours~lves as passive. helpless folks
completely ckpcndent upon outside forces. That
escape. Our economic development stra1egy
position is dangerous to 1he spec1acular beauty
muse be built around asking what it is that we
of our region, as well as destructive of the
have that is special and attractive. Our forested
political and social fabric of our states and our
mountains and the environmental quality they
comrnunjties.
provide cenai.nly are central 10 answering that
Instead we should view ourselves as
question.
creative entrepreneurs, contributing 10 the
There are important implications here,
economic resources and the well-being of our
100, for what a good "business climate'' is.
communities. We all have co find a living, and
Since we largely create our own jobs rather than
forest protection rather 1han forest extraction
wrutirig passively for gifts from benevolent
outside corporations, the business climate that
may be the best way for many.
~
counts is that faced by local, small
Thomas Power is professor of eco11t>mics
entrepreneurs. A productive business climate is
and chaiml(lll of the Eco,wmics Department at
not one tha1 gives outside businesses anything
the Universiry ofMomona ill Missoulo. His
they ask of the community! Rather. it is one that
recent book, The Economic Pursujt of Quality
encourages and supporlS residents as they create
(ME. Sharpe,1988) develops ill more detail rlre
economic opportunities for themselves and their
ideas presented here.
neighbors by pursuing opportunities 10 provide
goods or services to their neighbors chat
This artu:/e is reprintedfrom the Ottober 1989
otherwise would have to be imponed or would
issUL of Forest Watch, which is available from Box
3479: Eugene, OR 97403.
Spr L119, 1991
J ,i"'-'i
�,
...
WAYS TOA
REGENERATIVE
REGIONAL
ECONOMY
Nature does not require that any of its
intercomplmrmting mmrbers ·ear-n a /it,ing·.
R Buckmlnstcr FullC!I'
We all eat from the Earth, brea th from the
Earth, drink from the Earth, and exchange energy on
the way to rclurning it in augmented molecular forms
to the Earth. The movements of energy through the
many organismic forms of the biosphere creates a
kind of metabolism, a kind of economy, that is both
ancient and alive as we participate in its elaborate
ways of clean-burning combustion. Micro-organisms
first found ways to perpetuate themselves on
compounds like methane and sulfur. As different
cellular forms engulfed and rejected each other the
pattern of using solar energy emerged as a strong and
usefu I means of tapping into the flows of energy
coming to the Earth from the Sun. This
photosynthesizing ability came about through
millions of years of evolution, and the oxygen it
produced eventuaUy led to the creation of a
protective ozone layer· enabling life to lnhabil the
continents. It also came as a great shock to the
ancient anaerobic bacteria, who cannot exist in the
A Region Regen • crativc Primer. Involved in each of these basic requirements are questions about
Values and Ufostyles, which tend to tran,ccnd the mere fulfillment of material needs (•.. In nonlinear order).
presence of gaseous oxygen.
As dynamic plant forms began concentrating
their energy in fruits from pollinating flowers, and
edible (and inedible) seeds, along with developing
cellulose to incre~ lhe strength of their cell walls,
they began to take on more of an energy harvesting
role on the continents. Converting radiant energy to
chemical energy, they also began to aid In regulating
the flows of water, the contents of air, and the
distribution of some minerals. Animal cells which
thrived on the energy flow created by the existence
of plants also began to flourish and diversify into
multicellular forms. Through millenia this ever
renewing. turbulent, and resilient cycle of energy,
being used and reused through the lives and deaths
of uncountable organisms and whole species of
organisms, has continued despite the catastrophic
impacts of asteroids hurlllng in from the solar
system. The visceral movements of volcanoes and
plate-shiftings have also been a major factor In lhe
ability of this planet to mend from such great events.
Until human beings came along, there seemed
to be no multicellular form or life that could
interrupt these magnificent biotically guided cycles
or radiant and molecular energy as drastically as
meteors, volcanoos, and plate tectonics have. When
our coordination of social activity began we had
neither the numbers nor the skill to drastically
interfere with the vital regenerative nature of the
Biosphere. We simply participated in the flows of
energy that were swarming around us and inside us.
Particularly since an ice age was coming to an end,
there were other regions and habitats we and
related primates could move into and explore if need
be, to find food, shelter, and waler. We burned wood,
ate the plants and animals that were herding,
mcadowing, and foresting around us, expressed
ourselves though various languages and spiritual
practices, and found cures for some infections. Many
of these infections are due largely to the great
ancestral microbes and viruses who arc still doing
much of the most basic work of the Biosphere. Our
immune systems exist as an attempt to maintain
identity in the "sea" of microbes and viruses we live
prlng, 199 1
in.
As our social systems became more complex, and
the basis for human technology and industry began to
be discovered, we eventually eame to a critical
phase. The control of major regional energy Aows
that human beings hlld contact with were being
maintained less and less by a naturally diverse
Biosphere, and were co-opted more and more into our
own growing tribal intellect and infrastructure. Much
has come from our early inluitive grasps for wisdom.
However, these were relatively inexperienced
guesses al how natural systems work. The fine
details of recording and mapping our experiences soon
began lo open our species into realms or knowledge
thllt were as unexpected as they were at times
frightening.
As the experiences of our species with natural
systems expanded, so did our methods of control. This
was true not only of energy flows outside the core of
human culture, but also with the basic internal
relationships of gender, spirituality, and the
introducing of children to the dynamics of a Universe
at large. Conflict among various cultures (or
infragroups) within our species. over the economic
Aows of food, know-how, tools, minerals, and power
etc, soon inflamed into t he existence of hostile
sovereign states. One form of human cul lure would
try to assert its dominance over another (due perhaps
to its mihtary rrught at a given time) and a process
of intimidation would spread like a dlscase.
Delusions of a different culture being viewed as a
completely "evil other· only added to the
turbulence. Unfortunately, this kind of projection
often fails to recognize the evil that exists in all
dominator societies.
There have been m.1ny human cultures that
have exhausted the biodi verstty of lh!! ecosystems
surrounding them. A$ the life-cycle of some of these
cultures came to an end they somctimc!S paid the
price for this exhaustion with their survival. Early
ht.UlW\ hunting and agricultural practices could
deplete the carrying capacity for human beings in a
given region. This is supported by evidence from a
number of early human cultures that turned forests
into meadows and croplands, w hich in him could
become infertile deserts in some areas of the world.
The effects of sucll. practices however; extracted far
less from the whole Biosphcric Context than do
relatively fast changing industrial societies. For
much of the span of human existence there was
abundant habitat for other large multicellular
organisms lilce ourselves to con tinue in the Great
Energy Cycles of the Earth. As we extracted some
seeds and animals, domesticating and breeding them
for greater yield, a process began that infringed
further into forest, prairie, and coastal ecosystems.
By the lime some human cultures began pushing their
way into a dominating posture toward other human
cultures, and toward the uncountable millions of
species that were continuing to evolve, we were not
only losing these habitats· we were also beginning to
lose contact with deeper mysteries within ourselves.
As we found ways to use lhe petrified remains
or life from eons gone by (le; coal, oil, and ear thly
Aatult?nce) as add itional sources of fuel, the
virtu.-illy clean-burning fuel cycles of microbes, fungi,
plants, and animals were infused with a differmt
kind of pervasive combustion. The eicplosive
introduction of fossil fuel burning engines which arc
inefficient relative to the organic (or more readily
recyclable) combustion of living systems meant that
human beings were developing a potential for
by-passing many of lhe limits that existed earlier in
the Biospheric Context. Such a context, of energy
exchange bet ween organismic and molecular fonns
that created fossil fuels from marshes over vast
spans of geolog,c time, 1s now able to be *burned" by
human beings in the span of centuries. The effects of
this wave of fossilized-.?nCrgy-dcpendence and the
consequent existence of elaborate technologies and
populabon increases. has created a new kind of
threat not only to our human cultures but also to the
very existence of larger multicellular organ
communities llke ourselves.
As we release more greenhouse and ozoneOraw111g by Rob M cmclt
(cominuod on aut p1ge)
xatuah Journot
~ 5
�(continlllOd &om page S)
depleting gases than the Great Energy Cycles of the
Earth can accommodate, produce myriad synthesized
chemistries derived primaril>· from "cooking" oil in
petrochemical refineries, interrupt the now of vital
habitats, and till away topsoil at an alarming rate,
we can sec the evidence or an economy that has
strayed from the roots of its existence. It could be
said that when a species of multicellular organisms
grows too fast, outpacing the rate of energy now
created by millions of years of conflict and conflict
resolutions between the needs of a species and the
needs of the overall integrity or ecosystems in a
bioregion, then some feedback in the whole system
might seep in to correct the flow.
Perhaps we as a species will recognize in time
that "fooling around" with systems this large and
complex can lead to a partial or contagious collapse
of many types of biosystcms. By using methods of
accounting that do not regard the subtle nature of
whole systems, and their inability to susla.in
themselves when 'broken down' into incommurucable
parts, we open ourselves further to such risks.
Ignorance of these kinds of feedback processes became
evident in Katuah when disastrous floods occured as
a result or excessive rainfall after large areas of
forest were felled. The qualities of soil structure that
could move and absorb water through the work of
vegetation, earthworm, and microbe scale organisms
was lost in this method of industrial extraction.
A Regenerative Economy for human beings
would involve a recognition of some of the ancient
patterns of microbial relationships that have been
worked out over eons of geologic time. Huge
consequences have come from some of those
relatively "small" decisions or adaptations. In
developing co-operative and predatory behaviors,
biosystems have come to live within limits of scale
and tolerance that are 1mplicit to being abve in the
context of the Great Energy Flows of the l3iosphere.
It has now become an essential aim of humnn beings
to hve within the population and resource limits of
such solar initiated regenerative flows.
SACRED 0CONOMY
.,
There's a huge old apple 1ree on the fann
we live on that gave over a dozen bushels of
apples this year. The apples made good
applesauce and we put up about a hundred
quans of iL Thick, yellow and brown, sticky
sweet summer in Mason jars on the pantry
shelves. When the apples fell faster than we
could handle them, we called up Ed and Randye
and their family came over and picked up four
bushel~ to make themselves some sauce 100.
This was what the land afforded us, it was what
was freely offered and though it was a busy time
of the year, it felt like something of a sacred
duty to see that the apples were put lO good use,
to accept the offering of this place and our place
in the magic transfonnation of Sun and Rain and
Soil into Tree and into growing Human
children. The tree was planted and probably
grafted by an African-American fanner a half
century ago or more in the fertile Little River
bottomland. Its apples have become a lot of
children over the years, and I feel like we honor
the fanner as well as the place when we use
these apples.
When we lived at Travianna there were a
lot of wild grapevines that grew next to the
creeks, using the alders and willows there for a
natural arbor. Most years there would be a
couple of bushels of fragrant wild grapes for the
easy picking. Going 10 pick the grapes really
XQti&afl Jourtiai pa9e 6
Efforts such as energy conservation through
more efficient technologies that require less of the
dreaded noxious belching of fossil fuel engines will
be of great service. However, the invention and
practice of human systems that tap into regenerative
energy flows - such as solar ovens, heaters, collectors
and batteries, along with hydrogen and possibly
alcohol fuels, bioshelters, composters, wind
generators, and microhydro - will aid more clearly in
healing our relationship wilh the Sacred Flows of
the Earth. Many primal skills of living in balance
with local habitats and being able to flll many
human needs from healthy forests and mrodows
will also be important to this effon. Reforestation,
good husbandry, and soil conservation could be seen
as a form of "currency" in allowmg these potentially
heallhy ecosystems to sustain themselves. Such a
renewing economy could also explore ways or
integrating sustainable agricultural sysll.'l'T\S into
homes, offices, ponds, gardens, villages, and counties
within the Biorcgional Ptovincc.
A rcgen1?rative economy would guide us into
concentrating more on the local qualities of supply,
demand, and re-use of provisions, and less on the
push to generate more and more products without
regard to the effects on children, landfills, and
overall costs to the environment. Instead of insisting
on "continual growth" (a.k.a. greed) for the human
economy, a regenerative perspective would manifest
as more of a Steady State Economy; one in which the
now of energy and provisions would be used and
regulated for the good of the whole society and local
environments by councils of members living within a
given Shire, or county, of a Bioregion. Qualities of
durability, thrift, and attention to the needs of
systems larger than the human economy would be a
major focus of this approach.
I
The just involvement of other life forms in the
human economy would also be encburagcd. An
example or this can be found in the process of
Biorcmediation, in which microbes and other
organisms are used in specific ways to digest and
disintegrate many forms of organic and metallic
activates the hunter/gather memory banks and it
is sometimes a very good thing to do with kids.
It is sometimes a very good thing to do alone.
The chinquapins ripen about the same rime as
the grapes and we would find these and gently
pry them from their prick Iy husks and eat them
on the spot, spitting out their thin shells and
swallowing the sweet mini-chestnuts. This land
is so generous.
In our present lifestyle, the gathering of
the offerings of the wild is mostly symbolic, but
I think we long for a return 10 a more basic level
of relationship with our local environment lt is
sad I think, for the offerings of so many
blackberry thickets, grapevines, and apple trees
to go disrespected. ft is sad for busy humanity
that can no longer find the time to enjoy the
natural fruits of the place we live. r think we
kick ourselves out of Eden every morning. I
think we can walk back in any time we will. r
thank this planet and these mountains, the Little
River and an apple tree for the life they
generously and patiently afford. This place is
sacred. This place is beautiful. This place is
home.... So, how do we get to this place and
stay there? We can look at the examples of
Native People everywhere for an answer. We
see that native people are a whole lot simpler in
their lifestyles. We have become a nation of the
needy, needing all sorts of things that we would
be better off without. We can also see that we
need to cooperate with each-other more fully.
Tribes, extended families, bands and villages are
much more stable and powerful than our nuclear
contaminants in water systems. A regenerative
economy would act In ways to stop the now of such
contamin:iting agents at their source. This could be
done by using non-toxic replacement chemistries, or
bioremcdiation, or dehydrating techniques to
de-toxify or prevent some specific compounds from
being released into water, soil, biotic, or atmospheric
systems. However, the best way to stop
contamination is lo not produce it in the first place.
Better sbll, embody less of a need to use toxic agenl5
in creating proviSiqns.
Monitoring flows such as those of minerals,
nutrients, and re-usable wastes through settlements,
forests, living soil, and life-giving waters would
become a basis for this circulatory economy.
Involvement in these geological movements can
engender a kind or respect through familiarity,
similar to that which potentially exists in the
qualities of our own customs, know-how, emotions,
and mediations. Both of these living patterns are
necessary for human culture to sur,tivc.
Hopefully it will become possible for us to
envision the material form of a complexedly
regenerative human society. Perhaps it would live
and grow as a squash plant: keeping information in
the seeds and feeding them with the "meat" of our
hearts and minds; creating structures on which to
extend energy collectors with the sun, soil, waters.
and winds; diversifying enough so that each cell
phlys a specific role in contributing to the survival of
the plant, yet working together enough that.these
cells are sustained by the s tructure of the whole
plant. One thing aboul squash plants, though, is that
they need ''rich" soil. The price to be paid is
providing a kind of compost - a compost that tends
not to equate well with the way most human beings
think about and account wealth. Wealth comes from
partidpaling in lhe sustenance of the Great Cycles of
Energy of the Earth. To maim this source is to maim
the source of our own economy. One has no life
without the other.
Rob Messick
families and much better in touch with location
than our governments and bureaucracies which
can't deal with blackberry picking or anything
near that level of real. Our families arc hard
pressed to "cover all the bases" in this game we
are playing now, driving kids around and
driving ourselves around trying to earn enough
dollars to keep driving kids around. We forget
the sacredness of the place we rush through.
We let our share of Eanh's sacred gifts go 10
brown rot and yellow jackets. A tribe is seldom
this wasteful, even an extended family has
members who are free to put up food and fuel
from the local environment. Real cooperation
on a local level brings the focus of the
community home 10 here and now and
reintegrates us into the web of life. Sacred
economy is local 8conomy. This is certainly
not to imply that there is anything wrong with
trade, just that we will profit by looking closer
to home for the basic elements of our
sustenance.
A collapse of the present world economic
"order" would necessitate a return to local
economy all over the planeL We can envision
a new world 8conomic order in which
communities trade directly with each other from
aJI pans of the Eanh, assisted by a UPS, a
global, reality based 1rading system without
money or middlemen ..... These are good things
a person can dream about while making
apple.~uce.
.,,.
~
fr
- Will'Asbe 811.~on
Sprlnq, 1991
�Robin Cape and lvo Ballentine are literally
buildir,g a life for themselves from the waste
generated by our society. Tire pair mah! a living
salvaging, recycling, and finding creative uses
for "refuse'' - literally, those things t/rarsociery
/ras refused. Using mostly salvaged materials.
they restored a small, mndown lwuse near the
end of a small street in the city of As/reville,
where they live with their infant son Django.
This family is nor just surviving - they are
living well. They /rave found a richness in the
goods t/rat others have discarded: a life filled with
love, well-being, and a sense of meaning and
purpose.
As a result of their unique perspective, tl,ey
have valuable insights on our society and a clear
sense ofpriorities t/rat most people overlook in
the /rustle and bustle of accumulation.
"Money is the Lowest Form of Wealth"
An Interview with lvo Ballentine and Robin Cap e
Kat(iah : How do you go about your work?
Robin: It's just keeping our eyes open and
finding a place to put lhe things lhat come. In a
sense, it's a matter of doing what you can with
what you have. We go out and see what we can
find, and then we think of the best uses for the
things we have found. With practice. we have
gotten better at it.
Ivo: It's awo.reness, and stepping out of our
way a little bit to ask, "Hey, is that thing gonna
get thrown away?" My route is my day, and what
I come up with is whatever I find along the way.
I just look in on my streets, and it's new every
day. Somebody else has thrown something else
away that we can find a use for. that somebody
would buy, or somebody somewhere else would
want. We think of ourselves as "re-routers,"
because recycle has gotten so overused.
Robin: And recycling isn't necessarily the
best use for an item. Re-using is the best use,
because that saves the most energy, and geis
away from the idea that 1f we just throw
something away, it's somebody ebe·s job to
recycle iL We have 10 be responsible for our own
stuff. We can't just throw it away.
When we re-use an item, or we re-route it to
a person who wiU re-use it, we are saving the
object iiself and also countering the whole
concept of this thing as "trash," That action says.
"This isn't LrnSh. This still has value."
lvo: [ think everyone should start a
relationship with "the mill": che paper processing
plant. the metal processing plant, or even giving
their cans to the fire depanment.
When you take stuff to the mill, you learn
about what's going on. You start 10 think about
the transmission of the goods.
Kat(llll1: 'The mill" being the existing
reclamation system. and "transmission" meaning
moving stuff 10 where it belongs.
lvo: Yeah.
Kar1iah: Your equipment is basically a
pickup truck and some trailers.
lvo: We pull the trailers w11h an old 1929
Model A Ford, but not with the pickup. l did this
with my Model A when I didn't have a Lr.tiler,
and the Model A did fine for me.
We don't have a junkyard, so
"IT3llsmission" to us means keeping things
organiLed and keeping things moving. We have
trailers for metal, aluminum, and glass, and we
,.
Spr,-n41 ,l99 I
have to be caretul about not ovenoawiit
ourselves. We don't gather any more than we can
put right back into the system.
We don't go out of our way. either. When
we are going to the grocery store. we're looking
out for things we might be able to pick up along
!he way. We wou!9,n't hav~ a warehol§e way~ut
m the county to sllish aU this stuff, because that
would just be a waste. Our warehouse is right in
the same liule central area.
Katua/r: And stuff always turns up?
Roblll: We teamed a lot gathering the
materials 10 build our house. first, you get the
idea and make the plans. Then you have to get
out and get started on the work. By actively
looking for the things, we've found that often
what you want comes to you.
Like windows. We knew we needed $Orne
windows, and just when we needed them. we
were asked to clean up n remodeling job at a
church, and they were throwing away all these
old-style, hand-le.-idcd windows that you now see
in the house. These and man}' more. A lot had
been broken before we could reach them, and a
101 more we have sold or given away. Now we
have more windows than we could ever want.
Robin: If you make a clear enough plan in
your mind, oftentimes you are going to
materialize it. Bue then you al~ have 10 be able to
build your house or complete your plan using
whnt comes, rather than having to have
everything custom-mndc.
Looking for this propeny, we looked and
looked and looked, and I kept having the feeling
that what we were looking for was out there. The
action of looking helped us 10 clarify in our
minds what we really v.antcd to find.
Kar1iali: So being flexible helps when you
are doing n:cydmg and salvage. You get an idea.
but tl1en when you get the stufT you change the
idea. too.
Rohin: Yes. ll's t.TI;alivc.
AWtlUII. l'\JIUUlel pan OJ tnat creativity is
being able to make stuff out of things that people
have already discarded.
Robin: We have such fun making our
"Compost Cards." They are postcards that we
make using pjctw-cs from mag\\7,ines we ij.uipl
the dumpsters backco v.ith cardboard from cereal
boxes. They're not production cards. They arc
each one-of-a-kind cards.
We don't make any money on them 10 spe3.k
of. We figured out that we might make $4.00 an
hour for the time spent.
Ivo: That's lhe whole thing, though: we find
other profits. There are so many profiis other
than money. Jreally think that money is one of
the lowest forms of wealth.
With the cards, there is the fun and there is
the togetherness of doing it. beyond any money
involved. And when people see them. the cards
get everybody talking.
Robin: And I make jewelry out of old
linoleum 0ooring. It looki. very nice after il's
been refinished and hung with beads, I buy some
beads at lhe nea market, but l also make long
beads out of the insulation on electrical wires.
The jewelry sells very well in the citie.s. l call
it "composite materials," because ritzy ladies
don't like 10 think about hanging old floors from
their ears.
I used to make an. I used 10 do ceramic:!' and
weaving, and I was always buying expensive
materials trying to make my an. A lot or my worli.
was about the Earth, but at the same time I was
using energy to keep an incredibly hot kiln going
for days at a nme to produce my l>tatcments about
the Earth.
For me, it's a bcucr statement to make :irt out
of smff that ii. already here. It's fun, .and people
go, ''Ohl You made thh is from that old stuff1 l
\\Ould never have seen that."
It rcqu~ looking a1 something th:11 may
seem to have no value and then changmg it to
make it into something of beauty and worth. I
Phoio by ltodncy \\ cbb
(. ontinued oq D<,\l 1'"4")
c
D ,Wt\lpfi J o \ t ~ 7
�(conunucd from page 7)
have more fun now making linoleum jewelry than
1 had creating my art before.
Kauwh: lt is interesting what you said earlier
about "materializing," bocause our society is very
materialistic. Even though they have so much,
people are always wanting something else and
putting aside what they already have in order to
get it. It feels like you are crearing the life you
want our of the discarded fragments of the
American Dream.
Robin: From time 10 time. of course, we
have to take a load 10 the dump. We always bring
recyclables along with the garbage. That saves us
the tipping fee, and we can get in for free. Once
we're in there. we can poke a.round. We find
aluminum, copper. batteries. antiques...it's
amazing how much valuable stuff is just being
tossed away. Lately it"s been slimmer pickings,
but for awhile we'd be coming out of there with
$50 worth of stuff almost every time.
I hope that the new dump is going 10 be more
efficient. They say that they are going 10 call it a
Robin: Last year 1 picked up a book by Alan
WattS. He made the point that although we
constantly talk about America as a materialist
society, that is not what America is at all. We are
a concepmal society.
Americans in general don't take care of their
material goods. They say, "Oh if I just could
have that, then everything would be great." But
it's not actually the thing they want, h's the
striving for something. As often as not, when
!hey actually obtain an object, it goes out in the
back yard until it rusts, and then they throw it
away.
Americans don't take care of material things,
and I've come to think that really being
materialistic may not be so bad. If we were really
materialistic, we would take care of our material
things better.
We're symbolistic. The symbol of good taste
is imitation cheese. It's not the good taste. IL's the
symbol of good taste.
Kattwh: When we buy stuff, we think "I'm
,uying mushrooms," not "I'm buying
nushrooms, and I'm buying a mushroom
.ontainer." Some things are garbage even before
ve buy them.
Ka11wh: So a lot of recycling has to do with
being able to tell when something is valuable.
Ivo: To my mind, everything has value.
There is not much that is nOt worth something in
some way. We just haven't figured it out yet. The
whole process is figuring it out.
For instance, our bathroom floor is made of
solid mahogany. A lumber company in town getS
plywood from Honduras. It is packed in crates
made of mahogany wood. They take the plywood
out and throw the crates away. We picked up the
crates, took all the nails out of them, and now we
have a mahogany floor.
All that tongue-and-groove siding on the
gazebo was given to us at the lumber yard - right
on the day we needed it. It's being in those
alleyways that puts you in touch with those
goodies. That wood was going to get wasted,
even though it was very valuable. Now look at it!
Robin: We have a small warehouse where we
store things, and we find after making the rounds
of the flea markets that then: is some stuff that we
cannot seem to put back into society. It may be
because the person out there who wantS it
probably lives in Colombia, and we can't get the
stuff to the places where people would take the
time 10 take the screws out and re-use them someplace where people would see these items as
goods rather than as waste.
Ivo: When there's something in our
warehouse that we don't know what 10 do with,
we just look at it in a different way. We sec it as
pans and strip it down. Maybe there's lots of
screws or nuts and bolts in it that are perfectly
useable, or maybe there's a piece of wood that
could be used for something else. A lot of what
we do is 10 strip things down. We don't have 10
go shopping for hard wan:, for one thing. We just
go down to our bins and boxes and find ii.
"4tiulh JoumaL rm9c 8
belong. One thing we c-0uld easily live without is
~e "throwa~ay society" concept that says. "I'll
JUSt throw this away and forger the other five and
one half billion people's opinion on it."
We all need a metal pile, a glass pile, and a
paper pile, and we all need to take care of them
be talking about them, and getting stuff to whe~
it belongs. One might not make much money
from it, bur it's a mauer of tucking it in, of taking
care of the future.
The best thing would be to change our
a1ticude about things from the instant we acquire
them. We need to think, "Now I'm the steward
of this. How am I going 10 take care of this?
What am I going to do with this?" And then
follow it through.
When we buy something, do we think about
where it came from? Do we think about what it
?Ontains? Do we think ~bout what it is packaged
tn? Maybe we shouldn t buy the mushrooms in a
,tyrofoam container, for instance, unless we have
1 specific use for that styrofoam container. Even
hough the styrofoam container of mushrooms is
mly 89¢ and unbagged mushrooms are 99¢, the
ost of the container · the living cost - has to be
dded in, even if it doesn't come directly out of
,ur pockets.
Photn by Rodney Webb
"Reclamation Center." 1 hope that means that
we're not going to throw away something like
$30,000 wonh of ready recyclables per day,
which is what they say is happening now. Thar's
why someone can go in there now and find $100
wonh of stuff in one visit - and that's just ready
recyclables: metals, glass, and paper. That's not
even mentioning antiques.
lvo: Some things are garbage, and some
llings are just difficult 10 use - like aluminum
;creen doors. We get 10 of them a month at least,
all different sizes, all custom-made for different
houses. There are no real Standards. Aluminum
windows are the same way. There's very little
chance that we'd find another space that would
exactly fit them. so we strip them down and
recycle them.
We wish that someone would Stan a small
forge that would take aluminum and make some
worthwhile thing out of it. We could make a little
money selling to them, and they could save a
whole lot of money.
Kar1lah: That's a good idea: spin-off
indusrnes.
100?
Robin: The Smith and Hawken Company
sells aluminum cast benches, very small benches.
for $795. They contain maybe 50. maybe 100,
pounds of aluminum. We sell 50 pounds of
aluminum for $14. rf we could provide their
stock, we could get maybe $20 out of it, and the
company would keep a lot more of tl1at $795.
lvo: I've hauled things to the dumpster for
people, and they've said "If you see any hinges
around, I'll buy them from you." Several times
I've stripped pans off items they have given me
and sold those parts back to the same people.
Once they see stuff as "tra.Sh," they're blind 10
what might be in there.
But if we're hauling aluminum and there's a
piece of steel in there. even though 1 may not
need that piece of steel, I take it anyway and
throw it on my steel pile. which is continually
going to the scmpyard. I call the steelyard the
"the no-pay mill," because they recycle it, but
they don't pay me anything for it. In the
meantime, though, I get to use it if 1need it.
This is an example of "dumpster karma." It's
not only a mauer of making a li\'ing. It's trying to
take care of things and putting them where they
Ivo: We've been doing building salvage and
demolition clean-up work. It's really helped us
while we were working on our house, but more
and more people doing building projects an:
calling us because they need these goods, 100.
Now thnc we're finishing up our own place. I
want 10 put together a crew that's made up of
people who want wood and other building
materials to take over these jobs.
And t want 10 learn more about wood thi~
year, because people who really know wood are
telling me that the wood being thrown away i$ a
thousand times better than the wood wl! are able
to buy today. We need to save that old wood.
We are completely into the practice of cutting
down more and more trees and driving the price
up. whereas what we really need to do is to go
back and have a new understancling of wood and
Kattlah: Do you sell things from your stash,
Spri.f\9, 1991
�figure out that this is really wonh something.
These old boards remind us of our
grandparents' lives. Our grandfather might have
cut this tree. This is the tree, the wood, wood
like this doesn't grow anymore. This is
something really, really imponant
Old joists can be new furniture. It doesn't
matter what we make out of iL It just matters that
the wood's not wasted, and that it is used over
and over. It's a renewable resource, but not in a
way that we can waste it
disrurbs me that some people look at re-routers
and recyclers as n-ash, like "Oh, you're in the
dumpster? You're trash."
There are several responses when people
come on us at work. One response is, "Alright!"
and the other is, "Uggghhhh." And it huns
sometimes when people look at me and go
"Ewww, you're trash." I have to keep reminding
myself, 'Tm not" It's easy 10 buy into that when
you're climbing in and out of dumpsters.
lvo: Once I was going from one litter barrel
Robin: Several times while doing salvage,
we've run into a situation that bothers us greatly.
That's when the person in charge of a building
demands a payment to allow us 10 retrieve stuff.
That's fine as long as those people are
willing to salvage what they can, because if they
set the value on it, then they are responsible for
getting it out. But it's not right for good materials
to be wasted.
It would be better for the people in charge ro
honestly embrace the idea that a building is
coming down, get out what they can, then let go
of the rest, and be joyous about other people
going in and getting what they could.
We have to be more honest about our
commitment to our own labor. If people are not
willing to do what needs to be done, then they
need 10 move out of the way and open those
opportunities for others.
Robin: Part of it is 10 release and
acknowledge and hope that there are other people
out there who arc doing the work, too, and that
people will pick up what they can use. For awhile
we were feeling like it wasn't getting picked up,
and maybe we'd beu.cr eick ilup, so that when
someone's ready for it. it's here. Well.'wc can·1
do that for everything. Everybody has to help.
Katuah: It is kind of underground. It's a
sub-culture.
Robin: I suppose it's inevitable, but it
Sprlnq, 1991
Ivo: Or that's going to break and they're
going to throw it away'!
But moving metal the way we do. and
thinking about everything in this way, that can
get real hlll'd, too. It's not easy work. Help
would be great. To know that more people are
doing it would be real good, because we could
feel like, "OK, maybe I can't get that particular
item. but it's going to get taken care of."
lvo: It drove us nuts, because there is so
much waste and it really hurt us, seeing it.
Robin: The flea market is one. It's a great
place • kind of like an underground marketplace,
except that it's not underground - where people
rrade stuff off: "Iley, rm not using this any
more, can you use this?" ''Yeah, I can use that"
lvo: The world slows down a bit, and you
make friends with it. It's a different way.
Robin: And who wants to worlc a job 10
hours a day to get this stuff that they don't know
what they are going to do with?
Robin: For awhile we did try 10 do
everything. But we can't do everyrlting. Like one
pc11ion can't save the world. You can try but
you'd blow out in the process. We're having to
learn that. Living in the city, it's pretty
mind-blowing how much gets thrown away, and
for awhile we were just all the ume husding,
hu.srling, lmstling!
Karuah: Precisely. That's another case when
the symbol of value has come into conflict with
real value. It comes down 10 the question of
where our commitments really are.
I'd like to know if there other options for
re-routi ng items.
Robin: lt is. And a lot of people our age
disdain the flea market and look down on that
class of people. That seems funny 10 me. because
the flea market is a place where people value this
old scuff and seek it out
The flea market, the mill - they are there. and
there are real people working those places. We've
become very good friends with the people at the
metal mill in town. They give us Christmas gifts,
and they gave us baby gift~. They're our friends.
We see each other regularly; we have a
relationship with those people. They're part of
our community.
Living in a community includes alt the people
we come in contact with, whether they are our
groovy friend~ or not Living in community
involves knowing the names of I.he people in the
stores or the lumber yard we go 10 and letting
those people know who we are. If we are
friendly to those people and accept them into our
community, then they're more open to sharing
with us the stuff that would otherwise get
wasted.
Ivo: We try to be non-consumers. We try to
offset the waste in this country. We're trying to
do more with less, and use what people throw
away, and a lot of times we find that those goods
arc better than what we can buy.
Phoio by Rodney Webb
to another with my bag, and a homeless person
came to me and asked to borrow money. I just
said, "Hey, it's laying everywhere!" And he said,
"I'm not going to pick up irash."
Where did he think my money came from?!
All l do is trade my trash for money, so my
money must be rrash too.
People never seem to think of money as
being dirty. We never even think about that We
play with our money, and then we sit down to
cat.
Robin: Someone asked me one day what we
do for a living. I said that what we do is try to
keep a low overhead. That's a big pan of being in
the salvage business: keeping a low overhead.
That's sometimes hard to believe when the bills
come due. Then l am reminded that I am still
tapped into this modem-day society. But for the
most pan we do pretty well at staying out of the
monetary now.
We don't garden as much as we want to, but
we've been working on our house and preparing
the gardens.
I saw a video recently about some tribal
people in Africa. All the women do most of the
day is pound millet 10 feed their families. They
don't have much, but their needs are very small.
lt made me wish I could discover the joy in such
a simple life.
lvo: We want to change the way we can
change. The way we can change is not stopping
and staning up again. It's working slowly and in
truth and in power with what we have and what
we know, in the spirit of trying to let it occur. All
we can do is work at it. We all need 10 suut by
asking what we can do.
We hear all the rime about what's bad and
what's killing us, but people need to know about
what we can do and what ideas are working what heals.
People tend to think that they are basically
helpless and that because the world's so big that
their little pan doesn't matter. This is death. We
want 10 teach people that the little pan that we
each play is what mancrs; that those little pieces
add up in a big way. and that is all there is. It
empowers us. That's life.
lnien,iew recorded by
Rodney Webb and llenry Eckler
Robin and /vo's "Compos, Cards" and
Robin's "Collaborations" jewelry are/or sale ar
1he "What Do You \Vant?" store on Luingu,n
A~·e. m Asheville. Tlae two also have a boo1h 01
the Asheville Antique Mall at the corner of
\Valnw Sr. and lexing1on Ave. where they sell
valuable pieces that 1hey J,avefound in their
salvaging.
�THE CLARKSVILLE "MIRACLE"
by Griscom Morgan
Once we undersl.'.llld the cause of the
decline of rural communities, many
opponunities and resources are at hand for
canying out corrective action. One example is
the story of William Bailey, who was the
president of the First National Bank of
Clarksville, Tennessee during the Great
Depression of the l 930's.
Bailey made a habit of visiting local
farmers to stay in touch and to check on the
condition of their operations. During one of
these visits a local fanner named Peter Barker
spoke frankly to the b:inker saying, "I am a
good fanner and have plenty of food in
production, but I can't sell the food, because
you have all the money, inste:id of it being the
hands of the people who need to buy what I can
grow.
"You won't lend the money, except at an
in1e~t rate which is higher than the people of
lhis county can afford. Since the local people
can't afford to borrow it, you're investing your
bank's money outside the county. Because of
this. the whole economy of our coun1y is at a
Sl.'.llldsrilJ!"
William Bailey saw the point. Agricultur>!,
labor, and enterprise were quite sufficient for a
successful economy in Mon1gomery County. lie
saw the county was suffering because it had
little money in circulation. He saw that he had
been acting on a banker's first impulse, which
was 10 follow the highest interest rates and
invest where they could be found.
Bailey cared about the people in his
community, and he saw that if the county's
economic woes were 10 be solved. there would
have to be a good supply of money in continual
circulation. He knew if he offered low-interest
loans, the local people would borrow the capital
and keep it circulating. He also knew that he
could guide lhe loans to see that they were
invested where they were needed in the
community. But it would be up to the people
themselves 10 mount a campaign 10 buy locally
10 keep that money from leaving the county.
Bailey began loaning the bank's available
capital as low interest loans to the people of the
county, and borrowed money from outside the
county 10 augment 1he available capital.
He analyzed the county economy and
suggested ways to shore up the weak points, as
well as responding 10 people who came 10 him
asking for loans. Always his main emphasis
was 10 keep money circulating in the county.
Money in an economy is like the blood
circulating in the body: if it bleeds out, then the
body dies. One reason Bailey was successful
was his ability to make the local people realize
that finance was like the crucial role of the
blood, and that everybody in the community.
nor just the bankers, must feel responsible for it.
!he morale of the community was very
tmportant.
But the crux of the whole mauer was that
William Bailey was not just looking out for his
institution and for his own individual profit. Ile
saw his firs1 responsibility as being 10 the
community. His policies met with success.
Mon1gomery County rose from being one of the
10 poorest counties in Tennessee to become one
of 1he IO most prosperous counties in the state.
What happened in Montgomery County
became widely known at the time. Some thought
Xotuah JoumaL pa!JC 10
that what happened in Clarksville was close to
the miraculous. Later, William Bailey was the
first small-town banker to be chosen president
of the American Banker.; Association. He
always said, however, that he was never able to
convince American bankers or American
businessmen to accept the basic perspective of
their social responsibility as bankers.
The Clarksville "miracle" was no miracle.
It was just common sense.
What happened in Clarksville, Tennessee
was very similar to wha1 happened in a small
town in Austria at about the same rime. Austna
was aJso suffering from the Depression of the
1930's. The small mountain town of Woergl
was in economic collapse. and its people were
starving. The mayor of the town remembered
that 100 years earlier, when the town had been
without roads and was isolated from the rest of
Europe, it had been prosperous. It therefore
seemed absurd that they should be starving
when they clearly possessed the conditions
necessary for full employmenc and prosperity.
Work needed 10 be done, and they had in the
local area aJI the resources necessary to feed and
clothe themselves.
The mayor persuaded the people of his
community to exchange their Austrian currency
for a local currency, which would be subject 10
an annual tax 10 discourage people from
hoarding it out of circulation. Three monihs after
the)'. began circulating the taxed money, lhey had
full employment in the community, in
comparison 10 the desperate unemployment they
had been suffering earlier.
By the end of the yeauhe town was once
again prosperous. and the mayors of other
Austrian towns began to follow suiL But the
Bank of Austria had the government prohibit the
practice because it was driving the national
currency out of circulation.
In both these cases, although the actions
taken wen: different, the end results were
similar. When money becomes the medium of
savings instead of the medium of exchange.
people suffer, and damage is done to the whole
economy. When money migra1es from an area,
then that area sinks into depression and the
economy stagnates. Communities can take steps
lo ensure the health of their local economies.
Self-Help Credit Union
In 1980, the Center ror Communi1y Stir· Help
was founded in Durham, NC m order IO help low-income
people in !.he area gain ownership of lheir jobs and their
homes. The CCSH provided tcehnical nssislance to
worker-owned nnd othcT cooperative businesses.
In 1984. the Cemer saw need t0 start !.he
SelC-Help Crcdu Union ( SHCU) in order 10 provide
loans to these businesses nnd IO encourage the building
or low-income housing. The SHCU is a bona fuk credit
union, a regulated, fcdcrally insured depo~tory
insti1ution. The Center also. in 1984, began 1hc
Self-Help Ventures Fund, a non-profit revolving loan
Cund (RLF).
In 1988, lhe SHCU opened an office in Asheville
IO scrvc the mounuin region. This past ye.ir, the WNC
office provided more than 5700,000 in l(Xllls, including
eight business loans. fi\'e home mortgages, six 103lls
from iL\ Working Women's Fund, and one loan through
iL~ Self-Help Ventures Fund It also made 13 loans worth
over $50,000 through the NC Rural Center's
Microcnl.Ctpri~ Loon Program. In lhis program, business
spccialiru; at WarTCII Wilson College's Black Swan
Center and at McDowell, Mayland, and Isothcnnal
Communily Colleges work wilh emerging cnireprcncurs
who need small loans nnd technical assistance in ordct 10
get their businesses going. The SHCU provides the loans
from a pool or runds set up by the NC Rural Center.
Unfortun:ucly, the interest r:ue is quite high.
In the WNC area, lhe SHCU has helped finance
Stone Soup ResL1uran1, Nnntahal:i Outdoor Center,
Asheville Monicssori School, YMJ Cuhural Center,
ABC Recycling, and other small business \'Cnturcs.
Self Help Credit Union
12 1/2-A Wall Street
P. O. Box 3192
Ashe~ille, r-.c 28802
(704) 253.5251
Mountain Microtnterprise Fund
do Chris Just
701 Warren WIison Rond
Swannano:i, NC 28778
(704) 298-3325
Working Women's Fund
do nVCA Women's Re.source Center
Asheville, NC 28801
(704) 254-7209
Griscom Morgan worked closely with his
father, Arthur Morgan. the visionary engineer
and rite first director ofthe Tennes.fee \'alley
Amltoriry. At his father's request Griscom
traveled 10 The S0111/iem Appalachians to find a
location for an in1en1io11al community. Griscom
found a beautiful spot in the meadows along the
Somlt Fork of the Toe River where the Celo
Comm1111iry still prospers today.
Bur Griscom could not .Hay in the
mountains. He fell there was work to be dnne ill
/tis native town of Yellow Springs, Ohio were
he rewrneti and with his wife, Jane.founded
Community Services, Inc., a "think tank" and
resource tenter for comnuu,iry living i11 ntral
area.r.
Commiuzin· Services can be contacted tlt
Box 243; Ye/lo"; Springs, OH 4538i.,
Drawinc by Rab Meuidl:
Sprtn<J, 1991
�The Village
by Snow Bear
Tlze village lzums witlz activity, all
cenJeri11g on providing for the basic luunan and
material needs of ics inhabitants ...
A circle ofartisans, including some
childreri. sit coiling. molding, and pressing wee
gray clay into fonns offunction and beauty that
wiff later be tempered in the open fire.
Others skin and butcher the carcass of a
you11g whitetail doe that han9s from a
chokecherry, using flakes offlint picked up by
the lodge where theflintknappers sit. The
rhythmic clacking ofthe toolmakers'
Juunmerstones striking theflilll cores is as
soothing as distant drums.
In the warmth of the spring sun, deer
hides are being scraped, rubbed with mashed
brains, stretched, pulled, and then smoked over
smoldering fires until ,heir traTLeformation imo a
soft, srrong fabric is complete. Skilled hands
thenfashio11 the buckskin into moccasins and
shirts. The remnants go into the making of
po11clzes and lacing. emphasizing the
preciousness of every scrap ofthe deer's skin
a11d every moment ofthe labor that cransfom1ed
it.
One man sits spinning a carrail stalk
between his pabns,pressing it downward into
the yucca stalkfireboard a11chored beneath /us
feet. Smoke curfs II{) in a thin plume. and in a
surprisingly slwrt time, he tenderly places a
small glowing coal 011to the cauail down and
cedarbark tinder. His breath brings the glow into
flame, and a group of young men begin working
with this gift offire, /,eating and s1raigl11e11ing
rivercane into bfowg1111s. Older, patient, steady
hands fletch yellow locust darr slzafcs with
thistledown.
Nearby, a wizened grandmother, with
uncanny deftness, peels and splits riverca11efor
her double-weave basket. She internvines splits
briglzcened with the orange juice ofbloodroot
with contrasting lengths dyed dark brown with
walnut bark.
looking up, the old woman smiles at the
children pounding dark red dent corn imo meal.
They use a hickory log that has been burned and
scraped inro a 11wrcar and a hickory sapling char
has been stripped and scrapt•d into a pestle.
At the cooking fire, a growrdlwg is
smjfcd with cornbread dough. wild ginger, and
peppcroot, wrapped in wet clay 011d covered
with hot coals to bake with cornbread ashcakes.
SpriWJ, 199 I
The cooks drop hot rocks into a rawhide pot
hanging from a tripod to bail a ve11iso11 stew
comaini11g wild leeks, choran greens, and
solomon seal tubers.
In the wooded coves above the
riverbonom village, a small, quiet scouri11g parry
lopes along at wolf-trot, sca11ning the
mo11nrai11sides for the gifts of namre 1h01 supply
their people with food, medicille, and row
mmerials that defi11e a cult11re. The J,erbman wlw
leads the scowing party scops, drops t0 the
ground, looks up to the sky, and makes a prayer
to ack11owledge with thanks the awesome forces
that have united to bring healing and sustenance
u, the people. He ties together a twist of tobacco
and a lock of his own hair 1h01 he mighr make a
gift ro the world, before his people gather
anything on this journey.
The scours res11me their wolf-trot, but
stop to examine every discernible sign. the
mushrooms that have bee11 nibbled by whitefoot
mouse and box wrrle; the core of a white pi,re
cone that has been neatly stripped ofits scales
and seeds by a gray squirrel; the greenbrier
shoocs browsed by a whitetail buck; rhe
meucufously picked a11d stacked crayfish shells
011 the rock next to the deep raccoon hind-tracks
in the creek.sand.
This is a world 10 be see11, heard,
u,uched, and smelled, a gift ofthe Earth Mother
and the Spirit-/11.-All-Things. To move through it
any other way seems 1mgratef11l. The scowing
parry remrns laden with the Mother's bo1mcy:
poplar bark to be twined imo cordoge; pitch
scraped from wounded pines/or a waterproof
glue made with powdered charcoal; resinous
pine/or starting fires in wet weather; cucwnber
root, solomon's seal, and bluff mustard,
sassafras, ginger, and sweet birch: a deer skull
and mrkey feathers - bur above all, kMwledge.
Knowledge of where to/ind the freshest spring
water, where the deer have been bedding down,
wlzere the turkeys have bee11 scratching and
roosting, where the large rro,u gather under
boulders in deep, shimmering pools.
Knowledge: that the people may live ...
This picture of village life is not, as it
might seem, ancient history. These were scenes
from the daily life of the Riverc;ine Rendezvous
held at Unicoi State Park in I lelen, Georgia in
April, 1990. This rendezvous was an outgrowth
Drawing b)- Manha Tree
of the Eanhskills Workshops held in
the same riverbonom meadow each
spring and fall for the last six years.
Darry Wood, Bob Slack, Jr., and
myself have had the privilege of hosting
and instructing these workshops with the help of
talented, accomplished guest insiructo!'1>. The
The 1990 Rendezvous, however, brought
together over 15 instructors and almost 50
participanis, many of whom we have i;r!!V.1l 10
know closely over the years.
One shared perception is that these
gatherings are much more than an educational
event. The skills shared there are of the eye and
hand, but just as imponantly, of the mind and
hean: knowledge and intuiriveness
complemented by patience and detennination, a
feeling of harmony with the things we shape,
and a vision of beauty, all blended into a
balanced whole. Some aspects of che sacred
work accomplished there can be described and
communicated; some of what happens there
must be felt and experienced. One becomes pan
of a small, temporary village, but in another
sense, we become part of a more pennanent
village of the ancients of all cultures, who lived
by these ways for thousands of years.
These skills can be used 10 create a
sustainable economy at iis purest - a wealth that
will last as long as the natural world lasts, as
long as the village is sensitive 10 the rhythm and
flow of the life of the land.
A nature-based economy knows both
bounty and shonage, but nature rarely produces
true poveny. Blue tongue disease may cause a
decline in the deer population, but the wild
turkey, also feeding on white oak acorns, will
probably increase. A decline in hard mast can
reduce the number of deer, bear, and turkey, bUl
the trout and beaver will probably be unaffected.
Of course, human beings arc capable of bringing
it all 10 an end; but there is a tremendous feeling
of security in knowing tha1 when the oil runs
om, when the money-ba.--ed economy collapses
of its own weight. one possesses Lhe knowledge
10 create and sustain a rich life, full of beauty
and bounty. The essence of this life, the element
that makes it fulfilling. is the village: people of
(IXll\linuod.., pai;e 12)
'.Kattmh Journal pn9c 11
�(cootinucd from page 11)
like mind gathering to pursue common
endeavors within the comforting
security of nature.
People return 10 the Eanhskills
gatherings as much for the village
experience as for the potential to
increase their knowledge. It is a basic
human need often denied by our
individualistic, companmentalized
society. In the village created by the
EanhskiUs gatherings. we Ullce
responsibility for creating our own
material culture, music, an, stories and
legends. rather than having i1 spoon-fed
10 us by an industrial society that
refuses 10 base itself on respect for the
One Great Life. In doing so, our minds,
hearts, and spirits grow stronger. I
know of no one who has not been
touched by the plaintive cry of the
Lakota flute in the pre-&.wn mist; no
one who is not deeply enriched by the
stories absorbed while gazing into the
hean of the campfire; no one whose
heart does not know a pure joy when
they have worked the magic of calling
fire from the bow and drill. As one
whose life is controlled by the pursuit
of money, my return to this (and other)
villages is always revivifying; it feels
like I reclaim, for a shon rime, my true
place in this world.
As h~mankind develops. this will
come: a life in which our "economic"
pursuits wi.11 not deny our need for
communal contact, spiritual growth.
cultural stimulation, and artistic
endeavor.
Snow Bear is an herbalist,
n.awralist, eanhskills instructor, and
storyrcller. He is a staffteam supervisor
at tlze 0111ckxJr Tlu:rapeutic Program i11
C/e-.,eland, Georgia and co-director with
his ll'ifc Khalisa of the Pepper/and
Fann Camp.
Snow Bear can be comacted by
writing c/o Pepper/and Farm Camp; Rt.
4, Box 255-8; Murphy, NC 28906 or
calling (7{},1)494-2353.
The 1991 RnvcOM Rentfewo11s will
rake pl&e on April 16-21121 Vnu:r)I Suue Parle,
/Iden. Georgia. Pre-rcgwr=n isSl.15 and
includes campzng, instrucrion. ond two meals
per day. Chew urt PtJy,able lQ "Earrhskills
ll'orJ:sl:op." For more informmion, call or
wriu:: Bob Sloe.Ir.. Jr.: Unicoi Sratc Par.Ir.: Box
1029; lfeltn, GA 30J45 (4()4) 878-220/
(£.rt , 282).
Insrructor Darry Wood with Eva Bigwirch
"through dreams,
through magic"
she says !ihe can fly. says she can fly
feathen; and wings. bones and Lhings,
says she can fly
she says lhe eanh feels like her body
sky feels like her home
she moves out over the water
but she always goes alone
says she can fly, yeah she says she can fly
feathers and wings, bones and things
lisLen to the songs that the spirits sing
she says she can fly
well once I knew a woman
now she's more than that
she flies up lo 1he scm at night
but she keeps on coming back
i;he says she can fly, says she can fly
bones and wings, feathers and lhingr.,
listen to the songs that the spirits sing
the ~now owl guides her journey
and the hawk knows where she goes
the eagle gives her life and light
but she travels with the crows
oh she says she can fly, says she can fly
feathers and wings, bones and things
listen to the song that the dark bird ~ings
feathers and wings. bones and things.
listen to the song that the spirit sings,
the spirit sings
"-atuals Journot J'"'J0 1:i
poems by Gary Lawless
drawing by Stephen Petroff
they read their stories in our bones,
heated by flame, cracks, sharp ridges,
fingers tracing futures etched by fire.
we carry your life in our blood, the p~se of
story begins in our marrow, a deep, nch red.
you read its traces in our bones.
hands in the fire:
"for the marrow is known to be
the dwelling place of souls"
when they wish to find us
they call to us in their dreams.
we answer them through bone, through fire.
(from "Ice Tattoo•)
When the animals come to us,
asking for our help.
.
will we know what they are saymg?
When the plants speak to us
in their delicate, beautiful language,
will we be able to answer them?
When the planet herself
sings to us in our dreams,
will we be able to wake ourselves, and act?
Por:ms and drawing from the book FITTI Sight of
Land by Gary Law/us, published /9')() by 8/aclt.btrr,
Boou. Aw1ilablefor $7.50 plus shippmgfrom the
publishtr at: RJl. I, Box 228; Nobleboro. ME; Gulfof
Maint Bioregion 04555
6prln(J: 1991
�FOOD MOVERS:
Ron Ainspan and Mountain Food Products
not show up in time. Theo, although a company
may be doing a great business, at the same time
it's bouncing checks all over the place or it's
running out of funds 10 do what needs to be
done. It's in trouble
I like being small. We've sacrificed some
of the closeness that we had. Personally I think
that it makes sense 10 grow slowly, so we can
maintain the kind or environment in which people
can keep a connection with each other. We hold
staff meetings every week to involve all the
employees in the operation of the business, 10
talk about personal relationships · whatever
comes up. It's like a family; we have our
quarrels, and we try to work stuff out, either at
staff meetings or in smaller personal talks in the
course of the day's work.
For years local food growers have said that
the lack of a developed market for organic and
locally-grown produce was holding back
alrerflQ/ive agricu/mrefrom raking itS riglefu/
place in our regional economy.
Ron Ainspan was one of those growers.
Seeing the problem clearly, he built a local food
distriblllion network thaJ now stands ready 10
meet the needs of those w/w produce and those
who wish to buy wlwlesome and m11ri1io11s
nwumain-grownfruit and vegetables.
The Mow11ain Foods plan is now nwving
into its second stage. With rite network secure,
Ron is now actively helping growers to organize
and to produce the food thaJ will fill the niche the
Mouruain Food Products Company has created.
Ron is an enabler. He is one who can bring
a vision inro physical manifestation. This calling
requires special skills.· patience, dedication, a
genius/or strategic maneuvering, and a clear
sense of purpose. And, as Ron re/ls us in the
following interview, those who set out to realize
their dream must walk the narrow tightrope of
inregril)' . keeping their principles while creating
a vessel that will stay a/u)OJ in the currents of
physical reality.
Katuah: Can workers participate financially
in the company?
Ron Ainspan: We started a profiL-sharing
plan that we made up ourselves. People get a
check every three months based on how the
company is doing, and on how much they work.
Full-time workers are eligible to receive a
half-share six months after they start and a full
share after a year. Part-time workers are eligible
for a half-share after their first year. It is an
incentive for people to stick around.
Kat(Ulh How did you get the idea that
being a food distributor was a meaningful avenue
for social change?
Ron Alnspan: I've been involved in
encouraging the local agricultural market for quite
awhile. During the early '80's 1 was growing
produce to sell 10 local markets, and during that
time, I helped to set up the Tailgate Market in
Asheville, which is a growers' market now
locared on Merrimon Avenue.
It was in 1984 when a small group of local
producer:; called some meetings, and we talked
about the idea of working toge1her to distribu1e
our producL\ • bakery goods, sprou1s, tofu, and
produce. l "as finishing my gardening for the
season. so I staned 10 coordinate the whole thing
and began deliveries. Mounta.in food Products
hns been doing it ever since, although now we
focus on produce almost exclusively.
After we had been going for two or three
months. I met a woman who was working in
produce at The Fresh Market, Debbie Thomas.
We became a pannership, and stancd LO contacr
restaurants and some grocery stores 10 notify
them that we were distributing produce. The
business really took off, and we have become a
good-:;ized purveyor of produce, selling
primarily 10 restaurants, but also to some retail
stores.
Karuah : How big is the company'!
Ron Ainspan: We have 16 or 17 people
and five trucks. We sell wholesale only, making
deliveries 10 Asheville, Hendersonville, and as
far west as Bryson City. Only one truck is
refrigerated; the rest are small delivery vehicles,
from Mandard cargo vans up 10 pa.reel-type
trucks.
We do a lot of shon routes. We shuttle
food in and out of here from 6 or 6:30 in the
morning to four o'clock in the afternoon. The
little intersection out~ide the office is a traffic jam
in the mornings · with people rushing back and
forth with pallet jacks and hand ltllCkli for several
Sptit1CJ, 19!.lt
Phoco by Rodney Webb
hours. It's a scene of half-organized
confusion ...trucks going out and coming
in ... people pulling food out of the coolers.
Panicularly during the summer season, it's a
constant hustle to get the food out to the people
the way they want it. when they wan, 11. But it's
fun.
Kattiali: How many coolers are there?
Ron Ainspan: We've got two walk-in
coolers. One is 12 feet by 30 feet. and the other is
a couple of feet longer, nnd then we have dry
storage space in the rooms. We're going 10 have
10 expand the smaller cooler. tx.-causc we've been
busring the scams out ofit this year. We have had
10 buy at least one vehicle every year and do
some kind of cooler e:,.pansion every other year
since we ~tarted. It doesn't seem 10 stop.
I would like ii if our rate of growth did
slow down. If a company grows too big 100 fast,
then it has 10 incorporate systematized
relationships 10 maintain standards of quality and
10 keep clear accountability for evcl)•body's
activities. It begins to involve very bureaucratic
systems, and everybody become:. subject 10 rules
that don't make sense to anybody except the
people at the lOp. everybody else becomes a
puppet 10 to the rules.
But if a company growl> slowly. and tries,
as we've tried 10 do, 10 involve everybody in a lot
of the aspects of the business, then people can
maintain a connection 10 the whole operation,
even as it changes.
Kau,ah : The finance~ change 100. don't
they?
Ron Ainspan: Yes. Under condi1ions of
fasL-paccd growth iL':. easy Lo run up large bills
for receivables, and the necessary cash just may
K01t'loli: How is all this helping 10 build
markets for locally-grown food?
Ron Ainspan: My concept. even as we
were growing, has been 10 provide a reliable
supply 10 the customers. Because l supply the
market all year round, we are keeping a market
open for the local produce when it comes in. That
gets us outside the regional economy 10 some
extent. because to keep up a consistent supply we
have 10 make runs 10 Atlanta. There we buy
produce that comes in from everywhere, but we
also take mountain-grown bibb lettuce, shiit.'.lke
mushrooms, sprouts, and produce in season to
be sold in the city. It'~ a two-way exchange, but
overall it works out well for the local growers,
because, locally or in the city, we are always
ttying 10 move local produce.
We've been able 10 be useful to local
growers as an outlet. There arc s1x or seven
people that we deal with all the time, some of
them year-round because more people: arc getting
into greenhouse production. Two regional
growers arc cultivating hydroponic bibb lenucc,
and Ed Mills of Sunshine Makers Sprouts in
Fairview is producing organically-grown alfalfa
and mung bean sprouts.
A basic operating principle of our company
is 10 buy our stock locally whenever we can. Our
original goals when we siarted Mountain Food
Products were to suppon the local economy, to
encourage small-scale production, and to keep
things on a pen;onal level. We still keep that
commiunent.
Kat1iah: Do you emphasize organically
produced food?
Ron Ainspan: We are just getting strong
enough 10 move into that. As I said, our first
priority was moving local produce. We learned
that in order to be effective in doing that, we hod
(eontinll<d on next 114ge)
Xntilnfi Jburnn(, r1QCJIS 1
3
�(c:auinu<:d fninl page 13)
to provide produce of top quality all year. As we
built that capability, helping the local growers
actually diminished in imponance, because we
were growing so fa~1 overall. Now we sell to
over 100 different accounts, and we have enough
rumover that we can mke the time and the energy
10 seek out local growers. Now we can
confidently say, "Grow food for us and we can
sell it." We can help people ge1 going.
It's puuing 1he two together: !hose who
need the food, and those who have it
Righi now we aze helping to organize a
cooperative of local organic growers. A group of
six to 1en local growers from the area around
Asheville is meeting every iwo weeks.
Mountain Food Products bas been able to
sell all the produce that has been offered to us by
the local growers we aze working with, but we
have not been able to sell ii as "organic produce."
We have often bad 10 mix it with conventionallygrown produce and sell u at the same price. So
we are banding together 10 promote the organic
concept and reach out more to the remil market.
We are offering supermarkets a package deal
~hereby, if we can get a small "organic" section
m the produce department, we will stock it and
promote it ourselves by pmting up signs and
making a lot of personal connections. We have
seen some interest in this among the local chain
stores.
Initially the co-op is going to work through
Mountain Food Products. I don't know what will
work best in the long run, but right now we can
offer !he trucks and the cooler space.
For the last two years - especially since the
Alar scare - more organic produce has become
available. More people are handling it, and more
people are asking for it, so we have been able to
carry it. We can get supplies reliably and we have
customers who want it
We can now support organics in the same
way that we suppon conventional local produce.
q,as.c; productio~ that-it'$ difficuh_ to compete as a ,...
small gro~er with most oflhe things that_ arc
grown: Its largely a qu~snon. of economies of
scale: if you can sys1em1ze th10gs, you can
produce them more cheaply. It's not as human a
syscem. because it forces people to do very
routine, monotonous jobs without much say-so
about what they're doing, and not much control
over their working conditions. And with
transportation being fairly cheap, a company C30
economically move a product great distances
from one place to another.
There's another reason, too. As the whole
system has gonen more centralized. it has become
harder 10 break into the distribution chain.
Kan1ah: What do you think needs to
happen to get the local market going?
Ron Ainspan: It's an on-going process of
making people aware of the importance of
keeping it close 10 home. Mass media advcnising
barrages and other market forces tend to make
people expect a product that is mass-marketed It
could be anything - from Big Macs 10 cars to
electronics.
I was talking to some people about the idea
of opening a "brew pub" here, a place that
actually brews its own beers. But a venture like
that would have 10 buck Michelob and Coors and
companies of that size.
Another of those market forces is access 10
capital - somethings take a lot of money to get
started. That's certainly another aspect that tends
to propel large-scale operations, operations that
make a product one place and distribute it
everywhere.
r think that the advantages of keeping
Kamah: It sounds like the whole time
you've been building the company, you've been
thinking of developing a regional agriculture.
Ron Ainspan: My guiding philosophy has
a lot 10 do with keeping things local and
maintaining personal relationships. I don't like
the coipOrate mentality and standardi7.ed ways of
doing things. Individual initiative is very
important, and that's something that in many
cases is threatened by the way the economy
functions.
The corporate mentality is lifeless. People
need to be alive and thinking. Then, even if they
screw up, at least they're trying and putting
themselves into what they arc doing. That has
always been important to me.
Ka11wh: Why do you think that there are
not more people growing food for sale?
Ron Ainspan: It's a lot of work and n fairly
low pay-off. So much of farming is large-scale
,c.aiuah Journal plUJc 14
Kar(tah: What are some of the reasons that
local production is advantageo\lS?
Ron Ainspan: To me the most important
thing is having a personal connection 10 what }'Ou
do jn your dnily life. Too many people just put in
their work hours so that they can play when they
are not working. Our work-life is the biggest pan
of our life, and we should do something that's
innately satisfying. We need 10 be able to give
our own personal input, to put our own personal
stamp on what we do. I think that's really the
thing.
There is also the whole question of some
geographic areas taking advantage of others, and
the dollars that are lost from a local area. If your
beer is coming from Colorado, 1hen your beer
dollars are going to Colorado. 1f your produce is
coming from western Nonh Carolina, then your
money is being kepi in the local economy.
That kind of concept is in contrast to the
prevailing "trickle-down" concept that says it's
efficient to produce on a large scale somewhere
far away and distribute over a wide area, and the
wealth that is created from doing that will
evenrually work its way down to everybody.
That kind of system creates an imbalance between
the people who are very wealthy and the people
who get just a triclcle.
Karualr: The reason we are able to dunk
and act that way is because of our tremendous
(continued Cll'I page 30)
POEMS
by Jim Clark
Katuah: Secure that market and then plug
in the local goods.
Ron Ainspan: However, the growth
potential for local production is still greater than
the growth potential of the local market There's
the possibility of growing more produce in
western North Carolina than the market could
handle, at least right now.
thing! focal, small, andpel'sonal nud"to bet''~._
continually put in front of the public. People tend
to go along with whatever the trend or the lates1
marketing campaign is.
LIGHTS
i
This is the body's land at home here
or nowhere.
Through deep-welled air
the magne1 moon
orients the singing
skin's cardinal points.
ii
In cedar hung silence,
through camp smoke and wave lap,
shards of stunned brighmess
speak
a language of light
iii
As from a great distance
patterns are seen
to shiver
suddenly into focus,
so these lights
flashing at the body's perimeter
connect
and in the vibmting darkness
chart our every step.
MOUNTAIN WALKING SONGS
i
Always the ancient air
finds its home in our lungs
and goes on
ii
AJways our feet
move lightly
over the charged ea.nh
iii
Always we are walking
in the mountains
singing
Spri.n9, 1991
�Going about the Business
of Building a Regional Economy
These are profiles. shorr sketches of what
some people are doing and how they are dcing it.
These are only aJew examples showing different
facets of a possible regional economy. Many
other enterprises and projects have appeared in
the pages ofKa1uah Journal, in both the ads and
the feature sections - parricular/y in issue #7, the
first time the jo1unal touched specifically on the
question of a regional eco,wmy
COUNTRY WORKSHOPS
(Drew Langsner)
90 Mill Creek Rd
Marshall, NC 28753
(704) 656-2280
When I.hey first bought their farm in the
nonheas1em c?mer of Madison County in 1974,
Drew and LoU1Se Langsner hope.cl 10 make their
living close to the land, doing the things I.hat they
loved. Foremost among these were farming and
woodworking.
The couple was already well-versed in
traditional woodworking and other folk skills
largely as a result of a trip to Europe taken during
the early 1970's. However, they spent "four lean
years" of minimum wage work interspersed with
some magazine writing and some craft projcccs as
they gradually figured out how to put their skills
10 work.
In 1978 Drew and Louise hi l on the idea of
a woodcrafts school called Country Workshops.
The school would offer students seven-day
courses on the Langsner fann to teach some of
the skills Drew and Louise had garnered in their
travels and studies. The Langsners saw the
school as a way 10 earn income by sharing skills
they knew well and loved 10 practice.
With $500 of their personal cash, Drew
and Louise set up the first session of Country
Workshops. Enough people attended 10
encourage them 10 continue the idea, and the
workshops have happened every summer since.
It was mostly love of the work and a belief in the
potential of the idea that kept the Langsners at it
for the first years. "Only recently," said Drew,
"have the ~eip½~ shown anything appro,dmating
even a pan-nme mcome."
To round out support for their famHy,
~rew farms, producing cows and hay, and sells
his excellent ladderback and Windsor chairs on
order. The fann emphasizes Red Devon cows an
historical breed that came over 10 Plymouth with
some of the first white seulers from England.
Sprl.ng, 1991
The businesses presented here must be
viewed from two perspectives: the economy as it
is now, and the economy as it could be.for tliese
are businesses that are working within borh of
these contextS simultaneously. They are working
enterprises within 01u present economic sen'{),
b111 they are also the inspiration and the
infrasrrucnue for a new, mtJre appropriate
economy - although in some cases the operators
miglu deny that as their intent.
To fwiction within 01u present economic
system requires compromise, and the businesses
presented are evaluated honestly in terms of
Louise grows excellent vegetables in her gardens
and prepares them for their guests during the
workshop season. They are also occasional
authors. Together they wrote a book on European
craftwork, and Drew has also written three
instructional books: A logbuilder's llandbook.
Country Woodcraft, and Green Woodworking,
all well-known and well- respected in their fields.
"We're not even close to middle class,"
sars D~w, "but we've moved away from being
poised nght on the edge. Our car died a few
months ago, and I was able 10 purchase a used
car without it being the major crisis it once would
have been."
At first the workshops taught only two
courses: Scandinavian woodcarving with old
hand tools, and log cabin building. Now the
curriculum also includes Swiss coopering,
Japanese woodworking, ladderback and Windsor
chair-mnking, and basketry. Drew at first spent
muc~ ?f th~ time teaching, but recently
~dm1m~trauve tasks have been occupying an
mcreasmg percentage of his time. "Wilh seven 10
twelve people here and the needs of the students
and teachers to attend 10. it wa,; difficult and
sometim~ impossibl<:; 10 see to everything while I
was teaching as well Drew also allows up to
two students to live with their family for extended
winter tutoriaV apprenriccship programs.
The students sleep in a building on the
property and Louise prepares meals for all. "The
food is excellent, but the sleeping arrangements
are still somewhat primitive," says Drew. "Still
only a few people have minded at all."
"While we don't teach saictly Appalachian
crafts per se, I think the surroundings here are
imponant to the people and contribute a lot to
their appreciation of the experience. Many of the
people who take the courses are folks who get a
two-week vacation each year and decide 10 spend
one _w~ek of it here at a workshop. That is very
gra11fy1ng to me.
"People get more out of the experience than
just 1he skills of woodworlcing. Students write
back to say that they have learned something here
ecological a11d economic impact and
s1istain.abiliry. Their collective experience is a
report card, indicating ro /IS as a region how we
are doing at this business ofb[tilding a
land-based economy. Admiuedly, we have a long
way1ogo
Bw rhe most impanant message rha1 these
people and these projects bring UJ u.r is that there
are things we can do, tlllll we can begin now,
even if conditio,rs are not perfect, even if rite deck
is stacked against 11s in the shon nm.
Profiles compl/i,d by
Ernest Womlck and Millie Sundstrom
about what is imponant to them."
The same might be said of Drew and
Louise, two talented people who are clear about
the life they wane and have found a way to live it
Their fann and their skills are important to them.
Rather tlJaP. move;c;>.the urban marj(!!IP!ace to.sci.~ ~
ineir ~k.ills foi: me higltest price, th~y Jiav• found>n.e:>
a way to balance their abilities to provide a
satisfying life in the countryside.
BRIGHT HORIZONS,
BRIGHT MOUNTAIN BOOKS
(Eric and Cynthia Bright)
138 Springside Rd
Fairview, NC 28730
Bright Mountain Books is a publishing
house specializing in Appalachio.n regional
material. Bright Horizons is a regional book
distributor. Boch companies arc the creations and
the present passion of Eric and Cynthia Bright
Says Eric Bright, "We wanted to strut a
publishing company. but to publish books you
have to sell them, so we first began distributing
books 10 make a marketing network."
Today their first ambition is still largely
unfulfilled. Most of I.heir business and most of
their income still comes from book distribution
sa!e~. Bri~ht Mountain Books has published four
onginal ntles, however: Keep 'Em loughing by
Bob Terrell, Disorder in the C()llrt by Bob Terrell
and Marcellus Buchanan, Two on the Square by
Bob Moore, and Poper Mansions by Bob
PadgeR They have also reprinted other works
that were out of print and would have been lost,
like Moun1ai11 SpiritS and More Mountain Spirils,
well-read books about the Appalachian
moonshining culture.
The couple has jusc invesccd in new
computer equipment and a laser printer that will
be reserved strictly for publishing work. They
hope that the new tools will launch them more
deeply into the publishing side of their business.
Or.win& by Rob Missick
(conlirwed on pege 16)
Xatl'.mh Journat PCMJC 15
�(CCII\UIIUOd &om page IS)
•
create our own markeL We've done that.
'There has been a ground swell in interest
Bright Horizons is highly successful. The
in herbaceous native plants. The interest
company sold one-third more books in 1990 than
continues t0 grow, and we arc optimistic, but I
it had any other year in the pasL !he o'Yncrs,
suppose I should have done a ~arket ~e)'. I
while feeling that their comp~y lS malcing a
would have sought outside capital and Just bitten
contribution to the understanding and
.
the bullcL
appreciation of the Appalac~s and. Appalachian
~we can see clearly in hind.sight that we
culture, see some weaknesses tn their sue~.
"We are very dependent on the tounst ll'ade should have been harder-nosed businesspeople
initially. If I could start over again, l would
righi now," says Eric. "That means that we have
educate myself to good business practices
to malce concessions to the demands of the
beforehand, because that end of the operation is
market and offer some books that we may not
not anractive to either Meredith or me, yet we
particuiarty like, but which are good sellers and
can't avoid iL I would say that we are right now
are important to our retail store customers. .
"I saw a book called White Trash Coobng, making the tranSition from be~g dedica~ed
hobbyists to becoming professional busmess
and my first reaction was that I didn't want t?
people."
carry that book at all, but customers kept calling
The two are confirmed plant-lovers, and
and asking for it. and so finally I gave in and put
they started their business from a desire tO spend
it in stock. We sold 2,000 copies in the firstfour
time doing what they love to.do the most ~oth
months it was available."
are knowledgeable about nanve plants. Ed ts a
Are they living well? "No," they say. "We
professor of botany at the University of
haven't had a family vacation in ten years. We
Tennessee at Knoxville. It is hard 10 imagine two
haven't made our material goals, but we feel we
people more qualified for this work, yet Ed says.
a.re following out our p!an, and we ar~ firmly
"if we were dependent on the business for our
committed to the direcuon we are taking.
livelihood, we would be in the poor house. . .
"When we get our daughters through
We're going 10 give it a few more years, and if ll
college, we will think more about our own
doesn't become more profitable, we probably
lifestyle."
will get om of it."
They see the greatest problem wi~ ~cir
Some of the plants growing in the Native
work being that they spend much of !hCU' nme .
doing mundane chores that they don ~ n~e~y Gardens have commercial uses as herbal
medicines or botanicals. Ed would like 10 develop
enjoy, but which are necessary to maintaining
that trade because botanicals are growing in
their business at this stage. They are, however!
popularity and commerc!al harvesting in the _
wild
satisfied with their present progress toward their
would put 100 much stra.tn on the plant spec1es,
goals.
many of which are endemic or rare.
"I don't subscribe to the idea that
"Producing botanicals probably has greater
companies have to necessarily grow and grow
potential than the straight production of , . .
and grow," says Eric. "When a company gets to
wildflowers for gardening,'' Ed figures. This lS
a manageable siz.e !hat fulfills the needs of the
already a big business in the Southern_
owners, then it is quite alright t0 ease off and
Appalachians, but it is not developed m the way
maintain it at that level."
that it could be. As it stands now, a few large
And the Brights agree c~mpletely ah?ut
companies pretty much control the market. They
one thing: "People have to rcaliz.c that i:unnmg a
contt0l the price, they control w~at_ they buy: and
business takes l 50% of your efforL It is a very
the guy out there on the mounl8lns1de doesn t
demanding task."
have any choice."
Ed and Meredith are conscientious in their
work. They started out with ~ highest stan~ds
of purity. Now they use pesuc1des and fungicides
"only if we have to, or if there are legal
requirementS for them." That was another le~on
learned. "If somebody is going to g~t into this
business and thinks that they are going 10 totally
avoid chemical pesticides, they're naive," says
NATIVE GARDENS
(Meredith Bradford-Clcbsch and Ed Clebsch)
Ed.
. d al.i.n
There are other issues of concern in e g
Rt. 1, Box 494
with native plants.
Greenback.TN 37742
"We ask questions about whether the
plants we buy have been propaga~ed in th~
Native Gardens, the creation of Ed and
nursery or if they have been du~ in the w)ld. For
Meredith Bradford-Qebsch, offers herbaceous
the first four years of our operauon, we simply
plantS almost entirely of native varieties and all
didn't deal in materials that were dug from the
propagated from seed and cunings, for wholesale wild. Lately we have bought rescued plants from
and retail sale. Most of the plants are sold m
situations where their destruction is absolutely
containers, although they sell some field pl~ntS 10 certain. But we are not yet at a point where we
landscape architects. Much ~f the company s
would tum around and sell those materials
business is mail orders obtamed through
directly. We use them for propagation pufJ>?SCS.
Meredith's tastefully-designed catalog. .
"I am also concerned that we are creanng a
Personnel consists of Ed and Mered1th an~ considerable mixing of genetic material, because
two part-rime helpers and another worker, who lS we often buy plants from other pl~es '.111d grow
full-time except for the winter months.
them out 10 maturity for sale. The dilunng of
Ed and Meredith started Native Gardens
genetic purity is something that ~onccrns 11s, and
with their own money.
we think it will become an issue m the next
"If we had paid for a pre-opening market
decade."
survey, we never would have opened," said Ed.
Ed urges people not to be idealistic when
"We inruitively knew that we were on the
staning a business.
, .
beginning of what we were confident was a
"We run into people who say, fd like to
rising trend, but we knew that we would have to
do that. It looks like so much fun.' It is, if you
Xatuah Journ.at pCMJe 16
..
are willing to work 16-18 hours per ~Y"The market is there. I wouldn t
discourage anyone from getting started, but I
would encourage them 10 go into it with their
eyes open. It is an enormous amount of work,
and it takes some knowledge up fronL The .
starry-eyed ideal of growing plants and having
them sell themselves automatically is not true. If a
person has that idea, then they would do better
not to get into the business at all."
FRENCH BROAD FOOD CO-OP
(Barb Acker)
90 Biltmore Ave.
Asheville, NC 28801
The French Broad Food Co-op. the
member-owned food co-op in Asheville, NC has
made a move - a big move. Not just from ~cold
cramped quaners in the Old Chesterfield Mill on
West Haywood Street to a new address on
Biltmore Avenue, but a shift in policy that
involved borrowing $100,000 to change their
location and to expand the store, so the co-op
could serve the general public as well as the
co-op membership.
The co-op is run by a 7-person board of
directors elected by the membership at an annual
membership meeting. The board hires the store
manager and it was the board that decided to
undenak~ the $100,000 debL To raise that
capital $42 000 was borrowed from individual
mem~rs a~d another $60,000 was obtained
through the Self-Help Credit Union.
Barb Acker is the co-op manager, in charge
of supervising the day~t<Hlay OJ?Cration o~ the
store and its four full-ume and CJght pan-tune
staff people. She is encouraged by the response
to the move and feels it has revitalized the co-op.
'We are in the mainstream financial market
right now, deeply in debt., but. we fel~ that it was
necessary in order to make this leap in growth.
We are finding it to be money well-spent, and we
arc starting to pay back the loans on schedule."
"For the five years prior to November,
1990 while we were at the Chesterfield Mill, we
had a'bout 800 people from 400 families who
sustained the business. In the two and one-half
months since we've moved, our membership
base has increased to 1200."
Co-ops are different than most o~cr •
economic instirutions in that their goal 1s SCMCC
mher than profiL Co-ops depend heavily on
volunteer help; they keep a small rnar&;in of
overhead with which to run the operanon, but
they are not in the business of accumulating
wealth or making anyone rich. Co-ops generally
define their goals in terms of filling basic needs,
rather than using people's needs to reap pe!Sonal
and material benefits. Some co-ops see their
purpose as simply providing a cenain product,
but there are others that see themselves as pan of
an oo-going, overall social change.
The French Broad Food Co-op sees itself
as having a role in the changes ~at are happening
in the Asheville area and the region. Barb,
speaking of the grour 's long-range goals,
pointed out that "a trade magazine caJJ;d
.
Cooperarive Grocer ran a quote back m the spnng
Sprt.nq, 1991
�i~) l._ 't ' Jlt) :i :11 '"\) I
~ O I
t \~ If "' ..•ll
of 1990 that impressed me. (t reads, 'Food
co-ops n~ to be quality, profitable groceries,
but also pan of a larger social transformation.•
"1 think that's the essence of the
cooperative movement and also of the French
Broad Food Co-:op. Socilll change is very much a
p:ut of the C(),,()p's n1essnge in that we arc trying
to bring something different to people that is
better for all of us, beuer for the whole."
The co-op's first task is providing quality
food, but living in this world means making
choices and finding a workable balance. Barb
says, "We are providing the best physical
nourishment that we can in the food products we
offer, and we try 10 make equitable choices on
everything we buy to make sure that they have
the least environmental impact possible.
However, 95% of the food lhat we sell comes in
from outside the region.
"Produce is one area where we might be
able to change that Produce is 16% of our total
stock. Most of that presently comes from outside
the region. But it is a high priority for the co-op
to suppon local farmers, and we are now talking
with farmers to help them plan whar they plant
for the next growing season, knowing that the
co-op now is a much bigger market for them.
"We definitely do encourage our buyers to
buy locally whenever they can, but the reality of
the situation is that very little of our food is
locally-produced at this point. You just can't get
cashews from the Appalachians. One of the
realities of food distribution is 1ha1 it is
world-wide, and we have to provide what people
are u$ed to getting if we are going to stay in
business. We realize that shipping food all across
the world has a major environmental impact. But
I suppose things have to be W(;ighed in the .,
balance, and we see oun;elvcs as trying to 1
educate more people as to how they can eat bener
for less money."
The emphasis on eduC.'.lcion is another
imponant way that co-op members see their
business taking pan in social change. According
to Barb, "the next step we have to take, now that
we are settled down in our new loca1ion, and the
dust is settling from the transition, is that we have
to stan education right away. Folks are coming in
and saying. 'I want to switch from eating so
much meat, but I don't know what to do with this
tofu sruff.'
"People are more interested in eating food
that hasn't been poisoned. Even chain
supermarkets arc s1aning to carry organic food,
and it's making an impact on the everyday
person's consciousne.~s. We arc staning co see
that what we eat makes a difference in how we
feel, and how that makes a difference in the
health of the community and the health of the
world as a result People are wanting to cat
bener, and realizing tha1 eating good food fuels
the body much better."
"If we can't help people make that
transition, we aren't going to be here very long.
But the co-op staff people are qui1e ready 10 help
with that. They have been doing this work for the
last 15 years, and now they have a better
opportunity lo help 1he public learn how to use
good food.
"People are catching on about doing things
cooperatively, too. Thal':; another thing that we
have to teach. Worker-members have doubled in
number since we have moved here. Members feel
a real sense of belonging and contributing 10
some1hing: supplying decent food that they want
10 buy and are proud to offer 10 01hers.''
The co-op members arc also aware their
Sprtn(J, l 991
I
,fj
O!J
-,.//
1,11,
fl f /.., •,.t.. r)
4
J,.
business is making c.onlributions on tither levels.
"It's a physical sus1enance that we offer," says
Barb, "but it's also a social sus1cnance as well.
We want to promote a feeling of community. We
have one room that has been designated as the
community room, and we have a bench made out
of a rree that is just inside the door where people
can sit around and visit. That essence of
community is very central to the reality of the
co-op.
"We have a.water cooler, one of the
old-fashioned ceramic ones, that is filled with
spring water from up in the mountains, so the
co-op is also the watering hole."
The co-op also took a concrete step to help
people get through the recession. In line with
their policy of providing oosic foodstuffs at the
cheapest possible prices, the co-op in January cut
the mark-up on all the beans and grains in the
store to just above cost. Again, It was a question
of finding a balance.
,
"Right now in this co-op and in many
n:llural food stores and co-ops around the country
there arc a lot of packaged. fluffy foods that none
of us really need. but which we have become
used to," said Barb. "It's the fluffy alternative to
the products the supcnnarkets have. We have 10
answer that, so we stock them.
"People can choose whether or not they
want those expensive items. But the things they
need to live on will be here, and they will be
affordable."
But the co-op has also made a commitment
to quality. "Most of our produce is organic. so it
is somewhat higher-priced than produce a, the
supermarket," Bnrb explained. "We are adamant
about maintaining our support of the organic
fanning industry, so that it can c90tinue 10 grow
and flourish. To Mthdrawoursllpport ts&ause
I
conventional food is cheaper would oo 10
compromise our commitment 10 pure food.''
The co-op is moving forward. The group
is excited about the changes enabling them to
better carry out their original purposes.
tl'ltS . .ts,-it
.
GREG OLSON
211 Stoney Knob Rd.
Weaverville, NC 28787
(704) 658-0834
"In designing environmental homes, I am
basicaUy looking at three levels of impact," says
Greg Olson. "I try 10 minimize impacts on the
environment by designing homes that are
energy-efficient and rely heavily on alternative
energy sources. I try to look out for the
environment by using materials that have as linle
negative impact as possible in their production
and use. And then I pay attention to the health
impacts, which include things like electricity,
water quality, and how different spaces wi1hm
the house nre going to be used."
· Greg is an al1em:uive home designer who
is presently doing a brisk business planning and
overseeing the construction of environmentallyconscious shelters in 1he Katuah Province.
"My sole criteria for taking on work is
whether the people want an energy-efficient
home." he says. ''l don't look at the size of 1he
project, the money involved, or the building
f
"!i
,
r
•
, .....
, ~le. Jt could be an exciting project, btlt if it
looks like its not geared toward energy efficiency
I refer them 10 someone else.
'rrhe work I've been doing has varied
widely depending on the conditions of the site,
and the budget and desires of the people who arc
building the house. I have done passive solar
homes with solar water heating lhat is backed up
by power from the grid. I have done a middleground system that utilizes a solar-and-wood
system for healing and cooling. Right now I'm
working on a large house now that is completely
off the grid. All the electticity is produced by
phocovoltaic panels.
"lam constantly looking for materials that
are environmentally benign. That type of question
is constantly coming up: in doing the plumbing
should we use polybutylene or copper?
Polybucylene is a plastics product; but making
metal; whether it's siccl, a.lumitium, or copper, is
also nn intenseprocess;, •
J
J;tf
"We've dealt some \\ith the effect of
electromagnetic fields created by house wiring.
Where people want it, we've staned using
shielded cable lo neutralize that effect.
"We have also gotten to the point that we
don't use any plywood or any materials with
urethane binders unless it's absolutely nece.~sary.
"Contradictions are always coming up
between the levels of impact Insulation, for
instnnce, fulfills a very important function in the
house. But for a long time the best foams were
extruded or impregnated with air by CFC's in the
manufacturing process. Now one company has a
foam that they say is not a CFC, but which is
probably something else equally bad.
"Right now we are investigating setting up
a d~ership io the .area for air-enttaine.d.coocn::1e,
Vthicti ~s concn:te thal is,ini.vlaced.b>'.h.lvioa air
forced through it. That will llCl as a Sll'Ucrural
material and an insulating material at the same
time.
''The solar products are another example.
They are extremely helpful in their operation, but
as far as their original materials, they all have
their setbacks. Photovoltaic panels or copper
collector plates have a ttcmendous manufacturing
impact While the copper in a solar collector is
never going to return all the energy lhat was put
into it during the manufacturing process, it's still
better than just burning the energy.
"We're pursuing it all the time, but there is
also the cost factor: how much can we do on the
owners' budget?"
Greg says that there seems to be an
increasing concern about energy-efficient
building, perhaps generated by the war in the
l\1iddle F.ast. "My business all comes by word of
mouth; I don't advertise. Thar helps, because
people that seek me out are already thinking in a
certain way. It helps to filter my work out,
Nevenheless, I've been extremely busy.
"It's really picked up in the last year. We
are a culture that responds 10 crisis, and I thinlc
recent evenlS have been staning people to wonder
where their energy is going to come from."
Greg also teaches n class at UNCA called
"Environment, Design, and Solar Energy."
His business (and the rock-reggae band he
played wilb) was originally called "One Straw."
He doesn't use the name anymore, but he says
that be is still drawn to the quo1e in the book by
Masanobu Fukuoka from which lhe name
originated:
"With this single straw, I, by myself, will
begin a revolution."
.
�wltich are often indistinguishable, all are closely
clustered around the Gorge.
It is a vigorous athletic and cultural life
they share. In the same week on the Nantahrua
aaasoBElB oooosa BB BBB BeooBooooo
0
River, after wearing one's self out rafting,
c
biking, hiking, or rock-climbing, one could
spend the everting at a poetry reading, a loud rock O
Of Success and the River
c
'n roll pnrty, a modern dance workshop, a lecture ~
o
by a prominent nature writer, dining at a fancy
o
g
restawant, or .auending a friendly get-t0gether in o
The river staned it all. When Horace
c
one of the Center's private cabins.
gHolden bought the isolated motel on the
c
ln Payson's view of that enlightened
o Nantahala Falls, it had no profits and no future, g
community, it would be unfair to the Staff and the o only a good location on the river. Holden and
c
company alike to have anytlting less than full
Payson Kennedy provided the vision the location c
participation - economic and political, as well as o needed; they turned the location into a thriving g
professional and social. He first proposed the
o business and the NOC into a recreation industry o
employee stock ownership plan at a staff meeting g legend.
c
in January, 1987. The plan was at first rejected o
The best tribute to success is imitation, and g
by the employees.
"'I now 15 rafting companies crowd the banks of the o
0
Why would workers initially cum down a g Nantnhala. There would be more if the Forest
share in the profits and policy management of
o Service bnd not stepped in to limit the burgeoning g
their company and a greater measure of control of o whitewater industry on the river.
~
their day-to-day lives? The answer lies to a great ~
Whereas a total of 1.200 people rode the g
extent in the nature of the NOC and its staff.
o river in the NOCs first season, now more than 0
The raft-guiding and recreational work in o 6,000 people run the Nantahala on one good
o
which the Outdoor Center specializes requires
Saturday. In the 1990 season over 200,000
great expertise that comes from rigorous training o people took the river trip. The Nantahala is
g
and long practice - especially at the NOC. which o known as the most crowded rafting river in the o
rakes great pride in the excellence of its
gcountry.
o
programs. Thus. many of the Outdoor Center
o
The river continues to now along,
g
employees are highly skilled athletes, who could o seemingly unpenurbcd by all this uproar. But the o
easily find a job in other pans of the country.
g high rate of traffic is affecting the river. John
and often do. Recreational work is seasonal and o Burton, the president of the Nanw.hala Ourdoor g
is traditionally low-paying. Those who are
c; Center, says, "Up until five or six years ago,
c
attracted to it are willing to accept the lower
g resource degradation wasn't a serious concern in
wages because of their love for the work and the o my mind, but now it is. Human traffic along the
free-wheeling lifestyle it affords. Although the
o banks has been degrading the banks and wearing o
Outdoor Center is fortunate in having a strong
them away. People are trampling vegetanon that
core group of more than 70 people who have
o is needed to st0p erosion and exposing the roots 0
been on the staff for more than JO of the
c of trees. And there is the inevitable liner from the o
crowd and the cars that pass by on the two-lane
company's 18-year history (an unusual
percentage in that demanding business), many of o road that runs alongside the river."
0
0
the NOC employees are young and transient,
And surely the constant disturbance caused c
coming for one summer or only during cenain
by the high rate of river traffic is affecting the
times of the year. Even of the employees wbo
o aquatic habitat
0
consider the Nantahala area t!ieir ho~. a good . g
. c
number rake several months m the winter to "ski O
Ten years ago the NOC, aware of their
g
bum" or cravel.
o effect on the river, tried unilaterally to limit their c
O company's growth.
As a result, many of the Nantahala staff did
o
not want to risk their small salaries on stock
"All we did," said John Burton, "was to
investment and were wary of the long-tellll
o put a couple of competitors in business real fast, o
commitment and responsibility to the company
and we didn't do anything to limit the growth of a
that ownership requires. They were completely O the rafting business. Therefore, we felt we were g
happy to do what they did best and leave the
o undermining our own purposes, and we haven't c
hassles of management to the businesspeople
g tried that again."
o
hired for that job.
Being such a mnjor player, the NOC
g
0
Company president John Bunoo said, ''To o cannot suggest overall limitations on river us~ it o
many of these people, 'commitment' meant doing ~ would seem as if they were trying to monopolize c
the best job possible while they were here. To
O their own strong position on the river. Control is
Payson, it meant a long-term commitment 10 the o left up to the Forest Service, which limits only o
company. That was essentially the gap I h:id to
g the number of companies that can operate on the o
bridge."
0 river each season and mruces no attempt to
Burton was fonnerly a securities analyst
o regulate the size of those companies.
o
for the Philadelphia National Bank, as well as a g
"It's not the number of people who use the o
dedicated canoeist and one-time member of the
O river," said Ranger Bill Lea, ''it's the kind of
US Olympic canoe team. He understood the
o people who use the river that makes the
o
g difference."
o
problem from both sides. The KSOP
compi:omise was ms ~rainchild. 1ne plan's mix O
But o~ summer Sarurdays, the rafts come g
!)f opt!onaJ membership, and the handsome
o down, one nght after the other. River rafts are o
mcennve offered, seems to have met the needs of g not as deadly as dioxin, but the "invisible hand" 0
the NOC staff; 70% of those eligible are now
g
O of free enterprise is slowly choking the
member stockholders.
o NantahaJa.
o
O
Because of the closeness of the
a
community, the Outdoor Center's KSOP plan is
necessarily a social experiment as well. The NOC au sos uo oeeaeeeonooo Bes noooooa
is more like a rambunctious tribe than a
corporation, but in practical tenns that means that
g
THENANTAHALAOUTDOOR
CENTER
41 US Highway 19 West
Bryson City, NC 28713
(704) 488-6737
Rural Swain County is an unlikely place
for a phenomenon. But it is here, beside a low
waterfall on the Nantahala River, that a wildly
diverse crew runs the Nantahala Outdoor Center
(NOC), purveyor of rafting and outing
adventures and the corporate headquarters for an
operation that grossed $8 million in 1990.
The NOC is well-known in business
circles as a recreation-business success story. In
1972 when Payson and Aurelia Kennedy first
started the operation, everyone was waslting
dishes, and Saturday's profitS were spent
Monday morning for new paddles or life
preservers. The Center now comprises a
sprawling complex of three restal!Illnts, cabins,
an outfitter's store, and a fleet of buses, plus
outposts on four other rivers in the region. The
NOC employs 350 staff people at the height of
the summer rafting season and even sends
voyagers to exotic places such as Nepal, the
Grand Canyon, and New 2.ealand on an
Adventure Travel tour program.
But one of the most outstanding features of
the NOC is not noticeable 10 visitors coming 10
ride the river: the company is in the process of
transferring ownership into t.he bands of an
association of its workers.
It is a difficult process, and NOC staff
people are candid in speaking of its benefits and
t~ drawbacks. On paper what is happening is
this: the employees of the company are carrying
out a gradual and friendly buy-out of the outside
investors' interest in the NOC. An Employee
Stock Ownership Plan (ESOP) now owns 50%
of the shares of the company stock. Workers are
gradually buying into the plan through what is
called a "40l(k) provision," which gives them the
opuon of deferring 5 to 8% of their salary 10 buy
stock. Whatever they set aside, the company will
match at a rate of 50 ccntS on the dollar for stock
purchase. Because of the 40 I(k) provision, the
NOC employees cal1 their hybrid stock
ownership plan a "KSOP." According to the
plan, the KSOP will have vinually complete
control of the company by 1998.
The KSOP is a compromise plan, the result
of several years of often intense discussions. The
idea that the Outdoor Center should be
employee-owned came first from founder Payson
Kennedy. From the beginning, Payson conceived
the ~antahala Outdoor Center, not solely as a
~usme;,s venture, but as a community of
like-mmded people. That community is alive and
~ppeniog _in once-isolated Swain County.
River-running and the outdoor life are the
community's Stock in trade, but more
i!flponantly, they are the foundation of a way of
life that the Outdoor Center shares with its paying
guests.
The staff live closely together. More than
100 NOC employees consider the environs of the
NantahaJa River as home, and the Cen1cr
provides ~bin space for the summer employees,
so that durmg both working and leisure times,
xawah Journm J>CUJC 18
g
g
g
°
°
°
g
g
g
g
g
g
g
g
g
5
g
g
g
g
g
(continuod on psgc 19)
8pri.tUJ, 1991
�the KSOP member/staff have to hve with the
results of their decisions as a company day in and
day OUI.
The NOC executive officers worked hard
10 be sure that the decision for cooperative
ownership was made by consensus. But the idea
came from the top and the transition is being
managed by the company officers.
The plan is 10 gradually tum political as
well as financial control over 10 the KSOP
members.
"We want it to mean that the KSOP
members on the staff are actively involved in
policy decisions, big picture kinds of decisions,
directional decisions... " said John Bunon.
The KSOP's power to vote in board of
directors' elections is allocated democratically on
the basis of "one member. one vote" (rather than
on the economic basis of one vote per share). The
KSOP controls half of the company's 16,000
shares of stock. That block of 8,000 shares is
voted proportionally according to the wishes of
the people in the KSOP.
"We seek consensus at every tum, if we
can. We take it as far as possible in that
direction," said John. "What the people in the
KSOP are learning is that it is in their interest to
be unanimous. lf they act as a unit they can
control the board of directors. We have board
~ectio~s every year. The politics are getting very
interesnng."
But beyond participation in the election of
the Board of Direccors, the traditional function of
stockholders in any corporation, the KSOP is not
set up to participate in policy decisions. The
group has no structure and no independent
leadership. Meetings are still called by the
top-level management in the company hieran:hy.
With characteristic candor, John said, "It's
up to the leaders of the company to nunure the
leadership of the KSOP, whether that means
putting together a social council or actively calling
meetings that are run by different folks.
"The lesson we've learned this first year is
that it takes active effort to get this KSOP group
involvcd...lt takes someone 10 call the meeting. If
the meeting doesn'c get called, then the issue
doesn't get discussed. It's a demanding process,
and we have a lot 10 learn about how to do iL"
The Nantahala Outdoor Center is a
dynamic place, and the transition to worker
ownership is dynamic as well. It is closely
scrutinized and widely discussed in very practical
and non-idealistic terms, signs of a healthy
democracy. John Bunon thinks that the KSOP
will be able to develop its own identiry and rise to
the challenges of leadership.
"If for no other reason," he said, "the
employees are beginning to come around to it
beca~se they are wondering why they have been
working as hard as they have for someone else's
profit."
GREEN SPIRITS:
KATUAH PROVINCE VEGETABLE PLANTING CALENDAR
Developed by Lee Barnes (1/10/91)
Based on an a"crnge 160day frost-free period a~ adapled from Jeavons et aL 1983, NCAES 1978 and others.
For high elevation or shoner frost-free period, start two to three weeks later for spring planting
and two to three weeks earlier for late plantings.
START INDOORS
February I
Cool season plants - broccoli, cabbage,
cauliflower, kale
Wann season plants - tomato, pepper, eggplant
SEED IN GROUND
TRANSPLANT TO SOIL
Win~er Chores - Soil ccsc, lime, prune trees and berries, 1urn compost,
IUm in cover crops one month prior to planting.
March 1
Most annual herbs, spinach, annual flowers.
mosc perennial seeds
April 1
<or when ground tl'mpernturcs are greater than
40-45° F. at 4 inches in depth)
Cucumbers, melons, pumpkins, squash, leaf INtuce
Beets, chard, po1a1oes, peas, turnips, radishes,
lenuce, bare-root fruit trees and berries
Broccoli, cabbage, cauliflower, kale, mustard,
spinach, onions
Beans, carrots, corn, potatoes, radishes, beets,
turnips, squash, Cucumbers, Swiss chard
(Best after soil temperature is 65° F. at four
inchesdup)
Cucumbers, eggplant, melons, okra, peppers,
squash, tomatoes, sweet potatoes, pumpkins
Beans, corn, field peas, potatoes, New Zealand
spinach, radishes, cucumbers
Cucumbers, melons, squash, tomatoes
Beans carrots, corn, potatoes. squash,
cucumbers, collard greens
Cucumbers, late t0ID3tocs
May 1
'(or when ground temperatures are greater than 60"
F. at 4 inches in depth)
(wail for soil lo warm, tra11splants require 2-6
weeks to grow to s11fficic11t siu)
June 1
July 1
Brussels sproutS
July 15
Broccoli, spinach, cabbage, cauliflower, kale,
Mustard
August IS
Fall greens, radishes, lenuce, turnips, rutabagas
Radishes, letruce
Fall cover crops - winier rye, clover, buckwheat
Broccoli. Brussels sprouts,
cauliflower, leuuce, kale, mustard
cabbage,
Fall _Chores - Soil 1es1, plant clover crops. remove and compost garden refuse, lime (if needed),
tum m phosphorous and rock phospha1e/granitc sands.
Spn!UJ, 1991
Jeatu(lf1 Journnt J>G9C 19
�(These nre the wolds oC n tt:ldition:il Cherokee medicine person.)
"Vll,LAGE ECONOMY"
It was like the whole tribe was the torso of
the body of the people, and the clans were like
the extremities. The extremities did everything
they could to suppon the torso. :That was their
purpose. If the Wolf Oan was like the right
hand, !he Twisted Hairs would be the left hand
But the purpose of each of them was to suppon. 1
the torso, and the torso's purpose as a collective
body was to suppon the Grea1 Life.
The old pe0ple saw themselves as
caretakers. They used to say that they were the
first people on the Earth, and they were plnced
here to be caretakers - to keep the spiritual,
natural balance. We have the abiliry with our
~onsciousness to hook into the Great One, which
1s...l don't know what it is, maybe it's the spirits
of _all living things put together...and 1hey felt that
being caretakers was pan of our purpose, Like a
bcar's purpose is one thing, a deer's purpose is
another, and an oak tree's purpose is another
~ch_ thing is put here for a purpose. The Gre~t
Llf~ IS made up of trillion.s of beings, great treesl
• tu,tmy oolls, fllld; the .function of encll of those
individual llves.isto suppontheUfe:\lach in its!
own way.
. . The human way of supporting the Great
Life JS through our spiritual consciousness. We
were spiritually conscious of other living spirits
Like ~imals_. birds, and trees. No1 all the people'
were lake this, of course, bu1 people in general
were, and the people who weren't, understood it.
We we~n't domestica1ed by individualism and all
those things that are pan of the dominant culture
today. '!bat's why this society has a problem. It's
so mulu-<:ultured, that people don't have the same
h~ and the same mind. Everybody's doing
thetr own damn thing.
I
During those times, life was village life and
everyone saw lhe people they lived with every
day. ~hen visitors came through, they would
stay tn the town-house, and there would be a big
pot of food out there. Everybody would
contnbute to ?1at pot of food, so that strangers or
anybody connng through could have something
to eat. That was the people's attitude: their culture
was an extended family.
Generally, anybody in the tribe could go
alone out in the woods and take care of
themselves. The younger ones might have some
tr0uble, bur most people could. The women were
exi><:n at gathering; they probably were beuer
survtvors than the men.
And then a family, an extended family
would also take care of itself. The old peopte'
who raised the children. The uncles taught the
children. And while the old ones and maybe
some of the n:iother's clan ~le were taking
cnre _of the _c~ildrert, th~ mamed couple would be
making a livmg, fanning and hunting.
They had individual gardens, also clan
Xatuah ,aurnaL pnge 20
gardens, and there was a community garden.
They had storage places in the village to keep
food for those who needed it. Some of the
storage bins were built up on poles. Another kind
~ a small pole log structure that was sealed
~th mud to keep the rodents out. Com was put
10 there, and people were assigned 10 check it
~m. time to time to see if the critters were getting
IOIO ll
The white man Henry Timberlake when
he first came into the village of Echota the early
1700's! estimated a population of close to 2,000,
and said there w_ere something like 6(). to 70,000
bushels of com 1n storage. That was his estimate.
That was western attitude. Even if it wasn't that
much, it obviously was considerable.
i;
Most o_f th~ time every pan of the tribe, as
well as the mbe ttself, was self-sufficient But if
a family got in trouble, if they had their crops
washed out by a flood or something, 1hey would
first appeal 10 their clan for help, and then other
clans would ju~t naturally volu~teer to help,
beca~se the philosophy at that ume, which has
drasnc/¾P.-.r,pb,qn'i¢. w~ ~U)~ 'YI;~, !,!le helpless.
1,1µ1d !he ~1a firsi.. -l3ack,qi.c11 spjlii11g e.ni:I .giviµg
sniff' away was well 1ooked upon. Those people
who were the most generous showed their
commi~ment to the tribe and were given power.
The chief was the poorest person in the tribe, but
the smanest. However, that doesn't exist any
more. In today's society hoarding sruff and
amassing wealth is well looked upon. The old
way was son of nice, but it doesn't deal very
well with capitalism.
Food wasn't bought or sold inside the
tribe. Food or hides may have been offered in
exchange to people who could make beautiful
craflS or weapon-makers who knew how to make
really good arrows or blow guns, but no one had
10 buy food to keep from going hungry.
~ei:i. someone ,creates something, they put
power mto ll. h doesn t mancr what ii is. At the
very lcas1, one puts in their life/time. U someone
makes a flu1e, their intent is for the flme to play
and to free you up inside. You may not get that
out of the flute, but at the very least you get six
hours of their life • they put that much of the11
power into t~t object. They have put their full
10tent, all their experience, everything. into that
flute. Thar flute has power, and we recogni:ze
that.
. . We put power into everything we do. If we
do _11 _10 a bad heart, then .ii has bad power If we
do 11 1~ a good hean and 1n a loving way. maybe
say a httl~ prayer, then the power is a good thing.
If~ are Just neutral, if we just do it without
pumng anything into it, then it's not a craft it's
not a skill, it's just a repetitive motion.
'
. . Bae¥ then people saw that giving a gift was
g1v10g their power, so they didn't wait around for
admiration. They'd drop off a flute at someone's
front door, and that would be it. It was obvious
when a gift was given.
Some people were more skilled than
others, and it was a fine thing to get a gift from
someone who was very skilled. But the gift that
was the best was one into which some person
~ad put all their ~can. It _di~'t have to be good,
tf they put all their heart 10to u, then it was a
highly prized gift and would probably miss the
gambling exchange.
Betting and gambling was a wonderful
way of exchange. The men would play the
chunky game. It was definitely a macho game
probably the only macho game we had. One '
person would roll a round chunky stone and two
other men would be standing on either side with
spears with little red marks on them. They would
throw the spears underhanded and sec who could
ger the red mark closest to the stone. It required a
Lot of skill.
They would play right in the village
~uarc, big old males strun.ing around downtown
in front of the court.house. It was kind of like the
pool haIJ where the men could get 10gether and
talk rough.
They wouldn't bet food, just possessions:
crafts, weapons, things that they had taken from
other Indians, or trade goods. They would stand
there and throw down their bows and arrows
their loincloths. They would stand there naked
betting, and then try to calk a guy into betting ~o
or three days work in the cornfield. They would
always pay off, 100, because back then a
person's word was everything.
In lhe tribe auention was most important.
~e. cullu:e was built that way. Our way of
ra.1smg children wasn't to hit them, but to praise
~em when ther did well, and lO ignore them or
give them nothmg when they did wrong. So if
you were good in the chunky game or were a
" w81l}ol'1and did ~ t deeds, tllen you we~
admiicd lf you were a good fanm:r then you
~ere admired. But if you messed up, you were
ignored. The worst punishment was to be thrown
out of the tribe. Many people committed suicide
when that happened to them, when they lost that
connection with the tribe.
Although the tribe was self-sufficient, the
Chero~ees loved 10 trade. Some people think of
the Indian tribes as being isolated. but that isn't
true. The Cherokees could trade with anybody
from New York all the way to Florida and all
along the Mississippi and all the way along the
coast Everybody spoke the same trade language.
h was ~I~ the Choctaw trade language, and it
was a p1dgm version of Choctaw. All tl1e Indians
spoke it instead of using a sign language.
The P,crokee never actually used a
~ncy, like money. Everything was done
stnctly by baner. They used to make a lot of trips
to the coast to get "black drink" (a decoction
made from the leaves of yaupon holly - ed.),
shells, feathers and items like that, but what they
really loved was the dried root of the Venus
fly-trap, because it was considered an incredible
fishing chann, and all the fishermen would use it.
And then maybe they'd bent up a few Tuscaroras
on the way back from the beach, because that's
just the way the Cherokees were.
We had good flint deposits over in
Tennessee. and we may have carried that for
trade. We might have done some business with
soapsrone. We had soapstone here to trade. We
would trade mica to ihe northern Indians.
The Cherokee might have gouen turquoise
and stuff like that from the Chociaws and the
Chickasaws to the west. We traded horses with
the Chickasaws, who lived along the Mississippi
Sprtm.,, I 991
�On Eco-economics
by David Haenke
Instead of endwing a meaningless job to gei the
money IO buy necessities, real work should involve our
efliciClll production or bllSIC needs, or our dilcct
involvement in their procurement - e.g., by J)311icipaling
as wor.ting members or cooperatives. In an ccocconomy, the formal "work weclc" wherein we labor for
money might drop IO 20 hours or less.
The ec:o-«onomy would run as much as possible
on solar energy, just IIS cco-sysu:ms run entirdy on solar
gain. Jt would mnke judicious use of "capital" ~ources.
such as fossil fuels, which are used according 10 lhcir
most efficient application as in Ille "soft energy path.•
Basic cco-«onomics means doing the following
10 the giealCSl extent possible:
River around Memphis, because the Chickasaws
were lhe great eastern horsepeople - like the
Sioux or the Plains Inruans. They were
absolutely incredible horsemen, and 11\~y w~re
great allies of the Cherokee. The two tnbes Just
loved each other, God knows why. A whole
village of Cherokees would move over and live
by a Chickasaw village for a year. Then 11\e
Cherokees would go back home, and the next
year the Chickasaws would show up and live by
the Olerokee village for a year.
ArchaeologistS have discovered things in
Cherokee mcdjcine bundles that were found only
in South America. That shows 1he extent of their
trade and their communication. They weren't
isolated from one anoilier.
When 11\e white people moved in and
m.fluenced the Cherokee, they staned trading for
productS. They would trade bushels of com,
He jusL didn't fit in.
The couple left for two weeks. While they
were gone, their house burned down, a.nd it was
rumored that someone had done it on purpose to
get nd of him. They came back, and his wife was
so sad 1ha1 they had lost their house, that the
community got together and built them a new one
nnd just put up with the man.
That's an old Labor Brigade story.
The tribe was self-sufficient in every way.
The tribe satisfied the basic needs of human
beings. One of those needs is community. We
have a need for community that comes from
tribalism. On the intimate level people filled that
need through the extended family; on another
level, it was fulfilled through communal
ecrcmony, which was one of the foundations of
their culture.
dried pumpkin, deerskins, probably chestnuts,
They had feast days or holy days at
and ginseng to the western people, and 11\ey got
important times during the year. The feast days
teehnology in return. The clan system gradually
were held to celebrate the blessing of the com or
turned into a capitalistic system, but they sill!
ceremonial occasions Like lighting the fire or
maintained the community gardens for a long
putting the fire out, bu1 they were also a
time, until (Chief John) Ross created an elaborate connection people made with each other. The
central government that could tell someone what
people would get together, there would be betting
to do, and the government started a tribal fund and gambling, the exchange of goods. and people
money, y'know. IL son of worked its way over
would undoubtedly share some genes around at
from the baner system to capitalism, but at the
those big gatherings, and at the same time they
same time the Cherokees have always felt loyal to shared the spirit around the tribe.
"the torso," the body of the tribe, although
It was the cement that held the culture
·occasionally it's been pretty sick. Today the
together. When that started crumbling, it was real
tribe's like everything else in the world tough. But remnan1s of it still exist. You can still
everything's got cancer.
see it here and there: the Labor Brigades, people
The Cherokee Labor Brigade, which was
helping each other out, or sometime you might
going strong up into this generation, was a
hear somebody talking ihe old way. things like
remnant of the time when everybody lived in the
that.
village, and the clans were like the extremities of
Today we have less ceremony in our lives.
the body supponing the torso. The people of the
We need certain kinds of ceremonies. If we don't
Labor Brigade would get together on Saturdays
have them. we create them, because ceremonies
and go to the house of somebody who needed
are very imponant to human beings.
help, like an old person who needed firewood
Everything's a fonnula. When you're
split or someone who needed their roof fixed.
making a little cake. you go by the formula. You
they would all pitch in nnd do the job and then
need some flour from the field, eggs from a
have a big pot-luck. Nowadays it's only some of
chicken, some honey, and then the last thing is
the older men who still do it, but it's a part of that' some heat, which makes it change from five
culture, maybe it'll come back.
different things into this one sweet little brown
J beard a story once. There was a
thing, a cake. It's no longer an egg and some
half-breed married to a full-blooded woman.
flour - but it is. h 's made up of a!J those partS.
They lived in Birdtown a long time ago, like in
Everything's formulistic. There is a
my grandfather's time. He was a drunk and lived
fonnula for our way of living. We need the com,
in this community where nobody drank. Whether
we need the honey, we need the ceremonies, they
they were Baptist or traditional or what, they
are all the raw materials. The fire is our
didn't believe in his drinking. They thought it
spirituality, which heats il and makes our cultuIC
was a bad thing. He was a rowdy person, too.
the way it is.
~
'
Sprtng, 1991
.....
Drawing by Rob Lcvcrcu
•Participate In, invest in, and support local,
ecologically responsible production by locally owned.
opcralCd, and con1.rol1ed entctprises.
•Buy, trade, and consume locally/ regionally
produced goods and services.
•Keep resources, capital, and energy at home;
plug leaks.
•Use solar energy and other •renewable" energies
and resources..
•Be radically efficient in the use or nonrenewable
resources.
•Practice intense cooscrvat.ion and efficiency in oil
sectors.
•Do full-scale -- 90 to 1ooi.. -- recycling,
utilitiog local/regional enlelpriscs.
•Pay true. CCQlogically audited costs: intemalizc
"externalities". It may hurt now. but it will pay off lalu.
•Wodt coward a fonnol or informal local/n:giona1
trading sy~tem o.r cumney.
•Support a humane and socially responsible
economy.
•Do not support businesses that pollute Ot destroy
the cnvironmcnl.
•Wherever humanly possible. do not buy from
national or multinational corporations or their
subsidiaries.
Each localily, region, biorcgion oc stnte should
have an up-to-daie dat.nbase on what is being sold and the
ownership of the company selling, within its bounds.
This infonnation should be furnished IO the public so
lhat people can choose a tocallrcgional allCmlllive where
possible. Development of economic altem:uivcs 10
national and l18nSrultional companies should be a focus oC
each regioru
Lee every economic act be ecologically conscious.
�THOUGHTS ON WORK, PRODUCTIVITY, AND
DEVELOPMENT:
UNRAYELLING THE MYTH OF 'THE FREE MARKET"
The refrain has become all too familiar.
environmental proiection means loss of jobs. we are told,
and if we would only let the corporate "£tee market"
[unction without interference. lhen everylhing would
magically work out for lite best. The "invistble band" of
lhe market •aulOJ'llatically" mainlllins economic balance,
we arc assured, and competition keeps prices low and
SWldards high, as well as providing mucb·occdcd "jobs."
Our economic difficulties :uc lhcrefore lhe result of lOO
much regulation, not 100 liu!c; we are simply not letting
the system function properly...
Of course, !hero is some trulh to lhese assertions but not very much. If "mnrlcet fon:es• are reaUy th:11
benevolent, lhen why are lhey (we) creating many
lecllnologics and coosumption pauems which are bolh
socially and ecologically destructive. Why is energy
conservation seen as somehow benealh us? Why is our
society fallmg apan at lhe seams? (Wasn·1 it largely lhe
DE-regulation of lhc 80's lhat led to outrageous financial
excesses of every description - !he • gxced is good"
memality which, we're now learning, we're going to be
P3ying for over seveml dcc:ldes?) Why do most peoples'
"jobs" consist of boring, unfulfiUing work which, more
often Lhan 1101, has a dctrirnenlal effect . ranging from
slight to tremendous - on our world and our lives? We
need onJr /l)Fk ~l.!!Jc,P.:_9Jl:l~.w01"Jna in ~Pll!l~
indUSlry, Or ~..
"!9rkiria \lfilh~Jhcu U~_.,_, JU\j I J
"military-industrial complex· and ilS off!hoots, or all !he
common household products - solvenlS, painis, delClgel\b,
aerosols, polishes, etc. - whose creation simulUlllcou.~ly
createS a multitude of toxic industrial by-products, and
which are oflCII luu:ardous or toxic themselves...
Oearly, theie is something very wrong with a
socio-economic system which rapidly undermines social
cohesiveness ond destroys the very resources upon which
our supposed "prospctity" depends! The manic. or
mMliacal - functioning of our present economy reminds
meofthoseold canoons III which lhc "hero" is silting on
a high tree branch nnd is vigorously sawing lhrough it on lhe side closer to the trceJ Or lhttc's the classic
comedy routine in which the "hero" is sawing a circle
wound hunsclf in the !loor and soon completes it - only to
fall through to the !loor below. In both c:iscs, lhc end
result of all that hard work is 1111 unforsocn disaster though anyone eV\:11 remotely aware of reality could !rive
forcsccn iL These comedy routines arc funny precisely
because !he coming dis:ister IS so complctcly obvious yet when we promoo:: an economy that is leading 10
immincm social ond ecological disasw. we seem
oblivious to !he danger. Laughably, not only is it NOT
obvious 10 us, but most of u.~ mightily defend our "right"
10continue on the same "prolil:lblc" palh! But here we
should learn something from lhe C3rl00ns • or we will
continue sawing away until we and our environment are
dcsu'Oyai.
9f
···········
All around our nation and !he world, the struggle
10 save our environment and our societies is moving into
high ge3r • and the issue of'jobi' and ·productivity'
occupies a central pl.ice m this S11Uggle. In the Pacific
Nonhwes1, environmentlllists rue desperately trying to
save 111e spoucd owl and its habitat, lhe rcmnantS of
once-huge old-growth foresb, while angry loggers cloim
lh:u TIIEY are now •an endangered species", and logging
Xatuan JoumaL page 22
I
II
comp:inies claim to be patriotically serving vital
socio-economic needs. And in Norlh Carolina and many
other stales, obsessive road-building and "development" are
Cervenlly supponed by businessmen, cconom,stS, and
politicians (and, of course. !he developers}, on the
assumption lhat economic prosperity and job availability
depend on more roads and more rapid "growlh.• This trend
continues unsb:ued despirestrong evidence that lhc
prosperity thus gained is very shon-lived, if tndced the
•standard of living' for the locals - the actual inhabitants
- ever DOES rise appreciably.
The reality behind the dream of qu,ck, bsung
prosperity 1s this: once lhe p~pcrity boom
accomp:1nying !he initial devel0pmcnt and eonsuuclion is
o~r. the local inhabitanlS IISUa.lly tl1ld up getting shafted.
Most of lhc big money - from mnnufoc1uriog, rCJuals,
chain depatunent sl.OreS and superm:irkcls, and lhe glut of
fast-food rcslllUl'8lllS - is funnelled out of lhe kx:aJ area and
into lhe bank accoun1S oC distant corporations and
developers, while "!he locals" are left to race the tong-term
prospect of menial "setVice jobs" and socially and
ocologicatly disrupted lives.
TREND #1: Dcspitc intensive "development" and
an influx of new tcehnologics and induslrics over lhc Jr.ISi
IS yc.ars, Lhe "standard of livmg" of lhc average American
has ran,n durin9 that,J,lmc pi:\iOd, and feal income has
been steadily faJliog. ~p.y.is iltis l)CCwril)g?
TRF.ND 112: During' th,s same period lhe richest
(and smallest) segment of the American populllcc has
go11C11 much richer, while lhe middle class and the poor
have goucn poorer. 11 ,swell.known lhat lhe reign of
"Frcc.-markct Rc:lg:inomics" (and its sequel,
"Bushonomics") has created more millionaires lhan any
previous "growlh decade.· The trouble is. II also created
mounlllins of debt. a horrendous banking crisis, many
more families and children living in povcny, and legions
or homeless and hopclc.ss pcoplc... lhc grim "dart. side" of
lhe supposedly unbiased, accessible. and
soctally-rcsponsive "free markcL •
QUESTION: Is the market rc3Uy "value- free." as
us proponents claim. and docs it really encourage
dcmocrauc paruc,pation and bcallhy socio-economic
divcr~i1y . or does its implicit value-prefcscnce for proli1 ;it
any price drhc the market (panicula.rly 111duj;Uy} to be
free of ethical considerations and compassion,
free to abusr the public lrUJ,I, and rree to
lgnort as many !IOCiRI and ecological
consequences :is po5.<>ible?
QUESTION: b it po:;s1ble I.hat the TRUTII
underlying lhe "free marke1" is I.hat it suppons a very
small. scff.3ppo1n1ed elite in ransacking our environment,
exploiting oilier people. and raking in vastly
disproportion:ue monetary rewaril'i? Docli our society
actually reward those who can most convincingly con
lite public 1010 bclieviog th!lt all lhi$ cxplo1tation :ind
"development" 15 for lheirown good and lhc good of lhe
country?
......•••.•.•....•••..•.......
The qucsuon or cnYIJ'Ollmenl:1.1 prcscrvauon vs.
"development" and jobs is without doubl a thorny one and it IS made even lhom,cr hy a multitude of dangCl'OU$
and unquc:suoned assumptions about the n31ure oC our
economic/ ecological re31ily. Such assumptions include:
I) lhc belief lhat environmellllll prot.ection IS the
prilll3J'}' factor behind job loss in industries such as lhc
by Richaro Lowenthal
wood produclS indllSlry, clcij>ite lhc fact that lhc true
culprits in MOST job loss are managerial greed and
callousness. industrial automation, corporate
"strcamliniog." and poor "resource managcmcnL •
2) !he belief th:lt endless extraction and
consumption of resoun:es is good for jobs and lhe local
economy, despite lhe fact th:lt when these resources are
dcple1ed !here me then NO rc1alCd jobs left m that area and the exuactors simply move on, leaving behind a
legacy or heightened monetaty ~tations and the
bitterness of a 'boom-tumcd-busL'
3} lhc belief lhat wori( and productivity must be
~ SOL.ELY hy amounts of Dlllterials e:ctraeted,
~ . and sold, and NEVER in terms of conscrvar.ion
or restoration of vital h:lbil:us. Due to lhis belief, we are
still reluctant to commit ourselves • and our money - to
ecologically-sound economic practices, and we stubbornly
refuse to fac10r into our economic accountmg lhe true
social and ecological cosu of our vaunted "free mar1ce1•
system.
4} lltebclieflhat pcoplearedcpendcnton the
"gcnerosil}'" of industry fa their jobs, :ind not on
themselves. the value of their own labor, or personal
involvement in lhcir communities.
S) the belief that del>-pite meaningless and
mcchanic:ll work. worker's "productivity" cnn be increased
solely by mtre3Slng 'll'agcs, WlTHOUT anyfac- in
workers' intete..u. involvcmcn1. or sntisfacuon.
......•.•................
The deeper problem th.at we a.re just beginning 10
confront is lhat we have crcrucd a 'cuhwc" based on mass
consumption and "!he consumer mentality.' When
maximum profit and consumption are our highest goals.
we of course seek only SHORT-TERM "efficiency" in our
extraction, production. and dlslribulion processes.. Under
lhe prime direcuvo or maximum profit and consumpuon,
·emcicm productivi1y• MUST mean producing the
grcaics1 amount of good.~ m lhe least possible time ot the
least possible cost • and lhen selling lhem al lhe gn:atcsl
price lhc market will bear, This kind of "productivity"
would more approprinlcly be called "dC5tructivity"; it
ignores long-term consequences. create.~ "needs" where
there were oonc, and trc.ats both naLUre and human beings
as objocL~ to be e:cptoilcd, u.,;cd up, and !hen forgo1tcn.
For most worlccrs, lhis ovat cxploillltion is 111en
·compensated" via insulllngly low monetary rewn.rds.
which nevcnheless enable~ to consume more goods·
which requires 111at we produce more, of course. The end
resuh • our REAL •gross 113lional product" - is a vic:ious
downw:ird spirnl of producc-scll-consume-lhrow away,
produce-sell-ronsumc-lhrow nway.• and n never-ending
"need" toc~ploit ond "develop" new areas once the old
ones :ue ei1haustcd or become "unproliwhle" in lhc eyes of
our Glorious God. the marketplace.
But now we have nowhere to move on 10, and our
113bnual ·rron1.1er· mcnlali1y no longer makes even
economic sense (ii NEVER mode sense ecologically).
The biosphere we live m is suddenly changmg - ,n our
human awareness - from a lim,tlc.s~ collection or
exploi1abte ·resources· 10 a fragile and endangered ecosystem w1lh limited "resource avnilabtlny." So now
something has 10 give, somclhing has to change in our
way of RELATING to lhe Earlh and all her divctSC
hfc.forms.
(conlinued on pegc 30)
Spr tng, 199 1
�..
• • t .
\ t
,!:\~
.
"
.. , &
••
... '
APPEAL HELPS BEE TREE
OUTSTANDING RESOURCE
WATERS
Nawn! World Ne..-. Service
Nanni World News Sc,vicc
The NC Division of Environmental
Management has reclassified 14 bodies of water
in the mountain region as OutStanding Resource
Waters (0RW). putting them under special
protection to maintain their high water quality.
The newly-listed 0RW's are:
South Toe River (Yancey County), Gipp
Creek (Cherokee County). Fires Creek (Clay
County), Cacaloochee Oeek (Haywood
County). Upper Nantahala River (Swain
County). Chattooga River (Macon County),
Henry Fork (Burke County). the Mitchell River
(Surrey County), Elk Creek (Watauga County),
the upper South Fork of lhe Mills River
(Henderson County). Wilson Creek (Avery and
Caldwell Counties). Jacob Fork (Burke
County). Upper Creek (Burke County), and
Steels Creek (Burke County).
Nominated for possible future 0RW
designation are Bearwallow Creek (Transylvania
County). the New River and its South Fork
(Waiauga and Ashe Counties), Panthertown
Creek (Jackson County), Garden Creek (Wilkes
County), and Bullhead Oeek (Wilkes County).
After a bitter fight, Alarka Creek (Swain
County) has been classified as a High Quality
Water (HQW), a body of water that is somewhat
protected. allhough not as stringently as the
0RW's (see KaJuah Journal #26). Toe Nonh
Fork of the Catawba River (McDowell County)
has been nominated for future inclusion as a
HQW.
Although 0RW status is supposed to be
strictly a matter of biological criteria, experience
has shown that designations are often swayed
by political considerations, so it would help
classification of creeks nominated for 0RW
status if interested people would write letters on
the behalf of the water bodies.
Any state resident can also request
reclassification of a water body as an 0RW or
HQW. The Division of Environmental
Management requires a detailed description of
the area suggested. an indication of the water's
quality, and a list of the special resources that
need prorection. The agency will send a list of
.the standards and regulations on request. Call or
write Suzanne Keene at the NC Division of
Environmental Management: Box 27687;
Raleigh, NC 276ll (919) 733-5083.
"SOMETHING STINKS"
N,nnl World New, Savice
Development is the first priority for the
town government of Highlands, NC. And if the
town government gets its way, Highlands will
spur development with a 500,000 gallon-pcrlU!Y sewage treatment plant along the Cullasaja
River.
Spri.n9, 1991
The Cullasaja is a Class B trout stream
and a spectacular scenic attraction. Toe river and
its unique attributes would be th.reatened by
presence of the plant. Presently a treatment plant
half the size of the proposed plant is dumping
effiuent into lakes below Highlands. Toe lakes
help somewhat to maintain the river, but the
quality of the Cullasaja is srill deteriorating,
according to aquatic biologist Dr. William
Mclarney. Toe new $5 million plant would
discharge below the lake druns and would
severely compromise the water quality
downstream.
The town of Highlands is cager to install
the plant - so cager that they were ready to begin
construction without an environmental
assessment or an environmental iropacr
statement. They publicized the project with
notices in the local Highlands paper and the
Asheville paper, but not in the Franklin Press
which might be read by county residents
downstream who would be affected by the
plant. Highlands Mayor John Cleaveland
explained their actions, saying that Highlands
has been paying more than its share of the
county taxes, and they should get to do what
they want with the river.
The NC Division of Environmental
Management (DEM) seemed to be abening the
move to rush construction of the plant: they
refused to hold a public hearing on the matter
until confronted by a petition bearing 2,082
signatures collected by county residents
organi7.cd by Peg Jones of CuJlasaja
Community.
Resident Lee Hollins summed up the
community's feelings about the way they had
been treated when he said, "Sewage stinks, but
in this case I smell something a lot worse, and
that's rotten politics."
The new treatment plant is much larger
than the present needs of the town of Highlands
require. Residents downstream know that a new
treatment plant would be an open door to more
development in the reson town. They arc not
willing to let the Cullasaja be polluted for the
sake of mon: condos, second homes, and golf
courses.
Those who want to speak out on behalf of
the Cullasaja River can write to the DEM at: Boit
27687; Raleigh, NC 27611.
To help the river preservation effon or
offer support, call Peg Jones of Save Our
Rivers, Inc. at: (704) 369-7877
In response to an administrative appeal by
the WeStcm Nonh Carolina Alliance (WNCA),
Regional Forester John Alcock of the US Forest
Service ruled that the proposed Bee Tree timber
sale in the Pisgah National Forest was in
violation of the Endangered Species Act and
ordered the Ranger district to make a complete
biological evaluation of the area.
The appeal victory will delay cutting on
Bee Tree and, the Alliance hopes. will compel
the Forest Service to gather complete
information about stands slated to be cut before
beginning logging.
The Regional Forester, however. denied
other arguments the Alliance tiad with the sale:
that the Forest Service was not considering a full
range of cutting alternatives, that they had not
made a complete analysis of the true cost of the
timber sale. that they were not ensuring safe use
of herbicides, and that the sale plan did not
follow the principles of sustainable
management
MAKING STUMPAGE
Nanni World News Savice
The US Forest Service National ForestS
in Nonh Carolina has announced that it is
raising its timber targets 18% for 1991 - from 63
million board feet to 75 million board feet for the
year.
This announcement came shortly after a
much-publicized declaration from the same
office to the effect that there would be less
clearcutting in the National Forests. When asked
how the Forest Service planned to cut back on
clcarcutting while simulatancously raising timber
targets, Forest Service environmental planner
Pat Cook said, "we will try to maintain our trend
towards less clcarcuning in proportion to the
total harvest."
Translated into ignorant (they hope) lay
people's terms, Cook's statement reads, "we're
not going to to do any less clca.rcutting, but we
are going to keep raising quotas so that it seems
like we'll be doing less clcarcutting."
Any other questions?
Onwlnc by Jim HOUS('r
A(atuah Journn! JXl9C 23
�SMOKEY EATS APPEAL
NUCLEAR WEAPONS
Nawnl World News Se,,,icc
HEARINGS
1990 TIMBER LOSSES
REPORTED
Nanni World NcWJ Scrvlce
After a four year wait US Forest Service
Chief Dale Robenson finally responded to
objections lodged by the Wilderness Society to
the Land and Resource Management Plan
(LRMP} for the Cherokee National Forest. The
LRMP is supposed co guide agency management
practices for a 15 year period.
The objections were pr~ntcd as an.
administrative appeal. The Wtldemess Society
stated that the Forest Service was not fulfilling
its responsibility to maintain biological diversity
the Cherokee Nauonal Forest, was selling
timber below cost, and was not providing visual
beauty.
Under the National Forest Management
Act of 1976 the Forest Service is charged with
maintaining populations of native ~ies in .the
national forests. Many of these species reqUlre
old growth habitat. Forest Service plans to log
58 percent of the cove forest habitat in the
Cherokee would drastically reduce the amount
of old growth remaining and would also cut into
the supply of acorn mast that is vital to the
survival of many species of wildlife.
The Wilderness Society appeal also
pointed to the fact that below-cost timber sales
amounted to a public subsidy of the
deforestation of the Cherokee forestlands.
Tennessee senators Albert Gore and Jim Sasser
supported the point, saying in a Jetter to
Robertson that, "It makes little sense to
subsidize timber production on public lands in
the Southeast when the private lands provide far
and away the vast bulk of the timber used in the
region."
The Wilderness Society plans to pursue
its objections to the Cherokee Forest plan in
coun, as a civil lawsuit.
Narunl World News Service
What would you say if the government
asked you if you wanted nuclear weapons?
Well, for the first time in history, they're
asking...kind of.
The Department of Energy (DOE) is
sponsoring hearings to gather opinions on their
plans for building nuclear wenpons in the 21st
century. However. they are disguising the
hearings as "Programmntic Environmental Impact
Statement Scoping Hearings on the
Reconfiguration of the Nuclear Weapons
Complex." And, although the hearings are
supposed co be open to the public, the DOE is not
disclosing the dates.
But sometime between March 20 and July
31 hearings will be held in the 13 locations
where nuclear weapons are produced, including
Oak Ridge, TN. They will constitute the first
national referendum on nuclear weapons
production, and it is imponant that. despite the
obstacles, people make themselves heard.
For more infonnation and updates on the
times and locations of the hearings, write or call
Ralph Hutchison of the Oak Ridge
Environmental and Peace Alliance: Box l 101;
Knoxville, TN 37901 (615) 524-4771.
The US Forest Service (USFS) has
reponed the 1990 losses from its timber
extraction program in the Southern
Appalachians. As well as destr0ying the
old-growth forest habitat, the timber sales
accually cost the agency more money to set up
and carry out than they recoup from the price of
the stumpage. The difference is paid br t~e
taxpayers in what amounts to a roadbwlding and
habitat desttuction subsidy for the limber
industry.
In the national forests in North Carolina
the Forest SeTVice reponcd a loss of $2.0 I
million for the year. Georgia's national forests
came out slightly in the black, bringing in a total
profit of $233 thousand in the state, due to profit
made on the Ocoee National Forest. The
Chattahoochee National forest lost money.
However, in North Carolina and Georgia the
Forest Service keeps its tallies on a state-wide
basis and refuses to disclose totals for the
individual forests, so that the more profitable
national forests in the piedmont cancel out
somewhat the losses in the Appalachian national
forests.
In 1990 the USFS timber program in
Tennessee's Cherokee National Forest cost
taxpayers $654 thousand, and in Virginia's
Jefferson National Forest the timber program
lost $969 thousand last year.
"YOUR GOOSE IS COOKED"
...Then there are the hot geese of Oak
Ridge. According to the August (1990)
Scientific American, geese on the 35,000-acre
Oak Ridge Reservation have been detected wuh
up 103,950 picocuries of cesium-137 per gram
of breast meat. "In tenns of Christmas dinner,
just one pound would deliver almost 100
millircms, which is the generally accepted
standard for nnnual exposure."
Rrprinirdfrom IM Watrrn ,Vu.-tlt Carolina Alttatlt!c Acc:mt.
Foll.l9'm.
FI:'\E WITH ~lE
Nmir•I World Jl:ewi Sef\'1cc
Draw111g by Rodney Webb
The J.L. Todd Auction C.Ompany, a
Georgia-b;tSed lnnd developer, has nccn fined
S206.400 for violations of the NC
Scd1men1a1ion Pollution Control Act.
"lbi~ is a landmark penalty, the biggest
sedimentation pollution line in the history of
North Carolina, " said Don Follner of the :-;c
Depanmen1 of Environment, I lealth, and
Natural Resources (DEHNR).
The company was fined $103,200 for
violating the sedimentation act on a site in
Jackson County five miles north of the Qualia
Bound.iry on Route 19, and J.L. Todd, as
owner of the property and director of the
company was assessed an additional $103,200.
According lhe state DEHNR officials, the
violations occurred \\hen Todd built access
roads on a 10 acre tract (part of 1,000 acres he
owns in the area) that had been ;1uc1ioned off in
small parcels for residential development.
Richard Phillips of the DEi INR office in
Asheville said, "h's fairly serious due to the
large tract involved and the proximity Lo
!itrcams."
"I DON'T WANT TO SEE
NO ORV"
The US Forest Service (USFS) is
proposing a five-mile extension to an Off-R_oad
Vehicle (ORV) trail in the Nolichucky D1stnct of
the Cherokee National Forest near Greeneville,
TN. The extension would tie the area into an
"extensive net\,ork." of ORV trails, according to
a USFS spokesperson.
Other forest users feel that there is already
entirely too much ORV traffic in the area and
that the noisy vehicles are a grave thrc:u to
habitat. There have nlready been c.ornplaints
about the OR V's from hikers on the Appalachian
Trail and residents of the Shelton Laurel area
.
just over the Slate line.
As planned, the extension w~ld pas~
between two bear preserves, greatly increasing
access and rcsulting disturbance: in an atCfi .
where building up the black bear populauon is
supposedly a t0p priority. Bears ~hy away from
human intrusion.
The Tennessee Wildlife Resources
Agency has already voiced objections to the
proposed trail. ·,:·he more activity ~nd the more
access you have m there, the less likely you are
to have a good bear population," said Ron
Saunders, a biologist with the agency.
C.Omments on the potential threat of
ORV's 10 wild habitat in the Cherokee National
Forest can be addressed to the forest
headquarters at: Box 2010; Oeveland, TN
37320.
Contpil,:d 111por1frqm a rcp(JII III lhe A!hc•illc C,ti1en.
Spn119. 1991
�SHELTON LAUREL
Natural World News
SPECIAL REPORT
"The trees are so high so the legend goes
They grow all the way to the sky.
And they were here before you were born
And they'll be here the day that you die."
Waltzing with the Mountains
Shelton Laurel is situated in nonhem
Madison county, near the Nonh
Carolina-Tennessee state line. Shaped by the
high ridges and cascading slopes, gently
forested and filled with the sounds of rumbling
branches and streams, it is a beautiful and rich
land, special to the people of the community.
Things have come a long way since the
first white settler in the Shelton Laurel area lived
in a hollowed-out poplar for a season until he
got his cabin built. The forests have changed:
the people, the streami;, the wildlife, the way of
life have all undergone tremendous change. But
it is still evidem that there are people living here
who love these mountains and don't want to see
things change too fast or change for the worse.
There a.re recreational areas used for
fishing, and hunting as well as rugged wild
places in the portion of the Shelton Laurel
watershed that is overseen by the US Forest
Service (USPS). Although these areas seem
serene, they are the subject of controversy· a
controversy between two different interest
groups: those who want to extract the wealth of
the forest and those who a.re interested in having
it remain whole.
This difference of interests goes back
many years, and it currently centers on the
evolving role of the Forest Service. The Forest
Service once was seen as the protector of the
woods. Now it is now seen as an agency
protecting a financial invesanent A life-long
resident of Shelton Laurel, Haze Landers,
remembers a time when the Forest Service
wouldn't let anyone take so much as a single
tree for firewood . "I thought they were set up to
protect the forest.", Haze said. Now, after years
of poor logging pmctices and below-cost sales,
he sees the Forest Service in a different light:
"They don't love these mountains. If they did,
they wouldn't treat 'em this a'way."
The folks in Shelton Laurel have plenty of
other reasons besides poor timbering practices 10
dislke the Forc:.t Service. Back in the late
l 970's, when the RARE !I surveys were being
conducted, residents were told by Forest Service
employees that if the national forest in their area
were designated as "wilderness." they would no
longer be allowed 10 hunt, fish, or camp on the
land.
However, this is patently untrue. and
some of the folks in Shelton Laurel wish they
could have another opponunity to designate the
area as a wilderness, because now the forest
faces clearcuning. roadbuilding. and herbicide
poisoning - all the atroeities that accompany
timber harvesting.
-Sp ri.t,9·, t9 9 l
A CONSTITUENT'S LETTER
~anuary 24, 199·
Representative Charles Taylor Dear Mr. Taylor:
I hate roadbuilding on Federal Forest
Service land.
I hate clearcutting.
I hate below-cost timber sales.
I want all of these things to stop.
Yours truly,
Haze Landers
Marshall, NC
On January 24th the community held a
meeting in L'\urel School to discuss concerns
about preliminary plans for four timber sale
projects in Shelton Laurel. The meeting was
hosted by the French Broad Forest Walch
(FBFW). a citizens' group established two years
ago to panicipate in dialogue with the Forest
Service and make suggestions for the
management of the French Broad Ranger
District rn attendance that evening were about
50 people from the community, Forest Service
personnel, and Congressional aides.
Mary Kelly, Phd., ecologist, coordinator
for the Western Nonh Carolina Alliance, a
member of the FBFW, and a Shelton Laurel
resident. explained the four proposed timber
sales in Brigman Hollow, Little Prong,
Sugarloaf, and White Oak Flats in plaiin terms.
The Forest Service plans to cut 11 million board
feet of timber and build 6.8 miles of new road.
As the primary method of "harvest" would be
clcarcutting, that would translate into 805 acres
of cleared and roaded land in Shelton Laurel in
the course of the next three years.
The new District Ranger for the French
Broad District, Kimberly Brandel, said that she
is interested in listening to the concerns of the
people and is planning to do an "area analysis"
to look at the entire area as a whole instead of as
separate timber sales. She also stated that "no
decisions" had been made and thal the four sales
in question are "not even being considered at
this time." Meanwhile, the figures still reflect
the board feet quotas, the survey tape still flaps
in the breeze from the trees, and long-rime
residents remember, "We've been lied to by the
Forest Service before."
Pat Cook. a planner for the Forest
Service. tried for more than half an hour to
explain the need for management in the forest
and how the Forest Service is presently revising
and re-evaluating their views of timbering
methods such as clearcutting.
But Mary Kelly pointed out that the
projected ASQ (Allowable Sale Quantity for
timber) for the French Broad District for fiscal
year 1991 is expected to be 6.5 million board
feet (mbO. This is up from 5 mbf in 1990. And
now more recent infonnation indicates that lhe
ASQ for the French Broad could go as high as
8.5 mbf.
One local farmer spoke out saying, ''If
she's got to tum out six and a half million feet,
that seems to be it." But Ranger Brandel
answered that no matter what her ASQ, she was
first and foremost "committed 10 stewardship"
and that she W3S \'\1lling to "listen to what the
people want."
At that point, one member of the FBFW
called for a show of hands.
"How mnny people want to see Shelton
Laurel preserved the way it is?" The response
was almost unanimous.
"Well, that ought 10 tell you what we, the
people of this community, want."
Obviously the folks of Shelton Lautcl are
not interested in seeing the forest health
"restored" through resource management They
prefer seeing the land in its present healthy state.
As Haze Landers secs it, ''They say it'll grow
back to its original state in 250 years. So why
wait? It'll stay ihat way for the next 250 years if
they don't cut it down. We got generations of
kids between now and then who'll never know
what it was like if they cul it down."
The citizens making up the French
Broad Forest Watch can be proud of their effons
in staying ahead of the game with the Forest
SCIVice and infonning the community of what is
to come in their ranger district They are
definitely setting a precedent for what needs to
happen throughout the entire bioregion.
Their neighbors in the Cherokee National
Forest could learn much about the type of
recreation and forest activities that are
life-sustaining and non-desbllctive. Just over
the ridge, across the state line. in the Cherokee
National Forest, roads and ORV (off-road
vehicle) trails are being cxccnded deeper into the
bean of the forest. This is a matter of concern to
FBFW members, as they see the ecosystem as a
whole, and do not wish to see the habitat
disturbed.
When people in communities such as
Shelton Laurel take a stand and hold their
ground, it is like a breath of fresh mountain air
in the polluted wind.,; of change. Such effons
will take hard work. the kind of work that
people of the mountains know well. But the
effons to save these mountains do not go
unrewarded. As Haze put it, "There ain'
nothin', nothin' nowhei:c. that the Lord ever
created, I don't think, that can beat the looks of
these mountains...with the water in the streams
a'comin down betwixt 'em. I don't think He
built anything any better. Honestly, Tdon't
believe He cou1d'vc. I figure Ile thought we'd
be so poor, He'd have to give us somethin'."
- by Rodney Webb
�(H20). and carbon dioxide (CO2). This is why
t
OFF THE GRID
REGIONAL FUELS
by Jim Houser
- In Nownber and December I logged abo111 50 milts
driving my van around Boone on ethanol. -
Last issue, I said I would delve deeper into
the question of water power. Since !hat time,
however, there have been certain major tragic
events which pcnain directly to our dependence
on grid energy, in this case oil.
Seventy percent of all the oil used in this
country is used by the transportation sector, as
anyone, who has had the misfortune of driving a
car in downtown Boone on Friday afternoon, is
probably aware. We all depend a great deal on
our automobiles. They are essentially a necessity
if we want to get to and from work everyday,
especially in this region where mass transit is so
scarce.
The consequences of this dependence are
now painfully obvious. As a nation, a people, we
in the United States like to think we are in control
of our own destiny. But now, if you believe our
leaders. the actions of a single individual (and his
anny). left us with absolutely no alternative but
to fight an extremely costly and deadly war.
Docs this have 10 be so? Do we in lhc Katuah
region have recourse 10 other fuels besides
gasoline to drive our vehicles? Is it possible for
us to develop a regional supply of fuel which
would suengthen our regional economy while at
the same time free us from being economically
dependent on a bunch of countries many of us
would have been hard pre.~sed to find on a map
just a few monrhs ago?
The leader in the use of alternatives to
gasoline in this area is the Rural Public
Transponation Authority (otherwise known as
AppalCART}, headquancrcd in Boone, NC.
According to Chris Turner, director of
AppalCART,
In and of itself, public 1111nsponation, even when 11
uses gasoline. is a way to reduce our dependence on
foreign oil. A bus carrying 50 people uses a lot less gas
than 50 separate catS, as well as reducing traffic congestion
and air pollution, two problems which Boone i.~ beginning
to ex pcricncc.
AppalCART carries the conservative role of
public 1ranspona1ion one step funher by actively
experimenting with fuel aJtcma1ives. They have
eight vehicles which use propane as a fuel.
Being a fossil fuel like gasoline, propane is
also a grid fuel delivered to this area from Texas.
via a single pipeline. Nevenhclcss, it is a much
cleaner burning fuel than gasoline, due to 1he fact
lha1 it enters the engine as a true gas. ralher than
an atomii.ed liquid like gasoline. Liquids bum
(instead of exploding like gases), leaving behind
carbon deposits which foul oil and lead 10 the
deterioration of an engine. The complete
combustion of a hydrocarbon gas like propane
(C2H6) produces nothing more than water
Xntunfl Journot pmic 26
vehicles which must operate indoors. like
forklifts. use propane as a fuel.
Propane, however, is still a fossil fuel and,
clean as it may be, the carbon dioxide its
combustion produces adds to the Greenhouse
Effect, underscoring the reason why all fossil
fuel use must eventually be cunailed.
Propane would be a good vehicle fuel for the
coming transition period when we will have ro
switch to a non-fossil fuel trnnsponation system.
Its use would reduce smog, and it would
introduce society at large to the concept that
vehicles do run on something else besides
gasoline. In addition. a propane fuel system
could easily be modified 10 accept melhanc (since
they are both gases), and methane is a tested
vehicle fuel. The East Ohio Gas Company of
Nonh-East Ohio runs an of their company
vehicles on natural gas. The advamoge of
methane is that it can be of non-fossil fuel origin.
Methane (CH4), more commonly known as
natural gas, comes from oil wells, but it is also
found in swamps (swamp gas), septic tanks,
landfills, and biogas digesters (technology
specifically designed 10 harvest methane).
Actually, it is found anywhere organic matter has
been cut-off from oxygen. Bacteria which can
only live in the absence of oxygen (anaerobic),
consume the organic matter and "breath" Cll4,
instead of CO2 like oxygen (aerobic) organisms.
Non-fossil methane can be made in a few
weeks in a biogas digester or landfill. Biogas
digesters are very common in some countries.
China has an estimated 7 million diges1ers.
Communities are already required to vent
their landfills in order to prevent methane
explosions. Enlightened communities are
capturing and using that gas.
Bio-fuel, like non-fossil methane, is energy
harvested from a currently active and ongoing
biological process. Therefore, as long as there are
there are plants growing to replace the ones
harvested for fuel, the combustion of biofucls
does no1 add to the Greenhouse Effecr.
Another common biofuel is ethanol or ethyl
alcohol (com squeezens). Ethanol is harvested
from the fermentation cycle (yeast consuming
glucose and excreting alcohol). We can utilize lhe
energy in alcohol by completing the combustion
process begun by the yeast - turning alcohol into
carbon dioxide and water.
This process does not necessarily destroy the
food cycle, as many people contend The organic
remains left in the fermentation 1ank (stillagc) arc
a high protein foodstuff. Essentially all the com
grown in this nation's "com belt," goes through
the fermentation cycle at large industrial plants
(Archer Daniel Midland, and Staley). The alcohol
is sold to oil companies, the carbon dioxide to
soda companies, and the stillagc to livestoek
owners.
Dunng the 1980's AppalCART was actively
producing and using ethanol, thonks to a
Department of Energy grant from the Caner
administration's Alternative Energy Small Grants
program.
They have on-site a working still capable of
producing I0,000 gallons of ethanol fuel ( 180
proof) per year.
The program is not currently active for a
number of political reasons. and because they had
difficulty converting a vehicle to run satisfactorily
on their alcohol. 1l1is docs not mean that alcohol
is not a good fuel. Over half the vehicles in brazil
run on pure ethanol harvested from sugar cane,
and their vehicles are ma.de by the Ford Motor
Company and Volkswagen. In this country
manufacturl!rs are just beginning to introduce
flexible fuel vehicles which will run on a variety
of liquid fuels, including alcohol.
Since AppalCART experienced some
difficulties converting vehicles. I decided to srudy
up and do a conversion of my own. so that I
could beuer understand the difficulties they
encountered_
Fonunately, Talready had an old 1966 Ford
Econoline Supervan with a 240, in-line six
cylinder engine, which, luckily enough, was
essentially the same kind of engine AppalCART
had worked with.
l found that, as fuels, the essential difference
between alcohol and gasoline is that gasoline
requires a 15/1 air-to-fuel ratio for good
combustion while alcohol only requires a 9/1
air-to-fuel ratio. This ratio can be changed in the
carburetor by adding more fuel or decreasing the
air. For a number of reasons, the main one being
simplicity, I chose the air restriction method.
Appa!CART. and most conversions in the
literature. pursued the route of adding more fuel.
Mother Earth's 1979 Mother's Alcolwl Fu.el
Seminar is probably one of the best explanations
of this conversion scheme. However, a manual
from the State Fair Community College in
Sedalia, Missouri (816/826-7100 ext 220)
entitled Conversion of Gasoline Engines to Use
Ethanol as rhe Sole Fu.el points out that the liquid
systems in a carburetor arc precisely calibrat~
and independent of the operator. while the arr
flow, through the use of a manual choke. is
under the control of the driver and can be varied
for a wide range of speed and load requirements.
They install a metal sleeve in the carburetor
venturi to reduce the amount of air.
So I spliced a five gallon plastic gas can into
my fuel line before the fuel pump (plastic is
necessary because alcohol will rust metal). With
the simple rum of a valve r could switch from gas
to alcohol. This way l could start on gasoline (1he
way all Brazilian cars do). and then switch to
alcohol when 1he engine got hot. At the end of
my trip I would switch back to gasoline in
preparation for my next stan.
Even without the addition of a venturi sleeve
this system worked quite well. By simply closing
my choke a bit l was able to drive all over Boone.
My only real problem was speed on _lhe big hills,
which might be alleviated by advancmg the
timing and adding lhe venturi sleeve.
The best thing about the 50 miles J drove on
alcohol was they were relatively clean. With the
help of Bob Chandler who runs the power lab. r
checked my emmissions on an exhaust gas
analyzer at Watauga lligh School. On alcohol my
carbon monoxide emissions were reduced to
0.2% from the 6.5% of gasoline. Hydrocarbons
were reduced from 100 ppm 10 27 ppm. These
alcohol exhaust emissions are well within the
current guidelines.
The possibility or small farms generating .
their own fuel for on-fann purposes could easily
be a reality. This combined with the use of
subsidized energy crops for public transponation
could be the beginning of a truly regional energy
economy, helping 10 bring meaningful work and
economic security to our local communiti1/
A.nyoN 1nttrated"' a,,.,,,, "' <kpth look at the
A.ppalCA.RT a/£olwlf~I protram ~"" smd SS.00 to, OFF 11/E
GRID. Rt I , Bux J OO. 8/u,w,g Rod , NC 28605 f<>r a ror, of
my rrport A.ppalCART Alrohol ,..u~l l'rogrom
,hu~•mrnl Mis 20,0()() word rq,ort tlioroughly ro,·,rs tliL:
ph) ,u:aJ and admirustrotrw a.<per:u cf the program as "ell as the
baclrwnd rcwvdt I did an vehick ~on··~rstnrt Spn tUJ , I !l9 I
�LETS
What is LETS?
LETS Network 1s a Locru Economic Trading System
which helps people trade their goods and services so they
can get what they need without using cash. LETS is an
information exchange which through a computer or
bookkeeping keeps track of account holdcts' trading
ll1lllsactions.
The benefits of LETS arc:
I) Encourages sclf-confid;:ncc and initiative among its
u~. People who have previously valued themselves on
lhe employment market discover Ihm they ha,·e olher
skills and ways in which they earn money
2) Stimulates local trading activity, as the currency Clln
only circulate locally. In order to cam "emcmld dollars"
(the community currency), people must tr.we with local
p:ople
3) Transactions strengthen personal relationships and
goodwill w11hin a community, as trading always involves
a personru one.10-onc arrangement.
How did LETS begin?
LETS was established in 1983 by Michael Lin1on, who
was concerned about the high unemployment rat.e in
Vancouver, BC. He observed that while many local people
had ~kills and products to offer, their lack of money
prevcnt.ed them from trading with each other. By 1987, e
do,en LETSystems were opcr:uing in Canadn.
Who can join LETS?
AU members or the community can join. LETS docs not
discriminate on lhe basis of r.ice. sex, nationruity. age,
sexual preference, lilUlllcial staws, or political orientation.
RESOURCES
Books
•Berry. Thomas The Dream of the Earth (Sierra
Club Books, San Francisco, 1989)
•Berry, Wendell /Jome Economics (North Point
Press. San Francisco. 1987)
•Daly. Herman and John Cobb For lhe Common
Good. Redirecting the Economy Toward
Community, the Environmenl, and a Sustainable
Furure (Beacon Press, Boston. 1989)
How is LETS organized?
LETS Network has a Membership directory which lisLS
311 its members alphabetically. as well as their goods C1nd
services. Members needing goods or scr.·1ccs conLXt other
members who offer what they netd. Aftcr a tr.msac1ion has
been agreed upon and complcccd, :1 roccipt su11ing the
amount u-ansact.ed 1s scm 10 lhe LETS Network. The
network keeps track of lhe tmnsactions. Traansactions are
accounted for in ·emerald dolm" (the community
currency) which equals cash • dollar for dollat. Exchanges
can occur in a combination of emeralds or cash. Members
choose who they wish ID trnllsac1 with and for what
amounts.
How does LETS work?
The account holders of LETSysLCm lis1 what their wan&s
are and what they have 10 offer in a directory. for eimmple:
068-·StMPLE CAR MECHANIC
Rosie ~53773
069-·LA WN MOWINO
Dave 339-990S
07S··BUJLDING WORK
Andrew 442-9878
086-FRESH VEGETABLES
Jtll 776·2024
•Morrison, Roy Building the Road as We Travel:
Mondragon's CooperaJivt Society (New Society
Publishers, 1990)
•Power, Thomas The EcofllJmic Pursuit of Quality
(M.E. Shnrpc, 1988)
•de Romana. Alfredo, Tht Autonomous Economy:
An Emuging A/Juna1ive to Industrial Society
(Monchanin Cross-Cultural Centre, 4917. Rue St.
Urbain, Monucal. Quebec, C:tnada H2T 2\VI;
1989)
•Schumacher, E.F. Small is Beautiful: Economics
as if People Ma11ered (Harper and Row, New York,
1989)
•Eller, Ronald Mintrs. Mil/hands, and Mountaineers
(University of Tennessee Press. 1982)
•Elgm, Duane. Voluntary Simplicity: An
Ecological liftsryle tha1 Promotts Personal and
Social Renewal (Ban&am, 1982)
•Hacnke, David. Ecological Politics and
Bioregionalism. (The Biorcgional Projccr, New Life
Farm, Box 3, Brixey. MO 65618)
•Hau de no sau nee Nation, A Basic Call 10
Consciousness (Akwcsasnc Not.es. Mohawk Nation,
Periodicals
•Catalyst. Investing in Sot:ial Change P.O. Box
364; Worcest.er, VT 0S682
•In Busintss Box 323; Emmaus, PA 18049
•Katuah Journal (particularly Issue 7; Spring, 1985)
Audio Tape
Rooscvch., NY 13683; 1978)
•Philosophy and Economics in the Ecozoic Era
Conftrence with Al/rt.do dt Romana and Tlwmas
Berry, Tapes available from: Center for Reflection
•Hawken, Paul, Tht Nut EcofllJmy
on the Second Law: 8420 Camellia Dnvc; Raleigh.
NC 27612.
•Henderson, Hale! 11:e Policies of the Solar Agt'
•McRobic, Ocorgc, Small is Po.rsible
Projects & Organi,.ations
•Morgan, Oriscom I/ope for tht Future
(Community Setvicc, Box 243. Yellow Springs,
OH 4S387; 1987)
•Allernathe Economic Development Idea~,
MCED; University o( MO (628 Clark Hall);
Columbia, MO 6S21 I. Strategics. tools, case
studies for communily-ba.'iCd planning.
Spnm,J, 1991
++means "to offer" and - means "Wlllllcd.•
People get in touch with each other and negotiate a Lradt.
Rosie agr~ to pay Bob SO emerald dollar.; for five hours
of car mcchrulics, so Bob's emerald account goes up by
SSO and Rosie's account goes clown by SS0. No money is
exchanged. Bob sends a receipt to LETS which is
rcgi!;tcrcd in lhe books. The sum total or "acdits" in !he
system always balances ei,;actly lhe sum iolal of the
"debits." Account holders am take out "I0311S" simply by
spending cmemld dolllll'$ and running up a debit accounL If
a member leaves town. the sys1.em as a whole absorbs the
loss, ns shareholders and customers do with normal
banking losses. (This has never happened.) The more
account-holders there ore, the grcau:r the variety of tmde ts
possible. The LETSyst.em is a non-profit system. No
int.crest is charged on "ovcitlrafts.• and no interest given on
pos1 li vc account balances.
This inform111wn was exurptedfrom 1he "LE'fSNEWS~
article by Sarah F1111Sle.r itr News Crom Aprovocho.
Drawing by Rob M_,..jck
· Coalition for J obs and the F.m ironment
Working ror environmental quality and economic
ju.slice in NE Tennessee and SW Virginia.
• Bi-monthly newsleucr from CJE: 114 Court Street;
P.O. Box 64S; Abingdon, VA 24210 (703)
628-8996.
• E. F. Schumacher Society
Box 76, RD 3: Great Barrington. MA 01230
lnformauon on SHARE (Sclf·Hclp Association for
a Regional Economy) end "berksharcs•, an
alternative regionru currency.
•lnstilutl' ror Community Eco nomics
ISi Montague City Road; Greenfield, l\fA 01301 A
wealth of ideas and information including The
Community Loan Fund Manual and revolving loan
funds.
•Institu te ror Local SeJf.Reliance
242S l8lh Street NW: Washington, DC 20009;
(202) 232-4108. Provides ~ h , information, and
direct I.C(hnieal essisuince 10 citie.~ and towns.
V:iricty of pubbshcd papers available.
• LETS (Local Em p loyme n t Trad ing
System) Find out about lhis dynamic approach 10
regional currency. LETS; 37S Johnson Avenue;
Coutc03y, BC V9N 2Y2 Canada
•Rcgtneration Project
Rodalc Press; 33 E. Minor Street; Emmaw.. PA
18049, Promotes community regeneration,
particularly in the area of health, ctonomy. and
agriculture. Also publi.•,hes Regmeration magazine.
•School or LMng
RD I, Boit 1508 AA: Spring Orovc, PA 17362.
r-ocuscs on al1cma1ivc economic sy~1cms and
concepts: publi.~hcli Grun Revolution ncwslcucr.
Xaumr, Jo\&nmt
paqe z:,
�..
We must come to Ille understanding that the
amount of production possible is limited, llS the canh is
lim1ted in the amount of rcsowtes it is able to yield. We
should not treat Ille earth os a commodity, bul rather as a
community.
Adam Smith's concept oC the "Invisible Hand,•
which he claimed wiU guide our selftSh pursuiis of
supply and derrumd lO a 1111wral economic order, is (lawed.
As World Baok economist HetmM D31y says:
ShD11Td tltue IIO/ al lm1' be a mini"""" ,t~a,dsJ11p of
DRUMMI N G
To &he EditorS of KOJ@h Journal 1 read wilh inlCrCSt your Summer, 1990 number
oo "Canying Cap:lcity.• Very inlCrCSting matcrilll lhcrc,
and some very powerful ideas.
I was particularly intrigued by the graph oC
population coordinated wilh thc evcnJS or regional
history. Thal graph lod me into an interesting uain of
lhought.
Once iribal societies that lived off lhe land
regulated their populotions to what lhcir defined
ICl'ritories could provide. The economy of each group was
relaled to the available n:sowccs of !heir regioos. and
because lhe balance of population was aucial to survival,
it was a tnbal maucr, not a question of individual
preference. Things were very clear back lhen.
As was pointed out in lhe "Carrying Capacity•
issue, !he bioregion is sliU the n:uuml unil or human
hJbiution, however much we may au.empt to conceal
that by victimizing workers in other regions. importing
scarce resources, etc. tr we over-strcsS our bioregioru,
then that stress will only be passed on to other regions,
until lhe whole planet feels the suain. as is happening
now. Like those LribaJ people of yore, we once again
have to live within the economic limits of our
bioregion.~. The humM population still has to be
balanced to the re1,'10n's ability to provide,~ it was then,
which makc.s popufation conlli)I an ecological question
as well as a quc;;tion oS individual choice. It is up to lhe
people of each region to n:cognize how many people
!heir region could mainiain wuh external suppons, and
then accept !hat level as a goal to approach - gradually.
Bccnusc we over-consume so much, every
irutividual in this country counts for more in tenns of
rc,,()W'CCS, TI!en:fore, llS well as reducing our
consumption, wc must be very responsible about
keeping our number.. under control. Regional population
goots clccided by the people of the 111gion based on lhe
limiis of their regional economies seem like a necessary
ecological policy, b111 also one lhlll would grc:uly
11lCJ'C3Se the prosperity and wdl-bcing of the people or
each biorcgion. Thanks co Ka1uah Journal for the insight!
Sincerely,
Hoyt Wilhelm
N. Wilkesboro. NC
Dc.irKatUDh,
It is with sadness that l inform you that my
husband. Jack Combes, died of ()3llCre®C cancer in
Tampa, Florida on May 2 ISi, 1990. The world has lost n
long time dediaucd informed environmcnraliSI.
Jack supported your programs and your
publication, bu1 now you may n:move his name from
your mailing lisL
Wishing you continued WCCC.51;
Sancerely,
Nina C.Ombcs
De.Ir Ka1uah,
I read in the last issue that Ka1@h is going
lhrough difficult times. I wi.~h you all well - Ille jOurnal
is a bright $J)Ol in my life.
1M land. raJJiu tlian ltaving 1M •invisib/1/o«• nu, by theprofil
tJo, only t:onlrolling /1JC1or.
The invisible fooc in this case would be the
aftermath of poorly managed land. Daly poinlS out the
sukiJit "111vulbk liands", k
Dear Friends,
The Unil.Cd Swc.s oC America has a unique and
amazing culuue. It has provided a great many things 10
large numbers of ilS pOpublion. M:lss production has
produced not only large quMtiues of J¥0(lucts, but has
done so cheaply, due in pan 10 11 readily available soun:e
of cheap fuel, namely oil. What is our rcutionship 10
Ille production of oil? Clearly we are dcpcndem on ii,
but 10 what extcnt? With oil we run our ua111,-ponauon
sySICms, communications, heating and electricity. Oil
and its products enable us to produce linoleum tiles, latex
and acrylic paints, clothes, dyes, plnstic bottle.\ toys,
etc. Needless lO say, oil and ourculwre arc ine~tricably
in tenwined.
Problems arose when we bcgM 10 131c.e llus
resource for granlCd, conducting business as though there
were a constant and readily available supply. Oil is a
finite resource, and we arc using u at a ru1e fa.~tcr lhlln
natw-c is able to produce iL Evenwally we are going to
run out of it. and we are going to have to SUJ'l thinking
about 1C11ewablc fuels. Our society has become addicted
to instant gratification and Ille quiclc fut, plummeting
headlong into the fuaure wit.bout much forcthooght or
plnnning. Many of us have not truly considered Ille fact
1h31 the cycle of rcnewability with oil is hundreds of
millions of years. Oil dates back m time to a period 300
million 10 S00 million years ogo. As Jim Houser wri!Cl;
m l\fom~ntwn, I do not wnnt to sec our society, "Bum
as brightly as the sun
only 10 fmd lhat we "[grew)
while the growing was good, wid oow must die as Ille
dying is proved.· As Ille laws or lhetmodynamics Leach
us, "The star which burns twice as brightly only bums
half as long."
Due 10 our dependency on 011, wc have lost toUCh
with ourselves, our culture and the earth cycles which
ultimately suppon us. No longer have we an
understanding of the mechanisms, l.bcories and soences
which have produced our cultural anifaas, and we begin
to ta.kc !hem for grunted. We rely almost entirely on oil
to run our "Cree mnrkct" economy.
This "Cree mnrtct• ecooomy leads to an
overproduciton of goods. In ordct to com()CIC and still
mainiain a profit, priCC$ must drop and sales must
increase along with an maeasc Ill production.
C.Omp:inies are look.ing for low wage wortcers. which
help add lO their overall profits. A company may even
threaten 10 take ils business elsewhere (pcrtiaps to o lhinl
world country where the wages arc really low), unless
union concessions arc made. The employed worker must
worlc longer hours to make Lhe same amount of money
and maintain the same standard of living. Nevcrthelcs.~.
leisure ume and quality of life is sacrific:c:d, as wdl as an
understanding of the eanh S}'Slcrns which would
ultimately bring them security. We would be well
advised to listen 10 the word.~ of David Brandon in the
book Zt.ia in the Art of Helping, wherein ll is stal.Cd:
can:
COSl to our environment:
MUJtw•fortM .~ of1<nl11niudincreasuofwclJllll
and pop11/a,ion, atirpal, great """'1¥n ofsp«w ofrar, p/anls
and onimals and resources.
When wW our psychic incomes be satisfied?
Perhaps never. We an: IOO caught up in Ille economic
paradigm to be able to see past our.;clvcs.
Rachel Summas
Boone.NC
Fnends-
After reading more about tl1e matriarchal Ooddess
religions in The GrcOJ Cosmic Mothu of All, lltis sacred
symbol came lO me. I was thinldng how all the art and
symbols of pre-history were in honor of the
Mother-female-woman's body. While I am in reverence of
that, l also felt a lack of powerful male symbols in
reverence of lhnt aspect of mutu31 creation. C.Ombining
the spiral of life, often associated wilh women/birlh,
wilh the pointed arrow (obviously Phallic), lhis symbol
came to me and felt powerfully whole. When I showed it
to my lover, he immediately said, "Tum ii around."
Suddenly it was a sacred female symbol complete wilh
fallopian tube spiral, birth canal, and VI - a mirror image
• in balance - inner and outer - so different, yet so much
alike. It seemed appropriate, in this ca~. 1h31 the female
would see the male fertility in the symbol, and mnle
would see the female, honoring each other through o
unique humnlriarchlll symbol.
C.SacRcd
Only""""' who Is IIO/ itr.pr~d by IM Wbthl of his
po1.susions, and Jd not pcs~,sed wuli 1h• Med cQfllilwo,,sly 10
fwl.food and s~/1u ow, tu.l:oNJ live°"' vnporuw qlJtstibM
'11'1,o"'" 11 ll'Jiae""' I IOUlt? \\'hat u IM ll<JJIVC of life?'
Erika Schneider
Xatuafi JoumaC page 28
Spring, 1991
�Dc:itK01riah,
Enclosed is my check for S10.00 to renew my
subscription for anolhcr year.
I have debated and waited 10 renew wilh a reason.
For most of its publication lifetime, I have bought
Ka11ioh Journal over the counter. and subscribed when I
moved west a year and a hlllf ago.
It saddens me !hat Katuah Cor some 1.1me has
spoken wilh G voice increasingly shrill. I do not want
anolhcr cnvironmcntnl activist news organ-I have access
to many or lhese. What I want IO read more of in Katuah
Journal are aniclc..~ on the people, the h&Storie.~, !he
Native Ameriellns, spirituality (eitpecially NMive
Amenc:m and alternative), humor. poetry, music, nature,
self-sufficiency. rural living, cooking and n:cipcs, special
(and obscure) pl3ccs and events. the uniqueness. the
peculiarities, the gentleness, the quiet goodness, !he
sense of family and community so common 10 my kin in
Kauiah Province. To me, there's plenty of "diversity" in
!he abo\'C, both "natural and social" and intenclatcd.
Through !he years Kauiah has often l.OUChed my soul ,n
small ways, and to me !hat's the best kind of "education·_
Having lived in Kauiah Province for 47 years
before depaning, and with family "rOOIS" going b.1ck to
!he t 700's there in my Christian relations and even
longer in my ChocUlw relations, my heart remains in
K:miah as surely as my body will return 10 join it when
my Sedona sorjoum is completed- Now that I'm away
Crom "home." those words above speak of wh:ll I miss
most of all.
If Kauiah is headed toward a more angry.
confronUllional tone, or more "what's wrong• instead of
"what's right.• just send my check back, please.
Thanks for !cuing me have my say.
Judy Elizabeth Love
All of the elements /Ml you mention which rn.tJU
Ka1uah a bl'auliful and unique place, we all hold dear and
will conrinue 10 write about because they are a part of
our Ifft, bur so is the habitat which makes /his way of
life possible, and it is thrcattn.cd.
We live in the midst of the greatest evolurionary
catasrropl~ since the end of the Cretauou.t Period. 65
•million years ago. For those of u.s who liw: in and cart
Qbout Ka11ioh it would be irrespormble not to say
somcllWlg. Yt'/. we are aware tlwl when you livfl in the
midst of rhe .wciery largely resp0nsible/or the
catastrophe, whar you Junv: 10 say probably will ,wl
sound plcasa111 10 their cars.
• The Editors
Dc.itKatua/1,
Encl~ please find S40.00 for !he complete set
or b.xl.: issues. Also, please lind an addi1io113J S10.00 for
a foture subscription (after thi.~ one expucs).
We love you. The Kattiah Journal is a work or
spirit and artt I trust we'll answer your uppcal with
enough v!gor to give you new Ufe.
Warmly,
Ste\·e Qubcck
Or.wing by Rob Levcmt
Dear Ka1uah,
I love your journal and always look forward 10 it.
then treasure it until the neitL I really think it's
exceptional in many wayi;, but for me, thc spirituality or
!he Joumal 10uches my heart so deeply.
I hope you continue forever; and if you would
ever need assistance from someone outside !he Province
physically but lhcrc in spirit every day, I hope you will
let me know.
Bless each or yoo.
Nancy LignilZ
DcarKa1uah,
Thank you for sending issues of Katuah Journal
IO me, we've found them very interesting and informative
with beautiful art and open accessible layout. I'm so glad
we've discovered you! I'm including a check to cover a
subscription, but rn give you !he mailing information
'below so I do noc have to cut up the b.xlc: of one of my
issues.
David and Cindy Ort
To Katuah Journal:
Dear People.
I am a member of a Sydney-based group that until
recently was bioregional repn:sentative in an Australian
bio-rcgional network lcnown as Austtulian Association
for Sus1ainable Communities (AASC).
Though this network is no longer formally alive,
the groups of rural and urb.,n communities the
bio-regional mtsS11ge "stained" after cuuings Crom such
publications as Planet Drum Review and Akwas:isnc
Notes were circulated (via an AASC press cuuing
network) around thc countryside. are numerous and
mostly all locally active.
Recently in Sydney l met with Peter Berg and
friend Judy. Judy showed us many CJtamples or
bio-regionally inspired publications and pnnted creations,
one of which was your Mag37.inc Kotuah JourllOJ.
l was very unpressed wilh the breadlh in one
article or the Spring 1989 Edition by David Morris.
Could you please send me a copy of that edition or that
article if the.re arc none left? Or word of where I might
get a copy locally if my failure to enclose/forward any
money with this no1c discourages you? I would be
happy to send you wluucver the cost is in rc1um ma.ii if
you can get me a copy.
I look forward to hearing from your pan or the
plancL Over here il is (once again) mysteriously 100 hot,
and then just as mysteriously coo abruptly cold, then
again jUSt ~ radically windy without v.aming. Too
much change, 100 many extremes. all too often, to feel
comfonablc talking about !he wcalher - and the sun huns
your eyes and neck.
Right now it's I !pm night. and well away from
banks and money currency exchange venues, so I hope
you can bill me in the rewm mml.
Hope thi:. !cu.er finds Someone...
Regards,
Sieve Ward
.
Sprim.,, 190 I
'.J((lfuofl Journal J)O(JC 29
�(coruinued limn page 14)
fossil fuel draw. We may not be able to think that
way for tOO much longer. As the oil supplies
diminish, the gas is going to be getting more and
more expensive and it's going 10 be less and less
efficient to produce everything in one place and
ship it all over the world. Our assumption that the
fossil fuel supply is infinite dislons the price of
what is being made.
DW: What do you think the next step is for
local agrlouhlil'e? What's some of the stuff that
wt need to work on?
Ron Alnspan: We need to work together,
suppon each other, and promote the idea of the
regional economy. This involves on-going
education of the public. I don't think I have any
ideas that haven't been said before, but it's
imponam 10 raise the issue to the people, to make
the public conscious of the cosLS of gerring things
from far away. That way people can pull each
other up and build suppon for one another, so
they have the stamina 10 carry on.
My attitude about social change is summed
up in the idea that "you do what you can." I don't
know that ·we can ever expect to overcome all the
mon:: regressive or more reactionary forces, but
ic's imponant for everybody to live by their
principles and do what they can. Whenever we
win a battle, we can feel good about it, but then
we go_ on and continue the struggle. It's an
on-going proctl>s.
/
Ron Ainspan: If we were acting slI'ictly
from of our consciousness of global issues.
Mountain Food Products might not carry
products like Mexican tomatoes or O.ilcan
raspbenies in the wintertime because that
encourages the long-distance production and
disaibution system.
Kantah: That would definitely hurt your
business.
Ron Ainspan: Even though cantaloupes.
for instance. cost $30 a case in the wintertime,
whereas they go for $6 or $7 a case when they
are in season during the summer, people have
this seemingly insane need to be able to buy
anything they want whenever they want iL I
don't know what causes that, but it flies in the
face of efficient use of the world's resources.
For our pan, we push local produce and
try to raise the issues whenever we can, but we
try co be practical • I guess that would be the
word • and do what's necessary 10 be successful
and hope that we are getting some of our
principles across to our customers while
maintaining our own integrity.
(ca,linu':iS ~ 113i• 27}
lnttrvitw recorded and tdittd
by David Whulu
Photo by Rodney Webb
~
.
Growers or retailers who are interested in
?anicipating in the organic produce co-op can call
Wountain Food Producis at (704 J 255-7630, or
.1isit their location in rite Old Chesterfield Mill at
121 Wesr Haywood Street; Asheville, NC.
.
truer toilay. We do indeed need. despcrn1cly . to "step back
Yet our economic system is structured to pro1CC1 big
Md have a new look" at the world we are~ busily creating
business more than Individuals, so it's quilC likely that
• and the world we are destroying. But here's the rub: In
lllXJ)ayers will soon be asked - or ruther, told • 10 f00t the
order to ~,, cnvironmcntaVsocial preservation as
bill, as is already occurring wilh the mushrooming S&L
"productive work." we must stop relating producuvity
SC:lndal and other looming socio-economic disasters. If we,
only to shon-tcrm profits nnd mruumal consumption. The
the worl.crs, lllllpayers, and citizens wish to a"oid this fate,
ideA of "production for sale and con~umption" must be
we must rccogniz.e that a suong environmental sunax for
augmented by the vision of "productive prcscmumn for a
these nnd similar mdustrics is both necc.'IS.lry and jusL This
sUSUlinablc FUTURE."
nx:ognition must in tum be followed by social action, if 11
What will such a shift m emphasis mCM? In
is to have any effect • und then we'll face the long and
pr:ictical terms. it means that we mu.~l cre:itc new criteria
arduous UISk of bringing industry into line with ecological
for producuvity. and will have to pay people to preserve our and economic reality. Aficr all, the money to pay for
environment evtn though their work does not
long-term productivity and prc_~ervation hos 10 come from
create,, a "product" for imminent sate, and thus
some\\ h,re • :ind it should come from those who profit
brin~s in NO money In the short term. On this
the most from the rape of lhc Eartll. Equally imparuint,
most pracllcal level, it's obvious that the money needed to
our concept of ·work" simply HAS 10 shift into a more
IXIY these people will have to be justified by an cntin:ly
future-oriented and truly produclhe mode, a mode in
diflcrent rnuonale lhan that usually subscribed to by
which our finMci3J sul'\'i\'OI no longer depends on
industry ond by ~om1sts. This type of wort will have
personally, socially, and planet.1nly deadening "JObs." or on
to be e,•alumed and ,·ntued differently tlun work producing
incomes deriving directly or indirectly from ecological and
imrned1.1tc n:sults and profiis, and the woflcCl"S' P3Y will
social destruction.
ha,·e 10 come from olhcr public or private :,ource,-, since
their wurk involves on outlay of funds rJthcr 1h1111
producing immcduic income.
The logic:il source of such funds is the corporations
We now have the opportunity to refrnme our
and businesses which have been profiwng the most from
economy and our society so that they can be a
the cxploitntion and/or destruction of our environment •
source of pride and fulfillment ins1ead of shame
e,;pocmlly such COtJ)Ol'ate giants a, the trans-national 01I,
and despair... so that we can regain a sense of
banking, chemical, pla.5tics, beef, and wood products
identity beyond our roles as exploitive "consumindustries. THEY should be the ones 10 pay for
In I977, on the day before his de:uh, E.F
ers" and profiteers. There is so much more 10 the
cnv,ronmenUll prouXtion, not the beleaguered W<JXl)'Cl'S,
Schumacher h:ld this to :..iy ubow Wcstem lnduslrial
"American Dream" 1han we·ve been seeing, so
suicc nlOst of lhcse corporatioM have been allowed to •get
society: "Narurc canllOl Sl!lnd 1t, the resource cndowm~t or a11,-ay with (ecological) murder" for decades - in return r«
much we've apparently forgotten. The time has
the 11,orJd cannot stand it, and lhc human being c:innot sland the m30y ·benefits" they suPJX)Se(lly bring us. As
come to revi1alize that dream, 10 renew the vision
iL,.. lt 1, a kind of fruud. And so it c; necessary for us 10
Schumochcr put 11. we've boughL into •3 kind of fr.iud." and of a truly just and humane society... and to create a
step baclc and ha,e a new look_"
livable, sus1ainable future. Let's "seize the day"!
have been conned into supporting 3 fraudulent and
It is now 199 I, :ind Shunm,hcr'~ wool.~ nng even
disastrous economic systcm, This has got to stop; we
simply HA VE to redesign our economy if we wi~h to
~urvivc.
X.nti1ofi JounmC poqc30
n t '"- J1 ,1u, r ,1u. •nx
Oar response to this need for change has been
slow, but we arc sUll'ting to REDEFINE productivity to
Ulcludc lhe pr~rvation/ rtstoration of ecological
sysiems and "n:rourccs; since such prcser"auon alone c.in
guarnmoe a contmuing supply of valu:ible "products• (as
well as a functioning planet!). Eventu:llly, we will have
to recogniz.c lhat pro1CCting and n:smring nmurul
ecosySICms is ·productive work" wonhy of great financi:11
"COJnpcnsruion.• Thi~ essential mind-shift CIIII Blreooy be
o;cen in action in progr.ims such as the Federal
ConSCNntion Reserve Program, which pays furmen; to
NOT plant crops on eroded fields, and to pLlnt uces and
grow a forest iru.t.C3d. Th= farmers ·are paid to take the
land out of producuon fo,- IO years," and though the IJ'CCS
can be "han·ested" afier that time, "90% or the acres
planted m trees under the ooil bank programs of the SO's
and 60's have remained fore:;tcd • .Similar illCCllll, c
progrnmi nre being utiliz.cd m lhe SIJ"Usglc to save the nun
forests: for example, the SO<lllled "dcbt-for-ll3tUIC swap~· .
in which C011strvat.ion groups or governmental ugencies
·buy' pan of a trOpical ll3tion's debt food in exchange for
the preservation of a s«:tion of rmn forest.
These programs, and Olhcrs hke lhem, ~nainly
desctvc IO be viewed :is "productive." Indeed, lhe work.
they provide could be called the MOST producUvc work,
for u cn::itcs ecological health and economic
SU"'31nability, Md is NOT based on the economic.~ of
profit through ~pto,1a11on and destruction.
•••••••••••
···········
,
�EARTH ENERGIES
The Great Lover
by Charlotte Homsher
~
/~
' ~•
A t the deepest level we are all lovers of the
eanh and we are here on this planet to discover
this love relationship. It is like walking through
the woods, feeling the rhythm, feeling tuned in
'
~ and stepping lightly on the leaf cover, then
~
c:;
,J~
Drawing b)' Susan Adam
suddenly kneeling down and picking _up a leaf to
discover the marvelous, previously hidden world
underneath. The first time I recall feeling the eanh
energy as a distinct sensation, which literalJy
entered my body, was three years ago in the
Joyce Kilmer MemoriaJ Forest. I have aJways
loved big trees and I have attempted to
communicate with trees for years. Some of my
experiences with trees have included seeing
flashes of colored lightS and hearing sounds
within trees which I suppose to be the tree
elementals. Sometimes I received "messages"
from treeS. Any time interspecies con_imunication
is happening via words, thoughts or images,
there is translation going on. The tree doesn't use
words to experience life, therefore the energy of
the tree must be transformed into a cerebraJ
energy which we can understand.
At Joyce Kilmer, I chose the biggest, oldest
poplar I couJd find, grounded myself firmly and
put my paJms on the tree. 1did not expect
anything in particular except that I wanted 10
express affection and gratitude for the life of the
tree. I quickJy became aware of the tree as a very
powerful being. The energy came up the roots of
the tree from the eanh and emered my body just
as though I were attached to the tree as a sucker
root. The energy entered through the soles of my
feet. traveled up both legs, up my back on either
side of the spine and into my head. At the same
time it entered from where my paJms touched the
bark, traveling up my arms. The sensation was
pleasurable to say the least, and riveting. For that
quiet moment I was part of an ancient tree; I
knew cxactJy what it was like to be alive as a
poplar hundreds of years old. I stayed with the
experience as long as I could I noticed that the
energy which came form the canh into the roots
of the tree and into my rootS (my feet), came in
surges or waves of energy. Others have called
this energy pulses, or even feeling the rhythm of
the breath of the earth. In India, visceral energy,
when it travels up the spine, is called kundalini.
In any case, the knowledge of earth energy as
VJSCeral and real, a force to be reckoned with, is a
worldwide, if arcane, study. Witness the
worldwide distribution of sacred sites. Someone
or ones had co recognize the places of power and
then understand what effect these special energy
places would have on the people. One theory
now in vogue and mentioned in the book~
flaw by James A. Swan, is that the sacred sites
correlate to the chalaa system of man. For
instance, we go to a heart chalaa place and our
heart is heaJed or opened as our vibratory energy
harmonizes with the energy in that place.
I nearly always recognize vortexes as .
vibrations in visceral rushes of energy Wlthin my
own body. The intensity of energy might vary
with the power of the vortex or wilh my ability or
inability 10 be receptive at the time. For me. the
receiving of the energy, which of course is really
an energy exchange, is reason enough 10 pursue
the study of earth energy; it proves to me that our
relationship to the earth is not a static thing, but
creative and sensuaJ.
Many of the most powerfuJ vonexes in
Karuah are on public access. We flock en massc
to these places of pristine beauty ignorant of why
we feel so invigorated, why we wish to return
again and again. When you consider the
awesome power of the earth compared 10 the
puny life energy of a single human being. you
may wonder why the earth would bother to
respond to us at aJl The :t-nswer to t~is, in m_y_
opinion, is 1ha1 the earth 1s a lover with exqu1s11e
sensitivity.
~
GIRL'S SUMMER CAMP
'TURTLE ISLAND IS LOOKING
FOR A FEW TOUCH GIRLS"
NATIONAL
lNDlAN
FESTIVAL
JULY 7-13 1991
ACES 11-17
If you enjoy the challenge of
adventure then Turtle Island
ls the place for you,
100¾ Cotton Futons & Covers
No Rain Forest Wood Used
(615) 929-8622
Batik Clothing, Jewelry, Artwork ...
414 s . Roan St, Downtown Johnson City. TN 37601
For mon: infonnation write; Turtle 1'1.Jnd Pre..erve. Rt. I
Box 249-8 Deep Cap, NC 28618 (704) 265-2267
"CELEBRATING OUR
MOTI-IER EARTH"
MAY 17, 18, 19 1991
Highlights of Events:
• Native American Dancers
• Floyd Westerman ("Dances with Wolves")
• Thomas Banyacya - Hopi Elder
• Javier Alarcon - Aztec Fire Dancer
• Native American Flute Music Concert
• Demonstrations
• Native American Crafts & Skills
• Traditional Indian Foods
Thi$ cvl?J\t will be the l.lrg~ of its kind to date in
the Southeastern Unit-cd States! Camping is available
for the public al Chcllilw Parle Albany, ~rgla. $4.()() •
adults - S3.00 children. For More information call Velaric
Spratlin - Festival Coordinator, (704) 265- 1063.
Spri.ntJ, 1991
Union Acres
An Alternative
i
- - Acrtagt for Salt - Smoky Mounlmn Liuing
with o focus on spiritlllll 011d
ecologiall wluts
For more information:
Contact C. Grant at
Routt 1. Box 61]
WhiHitr, NC 28789
(704) 497-4964
Progrorrw to enco1.Xoge
sell aid Earth O\N0r808$$.
celetxol1on. klmhlp and hope.
• Yovfl Cempl • School ProgfWl!s
• Femily CemP* • Toachet Trumg
• Commurwty Progren,1
•~Stell Tr1lMQ
• Outdoot Prog111m Consulting
NATURAL MARKET
P0. 8al 1306
823 Blow,ng Roel<. Rd .
Gannwo. Teme- 3n3a
615-436-6203
265-2700
Boone. NC 28607
�----------------,
Floyd Co. Envitonmental Council
The Aoyd County Environmental Council
was formed out of a successful struggle to
prevent the county's participation in a potentially
expensive and dangerous regional landfill.
It is currently involved in trying to prcvent
massive clean:utting in an environmentallysensitive area of the county known as "The Free
State," where many people believe that cougars
survive.
People who want to get in touch with the
Floyd County Environmental Council or help in
their efforts can contact them via Donna
Whitmarsh at (703) 651-4747.
Staging a Bioregional Event:
The Piedmont's Haw River Festival
Beginning on April 19 and running for
four weeks, a volunteer crew of educa10rs,
performers, and river lovers will travel the
length of the Haw River, stopping 10 meet with
school children in each of the five counties the
river connects. At approximately seven different
riverfront sites, the festival crew will put on a
colorful learning celebration that will look at the
river from the perspectives of science, nature.
history, and fun.
A main goal for the Festival is to give
children a direct, hands-on experience that will
leave them with a greater awareness of the place
where they live, and how human choices affect
the natural world. Also along the way, the
festival will involve many other citizens within
the Haw River basin through scheduled events
in riverside towns. In all, approximately 3000
srudentS are expected to participate,
accompanied by 300 parents and teachers.
When children arrive at the site, they will
be clustered into small groups, which will rotate
among these teaching stations: Animals, People
Along the River, Good Allematives, Riverwalk,
Music & Stories, and Games. The Animals
Station, for example, will feature live animals
from the river and riverbanks and let the children
get to know these finned, furry, and scaly
neighbors - their relationship to each other
(food chains), to the place (habi1a1). and to us
(environmental issues).
To contact the Festival, write Haw River
Assembly; P.O. Box 187; Bynum, NC 27228
or call Louise Kessel at (919) 542-5599.
., '
RECEIVED
Elwiro~n1al Ad'IIOCacy: Concepis, Issues, and
Dilemmas by Bunyan Bryant (Caddo Gap Press, Ann
Arbor. MJ, 1990)
Communitits 1n Economic Crisis: Appalachia and tht
Sowh edilcd by John Gaventa, Barbara Ellen Smith, and
Alex Willingham (Temple University Press,
Philadelphia. 1990)
Audio Tape
Light ,n tht Wind a cappella chanis and circle songs by
Bob Avery.(irubel and lhe Celcbnuion Singers (Tribuia,y
Records, Aoyd. VA, 1990) - Spirited songs for holi<bys.
campfires, swcais. or whenever lho CltClc gathers.
REVIEW
From Walden Pond to Muir Woods:
Alternative Way.r Aero.rs America
Mary Dymond Davis (1990);
Foreword by Ernest Callenbach
Order from: ASPI Publications; Rt. 5, Box 423:
Livingston, KY 40445
For those who travel, Mary Davis' book
From \Vaiden Pond u, Muir Woods is an
ecological ttavel guide. For those who stay at
home, it is a local resource listing. Mary Davis
has compiled descriptions of a variety of
ecological loci throughout the continen1 that
would be worthwhile for a traveler to visit or for
a potential local activist to link up with.
Her descriptions cover a broad spectrum
of interests: groups and communities promoting
alternative and ecological ways of living, natural
areas, environmental education, recreation spots
and suppliers, and transponation help. Her
profiles are infonnative and her introductory
explanations show clearly the pan each caiegory
plays in the ongoing process of ecological
recovery on Tunle Island.
This is a book 10 have and to pass around,
a great resource for alternative folk or those who
want to find out "where it's at" on Turtle Island.
.ow
PLANTING CHESTNUTS
A very detennined woman, Dorothy
Dickson, has a vision of establishing an
American chestnut tree seed farm that could
supply viable seed to someday re-establish the
American chestnut in the wild. She is looking
for land and money to help with the idea.
Write her at: 113 Autumn Lane;
Harrisburg, NC 28075, or call (704) 455-1027.
Paul Gallimore of The Long Branch
Environmental F.ducation Center has initiated a
project to plant hybrid American-Oriental
chestnut seedlings in the wild to provide a
short-term hard mast source for black bears and
other creatures who will soon face mast
shonages from the oak tree decline and the
imminent depredations of the gypsy moth.
Membership in the project, including two hybrid
trees for planting, costS $25 to Paul Gallimo~;
RL 2, Box 132; Leicester, NC 28748
NATIVE FLUTES
Two styles made of cedar or walnut
woods in the traditional manner
Hawk Littlejohn
Sourwood Farm
RL 1, Box 172-L
Prospect Hill, NC 27314
(919) 562·3073
r/ r:rf.u
~ Saru}JMush
Htrb Nurse_y
,
WHOLE FOODS
VITAMINS
ORGANIC PRODUCE
160 Broadway
Asheville, North Carolina
Open 7 Days a Week
Monday - Friday 9 am - 8 pm
Saturday 9 am - 6:30 pm
Sunday 12 pm - 5 pm
WREATHS • POTPOURRI
• HERBS • TOPIARY
Complete Herb CataliJg - $4
Describes more tlum 800 plants from
Aloe to Yam,w
Rt 2, Surrett Cove Road
Leicester, North Carolina 28748
P1ione for appointment to visit
A.I.A., Resource Information Analysis
Neil Thomas and Andy Feinstein
(704) 683-2014
305 Westover, Asheville, NC
(704) 252-6816
Sprl.ng. 1991
�MARCH
20
"Oh, the May, the jolly, jolly May;
The leaves they spring so green."
SPRING EQUINOX
:8:ELT~:E
SWANNANOA, NC
Baba Olatunji Drum & Dance
Weekend. Spuitual teacher and cultural diplomat from
West Africa via the drum. Performance 8 pm, 3/22,
Kinn:dgc Auditorium, Wanen Wilson College, S 10.
Call 004) 645-391 I for mon: info. Sponsored by
Rhythm Alive!
22-24
and
APRIL
Katuah Spring Gathering
at Morningstar Fann on the Tanasi Ridge
5-7
AS II EVILLE, NC
Seminar on solar technology and a
tour of solar homes sponsored by the Buncombe
County Solar Communities Program. More info,
004) 255-5522.
30
FULL MOON - PASSOVER
30
WESSER, NC
"Cheoah Council" to talk
stm1.egies and tactics for the defense of the
Cheoah Bald area, the largest unprotected
roaclless area in the region, now threatened by
logging and roadbuilding. Bring food and
camping gear, be prepared to walk in along
the Appalachian Trail. For more info, write
SouthPAW; Box 3141; Asheville. NC 28802
or call (704) 586-3146.
April 26-28
5-7
22-23
Bring camping gear and food for yourselves and to share.
The site is at high clevnlion, so be prepared for changeable
weather. Bring colorful dress, musicm insuuments, toys,
mask matcn:ils, and other celcbl1\lory tools.
• .• t
11, I ,
NEW MARKET, TN
ST? (Stop the Poisoning! or Save the
Planet!) environmental acuon school at the Highlander
Center. Call or write for mfo: 1959 HighlMdcr Way:
New Market, 1N 37820 (615) 933-3443.
VALl,.Ef llEAD, AL
,
"Masculinity: Native Tcachmgs. Earth
consciousne.ss• workshop. Cieorgc Goodstrikcr
(Blackfoot elder), An Hom, Tarwater. Pn:-rcgisier.
S I75, includes 4 meals and camping. Hawkwind Earth
Renewal Cooperative: Box 11: Valleyhcad, AL 35989.
ASHEVILLE, NC
"Re-Thinking Democracy: Citizenship
in the Age of Mass Media," A Symposium for
Tcac.hcrs, PurcnlS, and Concerned CitiJ.cns. Speakers
include: Walter Trucu Anderson. Kathleen Hall
Jrunieson, Marie Crispin Miller. Free. University of
North Carolina at AsheV1Uc. For more mfonnation,
(704) 251-6526.
1 ••
,
n,
~
.(
•,
This is a bcnef4 celebration IO help ~ve sacri!d land:
SS d0113tion per pcison requesled
For 1r1vd din,clio115 and more info.rmJJlcm,
call (704)293-7013 or (70,1) SU-3146
11-13
28
FULL MOON
MAY
13
NEW MOON
NEW MARKET. TN
STP environmenl:ll action school for
young people! at the Highlander Center. See 4/5-7.
24-26
31
EASTER
13
SWANNANOA, NC
Dedication of the World ~ u n d
Oiamber ru. the Earth CcnlCI led by Beautiful Painl.Cd
Arrow (Josoph Rael). 30'1 Old Pdlo10sl11j, Rd.\• ,, •,110-x
24-27
14
NEW MOON
Spiritual Hcaltll." lnteyal yoga taught by Swami'
Vidynnanda. $145. Southern Dharmn Rcueat Center.
Sec 4/19-21.
28
Home! A Bioregional Reader
llome! A Bioregional Rt.adt.r, just published by
New Society Publishers, offers ·an CJtciting vision and
~tn11egy for creating ccologicmly suswinable
communities and cultures in h:umony with the limits and
regenerative powers of the Earth.· It has gathered articles,
stories. and poems of over forty writers and activists who
hnve comribuled both to defining bioregionalism as a
political philosophy and to lhc practice or "living in
place.• Contributor.. include: G4ry Snyder, Peter Berg.
Caroline Estes, Wendell Berry, as well as Mamie Muller
of the Kmuah Journal. Graphics in lhc book include the
worlt of Kmuah'.r Rob M~ick:.
The book Is a large-format paperback with 192
pages. including resources and a reading lisL Copies are
available by mail for $15.70 from: RM Designs: Box
UiOt: Boone, NC 28007. Pri~ of Rob Mcssick's
illustrations from the book are also available from the
same address.
Sprt ng, 1991
''"'.
jZ
16-21 HELEN, GA
Rive~ane Rendel.Yous with
Snow Bear, Darry Wood, and Bob Slack. Jr.
plus visiting instructors. "Ancient arts and
skills for the mind, hean, and hand..."
including fire by friction, making stone and
bone tools, tanning buckskin, plant
identification and use, basketry. blowguns,
and more. Pre-register: $135, includes
camping and two meals per day. For more
info, contact: Bob Slack. Jr.; Unicoi State
Parle; Box 1029; Helen. GA 30545 (404)
878-2201 (Ext. 282?· . \.,
HOT SllRINGS,rN<:'. h.'11~:Ktx·, am ~lri'I ,UI?.
........~~:M~~~.f9r ~1!,Yi;ic:il. Meot;i!J\~ •.., __
Sw:11\MnOa, NC .28nS.c31l.(704) 2!l8Tl!l3S. ~
FULL MOON
JUNE
11-15
JOHNSON CITY, TN
Changes, a play by The Road
Company at Down Home. Tickets 58.00 during week,
$10.00 weekend. For details call (615) 926-TI26.
19-21
HOT SPRrNGS, NC
"Hca\'en on the Mountain: Nine at !he
Top," divinauon with lhe I Ching taught by Jay
Dunbar. 'Through subtle movement and discussion we
will excn:isc the intuition and explore the language of
energy.• S75. Southern Dharma Re1Ica1 Center; RL I,
Box 34-H; Hot Springs. NC 28743 (7~) 622-7112.
21
25-26
EART H OAY CELfBRATIONS
II ENDERSONVlLLE, NC
Into the Heart of Healing" IC\'etsing hcan discas.c wilh vegetarian dict, cxe.tt:ise
and su-cs:; m.lllngement taught by Steven Oreer. MD
Md Lynn DcLuca. Shambala Institute. For more info,
write 118 Cumberland Ave: Asheville, NC 28801 or
call (704) 25.3-0509.
NATURAL
ALTERNATIVES
FOR HEALTHFUL
LIVING
p.o. box 1092 • winery square
gatlinburg, tenne.,sce 37738
615-436-6967
X.Otiw:lh Journot pa«Je a3
l ~ lQn,uor t Q.UnJl
�BUSINESS PAR1NER WANTED· Must have some
cspiLill IO help CSUlblish nn herb, orgnnic foods, and
0
possibly ecological and solar equipment business. Large
new building, half ac.re, in Ellijay Mt'ns. area. Please call
(~) 635-7009 or wri1e io: Wall Klimowiez; Rt. 5, Box
30-t: Ellijay. GA 30540.
omusu~ !:~ ~
challenge, of advenuue, lhe beauty and inspiration or
nature, the fellow~ip and sharing of lcindered spirilll, lhcn
Turtle Island is the pince for youl This one week camp is
open 10 gills 11-17, and runs from July 71h IO July 13th.
Tow cost iS $300.00. For information and application
call (704) 265-2267, or write: Valarie SpraUin c/o Tun le
lsl!lnd Pre:;ctve; RL I, Box 249-B: Deep Gap (near
Boone), NC 28618.
LAND FOR SALB • 32 acics, all or pan. 3 private coves;
2 large organic fields; sm311 solar ~lrUCture; 1906 rustic
fannhouse: barn. If interested, please wnic: Vicki Baker
and Tom Graves; Rt. 2, Box 108-A: Whittier, NC 28789
or call (704) 586-8221.
PIEDMONT BIOREGIONAL INSTITIJTE • For those
who live in the Piedmont ruca, lherc's a bioregional effon
well underway. Join us! We would appreciate any donation
or time or money to help mcel operating c:Jtpcnses. For a
gift of $2.5 or more. we will send you a copy of John
Lawson's joumru. A New Voyagt' 10 Carolina. Also, come
find out about the Lawson ProjecL PBI; 412 W.
Rosemary Strcci; Chapel Hill, NC 27516; Uwharria
Province. (919) 942-2581.
1WO FAMll.IES seeking neighborly folks 10 buy inco
130 acres of bcautlful mountru11S1de bnd near
Weavcsville, N.C. We are involved in org:inic gnnlening,
homeschooling, n:11.uml healing and spiritu:ility. 20 acre
share for $24,000. eau (704) 658-2676 or 645-7954.
LOO CABIN BUILDING CAMP· a three week.
hands-on, edueational retreat building a log house. Live as
an American pioneer and learn the ways of wood.
Magnificcnl involvement wilh hi.5tory and self· sufficiency
in na~ Towly hand-built Crom U'OCS cut on lhe sice in
the beautiful wilderness setting ofTunle Island Presesve.
A uniqueopp0nuni1y. June 23- July 13, 1991. For more
information call (704) 265-2267. or wrice Turtle Island
Prescrvo; RL I Box 249-B; Deep Gop (near Boone), NC
28618.
HAWKWIND EARTH RENEW AL CO-OPERATIVE is
an 87 acre primitive l'CU'Cal. and wocking community farm.
Located in the Northern Alabama mountruns, just 115
miles northwest of Allan ta. Classes on a!J.ernative
lifestyles and Native American philosophies rue available
on a regular basis. For inforrruuion or callllog of Native
crafts & products, call (1.0S)63S-6304.
MUSIC BY BOB AVERY.ORUBa available on lhrec
cassew:s. Treasures in the Stream and Circles Re1urni11g
a recent release of original chan1s
and songs. Ughl i11 the \Vind, is a cappella. Lyric sheets
included. Send $10 for each cape or S26 for o.ll lhlee co
Bob Avery-Grubel; RL I, Box 735; Floyd, VA 24091,
aie folk/roclt-jazz. and
GOOD STEW ARDS WAN"ffiD for rcmoce land. Approx.
IS acres for sale w/ house (2 bdrm., I bath). Organic3lly
fanned for 1.0 years, gravity feed spring water. High on
Tanasi Ridge, views. Raven and ~ Walker, Box 23:
Lake Toxaway, NC 28747 (704} 293-7013.
MOCCASINS, handcmfl.ed of clkhlde in the traditlonal
Plains Indian style. WaJet rcsisUlnt. rcsolable, and rugged great for hiking! Children's and infant sizes available.
Write: Eanh Dance Moccasins; RL 5. Box 341-B,
Burnsville, NC 28714 or call 675-594 I.
WICKER WORKER • Wicker fumitW"e reslortd. Cane.
rusb, lllld reed SC3IS woven - basJcets rcp:wcd. Expcricnced
scat weavu. "lf you ean'L we cane.· Andita Cwkc; 27
Mrut SL; Asheville, NC 28801 (704)2.53-6241.
SKYLAND • log on co the computer bulletin board of the
Smokies. Networking, plus news on lhe environment.
natwe phocography, games, computer utilities, much
more. Con1.aet Michael Havclin, sysop, (704} 2.54-6700.
HlGHLANDER CEN1eR • is a community-based
cducalional organization whose purpose is co provide space
for people co learn from each other, and co develop
solutions co environmcmal problems based on their own
values, experiences and aspirations. They also put OUl a
quarterly newslcucr, Hlghlandu Reporu. For more
infonnation contact Highlander Cci11er; 1959 Highbnder
Way; New Market.. 1N 37820 (615) 933-3443.
ADULT CAMP· a nawra1 living experience 1eJ1Cbing
primitive Eanh Skills and rughterung participants spirilU3l
awareness lllrough riwal This renewal rwe:11 olTers five
days of living in a teepee at Tunle Tsland Preserve wilh
master woodsman nnd &eaehu Eustace Conway. June 8 12. 1991 or Scpiember I • 5 arc the dates. For more
information call (704) 265-2267, or write TurUe Island
Preserve; RL I, Box 249-B: Deep Gap (near Boone). NC
28618.
EARTH SKILLS, NATURE AW ARE1''ESS
WORKSHOP • Reconoo:t wtlh the Earth • bow drill fire,
cordage, shelters, lOOlmaking. medicinal and edible plants.
nature observation, and much more. See and fed the Eanh
duough primal C)CS and primal :.kills Write: Dr. Guy
Jaconis; RL 4, Box 92: Beaufon. NC 28516 (9 I9)
728-2959.
BODY RIIYTJJMS from Pbnetary Molhcrs - a beautiful
and practical calendar for women 10 chart lhcir ·moonlhly"
cycles. Send S3.00 plus S 1.00 p0stagc 10: Planetary
Modicn Collective (c/oNancie Yonker): 5231 Riverwood
Ave.; Sarasot:i. A. 3423 I.
WISE WOMAN TRADmON APPRENTICE WEEKwith Whitewolf, near Asheville. July 25-31 (Weekend
opuon, 26-28). Foraging, wildcrafting, communicating
wilh plants, herb gardening. llllditional remedies,
Eanhkccping, woman's heallh care. women's wisdom
circles, Moonlodge, mllSSllgc, movement. and music.
Donation or work Exchange. Comfortable dorm, camping,
meals. Concacl Lcivan; Box 576; Asheville. NC 28802.
1990/91 DIRECTORY OF IN1'ENTIONAL
COMMUNfTIP.S • Just released, over 2 y~ in the
making. Names, addresses. phone nwnbets, and
descriptions of31.0 Norlh American communities, and
over 250 rcsourcc groups, plus 40 nniclcs. Maps,
cross-reference chruts, fully indexed. $13.50 postpaid from
Sandhill Fann; ROUIC I, Box 155-R: Rutledge. MO
63563. 40% discount available on orders o! 10 or more.
I am looking for land suitable for small scale farming
wilh a good source of war.er, preferably northwest
Rulherfocd or soulhW$ McDowell Counties. I am also
open to ocher areas within 45 min. of Asheville. Also
looking for people who would like IO develop a rural
community in lhc Kan1ah region wilh intereslS in org1111ic
gardening, environmental issues, lllld education. Contact
Frank Holzman: 537 Seminole Avenue; Atlanlll, GA
30307 (404} 688-4016.
RECYCLED PAPER! • Dll'CCtory of products sources for
the Southcas1. Suggested donation S 1.00
to Western Norlh Carolina Alliance; PO Box 18087:
Asheville, NC 28814 (704) 2.58-8737.
• 1Vebworkil1g hasclumgt>df There is nowafuof S2.50
per entry of50 words or less. Send 10: Rob Messick;
P.O. Boz 2601; BooM, NC 28f,/)7.
"The area's oldc,;t
and largest natural
food< grorery"
811fk Herbs, Spices, & Grains
Vitamins & Supplements
Wheat, Salt & Yeast-Free Foods
Dairy S11~titutes
Hair & Skin Care Products
Beer & Wi11e Mnki11g S11pplies
200 W. King St, Boone, ~C 28607
• PrCll'ulmg I fealll:y Food Sitree 1975 •
COMMITTED
To COMMUNITY AND Gooo Fooo
255-7650
~
90 Biltmore Avenue Asheville, :-.:c
2 Blocks South of Dov,mtown
(70,l) 26-t-5220
Sprlt19, 1991
�BACK ISSUES OF KATUAH JOURNAL AVAILABLE
ISSUE THIRTEEN • FALi.. 1986
Cenn:r FOT Awakening - Elizabclh Callari - A Gentle
Dcmh • Hospice - Emes1 Morgan • Dealing Creatively
wilh Death • Home Burial Box • The Wake • The Raven
Moelter. Woodslore and Wildwoods Wisdom· Good
Medicine: The Sweat Lodge
ISSUE THREE • SPRING 1984
Susminable Agriculture - Sunflowers - Human Impact on
lhe Foe-est - Childrcns· Edu01tion • Veronicn Nicholas:
Woman in Politics - Lillie People - Medicine Allies
ISSUE FOUR • SUMMER 1984
Walef Drum • Waier Quali1y • Kudzu - Solar Eclipse •
Oca.«:ulling - Trou1 - Going to Waier • Ram Pumps·
J\.1icrohydro - Poems: Bennie Lte Sinclair. Jim Wayne
Miller
ISSUE TWENTY-TWO -WINTER '88-89
Global Wanning. Fire This Time· Thomas Berry on
"Bioregions" • Earth Exercise - Kort Loy McWhirter - An
Abundance of Emptiness - LETS - Chronicles of Floyd Darry Wood • The Bear Clan
ISSUE FIVE • FAU.. 1984
Harvest. Old Ways in Cherokee. Ginseng - Nuclcor
Waste - Our Ccluc Hcrimgc • Biorcgionalism: Past.
Prcscn1, and Fu1ure - John WUno1y - Healing Darkness·
Politics of Participauon
ISSUE TWENTY-THREE - SPRING 1989
Pisgah Village - Plane1 An - Green City • Poplor Appeal •
"Clear Sky". "A New Earth" • Black Swan • Wild Lovely
Days • Reviews: Sacred Land Sacred Su, Ice Age • Poem:
"Sudden Tendrils"
ISSUE SIX • WINTER 1984-85
Winter Solstice Enrlh Ceremony • HorsepaslurC3 River Coming of the Ligh1 • Log Cabin Root • Mouniain
Agricuhure: The Righi Crop - William Taylor· The
Future of I.he Forest
ISSUE SEVEN • SPRING 1985
Susl3.i0llble Economics· Ho1 Springs - Worker Ownership
• The G~1 Economy - Self Help Credit Union - Wild
Turkey. Responsible Investing. Working in lhe Web of
Life
ISSUE EIGHT- SUMMER 1985
Celebrauon: A Way of Life - Katuah 18.000 Years AgoSacred Si1es - Folk Arts in the Schools - Sun Cycle/Moon
Cycle - Poems: Hild.:! Downer • Cherokee Heri1age Cemcr
• Who Owns Appalachia?
ISSUE NINE • PALI.. 1985
The Waldcc Foccs1 - The Trees Speak. Migraung Forests ·
Horse Logging • Slorting a Tree Crop - Urban Trees •
Acom Bread - Myth Time
ISSUE TEN • WINTER 1985-86
Ka1e Rogers - Circles of S1one - Internal Mylhmaking Holistic Healing on Trial - Poems: Steve Knauth • Mythic
Places • The Uktcna·s Tale - CrySUIJ Magic "Drcamspcaking•
ISSUE ELEVEN- SPRING 1986
Communi1y Planning - Cities and lhe Biorcgional Vision
- Recycling - Community Gardening- Floyd Coomy. VA·
Gasohol • Two Bioregionnl Views • Nuclear Supplcmenl •
Foxrll'C Games - Good Medicine: Visions
ISSUE 1WENTY-ONE • FALi.. 1988
Chestnuts: A Nalwal His10ry - Restoring !he Chestnut "Poem or Preservation and Praise" - COlllinuing lhe Qucs1
- Forests and Wildlife - ChCSllluts in Regional Diel •
Chestnu1 Resources • Herb N01e - Good Medicine:
"Changes lO Come•. Review: Where Ltgends Li-.e
ISSUE FOURTEEN • WINTER 1986-87
Lloyd Corl Owle - Boogcrs and Mummers - All Species
Day • Cabin Fever Universi1y • Homeless in Kaubh •
Romcmade Hot Water - Stovemaker's Narrative • Good
Medicine: Interspecies Communication
ISSUE FIFTEEN • SPRJNG 1987
Coverlets . Woman Forester· Susie McMahan: Midwife •
Alternative Contraception - Biosexuali1y - Bioregionalism
and Women - Good J\,tcdicine: Malriarchal Culture - Pearl
ISSUE SIXTEEN • SUMMER 1987
Hcfon Waiie. Poem: Visions in a Garden - Vision Quest·
F°l!SI Flow - µti1iation - Lc;iming in !he W i t ~ "Cherokee Challenge. "Valuing Trees"
ISSUE EIGHTEEN • WINTER 1987·88
Vernacular ArchilCCturc - D~s in Wood and Stone Mountrun Home - Eanh Energies - Eanh-Shellcred Living
• Membrane Houses - Brush Shcl1cr - Poems: October
Dusk - Good Medicine: "ShellCr"
ISSUE NINETEEN • SPRING 1988
Pcrclandra Garden • Spring Tonics - Blueberries Wildflower Gardens - Granny Herbalist • Flower Essences
- "The Origin or lhe Animals:" S1ory • Good Medicine:
"Power" - Be A Tree
ISSUE TWENTY • SUMMER 1988
Preserve Appalachian Wilderness - Highlands or Roan •
Cclo Communi1y - Land Trust· Arlhur Morgan School Z.Oning Issue - "The Ridge" - Farmers and !he Fann Btu·
Good Medicine: "Land" - Acid Rain - Ouke·s Power Play·
Cherokee Microhydro Projec1
ISSUE TWENTY·FOUR • SUMMER •39
Deep Listening • Ufc in AlOmic City - Direc1 Action! Tree of Peace - Communily Building· Peacemakers·
Elhnic Survival - Pairing Project - "Bnnlcsong• Growing Peace in Culwn:s - Review: The Chalice and the
Blode
fSSUE TWENTY-SIX • WINTER, 1989·'90
Coming of Age in lhe Ecozoic Era - Kids Saving
Rainfores1 - Kids Treecycling Company· ConOic1
Resolution. Developing lhe Creative Spirit - Birth Power
• Birth Bonding • The Magic of Puppetry - Home
Schooling - Naming Ceremony - Molher Eanh•s
Classroom - Gardening for Children
ISSUE TWENTY-SEVEN • SPRING. 1990
Transformation • Healing Power - Peace to Their Ashes Healing in Katuah • Poem: "When Left to Grow· - Poems:
Stephen Wing • The Belly • Food from lhe Ancient Forest
ISSUE 'TWENTY·EIGHT - SUMMER 1990
Carrying Capaci1y • Selling LimitS IO Growth - What is
Ovcrpopulntion? • The Road Gnng • The Highway to
Nowhere. The J.26 Project - "Curing Capacity" - Poople
and Habillll • Designing lhe Whole Life Community Steady Staie - Poems: Will Ashe Bason Ttansporte.rnativcs - Review: Cohausing
ISSUE TWENTY -NINE • FALL/WINTER 1990
From the Mounlains lO lhe Sea • Profile of The Lillie
Tennessee River - Headwaters Ecology and High Quali1y
Habitat - "l1 All Comes Down lO WBJN Quality· Wa1er
Power. Action for Aquatic HabilatS - Dawn Waichcrs •
Good Medicine: The Long Human Being • The North
Shore Road • Kalliah Sells Ou1 • W81erShed Map of lhe
Kalllah Province
- - -- - - - - - - - - -- - - --- - - - - - --- -- - - - ~UAt1 JOURNAL
Issue 30
Box 638; Leicester, NC; Katuah Province
For more info: call Rob Messick at (704) 754-6097
Name
Regular Membership........ $10/yr.
Sponsor.........................$20/yr.
Contributor.....................$50/yr.
Address
City
Area Code
Sprlnq, 1991
Stale
Phone Number
Zip
Enclosed is$_ __ to give
this ejfon an exrra boos/
I can be a local contact
person for my area
28748
Back Issues
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Title
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Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians Records
Description
An account of the resource
<em>Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians</em>, later simplified to <em>Katúah Journal</em>, was published from 1983 to 1993. A quarterly publication, it was focused on the bioregion of former Cherokee land in Appalachia. <br /><br /><span>The early issues of the journal explain the meaning of the Cherokee name, </span><em>Katúah</em><span>, and why the editors wanted to view the world through a bioregional lens, rather than political boundaries. A volunteer production, the editors took a holistic view in tackling social, environmental, mental, spiritual, and emotional topics of the day, many of which are still relevant. </span><br /><span><br />The <em>Katúah Journal</em> was co-founded by Marnie Muller, David Wheeler, Thomas Rain Crowe, Martha Tree and others who served as co-publishers and co-editors. Other key team members included Chip Smith, David Reed, Jay Mackey, Rob Messick and many others.</span><br /><br />This digital collection is only a portion of the <em>Katúah</em>-related materials in the W.L. Eury Appalachian Collection in Special Collections at Appalachian State University. The items in AC.870 Katúah Journal records cover the production history of the <em>Katúah Journal</em>. Contained within the records are correspondence, publication information, article submissions, and financial information. The editorial layouts for issues 12 through 39 are included as are a full run of the Journal spanning nearly a decade. Also included are photographs of events related to the Journal and a film on the publication.
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This resource is part of the <em>Katúah Journal Records </em>collection. For a description of the entire collection, see <a href="https://appstate-speccoll.lyrasistechnology.org/repositories/2/resources/937" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Katúah Journal Records (AC. 870)</a>.
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The images and information in this collection are protected by the Copyright Law of the United States (Title 17, U. S. C.) and are intended only for personal, non-commercial, and educational purposes, provided proper citation is used – i.e., Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians Records, 1980-2013 (AC.870), W. L. Eury Appalachian Collection, Special Collections, Appalachian State University, Boone, NC. Researchers are responsible for securing permissions from the copyright holder for any reproduction, publication, or commercial use of these materials.
Date
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1983-1993
Format
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journals (periodicals)
Language
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English
Type
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Text
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
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<em>Katúah Journal</em>, Issue 30, Spring 1991
Description
An account of the resource
The thirtieth issue of the<em> Katúah Journal</em> focuses on regional economics, development, and ecology. Authors and artists in this issue include: David Wheeler, Thomas Power, Rob Messick, Will Ashe Bason, Rodney Webb, Henry Eckler, Griscom Morgan, Snow Bear, Gary Lawless, Jim Clark, Ernest Womick, Millie Sundstrom, Lee Barnes, David Haenke, Richard Lowenthal, Rodney Web, Jim Houser, Charlotte Homsher, Martha Tree, Stephen Petroff, and Rob Leverett. <br><br><em>Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians</em>, later simplified to <em>Katúah Journal</em>, was published from 1983 to 1993. A quarterly publication, it was focused on the bioregion of former Cherokee land in Appalachia. The early issues of the journal explain the meaning of the Cherokee name, Katúah, and why the editors wanted to view the world through a bioregional lens, rather than political boundaries. A volunteer production, the editors took a holistic view in tackling social, environmental, mental, spiritual, and emotional topics of the day, many of which are still relevant.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1991
Table Of Contents
A list of subunits of the resource.
Economy/Ecology by David Wheeler.......1<br /><br />Avoiding the Passive/Helpless Approach to Economic Development by Thomas Power.......4<br /><br />Ways to a Regenerative Economy by Rob Messick.......5<br /><br />Sacred Oconomy by Will Ashe Bason.......6<br /><br />"Money Is the Lowest Form of Wealth": Interview with Ivo Ballentine and Robin Cape by Rodney Webb and Henry Eckler.......7<br /><br />The Clarksville "Miracle" by Griscom Morgan.......10<br /><br />Self-Help Credit Union.......10<br /><br />The Village by Snow Bear.......11<br /><br />"through dreams, through magic": Poems by Gary Lawless.......12<br /><br />Food Movers by David Wheeler.......13<br /><br />Poems by Jim Clark.......14<br /><br />LifeWork by Ernest Womick and Millie Sandstrom.......15<br /><br />Green Spirits: "Katúah Planting Calendar" by Lee Barnes.......19<br /><br />Good Medicine: "Village Economy".......20<br /><br />On Eco-economics by David Haenke.......21<br /><br />Thoughts on Work, Productivity, and Development by Richard Lowenthal.......22<br /><br />Natural World News.......23<br /><br />Shelton Laurel by Rodney Webb.......25<br /><br />Off the Grid: "Regional Fuels" by Jim Houser.......26<br /><br />LETS........27<br /><br />Resources........27<br /><br />Drumming.......28<br /><br />Earth Energies: "The Great Lover" by Charlotte Homsher.......31<br /><br />Events.......33<br /><br />Webworking.......34<br /><br /><em>Note: This table of contents corresponds to the original document, not the Document Viewer.</em>
Publisher
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<em>Katúah Journal</em>, printed by The <em>Waynesville Mountaineer</em> Press
Subject
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Bioregionalism--Appalachian Region, Southern
Sustainable living--Appalachian Region, Southern
Economic development--Environmental aspects
Mixed economy--Appalachian Region, Southern
Regional economics
Ecology--Economic aspects--Appalachian Region, Southern
Salvage (Waste, etc.)--North Carolina--Asheville
North Carolina, Western
Blue Ridge Mountains
Appalachian Region, Southern
North Carolina--Periodicals
Language
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English
Type
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Text
Source
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<a href="https://appstate-speccoll.lyrasistechnology.org/repositories/2/resources/937"> AC.870 Katúah Journal records</a>
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<a title="In Copyright – Educational Use Permitted" href="https://rightsstatements.org/page/InC-EDU/1.0/?language=en 8" target="_blank"> In Copyright – Educational Use Permitted </a>
Coverage
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Appalachian Region, Southern
Is Part Of
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<a title="Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians" href="https://omeka.library.appstate.edu/collections/show/79" target="_blank"> Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians </a>
Format
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PDF
Journals (Periodicals)
Agriculture
Alternative Energy
Appalachian History
Appalachian Mountains
Appalachian Studies
Bioregional Definitions
Community
Earth Energies
Economic Alternatives
Education
Forest Issues
Good Medicine
Habitat
Katúah
Poems
Politics
Radioactive Waste
Reading Resources
Recycling
Stories
Turtle Island
Villages
Water Quality
Western North Carolina Alliance
Wilderness
-
https://omeka.library.appstate.edu/files/original/78d9246223be9d0574b3bd2b5063d495.pdf
dd9e0daeaf638e3c9c89f1668668b7b7
PDF Text
Text
ISSUE 31 SUMMER 1991
$1.50
�Drawing by Rob Messick
~UAt1 JOURNAL
P.O. Box 638
Leicester, NC
Katuah Province 28748
:ic.\e
0 " ()
@
~
Postage Paid
Bulk Mail
Permit #18
Leicester, NC
28748
.,.
(I
Printed on recycled paper
ADDRESS CORRECTION REQUESTED
�Oowsing..................................................... 3
by David Wheeler
The Responsibilities of Dowsing:
An Interview with Tom Hendricks............5
by Madeline H. Dean
Ceremonies of the Moment:
An Interview with Joyce Holbrook...........6
"Jack-o-Lantems," Acid Rain,
and the Electrical Life of the Eanh............8
by Clyde Hollifield
Poem: "Old Houses".......... ,..................... 10
by Richard Nesrer
Kaufah and the Eanh Grid ....................... ! 1
by Charlotte Homsher
The Call of rhe Ancient Ones.................. 13
by Page Bryaru
"If the Eanh Is to HeaJ,
Our Heans Musr Be Broken".................. 15
by Richard lowenrlial
Good Medicine: On Aggression.............. 17
THE EARTH - SHE LIVES!
Poems by James Proffirt.......................... 18
Green Spirits: Sacred Forests.................. 19
by Lee Barnes
Off rhe Grid.............................................20
by Jim Houser
Natural World News................................21
"Jusr Doing Their Job"............................ 23
by Emmel/ Greendigger
Time to Take the Time
to Take the Time...................................... 25
by/vo
Drumming............. " .................................26
Whole Science......................................... 29
by Rob Messick
Tuning ln................................................. 29
by Charlotte Homsher
Review· Light in rhe Wind........... .. - ....... 30
Chestnut Grafting Project........................ .31
by David McGrew
Events......................................................32
\Vebworking............................................34
Su11u11cr, 199 1
Tradirional cultures around the world
have always had a close relationship to
the world around them. Dependent as
they were on their immediate
environment to meet all their needs, it is
not surprising that they were closely
attuned to the rhythms of their
surroundings and the messages that
came from the landscape.
The foundation of their spiritual
belief was that the world is alive. TI1ey
saw the Earth as a being, a Great Mother
who provided for all her children's
needs. With ritual, music, and dancing,
they conversed with the Earth and with
all the aspects of her power.
Here in the Southern Appalachian
Mountains, the native Cherokee
inhabitants accepted the forces of the
world as living beings and addressed
thern in their prayers and ceremonies.
They saw the mountains as great beings
of awe and grandeur, isolated and
imposing. At times of spiritual transition,
they went to sacred sites, places of
extraordinary power, to do their fasting,
praying, and divining, or to make a
vision quest.
As humanity turned toward
civilization and sought security by
insulating ourselves from our
environment, our former connection to
the world and the awareness that it
engendered slowly dissipated. Skills that
were once necessary for survival came to
be considered "folk customs" and
superstitions. In our minds the Eanh
died. As we relied more on our
intellectual brain and its offspring,
science, for our survival, we began to
see our world as a "system" under the
rule of "laws" that were mechanical,
linear, and absolute.
However, in the "backwater.. areas,
like 1.he rugged Appalachians, white
settlers from Europe kept alive customs
that dated back to pre-Christian times in
the Old World. They used the power of
wild roots for healing. They planted their
crops by the signs of the moon. They
would call on a "water witch," or
dowser, with a forked stick to find an
underground waler source. These
practices are with us even today.
(c:ontinucd on page 3)
Xatuoh Journat p09e I
�EDlTORlAL STAFF Tl ITS ISSUE:
Maria Abbruzzi
Lee Barnes
Christopher Davis
Charloue Homsher
Jim Houser
Lorraine Kaliher
Emmeu Grecndiggcr
Richard Lowenthal
Rob Messick
Mamie Muller
Rodney Webb
David Wheeler
We'd like 10 offer special thanks for the inspiration of Mounlllin Gnrdcns.
Thanks and fare well 10 John Creech. Happy trails, compadre!
COVER: by Rob Messick © 1991
PUBLISHED BY: Kau,ah Journal
PRINTED BY: The Waynesville Mo11111aineer Press
EDITORIAL OFFTCE THlS
JS SUE: The Globe Valley
CONTACT US AT:
Ka111ahJ011rnal Box 638; Leicester, NC;
Ka1uah Province 28748 (704) 754-6097
Diversity is an impon.am elemcm of bioregionnl ecology. both
nawral and socinl. In line will1 this principle. the Katuah Journal tries 10
serve as II fomm for the discu&;ion of rcgion:il issues. Signed rulicks
express only the opinion of the nuthors and arc not ncccss:irity the
opinions or lhe Katuah Journal editors or staff.
The Internal Revenue Scn•1ce has declared K a1uah Jo1u11al a non.profit
orgnniz.:ition under section 501(c){3) or Lhc lntemnl Revenue Code. All
contributions to K,uuah Journal are dcducublc from pcr!IOn:il income wx.
Aruclcs appcnnng in Katuah Journal may be reprimcd in olher
publications with permission from the Katuah Journal sulf. Com:ict the
journal in writing or call (704) 7S4-6097 or (704) 683-1414.
ApOW<Jlj
~
STATEMENT OF PURPOSE
Here,
in the Katuah Province
of these ancient Appalachian mountains
where once the Cherokee Nation lived in freedom
between the Tennessee River Valley and the Eastern
Piedmont
between the VaJley of the Roanoke and U1e Southern
PJain
on this Turtle Island continent of Mother Ela, the Earth
Here,
In this place we dedicate ourselves to remembering our
deep connection to the spirit of the land.
We bring this connection into the being and the doing of
our daily lives
When the land speaks, we listen and we act
We tune our lives to the changes, to the
seasons
We respect the limits of the land
We preserve, defend, and restore the land
We give thanks for all that is good
The photo of Darry Wood and Eva Bigwitch at Lhe R1vcrc;mc
Rendezvous on page 12 of Kauiah Jourl\ill #30 should hove been credited
10Jim Riggs. Jim is a photogrnphcrand 1c:ichcrofprimitive skills "ho
was also n guest insLructor at Lile cvcnL
'L'.NVOCA.'TW'.N
Ancient Mother,
Ancient Mother,
You who have waited so long.
You who have waited so long
for your children to return,
Your children are returned.
Here we arc.
-Swait lodge song
Ham1ony with the land is no longer an ideal; it is an
imperative.
The land is a living being. She is sacred.
As tl1e land lives, so do we.
As the spirit of the land is diminished,
our spirits are diminished as well.
The Ka111ah Journal sends a voice...
with articles, stories, poems, and artwork
we speak to the spirit of all the living, breathing
inhabitants of these mountains
in hopes that we, the human beings,
may find our place in this Great Life.
- The Editors
Xatimh Journot pngc 2
....
�(continued from page I)
Bui as the urban commercial cuhure
penetrated even the isolation of the
Appalachians, for many people the moumains
lost their magic. They could see the old hills
only as another collection of available resources
to be taken out, totalled up, and rung into the
cash register. That unbroken connection 10 the
life of the mountains, the life of the Earth, has in
the last 100 years faded and almost died ...
But it is not gone. When the astronauts
took the photos of the Earth from outer space,
it became suddenly obvious that our planet is a
fragile round ball suspended in the vastness of
space. From tha1 new perspecrivc we can see
that the Earth is whole. comple1e, an organism
unto herself· and beautiful. II is also obvious
that she is part of an even grander scheme - a
cosmic ecology. We hove a place in the
universe: an alignment with the stars, planets.
and galaxies: a relationship 10 the cosmos.
When we touch the Earth here in Katuah
Province on this Tunic Island continent, we mp
into an in1erlocking web of energies 1hat
extends out into the fanhcst star galaxies.
Scientific breakthroughs like "the Gaia
theory" and the "new physics" seem revelatory
to our jaded intellcccs. The Gaia theory states
scientifically that the Earth breathes through ils
atmosphere and regula1cs its own respirarion not only is the Earth a living, breathing
organism, but ii is also conscious on some
level! The "new physics" theory sets fonh a
conception of the world radicallydivergen1
from Newtonian physics - one that seems
almost more metaphysical than physical, closer
to a study of consciousness than of matter. But
t11cse scientific concepts are acrually not new.
They were in the prayer of a Cherokee
medicine man standing with anns uplifted by a
waterfall. They were what an old woman could
feel through her forked dowsing stick as :;he
walked the land.
Tho medicine people and the dowsers
knew the geology of the mountains. They
knew the depth of the fault lines and 1hc deep
waterveins. They also could perceive the web
of energy encircling the Earth. But they were
not scientistS. They worked from their
intuition; their practice was handed down from
reacher to srudent as pans of long-standing
traditions. The Gaia theory, the new physics,
and the other recent departures from onhodox
scien1ilic thinking offer scientific evidence of
the life and consciousness of the world 1hat
these old ones felt so clearly, so long :igo.
There is still much mystery in this
round globe that looks so vulnerable and
beautiful from ou1er space. In this issue of the
Ka11uihlournal we invite the reader to learn. to
speculate, to begin to think of a whole world
mind, a unifying world energy that connects us
10 every other place, 10 every other being on the
Earth, and 10 the s1ars.
The Eanh 1ums, we tum; everywhere
we look we are one world.
-The Editors
Sl11t11ncr, 1991
DOWSING
A Briefe Treatise or Digression Concerni11g the Long Historic a11d Practice of tlu• Art
a11d Erstwhile Scie11ce of Rliabdo111a11cy
by David Wheeler
"All alike grasp tire forks of the twig witIr
tlreir hands, clenching tlreir fi.rts, it being
necessary tlrat tire clenclredjingers slumld be
held wward tire sky i11 order tlrat tire twig
should be raised at tlUJJ end wlrere the two
branches meet Then they wander hither and
tlritlrer at random through mountainous
regions It is said that tire moment tlrey place
their feet on a vein the twig immediately mrns
and nvists, and so by its action discloses the
vein: when tlrey nwve their feet agaill and go
away from tlUJJ spot the Mig becomes once
more immobile."
• from De,~ metallica. one of lhc ftN wnucn
rcrcrcnces 10 dowsing. by Ocorg,u, Agricola. 1556
This is the commonly conceived pic1urc
of the dowser, or "water witcht walking the
land looking for underground veins of water.
However. to be a dowser a person does
not have to walk the land, use a forked s1ick, or
even be searching for water. Dowsers come in
more flavors than ice cream • they e>.hibit many
different attitudes, abilities. and mind states.
In ilS purest form, dowsing might be
defined as the perception of intangible or
spiritual energies. Usunlly dowsers use their
ability in looking for some1hing. In his paper
"The Divining Rod: A His1ory of Water
Wi1ching," written in 1917, Anhur J. Ellis
says. "In tracing the history of the subject it is
found that divining rods have been used for all
of the following purposes: (I) To locate ore
Drawing b) Rob Meu1<k
deposits, (2) 10 discover buried or hidden
ucasure. (3) 10 find lost landmarks and
reestablish propcny boundaries, (4) 10 de1ect
criminals, (5) to analyze personal character, (6)
to cure diseases, (7) to tmce lost or strayed
domestic animal~. (8) 10 insure immunity
against ill fonunc when preserved as a fetish.
(9) 10 locate well sites. { I0) 10 trace the courses
of underground streams, {11) to determine the
amount of water available by drilling at a given
spot, ( I2) to determine the deplh at which
wa1erorores occur, (13) 10 determine the
direction of cardinal pointS. (14) to determine
the heights of crecs, and ( 15) 10 analyze ores
and w111ers."
Dowsers today also search for the
answers to questions; negative and positive
Earth energies; missing persons; and waywan:1
spirits. They da1e archaeological finds and
contac1 UFO's. As well as the tr3ditional
forked stick. dowsers use a straight stick;
L-shaped mcl41 rods; wire; a dangling
pendulum (usually made of me1al or s1one but
possibly of other m:uerials); their hands; or
pure perception 10 find the object of their
search. Dowsers do not have to be on the site
but can make contact through maps,
photographs, or a person's possessions.
Clearly. the general category of "dowsing"
covers a wide variety of experiences and
abilities.
But how does it work? Dowsing is
clearly an e,cuasensory experience that draws
(ccntmuodonnc,tpAJ:C)
JCatud, Jounuat P°'JS 3
�(c:crnmuai Crom pai;o J)
on a different pan of the brain than our intellect
and our everyday awareness. Walter D.1le. a
yeteran dowser in his eigh1ies Yiho hvcs
outside Ashevilk, NC, ~ayi. lh:11 there is encrg)'
evervwhere and that, "We are able tu iocus in
on iiin much the same v.ny that you might tune
in to channels on your TV ~r. Do\\:.eri. can do
very remarkable things, and v.e can prove it. 1
don't know how 1t's done, but II depcnds on
our abil1ty to use this energy thm is everywhere
- even though we don't ~ee it. We don't sec radio
waves, we don't see TV trnnsmis.\ions. It's very
much the same."
Ano1hcr dowser, Vern Peter.;on. says,
"Dowsing is puuing out an idea or a question
of what you want. and 1hb v.ill set up u
vibration. If you are looking tor water, for
insmnce, the vibration will correspond to water
under the ground that you can fed when you
get over it with the dowsing rod.
"It leads 10 an advancement of
consciousness., There's no end 10 where you
can go. The longer you smy in dowsing, the
more you learn. and the more that you learn
how much 1here is to kn6w."
Other dowsers speak of spiri1ual
influences, a direct channel 10 higher
intelligences or 10 the Supreme Intelligence, as
explanation of their abilities.
Dowsing is nor a new phenomenon. tr
seems 10 be an innate pan of the human mind,
and many practitioners maintain that dowsing
was at one time one of our ba.~ic sense
perceptions, and that ii is only with the advent
of civilization that this ability has atr0phied in
our brain. Animals seem to have the nbili1y to
find water, and it seems logical thm in more
primitive times we would have relied more on
this type of awareness to locate food and water
and be alen to dnnger.
There is tangible evidence that S1one Age
humans in Europe and the British Isles had
dowsing abilities. Modem-day dowsers are
finding 1ha1 the megaliths or "standing s1ones,"
However. as anything 1h01 can be
deeply veiled in mystery affords a good
opportunity/or swindlers, there can be
no reasonable doubr that many of rhe
large group ofprofessio,wl finders of
water. oil, or other minera/J who take
pay/or their "service'' or for the sale of
their "instruments" are cleliberatt>ly
defrauding the people, and that 1/te total
amount of nwney rhar 1hey obtain is
large.
- 0. £. Meinwr.
Uniwtl Staies Geological Sur\'c)',
1917
giam rock formmions erected by prehl!>toric
humans, are aligned with underground
wutercourscs or 1he 1;rid lines of the Eanh's
energies.
There nn: pictures of ancient Eg, pti:.i.ns
holding what appear to be forked divining
rods. There nrc various Biblical references,
such as to Aaron's rod, 1hn1 dowsers claim a~
evidence of their crafL In 1882 R.W. Raymond
wrote:
"'1ti1nh JournnC pnl).C ·l
Drawing by Ocorgc Agricola. I 556
'The Scyrhians, Persians, and Medes
used them. Herodotus says 1ha1 the Scythians
de1ec1ed perjurers by means of rods. The word
rhabdomancy, originated by the Greeks, shows
1ha1 they practiced this an; and 1he magic power
of the rods of Minerva, Circe, and Hermes or
Mercury is familiar 10 classical students. The
lituus of the Romans, with which the augurs
divined, was apparently an arched rod ...
Marco Polo reports the use of rods or
arrows for divination throughout the Orient,
and a later traveler describes it among the
Turks. Taci1us says that the ancient Germans
used for this purpose branches of fruit trees."
During the Middle Ages, when
me1al-working became common and
widespread. miners ~ought veins of ore by
digging trenches by hand. The amount of labor
involved mnde any shortcuts extremely
valuable, and, while there were physical
indications of the presence of ore, divining
came to be intel-'1"311)' associa11.-d with
prospecting, panicularly in the mining districts
of Germany. Divining rods came 10 England
with German miners brought in by Queen
Elizabe1h I to develop the languishing mining
industry in Comwnll, and they spread from
there throughout the Bri1ish Isles.
Dowsing has been controversial
thmughou1 the his1ory of civilized rimes. Since
it was often involved with the production of
weahh, there w-as alwavs the likelihood of
charl:11anrv and fraud. And since ii is conceme<l
with the deeper realms of the human mind.
dowsing holds 1he possibility of transcendent
consc1ousncss, but is olso fraught with
mystery, contradtction. and tear.
The church became interested in d0\\Sing
· some S3Y through jealousy, others say
through fear - and, although ecclesiastical
,1ttitudes and interpretauons were ne\er
con~istcnt, at least initi:illy the l'hurch e;,;hibitcd
an umbiv-.ilcnt auitudc toward the divining rod:
it was considered dangerous and discouraged
among the geneml populace, but its use Y.,ts
widely practiced as a priestly function within
the church. Church ti1uals and prarer;; were
superimposed on wha1 was obviously a very
pagan pracrice - partly 1 strengthen the di vine
0
influence, and panly 10 protect against eanhly
persecution, ii is supposed.
During the time of 1he Inquisition,
dowsing was associated with witchcraft and in
some areas became justification for torture and
a capital crime. There yer remains a legacy of
fear and secrecy lingering from that p.-iriod.
Practicing dowser John Shisler says, "Even
today, if I go b:1ck into certain areas of the
mountains, I'm a 'water witch.' A lot of your
traditional Bap1is1s will still say that 'witching'
is the work of the devil."
Dowsing came 10 Turtle Island with the
earliest colonists, where i1 met a people who
apparently still retained a basic anunemenr to
the land as evidenced by 1he eanhworks 1hey
created, 1heir many sacred sites, and the vivid
They call it psychic. I call it a gif1,
sir. I use it for /lis glorv anti mankind's
purpose. I do11'1 charge to go find water,
I'll ask 'em 10 come after me and bring
me back - if they want to donate a
penny, I appreciate it; if 1hey do11'1, well,
I'll go anyway.
I use it/or what I feel in my heart.
and I re.\{'L'Ct it for what it is.
- J.C. Ga::mvay, dowser
legends assoc1:i1ed with them. From the
beginning ~Willer witching" was p:111 of the
colonists' folk culture. Many of the wells still
used in New England were located through the
abilities of dm.. seri.. Early European
immigrants brought dowsing imo the Southern
Appalachians. At first, it was not necessary 10
locate underground water because of the
abundant springs, bur when people began to
need wells, they sough1 help from those v.ho
had kepi alive the traditional "witching"·
(continued gn page 28)
S1Un111cr, 199 1
�THE RESPONSIBILITIES OF DOWSING:
An Interview with Tom Hendricks
OK. But if they can't, then 1 don't think they
ought to do iL
Ka11ial1: People seem 10 be amazed that
they have the power 10 do these things.
111: It's a major responsibility. 1 1hink
that regaining power is OK. so long as there is
a balance. an understanding. Asking
permission is very imponant. I've always had
a strong intuition. J developed it in my
dowsing. Intuition tells us c,cactly what we
need 10 know.
Kat(,ah · When did you stan dowsing?
Tom Hendricks: About ten years ago. A
man T knew in Madison County at the time was
president of the Appalachian Chapter of the
American Society of Dowsers. I learned
techniques from the society. I slowly got to
meet everybody. I met hundreds of dowsers
from around the country and from across the
seas. J sroned off with the pendulum and
L-rods. l would use the pendulum 10 ask yes
and no questions, L-rods to find a water source
or whatever else l was looking for. At some
point. I started realizing l was getting the
feeling before either one of those tools worked
I started paying anention to lhe feeling and
didn't much rely on the tools. l preferred to
deal with the energy itself.
Kan11Jh: You could have the feeling of
where water was, for instance?
TH: Yes. Most dowsers hang onto the
tool forever. Some people have real elaborate
pendulums. When l was still using a
pendulum. I picked up whatever I had around
10 make one, a piece of suing and a rock.
l met an old guy from Tennessee who
didn't necessarily use tools. He just felt iL A
real good dowser told me how he was bringing
him back from Tennessee on interstate 40. The
old guy said that they had just driven over a
major fault. So they Mopped and checked with
their dowsing rods. He had felt a major fault
under a moving car. He was real sensitive.
But dowsing itself is filtering into all
kinds of things these days. It has been
incorporated into the whole new age
movement. I've noticed, not a total lack of
auunement, but only panial auuncment.
K01uah: From the dowsers themselves?
TH: Not all dowsers. A lot of dowsers
were being real exact with what they were
doing. But a few dowsers were into playing
with the energies, talcing things out or context.
ln the dowser's society we were never taught
to be concerned with looking at the whole
picture.
I was clearing our someone's house 1ha1
had a lot of weird energy lines running through
iL..
KalJJIJh: From the Earth?
TH: Yes. You can get negative energy
from water, from fault lines and other ways.
These energies arc disruptive to the human
system. In dowsing that panicul:ir situation. 11
seemed to be OK to move the energy. We
moved it around the house. Bue it staned me
asking questions: "Should this energy be
moved? Do I have the right 10 move this
energy?"
K01uah: Would it be a question of why
the cnerijy is being vented at that pan.icular
location. And what the reason is for it?
Summer, 199 1
Kam.ah: That requires a different
lifestyle than most people have.
TH: The energy needs venting, but docs
It need to be vented in this particular place? ls
it OK to move it?
Katuah: The Earth has allowed a lot of
manipulation.
TH: The Earth has allowed abuse. She
is regaining her will, yet we continue to abuse
her. Something l have learned is that when we
dowse, we should ask whether it is OK on all
levels.
One time l was out dowsing with an old
timer and his daughter and all of us came to this
tremendous flow, a major vein of water. Yet,
when they went to drill it, nothing happened.
Another dowser came over and said, "Don't
you sec the Indian spirits?"
Native American spirits were still
protecting the area and 1hey had interfered.
They were angry at white people for all the
abuse we have done, and so they were mixing
signals. That got to be another question to
consider: "Are there any entities here that may
interfere?"
With me it went further. I asked, 'Why
would they interfere? What arc their reasons?"
I ta.kc it as far as 1can.
There are plenty of eanhbound spirits that
are wandering around Josi. That is another
aspect of dowsing, sending eanhbound spirits
on their way. Dealing with spirits is tricky
business. You don't always know why they
arc there or what they are doing. There are so
many things involved in life and death that arc
beyond our understanding.
I haven't been dowsing in years. I'm
even beginning to question dowsing for a well.
Do l want to dowse for someone to punch a
hole? There are enough holes being punched
into the Earth.
The idea of mining crystals really bothers
me. I think people ought to leave crystals
where they arc unless those people arc 1otally in
tune, can sec or feel the energy, know where it
comes from, where it's going and why the
energy is moving. Crystals take on energy 1hcy need to be cleaned
I know a man who planted a garden with
crystals. He put in a center crystal, and then he
planted other crystals equidistantly all the way
around it at the pyramid angles and generated
heat. This guy was preuy tuned in, but I'm not
sure whether even he asked if he was
interfering with any other energies. I think if
people can contact all levels of Ufe and be sure
that nothing else is disrupted, then it would be
Orawu,g by Rob Messick
TH: Our culrurc is very sick. I've come
to rcali:ze that a 101 of dowsing that is done just
feeds the sickness. I know people who arc on
payrolls for oil companies. They dowse for oil
and gas. They are making money by telling oil
companies where to go punch the holes.
When l backed off from dowsing, 1
began a healing for the will. As I understand ir.
the will is the female energy, the mother
energy. It is the pan of the godhead that
moves, that feels, thm gives life. The masculine
energy is the spirit.
The will has been so far removed from
human understanding and consciousness that it
is barely there. To my understanding, it is
because of the loss of will that we are so out of
balance. The w ill, the female energy is thal
which feels, that which gives birth. I need to
use my will in order 10 understand.
Developing intuition is listening 10 the will.
Ka1uah.: Is this your self-healing? Or are
you trying to manifest this outside yourself in
your environment?
11 I: 1 believe that the personal healing
musr come first. The disharmony is within
ourselves. We need 10 get in 1ouch with our
own dilemmas and fears. There are lost
emotions that we deny. I also think that b) our
own dishannony, we allow things to hun us.
If we were in harmony with ourselves, the
negative energies from the Earth could pass
through us without finding a place to collect. I
think emotions cause blockages and tl"llp
whatever wants to be trapped in us.
So lately I have been focusing on
self-healing, rather than manipulating negative
eanh energies. We humans feel we have a
right 10 do anything that we want to do. We
have got to realize our shoncomings. We have
responsibilities 10 ourselves.
Ka1uah: Are you going to get back to
dowsing?
Tii: A friend of mine wants me to
dowse for a well and I should do it for him.
The healing I'm doing is leading me through
places I've never experienced before. pans of
myself that 1have never experienced before.
So l don't know what is going to happen. I
feel, in a sense, that I am still dowsing by
healing my will and strengthening my intuition.
I listen more, not with my cars nccel>S3rily. but
with my whole being.
;,
Ruorlkd by Madl!llrw II Dean
Xat ua h ) oun\Ot ~ 5
�CEREMONIES OF THE MOMENT
An Interview with Joyce Holbrook
by Charlotte Homsher
Joyce was born and raised on a/am, in
Wilkes Co11111y, NC. She taught in midwestem
co//ege.f/or 17 years before remrning u, the
mountai,is. She ,ww smdies and teaches Earth
energies throu1:ho111 tlie Southeast.
•
Kat(iah: What is the nature of the energy
grid on Eanh?
JH: There are many ideas abou1 chis. The
similarity in the ideas is tha1 the Eanh is
surrounded by nee working lines of energy in
1hc shape of a dodecahedron, a
three-dimensional figure enclosed by twelve
sides. Looking at the grid on a smaller scale, it
would seem to be divided into uiangles. The
triangle is fundamental to so many things; it is
the basic geometry of life. l would imagine that
. in accord with the hermetic principal of "as
above, so below" · there is triangulation
involved in the energetics. not only of the
human body, but in subsystems of the body,
even at the cellular level and probably at the
molecular level.
It is my opinion that it is the life force
energy, whatever that may be, that powers the
grid.
Katt'iah: What happens when the cosmic
energy hits the Eanh grid?
JH: When it hits the grid, i1 runs along
the lines of the grid.
Kacuah: The lines of the grid sometimes
being called the "Icy lines"?
JH: Yes, the Icy lines. We know that
there 1s cosmic energy coming into the Eanh.
Th.is has been verified scientifically. However,
as far as r know, it has not been verified
scicn1ifically that the Earth is surrounded by an
energy grid or that this cosmic energy runs
along it. These are theories of more recent
times.
Karual1: Does any of thi$ energy
originate from inside the Eanh, or is it all
cosmic energy?
JH: I think it is cosmic, bu1 it docs have
an aspect tha1 comes from inside the Earth. If I
stand on a vonex point, a high energy point. I
can feel an energy that comes up through my
body from the ground and then goes back
down in a spiral fashion.
I also feel thllt whatever hum:in
consciousness does affects the grid. So,
obviously, this war-like consciousness
impinges on the communication network of the
planet and goes out and affects the whole
planet
Katualr: Can you comment on what is
happening with the Appalachian ~Ids and
ridge1ops in relation to Eanb energies?
"My whole approach to working with Earth
energies is to get away from ritual and recipes, to
enter into the spo11ta11eity of life." J.H.
spiral. That I am sure of, because I have felt it.
In the newer theories of physics, the though1 is
that matter itself spirals in on a vortex inio
mamfestation out of pure consciousness. You
could say that vortices exist on every level,
even down 10 atoms. And they exist, perhaps,
within our own bodies nnd in the Eanh itself.
JH: My personal experience with energy
comes from the fact that I sense it and see it. I
see auras over mountains in the same way that
some people see auras around people, and I
feel the energy.
The Appalachians arc the Grandparents of
the planet. They are gentle. old, wise, and
loving. These things can not be measured
scientifically. This is sensing through the heart
and by feeling the energy of nature, rather than
through the ra1ional mind. Love can be felt
from nature, i1 truly can, when a person's heart
is open. And lhe Appalachians embrace you
very much like wise old grandparents. There is
a certain quality that grandparents lent 10
society, and there is a certain quality th:11
grm1dparent energy lends to the Eanh.
The Rocky Mountains have a youthful,
vibrant, rather masculine energy. There are
many people who feel that the energy of the
Appalachians is essentially feminine. But I
have also felt mountains within the
Appalachians tha1 feel very masculine. For
instance, the Black Mountains are masculine.
My cabin is on a flank of a mountain that is
ma~culine in essence. Pyramidal mountains
essentially feel masculine. The balds :-.re round
and smooth, and those feel feminine. They are
very healing. They wi II raise your energy. I
often see golden lines of energy over balds.
JH: It could, although r have seem a
similarity. 1 had a whole group of people 001
by the Missouri River at a location that wa.~
both in a vortex and on a grid line. The people
all felt the line, and everyone had the same
response as 10 how they needed to align their
bodies in order to feel best in respect to the
line.
Ka11ialr. Could you explain about the
different kinds of voncxes?
Kauiah: How is Katuah affected by wh3t
happens in another place on the Earth?
JH: They arc as different as people are
different. The dowsers repon that they see· ·o
exist where grid lines cross. They are definitely
associated with water activity, flowing water,
lakes. oceans, and underground water. There
arc people who say that there are male and
female vortices. There are also people who
describe them as either electric or magnetic or
electtomagnetic, which is balanced between
male and female. l'm not real sure about that.
Bui I have felt energy move in a vortex. It does
JH: Before the San Francisco eanhquakc
m 1989, I was driving with my sister, and I
Katuah: How can we beuer auune
ourselves to the Eanh?
JI(: By exploring feeling. Find particular
places, either by direct sensing or by using
dowsing tools, and then simply stand in those
places until you can sense with your body how
they feel. Your magnetic orientation is
imponant - whether you face north, east.
sou1h, or west.
Kariiah: Would this differ from person 10
person?
looked at the mountains. The mountains looked
like they were in so much pain. I 1 my sistc:r
c!d
that something was happening, and the quake
occurred within a few hours.
Katuah: So all the Eanh is feeling what is
happening in any one place?
JH: Right. But canhquakes are also a part
of nature, and so they arc not an anomaly.
Slfmmcr, t991
�w
#=fj
They are ad-jusanents in nature itself.
I think, in particular, mountains are
antennae to register what the Eanh is doing.
Also streams will register the Earth's pulse,
attitude, and vibrations in the same sense that
your bloodstream is going to register what is
going on in your body, the energetics of your
body.
Ka11iah: How do you do Earth healing?
JH: Places call to me. Roan Mountain has
called me many times, and Chimney Rock as
well. Killian Mountain has called me recently. r
believe narurc is a conscious being and
communicates wilh us. There is a thing called
the spirit of a place. there is an essence to Roan
Mountain, or essence to Table Rocle. that has a
consciousness to iL And consciousness
communicates with consciousness.
When I go 10 a place, I try to humble
myself and tune into just "being." I don't go
purposefully like some doctor or technician
trying 10 ''fix something." I just go there, and I
tune into the essence of the place. I always pray
in these places. I think it is very imponanL l
always pray for inner guidance in any particular
moment or situation. And then I may begin to
chant, a chant that is not a recipe. 1don't do
recipes. I do chanting, toning, and movement
for the moment. My whole approach to
working with Earth energies is 10 get away
from ritual and recipes, to enter into the
spontaneity of life. Life has its magic for the
moment, has its light for the moment, has its
peace for the momenL And that becomes an
experience that involves the movement of the
body, the voice, the bean, and the feelings. If
we allow these aspects of ourselves to blend
with the pince and the moment. then we can
unlock our bodies, unlock our voices, and
unlock our hearts. This is allowing divine love
to flow through us. from the place to us, and
from us to the place. Once connected, we
network out over the grid, over the pathways
that are, into the whole system, into the
universe itself, nnd into every other person on
the planet. Aod this is the healing. The real
healing in life is to relax, let go, and allow love
to flow, because love is, it is of God and it
simply is. We do not have 10 create it.
Ka11'iah: Do you go to places where the
Earth has been desecrated by humans?
JH: Yes. I have been led to places where
people have damaged the Eanh. I did this at a
whole workshop once in Kentucky. Several
people felt led to go this place where for years
people had dumped tmsh off the side of the
road, and it had fallen into a ravine. The
essence of that ravine was speaking to us, and
it seemed to be choking and poisoned.
We held hands in a circle, we prayed, and
then we moved 10 places where we felt
comfonablc alongside the ravine. We then
entered into silence. One of us began to tone,
and then another began to tone, and as it turned
out, there was a triad. There were three
women, including myself, coning in what
became a triangle. This was all spontaneous.
And the energy staned to flow down the
ravine. Another woman had visions, very
powerful visions, of an old medicine man who
came up and spoke to her. It was such a
-
powerful experience that many of us began to
cry. We could feel the Eanh saying thank you.
That particular day, there was no wind
whatsoever, yet single leaves on the trees
would just flutter, even though there was no
wind to flutter them. We were amazed at what
we saw in terms of narure physically
communicating with us. And she really does,
but people don't notice that.
This is my philosophy of healing. It is
love that heals. In the process of working with
an area, I may end up using some stones to
build a wheel, if I feel led 10 do this. But again,
I do not have a recipe where I say, 'Take x
amount of stones... '' I just go there and allow
myself to be pan of the totality of the
experience. In doing this with nature, we learn
how to beuer do that with each other. Instead
of building rigid ways of interacting in
families, we learn to flow with the spontaneity
of the moment.
,.
,.
-
JH: Yes, I think the time has come that
we have to reconnect with the Earth. We have
lost touch with her, and in doing so we have
lost touch with ourselves. To reconnect with
her is to reconnect with our own individual
souls and with each other. I sec it as the answer
to bringing love to the planet and to bringing
healing. If you go out and lie on the ground,
you will be comforted and the problems which
disturbed you wiJI just seem to go away. I
know some very powerful places that will just
wash away your troubles.
For information abo111 Earth Energy
workshops with Joyce Holbrook, write her at
Box 1095: Burnsville, NC 28714.
K(ll1iali: Could you say something about
the vision you had about making your own
medicine wheel?
JH: The vision was shown to me to make
it of olivine, but at that time l had not seen
olivine in nature. A friend told me about an
outcropping near an abandoned olivine mine.
When I went there. I did not just go in and take
rocks without asking permission. I was given
these rocks, and I took 12 home and made a
wheel, and they turned out lookingjust like I
saw 1n the vision. It is on my property. and I
go sit in it. Tt is very powerful, and it has
taught me that we are a wheel within a wheel.
The wounds in our lives which are not healed
are broken circles. Medicine wheels help us sec
what we need to release to come to full circle
again.
In going to power places, we can find
within ourselves what is s1ill wounded. If we
work with these places, things may come up in
our memory, emotions mny come fonh, which
can snow us what needs healing. Nature is of
God. Nature is full of healing, hannoniling
forces, just as we are. if we can come to see
thaL
h is a spiritual experience when I work
with the Earth. 1 go out by myself a lot. I do
this to bring harmony into my own life. If l
have not gone out for three or four days, l just
have 10 re tum to the Eanh.
1 was down in Stone Mountain, Georgia
recently. Stone Mountain is a very powerful
place. It has been contaminated with a lot of
materialistic consciousness. but there still are
places there that ~ very powerful, and local
people could use these places to :ttt!lne and
align themselves. Stone Mount,un 1s a power
point for the whole Southeast. lf we were not
so numb to feeling and sensing energies,
people would be able to sense these things.
My sister and I have done a lot of work
together in the mountains. One of us will say
that we should go to a cenain place. and we
will go and tone and sing and pray toge~hcr.
This has been very powerful for us as sisters.
It is a wonderful thing to do with members of
your family. It brings harmony into a family.
Go inside a stone
That would be my way.
Let somebody else become a dove
Or gnash with a tiger's tooth.
I am hnppy to be a stone.
I
From the outside the stone is a riddle:
No one knows how LO answer it.
Yet within, it must be cool and quiet
Even though a cow steps on it full weight,
Even though a child throws it in a river.
The stone sinks, slow, unpenurbed
To the river bottom
Where the fishes come 10 knock on it
And listen.
I have seen sparks fly out
When two stones are rubbed,
So perhaps it is not dark inside after all;
Perhaps there is a moon shining
From somewhere, as though behind a hill Just enough light to make out
The strange ,1tritings. the s1nr-chans
On the inner walls.
-CS
Karuoh. Do you have a vision of humans
and the Eanh hving together in a more
harmonious way?
Drav.,in& by RobMcmck
Sum nu:< , 1991
JCotimn )ournot pQ(JI!- 7
�"Jack-o-lanterns," Acid Rain,
and the Electrical Life of the Earth
by Clyde I follifield
The lights do not stay strictly on
Brown Mountain, but seem 10 occur
throughout the whole area. I have seen
them in Linville Gorge. We once saw a
light on Hawk~bill Mountain, which is the
next hill beyond Brown Mountain. It was
cruising up and down lhc mountain,
circling lhe hill, moving at abouL treetop
level. It was moving a too fast to be
someone walking with a light, and it was
not a vehicle, for there is no road over !here
on which a vehicle could travel.
S
rown Mountain lies southeas1 of
Grandfather Mountain near the Linville
Gorge Wilderness Arca in Avery County
II is an unimpressive, nondescript
mountain, little more than a tong low ridge,
but it is a focus of curiosity because of
strange phenomena known as the Brown
Mountain LightS.
There arc a lot of different ideas about
what the lights look like. Some people say
they arc a bright light. Olhcrs 53y that they
arc a faint glow. Some say they arc diMinct;
others say that they are diffu~c. Some
people have seen them in the summcnime;
others say that they see them best in the
winter. I believe that there are ns mnny
different opinions as there arc people who
say that they've seen them. And a lot of
people have seen them. The Brown
Mountain Lights have been known in that
area for generations. There arc old folk
tales about them. The local inhabit:ints call
them "jack-o-lantcms."
I have been interested in the Brown
Mountain Lights since I was a teen-ager.
Friends and I would camp out on Table
Rock on summer weekends and were
sometimes rewarded by a sight of the lights
at the foot of the mountain or drifting up the
ridges. They appeared ns Huie lights above
the treetops. They were not diffuse or
blurry, but were rather small, brig.ht ligh1s,
usually about the color of a mercury vapor
lamp nnd shining as brightly as n
streetlight. They usually ap~d late in the
evening nnd in the very early morning.
On one occasion about eight or ten
years ago, I snw little flashes of light all
over Brown Mountain, as if somebody hnd
set off thousands of flashbulbs all at once.
It was like ligh1ning, outlining the top of
the ridge. II only hs1ed for several seconcl~.
and then it was gone, bu1 it occurred three
or four times that night. It was like
elcctricnJ discharges popping off all over
the mountain.
Other times the lights are long-hvcd.
They may appear, move around up on the
ridge for several minutes, maybe go behind
Xotunh Journat pm.JC 8
the hill, and then come back out again.
Today it is hard to pick out Brown
Mountain from 1hc background of anificinl
lighis. If you arc looking at Brown
Mountain, you arc just as likely to sec
something beyond it, like Lenoir or
Morganton, or houses built on Grandfather
Mountain, Blowing Rock, or Boone. My
criteria are. first, 1h01 the lights have to be
against the side of 1hc mountain where I
know there's no habitation, and secondly,
that they have 10 be acting strangely •
moving too fast. shooting lilce a skyrocket.
or coming up over the ridge.
Scientists have initiated some smdies
on the Brown Mountain LighlS. but they
have found the tights to be elusive. Many
times when they have tried 10 make
observations. the lightS have not appeared.
Some of the studies that were carried out
tried 10 dismiss 1he occurrences as swamp
gas or other easily explainable events.
However. I personally have seen two lights
n~proach each other from opposite
dm:ctions. Sometimes they bump together,
sometimes they move apan. but when they
nrc moving in opposite dircc1ions, one of
them has 10 be moving against the wind.
Gases \\OUld have to move in the same
direction as the wind, so it is apparent that
the lights arc not gaseous in nature They
look like a specific object, rather than a
blurry. windy-blown name. Even when
they arc moving rapidly. they rc1:1in their
sh:tpc. A fast-moving gas cloud would tend
to diffuse.
1 think 1hat the lights arc simply
something that we don·t underMand. They
arc a natuntl phenomenon that is outside
our knowledge of physics.
I have spent whole weekends
watching for the lights and been rewarded
by only one sighting, or somcumcs even
none. The lights seem 10 appear randomly.
However, I have a feeling that they arc
excited by electrical :.tonns. When I went
"light-hunting" with my friends, we would
ay to go in August, on an evening after a
big_ electncal s1onn.
Also, the Brown Mountain Lights are
no1 the only electrical phenomena in 1ha1
area. One cold night in November LWO
years ago, some friends and I were up on
Tobie Rock looking for the Brown
Mountain Lights, and I kept seeing little
flashes of light nickering around the edge
of my vision. They were dim, but I could
sec lhcm moving, panicularly when l
brushed against a bush. It was subtle, but
when I opened the blanket Lhat I had
wrapped around me, I saw that the inside
of lhe blanket was sparkling with light. I
jumped up and called the olhers over, and
we examined it. Little sparlcs of light would
appear when I dragged the blanket on the
ground or rubbed i1 against the bushes. The
sparks did not seem like static electricity.
They did not give us electrical shock:..
They did not jump or crackle or make any
sound. They were just there. We never saw
any Brown Mountain Lights that night, but
this amazing new sigh1 gave us plenty 10
think about. We joked about how we had
come looking for lhc Brown Mountain
Lights. and they had been around us all the
time.
Maybe there is some connection
between the electrical sparks and the Brown
Mountain Lights. I did not know. but I
decided 10 check it ou1. A few weeks laLer
some friends and I went to Grandfather
Mountain, and we saw a lot more of th:tt
same kind of electrical spark. The lights
were in our blankets, on our clothing, on
the bushes. The Grandfather Mountain
swinging bridge was sparkling.
It looked like what is known as St.
Elmo's fire, which appears frequently in
sea stories. It was a cold. clear night, and
the "'ind was blo"' ing hard. Our clothes
were tlapping in the wind, and the lights
would appear on the trailing edge of our
co:tts. If I stretched out my finger near
another person's coat, the fire would jump
to the end of my finger. Jt was uncanhly.
We saw a great deal of activity there 1ha1
night.
My old blanket. which was made of
some blend of wool and acrylic, was
lighting up more than our other clothing.
and J got the idea that we could use it ns an
electrical indicator. Later that month. I took
that blanket up 10 the top of Mt. Mitchell. It
was another cold December night, nnd the
blanket lit up. I experimented as Jtame
Drawma by Rob Mcssicl
S111nn1cr, 1991
�down th': Parkway by stopping periodically
as I descended in elevation and trying the
blanket each time. The sparks diminished
until I got down to about 3,500 feet, below
which they did not reappear. I theorized
that the phenomenon was connected
somehow to cold nights and high elevation.
I went out on several other cold
expeditions that winter to different
locations, and we tried some other
experiments. I had heard that fluorescent
light bulbs would sometimes light up under
high-voltage power lines because of the
electrical emissions. So one time we carried
some fluorescent bulbs lO the top of Mt.
Mitchell. When we opened the trunk to get
them out, we saw lights nickering up and
down the shafts of the bulbs. They would
light up when we whirled them through the
air, touched them 10 bushes or to the
ground, or even when we passed them
back and fonh among ourselves.
We didn't see much of the St.
directly from the air. He said that they
receive as much as 11 % of their nitr0gen,
not through the roots, but through their
leaves.
These specially adapted nonhem
plants are built so that high levels of
elecuicity in the in the air around them
induces what Professor Aurela calls a
"coronal discharge" at their edges or needle
tips, which ionizes (or adds an extra
electrical charge 10) chemical compounds
containing nitrogen, so that the ionized
ourogen atoms can be fixed into the plant
tissues. The coronal discharge happens
often, but it only breaks over into a visible
state five or ten percent of the time.
However, because the air today also
contains sulfur and niuogen pollutants
(which we know as "acid rain"), these too
arc ionized, and the plants fix them into
their tissues as well, causing great damage.
Because the air is poisoned, this process
which was once vital for their survival is
Cl.08'1L ELECIIIICAL CIRCUIT
or
Schematic various electrical proc:csin O,c global clcc:lnc:11 circu,t
Sowce: the Earth', Ekctrical r:.n,iroMIUII by E. Philip Kinl,r and Raymond G. Roble
Elmo's fire that night, and we thought that
what we were experiencing was some type
of static electricity. 1decided that I would
find out. Rather than continunlly freezing
on mountaintops, l went over to the
National Oimatic Data Center office in
Asheville, which is pan of the National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration of
the US Department of Commerce. I was
passed around between six different offices
and never found anyone who had heard of
these occurrences. I corresponded with
experts in Washington, DC: Boulder,
Colorado: and Fairbanks, Alaska before
someone directed my attention to Professor
Asko Aurela at the Wihuri Physical
Laboratory of the University of Turku in
Finland.
This man knew all about iL fie
amazed me when he told me that the
electrical phenomena we had been seeing
was connected with acid min! He explained
that in the nonhem latitudes, because of the
poor, thin soils, and the short growing
season, some varieties of plants - like
Norway spruce, Scotch pines, and lichens have evolved the ability to absorb nitrogen
Summer, 10!1I
now speeding these plant species toward
destruction.
Professor Aurela told me that coron.il
discharge is similar in nature to what he
called "the luminous pillar," a wide shaft of
light going straight up into the sky, and
another phenomenon named "low aurom."
The fascinating thing about these
occurrences, as he exrlained, is that they
are all natural parts o the: Earth's electrical
environmenL Thundel'5tom1s arc like big
generators pumping high voltages of
electrical current into the Earth's electrical
circuit. There arc thousands of
thunderstorms active around the planet at
any one time. sending 50-100 bolts of
lightning down 10 the Eanh's surface every
second. Thunderstorms do not occur
everywhere; it requires heat to produce a
thunderstorm. 11terefore, on each side of
the Equator arc thunderstorm belts that
extend from the tr0pics up to the middle
Latitudes.
The other side of this electrical system
is several hundred feel under the surface of
the Earth where there runs an energy flow
known as the Telluric current. Sometimes
the Telluric current disrupts transmissions
through oceanic cables, because it gets so
strong that it produces static on the wire.
Because the seasons in the Nonhem
and Southern Hemispheres are reversed,
during the winter, when we are seeing
electrical phenomena on ML Mitchell and
Grandfather Mountain, thunderstorms are
playing over the Amawn basin and in
South America. They send energy currents
up into the ionosphere, a layer of the
Earth's upper atmosphere. Thunderstorms
are instrumental in keeping an electrical
potential difference of about 200,000600,000 volts between the Earth and the
ionosphere. The ionospheric current flows
north across the Equator and comes back
down, 001 at the North Pole, but at about
«I' nonh latitude in central Canada. This is
the area known as the "auroral ring,• where
there is a lot of northern lights activity,
more even than at the Nonh Pole.
On the Canadian plains during nights
of a lot of electrical activity, people cannot
use the telephone, and sometimes the whole
power grid goes down because the long
wires build up so much electrical static. The
Southern Appalachians are at the southern
edge of this electrically active zone. If we
didn't have mountains here, we would not
experience electrical phenomena at all. But
mountains arc an imponant pan of the
Earth's electrical energy circuit. One-third
of the Earth's electri.cal current returns 10
the Earth at high mountain peaks. There is a
blanket of thicker atmosphere, called the
"planetary bound.µ-y layer." that extends
one mile above the surface of the Earth and
nets as an electrical resistor. As the air gets
thinner at higher elevations, it offers less
resistnnce, and electricity c;in now more
easily through it. High mountains like the
Southern Appalachians act like lightning
rods, or electrical receptors, that penetrate
the planetary boundary layer and conduct
the electrical energy back to Earth.
The Ea.nh's electrical energy moves
in a great circle. When a thunderstorm
occurs in the Amazon River Basin or in
South America, the energy travels to the
nonh, comes into a mountain peak, returns
to the ground, and travels underground
back 10 South America. When it is
summcnime in the north, the polarity shifts
so that the thundcl'5torms here gener.11e
current which is sent back through the
ionosphere 10 the south. It is like an
alternating current on a yearly cycle instead of sixty cycles per second, it's one
cycle per year - six months one way, six
months the other.
Professor Aurcla also has a gr.1ph of
the daily variation m electrical activity, and
the graph shows that here in the nonhem
hemisphere the highc.\t level of activity is
between l l and one o'clock at night. As
happens here, most of the thunders1om1
activity in the southern zone occurs just
before sundown, so the surge arrives up
here around midnight, and then activity
tapers off towards morning. There's a daily
variation, and there's a seasonal variation.
We just happened 10 be on Grandfather
Mountain during a period of peak activity.
(conttnucd CG po&< 10)
JGoti&ah Journot
pal)&
0
�Old Houses
Even exposed to all weathers
it takes many years
for a strong house, untended,
10 collapse of itself.
First the boards have to weather,
shedding even the little life
the ax lelt them.
The doors, swollen with rain,
must open, inviting owl and vole
and every creature at random
like a kind of ark:
men without money
and lovers at play
on the one brown mattress.
Boys in summer must stone
the windows to blindness.
then grow themselves
into sternness and silence,
assuming the weight of their lives.
The wine bonles smashed
in the oorner must gather dust
and the eaves go crazy with birds.
and the floors curl up
like sleepers grown cold.
Then the stones it sits on
must sink in the wet eanh
as they open at last
to the frost's slow demolition.
TIii tho whole house slumps,
a haven for snakes, so low
nol even the wind
caJ1 rattle it anymore.
II
No strata
of wills. deeds, papers,
stacked in the courthouse
can tell you
how it came to this,
why the rose bush runs wild
over the back steps,
and a rag doll is left
down cellar by a stack of books. No matter.
Today is one out of many
and you are happy.
Nothing here is haunted.
Squirrels skitter off like regrets
· as you enter their chamber.
a tourist, a snapshot.
The old boards give back the light
with a kind of joy, the rose
llght of evening, the sun's
dark laughter. For it takes.
it takes many years.
- Richard Nester
Drawing by Rob Memck
(aintinued 6om page 9)
ls all this related somehow to the
Brown Mountain Lights? Maybe it is!
Perhaps Brown Mountain for some
geological or physical reason is more
conductive. Perhaps i1 is positioned in such
a way, or iis roots go down to a cenain
depth beneath the Eanh so lha1 it aurac1s
more of this kind of activity.
Maybe not.
However, for whatever reason, there
are fireballs shooting around on Brown
Mountain. And in the Andes Mountains in
Peru, 1he highest mountains in the Southern
Hemisphere, where one would expect to
sec an elecaical activity center, there is a
phenomena called the "Andes LlghLc;":
mysterious lights that can be seen among
I.he mountain peaks. In guidebooks I have
seen references to lhe Brown Mountain
LighLS tha1 describe I.hem as being
"...similar to the Andes Lights in Peru."
They seem to be much the same. Bur who
knows? We just do not know enough yet to
be sure.
Xatimh Journot ptuJe t 0
Resource Reading:
The Earth's £/ecmcal E11viro11ment by E.
Philip Kirder and Raymond G. Roble,
co-chairmen (National Academy Press:
Washington, DC: 1986) .
lightning, Auroras, Nocturnal lights, and
Related Phe,wmena by W.R. Corliss
(Sourcebook Project; Glen Arm, MD:
1982)
Aurela, Asko and Risto
Punkkinen,"Atmospheric Nitrogen Dioxide and
Nonhem Plants," Report of Kevo Subarctic
Research Station 17: 1-6 (1981)
or
• Schematic diqiam ela:uic c:wn:i,15
in lhe ionosphere and inner magnctosphett.
Sowa,: the Eanli's El«tricol EnvirOMIDII
b)I E. Phibp Ki.rdcr and Raymond 0 . Roble
Punkinnen, R. and A.M. Aurela,
"Production of N02 and Sound in Positive
Streamer Discharges," 7th lnternatio11al
Conference 011 Atmospheric Electricity
(American Meteorological Society,
Boston, 1984)
Summer, 1991
�KA TUAH AND THE EARTH GRlD
"The Earth grid" is an energy
system that surrounds the emire planet.
Dowsers think of the grid as a network
ofelectric and magnetlc energies.
Meraphysicians see the grid theory as yet
atwther demonstration that 1/ze Earth is a
self-regulating system and a consciollS
being. There is a wide divergence of
viewpoints on the nature of the Eartlt
Grid and Katuah's place in the system.
Following are s1mu11aries of the opinions
ofa few of the individuals in Ka11,ah
who routinely work with Earth energies:
Joll11 Shisler is a biolocation
co11sultan1. Using a combinatio11 of traditional
dowsing techniques a11d scientific equipment,
he assis,s clients i11 choosing building sites and
construc1i11g buildings for optimum health. He
takes inu, accow11 Earth energies, climate, soil
rype, and also the surroundlng lu1111an-created
energy fields.
Theories about Lhe Earth grid began to
surface about 50 years ago in France and
Germany. Dr. Josef Oberback of Gennany
originated the lheory of two grid systems, a
cosmic grid which runs nonh to south, and east
to west; and an Eanh grid system which runs
northeast 10 southwest, and northwest to
southeast. The two grids lie in close proximity,
wilh the Eanh grid crossing points about seven
inches away from the crossing points of the
cosmic grid. There is constant energy exchange
and interaction between the two grids, and ii
can become difficult to separate the two when
mapping.
There is no mystery about the grid. It is
nothing more than vibration, or frequency. The
two grids can be mapped and measured
Superimposed on each other, the two grids
create what would be ca.lied in electr0nic
tenninology, a "2 x 2 memory core system" of
el~oical and magne~c fields. These crossing
points could be descnbed as "spiral vortex
energy."
Except in the event of earthquakes, the
Eanh Grid fluctuates very li1tle. The cosmic
grid fluctuates seasonally, expands and
contracts at sunrhe and sunset, and shifts
during eanhquakes. The Christian church
calendar, which bases its holy days upon the
old pagan holidays, follows the seasonal
fluctuations in the cosmic grid. On October20
near All Saints Day, the cosmic energy field '
begins to expand. By December 20, the cosmic
grid lines are as large as nine feet in width.
This i~ also the time of year when people
e,cpenence more heallh problems. By February
2, the day when the Christ child was
introduced to the church, the cosmic grid lines
have receded back to their normal size of two
and one-half inches in width.
Everything that we do 10 the Earth attracts
the magnetic flux in the Earth at the local level.
If we dig up tree roots, put in dumps, or place
huge culverts in the Eanh, as we are doing
now, we change the lines of magnetic flux.
The human adult is composed of70%
water. Every atom in our bodies is replaced
periodically. We lose two pounds of cells per
day. We have new skin cells every thiny days.
We are in a constant state of change. Every
blast of energy goes through our bodies,
whether that energy is from the Earth, cosmic
rays, magnetic s1onns, or human-made
electronic energy.
It is not only the gcopathic location of
one's residence that determines the debilities 10
which one is most liable. We arc changing !he
molecular structure of our bodies because of
the barrage of the horizontal electrical field
which we have created, as opposed to the
venicaJ field of energy coming down from !he
cosmos and the steady-state electrical field
coming up from the Earth. We arc affecting
ourselves at the cellular level so rapidly that we
have stepped up our own evolution by 50,000
years.
by Charlotte Homsher
Richard Crutchfitld, a dbwser from
Weaverville, NC works 1 ridgecops along 1l11t
Jte
Blue ridge Parkway searching for negative
vortexes and evldence of ancienc sacred sites.
Richard works with two basic grid
energies. The Curry grid of magnetism is the
Eanh Grid. It runs in lines nine co ten feet apan
around !he globe in a nonheast-southwcst
orientation. These lines are intersected by
peipendicular lines about the same distance
apart. The intersections have positive, neutral,
and negative energies which alternate along !he
lines.
. The Hartmann grid is the cosmic grid
which overlays the Earth Grid. The cosmic grid
has wider lines which vary in width according
10 where the Earth is in relation 10 1he sun, and
other factors. The fluctuations of the cosmic
grid influence our behavior.
{conunucd on nu.I page)
The new double pcntadodecahedron grid p:iuern now emerging
Summer, 199 1
• from Nrw Earllo Odystty by Joseph Robcn.JochmJJ1s C) 1989
Xatimh Journot paqe 11
�(conlil!ucd from pogo II)
Richard has found much evidence of
ancient sacred sites in the mountains. Of
panicuJar interest 10 him arc the many large
rocks which were cut and placed in the
landscape by the ancients who placed "walls of
energy" into the rocks.
Richard uses t11e tenns "positive.. and
"negative" to describe vonex energy as either
heallhy or unhealthy. Po:.itive vortexes are
generally found where the vege1ation is lush
and the area seems invi1mg. There may be fairy
rings in these areas. The negative vortex area.,;
can be recognized by scruffy vegetation and
fallen trees. The negative vonexes become
unhealthy for various reasons, possibly
including violence from old cultures or our
own negative thought forms. Using dowsing
tools, Richard reverses the flow of energy in
the negative vortexes. I le believes that he is
aiding the healing of the Earth by helping to
restore unblocked flows of energy.
• rn late winter, 1991, Richard perceived
with his dowsing rods that there were two new
energies on the ridgetops. The first was a
steady, unfluctuating su-cam of energy which
came from the nonhwest and blanketed the
mountains. This energy was of a very positive,
healing nature. There was also another kind of
energy which was moving uphill at knee level
with both negative and positive polarity flows.
Richard docs not think either of these new
energies is geomagnetic, nJthough they may be
related 10 the life force energy which comes in
through the node system of the Eanh Grid. He
believes that the energy may have been
activated by very sophisticated pre-planned
engineering on the part of someone or some
force, possibly by the ancients. When this
energy hits sacred sites, the siLes seem 10
spring back to life. Medicine wheels activated
by this energy are very powerful.
Bill Waften has smdied Native
American prophecies and traveled exrensivel>•
to sacred sires the world over. His eleventh
book, Pilgrimage, will be available this
summer at the United Research lighJ Cemer
near Black Mo111110i11.
The Cherokee Indians recognized that the
Earth energy in Katiiah was feminine/right
brain energy. They refe~d 10 Grandfather
Moon and Grandmother Sun until they were
forcefully reloc~ued to Oklahoma where the
prevalent energy was masc11line/righ1 brain.
The masculine counterpan 10 the Katuah
area in the United States is the Four Comers
area. The Hopi peace prophecy states that there
will be global peace when the Rainbow is
completed between the Hopi Four Comers area
and the Cherokee Katuah.
In 1984 Diana and Jim Gourc from the
United Research Light Center began prayer
group pilgrimages from Cherokee, North
Carolina to the Four Corners area.. They
believed that they had anchored the Rainbow
into the etheric. However, they were not aware
of the Cherokee interpretation of the prophecy
that called for extending the pilgrimages 10 the
Mount Shasta area and nearby Black Butte,
California. The prophecy also called for
prayers for all the people who lived between
these three power poinlS.
Pilgrims from Kntuah who wish to fulfill
the Hopi peace prophecies may travel the "Icy
lines," or lines of power, by way of the Grand
XatiUJh JoumaL pa<JC 12
811/ IValrcrs
Canvon, Southern California, Mount Whitnev,
and north to Mount Shas1a: or by an alternate.
route from the Four Comers area to the Gmnd
Teton Mountains, the Bighorn Mountains,
Yellowstone National Park, and then west to
the Mount Shasta-Black Butte area.
Mary arrd Joseph Jocllma11s recemly
moved to Sowlt Carolinafrom New
Hampshire. Mary is a karmic galactic
astrologer and Joseph is known/or his book
Rolling Thunder. The Coming Earth Changes.
The pair co,uittct 1011.rs 10 sacred sires aro1111d
the world and are co11sidered authorities on
ancient cultures arrd vortex energy. Together
they research what they call the "evolving
crystal grid." Their grid theory involves
complex patterns ofgalactic co11jiguratio11s,
ancient symbols, and sacred geomerry.
According to the Jochmans, the Earth is a
living evolving, crystal fonn. She has points of
power on her surface which increase in number
every time she moves into a higher energy.
Along with the increase of power points, there
is also a corresponding increase in the lines of
energy (the grid) between these power points.
When the continents were splining apan
about 220 million years ago. 1hey broke along
Lhe lines of a tetrahedron. Since Lhat time the
geomeaic configuration of this grid has become
ever more complex.
The Earth is now undergoing a massive
shif1 which will result in 1he most complex grid
yet. The new grid will be a double
pentadodecahedron. The power points on this
new grid will increase from the present 64 to a
~otaJ of 486 poccntiaJ sacred sites. The ancients
located their sacred sites and built their
monuments on or near the grid power poims.
Many of these old sites will be dying or
changing purpose as the new power points
emerge. The Harmonic Convergence of 1987
marked the beginning of these changes. The
new crystal grid will be in pin~ within 30
ye:irs. The energy now being anchored into the
Sou1heas1 is feminine, intuitive, hean energy.
Mary claims that the m.ijor power poini for the
Capricorn Compassion node will be anchored
in the Carolinas or Tennessee by 1996.
Compassion as defined by Mary means
"the ability to communicate one's compassion
for all of life," The old anchoring point for this
compassion energy was the ancient mythical
Allanth which is off the Florida coast. There
are manv Karmic connec1ions between Ka11iah,
Atlantis; and Lemuria. Remnants of the land
mass of the old Atlantis can still be found in Lhe
Southeast. In Peach Tree Rock, a heritage trust
site in South Carolina, there arc visible crusts
of rock from the original Atlantis.
The Elbenon quarry district in Georgia,
site of the largest granite deposit in the world,
is sitting on the edge of a huge mass of
crystalline rock 35 miles long. This same
crvstalline mass is connected to the
underground mass of Stone Mountain. When
the crystalline energy is triggered by the
anchoring of the new grid, many mountains,
such as Stone Mountain, will become
reawakened. Also the EJbenon granite, which
has been exponed around the world, will
become reac1iva1cd with the Compassion
energy.
According to Joseph, the Eanh will not
allow manipulation of these higher new
energies. We cannot force the changes, and
neither can we stop them We can delay the
anchoring of the energies for a time by our
resistance 10 change, bu1 the Earth will be
reborn no matter what we do. The Earth
changes do not have to be cataclysmic if we can
"allow the Eanh Mother to go through this
birth." We are the creatures with the greatest
po1entiaJ 10 lose everything in the Eanh
Changes, yet we are also the potential
midwives. "We are the Earth Changes
ourselves. If we change within ourselves first,
then we become a force of change to bring lrUe
co-creation to the planeL"
Those who wislifor information about
the Jochmans' Alma Tara Multi-versiry, the
Universal Magi Apprenticeship program, or to
subscribe ro their newsletter. may write them
a1; Jlox /0703; Rock Hill, SC 29731.
Mary & Joseph Jockmans
S11mmcr, l 99 l
�THE CALL OF THE ANCIENT ONES:
The Spiritual Re-Awakening of the Great Smoky Mountains
:Cl
has become increasingly evident over
lhe past decade lhat the Eanh is indeed
chan~ng. All around us rhe climate becomes
more unprediclllble while volcanoes awaken to
cast the earlh's blood heavenward in fiery
splen_dor. De~rts grow larger and areas of rich
and tillable soil grow smaller. Rivers and seas
continue to pound lhe continental shores,
carying their signarures into lhe landscape
while battles rage for the cleansing of their
polluted walers. UnnaturJl clouds block lhe
swlight from our cities, and the land groans
wilh the pain of greal quak<!S thal rend and tear
the fault lines lhal lay in lace-like patlems over
lhe plane1's surface. All the while, humanuy
wages war amongst ourselves, economic
siabi!ity wav_ers. and political, social, and
religious penis challenge our very survival.
Bui th<;se are the frightening negatives
regarding planetary change, for arnidsl all lhe
apprehension and uncenainty some
wonderfully positive global events are
(!CCUrring lhat are unprecedented in modem
umes.
These events will perhaps do more to
open the minds and heans of humans to a
greater awareness of the truth of the "living
E~''. theory than anything the academic or
s~1enllfic "".orlds could ever offer to prove or
disprove this age-old tnnh. An explanation of
these events spans lhe fields of geology and
geomancy, and encomp~sscs lhe perspectivCl;
of_l~e sa_cred ecology of Native American
spmtunlity as well as related beliefs and
practices of other ancient cullures.
The body of Mother Earth is dotted with
special power sites, bolh natural and
human-created, that were recognized and used
by our ancestors for lhe performance of their
~cred c~remonies. Balefires have lil up the
mght skies on the grassy slopes of ancient
Av~lon while priests and priestesses wound
their way through the stone circles at
Stonehenge and Avebury. Patient eyes have
awmted Grandfather Sun 10 make i1s annual
imprint upon the walls of Newgrange in Ireland
and Chaco Canyon in the American Sou1hwes1.
Sacred mountains all over the \\-Orld have
beckoned pilgrims to lhc1r summits and the
healing waters from holy rivers, wells. and
springs have blessed and repaired 1he bodies
and souls of the faithful who have lilied their
chalices with sweet waters, 1hc Earth Mother's
very source of life.
Yes, our forbears were clme to the Earth.
They called her Mother. TI1ey knew lhe
wholeness of Nature and lived their lives as 11
conscious relauve pan of all the planet'!> life
kingdoms. It was precisely because of tl11s
closeness that our ancestors could sense the
and potent _life force of the planet being
emmcd at specific sttes. It "'as to those pfaces
that they retreated for healing and
rcplenis~me_nt, and it was there that they did
ceremonies in honor and recognition of the
natural earth forces around them lh3t gave
power and purpose lO their hves.
ra"':
Since the latter days of the Allantean em,
Summer, 1991
by Page Bryant
Pun&al An by We. Wyan
humans have gradually moved forward in
evolution. Civilizations have come and gone.
Many spiritual traditions have sprung from the
Atlantean "root," presided over and preserved
down ~rough rime br Egyptian hierophanlS,
Delphic oracles, Celuc pneslS and priestesses,
My_stery Schools, and adepts and shamans of
vanous culrures. As evolution proceeded,
ho~~ver, modem times and society nnd new
religions pushed the Old Traditions into the
darkness of obscurity
This, like the Earth, is changing. Once
m<?i:e the Wisdom Teachings and the social,
sp!ntual, and ecological values they foster, are
being sought by modern aspirants. At thi~
panicular lime. a revival of interest in Native
American spirituality is spreading like wildfire
worldwide, due no doubt to its embodiment of
the principles inheren1 in the Earth Religions of
the ancienl past. These principles have a
tremendous bearing on our ecological problems
of today.
People are seeking lo learn about
ceremony and are using it as a loo! for gaining
a closer relationship with the planer. a
relalionship 1hat has long been lost and/or
devalued. As a result. the location of sacred
sites is of intere~t to thousands of sp1riwal
seekers worldwide, and ceremonial voices have
begun to resound, once again, within sacred
stone circles, medicine wheels, fairy rings. and
other cercmon1al grounds. Power spots or
vortexes. long dormant. have begun to awaken
during this time of planetary change and
ren~wal. Their power will once again be
available 10 empower humans and members of
other kingdoms to progress into a New Dawn.
While doing the re~arch and channeling
for The Earth ChanReS Survival Handbnok
some ten years ago, my Spiril Tc,Kher. Albion.
lor whom I have been the "mstrUment" for the
past twenty years, gave infonnauon aboot lhis
time of planetary change and mentioned ccn.un
pl3ces in Nonh America 10 "'hich people would
be drawn, some tcmporanly and others
permanently. The intense degree of natural
eanh power, the "energies," if you will, was to
be the reason why individuals would foci such
on attraction lo these places which would also
be where "Light Centers" would spring up.
designed to teach nnd guide spiritual seekers.
The~ places, which Albion called "way
slations," would ah.o be safe. in every way,
during the planetary changes. They would be
places where lhe land ilself would be tile
greatest teacher. One of these locations was
identified as the area surrounding Asheville
Nonh Carolina. Olhers were Sedona, Ari~na.
where my husband and l lived for eleven years;
southern Colorado; pans of Hawaii; and Santa
Fe, New Mexico, to name bur 3 few. While
trying to make a decision as to the proper
location for a move. due to a droughl thar
Albion predicted would become much worse,
and for olher personal desires, Albion brought
the Asheville area to our anention o.s the plac~
to which he would like l0 see us move. [a thal
~ession, ~e Teacher offered some interesting
infonnauon aboul the Great Smoky Mountains
lhat I feel is important to share with my
rea~ers,- I am, for the most part, using
Albion s exact words so that the reader might
get lhe "feeling" that the Teacher tried 10
portray:
"...The Great Smoky Mountains
themselves arc the Elders... the Ancient
Ones:.. whose voices have sung the Song of
Creauon on the North American continent
longer lhan lhe voices of any other mountain
range. They arc so very, very powerful, and
lhat power may be explained in lhree ways.
"First, because of lheir particular situation
geologically, and lhe powerful influence of the
ne3=1by sea. the~ mouniains arc magnetic in
thet.r charge of hfe force. Magnetism is of the
nature of lhe element of watt..-r. It is conducive
to helping one rum wi1hin, 10 tap the
subconscious and the Collective Unconscious.
Magnetism promotes ~nsitivity and awakens
the psychic and intuitive faculties wilhin human
consciousness. Magnelism is lhe feminine
force in Nature. These mountains are filled
with natural springs and underground river.,
and caves that have a sublerrancan water
source.
"Secondly, because we are labeling lhem
as "magnetic mountains," they are conducive: to
the energies necessary to assist Spiritual
Seekers \l.ith their Vision Quests more so than
any other mountains in the world at lhis umc
. 'Thir~ly. the Smokie~ hold the 'memory'
ol th~ breaking up of the continents dunng
previous planet.1ry changes and of the mountain
building procc.,s. They have 'recorded' the
ancient voices of Nature tha1 are unmatched on
your continent. Smee the l:m period of Eanh
changes, some len thousand year.; ago, these
great mouniuins have hecn 'asleep.' their
energy but a shallow breath. It was aho during
ll10se ancient times of upheaval that lhese
mountains were first inhabited by Allantean
m1grnnt, who spread throughout the \I.Orld
~eekmg refuge nnd ne\l. beg.innin~. To this
day. there arc ancient rock and b:trk scrolls and
SO!llC cave drawings that arc 1\tlamc.1n an their
on gin 1h:11 still exi~t wilhin various pans of
these mountains.
"This place has long been the site of
:m:ane ~ercmonies. Although man) of lhe
mountain peaks have been worn do"'n wnh
time. there were once seven summits in the
Smokies which were u~cd throughout the
centuri~ as ceremonial !;lit:;. The areas around
(aJlllurucd c,n llellt J>OS•)
Xotuah Journal JlCl()C 1'3
�(coniinw,d liom Pl&• 13)
them still comain n:mnaotS and artifactS of the
Old Ways. Some of 1hosc whom you call
Native Americans were born from these
Atlantcan ancestors, while others migrated
here from other continents and settled into this
land. For a shon time, the mountains remained
awake to their full energy potential before
slipping into an introvened slumber. Once,
through time, their power re-awakened for a
shon time, to embrace the native people who
fled into lhem for safety so that they and their
tradition might survive the thrca1 of the
invaders for later rimes. These who the
mountains hid were those you call the
Cherokee.
"Beginning in the middle of the decade of
the 1980's, the Great Smoky mountains began
LO awaken once again 10 their full power. This
process will be comple1e by the year I 993.
Between now and 1hen, many will be drawn 10
this area. They will come to live and to study
and to 'connect' themselves with Mother Earth.
Teachers will come 10 the area and some will
establish Light Centers. Ancient ceremonies
will be practiced once again on these mountain
slopes and the Native American tradition and
people will become stronger and more
irnponan1 to the natives themselves. Sacred
sites throughout the mountains will re-awaken,
sites such as Chimney Rock, Blowing Rock.
Mt. Mitchell, Wayah Bald Mountain,
Grandfather Mountain, Flat Rock, and Looking
Glass Rock will once more embrace Seekers
and emit their most potent power. The waters
of the Smokies will become more potent and
can be used for healing the body. They will be
rich for growth and fertility. The planis of the
area will increase in their potency so that their
medicinal value will be greatly enhanced. The
formation of 'brotherhoods' and 'sisterhoods'
will have their birth in these mountains once
again."
must be and what my future as a teacher mus1
be. It is here, in the Great Smoky Mountains
that I will live and work 10 awai1 and
experience the awakening of the Ancient Ones.
It is here that r will listen to 1he Voice of the
Earth Mother sing the song of Creation... of
Wholeness... and of Rebirth. And, it is here
1hat I will seek to add my ·ligh1· 10 the ·ugh1s·
that are already here... in peace and in harmony
with the Spirit Forces and the Greai Devas of
the Mountains.
So mote it be!
Page Bryant is a ttacl~r and p.rychic ofmany
years txptritnce. Shr has sludit'd atensivt'ly with
Nativt American mtdicmt ttachtrs and is familiar with
naJivt' prophecies abow the currtfll Earth changes. She
has wrttttn st11tral books, one of IM bt'st known Ming
The Earth Changes Survival Kandbook. fltr /WO nr:wtsl
rtkasts art. Tcrmvis1on, a pr~r on sacred sitts o/tht
world. and The Aquarilln Guide lO N;wve American
Mythology.
Page and l:t'r husband Sco11 Guynup, a visionary
artis1, havt optntd 1he Mystic Mowuain Rt1re_a1 and
Ltar,ung Cuittr and may bt' rtaehtd at -,07 8rUJIS\l,1C'Jc
Drive; Waynmillt', NC 28786 (704} 456-6714.
This article was reprinted from Eanh Walk, tht
ntwsltlltr ofThe Earth Ctn/tr, which is dedicated 10
personal <kvelopmtnt and Earth htaling by bringing
s1udtnts toge1/iLr with well-known Native l.!ru!rican
ltachus Olld holding regular spirltMDl ceremonies ill 1hr
narivt ,radicion. The Earth Center is mam«zintd by Zoe
and Jim Marun. Contact them 01 302 Old Ftllowship
Road, Swannanoa, NC 28n6 (704) 298-3935.
WIIEN THE MOUNTAINS A WAKE
Upon hearing the Teacher's words, I
knew, beyond doubt, where 1 must relocate.
knew what the next step on my path of life
(from a conversation wi1h Page Bryant)
"My spiri1 teacher Albion has repeated
numerous times in speaking of the Eanh
Changes, 'We don't wan1 you to limit
yourselves by thinking about 1he Earth in only
the physical sense. When we say Earth
Changes we are talking about geological and
climatic changes, but we are also talking about
social, political, and spiritual changes.'
RESOURCES
······~.
.... . .~~~~.1!·~·-· -
• Earth Ascending. Jose Arguelles (Bear & Co.
Publisher.i, Santa r-c, NM. 1988)
• Thi! Divining Jland: The 500 Ytar Old Mys1try q/
Dowsing. Chris10phcr Bird (New Age Press; P.O. Box
1216; Black Mounlain, NC 28711. 1979-1985)
•Ttmn•ision. Page Bryant (Hi1rpcrMd Row, New York.
1991)
• Anti·Gravity and tlu- World Grid Ed1tc.d by David
Hatcher Childress (Advcntwts Unlimited Press; Box 22:
Stelle, IL 60919. 1987)
~
/(:i;<-:;;~\
..:·
.
..
• •
•
·:.
.
•
......
,
_
~
··....
··.........'
.......
..... . .
,
··-
..........
.......... . l ....\ ... ······-.........
:
;
.,-..
••
I
jlll'"li~l.'i,,,__
.
'•
·..:.
-
....
..
.
.
,
• r(!C()rtkd by DW
• The Earth Sp,ril. Its Ways. Shrines and Mys1tries.
John Mitchell (Crossroads Publislung Co., New York,
NY. 1975)
• T~ Ntw Vi= Over Atlantir. John Mitchell (Harper
and Row Puhlishcrs, San Pranci51CO CA. 1986)
• Looking Gia.rt Univtrst: The Emogmg Scitnce of
IVhokMSS. F. David Peat and John Briggs (Simon &
Schuster, Inc., New York. 1984)
• Tht Ancitnl Srienu ofGtomancy. Nigel Pennick
(Townes & Hudsen. Ltd., London. 1979)
•
o!
••
• "Geomancy: A Tawny G111111mor; Steven ~ l in
Rais,: tht Sraus (Spnng, 1984 • Planet Drum
Found:11ion; P.O. Box 31251; San Francisco, CA
94131)
• Where ug1wi.f livt. Doug Ro~Jln (Cherokee
Publicnlions: P.O. Box 256; Cherokee, NC 28719)
• Black Dawn • Bright Day. Sun Bear & Wabun Wind
(13.e.lrTribe Pub.; Box 9167; SpocMc, WA 99209. 1990)
Wet England. 1984)
• Nttdlu o[Srone. Tom Graves (Granada Publishing
Lid. 1980)
:.
.:
d
~
• Ear1hmind. Paul Devereux, John S1ccle, and David
Kubrin (Harper and Row Publishers, New York. 1989)
• Ftng Shui: Thr Seitnet ofSacrtd Landscape in China.
Em~ J. Eilel wilh commem.:iry by John Michell,
(S)'IICJ'getic Pless; 24 Old Gloucester Street: London
-... ,
. . ~. .
"The sacred sites in the Appalachian
Mountains are coming into their power. 1993 is
a year tha1 I feel will be intense in every way.
Bui people are not going to be able ro
experience that power until they reconnect
themselves 10 the Mother Eanh.
'There are mnny ways to regain our
connection with the Eanh. One 1s 10 educate
yourself about the Earth. That is what my book
The Eanh Changes Survival Handbook is all
about.
'That is well and good, bu1 we need 10 go
a step funher. We need 10 learn from the native
people. and the most imponam thing we can
learn is ceremony.
"We have to get back into doing the
ceremonies 1ha1 honor the forces in narure.
We've jus1 become 100 sophisticated for our
own good. Jus1 try getting up in the morning
and greeting the sun. Take a handful of
cornmeal and throw it up toward the Sun and
say, 'Thank you, Grandfather. Thank you for
the new day.'
"Do that for seven days - ir you don·t feel
better, more connected 10 the Sun and 10 the
Earth, then don'1 do it any more.
"Something simple: we have a sign by the
water tap in the the kitchen tha1 says,
'Remember the water spirits.'
"People want to know what that means. I
ask them, 'When is the last time you gave
1hanks to the water spiri!S for being here?'
"They say, 'What?'
"Obviously it's no1 a question of when
was the last rime, because they have never done
it before. They've never though1 abou1 it 1ha1
way. Well, I lived in the desert for 12 years,
and r learned 1here 1ha1 it's really important 10
have a good solid peace with the water spirits.
'That's some1hing to think abouL We
lake these things for granted. That's the big
enemy: we lake all these things for granted.
No1jus1 the Eanh, the waler, and the air, but
also each other.. .life! If people can stop doing
that, then we've staned the ball rolling."
• TM Ages ofGOia: A Biography of our livin1 Ea,-1/t.
J:imcs Lovelock ry./.W. Nonon & Co. Inc. New York.
1988)
Orawina by Rob Meaick
• Sacrtd Pious. James A. Swan (Bear & Co.
Publishing. Santa Fe, NM. 1990)
• Ear1h Wisdom. Delores LaChapclle (Finn Hill Ans;
P.O. Box 542; Silvcr1on, CO 81433. 1~78)
Summer, 1991
�"If the Earth Is To Heal,
Our Hearts Must Be Broken":
Two Experiential Approaches to Reconnecting with the Earth
by Richard Lowenthal
Earth Dance
Since August oflast year I've been
deeply involved in the fonnation of an
innovative environmemal youth program called
EanhDance. There are two primary "guiding
lights " behind this program. First is the belief
that our youth need in-depth and experiential
knowledge about our environmental crisis - .
and about viable, practical solutions. Second 1s
the observation that young people are
.
disenfranchised in our society, and are growing
up feeling helpless and/or apathetic about their
future. They are desperate for guidance,
support, and hope. They are seeking a positive
aliemative vision.
In speaking with groups of young people
throughout the Asheville, North Carolina area,
EanhDance director Mark Fields and I have
been astounded and saddened to hear the
bleakness of many kids' vision of the future.
Even from nine and ten year olds, when we ask
them to imagine the world twenty years from
now, we hear responses like:
"In 20 years there won't be any eanh."
"1 see the whole planet covered in black
smoke."
"The hole in the owne layer will keep
growing, and we'll all be fried by radiation."
They have good reason to be frightened
Although our culture voices concern for our
childrens' future, it ii; simultaneously
devouring the planet and pirating the natural,
financial, and social resources essential 10 the
future of the coming generations.
Amazingly, environmental education is
still considered an educational "frill," and sits at
or near the bottom of the totem pole of
educational priorities. This error is a symptom
of OUT failed relationship with the natural
world. This massive failure in tum translates
into failed relationships with our children, since
we are initiating them inro a social system badly
out of touch with reality. And buying a child
off with a new computer or video game doesn't
change the underlying truth: if we really cared
about our children and the world they are
inheriting, we would be doing much more chan
we presently are ro deal. with t~e profo~nd
social and ecological cnses which cononue to
deepen around us.
Within our society and within each of us
individually, there exists a _pressing n~ed for
adaptive change and conscious evoluuon, a
need that we consistently refuse to recognize.
We need 10 honor the Eanh, to begin again to
nunure the awareness chat this planet is our
Home, that we belong here and are responsible
for caring for our Home place.
One way to promote this aw3:"!"CSS, an~
the sense of caring nunurnnce that n evokes. 1s
through planting trees. This spring,
EanhDance sponsored a tree ~ale and plan tin~
project for young people, wh1<:_h w:c: unique m
its multi-leveled approach. This proJCCt had
three interconnected goals:
1) To empower young people (age 9-18)
to act on behalf of their communities and their
S1nt111ia-, 1991
Planring trees al GrQ.NJ[Olhu Mountain
natural environment, and 10 literally get "in
touch" with che Earth by planting trees.
2) To teach kid5 that environmentalism
and money-making can coexist, and in fact can
In
suppon each other. _ this case, 40~ of the
money raised by selling trees went directly .
back to their environmental groups or classes m
school, 10 be used for other environmental
projects chqsen independently by each group.
(The remaining 60% of the proceeds covered
EarthDance's expenses in coordinating the
project.) One group donated its earnings 10
black bear protection work, while an~ther
chose 10 buy and protect an area of r:unforest.
Yet another group set its money aside to fund
the projects of the environmental club during
the coming year.
3) To conduct a liCientific experimen1 .
based on soil rcminemlizarion as a therapeutic
technique for healing both !;Oil and trees. In
coordination wilh Dr. Roben Bruck, a
nationnlly known expen on acid min and plant
pathology, EanhDance arra!'lged for tree
plantings on areas at Mt. Mi1chcll and
Grandfather Mountain that have been
devastated by a combination of airborne
pollution, insects, and fungi.
Using a na1urally derived mineral rock
dust study groups remincmlized half of the
where trees were being replanted, while
the remaining areas were left alone to serve as
controls.
Dr. Bruck expects 1he rock dust to
significantly im~rove th_e ~es' chances of
survival due 10 its alkahmzmg effect on the
soil and 'the concentration of irace minerals it
provides for the trees' nourishment In
.
Germany. large-scale remine:-l1iw.tion efforts _m
the Black Forest have been highly successful m
rejuvenating dying forest stands.
.
.
Herc m Asheville, another expenment 1s
under way on the Audubon Society's new land
at Beaver Lake, where kids planted 200 trees -
area;
~vcamores, hickories, pecans and hybrid
chesmms - and remincml1zcd half of them.
EanhDance is also planning future projec1i, to
explore whether reminemlization can, ns Dr.
Bruck suspects, minimize or perhaps stop the
damaging dogwood blighL
All the!">C effons arc imponant, yet the
crucial aspect of the EanhDancc approoch is the
focus on active involvement and experiential
education for our youth. Technical solutions
and temporary improvements will no~ suffice lO
insure a sustainable society and a habitable
planet. We need a drastit "change of hean"
even more than a "change of mind." We
already realize the gravity of OUT situation; th~re
is plenty of terrifying inf0rnl3tion oa that topic.
What we need now is courage, inspiration and
lwpe. We need hean-lcvcl inspiration to get _us
motivated, but inspiration never lasts unless 11
is convened into hope and encouragement
through direct personal experience.
As Mark Fields puts it, ''The problems of
our world ultimately spring from OUT sense of
separation from life and each other. The mos1
effective way to heal this sense of separateness
is through building connectedness and
community: actual involvement in life.
"In thinking 1his through, I concluded
that OUT children arc the most effective
"acupressure poin1" within human society 10
quickly tum things around. Most a~ults arc
either so busy or so shut down emononally that
they arc simply unavailable for intensive
involvement. Our kids, on the other hand, arc
desperate for involvement, for real participation
in life. And the kids have the most to lose, too.
They know we need to preserve the planet, but
they aren't seeing much real change; they arc
offered public posturing and "green" slogans
instead. This conveys a negative message to
our youth, and increases their frustration and
cynicism.
"If young people don't have a positive
oullet for their energy and youthful enthusiasm,
they tend to lapse into depression or apathy.
But if their potential energy is guided and
convened into activated. energy, then they can
work to change the direction into which our
planet is heading - and they can feel much
beuer about themselves and their future. Only
if a tremendous grasH'OOts movement arises,
among both children and adults, can we move
towards righ1 relationship, wholeness, and
harmony. I see this movement as one of the
bare essentials for the survival of humanity and
the planet - and it 1s happening. and slowly
growing, becau:;e II is so desperately needed.
We need more than anything 10 reconnect with,
and honor, our Source.·•
MurJ; Firld.r is aformrr busi11essman ondflowtr
farmrr who spent many )·ears living in the f<Jln/oresu of
Costa Rica lit rtlMTMd nnrth ,n 1988 fuling a dup
r.onu,11 for ow social and p/JJMUJry tn1v-0=111. and
rpent tM [WI two ~ors dew/oping the ideas bthilld
EanhDanct. Phone (704) 2.52.Jlll/8 or writ( to
Ca11hDa11cc htStllutt: P.O. Box 2155: Ashl!Vlllf. NC
28802.
(continuod on nm r•i:•)
�(conlinued rrom page 1S)
Children already have the connection.
Little kids know - they feel it. It's amazing
how much more they know than we do, how
much more they sense. They just need
encouragement.
Karualr: I grew up surTounded by deep
woods, arid I used to spend hours and hours
exploring them. That was important for my
growth, but most kids don't have that
anymore. Their feelings are intact when
they're very young. but without encouragement
to feel their relationship to life around them,
they start to lose touch. It's like autism, in a
sense. We withdraw into the "separate" self,
and cut ourselves off from reality.
ReCreation Experiences
Another Asheville-based program,
ReCrearion Experiences, was begun last/al/ U>
literally bring people "down to earth" through
wilderness skills and outdoor living training.
Based on the Native American ways 111ughr by
tracker Tom Brown and his staff. ReCreation
Experiences is led by founder Dave Torbett. I
spoke with Dave about the focus of his
reaching:
Karuah Journal: What was the genesis of
ReCrearion Experiences?
Dave Torbett: About 8 years ago I began
to envision developing a program to help
people "come home," as I call it. Our culture
has a built-in mentality that wilderness is "bad"
or "dangerous," so we insulate ourselves from
it. Backpacking has become very popular, but
even then we're insulated. We wear heavy lug
boots, we carry massive backpacks, we sleep
enclosed in tents. We pack in our stoves and
ice cbestS and lanterns, then go home feeling
we've been "back 10 nature"! Despite the big
wave of backpacking and outdoor recreation,
we still have not gouen back to the Eanh.
So I began 10 dream about an alternative
to those kinds of camping and outdoor
programs - a way to take people home, help
them feel corilfonable with the Ennh, help them
learn skills that teach them that our Mother
provides everything that we need. It's very
simple living.
There's an old Apache saying that as far
a.s humans' feet are protected from feeling the
Earth Mother, that's how far humans' hearts
will be from knowing her as M0ther.
lf people's hearts aren't broken again,
and they don't reawaken into a loving, caring
relationship with the Earth, environmentalism
will do some good, but in the long run people
will tire of it and go back to their "convenient,"
desrructivc ways. So I feel we have to woo
people back to our Mother.
Xntuafl JoumoC P<1CJC 16
DrawingbyRobMculclt
Katuah: It seems that the fundamental
problem is our separation from nature.
OT: Yes. A lot of it comes out of the
Puritan mentality, which maintained that
anything passionate was bad, including sex and
nature. Anyone who's spent much time
outdoors, or been out when the wind's
blowing and the sky is tom apan by lightning,
knows nature is passionate and alive, and not
some thing that we can control. But our
western mentality says, "If we can't dominate
it, then we will kill it" Thai is still how we
approach life: we analyze it, we do endless
scientific studies... but there is an clement to the
Earth that is spiritual, that is deep - something
unfathomable. There's something magical
about iL Our culture tries to obliterate that, to
w1pei1 out.
Karuah: Our obsession with conb'OI
seems 10 be a major problem_
DT: Making fire with a bow drill
provides a good example. If you don't work
with the wood, the cord. and the tinder - if you
try to dominate them - you may grind through
that fire-board, but you don't get a fire!
Once while we were doing a workshop
for a group of parents, the lead instructor,
Steve Ashmore, became very frustrated
because he couldn't get a fire. He wns
cranking hard on that bow drill, and nothing
was happening. Finally he just laid everything
aside and said "J quit." About 1wo seconds
later, he looked over. and the '>'ind had sparked
a coal in his tinder bundle. His tinder bundle
was 5moking, it was on fire. He got a fire by
saying ''OK. I give up."
This was a great spiritual experience for
Steve. As long as he had fought the energy
and tried to control it, nothing had worked.
But when he let go, the wind blew the coal
into a flame for him. Trans formative moments
like tha1 happen 10 people when they get back
to being a pan of nature. When we're willing
just 10 stop. put our bare feet on the Earth. and
listen to her speak and b~thc...thcn we arc
able 10 be transfonned.
DT: Yeah, Tom Brown uses this
example: imagine you've been lying in a
hospital bed for 10 years. Your muscles
atr0phy, and when you try to get up you can't
walk, you have to relearn how to walk. We
have innate awareness skills: we know how to
live in harmony with the Earth, we know how
10 be in balance, we know how 10 let the spirit
flow within us. But as our feet became
removed from the Earth, our awareness skills
atr0phied: all the spiritual awareness, the
e,cpanded vision, the sensing of the movementS
of our animal and plant brothers. All those
sensing skills became atrophied.
When people go outside, even for a little
while, you hear them say how good they feel.
Well, it's that reconnection. But since it's so
unfamiliar, we have to help people define what
they're feeling and realize that it's good.
Sometimes people ask me if I'm "New
Age," and I tell them, "No, it's a very "old
age" thing we're doing. It's pan of us, we've
carried a club a lot longer than we've earned a
pen. We're toolmakers and craftspeople.
We're more comfortable with creating, sensing
and moving with the Ennh, than with anything
else.
Katuah: How does that deep
rccoMcction with nature unfold inside us?
What can we do to nurture it?
OT: We have to gradually recover our
inner sense of being comfonable with the
Earth. This may mean starting with small
periods of time when you can go outside and
be alone and listen. You begin to rune your
senses once again. You listen for sounds. you
smell whatever's in the air, you begin to look
with expanded vision. If you lie down on your
stomach and look at one six-inch square piece
of ground, you could fiU a notebook with all
the things you see.
There's a wonderful, mysterious place
right there in your back yard. Take your shoes
off. stand in the grass, then step away and look
at your foorprint. That's the beginning of
tracking: observation. Begin to observe what
comes in and out of your yard, what lives
there, what grows there. Begin to research all
the plants that grow there. Take longer periods
of time to be silent, breathe. and let the Earth
speak to you. Let the spirit that moves in all
things speak and move in you, and trust w~3;,,.
t
you begin to sense and feel.
fr
RcCrtaJion ~ritncts. an &mh skills and
a/llllltlMIII program, offas work.tlwps and training 10
1/rt public. PhcM (704) 252-8688 or writt to
RcCrearionuperitncrs:46 Wall S1ru1: Asheville NC
28801.
SummcY-, t99t
�,
I
ON AGGRESSION
In 1838 Andy Jackson said that we
should move aside for "civilized man,"
meaning white people with their plows,
schools, technology, etc.. I think about the
thing that happened in Iraq and I think about
the wars carried on by "civilized man," and the
way that we think about them. For instance.we
consider ourselves "civilized" because we don't
indiscriminately drop nuclear bombs on our
enemies. But at the same rime it's "civilized" 10
thre:1ten people with nuclear weapons by
havmg thousands of them
To me this says that one of the things we
haven't addressed is our own aggression.
Looking around today, 1 see that spunking m
dny-care centers has become an issue, and the
argument is brought up that "the reason that
there is so much crime. is because there is not
enough spanking."
. Now how could a child not grow up
bemg aggressive when adulL'i hit him because
they assume that his behavior cannot be
~~lied in any other way? Spanking and
h11ung (as well as neglect) by adults is what
causes wn.rs and criminality • not the tack of
those!
r recently witnessed white kids having a
fight. One was an 11 year old boy who was
pounding on a nine year old. The older boy's
father came out with a big leather strap and beat
the older kid for hitting the younger1>ne. That's
how aggression and wars are perpetuated.
We learn by example, all of us, adults
and children. ln raising kids, it isn't what one
says that is important; it's what one does. But
in thi~ cul~urc ki?s are expected 10 respond to
what ts s:nd, while the adults think that they
can do whatever the hell they want to. And they
don't realize that the children are learning from
wh~t they are doing, not from what they are
saying.
The way to communicate non-violence.
to say that there are other ways 10 solve our
human problems than to nuke our enemies or 10
go aftei them with high technology weapons •
is 10 live that kind of life.
After awhile, we're expected 10 notice
when we're doing something that doesn't
~ork. ,:tie v:iay we measure how well a policy
1s working 1s by the results ...and we're still
slaughtering ourselves wholesale.
The native people never thought that
spanking was the right approach 10 dealing
with children. To us spanking seemed barbaric
- it was a barbaric, savage thing that dominant
culture men did to their children.
The traditional family was different from
the fa!11ilies. of today. F~r.one thing, they were
more inclusive. In a tradiuonal family the old
people were respected. They were the
caretakt:r.;, the nunurers, and the teachers of
the children. They weren't meaningless lives
best stuck off in a faraway house 10 die.
Today we don't seem 10 have time to take
care of our children or our old people. We're
100 busy making money 10 survive or 10 get
ahead. We often leave the ca.re of our family
Su111111cr, 1991
(These n.re the words of a IJ'Dditiorol Cherokee medicine ~n.)
members 10 "professionals." But most of these
"professionals" arc people who arc hired off
the street to work a menial job for a minimum
w~~e. Or we i:elinquish the responsibility of
ra,s,ng our children 10 the school system. It
ends up that frustrated, underpaid,
Lower T/uuvkrlwle
under-respected people have the responsibility
for talcing care of our families.
In a traditional family, the children were
indulged - their every whim was met. But they
we~ also made 10 feel like they were pan of the
family and welcome 10 panicipate in family
ac~ivi.ties. This ~esulred in a different way of
1h1nkmg, what 1s called a "cultural bias."
People's identity was defined first by the
family, then by the tribe and by the clan.
Everybody, when we get hun. wants
sympathy and empathy. r can remember as a
small kid falling and crying, and somebody
picking me up, hugging me, and raking care of
me. I can rcmembt:r that. But as I got older the
grown-ups just stopped reacting like that. They
gradually had me become more responsible for
myself. That went on up through the pubeny
and moon lodge ceremonies.
As I got older, if I misbehaved, people
would simply walk away and act hun. White
people call this rejection, but I don't see it as
rejection at all. When as an adult, if someone
violated cultural customs, but in a way that was
not too serious, people might not talk with that
person for a week. That was a powerful
reprimand. The need 10 belong 10 the family
and clan groups was so strong, that it was a
motivating factor in modifying people's
behavior. The most serious punishment was 10
be ostracized from the tribe. That was worse
than death. If someone was ostracized from his
family or clan, there was probably a 90-95%
chance thnt person would commit suicide.
That's a cultural bias. That wouldn't
work in this culture. People don't have that
tribal sense now. Today it's every man for
himself.
Just about every one of the native tribes
recognized that the tram,ition from childhood 10
adulthood was a very imponant stage in a
person's. life and marked it by some son of
c_elebrrmon or pubeny ceremony: Pubeny is a
t1~1e w_hen young peopl~ are having a variety of
b1olog1~I change:. commg over them. and it's
also a urni: when they are staning 10 question
and doubt the thing:. that have been taught 10
them by the older people. This is called "the
~bellious stage" now. h is a time 10 question. a
umc to a.\k: "Is there a God?" "Is Grandpa full
of shit?"' - important mauers like that.
Instead of trying 10 hold that energy
down, or lock it up, or conrrol it, traditional
people would encourage the young ones to
search and 10 :;eek out answers for themselves.
!'I~. one said, "This is the only way that there
1s, because experience taught them that if there
was any truth or goodness or sohdriess 10 the
philosophy that the young people were raised
by, they would come back home after they
were allowed to question, to doub1, and 10
experiment for themselves.
I sure as hell did it, and the older l get,
the more I find myself acting like my
grandfather. Every once in awhile I look in the
mirror, and I think he's standing there. And
when I hear myself talking 10 my children, I
hear his voice. I've gone in a big circle in my
life. That circle went way, way out there, but
now it's come back around. But that's fairly
nonnal - that is, if there's any basis 10 the ideas
one was brought up with.
We also recognized that there was
aggression in human beings. The white people
have always thought that we had lots of wars
among ourselves. but I think that our ''wars"
were more like long-1enn, off-and-on feuds.
We certainly weren't without aggression, but
w~ ~!so didn't ~eep armies and build up
m1l11ary s1ockp1les. In warfare and in raising
children we were several thousand years more
advanced than the dominant culture of today.
Instead of putting all our energy into
designing new weapons and military hardware,
we sho_uld be 101e_lligcnt or civilized enough to
deal w11h the basic problems of our aggression,
our selfishness, our self-centeredness - not just
with the symptom.-..
We have 10 face the fact that aggression is
pan of us. It's pan of our t:rue name. Uut the
dominant culture doesn't really address that.
The present society substitutes "the big stick
theory" - since we expect other humans 10 be
aggressive, we create a big military to proteet
our wealth and our ideas. c-un·.~ on ne11 pa1e)
- · _,
)(,(ltimf, Journal pa<)C 17
-.
�(c:o111inucd from~ 17)
The Cherokee people recognized our
muuml aggression. They would arrange
stickball games. Somelimes lhey senlcd
disputes with u game of stickball. The word for
"ballgame" was the same as the word for
"war." People. ;ot hun playing stickball;
somelimes pooplc even got killed.
We certainly didn't solve the problems of
aggression, but we had ways 10 deal wich
them. Jn the Cherokee way of thinking, for
example, there was no concept for cowardice.
When we were having a baule 1,1,ith our
neighbors, maybe the Creeks or somebody
else, and we felt that we were losing too many
of our people, even though we might be
winning the conflict, we would just pack up
our weapons and go home. We acted like 1his
because life was sacred m us. The loss of too
many people was more than we could handle.
Indebtedness :ind revenge were parts of
our culture in which we were nor VCI)'
advanced. The basis of the clan justice svstcm
was retaliation. Everybody knew thal if ihey
tre:ued a member of :1no1her clan badly, they
were going to get their ass kicked by all the rest
of the clan. It made people think twice about
mistreating someone, but the clans had 10 kick
a lot of ass 10 uphold their reputations so the
system would keep functioning.
In clan maners we weren't as much a
tribe a.\ a confederation. If someone was killed
who wasn't kin or a clan member, other people
often were not too concerned. Some Cherokee
villages fought with the Creeks for years, while
at the same time other Cherokee villagl!s were
friends 10 the same Creeks. But revenge was a
powerful motivation.
However, there were restraims. The
nation had what they called "red villages" and
Aging...Changing
Asheville, May.
Jordan's jus1 now learned
how 10 replace a pacifier between tiny we1 lips
curled sweetly beneath May's sun
while the new leaves of wild strawberries
and blue-purple briars discover
how it is warm and sad and odd
beneath a cloudless Appalachian ceiling.
And down the pebbled road
I know through the inference
of tre~ crashing through irees
and the sorrowed, bloody thud of wood to earth
lha1 the firs lll'TOSs the ridge
arc just now learning, too:
seeing how the cones shake and drop
through lhe popping, cracking, fibrous wrenching
of hot, oily metal teeth.
The blue twist of two-cycle oil breath
dissipa1es, quite satisfied, up and away
through a canopy of needles,
waiting in the silence of death
for the imminent drying.
The bridge has tumbled into the deep.
Below the sloshing, muddy torrents
!here are creatures calm and curious,
monsters bloated, white, and wide-eyed,
and between them somewhere in the murky stew
an understanding odd and unspoken.
Finned ~a1urcs stare at rare monsters queerly,
wondenng what purpose they've come to !,C!Ve,
To reclaim appliances, furniture, tires, boulcs, and else?
To 1emp1 with wonn, jig, or spinner?
Or perhaps only 10 say "l have driven submerged".
The monsters stare back, but do not see or question
• though lips are poised for speech.
Hair standing on end pointing downstream, body
slowly swaying, stiffening.
Above, quiet whispers of drizzle
beckon the sun's fading 10 hurry. And upstream
muddy banks doued with the living who stand among
red and yellow and blue s1r0bes, dizzy, pointing
downstream, are disappearing in the rising.
The living Stare also, blindly
into swirling eddies of death.
"w hi1e villages." Generali v it broke down th111
the aggressive people lived in the red villages,
and the non-aggressive people lived in the
white villa~es.
The "Beloved Woman" was another
built•in check within the syMcm. If everybody
got all excited about something 1he Creeks had
done and wanted to go make war right away, a
Beloved Woman could say, "Listen, there's not
going to be any warfare," and 1here wouldn't
be any warfare. We had cenain checks and
balances that developed through the centuries. I
don't know if it was ever consciously though I
out, but it fit in witb our cultural biases.
How the clan system of justice would
have developed in the future if it had not been
contaminated by an influence as strong as
western cuhure, J really don't know.
Poems by James Proffitt
Ancient, crude magnificence
evolving from distant overtones
to immediate, restless anger
low and .still and brittle.
Cracking pop splitting
flash of flashes
and flutter of an in splinters
sweet pine mood rain pouring hail
and sulphurous love of electric
kissing a nameless fir
clenched to the crest
of a trillion ton stone.
This is the beginning.
What if old age is a healing crisis? - the
harder old age is, the more healing is needed,
As we get closer 10 Spirit, we cleanse naturally.
Old unhelathy habits of body and mind come 10
the surface - we're more sensitive - more
unable 10 abuse ourselves without instant
repercussions.
~hat_ if we looked at aging as prosperity?
Prospcnty IS abundance. The more we have of
something, the more prosperous we arc. With
age our numbers build like money in lhe bank experience - wisdom - value.
When we age, we slow down so we can
notice more. We learn how 10 conserve our
energy, so that we can better become involved
in olher realms besides the physical.
Our culture has taught us that old age
often means sickness. Bu, these sicknesses are
probably only the accumulations of lifelong
habits that harden us when we do not face
issues and feelings in relation to ourselves and
olhers...When we are not willing 10 change.
The word change has age in iL It also bas
can. lf we can stay open and make the changes
we need to as we go along, the healing crisis
needn't be so hard. Don·, let lhc healing pile up
until 1he end. Ligh1en up your load. Count your
blessings and your years - and when you reach
I 00, it could be like collecting interest on a life
well invested.
• C Redmage
Rcprint.cd from !he Floyd ReSl)urce Cooperative
Muulrller; Bo~ 81: Floyd. VA 24091
A bear's nose quivers fur pointing
that way, buck's ears and tail twitching
water hissing steaming up and away
from charred wood
echo of a fading, wordless language.
Later earth whispers beneath a sagging
canopy wrecked foliage
heaving and sucking
expelling long ceremonious sighs
having wealhered one more
and only rhe foamy brown rnge
of a river below and subtle, renewed
spirit in flora to show.
D,_,,,, by f1t1 Graef,:
Xati«lfl Joumat pnge 18
(from IN CllMrttc Ught on tho Wind. .K~ p.
JO}
Summer. 1991
�SACRED FORESTS:
Recommended Guide to Old Growth Stn11ds
Green Spirits, our generous plant allies.
gifl animal-kind with food, medicine, and
counsel. While all animals consume 1he fiber
and flesh of plants, few seek out the counsel
and cures offered by plants.
My favorite way to immerse my soul with
plant and eanh energies is by entering and
communing with the old growth forests. I
prefer the 1enn "old growth forest" over the
romantic misnomers "virgin forest" or
"wilderness," which only exist in the minds of
civilizations which have left the forest. Old
growth forests are defined by many criteria, the
most obvious of which are: the relative freedom
of disturbance by humans; the presence of large
trees and an uneven canopy structure; an
abundant fungal component; and the presence
of logs in alJ stages of decay.
I gain reverence by day-hiking into these
wooden-cities of forest inhabitants, where I
temporarily become a citizen of these woods.
But the greatest spiritunl sensitivity'comes to
ptc after $pending three or more days in the
fores1s. Gradually. one becomes more "in
tune" to the subtle rhythms and energies of a
truly balanced ecosystem. Words poorly
describe this personal experience; I can only
encourage readers to directly visit and
experience these green energies first hand and
with open heans. One should enter the forest
with a sense of reverence and should "leave
nothing but footprints ... "
Katuah's Green Spirits are best felt and
embraced within the old(cr) growth forests,
especially within the protected areas of the
region's largest preserve, the Great Smoky
Mountains National Park (hereafter called "the
Smokies"). Detailed trail maps of the Smokies
can be purchased at any of the visitor centers in
the Park, or can be obtained by mail from the
Great Smoky Mountain Na1urnl History
Association (Grea1 Smoky Mountnins Trail
Map- GSMNHA; Rt. 2, Box 572-B;
Gatlinburg, TN 37738. $1.00 postpaid).
More detailed trail infonnation can be ob1ained
from the Sierra Club's Hiker's Guide to the
Smokies (Mur!less and Stallings), available at
libraries and bookstores.
Day-hiking is unrestricted in the Smokies:
however, you will need a free backcountry use
pcnnit (available from rangers and at several
self-service Backcountry Reservation Stations)
for any over-night stays in the backcountry.
Several of the backcountry camp~ites arc
extensively used and require advanced phone
reservations.
My favorite places 10 eicperience the
communities of forest beings have occurred
along the following hiking trails in the
Smokies:
(I} The Gabe Mountain Trail follows the
lower slopes of the main ridge crest between
Cosby and Greenbrier, Tennessee. East of
HenwaJJow f-nlls, the trail travels through
se_veral miles of undiscurbed original forest,
with _an exceptional diversity of plant and fungi
species of enormous age and siz~. There is a
Sunmier, 1991
beautiful backcountry campsite (#34- Sugar
Cove) located in 1he middle of this forest. This
trail offers easy access 10 some of the best
woodlands in the Smokies.
Joye~ Ki/~r M~morial Forest
(2) A few miles awny by trail is the
preserved Albrigh1 Grove, a small section of
prehi~toric forest, named after a former director
of the National Park Service. The trailhead is
locared on a short side-road behind the
Jellystone Park Campground on US 321
between Gatlinburg and Cosby. fn the grove
one may experience the immense presence of
several HUGE tulip poplars ("the Behemoths")
and record-sized understory trees and ferns.
These trees are friendly 10 u-ce-huggcn..
(3) A few stream drainages west of
Albright Grove is the Ramsey Cascades Trail,
an eight mile round trip day-hike. This tmil
leads through mature forests, but with a more
limited number of the exceplionally HUGE
trees. This is a m<X.lerately difficult hike due to
the distance and steady climb (a 1600 foot
elevation gain in four miles).
(4) One of my favorite trails is the
Boogerman Trail in Cataloochec Valley, located
off rnterstate 40 at the nonheastem end of the
Park. This relatively easy. seven mile round
trip trail leads the hiker through magnificent
trees of record-sized hemlock, oak, hickory,
and poplar trces ...rcalJy fine trees to hug!
CataJoochec Valley contains several additional
pockets of relatively undisturbed forest,
including (along the Big Poplar Trail) the
largest tulip poplars in the Park, each with a
trunk diameter of six to eight feet.
(5) A few trail miles west ofCataloochcc
Valley is the high elevation "perched valley" of
the headwater:. of Raven Fork. This is the
valley of the Cherokee Indian legend of
''Yona-unatawasiti'yi'' ("where the bears
wash"), a mythical purple pool where wounded
bears are healed .
Loc:ued adjacent to the Cherokee Indian
Reservation at Cherokee, NC, the headwaters
of Raven Fork nrc considered the most isolated
and rugged valley in the Park. No maintained
tmils lead through this area, bu1 the ridge above
it can be reached by hiking the Beech Gap Trail
from Roundbouom parking area, nonh of the
Cherokee Trout Hatchery. At the head of this
trail is the McGee Springs Campsite (#44),
from which a very primitive man-way leads
along Breakneck Ridge and then descends
through thick rh<X.lodendron and laurel to the
rushing creek. The forest around the campsite
is composed of huge spruce and oak trees. A
second and more frcquemly used campsite,
Enloe Creek Campsite (#47), is located
alongside an especially beautiful section of
Raven Fork
(6) Small, relatively undisturbed
"pockets" of the original forest, remain along
the eictreme headwaters of the many southern
streams which drain down from the ridgecrest
along the Tennessee and Nonh Carolina border
in the Smokies. Most of these watersheds were
heavily logged in the 1920-30's, but the
uppermost re.1ches of these valleys contain
magnificent forests. One of the more easily
accessible headwaters is that of Deep Creek.
This trail-head is located a1 a small parking :irea
on RL 441 about a mile south of Newfound
Gap in the center of the Park, TI,e trail drop:.
steeply into the impressive forest with its many
streams and beautiful trees. The tr.iii should be
followed for at least 1wo miles. Better yet is 10
walk the four miles to the campsite at Poke
Patch (#53).
(7) Another exceptional woodland in the
Smokies is found at the beginning of the lower
section of the Gregory Bald Trail. This
trailhead begins 01 1he start of the one-way
Parson Branch Road, leading out of Cades
Cove, TN. The two mile hike to 1he Forge
Creek Campsite (#12) leads beneath an
exceptional tree canopy. Continuing up to the
crest of the ridge (about a 2600 foot rise in
elevation), the hiker will reach the grassy
Gregory Bald, another Cherokee mythical siie.
"Tsisrn'yi'' ("the Rabbit place"}. Herc the '
rabbics had their townhouse, ruled by their
chief Rabbit. who was as large as a deer. This
open and grassy mounca.in bald is exceptionally
beautiful in mid-June when the native name
azaleas bloom in blinding red-to-orange colors.
1hls listing of exceptional forests in the
Smokies (and 1'm not telling all my secrets!) is
intended as a guide for personal pilgrimages
into some of the last old growth forest
remnants remaining in K.atuah Province. Go to
these places. and scclc the counsel and wisdom
of plant spirits there • you will gain greater
respect for even the simplest Green Spirits.
•
/
by Lee Barnes
Xatuaf1 Journal pngc I 9
�-
OFF THE GRID
When we 1alk about hydropower we are
really talking about mpping into the primary
power of the eanh... gravity. Water itself has
no power, it has mass. The power is due to the
force'of gravity acting upon the mass of water
and creating an energy flow,
The energy flow represented by flowing
water is naturally regenerative (as are all natural
cycles}. due to the sun's input. Star energy
evaporates water, allowing the wind to carry it ,
back to the top of the hill.
Organisms have been using flowing
water to help them do the things they need to
do, ever since water first flowed; whether it be
the micro-organism that needs it to bring food
within its reach, or the person floating
downstream in n hollowed-out log.
Up here in my neck-of-the-woods, the
Blowing Rock, people have been using the
many swift and swollen streams to U11nsport
themselves for, I imagine, IOOO's of years
(though now we just call it spon).
More recently, the people of this area
took to pu11ing large wheels in the path of a
stream's flow in order to change i1i. linear
energy in\Q circular mQtion.
At first, this 100k the shape of giant water
wheels running grist and lumber mills at places
like Cove Creek, Valley Crucis, and near
Beech Mountain on Beech Creek Road. In
fact, the Winebarger mill in Meat Camp is still
operational and the giant wheel (over three
stories high) that once powered the lumber mill
on Beech Creek Road is sull turning, though in
a different stream...
The first thing you notice when you enter
Edith and Ray Estes' small piece of land tucked
into a holler along Howard's Creek, is that
giant wheel turning slowly and inexorably like
some giant fenis wheel from a perpetual fair.
Along its circumference, every foot or so.
is a metal slat which caplllrCs a stream of water
directed to the top of the wheel from
somewhere higher up the holler, making the
wheel fall with ics weight over and over again.
Ray, who has been active for 83 years.
once used the wheel's spinning motion 10 spin
a 12 kilowa11 (kw) generator. Since then he
ha.~ scaled down his operation and uses a
smaller wheel nexr 10 his house 10 generate
electricity, but rhc big wheel still turns 10
generate memories of the pasL
Ray's use of the big ol' lumber mill
wheel to gcnerarc electricity, illustrates a very
recent use for hydropower which mos, people
associate with the term, electricity generation.
By virtue of its elevation a stream
contains potential energy. hs rate of flow is a
measure of this potcnrial being realized. We
can use these two simple truths to calcul:ue 1he
potential power of any stream:
P=HxQ
Xnti1<1h Jou rno t pngc 20
Which says that the power (P) of a stream
of water is equal to the height (Hor head) from
which it is falling multiplied by the speed (Q) at
which it falls.
The electricians among us may recognize
the similarity between this equation and the
basic power relation of electricity:
P= EX I
where P is power in waus, E is
electromotive force in volts, and I is current
flow in amps. According to More Orher
Homes and Garbage, the power of a stream can
be expressed in waus by dividing the product
of the flow in cubic feet per second and the
head in feet by 0.0118. This gives the potential
maximum power. How close one can get 10
that figure is a function of how efficiently one's
electrical power generating system translates
the linear motion of the stream to the circular
motion of the generator.
Before 1930, Boone got a lot of its
clccuical power from a hydroplant off the
Blowing Rock Ro:id on the South Fork or the
New River. The dam for thtlt system still
smnds.
Another large hydrosys1em in the area
still operates. The dam for this system which
crosses the breadth of the Watauga river
(ma.king it unnavigable at that point, which
would not be allowed today), was originally
built in 1890 out of hemlock logs, and the
stored power was used to grind com and
wheat. In 1905, Ben 0. Ward built a sawmill
which still stands, though in a state of long
disuse. In 1934 a larger dam was built and
Ward began to generate electricity. He received
a power franchise from the state und supplied
12 to 15 homes with electricity through a 35
kw synchronous generator.
The famous flood of 1940 wiped out the
plant (and just about everything else up here),
and before it could be rebuilt the Rural
Electrical Association (REA) moved in and
divided the countryside into regions within
which only one company could have a
franchise. fn this area that was BREMCO
(Blue Ridge Electric Membership Co-op).
Now, anyone generating power for more than
personal use must sell it 10 BREMCO, they
cannot sell it dircclly to their neighbors.
Currently, the si1e begun by Ben Ward is
maintained by his son Rick. It consists of two
3-phasc induction motors, one 100 hp and the
other 125. It is a 69 kw plant with a head of 16
feet forcing a flow which often exceeds 20,000
gallons per minute through the two giant
vertical turbines. Mr. Ward produces 50,000
kwh per month which he sells to BREMCO at
$0.03/kwh, so he makes about $1500 per
month from his hydropower.
Ward's system is an example of a
low-head, high-flow system. This area,
however, also contains a good working
example of a high-head, low-flow system. It
dams a small creek high arop the hill ii falls
down. Water is channeled from this dam down
1680 feet of eight inch diameter drainage pipe
(obtained 31 $2.08/ft from leftovers 31 the oon
to the generator 168 feet below the head of the
dam. A flow of 1200 gallons per minute spins
a vertical pelton wheel at 300 rpm, which is
geared down to spin a 18 kw 3-phasc induction
motor.
Like Ward's, this generator is induced by
the power company, which means BREMCO
supplies the power to the electromagnet within
the generator. Thi~ makes 11 unnecessary for
the person who is generating the power to have
a lot of expensive synchronizing and voltage
protection equipment. But it also means when
BREMCO goes down. so do they. Not exactly
off the grid. but they could be.
This micro-hydro system could generate
almost 13,000 kwh per month, enough to
provide up to 15 normal homes (energy hogs)
with electricity. The resuiction on selling
power to others could possibly be
circumvented by buying land cooperatively, or
having all the service homes on a single piece
of propeny owned by the power generator.
This is the situation which exists on Ray
and Edith Estes' estate. Resembling more a
riverboat than a house, the Estes' home is
tucked away high up in the holler alongside the
stream. From there it overlooks a little
community of homes and cabins which they
rent at very reasonable prices.
Ray built a dam across the little stream
which runs by his house, and created a small
pond above his house, teeming wi1h fish and a
family of ducks. He channels some of the
water from the pond to a srt13ll tmditional
wooden waterwheel which sits right next to his
house. adding even more 10 the illusion of a
riverboat as it slowly spins in the stream. Its
speed of six rpm's turns a giant flywheel which
is attached 10 the shaft of a generator by a
•
leather strap. The 5 kw, l lO V generator is
bolled to a workbench in the small wheelhouse
Ray built next 10 the waterwheel. Currently he
uses the power 10 nm his outside ligh1s, twenty
to thirty I00 wan light bulbs. During the day
when no lights are needed but a load is needed
to prevent the DC generator from burning up,
Ray uses the power to heat his hot water.
Ray's got a lot of hot water.
Ray's system is the best example of a
low-tech system which most anyone with a
little spunk could build. No exorbitantly
expensive turbine, pelton wheel, or piping is
required, and il's graceful.
Though I think Ray's dam and resulting
pond are beautiful, some people (not beavers)
object to micro-hydro systems because the
·dams destroy the stream's ecology. At the
developing Center for Ecological Living
(CEL). which would be Katuah's newest site
for investigation into self-sufficient community
lifestyles, Rob Messick. curator and local
genius, has devised a water delivery system
which is unobtrusive to the stream. I le placed
a preformed concrete culven, in which he had
driven a two inch hole and a couple of small
feed holes, i 010 the center of the small but
powerful ~tream which flows through the CEL.
A two inch nexible black plastic pipe runs out
of the two inch hole 250 feet to the pond which
sits beside the stream. The flow from the pipe
is about 45 gallons/minute, which could be
quadrupled by doubling the size of the pipe.
Besides using this hydropower to fill the
pond, it might be possible to generate electricity
as the water enters the pond. Hopefully, we
will repon more on this in future OFF Tl IE
GRTD columns.
Anyone interested at an in-depth look at
one person's small 7 kw hydrosystem should
refer to Katuah #4, the WATER issue. on page
11. If you don't have it, order a back copy.
There are still a few left.
If anyone out there i,; running a small
h)•drosystem, send in a description and w/''ll
print it in this space.
'
Big wheel keep on turning ...
Jim IJouser
S111mm.·r, 1Q91
�"I'M YOUR PUPPET"
NIIUn.l World News Service
ECOTAGE
The Cullasaja controve~ continues (see
Na1ural World News Ser-ice
Ka11wh Journal #30). At issue are plans for a
A series of inc1den1s in Katuah's national
forests is leading some fores1 officials and law
cnforcemem agencies to suspect 1ha1 there are
local activis1s commi1ting acts of "ecotage,"
damage to equipment that is damaging natural
environments.
On March 27, Leonard Cook of Cook
Bro1hcrs Lumber Company in Franklin
reported that spikes embedded in logs from the
Paroidge Ridge timber sale near the Namahala
Community in Macon County had caused over
$1000 worth of damage to his sawmiU.
Less than one month later T & S
Hardwoods of Sylva, Nonh Carolina reported
damage to logging equipment in the Avery
Creek area of the Pisgah National Forest.
Thomas Stanley, mill manager for the
company, reported on April 5 that dirt had been
added to the fuel tanks of the machines.
Stanley, whose company was also the target of
a spiking incident last March, does no1 believe
that April's incident was nn act of ecotage: "To
me, it looks more like vandalism than someone
trying to make a statement."
Pisgah District Ranger Art Rowe
disagrees. He considers the act "environmental
terrorism." The area where the equipment
damage occurred is located three miles behind n
locked gate, and Rowe said, "That's a long
way for somebody to go back into an area just
to commit casual vandalism," he said.
Rowe wonders if the possible ecotage is
in any way connected to an incident two weeks
earlier in the North MUls River area of
Henderson County, in which an un-named
group of people blocked a Jogging truck for
nearly three hours as it was attempting to leave
a logging site.
SAVING WATERSHEDS
Natural Wotld News Service
Two special places may possibly be
slated for federal acquisition this year. Work
continues to protect the Chattooga River, and
two tracts arc currently available for purchase.
$2.2 million is also being sought to buy 1,860
acres on the Horsepasture River. The
Horsepasture is designated a Wild and Scenic
River and efforts continue to guarantee
permanent protection of that status.
The Congressional Land and Water
Conservation Fund directs a portion of
government receipts from offshore oil drilling
and other resource depleting activities imo land
preservation. Write your Congressional
representatives about malcing these important
watershed acquisitions through the Land and
Water Conservation Fund.
Senators
US Senate
Washingion, DC 20S10
SAY NO TO PLUTONIUM
Nawn! World News Sctvice
The US government's Rocky Aats
plutonium processing operations near Denver,
Colorado are being shut down because of
plutonium contamination to the surrounding
area. Rocky Aats is looking for a home, and
the government would like to move the facility
either to the Pantex nuclear weapons assembly
plant near Amarillo, Texas or 10 Oak Ridge,
Tennessee.
Presently the Rocky Flats plant
reprocesses plutonium so that it can be re-used
in nuclear warheads and builds plutonium
•pits" which are used as a triggering method
inside the warhead. Plutonium has been
released into the soil, wr, and water of the
plant's surrounding environment. Studies by
Dr. Carl Johnson, health officer of Jefferson
County, Colorado, showed that people living
near the Rocky Flats plant had increased risks
of childhood leukemia, brain tumors, skin
cancer, and lung cancer.
Moving the operation to Karuah's
western slope would mean severn.l billions of
dollars in construction work on new
processing facilities and thousands of jobs,
Summer-, 1991
Rcprcsenlntive
US House of Reprcscntat.ives
WashinglOl'I, DC 205 IS
considerations that have the Oak Ridge city
government drooling. The town has already
signed an agreement - before even looking at
the operation plans! - that offers the Dcpanment
of Energy (DOE) 5,000 acres of free land and a
guarantee of five million gallons of water per
day if the agency would locate their supcrplant
in Tennessee.
The Rocky Flats faciliry would also bring
large amounts of plutonium, one of the
deadliest substances unleashed on the planet •
an clement so volatile that it instantly bursts
into flame on comipg into contact with oxygen;
a substance so concentrated that it requires only
ten pounds to make an atomic warhead.
Handling plutonium results in plutonium
waste that has a half-life of24,000 years and
which, as it decays, creates americium. that
gives off bone-penetrating radioactive gamma
rays. his impossible to safely handle or
pennanently contain plutonium waste, and
when it seeps or vaporizes into the environment
it collects in living tissue. causing degenerative
disease and genetic mutation.
The announcement about the Rocky Flats
move was contained in a DOE repon titled 'i'hc
Reconfiguration of the Nuclear Weapons
Complex," which outlines plans to carry
$5 million sewage treatment plant proposed by
the town of Highlands in Macon County,
North Carolina that would dump one-half
million gallons of treated effiucm per day into
tl1c Cullasaja River.
The NC Department of Environmental
Management (DEM), although ii was aware of
the controversy and has been presented wi1h
pmple evidence of the potential impacis of the
proposed treatment plant, signed a permit for
the facility in April, 1991 without even
requiring an environmental assessment for the
project.
The action set off a storm of protest. Save
Our Rivers, Inc., the Macon County Citizens'
group organized on behalf of the Cullasaja,
filed a lawsuit in civil court to require that the
state prepare an environmental assessment of
the treanncnt plant proposal. The US Fish and
Wildlife Service. the NC Wildlife Resources
Commission, and the Clean Water Fund of
North Carolina all immediately made public
objections to the plant. Senator Terry Sanford
sent a letter to the DEM asking for an
environmental assessment. Even North
Carolina Attorney General Lacey Thornburg,
who used to fish in the Cullasaja, sent a letter
of protest stating that an environmental
document should have been prepared before the
pennit was issued.
The DEM has turned a deaf car to the
uproar. Green LiM newspaper quoted DEM
Public Information Officer Debbie Crane as
saying, "We haven't heard any real
concems...Jt's just mass hysteria." Another
DEM spokesperson, Don Fullmer, said, ~we
applaud what the town of Highlands is doing."
Highlands is an upscale retreat for the
rich and powcnul - people who are used to
getting what they want. Apparently the
tentacles of their influence reach a long way all the way to Raleigh.
nuclear weapons production into the
1wcnry-first century. The report offers three
alternatives for future plutonium p.rocessing:
move Rocky FlatS to the Pan1ex site, to Oak
Ridge, or 10 close all the existing operations
and move them to a different (as yet
unspecified) location. The logical alternative,
to shut down plutonium production entirely, is
not offered as an option by the DOE. It is up to
the public to bring that alternative to the the
attention of the agency.
There will be public hearings on the DOE
report and the plans to move the Rocky Flats
opera.lion this summer. Hearings for this region
will be held in the Pollan! Auditorium on the
campus of the Oak Ridge Associated
Universities in the town of Oak Ridge on
August 28 starting at 9:00 am. The Oak Ridge
Environmental and Peace Alliance (OREPA) is
calling on all concerned people to participate in
the hearings, OREPA organizer Ralph
Hutchison emphasizes the importance of the
hearings for the whole region, saying, "If you
can only come to Oak Ridge once in your life.
come on August 28!"
For more ii,formaJion on the DOE:J plans and
the Rocl:y Flats move, call OREPA 01 (615) 524-4771.
Xoti1oft Journal P"'JG 21
�CHEOAH SET'l LED?
~OT QUITE!
BIG TOM'S LEGACY
Naruru World New. Scn-i«
NillW'lll World Ne,., Sena
The US Forest Service (USFS) and
several influential environmenml groups
reached agreement March 4, 1991 on 1enns to
senle an appeal of two disputed timber sales in
the Cheoah Bald area, the largest unpro1ec1ed
roadless area in rhe Pisgah and Nnntahala
National Forests. Under the terms of the
se1tlemcn1, the USFS will forego a one-half
mile pennanenr road into the Cheoah area and
will scale back the Wesser timber sale by
dropping one cutting unit which would have
required the road for access. In return, Lark
Hayes of lhe Southern Environmenml Law
Center agreed on behalf of The Wilderness
Society, the Sierra Club, the NC Wildlife
Federation, and ~e Elisha Mitchell Chapter of
the Audobon Society 10 drop the coalition's
appeal of the USFS timber sales.
Two other appeals of the controversial
timber sales had already been turned down by
the U~FS. One was by timber industry
lobbying groups demanding a higher timber
vol~, and ~e other was filed by SoulhPAW,
a regional environmental group advocaring 1ha1
the _Southern Appalachian national foresLS be
designated a roadless "evolutionary preserve"
for the benefit of habitat. The SouthPAW
appeal was refiled again at the regional and
national levels and wa.~ rejected at every stage.
Apparently the USFS did not lake kindly 10 the
group's suggestion that the Cheoah Bald area
be returned 10 pre-RARE n conditions.
This dates back to early 1983, when the
Chcoah area was a 21,000 acre roadless area,
under study as pan of the Roadlcss Area
Review a!1d Evaluation (RARE IT) program.
But later m 1ha1 year Chcoah was removed
from RARE It consideration, and the Forest
Service began a road-building orgy that within
only a few yC3I'S reduced 1he roadless
component to 7.000 acres, one-third of its
previous size. SouthPAW would have the
Cheoah roadless area returned 10 ils original
condition.
Peter Kirby of the sourheasrem regional
office of The Wilderness Society hailed the
apP?I senlement as a victory. "As well as
halung roadbuilding into this crucial roadless
area, by recognizing the importance of
protecting the roadlcss resource. the agreement
SCI a precedent that will be most useful in the
course of the upcoming land use and
management plan revisions," he said.
"
SouthP~W activist Rodney Webb said.
For s~ch an 1m~rtan1 ~abi_tat area._the only
eco_log1cally fea.~1ble pohcy LS very simple:
obhterare, revegcuuc - obliterate the roads and
allow them 10 be recovered by the natural
vegeuuion."
'This area is just across Fontana Lake
from the Great Smoky Mountains National
Parle. fl is 3:11 important stepping s1one by
which species can migrate from the parlc into
the southern reaches of the Nnn1ahala National
ForesL If we lei them, the Forest Service will
chop Oicoah up and carry it away in liule
pieces. We can't let that happen. We won't
forsake Chcoah. Whatever it takes - a lawsuit
in civil court, direct action whatever - we will
defend it as long as we~ able."
To cc111ac1So1111t n,w, writt to: Box J/4/; Askvillt.
NC288(}2.
Xatuah
Journot
~ 22
Big Tom Wilson was a legendary hunter
who roamed the Black Mountains during the
laie 1800's. He knew those mountains and ir
is said 1h01 he loved them well
'
In April, 1991, Wilson family
descendants gathered nnd donated a
conservation easement on 1800 acres or family
land that had been passed down intact since Big
Tom's day. The easement does not transfer
owne~hip of the property, but ensures that the
propeny will never be developed. The area will
hereafter be protected as the Big Tom Wilson
Preserve.
The event marked an important step in
maintaining unbroken hnbirar in the Black
Mountains, because the Wilson property makes
a strategic linkage between Mount Mitchell
Srate Parle 10 the east and 1he Big Butt area of
the Pisgah National Forest 10 the wesr. To the
south lies the Blue Ridge Parkway and the
Asheville Watershed area.
The easement was done under the
auspices of the American Farmland Trust. a
non-profit organization dedicated to protecling
farmlan~ from encroaching developmen1. It
was earned out at the request of the Cane River
Club, which is presently administering the land
for the Wilson family members.
team from Atlanta that invcsug;ired the incident.
"It's an ~xpcnsive joke, if that's what ii is. It's
pretty s1ck..,1oi.illy uresponsible." According
to 11u1hontie:,, fin11I costs of rhe hoax ran into
rhe thousands of dollars.
On May 8 an anonymous leuer received
by the Asltevil/e Cimen-Times signed only
"The Black f-1:ig'' rook responsibility for rhe
hoax, saying it was "executed in hopes of
illiciting (sic) p_u~l!c attention 10 the deadly
1hrea1 and poss1b1hty of nn actual toxic was1e
spill," FBI Agent E.K. Miller said he would
refer the lcuer 10 the FBl's agent in Charloue
that specializes in environmental mauers.
.
The n1:tion may have been expensive, bur
~1 was not fnvolous. According to the May
issue of Green Une. an independent
green-oriented paper in Asheville. a survey
conducted by the NC Division of Motor
Vchicles from December 1990 10 February
19~ I foun~ char 22% of rhe trucks stopping at
weigh srauons along 1-26 and 1-40 were
carrying radioactive waste. In addition, there is
a _re_ar th~t President Bush's five-year, $105
bilhon highway plan, inrended to facilitnte the
shipment of defense goods, will result in a
markedincrcasein1heamoun1ofhazardous
and radioactive waste being transported.
LET'S NOT LOSE LOST COVE
Narunal World Ne"'-. Service
. . . . -RADIOACTIVITY ALERT!
N.tunal World New, Service
Ar 5:00 nm on April 22. authorities
discovered what appeared to be the af1erma1h of
a hit-and-run accident near the junction of 1-26
and 1 near Asheville, NC.
-40
But this was no ordinary accident. At the
scene were four metnl bam:ls labelled
"radioactive" and a shanered wooden pallet. it
appeared ';h:11 the_ ~Is had spilled from a
ITUCk hauling rad1oact1ve materials. and the
Stnre Highway patrol immediately closed one
lane o_f traffic and ~gan 10 call in experu from
five d1ffcren1 agencies 10 look into the incident.
Investigators using Geiger counters
de1ennined thar the barreb did not, in fact
contain any radioactive substnnces and the
a~lhorities began 10 suspect thar th~ whole
thing was an Eanh Day hoax 10 call ancnrion 10
the dangers of mdioactivc waste transpon. "h
looks 10 be a set up." said Dora Ann Danner
coordinator of a US EPA emergency rcspo~
[)(.-ep in the nonhern Pisgah National
Porest lie the lands known as Lost Cove and
Harper Creek. Accessible only by graveled
Forest SCJVice roads, this area just south of
Grandmother and Grandfather Mountains
provides vital habitnt for a great number of
plant and animal species. The area is also
blessed with many scenic waterfalls and troll!
su-eams, along with an extensive network of
trails.
Curcntly the land is ser aside as a
Wilderness Study Area, and the US Forest
Service has recommended both areas for
wilderness d~ignntion. The proposed Western
Nonh Carolina Wilderness Prorecrion Act of
1991 (IIR 35) would protect 13.000 acres of
this land from industrial pressures.
The bill passed the House or
Rcpresenracives last year, but no action was
taken by the Senate before adjournment, and
the bill died. Cass Bnllengcr. a Republican
representing the 10th Congres.~ional District,
brought the bill back 10 life this January, and
the proposal has broad suppon in his home
disrricL
In the l Ith Con.,.... · . 11
r
west anothl'r 1-··:HE pRESSES, f{ep. faylo d
R,-.-- SfOP 1
press, .. propose
\\\ went 10. ding tus . 111a1idS
t<,.atu\\\'I 1011m was resc1'.1 ,, i11 ihe J·h& •n rhe
As ' ti 11ta1 he "h)'~tena , Jogging 1
aw\01ince . bill d11e ro ·s1bililY o,
i(derrieS)
the? pos
~· would
w_ trict ob0141
~-crtlow Creek
dis rf!oW area,
.• .,u'CI areas from srudy as
ove
•v wilderness areas.
Wr,u you.r rt'prtst'ntomve cto US I/oust of
Rtprtuntotil't!S, ll'o.shington, DC 20$/j.
(oontinuecl on J>ll:C 2S)
Summer, 1991
�Natural World News
I,
SPECIAL REPORT
..
by Emmett Greendigger
Once again, Bjorn Dahl, Lhe US Forest
Service's national forests supervisor for Nonh
Carolina is the focus of public outcry. This
time, Lhough, it's not jus1 a passle of forest
1eformers presenting a petition, or a couple of
renegade "Rescue Rangers" chaining
themselves to his office door, or a group of
activistS protesting ever-increasing
roadbuilding and timber harvesting levels on
the national fores1s. This time, Dahl is at the
center of "a scandal of the first magnitude."
The issue is the protection of threatened and
endangered species, and this spring Dahl has
attracted nationwide attention to the willful
neglec1 of his agency's threatened and
endangered species programs and to his
disregard for good science and professional
ethics.
This time, Dahl has enraged
environmentalistS, scientists, and 1he general
public by firing bo1anist Karin Heiman and by
causing the dismissal of Chuck Roe, director of
Lhe Nonh Carolina Natural Heritage Program, a
"(This) brings into serious question
the ability of the Forest Service to assess
the effects of timber management
programs on federally and state-listed
threatened and endangered plant
species." - Chuck Roe
state agency that works with other agencies and
the general public to identify and protect rare
plants. Heiman, the firs1 full-time botanist
hired to work in Lhe Nantahala-Pisgah National
Forests, was fired on March 1, af1er onJy nine
months on the job and only four months after
receiving a "superior" performance rating from
the agency.
When Roe learned of Ileiman's firing, he
tried for two weeks to express his concern to
Heiman's immedia1e supervisor, national forest
biologist Lauren Hillman. When these effortS
failed. Roe, who was very familiar with
Heiman's stellar work as a field botanist
surveying for threatened and endangered plant
species. wrote a letter on March 14 to Bjorn
Dahl expressing fear that "the dismissaJ of your
staff botanist at the stnn of the 1991 field
season brings into serious question the ability
of the Forest Service to assess the effectS of
timber management programs on federally and
state-liSted threatened and endangered plant
species."
On March 22, Dahl wrote to Roe's boss,
Dr. Philip McKnelly, Director of the NC
Division of Parks and Recreation, stating that
he was "di'imayed to receive the letter from
(Roe) expressing so much interes1 in and thinly
veiled threats over the dismissal of Karin
Heiman." Even a cursory reading of Roe's
leneneveals not "threats" but professkmaJ
Summer-, 1991
"Just Doing Their Job"
concern about the future of threatened and
endangered plant species in the national forests.
Despite that, Roe, who had 14 years of
experience with the Natural Heritage Program,
was immediately fired for "violating agency
procedures" and the "chain of command."
Directly, red flags went up in the
environmental and scientific communities in the
Southeast. At an April 2 press conference in
Asheville to publicize the firings, Bill Thomas
of the Sierra Club said, 'The credibility of the
Forest Service has slid right down around its
ankles." Mary Kelly, Coordinator of the WNC
Alliance (WNCA), said that the firings had
caused a "rapid, unfortunate, unnecessary, and
drastic deterioration in trust and relationships"
between the Forest Service and 01her agencies
and groups working on forest issues.
Scientis1s and aclivists had been
especially pleased when, after much pressure,
the Forest Service announced in June,1990 that
Karin Heiman would be the agency's first
full-time botanist. With the hiring of Heiman,
a graduate of Warren Wilson College with
several years of experience surveying the
state's plant communities, the Forest Service
seemed at last 10 be displaying a commitment to
the state's rich botanicaJ diversity.
Heiman did her work wilh diligence and
competence. While surveying the
Tellico-Robbinsville Federal Highway Project,
she discovered two rare lichen species,
Gym11oderma /ineare, an unusual Southern
Appalachian endemic and candidate for federal
listing, and Hydrotheria venosa, an extremely
rare and unique aquatic lichen found only at a
few locations in the Southern Appalachians and
the Cascade Mountains of Oregon. Heiman
helped 10 design a management program for
rare plants on Roan Mountain, and served as a
liaison with other federal and state agencies that
work with Lhe Forest Service to protect
threatened and endangered plant species. She
also perfonned surveys for rare plants on over
20 proposed timber sale projects in nine ranger
districts in the mountains and on the coast Her
effons did no1 stop or even seriously in1erfere
with a single timber sale, and she was praised
by Forest Service district personnel for her
competence and cooperation.
Roe, for his pan, was widely recognized
for directing one of the best s1a1e-run rare plant
protection programs in lhe nation. He had
organized Nonh Carolina's Natural Heritage
Program, which has protec1ed unique species
and natural areas on 630,000 acres in the stnte
and which has entered into over 300
"protection agreements" with public agencies
and private and corporate landowners. Roe
had acc-0mplished all this with a staff of 4 1/2
persons and a miniscule $164,000 annuaJ
budget
Why were Lhese two respected and
committed scientists fired? The official
justifications given were petty and largely
undocumented. In Heiman's case, neither Dahl
nor Lauren Hillman, her immediate superior,
were able to substantiate any change in
Heiman's performance that would account for
her performance rating falling from the "fully
successful" rating she received in October 1990
10 1he "negative" raring she received in
February that led 10 her dismissal.
11 seems apparent that Heiman and Roe's
only transgression was to carry out the jobs
assigned 10 them to the best of their abilities.
Unfortunately, competence in their work set
them athwnn of political interests that value
devastating timbering and roadbuilding
operations more than the rich biologicaJ and
botanical diversity of the native Appalachian
habitnl. And, aJso unfonunately. these interestS
control the strings that motiva1e Bjorn Dahl.
The supervisor remarked once to a group
of timber industry officials that during his
tenure in lhe nationaJ forests of the Pacific
Northwest, "we used 10 do 400 acre cleazcuts
before the spoued owl," and that "it could
happen here," implying that the discovery of
rare and threatened species in Nonh Carolina's
national forests could seriously hnmper timber
operations in the state.
Most observers believe that Dahl was
"I am in contact with several
Congressional offices who have said chat
they are already aware that this is just the
latest incident in what is clearly a national
pattern of intimidation of Forest Service
scientists. We hope and fully expect my
firing to get broader attention soon."
- Karin Heiman
!f'll~1{~Al~~~!,~~~k't~~~~':
Most observers believe that Dahl was
concerned that Heiman's trained and observant
eyes might discover a "spotted owl" that
would slow regional timber harvesting in the
Appalachians. Even the Asheville
Citizen-Times, normally a mouthpiece for the
region's timber industry, seemed to find the
firings suspicious. "The evidence offered thus
far by the Forest Service" for Heiman's firing
"falls embarrassingly shon," read the
newspaper's editoriaJ page on ApriJ 15, and
went on to say that "there is absolutely no way
Stale bureaucrats can come up with a credible
excuse for firing Chuck Roe."
Sad 10 say. it appears unlikely that these
ttnvestie.~ of administrative justice will be
righted by the agencies who committed them.
Both scientists have appeaJed their dismissals
within their own agencies. Forest Service
Regional Forester John Alcock has requested
that Heiman submit her appe& and all
supporting materiaJs to him in writing. In the
course of investigating Heiman's appeal,
regionaJ personnel officer Rudy Caruthers
traveled from Atlanta to Asheville to speak with
Dahl and Hillman about the firing but did not
infonn Heiman of his visit or give her any
opportunity to meet with him personally. Roe,
after what he felt was a "one-sided" hearing,
>C.Qtuaf,. Journat J)Q(JC 23
�has decided on a second-level appeal of his
case.
Since the firings, outraged citizens have
written hundreds of letters to legislators,
agencies, and newspapers in support of
Heiman and Roe. Several environmental
"watchdog" groups have responded to the
incident, including the Association of Forest
Employees for Environmental Ethics and the
Government Accountability Project, who arc
working with Heiman to get a Congressional
review of her tem1ination. Heiman has also
spoken with several concerned federal
legislators: "[ am in contact with several
Congressional offices who have said that they
are already aware that this is just the latest
incident in what is clearly a national pauem of
intimidation of Forest Service scientists,"
Heiman has stated. "We hope and fully expect
my firing to get broader attention soon."
Ultimately. however, the rrue victims of
these firings are the once diverse and
flourishing forest ecosystems. Without
advocates like Heim:i.n and Roe, they seem
doomed to be trampled into extinction. Before
Heiman was hired, it was routine for the
Forest Service to harvest constantly increasing
amounts of timber and to build thousands of
miles of roads in some of the finest forest
communities on the planet without ever
sUJVeying the sale areas for threatened and
"We might not be doing everything
we could to protect species, but we're
not willfully malicious." - Bjorn Dahl
endangered species.
All evidence indicates that this is how
Bjorn Dahl prefers it. The proposed Bee Tree
timber sale is a case in point. This area, near
Devil's Counhouse in nonhern Transylvania
County, was proposed as a timber sale project
in early 1990 by District Ranger An Rowe. In
June of thnt year, the WNC Alliance and the
Sierra Club appealed th.: sale. In their appeals
they pointed out that the Forest Service had nm
done adequate surveys for threatened and
endangered plant species on the Bee Tree site,
in spite of the fact thnt botanists consider the
area a "high probability site" for rare species.
Instead, the district had merely done a cursory
search of re.cords indicating the presence or
threatened and endangered :,pccics. Finding no
previous listings of threatened and endangered
species in the area. Rowe felt the "'ay w:l\ clear
to proceed with the sale. Dahl concurred, and
in October 1990 rejected the environmental
groups' appeab.
Unhappy with Dahl's decision, Wt-.CA
and the Sierra Club c:irried their appeal to
Regional Forester Alcock, who in J:inuary.
1991 decided in their favor. specifically citing
the lack of a thorough survey for threatened
and endangered species, 111c regional oflice
ordered Dahl to conduct a site-specific survey
of the area.
Even after Alcock's decision, Dahl
continued to maintain that he felt the records
survey had been "adequate," and that there was
no need for a site-specific survey. When
J{{\tunf~ JounlO! pn9c U
Heiman had offered to survey the Bee Tree area
in June, 1990, she had been stopped by
Hillman and Rowe. Then, after Alcock's
decision compelled the national forests
administration to make the survey, Heiman was
told 10 make the survey during the month of
February, 1991 - in the middle of winter when
many rare plant species are impossible to
locate.
Heiman did anempt the survey and
concluded that rare plants were likely to be
found in the Bee Tree sale area. It was only
days later when she received the "negative"
performance evaluation that led 10 her
dismissal. The survey was completed by a
substitute botanist, and last month, in its
Environmental Impact Statement for the Bee
Tree sale, the Forest Service reported its
conclusion that logging in Bee Tree would have
"no significant impact" on plant and wildlife
species in the area.
Unfomrnatcly the Bee Tree sale is not an
isolated example of Forest Service
manipulations and misdeeds in the name of
roads and timber. Heiman has outlined 15
other instances in which she says she was
stopped from identifying and protecting rare
plant species. When she reponed her findings
on the Tellico-Robbinsville Federal Highway
Project - which might have halted construction
of that infamous "road to nowhere" - her staff
officer supponed her findings, but she lost his
backing when he retired shortly thereafter.
While surveying a site near a proposed parking
lot expansion at the Oadle of Forestry, Heiman
expressed concern to District Ranger An Rowe
that the construction might threaten the rare
swamp pink plant. Rowe responded by saying
that he felt the parking lot, not the plant, might
be a better value for the American public.
In defense of the Forest Service, Julie
Tneciak, the agency's public relations officer,
maintains the agency is "str0ngly committed 10
protecting plants and animals." She said that
the agency has increased its Endangered
Species program tenfold since 1985, and that
there a.re 50 areas managed specifically for
threatened plants and animals. She also stated
the Forest Service buys land to provide habitat
for threatened species, and has entered into
agreements with the Plant Conservation
Program and the NC Natural Heritage Program
to protect rare species on the federal lands.
Chuck Roe was the lia.\on between the
Natural Heritage Program and the Forest
Sc1vicc on the agreements th.11 Trzt.-ciak ci1cs.
In the same leucr 10 Dahl i:xprcssing concern
about Heiman's firing, Roe pointed out the
problems his agency was having with the
Forest Service:
- the Forest Service had not drawn up
contracts to conduct surveys of rare plants on
national forest lands, although the funds had
been approved since December, 1990. The
delay was preventing the Natural Heritage
Program from hiring botanists in time to do the
surveys this growing season.
- the Forest Service had not responded to
nominations made two years ago for nearly a
doun sites in the Pisgah and Nantahala
National Forests 10 be designated "special
mterest management sites."
- The Foresc Service had shown no
interest in a one-day infonnational rare plants
seminar offered to agency personnel by the
Natural Heritage Program.
- the Forest Service had told Roe in the
fall of 1990 that a revised list of protected,
endangered, and threatened species on Forest
lands "would soon be put into use by Forest
Service personnel." This has yet 10 happen.
When asked about these delays, Dahl
replied that he was "perplexed" about them,
stating that the threatened and endangered
species programs are handled by Lauren
Hillman's office. Hillman has refused all
requests for direct interviews concerning the
firings and attendant issues, but said through
Tl7.Cciak that she believes "the programs are
right on track."
'The credibility of the Forest
Service has slid right down around its
ankles." - Bill 171omas, Sierra Club
Strangely, Bjorn Dahl seems 10 blame a
"lack of public input" for the firings and for his
agency's blatant unwillingness to establish a
vigorous program of protection for rare
species. "From these setbacks," he said after
the firings made the news, "I hope people will
join me in laying out their expectation~." And,
as if the flurry of letters, phone calls, and
editorials protesung the firings are not vocal
evidence enough, Dahl added, "They (the
public) should Jay out what they Wdnt more
vocally than before. We'll gauge our actions
based upon public expectations."
Th:11 sounds familiar. Throughout his
reign as supervisor of the Nonh Carolina
national fore~ts. Dahl has promised to alter
agency policies to meet "public expectations."
How then b he to explain items like these?
Although the puhlic has continued to ask
for less timbering on national forest lands,
1991 "timber target" levels are 20% above
those of the pre\·ious year.
Although the public ha,; conunued to ask
for less clearcutting on national fori:st lands,
and while the agency states that they have
reduced clearcuuing. they have merely
increased the number of "selective harvest"
units, which silvicultur:1lly are merely smalli:r
clearcuts.
Although the public. through the WNC
Alliance, the Sierra Club and other activist
groups, has expressed grave concern for the
fotc of threatened and endangered species on
(contmuod on page 30)
Craphic by Ibby Kenna
S11 lllt1IC1', 1991
�TIME TO TAKE THE TIME TO TAKE THE TIME
There's a new world 1ryi11g 10 emerge
from 1he hearts and hands ofmany...a world
of economy where was1c is sold as a resource
for new products - with a modern
understanding thar so-calli.:d "wasres" an: not
wastes unless they are wastcd...a world where
efficiency is in keeping wi1h nature and
heal1h ... new kind of fann...a more
purposeful kind of worlc ... a different feel for
our world ... a new day.
People are hungry for it. industry is
busy with it. But how docs it all really
happen? How, when the seeming immensity
of it all can so quickly boggle our minds to the
point where we throw up our hands and wait
for someone else to figure ou1 what to do, or
hope the solutions will come packaged for
sale?
Business in the past looked at money
profits as its main goal and let nothing stand in
the way of its claim, "If we don't profit, we
won't be In business." It had litrle vision of
the many more useful long-1erm profi1s such
as people, their lives, the food they eat, the
water they drink, and the secure alternatives in
learning about true wealth. And then with a
small sliver of that narrow-minded cash profit,
they proceeded to pa1ch up the damages that
occur with this sort of obsolescent
irresponsibili1y; or beat it in court. This was
a
the 1rcnd, bur now we are seeing businesses
wirh money-making as their chief nlOrh~
Jting
fon:e going out of business as thcv rhemsdves
predicted.
·
lt all really happens as we, in our
homes. and in our curs, and in our dailv
business, ask ourselves, "What docs \\'Ork?''
From inside our:.elvcs this goes out and out
and out 10 create the new, more real.
marketplace. Environmental problems arc big,
but we needn't be boggled, for as big as they
:ire, they are equally as small fractioned down
10 the responsibility of each of us. The
situation is then i11 our hands and no longer
"out of hand."
When we realize our own powerful pan
by beginning. our go the fears of what wasn't
working anyway. The answers then srart to
come with all the questions. When we're
acrually doing what we can do. the very
feeling empowers us and will soon replace an
old world built on false economy, and the
aging, tired concept of wealth thnt we know,
and bring newness • new forms of "profit."
From here we can begin to get on with more
of the real things.
bylvo
/
(NWN - continued from p. 22)
BUSINESSES AGAINST
CLEARCUTS
N4ruraJ Wo.-ld News Sttvicc
On May 15, 1991 the Westem North
Carolina Alliance (WNCA) presented the
results of its second anti-clearcutting campaign
to US Forest Service Supervisor Bjorn Dahl.
This new campaign gathered suppon from area
businesses and resulted in the collection of 930
names - a fnr greater response than was
expected - on a petition that called for an end to
clearcutting in the national forests.
WNCA targeted the tourism and
recreation industry, but a much broader
cross-section of businesses, including banks,
pharmacies, florists, and grocery stores, from
21 counties in western North Carolina chose 10
get involved.
The Southern Appalachian Multiple Use
Council, a timber industry lobby group,
attempted to manipulate the public by soliciting
signatures on a pro-logging petition that was
almost identical to the WNCA petition in its
fonnat. After complaints about this deceptive
tactic, the WNCA staff publicly accused the
Multiple Use Council of trying to "muddy the
issue and confuse people."
Upon receiving the petitions, Mr. Dahl
stated that he was "impressed" by the number
of signatories, and assured WNCA members
and participating businesspeople 1ha1 1he Forest
Service would be responsive 10 the public will.
Dahl said that, "[n response 10 public wishes,
we last year amended the Forest Plan to
Summa-, 1991
climina1c clearcutting as the preferred
aJ1cmative. The issue of clean::utting is
essentially behind us."
WNCA staff person Mary Kelly strongly
disagreed with this statement. as did others
present. She said that the supposed reductions
in clearcutting (from 87% to 48% of the harvest
over the past two years, according to Dahl)
merely reflected use of smaller, less obvious
clearcuts, not true selective culling.
Kelly stated that some forest expens
believe that the allowable sale quantity in our
National Forests is twice as high as it should
be, and noted that "the Forest Service has
historically treated the timber industry as the
only industry to consider We're asking them
to look at the big picture."
Drawings b)' Rob Mcuick
ROAD HOGS FIT TO BE TIED
Na11aral World News Service
There arc three departments of the North
Carolina state government that are prcsen1ly not
required to announce and hold public hearings
before setting poJicy: the Depanment of
Correction, the Department of Revenue, and
the Department of Transportation (0011. Of
these three, the Dcpanments of Correction and
Revenue hold fairly specialized responsibilities.
The Department ofTransponation every
months makes decisions rhat involve millions
of dollars of public funds and have imponant
implications for the future of every town and
county in the state.
It is a testament to the great political
power of the DOT that the agency still operates
only under the advisement of the Board of
Transportation, a wcalrhy and influential elite
who receive their appointments - a true
patronage plum - directly from the hand of the
governor in exchange for "seivices rendered."
Yet now when Senator Joe Johnson
(D-Wake) introduces a bill to require the DOT
to conform to public heanng guidelines
followed by all the other State agencies, rhc
howling and crying is tremendous. ''It's going
to cost too much." ··1t·s going 10 be too much
trouble." complain the road hogs. The "sacred
pigs" will no1 easily or gracefully give up their
places at the public trough.
Your state legislators need 10 hear your
opinions on the bill requiring the DOT to hold
public hearings.
Xatuafl Journnt JXUJC 25
�DRUMMING
LETTERS TO KATUAH
To the Editors of the Kattiah Journal,
In the otherwise fine article by Thomas
Power, "Avoiding the Passive/Helpless
Approach to Economic Development" in the
Spring, 1991 issue, he mnkes a very erroneous
assumption when he suggests, "Jf we are
interested in attracting more people, ..." That
assumption is the same one that the
powers-that-be ascribe to so wholeheanedly:
that we have to grow in order to have a healthy
regional economy. If Tcaught the gist of the
Summer, 1990 "Canying Capncity" issue of the
Kau«Jh Journal correctly, then we already are
burdened by too many people in the southern
mountnins. We do not need to expand, we need
to shrink the number of people living here.
Beyond a certnin point, numbers or people
and the "forested mountains and the
environmental quality" Power speaks of are
antithetical to each other. We preserve wild
habitat for the sake of wild habitat and the wild
animals that live in it, not 10 attract more people.
These points were minor revelations to me when
I read them in the Kamalt Journal. Don't back
out on them now!
Sincerely,
Hoyt Wilhelm
N. Wilkesboro, NC
Dear Kalllali Journal Friends,
l am just writing to tell you how much l
have enjoyed reading several issues or your
journal that a friend lent me to read. I appreciate
your deeply considered opinions and the
viewpoint they come from.
I consider myself to be somewhat
perceptive, and in most Statements that are called
"environmental" these days, I can see that the
spokespeople are representing some interests
besides the environment, whether it be their
own career, their own profit, or some
philosophical or political ideology. Most of
what I read in the Katualr Journal seems to
come suaight from the hean, and that makes a
difference. There are not many publications that
would have the courage to speak out about t.he
''carrying capacity" for human beings or
propose that aU the national forest lands in the
Southern Appnlachians should be an
"evolutionary preserve."
1 have to admit that these ideas were a little
shocking 10 me at first, but on reflection r could
see that that they are just what is needed in this
"bioregion." Now it seems so obvious. I see to
what a great extent we are conditioned by the
business assumptions that motivate this country.
when what is just common sense can seem so
unsettling.
I wonder what is going 10 happen to this
country, and I wonder what is going to happen
Xntuaft Journot p119c 26
to Kat1wl, Journal Please continue to say what
needs 10 be said (even if it is a little shocking
sometimes!) and maybe we will see some1hing
change. I am always hoping for the best.
Yours truly,
Katherine Albright
Knoxville, TN
TLANUWA
Ho. Tlanuwa,
Spirit-falcon,
Your mighty wings
Blot out the sun.
Pear strikes all who
See you flying Fawn and bear cub,
Man-child, too.
Carried struggling
To your nest si1e,
On the cliffs they
Feed your ne~tlings.
Came a shaman
Then to thwan you;
Cast your nestlings
To the water.
There Uktenn,
Great homed serpent,
Swallowed down your
Precious offspring.
Great your sorrow,
Great your anger.
Vengeance wrought you
On Uktena.
Chunks you pulled our
or the serpent,
Let them fall down
From the heavens.
There upon the
Eanh his body,
Tom and broken
Soon did lie.
From your empty
Nest you fled then;
Leaving an
Unshadowed sky.
Your depanurc
Saved our young, but
Awe and wonder
Left us, 100.
Perhaps too high a
Price was paid, and
Wonder's presence
Worth some risk.
Ho. Tlanuwa,
Spirit-falcon,
My heart yearns
For your return.
- Douglas A. Rossman
To the Editor,
Back in April some political pranksters
threw barrels marked "radioactive waste" by the
side of 1-26 where it joins I-40 near Asheville,
NC. This caused a big sensation among the
officials who flocked to the scene. r read in the
Asheville Citizen that one woman from the EPA
called it "totally irre!iponsible" and "a sick joke."
The S Bl had fun telling the paper all lhe terrible
things they would do to the.tricksters if they
could catch them.
I thought that it was totally responsible to
do this. Trucks carrying radioactive waste ~
drive through that intersection. A lot of people
don't even know this; a lot of other people do
know this, but they choose to ignore it People
need to be woken up to what is really happening
around here, and somebody found a good way
todoit.
What is totally irresponsible is for the EPA
to grant permits for trucks to cany barrels of
real radioactive waste along the highways. lf
some barrels of real waste fell off one of these
trucks, there would be trouble and danger for
Asheville.
When I saw how indignant the EPA lady
got about somebody's trick, I laughed and
laughed at how backward it all was. But it was a
sick joke.
Sincerely,
Etta Bennett
Cullowhee, NC
(P.S. • I wroie a leuet lO the Ashevil/t Citizen about
this. bu1 r don't think they ever printed iL ~l's why I
wrote IQ you.)
Dear Katuah,
Recently, while visiting my sister in
Knoxville, I was handed a copy ofKatuah
Journal, summer 1989. I must say it was highly
inspirational reading. I applaud your work for
peace, justice, and ecological harmony in the
Katuah Bioregion.
Sincerely,
Michael Sosadeeter
Dear Katua/1,
Your Journal is so valuable - and
important. I'll be sending more suppon later.
Thanks for leading the way. May the Crow
Moon bring you growth, green, and peace in
these dark times.
Sincerely,
John King
Drawing by Rob Mfflic-.
Su mtt1CT , 1991
�Dear Katuah,
You are a real friend! Thank you very
much for sending me lha1 back issue (on the
Chestnut) lha1 I wanted, but even more for the
current issue, wilh itS wonderful article on my
old friend Mr. Bailey of Clarksville. When I
was assigned 10 the 12th Armored Division in
1942, a newly married first lieu1enant in field
artillery, I opened an account in Mr. Bailey's
bank and immediately became his friend, as
ev<:ryone_did: Your story 1ell~ i1 very truly; he
believed m his own surroundings and did all he
~ould 10 improve the lot of his people. His
influence was very grea4 and I think Mr. Bailey
was wrong in thinking that industry never
accepted his ideas. l also think Griscom Morgan
is wholly wrong in his disparagement of
savings, but that is another story.
I enclose a Case Statement for the
American Chestnut Foundation (P. 0. Box
6057, West Virginia University, Morgantown,
WV 26506). I think you will find it interesting
and encouraging. I am doing all I can 10 raise
the additionaJ funding they desperately need,
first from private foundations, because 1hat is
1he bes1 chance for early resulis. Later I want 10
identify and approach large landowners in 1he
Appalachian region, and especially people with
o family history of giving and the means to
make those gifts in substantial amounts...
When I was growing up the chestnut was
still the dominant iree in our forests. I remember
it vividly, and recall the distress which everyone
felt so keenly as the onslaught of the blight iook
those great trees from us. l am fully convinced
we will restore the ll'Ce, and after you read our
case statement you will understand why. Young
men plant flowers; old men, trees.
Sincerely yours,
WilHam G. Raoul
Lookout Mountain, TN
Greetings Kaiuah Journal Folk,
Thank you for your continued 1ime and
effons in pulling together Kaul ah Journal. l just
~anled 10 let you know how much reading the
Journal means to me, and the suppon ii offers in
living in a "mixed community" with its incessant
bombardment of media propaganda extolling the
industrial growth society. Even when the
in~i?i~us e~fe_cts ofT.V. are personally
m1nirruz.ed II is too oflen necessary to live and
work with friends, family and associates whose
mind and (sadly} values are shaped by 1.O.S.
media. Sometimes 1his "reality" seems
overwhelming. It is al such a time that a friend
like Karuah Journal (and perhaps some
wilderness) helps to restore my connection to a
"d~per renlity" and community of Jjving
bemgs. The real work you are doing is very
much appreciated.
For All Things Wild,
Ed Lytwak
I
I
Sumincr, 1991
Dear Brother & Sister Editors,
I have written a prayer that I hope is
wonhy to be printed in your paper. I have been
disabled for almost six years as rhe result of a
back injury. I have been diagnosed as clinically
depressed. Many people think I am crazy. Some
think I am a lunatic. This could be true but
since I became homeless a dear old fri;nd,
Danny Jesse, moved me into his old farm house
because I had nowhere to go, and I was
penniless. The old house has no electricity, and
the water is from a spigo1 in the yard.
Another dear friend, Charlie Dunaway
inuoduced me to Karuah Journal (summer 1990
issue) and 1realized there are s1ill some "real"
people left who really care about our Creator,
our Mother Earth, and each other.
Since l have been here (approximately 6
months) I have developed a close relationship
with my Creator. Had it not been for my Creator
sending my friend to rescue me I would surely
have committed suicide. However, here I am
very much alive and would like to share my
prayer with you.
0 Great Spirit open my eyes
that I will see you in each of your creations
0 Great Spirit open my ears
tha1 I will hear your voice in the words of
my brothers and the sounds of the Eanh
0 Great Spirit open my heart
that your good will flow through me
0 Great Spirit give me knowledge
that I will be one with you
0 Great Spirit give me wisdom
that I may teach my sons of your love
and to love our Mother Eanh
0 Great Spirit be merciful to my brothers
who in their greed have scarred my Mother's
flesh
who have poisoned her flesh and her blood
who have polluted her skies
who have hate in their heans
0 Great Spirit give me the coumge
when death comes so I will welcome ii
with the realization
that life comes with death
as death comes with life.
Sincerely,
RogcrOark
I
rhoio by Rob Mcoid<
Sometimes Tears Are Not Enough
We sang for peace.
Woke up this morning to find
they are still making bombs.
We acted for peace.
How, I said, and why?
What about our planet?
Whal aboul the children?
We wor1<ed for peace,
even as those surrounding us
filled lheir yards and minds
with patriotic slogans,
waved their flags,
called war "just"
·successful"
"deserved"
Woke up this evening 10 find
!hough we sing,act,cry,
or even protest they are making bombs now.
Singing peace
woke 10 lind
our songs aren1 enough
acting peace
how?where?
why do we live In such madness?
shouting peace
as hundreds of thousands or
innocent human beings
die at Hie hands
of our ·smart· precision bombs,
hands of boys trained and
distanced by video games
crying peace
woke in the dawn
wilh tears on our cheeks
from war filled nightmares
tears on our cheeks
knowing there are those
lor whom this war
is more lhan a media event
or a palriotlc slogan
dreaming of
singing peace acling peace
dancingshou1lngtovingbelieving
11\Jstingtrying peace...
concrete dreams cl\Jni>ling
to TNT, plutonium,
machine guns...
they are making bombs now.
A
child is crying for what she can·t be giving
I say, child, stop your c,ying.
Gather up your strength for living
because somewhere children are dying.
Our tears are not enough to chase away the pa,n
we cannot understand why war seems to never
cease.
Yet even as the sun shines bnlhant through the ram
we know that through the dar1<ness we must st,U
wor1< for peace.
(continued on nclll page)
�(Cfflllnutd {rQln pogo 27)
Dear Ka1uah,
I miss you in my life! Please re-subscribe
me. I've moved 10 the city and am surviving
well on one of the few din roads left in
Tallahassee. Bard owls (a couple) are mating
now. I wake at night to hear lhcm and it's like
manna from heaven. I know the trout lilies are
blooming back in Sycamore, and just knowing
they're there is not enough. Every day I
consider returning 10 lhe country, but life is so
much easier here with electricity, running water,
and acceptable child care. Still I grieve the
losses.
Thnnks,
Janeice Ray
Dear Karual,.
I've been thinking lately about what is
imponant to me. A few things come out
strongly: people I love, doing something I can
put my soul into, and encouraging a more ideal
world by supporting things I believe in like;
• the local baker
• organic fanning
• and publications that
communicate what is
important 10 me.
I don't live in Ka11111h, but I like feeling
pan of the soul 1ha1 is in this journal.
I want you 10 know that ideas from the
Kaniah Journal have helped me shape my life
philosophy and will influence the way I live and
impact the world. Thank you for your
dedication and work. May you be blessed with
strength and pel!Ce.
Dan Shoug
Bean Goose Farm
Dear Kania Ii Staff,
I was exin:mcly excited to read issue #30
of the Kan!ah Journal. This was my first contact
ru,d I om impressed with the anicles and the
overall JayouL The "economy" anicle was
eitcellem.
I hnve included a check for 3 back issues,
plus T wish 10 be a ~ponsor.
Thanks,
Todd Rohlsson
From lhc Floyd ERC Ncw,lcuer
(continued Imm page 4)
practices in their families.
The dowsers' "golden opponunity" came
during the eastern gold rush of 1828-29 that
centered on Dahlonega, Georgia. It offered
great reward for those who could sense the
presence of underground veins, but it also
brought on the inevitable swindling and
che:iting that accompanies the lure of sudden
riches.
Sharon Johnson of the Gold Museum in
Dahlonega said, ''There are people who believe
today that they can find gold dowsing with
certain rypes of stainless steel rods, and I'm
sure that there were people like that back during
the gold rush years.
'&hey also had what they called
'gold-finders.' These were instruments sold 10
people who were prospecting. I've seen at least
two of these, one that dated back to about 1890
and another came from the 1920's. One was no
more than a wooden rod which was filled with
gold, iron pyrite, and black -;and. It had a
compass-like instrument in 1he center. The
metal gold-finder was a long tube, prob:ibly
made 0111 of aluminum. and I think that came
also with a liulc vial of gold."
Dowsers do 001 think that theirs is an
eicclusive gift. They generally agree that, like
intelligence or any statistical curve, there arc
tho.SC: eicceptionally sensitive to the psychic
energies, many people mildly sensitive, and
those who do not perceive that level of
existence at all. Walter Dale says, "To learn
how to do it, you can get some ideas from a
book, but the very best thing to do is 10 have a
dowser who is really familiar with the method
to show you. Anybody can do it, but you have
10 really want 10 do iL"
But he does offer this idea as a way for
beginners 10 familiariz.e themselves with the
process: "Get yourself a five inch piece of
Xcatuaf1 )oun \Q( POlJC 28
saing and tie on a metal nut (used to screw
onto a bolt) that is about the size of a nickel.
This will make a simple pendulum.
"Practice with it by looking at it and
saying, 'Give men yes.' ft may lllke several
a11emp1s, but you should be able 10 get the
pendulum to move consistently in a cenain
way. Then ask the pendulum for a no, and after
awhile you should be able 10 establish a definite
motion for that answer.
"Once you get the communication paucm
going, relax and know that you can do it. It all
comes with practice.~
For additional mfonnauon on dowsing nnd help
for those who wi~h IO gci stancd:
American Society of DowSCl'I - A~luc;hi.111
Ch;iplCf Bob Barnwell Rd.
137
Fletcher, NC
(704) 628-2456
/ -;_·
The mountains are
slow moving waves
of rock and gravel
trees and microbes
on which we all festively ride,
meeting old friends
from other eras that stir anew
notions of supplanting the
demise of our kind ...
RM
Summer, 1991
�Whole Science
One need not tum only co metaphysical
explanations in working toward an
undeTStanding of how some perplexing
phenomena occur in Lhe Universe. There is
emerging a sound Ecology of Lhe Cosmos
which is based on repeamble experience.
recorded measurements, and an
acknowledgment of the role of human
consciousness in interpreting the work of
science. The scientists who are now working
through more comprehensive means of
collecting information, and creating theories
that reflect Lhis new infonnation, are finding
that the physical Universe is far more complex
and inter-related than previously Lhought.
Some of these new ideas in science go by
the names of Quantum Theory, Dynamic
Whole Systems approaches, Chaos, and Gaia
Theory. These ideas have in common a break
with classical scientific principles which
regarded the Universe, and all its constituent
pans, as a pre-determined machine which is
running down in a clear sequence of events.
When Lhe Universe is recognized as being more
dynamic and self-organizing, through its many
diverse scopes of whole systems and
environments, a different picture can be drawn
of the regenerative patterns of energy and form
that surround us.
In Lhe discipline of physics, Quantum
Theory has shown that what we as human
beings experience as "normal'' is not the same
as what other whole systems at other scales of
being would consider to be "nonnal." For
instance, at Lhe scale of an atom the instruments
used to detect an electron's speed or position as
it moves around the atom's nucleus interfere
drastically with the electrons motions and
potenuals. LI becomes impossible to separate
the experimenter from the experiment at this
scale, since the two are so intimately involved
with each other. In addition to this an electron's
position can be determined, and its momentum
can be determined, but the 1wo can no1 be
de1ennined together. Electrons fliner like
clouds around atomic nuclei, and Lhe best we
can do is find the potemial of either what phase
they are in or where they will be in this
entangled environment.
In the Life Sciences it has been found that
all life, in its amazing diversity, is composed of
the same types of chemical elements: Carbon,
Hydrogen, Nirrogen, Oxygen, Phosphorus,
and Sulfur. These and the other kinds of atoms
found on the Eanh came together when the
planet began m accme in the interstellar
medium. It is very likely 1ha1 the atoms we are
composed of were strewn from an exploding
star, more massive than the sun, which
influenced the formation of the Solar System.
There are only 20 different fonns of amino
acids, which are the basis of all the different
strands of protein essential to all life on Eanh.
Every living organism came from previous life,
which in turn has a common ancestry 1h01
reaches back at least 3 l(l billion years. For
much of this history microbes were the major
fonn of life. lndependant microbes formed
alliances and antagonisms which evenrually
became the composite cells found in plants and
animals today.
Building on past successes, through this
kind of mutual advantaging, a strong
relationship also developed between living
systems and the magma, rock. soils, waters,
atmosphere, and magnetosphere of the Earth.
These dense-to-gaseous fluid mediums arc
cycling physical energy, much as other
plnnatary systems do; only for this planet there
existed the po1ential for active participation in
these cycles by Life. This is a dramatic
difference, because the range of circumstances
necessary for life 10 emerge on a planet of
sufficient endowment and proximity is limited
and very unique.
0..wmg by Rob Messick
II IIll II III II IIIIIIII II II II II IIIII II1111111111111111111111111111111111111 11 III IIIIIIII llllllllllll11111111111 II IIIIIIII IIIIIIINllllll111111111'I, IlII1111111111111111111 II IIIII III IIIlIIIIII IIIIII IIIIRlllllllll Ill III II Ill IIIII II llllllllllllllll 111111111111 I111111111 llllltllllll
TUNING IN
There are a number of practices that one
can do to increase the intuitive ability as it
pertains to the Earth. The exercises which have
worked best for me arc adaptations of yoga and
techniques from psychic healing. Nearly all
meditation techniques translate very well into
learning Earth attuncment My inner guidance
has been to remain flexible by borrowing from
many disciplines and then adapting the
techniques wbicb fit into my life in a natural
manner.
The big revelation for me came in a yoga
class when T learned that there are minor chakrns
on the feet. 1 suspect that the yogis can stand
transfixed in a difficult position, such as on one
leg, for hours at a time because they have
learned how 10 ground themselves so
thoroughly that they are temporarily auached to
the Banh through the chakms in the feet. The
importance of Lhe feet is somelhing that has been
ignored in western civilization. In the Mideast,
where lhe feet are ritually wai.hed and perfumed
with oils, they are considered sacred. and
recognized as one's most vital connection to the
planet. One can learn to dispel tired energy
through the soles of the feet, and ask the Earth
to replenish that energy. Yoga is excellent
practice for this. So is T'ai Chi or any of the
martial arts, so long as the emphasis is on
grounding and balance.
Walking meditation, as in Zen Buddhist
practice, in which one is very aware of body
rhythms, is an excellent way 10 walk through
S\1mmcr, 1901
the woods in a state of heightened awareness. I
have found that if I can match my stride in a
conscious way to the panicular terrain, I usually
break through 10 a quietness in which I am
aware of my rhythms blending in with the
larger, greater rhythms of life around me. This
is also a good way 10 become aware of the
variations in the lay of the land.
Since I live in town these days, I have
limited access to wild areas. Still, it is possible
to grow in sensitivity if one is willing to make
daily connections to the Eanh from a conscious,
aware state.
l recommend bringing home small
momentoes from places Lhat have special
meaning. This keeps the memory alive and
helps make emotional connections to one's
personal sacred places. I routinely bring home
pieces of gnarled wood, shells, or small rocks.
Do not take large rocks without pennission or
rocks that are part of a fairy ring. Usually there
is something · a feather, a rock - that stands out,
and that is what I take as a gif1. And J always
give thanks. ln my house, the kitchen window
sill is a great place for an altar, because I can •
automatically look at my nature gifts every day
when l wash dishes.
But the most important practice of all is to
get outdoors every day in a conscious way.
Usually the only time I can do this and know I
wilJ not be interrupted is when the supper
dishes arc done or when l am ready to close up
the house for the night. l step outside in my
backyard, and I let down my guard and open
up as totally as possible to whatever is
happening at that moment.
The Earth is always ready to respond 10
us. However, nothing "happens," to me at
least. until I have quieted my mind. When my
mind stops its chatter, then my senses literally
become more acute. I can hear birds, insects,
and 1he rustle of leaves more intensely and with
greater detail than I was able to do only a few
minutes before. When I do reach that point of
the quietness within, there is always something
amazingly beautiful and striking Lhat leaps out
at me. It may be Lhe full moom peeking out
from behind silver clouds, or the sudden
wafting of the fragrance of whatever flower is
in bloom. Sometimes my holly tree becomes
suddenly vibrant and animated. It is a
championship holly, and I am sure that a
powerful nature spirit lives there.
Along with this sudden insight into the
beauty of nature, there is always a caressing
breeze. I call it caressing, not only because of
iLS gentleness, but because it does not appear to
come from a specific direction, and it never
seems to be thcre until I reach a certain open
state of consciousness. I always wait for this
moment, because I t:lke it as a re.o;pon~e. a
confirmation from the Earth he~lf.
How much time does it take out of a busy
day to perform this simple ritual? Maybe five
minutes. The payoff in tenns of lifted spirits is
tremendous.
- Charlotte Homsher
X.Ot.wlh Journal pogc 29
�(FUUNGS-cool.inucd from pegc 24)
REVIEW
national forest lands, Dahl responded that the
records search on the Bee Tree site was an
'adequate' survey for threatened and
endangered plant species and then ordered a
survey when the ground was covered with
snow.
The clear and unfortunate conclusion one
must draw from all of this is that the "public''
Dahl listens to moSt closely is the timber
industry.
LIGHT IN THE WIND
chanrs and circle son-gs by Bob Avery-Grubel
(available from Bob Avery-Grubel;
RL l ,Box 73S: Floyd, VA 24091)
Bob Avery-Grubel is a founder and
mainstay of The Celebration Singers of a
closely-knit community of families inhabiting
Floyd County, Virginia. The group sings
up-beat, positive, spiritual music, all of which
is original, much of it contributed by Bob
Avery-Grubel.
The songs on l,iglu in the Wind arc
typical of I.he Celebration Singers: rhythmic and
unifying numbers meant for group singing at
evening circle, in the sweat lodge, or at holiday
gatherings. The credit sheet says that the music
is "dedicated to those moments when we let go
into uplifting song and come closer to the truth
of who we are," and surely this is so. The
songs are simple, as chants and community
songs should be, yet they are filling and
satisfying. However, the songs leave the
listener with a persistent feeling that they are
more fun to sing than 10 listen to - and they are!
(proven fact) The words are easily learned, but
for those in doubt a lyric sheet is available for
$1.00.
Bob Avery-Grubel's productions are
home-made craft pieces. Ught in the Wind was
recorded at Bohemian Studios, which are
housed in an angular building on a wind-swept
farm seven miles from the closest town. The
tape was engineered and mixed by
Avery-Grubel and A'Coun Bason (who also
plays penny whistle and catchy percussion on
several differem hand drums).
Light in the Wind: a valuable community
resource.
For tho.-.e who want more. Avery-Orubcl also
offers the benefit of his musical and community
experiem:e in "Breakthrough Singing" workshops: "a
lime and space IO experience healing through song and
voice." For information, write h1m at the address above.
-MT
THE TOE VALLEY CENTER
The Toe Valley Ccmer is being
established as a non-profit community resource
organization to promote and encourage ideas
for better living in the three-county area of the
Toe River Valley.
The Center will:
• act as an education and infonnation
source for the valley
• develop educational programs
• initiate meetings and seminars on issues
of importance
• distribute pamphlets, fact sheecs, and
other information
• promote I.he vision of a positive future
in the Toe River Valley.
For information, write or call:
Richard Kennedy:
849 JlalUlah Branch Road;
Burnsville, NC 28714
(704) 675-52S6.
ACUPUNCTURE~ AFFORDABLE !
We otter a sliding scale to get you
through hard times In good health!
Shortly after she was hired by the Forest
Service, Karin Heiman made a statement that.
in retrospect, turned out to be eerily prophetic.
"What makes my job so challenging," she said,
"is the fact that I must strive to find a balance
between I.he environmentalists and the timber
industry, who both have huge stakes in the
decision to harvest or not 10 harvest. And my
reports influence that decision."
By all accounts, Heiman - and Chuck
Roe as well - met that challenge and found that
balance. Unfortunately, in the eyes of her
employers an honest and thorough naturalist
without a political 8.l<e 10 grind is viewed as an
obstacle to timber sales rather than as a
concerned and commiued scientist dedicated to
doing what is best for the forest community.
How "vocal" must the public be for I.he
the Forest Service to recognize I.hat most people
believe that the incredible biological richness
they contain is the most valuable "resource" of
Southern Appalachia's national foresis? Dahl
has recently said, "I'd be the lirst one, if we
had an endangered species, to do somclhing
about it. I'm not om 10 violate the Endangered
Species AcL We might not be doing
everylhing we could to protect species, but
we're not willfully malicious."
Two fired scientists, an enraged public,
and we may never know how many rare
species would beg to differ.
Also Chi Kung (like Tai Chi)
every Wednesday 6-7 p.m.
at JewtSh Commumly Center.
Call to regisler.
Ellen Hines, M.Ac., Dipl.Ac. (NCCA)
Tradilional C hineSt Acupuncture & Htrbology
c:.i.rom... l&.w,.s......... s . - -
~
(704) 2S2-7491
rl :Thu
~ Sanr!J Mush
HerbNurse7
WHOLE FOODS
VITAMINS
ORGANIC PRODUCE
WREATHS • POTPOURRI
• HERBS • TOPIARY
Complete Herb Catalog - $4
Describes more than 800 plants from
160 Broadway
Asheville, North Carolina
Open 7 Days a Week
Monday - Friday 9 am - 8 pm
Saturday 9 am - 6:30 pm
Sunday 12 pm - 5 pm
Aloe to Yarrow
A.I.A. , Resource Information Analysis
Neil Thomas and Andy Feinstein
305 Westover, Asheville, NC
(704) 252-6816
Rt 2, Surrett Cove Road
Leicester, North Carolina 28748
Phone for appointment to visit
(704) 683-2014
~umnlci,
199 1
�CHESlNlIT GRAFTING PROJECT
by David McGrew
SilviculturalisL, French Broad Ranger Districl. USFS
Sarurday, April 27, one small step was
1aken toward nmoration of the American
chestnut tree to the Southern Appalachian
forest. A chestnut grafting workshop was held
on lands m.1naged by the French Broad Ranger
District of the US Forest Service (USFS) for
the purpose of grafting blight-resistant twigs
derived from native chestnut trees omo wild
chestnut rootstock. The workshop was joir..:y
sponsored by the USFS and the American
Chestnut Cooperators' Foundation, and served
as a uaining session for private cooperators 10
team the grafting technique.
The workshop group went 10 a grafting
site on a nine acre clearcut in the French Broad
District Lhat hod been prepared by the forestry
class at Haywood Community College. John
Elkins of the American Ches1nu1 Cooperators'
Foundation gave the group a brief overview of
the breeding and grafting work being done by
the foundation and then demonstrated the
grafting technique. Each member of the group
had a chance 10 perform the grafting operation.
and 20 twigs of the blight-resistant American
chestnut stock were grafled by the end of the
day. At the end of the workshop, all of the
private cooperators received 1wig material for
grafting in their home areas.
Elkins stressed that the twig material was
not from trees that were immume to chestnut
blight infection but from trees that were better
able to resist the infection. He said that a
20-50% survival rate for the grafted twigs is
expected, but that a 10% survival rate would be
acceptable.
A virus disease of the blight fungus,
called hypovirulcnce, will be imponant 10 the
survival of the gr.tfted trees. "Hypovirulence
weakens the blight, just as the nu or a cold will
weaken people." said foundation president
Gary Griffin. "Chesrnut blight nonnally
damages the growing tissues just under the
bark, so that Lhe tree can't pass water or
nutrients up or down the stem. If enough of the
living tissue is damaged, the tree is girdled and
it dies. Blight weakened by hypovirulence,
however, cannot damage the living tissue under
the bark, so the chestnut tree isn't killed, even
when heavily infected by blighL"
Union Acres
An Alternative
-
i
- Acreage for Salt - Smoky Mountain Living
with a focus on spirit1111l and
ecological values
For more information:
Contact C. Grant at
Route 1. Box 61/
Whittier, NC 28789
(704) 497-4964
Programs to &ncolXoge
self and Earth oworEIOeliS.
celebration. kinship and nope.
• Youlh Camps• School Programs
• Farruly Camps• Teacher TniinlOQ
• Commut'II)' Programs
• Camp Slaff Tre11ing
• Outdoot Progrem Consult.ig
P.O Box 1306
Gomnt>ug. Tennessee 3n38
615-436-6203
NATURAL MARKET
WHOLE FOODS • BULK
FOODS• VITAMINES • IIEROS
• FAT FREE FOODS • TAKE
OUT FOODS• SNACKS• NO
SALT, NO CHOLESTEROL
According to Elk.ins, blight infection
cannot spread as fast on twigs that are
genetically resistant to the blight as it can on
non-resistant rree$. The hope is that the
resistant trees will hold off the blight long
enough that the fungus will become infected
with the virus disease. Griffin explored the
graft.ing site during the workshop, and he
found five chestnut trees that had blight
infection sites that had been modified by
hypovirulence, including one tree where all
infection sites were modified. 'These trees give
us real hope that this grafting site will be
successful in producing large chestnut trees,"
said Griffin.
The French Broad Ranger District will
monitor this sile over the next year 10 determine
1he success of the grafting project. The USPS
will manage an area of three to four acres
around the experiment solely for chestnut, first
by maintaining the best growth possible on the
surviving gr.tfts, and second, by cutting down
all the saplings in the area except
naturally-sprouting chestnut saplings.
It is a gamble to try these techniques, but
it is well wonh the attempt considering how
valuable the chestnuts were to these mountain
forestS.
For more information or lO volWttter l~/p to the
American Chtstnut CooptrtJlors· Foundation. write:
Lucille Griffin; American Chestmll Cooptra/Ors'
Foundaiion; 2667 ForesJ Suviu Road 708; Newport,
Va 24128.
265-2700
823 Siow,ng Rock Rd
Boone, NC 28607
Shhh. Listen ...
~
by Rob W..essiclt
NATIVE FLUTES
Two s1yles made of cedar or walnut
woods in the traditional manner
Hawk Littlejohn
Sourwood Farm
RI 1, Box 172-l
Prospect Hill, NC 27314
(919) 562·3073
Get a set of IO assorted
folding cards with
artwork you see in
Katuah Journal.
(Envelopes included.)
Send $11.25 postage paid
1 Summer-,
1991
to:
RM DESIGNS
P.O. BOX 2601
BOONE, NC 28607
Ill l l .
ec. 2.)C
11a•oo- NC211139
!7041 $30135
speaking fQr.Jhe earth.
�evenrs
JULY
JUNE
14-23
CIT ICO CREEK, TN
Katuah Rainbow Family
Galhering Summer Solstice Galhering." ...for
the purposes of Peace and Healing, in honor of
the Summer Solstice" on Citico Creek in the
Cherokee National Foresl, TN. Directions are
recorded on lhe Light-Line (404) 662-6112,
from NC (704) 563-9218. HO!, Newslet1er of
the Kauiah Rainbow Family; Box 5455;
Atlanta, GA 30307.
•
21-23
ROAN MOUNTArN
Summer Solstice and Ent111 energies
workshop with Joyce Holbrook. SIOO. Pre-register: Box
109S; Burnsville. NC 28714.
22
SUMMER SOL'-TICE
22-23
GREAT SMOKIES PARK
"Wild Mammal~ or the Smokies"
field =-ch with Dr. M1
ch.1el Pelton. Hlllld.W>n study
or black bear, deer, b3t, and woodchuck populill.ions in
the Pork. For information on this and olher field
course:.. coniact: Smoky Mounuain F'icld School; c/o
Dr. Gayle D. Cooper; Univc:sity ofTcnne=: 600
Henley St. (Suite IOS); Knoxville, TN 37902 (800)
284-8885.
BLACK MOUNTAIN, NC
"Why Old Women Don't Get the
Blucs" with Alice Girard 31 McDibbs. I I9 Cherry SL
For info on this gig and summer schedule, call (704)
1A
9-11
AS HEVILLE, NC
Broom-making workshop with
Carlson Tuulc. For info on this and olher workshops.
conlJlCl the Folk Art Center, Box 9545; Asheville, NC
2881.5 (704)298-m8.
11-12
WESSER, NC
669-2456.
1A-27
CREA T SMOKIES PARK
''Family Ounp" - activities for
fomilies with children ages 6-12. Nature exploration,
slOrytelling. Appalachirul music. hiking, and
swimmmg. For info on this and other prognuns,
conU1Cc Great Smoky Mountains lnsti1u1c at Tremont;
T0Wll5Clld, TN 37882 (615) 448-6700.
National Whilewater
Championships on the Namahala River,
including slalom and wildwater race:;.
Nantahala Outdoor Center; 41 US Hwy. 19
West; Bryson City, NC 287 13 (704)
488-2175.
LINVI LLE,NC
36111 Annual Grandfather MoUJ1tnin
Highland Games and Gathering of the Scouc.h Clan~.
Papmtry, pipe bandi:, sheep herding. Scoui,h athletic
cvcntS, ccUidh. For info: Highland Game.~; Box 356;
Brumer Elle, NC 28604 (704) 898-5286.
11-14
24-27
CULLOWll EE, NC
"Landscnping with Native
Plants" conference. Lectures, workshops, and
field trips led by a host of experts, including
Dan Pit1illo, Roben Zahner, George Ellison,
and others. $45 + room and board.
Pre-conference field trips, 7(21+, are optional
and cost extra. For information. call Dr. Jim
Horton, (704) 227-7244.
25..S/4
13
ASII FV ILLF~ NC
Annunl membership picnic of the
Amcric:ln Soc1c1y of Dowsers - Appalachian Chap1cr.
Call President Jill1CI Shisler for dctruls: (704) 628-1758.
FOLK \1O0T
Foll.moot USA brings folk dllncers
and musicians from Grcccc. USSR. Fmllllld, Atgcnlina,
Holland, Spam, Rom;inia, Puerto Rico, lsr.iel, Turkkey,
and Thailand lO perform :u various location.~ in Katu:lh.
For schedule and price mfonnauon, conUICt Folkmoot
MOUNTAIN LAKE, VA
"In Search Of .JI"· ~ploring
"iMcr sacred space.• Mt.dicme wheel. dowsing, music.
mctliwuon, yoga. drumming, hiking, nnd ritullls.
Pre-register: Indian Valley Retreat; Rt. 2. Box 58;
Willis, VA 24380 (703) 789-4295.
23-27
27
HOT SPRINGS, NC
"lndcpcndcooe Weck Ztn Holiday"
WAYNF..SVILLE, NC
"Buddhi.gn nnd Meditation• with
John Orr. Explora1ion of the Buddhist path 10 sptri1UJI
Jjbcra.uon will include meditations, periods ol 5ilcncc,
and discussion. For mfo on this and other prognims,
con!Xt; Sul-Light Retreat Center. Rt. I. Box 326:
Waynesville, NC 28786 (704) 452-4569.
F ULL MOON
29-7/6
19-21
19-21
wnh Genie, Sandy Stcwan.. Working. chanling. sttting,
dharma talks. and keeping SJlcncc, culminating with a
walk up the mountain. For info on this and Olhcr
rctrcais: Southern Dtwm11 Rctrea1 Center, RL I. Box
34,H; Hot Springs, NC 28743 (704) 622-7112
USA; Box 523; Waynesville, NC 28786 (800)
334-9036.
26
FULL MOON
BLACK MOUl\TAIN, NC
Robin and Linda Williams al
McDibbs. Sec 7(24.
28
HOT s r RJNGS, NC
r-w
"Hand~ Sur lhc SIMS.
Tum the
Ellrth" Tai Oli Ch'uan workshop w1lh Kathleen cu.~ick
and Jay Dunbar. Solo nnd two-person play orrcr ins1gh1
inio classical principles of unified movement.
Prc-rcgistu. Soulhcm Ollllrma Retreat CcnlCI (sec
6/29).
30-8/1
MARSIIALL, NC
"Green Woodworking with Kids"
fOl'childrcn ages 10.15 and adult portners. Build a
r001S1ool from an 03k log · also swimming, hilting,
\l.·1ld plant i<lentificauon, campfires, ond SIOC)'tclhng.
Country Workshops: 90 Mill Creek Rd.: Marshnll. NC
28753 (704) 656-2280.
S111111nn. 1991
�AUGUST
1-J
16.l!i
c;nr:A'f S\IOKll:S r,\RK
·~J!Jvc Amcr1c:111s and the Easth"
pr0t,'fiu11 nnhe Grc:u Amoky Moum:am, Instil:.:!~ 111
Tr.:mont, S.:c: 1/:lA-21.
111c;111 ..,:-. ns. NC'
"Pinhole V1s1on" - low,tcch
pmhok camcm constnu:1100 and c~plur.ulon or crcati\c
1m:1gc-makmg wnh Pinky Ba,;s. For info on thi.~ and
111ocr pho1ogr.iph)· workshops, conl.1(1' App.1lachian
finvironmcntal Arts Center: Box 580: I l1ghfands, :-:c
211741 (70-I) 526-4303.
J Ul.1..\100~
26-31
MARSllc\U., l\C
-~,:ick Ch:11I111.1kmg•
work~ilop wi1h Dan Mayner. Bcgmning wuh a red oak
log, parucipants assemble a cluur ic,mg morme and
1cno11 jomcry, dr.i,..knh-cs, and spokeshaves.
Prc-rc:g1s1cr. Country Work,hors (sec 7/30-8/1 ).
30-9/2
IIREVARD. NC
Soull1cm Life Community
Ga1hcrmg • ncl,..Nking on issues of peace, jusucc, and
planci;iry protection. Family gathering, orcn IO all
.Music hy Cnnd1c and Guy Car:iwan, Contact Rur.d
Soulhcm Voicc for Peace (sec 8/2-3).
2-3
CF.1.O, NC
Onlhcring of commu111ty orgam,.crs
and ga.woots leaders who wish to sh.ire experiences and
network at Rural Soulhcm Voice for Peace office in
Celo Community. If interested m ancnding, plca.,c
contact RSVP; 1898 Hannnh Bmnch Rd.: Burnsville,
1'C 28714 (7o.1) 675-S933.
ASHEVILLE, NC
11 lh Annual World Gee-Haw
Whimmy Diddle Competition will include whimmy
diddle feats, lrlldiuon:il music, and clogging. For info,
conlllCt: Folk Art Ctntcr (see 7/9-11).
2.'i
SEPTEMBER
2-3
WILLIS, VA
6th Annual "Women's
Wellness Week"· an opportunity 10 become
part of a supportive women's community for a
week of renewing power. honoring spirit,
nurturing heart, and encouraging creativity.
Activities will include dance, clay sculpting,
drumming, tie-dying, healing work, and sweat
lodge ceremony. Children's program will run
concurrently. Pre-register. Indian Valley
Retreat Center (Sf.C 6/23-27).
5-11
17-IR
CHEROKEE, NC
Freeman Owlc, Cherokee
pipcmakcr stone sculptor. and storyteller, will
demoru;t.nue nt the Cherokee Hcn!llge Museum and
Callery. For infonn:uion on lhis and olhcr eppcara11ccs
by nauve cr:if1$pCople, conUJCt: Cherokee Heri1.1ge
Museum and Gallery; Box 477: Cherokee, NC 28719
(704) 497-3211.
OCOEE RTVER
1991 World Cup and
Wild water National Chamnpionshtps will
attract over 100 of the top wild water racers in
the world. Contact Nantahala Outdoor Center
(see 7/11-12).
HARRISONBURG, VA
PAW (Preserve Appalachian
Wilderness) Conference to discuss ideas and
Str'Jtegies for "evolutionary preserves" and a
wild habitat range the length of the Appalachian
Mountains. Sponsored by Virginians for
Wilderness/Earth First! and PAW. At James
Madison University. For info, write Virginians
for Wilderness; Rt. 1, Box 250; Staunton. VA
2440 I or call (703) 885-6983.
14 • 16
19-23
Send $ubmission~ f0t the Event~ page to: Kauiah
Calendar Editor; 300 Webb Cove Rd.; Asheville, NC;
Katliah Provmcc 28804. Listings for next is.~ue due by
Augu.~t 15.
"The area's oldcsi
and lugc,t natural
food~ gtoet'ry •
811/k Herbs, Spices, & Grains
Vitamins & Supplements
VI/heat, Salt & Yeast-Fm~ Foods
Dairy Substitutes
Hair & Skin Care Products
Beer & Wine Maki11g Stlf'l'lics
200 W. King St, Boone, SC 28607
(704) 261·5220
-p,;,
~~\
Talking J.,,n,~ i~ a monthly
J('lutnlll of deep ecology, UISf'ired
pen,ooaJ RCIIVlbID rooted ID eMtben
'J'mlWlluy. Pa.,1 1!-!<ucs have
rurunxl ar11cles by Gary Soylkr.
Statba"J.. Jc>hn S~. Joanna
~facy, 81II ~val!, u•oe Wnlf
C1r¢1et;, Barham Mor, etc,
AH? NATBR Ml'l'fWl' BLICI'RlCITY
with a RAM pump! It works by
the action of flowing water
and can pump 120 ft. high.
Colllplele pump w/ guide -$125.
Call or send SASE for free
brochure.
NATERHAN MK PlJFS
355 Cedar Creek Road
-"'-...£.._....____ e1ack Mountain, N.c. 28711
(704) 669-6821
Summer, 19!J1
TnlJ.inl( J.,,111~ ~pew for the
n•tural world :and for lhe rd:.indlmg
!'I OW' OWII wtld ~JlU11,
Suhscnpt1ons arc S15.00 one
year/SI 8.00 outside U.S. S25.00
i...o )·ear'IIS36.00 outside U.S.
Send chock or M.O. 10:
Tn/J.i11x I.raw:,
1430 Willalllt'lle 11367
Eugrlle, OR 97401
5031342-2974
rFR~~,~~~'~:~~~P
COMMITTED TO C0'.'.1MUNTIY
AND ·cooo-FOR-YOU.FOOO"
255-7650
90 Biltmore AH•nu~ ,\,hevdlc ~C
2 Blocks South ol Downtown
Xatimh Journot PCUJC 33
�~BWoR/slt{g
• Webworking has changed! There is nowafee
of$ 2.50 (PRE-PAJD) per en1ryofjifry
words or less. Send b>•A11gust 30th 1991 I();
Rob Messick; P.O. Box 2601; Boone. NC
28607. (704) 754-6097.
GOOD STEWARDS WA/IITED for rcmotc land.
Approx. IS acres for sale w/ hou.,;e (2 bdrm .• I balh).
Organically rarmed for 2tJ )'Cffl, grnv11y recd spring
,,,:ner. High oo Tannsi Ridge. views. Raven ond ~fmnc
Walker, Box 23: Lal<c Toxaway. 1'C 28747 (704)
293-7013.
RAINFOREST BOTANICALS • from the ancient
hc31ing Ulldi11ons of the indigenous people. or SOUlh
America. The Life Force of Amawnui. now available
io you. Fn:e mformation ID Health Profes.,,onals. Call
Lei at l!OO-SJS-0503.
'!WO FAMIUES seeking neighborly follcs IO buy mlO
130 acres of beautiful moumainside land near
Wcavervillc.1'C. We arc involved in organic
gnro,:nmg, homc.~hooling. rwural healing. 1111d
spimuality. 20 acre sh3re for S2A,OOO. Call (7~)
658-2676 or 645-7954.
1990,91 DIRECTORY OF INTENTIONAL
COMMUNITIES · Just rclc:i~. over 2 years m the
nuking. Names, adrcssc.s, phone numbers, and
d=riptioos of 320 Nonh American communities. and
over 2SO resource ~ . phi., 40 articles. Mops,
cross-reference chan.s. fully indexed. $13.SO postpaid
from Sandhill Fann: Rt I, Box 155-R; Rulledge. MO
63563. 40% discount available on ordcn of 10 or
mate.
MUSIC BY BOB AVERY-ORUBELaVllilablcon three
casseu.cs. 1'reasuus in the Stream and Circles
Returnuig arc folk/rock·J3U. and a recent release of
origu1al chants and songs. light in the Wind. isa
coptMlla. Lyric sheets included. Send $10 for each tape
or $26 for ell throe to Bob Avuy-Grubcl; RL I, Box
735; Aoyd, VA 24091.
HIGHLANDER CENTER· IS a communuy-bascd
educaLional organ11.auon whol,C purpose IS lO provide
space for pcq,lo to learn from each other, and 10
dcvclopc $<llu1ions to cnvircnmcnllll r,roblcms based
on their values. experiences, 1111d a~iratlons. They also
put out a quanerly newslcua called Highlander
RcJ)OrlS. For more information conwcr Highlander
Ccnlel'; 1959 Highlander Wuy; New M.lrtkc1, 1N
37820 (615) 933.3443
A SMALL FMflLY COOPERATIVE. IS scckmg a
sw1Able ,;pace for homeschooling our children, ages
4,7. We are a responsible, conscious, ruid cxpcri<:nccd
a,oup. We 5"k a \l*iOUs house and yanl. away from
uafr.c. We prefer lO renr wil.h an Ofltlon lO buy. Call
(704) 628-3628 or (704) 252-8183.
RAW CHEMICAL-FREE HONEY. Tulip Poplar,
Sourwood, and Wildflower hooey from lhc forcstS or
Palrick County, VA. No chemicals, no while sugar.
no heat ever Slrllincd through ch=ccJoth and p;tekcd
in glass. Luni1cd quantities. ~11 or wntc for pnccs &
availalnlny. Wade Buckhohs • Bull Mountlin
Bcekecpcrs; Rd 2, Box 1S16. S1113r1. VA 2·H71 (703)
694-4571.
Xa1uwi JournoC p~ ~
NATIVE AMERICAN Fl.lTT'E MUSIC- Richard
Roberts. a well known west TN new age flutist (Ilk.a
Zero Ohms), is now availoblc tn lhe East TN/NC are.,.
For rcla:ting and uplifimg pcrfonnanccs nr tapes
contaet RIChard Robcns: Box 821; Norris, TN 37828
(615)494-8828-oc- RL I, Box 136RD; Lamar, MS
38642 (601) 252-4283.
THE DREAM CATCHER - C3tchcs bad dreams and
hold, I.hem, 10 be dcsttoyed by the morning sun. Good
dreams 0031 down the feather to I.he slcepu. Price: 11
dollars - spcc,fy color prefcrcnccs or nalWUI. Order
from Ch1ck:unaugan Fn:c C'hcrolcees: 1915 Buckky Sr
#8; Chawrnoogn. TN 37404.
I IA WKWlSO EARTII RENEWAL COOPERA11VE •
i.\ an 87 acre primitive rcl!C3t and working communily
fal!1l, l..oc:31Cd in I.he norlhcm Alabamo mountnin,111>1
11 S miles northwest oC Atlanta. Clas,;c,; on alrcmat1ve
lifestyles and Nill.Ive American philosophies arc
available on a rcgulor basis. For inform:ition or cnllllog
of Nauvc crofts & producL~. Cllll (20S) 635-63().1.
32-ACRE FARM for sale ,n Whittier, NC. Multiple
solor hom~ltS, pnvacy, creeks and springs, rwo large
orgamc fields. Includes rusuc farmhouse wil.h
gravil)'-fcd water and solar sys1em, born, 1111d small
solnr suucture. $90,000 for all. Wlll sell pan. Writc
Vicki Baker and Tom Graves: Rt 2, Box 108-A:
Whittier, NC 28789 or call ('704) 586-8221 or(704)
649-9266.
NATIVE AMERICAN CEREMONIAL HERBS • we
offer a latge variety of sages, swce1 grass, ruuural
resins, 11114 everything ncccssiuy for smudging. Nnrivc
smolc.ing m1~tures, flulc music, pow-wow Lape:!, und
ceremonial songs. Essential oils, and incenses
specifically mode fo, prayer. offcriJlg, and meditation.
Forcawlog call or write: Esscncinl Drc:uns; Rt 3. Bo~
285; Eagle Fork, Hllyc:svillc. NC 2890i (701)
389-9898.
whole earth
grocery
•
NATURAL
ALTERNATIVES
FOR HEALTHFUL
LMNG
4~6 e parkway craft «-nt<'r • <ultc 11
gatllnburg, tcnn~ 37738
615-436-6967
PIEDMONT BIOREGIONAL INSTITUTE - For those
who live in lhc Piedmon1 area, !here's a biorcgionnl
e!fon well underway. Jom Us! We would nJlPrec13lC
any donnuon or time or money IO help moot operating
expenses. For a gifl of S25.00 or more. we will send
you a copy of John Lawson's journal, A New Voyage
10 Coro/mo Also come find ou1 about the Lawson
ProjecL PB!; 412 W Rosemary Slt0CI: Chapel Hill,
NC 27516; Uwbruna Province. (919) 942-2581.
WICKER WORKER· Wicker furniture rcs'U>red. ainc.
rush, and recd sc31S woven, D:sskcrs al.,;o repaired.
Expericncc:d scat weaver. "If you can't we cane.· Andrea
Clarke; 27 Mu Strc<:t Asheville, NC 28801. ('704)
253-6241.
RECYCLED PAPER I - Oin:etory or product sources
for the Southca~ SuggC$1.Cd Donation of S 1.00 10
Wcstcm Nonh Carolina Alliance: P.O. Box 18087:
Asheville, NC 28814 (704) 258-8737
BODY RI/YT/IMS from PIIIIICtnry Mothers • a
beautiful and paroctical calendar for women ID chart
rhcir ·moonthly" cycles. Send $3.00 plus S 1.00
[lOSWge to: Planetary Mothers Collective (c/o Nancie
Yonker); 5231 Riverwood Avenue: Saraso111. FL
34231
FAMILIES LEARNING TOGETHER - is a new
sutew1dc ho=hool group welcoming :inyone wirh
on i n ~ in home education. Our pulflOSC 1s 10
focili111tc the exchange or infonnauon, Ullcnt. nnd
n:sowccs. For more infonnauon contact: Trish Severin
(704) 369-6491
QUEST FOR SUR VIVAL/ JOURNEYS TO
SPIRITUALITY· 1s .i new program being offered in
the Kimlah area. The purpose of the Que.st for Sutv1vll.l
progroms 1S to 1C3Ch the sxrcd order of swvivnl
(Shcl1.cr, W111er, F,rc, and Food). and explore I.he roles
of ~urvival phllnsophy and spin1ulll1ty in 11113lning
b:ll:lnccd hannony wil.h ourselves, cai;h other. Qnd the
Eonh.
Two rnll'Oductory weekends will 111kc plxc in
l.Jlurcl Sp<ings, NC on Scp1cmbcr 27-29 for Women,
and Oc1obcr 4-6 for Men. Also ii wccl:long program for
men is planned for October 6-13 al Turtle hl.1nd
Prosct\·c near Deep Gap. NC. For information on any
of thc.o;e programs conU1Ct Tom Barnes: P.O. Box 166;
S3vcry, WY 82332 or call (307) 383-2625.
LAND FOR SALE - wil.h small house in beautiful
Spring Creek. 1'C; IS miles west of Hot Spnngs.
Pctfcct for the scJJ-sufficicn1 tire. One hour wesr of
Asheville. Call Linda Deyo (704) 675-9575.
S11tt11ncr-, 1991
�Katuah Journal wams w comm1111icare your 1/,ouglus and
feelings 10 the 01her people i11 1he bioregional pmv111ce Send
1hem 10 us as /e11ers, poems, sinries, articles, drawings, or
photographs. e1c. Please seridyour contrib111io11s w 11s at: Katuah
Journal; P 0. Box 638; Leicester, NC, Ka11'tah Province
28748.
The tall issue of Ka111al1 .loumal will be a·i*,tpouni featurhg
a strong emphasis on humor and fun. The titles and contents of Lhe
major depanments will tn1nsform laughably, and Katiiah Journal
will let its hair down: hopefully gcuing its funny bone tickled!
Deadline for anicles is July 31, 1991.
Our Winter issue will be concerned with Fire in its many
manifestations; from forest fires to the warm hearths of home.
BACK ISSUES OF KATUAH JOURNAL AVAILABLE
ISSUE THREE • SPRINO 1984
Sw;r.ainablc Ag,, iculture • Sunflowers • Human lmp:icl on
I.he FOfest. Childrcru· Education· Veronica Nicholas:
Woman in Politics Lmlc People· Medicine Allies
ISSUE FOUR • SUMMER 1984
W11cr Drum • We11:1 Quality. Kudzu. Solar Eclipse .
Clcatcuuing • Trom. Going U> Wiler. R'IITI Pumps Microhydro. Poems: Bemie Lee Sinelair. Jim Wayne
Miller
ISSUE FOURTEEN • WINTER 1986.87
Lloyd Carl Owlc • Boogcrs and Mummers • All Spooics
Day • Cabin Fever University • Homeless m Katuah
llomcm~de 1101 Water • Stovcmwcer·s Narrative • Good
Medicine: Interspecies Communication
ISSUE TWENTY-THREE - SPRINO 1989
Pisgah Village • Planet Art • Oreen City • Poplar Appeal •
·CIC1t s1cy·· ·"A New Eanh". Black Swan • 11'/ld lt;vely
Days· Reviews: Sacred Land Sacred Sa, Ice Age • Poem:
··sudden Tendrils"
0
ISSUE FIVE • FALL 1984
Harvest • Old Ways in Cherokee· Oin.scng • NuclClll Waste
• Our Celtic Heritage· Biorcg1onalism: Past. Prcser1~ and
Future • John WUnoty • Healing Darkncs.s • Politics of
Participation
1SSUETW£NTY.FQUR • SUMMER "89
Deep Listening· Life in Atomic City • Direct Action! •
Tree of Peace· C.Ommuruty Building· Peacemakers.
Ethnic Survival. Pairing Projcc:t . ··Battlesong".
Growing Peace in Culturos • Review: Tiu: Chalice and lhe
8/ak
ISSUE SIX • WINTER 1984-85
Wintu Solstice Earth Ceremony • HorseJ>3Sturc:a River·
Coming or the Light • Log Cabin Root • Mountain
Agriculture: The Right Crop. William Taylor. The Future
of the Forest
ISSUE SEVEN -SPRINO 1985
SuslAlnablc Economies • Hot Springs Worker Ownership
- The Orea! Economy . Self Help Credit Union· Wild
Turkey - Responsible Investing - Working in the Web or
Life
ISSUE EIOIIT • SUMMER 1985
Cc:lcbration: A Way of Life. Katuah 18.000 Years Ago
Sacn:d Sites • Folk Alts in the Schools . Sun Cycle/Moon
Cycle . Poems: Hilcb Downer· Cherokee Heritage Cenll!r ·
Who Owns Appalachia?
ISSUE NINE • FALL 198S
Titc Waldcc Forest. The Trees Speak. Migtating Forcsu .
Horse Logging · Sllll'ling a Troe Crop· Urb:tn Tr«s •
Acom Bre3d • Mylh Tim,,
ISSUE TEN • WINTER 1985·86
Kate Rogers. Circles of Stone Internal Mylhmllking •
Hohsuc Healing on Trial • Poems: Steve Knauth • Mythic
Pieces • 11,c UJ(lena·s Talc • Crystal M•gic •
ISSUE FIFTEEN • SPRINO 1987
Coverlcu • Woman f-ores1er • Susie McMahon: Midwife ·
Alternative Contnception Biosexuality Biorcgion:llism
l1lld Women Good Mcdic111C: Matria,chal Culture. P~art
ISSUE SIXTEEN • SUMMER 1987
Helen Wlitc Poem: V1$ions in a Garden Visi<>n Quc5t •
First Aow - Initiation • Ltaming in the Wililcmei> •
Cherokee Challenge· "Valuing Trees"
ISSUE EIOHTEEN • WINTER 1987-88
Vem11CUlar Architecture Drums m Wood and Stone .
Mountrun Home • Earth Encrgi<:s Eanh.Sheltettd Llving
Membrane Houses • Brush Shelter . Pocmr. Octobu Dwk
Oood Medicine: "Shelter"
ISSUE NINETEEN • SPRING 1988
Pcrclandra G3tdcn Spring Tonics . Blueberries .
WddOower Gardens· Onumy Hcrl>1list ·Flower~ ·
""Inc Origin of the Animals:· Story · Good Medicine:
"Power• • Be A Trec
"Drt,:lnl$pMking"
ISSUE THIRTEEN • FALL 1986
Center For Awalccnmg Eli1.abclh Callan· A Ocntlc Death
Hospice Ernest Morgan • Dealing Crcotively with De.th
• Home Burial Box· The Woke The Raven MockcrWood.slorc and Wildwoods Wooom • Good Medk:inc: The
Sweat Locl&e
~UAtt JOURNAL
ISSUE TWENTY . SUMMER 1988
Prcsavc Appalachian Wildcmcss Highland$ of Roan •
Cclo Community • Land Trust • A.rthur M<><i;an School •
Zoning Issue • "The Ridge" • Farmers and thc Farm Bill
Oood Medicine: "Land" Acid Rain· Ouke·s Power Play •
Cherolcee Miaohydro Project
P.O. Box 638 Leicester, NC Katuah Province 28748
For more info: call Rob Messick a1 (704) 754- 6097
Name
Regular Membership......$ I0/yr.
Sponsor..........................$20/yr.
Contributor.....................$50/yr.
Address
Ciry
Area Code
Summer, 1991
State
Phone Number
Zip
ISSUE TWENTY.TWO. Wl'NTER ·ss~9
Olobal Warmu,g • Fire This Time • Thomas Beny on
"Bion:gions" • Eanh Exercise. Kore Loy McWhiner. An
Abundance of Emplmess • LETS • Chronicles or Aoyd •
D:u,y Wood. The Beat Cl11n
Enclosed is $ - ~ - - u, give
this effort 011 ex1ra boos1
I can be a local contact
person for my area
ISSUETW£NTY.S1X . WlNTER, 1~89.'90
Coming or Age in the Ecoroic Eni Kids Saving Rainforest
• Kids Treecycling Company • ConOict Resolution .
Developing the Creative Spirit - Buth Power · Birth
Bonding. The Magic or Puppcuy . Home Schooling.
Naming Ceremony MOlhcT Eulh·s CIISS!OOO\ • Oardcnmg
for Children
ISSUETW£N'fY.SEVEN SPRINO. 1990
Transform•tion - lfoaling Power Pence to Their Ashes.
llealing in Kanlah Poem: "When Loft u, Grow·· • Poemr.
Stephen Wing The Belly • Food from lhe Ancient Forest
ISSUE TWENTY EIOITT SUMMER 1990
Carryu,g Ca~uy . Seu1ng Limit$ to Growth • Whu is
Overpopulation? • The Road Oang • Tru: Highway 10
No-.here • The 1.26 Projocl "Cuing Capacity"· People
and l11bitll • Designing the Whole Life Community .
Steady Sllltc - Poems, WOI Ashe B=n . Tnnsportcm.lbvos
· Review· COMUSlfl8
ISSUE TWENTY.NINE . FALl,JWlNTER 1990
From the MounLlllU to the Sea • Promc of The Little
Temt$- R1ver • Hcadwatcn Ecology • "It All Comes
Down 10 Water Quality. Wata Power: Action for Aquatic
HabitalS · Dawn Watchers · Cood Medicine: The Long
Human Being The Nonh Shore Road Kllllah Sells Out ·
Wllcrlhcd M"f) of the Katuah Province
ISSUETIURTY SPRJNO 1991
Economy/Ecology Rcsencrativa Economy • "Money Is
the Lowest Form of Wealth"· Claruvillc Mira:Je • The
VillJ,ge • Food Movers Ll/'eworlt • Oood Medicine:
"Village Economy·. Shelton Laurel. LETS
Issue 31
Back Issues
Issue# __@ $2.50 = $_ _
Issue # _ _@ $2.50 = $_ _
Issue # __@ $2.50 = $_ _
Issue # _ _@ $2.50 = $_ _
Issue#_@ $2.50 = $_ _
postage paid $ _ _
Complete Set (3· lO, 13-16, 18-20,
22-24. 26-30)
@ $40.00 = $,_ _
postage paid
X.Otu.nfi JourrwL page 35
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians Records
Description
An account of the resource
<em>Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians</em>, later simplified to <em>Katúah Journal</em>, was published from 1983 to 1993. A quarterly publication, it was focused on the bioregion of former Cherokee land in Appalachia. <br /><br /><span>The early issues of the journal explain the meaning of the Cherokee name, </span><em>Katúah</em><span>, and why the editors wanted to view the world through a bioregional lens, rather than political boundaries. A volunteer production, the editors took a holistic view in tackling social, environmental, mental, spiritual, and emotional topics of the day, many of which are still relevant. </span><br /><span><br />The <em>Katúah Journal</em> was co-founded by Marnie Muller, David Wheeler, Thomas Rain Crowe, Martha Tree and others who served as co-publishers and co-editors. Other key team members included Chip Smith, David Reed, Jay Mackey, Rob Messick and many others.</span><br /><br />This digital collection is only a portion of the <em>Katúah</em>-related materials in the W.L. Eury Appalachian Collection in Special Collections at Appalachian State University. The items in AC.870 Katúah Journal records cover the production history of the <em>Katúah Journal</em>. Contained within the records are correspondence, publication information, article submissions, and financial information. The editorial layouts for issues 12 through 39 are included as are a full run of the Journal spanning nearly a decade. Also included are photographs of events related to the Journal and a film on the publication.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
This resource is part of the <em>Katúah Journal Records </em>collection. For a description of the entire collection, see <a href="https://appstate-speccoll.lyrasistechnology.org/repositories/2/resources/937" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Katúah Journal Records (AC. 870)</a>.
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
The images and information in this collection are protected by the Copyright Law of the United States (Title 17, U. S. C.) and are intended only for personal, non-commercial, and educational purposes, provided proper citation is used – i.e., Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians Records, 1980-2013 (AC.870), W. L. Eury Appalachian Collection, Special Collections, Appalachian State University, Boone, NC. Researchers are responsible for securing permissions from the copyright holder for any reproduction, publication, or commercial use of these materials.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1983-1993
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
journals (periodicals)
Language
A language of the resource
English
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
<em>Katúah Journal</em>, Issue 31, Summer 1991
Description
An account of the resource
The thirty-first issue of the <em>Katúah Journal</em> focuses on "earth energies" and humans' reconnection with the earth through dowsing; earth healing and Earth Energy workshops; and understanding the Earth grid. Authors and artists in this issue include: David Wheeler, Madeline H. Dean, Joyce Holbrook, Clyde Hollifield, Richard Nester, Charlotte Homsher, Page Bryant, Richard Lowenthal, James Proffitt, Lee Barnes, Jim Houser, Emmett Greendigger, Ivo Ballentine, Rob Messick, David McGrew, George Agricola (1556), Douglas A. Rossman, and Mara. <br><br><em>Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians</em>, later simplified to <em>Katúah Journal</em>, was published from 1983 to 1993. A quarterly publication, it was focused on the bioregion of former Cherokee land in Appalachia. The early issues of the journal explain the meaning of the Cherokee name, Katúah, and why the editors wanted to view the world through a bioregional lens, rather than political boundaries. A volunteer production, the editors took a holistic view in tackling social, environmental, mental, spiritual, and emotional topics of the day, many of which are still relevant.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1991
Table Of Contents
A list of subunits of the resource.
Dowsing by David Wheeler.......3<br /><br />The Responsibilities of Dowsing: An Interview with Tom Hendricks by Madeline H. Dean.......5<br /><br />Ceremonies of the Moment: An Interview with Joyce Holbrook.......6<br /><br />"Jack-o-Lanterns," Acid Rain, and the Electrical Life of the Earth by Clyde Hollifield.......8<br /><br />Poem: "Old Houses" by Richard Nester.......10<br /><br />Katúah and the Earth Grid by Charlotte Homsher.......11<br /><br />The Call of the Ancient Ones by Page Bryant.......13<br /><br />"If the Earth Is to Heal, Our Hearts Must Be Broken" by Richard Lowenthal.......15<br /><br />Good Medicine: On Agression.......17<br /><br />Poems by James Proffitt.......18<br /><br />Green Spirits: Sacred Forests by Lee Barnes.......19<br /><br />Off the Grid by Jim Houser.......20<br /><br />Natural World News.......21<br /><br />"Just Doing Their Job" by Emmett Greendigger.......23<br /><br />Time to Take the Time to Take the Time by Ivo.......25<br /><br />Drumming.......26<br /><br />Whole Science by Rob Messick.......29<br /><br />Tuning In by Charlotte Homsher.......29<br /><br />Review: Light in the Wind.......30<br /><br />Chestnut Grafting Project by David McGrew.......31<br /><br />Events.......32<br /><br />Webworking.......34<br /><br /><em>Note: This table of contents corresponds to the original document, not the Document Viewer.</em>
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
<em>Katúah Journal</em>, printed by The <em>Waynesville Mountaineer</em> Press
Subject
The topic of the resource
Bioregionalism--Appalachian Region, Southern
Sustainable living--Appalachian Region, Southern
New Age movement
Dowsing
Environmental education--North Carolina--Asheville
North Carolina, Western
Blue Ridge Mountains
Appalachian Region, Southern
North Carolina--Periodicals
Language
A language of the resource
English
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
<a href="https://appstate-speccoll.lyrasistechnology.org/repositories/2/resources/937"> AC.870 Katúah Journal records</a>
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
<a title="In Copyright – Educational Use Permitted" href="https://rightsstatements.org/page/InC-EDU/1.0/?language=en 8" target="_blank"> In Copyright – Educational Use Permitted </a>
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Appalachian Region, Southern
Is Part Of
A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included.
<a title="Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians" href="https://omeka.library.appstate.edu/collections/show/79" target="_blank"> Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians </a>
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Journals (Periodicals)
Acid Deposition
Alternative Energy
Appalachian Mountains
Appalachian Studies
Earth Energies
Economic Alternatives
Education
Folklore and Ceremony
Forest Issues
Good Medicine
Habitat
Health
Katúah
Plants and Herbs
Poems
Radioactive Waste
Reading Resources
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Sacred Sites
South PAW (Preserve Appalachian Wilderness)
Transportation Issues
Turtle Island
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Wilderness
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Kirby and Eller Family Letters
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The Kirby and Eller Family Letters contain correspondence between the Kirby and Eller families of Ashe County, North Carolina. The letters focus mainly on day-to-day events such as planting and harvesting crops, health and illness, and household tasks, but also include references to the Civil War. The original letters of Collection 495 Kirby and Eller Family Letters, 1826-1938 are in the W.L. Eury Appalachian Collection.
<div class="subnote ">
<p><span class="less">Elizabeth “Bettie” Kirby (1851-1925) was born on February 15th, 1851 in Meadow Creek, Virginia, to parents Joel Kirby and Frances Roberts. Millard F. Kirby, Samuel J. Kirby, Emory T. Kirby, and Ada B. Kirby were her siblings. She married Joseph Lafayette Eller on September 22, 1875 in Ashe County, NC, where she lived until her death on December 9, 1925.<br /><br />Luke Eller (1806-1883) was born on June 8, 1806 in Ashe Co., NC. He was married to Sarah King<span class="elipses"></span></span><span class="more"> on March 27, 1829 in Ashe Co. He is the father of Joseph Lafayette Eller (Elizabeth’s husband), Hansford Eller, and Aswell Eller. Luke Eller lived in Ashe Co. until his death on December 6, 1883.</span></p>
<span class="note-content readmore expanded"><a href="https://appstate-speccoll.lyrasistechnology.org/repositories/2/resources/165#" class="expander">See less</a></span></div>
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<p><a href="https://appstate-speccoll.lyrasistechnology.org/repositories/2/resources/165">AC.495 Kirby and Eller Family Letters</a></p>
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<a title="In Copyright – Educational Use Permitted" href="https://rightsstatements.org/page/InC-EDU/1.0/?language=en 8" target="_blank" rel="noopener"> In Copyright – Educational Use Permitted </a>
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Letter from Jas Eller to Joseph Eller, 12 November 1892
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1892-11-12
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2 pages
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Letter_11_12_1892.pdf
Description
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This letter from Jas (James?) Eller to Joseph Eller discusses a proposition from Jas to work as a teacher at a school that Joseph Eller is involved with.
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English
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<p><a href="https://appstate-speccoll.lyrasistechnology.org/repositories/2/resources/165">AC.495 Kirby and Eller Family Letters</a></p>
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<a title="In Copyright – Educational Use Permitted" href="https://rightsstatements.org/page/InC-EDU/1.0/?language=en 8" target="_blank"> In Copyright – Educational Use Permitted </a>
Subject
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Job vacancies
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Ashe County (N.C.)
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<a title=" Kirby and Eller Family Letters" href="https://omeka.library.appstate.edu/collections/show/17" target="_blank"> Kirby and Eller Family Letters </a>
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https://www.geonames.org/4453028/ashe-county.html
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Text
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PDF
Letters (Correspondence)
Education
Eller family
family letters
Jas Eller
Joseph Eller
letter
North Carolina
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Oral History Transcript
Appalachian State University • Collection 111, Tape 235
Interviewee: J.O. Shell
Interviewer: Barbara Greenberg
23 July 1974
BG: Barbara Greenberg
JO: James O. Shell
BG: This is a recording of Mr. J.O. Shell, done by Barbara Greenberg on July 23, 1974 at his son’s
home in what area is this?
JO: It’s Elk River.
BG: Well, tell me Mr. Shell were you born and raised in this area?
JO: No, I was born on Upper Shell Creek in Tennessee. And my father died when I was two
months old and my mother, she moved back to the Heaton area. And I was principally raised in
the Heaton area.
BG: What year were you born?
JO: I was born in 1892.
BG: How many brothers and sisters did you have?
JO: I had one whole sister, one half-sister, and four half-brothers.
BG: Was Shell Creek, was that area named after your family?
JO: Well, it’s been known as Shell Creek ever since I’ve known anything. My grandfather lived
there and went to school. I went down there and went to school on up to Shell Creek for a
while; stayed with my grandfather.
BG: Do you remember very much about your grandfather?
JO: Well, not too much.
BG: What did he do for a living?
JO: Well, he owned a farm up on Shell Creek. Worked on a farm.
1
�BG: Was your father a farmer also?
JO: No, he was a carpenter.
BG: Oh, was he?
JO: Yes, he was a carpenter. I had part of his old tools until the ‘41 flood and I loved them. I had
his toolbox and tools sitting out on the porch and it washed a part of the kitchen away and all
his old tools away.
BG: Boy! I hear the flood back then, was it in 1940 or was it ’41?
JO: I believe it was ’41, but I’m not sure.
BG: I’ve talked to several people who lived out in the Foscoe area and they told me that the
flood really hit hard out there.
JO: Oh, it was hard here. I can remember a hard one in 1901. But I can’t remember much about
it because I was too young.
BG: Did the flood of ’40 or ’41, did that affect many of the farmers around here? Did they have
a real hard year that year?
JO: Yes, it washed a lot of their stuff away.
BG: Did anybody have any crops to sell or did they just barely have enough to feed their family?
JO: I don’t know of anybody that had anything to sell. Don’t remember anyone. But I do know,
remember it was stronger across the way. I had a good garden up there and it came and
washed the land away and just left a rock bar.
BG: How did your family decide how much of each crop they should plant each year?
JO: Well, I don’t know really, they just decided about what they could really take care of. Back
then people used horses you know, and plowed the ground with a horse. Some tried to plow
with one horse, some of them with two. And they mostly tended their crop with a hoe. Back
when I was a small boy.
BG: I bet you worked in the fields a lot, since your family was smaller than a lot of the other
families at that time.
JO: I didn’t understand just what…
BG: No, I’m just saying that you probably had to do a lot of work, a lot of chores yourself since
2
�your family was so much smaller, is that right?
JO: Yes, yes.
BG: What were some of the other chores that you had to do?
JO: That was about the biggest thing that we did, was farm, but when I got to be old enough to
drive a team, my stepfather, he had a yoke of oxen, and he would put me out hauling for those
oxen. I’d make about $3 a day. I would give him six days and make $18 a week with that team. I
thought we were doing well.
BG: Can you describe a typical day for me when you had to go out and work the oxen? What
time would you get up in the morning?
JO: Oh, usually got up about four o’clock and got the horses fed, after that I drove the horses
and I would get feeding, get up and go to feed about four o’clock in the morning. Eating
breakfast started out in the dark and it would be dark when you got back that night.
BG: When you came home that night, would dinner be all ready for you?
JO: Oh, yes. And I can remember working at the Cranberry dome (iron ore that was mined in
nearby Cranberry). And I worked ten-hour days.
BG: How far was that to walk?
JO: It was about, something over four miles each way.
BG: Can you remember if there were ever any years when your family didn’t have enough
food?
JO: No, we always had food, except only during the 1901 flood I believe. Anyway, food got
scarce then and we didn’t have much, couldn’t get anything one time.
BG: Did your family plant their crops according to the moon?
JO: Well, to some extent they did.
BG: Can you remember any of the certain signs that were good for planting certain crops?
JO: Well, I don’t remember just exactly but a lot of times, certain things they wanted to plant
when the moon was new. And other things when it was an old moon.
3
�BG: When the Depression hit, what were you doing at this time?
JO: In ‘30?
BG: 1929, ’30 yes.
JO: I was postmaster at that time.
BG: When did you first become postmaster?
JO: I was appointed in 1914, I believe in November. I forget what day in November. My
commission is in there on the wall (in another room); you can go in there and look at it if you
want to.
BG: Great. In a little while maybe I can even take a picture of that. Well, tell me a little bit about
you, when you were postmaster. What did you do?
JO: Well, I worked about every day in the post office. But sometimes, I’d leave my wife and my
daughter, when my daughter got old enough with the post office. And I got out and worked on
a farm. And I can remember as I was always lazy about milking my cows and people teased me
and said my cows would wait for me to milk them until after dark.
BG: How many years were you postmaster?
JO: Nearly 39.
BG: 39 years, boy. And in which area? In Heaton?
JO: Heaton, yes. The old building is there yet. Do you know where J.C. Ellis’s store is?
BG: On the left as you’re going back towards Boone?
JO: Boone, yes ma’am. The old post office is right in front of his on the right hand side of the
road. It’s there yet. That old building is.
BG: Let me see, what was the political scene like at that time? How did people tend to vote?
JO: Well, just like they do now, but you know we didn’t have any radios, television like now. You
watch news right off and sometimes it would be three or four days before we would get the
news. I can remember when Woodrow Wilson was first elected. There was a friend of mine, he
was about my age and we were kind of good friends you know, and together quite a bit. And I
knew he was a strong Republican you know. Just after we heard the news that Woodrow
Wilson had been elected to his first term. I saw him coming down the road. I stuck my head out,
just waiting until he got past the door and stuck my head out around, out the door and hollered
4
�“Hurrah for Woodrow Wilson.” He turned back and looked over his should and said, “Hurrah for
a dad burn fool!” (both laugh). That really tickled me you know. I just fell back and laughed. And
then later on, after he became a man Mike changed from a strong Republican to a strong
Democrat. But he and I were always friends.
BG: Were the majority of the people Democrats at that time?
JO: No. Most of the folks in Avery County were Republicans and are yet.
BG: Was the Heaton area, was that Avery County at that time?
JO: Yes. At that time it was. But at one time it was Mitchell County, that was when I was just a
small child. Avery County was established in 1910 or 1911. I forget which.
BG: Did many people in this area have slaves at that time?
JO: Have what?
BG: Slaves.
JO: Sleighs? The children had quite a few. I can remember a mail carrier that carried the mail
from Boone to Elk Park. It gets slick and bad sometimes and he’d carry it with horses on a sled.
Jeff Billings was the mail carrier at that time. And he usually just had a small team of horses. He
would hook them to that sled and carry the mail on a sled. And then another time there was a
route from Heaton to Beech Creek. My brother-in-law, he carried the mail from Heaton to
Beech Creek. He’d tell me about snow drifts being so deep that a lot of times he’d be walking
there, he’d come to a snow drift that he would get a hold of the horse and pull him through
that drift.
BG: Boy, that’s some deep snow.
JO: The winters back then, you know, were even harder than they are now.
BG: I wonder why all of these changes are taking place like that?
JO: Well, I think the Bible is fulfilled because, you know, the Bible says that time will come that
you can’t tell winter from summer. It seems to me that its getting much lighter than they used
to be.
BG: A lot of people really believe that that’s what’s happening. Was there many “crooked
carrying-on” in the political elections?
JO: Well, it was about lit it is now, as far as I know. People…
5
�BG: Somebody was telling me that they didn’t go out and buy your vote with money. They
would go out and then take you to the polls and make you sick.
JO: Oh, I never did get drunk enough to know anything about that. I never id drink any whiskey
much. I remember getting drunk when I was a little bitty boy. My mother let me go over to my
grandfather’s to stay overnight, my sister and I. And she told us to come home the next
morning early. My grandfather he was a good religious man but he always kept a jug, an old
stone jug sitting under his bed with a little whiskey in it. And he’s take it down before breakfast
every morning so he got his whiskey and picked him up a glass. He passed it to me, I just hung
on to it and drunk until he took it from me.
So good you know and I wasn’t used to it, and so I got so sick, my sister couldn’t take me home.
It was way up in the day, about 10 or 11 o’clock until I was able to go home. I didn’t know any
better and I just kept drinking. That’s the only, well, I remember getting drunk one time after
that. I was a small boy. I wasn’t but…Sunday school teacher.
Did you hear him sing at Elk Park Sunday nights? I got a couple of other fellers and went out
one night and had a pint of whiskey. We drank that pint of whiskey and all got kind of high on it.
That was my last. Well, another time I stayed with one of my friends one night. One of them got
so drunk he couldn’t get home and so we had to stay all night. And next morning I went home
and felt so bad. And my stepfather had a big old mule and he told me he wanted to plow that
mule that day. And I thought well, could I ever make it? But I finally got the old mule and wen
over to the field and after I was there I got to work, I got hot, and I got better and worked all
day. But that was my last time I ever got the old saying is “high.”
BG: Did a lot of the people around here used get, as you say, “high?”
JO: Well, no more than it is now, I don’t think.
BG: Let’s go back to your early life on the farm a little bit. Did you and your sisters, were the
jobs – the chores, were they divided that you had to do a certain think or did you all work
together?
JO: No, my stepfather would go off and tell us to do certain tasks, give us a certain thing and we
usually always got it done. If we didn’t we were afraid we’d get a whipping.
BG: Did you and your sister alternate jobs? Like you did something one time and the next time
it had to be done and she would do it?
JO: No, we usually just did little jobs both together. Of course, she helped in the kitchen you
know, and I didn’t too much.
BG: What type farm machinery, farm equipment did you use then?
6
�JO: We just used old one horse plows and some two-horse turn plows, hillside plows you know
mostly. And then we used hoes for the rest.
BG: When modern farm machinery came out, what kind of effect did it have on the farmer?
JO: Well, on some of them, it was quite a help. But some didn’t farm enough to buy it and they
had to farm the old fashion way.
BG: Did it seem to give the farmer a lot more leisure time or did he have to spend a lot of time
taking care of his new equipment?
JO: It seemed like he worked quite a bit.
BG: Did your family ever grow any crops, any cash crops?
JO: I don’t remember it. Had many things to sell. Now, I raised beans after I got grown. I raised
them for several years. I sold them of course and then I sued to raise cabbage to sell.
BG: Would you sell your crops to big buyers or would you sell it to small buyers?
JO: Well, usually just small buyers would come around with a wagon or a truck you know. Buy
it. After I got older and raised more stuff, there was quite a lot of people hauling the stuff to
Knoxville and sold it.
BG: Did they get much better prices down there?
JO: They would get a much better price down there than they could around here.
BG: Would all the farmers get together and just make one big haul to Knoxville or would
everybody go separately and take their own?
JO: Why, they would usually have enough stuff just to take a load of their own, you know. We
used trucks. Of course we traded down around Johnson City and Elizabethton some back in the
horse and wagon days. They hauled it on a wagon.
BG: Did your neighbors help you harvest your crops?
JO: Well, some. They would, back in those days you know. They would clear a piece of land, and
they would get a certain date for a log rolling and a lot of the men in the community would
come and help pile the logs you know. And you would always fix up a good dinner for them and
have a good time. I remember I was going to a corn shucking one night after I was married,
after I was grown and was shucking corn and somebody hit me in the head with an ear of corn. I
never did find out who it was. I don’t know whether they did it accidently or whether they did it
on purpose.
7
�BG: Can you remember any other stories about any particular corn shuckings when something
funny happened?
JO: Well, I remember we used to go to several but I don’t remember any specific accidents that
happened much.
BG: Did people give rewards for people who shucked the most corn or did you play games or
anything like that?
JO: Well, sometimes they would play games. They never got any rewards that I remember.
BG: It seems like families used to be closer together then, and the neighbors used to help out
more? Could you tell me a little bit about that?
JO: Well, if a person…if one certain person was building a new house you know, the neighbors
would come and help him on the building. And you don’t see any of that anymore. They always
have to do their own work. Nobody will help you free much. Of course people do yet, you know
some. But they were better to help each other seems to be, back several years ago than they
are now.
BG: Where did you go to school, around here?
JO: Well, we had a school over at Heaton. I went there until 1910. I believe it was and then I
went to Melvin one year, down at Melvin College. But I had not completed high school at that
time. And in 1911, we had a high school, the first high school that was ever in Avery County. I
believe it was 1911 or 1912, I’m not sure. And I went to high school one year at Elk Park on the
side of the hill.
BG: Can you describe it to me, what did it look like?
JO: Well, I can’t remember too much of what it looked like. But I can tell you who the principal
was. Professor Pearson was his name. But I don’t remember his given name.
BG: How did he teach, if there were so many different grades in this one classroom, how would
he teach everybody something different at the same time?
JO: Well, they just have different classes, you know. And while one class was doing one thing
then he’d be teaching another class something else.
BG: Yes. Did you used to write on slates?
JO: Yes, we used to have old slates, you know and slate pencils?
8
�BG: Penny pencils?
JO: No, I don’t know if they were. I don’t know what they called them, they didn’t have any
wood on them, you know they were jut a little pencil you marked with on the slates.
BG: They didn’t have any wood on the pencil, it was just like lead?
JO: They were chalk you know, they used a blackboard and used chalk a lot. Can you remember
seeing chalk?
BG: Chalk?
JO: Chalk? To write with.
BG: White chalk, yes, we used that.
JO: Well, we used that a lot back in my days, when I was going to school.
BG: What type of classes did you learn when you were in school? What subjects?
JO: I studied arithmetic and algebra, history and geography, and I don’t remember what else.
BG: What type of games did you and your friends used to play at your recess time?
JO: Oh, we played ball. They hit the ball and then they would run and if they got across before
they go to the based, why they were out. Somebody else took their place. And then we had
another one called “Bull Pen.” I know my uncle, he was a preacher, but he came to the school
house and played Bull Pen with us. But I don’t remember too much about how we played it.
BG: Did you used to make your own balls?
JO: Oh yes, made it out of cotton thread.
BG: Did you wrap leather around the balls, is that what you used to do? Somebody was telling
me they would take their mother’s old shoes that were all worn out and wrap leather around
the balls to make them last longer?
JO: Well, I think they did that some, but usually back when I was going to school they just were
thread ball. Just used cotton thread and rolled them.
BG: Was it hard to make one?
JO: No, no.
9
�BG: Did the girls play these games with you or…
JO: Sometimes they would play ball some. I remember they used to have a game they would
call “Dare Base,” they played that quite a bit.
BG: Did a lot of the town people around here used to meet at one certain store in town and sit
around and tell folktales and things like that?
JO: I remember up there in Heaton, they used to do that and called it “Rover’s Story.” A little bit
you know around there, some people called it “Rover’s Story.”
BG: That’s a good name for it I guess. Were any of your neighbors or your family, were any of
you all involved in playing banjos and making music?
JO: No. None of my family did it. I had an uncle named James Heaton, he was a merchant,
wholesale and retail merchant there in Heaton and he enjoyed singing mighty well. He usually
always had singing for about two or three times a week. About once a week in the middle of
the week and then on Sunday and Saturday. And he preached quite a bit.
BG: Did you feel it was, or did the people feel that it was important to be real active in the
community?
JO: Be active?
BG: Active, yes.
JO: Well, I guess it was about then like it is now. People are about the same.
BG: It seems like it would, the more active you were, the more it would help your political
career and everything like that.
JO: I can remember Eddie Ray’s brother, and he lived up there at Heaton. After they put in a
Trailways bus, he would see that bus come in and say “Yonder, here comes the big bus.” That
was Homer, Homer, Jr. Eddie Ray’s brother.
BG: Does he live around, does he live…where now?
JO: I don’t know where he’s at now. He must be in California. He’s still in the service.
BG: Can you tell me the different between the things you did in the summertime compared to
the wintertime? Was the summer a lot easier, even though you had all your farming to do or
was it easier to fight off the cold in the wintertime?
JO: Well, of course we didn’t have so much work to do, you know. Everybody burned wood
10
�mostly then. And had to get out and cut a lot of wood when it was cold and bad to get it in. I
remember that we always had a fireplace and we would, if there was a fire, we would get a
buckeye and cut it for back sticks. That was a stick to burn in the back and the other wood such
as hickory and sugar tree and maybe oak and so on, for to burn in front of that back stick. That
old back stick would be green buckeye and it would burn, last a long time.
BG: Burn a lot slower.
JO: Yes.
BG: Can you tell me something about the houses back then?
JO: Well, there were not many people that had very good houses. Just two or three roomed
houses about what they mostly had. Some of them only had one room. And you never saw any
carpets on the floor very often.
BG: Really? I thought that a lot of the ladies used to weave their own carpet?
JO: I never knew of anybody weaving any carpet but, I can remember the spinning wheels. They
used to take wood and make yarn out of it. And use yarn for whatever they wanted to make
like socks and so on.
BG: A lot of the people raised their own sheep then?
JO: Oh yes, there was quite a few sheep then but there are not that many now.
BG: I don’t know, why do people not raise sheep anymore around here?
JO: Well, dogs go so bad until I had to sell. I’ve raised sheep I guess, for 30 years. And gos got so
bad, they killed the sheep, so I had to sell mine. Sold them two years, two or three years ago. I
haven’t raised any in about three years.
BG: Can you remember what the attitude of the people was when the first cars came to the
area?
JO: Yes, I can remember that people, they thought it was something great you know. And I can
remember the first one I ever rode in. One of my friends that lived in Banner Elk bought one of
the first cars that was around. I’d been somewhere walking and he picked me up between
Heaton and Elk Park and gave me a ride and that’s something I can remember the first time I
ever drove one too. Back then you didn’t have to have any license, you just bought your car and
went ahead and used it. It was like with horses you know. But that didn’t last too long until you
had to have a tag for each car.
11
�BG: How fast would those first cars go?
JO: About 20 miles per hour. That was a pretty good speed.
BG: Well, how did most people feel towards the car? Did they welcome it?
JO: I think so. I think most of them appreciated them.
BG: Can you think of any specific changes that started coming into use?
JO: Well, I don’t know of anything special that happened. Of course people began to buy you
know quick as they, people didn’t have money then that they have got now. And they would
buy a car when they got able.
BG: What about the railroads? Can you remember the first railroads?
JO: Yes. I can remember a little narrow gauge that came from Johnson City to Boone. And I
don’t remember, I believe it was the 1940 flood that washed away so much of it between
Cranberry to Johnson City until about oh, I don’t know. Its been discontinued I guess about 20
years. They called it E.T. & W.N.C, the East Tennessee and Western North Carolina Railroad, but
most people called it the “Arbuckle.”
BG: what was the train ride like? Was it hot and smoky and anything like that?
JO: No, no, it was a mighty good one. People you know riding the train. Sometimes they would
have a special trip. I can remember going to Boone one time on a special trip. Just for the trip
you know, no business. Just for the trip.
BG: Did you take many trips that weren’t for business very often or did you usually go places for
business purpose only?
JO: Mostly for business purposes.
BG: Can you tell me the difference in a weekday compared to a weekend?
JO: I have to understand just what you mean by that.
BG: Well, did you do farm work on the weekends the same as on the weekday?
JO: Oh, yes. People used to work six days a week. Now they only work five. They used to work
ten hours a day and now they only work eight.
BG: Did everybody in the community go to church on Sunday?
12
�JO: No. But people went to church very little back then in those days. Of course, there were not
near as many people as they are now you know. There just were not that many people like
there are now. But they attended church very little back then. Like they do now, about the
same amount.
BG: Were the church services different then compared to how they are now?
JO: Well, not too much. Preacher usually preached the Bible you know, couldn’t be much
difference.
BG: Some people have told me that…what was I going to say? Oh well. What were funerals like?
JO: Well, they were different when somebody died in the community. Somebody made a coffin,
they didn’t go to a store and buy it. There wasn’t any place to buy it. Somebody would make it.
They would be buried in a homemade coffin. Now they wouldn’t know what a homemade
coffin was I don’t guess.
BG: I don’t guess so.
JO: I used to remember this fellow named John Harmon back in the Beech Mountain section
that made coffins. He usually kept a few made ahead, you know, for people. But a lot of times
they would make your coffin after they died.
BG: Were the graveyards scattered throughout the area or did people like to be buried on their
own land?
JO: Well, some often wanted to be buried on their own land but now the graveyards in Heaton,
I can remember the first one that was buried there. And it’s a pretty big cemetery now. But
there are a lot of differences you know, in funerals in those days and today. People just had to
take them to church in a wagon, with a horse and a wagon. I can remember when my mother
died. They took her to church in a wagon. That was back, I guess in the ‘30s or ‘40s.
BG: Were there not any laws about where you could bury people and where you couldn’t bury
people?
JO: They used to have cemeteries around certain places in the community, you know, they
would all have a name. Now line the one up there at Heaton, one named the Heaton Graveyard
and there’s another one across on the other side of the river called Smith Graveyard, and
another one back over on the mountains a little further called (inaudible) Graveyard. You see
people mostly named them after people that were first buried there. They would start their
own graveyard, you know.
BG: So they were not really like church graveyards then?
JO: No.
13
�BG: Did they have a service at the…like a graveside service or did they hold the service at the
church?
JO: They had both. They would have a funeral at the church and then the preacher usually
talked some at the graveyard.
BG: Was your family involved in any crafts in any way?
JO: Not that I remember.
BG: The crafts that people speak of today were really just your livelihood in a way. Its how you
kept going you know, making your own clothes and spinning and weaving and all that.
JO: People used to make about all their clothing you know. I can remember a fellow down at
Shell Creek whose name was, he was a Miller and his wife had knit a pair of socks. He said, “I’ll
give you a quarter for the pair of socks,” Yes, I guess you would like to cheat your wife out of a
few cents. I can take them down to Woodrow’s store and get 25 cents for them. Now, I don’t
know whether that’s true or not, but they told it to an old gentleman.
BG: The mother used to knot all the socks for her family?
JO: Oh, yes.
BG: How many pair of socks would you have?
JO: Oh, two or three I guess. Didn’t have many. Just enough for a change you know. Of course
some would have more than others.
BG: How many pairs of pants would you have? Just those that you worked in everyday and then
another pair for Sunday?
JO: Yes. I can remember when I was just a boy. Usually a boy wore knee pants and he was
sporting a pair of pants and a little shirt. One Sunday a couple of boys would come to spend the
Sunday with me and we went swimming just a little ways over the hill on what they called
“Gator Branch.”
I noticed that one of the boys he was in a little hurry to get his shirt and pants on before I had
mine. I took out up the road after him, he was about a quarter mile ahead. He got ready and
just threw my pants way off above the road on an old brush pile. I had to crawl in that brush
and get my pants.
BG: Did you get him back?
JO: Oh, I threw rocks at him all the way back.
14
�BG: Can you think of some more old stories of experiences that you had that would be
interesting to us?
JO: Well, I don’t know of anything that would be very interesting. Of course, you know it
wouldn’t be interesting to me anyway. After I got to be older why I had the experience of going
to Georgia quite a lot. I bought a farm down there, between Greensboro and Madison. I bout a
326 and ¾ acre farm down there for $3,300 I believe it was. I kept it from 1927 until about 16
year I think it was. I would go down there every three or four times a year. We kept renters
there, kept cattle down there.
I would buy cattle down there and bring them back here and sell them. And I had quite an
experience going to Georgia and back.
BG: You own quite a bit of land today don’t you still?
JO: Well, they have my tax at about 471 acres. And than a couple of lots at Heaton.
BG: What were land taxes like back when you first started buying land?
JO: Oh, they were cheap then. Land was cheap too.
BG: How much did you pay for most of the land that you own now?
JO: Now, this house, you see what it is. About 30 acres, maybe about 33 acres of land was the
first I ever bought here on Elk River. I bought it for 1,800 dollars.
BG: 30 acres for 1,800 dollars?
JO: And then I bought another 100 acres gross on the other side of the mountain called Fall
Creek. I got it at a sale. A man owed them 2,000 dollars for the mortgage to somebody else and
he didn’t pay for it, they put it up for a public sale and I got those 100 acres of land for 500
dollars. When UI went to the sale there wasn’t anybody there and I thought that would bid
against me. His name was Ed Lewis, and when the man brought the sale up he said not to start
for less than 500 dollars. He turned around to Mr. Lewis and said “What will you give me for
it?” I said, “Oh, I reckon I’ll give you 500 dollars.” So I got 100 acres of land for 500 dollars, he
had been asking 2,000 dollars for it. “The buck stops here.”
BG: The land down here where the Elk Falls are?
JO: No, I own some land below the falls.
BG: You don’t?
JO: No, that belongs to the government.
15
�BG: I went swimming down there. It was so cold, I did it and every muscle in my body froze up.
Did you go down to the big one? Did you go down to that?
JO: Yes. My next-door neighbor went down there and he jumped off the top. That is what
about 65 feet isn’t it?
BG: I’ve seen people jump off. Not me!
JO: I wouldn’t want to do that!
BG: Didn’t you tell me about the mailman who used to ride ½ down the falls and jump the rest
of the way? What’s the story about the mailman?
JO: I don’t remember, but I do remember a mailman who was carrying mail to Beech Creek and
one day he came to eat, got his mail, then started back to Beech Creek and the water was up
pretty high. It had been raining hard. Along by night he came back with a wet mail bag. He said
the creek was so high it swept it away and he found it down the creek. So I took the mail u of
that bad, fried it, and delivered it. Every piece of it, then sent the bag back.
BG: Well, what happened to the mailman?
JO: He didn’t get hurt, he went on. I’ve got a piece that was written about him, rowing the
branch. I’ve got it, I’ll let you read id you would like to.
BG: Let’s talk some more now.
JO: He never would ride a horse. He walked. He would just about run downhill. But he walked
fast the entire time. He just had one hand, lost one hand back in his young days.
BG: Can you give me a comparison of your feelings of life compared to today to when you were
growing up?
JO: Well, I don’t think it was any better. Of course there were not so many people back then
and it seemed that things were not as hurried when I was young.
BG: Do you think having a small community school was better than having the larger schools in
big areas now?
JO: I think you can have better schools by having them small, but it seems like now such as
Avery County. At one time they had three schools, and now they have one. People have to
come from Beech Creek and Plum to Newland for school. That’s awful far for them to travel to
high school. But still people think it’s better; I guess they think it is because they still continue
them all in one.
16
�BG: Would you say that life is easier now or harder?
JO: Well, people don’t work as hard as they used to back then. But it seemed that people were
stronger then and could enjoy it better. You know the Bible speaks of a generation that will get
weaker and modern. It seemed to be that its getting that way, don’t you?
Of course you know people are a lot wiser than they used to be, because they didn’t know how
to make automobiles and airplanes, and like that.
End of interview
17
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
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Appalachian Oral History Project Interviews
Description
An account of the resource
In 1973, representatives from Appalachian State University (ASU) began the process of collecting interviews from Watauga, Avery, Ashe, and Caldwell county citizens to learn about their respective lives and gather stories. From the outset of the project, the interviewers knew that they were reaching out to the “last generation of Appalachian residents to reach maturity before the advent of radio, the last generation to maintain an oral tradition.” The goal was to create a wealth of data for historians, folklorists, musicians, sociologists, and anthropologists interested in the Appalachian Region.
The project was known as the “Appalachian Oral History Project” (AOHP), and developed in a consortium with Alice Lloyd College and Lees Junior College (now Hazard County Community College) both in Kentucky, Emory and Henry College in Virginia, and ASU. Predominately funded through the National Endowment for the Humanities, the four schools by 1977 had amassed approximately 3,000 interviews. Each institution had its own director and staff. Most of the interviewers were students.
Outgrowths of the project included the Mountain Memories newsletter that shared the stories collected, an advisory council, a Union Catalog, photographs collected, transcripts on microfilm, and the book Our Appalachia. Out of the 3,000 interviews between the three schools, only 663 transcripts were selected to be microfilmed. In 1978, two reels of microfilm were made available with 96 transcripts contributed by ASU.
An annotated index referred to as The Appalachian Oral History Project Union Catalog was created to accompany the microfilm. The catalog is broken down into five sections starting with a subject topic index such as Civilian Conservation Corps, Coal Camps, Churches, etc. The next four sections introduced the interviewees by respective school. There was an attempt to include basic biographic information such as date of birth, location, interviewer name, length of interview, and subjects discussed. However, this information was not always consistent per school.
This online project features clips from the interviews, complete transcripts, and photographs. The quality and consistency of the interviews vary due to the fact that they were done largely by students. Most of the photos are missing dates and identifying information.
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Collection 111. Appalachian Oral History Project Records, 1965-1989
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1965-1989
Sound
A resource whose content is primarily intended to be rendered as audio.
Artist
Shell, J.O. (interviewee)
Greenberg, Barbara (interviewer)
Duration
Length of time involved (seconds, minutes, hours, days, class periods, etc.)
01:13, Election of Woodrow Wilson, 01:28, Heaton Postmaster
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
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Interview with James Oliver (J.O. Shell), July 23, 1974
Subject
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Shell, James (1891-)--Interviews
Farm life--North Carolina--Avery County--History--20th century
Avery County (N.C.)--History--20th century
Avery County (N.C)--Social life and customs--20th century
Description
An account of the resource
James Oliver Shell was born on January 26, 1891 in Shell Creek, Tennessee where his grandfather owned a farm and worked as a carpenter. His father died when he was two months old, so his mother reared the children living with her father. Mr. Shell had one sister, a half-‐sister, and four half-‐brothers. As a young man James O. Shell moved to the Heaton community of Avery County North Carolina and was a farmer and served as the postmaster in Heaton from 1914 to about 1953. He died on July 4, 1980 at the age of 88.
During the interview James O. Shell reflects on working his farm, local politics, and playing baseball as a youth. He discusses log rollings, corn shuckings, and the how neighbors helped each out. Some other topics he discusses are Tweetsie Railroad, homemade coffins, local cemeteries and playing baseball.
Creator
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Shell, James Oliver
Source
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<a title="Appalachian Oral History Project Interviews, 1965-1989" href="https://appstate-speccoll.lyrasistechnology.org/repositories/2/resources/195" target="_blank">Appalachian Oral History Project Interviews, 1965-1989</a>
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
23-Jul-74
Rights
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Copyright for the interviews on the Appalachian State University Oral History Collection site is held by Appalachian State University. The interviews are available for free personal, non-commercial, and educational use, provided that proper citation is used (e.g. Appalachian State Collection 111. Appalachian Oral History Project Records, 1965-1989, W.L. Eury Appalachian Collection, Special Collections, Appalachian State University, Boone, NC). Any commercial use of the materials, without the written permission of the Appalachian State University, is strictly prohibited.
Format
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MP3
Extent
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17 pages
Language
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English
English
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Sound
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
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Shell Creek (T.N.)
Avery County (N.C.)
Avery County
cemetery
coffins
corn shucking
Education
Elk Park
ET & WNC railroad
farming
Heaton
local politics
postmaster
railroad
rural mail delivery
Tennessee
Tweetsie Railroad
-
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PDF Text
Text
Oral History Transcript
Appalachian State University • Collection 111, Tape 26/27
Interviewee: Bill Brinkley
Interviewer: Lester Harmon
1973 February 8
Introduction
Snow is falling outside and we have just settled down in the Brinkley home after a delicious
dinner. Bill’s home with his wife Rosemary reflects his love for people and nature. Family
portraits flank the walls.
Bill, over six feet tall, is a very stalwart man. His hands tell the story of a life of hard work, and
his eyes speak to you in an honest, cheerful way. He is very attentive to my questioning and is
very interested in our oral history project. A very congenial and intelligent man, Bill has lived in
Elk Park all of his life and runs a hardware store there. He has much to offer about the Elk Park
and Avery County area and is very genuine and entertaining in is delivery.
This is an interview with Bill Brinkley in Elk Park, North Carolina on February 8, 1973 for the
Appalachian Oral History Project by Lester Harmon.
LH: Lester Harmon
BB: Bill Brinkley
Pam: Pam ??
Mrs. Brinkley: Mrs. Brinkley
LH: Would you give us the name and the birthplace of your parents and the number and names
of your brothers and sister and their ages?
BB: My father was D.G. Brinkley, and he was born in Grassy Creek, which is near Spruce Pine.
He was born about 1885. My mother was a Carroll. She was born in Chester, South Carolina
about 1888 or 1889. My oldest brother lives in California named Edwin who is about 70 years of
age. My father was 91 when he died and he’s been dead about two years. My mother is still
living; she’s 88 and living in Florida with my sister. There were six children; the eldest was
Edwin. My oldest sister is about 65 and she lives in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida. My next brother is
about 63 and lives in Los Angeles, California. The next child in line is another sister who is 60
years old; she lives in Los Angeles. Then my brother and myself are twins. We’re 56, born in
1917 in two different months – June and July.
LH: Is there a story behind that?
BB: We were actually born in June, but at that time of course the roads were very bad, and
1
�there was not much transportation. The doctor that brought us in, when he listed our birth in
the courthouse in Newland, why, he must have gone over in August. He said, “Well, they were
born the 27th of the last month.” So I have two birthdays. That’s the reason I get so many
presents!
LH: When did you come to Elk Park?
BB: I was born here.
LH: Can you talk a little bit about what life was like as a child? Did you live on a farm and grow
your own food? Do you remember any scarce periods?
LH: Well, as a child no. That was before the Depression. My father was a merchant, and we did
raise right much food that we ate, but that was customary with everybody in this section, of
course. I had a very good childhood. I had my twin brother, always had someone to play with,
of course. So, as I remember, I had a very happy childhood. We didn’t realize any Depression
until about 1929-30. It was about 1929 when the Depression started.
It wasn’t too bad in this mountain area because people, most everyone had land, and they did
raise most of their food. Maybe not a big variety, but a sufficient amount of food. Our worst
period was between 1929-33. At that time, there was scarcely any money, and of course, we
had very little clothing, except about one change, and that was it. But by 1935, we had about
come out of the Depression, this whole area really. Although the WPA lasted until about almost
up until World War Two started.
The lady next door to us, she was a great hand at canning, especially peaches. She had several
hundred cans of peaches, and she canned them all in usually ½ gallon jars, fruit jars, or quart
fruit jars. She dated them all, and she had some that were 14-15 years old. She didn’t have any
children, so it was just her and her husband and she canned peaches every year, no matter
what. I’m sure when they both died; they still had some peaches in that basement.
Pam: Would you tell him about the Sunday suit you had?
BB: Well, the first suits we got were about 1933 or 1934; we each got a suit of clothes. My
brother and I put it on to go to Sunday school. We got up the road a ways, at the time we lived
across the street from here, and we looked at each other. One, I don’t remember which, but
one called the other one and said, “Well, you look like a Philadelphia layer.” We just turned
around and came back in, and took the suit off. We put on our overalls and went to Sunday
school. That same suit after I had it just a short while. I was playing on Sunday, and it got warm,
so I took it off and laid it across this fence and forgot it. Of course, we didn’t remember it,
because we didn’t wear the suit except on Sundays, and it was on a Sunday when I took the
thing off and hung it on the fence.
2
�The following Sunday, I couldn’t find the suit. I couldn’t remember where in the world that coat
was, and it was during a rainy period. Oh, two or three weeks later, I happened to look up
where we played that Sunday, just glanced up that way, and I saw the coat hanging on the
fence. And of course it was ruined, so I didn’t have another suit until about 1937, somewhere
along there. But, as I say, by that time, the Depression was over with as far as we were
concerned, and most people in this section. I really don’t think the mountain people felt the
Depression nearly as hard as the people in this section. We have been classified as a poverty
area along with the Kentucky group and so on, but in my opinion, Avery County is really not a
poverty stricken country, never has been.
LH: You were saying that you were living here at the start of the Depression, and were all the
kids in the family here, or did any of them leave home during the Depression, or did they leave
home because of the Depression?
BB: No, my two eldest brothers left during the Depression, but not because of it. They went
west to seek their fortunes, and they’re still out there, living in California. But it wasn’t the
Depression that made them leave. The oldest one I think left before the Depression even
started.
LH: Your father and your mother, did the Depression have a big effect on their jobs, or did they
change the jobs during the Depression, or were you working during the Depression at all
anywhere?
BB: Well, my father had a store and of course my mother never worked. I graduated from high
school in 1934 at the age of 16, and I went to work in that store soon as we were out of high
school. Of course the Depression was practically over then, well it wasn’t over, but times were
certainly better by 1934. But we didn’t have enough money to go to college, and we did have to
go to work.
LH: You’re talking now a little bit about school. Can you tell me if your parents went to high
school or if they went to college? Tell me about your brothers, sisters, and about your school
life and some of the teachers or schoolmates that you had and how the schools have changed
around here in Avery County and Elk Park since you were there?
BB: My father went to college two years at N.C. State. My brother went to Davidson, my oldest
brother. He was going to be a minister but he changed his mind on that. None of the other
children ever went to college.
LH: Do you remember anything about how the schools were when you were in grammar school
and some of the good times that you had and what the schools were like then?
BB: Well, I remember of course, the first day that I ever went to school and remember my first
teacher. Her name was Miss Bean. Back then it wasn’t the first grade, your first grade was
called the “Primer,” and that was because of a book that you had was named The Primer. That’s
3
�why you never went to the first grade, you went to the Primer.
Then you went to the second grade. The schools were very good, but by the time we were in
fourth grade, they combined two grades, the fourth and the fifth. We had the same teacher for
the fourth grade and the fifth in the same classroom. She’d teach the fourth half a day and the
fifth grade half a day, and the other half of course was supposed to study.
Then, that grammar school was here in Elk Park, and in the sixth grade we were transferred to
the high school building. It started, you weren’t in high school, but the sixth grade was taught in
the high school, and the seventh grade, and then your freshman year in high school started in
the eighth grade, and of course we only had four years of high school, so you were out at the
eleventh grade.
LH: You graduated from Cranberry School?
BB: Yes, Cranberry High School.
LH: The building looks a lot like the one that my dad went to school in. I think he’s 59 now, but
he graduated from a school that looked a whole lot like the Cranberry School out here.
BB: Well, we had very good teachers in high school, I thought, and I still think so – looking back.
We had an excellent English teacher. If I learned all that she tried to teach us, I would know a
lot more English I’m sure. But her primary interest thought as in literature rather than English
grammar. But she was an excellent teacher, and I had her for four straight years. But she was
very hard, and a lot of students tried to get another teacher if they possibly could. So her
classes were never too large; really we learned more in her class, I thought, than the other ones
that went to the English teacher.
LH: You say that when you got out of high school, you and Bob went to work at the store. After
the store, what did you do? Or have you stayed with the store up to now?
BB: I’ve never done anything else other than extra things that I’ve gotten into, but primarily I
have never left the store.
LH: How has the store changed since back then? A whole lot?
BB: Of course we started in an old building, but we built a new store that we’re in now. We
built in 1940, just before World War Two started, and since that time, I built on it in 1957, built
an addition on the east end and built the post office on the west end. But the building is really
comparatively new although it was, part of it was built in 1940, but it’s a solid brick building.
The old store was a wooden structure, very commonplace with what you would think of as an
old country store.
4
�LH: Wasn’t it a good grocery store then?
BB: We had general merchandise. We had groceries, dry goods, shoes, a little hardware,
practically anything you would want.
LH: It’s mainly hardware now, isn’t it?
BB: Yes.
LH: What kind of churches were in the Elk Park area or in the Avery County area then? What
was the main denomination of most of the people around here? What were the churches like
and how much have they changed since then?
BB: They haven’t changed a great lot. I’m Methodist, my father was Methodist, and my mother
was Baptist, but we all went to the Methodist Church, and it’s the same church we’re going to
today. Of course the first church burned; then it was rebuilt and remodeled. The Baptist
Church, of course they have done quite a bit of remodeling on it, but it’s in the same place and
primarily the same church as when I was a boy.
And the Christian Church here was an old wooden structure when I was a boy; it was torn down
and has been a new church built since that time, but the church – the Christian Church is
approximately 65 years old. The first structure is primarily the same because it was a brick
building, and it burned, and it just burned the inside out and the roof off of it. It was built back
just like it was except a little more modern.
LH: Did a lot of people pitch in and help build the church, a lot of community people?
BB: Yes, it was built and rebuilt entirely by people, by members of the Methodist Church and
some of the friends of Methodists from Memphis. There was no outside help at all except from
the Memphis Conference did, I think – maybe gave us 1,000 dollars, something like that. The
church burned about 1952 and cost about 20,000 dollars to rebuild.
LH: Is that Elk Park Methodist Church (pointing)?
BB: Yes.
LH: How did Elk Park get its name? Do you know?
BB: Well, I’ve asked that question to many an old timer and I don’t believe any of them really
ever knew. But the only tale that I have ever heard was that they claimed that the elk, which
was the deer of course, because we had no elk, never had, but the deer well, this was one of
their stopping places. You know deer migrate and they usually run within a certain area, and
they were supposed to have had a place here that they stayed for a time, and that’s why they
named it Elk River.
5
�I really don’t know whether the deer had anything to do with the naming of all this Elk and
Banner Elk. I do know that Banner Elk was named particularly from, mainly from the fact that it
was – everyone that lived there practically were Banners; they settled the town. But Elk Park at
the turn of the century was the hub of this whole section. The railroad came here. Elk Park was
about three times as large as it is now. They had the railroad, which was narrow gauge of
course, coming to the Cranberry mines, which was mining iron ore. The town had a depot, had
three hotels, it had a bank, had a sawmill.
It had three livery stables. A livery stable is where people went to rent a horse and a buggy or a
horse. There were three large ones so everybody came into this area stayed in Elk Park, and the
community grew out of here to the various other places in the area. Salesmen and so on came
from Johnson City from wholesale places that came up here selling goods. They all rode that
train to Elk Park.
LH: What train was that?
BB: Tweetsie.
LH: Tweetsie, that’s in Boone now right?
BB: That’s right. Narrow gauge and it ran to Boone, but we had a flood in 1940, either 1940 or
’41 and the flood washed the railroad out, practically all of it out from Cranberry to Boone. And
it was beginning to be a losing proposition, so they were allowed to not build it back. Got
certain laws and regulations about busses and trains; you can’t just stop them whether you lose
money or not. You’ve got to carry on.
So they came on the Cranberry for a number of years until 1950. I believe the last run that
Tweetsie made was about 1952, and they were allowed to cut the railroad out. Of course it was
really more expensive to get anything in on the railroad by that time than it was by truck,
because it being a narrow gauge, everything had to be transferred.
It came by rail, and it was transferred to Johnson City to this narrow gauge train. We sold sheet
rock and bought it by the carload out of New York and it costs us less freight to get it from New
York to Elizabethton or Johnson City than it did by rail from Johnson City on up here, which is
only 30 miles away. Of course the mines were operating too at that time.
LH: Mines around here?
BB: The Cranberry iron ore mines that was only two miles from here. One of the biggest belts of
ore in this selection known anywhere, magnetized ore that is. It is magnetized, but it’s a low
grade, and that’s why they are operating. The cost is no greater to get out; in fact, it’s less
because granite is so strong.
6
�They didn’t have timber in any of the mines; they just left a pillar of granite every so often. They
didn’t have to timber the mine with wood, so it wasn’t any more expensive to get out but the
grade was so low, the ore grades were so low that it got to where it wasn’t profitable to
operate. Some of the mines closed sown about 1930, somewhere long then.
LH: How did Elk Park start? I mean, who first settled here and was it because of mining that the
town got started?
BB: No I think…deer hunting, elk hunting. I don’t know where he went (telling a story of a local
old timer), maybe to Montana or somewhere northwest, and he was telling this group of
people when he got back about what all he had seen, how it was way out west, what a big
country it was and said, “The forest was so thick,” he said, “You can’t even walk through them,
the trees were so close together.” And he said, “Elk,” he said, “You’ve never seen such elk. They
had horns this large” (used his hands as wide as he could spread them). Finally somebody
stopped him in the middle of the story, and they laughed and said, “If the elk had horns that
big, how did they get through those trees that were so close together?”
This gentleman didn’t even slow down on his story, he just looked at the man and said, “That’s
their story.” This was typical of the type of stories that he told, and I guess if somebody kept a
record of all of them, it would really had been a best seller. He certainly was surely full of them.
Oh, he told another story about hunting. He was a great hunter and said he saw twelve turkeys
sitting on a limb and he said, “I checked my gun and only had one cartridge. I jerked up my gun
and got all twelve of those turkeys.”
Somebody said, “Well, how in the world (laughing) did you get all those turkeys with just one
shell?” He said, “Well, I’ll tell you. I shot and split the limb and when the limb went together
caught all the turkeys’ toes and held them there until I got up and killed them.”
But he was full of stories. We have had lots of characters like that.
LH: How about some of the community leaders or decision makers, like the rulers of the town
and everything over the years?
BB: Well, I have been mayor of Elk Park myself and an Alderman two or three times. I had the
distinction of running for mayor against the only woman that ever ran for mayor. Of course she
campaigned like everything and I didn’t campaign, but I still won. She is to my knowledge, the
only woman who ever ran for mayor of the town of Elk Park.
LH: How long ago was that?
BB: That was in 1939 or ’40, about then. We’ve had some good men, had a Harmon by the way,
good community leader. He taught Sunday school and taught the men’s class for about 15 or 18
years in the Methodist church. I was superintendent at the time, the superintendent for 17
years, of the Sunday school up until the time I went into the army in fact. But Mr. Harmon, he
became a U.S. Marshall under the Eisenhower administration, and he had some sort of illness
7
�and died. He wasn’t too old of a man when he died, but he had left Elk Park of course when he
became a U.S. Marshall and moved to Asheville.
LH: You have said that Elk Park used to be bigger than it is now. Has the population decreased
that much, or just the general size?
BB: Well, Avery County has grown less in population until the last three or four years. Now,
what happened there was, of course, a lack of jobs, and a lot of people who moved away to get
these jobs during the war, stayed so the population went down from 14,000 to 10,000 at one
time, and it was because of lack of jobs. There was no industry to amount to anything for a
number of years, the mines had closed.
After the war, they started coming back a little bit, but not too much, but then “tourism” has
done more to increase the population – to get the population back to closer to the point where
it was, than anything else. People who are retired want to come to the mountains to lived
because they know this I the finest place on earth. A lot of people like to come here and there’s
been a good deal of the land that’s been sold to outsiders who want to come here, and will be
here for the rest of their lives.
LH: Has the tourist industry had, in your opinion, a bad effect on the natural beauty of the
mountains around? I know like Beech Mountain and some of the bigger places used to be, well
nothing there and a lot of people feel like it has done more harm than good. I was wondering
how you feel about that?
BB: Well, of course there are several thoughts on that. The county as a whole felt like tourism
was the only way out of growing. Naturally they wanted to grow and they hated to see the
population decreased. So they tried to make it as attractive as possible for the tourists. But it
was slow coming for the simple reason there were no accommodations and so people didn’t
come because of that. And then on the other hand, people are afraid to build accommodations
because the tourists aren’t coming. But it made a vicious cycle out of it.
These resort areas such as Beech Mountain and Sugar, ski places, some people resent them
because for one thing, it has made land go sky-high, and it’s gotten where it’s hard to even buy
a piece of land in Avery County unless you pay what I would say, an exorbitant price for it.
Really, in that respect it’s (tourist industry) hurt. Of course, there’s not, well, there a few fairly
big landholders in the county, but the land isn’t for sale. Meade Corporation owns about 4,500
acres and they sell it sometimes. They are the biggest owners.
LH: Who is that?
BB: Meade Corporation – they are a paper company of course, and they recently sold 40,000
acres in Jackson County. That’s been a big, well, quite a bit in the paper about that because
they didn’t sell it to the Forest Service, but they offered it to the Forest Service and they said
they would like to have it but they didn’t have the money. Then Meade was ready to sell and
8
�these developers from Florida bought it and gave them five million (dollars) for it. And now, of
course everybody over there’s hollering that they really didn’t give the government a chance to
buy it – that’s neither here nor there, I don’t know how much truth there is to it, but I do know
from personal experience that the government is tied up in too much red tape when it comes
to something that they would like to have, that they don’t do anything about it until it’s too
late. I had 500 acres in the middle of crops that they owned all around and they wanted to buy
it. They never did buy it, and finally I sold it to another party. So, I expect that’s about what
happened to Meade.
BB: At the beginning of the Depression, for this area, when the government decided – I don’t
know; they had been giving help elsewhere, but the way it was started here, the help situation
from the government, they have you a little piece of paper that said that you were entitled to
so much food money and you took that to the store. We took it just like it was a five dollar bill.
For instance, this allowed you to buy that much food, or whatever it said. And of course the
amount was given accordingly to the number in the family. Now this was a monthly thing.
LH: Rations?
BB: No, it was – I forget what they called it, but anyway – it was the largest amount that I can
remember anybody getting was one man that had 13 children, he got $21 per month. He spent
half of that for tobacco and snuff, his wife dipped snuff and he chewed tobacco. And he spent
the rest of it for essentials that they could not raise. And they existed on it; nobody actually
thought they were poor, poverty stricken, or anything else.
So it just shows you that really – well, there was no great need for money. That man raised
practically everything that they are, with few exceptions, but that $21 helped out with him
using half of it for snuff and tobacco!
LH: How many were in the family again?
BB: Thirteen! He had 11 children plus himself and his wife. Then at a later date, I knew a man
that had 19 children and he and his wife, and he was never on welfare and never had a job. He
pulled moss, dug herbs, and that sort of stuff for a living and yet he raised 19 children.
LH: You said welfare – are you talking about the…
BB: I’m talking about a later date, such as when the welfare program started after the war.
What we called the welfare program that started after World War Two. And this man was never
on welfare, and yet he never had a job working for anybody unless he just wanted to. He made
his living out of…well, off the land.
Mrs. Brinkley: Did they pick Galax?
BB: Yes, Galax and moss and dug ginseng and crabapple roots and so on. Ginseng is a root
9
�that’s very valuable, even to this day. The Chinese use it extensively for medical reasons of
some reason or other, but that’s where it was all sent from, but it’s always brought anywhere
from $15 to $40 per pound, and of course it’s very scare. But I had known people that found
patches of it where they’ve gotten out 800-900 pounds and made themselves quite a bit of
money. But that hasn’t happened but very few times.
LH: Do you remember the change in the schools or the churches or the country stores around?
Do you remember any great changes in those during the Depression? Working in the store
(Brinkley Hardware Store), you probably saw some changes in the store there?
BB: Well, I don’t quite know what you mean by change. We saw, naturally business get better
as people got more money, and as the Depression ended. Of course, the war naturally created
– between the WPA and the war – they created many more jobs and there was money around.
So, the volume of business gained constantly.
Pam: What about the packaging in the store? How has that changed?
BB: Well now, that’s changed completely in my day. When I first started working in the store
nothing was packaged. Sugar came in 100 pound bags and we poured it in a barrel. People
never bought more than five pounds, something like that. Most people bought a quarter’s
worth, which was about five cents per pound.
You had to weigh it out on a scale and tie it up in a bag. Lard or shortening came in a 100 pound
drum. You opened the top of it and there was a little paddle that you took, you put the lard in a
tray and sold whatever the amount they wanted from a nickel to 50 cents worth. Flour was not
sold in anything less than 25 pound bags. Meal was not sold in anything less than 25 pound
bags. Self-rising was unheard of. Peanut butter came in a 25 pound can; you sold it similar to
lard, in a little wax tray.
Bologna didn’t have to be refrigerated; you had no refrigeration to start with. Rather it came in
a white cloth sack and it would keep, we hung it from the ceiling. Bananas we bought by the
stalk. Sold two, three, or four – they wouldn’t ask you for pounds. They would say give me five
bananas or a half dozen bananas, or whatever.
Pam: Do you want to tell him about the time when you stuffed your banana – was it a banana?
BB: It was a banana yes, that’s a – I don’t know whether it’ll help his story or not. I was – that
was before I was out of school of course, and my daddy had the store and we would go in there
in the afternoons and try to steal us a little piece of candy or something. We didn’t have to steal
it, he was very liberal – he would let us have it, but you would ask and he’d say how much you
could have. So we got in this stalk of bananas, which was very unusually in that day and time.
The stalk was as green as a gourd. But we wanted one so badly, he finally let us have one and I
decided that I’d get me another one, and I didn’t ask for it. About that time I got it about half
eaten, my daddy came around the counter. I just stuck all of it in my mouth and swallowed it,
10
�and that night I nearly died of a stomach ache. But, we finally had oranges and that sort of stuff
at Christmastime – in the store. There was really nothing packaged.
LH: Did you have the pickle barrel and the cracker barrel?
BB: Had a pickle barrel, pigs feet – pickled pigs feet. Sold fish from a big barrel, salted fish that
you could keep from now on. People had to take them home and soak them all night, and they
usually ate them for breakfast.
By the way, the main reason for that is they had to soak that salt out of them before they could
eat them. They would soak the fish during the night and it was just a breakfast food to the
mountain people at that time. Nuts, we never sold any nuts except at Christmastime. Oranges,
tangerines, and all that – just Christmastime. Saw very few toys and we had a tin can for a car –
played around with the bank and make a road out of it with a tin can, an empty tin can.
Pam: What about buckeyes?
BB: Buckeyes were very similar I appearance to a chestnut, except much larger. And a lot of
people had the superstition that to carry a buckeye was lucky. This one boy was very
superstitious. He carried a buckeye for about 20 years that I know of. But, he got in trouble one
time, and he was telling the story later, he said, “I promised the great Lord and this buckeye
that if I get out of this, I’ll never do it again!”
You were talking about calamities…I guess the biggest calamity that ever hit this section of the
country was the blight of the chestnut trees. I don’t know really what extent it was here, but I
think the chestnut tree was about the majority of the types of trees all through the Appalachian
area, probably and maybe all the way to the West Coast, I don’t know.
LH: A lot of barns were built from wormy chestnut weren’t they?
BB: That’s right. And now its worth anywhere from 1,000 dollars to 1,200 per thousand board
feet. I bought it for $15 a 1,000 board feet, sawed and planed - $15. But the chestnut tree was
one of the biggest losses we ever had in many ways. The loss of the timber, the loss of the
chestnuts to the animals of course, the squirrel, deer. Practically all of the animals ate chestnuts
and by losing the chestnuts, why, it badly affected the wildlife of this area. But, you really didn’t
realize how many chestnut trees there were until they all died.
I can remember going from here to Blowing Rock on what we call the Yonahlossee Trail, which
is still there any is part of the (Blue Ridge) Parkway now. You can see a great distance along that
road, up the mountain and below the mountain, and before the leaves would come out, or just
when they would begin to come out, you could see all these dead chestnut trees. I’d say ¾ of
the trees were chestnut trees. But they would stand out at that period you see, and you could
tell that they were dead chestnuts. It was a great loss to the whole country.
11
�LH: What was it that caused the…
BB: The blight?
LH: Yes, the blight.
BB: Somebody brought in a chestnut tree either from China or Japan, and it was diseased, and
it gave the blight to the chestnuts in North America, and that blight spread. They never found
anyway to stop it, and it killed every chestnut tree in the United States.
LH: They can’t grow them anymore, can they?
BB: Well, they have found one that’s blight-proof, but it’s really, its what they call an English
Chestnut. It’s much larger than our chestnuts. You’ve got to plant it and take care of it, like
you’re taking care of an apple tree or something.
Pam: Well, what kind is it that the Penland’s have? They have one in their yard; we eat
chestnuts from it all the time. I think it’s a Japanese kind or something?
BB: Well, it probably one of those English Chestnut trees – they call them “Horse Chestnuts”
because they’re larger. They are really not a true chestnut as far as the chestnut we had. I’ve
never heard of anybody cutting the timber from them, because we don’t have that many of
them. The chestnut timber now, if you can find any that were sound, some were found even
years afterward, and they were able to cut a lot of the logs found on the ground or still standing
and cut the sound wood out of them. It brought big money because it was scarce wood, and
everybody like those worm holes.
LH: My sister and her husband got a wormy chestnut bookcase for a wedding present and they
said that was the best present they got. It’s really beautiful.
BB: But, the funny thing about the chestnut tree. If it was cut but not soon enough, it got shaky
and a shaky chestnut lumber was worthless and still is even today. If you had it, it would be
worthless. In fact, a man offered me 40,000 board feet about five or six years ago. I had a wood
working shop and we had a lot of demand for things made of chestnut lumber that was cut, so
he offered the 40,000 feet for $35 a thousand feet. I didn’t know that much about it. So, I went
to somebody that did and asked, “Out of 40,000 feet, surely to goodness you could cut enough
good out of it to get five or six thousand feet,” and he said, “No, if it’s shaky chestnut, you
cannot get anything good out of it. If you had ten million feet of it, you couldn’t.” So I didn’t buy
it.
About all you can use it for is for sheathing for a barn or something like that, but it won’t last
anytime you see. Once it’s exposed to the weather, it doesn’t last.
12
�LH: Comparing childhood during the Depression days, when you were growing up – what did
you like best about those days? What were some of your best days? What do you like best
about living now and what did you not like back then?
BB: It would take a long time to answer all than, but quickly: The Depression didn’t bother us
because I was too young, and we were in a business where I guess, we made money faster than
the common run of people. So I had a car when I was 17 and have had one ever since. The first
car I ever bought was the only one I was ever able to pay cash for, I think. I guess that I was
better off between 1935-45, than I ever have been since!
LH: I guess that’s something you don’t like about now, the way everything cost a lot more.
BB: Well, it’s really harder to accumulate anything or make any money this day and time than it
was in those days because of high taxes and the high cost of living. Bought insurance back when
it was cheap and had the money for it. If you had the money today it would be worth well, what
is it worth now? A dollar is worth about 40 cents. I doubt that it’s even worth that.
The government’s index claims that stuff has risen so much, that I can remember the first car
that I bought in 1935, brand new Deluxe Ford cost 600 dollars. And of course, everything is not
that much difference of course, but that is an example – that’s why I said with a little money
back in those days, you could really have yourself a ball, because it didn’t cost anything. Go on
vacation, I’ve gone to Florida and spent less than $200, now it will cost you that and a little
more than that to buy a plane ticket there and back.
LH: Or just to stay down there a while in a motel. Forty dollars a day in a motel for practically all
of them. What do you like best, if you can pinpoint anything, about today’s lifestyle, the way
things are now?
BB: Well, I like the improvements man has made, certainly. A lot of people say the “Good old
days.” When I say that, I’m talking about the fact that stuff didn’t cost much. But I still
appreciate the fact that we have all these “luxuries” like dishwashers that do a lot for the
housewife.
But the trash-smasher, the dishwasher, the refrigerator, -- that’s one thing we’ve always had, so
that doesn’t mean as much to me, but I do – from the fact that until after the war, there was
more than 10% of the people outside of the town that had lights. Everywhere now rural
districts have lights, and that is to be a very, certainly a luxury for them. Bound to be, and that
was the first thing that everybody did after the war that could get them of course, these other
things could come in such as washing machines, refrigerators, whatever.
But I do like the fact that man has made all the progress he has. I’ve certainly seen more
progress made in my lifetime than was made for previous, well, some people say millions of
years. Some people say 10,000 years, or whatever. But that’s up to the individual to think what
he wants to about it, but I think more progress has been made in the past 25 years than ever
13
�has been made before. And maybe in the next 25 years it will be – it’s hard to imagine, but
maybe just as much or more.
LH: If you could change something right now, what would you change?
BB: Well, that’s hard to keep from thinking of personal matters, and that wouldn’t have
anything to do with what you’re asking.
14
�
Dublin Core
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Title
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Appalachian Oral History Project Interviews
Description
An account of the resource
In 1973, representatives from Appalachian State University (ASU) began the process of collecting interviews from Watauga, Avery, Ashe, and Caldwell county citizens to learn about their respective lives and gather stories. From the outset of the project, the interviewers knew that they were reaching out to the “last generation of Appalachian residents to reach maturity before the advent of radio, the last generation to maintain an oral tradition.” The goal was to create a wealth of data for historians, folklorists, musicians, sociologists, and anthropologists interested in the Appalachian Region.
The project was known as the “Appalachian Oral History Project” (AOHP), and developed in a consortium with Alice Lloyd College and Lees Junior College (now Hazard County Community College) both in Kentucky, Emory and Henry College in Virginia, and ASU. Predominately funded through the National Endowment for the Humanities, the four schools by 1977 had amassed approximately 3,000 interviews. Each institution had its own director and staff. Most of the interviewers were students.
Outgrowths of the project included the Mountain Memories newsletter that shared the stories collected, an advisory council, a Union Catalog, photographs collected, transcripts on microfilm, and the book Our Appalachia. Out of the 3,000 interviews between the three schools, only 663 transcripts were selected to be microfilmed. In 1978, two reels of microfilm were made available with 96 transcripts contributed by ASU.
An annotated index referred to as The Appalachian Oral History Project Union Catalog was created to accompany the microfilm. The catalog is broken down into five sections starting with a subject topic index such as Civilian Conservation Corps, Coal Camps, Churches, etc. The next four sections introduced the interviewees by respective school. There was an attempt to include basic biographic information such as date of birth, location, interviewer name, length of interview, and subjects discussed. However, this information was not always consistent per school.
This online project features clips from the interviews, complete transcripts, and photographs. The quality and consistency of the interviews vary due to the fact that they were done largely by students. Most of the photos are missing dates and identifying information.
Contributor
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Collection 111. Appalachian Oral History Project Records, 1965-1989
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1965-1989
Sound
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Artist
Brinkley, Bill (interviewee)
Harmon, Lester (interviewer)
Duration
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01:01, Buckeye luck charm
Dublin Core
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Title
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Interview with Bill C. Brinkley, February 3, 1973
Description
An account of the resource
Bill Carroll Brinkley was born on July 27, 1917 in Elk Park in Avery County to David Brinkley (b. July 24, 1879 – January 1971) who was from Grassy Creek near Spruce Pine, North Carolina and Carroll Ivey Brinkley who was from Chester, South Carolina, and he had five siblings including a twin brother. He graduated from Cranberry High School in 1934 then started working in the family hardware store and served briefly in the U.S. Army enlisting in February 1945. He died on March 20, 2001 at the age of 83.
During the interview he reflects on a happy childhood during the Depression partly because everyone was self‐sufficient and raised their own food. He provides several anecdotal stories about his education, the family owned Brinkley Hardware Store in Elk Park, religion and local churches, the origin Elk Park, the railroad, the Cranberry mine, and tourism in Avery County. He also discusses collecting herbs and rationing during the Depression and relates stories about panthers and the Brown Mountain Lights.
Creator
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Brinkley, Bill Carroll
Source
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<a title="Appalachian Oral History Project Interviews, 1965-1989" href="https://appstate-speccoll.lyrasistechnology.org/repositories/2/resources/195" target="_blank">Appalachian Oral History Project Interviews, 1965-1989</a>
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
3-Feb-73
Rights
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Copyright for the interviews on the Appalachian State University Oral History Collection site is held by Appalachian State University. The interviews are available for free personal, non-commercial, and educational use, provided that proper citation is used (e.g. Appalachian State Collection 111. Appalachian Oral History Project Records, 1965-1989, W.L. Eury Appalachian Collection, Special Collections, Appalachian State University, Boone, NC). Any commercial use of the materials, without the written permission of the Appalachian State University, is strictly prohibited.
Format
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MP3
Extent
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14 pages
Language
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English
English
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Sound
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
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Elk Park (N.C.)
Avery County (N.C)
Subject
The topic of the resource
Brinkley, Bill Carroll--Interviews
Avery County (N.C.)--Social life and customs--20th century
Depressions--1929--North Carolina--Avery County--Interviews
Farm life--North Carolina--Avery County--Interviews
Christian life--North Carolina--Avery County--Interviews
almanac
Avery County
car
Depression
Education
Elk Park
farming
folklore
religion
tourism
-
https://omeka.library.appstate.edu/files/original/97152d942f5a0d9f9963f14014b0343d.mp3
609256f96d7501078431a09bdec71d14
https://omeka.library.appstate.edu/files/original/cb26a23146691a2df3890fb004e59b8c.pdf
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PDF Text
Text
Oral History Transcript
Appalachian State University • Collection 111, Tape 19
Interviewee: Mr. and Mrs. Arlie Moretz
Interviewer: Karen Weaver
5 February 1973
KW: Karen Weaver
AM: Arlie Moretz
MM: Mrs. Moretz
KW: This is an interview with Mr. and Mrs. Arlie Moretz for the Appalachian State University
Oral History Project by Karen Weaver at Boone on February 5, 1973. First of all we’d like to hear
a little bit about your family life, when you were growing up as children.
Where were you born?
MM: I was born over here at Silverstone. It’s in Watauga County.
KW: How many children were in your family?
MM: Eight.
KW: What about you Mr. Moretz, how many were in your family?
AM: Ten, nine grew to maturity. The first one died in infancy. I was born near the Tater Hill Lake
on the Meat Camp side. Granddaddy entered the land on which I was born; nobody had lived
there except the wild creatures until daddy moved in there and cleared an area. Five of the
children were born there. We walked three miles to school each day. I started at five and hiked
six miles away round-trip. We went on the Meat Camp side now, not back near the Tater Hill
Lake area, but in the other direction east of the Tater Hill. Very, very rugged mountainous
terrain and we were poor, very poor.
I can remember going with mother to gather roots and herbs so that we might have clothes and
most of all (our clothes) were made with needle and thread, she didn’t have a sewing machine,
mostly homemade clothes. Little tiny shirts and pants she ordered from a place called Proximity
Mercantile Company in Greensboro. I didn’t know where Greensboro was in those days.
KW: Did you grow most of your food and have a farm?
AM: Yes, it was country. We grew our food practically all of it, everything.
MM: We raised our own corn and beans and potatoes, and we raised some sheep and cattle
1
�and had horses, mules, and hogs – had our own meat. We walked to school about a mile.
AM: Daddy was known for his hogs, he grew an enormous lot of tem, everybody in the country
came to dad to but hogs. Not only did we have meat, we had cane “lasses.” Now, I didn’t say
molasses, I said “lasses,” and we grew fields of buckwheat and we had to have pancakes made
with the buckwheat.
I remember how we cut it with a cradle, that’s a scythe sort of machine; we thrashed it with a
flail. I called it a frail, and I remember how daddy made those things with a hickory spout, about
as big around as your arm and beat it with a pole axe, the back of it, until it was limber. Wailed
the daylight out of it that the grain and separate it from the straw and we didn’t have the
windmill with which to clear out the trash and chaff, we borrowed one.
We would take it home on a little sled or wagon and use it to clean up the grain. We not only
used the buckwheat for pancakes, but it was ground and given to animals to eat too. We called
it “chop,” it was ground grain.
KW: What about your schooling, how much did you and your parents have?
AM: Granddaddy was a highly educated man, he was a minister. Great grandfather came to the
county, one of the first to move into the county and he was married twice and had 25 children.
I know where he is buried, I helped select it. Myrtle and I together helped pick a gravestone and
helped do the inscription on it. It’s near my original home in Green Valley on the Meat Camp.
KW: What was his name?
AM: His name was Jonathan Moretz. My grandfather was one of his children. He was a welleducated man, but daddy wasn’t. I think he went about to the third grade. I’ve heard him say.
Mother was something like a seventh grader. And I don’t know how much education you would
say I had. I haven’t done anything for the last 60 years except schoolwork. That’s quite a little
while to spend isn’t it? I have a couple of degrees, a B.S. (Bachelor of Science) and a M.A.
(Master of Arts), both from ASU (Appalachian State University). And I’m a minister and a
schoolteacher with 39 years of experience under my belt.
KW: What do you think about the way schools have changed from the way when you went?
AM: Well, when I been to go to school, we had two to three, maybe four teacher schools where
I went and I’ve taught in the same place for three years. And I’ve always taught in a one-teacher
school for three years and we’re back to the one-teacher school concept now. The team
teaching, individualized instruction, is practically the same thing that we had in those days in
the one-teacher school.
It’s the one-to-one “teacher-pupil” relationship. Frankly, I think we’re deteriorating some. I
don’t think the concept is worth a “blanket-blank!” I can’t say the word because I am a minister.
2
�I don’t like teamwork. If the thing that we have done prior to this was good enough to develop
the best technology on the face of the earth, and good enough to put a man on the moon and
bring him back safely, I can’t see throwing it away.
KW: When you were little, what did you hear about elections and politics?
AM: Well, in those days we weren’t told much about why we held elections and in the schools…
there was very little said about why we were voting. Frankly, I don’t think that we knew what it
was all about in those days. I honestly can’t remember before the seventh or eighth (grade),
know much about why an election was held. We may have learned a little bit in a casual sort of
way, but I can’t remember anything.
KW: What kind of transportation did you have when you were growing up?
AM: The horse and the wagon. We rode horseback to church or in the wagon or we walked.
Walking was the biggest thing. There were no automobiles when we were little.
KW: Do you remember when you saw your first automobile?
AM: Yes.
KW: Do you remember what year it was?
AM: No, I don’t. It was somewhere in the area of 1918, near the terminal point of World War
One. I don’t remember seeing one before 1918.
KW: What did you think about it?
AM: We were fascinated by it. We hitched a ride on it if we got a chance. And the first airplane
was just as fascinating.
KW: Could you tell us some of the things about the “Potters” and the other bad men?
AM: Booney Potter was one of the meaner ones and John O..J. was pretty bad to get drunk. I
knew him personally. He told me one time that he was so drunk that he passed out and they
thought that he was dead. They laid him out on a cooling board and dug his grave. He said that
they had made his casket and put him in it. When he came to, he sat up and asked them what
was going on, to those who were there, if it was some kind of joke. The people gathered told
him that he would have been buried in another few hours, buried alive!
John O..J. told me that he hadn’t been drunk any since then. I can remember him sending me to
preach in his truck down in Bulldog, Tennessee. Quite an interesting deal, his grandson took me
and we spent the night and the only time I ever caught the itch in my life was sleeping with him.
3
�KW: Do you remember any of the stories about the people killing each other?
AM: I can tell you about an actual murder that occurred over there in Pottertown. I could tell
you two. Let me tell you the one. Brown was his last name. I shouldn’t put the first name of the
“Brown” in the story because I think he’s still living. He wanted to borrow his cousin’s truck to
buy some more “white lightening” as they say. His cousin wouldn’t let him have his keys to the
truck. They quarreled a little bit about it. The incident culminated in the death of one of the
boys, the first cousin to the one who killed him.
I was in the church preaching when that happened. The other incident involved a merchant
whose last name was “Ellison.” He had operated a sawmill, a country, store and post office. He
was practically an illiterate man, but he had a great deal of business acumen. Everything that he
touched like King Midas “turned to gold.”
I remember he went into a business transaction with a fellow named “Smith,” to manufacture
little pins for the insulators of the telephone wire to be wound around, little pins about six or
eight inches long. Mr. Smith didn’t live up to his end of the bargain and Mr. Ellison ran an
attachment on some of the pins, some sort of legal transaction so that the workmen could be
paid and Smith hopped onto Mr. Ellison with a knife and was about to whack him a little bit and
Ellison shot and killed him.
He came on to Boone himself and told the sheriff that he’s killed a man and he sent for me to
come to the jail and talk to him about it. Later in the flood of 1940, he died and I went to do his
funeral, had to wade the water up to Meat Camp Creek and across to Pottertown where he
lived. I helped put him away.
KW: You mentioned the flood, what can you tell us about that?
AM: It was rather terrible. There were several people killed down in the Stony Fork area. I did a
double funeral of two who were drowned in it up in the Howard’s Creek country on the rich
mountains near the Tater Hill Lake.
4
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Appalachian Oral History Project Interviews
Description
An account of the resource
In 1973, representatives from Appalachian State University (ASU) began the process of collecting interviews from Watauga, Avery, Ashe, and Caldwell county citizens to learn about their respective lives and gather stories. From the outset of the project, the interviewers knew that they were reaching out to the “last generation of Appalachian residents to reach maturity before the advent of radio, the last generation to maintain an oral tradition.” The goal was to create a wealth of data for historians, folklorists, musicians, sociologists, and anthropologists interested in the Appalachian Region.
The project was known as the “Appalachian Oral History Project” (AOHP), and developed in a consortium with Alice Lloyd College and Lees Junior College (now Hazard County Community College) both in Kentucky, Emory and Henry College in Virginia, and ASU. Predominately funded through the National Endowment for the Humanities, the four schools by 1977 had amassed approximately 3,000 interviews. Each institution had its own director and staff. Most of the interviewers were students.
Outgrowths of the project included the Mountain Memories newsletter that shared the stories collected, an advisory council, a Union Catalog, photographs collected, transcripts on microfilm, and the book Our Appalachia. Out of the 3,000 interviews between the three schools, only 663 transcripts were selected to be microfilmed. In 1978, two reels of microfilm were made available with 96 transcripts contributed by ASU.
An annotated index referred to as The Appalachian Oral History Project Union Catalog was created to accompany the microfilm. The catalog is broken down into five sections starting with a subject topic index such as Civilian Conservation Corps, Coal Camps, Churches, etc. The next four sections introduced the interviewees by respective school. There was an attempt to include basic biographic information such as date of birth, location, interviewer name, length of interview, and subjects discussed. However, this information was not always consistent per school.
This online project features clips from the interviews, complete transcripts, and photographs. The quality and consistency of the interviews vary due to the fact that they were done largely by students. Most of the photos are missing dates and identifying information.
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Collection 111. Appalachian Oral History Project Records, 1965-1989
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1965-1989
Sound
A resource whose content is primarily intended to be rendered as audio.
Artist
Mortez, Arlie (interviewee)
Weaver, Karen (interviewer)
Duration
Length of time involved (seconds, minutes, hours, days, class periods, etc.)
01:13, Drunk man almost burined alive
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Interview with Alie Mortez, February 5, 1973
Description
An account of the resource
Arlie Earl Moretz was born on June 30, 1908 to Sion Gideon Moretz (b. January 16, 1880 d. October 29, 1950) and Virginia Dare Stanberry (b. March 16, 1883 d. February 2, 1970). He married Alice Myers Moretz (b. May 12, 1912 d. January 25, 1965) who was born in Crossville, Tennessee to the parents of Thomas Myers and Olive Dougherty. His great grandfather was one of the first settlers in Watauga County, having married twice he had 25 children. The Arlie Moretz family lived in the Meat Camp area of Watauga County. Arlie Moretz died on September 7, 1997 at the age of 89.
Mr. Moretz earned B.S. and M.A. degrees from Appalachian State, and professionally was both a minister and schoolteacher with 39 years of experience. During the interview he reflects on how education has changed from the time when he was a youth through his career as an educator, talks about attending and teaching in a one-room schoolhouse, personal reflection on education, and local politics.
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Moretz, Alie
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
<a title="Appalachian Oral History Project Interviews, 1965-1989" href="https://appstate-speccoll.lyrasistechnology.org/repositories/2/resources/195" target="_blank">Appalachian Oral History Project Interviews, 1965-1989</a>
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
5-Feb-73
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
Copyright for the interviews on the Appalachian State University Oral History Collection site is held by Appalachian State University. The interviews are available for free personal, non-commercial, and educational use, provided that proper citation is used (e.g. Appalachian State Collection 111. Appalachian Oral History Project Records, 1965-1989, W.L. Eury Appalachian Collection, Special Collections, Appalachian State University, Boone, NC). Any commercial use of the materials, without the written permission of the Appalachian State University, is strictly prohibited.
Format
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MP3
Extent
The size or duration of the resource.
4 pages
Language
A language of the resource
English
English
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Sound
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
<kml xmlns="http://earth.google.com/kml/2.0"><Folder><name>OpenLayers export</name><description>Exported on Thu Oct 24 2013 14:14:31 GMT-0400 (Eastern Standard Time)</description></Folder></kml>||||osm
Watauga County (N.C.)
Subject
The topic of the resource
Moretz, Arlie Earl--Interviews
Teachers--North Carolina--Watauga County--Interviews
Clergy--North Carolina--Watauga County--Interviews
Watauga County (N.C.)--Social life and customs--20th century
Appalachian State University
car
Depression
Education
herbs and roots
Meat Camp
moonshine
New Deal
Pottertown
Tennessee
Wake Forest
Watauga County N.C.
-
https://omeka.library.appstate.edu/files/original/bfdcde28375a3728f55e2a2522b3adf3.mp3
a7181a389c8b26b4fa24fbbfdd87830c
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Appalachian Oral History Project Interviews
Description
An account of the resource
In 1973, representatives from Appalachian State University (ASU) began the process of collecting interviews from Watauga, Avery, Ashe, and Caldwell county citizens to learn about their respective lives and gather stories. From the outset of the project, the interviewers knew that they were reaching out to the “last generation of Appalachian residents to reach maturity before the advent of radio, the last generation to maintain an oral tradition.” The goal was to create a wealth of data for historians, folklorists, musicians, sociologists, and anthropologists interested in the Appalachian Region.
The project was known as the “Appalachian Oral History Project” (AOHP), and developed in a consortium with Alice Lloyd College and Lees Junior College (now Hazard County Community College) both in Kentucky, Emory and Henry College in Virginia, and ASU. Predominately funded through the National Endowment for the Humanities, the four schools by 1977 had amassed approximately 3,000 interviews. Each institution had its own director and staff. Most of the interviewers were students.
Outgrowths of the project included the Mountain Memories newsletter that shared the stories collected, an advisory council, a Union Catalog, photographs collected, transcripts on microfilm, and the book Our Appalachia. Out of the 3,000 interviews between the three schools, only 663 transcripts were selected to be microfilmed. In 1978, two reels of microfilm were made available with 96 transcripts contributed by ASU.
An annotated index referred to as The Appalachian Oral History Project Union Catalog was created to accompany the microfilm. The catalog is broken down into five sections starting with a subject topic index such as Civilian Conservation Corps, Coal Camps, Churches, etc. The next four sections introduced the interviewees by respective school. There was an attempt to include basic biographic information such as date of birth, location, interviewer name, length of interview, and subjects discussed. However, this information was not always consistent per school.
This online project features clips from the interviews, complete transcripts, and photographs. The quality and consistency of the interviews vary due to the fact that they were done largely by students. Most of the photos are missing dates and identifying information.
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Collection 111. Appalachian Oral History Project Records, 1965-1989
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1965-1989
Sound
A resource whose content is primarily intended to be rendered as audio.
Artist
Critcher, Josie (interviewee)
Ward, Karen (interviewer)
Duration
Length of time involved (seconds, minutes, hours, days, class periods, etc.)
00:53, Making soap
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Interview with Josie Critcher, August 8, 1973
Description
An account of the resource
Josie Mae McGuire Critcher was born on May 10, 1876 to Paul McGuire and Laura Martinee Lewis from Ashe County. She married Gaither Critcher on April 27, 1898 and they had seven children that included Thelma, Lena, Willie, Jessie, Paul, Robert, and Hubert.
Gaither was a farmer and carpenter, and also pruned trees and shrubbery. The entire family helped on the farm and mother Josie did the cooking, canned food for the winter, spun cloth to make clothes, made quilts, embroidered pillow cases, made scarves, and crocheted lace and fringe. She also taught weaving at Watauga Handicrafts in Boone. During the interview she talked about her parents, siblings, making soap, quilting, education, using lamps before electricity, and raising children.
She died in June 17, 1977 at the age of 101.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
<a title="Appalachian Oral History Project Interviews, 1965-1989" href="https://appstate-speccoll.lyrasistechnology.org/repositories/2/resources/195" target="_blank">Appalachian Oral History Project Interviews, 1965-1989</a>
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
8-Aug-73
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
Copyright for the interviews on the Appalachian State University Oral History Collection site is held by Appalachian State University. The interviews are available for free personal, non-commercial, and educational use, provided that proper citation is used (e.g. Appalachian State Collection 111. Appalachian Oral History Project Records, 1965-1989, W.L. Eury Appalachian Collection, Special Collections, Appalachian State University, Boone, NC). Any commercial use of the materials, without the written permission of the Appalachian State University, is strictly prohibited.
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
MP3
Language
A language of the resource
English
English
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Sound
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
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Boone (N.C.)
Watauga County (N.C.)
Subject
The topic of the resource
Critcher, Josie Mae McGuire--Interviews
Ashe County (N.C.)--Social life and customs--19th century
Ashe County (N.C.)--Social life and customs--20th century
Watauga Handicrafts Center
Ashe County
cooking
crafts
Education
farming
quilt making
Watauga Handicrafts
-
https://omeka.library.appstate.edu/files/original/0bacb7c67ddd82623c1891caed2c2ae7.mp3
926b22193be83e92f3ff03378e1576b2
https://omeka.library.appstate.edu/files/original/7279378da62d287a2467250bf1170b40.pdf
8f9a8b5d3b6eecb22ef29b88d6635df0
PDF Text
Text
Oral History Transcript
Appalachian State University • Collection 111, Tape 122/123
Interviewee: Don Davis
Interviewer: Donna Clausen
1973 July 5
This is an interview with Mr. Don Davis for the Appalachian Oral History Project by Donna
Clausen on July 5, 1973.
CD: Donna Clawson
RD: Don Davis
CD: Mr. Davis, when were you born?
RD: July 30, 1986.
CD: What year was it when you started school?
RD: I suppose I started school in 1902.
CD: What school did you go to?
RD: Laurel Ford, a little school about a mile toward Todd, off on the right hand side of the road.
CD: What kind of school was it? Was it one-room?
RD: It was a one-room school. The house was made of “boxing,” we called it in those days. The
plants set-up and down, and enclosed the house. Part of it was sealed; part of it wasn’t. It was a
rather cold building in the winter. It was heated by a stove sitting near the middle of the room.
You’d call it a shack if you saw it now.
CD: Was it not a very large building?
RD: Small building.
CD: How many pupils were in the school?
RD: I’m sorry that I don’t know, but there were pupils from the first to the seventh grade. I’d
say 20 to 30.
1
�CD: How many teachers did you have?
RD: One teacher, Miss Margaret Dobbins. She lived a half-mile from the school.
CD: Did she board with someone or was she from the area?
RD: Her home was in the area. She stayed at home. I passed by her house every morning as I
went to school. I usually waited for her.
CD: How far did you have to walk to school?
RD: Oh, it was something over a mile. I doubt whether it was a mile and a half.
CD: What time of year were you in school?
RD: I think we started in September. The first school I went to, I guess, was for four months.
CD: Can you remember your first day of school?
RD: I’m afraid I can’t remember and pick out the first day as an individual, vivid picture.
CD: Did you go through your entire seven years there?
RD: No, I changed several times. When I had been going to school for three or four years, they
moved the school house down to what I would refer to as Mr. James Miller’s bottom, and built
another house. I don’t remember how many years I went to it, but when I was 12 or 13 a new
district was created in this area.
It was called the Tugman School District. They had to build a house, and for the first term they
used a little storehouse that belonged to Mrs. Emma Stevens, about a mile and a half from
where we are on the road toward Boone.
Then the following year they had the Tugman Schoolhouse built, which was on the road toward
Boone near where Donald Woodring now lives. It was a much better house than I’d been
accustomed to, but it had only one large room and one teacher.
CD: What kind of subjects did you study in school?
RD: We studied the traditional subjects I guess: reading, writing, and arithmetic. To that were
added geography and history, civil government, physiology. And the last year that I went to the
Tugman School we studied a course in elementary agriculture.
CD: Did one teach all those subjects?
2
�RD: One teacher attempted to teach all the subjects. The last year that I went to Tugman
School, I went there, I guess, three years, a couple of the seventh grade boys assisted a little by
working with the second and third grades part of the time.
CD: What kind of equipment and furnishings did the school have when you were going to
school?
RD: When I went to the first school there were no desks, and crude benches. I’m not sure in the
second school whether we had any desks, but still it was largely benches. In the Tugman School
we had well-constructed desks, through they were homemade. But they had sufficient room for
our books, and the top of the desk was large enough to keep all our books and for our writings.
CD: What kind of writing materials did you have?
RD: The first writing equipment that I recall was what we called a slate. It was made of a type of
rock, and had a wooden frame around it. We marked on it with what we called a slate pencil,
which was also some type of rock. And of course we had some paper. But I can remember when
it was something to have a paper tablet in school, and a pencil to write with.
CD: Did you have textbooks for every subject?
RD: No, we didn’t have any writing books that I recall. Any books that we had were individually
owned. At least they were not furnished by the state or county. It was hoped that each child
would have a set of books. Often, it wasn’t true. Many times, two or three pupils tried to work
from the same book.
CD: What did you do for recreation, like when you had a recess or something?
RD: We played various types of ball, and what we called “Dare base.” We threw the ball over
the house, caught it over there, ran around on the other side, and went around and the fellow
on the other side caught it and ran around the people on that side before he could get around
to the opposite side, and thereby caused him to belong to the side which had been successful.
In the Dare-base, we divided into teams, somebody chose the players. One from one side
would go over and touch something near the other side that they dared us to touch, and then
they attempted to catch us before we could get back to the home base. If they did, we became
their player. Of course the game was won if they could catch all of those players.
CD: Did boys and girls play that game?
RD: Yes. Another game we played was a game called “Bull-pen.” It was a type of ball where part
of the players were in a circle and part of them were inside the circle. The ones that composed
the circle would hit a boy within the circle, and then they would run a certain distance to a
defined spot.
3
�The one whom they’d hit would stand at a definite place and try to hit one of the players who’d
formed the circle. If they could hit him, he had to come inside the circle, and the other fellows
were around him.
CD: That sounds exciting. What kind of discipline did the teacher use?
RD: Various kinds of discipline. All the teachers that I recall used various types of corporal
punishment. Sometimes they switched pupils; sometimes they paddled them in the hand with a
ruler. Sometimes they had them stand on one foot. Some had them put their nose in a ring on
the blackboard, and then put each hand up on the board at a mark and stand for a definite
time.
An they were kept it, if they wouldn’t study or misbehaved. When the others went out, they
were assigned something to do inside. And there were times when they were required to learn
something extra because they’d been lazy and hadn’t learned what they should’ve learned.
CD: Did they ever have to memorize anything?
RD: Yes. Sometimes they memorized as a form of punishment. I guess that was bad, but the
teacher had to do something. Teachers, then as now, I presume, were often at their wit’s end
to know what was best to do to control the children.
Various teachers had various rules, of course. Some expected a much quieter room than others.
Some were stricter about the lesson being well-prepared than others. That, I supposed, still
holds.
CD: Can you remember the qualifications that your teachers had to have to teach?
RD: The earliest teacher that I had was reported to have had a first-grade certificate. That
doesn’t mean a certificate to teach the first grate. There were “First-grade” and “Second-grade”
certificates issued by the county superintendent when the teachers had followed and
completed a definite line of work.
It was assumed that a teacher who had a First-grade certificate would be a superior teacher to
one who had a second. There may have been “Third-grade” certificates. I’m not sure about
that. As now, a certificate was not always definite proof of what type of teaching a person
would be able to do.
CD: Do you know what kind of salary the teachers received?
RD: My first teacher received a dollar a day. When I first attempted to teach I received a dollar
and a quarter. The last day I ever taught, I received more salary than I did in the first month, or
any month of my first year.
4
�CD: Where did you go to school after you finished grade school?
RD: Appalachian Training School. There were no high schools available in this area where one
could stay home and go to high school. Because of that I didn’t go to high school as soon as I
should have gone. I went back to grade school. I might have entered high school if there’d been
one located close enough home so that I could’ve stayed at home and gone.
CD: What year did you start at Appalachian Training School?
RD: The beginning of 1917, I guess.
CD: Did you have to stay there to go to school?
RD: Yes. I boarded with a Mr. Henry Lewis and his family.
CD: How long did you go to school there?
RD: I went to Appalachian Training School, and Appalachian State Normal, and Appalachian
Teachers College off and on, periods in the summer. I went one full year during the time but
largely taught in the regular school years. During that time I taught in the regular school year.
Sometimes I began at Christmas because schools closed in those days generally before
Christmas.
Other times I just went to summer school, sometimes one summer term and sometimes two.
There was a time when I needed credit toward a certificate, thought I did, that Appalachian
wasn’t prepared to give and I went to the University to the summer school: two summer
schools in 1928, two summer schools in 1929 at Chapel Hill.
Then I had the certificate equivalent to what one would secure by graduating from a four-year
college. But it seemed after I’d secured that that I still wasn’t satisfied with the training and I
continued until I finally earned a degree from Appalachian, which was issued in 1937.
CD: What was the first year that you began teaching?
RD: In the fall of 1917.
CD: Where were you teaching?
RD: Zionville. As an assistant teacher in a two-teacher school.
CD: What subjects did you teach?
RD: I had first, second, and third grades. We had reading, writing, spelling, and arithmetic,
largely.
5
�CD: At that time, had the schools changed a lot from when you had been in grade school?
RD: The schools were about the same then that they were when I was in grade school, and
whatever methods I had were, to a great extent, borrowed from the teachers that I had gone to
in grade school.
CD: Where did you teach after you finished teaching there?
RD: I taught there for five years, but there were intervals that I didn’t teach. Once I went to a
camp near the close of the First World War. I didn’t teach that year. Then I went back and
taught a year. Then I went to school a whole year. And then I guess I went back and taught . All
together I taught five years there. And then I came from there to Todd, and I taught 17 years at
Todd.
Then I went to Jefferson and taught two years, then went to Lansing and taught four years. And
then I came back to Todd and taught enough to make 32 years in all at Todd. I went to Jefferson
thinking that I would be a teacher only, but it developed that I had to be the principal of a
school because the principal resigned to go into defense work before the school opened.
And I went to Lansing because they needed a principal. That was during World War II, and the
school personnel was scarce. Had to use teachers, oft times that were not really qualified, so far
as credits earned at school were concerned, to be teachers. Some of them did excellent work in
spite of that. Lansing was a large school, the largest in the county. It was a union school, had 12
grades, and between, as I recall, six or seven hundred.
CD: Did you teach as well as being principal?
RD: I taught some. As much as the county superintendent would permit me to teach. He had a
notion that there were a lot of other things that were important for a principal to do besides
teach. And I agreed that he was right.
I remember teaching American history and sociology in the Lansing School. I recall having had a
class of 9th grade math one year. I also had world history, sometimes. It seems to me now, as I
think back, that I had two or three periods of teaching a day. Various subjects during the four
years. I taught geography sometimes.
CD: Do you prefer teaching or being a principal?
RD: Well, I’m not sure how you answer that. I’d say yes, without hesitation if one could have
what he considered an efficient principal all the time. Its not always easy to teach if the
principal is unable or unwilling to establish procedures for the school to follow that make what
one considers a good school.
CD: Were there a lot of changes in the curriculum over the years that you taught?
6
�RD: The curriculum expanded considerably during the years I taught. It was enlarged to include
many things that hadn’t been included before, and its been enlarged even since I’ve quit
teaching to include still other things. Now, I think the curriculum is perhaps the best it’s been.
I’m heartily in favor of things they’ve added wherein a child could learn by using his hands to do
things that he can use later in life as an occupation, whereby he could make a living. Carpentry
and bricklaying, plumbing and auto mechanics, and typing and bookkeeping: Things that will
function after the schooldays are over.
CD: Do you think that variety is important in a curriculum?
RD: Yes, indeed. I think that variety is very important. Now it’s to me quite noticeable that
there’s so much more for children to choose from than there used to be. When I worked in the
high school at Todd, I was principal there a couple of years, but mainly I worked in the high
school there for a number of years.
It was a small high school. We had few teachers, four, I guess, though it was accredited. And
that was the smallest number one could be accredited for, I guess. But we had what was called
a cut-and-dried curriculum. And whether you liked the subject or not, you must take it. If you
graduated from the school you had to have 16 units and you had to take all the courses offered
to get 16.
After a while, it got a little better. And now, is consolidated high schools (Todd High School
consolidated at Beaver Creek with Fleetwood and West Jefferson to make the Beaver Creek
High School), they have so much additional in the way of courses to offer that its quite
gratifying for e to know that a child doesn’t have to take world history if its meaningless to him.
And that he’s not obliged to take French if he has no interest or understanding of it, things like
that.
CD: How do you feel about certain required courses? Do you feel that some courses should be
required?
RD: I think I do. I would want a child to know something of the background of his country, and I
think for that reason American history is a must. Since we try to speak the English language,
even though we do it quite poorly, I think English is a must.
Of course, if you aim to write, you must know how to spell some. And if you aim to write, you
must know how to form your letters. So I think there are a number of courses that one would
say has to be required. But I’m quite happy that everything isn’t required; that a child has a
right to choose now from among many courses.
CD: Do you think math courses should be required?
RD: I don’t know how much math should be required. Math, like French, is somewhat of a
7
�riddle to some people. They don’t seem to have an aptitude or interest for it. However, we
have to count to do any business. And one does need to know the basics.
CD: How have the qualifications for teaching changed over the years?
RD: Well, it’s unbelievable to one who hasn’t thought about it. When I began teaching,
qualifications were determined by the availability of somebody with some learning to work in
the school.
If they’d been high when I was a youngster, I think the schools would have had to remain
closed. Now they consider a person reasonably well qualified if he has a master’s degree. Some
counties a few years ago would hardly employ one who didn’t have a master’s degree. I think
maybe they’re not quite as strict on that in Watauga as they were 10 years or longer ago.
There are many positions now that one must have at least a master’s degree to fill and its
desirable to have a doctor’s degree. Watauga elected a superintendent the other day that I
used to teach over a Lansing. He has a doctor’s degree. I’ve been extremely proud of him
because o the progress he’s made in the acquiring the necessary understandings to be what I
hope will be an outstanding superintendent for Watauga. I think now that degree is generally
expected from anybody, certainly a beginning teacher.
There may be some still teaching who haven’t a degree who worked, raising their certificate
without earning a degree. But I don’t think there’s anyone beginning teaching now without a
degree. I don’t know that that’s so. You could find out.
CD: I doubt that you could. It’s hard enough to get jobs with degrees.
RD: Of course I’m speaking of those subjects that must have a learned background that’s
learned from books. There are people teaching bricklaying and carpentry, and those kindred
subjects like auto mechanics and things like that who don’t have degrees. They don’t have to
have them to teach those subjects.
8
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
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Appalachian Oral History Project Interviews
Description
An account of the resource
In 1973, representatives from Appalachian State University (ASU) began the process of collecting interviews from Watauga, Avery, Ashe, and Caldwell county citizens to learn about their respective lives and gather stories. From the outset of the project, the interviewers knew that they were reaching out to the “last generation of Appalachian residents to reach maturity before the advent of radio, the last generation to maintain an oral tradition.” The goal was to create a wealth of data for historians, folklorists, musicians, sociologists, and anthropologists interested in the Appalachian Region.
The project was known as the “Appalachian Oral History Project” (AOHP), and developed in a consortium with Alice Lloyd College and Lees Junior College (now Hazard County Community College) both in Kentucky, Emory and Henry College in Virginia, and ASU. Predominately funded through the National Endowment for the Humanities, the four schools by 1977 had amassed approximately 3,000 interviews. Each institution had its own director and staff. Most of the interviewers were students.
Outgrowths of the project included the Mountain Memories newsletter that shared the stories collected, an advisory council, a Union Catalog, photographs collected, transcripts on microfilm, and the book Our Appalachia. Out of the 3,000 interviews between the three schools, only 663 transcripts were selected to be microfilmed. In 1978, two reels of microfilm were made available with 96 transcripts contributed by ASU.
An annotated index referred to as The Appalachian Oral History Project Union Catalog was created to accompany the microfilm. The catalog is broken down into five sections starting with a subject topic index such as Civilian Conservation Corps, Coal Camps, Churches, etc. The next four sections introduced the interviewees by respective school. There was an attempt to include basic biographic information such as date of birth, location, interviewer name, length of interview, and subjects discussed. However, this information was not always consistent per school.
This online project features clips from the interviews, complete transcripts, and photographs. The quality and consistency of the interviews vary due to the fact that they were done largely by students. Most of the photos are missing dates and identifying information.
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Collection 111. Appalachian Oral History Project Records, 1965-1989
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1965-1989
Sound
A resource whose content is primarily intended to be rendered as audio.
Artist
Davis, Ron (interviewee)
Clausen, Donna (interviewer)
Duration
Length of time involved (seconds, minutes, hours, days, class periods, etc.)
00:44, Bullpen ball game
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Interview with Ron Davis, July 5 1973
Description
An account of the resource
William Ron Davis was born in Todd, North Carolina on July 30, 1896, attended college at Appalachian Training School for Teachers (later became Appalachian State University) starting in 1917, then taught in Watauga and Ashe Counties for 32 years. He passed away on March 9, 1978 at the age of 81.
During his interview, Ron reflected on his rearing in rural Ashe County including his education, the rules to games they played as children, and discipline. He spent a considerable amount of time reflecting on education including his thoughts on how education has changed.
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Davis, Ron
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
<a title="Appalachian Oral History Project Interviews, 1965-1989" href="https://appstate-speccoll.lyrasistechnology.org/repositories/2/resources/195" target="_blank">Appalachian Oral History Project Interviews, 1965-1989</a>
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
5-Jul-73
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
Copyright for the interviews on the Appalachian State University Oral History Collection site is held by Appalachian State University. The interviews are available for free personal, non-commercial, and educational use, provided that proper citation is used (e.g. Appalachian State Collection 111. Appalachian Oral History Project Records, 1965-1989, W.L. Eury Appalachian Collection, Special Collections, Appalachian State University, Boone, NC). Any commercial use of the materials, without the written permission of the Appalachian State University, is strictly prohibited.
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
MP3
Extent
The size or duration of the resource.
8 pages
Language
A language of the resource
English
English
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Sound
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
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Todd (N.C)
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Ashe County (N.C.)
Subject
The topic of the resource
Davis, William Ron--Interviews
Appalachian Training School for Teachers (N.C.)
Teachers--North Carolina--Ashe County--Interviews
Teachers--North Carolina--Watauga County--Interviews
Appalachian State University
Ashe County
children games
discipline
Education
Elkville
Lansing
Todd
Watauga County N.C.