1
50
10
-
https://omeka.library.appstate.edu/files/original/bd92e4fbc33066336189ab94cb2cebd3.pdf
faafa5c5af75e827adb96e85cb965890
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 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/962957d2fbc58ba3d1a81a382fb3c3bc.pdf
cc384e642678c5ef0ae41167bc6ca93f
PDF Text
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
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 8, Summer 1985
Description
An account of the resource
The eighth issue of the <em>Katúah Journal</em> focuses on the theme of celebration of life and community. Authors and artists in this issue include: David Wheeler, Dan Pittillo, Bill Oldham, Hilda Downer, Donna Obrecht, Barbara Reimensnyder, B.J. Bach, Jay Wentworth, Lowell Hayes, and Thomas Rain Crowe. <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
1985
Table Of Contents
A list of subunits of the resource.
<p>Celebration: Way of Life.......1<br /><br />Katúah 18,000 Years Ago.......3<br /><br />Poetry by Hilda Downer.......6<br /><br />Cherokee Heritage Center.......7<br /><br />Farmers Ball.......9<br /><br />Celebrating Folk Arts in the Schools.......10<br /><br />The Simple Tools of Healing.......12<br /><br />Paintings by Lowell Hayes<br />Poetry by Jay Wentworth.......13<br /><br />Good Medicine: "Summer Solstice".......14<br /><br />Sacred Sites Project.......15<br /><br />Sun Cycle, Moon Cycle (Centerfold).......16<br /><br />Wild Turkey Part 2.......18<br /><br />Natural News Update.......20<br /><br />A Children's Page.......23<br /><br />Reviews: Minstral of the Appalachians<br /> Who Owns Appalachia?.......24<br /><br /><em>Note: This table of contents corresponds to the original document, not the Document Viewer.</em></p>
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
Cherokee art
Turkey Hunting--North Carolina, Western
Folklore and education--North Carolina, Western
Cherokee Indians--History
Appalachians (People)--History
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
Children's Page
Folklore and Ceremony
Forest Issues
Geography
Good Medicine
Habitat
Health
Hunting
Katúah
Poems
Radioactive Waste
Sacred Sites
Turtle Island
Water Quality
Wilderness
-
https://omeka.library.appstate.edu/files/original/39d9d512c1f257fe72c22bdc7c6a515e.pdf
6dc3d7ae52ba2691f94e33c1cdd16861
PDF Text
Text
---4
AT.U AR
PUBLISHED QUARTERLY
ISSUE X
WINTER 1985 -86
Healing/ Earthplace
�MEDICINE TRADITIONS NEAR HOME . ... ... . .. . ... 1
KATE ROGERS AND HER MOUNTAIN MEDICALS . .. . 3
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N
CIRCLES OF STONE . ... . .... .. . . . ... .. .. ... .. .. .. 4
......
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INTERNAL MYTHMAKING:
AN INTERVIEW WITH MARLENE MOUNTAIN . . 6
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" THIS IS HERESY!" HOLISTIC HEALING ON TRIAL. .. 9
TWO POEMS by STEVE KNAUTH . .. . .. .. .. ....... 10
CHEROKEE MYTH IC PLACES ..... .. . . ............ 11
THE UKTENA'S TALE . .. .. .. . . ....... .. .. .. . . . . .. 15
CRYSTAL MAGIC ...... . .. .. . ....... .. .. ..... .. . 19
GOOD MEDICINE: "WHAT MAKES A PLACE SACRED?" 20
REVIEW: DEEP ECOLOGY ...... .. .. ........ .. ... . . 21
NATURAL WORLD NEWS . . ...... . ... .. ... ... .. ... 22
"DREAMSPEAKING" ......... . . ... . .. .. ... .. ... ... 24
.,
FALL KATUAH GATHERING . ........ . ..... .. ...... 27
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�ISSUE X
WINTER 1985 - 86
MEDICINE
TRADITIONS
NEAR HOME
eaU.ng ..iA an Olf.ganic., e.ve1tp11.uent p11.oeu6---
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06 one' ll be.in.g---one. '" Liell6e. 06 .tlw.e, .i..Me.11. LipiJr.,Uu.a.1. balance. an~ 06 Motednuli. lloote.dnMli comu 6AOm a Lie.Me. 06
conne.ctlon- -.to place. and to corrrnun,.Uy. So the. w.i..de.11. c..bt.cle.
11.ee.cUi to be. gJt.Ow.lng .tollXIJl.<U whole.nuli a.6 well a.6 the. in.d.i..v.i..dutd..
Wlwle.nuli o 6 'place.' ..iA v.Ual .to .in.d.i..v.i..dutd. he.ali:h.
Th~ q~y 06 a..i.11., the qua!Uy 06 tOO.te.11., .the. quatuy 06
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cannot phyl>A..Callyr0
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~he. '~ght Li.ize.' t~ 11.e.la.te. .to • •. be.in.g 91te.a.teill"hanone. '"
,(J)l!71e.d.i..a.te. llUM.owtd.i..ngli bu..t not a.6 oveltWhe..fm.lng a.6 a con.t.ine.n.t Olt the. e.n.t.iJte. planet.
Whole.null 06 'communUy' ..iA alho vUal .to .i.nd.i..v.icfu.al
he.al.th. 1n olde.11. cul..twr.u, a C!Oll'lllun.i.ty 'Li Jt.Oo.te.dn.uli ""1.l>
ce.lelJJta..te.d .thltough M,tual. and U:.6 un.i.ve.Jt.6al conne.ct.i..on IAl'U
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a.6 well ah C!Ornmu.n.i.tlj a.i..lmen.th. The g1te.a.t :te.mple. a.t Ep.i.da.wr.U-6 in liouthe.11.11 Gft.eece. ~ a place whe.11.e people came .to
4f.eep, dll.e.am v..iA.i..on.\, and be cUJLe.d.
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'place.' ..iA .impoJt.:tan.t. •'Place' hah p11.0v.i.ded plan.th 'c.l.ay.6 '
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.
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dll.e.am med.i..C,,(.rte.
In .tli.i..6 ..iAllue 06 Ka;t{Ul}i---owr. w.i..n.te.Jt. .i.hllue.-- -we. .take
the. t.Une. .to colth.ide.11. the .i.mpoJt.:tance. 06 .the. heali.ng pll.OC!Uli
and owr. 911.a.t.i...tude 6011. U. We hope. U w.i..U move. U-6 de.epe.Jt
.into OWL cormiltme.n.t .to pll.Ue.Ji.ve. the. whole.null 06 .the.
'place' we. call Ka.:tdah .
---The. Ed.i...toM
1
ye.aM . '
People have always doctored
themselves. Archaelogists find traces
of plants that people used for medicine forty thousand years ago. Animals
doctored themselves with plants too.
Everyone has seen cats and dogs eat
grass to clean out their stomachs and
horses will graze through comf rey once
in a while for a tonic ...
Most people in the world today use
plants for medicine. And the 'wonder
drugs' of our westeTn world have saved
many lives in the last fifty years.
But these drugs are unavailable or
impractical for many people, because
of the high cost of pharmaceuticals
and because of the technology needed
to administer them (doctors living in
remote regions , or the technology
necessary to store them such as refrigerators for penicillin in Africa.)
Communities have always had medical specialists--someone who could deliver babies; someone who could set a
bone, pull a tooth; someone who could
straighten out a bent back, or doctor
the animals; someone who could talk
to the troubled--yet always , in our
history as humans, we have looked to
the world of the spirit for healing.
Monks in the Middle Ages said a
prayer for each plant they picked for
medicine. Native American medicine
people pray to the spirit of the plant.
People in hospitals pray for improved
health, and even have healing visions
on the operating table!
So what is 'folk medicine?' I believe that whatever people do to doctor
themselves and others is 'medicine. •
M.D. 's rely heavily on books, studies,
and statistics for information but
they also rely on oral traditi~ns
learned from the professors and from
other physicians. Illiterate mountain
herbalists expand on their knowledge-passed down through several generations
~by doing experiments on plants and
then analyzing the results.
As different as these approaches
might seem, it ' s all a part of the same
cont:inuum--using books and oral tradit .
ions in varying proportions; using
plants in their distilled, synthesized,
or whole forms; or calling on physical
(con.t.il'ILl.e.d on p. 3I
�~-·
'J\..ATUAH)
a
IMClifiliJ#MMiflllillMie!M'llMtlllllti!lfl dPP1!i d'#"j1&'hnz
EDITORIAL STAFF THIS ISSUE:
Scott Bird
David Reed
Richard Ciccarelli
Barbara Reimensnyder
Th011as Rain Crowe
Chip Smith
Judith Hallock
Brad Stanback
J. Linn Mackey
Martha Tree
Marnie Muller
David Wheeler
Michael Red Fox
EDITORIAL ASSISTANCE:
Cathy Danna
Jeff Fobes
Kathleen McLaughlin
Bill Melanson
Sally Roark
Sarah Jane Thomas
Mark Yancey
FIREKEEPER: Joe Roberts
EDITORIAL OFFICE
THIS ISSUE:
309 Kenilworth
Asheville, NC
PRINTED BY:
Sylva Herald
Publishing Co.
Sylva, NC
WRITE US AT:
Katuah
TELEPHONE:
(704) 252-9167
'ii0i'8'73
Cullowhee, NC
28723
Spe.c..i.a.l .tlw.ntu. to Va /wt Ma.I> 4 ~ 6°"- .the.
il.lLL4tlrJJ.ti.o n6 on
p:tg u
14 and 20
COVER: "The Blues Pass through" by Marlene
Mountain , painted in acrylics on 2' x 2' masonite
(Healing Series 15, 1983). Adapted by Martha Tree.
r-r
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RAISE THE FRUIT
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haltvut
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.into .the. peJt.pe.:tual.
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611.om 6UMO'~ 06 rh.tfl9 and blood.
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Ea/I.th 1t.OCL4ed wlU bll..Utg IL4 home.
.in 4e.etf and pollen.
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.in .the. e.n.ti.11.e. 4oltvt. Ug ht.
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0 me.et me. .in the. unbombe.d vil.lagu
06 the. Wtth.
In cob4 06 coll.n
In the. du6t 6luh
In .the. 11.UUM.e.cted idiea.t
Fo11g.ive. the. Jt.Oot
and ..\4.i4 e. .the. f1r.ui.,t !
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KA'[\;AH -
-Meridel LeSeur
page 2
HeJLe. .in the. .sou.the.11.11-mo.st he.a.11.tt.o.nd 06 .the.
Appab.cMP.n moun.t.aW, the. oldu.t moun.t4.in Jtange.
on OILll. con.t.inui.t, Tws.t/.e. l.sla.nd, a. .sma.U bu.t 911.0w.ing gMup ha.4 be.gun to .ta.he. on a .se.n..se. o~ Jte.4 po n 4.ib.<.Uty 6011. .the. .i.mpl.i.ctJ.Uonlt 06 tha..t ge.og11JJ.ph.U:.a.l
a.nd cu.ltuJLa1. heJL.ita.g e.. Th.<.4 4 e.rt4 e. o6 11.U po nlii..bil.Uy
ce.MeA.6 on the. conce.pt 06 Uv.ing wlthi.n the. lla.twt.a.l.
4ca.le. a.nd balance. 06 u.A.lve.Jt.4a.l 4q4tem4 a.nd la.W6.
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~IL4ta..i.na.bil.Uy and .the. e11.e.a...t.ion 06 ha.Jt.mony and bo.la.nce. .in a. to.ta.l Hll4e., heJLe. .in th.i4 pta.cE..
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We. wdcome. aJ.1. COMUponde.nce., CJLi..tic.i.4111, peJl.t.i.nVl.t .in6o.\ma.Uon, OJt.t.<du, llJl.t.woltk, E..tc. wlth hopu
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th.i4 ~ a.nd a.U .lt4 Uv.ing, blt.e.a.thi.ng 6"1fl.i.t.!/
me.mbelt.4.
- The EcLltolt.4
The Internal Revenue Service has declared
a non-profit organization under section
50l(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code.
All contributions to Kat uah ar e deductible
from personal income tax-.--
Kat~ah
Winter 1985-86
�•• • NEAR HOME
( cont.i.llued 611.Dm p. 11
remedies and spiritual powers.
The Native American people say that
medicine is everything: religion, psychology, politics, ecology, philosophy,
plants, ceremonies, community--all
things that we seem to need separate
words for, in English.
Here in the mountains, the Cherokee have evolved and still practice a
complex system of medicine. In their
practice , they use the plants--which
include over 75% of all the medicinal
plants in America~from tropical passiflora vines in the river bottoms to
tundra lichens on the high peaks. Cherokee medicine also uses a sophisticated
understanding of human nature, and of
our 'place in the world.' Ceremonies
address our relationship with 'the
whole '.
The white people--English, Scots,
Irish, and Cerman--wbo established
communities in the mountains about 150
years ago learned about medicinal plants
from the Cherokee. They brought their
knowledge of European plants and beliefs
as well--everything from ustng seeds and
root cuttings, to formulas for removing
warts, taking the fire out of burns,
and even putting a knife under the bed
to ease the pain of childbirth.
Today mountain communities have
hospitals, M.D.'s, chiropractors, ministers, psychologists, and other healing practitioners. And yet another
wave of newcomers in the mountains of
Katuah have been working to establish
healing centers, holistic health farms,
and centers for psychic research.
In the 1960's , throughout the
country, people began to take back responsibility for their own health care.
In the eighties it seems that perhaps
our greatest challenge is to take responsibility for the health of the earth!
Our mountains are threatened by acid
rain (what government agencies mildly
call "atmospheric deposition") ,
threatened by the deposit of nuclear
wastes , by clear-cutting and poisoning of the forests, by development that
erodes land and silts streams and
places burdens on water and sewage
treatment in those communities.
All of us who have felt the healing
power of the mountains, of the earth-if only the 'peacefulness' that comes
from sitting by the side of a mountain
stream--need to respond now to the mountains' need for Health. We must open up
and expand our definitions of ' medicine '
to include the earth and all peoples
as a Whole so that we cannot only survive, but BE WELL.
Barbara Reimensnyder, PhD
BaJtbaM Re.<me.nMtydeJL, a. 11.e.gulalt. contM.bu.to.11. .to Ka.ttra.h, ,(A 4 6ol.Jtt.OIW..t
who ti.vu .in"1iaCon Coun.ty, NC.
1n .tJi.i..6 nut <Vt.ti.c.le., 4 he. 4 ha.11.u
c.ui..th U4 4ome. 06 he.A .ti.me. 4pe.nt c.ui..th
Ka.te. RogeJt.b, one. 06 .the. ol.dut plUlC.uti.oneJt.b o6 6o.tk me.cLi.c.i.ne. he11.e. .in
.thue. moun.ta..in4 .
,
N\TrAH - page 3
KATE ROGERS
and her mountain medicals
The following exerpts come from a
book that Kate Rogers and I have
been working on for several years ,
Kate was born in 1905 in the Ellijay co111111unity outside of Franklin,
North carolina, where she grew up
and where she now lives, near her
large family. In addition to knowing and using over two hundred
plants for medicine, Kate also
sings old ballads and shape-note
hymns and takes an active part in
her church. She and her husband
celebrated their 60th wedding
anniversary last year.
When I first made a tape with
Kate, she started out, "Hy name is
Kate Minervy Rogers. I was named
after both my grandmothers, Kate
Henry and Minervy Moses--tbat was Dr.
Athan Hoses' wife. Hy grandfather
was a herb doctor, Dr. Athan Hoses.
And Mama used herbs; she knowed
everything we ought to do when one
was sick--just go and git this and
go and git that."
I asked Kate how she first began
to learn about plants. She said , "I
started in quite young. We bad big
fields, about twenty acres, and I
carried the water from a little
spring way over in the woods at the
aide of the field. I was the waterjack, I guess you'd call it. I
carried water to where they was
hoeing corn."
"See , on new ground , you can't
plow it and do too good. They laid
off a little first with oxen , but
part of the way was so rough they
had to dig boles to plant the corn.
So they'd dig up all the bloodroot
and may apples as they was agoing."
"And I would put them on top
of a stump, and then I'd run and
carry them, every bit , to the house.
I would run as fast as I could. It
was over half a mile to walk from
the field, and a lot of it was uphill ss ye come back. If I didn't
get to wash the roots then and
put them out to dry , why I would
that evening."
Kate's uncle , John Henry, had a
store where he sold general goods to
the co-unity , and in turn bought or
traded for beeswax, roots, herbs,
corn, chestnuts, and other natural
products. Kate said , "I could take
a pound of bloodroot, and Uncle John,
he sold five cent calico , so I would
get a yard of calico for a pound of
bloodroot and Mama could make me a
lc.ont.inue.d on nut page.)
W
inter 1985-86
�continued from page 3
dress out of it." Kate was five
years old at that ti.me.
"And then I learned about herbs
from Mama. She was Dr. Athan Hoses'
daughter, and she knowed a lot about
them. She knowed that poplar bark,
the root bark, was good to kill worms,
and she'd give it to us. One'd cry
with his stomach hurting, and Mama
would say, 'Go and get some poplar
bark, Kate.' (She always sent me, I
don't know why ). But I'd dig in by
them big roots that went down in the
bank of the road. And I'd get the
poplar bark and take it to the house.
And usually when I got in with it I'd
wash it and fix the tea for the
children."
"Kate digs plants
to make her own garden of
medicinal plants - 'medicals'."
Kate grew up collecting roots to
sell from the woods and newly cleared ground of her family and gathering roots and herbs as needed to
doctor her family. She has continued these two kinds of activities
ever since--she finds and grows herbs
to doctor herself and her husband and
others as needed. She also regards
medicinal plants as a source of income, digging them to sell at the
flea market and through the mail,
which she bas done for years. Her
grandfather too did a substantial
mail order business in herbs in the
late 1800's. In addition Kate digs
plants from the woods and gets seed
to make her own garden of medicinal
plants- "medicals".
Throughout the years she bas
worked as postmistress, in factories,
bas run ruby mines, taken in boarders, and done a variety of jobs
while raising three children, caring
for her extended family, making gardens, sewing, quilting, taking an
active part in her church , and doctoring anyone lolho needs help. Although she has always helped to support her family, Kate says, "Every
ti.me I pick something for somebody,
I just give it to them. Wben I tell
people what to use for medicine,it's
just free, gratis. One person the
other day, they didn't give me nothing, and I didn't expect nothing,
but I know they'll be good to me."
Kate continually adds to her
knowledge of plants by reading books,
experi.menting--mostly on herselfKAWAI:! - page 4
and growing new plants or bringing
them in from the woods. She said,
"They ' re a lot of herbs in these
mountains, but I ain't never found
out what they're all good for. I
know two hundred and fifty, but I
don't know where they're all at.
Two hundred and fifty that I've
used then around here close."
"I grow some, and I find some
in the woods, all along the roads
and so on. And some I bring back
and set out to where they'll grow,
it's like they're alive to me. Well,
they ate alive! But it's like they're a pet. I love them, each one."
"One day, when I was a child,
Mama done a good deed for me and the
plants too. I pulled the flowers.
I'd come in with everyone that I
could hold in my hands, the pretty
little flowers. And Kam.a said, 'I
want to tell you something.' She
said, 'Every one of them pretty
little flowers would have raised
seed if you'd a left them.' She
said, 'If everybody done like you're
doing, everybody could pull up
every flower, and when they got the
flowers pulled, there wouldn't be
no seed to fall back and come up.
That's just a-robbing everything. '
Well, now I'm so particular about
pulling things I want to make seed-I won't pu11 them just because
they're pretty. Because I want them
to keep coming, because they're so
many good plants. And the more I
learn about them, the more I want to
learn."
Kate's great granddaughter already makes tea for her brothers and
sisters using some of the plants her
great grandmother bas shown her. In
the last several years Kate bas spoken to garden clubs and 4-H groups
and participated in local festivals
like Mountain Heritage Day and the
Macon County Folk Artists in Schools
Program.
One day Kate said, "Hy tea, I
think that helped my arthritis, but
I'll tell ye: try to stay happy.
That's one of the best remedies ye
can find. One day there was a girl
come to me, and she was wanting to
know bow to stay young. And I said,
'Why are you asking me? You sure get
old, you can't do a thing about that.
And she said they had told her to
ask me. So I said , 'Well, just try
and be a happy person. Never do anything you know is wrong. If you know
it's wrong, just avoid it. You don' t
have to do wrong. ' You know there's
always things that will happen --none
of us ain't perfect. I've been sad,
and I've had trouble that made me
mad a few times, but it's all in
life. You just I.ave to let the
worst go and live for the better."
"I'm trying to live a natural
life, use the natural things. We're
just learning more about nature all
the ti.me. The Lord put it all here,
and put it here to work, and that's
nature."
Kate Rogers and Barbara
Reimensnyder , PhD.
© 1985
I.t .i.6 .the. moJuthtg o 6 .the. win.tVL
4 olJ..ti.ce:
New G.ltange., lite.land - A COll.e.6u.lty
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.i.ng, 116 ..it luu. done. 6011. .thoiu.and6 o 6
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bod.i.u 06 .the de.ad weA.e C411..e.6u.ltq .i.nljllOJl.6,
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be.601te. modeJl.n c..i.v.i..Uza.t.i.on, 6.i.ng6 06
11.UUM.tct.i.on and 11.e.b.iA.th.
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Ancient societies all across
the face of the Earth, but particularly in the British Isles and
the northwestern coast of Europe,
have left enduring remnants of their
presence 1n the form of earthen
mounds and barrows, stone structures, and great boulders raised on
end in patterns or standing alone.
The great stone circles in particular, such as the familiar Avebury
and Stonehenge circles, have caught
the modern imagination and are tantalizing clues to the minds of the
old ones, the "megalithic peoples,"
as these societies of builders are
called.
Living in the period from
5,000 to 2,000 B.C. before the
Celtic tribes overran Europe, the
megalithic peoples based their life
on a subsistence agriculture largely dependent on domestic animals.
Apparently the lands were sparsely
populated at that ti.me, and there
was plenty to eat, but their living conditions would have seemed rough
and crude to us, with little to indicate the extraordinary capabilities
required to transport and raise the
great boulders in precise patterns
and aligments.
Time bas shrouded the monuments
1n mystery , and there are many guesses--some academic, some psychic, and
some purely inventive--as to their
original nature and purpose.
Since Professor Gerald Hawkins
of Boston University discovered in
1963 that the Stonehenge circle was
used as a huge astronomical obser-
~,0,j@>~@ljOeJ~~~~
Winter 1985-86
�~~<@'~~~~,i@~~,~~S~@ijfbeJ@~~~~B~".W-~@~G(@W~'
vatory, it has become coaunon knowl edge that solar , l unar , and stell a r
sightings are a pa rt of th e f unction
of many of the megalith ic ston e figures . Yet as mor e is revealed about
this function of t he stones , astronomers marvel at t he knowl edge these
a ncien t people had of our universe,
and are amazed at t he a ccur a cy of the
observation s that are poasibl e with
the g rea t s tones , wh:Lch a t fi r s t look
seem so clumsy .
Enginee r s wo nd e r how t he bouldere were moved over long distances,
a nd how t hey wer e raised with the
tools these stone-age people had at
hand. Professor Alexander Thom,
Emeritus Professor of Engineering
at Oxford University, has demonstrated that a common unit of measure, the
"megalithic yard" as he calls it, was
the basis of the stone figures
throughout the British Isles. He
has spoken of the sophisticated
geometry evident in the design
of the stone figures, and the
mathematical precision with
which they were laid out
and put into place - by
a people of a rustic and
illiterate culture!
But while academics
can point out the astonishing accomplish·.
ments of this ancient
people, the attraction of the stones,
particularly to peo! ·
ple of Eur o pean descent, is a pers onal
one, for the stones
represent a part of
ourselves. They are a
· .;
part of our ancestral
peo-~
between t hem. The s uns ets are emphas ized because the smal.l val.ley
sight s west, giving a long view of
the western horizon.
Lylich i s descend ed from peo ple
who lived in Scotland and northwes tern Europ e . He fel t that bu ilding a
circle and experiencing the mind of
the builder s wa s t he best way to
understand their f eelings and motives.
"My primary reason for building a stone circle, besides wanting
to see what it was all about, was
to make a ceremonial area, just as
I believe my ancestors did . It's a
place to go and be serious, a place
set aside as sacred ground.
''Some people might think it
rash of me to meddle with megalithic
.·:: ·
•
'·
•·
...
··. ·
.:{::_.
.
•
American t r i bes , even the Chinese
pl e ha ve stone monuments in their c ul·i
tu ral his to r y . It is a t r adition that
i s found among ancient peoples all
over the world .
" I n this wa y i t i s a bridge be- ~
t ween us whit e peo ple and the na t ive (@))
Indians that we f ound l iving here
:ii
when we came. It is clear t hat among 'G
th eir oth er functions, the pre-Celtic ~
stone circles in Europe were calendare~
measuring the moon cycles and the
~
yearly solar cycles. The medicine
wheels discovered in this country werf ~
the same. We can trace the solstices ~
and equino.xes through them, so we
know th;lt they were calendar3 for the fl,
native peopl e of this continent.
'8
"The fire-pit at the center of
&
our circle i s one element that we
,
~
borrowed from the Native American
medicine wheels. It's a funny thing,
but none of the pre-Celtic circles
has a fire-pit. All the alignments
pass through the center of the
circles, but they left it un~
marked. I figure they left it
I~
clear for their ceremonies
or for sacred contests
· ···
and games.
"It is natural that
the old European
.
l
. ·; •
tribespeople com(@
· -_.. ·
bined the functions
~
..:·. ..
of sacred sites
if)
and sacred calen~
dars in their
···
circles. The peo··. · ·
ple obviously had
to know when a
celebration was
coming. They
~
sometimes had to
~
tTavel miles to get
there, and they
'4i>
li-
I
~~;:~~E~~~i:~:;~h~~ '·:-:~:~:\\?:~;<~Y}'~~~!r;~<'\~·~ '::~-;~.-:: ·.-.·:=:I.;·; ::~~~=~· -~-s:·?:}:~~ .:}!"~~:~:: :~~%:;~):fil.~C1. -~~~Ft!~:::~t~~:;~
~::!,'!:·~~! :.."!:
something we once
· '' · . <:~(?
c1.-.n·cLeS
were - something we
have lost. If we
~could only unravel
the mystery of the
·.
standing stones, we know we would be
face to face with ourselves at the
other end, looking into our own eyes
with new understanding.
One person living today in Katuah, who wishes only to be known by
his Celtic name, Lylich Crabawr, decided to do some experiential research to try to fathom the true
meanings of the old megaliths.
In bis small valley, close to
the center of his five-acre property,
he has erected a circle of stones.
The four largest ones mark the four
cardinal points of the compass and
are ins cribed with carved pictures
of the plant and animal kingdoms
c orresponding to the powers of each
of the four directi.o ns.
Beyond the circle, outlying
s tones mark the positions of the
sols t i c e s unrises, and the sunsets
f or the sols tices, the equinoxes,
and the
''\:~~;~;t,
a~
' ''>i('?F
sro
··
stone circles, but I feel that I have
an ancestral right to follow this
path . The bloodlines and the cultural
roots of the white people living on
this continent lie back in the tribal
homelands of Europe. White people
have only been a presence in the "New
World" for 400 years, whereas our ancestors have inhabited Europe since
antiquity and developed a long his- ·
tory and strong cultural traditions
there.
"I don't always feel comfortable
adopting some other people's ceremony.
It would be clearly out of place for
me to take up the Sun Dance. I couldn 't build one or run one of thos e .
But I feel that I have some authority
to do some thing in this area. We all
do. European people , Nat i v e Ameri can
1
thore •:.;•:,:::."!~of ;
They had to know
~~
~
in advance.
Y'"'\~ when the sunSo
was
~
I~~
almost in the
~
right place,
•
they would know
~
that there was about a week until
~
the solstice, and they'd go over
there and gather.
"It was also impor tant for an agricultural people to have a calendar. ~
They needed to know when to plant,
when to breed their livestock, etc. It
was a simple matter to set some stakes
or a few rocks in the ground, sighting ~
on some prominent feature of the landscape, and nove them every few days
until one day they didn ' t have to move
them again. With rocks 200 feet apart,
one can measure to within a few days
of the solstice. With sights five
miles apart, it can be done precisely.
"We used that method to l ay out
our alignments. Once we had a megalithic stone c ircle, it was easy to
(@J
s e t up outlying stones. Sighting over ~
the fire -pit at the center of the cir- if1J
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mtwlene m~~ ~ wnttui "''/U.#t of h~ ~
f'r#wtl""J fh17Ct44 /Alfu°Vh- IJ,(.f,IJ#fa;n,lf4 hey f/Xkitn't .
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6U6pe.c..t. (It taku .two lu.i..on.6 .to name. .U comple.te.ltj. J Mo.11.e. pa.ht, e.x.CJW.Wlling, hantU. a.ll.m6, ba.nd
a..11.~und c.hu.t. We.aknU6, c.an'.t d!Uve., l(l16h mlj ha.ur.,
pa.ht.t, no.11. hold .th.Utg6 ve..11.tj we.U.. Bad 6e.e.li.ng .ln my
leg6. Oh no. Con6U6.i..on. Fe.a..11.. D.11.e.o.d.
One. e.ve.n.lng a 6.!Ue.nd v.U.li.6. She. .U a m.i.di.ul6e.
a.nd I a.Ilk hell abou.t me.dUa..t.lon. She. 6li.6 on the.
bed, pu.tll he.11. hand on mlj 6011.e.he.ad, 6ay6 a 600.th.lng woll.d. 011. .two. I n6tantly mlJ m.lnd e.xpandl. a.nd
theJr.e. i6 a. 4.tllange. 6e.n6a..t.i..on I a.m ou.tll.lde. 06 my6 e.f.6. Some.th.lng ma.g.lca.l .U happe.n.lng, 40me.th.lng
handed down 611.0m .the. old day4 o 6 owr. 4.U..te.11.6 , .the.
w.ltc.hu/he.a.le.11.6. She. a.6/l.6 me. .to v.UuaUz.e. the. demon
(li. i6 an UfJly glob, a "b.ig e.a..te.11.," I a.m la.tell. .to
wtde.ll.6tandl , .to MU the. pa.ht bi.to a ba.ll (wh.ic.h
be.c.omu 40 l.tvige. a.nd he.o.vy I'm una.ble. .to U6.t .U
611.0m my c.hu.t, bu.t can 6Uc.k au:n.y pa.JLt6 o 6 .U I and
.to 6.lnd a 4a6e. ptac.e. (Hve..11.a.f. appe.a..11. bu.t a..11.e. nl,,t
.!Ugh.ti • By now I a.m .la.ugh.Utg, e.11.y.lng, talking, c.wr.6.lng. Eve.ntu.aU.y the. 6a.6e. pto.ce. be.c.omu the. loweA
pa.JLt o 6 a .t.11.e.e.. F
loa.t.&tg ne.a..11. me, li.6 11.0ot.6 a11.e.
e.xpo6 e.d and li.6 dangl.lng 11.0ot ha.cA6 a.tta.ch .to mtJ
a.ll.m6 • I .t appe.o..11.6 they a..11.e. .t.11.y.lng .to dJuwJ ou.t the.
pa.ht. Get ou:t .the. rne.o.n-6hli. 4.tu.6 6, I ca.ll ou:t.
Ove.11. a.nd ove.11., get out, go aJAXJ.y I
The. v.U..i..on 6adu and I a.m 6W1. m.iAe..11.0.ble..
Some.th<.ng, howe.ve.11., i..6 cU.6 6Vte.n.t. The. 11.e.leiu.e. 06
a.nge.11., the. mowr.n.lng 06 lo66 , the. nam.lng 06 e.vil.,
have. le.6t empty 6pac.u in.to wh.lch c.an c.om po6.Ue.
.ive. 60Jt.cu. A. .twuWlg po.ln.t. The. .t.11.e.e., tho1J9h,
t®Lt dou .U m
e.an, Jte..11.e. dou .U come. 611.0m'I She.
po.lnt.6 .to my .ta.6.t pa.in.t.lng, 611.0m a. 4 e.M.u o6 women' 4 anc.le.nt 6ymbol4, a .t.11.e.e.. A. 6.tyUz.e.d du.ign
6JLOm old Ca.naan 06 the. 6acAe.d .t.11.e.e.: the. body 06
the. goddU4. ( La..te.11. I l1lft .to 11.e.a.Uze. I had be.en
a.6Jt.a..id 06 #wJtU.ng the. .t.11.e..e., 06 luiv.ing my ptLi.rt go
in.to .U--how Wfte. did I unde.ll.6tand. J The. n.ighl:
i6 long and halt.6h, moll.rl.ing I 41Qlke. and the. e.xCJWc..Ut.tin.g pa.ht .U gone.. Gone.! V.ld the. .t.11.e.e. take. .U'!
You know .U d.id. The. pa.ht .t"4.t .U le.6.t .U be.o.Jta.ble.,
not we.lc.ome., bu.t be.a.11.11ble..
One. a.6.te..11.noon I a.m able. .to M.t.a.x dee.ply (.to
6.lnk .ln.to the. be.di, a.nd the.11.e. i6 anothe.11. v.U.i..on.
Fo.!t. 6ome. Jte.a.60n I unn.t .to be. .in my Uttle. gall.d.e.n.
I .t.11.y a.nd .t.11.y bu:t I c.an' .t get the.Ile.. I qu.i.t .t.11.y.lng
a.nd 6udde.nly I a.m the11.e.. That i6 , mlj leg4 , wh.i.c.h
luive. be.en hwr..t.ing, a11.e. the.11.e., ly.ing among the. we.e.d6
and with the. we.e.d6 glWwing out 06 the.m. W.ith .inv.U.i.ble. hand6 I beg.in to weed the. ga.11.d.e.n, and
oddly e.no1J9h, my l.e.g6. Iv:. e.o.ch we.e.d comu ou:t, 60
dou 6ome. 06 the. pa.in, 6ome. 06 the. 6e.a.ll.. 1 weed 6011.
a long t.ime..
It .U anothe.11. ba.d dD..y. I 6 e.e. my4 e.f.6 ly.lng .in
be.d, 6ull 06 bad 4.tu.66. I unn.t .U ou.t. The11.e. if, a
co1r.k .in the. 6ma.U 06 my ba.c.k. I pull .U out and the.
ba.d 4.tu.66 be.g.in.6 .to dfia..Ot. A ho6e. a..ttac.he.d .to a
(c.on.t.inue.d on next page.I
Winter 1985-86
�v151onJ · Jownfur,e-5
aff1rmatton5 ·;ournf!tj5
.tUllJ moon appe411.6 on mlJ bel.ly. The. moon ,(,/, 6ult. 06
good 1>tLL66 land ,(,!, dJuuuUtg Lt 611.0m a moon 1>1J111bol .i.n
one. 06 mlJ pa.i.nti.ng1> l . The. ho1>e. weMI> .it.6e.l6 .i.nto
mlJ Mvel and 6.ill.h me wlth good 1>.tu66. I am bet.tell..
Some. 1>ay MS doun 't h.ulLt, othe/Lb 1>a1J U dou.
MIJ le.g1> (though .the. tu.ion ,(,!, ne.M. mlJ ne.cld, ho.ve.
pa.i.n. 1 1>e.e. .i.M.lde. .th e.m. TheJte. ,(,!, a caJuiboM.d 1>.tM.p
.i.n e.ach. Slowl.IJ one. o 6 the. 4.tlUP" be.g.i.nl> to /LOU
.i.n.to a .tube.. A6 U 11.oli.4, U catchu up pa.in .i.'1.41..d.e.
U. In ano.theJt v,(,/,.i.on I 1>e.e. mlJ back, .the.n a wooden
table., and on U a ti.nlJ papeJt m.i.nt cup. A 4poon
appe.M.b. Some.how U 4COOpl> bad gunk 6/tOm mlJ 4p.i.ne.
and 6.il.lb .the. cup. Ano.the.IL cup appe.M.b, and 6.i.Ub.
Ano:tlteJt, ano.the.11., ano.theJt.
81J now rruch 06 mlJ 4.tll.e.ng.th, coolLCLina;Uon ,(,/,
back. A pa.i.ntell 611..i.end 4uggutl> 1 pa.i.nt .the. v,(,/,.i.onl>. Tho1>e. we.iAd :tki.Jtg4? lmpo1>1>.i.ble. 1 1>ay, IJU,
almo1>.t a4 .i.6 to .i.nl>,(,t,.t, .the. tlte.e. 11.e.appe.a11.1>--U
,(,!, 1uhole. th,(,t, ti.me.. Then U 1Le.p1t.odu.cu .U:.6 e.l.6
.i.n.to llldnlJ .tll.e.u • They tll.an1> 60M1 .i.nto a clwnp, a
g11.ove., and look "~ .to one. 1 pa.i.nte.d ove.11.
.twe.ntlj IJe.M.b ago. Ago..i.n, ha.i.11.li hang down and a11.e.
like. pe.a v.i.ne. te.nclllil.b. The.If be.g.i.n attac.h.i.ng to my
bodtj. 1 am not a6Jta..Ui 06 hull..tU1g .the. .tll.e.u. MIJ
mind pu.tb .the. ha.i.lll> .i.nto pl.a.cu that hUll.t, two 011.
tlvte.e. .i.n 4ome. pl.acu. Even .i.r. pl.a.cu that jUL>.t Uch.
I talk, olwy, now 1 am go.i.ng a4le.e.p, .i.6 1 move. oJt
.tull.n ovell .the. ho..i.11.4 will. 1>.tay .i.n place.. 1 wilt 6e.e.l.
be.tte.11. cdt e.n 1 <U1n ke.. Much o 6 .the. po..i.n and 6e.aJt go u
thllough .the. Motl>, .i.nto .the. .tll.unk, and out .thllough
.the. le.a.vu- -11.e.clJcle.d.
Somet.i.mu .the. bluu get to me.. 1n one. po..i.nt.i.ng
I am undellg1tound--.i.n 6ac.t, dcwn de.e.p .i.n a g.11.0und
hog de.n--unde.Jt mlJ hoUL>e./moun.ta..i.n la 1>ymbol .i.n p11.e.v.i.0U1> pa.i.nt.i.ngl> J . Thelle. 1 1>.tay 6011. 1>e.veMl da1J1> and
t«tU out :t.he. mood. One. da1J my Jtoom Hentl> .to 6.i.U
w<..th 6loa.ti.ng whe.e.lcha.i.11.li and 1 am 4Ull.Jtounde.d.
Sca11.e.d. Haunted. Ske..tch .the. .&nage., du<.gn U, pa.i.nt
U. Name. .the. 6e.a.1t. 1 am lu1> 1>CaJte.d.
1 look at my po..i.nti.ngl>. 1n mo1>.t 1 am llj.i.ng down.
What ,(,!, th,(,!,? 1 can w:tlk, ca"' .t I? I get m1J1>e.l6 up,
embJtace. the. moon, 1>he. pu.tb out hell aJIJl14 and g.i.vu
me. a b.i.g hug. I be.g.i.n a 1>e.Jt.i.e.1> 06 joUJr.11e.y1>, dJtawn
.in.to .the. pa.6.t, back to uiome.n '" anc.i.e.nt 1>ymboU. (The.
p!t.e.v.i.oUI> 1>e.Jt.i.u ha4 be.e.n 11.uume.d and «n.& 6.i.n,(,t,he.d,
Oil 1>0 1 ltad thought:. l Now 1 am llteMlllJ w<..th .the.
"1>ymbol6," bu.ld.e. .the.m, tallU.ttg w.i.th them, l,(,t,.te.n.ing .to them. 1 come. upon the. temple. 06 A6talt.te.; 1>U
at the. 6e.d 06 goddu1>u .i.n .the. Salto.Jta; 4tand at
the. al.taJt o 6 Mothe.11. Goddu1> .i.n C11.ete. and call. to
lte.Jt along w<..th one. 06 hell p!Uu.tu1>u; dance. and
1>.i.ng w.Uh o.the.11. women o 6 the. woll.l.d.
Back home. 1 6.i.nd goddU4U. have. taken up 11.u<.de.nce. to watch ove.Jt me.. One. n.i.gh.t I am 1>Uti.ng
on .the. poJr.Ch, Nut, .the. EglJp.t.i.an 1>k1J godd.u1> 4Ull.Jtound.i.ng . p11.ote.cti.ng. 1 be.come. <Ulnlte. .that the. j 0U11.ne.1J1> .i.nto .the. pa.6.t have. g.i.ve.K me. COUii.age. 6011. .the.
p.\Ue.nt, 6011. the. 6utUJte.. Me.h·Ull.t, a ve.Jtlj anc.i.e.nt
cow/4 kif godd.u1>, W'.lnde/Lb .i.n to v.i.l>U. All.Ound he.11.
ne.ck lb the. Me.na.t, a 1>ymbol c6 1>.tll.e.ngth, 1>e.xual.
ple.abUJte., and ph1J4.i.cal we.U-be..i.ng.
- Mall.l.e.ne. Mounta.i.n
:. ~
c
..
..- ~
U NE DllAWINO$ ADAl'TW aY MARTHA TllQ
'J '
r1'1
f
s
MOON FILL
f,(i9ht~
of~
"I don't even know what r&ade me sic.It," related
Marlene to us , "I think it was the stress and not
talking to people, being bottled up with pressures
and it came out ( in MS symptoms ) and I went through
a bad period. But maybe that was to be. I'm still
not able to settle down. I'm on fire. But I've had
a warning .•• and the healing. I didn't have anything
to do with it--it just happened and it was a major
healing process that I don't know how to explain."
We as~d Marlene to describe, as best she could,
her healing experience--"! don't even meditate
and that evening I said, 'Let's meditate tonight,
Cindy (midwife/friend) ' not even knowing really
what it was--it was a weird experience and it
happened several times afterward. And it basn 't
happened since (the healing) but it got me through
a period. I guess you could call it a miracle but
not in the old-fashioned sense. I'd love for it to
happen again but I don't know if it would be the
same form." Marlene continued, "What happened to
me ... I know it was from women's past--ancient
Goddess energy. I certainly wouldn't have known
anything like that would have happened or was going to happen. I don't have fantasies , I don't
have rituals, I don't have anything li~ that .. •
and then all of a sudden something absolutely abnormal happened to me . The midwife, Cindy, says I
did it myself. I don't think I could have ever
done it. But it was at the po:lnt that something
had to happen." From these visions, Marlene felt
compelled to paint the images in a series of healing paintings.( see 'In Circles', opposite page)
Throughout our visit, Marlene spoke of releasing her anger and her fears. In speaking of her
wheelchair painting, Marlene conJ:ided, "By the time
I was finished painting , I didn't have that fear
anymore and it has not come back. Maybe I just had
to deal with that fear and my being visual, it came
out visually. ~y fear and painting it through and
putting myself in the midst of it was empowering."
In conversing with Harlene, there is a strong
sense that the expression of rage in s creative way
and a positive vision of healing can co-exist. Some
of her 'outrageous' expressions include her series
lcon.t.i.nue.d on ne.x.t page.I
~<(]
KATUAH - page 7
Winter 1985-86
�WEEDING PAIN & FEAR
\:ifiiJ
\I
of paintings entitled: "a woman's non- commemorative
stamp collection". "They are 'stamps' which will
never be real stamps , " said Marlene. The 'stamps'
speak to the annihilation of native peoples , the
environment, rape, incest, war and nuclear extinction. One simply reads 'women and minorities'. "It's
incredible," continued Marlene, "that in America in
the 80' s that phrase should even exist . "
Besides creatively expressing through the
visual art of painting, Marlene is also a recognized poet of haiku. Conventionally, haiku is
viewed as an apolitical, pure/objective art form.
Marlene though differs with this view and creatively allows her 'grumblings' to come through
this mediUlll as well. She feels that haiku offers
a great deal to women in particular as an art form.
In terms of her paintings, Marlene ' s most recent series is called "Cross Words". The paintings ,
all 13 of them, are of crossword puzzles filled in
with words of what women are called ..• the animals
women are called .. . the food ... the slang body parts,
and so on. "I 'd say that most of my paintings are
for women, but I want men to be involved too. I
think they're called things that they don't want to
be called. If they could see what women are called
and start thinking about what they are called and
what they are supposed to be doing in life, it helps.
We all have to be in it together." Cross Words" allows us to see the disturbing words in a "playful"
and dynamically contained way, effectively taking
away their 'power'.
One of Marlene's older series of paintings
called "the Other" portrays ancient women symbols ,
which she spent a great deal of time researching.
Another series is a "female alphabet" which she
herself 'made up'. She felt the need for this kind
of alphabet and one night the images started coming to her, all except the 'y' and the 'n' which
came the next day. "For a while I would write letters in 'female ' and translate poems into 'female'.
The alphabet just c ame out of nowhere ... or rather
it came out of somewhere, I just wasn't aware of
it. I had to paint them."
IDher early days of being an artist , Marlene
was not aware that there was any avenue in art other than what she, for convenience, would refer to
as the 'male art of New York'. "I bad become dissatisfied with those attitudes." Harlene painted
ten years, got her degree, quit for ten years , then
started again . I n renewing her art again, there was
a period during which she painted a painting every
day for one month based on the theme of the mountain and the moon. The mountain wasn't a specific
landform--it was from within. "I just identified
with i t somehow. A f riend said, 'what 's the name of
~~ ~••<ain' and I didn'< know. I
g••••
i<
<•~••
out that it's me ... It was something that took a
long time. I wanted to change my name to that and
that's partly what the piece is about. ~hat's my art
name and poetry name. That's my real name (Mountain)''
Marlene is not interested in selling any of
her work. Seldom does sbe paint a ' single ' painting.
Mostly, her paintings are in a series of 20 to 40
pictures which need to be displayed together. In
asking Marlene how a ' series' develops, she offered,
"For the "stamp" series, I did a sketch in my sketchbook of a little perforated thing •.• ! don't know
where the image was ••• and then all of a S1.1dden i t
was a series. And t he alphabet just 'popped' out so
I don't know if there is a process. You have to 'go'
with it, you know."
Marlene's work and scope extend far beyond
her own personal realm. She in particular speaks to
women and their sense of wellbeing . "Women need,"
she insists, "to develop a collection of positive
images with which to enrich their art as well as
their psyche. For me, reference to the mountain and
the moon as female is a necessary element in building an aesthetic vocabulary as well as personal identification . Women have a tremendous amount of
underlying texture from which to draw, but due to
distortion, inversion and removal of archetypes, we
haves long journey of rediscovery and reclamation."
'
:;;
.!
.
..
.
"
i..
~
~
"
BENEATH THE SACRED GROVE
Harlene envisions a return of the Mother
Goddess qualities , both on a personal and a social
scale . This return which she feels is happening
("I feel I'm in the revolution, even out here") is
more a process of "searching for rather than giv!!!s .!!.P.· No doubt, though , there-must be a certiiTn
amount of sifting and sorting, declining and accepting, and balancing. There are many more concepts to discover and to embrace than there are
to negate."
"I feel", Marlene continues,"it 's quite valid
to call specific attention to what women create ..•
I'd say it' s very necessary until there is a truer
under s tanding of female sensibilities and her offerings--and, beyond that, of individuality. Today's
woman has much to offer and, I feel, has an obliga tion to give voice. Adrienne Rich aptly says, ' Women
have often felt insane when cleaving to the truth
of our experience. Our future depends on the sanity
of each of us, and we have a profound stake, beyond
the personal, in the project of describing our reality as candidly and fully as we can to each other'."
Marlene ' s journey of personal inner healing
s uggests an approach towards a wider community
healing where visions, dreams and sensations prompt
us towards health. Her organic imagery of mountain,
moon , roots , rock, s leep, sac red grove ..... and of
heslinQ , entering , passing throu gh .. . remind us that
,
we a r e all roo t ed deepl y i n t he natural proce~ '\fiN-;
-- M.M. S J. H.
_'\L_
© ~v
"
0
KATUAH :
~ eg~,e 8
ii ~
ex
c<JW
Winter 1985-86
- HA
~
�"This is Heresy!
HOLISTIC HEALING ON TRIAL
"The Constitution of this Republic
should make special provision for Medical Freedom as well as Religious
Freedom . . . To restrict the art of
healing to one class of men (people),
and deny equal privileges to others
will constitute the Bast1lle of medical science. All such laws are unAmerican Md despotic."
-Be.n.jamht RU6h, M.V., SW!fJe.on
Geneltlll 06 the. U.S. AlurilJ 6 a
6.lgneJL 06 the. Vec.ftvta,Uon 06
1nde.pe.n.de.nc.e. [7745-1813)
"Backed by vast sums of money and
the intellectual prestige of great
universities, decked in all the trappings of modern laboratory science,
and supported by an impressive record
of clinical success, allopathic medicine exerts an influence on our lives
and thinking equal to that of law and
religion. So dominant is it that
many of its adherents are surprised
to learn that other systems of treatment even exist."
-AndJtew WeU, M. V., .&t h.l6 boola
He..alih 6 ~: UndeJr..6.tancWtg
~o ~
Mecac:Lne.
-
AU.e11.na.:ti.ve
In a scene more reminiscent of the
Salem witch trials or the Spanish Inquisition than the informed and enlightened l980' s, Dr. George Guess of
Asheville appeared Dec. 2 for a hearing before the N.C. Medical Licensing
Review Board on a charge that his
practice of homeopathic medicine conflicted with his orthodox practice of
family medicine .
Three other physicians-Dr. John
Laird MD of Leicester, NC; Dr. Logan
Pobertson, MD of Canton and Asheville;
and Dr. Ted Rozema, MD of Landrum, SChave also been threatened with loss
of their medical licenses for practicing chelation therapy with their
standard orthodox techniques.
The unfortunate result of this investigation may be the loss of valuable health services to our communities and the loss of our right to
choose medical treatment that meets
our needs.
These four men are sincere, canpetent practioners devoted to the ideal
of healing others the most effective
way they can. But even being called
before the Medical Licensing Review
Board brings their intentions and
abilities into question. The four
physicians have already been pressured by their medical insurance
~ompanies into dropping their malpractice insurance.
George Guess, M.n., D.Ht . received
his medical training at the Medical
College of Virginia and Southern Illinois University. He was licensed
as an M.D. in 1978. Soon after entering family practice, he realized
KArUAH - page 9
the shortcomings of allopathic medicine.
Be discovered that attaining broad
knowledge, experience, and sensitivity to choose the appropriate technique for treatment offered the most
benefit to the sick. Following these
ideals he studied at the International Foundation for Homeopathy, completing their postgraduate course in
1980. Since then he has studied intensively with the renowned George
Vithoullu!s of the Athenian Center of
Homeopathic Medicine in Athens,
Greece.
In addition to his private practice in Katuah, Dr. Guess has also
served on the board of directors of
the National Center for Homeopatt.y
and as convener for the National
Council for Homeopathic Education.
He is a diplomate of the American
Board of Bomeotherapeutics and a
member of the American Institute of
Homeopathy, as well.
"Homeopathy," be says, "is a 200year-old science of healing that utilizes the healing properties inherent
in naturally-derived products to
stimulate the body's defensive mechanisms to overcome disease symptoms.
"The homeopathic physician utilizes non-toxic, gentle substances
adminiscered according to the 'law of
similars', which states that 'like is
cured by like' (or that bodily symptoms are cured by natural substances
which produce similar effects).
"A focal point for the homeopathic
physician is the uniqueness of the
individual patient. Typically, before focussing on local symptoms,
such as ulcers or arthritis, the homeopath concerns him/herself with the
total psycho-physical (mental, emotional, and physical) state of the patient.
"It is hoped as an end result of
homeopathic treatment that health is
restored gently, speedily, and permanently."
At the recent hearing, Dr. Guess
spent a grueling 8 hours defending
his practice . The hearing evolved
into a basic introduction to the
principles of homeopatlrl.c medicine.
At one point a board member, impatient with Dr. Guess's car eful and
complete descriptions of how he
treated his patients, lamented,
"You ' re losing me, I really must go
on to something else. I know you
understand what you are saying, but
I don't."
Throughout the hearing the Medical
Review Board displayed a total ignorance of the basis and the techniques
of homeopathic medicine, raising the
question that perhaps the Medical
Board is not qualified to judge a
method they know nothing about.
CHELATION THERAPY
Dr. John Laird, founder and director of the Great Smokies Medical
Center in Leicester, NC , is another
holistic healer threatened by the
II
Tho cadu.c~1.1•. the phr•icbft'• abln1
n ..
•111bot of .flnak._ cc.e• fta. • pr•Hd lanlc 1n1ke cult and oracle of ancient
Ct•..C•. hur taken ov•t by the cult of
M.c Jeplo1 1 vho h conaide:red the patTon
of at'dlclne.
Medical Review Board for his practice of chelation therapy. Laird
describes this technique as "an
intravenous therapy of prescription
medicines and nutritional supplements
that is known to inhibit degenerative
symptoms in the body, such as hardening of the arteries, arthritis, and
such."
Dr. Laird graduated with honors
from Dartmouth College in 1969 and
Dartmouth Medical School in 1976. He
·worked in the MAHEC Family Medicine
Residency Program in Asheville before
starting the Great Smokies Clinic.
He now specializes in nutritional and
preventative medicine. Be has directed a variety of national and international symposia on holistic approaches to health care. In addition,
be lectures to both health professionals an.d the non-medical public. He
is a founder and the executive director of the Raphaelite Institute, as
well as a member of the Amer ican Holistic Medical Association and the
American Academy of Medical Preventics.
In assessing the dis-ease of the
orthodox medical establishment, Dr.
Laird looks first within himself.
"I ask what I ' ve done to draw them
into my life. Part of my response is
to understand inwardly what is going
on, and the other part is to try to
figure out a way to reconcile the situation, because we are all One.
" In the course of all this, I've
learned a lot about arrogance. We
must express forgiveness without resentment so that we can be more free
ourselves. The need of this age is
tolerance and that is a function of
the heart."
intinued page 10)
Winter 1985-86
�(continued from p. 9)
Dr. Laird believes that there must
be a recognition that both sides of
this question have contributions to
make . The quacks and the unscrupulous
charlatans will always be with us, and
Laird maintains that there is a place
for an impartial panel of experts to
defend medical ethics and to set minimum standards to protect the public
from imposters who would take advantage of people's debilities for personal gain. But these hear ings, with
George Guess ' s careful and patient
presentation on the one hand, and
board members ' professed ignorance on
the other, calls into question the
competency of the Medical Boar:! of Re·
view more than the abilities of the
physicians called before it.
At present, the Board is composed
solely of licensed physicians who are
nominated by the North Carolina Medical Society, except for one lay member
who is appointed by the governor.
"The Board should be protective, but
not exclusive", says Dr. Laird.
The scope and techniques of medical
practice are expanding at an everaccelerating rate. The breakthroughs
in healing will come from those who
dare to pioneer new approaches and new
techniques. It would be a positive
step to have the Medical Licensing Reiew Board be composed of vell-educated, unbiased physicians familiar with
lternative techniques of healing as
ell as allopathic medicine. The
oard ' s composition could be balanced
to include practitioners of alternative medicine to better evaluate the
merits of different methods of nonconventional healing.
Ever since medical licensing was initiated in England in the 17th century,
the procedure has been used to maintain the hegemony of the practititioners of allopathic medicine. That
system has such a str ong hold on the
JOHN LAIRD, MO
minds and belief of the people of today, that medical associations have
taken on the nature and trappings of
a priesthood that will brook no
challenge to its authority.
But it apparently is time for a
change. 88 people attended a meeting
at the Unity Church in Arden, NC
cal.led to discuss "Medical Freedom of
Choice".
Chad O'Shea, church minister, sai
that he plans to convene a larger
meeting at UNC-Asheville somettme
during the winter to present a panel
of speakers representing both sides
of the alternative medicine issue.
"Our basic attitude," said O'Shea,
"is: 'Let's get together and share
some understanding. Let's look at the
facts' .
"I think that some people's preoccupation with money and material
things has blinded them to some wonderful medical methods that they perhaps should be not only supporting,
but maybe practicing as well!
"For instance, in the view of the
A.M.A., heart by-pass surgery is seen
as an acceptable risk, even though it
is known that 2 out of 100 patients
die on the operating table. It is
estimated that there will be 200,000
to 300,000 heart by-pass operations
next year. That means that there will
be 4,000 - 6,000 fatalities outright
as a consequence of this technique.
"That is not necessarily bad in
itsel f. Yet chelation therapy, which
bas not been known to harm anyone,
and which bas done a lot of good for
a lot of people, is not acceptable to
the A.M.A .. ~ is that?
"We need to explore hard questions like this one and bring them
into the light of day."
�A QUEST FOR
CHEROKEE MYTHIC PLACES·
By Douglas A. Rossman
Many European-Americans, long separated both
physically and spiritually from their own mythological roots, may find it difficult to comprehend
how mythically alive the American landscape has
been--<>nd, to some extent, still is--to Native
Americans. When the famous ethnologist James Mooney made his collection of Ea.s tern Cherokee myths
and legends just before the turn of the century,
more than fifty of the stories were associated
with specific locations in North Carolina, Tennessee, and Georgia. Mooney's classic publication,
Myths of The Cherokee (1900) , provided detailed
descriptions of these locations but included a
photograph of only one of them, Nikwasi Mound, in
Franklin, North Carolina.
I first read Mooney's book in the late 60's,
was fascinated by the stories, and longed to see
the settings in which they had come into existence. The lack of time, finances, and adequate camera equipment prevented me from pursuing my personal quest in other than a sporadic and incidental
fashion until 1983 , by which time it had occurred
to me that other people in the region-both residents and visitors--might enjoy seeing and benefiting from learning about the significance of
those mythic sites that could still be visited.
Thus was born the idea for Where Legends Live : A
Pictorial Guide to Cherokee Mythic Places. Subsequently the project acquired a principal photographer, William E. Sanderson, and an illustrator,
Nancy-Lou Patterson. Bill, a former graduate student of mine, shared my interest in Cherokee culture, and Nancy-Lou, herself the author of a book on
Canadian native art, had previously illustrated my
dictionary of Norse mythology, The Nine Worlds
(1983).
How to present the Cherokee Names for the sites
and the mythical beings associated with them posed
a real problem. Cherokee was not a written language
until the early 1800's when the brilliant mind of
Sequoyah devised an alphabet of 85 letters to rep-
FORT MOUNTAIN STATE PARK, GA.
.
WH ITESIDE MOUNTAIN, N.C.
i
0
resent the sounds of spoken Cherokee. This system is,
unfortunately, unintelligible to readers of English,
for whom Cherokee names have inevitably been rendered phonetically . Over the years a number of phonetic
systems have been used (same without explanation) , but
no standard usage has been established . I decided to
go straight to the source, so to speak, and was extremely fortunate to obtain the generous cooperation
of Cherokee linguist Robert Bushyhead. He converted
the names given by Mooney into the phonetic system
devised by Bushyhead and Bill Cook, veri£ied or modified the translations of the names given by Mooney,
and provided translations for the "ames not translated by Mooney. Ris patience, enthusiasm , and good
humor were a delight and an inspiration, and the results of his efforts adtt inuneasurably to the usefulness of the book.
It is a measure of Mooney's thoroughness a.nd
preciseness that I was able to approximate the locations of the sites on detailed topographic maps and
subsequently go to these places and find something
that fit the appropriate description. In several
instances involving sites in or near Cherokee, North
Carolina, I was able to verify the locations with
either Robert Bushyhead or Tom Onderwood, a lifelong
resident of the area and a student of Cherokee culture.
For Bill Sanderson and myself, the quest for
mythic sites did not prove to be a routine, dispassionate cataloguing of spots on a map. Like all true
quests,ours had internal as well as external dimensions, and the places we experienced and the people
we met in our search for the sites contributed to
our own spiritual growth. Despite the disappearances
of many sites beneath TVA lakes and the alteration
of some by still other manifestations of "progress",
several of the places we visited still possess the
ability to arouse in a receptive visitor the sense of
(continued next page)
Winter 1985-,86
�CHEROKEE MYTHIC PLACES
being in the presence of sooething
outside the ordinary. 1 most vividly recall the visits to Fort Mountain
--home of the great Uktena-in the
path of an approaching thunderstorm;
T!!llSsee Bald- -home of the slant-eyed
giant Tsulkala-in early spring with
the golden leaves crunching underfoot; and Pilot Mountain--home of
K.anati and Selu, the thunder and
corn spirits, respectively--with a
golden eagle soaring past the summit
in the crisp October wind to help
(continued from previous page)
celebrate "Creation Day." It seems
almost inevitable that such places
would have myths connected with them.
Cherokee mythology has its share
of monsters and none is associated
with more places than the Uktena, the
giant horned (antlered?) serpent that
bears a magical crystal-the Uluhsati
-- on its head. There seem to have
been many different individual uktenas,
but the greatest of them lived in the
Cohutta mountains of north-central
Georgia, apparently at the site of
ULUHTU, THE SPEARFINGER
present-day Fort Mountain State Park.
One of the longest and most complex
of the Cherokee myths concerns a
"search and destroy" mission directed
toward this particular serpent. The
ensuing events are briefly swmnarized
in~ Legends Live: "Only one man
is known to have succeeeded in killing an Uktena and securing the magic
crystal. He was a war captive of
the Cherokee, a great Shawnee conjurer named Oganunitsi. The Cherokee were going to kill him, but
they released him when be pledged
to seek out and secure the Uluhsati.
He searched the entire length of
the Great Smokies and beyond, encountering a series of giant reptileR,
amphibians, and fishes along the
way, but it wasn' t until he reached
Cohutta Mountain . • • that he finally
found the Uktena be had been seeking. Oganunitsi built a circular
trench in the mountainside, set
fire to the pine cones encircling
the trench, and then shot an arrow
into the seventh spot on the body
pattern of the Uktena, which had
been sleeping on the mountaintop.
He evaded the rush of the mortally
wounded serpent and leaping beyond
the fire and trench, was protected
from the stream of venom spewed out
by the Oktena in its death throes.
After seven days had passed, the
birds of the forest had stripped the
carcass so completely that only the
Oluhsati remained. Oganunitsi carried the magic crystal back to the
Cherokee, who were said by Mooney
to still have it in their possession as recently as 1890. "
The 855 foot-long rock wall
that meanders across the southern
face of Fort Mountain does not fit
the description of the circular
trench within which Oganunitsi
took refuge, but some of the larger
"gunpits" along the wall might.
Although the surviving version of
the myth relates that the birds consumed the dead Uktena's bones as
well as its flesh, this seems unlikely and one wonders if, in an
earlier version, the wall might not
have represented the giant snake's
skeleton. The serpentine wall does
remind one somewhat of the Great
Serpent mound in Ohio.
No sampling of Cherokee mythical monsters is adequate that fails
to mention the infamous Utluhtu, or
Spearfinger; a shape changer who
usually appeared in the form of an
old woman. Utluhtu had a long,
bony forefinger on her right hand
with which she would stab and extract the liver from her unsuspecting victim, often a child who saw
her only as a kindly old grand-
--- - -
Wint_!?r )..98!)-86
�mother. Frequently the victim was
unaware his liver had been stolen
until he began to weaken for no
apparent reason, and by then his
death was inevitable.
Spearfinger wande.ed far and
wide through Cherokee country, but
her favorite haunts seem to be the
Nantahala Gorge and near the Little
Tennessee River, where it passes
around tbe foot of Chilowee Mountain.
On one occasion, to make her travels
easier, she started to build a bridge
of rocks up through the sky from
Tree Rock on the Hiwassee River to
Whiteside Mountain. She bad the job
well underway when lightning shattered the bridge, breaking off it's
foundation on the western end of
Whiteside Mountain. Apparently, the
thunders had taken offense at
Spearfinger's bridge, or her behavior
in general, or both. The Cherokee
eventually trapped and killed
Spearfinger, but the mythwise traveler still glances uneasily over
his shoulder when passing through
the Nantahala Gorge on a misty
morning. Or perhaps what he senses
is the shadowy presence of the
inchworm-like Uwtsuhta serpent as
it stretches from one rim of the
gorge to the other.
Not all mythic creatures that
threaten mankind are earthbound.
The Tlanuwa is a giant falcon capable of carrying off a man, a deer,
or even a bear. In Chattanooga and
on the Little Tennessee River below
Tallasee are cliffs where these huge
birds were said to nest . These cliff
faces are still marked with vertical
white streaks that resemble nothing
so much as bird droppings.
Most of the other beings associated with the surviving mythic
sites are more favorably disposed
toward the Cherokee; for example:
Tsulkala, the slant-eyed giant;
Kanati and the other thunders; and
the Nuhnehi, the usually invisible
'"those who have always been here",
who have a number of underground
dwelling places throughout Cherokee
country -- Blood Mountain, Shining
Rock, and Pilot Mountain are the best
known mountains that contain lodges
of the Nuhnehi. Nikwasi Mound also
contains one of their lodges and on
one occasion, when the Cherokee were
hard pressed by their enemies, the
Nuhnehi emerged from the mound to
rescue the Cherokee from their
attackers.
Nikwasi Mound is one of only
three Cherokee mythic places to have
been protected and identified with
a marker. Kituhwa Mound* between
Cherokee and Bryson City has not been
KA'rfae -
page 13
@ DOUGLAS A ROSSMAN
so fortunate. Although it probably
was once the principal ceremonial
center of the Cherokee (the "People
of Kituhwa" as they sometimes called
themselves), repeated cultivation
has eroded it very badly. Unless
16 lJOU. all.e. .i..nt:eJLU.te.d .(.n he.lp.i.ng
steps are taken iDDDediately to pro.to .lde.n:ti.6y a.nd p11.o.te.c.t CheJLoke.e. 1ncii.an ha.Cl!.ed hilU .in t<a..tU.o.h , c.onto.c.t:
tect what is left, the mound will
Thoma.h Ra..ln Cltowe., c./o Ka..tUa.h , P.O.Box
disappear altogether. I hope that
873, Cui.towhee., NC 28723
one of the things Where Legends Live
might accomplish is to arouse sufficient local interest and concern
that the "endangered" mythic sites/ .
such as Ki tuhwa Mound can be saved . _,,
* Kituhwa is another spelling of Katu~.
THE UKTENA
�\U' "'
..._ ,.,.
--- ..
�Esta'sai (pronounced es-TAB-say) was a beautiful
young woman of the ancient Cherokee Indian people. She
~was a cheerful light among the people of her village , and
many of the young men of her village , and from towns far
away desired her, but she had thus far remained unmarried .
~
That was what was bothering her this day, and was why
~ she had come to a forbidden place to pick the berries to
add to her dried pemmican.
She wanted to be alone, and so she had come to the
/ ~ cliffs high above the Nantahala, the "river of the midday
1
o/ sun , " called thus because _the gorge was so deep and the
cliffs so straight that the sun did not shine on the
waters of the river until noon of the day.
Somewhere, deep in that gorge, it was said, dwelled
a fearsome creature, the uktena, a great snake with a
horned head; massive jaws--;;ncasing huge , murderous fangs;
• a great body covered with scales that glittered like fire
./.~ --impenetrable to spear or arrow, except for one small
area on its seventh ring where its heart lay below a soft
spot, the one flaw in its armor. The beast's breath was
noisome and poisonous, and its eyesight was legendary.
1
/ It was from its keen sight that the monster derived its
name, uktena,"it examines closely ".
OntiieC°reature's head was a huge, transparent
quartz crystal, the Ulunsu'ti, the greatest of its kind,
of which it was said it would bring wisdom, foresight,
and great power to whomever possessed it. The crystal
had such power that no human's mind could stand before
, it, and whomever beheld the stone was drawn to it, wheth&j er by desire or enchantment, like a moth to a flame. The
bottom of the river gorge was littered with the bones of
hunters and conjurers who had attempted to kill the
uktena to win the Ulunsu'ti talisman for themselves.
k{j
All this Esta' sai knew, but she had never met anyone
r who had actually seen the uktena,and , in truth, she only
half believed the stories herself, although she had heard
them many times from old ones around the winter fires.
~
The stories did not trouble her that day, for she
~ was young, the sun was bright , and her heart was disturbed by thoughts of romance.
"I am as silly as a ten- year-old girl , " she thought ,
aimlessly flipping a few berries into her bark basket.
"Alitak 'wa , (pronounced ah-lee-TAK-wah) the strongest,
,- most handsome, and bravest young warrior of our village,
seeks me out, and I turn away from him with foolish
/11. words of dreams and visions that I have seen in my sleep"
She remembered him I panting hot and amorously into
her ear as he spoke, and she bad pulled her fur wrap
more closely about her and turned demurely away.
~
"No," she had said. "In a dream I saw myself married
· to a white-headed man, not to you."
'1:
"You mock me!" he had shouted, recoiling as if he had
been struck. Although be had said nothing more, she knew,
/}1. as he whirled and stalked away, that he had almost lost
~control of the passion and anger within him.
"Why did I say that?" her mind wondered . "The words
were out before I could think. They were a great insult
ft: to a young brave.
~:fr
"t would have had much prestige as the wife of such
a warrior, one who maybe would later be a war chief in
the village."
~
But in her heart, Esta'sai knew she did not desire
~
!
,, ---
A,
•r
"r
4.~
the warrior Alitak'wa. Re tolas overbearing and haughty,
and it seemed that all he could talk about were his own
grandiose exploits.
"But , " argued her mind , "the nice things be would
bring you ... "
Suddenly she was oppressed by the sun's brightness ,
the heat of the day , and the war going on in her own
body . She stamped her foot and gave a snort of disgust.
Over her shoulder she heard a chuckle , and from behind a rock glided the lit he figure of Alitak'wa , Esta'sai spun around to face him . The sun gleamed on his body.
Re was beautiful , to be sure, but the smile on his face
u,
was twisted and ugly .
~~
"So the young doe begins to feel some passion for her
buck," he said insinuatingly, as he slowly came closer.
"No!" she said firmly. Her fear gave strength to her
words. "I told you last night, and I tell you again:
there is nothing between us . "
"In a moment," he said , "there will be nothing between us, for one way or another, I am going to have you.
I came to you honorably, and you have tarnished my honor
and my reputation. Now I am going to have my way."
"No," she repeated, stepping away . "Someone will find
out. Someone will know. You will be punished,"
"There is no one here to know." Ris body was trem'f
bling as he stepped toward her again.
"No, no." Tears came to her eyes as she shrank away·
from him. Her foot felt nothingness. To her horror she
realized she was at the brink of the cliff. The world
went white and swam before her eyes .
"No-o-ol" she shrieked, and threw herself backwards,
away from his clutching hands.
Esta'sai braced herself for the crushing pain of
impact, but strangely enough , it did not come, The cliff
walls grew darker and darker around her , until she could
see nothing, and it seemed like she was falling through
~
a dream. Time slowed. Her body felt weightless. I t seemed 1-fj
that she would fall eternally.
Ber reverie was jarred by a sudden splash! into chill
ing water. But instead of the hard stones of a shallow
;f
j
river bottom that she expected, Esta' sai felt herself go- ~
ing deeper and deeper into the waters of a seemingly bottomless pool. Her mind rebelled. It was impossible for
such a deep pool to be in the shallow river bed. But by lft
instinct her body kicked and struggled upwards until she ~
bA
�reached
of air.
t~
surface, panting, faint from shock and lack
now, withholding nothing.
"I am out of my time. I am the last of my line, and
I know my doom is near, so I am going to tell you of my
She looked about her. It seemed as if she had fallen
kind that it may serve to guide your species, which has
into a different time, mournful and darkened by the shadcome to be dominant upon the Earth in this age."
J~ ows of a gloomy past. She looked upwards. Framed in the
In her mind Esta'sai felt a comnand to remain silent.
~narrow slit between the sheer walls, she could see the
She listened.
light of her own world. It was unreachable to her now ,
''1 am but a shadow of the greatness of my kind. Long ,
but it was still a comfort to see. Somehow, inexplicably,
long ago, before 'time' was, even, my ancestors, the
deep in the bright blue sky of full day, a single star
dragons, the greatest and most glorious creatures ever to
71 shown brightly.
live in this realm of being, swam and played in the eleThe sight gave Esta'sai hope. The slow current carments. At that time the elements were three: air, fire,
ried her against huge rocks, and she clung to one and
and water~and the dragons were the center.
~i lay across it gasping. Weakened and exhausted, she slept.
"The world was unformed then. There were no tides or
'f' In her sleep the single star still hung before her vision.
directions by which to order the world. The dragons were
She was awakened by a low rumbling like thunder. She
themselves, but they kept the sense of everything within
thought she could still see the star before her eyes ,
themselves. It was through them that the world continued
~ but then it began to wobble and sway as if it were movto exist. The world was theirs, and they were free to fly
~ ing slowly, ponderously , toward her. The cavern walls
through the swirling winds, dive into
boomed, and Esta'sai realized that she was in the presence fettered oceans, and bathe and play in the surging, unfree-burning
of the ~· Her eyes were riveted by the shining crysfire."
tal in the monster's forehead. She could not take her gaze
off of it. The creature's presence filled her mind. She had
The uktena's gaze withdrew behind its heavy-lidded
eyes. Its voice grew distant.
~~o~::~ses. Her own mind was laid bare to its probing
"They were magnificent to behold. Their every moveA
ment and their very being was an expression of freedom.
~
She could smell the uktena's foul breath. She could
They were greater, indescribably greater, and brighter,
o/ feel its strange, alien nature and the blood of the many
humans it had devoured. Yet, through all the loathing she
indescribably brighter, than I. It is impossible to tell
how they were, for they could change their aspect as need
instinctively felt, Esta'sai was drawn to the creature,
or desire arose. In the fires they would blaze brilliant
~ not only by the power of the Ulunsu'ti stone, but also by
ed
!fa sense of aloneness so deep i t had become a part of the
r
and orange, rising up huge over the flames. They
~· 9 very being. Esta'sai, born and reared in the prowould become long and slender, shimmering blue and green
tective circle of the tribe , always among her friends and
in their scales as they knifed through the waters. They
_a kin, felt a pang of sadness in her heart for the solitude could disappear into the skies in the lightest and pur~ the uktena had endured .
est of blues, or they could stand out sharply as a rain,
'fiie"iiiOnster dragged itself near her. Its great head
bow of bold colors arcing through the realm of the winds.
~ loomed over her, blocking out the surface world. The Ulun''I can imagine it: the sheer delight of my ancestors,
& au 'ti sparkled in the darkness of the chasm. The colors
dancing among elements that were completely wild and un~ Ofthe uktena 's thoughts swam hypnotically in the intertamed except for their unifying presence. They breathed
ior of the great stone , binding Esta'sai's attention.
the living dragon-fire, the breath of life for all of
She stood slack-jawed, staring at the jewel, not even
creation.
noticing the uktena 's breath, hot and rank, curling about
"In each of the dragons, the elemental knowledge of
her body like smoke. The great serpent slithered nearer
the world was joined, and therefore they knew everything
to her until its bead was quite close , and it scrutinized
in its purest form. Thus, I am able to know everything in
her closely with one baleful red eye--an eye that was
this world, even as you do now, because everything is but
cold, calculating, and completely amoral. The uktena
a combination and a transmutation of these basic elements.
hung its massive head over a huge boulder and iitiir';;(i at
"That is why the dragons were aware that they were
the maiden for a long time, as if looking into her
bringing about the downfall of their race even as they
thoughts. Then , almost casually, it lifted one of its
wer~ accomplishing it.
scales with one of the four long and deadly claws on its
"Their life-principle was the dragon-fire. It burned
.~right foreleg and scratched its own leathery skin, prowithin them, and was also their breath--shooting out in
ducing a drop of blood so red it was almost luminous in
magnificent streams of flame. Instinctively the dragons
the shadowy pit. The uktena reached forward and touched
knew that their fire and the water should not mix, but if
the reddened claw to her lips.
they flew low over the waters and shot down a burst of
Instantly Esta'sai's head was alive with visions ,
fire like a lightning bolt from the sky, they would feel
strange sights, sounds, and sensations that flitted by
a shock of intense, ecstatic energy that coursed through
so rapidly they made her head swim: great winged creatheir bodies as the connection was made. It was sheer
tures of beautiful, shining colors cavorting in the
pleasure, satisfying and fulfilling. Every part of their
skies; the rush of wind, the touch of cloud; red volbeing was renewed , and they would scream and moan with
canoes; pain, violence, and the stench of burning
delight. They knew that this was the beginning of their
flesh; and strangest of all, she could hear all the
own decline, but that was not a time for limits, for that
voices of her own world, distant yet iamediate, all at
was no 'time' at all, and limits were unknown.
once and yet each distinctly--rabbits thumping in their
"So it had to be. 'The seed that brings to birth
burrows ; the hawk calling to its mate; grass stretching
contains its own destruction,' it is said. Yet, if things
upwards in the sunlight; tree roots penetrating ever
had not been exactly so, the dragons might have continued
deeper into the earth; and the quiet, even song of the
to evolve in harmony with the world, and maybe the dominriver flowing through its bed~all these and everything
ant species now would have been beautiful, enormous dragelse she heard and knew. She was not surprised in looking
on-creatures ... "
into the serpent's red eye that she knew it as well.
The uktena's eyes glowed like embers for an instant,
"Yes-s-s," the creature's sibilant votce spoke in
the Ulunsu'ti flashed a defiant red and then faded.
her mind, although its mouth did not move, "the uktena"But it could not be so. For the stars are different
sense is yours now. You are connected to us who are--th'e
now, and the dragons have been bound like the other ele4:1 very roots of the Earth, and through us to everything
ments of the world.
of the Earth." The voice was even and unsentimental. If
For when the living fire of the dragons touched the
there was any pain in its loneliness, the creature had
waters, it created a new element and new forms of 1 tie
mastered it completely .
never before seen in the world. A new chain of evolution
"They say among those of your race that an uktena
was begun.
always speaks truly, but it only tells what it ~its
"Invisible at first, this new life wave spread. As it
istener to know, and there is always a purpose behind
spread, it began to coalesce. And as it came together,
~ the telling. This is true, but I speak plainly to you
the new element did what had never been done before: it
4.1
~-"'~~~~
-~
~~. ~ ~ -~~~'
~--~--~~
~
�-~><
~~~-
found its own center and began to define a shape.
"First, there was a p1ace to stand, aod then there was something
standing there. Something huge, dark, and forbidding--doom for the
wise, shining dragons. It was the first of the giants. The element
earth was present in the world, aod the giants were the embodiment
orrt.
"There was enmity between the Biants and the dragons immediately.
It was unavoidable. The sight of the bri1liant dragons pained and
blinded the giants, so recently emerged from the depths of the waters.
The dragon-fire touching the water jolted them with a painful shock,
so they would strike out in fear and anguish. When one happened to
hit a dragon , that creature would scorch him with a blast of hot
fire or rake hill with its claws. In this way , struggle against the
dragons became a part of the giants' very nature.
''As soon as they could stand upright, the giants would pick up
rocks of the new-made earth and throw them at the dragons. At first
they were clumsy, and their eyesight was poor, so they could not
see where they were aiming. But they acclimated rapidly to their
conditions. Their enmity for the dragon race was the impetus for
their evloution.
"Evolution," the uktena continued, "demands the presence of
time, and so the idea of limits came into the world. The limiting
factor for the dragons was the giants. Their blind flailing grew
more deadly, and in time they picked up the stone clubs that later
--carved , fashioned, and even crudely decorated~ became so much a
part of them that they were almost extensions of their stony bodies.
"They would stand waist-deep in the oceans and knock the glittering dragons from the skies. Eventually, they built themselves
continents to stand and move about on.
"They could never k:Ul the dragons. The dragon's immortality is
too strong for that. Their primordial minds are linked with the
basic elements of the world, and if the dragons should die, this
world would disintegrate until new elements of life appear in the
cosmos.
"But the giants did bring down the beautiful flying creatures.
They turned the Earth into a prison for the dragons. They put them
in deep holes, covered them over with earth, and sealed them with
the power of their earth spirit. The mountains of today outline
the sinuous dragon forms buried below. But the life-giving dragonfire is inexhaustible. It sti11 burns, even today , in the depths
of the Earth, I t turns the plain rock into caverns of beautiful
jewels. It flows through the Earth into all things that live, and
the dragon's mountain sepulchers are places of special power.
"Sometimes water flows to the surface from sources so deep
that it is warmed by the dragon-fires and comes from the Earth hot
to the touch. This water has special healing and rejuvenating
powers, because it has been touched by the vitalizing dragon-fire .
'Other water carries a sulphurous, fiery taste, and in other places
the Earth herself is on fire deep underground.
"The giants passed on in their time, never knowing why they
acted as they did or of their role in the evolution of the world,
But they prepared the land for the spirits that inhabit it today,
and now it is the time of the humans.
"The old ones of your people knew the Earth power that comes from
the dragons, and they revered my ancestors. In those times the northern star, the center of the sky, was in the eye of the dragon constellation. Things are different now, different influences are abroad, and
the people have forgotten.
"I am just a shadow of the great ones who were before me. Centuries of enmity and loathing have turned me into this creature who lives
in the dark, shadowy places of the world, resembling some worm more
than my own ancestors, the dragons of old, who sailed the free winds."
The uktena spoke flatly, without bitterness.
11
0ne of your kind is coming soon to kill 1te. He will rip the
Ulunsu'ti from my forehead. It is a11 over. I go now to Gahuti (Cohutta Mountain) to meet him. They will never know how things might
have been. We will never meet in council between our races. Never
will chosen leaders among the humans tsste the uktena blood, as you
have done, and know the secret lives of the things of the world." The
monster spat , and its spittle landed on a rock and sizzled as it
burned a hole into its core.
''The mind of the human species is a circle, just as the world is
a circle, and the combined mind of the human race encompasses the
being of the world, just as the mind of an individual dragon encompassed all its world. So you join together and live in tribes to make
your prayers stronger and to gain a wider understanding among you ,
and it is good for you to do this.
"There is another change being made which will be evident to you
soon, but it is not clearly defined as yet. It is not for you to know
�DAVID WHEELER
Drawings by ROGER STEPHENS
�ocigi.nal drawta.a by lichard Cicc.ar·e.111
Q.WVLtz CJt.yi..tai..6 a11.e. 6owu:C heJte. .in
Ka.ta.ah and had an. .i.mpoltto.n..t plac.e. .in
tlte. myt.h and i. p.ilt.l;tual .U6e. o6 tlte.
na.t.<.ve. pe.ople. heJte.. The. CheJtoke.e.
me.d-i.c-i.n.e. pe.ople., who had a t.tlt.ong
IWVl.e.ne.u and a clot. e. k.ini. ILi.p wUh ;th. e.
poweM and e.n eJtg.lu o 6 .th.l6 a11.e.a., ui. e.d
.the.m e.x.te.ni..i.vel.y .ln CeJte.mon.lu 6011.
c.le4M.lng, he.a.Ung, and cUv.lna.t.<.on.
The. poweJt 06 CJt.yi..tai..6 .l-6 t..tlU
ava4.a.ble. .to u.i. .toda.y. Tapp.lng t.h.a..t
poweJt dou not 1r.e.qu..iAe. i.pe.ciJLt .tlr.a..ln.lng oJt h.ldde.n, uo.teJl..lc knowte.dge.. It
t..i.mply 1r.e.qu..iAu .tu. .lng" - be.com.lng
n
6am.iU.alt wUh a CJtqhta.l and ope.n.lng
to ,(,U, 11.neJtg.i.U •
11
Quartz crystals are a natural formation resulting from a combination
of silicon dioxide and oxygen atoms
forming a solid unit of light. Clear
quartz has a natural ability to resonate with other crystalline structures that can enhance the function
of the human body, restoring natural
balance.
Quartz is considered the stone of
the White Light and the First Ray and
can serve better than any other mineral for balance and healing. They remove blocks in energy fields and can
be used in areas where negativity has
congested the atmosphere. Crystals
clear the way with light.
Used in meditation and healing,
crystals can bring on change by
their interaction with the psychi.c
centers of our beings. The crystal
has an effect on the physical body as
its subtle electrical energy vibrates
with the electrical pulses of the
body structure.
CLEANSING
A crystal must be cleansed before
being used. The simplest method is to
place the crystal in an uncontaminated, free-running stream for seven
days. Another method is to make a
solution of one cup of sea salt, one
cup of cider vineg'ar, and one gallon
of spring or distilled water. Soak
the crystal in this solution for ten .
minutes of more. Use only as much
solution as needed and reserve the
rest for another time.
"Charging" a crystal will advance
the frequency of the crystal and
allow the keeper to achi.eve goals
that the mind bas yet to discover.
When a planet moves into the area
of 26 degrees from any zodiac sign, a
galactic activation for the crystal
can take place. Check an ephemeris
to find when the Sun or other planets are at 26 degrees. Tllis degree
marks a frequency centered by cosmic
law.
The energy of the Sun is used for
magnification, so the Sun's midpoint
in the sky (noon) is the best time
for charging a crystal. Knowing
that the entire life force of this
planet depends of the energy coming
directly from the Sun, one will see
the significance of charging crystals
during the Sun's midheaven.
An hour is a good length of time
to leave the crystal to the Sun ' s
energy. After the process . is complete,
bring the crystal indoors and wrap it
in a soft, dark, cotton cloth.
sew ENERGY
Crystallography is a culmination
of a variety of sciences all interwoven. The 26 degree galactic activation point not only relates to
the angles of a crystal in its molecular structuring but also to the
dynamic point of the galactic center.
This in itself displays a triangle
effect, and capturing that pattern
in the crystal will allow the crystal to emanate a standing columnar
wave (SCW) energy. It is believed
that the technology of Atlantis was
based on the use of SCW energy, as
opposed to the technology of today
which is based on the Rertzian wave.
Wind funnels, elec~rical storms,
cyclones, and tornadoes are all examples of SCW energy patterns. Much
of the electrical phenomena of the
human body, such as brain waves and
nerve impulses, are also forms of
sew energy.
When using crystals for healing,
color and sound can be incorporated
into the stones to focus energy on a
certain area of the body, particularly the spinal chakras. The healing potential of charged crystals
can be maximized when color and
sound are added to the program.
The following is a method used to
program a crystal for a specific
purpose in the healing arts. Other
methods of progr amming will come to
one who opens the imagination to the
possibilities of crystals.
Take a set of seven crystals , and
place them one at a time in a pyramidal structure at the verg negatif ,
the area known as the " king ' s chamber" . This is the point of highest
concentration of sew energy .
Use seven colored transpar encies
in a proj ector or affixed to a desk
lamp to power the seven crystals .
As each crystal is lit , sound the
note that relates to that color. The
harmonics of a guitar or the sound of
a flute work well .
PRIMARY
MUSICAL
NOTE
COLORS
CllAKRA
red
root
c
orange
spleen
D
yellow
solar plexus
E
green
heart
F
blue
throat
G
indigo
brow
A
violet
crown
B
Each crystal should receive three
to five minutes of color and sound
programndng. Done daily for seven
days, this will insure that total
mergence of all the frequencies has
taken place. Once a set of seven
crystals is completed, wrap them indiVidually in dark cotton cloths,
using colored thread to code each
wrapped crystal.
By attaching a string to each
crystal with silicon glue, they can
be used as pendulums to heal by
opening and closing the energy centers. Use the crystal corresponding
to the chakra and hold it over the
energy center, allowing it to become
filled with the heali.ng frequency
from the crystal.
PRAYER AND MEDITATION
Quartz crystals may also be used
to advantage in prayer and meditation.
Crystals have a propensity to bend
light rays to a bO degree angle, so a
triangle of light can be constructed
using three quartz crystals, all facing the same direction. Focus can be
placed on the triunal formation by
establishing a connection between the
mind ' s eye, the light center, and a
Visualization of the projected
thought.
The possible uses for quar tz are
limitless. It would appear t hat the
quart z crystal is an opening door to
a new dimension in consciousness .
Through it one can see the many facets of exist ence and per haps discover the secr ets frozen in its light .
-excerpted from the bookl et Quartz
Crystals and Other Gemstones by
Diannah Beauregard
�;,_
I\
I•
I '.
WHAT MAKES A PLACE SACRED
Thi.6 .i.66ue.' l> "Good Me.cli.c.i.ne." .U. e.xeJtpte.d 6Mm a
lUteJt we. Ae.ce..lve.d 6Jtom a .tll.ad.U.iona.l CheJtoke.e. .li.v.lng
ht Ka.tifuh to the. U.S. F011.ut SeJtv.i.ce. conc.e.Jmi.ng theht
plan6 60Jt c.letlll.-c.utl> and t.i.mbeJr. l>a.le.l> .i.n Me.al> aJLOund
Ata.11.ka Fa.U.6 and the. Raven C.li.6 66 ht the. Cowee. c.omrrKJ.ni,ty 06 Mac.on County, N.C.
I'd like to say when I look at a tree I see it as
one of my own relations, and I se7 it's natural beauty,
and I see it giving me the ve:y air that I breati:ie· I
see a house in that tree, chairs and tools and firewood
for cooking and heating. 'PG we all have many purposes,
so does a tree . .And that's what makes things sacred.
The Cherokee people traditional~y see the :iver~
and streams as living beings. With it we had life.Without it we had death .. So that entity or energy in that
water that gives life we called a 'spirit'. 1\nything
that has a spirit is alive.We call it the 'long human
being' or the 'long person'. There are m~ny taboos
about the river. That's the reason the rivers were
clean and fresh when the non-Indians came here.
The 'long human being's' head l~es i~ th7se mountains. 'JIB it rushes down the mountains, it gives power
and life to all living things. The legs, the torso, the
arms of ' the long human being' are diseased, but the
head is still alive and reasonably disease free, due to
the Forest Service and National Park Service .
l\ATIJAH - page 20
What I would like to see, since
we can't do much about the rest of
the body, is to keep this part of
the body healthy and strong. When
the head dies, we all die. If all
I have said does not explain why
the head of the 'long human being'
is sacred, then I don't understand
the meaning of 'sacred ' ,
I look at it this way: The Indian people were placed in this land
as caretakers . I think that the
Indian people understood that and
saw that as part of their purpose,
or the Europeans would not have
found such a bounty when they came
here--a bounty based on their value
systems.
Now the Europeans are caretakers and a lot of our people have
forgotten that purpose and only
dwell on the wrongs that happen to
them. I think that our purpose is
quite clear: we are still c aretakers, but another burden has been
placed upon us, and that 's to teach
you to become caretakers.
The area of the Alarka Falls
("Raven Falls" or "Kalanu Falls" )
and the waterfalls i tself are sacred to us; as are the Raven Cliffs
("Raven Place" or "Kalanun'yi").
Those places have been used for
years beyond memory. The falls
were used as plunging and fasting places . The Raven Cliffs was
a place where bad stuff was taken,
buried, or was sent there ...
What makes these places sacred
to us is their personality. 1\nd
their personality is made up by
physical structure: by the four
leggeds, the two leggeds, the
wingeds , the roots, the insects
and water creatures. The combination of these things gives a place
its personality. Ind then these
personalities sometimes attract
spirits, which have their 'personality.'
When people practice medicine
and they need a certain personality to use in healing ceremonies,
conjuring, or just to help the
People, all the things above make
this place sacred.
/.lnd if you're a person that
needs to bring something bad--a
disease or the badness taken from
someone and buried there--if you
need to do the ceremonies that
make this stuff stay here, and you
go to this place and the personality which you sought is no longer
there, because some of the medicine
has been removed, where do you go
then? There are fewer and fewer of
these places for us to go.
Our places are narrowing every
day ...
,
Winter 1985-86
�REVIEW:
By
J.
Linn Mackey
Deep Ecology or Shallow Moralism?
Deep Ecology:Living As If Nature
Hattered:Bill Devall and George
Sessions (Salt Lake City, Ut;
Gibbs M. Smith, Inc.1985)$15.95
The very term Deep Ecology is
apt to send shivers of anticipation throuRh the bre.ast of a bioregionalist. It seems to prollise to
unite two bases which lie at the
heart of the bioregional movement.
One basis is the insight emerging
from the science of ecology which
informs our minds on both the dangers of a growth orientQd industr ial culture and points us toward
a practice of how to live in harmony with the structure and process
of nature of w
hich we are a part.
The second basis is a profound
spiritual union with nature which
deeply touches our intuition and
hearts so that we want to act out
of awe and reverence to preserve
the natural world.
Unfortunately, a great title
does not a great book make. This
review will argue that Deep Ecol~ does not deliver on the promise of its title. This is because
the authors both sever our deep intuitive communion with nature from
specific religious traditions and
reduce the complex and subtle interactions revealed by ecology to a few
moral principles. We end up then in
this book not with a deep ecology
but a shallow moralism.
Let me hasten to add that I
applaud the authors' radical critique of the antiecological practice and attendant "environmentalist"
rationalizations of the dominant
culture. I suspect that most bioregionalists would support the
authors' radical programs for preserving and expanding wilderness
and "letting nature be" in place of
resource development. Indeed , the
strongest part of Deep Ecology is
what the authors have to say in
their critique and on these issues.
Neither am I questioning the
depth and co111Ditment of Devall and
Session's personal stance toward
nature. What I am questioning is
whether the authors have delivered
on the promise of their title, i.e. ,
to unite a deep spiritual union with
nature with a sophisticated and
subtle science of ecology.
Central to the author's conception of deep ecology are the
ideas of holism, the interconnectedness of everything, and biocentric equity, by which they mean that
"all organisms and .mtities in the
ecosphere, as parts of the interrelated whole, are equal in intrinsic worth." Devall and Sessions
would have us believe that there
is what they call a minority tradition in history that emphasizes
these notions. In fact, there is
no single minority tradition; there
are only minority traditions. It
is not honest histography nor does
it give an accurate picture of the
way the world works to go bunting
through the past in search of certain concepts or key words and, when
finding such, to claim a significant or causal connection. Scientists (not historians, who know
better) have attempted to write a
hi~tory of science that way , searching back through the past for any
thinker, for example, who used the
word "atom", then arranging these
chronologically, as if this said
something meaningful about the development of the modern concept of
the atom. It doesn't!
Yet this is akin to what Devall
and Sessions have done. They have
searched through past and present
thinkers and movements looking for
advocacy of holiam and/or biocentricism. They find one or both of
these notions in a diverse group of
past and present thinkers sod movements. But what have we learned by
assembling such a collection? I
would argue very little indeed. It
does not tell us how these notions
of holism and biocentrism arise and
function within a belief or philosophical system or how the philosophical or belief systems arise
and function within a whole cultural matrix. But until we know this,
we have only meaningless juxtaposition and vacuous abstraction, not
real life. We need more, much more ,
than this if we are to move to a
culture that lives and develops
harmoniously with nature. We need
to understand the subtle dialectics between a culture's values ,
practices and the specific natural
world in which it is embedded. We
need a bioregional analysis.
Devall and Sessions seem to
believe that they can set up some
moral principles and change the
world. No doubt a society dominated by a biocentric value system
would treat wilderness and resource development radically different
than one holding homocentric (human centered) values. The problem
before us though, is how to move
from a culture totally dominated
by homocentric practice and ideology to a society dominated by biocentric values and practice. What
do the authors have to off er us
toward the solution of this absolutely crucial problem? They propose
that we ask "deep questions" and
that we cultivate "meditative experience" . The problem here is that
these approaches have been standard
in the Western tradition since the
time of the Greeks. While it is
true that they sometimes lead to
biocentricism, they more importantly have lead to our current bomocentric and profoundly antiecological society.
In the end then, Devall and
Sessions are proclaiming an abstracted moral principle of biocentricism in a society in which homocentricism and domination of nature
reigns and is procl aimed through
every organ, institution and media
of society. One suspects that Deep
Ecology is not going t o change the
world, offer any reali stic hope for
such a change, or even make any converts to a biocentric position, At
beat it is mo r alizing to the already
moral!
Deep Ecology suffers from diftuae and disconnected roots and a
lack of hard-beaded analysis. It
suffers from a double amputation.
Religion , philosophy and ideology
are first severed from the cultures
in which they are intrinsically embedded and then certain principles
like biocentricism are further excised from the religious and philosophical systems in which they are
intrinsically interwoven (a totally
unecological act). In so doing, the
heart 1a amputated from the body,
the spirit from muscle and sinew .
Deep Ecology takes us in the opposite direction from wh:ich we must go
to really change society. That direction is to reunite spiritual intuition and values with practice in
a specific place. This is the way of
bioregionalism.
Deep Ecology mentions bioregionalism favorably in several places
and would draw bioregionalism into
deep ecology. I would argue that bioregionalism has little to learn from
this book . Bior egionalism is a
movement to reconstruct culture
harmoniously within a specific, natural region. As such it is a practical hol1811. Culture means material
practice---providing the necessities
of food , clothing and shelter as
well as politics, customs, law, morality, values and religion. It is
human existence and meaning in its
fullness and totality, not simply
some principles abstracted from
religion or philosophy. As such,
it is real people in real life
embedded in specific place in real
day-by-day, nitty-gritty existence.
It is only here--in the totality
and fullness of practical living
in a place, not in some set of
doubly abstracted principles, that
an evolving and harmonious dialectic with nature can be constructed.
~
Winter 1985-86
- iL' rAA
�o~
NATURAL
WORLD
NEWS
PROTECTING
SACRED SITES
Jla"'ral Vodd lew s....,k•
Elders of the Eastern Band of the
Cherokees have appealed to the USFS
to stop the Little Laurel Timber sale
in Macon County, NC as it will "desecrate" two sacred sites adjacent
the sale: the Alarka Falls and Raven
'Cliffs. Appeals 1570 asks the USPS
not to log or use herbecides near
these sites and justifies the request via the Native American
Religious Freedom Act. It was also
stressed that the USFS needs to
realize the importance of sacred
sites to all peoples and that the
issue here is not how a forest
should be managed but rather how the
integrity and power of sacred sites
should be upheld.
The Appeal was turned down by the
National Forests Supervisor for NC
and is in the hands of Regional
Forester John Alcock in Atlanta.
While the offical comment per iod is
closed, continued support is important .
Write: John Alcock
Regional Forester, USFS
1720 Peachtree Rd. , NW
Atlanta, Ga. 30367
KArUAR - pllgi! 122
DOE PLANS FALTER, COMMUNITIES ORGA NIZE
In Nove111ber of 1985 the Department of Energy was to have narrowed
its choice of Nuclear Waste Suppositor y sites from the 236 under
study to 20 "possible" locations.
Widespread public involvement and the
Department's own negative findings
have caused the DOE to postpone,
until January 1986 their annoucement
of selection. This is their second
postponement since November 1985.
While Oak Ridge, Tennessee is the
most likely site for the Monitored
Retrieva ble Stora ge facility (the HRS
is a way station for waste headed to
the Suppository). the associated transportation routes are still under study
and the DOE has admitted that they are
open to negotiation.
Strategy and organizational meetings along the "likely" routes are
becoming more numerous. The Highlander
Center hosted such a meeting for community action leaders from east ern NC
to western Tennessee. Over three hundred citizens of Madison County , NC
met this november, providing another
voice in this effort to stop the
DOE's part in this country ' s nuclear
energy policy .
EPA SEARCHES FOR ACID RAIN CLUES
~lnu.ral
WOl'ld Mew Strvic•
Rumor has it that the EPA has
contracted with private research
groups and other government agencies
to find where and to what extent
"Acid Deposition" is affecting the
Southern Appalachians. Similar
studies have recently been conducted
in New England and the Northwest.
The work here will be conducted
in 30 to 40 watersheds located in
east Tennessee, western North Carolina, north Georgia and northeastern
South Carolina.
This study consists of the
gathering of data in the following
areas: forest cover types, land use,
soil and water chemistry and the various climatic factors affecting this
area. This information will be comcompiled by the EPA , plugged into its
data base and analyzed.
While no public information is
presently available, it is speculated
that the results of this study will
be used to trace "Acid Deposition"
back to its source and later used
in court actions aimed at "cleaning
up" the problem.
ONLY YOU CAN SAVE THE BEARS
M.atu.ral *>rl.4 tf-"'9
Se.rvic•
According to biologists at the
North Carolina Wildlife Resources
Conmission, poaching and other
illegal bear hunting is an old and
intractable problem. The biggest
threat to bear populations, as for
most wildlife , is continuing habitat
destruction. Even if poaching remains at a constant level, it spells
disaster for the bears as habitat
shrinks due to increased clearcutting
and road building. The survival of
large predators and omnivores such
as bears requires vast,roadless areas
where contact with humans is kept to
a minimum. Forest Service logging
roads make bear habitat more accessible to poachers and slob hunters.
In North Carolina, the Wildlife ·
Resources Commission's primary means
of measuring the bear population is
the number of legal kills reported
each year. With shrinking habitat
and increased road access, the few
remaining bears are vulnerable to
hunting pressure. The effect of this
is that the kill level stays high
while the population declines, possibly beyond the point of recovery.
Using bait to attract bears is a
popular slob hunting practice that
has recently been made illegal. The
usual technique is to hang sacks of
food, sweets, or rotten meat on trees ,
attracting bears to an accessible area
where dogs can pick up the scent.
Hunters then monitor the dogs' posi-
tion from access roads using vehicles,
CB radios, and even radio collars on
the dogs. Hunters don't need to leave
the saftey and colD.fort of their
vehicles until the dogs ' baying indicates that the bear has been treed
and can be shot with a minimum of
effort and skill on the part of the
hunters. Baitin_Jt was often used at
the edge of bear sanctuaries to draw
protected bears out where they could
be letally killed. A new law that went
into effect October l makes it illegal
to use bait to attract bears on public or private land.
Wildlife enforcement officers say
it is impossible to control poaching
and baiting without help from concerned local citizens. Some states
have toll-free hotlines to report
hunting violations, and can dispatch
an enforcement officer to the scene
quickly. In North Carolina, call
1-800-662-7137, South Carolina 1-800922-5431, Tennessee 1-800-262-6704,
Georgia 1-800-241-4113. A number for
Virgina could not be determined.
To participate in the Bear Action
Network to document incidences of
poaching and other illegal bear hunting activities, contact:
.'aul Gallimore
Long Branch Enviornmental Ed. Center
Big Sandy Mush Creek
Leicester, NC (704)6e3-3662
..
Wintq.r _1985-86
�HORSEPASTURE RI VER TO FLOW ON:
SMOKE GETS IN
A GRASSROOTS SUCCESS STORY
YOUR EYES
Ntituu.J Morld Nev•
~ erv 1c.
Spruce Pine-Mitchell Systems Inc . ,
an incinerator plant owned by Charles
Foushee continues to burn hazardous
wastes. The smoke causes irritation
of eyes, nose, and throat. People
have developed "allergies" since it
opened five years ago. It has burned
corn crops nearby. The heavy metals
coming out of the smokestacks are
above permissible standsrds set when
its permit was reissued early in 1985.
Fores~ Service botanists have linked
the emissions to tree deaths surrounding the plant. Homes remain un-
Since the spring of 1984 a grassroots group, Friends of the Horsepasture, have rallied support for the protection of the Horsepasture River and
her 5 waterfalls from an out of state
invesbnent group, who plan to build a
hydroelectric dam. While this ill-fated tax write off has faded, further
public support for the Borsepasture
has brought about Natural and Scenic
River designation by the North Carolina General Assembly and most recently, appropriation of funds by the U.S.
Congress to the United States Forest
sold, land values are dropping, water
Service for purchase of the 350 acre
is becoming contaminated.
Because of these gross violations
of all applicable standards, Mitchell
Systems has been fined, has had its
air quality permit revoked and was
issued an order of compliance when it
was discovered that its environmental
liability insurance coverage was no
longer in effect. Since it did not
comply with regulations as of December 2nd, the N.C. Department of Human
Resources ordered the plant closed.
On December 5th a local resident
brought a $250,000 lawsuit against
Mitchell Systems alleging that discharges and odors f ran the plant make his
home unfit for human habitation.
Community response has been escalating rapidly. 150 people from all
over Mitchell county gathered at a
recent meeting to air their demands
and frustrations. Outside professional
consultants have been hired and they
are learning what program consultant
Millie Buchanan called "effective involvement." Citizens are bringing
pressure on state officials to release information, they are helping
the legal and technical consultants
collect data, and they have exposed
a large flaw in due process procedures
regulating waste disposal.
Why is the incinerator still
burning? No insurance, no permit,
and still the smoke settles on cars,
houses, children and streams. Local
people in Mitchell county are fighting
national problems: lack of control
and an inability to enforce laws
governing the disposal of hazardous
wastes. Charles Foushee has appealed
both the insurance compliance order
and the air quality permit revocation. Until these appeals have
been decided upon, Mitchell Systems
is free to burn wastes. "If be
operated a bar and served alcohol
to minors he would be shut down
immediately and kept shut during
the appeals process:• said one involved person.
Why is Charles Foushee still
allowed to serve emissions hazardous to the health of Mitchell
county?
Leder tract. This will allow for protection of Turtleback, Rainbow and
Stairway Falls (the others are owned
by Duke Power.)
Bill Thomas, Chairperson of the
Friends o f the Horsepasture, points
out that a special thanks goes to the
private conservation group, Trust for
Public Lands. The Trust, through its
own funds, secured an option to buy
the Leder property at a Forest service appraised price. This protected
K.\Tl'.\11 - !Mge :!3
the river from develo?11ent while Congressional appropriations were sought.
In doing so, Thomas says, TPL has incured a $70,000. debt primarily in
option costs, which will not be refunded by the Congressional appropriations. It is the hope that all the
"Friends" will continue their support
by sending tax deductable donations
to the Trust via FROTH so they can
continue their preservation efforts.
Most recently, the N.C. Department
of Natural Resources and Community
oevelopnent is preparing a management
plan to "preserve" the river in its
natural state and offer guidelines
for recreational use. This is the
first step in" placing the river under
the protection offered by the National Wild and Scenic River Systems. Gov.
Martin is expected to request Interior
Secretary, Don Hodel, for this status.
Hore info:
FRIENDS OF THE HORSEPASTORll
P.O.Box ·272
Cedar Hountain,NC 287lij
A QUESTION OF STANDARDS
CHAMPION WASTE PERMIT
){U'U.rAl
~ld
N...,. Suvi.c:•
As of mid-November, the EPA has
stepped in to resolve differences
between the states of Tennessee and
North Carolina and the color of water
in the Pigeon River at the state line.
Being contested is the NC Division of
Enviornmental Management ' s 1985 waste
water discharge permit for Champion
International ' s Canton paper mill:
the amount of color in its ef f ulent
and its affect on water quality down
stream.
This summer the EPA voided this
perlllit and informed the DEM that the
permit did not canply with the required federal Clean Water Act
guidelines . DEM countered by saying
it might not have statutory authority
to implement all of the EPA's recommendations.
Tennessee has filed suit against
NC and Champion stating that the 111111
should be required to meet their
clean water standards . It is here we
find the crux of the legal and political debate. Water quality in Tennessee is based on a "narrative
standard" which states that color
units in waste water shall not exceed
"background levels" which can be
treated by conventional methods. They
have further "interpreted" this color
standard and assigned a value of
50 ppm.
Paul Wilms, Director of the DEM
states that all of the EPA recommedations have been met except those that
pertain to the 50 ppm . color standard.
It is their feeling that Champio~'s
new Ultrafiltration test system and
oxygen enrichment equipment will
maintain water quality and thus cOlllply with the NC permit. They also
contest Tennesse's 50 ppm. color
standard stating that it has been
arbitrarily derived and not scientifically based and as a result no~
legally enforceable here in NC. At
present, NC has not assigned numerical standards for color levels in
waste water.
Champion is presently filling
out its EPA perlllit application and
is legally operating under the DEM
permit. They have also signed a
"Special Order of Consent" requiring further testing of color removal
technology with a review by DEM personnel this spring. EPA is expected
to draft a new permit this spring
with a public comment period to
follow.
(NWN continued next page)
Winter 1985-86
c
�. - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . . . , - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,W!@\Yf@\Vl@Wr@Wf@\Yl®\V!@\Yl@\YI@
O;t
NATURAL VIRUS CHALLENGES
CHESTNUT TREE BLIGHT
NATURAL WORLD NEWS
continued
PROJECT FIREHAT
AWARENESS
TRAINING
Each year, firefighters in
North Carolina risk exposure
to hazardous chemicals. As
first responders, firefighters
and other emergency response
teams are the front line in
dealing with hazardous materials.
They and their communities particularly need to be more aware
of potential hazards in households, in agricultural operations,
and at Slllall businesses.
The dangers these chemicals pose can
be reduced if firefighters ar e more prepared for specific risks and have appropriate resour ces available to handle
them. L8ck of information at the local
level has been identified repeatedly as
a problem in emergency response planning
for hazardous material incidents.
Project FIRERAT (Hazardous Awareness
Teamwork), funded by a grant from T.V.A.
to the University of North Carolina at
\sheville has recently been started in
WNC . It's aim is to assist Buncombe,
Haywood, Henderson and Madison counties
by collecting information on risks in
the COlllDunity. Through a series of workshops with local volunteer fire departments, FIREHAT addresses specific areas
of concern identified by local, regional ,
and state emergency response professionals. Some of the topics covered are:
laws governing handling of agricultural
chemicals, transportation of hazardous
materials and the new North Carolina
Right-To-Know Act. Future plans include
3 video to further inform f i r"ef ighters
and public alike .
For mor e information contact;
PROJECT FIREHAT
102 Tacoma Cir .
Asheville, NC 28801
Cam Metcalf
Millie Buchanan
254- 4414
253-4423
Scientists at Michigan State
University have discovered a virus
which inhibits the American chestnut blight. An estimated 3.5 billion trees died between 1904 and
the early 1950's. With the demise
of the chestnut came a decline in
bear populations due to a marked
decrease in available mast each
fall.
Being studied is a naturally
occurring virus which infects the
chestnut blight fungus. The fungus
damages the tree under the bark but
does not affect the roots. Keeping
the fungus in check allows the roots
to send up sprouts then allowed to
form healthy trees. The origin of
the virus remains a myster y.
"POST NO BILLS"
• n w ""ve' U • cva
c•l
S~
Billboard landscapes blocking your
view? Then write to your U. S.Senators
and urge them to support Senator John
Glenn's proposed legislation which would
in effect abolish billboards . The bill
would prohibit destruction of vegetation along highways in front of billboards, close loopholes in the current
law which allow for signs in rural
areas, and ban new signs from zoned and
unzoned co11111ercial and industrial areas.
It would also establish a 5-yenr moratorium on signs in unzoned commercial
or industrial areas made "non-conforming" by this bill and would require
them to come down following the 5year period.
Write: Senator
, U.S.Senate
Washington, DC 20510
NATIVE BEARS THREATENED
BY RUSSIAN BOA RS
Unchecked populations of wild
boar s in the Great Smoky Mountains
Nat ional Park are depriving native
animals (especially bears) from sixt y per cent of the acorns needed to
s urvive the winter months . In an
attempt to secure an ecological balance in the park , rangers trap the
boar and release them outside the
park wher e hunting is permitted.
Local hunting organizations and
some rangers would like to see the
trappings increase .
Alr eady five organizations have
co-signed an appeal against widening the present range of the boars
and thus keeping their destructive
ways confined. Raving received national attention has taken the appeal
to Washington. But the real issue is
back in the park where the ever increasing population needs definite
thinning .
Perhaps re-establishing a native
wolf population in the park would
allo~
for a more natural
Karen Paquette
"The Mo.g.<.ca.i. Chil.d" ht al.£ o6
.the chil.d who dlt.eam.6 a.uxlke oWt.
memo.11.y 06 whe.11.e ~ beg.in ... .the chil.d
tL6. • •
who
dJL~
aunke. the. g11.e.a.t 'comhtg
.to9e.the.11. place' on
owt
EaJLth Mo.the11..
HO/"
We a.11.e a.t.t. chil.dlt.en .to9e.the.11..
--Scout tee
How important is it to pay attention to dreams? Peoples from al.most
all societies and cultures on earth
throughout time have used dreams to
deepen awareness, explain reality,
and foretell the future. These have
been characterized by 'culture pattern dreams', visions, and ordinary
individual dreams consisting of cultural phenomena or subjective personal
experience. Much attention has been
paid to every physiological and psychological aspect: poets bespeak
dreams, mythmakers spin them, and
visionaries live them ••.
The importance of 'dreamspeaking'
is becoming more evident as creative
consciousness is accepted as a valid
process in a world where science and
mysticism are finding common ground.
If we look at the essence of what it
ia to dre11111 and not 'means', we come
closer to understanding the power and
the process of the dream's potential.
' Night dreaming ' is a bodiless
experience . It is a networking of dimensions unhindered by ear thplace exi stence . Here, we are guided by our
leaders , goaded by our 'monsters ' ,
and sung to by our muses ..• On the
other hand, ' daydreaming' is the experience of fantasy, of creative visualization, and of reverie. The former is usually receptive; the latter,
creative. If our 'somewhere over the
rainbow ' dreams are not coming true
for us, perhaps i t is because we have
'pu t aw the things of the child' in
ay
us too securely. As adults we must
learn ~o allow ourselves to be re-enchanted--to look to the child, the
one we once were who is still within
us, and to the child who walks beside
us as son, daughter or friend.
Can we rememher when the simplic-
preda~~
L---------;,.;.-...:~--:.&,.••ey-• --y s• em ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...,. Wl@\Vl@\Yf@Wl@\V(@\'(/@'r(f@\Vl@ WI@
pr • eco• s • t••
Winter 1985-86
�ity of our ' higher' visions were cloud
scapes changing with the breeze? When
our ladder to higher consciousness was
a tree limb? The abandonment of lying
face-up, open and vulnerable to the
greater expanse of the sky let our
imagination be free. It was easy to
absorb the knowledge of hidden things,
represented by clouds, into the more
imaginative parts of our being. Remember the joy? The Adventure! ...
If we can relive that ma&ical moment in time, remembering that the
child we once were is still there
(covered, now, by our layers of
'adulthood'), we can tap into the
'stuff that dreams are made of'
anytime. Remembering dreams not only
means remembering sleep consciousness but also means capturing the
essence of the creative proc ess (i.e.,
the 'magic momenta') that are the
energy structure of our visions.
Knowing we can still 'p13y' is essential to our life's work of manifesting
our dreams ss reality.
In structuring our future we must
also look to the generations to come-to the children. We can help our
sons and daughters stay open to their
creative processes by encouraging
their 'daydreaming'. We can do this
by way of a morning ritual: of sharing dreams upon awakening. Doing this,
we find it becomes progressively easier and more natural for our children to remember the nightland visited if we do it regularly with them.
This practice adds another d1mension
to the life we share with our children.
It is important not to dismiss our
children's nightmareil'With only reassurances. Children have a great ability
to understand symbols and inner meanings. If we complement their own fantasies with simple 'truths' we might
find that they will begin to look forward to their nightly adventures. In
this way we give our children a way to
experience and accept their 'inner
life ' in a way which m
any of us adults
were not allowed to do at a younger
age.
Perhaps John Prine, during a recent visit to our Katuah region (Asheville Music Hall, 10/31/85), summed
it up best in this way:
WE WERE TN A HOUSE WTTH BOTH OF OUR VTNTNG
ROOM TABLES PUSHEV TOGETHER ANV VAV'S HOUSE ANV
MOM'S HOUSE PUSHEV TOGETHER. WE WERE ALL GETTING REAVY TO HAVE SUPPER TOGETHER ANV ETHAN
WAS TN COLLEGE ANV GRANVIi.A WAS IN HER APARTMENT. I WANTEV TO FLY ANV GET THEM BECAUSE
WE WERE HAVING A BTG PARTY AT OUR HOUSE ANV
SO T WALKEV OUT THE VOOR ANV 1 FLEW TO
ETHAN'S COLLEGE ANV 1 GOT HIM. I HELPEV HTM
FLY BACK TO GRANVMA'S HOUSE. 1 GOT HER ANV
BOTH OF THEM VIVN'T KNOW HOW TO FLY ANV SO
I HAV THEM HOLV MY HANVS AS 1 FLEW. WHEN WE
GOT BACK TO OUR HOUSE WE SAT VOWN AT THE
TABLE ANV SAW A BIG CAKE ON IT. WE VIVN'T
KNOW THERE WAS GOING TO BE A CAKE THERE. WE
ATE THE CAKE ANV THEN WE WENT INTO THE LIVING ROOM ANV HAV A FAMILY HUG.
Ab.i.ga.il., age g, who4e
pa.II.en.ti. cUVOIJ..Ced
when
4he 11n.t> 6oWL.
"Dream in' comes easy,
Like the first breath of a baby~
Like sunshine feedin' daisies-Like the love hidden deep in your
heart.''
... as does the following dream by
this e ight year old:
A CHILDREN'S PAGE
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~5
Winter 1985-86
�DRUMMING
,,
LETTERS TO KATUAH
•
Dear Folk Thanks for the latest KatGah, with
the pertinant articles on the threats
to this area's life. Acid rain and
nuclear waste are not metaphors for
apocalypse, they are part of it .
I am still stirred by memories of
the sullUller solstice ceremony at Sam's
Knob. The dominant image in my mind is
of a people-crystal hung in a rainbow
pouch above one of Gaia' a vital organs
now in need. The crystal is a little
chipped and sort of jagged on one end,
and it has cracks in it, but it works.
I don't know how it works, but I know
it works.
We had a fall equinox celebration
here involving sweats at Zephyr in
their huge blue sweat lodge. People
wove wreaths out of vines and flowers.
Each year people bring whatever ripe
fruits are on hand, and Bob AveryGrubel takes them and makes them into
wine. Around the fire this year we
drank wine from the two previous
years. We chanted all our chants and
sang a lot of songs. I read a poem
which went something like:
We are allies and
can ill afford
to fight amongst ourcellves
we can ill afford
to fight amongst ourcellves
Dear Katuah I have been thinking about the humans' connection
with nature, mainly because I am concerned about my
relationship with the Earth. The past two years I
have been able to begin fulfilling a dream - a dream
of achieving harmony with and awareness of the Earth,
her native spirits, muses, plants, and animals •....
the Great Spirit that breathes through all, beyond
tangible boundaries.
Last year and this past summer were especially
profound and strengthening, living in the mystical
mountains of Katuab with people who understood and
were striving to live i n harmony too . Working in a
garden, harvesting her fruit, feeling the sun, rain,
early morning fog and dew; sensing my emerging woman.
I found that the Earth is full of surprises boundless knowledge, unsurpassable strength. Waking
up as darkness rotated into dawn, meeting a companion
in the pasture by the saw mill as the Sun burst
through the trees over the mountains. Sleeping outside , sensing the roundness of the all-powerful
sphere beneath my body.
"Woman" is a powerful sense, I found, feeling the
cycles and circles and the bond between myself and
the Earth ...•• growing . Such strength and insight can
be gained from active involvement with Mother Earth!
Knowledge that can only be felt and inwardly heard,
beyond human words.
Now I sit in the morning sun upon the western part
of this continent. In this changed atmosphere , it is
easy to forget, easy to become passive and let Mother
Earth with her unlimited knowledge and opportunity,
her infiniteness, slip away.
I will continue to strive for my goal, which I hope
will always be just beyond my reach, forever expanding. My "environment" is wherever the River leads me.
A human being can be forever hopeful. I make sure not
to miss the new day's da~"!l ....•
Peace,
Celia Wissler
Central California
After seeing the cover picture on the fall issue
of K.atuah, my lady and I went to the Joyce Kilmer
Memorial Forest. We thought that i f those two poplar
trees in the picture were still there, then we would
find the bodies of the chestnut trees there, too.
Sure enough, lying behind those two old poplars
were three huge chestnuts. They were covered with
moss, and we could climb up on them and walk a long
way! It must have been amazing to see them standing.
Ralph Morgan
Webster, NC
There's plenty but there's
not enough to spill it
on the ground
when we work together
love will reach around
We are allies and
can i l l afford
to fight amongst ourcellves
we can ill afford
to fight amongst ourcellves
Take Heart ~
Will Ashe Bason
Travianna Farm
Check, VA
!<.ATl'..\H - page 26
Winter 1985-86
�On Swtday, Oc..tobe11. 13, 1985,
tfWi;ty-6.<.ve. people. came. toge.the11. 6011.
the. annua.l l<a.tLulh Fall Ga-theM.ng . We.
had a c.hanc.e. to .6 e.e. .6ome. 6ac.u be.h.<.nd
namu we. had known 6011. a long ilme ...
and we. had a c.hanc.e. to tatk wUh. ea.eh
othe11.. We. .&poke. abou:t oWtAe.l.vu .<.n 11.e.Wi.on to th.<..6 land:
_A._~:Jr
1t;~·~
.~-f
(J
":~'\
'
''
"I live down in Georgia. The land down there is so
poisoned, that we can't even be sure about the drinking water. I want to grow an organic garden , but a
garden can 't be certified down there, because there's
no telling what was put on the land when it was planted in cotton.
"We came up here to Katuah because the land seems
so much less disturbed. This seems like a powerful
place to get in touch with the land. 1 hope everybody
who lives here remembers how they are blessed and will
protect this land to keep it alive and healthy."
- Morgan
"For a long time I was looking inside myself for a
spiritual change and a spiritual experience. Now l
feel myself coming out, and I am moved by concern for
the Earth and her creatures. Once again I am feeling
earthiness. l think that now l need to bring my spiritual part to a practical level, working on the Earth,
being of service. In doing this, every thought we
think is important, because thought is creative . It
brings the spiritual down to the material level.
"Each of us has a purpose for being here. For myself, I want my actions to come from the heart. I
want to make permanent changes in others and in myself - changes that bring us toward unity, not separation.
"People and groups can teach each other. Every
little bit is illportant. I f we leave out anything,.
then it's not whole. I'• looking to see whole people
and a whole Barth. It's good to know a little bit
aore of ay purpose."
- Linda
"Looking around us we see ecological disaster, and
looking at our society we see a great spiritual void.
The two are interconnected. We can't ever be whole on
the spiritual level unless we are biologically well.
"For example: I don't like clearcuts. I heard once
that it takes 40 acres of trees to print one issue of
the N.Y. Times. Since then I haven't bought another
newspaper-:-r-go to the library if I want to see a paper. That may seem insignificant, but it's an exam;ie of an action moving from the spiritual to the
mental to the political realms."
- Donald
'
"This is an age of personal transformation. Our
personal change is a metaphor for the changes the
Earth and our universe are going through. l want to
learn and listen, a.nd translate these lessons into my
life and work. 11
- Les
"Those who care about life have to come together
to reinforce each other in a multitude of ways to make
us all strong enough to live through the coming changes. We must do thia if we are to survive as a species .
"We have to keep in mind that this culture is real.
It exists. It is not people, it is not a government.
It is an energy form, and it stands against everything we value.
"We need to be strong and dedicated . We need to
have the will to stay together, to keep our ideals,
and to make our visions happen. Otherwise it won't
happen. If we believe something, we have to eat that
way, think that way, live that way."
- Andy
" We need to have a positive dream, a positive
vision. We need to focus on that and head for it
straight as an arrow.
"Looking around me, I see others changing, and I
see myself changing. We need to take the world as it
is, the good with the bad, and, starting with this,
to make it new. We need to affirm a positive future
and our ability to create it. We need to affirm our
ability to dream."
- Judith
It
~
an .<.Mpi.11..i.ng da.y •••••••
Le.t' .6 aU 06 U6 ge.t .toge.the.11. 60.I!. the.
Katful.h Sp!Ung Ga-thell..<.ng. See. you the.n!
#"
"-~TUAH - page 27
Winter 1985-86
�cfReLes
cle, I began with small stones and
sticks that I stuck in the ground at
the right time on the right days.
Later when I found a good rock and I
had the time, I'd haul it back there
and stick it in.
"This is the most primitive way
of making the simplest types of observations. It is now known that the ancient Europeans could predict eclipses by watching the moon. This is remarkable, because the key to predicting an eclipse is a slight wobble in
the moon's orbit, and this wobble is
visible only every 9. 3 years when the
moon is at the northernmost and southernmost points of her orbit. These
people were considered illiterate!
Bow could they have kept that information long enough to establish a repeating pattern of observations?"
THE PATIERNS IN NATURE
The stone circles acted as a
bridge between the Earth and the sky
for the early peoples. l:lumankind is
ever searching for patterns. It seems
to be in our nature to seek out the
order in our ever-changing world. In
their role as astronomical observatories, the rock monuments_pass on to
us the excitement the ancients felt
in discovering the cosmic order in
the movements of the heavens.
"At one time," said Lylich, "when
it turned winter, people didn't kn.ow
if it was going to be spring again or
ot. But when they could look at the
sun, and see it turn back, they could
say, 'Look! It ' s following the same
pattern it did last year!', and
they'd know everything was going·
long alright.''
(continued from p. 5)
There is also a power in the
Earth. Whether physical and/or spiritual it is capable of turning dowsers'
rods or making an electromagnetic
charge measurable on a gaussometer.
The Cherokee Indians of Katuah were
aware of this and recognized sacred
sites that were sources of spiritual
•power here in this land (see page 11).
It is said that th~ standing stones
of pre-Celtic Europe were also conductors for this mysterious Earth energy,
sometimes called the "dragon power"
and symbolically represented on the
great stones by spiral designs chiseled with great care onto so many of
the monuments.
It is surmised that this power was
readily perceptible to the ancestors
through senses that we have lost to
civilization, and that generating
and using this energy was a central
feature of the ceremonies and rituals
held at the sites.
"I hear stories," said Lylich,
"of people who touch big standing
stones and feel a tingle or a shock,
or who ·lose their balance and fall
to the ground. There are also stories
of strange electromagnetic effects or
weird weather associated with them.
"No one has told me that they
have felt that in our circle. Mostly
what I feel is a solid, massive,
rooted-in-the-Earth, basic-type feeling. Maybe that's what we need today."
This could very well be so, The
movements of the heavenly bodies,
which so transfixed the old ones, are
now proven and documented to the point
of being commonplace. But the connection to the Earth that the old ones
took for granted is only now being rediscovered by Mother Ela's children.
Perhaps by helping us to remember,
the stones are helping in a healing.
"Making this megalithic stone
circle was slow, but it wasn't difficult," said Lylich. "The time was
right and it felt like we were moving with a flow of something already
happening.
"The number four is a sacred
number to the Cherokees, and it seemed to be important in the construction of this circle . I was 40 last
year when we built it, and that was
the 400th year of European settlement
in North America--dating from the lost
colony of Manteo. It was also the
444th year since DeSoto's expedition
in 1540, which was the first time
white people penetrated these mountains.
We have had our way with this con-·
tinent for 400 years.The four directions, the four seasons, the four
rounds of a sweat lodge; 1n many ways
the number four signifies a completed
cycle. I think it means that we've had
our time here, and that now it's time
for something else to happen.
"It's time for a change 1n our attitude. We've been screwing it up for
400 yef.rs, maybe now it ' s time to
straighten it back for 400 years.
That ' s about how long it would take to
restore the wild places the continent
had when we first approached its
shores."
RESOURCE READING: Earth Magic by
Francis Hitchings (Wm. Morrow &
Company, New York City, 1977)
- D.W.
Ly.Uch (;)[.(tba.wtL may be cont.ac.te.d
tlvt.ough Ka;tUah; Sox 873; CuLlowhee,
NC 2872;--
Pmvidin~ Pen<>n.1l Sttvicc
Allin~ Your Boal< N..,.U
704.264.5866
In Speciali:od Fields
Books Q,.J
ThingsL~ ...
GARY HEMSOTH
!loolutlJ..-
?08 Blowu>g Rock Road
Boone, Nonh Camlonn Ul607
A \'ARIF.TY OF
WHOJ.F.Sot!E BAKED
coons
SOI AH PllOUlJCTS WAIER ANALYSIS
RAN UAL l C lANIER
704 293 5912
:{AITAH -
page 28
llWY. 101
Rf. 68 BOX 125
CULLOWllEE, NC 28723
Winter 1985-86
�WINTER SOLSTICE-YULE The
longest night, light is born. This
is a time for community earth ceremonies and celebration. See Kat6ah
issue 06 for a suggested Winter
Solstice Earth ceremony.
CULLOWHEE, NC
"The G eat Forest: An Appalr
achian Story," ongoing through January 6, 1986. At The Mountain Heritage Center.
17
ASHEVILLE, NC
Dr. H. Ray Evers of the Evers
Clinic, Cottonwood , AL, one of the
most successful institutions offering alternative medical treatment
in the country , to speak on "Holistic Healing and Freedom of Choice"·
UNC-A, Humanities Lecture Hall· '
7:30 pm.
'
19
ASHEVILLE , NC
Christmas Caroling at Craggy
State Prison. Bring flashlights,
songsheets provided. Parking limited
Please carpool. (ABCCM Jail and
Prison Ministry). 7-8 pm.
HOT SPRINGS, NC.
Southern Dharma Retreat Center
will sponsor a 7-day meditation retreat, which will be led by John
Orr, a former Buddhist monk who now
lives and teaches in the DurhamChapel Hill area of N,C. The retreat
will cost $190., which includes all
meals and lodging. For further info
call 704-622-7112 or 704-254-1351.
28
3
BLACK MOUNTAIN, NC.
David Wilcox-original and
traditional folk tunes. Exceptional
guitarist, storyteller , singer and
songwriter. McDibbs, $2.00 9pm ,
16
BLACK M1'N. 1 NC .
Harriet Witt Miller-slides on
Halley ' s Comet, McDibbs, $2.00,
9pm , Children free , No smoking.
18
ASHEVILLE , NC.
Martin Luther King, Jr. prayer breakfast. Key speaker-Shirley
Chisholm. Call 253-37ll
FEBRUARY
28
ASHEVILLE,NC.
A concert in the Great Hall
by The Community Chorus of UNC-Asheville. Free Admission. Grove Park
Inn.4:00-5:00 pm.
BLACK HISTORY MONTH For
event info, call Y,M.I. Cultural
Center (704) 252-4614
29
2
CANDLEMAS-the light quickens.
GROUNDHOG DAY
7
MARS BILL, NC.
ASHEVILLE, NC.
A concert in the Great Ball
by The Asheville Junior Symphony .
Free Admission. Grove Park Inn.
4:00-5:00 pm.
•
Opening night of The G e.s t
r
Forest: An Appalachian Story Exhibi
at Rural Life Museum. Public Showing Feb . 8-April 29.
9
HALLEY'S COMET reaches perihelion .•. its closest point to the
sun. Earth, though , will be on the
opposite aide of the sun from Balley' a Comet so it will be impossible for us to see it.
Dr. Robert A. Resnick
CHIROPRACTIC PHYSI C IAN
MARCH
..;....we/ve,, now
l'Y\oved to
01.At"' Y\CW
off1ve .....)(
NATURAL FOOD STORE
& DELI
CELEBRATING OUR 10th YEAR
'3'3S Me-vv imon Ave.
Ashe.vii le NG z~eo1
(704 ) 255. 6333
160 Broadway
Ashev ille, N.C. 28801
Open 1 Days A Week
Monday • Friday
(704) 253-7656
9:00 a .m. · 8:00 p.m.
Where Broadway
Meets Merrlmon
And 1
·240
9:00 a .m. · 6:30 p.m.
Saturday
Sunday
1:00
.m. · 5:00 .m.
2-15 WOMEN'S HISTORY CELEBRATION
Events at UNC-Asheville ( cal
(704) 258-6588) and A.S.U., Boone
( call (704) 262-2170) & elsewhere .
8-21 HALLEY ' S COMET. Look south
in the sky before sunrise.
18-25 CENTRAL AMERICA WEEK For
program info, call (704) 252-9167
21-23 BOONE , NC.
Appalachian Studies Conferenc
Center for Continuing Education ,
Appalachian State University ,
herbs , na tive pla nt s, pere nnials,
flowers, fruit trees, bulbs,
bedd ing pla n ts.
80 Lakeside Drive
8/ IOl hs of a mile from Hdrdee'!>
in Franklin, N.C .
fo r informdlion call 524·3321
M ALAPROP'S
BOOKSTORE/ CAFE
BOOKS -
CARDS -
RECOROS
81 H4YWOOO ST. ASHEVlllE. NC 29801 704-254-8734
KA7f A - pa ge 29
H
Winter 1985-86
£
�LIFE DESIGN: A counseling/consultant
service; addressing communication ,
cooperation and a centered, focused
approach to ENJOYING your life!
Group Workshops , Individual and Family Sessions. Located at 5 Ravenscroft ~. Asheville. Phone Cat Gilliam
at 254-8140 or Lorra Streifel at 2535575.
RURAL SOUTRERN VOICE for PEACE
(R.S.V.P.) is a network of people
in rural/small city communities
in the Southeast who are working
to build the nonviolent alternative systems and lifestyles that
can bring peace to our world.
Publishes RSVP Newsletter. More
info : RSVP, Rt 5 Box 335, Burnsville , NC 28714
NICARAGUAN COFFEE. Delicious,
roasted coffee beans or ground
coffee available for $6.00 a lb.
Contact: Steve Livingston (704)
257-3019
IN 17th YEAR OF PUBLICATION, Akwesasne Notes is a Journal for Native
and Natural Peoples, covering world
events which effect indigenous peoples. For subscriptions or tax-deductible contributions: AKWESASNE
NOTES, P.O. Box 196, Mohawk Nation ,
Rooseveltown , NY 13683-0196.
liEADWATERS: What is your experience with water? Would you share
your experience in your own means
of expression (poetry, story, dance, music) for a performance and
recording to explore and celebrate the beauty and purity of the
mountain headwaters? We will focus
on water in all its aspects-our
goal is harmony. If you would like
to be in a core group to create
this production, contact Bill Melanson, P.O. Box 628, Asheville, NC
28802
T'AI CHI , a philosophy you can
dance to. Mondays 7:30-9:30 pm
at 70 Lexington Ave . Asheville
with Harold Miller.
APPALACHIAN GINSENG COMPANY. Stratfiied Seeds, Seedlings, 2-5 year old
Roots. P.O . Box 547 , Dillsboro ,NC.
28725
ALTERNATIVE METHODS for controlling
garden pests- send $2 . 00 to Joe
Armstrong, Rt. l,Box 121 , Bardstown , KY. 40004 .
If you have experience with methods
of pest control that do not rely on
synthetic pesticides, send your contributions to the "Alternative Methods
of Pest Control" list being compiled
by Joe Armstrong. Copies of the list
available for $2.00 and a long SASE
from address above
SELF-RELP CREDIT UNION has now
opened a branch office in Western
North Carolina through the State
Employees Credit Union system. For
more info: Write: S.R.C.U., P.O.
Box 3259, Durham, NC 27705, Or go
by: State Employees Credit Union,
200 All Souls Crescent, Asheville,
NC/telephone: (704) 274-4200
We are makers of Bamboo Flutes, Each
of our flutes is capable of a twooctave range. They are electronically
tuned, burnished, and lacquered. For
prices and more information, write:
Wood Song
Rob Yard
Route 3, Box 120-3
Floyd, VA. 24091
BACKROADS TOURS - A 32 page collection
of self-guided motor tours through the
rural areas of the Virginia Blue Ridge
-$2.75
Laurel Publications
Route 1
Meadows of Dan , VA
24120
WEBWORKING is free.
Send submissions to:
Katuah
P.O.BOX 873
CULLOWREE, NC
28723
·waterman
ram pumps
Q
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I
T -SHIRTS
E:1c h ori11 i n;il
••
lf@~ia:n
hand screened in 5 colors
on lhe line~l 100%
pre-shrunk cotton
PaY
"why
to pump water when a
ram pump wiil do it for free ?"
Send for free brochure
C. Hollifield
355 Cedar Creek Road
Black Mountain, NC 28711
(704) 669-6821
~
'<ATI:..\H -
page 30
short a nd long sleeve t·shirts.
I
Sho11 Sleeve •1 ppcl S&P C/f£CJ<.H.a,"'41( I
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Bloclc Beor 0 Silver 0 Ton 0 White Phone
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Red-Tniled Howle 0 Ec111 0 SilvN O Too Mallle· Rld10Rtmoodl•~"'''
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or wnle for brochure
0
0
Winter 1985-86
�OUR ERROR
We neglected to put the by-line on
the excellent article on "Acorn
Bread" in the fall issue of Katuab.
The article was written by S~
·Bear - herbalist, counselor, and
co-director of the Pepperland Farm
Swi:lit.sfi 8 Degi .:l>l11xk .JJ(ai.."1;1'
~i~ 8 1'.Jfaril!J 13afa11ct1~/
Cerrffi£cl
Camp.
628-1537
GET BACK! ISSUES OF KATUAH
ISSUE TWO - WINTER 1983-84
ISSUE SIX - WINTER 1984-85
Yona • Bear Hunters •Pigeon River
• Another Way With Animals • Alma:
Poems • Becoming Politically Effective • Mountain Woodlands •
Katuah Under The Dril l • Spiritual Warriors
Winter Solstice Earth Ceremony •
Horsepasture River • Coming of
Light • Log Cabin Roots • Mountain Agriculture-The Right Crop•
William Taylor • Forest's Future
ISSUE SEVEN - SPRING 1985
ISSUE THREE - SPRING 1984
Sustainable Economics • Bot
Springs • Worker ownership • The
Great Economy • Self Help
Credit Onion • Wil d Turkey • Responsible Investing • Working
In The Web Of Life
Sustainable Agriculture • Sunflower_, • Human Impact On The
Forest • Childrens ' Education •
veronica Nicholas : Woman In
Politics • Little People •
Medicine Allies
ISSUE EIGHT - SOMMER 1985
ISSUE FOUR - SOMMER 1984
Celebration: A Way of Life•
Katuah 18,000 Years Ago • Sacred
Sites • Folk Arts in the Schools
·Sun Cycle/Moon Cycle • Hilda
Downer• Cherokee Heritage Center• Who Owns Appalachia?
water Orum • Water Quality • Kudzu
• Solar Eclipse • Clearcutting •
Trout • Going To Water•Ram Pumps
• Microhydro • Poems: Bennie Lee
Sinclair, Jim Wayne Miller
ISSUE NINE - FALL 1985
ISSUE FIVE - FALL 1984
The Waldee Forest • The Trees
Speak • Migrating Forests •
Horse Logging • Starting A
Tree crop • Orban Trees •
J.\corn Bread • Myth Time
Harvest • Old Ways In Cherokee •
Ginseng • Nuclear Waste • Our
Celtic Heritage • Bioregionalism
Past, Present, And Future • John
Wilnoty • Healing Darkness •
Politics Of Participation
I
KATUAH: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalach ians
B~x 873;
Cul l owhee, N~rth Carolina 28723
ORDER FORM
For more i n fo : call Marn ie Muller (70 4) 252- 916 7
Name
Regular Membership ••• • • $10/ yr .
Sponsor • • .••••..•• •• • •• $20/ y r .
Contr ibutor • • . • •• ••• ••• $50/ yr .
Add r ess
Enclou .d .i4 ,
.t~.l.4 t66o~t
c ity
Area Code
State
Zip
$
4n
txt~A
.to 9.ivt
bo o4.t
Back Issue s
Issue 2
Issue 3
Issue 4
Issue 5
Issue 6
Issue 7
Issue 8
Issue 9
@ $2 . 0 0 = $
@ $2.00 .. $- @
$2.00 =
s--
@ $2. 00 • $- -
@ $2.00 •
@ $2 . 00 @ $2 . 00
@ $2.00
TOTAL PRICE •
postage p a id
$-$=
$
$==
$_ _
I can be a local contact
peraon for m area
y
Phone NUilber
KA rf AH - pa~e 31
Wint er 1985-86
�
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 10, Winter 1985-1986
Description
An account of the resource
The theme of the tenth issue of the <em>Katúah Journal</em> is on holistic healing, folk medicine traditions, and sacred places. Authors and artists in this issue include: Meridel LeSeur, Kate Rogers, Barbara Reimensnyder, Marlene Mountain, Stephen Knauth, Douglas A. Rossman, Nancy-Lou Patterson, D. Massey, David Wheeler, Roger Stephens, Richard Ciccarelli, Diannah Beauregard, J. Linn Mackey, and Karen Paquette. <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
1985-1986
Table Of Contents
A list of subunits of the resource.
Medicine Traditions Near Home.......1<br /><br />Kate Rogers and Her Mountain Medicals.......3<br /><br />Circles of Stone.......4<br /><br />Internal Mythmaking: An Interview with Marlene Mountain.......6<br /><br />"This is Heresy!" Holistic Healing on Trial.......9<br /><br />Two Poems by Steve Knauth.......10<br /><br />Cherokee Mythic Places.......11<br /><br />The Uktena's Tale.......15<br /><br />Crystal Magic.......19<br /><br />Good Medicine: "What Makes a Place Sacred?".......20<br /><br />Review: Deep Ecology.......21<br /><br />Natural World News.......22<br /><br />"Dreamspeaking".......24<br /><br />Fall Katúah Gathering.......27<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
Holistic medicine
Alternative medicine--North Carolina, Western
Art Therapy
Visions
Herbs-Therapeutic use--North Carolina, Western
Dream interpretation
Sacred space
Stone circles
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)
Acid Deposition
Appalachian Mountains
Appalachian Studies
Black Bears
Book Reviews
Cherokees
Children's Page
Earth Energies
European Immigration
Folklore and Ceremony
Good Medicine
Habitat
Hazardous Chemicals
Health
Katúah
Pigeon River
Plants and Herbs
Poems
Radioactive Waste
Sacred Sites
Turtle Island
Water Quality
Women's Issues
-
https://omeka.library.appstate.edu/files/original/a1feba40871ce614a08133c6846cda92.pdf
9ea20a95b097d62eeecabfc775e81415
PDF Text
Text
---~
ATUAB
$JOO
~
ISSUE XII
) " SUMMER 1986
�LIVI~ IN 'THE GARC>EN..............................................•...•...............1
r.c
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Nl.n.EAR FEFERENDl.M..---···..····----·······-··········-···.3
SHIIT'Ali<E•••.••.•..•.•..•.......•......••••..•........................................................4
"Tl-E WATER CYCLE": A PC:EM...................................................•..6
'THE SACRE.D SCA,RAB.•...•...•...........................................................7
CIRCl.ES
~UNICATIC:>l'il-................................................•...8
a=
fEVIEW: JHEWISE VOMN HERBAL
FOO Tl-IE Cl-tll.DBEARI~ YEAR...........................................9
REVBV: 1HE SMALL-scAl..E AQ.JACULTI.JAE BOOK..........10
C3C:XD MEDONE: TOOA,COO.........................................................12
SUN ROOT.....•...................................................................................14
POEM: "THE HCMESTEAD ~ HORN MCX.JNTAIN"....-.............14
"HD..AHl'VlJ_.": THE FORMATIQ\J OF 1HE
APPAl..ACl-tlAN ~NTAINS.............................................15
NATIJRAL ~ NEWS..............................................................19
'1l£ WIUDNTIEE": ACHILDREN'S STORY......-.................25
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LtUING 1 THE: GAPlOc(\)
N
"The garden", as it is known in the community below,
occupies a small clearing among the folded ridges of the
Black Mountains. In the summer the Rarden blooms
profusely. Flowers, shrubs, vegetables, and trees crowd
toget~r in what first appears to be a wild disarray of diverse
colors and textures falling over the stone terraces stacked up
the hillside. A tiny log cabin and gnomish yurt stand at the
edge of the trees to one side, while "the pavilion", a large
buildmg that is both work space and community danc~ hall
looms above.
In the midst ofthe riot of Rrowth, partners Joe Hollis
and Rhea Rose Orm1Jnd work, looking like the small
human figures in the middle of a Chinese paiflling. Joe has
been on this site for 15 years now, intuitively creating an
enviroMMnt to meet his particular needs of habitation, and
consciously attuning and adapting himself to his chosen
niche.
KATUAH - page 1
ISSUE XII
SUMMm 1986
by Joe Hollis
illustrations by Rhea Rose Ormond
"I came here with an idea to start a garden. It took: me
a couple of years to clear trees and to build this cabin where I
live now. But then I started to garden. I started right in front
of the cabin, and I've been working out since then. The soil
is good here; there's a lot of leaf mold in it. But it took: a lot
of clearing to get out the roots, the stumps, the black:benies and the rocks. It is extremely rocky in this hollow. Some
kind of landslide ended up here. The rocks are all jumbled;
you can see how they ended up on top of each other. As I
began to dig them out. I made rock piles. Then. to get rid of
the rock piles, I made walls. Now this whole hillside is a
tcrraccd garden, and the terraces are still growing. There arc
rock piles down there right now waiting to get laid up.
"I started with the standard flowering percnniaJ plants poppy, Sweet William, bulbs. All good, sturdy local
varieties that I'd get by trading with old ladies down in the
neighborhood. Then when I bad some walls laid up, I got
the idea to put strawberries among the stones. Once I had the
notion that plants could help tie the walls together, I stumbled
into the world of rock gardening. For many people, rock
- continued on p. 13
Summer 1986
�'
2!2·,·!l·.·#jW:·,·H:l U¢iijiJ@ld!#lt·UO,.
· il!ll.
EDITORIAL STAFF THIS ISSUE:
Rob Messick
Martha Tree
Martha Overlock
J. Linn Mackey
David Wheeler
Will Ashe Bason
Chip Smith
Mamie Muller
Michael Red Fox
Scott Bird
Brad Stanback
Judith Hallock
EDITORIAL ASSISIANCE:
Joe Roberts
Brooks Michael
Jeff Fobes
EDITORIAL OFFICE
THIS ISSUE:
Asheville, NC
PRINTEPBY:
Sylva lk.rsls1
Publishing Co.
Sylva, NC
WEITEUSAI:
TELEPHONE:
(704) 252-9167
Kmih
Box 873
Cullowbee, NC 28723
COVER· Rob Messick
JR\10CllTJ0R
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Statement ofPurpose
Here in the southern-most heanland 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 responsibiliry for the implications of that
geographical and cultural heritage. This sense of
responsibiliry centers on the concept of living within the
natural scale and balance of universal systems and laws. We
begin by invoking the Cherokee name "Kariiah" 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 contifll4ing evolutionary process.
) ,
We seem to have reached the fulcrum point of a "db or
die" situation in terms of a contilll4ed quality standard of life
on this planet. It is the aim ofthis journal tO db its part in the
re-inhabitation and re-culturation of the Kamah province of
the Southern Appalachians. This province is indicated by its
natural boundaries: the New River vicinity to the north; the
foothills ofthe piedmont area to the east; Yona Mountain and
the Georgia hill.s to the south; and the Tennessee River Valley
to 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 sustainabiliry and the
creation of harmony and balance in a total sense, here in this
plaa.
We welcome all correspondence, criticism, pertinent
informa1ion, articles, artwork, etc. with hopes that K1l1fJ.gh
will grow to serve the best interests of this region and all its
living, breathing family members.
• The Editors
The Internal Revenue Service has declared K.aWAh a
non-profit organization under section 50J(c)(3) of the
Internal Revenue Code.
All contributions to KilWlb. are deductible from
personal income tax.
Summer 19 6
�I
THE IMPORTANCE OF SAYING "NO"
'
THE NORTH CAROLINA NUCLEAR WASTE REFERENDUM
by Avram Friedman
On May 6, 1986, 93% of the
electorate in North Carolina rejected the
location of a high level nuclear waste and
spent fuel repository in that state.
At first glance' this event may not
seem astounding, but its political
significance is potentially far-reaching and
could mean a watershed of good news for
environmentalists on the local, state,
regional, and national levels.
The news of this referendum is still
so fresh that as of yet many organiz.ations,
active individuals, and politicians have not
grasped the meaning of what has happened.
A Powerful New Tool For Local
Organizations
A powerful tool has just been handed
to anti-nuclear waste, anti-nuclear energy,
and environmental organiz.ations in North
Carolina State officials and politicians who
have their fingers lifted to the winds to
sense the public mood, just ran into a
hurricane. 1t is now a matter of public
record that Nonh Carolinians almost
unanimously reject participation in one part
of the nuclear fuel cycle. Politicians can
now be effectively pressured into taking
further environmentally responsible actions.
For example, since the referendum,
the Citizens for a Choice on Nuclear Waste
(CCNW), of Jackson County, has informed
every state legislator that North Carolina
should not enter into a "compact" with other
southeastern states that would result in this
state receiving all th~low-level radioactive
waste produced by the entire region.
CCNW told the politicians that the public
would be informed how each legislator
votes on the issue when the decision is
made this July in Raleigh. Will politicians
dare to stand against 93% of the public in an
election year?
Although the entire 93% cannot
necessarily be transferred from one related
issue to the next, a politician can only use
the information available to him/her to draw
assumptions about the public mood. The
only concrete indication available at this
time, concerning nuclear issues, is the waste
referendum. Combined with the Chernobyl
nuclear power plant accident in April, the
THERE WILL BE NO "SUSPENSION"OF
To those who have worked on the related
issues of the nuclear waste dump, the
Monitored Retrievable Storage Facility
(MRS), and the transportation of nuclear
waste through the mountains of KatUah, it is
blatantly obvious that the recent
announcemer.t l.>y Energy Secretary John
Herrington that the search for an eastern
waste suppository has been "suspended" is
a political move designed to take the heat off
the incumbent administration until after the
next presidential elections, at which time the
hunt for the second nuclear waste
suppository will be continued at full force.
It is hard to believe the degree of
callousness of those who would toy in this
way with the hopes, the dreams, and the
expectations of the people who live in the
affected areas. Ultimately, their scheme will
backfire, because eventually the people will
know that they have been disenfranchised
by the machinations of the technocrats who
seem to wield so much power in
government While it may put people to
sleep for a time, in the end it will serve only
to drive home the realization that doing
away with nuclear involvement altogether is
the only permanent solution to the problem
of nuclear waste.
Besides the obvious goal of
manipulating the electoral vote, the strategic
purposes of this move, the "suspension
announcement", are twofold:
First, the nuclear consortium hopes to
divide the anti-waste movement They hope
KA
AH-page 3
that by offering a false security to the
residents of the eastern states, they can
increase the pressure on the western states
to force a nuclear waste dump on them.
Onoe this is accomplished, they will then
tum their full attention to the goal of
establishing a second dump site in the east
The bureaucrats' second purpose is to
create a lull in which they might establish an
MRS facility in eastern Tennessee. The
MRS always has been and still is the !'mt
step in the strategy to bring a nuclear waste
dump into the Appalachians. Allowing the
MRS to be emplaced would constitute an
engraved invitation to emplant a nuclear
waste suppository in Katfiah sometime in
the future.
In one way the "suspension"
announcement is helpful. It makes clear the
difference between the politicians who are
working in the interests of the people of this
area and in the interests of the land itself and
those politicians who are working strictly in
their own interest or on behalf of large
corporations in other parts of the country.
Those who do not care about this land and
its people are parading about crowing, "It's
over! We've won! It's all finished now!"
They are trying to disarm us and put us to
sleep in the face of an impending nuclear
catastrophe.
But the leaders who have the interests
of the people at heart are cautioning that the
mountain interstates are stiJJ prime routes for
the transportation of nuclear wastes and still
referendum bas dramatically shifted the
burden of popular support to the nuclear
industry. Anti-nuclear groups will find it
much easier to convince politicians that the
safe political ground lies in opposing nukes.
In addition to the political leverage
gained in dealing with legislative action,
anti-dump groups and individuals will now
find it much easier and safer to carry out
further actions against the U.S. Department
· continued on . 26
DISBELIEF
opposing the MRS. A truly conscientious
leader would exhibit the courage to call for a
moratorium on the construction and
operation of all new nuclear facilities, but a
leader of such caliber has not yet stepped
forward.
The "suspension" of the nuclear
waste dump plan in the east does not mean a
suspension of interest on the part of the
DOE, but rather the suspension of a
panicular strategic approach that has proved
a failure. The DOE is simply going to
approach its self-chosen task more
carefully, trying to diYide and then conquer
the anti-suppository movement and to
disarm the people of Katuab in hopes they
would awaken one day in the future to be
faced with afait accompli in the form of an
MRS facility installed in Tennessee just
waiting to package high-level radioactive
wastes for a second waste suppository in
Appalachia.
If this country is to have a nuclear
future, and there is no doubt that this is
what the DOE, the present political
administration, and the giant energy
corporations desire, there will necessarily
have to be a second nuclear waste dump.
The recent "suspension" of activity makes
clear our task: to expose the actual
environmental and economic costs of
nuclear power and to promote the
development of a more viable fuel to power
our future.
,
ummer 1986
�by Michael Red Fox
The generic name is Lentinus e®des,
but say "shc-i-ta'-kee" if you want people to
know that you arc talking about an oriental
mushroom that has become a popular item
in western urban gourmet cuisine. Long
known in both China and Japan as "The
Emperor's Food" and jealously guarded by
Samurai warriors, shiitake today offers the
more democratic promise of being a
low-cost way to diversify small farm
income and to improve the health of regular
users.
Demand for the dark brown,
wide-gilled shiitakc mushrooms far exceeds
the present supply. Why the demand?
Because as well as being renowned for its
flavor, the easily grown mush.room resists
bruising and spoiling and can be quickly
pickled, canned, or dried (remaining
nutritious for 13 months). Using beat to
dry shiitakc enhances certain popular navor
characteristics. Shiitakc rehydrates well and
when cooked maintains its color and impartS
a smokey. full-bodied, aromatic navor
while maintaining a delightfully delicate,
fleshy texture. It can be added to any dish
which uses the familiar white mushroom,
though much Jess shiitakc is needed.
Shiitakc has twice the protein value of
the common mushroom and contains all
eight essential amino acids in proportions
similar to that or milk and animal nesh. It is
low in calorics and contains large amounts
of B vitamins and minerals.
For centuries, the Japanese have
priud the health· giving benefits of shiitake.
Now modern research shows that shiitake
reduces scrum cholesterol, strengthens the
immune system against viral diseases, and
bas prevented or caused remission of certain
typeS of tumors in mice.
Sbiitake already generates more than
$1 billion annually in export sales for Japan.
There arc nearly 200,000 shiitake growers
in Japan raising 161,000 metric tons of
shlitake every year.
Toby Farris, head of the USDA
Mushroom Project in Asheville, NC,
estimates that small farms in KatUah can
increase their incomes 30% by growing
shiitakc. But he suggests that small farmers
gradually develop shiitakc cultivation as a
stabilizing second income rather than trying
to turn it into a get-rich.quick scheme.
Market price of fresh shiitake is
anywhere from $4.00 - 20.00 per pound.
This price varies according to the quality of
GROWING SHIITAKE - HERE'S HOW
There arc six key cultivation phases in
growing shiitakc, each of which requires
careful attention. These arc: 1) obtaining
viable inoculum (spawn) in pure culture and
storing it until use, 2) preparing logs for
cultivation, 3) inoculation, 4) laying the logs
to favor fungal growth, 5) raising the spawn
to favor fruiting, and 6) harvesting and
storing the crop.
Spawn: Shiitakc spawn is usually
grown on small dowel or peg-like pieces of
wood 3/8 to 3/4 inches in length that are
supplied in sealed autoclaved plastic
containers. Occasionally it is grown on
sawdust.
The spawn should be moist, generally
white, and appear rather fuzzy. Spawn may
be kept as long as one year under
refrigeration. The retail cost of spawn
varies widely, so it would pay to carefully
check different prices and quality.
the product and the location of the market
A com of oak firewood can sell for as
little as $30.00. That same cord of wood
could produce between $1,000 - 2,000 of
shiitake during the average five-year life
cycle.
Preparing the logs: The most
important ingredient of a good shHtakc farm
is a sustainable source of hardwoods,
prefcrabTy oak,. 6CCCii, or hornbeam. Softer
hardwoods, such as poplar and maple arc
being used experimentally to nurture
shiitakc mushrooms, but whether they have
a commercial future is still uncertain.
White, black, northern red, and chestnut
oak wilJ hold onto their bark and maintain
the proper moisture content for shiitake.
Thick-barked trees, such as locust, hamper
the inoculations and spread of the shiitakc
spawn.
A growing area is necessary that
provides protection from direct sunlight
(70-85% shade is best) and from strong
winds. Nearby there must be a good source
of clean water.
Shiitake is a non-pathogenic fungus
and will not grow on living tissues. It
survives on dead wood only and must
establish itself before competitive fungi
colonize the wood. For these reasons, only
live trees arc cut for shiitakc cultivation.
Cutting the live tree is best done in the
fall or winter to capture the supply of sugar
stored in the dormant wood. Also the bark
tends to stay on the logs longer if the trees
arc cut when the leaves arc gone. Keeping
the bark on the logs and keeping it intact is
�critical for proper moisture control and to
block competitive "weed" fungi
Logs are cut to 3-5 foot lengths and
may be 2-8 inches in diameter. Branches
may also be used. Seal the ends of the logs
with a latex paint or soft wax to provide a
moisture barrier and to keep out the "weed
fungi". It is important to keep the exposed
log ends from coming in contact with the
soil. Therefore, never skid the logs from
the forest. Soil contact greatly increases
contamination of the logs. Stack the logs
off the ground for six weeks to allow the
natural defense mechanism against fungi to
die off and allow the moisture level to adjust
to 50-70%.
How will you know when the logs
have reached the proper moisture level? It
can be measured by slicing off the end of a
log and weighing it This figure is the net
weight Weigh the cut end again after it has
been dried overnight in a warm oven. This
figure is the dry weight. Subtracting the dry
weight from net weight gives the weight of
the water in the slice. Dividing that figure
by the net weight of the piece gives the
percent of moisture in the log.
Before inoculation, scrape lichen,
mosses and debris off the logs without
damaging the barlc.
Inoculation: Inoculation is best
done when daytime temperatures are 50-60
degrees F and the coldest weather is past.
March and April are the best times to
inoculate. Inoculation should be done in a
shaded area to avoid direct exposure of the
spawn to sunlight
To inoculate the logs, drill holes 6-8
inches apart in a row along the length of the
log.
Insert a dowel in each hole
immediately after drilling. Space the rows
so that the holes are staggered and 2-3
inches apart around the citcumfercnce of the
log. Tap the dowels in gently with a
hammer and immediately brush over the
plug with a thin layer of wax. Growth
begins almost immediately under favorable
conditions. If sawdust-grown spawn is
used, the holes should be completely filled
with the sawdust-and-spawn mixture.
Laying: In practice, most failures in
shiitake cultivation have been traced to
incorrect stacking of the logs in the "laying
yard" that creates conditions that favor
"weed fungi" instead of the shiitake.
Logs should be laid at a 45 degree
angle to encourage growth of the shiitake
mycelia. They should be reversed every 2-4
months to encourage even mycelial growth.
In addition, the logs may be soaked in water
for 18-24 hours if necessary during
exceptionally dry periods. The optimum
conditions in the laying yard are
temperatures between 59-82 degrees F and a
relative humidity of 80-85%.
Raising: The following winter the
logs can be moved to the "raising yard".
There they arc laid nearly upright or stacked
log cabin style and kept shaded and moist
until fruiting.
A relatively dry log surface will help
discourage the growth of surface molds.
Therefore, if logs are watered artificially,
they should be watered thoroughly for a
relatively short period of time. Studies
show that if motsture is maintained near
70%, a 50% increase in production will
result, but light, frequent waterings should
be avoided.
In commercial production,
dehydration of the logs followed by soaking
in cool water 55-70 degrees F is often done
to stimulate fruiting. Logs that have been
dehydrated usually produce bumper crops
within a week of being soaked! Soaking
also tends to eliminate cerUin kinds of
pests.
Any logs that lose their bark should
be discarded. Old logs should be disposed
of in a separate location a good distance
from the cultivation site.
logs ca.n provide 3-5 years of consistent
cropping of shiitake mushrooms.
Cultivated in the Orient for more than
400 years and praised as the "ginseng of
mushrooms" and "elixir of life'', shiitake
offers special promise for small farmers in
Katuah.
Happy 'shrooming!
SOURCES OF SHIITAKE MUSHROOM
SPAWN AND CULTIVATION AIDS:
Fruiting: Shiitake is capable of
fruiting only after the mycelia have
completely colonized the log. First fruiting
usually occurs early in spring or in late fall
of the year following inoculation. At this
time, a fuzzy white fungal growth can be
seen at the cut ends of the Jog in the
sapwood area, especially just under the
bark. From this time on, conditions should
be altered w favor fruiting.
To fruit, the fungus requires abundant
moisture, sufficient air movement, and little
exposure to light Fruiting is favored by
cool nights of 46-72 degrees F followed by
warm days and a constantly high relative
humidity of 85-90%.
When the mushrooms appear, the
caps begin as round buttons and flatten out
as the mushroom matures. They will
eventually reach a size of 2-6 inches in
diameter. A flush of shiitake may last a
week.
Harvesting:
Mushrooms are
harvested as the cap begins to open to
expose the gills. Fresh shiitake can be
stored under refrigeration in ventilated
containers for 2 weeks.
Continuing Harvests: After
ceasing to produce mushrooms, the logs
must be rested for 3-6 months in an
environment similar to the raising
conditions. Winter conditions in KatUah
ordinarily would not damage the mycelia as
they lay dormant, ready to flush again
during the next spring and again the
following fall. Properly treated and cured,
American Forest Mushroom Association
P.O. Box 1362
Asheville, NC 28802
Ellie Corporation
Route 1
Arvonia, VA 23004
Mushroompeople
P.O. Box 158
Inverness, CA 94937
Dr. Yoo Farm
P.O. Box 290
College Park, MD 20740
REFERENCES:
Shiitake News ($25 I year)
from Forest Resource Center
Route 2, Box 156-A
Lanesboro, MN 55949
Shiitake Oardcnine and Fannin&
by Bob Harris ($3.00)
CUltiyation of Shiitake The Japanese forest
Mushroom. on Loes
by Gary Leatham ($1.50)
How to erow Forest Mushrooms CShiitakel
by Daniel D. Kuo and Maw H. Kuo
($10.45)
(Books listed above are available from
Mushroompeople)
"
�KATUAH - page 6
Sum.mer 1986
�I have been _successfully
experimenting with scandt1'cctles and their
larvae as an answer to the problem of
disposing of human waste. After eight
years of 'field research', I feel I can now
pass on what I have uncovered to .Ka.1Wih
readers.
Scarab beetle larvae eat fecal matter
with a vengeance, turning it into a flaky,
dry, odorless substance, which can later be
used as a fertilizer. It is an extremely
sanitary process, and no flies venture near
the scarab beetle's domain, as they'll eat fly
eggs too. The waste becomes so broken
down or compacted that an individual could
not fill a two foot square bole for many
years no matter how much food be
consumed.
A change of location will not confuse
the beetles, provided it is not too far away.
All you need do is dig a new hole and bait
it, and when spring has been around for a
while, the beetles will be in the base of the
hole awaiting your return. They will roll the
fecal matter into little balls and lay their
eggs.
You may cover the hole with the
luxury of an outhouse, or simply cover it
with plywood so the scarabs won't drown
when it rains. And as a matter of courtesy I
avoid urinating on them. An empty jar will
suffice for thaL Also avoid using lime.
In peak summer months, one visit to
the outhouse will be disposed of in a matter
of minutes, provided you have built up a
good population. They slow down activity
when the nights get below freezing, and
when the days no longer hold wannth they
become dormant, not noticeably becoming
efficient again until late spring or early
summer. I know one fellow who kept his
larvae warm enough to keep them active
throughout the year so that there was no
gap. I have an alternative outhouse that I
use a few months out of the year. This past
year my larvae did not close up shop until
early January, but I kept a number of the
larvae alive on into the winter by placing a
large frying pan over them. On cold ni~hts
this was warmed by a candle I placed m a
jar covered by a metal lid punched with
holes. I would pull it all off in the mornings
and all the little things would be huddled
under the operation. But I began to worry
that I might be interfering with their normal
life cycle or that when the new adults came,
they might cat the balls with the eggs. In
any case, on the coldest night of the year
they perished. Either the candle went out,
or after setting up my little rig, trembling,
with a flashlight in my mouth, I forgot to
light the candle. They must have cocooned
or died thinking I was crazy.
I think they can be kept alive in the
KA
AH-page 7
winter, but at this time I would recommend
keeping a batch to survive the winter and a
batch to keep their natural cycle for this
region.
Facts on scarab beetles arc mentioned
in some texts, but utilizing their
undertakings has never been considered,
nor their effectiveness realized. At least not
since the Egyptians, who regarded both
beetles and their larvae as sacred.
My variety of beetle is indigenous to
the piedmont of South Carolina. They arc
black and arc about the size of a quarter. A
smaller, colorful variety has infiltrated their
ranks in lesser numbers.
I do not have any good pictures of
them. I have a very overexposed slide of
one beetle. The slide was taken under far
too powerful a flash. The photographer
should have gone with a bright light (but be
was stressfully lazy). Usually they arc very
gentle and docile, but this poor beetle must
have bu.med its retinas out, for it went
berserk - I never knew they could move that
fast I put it back in the gallon jar to take it
back home, but somehow it escaped,
probably into the environs of the car, and I
have felt quite sick about it ever since.
When you get to know them, you will know
that this is no joke.
I have never considered turning this
operation into a business, though the right
person with the right setup could easily do
so. If the dung ball gets rolling I could bask
in the knowledge that I had done
humankind, Mother Earth, and life itself a
great service. I do not really eat enough to
punch them out in vast quantities, though I
do have more than enough, and usually feel
obligated to make sure they get enough to
eat during their active cycles. If I bad a
larger setup a.n d more active, shitting
humans, populations would soar. And I
could go to Europe!
I personally started with about 60
larvae. I expect 7- 10,000 by late summer,
but it could be in the millions with more
food. Sending larvae is a way to start a
herd. They arc clean and easy to ship. I am
willing to give away starter colonies maybe for a $10.00 mailing and handling
fee. And if someone is enterprising enough
to get a business going, a bumble royalty
would not insult my virtues.
Neither the larvae nor the beetles arc
offensive to the sight or in any other
manner. They are man (sic) and beast at
their finest hour.
For more information, contact
Corry
P.O. Box 5242
Columbia, SC 29250
The ancien1 Egyptians Wt!refascinated
by the small scarab beetle. The scarab
beetle, Scarabeus sggr, "lays its eggs in a
ball of dung some two inches across,· this it
subsequen1ly pushes around with its rear
legs with great determination, loohng for a
suitable crevice in which to deposit it.
Inside the ball, the larvaefud on the dung until they eventually break through the ball
to freedom. This was regarded by the
ancienr Egyptians as a most mysterious
process of self-generation: the young butlu
appearing from a ball qfdung aµr they had
been helped only by a single scarab butle.
Jn a grand analogy, ii was a beetle thal was
seen to be rolling the sun itself over the
eastern horizon, as the climax to the
self generative processes thal had taken
place during the night. The beetle itself
became a symbol for the change of state
from deaJh to rebirth, which was ofprimary
interest to the ancienl theologians, who
described it in sorru: ofthe long tats ofthe
royal tombs in considerable detail. The
beetle also became one ofthe most popular
symbols of ancien1 Egypt and small scarab
seals were made in mi/JWns, a tradition thal
continues to this day. It seems too, that
parts of the mysterious functions of this
beetle have never been lost since ancien1
times; early in the presen1 cenJUry the village
women of Thebes ate these harny black
insects which were supposed to aid their
fertility, and many properties similar to the
ancient symbolisms are attributed to
Scarabeus sacer in the writings of the
mediaeval alchemists."
from valley Qf tbc Kines.
byJohnRorru:r, 1981.
~
Summer 1986
�"-"X.1.NB NEW FR.1.ENDI
HAV\NCl J'UNI
J'1.JU:I "11.'JlU>UT '1.o\'J'Cf(£1
J'ORAB1.NB "11.LD FOODI
CONCf:N'Jll..tTI.ON •.. .• CR.ljlTALI ... . . tC&U.1.NB
11.NCl'lNCl
D.ANC1.NCl
DR.WU
1.N TH£ 11"1£.U LOME . ••••
KAWAH - page 8
J'1.ND'lNCl "1KO "1£
~
Summer I 986
�Review
Wise Woman Herb al
Childbearing Year
for
the
by Susun S. Weed
published by Ashtree Publishing, POB 64,
Woodstock, NY 12498
($ 6.95 plus $ 2.00 for shipping & handling)
reviewed by Ise Williams
For more than a million years Wise Women have used
herbs - ga1hered, eaten, tended, loved herbs - and taughl their
daughters the wisdom of herbs in the cllildbean·ng year.
In Europe, five hundred years ago, men tortured and
burned the Wise Women who healed with herbs, the
midwives, the ones who celebrated the cyclical ways.
Calling them witches, they burned them in millions and
broke the flow of mother-to-daughter transmission.
In the Americas, their sons in later years killed the
medicine women and c11randeras. the Wise Women of the
New World. Then they denied the existence of Wise Wome"
in history.
Without our connections ro each other and the Earth,
withollt our mothers' wisdom, we forgot our power. When
we were told that we had no souls, and no minds, and no
sisters, we believed it was true. When they cold us that
childbearing was too difficult for women, midwives, and
herbs, we believed it was true.
Bm the Wise Women live in our dreams, our visions,
our deepest munories. We hear their whispers, and we
listen..
Wise Women herbalists see the whole herb, the
physical forces and the subtle forces, and respect the
wholeness. Wise Women make use of rite color, form,
spirit, and substance of a plant, using it as a whole, not
dividing it into parts and seeing power only in the HactiveH
principle. Wise Women lcnbw thaJ we are each whole and
unique, in an individu.a l, everchanging, symbiotic
relationship with herbs.
Wise Woman healing is grounded, earthed, rooted.
The Wise Woman accepts herself and her changes, her
moods, and her bleedings. She tends to birthing and dying
withaur alienaiion from herself or rite ones site helps. Site is
open to the life song surrounding her, she ~ the secrets
of the herbs. Fairies appear to her; devas bless her. All that
she needs for health and well-being grows within the fall of
her foot.
This book speaks to the Wise Woman in you - the
pregnant woman - aT1d to the Wise Woman in your mare,
lover, midwife, doctor, childbinh educator, and friends. It is
based on the belief that you are capable of observing yo1u
own body, heart, and mind, responding to the messages you
receive during the childbearing year, and caring/or yourself
in a context of loving s11ppon and assistance.
·from the introduction
Thie; is a wonderful herbal. one that I'm sure will
become the companion of many a pregnant woman, and also
a resource that goes far beyond lhe childbearing year. Since
pregnancy is a period of growth which couches on all aspeccs
of our lives, I find many of the issues covered are also
applicable to the situations of my non-pregnant friends,
women and men alike.
The dedication makes clear the spirit m which lhe book
is written:
May the six directzons empower tlus medicine work. May it
be pleasing to my grandmothers, the a11ciem ones. And may
it be of benefic to all beings.
One of lhe chapters, titled "Herbal Pharmacy", covers
very concisely how co respectfully encounter planes in our
environment and how to safely tum them into water-.
alcohol and oil-based herbal medicines. le is an excellent
and comprehensive guide for everyone desiring to take
responsibility for their own health care.
KATUAH - page 9
The book is written in the Wise Woman tradition,
which views everything as cyclical and deeply
interconnected. In these ancient traditions, once owned by
each tribe and each people, women were the gacherers and
growers of herbs, the nunurers, and the healers. Today
more and more men are beginning to work out of the same
stream of consciousness. However, in our society the oral
tradition has been brutally interrupted by the medieval witch
burnings. A large body of knowledge was destroyed and
losL We are only now beginning to reclaim it. Healing
ways evencually were narrowed down co male-dominated
allopathic medicine, which is linear in Lhink.ing and promotes
a world view of black and white, of sickness versus health.
Wise Woman healing begins with nourishing and nurturing
and reseIVes dramatic interventions as the last reson.
"Wise Women understand the attunement built into our
cells after thousands of generations nourished on wild foods,
the special kinship our bodies have with the vital elements
condensed in herbs", says Susun Weed. Consequently
you'll find in this Wjse Woman Herbal references to other
pertinent publications, addresses of conscientious herb
businesses, appendices that list herbal soun:es of vitamins
and minerals, and recipes for herbal preparations. There are
lovingly handwritten notes in the margins that give the names
of herbs in different languages - including Russian and
Chinese! A comprehensive index makes it easy to locate
specific information.
Susun's knowledge cenainly could fill many a
volume. I hope that Susun will find the time to be a prolific
writer, besides being an avid gardener, homesteader,
naturalist, feminist artist, and travelling lecturer/workshop
facilitator. Presently, her busy schedule takes ber from coast
to coast, attending herbalists' conferences and sharing the
knowledge extracted from 20 years of studying and working
with medicinal herbs.
The Wjse Woman Herbal is written with compassion
and from direct experience. It is not just another compilation /;:;41"
of facts retrieved from other books. What a blessing!
p
'* Elder
The fragile, cream-colored flowers of Sambucus
species, when tinctured., provide a superb remedy for treating
infants' fevers. Elder blossom tincture seems to encourage
balance in the mechanism which regulates temperature. It
reduces frighteningly high fevers without fail. Put one drop
per pound of body weight directly under your baby's tongue,
or slide the dropper alongside your nipple and administer the
drops while the baby is nursing. (Measure the drops into a
spoon, then take the correct dose into the empty dropper.)
The dose may be repeated as often as needed; it is completely
harmless. The fever usually begins to decrease within a few
hours of the first dose.
Stories abound about the dangerous Elder. And there
is a story told all over the world, in different cultures and
various versions, of the woman who lives in the Elder.
Sometimes she is called the Elder Lady, sometimes Elder
Woman, but my favorite name for her is Elda Mor.
The stories say that Elda Mor is a Wise Woman who
has taken the shape of a tree in order to heal her children.
She is powerful and she demands respect. If you wish to
have her help, you must honor her. If you abuse her, or fail
to ask her permission to take part of her, Elda Mor will
poison you.
Elder grows somewhere near you; look and ask for
her. When you find an Elder bush, develop a relationship
with Elda Mor. Visit with her from time to time. Then,
when the Elder blooms, go out in the moonlight and tell her
of your desire to heal with her magic and her knowledge.
She wilJ respond, granting permission for you to take her
sweet flowers. Thank her and put up your tincture
immediately, capturing moon beams, Elder dreams, and the
ancient wisdom of women in your bottle.
From The Wjse Woman Herbal for the Chjldbearine Year
�Review:
THE FRESHWATER AQUACU LT URE BOOK
A handbook for small scale fish culture in North America
The Freshwater Aguaculture Book· A Handbook for Small
Scale Fish Culture jn Noah America; William McLamey
(Point Roberts, WA 98281; Box 147; Hartley and Marks,
1984) 600 pp. 150 illustrations; appendices, index.
available from the publisher for $40.00 plus $1.00 handling.
The need/or aquaculture arises from the same root as
thaJ for agriculture. It is commonly accepted thaJ it would be
impossible to supply human demands for meat solely on the
basis of hunring wild game, or to provide all our fruits and
vegetables by foraging in the naJUral environment. Yet most
of the world still obtains fish in this manner, through
traditional "capture" fisheries based on natural stocks .....
The current world harvest of about seventy million
metric tons per year is not nearly enough to go around, much
less to keep pace with the demands imposed by a
still-increasing human population. The obvious solution is
oquacubure.
- The Freshwater Aquaculture Boole
Bill McLarney was trained as a fisheries biologist at
John Carroll University and the University of Michigan. He
was a co-founder and director of aquaculture studies at the
New Alchemy Institute in Massachusetts, which for 20 years
has done pioneer experiments in ecological living. He
presently divides his time between Fran.k lin, NC in Katiiab
and Costa Rica, where he is director of New Alchemy's
Central America project
In the l 970's McLarney and his co-workers at New
Alchemy developed innovative techniques for small-scale,
low-budget fish culture. Because of their careful study,
observation, and creativity, many of the methods developed
then still stand as the simplest and most efficient available
today.
McLamey has distilled his years of experience and
research into The Freshwater Aguaculturc Book. He has
taken on an ambitious project, and has succeeded in giving
us a highly useful tool: a comprehensive manual for raising
all known varieties of food fish (as well as some types of
aquatic animals) in all the areas of Turtle Island where
fish-raising is feasible. There are also sections on
greenhouse and closed system culture.
McLamey's work is by far the most complete
collection of factual material on the topic to date, but it is also
of importance that he writes from a perspective that respects
the needs and conditions of local ecologies and the "hidden"
economic value and practicality of the efforts of small
producers. This makes The freshwater Aquacul!ure Book
eminently appropriate and a very valuable resource for people
who choose to worJc in the context of their own particular
locale.
WORLD AQUACULTURE
The introduction to the book is a brief survey of the
history and practice of aquaculture around the world. But in
the course of the world overview, McLarney breaks down
these two primary values, ecological awareness and
decentralization, into a set of principles which underpin the
information he presents throughout the book. Illustrative
examples are drawn mainly from the Chinese aquaculture
system, which McLamey regards as the most highly
develo~ in terms of simplicity, productivity, efficiency,
and minimal environmental disruption. But although the
language is "fish culture", the principles expressed could
serve as well to ensure the sound operation and long-term
survival of any type of bioregional enterprise.
Keep in mind thaJ part ofthe secret ofChinese fish culture is
in making the best use of a given local ecology and materials.
However, consider this: The currem average production of
traditional pond polyculture in China is said to be over 4 ,000
lb/acre/year (4,412 kg/ha/yr). (Much higher yields are
achieved in southern China and in southeast Asia, where the
growing season is year-round.) This is accomplished
primarily through the use of fertilizers, with no processed
feeds whatsoever, with virtually no technology, and using
ancient methods developed without benefit of scientific
research . The products of Chinese pond polyculture have
traditionally been available widely and cheaply; they are an
important factor in the nutrition of the Chinese people, as
well as in Chinese high cuisine. Chinese aquaculture may
also be regarded as ecologically beneficial, as it provides a
facility f or recycling organic "wastes".
The effect of s.kik must be considered for any
enterprise in terms of economics, necessary labor, and
relation to the surrounding environment to determine what is
truly the most effective and appropriate system. l l i
Freshwater Aquaculture Book emphasizes the simplest
possible systems that require the least capital investment and
are easiest to construcL
INTEGRATED FARMSTEAD
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KAWAH - page JO
Surnrnerl986
�From the many aquatic habitars available, rite Chinese chose
the small pond as providing the best combination of
prod11ctiviry and manageability. Though aquaculrure has
subseque111ly been pracriced in virmally every orher type of
aquaric environmen.t, the truth of this rarely acknowledged
insighr remains. Ponds are nawrally present in many
localities and may be constructed, by hand labor if necessary,
in nwst other places. As compared to larger laJces and the
oceans, a higher percentage of pond warer is relatively
shallow, hence more productive and easier to harvesr.
Srreams represent a rheorerically more productive
environment, but use of flowing waler often raises
comperirive situations with regard to water righ1s,j1Shing,
pollution, ere
culrure or eaJ comnu:m carp, and aquaculrurisrs had to seek
other fishJo raise. It was found rhar if one stocked several
kinds offish - say one which fed on the botrom, one which
fed in
mid-water, and one which could eat green leaves
provided by the farmer - grearer yields would be achieved
rhan if one stocked the same number of common carp only.
This was the beginning ofpolyculture. Through trial
and error and observation, Chinese fish culrurists eventually
developed much more complex polyculrures, in some cases
including as many as a dozen species. These culrure systems
are ofren unique to a particular locality, having taken
advantage of local conditions, availability of stocks ofj1Sh,
feed, or ferrilizer marerials.
WASTE UTILIZATION
What we wish to create are living systems, but it must
be remembered that these living systems are always parts of
greater ecosystems or natural communities and can only be
considered as parts of the larger whole. This concept
Mclarney calls jntemrion.
It is nor customary in Norrh America 10 rlunk of bodies
of water used for intensive aquaculture as parrs of a total
farm ecosystem. A commercial fish/arm is afHh.farm period. Yet inregrarion of terrestrial and aquaric crops and
byproducrs is part and parcel of many rraditional Oriental
food-producing systems. The Oriental approach, which is
more ecologically sensirive and less dependent on
technology, may be difficult to adapt to a large-scale
commercial situation in North America, but the small,
diversified/armer, parricularly the/armer for whom fish is a
subsistence crop, would do well to study it.
The related principlcS' of diversity and~ are basic
m considering any living community. Application of these
two ideas can work to stabilize and maximize the productivity
of a fish farm, as they do in nature.
It happened that the family name of the Tang emperors was
Lee, which has the same sound as the Chinese word/or the
common carp. For a time it was considered sacrilegious to
trout, e totem spirit of the Appalachian
The cul tu
waters, is well covered in The Freshwater AQuaculturc
.RQQk, and author Bill McLamey emphasizes methods that
are suitable and affordable for the small farmer and
homesteader. Bass-bluegill combinations do well in ponds
in all but the highest elevations of Katuah, but trout will
always be most in demand as the pre-eminent Appalachian
food fish and as representative of the cold, pristine waters
beneath forested slopes that so many people come here to
find.
Trout have special requirements for their culture and
require strict adherence to certain conditions to do well.
They thrive only in cold water (50-60 degrees F) and require
a high dissolved oxygen content (7 ppm) to simulate the
freshness of a running stream - moving water is the best
habitat.
Trout are almost exclusively carnivorous and therefore
require high-protein feeds. Because they favor cold water,
they grow more slowly than do other fish species, and they
are very sensitive to excessive handling and pollution.
Cold water environments have a low nutrient-carrying
capacity, so cold water food chains are shortened. Few
intermediate-size or vegetarian fish share natural trout
habitats. Therefore, trout ponds are essentially monoculture
situations, which seems to violate the principle of
diversifying the fishpond, but trout are virtually the only
accepted food fish that can be grown in cold water, and their
popularity makes their culture worthwhile.
Because The Freshwater Aguaculture Book is a
compendium of information covering fish-raising throughout
Turtle Island, no one fish farmer will be able to use all the
information the book contains. The best way to use the book
KA AH - page 11
It is said in the study of ecology that a climax system,
the most stable community possible at a given location,
develops many layers of use for available materials, so that
very little energy leaks out of the system.
In human terms, this is stated as "Recycle!", and an
important negative cntcrion of a system's effectiveness is the
amount of waste it generates. A system truly integrated
within itself and in the natural surroundings produces a
rninimum of waste.
The Chinese seem to have recognized rhe value of
pond fertility early on, and to have understood thatfish could
be grown more cheaply through fenilizarion with "wastes"
than by direct feeding with marerials which could be eaten by
other livesrock or by people.
These basic principles, which are also basic to the
ideas we choose to call "bioregional", are underlying
assumptions to the text of The Freshwater AQuaculture Book
and are inherent even in the structure of the book itself. For
in presenting fish culture, McLamey does not set out pat
formulas or a dogmatic school of practice. Rather, he 1)
introduces the fish and their habitat requirements, 2) gives
- continued on p. 24
is to read it through one time to get an overview of
aquaculture, the conditions that need to be considered, and
the options available, then to go back, aided by the
comprehensive index, and look up the special requirements
of the fish to be raised and find the most appropriate
methods.
Whether one wants to raise trout commercially for sale
to restaurants, operate a catch-your-own trout pond, or just
have a convenient source for a quick supper in the back yard,
trout raising has a place on almost any small farm in Katilah
where flowing water is available.
Among trout species, the rainbow trout (Sa/mo
gafrdneri ) responds best to culture. The native brook trout
(Sa/mo fontinalis) are smaller, prefer colder water, and grow
more slowly. They are therefore raised only when the farmer
has a specific market or a specific personal preference for
them. Brown trout (Salnw trutta ) are the preferred fish in
commercial hatcheries for stream stocking. Of the three
species, brown crout are the hardest to catch, most tolerant of
pollution, and attain the greatest size where food is plentiful.
But the browns are sensitive to overcrowding and the least
favored for eating, and so a.re not widely cultured as a food
source.
DESIGNING A TROUT FARM
The type of enclosure in which the fish are contained is
determined by the amount of moving water available and the
size of the operation desired. Ponds are easiest and most
economical to construct for the amount of water contained,
but raceways (defined by McLamey as any enclosure where
there is a constantly moving CWTCnt perceptible throughout)
as used in commercial hatcheries, can produce more fish in a
given area of available space. McLamcy discusses the
advantages of each and gives siting and design
considerations.
Trout feeding is another important variable that is
- continued on . 21
Summer 1986
�TOBACCO
We have been told that no non-food plant has had so
great an impact on humans as tobacco. It has affected the
whole world. It is a plant native to this continent, Turtle
Island, but now there is not a country in the world that does
not use tobacco in some fonn or other.
The elders say that tobacco is an ancient planL The
native Cherokee people call it the Old One or
Tsal Agayun1i. They believe that after the lichen, moss
and fem that the fU'St plant was ginseng and the second plant
was tobacco.
Native people consider plants to have a gender and a
personality like people. Medicine plants are plants used for
direct healing by treating a disease of the body or by altering
a person spiritually. European science would say that it is
the "active principle" in the drug that makes one well Native
people call the healing power of plants the "spiritual
personality" of the planL Healing with plants was based on
the principle of using something positive to get rid of the
negative or bad thing causing sickness. The spiritual
personality of tobacco used in the traditional way was female
and positive.
We have been told that there were two original types of
tobacco used by native people. The old tobacco, Nicotiana
rustica, has yellow blossoms, the other, Nicoriana tabacwn,
has pink blossoms. The old tobacco has about ten times the
nicotine content of the tobacco raised commercially today.
The old tobacco was jealously protected by the Cherokee. It
was not usually traded with other tribes, but the
pink-flowered tobacco was a common trade item.
We have been told that the old tobacco was used for
ritual and medicine purposes. It was raised in a special way.
A medicine person would go into the woods and plant the
tobacco seed in a spot he would clear by burning. They
might plant eight or ten of these patches so that no one would
see the tobacco. The tobacco would lose its power if
someone else saw it growing.
We have been told that tobacco was smoked in a ritual
at the beginning of any important councils. The hopes and
prayers of the people were sent up to all of the creation as the
smoke rose to the heavens. It was also the custom to smoke
tobacco when someone visited another person's lodge. The
pipe was brought out and liL It would be passed around and
everyone would take one or two puffs of the sacred smoke
before the conversation would begin.
We have been told that tobacco was used also in
fasting and on vision quests. It helped a person fast because
it cwbed the appetite and suppressed the need to sleep. The
old tobacco of the Cherokees also helped to bring dreams and
visions.
We have been told that the pipes in which tobacco is
smoked arc important Native people have medicine pipes
and social pipes. Social pipes are made from clay or stone.
- page 12
Medicine pipes are carved from soapstone. The Cherokee
carved pipes are made from red or black soapstone. The red
stone is preferred, but it is hard to come by so that most
medfoine pipes are black. Images, say of a totem spirit or
animal teacher are carved on Cherokee pipes. A medicine
pipe never "belongs" to an individual. It is given to a person
by someone who thinks they are ready for the pipe.
Sometimes the pipe is a new one carved by the giver.
Sometimes the pipe bas been passed through several hands.
An individual is considered the caretaker, not the owner, of
the pipe. It is their responsibility to see that the pipe is
passed on in a good way. "A good way" means that the
pipe's new caretaker will take care of the pipe, use it
responsibly, and in tum pass it on.
We have been told that tobacco was an integral part of
a special ceremony to protect a sick person from "liver
eaters". These were people that bad the power to create an
illusion. They did not actually have the power to tum
themselves into an owl or raven, but they could create this
illusion. That is bow they moved abouL They would come
into a lodge and kiss a sick person or a person nea.r death to
taste the sweetness of their breath. The liver eater would
then draw the power from the liver of the suffering person.
This would immediately kill the person and the liver eater
would receive however much time that person had been fated
to live to extend its own evil life.
We arc told that in the ceremony to protect the sick
person, the medicine people would drive four sourwood
stakes around the lodge. They would then go into the sick
person's lodge and make a fire with sourwood or wood from
a tree that had been struck by lightning and had lived. They
would heap up the hot coals into a pile. Then they would
take a pinch of fine-ground "old" tobacco and hold it over the
coals. When the tobacco was dropped. it would fall in the
direction from which the liver eater was coming. If it hit
directly on center, then the liver eater was in the room or
above the roof. Theo another pinch of tobacco was dropped.
If it sparked or made an explosion, a person in the
community would die in four or five days, and that person
was the liver eater. That was how they killed the liver eaters.
We have been told that native people used the old
tobacco as an insect repellant on plants. It works well on
everything except tomatoes. Tobacco extract was spread on
beans and on the silks of the com. If insects eat the sprayed
parts they die, but usually the scent confuses the insects so
that they are not attracted. The only thing that eats tobacco is
the tobacco worm. Native people used the extract of the
nightshade plant to kill the tobacco worm. The extract was
made by boiling the nightshade plant in water and spraying
the water on the tobacco plants.
We have been told that tobacco was also used as a
poison. Pure nicotine is deadly in a dose as small as 100
milligrams. The nicotine was used on blow darts for revenge
killing. The darts would be soaked in nicotine for a long
time before they were used. The blow gun and poisoned dart
were used only in this way. They were never used in war.
It is true that native people never used tobacco as a
personal drug as it is frequently used today. It was taken
into the body only sparingly as part of a ceremony or ritual.
Used in this way, it promoted healing. The way it is used
today causes addiction and illness.
We have been told that among the Cherokee there are
tribal secrets about tobacco that cannot be revealed. When
these secrets are taught within the tribe, the one who receives
the knowledge promises not to reveal iL Keeping this lore
hidden is done not for the sake of the knowledge itself, but
as an obligation to the person who passed on the secret
teachings.
~
Summer 1986
�THE GARDEN - continued from p.l
gardening is a lesson in applied ecology. It deals mainly
with alpine plants, and rock gardeners go to extreme lengths
to duplicate exactly the conditions we have here: lots of
tumbled-down rocks and perfect drainage, yet deep moisture.
"In the terraces I was planting shrubs and vegetables,
and a few trees as l could obtain them, so it was all
progressing at the same time. All these beds are mixed
flowers and vegetables now. They say flowers help the
vegetables, but that is a meaningless distinction. They all
flower. They all should be here in as much diversity as
possible.
"A lot of my training has been learning by mistakes.
My gardening plan is simply to set out plants that I like, of all
different varieties and types and see what naturalizes and
multiplies. The plants you see here are the plants that have
survived a natural selection process at this site. I've used a
lot of self-seeding annuals. They pop up each year, and I
leave them where they're appropriate and pull them up where
they're in the way. They fill in all the holes.
"Berries are a good crop for around here. This is good
nut and berry country. It's easy to see, they grow so well in
the wild. Did you know that blueberries only became a
domesticated crop during the l 940's? Before that, people
found all they needed on the hilltops. The plant was brought
under cultivation under the auspices of the TVA right in this
area. They gave kids a piece of cardboard with a hole
punched in it If the kids could find a bush with berries that
wouldn't fit through the hole and could lead the growers to
it, they would earn $1.00. That's how they developed the
first cultivated varieties of blueberries.
"We're going to grow a lot more strawberries. We
became acquainted with an everbearing variety that produced
right up to Thanksgiving last year. Really good fruit! We
also have bush cherries, lots of currants, rosehips, barberries
- lots of food for wildlife. That helps to blur the line between
cultivated and uncultivated aspects of the garden.
"I've found that the easiest way to work is to use the
natural energy flows. For instance, we get some colloidal
phosphate, some lime, and some cottonseed meal for
fertilizers, but we try to bring as few materials up the hill as
possible. We plant rye in some of the beds in the fall and in
the springtime we turn it in with handforks. We pile the
weeds we pull out of the garden - it seems to generate a big
heap every three weeks.
"The creek that flows through the garden brings down
leaves during the spring floods. The stream is normally
buried by the landslide, but if it rains hard enough the stream
rises to the surface. [f it rains mal1:t hard, the stream will
flow right through the garden and on down the hill. But if I
wait until it's raining enough so that the stream recedes back
among the rocks inside the garden, I can go uphill and rake
leaves into the water and they'll be dropped off right where I
need them. They are deposited as wads of leaves mixed with
silt. I have to collect them quickly because the mixture rots
fairly fast. If I come back too late, it's already part of the
soil. It's a wonderful system: during one short season in
spring I can skim off a little of the surplus fertility."
~-.,, '{·~
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Joe is a quiet individual. He can be goaded to
excitemmt when talking abour the plant.s or the people thaJ he
Loves, bur he is generally content to let the obvious evitknce
of the garden speak for him. He has spent marry moonlit
nights and many winter months thinking about his
relationship to the garden and the natural mountain
landscape, however, and this shows up when he can be
coaxed to speak ofthe deeper levels of his garden experience:
"The garden is a mandala (a circular design) that
expresses our understanding of the place we live. This
garden is my conscious attempt to live in the context of
nature. 'Paradise' means 'to be perfectly integrated in
nature'. The prevalent vision in western culture of a life in
accord with nature is the Garden of Eden, where human.kind,
Adam and Eve, were given the garden and charged to 'dress
and keep it' in the beautiful words of the King James version
of the Bible <Genesis 2: 15).
"But 'paradise' does not have to be an idealized place.
It is a way of living here, wherever we're at right now. It is
a co-evolutionary process - we change together. Living and
learning, 1 transform myself to live as this place demands,
and as part of the process I also transform this place into my
personal paradise.
"Eugene Odom had a more technical vision of the ideal
human niche, which he called 'the ecosystem manager'
whose function is to maximize the productivity and
perpetuate the survival of the system. The ecosystem
manager rearranges the growth of the natural environment a
little - snipping something here, starting something over there
- and s/he gets paid a little bit by all the diversity of other
creatures in the system
"It's a similar position to that of a bear or a wolf. If
there's too much of something, that's what the bear or the
wolf gets to eat that year. The service they perfonn for that
plant or animal is selection and population control, which is
to the benefit of that species. By keeping ecological balance,
the manager gets enough off the top to keep him or her alive
and functioning. By caring for the ecological principal, one
gets to live off the ecological interest An unlimited number
of people could devote themselves to that task, and it would
provide for all of them.
"Odom's somewhat mechanistic definition hinges on
food supply as the determining factor. This is basic, but the
idea of creating a niche also has to do with being surrounded
by beautiful things when one walks out the door. Our
aesthetic sense is a natural organizing system. It is a fine
form of positive feedback that is much underrated in our
culture. In this society the basic standard is the economic
one which is expressed in terms of profit and loss. But what
I'm saying is: 'Enjoy it!' Be spontaneous in gardening.
Trust that intuitive sense of rightness that we all have in us.
It is at least as true an indicator as the profit sheet of the
health and productivity of a natural community.
"Historically, some anthropologists believe that the
'Paradise' myth refers to the transition from a hunter/gatherer
economy to an agricultural economy. Rindos, in his book
7J;=---:;:::::=~~~~ar·(iSth'-~:BF:::::_.--,r - continued on next page
�- continued from p.13 THE GARDEN
The Orieins of Amcu!ture. puts the changeover into the
context of co-evolution, saying that there were changes on
both sides. The hunter/gatherers were working with plants maybe by weeding preferred crops or by planting some
selected seeds - and while the plants were changed to be
more what the people wanted, the people were also changed
as they developed certain behaviors to encourage these plants
- disturbing the ground, staying in one place,
experimentation, selection, and observation. These two
processes together produced the gradual development of the
agroecosystem.
"I think to some extent the people were seduced into it
Perhaps it was the plants who domesticated the people. I like
to think that certain plants tricked us into devoting our lives
to changing the world for their benefit One could look at it
either way.
"The food surplus produced by agricultural techniques
had the effect of increasing human population. This resulted
in a new context for human life as specialization developed
and people became more involved within the framework of
human society and less involved in the wider circle of nature.
The human sphere continues to expand. It is replacing the
diversity of nature with human diversity, and we are the
worse off for it
"A 'niche' is a way of describing an organism from the
ecosystem's point of view: it is the relationship of the
organism to its environment and the flows of energy and
matter. Because there have been no effective natural checks
on the human population, we have created an unhealthy niche
for ourselves, called 'civilization'.
"'Paradise' is a genetic memory of a time when
humanity was integrated into the natural environment. It
could be summed up as a continuing, spontaneous, intuitive
response to the world. But that spontaneous response to the
real conditions of life is buried under millenia of accretion of
cultural elaborations on the distinction 'good/evil'.
"The garden as you see it here is a conscious attempt to
invent and occupy an appropriate niche. Using the
knowledge of modern civilization, I am attempting to work a
way back through centuries of physical and behavioral
programming (our 'needs') to a real relationship with the
Earth, a transition to a natural support system.
"More and more," Joe reflected, "I'm beginning to feel
I should specialize in the flora of the Black Mountains. It's
such a beautiful habitat, and no one else has taken it on. I
need to get out there, spend more time in the woods, find the
specimens with the biggest fruits find the particular clones,
the things that should be propagated, and work with them,
get really involved....."
- recorded by DW
SUN ROOTS
The Sun Root is a native American vegetable which
was under cultivation by many tribes, including the
Cherokee, when white people arrived here. These white
people, for mysterious reasons, ignored this Indian name and
called it Jerusalem Artichoke. The Latin name is /leliaruhus
tuberousus, which means "sunflower full of swellings".
This is an accurate label because Sun Roots are a sunflower
with large, edible roots.
By whatever name, this is one of the world's most
practical and easiest to cultivate vegetables. They are started
from a piece of tuber in the spring, much like potatoes, and
are perennial in practice since even a very careful harvest
leaves enough tubers for the next year's crop. The stalks are
6 to 12 feet high and are topped by beautiful brown and
yellow flowers which smell a little like chocolate. Most
varieties produce mature tubers in 120 days, but the
Columbia and Stampede varieties are about 30 days earlier.
Tubers can be harvested any time during the fall, winter, or
early spring when the ground is not frozen.
Nutritionally, Sun Roots are interesting because they
have very little starch. Their carbohydrates are stored in the
form of inulin, which is composed of fructose molecules.
Humans lack the enzyme inulase which is necessary to break
down this inulin, so most of the calories of Sun Roots pass
through our systems unused. What is used is the protein,
which is of very high quality and high in lysine, and the iron
which is present in large quantity. These qualities, along
with their good taste, high quality fiber, and satisfying
crunch make Sun Roots a very good, low calorie snack food.
There are people at work developing the "artichip".
Sun Roots are an excellent feedstock for fuel alcohol
stills because of their large yields and the fact that inulin,
unlike starch, does not need to be broken down before
fermentation. They are also a very good potential source of
commercial fructose. A flour made from dried sun roots is
good tasting and high in protein. A protein extract can be
taken from sun roots which is 60- 70% high quality protein
and could be used to feed the world's hungry people. The
tops of this versatile vegetable are already finding commercial
use as an animal feed
(This information is taken from The ArticboJce
Connection; Rt 2, Box 157; Spartansburg, PA 16434.
Subscriptions are $10 a year and it comes out on a quarterly
basis.)
THE HOMESTEAD
ON HORN MOUNTAIN
Long ago
someone climbed to the top of this mountain
and dug a well.
This is the place, marked
by an elderly pine.
I part a way through the overgrowth
with my stick
to the black brackish water in its circle of stones.
This is mystery:
the circle,
older than the pine,
stone more ancient than the mountain: water
as eternal as all circles.
Someone lived here and drank that water
and disappeared under moss and bramble.
The ground is littered with rocks
of a fallen homestead.
The well is a shaft of memory sunk in the ground.
Turning to scribble a note to myself
I start to the sound
ofa motor.
since I last climbed Hom Mountain somebody
has cut a road just above the old homestead,
I can see the cigarette
in the driver's hand as a yellow truck comes
trundling past -
r duck below the bramble like the spirit of ruin
that haunts this place,
diving back down the black shaft
of undrinkable remembrance
past the names of mountains and roots of pines
down to the fertile aquifer of earth's
forgetfulness.
Stephen Wingeier
;e:t'
~
KAfUAH - page 14
))t
Summer 1986
�by 4 cords
hanging down ·
the island earth
from the sky vault
suspended
of solid rock
east
west
floating
north
south
in a sea of water
�0
750 MILLION
ON1CF.
-
650 MILU ON
I
'"\I'\ r.,
LG v..
n
·'""'......., .. .
A(~
The southern Appalachians have evolved in a series of
collisions of fragments of continental or island-an: material at
the eastern edge of North America.
About 750 million years ago magma rising deep from the
interior of the earth split a megacontinental expanse into at
least two large continents
Laurentia or proto-North America
Gondwana or proto-Africa
and at least
two continental fragments that included the Inner
Piedmont-Blue Ridge fragment and the Carolina slate belt
fragment ...
Volcanism started in the island an: of the Carolina slate belt
fragment some 650 million years ago.
...500 million years ago
the basin between proto-North America and the
Inner-Piedmont-Blue Ridge fragments began to close...
beyond the arch
in Galunlati above
when all was water
the animals were very crowded
and wanting more room
they wondered what was below the water
Dayunisi, the little Water-beetle
offered to go down and see if he could learn
It darted over the surface in every direction
but could find no firm place to rest
Then it dived to the bottom
and came up with some soft mud
which began to grow and spread
on every side until it became
the island Earth
500 MILLION
Most of the rocks at the swface of the southern Appalachians
are highly defonned metamorphic ones ... older than or
contemporaneous with the horizontal sedimentary strata
under them ... suggesting that roughly 415 million years ago
the swface rocks began to be transported as a thin sheet for at
least 260 kilometers over the eastern continental margin of
the land mass that was to become North America.
...from 300 million to 250 million years ago, the last major
compressional event was the Alleghenian orogeny. This
mountain-building episode can be attributed to the collision
of proto-North America and proto-Africa (or perhaps South
America) to form the supen:ontinent of Pangaea.
...a segment of the African
(or South American) continental shelf underthrust the eastern
margin of the Carolina slate belt fragment resulting in a
fold-and-thrust belt that went in the opposite direction...the
southern Appalachians...
...western Africa and northern South America
all have belts of folding and thrusting...
The Mauritanide
mountain chain of western Africa is characterized east to west
by a series of belts that are similar in some ways to the
Appalachian belts.
... the Mauritanids are a mirror image of the Appalachians...
�~75
MILLION
200 MILLION
300 .. 250MILLION
··....
'····· .......
at first the earth was flat
and very soft and wet
...
-~{_,:.:,+~. -
.·
the animals were anxious to get down
and sent out different birds to see if it was dry
but they found no place to alight
and returned to Galunlati
.....•
,,·
t
••
at last it seemed to be time
and they sent out the Buzzard
and told him to go and make ready for them
.
·············· ·········
:
..·········.
'7..
\
~
....··
...
··············
the Great Buzzard flew over the earth
low down near the ground
when he reached Cherokee Country
he was very tired and his wings
began to flap and strike the ground
...
.·
..···
and wherever they struck
the earth was a valley
and where they turned up
there was a mountain
...
...
...the continents that now border the Atlantic were joined 200
million years ago like the pieces of a jigsaw puzzle to fonn
one huge expanse of land ... a megacontinent Pangaea...
At that time North America began to separate from Europe,
Africa, and South America.
·
As the continents drifted apart the Atlantic
Ocean was left in their wake.
As the Atlantic grew the current
continental shelf was built up off the eastern coast of North
America (and off the western coast of Africa and the northern
coast of Sou~ America).
when the animals above saw this
they were afraid the whole world
would be mountains
so they called him back
but the Cherokee Country remains
full of mountains until this day
...·
.·
.....
.·
••
.
�--
..
(
J
.
:•
...······ .
...
.··
.,...•
when the world grows old
and the earth will sink
the people will die
down into the ocean
and the cord will break
and all will be water again
written by Jeny Trivette
drawings by Rob Messick
�0 --"
NATURAL
WORLD
NEWS
NANTAHALACO.BROUGHTTO
U.S. SUPREME COURT
Natunl World News Service
Since 1976, when Henry Truett of
Bryson City, NC filed suit against the
Nantahala Power Company to protest the
high costs resulting from hydroelectricity
being drained from the mountains of KatUah
to fuel the Alcoa aluminum plant in
Marysville, TN, the question "Who owns
the mountain water power?" has been a
botJy-contested issue in this region (see
Ki1V.ah #3).
.
The dispute came to a head April 21
as arguments were heard in the US Supreme
Court from attorneys for Alcoa and for the
Committee for Low-Cost Power, a citizens'
group from five counties in Ka!Uah.
The case was an appeal by Alcoa of a
North Carolina State Suptcme Court ruling
handed down last July that awarded $29
million in refunds to Nantahala customers
because of practices by the company ~t .led
to excessive rate costs. Two other surular
decisions by the court awarded the
ratepayers another $16 million in refunds.
The conflict goes back to the very
beginnings of the ~ant~hala Power
Company and Tapoco, its sister company
which operates two hydroelectric dams on
the Santeetlah and Cheoah Rivers. Both
companies arc registered as public utilities,
but both arc also wholly-owned subsidiaries
of the Alcoa Corporation. All the power
from the Tapoco Company has gone to
operate Alcoa smelters in Tennessee,
although since its inception th7 coml?any ~
been receiving the benefits of us des1gnanon
as a utility. Tapoco has never be~n
responsible to regional customers, and 1n
1960 even tried to sell its high-power
transmission lines to the Duke Power
Company. But while "fapoco power .has
been flowing down the nver to Marysville,
the Nantahala Power Company has been
supplementing its hydroelectric power with
expensive, imported, nuclear power
generated in Tennessee .by the.-rv:A. The
North Carolina court recnfied this difference
by declaring that North Carolina ratepayers
should retroactively be charged as though
the cheaper Tapoco power were available to
them, which would result in a total of $45
million in refunds.
Alcoa attorneys maintained in the
Supreme Court hearings that the Nort!1
Carolina courts had overstepped the1t
boundaries and were trying to set rates for
power generation between states, citing a
KATUAH - page 19
1971 Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission (FERC) ruling that Tapoco had
no obligation to make its power available to
the Nantahala Company. Alcoa attorney
Rex Lee stated before the court, "What
North Carolina has done ... is to take from
Tennessee a share of power which properly
belongs to Tennessee."
But William Crisp, a Raleigh lawyer
who has worked with Nantahala ratepayers
for 25 years, explained meticulously and
eloquentJy that this was not a case of one
state's interest against another's, but "a
flagrant example of a corporate giant, a
multinational. taking over public assets for
its own benefit" Pointing out that the
ruling of the NC Supreme Court did not
actually divert any power, but instead
created a "roll-in" where both companies
were considered as one for ratemalcing
purposes, Crisp made it clear that the issue
was whether the hydroelectric resources of
the mountains shouJd be used for public
service or private profit. Alcoa has
attempted to develop its subsidiary company
Tapoco solely to divert water resources
from Kanfah strictly for its own benefit,
Crisp maintained, which in effect has forced
the ratepayers in the mountains to pay the
difference for Alcoa's cheap hydroelectric
power.
Alcoa has threatened that if they do
not win continued access to the mountain
water power, they would close their
Marysville plant, terminating o~er l,~
jobs in East Tennessee. Responding to this
threat, the US Steelworkers Union, Local
309, which represents the Alcoa plant
workers, joined the corporate appeal as a
"friend of the court".
"If they had known the true facts of
the case," said Veronica Nicholas, Jackson
County commissioner and witness to the
Supreme Court hearing, "I don 't believe
they wouJd have taken that position. If we
could talk with them people-to-people, I
thinlc they would see that the corporation is
trying to victimize us all in pursuit of its
interests."
,
BIG MOUNTAIN UPDATE
Na!W'al World News Service
The Big Mountain issue - the
proposed removal of 10,000 to 15 ,~
Navajo (Dineh) and Hopi Indians from their
ancient homeland • remains critical. In 1974
Congtcss passed legislation (P.L. 93-531)
to settJe a so-called "land dispute" between
the two tribes calling for the removal by
July 7, 1986 (see Kutfah #11).
CoincidentJy, this area known as the Four
Corners is extremely rich with high-quality
coal and uranium deposits. Peabody Coal
Co., among other energy giants, is
extremely interested in the resources o~ the
area. It appears, however, that a rrunor
victory has been won.
In early May, 1986, Ross Swimmer
of the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) and
Ivan Sidney, Hopi Tribal Chairperson, said
that they wouJd not forcibly remove Najajos
(Dineh) from what they and the U.S.
Government call "disputed land". The Hopi
Tribal Council is a creation of the Bureau of
Indian Affairs and the traditional people feel
that the Tribal Council is a sham and docs
not represent their interests. Swimmer
sought an opinion from the U.S. Solicitor
General who s.Ud that July, 1986 was
merely a target date and was not cited within
the actual law. Sidney commented, "We do
want those Navajo off our land."
This delay in the forced .remo~al ~s
just that - a delay. Perhaps the intention 1s
to allow the media and public attention on
the issue to subside. The Big Mountain
Legal Defense is still urging citiz.cns to ~te
letters to U.S. Senators and Represent.aUves
demanding the repeal of P.L. 93-531. If
you write a letter and receive a form
response, BMLD is asking that you wr!te
and write again to establish dialogue with
those in power. Send copies of your letters
as well as copies of responses to:
Big Mountain (JUA) Legal D/O Committee
2501 N. 4th St Suite 18
Flagstaff, AZ 86001
Write them also for updates and local
contactinformation,orcall(602)7~
LOWER WEST SLOPE OF
GRANDFATHER MOUNTAIN UP
FOR SALE
N11unl World News Sctvice
AIRPORT PLANNED FOR
JULIAN PRICE PARK
Nllunl Wor1d News Service
The Watauga County Commission is
trying to build a county airport in Julian
Price Park, part of the Blue Ridge Parkway
near Blowing Rock, NC. The National
Park Service is strongly opposed to an
airport on Park Service land, but much of
the lobbying for the airport is going on over
their heads at the Department of Interior in
Washington. The secret agenda ~or the
airport is a new highway connec~g the
high country ski and resort are~ directly
with the Charlotte metropolitan area.
National Parle land couJd not be obtained for
the construction of a highway, but ~ere is
apparently some precedent for putnng an
airport in a National Park. Once the airport
was OK'd, the highway could be put in to
provide access to it and the developers
would have their way.
The lower west side of Grandfather
Mountain in Avery County is up for sale
and threatened with development as a ski
resort Hugh Morton, one of Grandfather
Mountain's owners, is adamant about
protecting the upper elevations of the
mountain, which is designated as a North
Carolina Natural Heritage Area. A new
hiking trail is being construe~ t~ ~la?C
the classic Shanty Spring trail which 1s in
the area to be sold.
,
~
_
. ' J
...~~,fii;·}...... ~.
'~"'-~
. -
,/.,
'<..
:.
'
, ..\IV'
---~
- continued on next page
Summer 1 86
�.·
USFS 50-YEAR PLAN
IN THE MAKING
OUR "CHAMPION" IN COURT
Nalllnl World News Service
The dispute over the discharge
standards of the Champion Paper Company
plant in Canton, NC is heating up. In recent
months charges and countercllargcs have
been flying, there llas been a furious
shllffiing of papers, and two solemn collrt
decrees have been ordered. Yet the Pigeon
River is still smelly, mllfky, and rolling
with foam as it flows into Tennessee.
On March 31 Judge David Scntclle of
U.S. District Court in Asheville declared
that the Champion Paper Company would
have to apply for a federal wastewater
discllarge pennit from the Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA) while litigation
continues in the controversy over the quality
of the Pigeon River waters.
The decision arose from an
unprecedented move by the EPA, which in
November of 1985 stepped in and
superseded the right of the North Carolina
Environmental Management Commission
(EMC) to issue Champion a wastewater
discllarge permit (as reported in KaW1h.
#10). Under the national Clean Water Act,
the issuance of discharge permits was
placed under the jurisdiction of the EPA, but
the agency has traditionally delegated that
power to state environmental regulatory
agencies and acted only in a supervisory
capacity.
In January of this year Champion
responded to the EPA's action by filing suit
in the District Court to void the agency's
authority in the Pigeon River dispute. The
company simultaneously filed a motion for a
tctnporary restraining order to release
Champion from obtaining a federal permit
while the primary lawsuit was in the courts.
It was this motion that was struck down,
compelling Champion to apply to the EPA
for a permit to operate until a ve.r dict on the
request for a permanent injunction is
reaclled.
The EPA move to strip the state EMC
of its power to dispense a permit to
Champion implied that the federal
government saw extraordinary neglect in
enforcement of basic environmental
standards by the state agency.
In a prepared statement read last
January, Champion manager Oliver
Blackwell disagreed with that assessment,
praising the state for a "professional job" of
determining operating standards for the
factory. This may have to do with the fact
that in recent years the EMC has issued
"variances" and "special consent orders"
which have allowed Champion to operate
below existing norms in the most
controversial areas of regulation, water
temperature and color, instead of
comprehensive and enforceable discllarge
directives.
Apparent neglect on the part of the
state environmental agency turned into
apparent collusion as state attorneys sat at
the same table with Champion lawyers in
the district courtroom to argue that the
corporate giant should be allowed to have its
way with the Pigeon River without federal
interference. "They shouldn't have taken
the power away from the state," said
assistant state attorney general Don Oakley.
Although Champion did reluctantly
comply with the judge's order to submit an
application to the EPA, the company's
pending suit will definitely delay a stringent
The US Forest Service (USFS) is
soliciting active citizen input on its revised
version of the 50-ycar management plan for
the Pisgah and Nantahala National Forests.
According to Bob Cunningham, US
Forest Service planner in the Asheville
office, Forest Service staff have reorganized
their data and are now compiling the
preliminary results for their new plan.
During the latter part of June and July,
Cunningham will meet with individuals or
representatives of any interest groups who
wish to discuss the data at the Forest
Service office in Asheville.
"We're going to be building the new
plan as we interact with the public on it,"
said Cunningham.
Maps and brochures interpreting the
environmental effects of each of the Forest
Service plans will be available to the public
at the USFS District Offices free upon
request
The Forest Service is inviting
comment on the new plan. Take them up on
it! Although they would like people to come
to their Asheville office, cards and letters
from those who cannot go to the city Yi.ill
make a difference. Let the Forest Service
serve us. Tell them how you feel about
their policies, either in person or in writing:
George Olson, Forest Supervisor
US Forest Service
Box 2750
Asheville, NC 28802
~
(704) 257-4200
P'
KA
AH - page 20
Natutal Wodd News SeMcc
permiL "It reveals the company's true
stripes," said Pigeon River Action Group
activist Jim Harrison. "They won't spend a
nickel on the environment unless they're
absolutely forced to. The money (and
paper) they arc squandering on legal
entanglement would be far better spent for
real action to restore the river."
In another collrtroOm in Nashville,
the Tennessee State Supreme Court on April
21 threw out a lawsuit brought in 1983 by
the government of that state against
Champion that wollld have required the
paper company to pay civil damages of
$10,000 per day since 1977 to compensate
for the degradation of the river in heu of a
total river cleanup. The suit, as argued by
Tennessee deputy attorney general Frank
Scanlon, was based on Tennessee
environmental protection laws, particularly
clauses regulating water color standards,
which are much stricter than the North
Carolina laws tlnder which the Champion
plant is operating.
But the collrt ruled that one state has
no jurisdiction or control over another
state's environmental laws, even if laxness
or environmental neglect causes damage tllat
extends over state lines.
After receiving the disappointing
ruling of the Tennessee high court, deputy
attorney general Scanlon vowed to carry the
case on to the U.S. Supreme Collrt. There
would seem to be some basis for this, for,
short of discarding the whole patchwork
system of state governments, there needs to
be some remedy found to accommodate the
blatant disregard by the natural clements of
the illegitimate state boundaries.
It would be unfortunate if this ruling
were allowed to remain as a precedent, for
the whole issue of atmospheric deposition
("acid rain") hinges on the ability of one
region to convince the hllman inhabitants of
a different region of their accountability for
destruction of a distant habitaL In this
ever-shrinking world, it is imperative that
we recognize the evidences of Ollf close
interdependence. Much is at stake.
WRITE!
There is sometlling we can do to help
the Pigeon. The conditions of Champion's
operating permit are being decided right
now by the EPA. Write to:
Jack Ravan, Regional Administrator
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
345 Courtland SL NE
Atlanta, GA 30365
Ask that the new permit determine the
maximum limits for color and water
temperature, and that minimum levels of
dissolved oxygen be maintained.
Please send a copy of your letter to:
Dick Mullinix
c/o Pigeon River Action Group
P.O. Box 105
WaynesviUc, NC 28786
Summer 1986
�COMMUNITY ALERT:
BUNCOMBECO.THREATENED
BY WASTE INCINERATOR
Natun.I World News Service
The
Buncombe
County
Commissioners are being pressured to
pursue a co-incinerator (for burning both
municipal sewage sludge and solid waste)
as a means to relieve the growing problems
of sewage sludge and over 600 tons per day
of solid waste going into the landfill on the
French Broad River.
In order to qualify for a $5 million
EPA grant to help with new sewage
treatment facilities, the Commissioners must
decide prior to June 31, 1986 whether to
pursue the technology of incineration.
URGENT NEED FOR PUBLIC
HEARINGS!
Please write the commissioners,
Curtis Ratcliff, Jesse Ledbetter, Wayne
Montgomery, Tom Sobol, and Doris
Giezentanner to request that a series of
public hearings be held on the question of
mcineration to examine the potential health
risks from:
•
Hazardous air emissions (dioxin,
dibenzo-furans, acid gasses, ethylene
dichloride, toxic metals, etc.)
•
The disposal of toxic ash residue
(heavy metals and other contaminants)
•
The inability to adequately screen out
hazardous wastes from entering the
incinerator
Buncombe County Commissioners
POB 7435
Asheville, NC 28807
252-5536
CLEARCUTTING
BATTLE
MOVES TO JACKSON COUNfY
from a repon by Pcny Eul)'
Proposed clcarcuts in the Nantahala
National Forest in Jackson County have led
residents to organize a county chapter of the
Western North Carolina Alliance to preserve
the natural diversity of the forest
Sites on Greens Creek are scheduled
to be clearcut this fall if citizen action cannot
change the Forest Service's plans. Other
clearcuts adding up to an estimated 300
acres of land are planned during the coming
decade in the Sheeps Knob, Dicks Creek,
Terrapin Mountain, Buckeye Gap, Fall
Cliff, and Pinhook areas.
Petitions bearing the names of over
300 Jackson County residents demanding
that the Forest Service change its cutting
methods have been sent to the USFS
Regional Office in Atlanta. The next move
in the campaign to save the Jackson County
forest areas depends on the response of the
Forest Service to the petitions.
Clarence Hall, head of the Jackson
County group, said, "I walked the area they
plan to cut on Greens Creek with Marcus
Moore and some of the Forest Service
people. They acted real nice and were much
easier to talk with than they have been in the
past. They made some changes for us smaller areas to be clearcut, leaving some
spots of timber, things like that
"They seemed like they were very
willing to compromise, but I think that the
Gramm-Rudman Act has hit them hard, and
they're not going to compromise any further
than what they've been cut back to already."
WNC Alliance
SOURCE SEPARATION, RECYCLING,
AND COMPOSTING ARE PROVEN
- ~ALTERNATIVF.S!
, ..p repared by Long Branch Environmen~
Education Center (704) 683-3662
/:"'
HERE WE GLOW AGAIN!
Natural World News Service
Five western North Carolina counties
are being seriously considered in the search
for a suitable site to receive the low-level
radioactive waste (LLW's) from eight
southeastern states. The eight states
(Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Mississippi,
Tennessee, Virginia, South Carolina, and
Nonh Carolina) have joined a Southeastern
Compact to deal jointly with the waste
problem, but many North Carolina citizens
are demanding that North Carolina
withdraw from the compact if the burden of
waste disposal is to be shouldered by that
state alone. The compact will choose one of
its member states as the host for the
low-level waste dump site by July 14, 1986
and locations in Burke, Cleveland,
McDowell, Polk, and Rutherford counties
are being closely examined for a potential
low-level nuclear waste dump site.
The term "low-level" is actually a
mis-nomer as the category is defined as all
radioactive wastes that are not specifically
classified as "high-level".
This
encompasses a wide range of materials,
many of which arc as deadly as high-level
KATUAH- page 21
P.O. Box 117
Murphy, NC 28906
Call Clarence Hall at (704) 586-2056 for
/
more infonnation.
wastes. LLW s can in fact be potentially
more dangerous in many cases because
there are no stringent safety standards for
the handling of low-level radioactive
materials.
The most massive and most
dangerous of the low-level wastes produced
in North Carolina come mainly from the
nuclear power plants which account for
approximately 87% of the volume and 97%
of the radioactivity. Citizen groups are
suggesting that power plants manage their
own waste in safe, on-site, storage facilities
at their own expense.
The remaining wastes - mostly
medical, industrial and research wastes - a
lot of which are short-lived - could be
managed by the state in a small storage
facility. It is important, the groups advise,
that there be fi2 landfills and that various
low-level wastes be separated according to
radioactive life-span and managed in
above-ground, monitored, retrievable
storage facilities.
For more info, contact
- continued from p. 11
TROUT FARMING
dependent on the size of the operation and
the intensity of culture employed. Most
trout farmers now use dry commercial feeds
because of the high protein requirement of
trout, but live foods are often less
expensive, can sometimes be produced on
the site, and have the advantage of
producing trout flesh that is pink in color
and tastier than that of commercially-fed
fish, which is white in color.
McLamey discusses several
possibilities, including feeding trout meat
wastes or slaughterhouse offal, starting a
worm-raising operation to complement the
home fish farm, using "bug lights" to
capture insects, and even the trick of putting
a rotting log upstream to be a free, natural
culture medium for live trout food. Feeding
times, feeding amount, and many other
specifics are also covered.
Methods of harvesting and handling
fish are outlined in detail in the book. Trout
can be harvested by seining, various kinds
of trapping nets, or by draining the pond to
capture all the fish. An "umbrella net"
dangled under the feeding place is an easy
alternative for a partial harvest, but the
fishing rod will never be totally replaced for
the home pond.
McLarncy gives
suggestions and complete instructions for
the use of various nets and traps. Pests,
predators, diseases, and contamination by
silt and pollution are also discussed.
Appendices to the book give
additional infonnation on cooking the fish, a
summary of their characteristics, and
resource information on standard reference
works and sources for supplies and further
advice.
"Experience is the best teacher", but
The Freshwater Agyacutwre Book is an
excellent place to start a fish-raising
operation.
Bill McLarney is offering an
aquaculture consulting service for fish
farmers in KatUah. Inquire by letter to:
1176 Bryson City Rd.
Franklin, NC 28734
~
j:Y
h erbs, nct t ive plcsnl!;, f1erennidl:.,
flow~rs,
fruit lrees, bulbs,
bedding planl:..
80 lakeside Drive
8/I01hs of a mile from turdee'li
in Franklin, N.C.
for infurmdlion c:all 524·3321
Millie Buch;man, Clca.n Water Fund ~
(704) 253-4423
/:"'
Summer 1986
�RUMMING
..
LETTERS TO KATUAH
In Dwellers jn the L,and. Kirkpatrick Sale states: "What
makes the bioregional vision different -- in any foreseeable
future, anyway -- is that it asks nothing of the Federal
government and needs no national legislation, no
governmental regulation, no Presidential dispensation" (p.
169).
But it seems to me that the bioregional movement
cannot simply wait for the exhaustion of the world's supplies
of fossil fuels to make long-distance transportation
uneconomical and thus force the world to adopt bioregional
economies. The carbon dioxide released into the atmosphere
by the combustion of fossil and biomass fuels will so
drastically change the climate of all pans of the earth as to
fundamentally alter the biotic potential of every bioregion. In
order to prevent that, it would be necessary for all industrial
nations to begin ~ to phase out the petroleum, coal,
automobile, railroad, and merchant marine industries. That
would require political action, since those industries will not
voluntary go out of business. How else could a liveable
bioregional world be brought into being?
Ed Price
Sylva, NC
Dear Friends,
I have r;ad and enjoyed the K.aWah. I am broadcasting
on WUM radio on Sundays at 1:45 P.M. I sing sacred
songs, read poems, Bible, and etc. I am sending some home
remedies from an old New York doctor book published
1919.
Kate Rogers
Franklin, NC
LEMONS
Heartburn - Slowly suck the juice from one to two lemons,
which is generally sufficient to give relief.
Colds - Add the juice of two lemons to the same quantity of
strained honey, and mix thoroughly. Take a teaspoonful of
this mixture every ten or fifteen minutes.
Rheumatism - Take the juice of several lemons every day and
in a short time all signs of rheumatism will disappear.
Corns - Bind a piece of lemon over the com every night for
four or five nights.
Asthma - Persons suffering from asthma should drink the
juice of two or three lemons every day.
Headache - The juice from half a lemon added to a cup of hot
water sweetened with honey will generally relieve the most
severe headache.
(For more on Kare Rogers, see Kmfil.lb.1110 - Eds.)
KA
1 offer you a quote that has been a source of great
power for me:
Remember thaJ you live always wuler the protection of
some mysterious force. T.hi.s...ffU« i~ ~.Therefore, true
self-defense does not stop with defending oneself against
others, but strives to make oneself worthy of defense by
nature herself ... When your mind and your acts become OIU!
with narure, then narure will protect you.
Fear no enemy; fear only to be separated from the
mind of nature. If you are on the right path, nature will
protect you and you need not fear anything. Trust nanlre and
do not worry. Leave both your mind and body to narure.
Do not recognize friend or foe in your mind. In your
heart, let tlwre be generosiry as large as the sea, which
accepts both clean and unclean water. Let your mind be as
merciful as namre, which loves the smallest tree or blade of
grass. Let your mind be strong with sincerity thaJ can pierce
iron or srone. Repay the favors of nature, work/or the good
of all, and make yourself a person whom nature is pleased to
let live.
Koichi Tohei
(in Ajkjdo, The Art of Self-Defense I
The spirit and practice of the martial art of Aikido can
give us some idea of principles that can successfully be used
in political resistance. My knowledge and understandfog of
Aikido are limited, so I speak as no expert, but to my
understanding Aik.ido works with the "flow" of energy and
does not confront force with force. Instead, it allows the
opposing force its expression and then moves to turn the
opposing force to its own disadvantage. The Aikido
practitioner will allow an attacker to lunge and with a simple
movement will use the attackers own energy to send him
reeling. Aikido works with centering and directing the
body's energy or ,Ki. That's an oversimplistic explanation,
but it might give you an idea.
Translating the principles into action is what presents
the challenge. Obviously we can't match force with the
nuclear power industry, the chemical industry, or the
technological forces which are killing our Mother Earth. The
Indians tried to stop it with force years ago, and look what
happened So how do we keep it from happening and stay
sane at the same time?
First, maybe we have to give up the notion that ~
have to keep it from happening. If this crazy absurdity of the
modem world were not a part of the Great Spirit's plan, it
would not be happening. And maybe it's going to have to
get even crazier before the majority of humans arc going to
pay attention. Once during a discourse with a "psychic
being", l expressed a great deal of concern about the rampant
commercial development that was placing all our best food
growing land under concrete and asphalt I was advised that
the disease must run its course and not to base my life on
fighting the disease, for if I did, when the disease vanished
so would my life.
So do we just give it up as hopeless? Absolutely not.
F. Scott Fitzgerald once said, "The test of a first rate
intelligence is to hold cwo opposed ideas in your mind at the
same time and still retain your capacity to function. You
should, for example, be able to sec that things are hopeless
and yet be determined to make them otherwise."
It sounds a lot easier than it really is. Once we begin
the work in earnest in our own hearts, then the Great Spirit
may guide us to other action. If we try to tackle the "evil"
without purifying our own hearts, then we simply give it
more energy and make it stronger.
We are not alone. Many people all over this planet are
facing similar situations. We live in a world that is extremely
unbalanced and full of great suffering. For this reason we
must develop and hold a clear vision of the world as we wish
it to be - happy, healthy, and filled with life. Affirm that
vision every day. Don't let negatives get in the way. Our
vision is our prayer. Keep the vision foremost and clear.
And we must not wish ill on our perceived "enemies" -- this
is not Good Medicine. Pray for happiness, health and peace
for all beings on the Earth Mother.
Dan Vega
Fayetteville, Arkansas
Summer 1986
�Dear Folks,
l am writing you concerning your promotional material
for your Spring Gathering. I think .K..iUia.h is a great
publication and I think your having a gathering is a good
idea. Snow Bear came to our Fall Gathering last year and
was on the teaching staff with Grandfather Wallace Black
Elk, Grandmother Grace Spotted Eagle, Buck Ghost Horse,
Ron Evans, and others. We really like Snow Bear and
promote his camp through our newsletter.
The way you have stated "SACRED SWEAT
LODGE" on your promotional material can be easily
interpreted to mean that you are selling the sweat lodge. I
hope you are clear about what you are doing. I don't believe
that Snow Bear would in fact charge money for a sweat.
SeUing ceremonies of this type is as offensjve as having
Christian sacraments offered on a sale basis. Advertising
sweats as a prominent clement of a for-sale program is also
offensive to many people.
I wish you no harm. Several of your staff know me
personally. I would appreciate some cla. ification on these
r
matters. We all make errors and it seems that errors of
advertising and pubHcation are very easy to make and once
made propagate rapidly.
Sincerely,
Art Horn
Marietta, GA
An,
As the person who drew up the flyer for the ~
Spring Ga1hering, I am the person to respond to your letter.
Thonks very much/or raising the issue. We appreciate your
lerrer and the spirit in which it was offered.
We did nor consider the Gathering as something that
was for sale when we put together the flyer. The money
mentioned represented our guess as to the minimum amount
we would require from each participant ro cover our basic
expenses for renting the camp and providing our food. All
work on the Gathering was volunteer, as is all work on the
Kiufimljournal. Nobody took any money home, unlike a lot
of spiritual seminars put on by some white people (and a few
native people, too, who have been mentioned/or Hselling"
sacred gatherings and sacred objects). If we had been fasting
in a wilderness area, the Ka1Uilh Gathering would have been
free.
I did not show the flyer to Snow Bear before sending
it out. If I had, he said he would have advised me 10 take the
sweat lodge off the page. He had some good words about
that. He said that regardless of our circumstances, it is an
historical fact that white people have consistently taken the
tra&tions ofthe native people and abused them. We cenainly
do not want to do that. On rlie contrary, I mentioned the
proposed sweat lodge so people would know that we were
seeking the highest possible spiritual level for our meeting,
not to produce the opposite effect. So with that in mind, we
thank you for poillling our attention to this mistake, and I
rrust we won't re,,ea1 it.
David Wheeler
~Friends,
It seems desirable to consider some positive
alternatives to the wasteful and dangerous burial of high level
nuclear waste in "solid" rock. So, here is an alternative
pattern that seems worth consideration:
( 1) Instead of transporting dangerous nuclear waste to
an individual repository, why not keep the waste at the site
where it is produced, thus avoiding the danger of
transporting these dangerous materials. If persons in a given
location produce such waste, and probably benefit financially
from the operation, it seems only fair that those same people
should deal with the waste; not persons in some distant
location.
(2) High level nuclear waste contains a great deal of
energy. Instead of heating rock with that energy, it is
suggested that the energy be converted directly to some
useful form. (e.g., it is estimated that the 70,000 tons of
waste proposed for burial in a permanent repository would
yield, in a 256 year period, over 60 billion dollars worth of
energy at $.035 per kwh.)
(3) The present method of using thermal fission
processes, with the demonstrated danger of catastrophic
meltdown, is a relatively inefficient means of obtaining
electrical energy. It is possible to ~izc direct coo version to
electrical energy by slowing the beta and alpha particles in an
electric field. The direct conversion could be used with
suitably processed waste as weU as with nuclear fuel now
being used in wasteful and dangerous thermal fission
reactors. (Note: Some of the nuclear physicists who
demonstrated the conversion of matter to energy in the early
experiments with Fermi wanted to develop safer, more
efficient conversion schemes for commercial use. The
politics of that situation led to the present dangerous and
wasteful methods, rather than the safer and more efficient
processes proposed by those early pioneers in nuclear
physics. It may be time to pay attention to the suggestions of
those expert and creative persons.)
(4) Placing large amounts of collected waste in a
localized region is contrary to the teaching of the old ones.
The forests, meadows, waters, winds, and earth processes
tend to scatter and diffuse matter. Large concentrations may
be an expression of humankind that is destructive and
hannful when out-of-tune with nature.
(5) Instead of spending over 9 billion dollars to place
dangerous waste in the ground, why not spend that money
on research and development that would use the waste for
useful purposes and help to preserve the natural ways given
to us?
(6) Those of us in Katuah (Katuahins?) can come
together to encourage alternative, more constructive patterns.
The epic of nuclear processes on earth demonstrates
again the power of the mind to rcaHze signillcant new
patterns. That power of the mind can be used to help form
these new patterns into beautiful and useful configurations.
Fear, greed, and ignorance can be replaced by peace,
fairness, and understanding.
Harmony is a possible alternative.
Ho,
Peregrine Falcon
KATIJAH - page 23
John Artley
Hot Springs, NC
- continued on p. 24
�- continued from p. 23
Dear Folks at~
Dear~.
I wrote to the President of the United States and
enclosed the pullout section on the nuclear dump plan from
the spring K.ci.ah.
Yesterday, I recieved a two page typed letter written
"on behalf of President Reagan" in response to my letter
"regarding the Nation's second repository program." The
letter and a folder of materials came from the Department of
Energy.
According to the letter, "the DOE evaluated, with State
assi.stance, existing publicly available geologic and
envuonmental data ... to identify preliminary candidate
areas.''
In my opinion, North Carolinians should be asking,
"Where was Gevemor Martin during the time that South
Carolina's Governor was in Washington, D.C. fighting to
protect that state from being dumped on more than they
already have beenr' Arc the people aware that Governor
Martin is from South Carolina?
Also, the people should be made aware that
Congressman Bill Hendon accepted campaign funds from 18
out-of-state nuclear power companies of $250.00 each plus
donations from in-state companies. Isn't it reasonable to
assume that he would feel obligated to them rather than the
people of this state? Isn't it possible that he may not be
well-informed on the potential threat to the lives of the people
in thC: vicinity of a hazardous nuclear waste dump as we arc?
Consider the fact that he recently made a "mistake" in voting
[Qr the MRS budget and that he has not been successful in
getting one bill through Congress in over three years.
If we are to be successful in protecting ourselves and
future generations from a nuclear holocaust, we must get
involved in the political process and elect public officials who
w~ be responsive to our urgent requests to protect our
envuonment
DOE anticipates "recommending to the President three
sites for characterization for a second repository in the early
1990's." Let's be sure that the people of wesrcrn North
Carolina have someone in Washington, D.C. to care for YJnotjust big industry.
Sincerely,
Esther c. Cunningham
Franklin, NC
- continued from p. 11
'I
.
. . I am mtei:ested in_ proi:notin~ home music-making -smgmg & playing music with friends and writing songs.
Those of us who were not born where we have put down
roo~ become part of local culture, and can bring our insights
& light co a place ... music is my way of doing it. I love
spontaneous music-making & sharing. rt turns us away
from mass culture (TV & MTV, etc.) and gives us a beauty
and richness we can share.
Als~>, in a mystic~! sense, our singing and playing
adds music of a human kind 10 a place long after the music
has stopped. M~st of my son~s sing about nature anyway.
Human bemgs neeg to sing. Nature loves the singing.
Thank you for .Katlulh's song.
Love,
Cindy Crossen
Pittsboro, NC
Dear friends at Kill!.ah.
We appreciate your kind words for our publication and
the Backroads column. We have seen young people,
families, older people, and combinations of all of the above
taking those tours. They occasionally stop by to say hello
and all of them have been very nice people who appreciate
the very things we would like to preserve about the Blue
Ridge. We know that, like everywhere else, growth is
inevitablC:, _but we hope to ~ abl~ to guide that growth along
more posittve, non-destrucuve hnes. We feel one way is to
create an awareness of what is here and has been here. In the
past two years, The Mountain I.aurel has attracted national
attention, so we must be on the right track. We have no
degrees in journalism, but follow only our instincts. We try
to present mountain people and their ways and mountain
places in their true light and give people a "taste" of what
mountain life is really like.
Susan Thigpen, Editor
The Mountain I.aurel:
Monthly Journal of Mountain Life
Route I
MeadowsofDan, VA 24120
,,#
,P'
AQUACULTURE
basic background information for each stage of the
fish-raising process, and 3) offers a variety of techniques to
handle the different fish species in different fish farm
situations. The result is that fish farmers are able to design
their own individual aquaculture operations that arc tailored
to the particular conditions of their environment and the scale
at which they want to work.
The freshwater Aguaculture Book is a multi-leveled
statement In its form and in its content it speaks to the
question of what arc the true and enduring values that will
make fish culture or any other enterprise a truly satisfying
and life-enhancing occupation. Many people will benefit
from the practical infonnation and advice McLamey offers on
fish-raising. It can only be hoped that some will respond as
well to the deeper discourse that seeks to define what is truly
appropriate and lasting. Ultimately, these values can only be
realized through experimentation and practice as part of a
continuing process of maintaining our "place", the point
where we arc in balance with the natural world, but il is most
helpful to have a guidebook to help point the way.
If we are to speak of an aquaculture for small groups
and individuals, it will ultimately be up to us, as small
groups and individuals, to create it. Fortuna1ely, despite the
gaps in our knowledge, there is much that we can do right
now. Some of what we can do is contained in this book.
The implementaJion of this information and the testing of
these ideas will be an important step toward a more diverse
and imponant future for aquaculture in North America.
reviewed by David Wheeler,
KA
AH-page 4
1
,, .
~•
l:11mmer 1986
�A CHILDREN'S PAGE
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AH - page 25
a11J
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- continued from p. 3
SA YING "NO!"
of Energy. With the knowledge that the
citizenry of this state is solidly behind them,
activists can organize without fear of local
h~tility from state officials. More people
will be likely to participate in civil
disobedience, for example, if it comes down
to ~at It's nice to know you're in friendly
temtory.
Rererendums on Other Issues?
When the Nonh Carolina legislature
decided to place the high-level nuclear waste
issue on the ballot, it broke a longstanding
rule against holding referendums. Indeed, it
was the first referendum in the history of the
state on anything but a Constitutional
Amendment or a bond issue, both of which
are required by state law.
Many other groups, representing a
multitude of causes, have been clamoring
for state-wide referendums on their issues,
only to be rejected by the state legislature on
the grounds that North Carolina traditionally
has a "representative form of government".
This means that the people elect officials
who in turn are supposed to make all the
important decisions for them. This is an
archaic interpretation of democratic
government which amounts to tight fisted,
autocratic control and discourages a
participatory role by the citizenry. This
philosophy of government has ruled North
Carolina and the entire Southeast since the
Revolutionary War, and kept this state in the
political dark ages. Many states, by
contrast, have instated an "Initiative
Process" whereby any group or individual
can circulate a petition for a referendum and.
once the required number of signatures has
been achieved, it is placed on the st.ate-wide
ballot In some states, such as Oregon and
Maine, initiatives become binding laws if
voted on and passed by a majority of the
people.
Now that the North Carolina State
Legislature has broken with tradition by
placing one referendum on the ballot, it will
be hard to rationalize the denial of others.
The pressure from lobbying groups will be
enormous. Perhaps the stranglehold of
authoritarian rule is finally beginning to lose
its grip and a new political age is dawning.
National Significance
On a national level, the results of this
referendum have great meaning.
. As much as the ~t of Energy
denies that politics enters its
decision-making process, politics will be the
~iding factor in where, if anywhere, a
high-level nuclear waste repository will go.
There is no safe method to bury
nuclear waste and there is no safe place for
nuclear waste. No geological location is
suitable. Everywhere is on top of some
water table. The DOE is merely in the
process of finding out where they can put
the repository so that it will be economically
suitable for the nuclear industry and where
people will let them put it without major
political upheaval.
They have now
discovered, to their disappointment, that
Nonh Carolina is not that place.
In addition to putting the DOE on
notice, the waste referendum has sent out a
signal. to the rest of the country which is of
great importance. North Carolina and the
southeast is not known for its leadership in
en.~ental issues. Quite to the contrary,
this region has been the most politically
conservative and industry-oriented. The
fact that this state has taken such an
overwhelming stand in opposition to nuclear
waste bas particular significance. The
referendum has given North Carolina
leadership potential on a national basis in
regard to the nuclear waste issue. The less
conservative st.ates, threatened with the
dump, will in all probability, hold similar
referendums of their own in the near future.
(Wisconsin held a referendum prior to
No~ .Carolina and rejc:cted the dump with a
maJOnty of 89%.) This turn of events will
create a block of st.ates from different
regions of the ceuntry in alliance with each
other. and ~pposcd to the misguided process
that 1s being used to deal with nuclear
waste. Io essence these states will
spearhead a national movement which could
lead to the demise of the Nuclear Waste
Policy Act of 1982.
•.»o0 • A variety 1J{
~f,..i""'"" wholesome baked goods
OC4 Chesterfte!d tttU
next IO French Broad Trading Co.op
Potential is the Key Word
The referendum in North Carolina has
come and gone. Those of us who worked
bard to make it a reality have tasted a small
measure of success. But the real fruits of
our labor are yet to come, and it will involve
a committment to years of hard work to
bring this saga to a happy conclusion.
The referendum has generated a great
potential to bring about all the benefits
outlined here, but the potential will not be
realized unless people make a concerted
effort to take advantage of the momentum
we presently have, to direct that momentum,
and to create the future scenario we desire.
Let's use this referendum for what
it's worth.
If you live in a state other than North
Carolina and wish to help instigate a
referendum in your state, CCNW might be a
good source of infonnation for you. Write:
NATIJRAL FOOD STORE
&DELI
CCNW
P.O. Box 653
Dillsboro, NC 28725
Avram FriMman and the CCNW group first
initiated the idea of a NC nuclear waste
referendwn this past winter (see ~
#ll).
,
Open 7 Days A Week
160 Broadway
Asheville, NC 28801
Monday - Friday
9:00 a.rn. - 8:00 p.m.
Saturday
9:00 a.m. - 6:30 p.m.
Sunday
1:00 p.m. - 5:00 p.rn.
(704) 253-7656
Where Broadway
Meets Merrimoo
And 1-240
ACUPUNCTURE ASSOCIATES
of
ASHEVILLE
Mary C. Majebc
258-9016
KurtKochek
258-0837
Naoki Kubota
254-9236
Acupuncture, Nutritional Counselling, Chinese Herbology, Shiatsu
Summer 1986
�N'flBe. tJ.
- --ea-t L alces r- g-on-. C a- ca - Sh-asta, _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.:..,__
Gr
- - - e i
- s -dia,
_
'The larger functi.oning of bjoregions
leads to a consideration that the Earth be
view~d pr~marily as an inlt!r-related system
of b1oreg1ons and only secondarily as a
community of nations.
'The more massive bureaucratic
nations of the world have lost their inner
vitality because they can no longer respond
to the particular functioning of the various
bioregions within their borders. A second
difficulty within the massive nations is the
exploitation of some bioregions for the
advantage of others. A third difficulty is the
threate~ devastalWn of the entire planel by
the conflict ofmassive bureaucratic nations
with their weaponry capable of continental
and even planetary devastation . To break
these nations down into their appropriate
bioregiona/ communities could be a possible
way to peace.
'This bioregional mode of thinking
and acting is presently one of the most
vigorous movements taking place anywhere
on the North American continent. Its
comprehensive concern is leading toward a
rt!()rdering ofall our existing establishmenrs:
the political-legal, the commercial-industrial
communications, educational and religio~
establishmenrs.
N
Upper Sonoran, Ohio River basin Hudson
River Estuary, and Katuah as ' well as
others. The regions themselves were
reercsented - the land, the plants, the
animals, as well as the humans. The focus
of the Congress was on the whole
ecological community of North America Turtle Island.
At the final plenary session ofNABC
I it was unanimously agreed that a second
North American Bioregional Congress
should convene in 1986.
Now plans are underway for NABC
1I! It will be hosted by the Great Lakes
Bioregional Congress (GLBC) from August
25-29, 1986. There will be a conference
style format at the beginning of the week
followed by the convening of the formal
Congress later in the week. Some major
areas of ecologically-based work which will
be represented at NABC D are:
~xhibit ~air.
The format of the Congress
itself will .be at the discretion of the
representallves.
The NABC I was
structured to include NABC Standing
Committees (Agriculture/Permaculture
Econ?mics, Forests, Culture & Arts, etc.}
~ectln~ on a regular basis plus small
d!scus~1on .groups meeting to discuss
b1orcg1onal 1ssues and practical strategies
as well as plenary sessions.
'
Throughout the week there will be
amp!~ . time for informal networking,
socializing, and celebrating.
I_'. contingency from Kat6ah will be
a~tendi.ng NABC II and is developing a
b1orc;g1onal .presentation and exhibit for
sharing with the other bioregions.
~ponsors of NABC II from Appalachia
include: Katiiab: Bjorc~onal Journal of the
Southern Appalachjans. Indian Valley
Ce~~r for Holistic Living and Learning
(Wilhs, VA), Lon~ Branch Environmental
Educatio~ Cen~ (S~dy Mush, NC), and
A~p~ach1a-Sc1ence 10 the Public Interest
~LIVlng~ton, KY).
For additional
mfonnaoon, contact
Mamie Muller
~
(704) 252-9167
P"'
All Species Rights
Appropriate Technology, An:hirecture, and Design
Bioregionalisrn...Cooperatives/Communities
Cul1we/Ans •• .Ecological Politics/Green
Ec~Feminism'Posl patriarchlal values
Politics
Educalioo...Environmental DefensdConservatioo
Forestry/Agrofaesuy
Holistic Health Care/Healing
Land Stewardship...Native People's Rights
Organic Agricu ltute/Pennaculture
- Thomas Berry in
Bjoregjons.· The Context for Rejnhabjtjng
the Eqrth. 1984
Peace/Equality/Justice...Regional Planning
In May of 1984, over 200 participants
from all over the continent attended the first
North American Bi~egional Congress ...
representatives from bloregional, ecological
an~ sustain~bility-oriented groups, and
nauve and tnbal organizations. Bioregional
areas represented included the Prairie
Ozarks, Cumberland-Green watershed'
'
Renewable Resource Development
Responsible lnves1rnent
Spiriruallty/Sacredne.WCeremony
Sustainable F.conomics/BU$iness
Water Quality
....• as weU as others.
The Conference time will include
papers,. panels and special
b1oregional presentauons,and a bioregional
"".orks~ops,
~a~e,
~~
T-SHI RTS
Each ori2inal desi 2n
hand screened in 5 colors
on the finest 100%
pre-shrunk cotton
Short SIMVe
Long SIHVe
short and lon2 sleeve t-shirts.
110
ppd. rSEJIP CJrFOC
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ULTRAVIOLET PURIFICATION ANO FILTERING SYSTE"IS
SOLAR PRODUCTS WATER ANAlYSIS
RANDALL C. LAN IER
704 29359 12
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RT. 68 BOX 125
CUL LOW HEE, N C 28 723
KAT AH - page 27
Joe Roberts
258-1038
734 Town Mountain Rd ,
01vrd Reed
253 2846
Ashtville. NC 28805
. nmml'r IQRI'\
�20-22
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13-18
Slippery Rock, PA
A People's Conference on the
Fate of Our Forests. Slippery
Rock University, Slippery Rock, PA;
sponsored by The Earth Regeneration and
Reforestation Association (fERRA); More
info: TERRA c/o Elfin Permacu!ture; P.O.
Box 202; Orange, MA 01364; (617)
544-7810.
28
20-25
28-July 5 Burnsville, NC
Southern Appalachian Wilderness
Encounter led by Doug Elliott; hiking
camping, foraging in the mountains - for
info, write or call: Doug Elliott; Rt 4, Box
137; Burnsville, NC
28714 (704)
682-9263.
Nantahala River
Nantaha!a River Festiya! - River
cleanup, environmental awareness
programs, biking, Bartram Trail walks,
swimming. Free camping; meals available.
Reply to: Brett Poirier; US 19W, Box 41;
Bryson City, NC 28713.
21
Summer Solstice-Full Moon
Celo Community, NC
Full Moon Party - Drumming,
dancing; bring instruments, snacks, high
spirits; "Mountain Gardens," 3020
Whiteoak Creek Rd. (704) 675-5664.
Pre-register: Southern Dharma Retreat
Center; Rt. 1, Box 34H; Hot Springs, NC
28743.
28
Great Smokies Park
Greeory Bald Azalea Hike
Smoky Mountain Field School, see 6121-22
28
Banner Elk, NC
R2an Mountain Hike North
Carolina Nature Conservancy; P.O. Box
805; Chapel Hill, NC 27514.
21
21
Swannanoa, NC
O_penine Concert of Swannanoa
Oamber Festival at Warxcn Wi1son Co!!cze
William Nelson and Werner John. 8:00
P.M., Kittredge Theater, WWC.
Hot Sprlngs, NC
Goddesses Arnone Us: An
Empowr;rment Retreat for Meo and Women
Black Mountain, NC
Timmy Abell Irish & Traditional.
McDibbs, see 6121.
28-29
Great Smokies Park
Mt. LeConte Lodee Hjke &
Oyernieht Research Qn Wild Mammals Qf
the Sm2kies: A Hands-On Course Qn
Animal Life jn SmQky Mountain Streams
Smoley Mountain Field School, see 6121-22
Il1LY
~
July
Genius Qf fubn Juliys WilnQty Cherokee Heritage Center.
21
Black Mountain, NC
John Pabey Conte.mporary of
Leo Kottke. McDibbs; 119 Cherry St;
B!aclc Mountain, NC 28711.
21-22
13-15
Farner, TN
Herbal Retreat at PeJ>perland
Fann Camp; herb walks, foraging for wild
foods, identifying medicinal plants, etc.
$65.00 meals & lodging/adults; children
6-16, $15; under 6, free. (704) 494-2353.
Leicester, NC
"Positively StQppine tbe Dump"
Celebration - Fuodraiser. Music, food,
volleyball and information. Sandy Mush
Community Center 12:00 Noon - 8:00 PM.
14
Great Smokies Park
Identification of Fems Smoky
Mountain Field School.
Non-credit
programs. 2016 Lake Ave.; University of
Tennessee; Knoxville, 1N 37996.
22-28
Brasstown, NC
June Dance Week English,
American & Scottish country dance and
song. Tuition $130 plus lodging and meals.
John C. Campbell Folk School, see 6/15.
14-22
Sam's Knob
Mountain Reeional Rainbow
Summer Solstice Celebration Contact:
David Recd, (704) 253-2846 (before 9:30
P.M.).
Brasstown, NC
June Festival Choice of classes
in mountain singing, recorder, and
dulcimer; or crafts. Tuition $130 plus meals
and lodging. John C. Campbell Fol.le
School; Rt. l; Brasstown, NC 28902.
(704) 837-2775.
5
Alum Ridge, VA
Psycho Chiroloey Seminar on
psychological hand interpretation with
Muzawir. $25 or barter, free camping.
Pre-register: Penny Royal Educational
Center; Rt. H C 67, Box 171 ; Alum Ridge,
VA 24051 (703)763-3728.
6-7
Turtle Island
"Circle Qf Lieht" - Prayers for
protection of the Hopis and Dineb
threatened with forced removal from their
sacred land by the U.S. Government. From
midnight July 6 throughout the removal
deadline date of July 7.
15-21
23-27
Horsepasture River
Pretty Pictures & Politics: visual
Environmentalism
Appalachian
Environmental Arts Center; P.O. Drawer
580; Highlands, NC 28741.
6-7
Celo Community, NC
"Mountain Gardens" tour and
perennial plant sale; 3020 Whiteoak Creek
Rd., (704) 675-5664.
18-21
Bakersville, NC
RhQdQdendrnn Festival
TRAC; Spruce Pine, NC 28777.
Raleigh, NC
l.ow-Jeyel Radiation Waste Rally
to urge the NC General Assembly to get out
of SE Compact (see ~ p.21) Maio
speaker: Brost Schori, biosafety radiation
officer at Dartmouth Medical Center. At
State Capitol, starts 9:00 am. more info:
(919) 832-7491.
17
25-26
Raleigh, NC
NC Al!ematiye Faonine Fjeld
Jlu. Promising new approaches for a
sustainable agriculture. More info: Dr. R.
H. Miller; Dept of Soil Science; P.O. Box
7619, NC State University; Raleigh, NC
27695-7619.
26-29
Swannanoa, NC
SwQCds intQ Plowshares
Peace Studies programs in higher
education. Warren Wilson College.
Swannanoa, NC 298-3325 (x231).
10-Aug 3 Blue Ridge Parkway
MQuntain Sweet Talk Two-act
play by The Folkte!Jers. Folk Art Center
Theater. More info: Mountain Sweet Talk;
c/o The Fol.lctellers; P.O. Box 2898;
Asheville, NC 28802 (704) 258-1113.
�11- 19
Alum Ridge, VA
Psychic Allunement Seminar with
Tom Williams and Muzawir. Explore the
self-healing abilities we all possess. S200
or barter; bring food, pre-register. sec 115.
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9-10
Willis, VA
The Herbal Medjcjne Chest with
Susun S. Weed. Contact: Indian Valley
Holistic Center. Rt. 2, Box 58; Willis, VA
24380.
11-17
Willis, VA
Women's Wellness Week
Bodywork, herbal medicine and medical
self-help, see 8/9.
12
West Jefferson, NC
Bluff Mountain Hike North
Carolina Nature Conservancy, see 6128.
14-25
Elkins, WV
Augusta Heritage Arts fair food, crafts, and !otsa music! (3
workshops by Doug Elliott as well: herbs,
woodslore, basketmaking) call : (304)
636-1903 for info.
As heville, NC
39th Annya! Soythem Hiehlands
Handicraft Guild Fair. Asheville Civic
Center, (704) 298-7928.
16
Alum Ridge, VA
Environmental
Harmony
Workshop with Edward J. Kesgen of
Sunshine Weavers. Cost $35 per person,
$55 per couple; bring food. Pre-register by
8/8. see 11
5.
19
13-20
Asheville, NC
French Broad River Weck,
Featuring:
Sept. 13 RIVERFEST - AU-day event on
the Asheville waterfront celebrating the
French Broad River - raft rides, games,
crafts, displays. Music by Mike Cross and
local musicians.
Celo Community, NC
full Moon Paay - sec 612 ! .
17-20
19
Celo Community, NC
full Moon Paey - see 612 l.
Great Lakes Bioregion
North American Bjoregional
Coneress 11 NABC 11 Office; Bioregional
Project; New Life Farm, Inc. Box 3;
Brixey, MO 65618. Regionally: (704)
252-9167.
25-31
Banner Elk, NC
Bie Yellow Mountain Hike NC
Nature Conservancy, sec 6128.
Also raft and canoe trips, hikes, displays,
contests, river clean-up throughout French
Broad River Weck. Dates not set at
publication time. Call or write:
Bill Eaker
Land of Sky Regional Council
19
25 Heritage Drive
Asheville, NC 28806
(704) 254-8131
for dates and details.
SEPTEMBER
7-8
20-26
Brasstown, NC
Multi-Media Week I Basketry,
Pottery, Blacksmithing & more. John C.
Campbell Folk School, sec 6/15.
Celo Community, NC
"Mountain Gardens" tour and
perennial plant sale; see July 6-7.
18
21-25
Swannanoa, NC
The Many faces of PeacemaJcjng,
Elderhostel class on global understanding.
Warren Wilson College; More info:
298-3325 (x231).
,.st3~
.~CJ,_ .
-.
Swannanoa, NC
Facine the Nuclear Winter Njght:
Options and Actjons. World Affairs
Institute. Warren Wilson College,
Swannanoa, NC (919) 786-5233.
25-27
Modica! Sell-Help
30-Aug 3 Swannanoa, NC
fellowship of Reconcjliation
National Conference Key speakers include
Wendell Berry, Dorothy Cotton and Miles
Honon. Contact: Rural Southern Voice for
Peace; 190 I Hannah Branch Road;
Burnsville, NC 28714.
Celo Community, NC
"Moyntajn Gardens" tour and
perennial plant sale; sec July 6-7.
3-16
Brasstown, NC
Mountain Traditions Stone
Carving, Dulcimer & more. John C.
Campbell Folk School, see 6/15.
8
Brasstown, NC
Mountain Music Concert with
Homer Ledford. John C. Campbell Folk
School, see 6/15.
-
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August 11·17
Wldl H-S-WMd, c.,..,_ M_.t, MD.
Hd 8od1 w...... udMlllklM Mtndldl Mclno..a
"!ltffJ D:<'\1u_y.u .W•11
255-19M
IHDIAH VALU!Y RETREAT
- 2ao.sa.w... vA2-110317-
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13- 18
Ib'
20 -22
27-29
July
4-6
11- 13
6211-15J7
SOUTHE:RN DHARMJ\ RE:TRE:J\T CE:NTE:R
SUMMER SCHEDULE
Q11ddcuu
Eamgy,~DJKn&
AUGUST
3-4
/
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HMology
P•- . l l S -
WOQIXD1'8 w.a&Jll!a W%llX
Asheville, NC
Bele Cher Festival; Downtown
Asheville.
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25-27
Celo Community, NC
Full Moon Paey - sec 6121.
ama111
Lii
Ao
B'-lttll Cm M= 1Dd Wgmm
with Roger Woolger. Ao iouoductloo to
the universal feminine archeiypcs aod ao
exploration or their meaoiog to us.
:Cai Cb! Cb11m - Ihc E11cmlm E11cm with
Harold Miller. A wec.ltend CllploratioD ioto
the way of oot-doiog, or dancing the
Mystic Spiral, or creating your own
Formless Form.
A ~iRllllDI MGdllllhlD Yl';ks=Dd with
Rodney Smith. RodDCy will provide useM
guidlll(:e aod instruction in medication aod
will be available as teacber-io-re11dence
June 30 through July 3 for those who wish
to do private retreats.
2S-27
SRWL with Harruoo HobU~lle, Ph.D. A
weekend or mediUtiOD aod discuuioo
~latlog Buddhitm and ChriJtlaoil:y.
Miad[11lan1 Mcdi111l11a with S11110
Augenstein. Medlutlon aod momnt to
momen1 awareness are the focUJ or this
week.cod.
Aqust
Xllll !Qt Xlllll Wb11lc l.iCI< with BODDe
Kelly. Adaptiog yoga to daily 1etivitia aod
individual needs.
22- 24 A Bjau! z,o Wi:ckmd with S&ody Stewar1.
The way or the selllesa self.
29 .
~ Hs:1lia1 I•:r Imi11 Mt:dilltiSZD IDd Cal
Sept I K.11.u. with Anna Joy Oaybeart. A
comp~hens lve ioll'Oductlon to Ille ll)(:le111
Taoist pr1ellces.
12-14 I2iss<cD1laa lb' Cbd11 Seed l1!'.ilbia with
A ~ilHlllDI Mcdllaliaa W"l"ad with
John YungbluL Exploring Christlaoi1y and
Rodney Smith.
relatiag the mystical upcrieoce of Christ to
lcsi1b1 Mcdi111i11n IDd lb' Li!c ac 1bc
meditatioo and. cootempla11ve prayer.
Southern Obarma Retreat Center is localed in a ~moie area of the Smoley M
ountains near Asheville, North
Carolina. For further information about Southern Ohanna or about aoy or the programs above, call or write:
SOtrrH.ERN DRARMA RETREAT CENTER
8-10
RLI, Boll 34-H; Roi Sprio&J, NC
28743 (704) 622-7112
�Hoaldeas GARDENING NEWSLETTER - A
monthly review gleaning the mos1 practical and
innovative ideas from hundreds of teehnical
iniemational horticuhural publications - S 10 per
year; sample copy: SI. Route I; Gravel Swhch,
KY 40328.
ACCESS is a free lelephone infonnation service on
peace issues including mili1ary spending,
environ.menial impacts of miliiary activity, conflicl
resolution, elC. Your only charge is your
long-distance phone call. ACCESS I is (202)
328-2323.
ln!m!arianal pmnacuhgrc Seeti Yearbook - The
annual bulletin, direciory, and resource guide for
pen:nacultvre practitionen; $10.00; Box 202;
Onnge,MA 01364.
DRUM WORKSHOPS - for children of all ages.
lherapeutic massage - Relaxes lhe body &
mind...Call Martha for more info 11 (704)
252-2420.
MOON DANCE FARM HERBALS - herbal salves,
tincnues, & oils for birthing & family heallh. For
brochu~ please write: Moon Dance Farm; RL I,
Box 726; Hampton. TN 37658
HOLOGRAPHIC ASTROLOGY - Every part of a
hologram con1J1ins all !he info abou1 the en1ire
hologram, and each ctll in your body contains all
!he genetic data about your whole body. Similarly,
every body conlains all Ille infounation about lhe
entire solar sysiern - you are !he solar sysiem and
each of your planeu is ooe of your potentials. Olan
& Consul11tion, SS0.00 Harrie1 Witt Miller (704)
689-4617.
FAIRGLEN FARMS offen organic, biological
feniliz.ers for fmn md garden. Send SASE for price
lisL Biologically-grown produce IO sell? We SC
interested in acting IS cooperalive nwketing agenlS
with other growers. Wriie: Rouie 1, Box 319;
Clyde, NC 28721.
HOW - TO - BOOKS: "Gemstones, Crysials &
Healing" by The.Ima Isaacs - 30 mineral families cl
oompleie descriptions ($8.00); "NllUJ'e's Pantty" by
David Wilson - 100 wild edible foods ($3.00); "The
Soler Energy N0tebook" by Rankins cl Wilson use lhe sun for home heating ($6.00}. Please add $I
~:Jpping per order. Lorien House, POB 1112,
Black Mounlain, NC 28711.
1HE RAINBOW LODGE, a conference ctnier and
reirea1 facility, is available for workshops, reueais,
ete. - Write: RL 4, Boll 4636; BWrsville, GA
30512.
CRAFTS FROM SALVADORAN AND
GUATEMALAN REFUGEES IN NICARAGUA:
Cards, plaques, boxes, puzzles, patt:bes; This irade
benefits refugees directly. Brochure from:
Dry Creek Cooperative Trading
918 Jennings CL
Woodbu.ry, TN 37190
a oon-profil oraaniz.ation.
UGHTWORKS - luminous fabric window pieces
by Cathy Scou; 734 Town Mountain Rd.;
Asheville, NC 28804.
FRIENDS OF 1lfE MOUNTAINS is a grassrOOlS
organization involved in !he conservation and
proiection of !he soulhem Appalachian highlands.
RL 2, Box 2279; ClaylOll, GA 30525.
CHEROKEE CLEANSING lEA - over a doz.en
herbs (makes app. one gallon) - $1 .SO from
Medicine Canoe Products; RL2, Box 90-E; Old
Fon. NC 28762.
ELACHEE NATURE SCIENCE CENTER dedicaled IO !he undemanding and apjX1!Cialion of lhe
nawral world. For membership or visiting info,
write P.O. Boll 2771 ; Gainesville, GA 30503.
AMRITA HERBAL PRODUCTS - Comfrey,
Eucalypws, or Golden Seal Salve, Lemon or
Lavender Pace Cream. Made wilh nawral and
essential oils and love. Send for brochure: RL 1,
Box 737; Floyd, VA 24091.
AMERICAN MINOR BREEDS CONSERVANCY
is saving endangered breeds of farm liveslOCk. If
you keep any minor breeds or know of olhen who
do, please lei AMBC know. $10 10 join. AMBC;
P.O. Box 477; PillSboro, NC 27312.
CUSTOM CELTIC HARPS - A'Coun Bason;
Travianna F1rn1; RL 1; Check. VA 24072.
Shares for sale in FLOYD AORICULTURAL
ENERGY CO-OP; par valued at $100 each. Will
Bason; Travianna Farm; Rt I ; Check, VA 24002.
•AS WE ARE" - Women's music by Pomegrana1e
Rose, a four-woman group playing lively original
music. Casse11e llpe avail.able for $9.00 ppd. from
RL 2, Box 435; Piusboro, NC 27312.
INDIAN VALLEY RETREATS - We offer
individual or group reireats on our 140 acteS of
rolling meadows, wooded r:raiJs, fresh waier streams
and clean air in the majestic Blue Ridge Mountains
of Soulhwes1 Virginia, IS miles norlh of !he Blue
Ridge Parkway. Reireats can be lailorcd 10 your
needs, wilh as much or as little guidanct and social
imerx1ion as you wish. We have rustic cabins,
privaie or semi-private rooms or camping. $10 per
nigh1 per person, bed and breakfasL Indian Valley
Holistic Center; RL 2, Box 58; Willis, VA 24380
(703) 789-4295.
THE LONE RECYQ ER -- Comic book advenwres
of humankind's early suuggle to combat
was1efulness. $4.00 pp. from Long Branch
Environmenlal Education Cenicr; RL 2, Boll 132;
~._~.•::~~o
""
Send submissions io:
K.o.DWi
P.O. Boll 873
Cniiownee, NC 28723
BIG MOUNTAIN - 10,000 traditional Navajo
people lhreaiened with removal by US govemmenl
IO make way for coal and uranium mines. Support
and donations needed. Write: Big Mountain Legal
Defense/Offense Committ.ee; 2501 N. 41h SI.,
Suile 18; Flags1aff, AZ 86001 (602) 774-5233.
At ARTIIUR MORGAN SCHOOL 24 swdents and
14 staff learn iogelher by living in community.
Curriculum includes creative academics. group
decision-making, a work program, servict projects,
extensive field trips, challenging ou1door
ellperiencts. Write: 1901 Hannah Branch Rd.;
Burnsville, NC 28714.
GREEN RIVER RESEARCH JOURNAL exploring lhe connections beiween body. cools, and
land. Send $1.00 for sample copy io: Boit 1919;
Brattleboro, VT 05301.
APPALACHIAN GINSENG CO. - Cuhivaied
American ginseng, siratlfied seeds, seedling roots T-Shins wilh ginseng logo, $9.00 ppd from P.O.
Box 547; Dillsboro, NC 28725.
KA
AH - page 30
MALAPROP'S
BOOKSTORE/CAFE
BOOKS - CARDS - RECORDS
FOUR WINDS VlLLAGE - health and spiri1ua1
reireat; home for children in need. For visiting info,
write: Boll 112; Tiger, GA 30576.
61 HAYWOOD ST., ASHEVILLE, NC 28801
(704) 254-6734
Summerl986
�K1Hfiah. wants to communicate your thoughts and
f eelings 10 the other people in the bioregiona/ provirlce. Send
them to us as letters, poems, stories, drawings, or
pho tographs. Please send your contributions to us at:
Kmflgh; Box 873; Cullowhee, NC 28723.
The fall Kitiiah, Issue XIll, will collect our thoughts
and experiences of "Death and Dying". The deadline for all
submissions for that issue is August I.
Please send your ideas for a theme for the winter issue
of .Kat:Y.im.
Medicine-- .Allies
GET BACK!
issues of Katuah
full color
T-sfiirts
In the traditional Cherokee Indian
belief, the creatures in the world today are
only diminutive fonns 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 KfilWi, the lightning, the power of the
sky; Utsa'nati. the rattlesnake, who
personifies the power of the earth plane; and
Yunwi Usdj, "the little man", as ginseng is
called in the sacred ceremonies, who draws
up power from th.e 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 power of the
Appalachian Mountains.
The medicine powers of Katiiah 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 sii.es from the Km.ah journal.
"To show r espect 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 ofKatUah."
To order, use the form below.
ISSUE TWO - WTNTER 1983-84
Yona - But Huniers - Pigeon River Another Way With Animals - Alma Becoming Polilically Erreclive •
Mountain Woodlands - Katii.ab Under lhc
Drill - Spiritual Warriors
ISSUE THREE - SPRING 1984
SUstainable Agriculture - SuoOowers Human lm.pect oo the Forest • Childrens'
Education - Veronica Nicbolas:Woman
in Politics - Little People - Medicine
Allies
ISSUE NINE - FAll 198S
The Waldec Forest - The Trees Speak Migrating Foresu - Horse Logging Starting a Tree Crop - Urban Trees Acom Bread · Myth Tune
ISSUE FOUR - SUMMER 1984
Waier Oram - Water Quality - Kudzu Solar Eclipse - Clcarcuttin8 - Trout ·
Going to Water • Ram Pumps Microhydro - Poems: Bennie Lee
Sinclair, Jim Wayne Miller
ISSUE TEN - WINTER 198S-86 Kale
Rogers - Circles of Stone • Internal
Mylhmakiog - Holistic Hcalln8 on Trial
- Poems: Sieve Koauth - Mythic Places The Uktena's Tale - Crystal Magic "Dreamspeaking"
ISSUE FIVE- FAll 1984
Harvest • Old Ways in Cherokee Ginseng - Nuclear Wasie - Our Celtic
Heritage - Biore8ionaliJm: Past, Present,
and Future - John Wllnoty - Healio8
Oarlcness • Politics of Participation
ISSUE EL£VSN - SPRING 1986
Community Planning · Cities and the
Bioregional Vision - Recycling •
Community Gardening· Floyd County,
VA • Gasohol • Two Bioregiooal Views Nuclear Supplement - Foxfire Gamca
-Good Medicine: Visions
ISSUE SIX - WINTER 1984-85
Winter Solstice Barth Ceremony
Horsepastu.re River • Com.log of lhe
Light - Log Cabin Roou - Mountain
Agriculture: The Right Crop - William
Taylor - The Future of the Forest
ISSUE SEVEN · SPRING 19&S
Sustainable Economics - Hot Springs Worker Ownership - The Great Economy
• Self Help Credit Union - Wild Turkey Responsible Investing • Working in the
Web of Life
KATUAH: Bjoreeional Journal of the Southern Ap_palacbjans
Box 873; Cullowhee, North Carolina 28723
For more info: call Marnie Muller (704) 252-9167
Regular Membership........$10/yr.
Sponsor.......................$20/yr.
Contributor...................$50/yr.
Name
ISSUE EIGHT· SUMMER 1985
Celebration: A Way of Life - Ka!Uab
18,000 Years Ago • Sacred Siles - Folk
Ans in the Schools - Sun Cycle/Moon
Cycle Poems: Hilda Downer - Cherokee
Heritage Center · Who Owns
Appalachia?
Address
Back Issues
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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
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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: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians</em>, Issue 12, Summer 1986
Description
An account of the resource
The twelfth issue of the <em>Katúah Journal</em> covers a variety of topics, including, nuclear energy issues, shiitake mushrooms, trout farms, and the Cherokee people's historic use of tobacco. Authors and artists in this issue include: Joe Hollis, Rhea Rose Ormond, Avram Friedman, Michael Red Fox, D. Newton Smith, Rob Messick, Corry, Ise Williams, David Wheeler, Stephen Wingeier, Jerry Trivette, Perry Eury, and Marnie Muller. <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.
Living in the Garden.......1<br /><br />The NC Nuclear Referendum.......3<br /><br />Shiitake.......4<br /><br />"The Water Cycle": A Poem.......6<br /><br />The Sacred Scarab.......7<br /><br />Circles of Communication.......8<br /><br />Review: The Wise Woman Herbal For the Childbearing Year.......9<br /><br />Review: The Small-Scale Aquaculture Book.......10<br /><br />Good Medicine: Tobacco.......12<br /><br />Sun Root.......14<br /><br />Poem: "The Homestead on Horn Mountain".......14<br /><br />"Hilahi'Yu...": The Formation of the Appalachian Mountains.......15<br /><br />Natural World News.......19<br /><br />"The Willow Tree": A Children's Story.......25<br /><br />NABC II.......27<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
Beginning
Human ecology
Radioactive waste disposal--Appalachian Region, Southern
Shiitake--Appalachian Region, Southern
Dung beetles
Cherokee Indians--Tobacco use--History
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
Appalachian History
Appalachian Mountains
Appalachian Studies
Bioregional Congress
Book Reviews
Cherokees
Children's Page
Community
Electric Power Companies
Folklore and Ceremony
Forest Issues
Good Medicine
Habitat
Hazardous Chemicals
Health
Katúah
Pigeon River
Poems
Radioactive Waste
Stories
Turtle Island
Water Quality
Western North Carolina Alliance
-
https://omeka.library.appstate.edu/files/original/b7c30c6ce7c5fb288b9fbaf8533bfb00.pdf
e4fb1233504bfc8d0f823864df5a94b2
PDF Text
Text
ISSUE 19 SPRING 1988
$1.50
BIOREGIONAL JOURNAL OF THE ~OUTHERN APPALACHIANS
�©~
Postage Paid
Bulk Mail
Permit#18
Leicester, NC
28748
P.O. Box 638 Leicester, NC Katuah Province 28748
ADDRESS CORRECTION REQUESTED
�The Perelandra Garden ...... 3
Spring Tonics .............. 6
Rooting Blueberries ......... 7
"First Dogwoods"
a poem by Michael Hockaday .... 7
Gardens of the Blue Ridge .... 8
A Visit with Granny:
An lnterVlew with Carolyn Port ... 1O
Flower Essence ..... . ...... 13
The Origin of the Animals:
Plants have been in
communion with the human
species for thousands of years.
Only recently with the advent of
the mechanical age have we
relegated them to muteness.
a story by Clyde Hollifield . . . . . . 14
''Sacrament,"
"Rain Has Come Again:"
poems by Janeice Ray ......... 15
Good Medicine: "Power" .... 16
Be A Tree .......... ...... 17
Natural World News ........ 18
Drumming:
Letters to Katuah .......... 22
A Children' Page . .......... 25
Events ... .. .............. 28
Spring Gathering ........... 29
Webworking ............... 30
In the past, plants have
shared their information with us.
They have told us which of their
species is good for medicines,
for healing, for food, for making
musical instruments ... They have
whispered songs to our ancestors
...and poems. They have sent
dreams our way...and visions.
We share a sacred bond with
plants. Our "world" depends on
their world. Even from the
beginning, photosynthesis was
essential in allowing our
species to eventually occur.
Today, sharing the earth's
atmosphere...exchanging oxygen
and carbon dioxide with each
other... reflects how intimate our
connection is. In fact, at the
heart of the relationship is
"exchange".
We receive nourishment from
plants ... not only for the physical
body, but also for the psyche.
They daily reveal to us visions
of rootedness, stillness ...
vibrancy and life.
The plant world holds the
memory of what a bioregion
is...what it looks like in its
wholeness. By listening to the
plant world, we can tap our own
underlying sense of what this
region could be... how to
re-inhabit Katuah.
As we begin to become more
conscious, we see how power and
creativity can be used to enhance
and celebrate the heartbeat of
the ecological processes here
rather than disrupt or destroy it.
The plant world can participate
in a vital way in this
internal reawakening . Plants
can partner with us as we
explore integrating the human
species into the ecological
symphony of this place.
Whether in a garden, in a
grove...or in wilderness, we can
begin to develop a co-creative
partnership with plants, where
once again, they speak to ~
�EPlTORTAL STAFF THIS ISSUE;
Scott Bird
Christina Morrison
Mamie Muller
Jack Chaney
Sam Gray
Michael Red Fox
Sally Mander
Manha Tree
Rob Messick
David Wheeler
THA NKS TO: Julie Gaunt. Ellen John, Brooks Michael,
Judith Hallock, Tom Hendricks, Kathleen Mclaughlin, Karen
W.i1.ldns-Deckct. Susan Laird, Chip Smi1h, Joe Roberts, John
Peuie, Manha & Dean, and Cclo Communi1y.
Cover: Manha Tree
Invocation: Rob Messick
EPTTORTAL OEFTCE nos ISSUE:
Worley Cove, Sandymush Creek
THE SOUTHERN APPALACHIAN BIOREOION AND MAJOR EASTERN RIVER SYSTEMS
PRINTED BY: Sylva Herald Publishing Co., Sylva, NC
WRTTEUSAT:
TELEPHONE:
(704) 683-1414
KiWah.
Box 638
Leicester, NC
Katuah Province 28748
Diversity is an imponan1 elemeni of biorcgional ecology, both
nn1urol and social. In line with this principle, KatCiah tries IO serve as a
forum for 1.he discussion of regional issues. Signed articles express only
the opinion of the authors and are no1 necessarily lhe opinions of the
KatU/Jh editors oc staff.
The lniemal Revenue Service has declared KaJiia.h a non-profi1
organizatioo under section SOl(cXJ) of the lntcmal Revenue Code. All
conuibutions IO KaJliah are deduclible from pcrsooal income 13X.
Let !he center of the earth
Be my heart
Aod the laod be mv shell
Let the soil be mv cells
Aod the rock be rrrv bo!la
U!t the water be my blood
The ocean be my pulse
And a• rivers be my veins
Let the atmosphere
Be mv bream
And the seasont be my senses
As the spirit lives
Let its growing bring a change
Aod plant the seed of its continuance
For all things will return
To the elements from which they come
In
being
one
Sl'ATEMENTOF 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 ofresponsibility
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" Katuah" as the old/new name/or
this area of the mountains and for its journal as
well. The province is indicated by its natural
boundaries: the Roanoke River Va.l/ey to the north;
the foothills of the piedmont area to the east; Yona
Mountain and the Georgia hills to the souih; 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 thaJ 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 of a quality
standard of life for all living beings on this planet.
As a voice for the caretakers of this sacred land,
KalUah, 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 Katfuzh will grow to serve the best
interests of this region and all its living, breaJhing
members.
- The&Utors
KATUAH - page 2
SPRING - 1988
�'The Pere.Candra Clarden: Cooperation JJi,th N atu.re 'LnteUU}ences
It is in a garden that we have a special opportunity
to enter into a purposeful relationship with the Earth
and its creative energies. MachaeUe Small Wright has
been working with these energies in her garden in a
specific, conscious way for over a decade. She refers to
them as "nature intelligences."
Machaelle's garden, called Perelandra, lies a few
miles east of the Shenandoah Valley in Virginia.
Perelandra, meaning "of the heart", began as a small
family homestead and has now grown into a nature
research & learning center. There, she teaches
co-creative gardening, produces flower essences, and
publishes books and tapes based on her experiences.
Machaelle's first book, Behaving As If The
God in All Life Mattered (1983), is an
autobiographical account of how she came to garden in
cooperation with nature intelligences.
From Behaving As If the God in All Life
Mattered:
...One evening in early January 1977, I walked into
the woods and announced in a loud, clear voice, "...I
want to work with devas and I want to work with nature
spirits. I invite all of you to make yourselves known to
me. I am ready to learn from you."
Then I left the woods, returned to the house, put
myself into meditation and waited.
At the time of "my declaration," I didn't know what
I was doing. But years later, l realized that I had used a
oercmony to ground a shift that was taking place in me.
Ceremony is a physical vehicle used to ground energy
from a higher level, thereby giving it form and greater
accessibility to the people involved in the ceremony. It's
a tool designed to give clarity and form to energy. To
accomplish this, we use special settings, actions, words,
music... whatever is appropriate. On that night in
January, I moved through a ceremony. I made a clear
decision about what I wanted. I chose the woods as my
setting. Then I moved through a seric:s of physical
actions via the use of words. I stated my mtent Clearly
SPRING-1~88
and simply. I invoked to myself what I felt I would need
to carry out my intent. Then I scaled my declaration by
physically acting on it -- by going into meditation and
opening myself to whatever was to happen next
The response was immediate. In fact, I. had the same
experience that Dorothy Maclean had at Fmdhom when
she first connected with devas. I had a "crowd of voices"
coming at me, all talk:ing at the same time - all telling me
that it was "about time." I connected in with them and
found that they had been waiting for this for some time. I
remembered that in the Findhom book, when Dorothy
described this experience, she said she simply asked the
devas to speak to her one at a time. Having nothing to
lose, I tried the same thing. Much to my ama~ment,
they responded instantaneously. And from that pomt on,
I received one devic voice at a time.
Behaving was followed in 1987 by The
Perelandra Garden Workbook: A Complete
Guide to Gardening with Nature Intelligences.
This book is a step-by-step manual for anyone wishing
to develop a relationship with the devic levels and
nature spirits. In this excerpt, Machaelle describes her
understanding of these presences and their distinctive
characteristics.
From The Perelandra Garden Workbook:
... "Deva" is a sanskrit word meaning body of light.
This has little correlation with what I experience when I
am open to the devic level, but I accept the word. The
devic level is the architectural dynamic within nature. It
is the force that formulates every individual aspect of
form on Eanh. It is the creative force which determines
the size, color, shape. weight, texture, taste, life cycle,
and requirements of all form, all of nature. Each form
has inherent in it its own deva. There is, for example, the
• continued on Delli pqc
Editots' Note: In her book:s, Machacllc baa chosen to follow lhe conventional
mode of grammar, ic. "he" ralher lhUI "1/he" or "one"; "mankind" ralher lhUI
"bwnankind"; etc. Becauac lhc pusagca cc diJcct excap!S. we have left them u
they arc.
- continued on next page
--·KATUAH - page 3
�Deva of Soil, the Deva of che Shasta Daisy, the Oak Tree
Deva, the Carrot Deva. Each deva holds, as in a
computer bank, all the specific information relative to its
form. It also holds the information pertaining to how its
individual natural form fits into the grand scheme of
things both on Earth and within the universe. If there are
to be any physical changes made -- for example,
changing carrots from the color orange to pink - they
must be made within the devic level in order to maintain
natural balance. Change made through the pure will and
desire of us humans disregarding the devic dynamic is
called "manipulation" and results in a weakening
imbalance and becomes part of the ecological disaster we
are experiencing...
...There is another distinguishing feature about
nature spirits that will help you understand them and the
differences between them and devas. Nature spirits are
regional. Although I do not have a phalanx of little
people visible in the garden, I do have my group of
nature spirits who are connected to this land and what is
happening here. Your connection will be with your own
group. They are an intelligent reality that is individuated
enough to be connected with specific geographic areas
on Earth. Devas, on the other hand, are universal in
dynamic. When I contact the Carrot Deva, I touch into
lhe very same intelligent reality someone in China would
touch into when making the same contact.
...Here is my understanding of nature spirits.
In Behaving .... I referred to nature spirits as the
blue collar workers within the realm of nature
intelligence. I still hold to this imagery today but feel it is
simplistic. My work with the nature spirits has
convinced me that they are truly masters of
understanding and working with the concept of bringing
spirit into matter, energy into form. They tend to the
shifting of an energy reality which has been formulated
on the devic level and assist the translation of that reality
from a dynamic of energy to form. In short, they
constantly work with the principle of manifestation on
Earth. They also function in a custodial capacity with all
that is of form on the planet. That is, when not interfered
with by us humans, they tend to the care and needs of all
physical reality, assuring perfection within form. ..
Machaelle depends on a systematic communication with the devas and nature spirits to inform
her about every aspect of the garden, including what
plants go in which locations, soil preparation, and how
to deal with insects and animals. She consistently
affirms that "the backbone of the Perelandra garden is
communication."
From The Perelandra Garden Workbook:
.. .I happen to be someone who feels deeply that this
communication is possible for everyone. We are talking
about a natural partnership between humans and nature
and it is not meant to be exclusive. It only stands to
reason that there be simple ways for us and nature to
communicate with one another. There have to be
language frameworks that are just waiting to be
developed.
I see the communication problem as being similar to
the problem that arises when you are faced with someone
from another country who speaks a language that is
completely foreign to your ear. There isn't one sound
they are making that strikes a familiar note. We can back
off the situation and say, ''This is impossible." Or we
can tackle the situation together with the other person,
begin to learn each other's language, and devise
additional techniques for communication.
This is what I've done with nature. I've worked to
develop techniques which we can use for the purpose of
sending and receiving information. And it's not difficult.
In fact, it's embarrassingly simple. But that's as it
should be.
The workbook gives complete instructions on
how to use the form of communication that Machaelle
has found to be most effective - kinesiology. In the
following passage, she explains the principles of this
technique.
From The Perelandra Garden Workbook:
...Simply stated, if a negative energy (that is, any
physical object or energy vibration that does not maintain
or enhance the health and balance of an individual), is
introduced into a person's overall energy field, his
muscles, when having physical pressure applied, will be
unable to hold their power. For example, if pressure is
applied to an individual's extended arm while his field is
being affected by a negative, the arm will not be able to
resist the pressure. It will weaken and fall to his side. If
pressure is applied wl\ile being affected by a positive, the
person will easily be able to resist IUld the arm will hold
its position.
To expand on a more technical level, when a negative
is placed within a person's field, his electrical system
(the electrical energy grid contained within the body) will
immediately respond by "short-circuiting," making it
di.fficll]t for the muscles to maintain their strength and
hold their position when pressure is added. When a
positive is placed within the field, the electrical system
holds and the muscles are able to maintain their level of
strength when pressure is applied.
Original Drawings by Kore Loy McWhirtt:r
SPRING - 1988
�This electrical/muscular relationship is a natural pan of
the human system. It is not mystical or magical.
Kinesiology is the established method for reading their
state of interaction at any given moment. It is most
commonly used today by wholistic physicians,
chiropractors and the Touch for Health people.
What does this have to do with "hearing" information
from the nature spirits and devic levels, you ask. Simple.
If you ask a question using the yes/no format, they can
answer your question by transferring a yes (positive) or
no (negative) into your energy field. Then you read the
answer by testing yourself using kinesiology...
For good communication, Machaelle emphasizes
being outside in the garden space, achieving an inner
quiet, and vocalizing one's requests. She then affirms
the importance of asking simple, precise questions and
being willing to act on the information and ideas
received...even if they challenge one's conventional
concepts.
The workbook provides detailed information on
how to formulate these questions. It also includes many
insights and practical tips that Machaelle has gained
from her own experience in the garden.
From The Perelandra Garden Workbook:
...It has been over ten years since I began gardening
under the tutelage of these nature intelligences and the
result has been a garden in which all inhabitants, be they
animal, mineral or vegetable arc truly compatible with
one another. Each member of the garden enhances the
health and well being of all the others. And this includes
the bugs. The garden is inclusive, not excl usive. I do
nothing for the purpose of repelling. The focus is to
create a balanced, wholistic environment in which all
within that environment arc enhanced. The results are not
only more food than I know what to do with, but also
food that has contained within it a very high level of life
energy - light.
...The Perelandra garden thrives because of the
approach I have been taught and the underlying
consciousness and reality that motivates the approach.
What l'm going to describe to you in this book docs not
fit comfonably into the recognized notions of tradition,
logic or even sanity. Be that as it may, it works. And
that's what drives traditional gardening thinkers a little
nuts. Everything you know which has gone into
establishing your sense of order, stability and balance, in
other words, logic, both in your garden and your life
away from it, will be constantly challenged. For you see,
this gardening is, in fact, a metaphor for the whole of
life. As you change how you approach the garden, you
will, in turn, change the very fabric of how you
approach your life.
'"~7~,.....~~t
In addition to the specific information that
Machaelle obtains through kioesiology, she also
receives more extensive messages from the nature
intelligences. In both books, she includes these
messages that have deepened her understanding of
herself and her garden. (1be devic voices are indicated
by italics.)
From Behaving As If The God in All Li/e
Mattered:
... As each deva came into my awareness, 1 noticed
that there was a slight shift in vibration, that each had its
own vibration. After awhile, I could recognize which
deva was entering my awareness. This led me to develop
tho ability to call upon specific devas by "aiming" my
awareness for the deva's own vibratory pattern...
Overlighring Deva ofthe Garden
We urge you to join our creative process. When you
planr a seed, invoke the deva and nature spirits connected
with that seed. The seed is the door between you and the
various energies that are drawn rogether on the devic
level and cared/or by the nattue spirits. Once you have
planted the seed, put our the call for the deva to draw
together all the individual energy components of that
variety. Ask that the natwe spirits receive the energies
and, in essence.fuse them to the seed. The seed contains
the potential of the plant's perfection. The grounding of
the plant's energy into the seed activates that potential
and transfonns it inw reality. As you call the energy into
form, see its energy channel wuch into the seed as it is
growuled by the nattue spirits.
By joining in our creative process in this manner,
you will begin to see the importance of worldng with the
nature energies with clarity. We urge you to plant the
garden in this new way and see the difference yow clear
panicipatkm as a co·creative partner with us makes i11 the
germi11arion ofthe seeds and the qualily ofplant growth.
· continued on page 24
KATUAH - page 5
�dandelion can be used throughout the growing season. but
to avoid bitterness you need to look for new growth and
young plants.
Spring Tonics!
The docks, dandelion, roostard, sorrel and lamb's
quarters can all be used as cooked greens. V- 0/ets can also
1
be cooked, but I have never bothered. They are too good
raw. When cooking greens it's best to pid< a lot because
they cook down. Most can be thrown into boiling water and
cooked, but dandelion leaves should be started in cold
water and brought to a boH.
by Lucinda Flodin
A s I sit poring over seed catalogues, looking for
bargains on untreated, non-hybrid seeds, scheming and
dreaming my gardens. plotting crop rotations, remembering
ga"tr:Jens past, wishing gardens future. feeling in my rooscles
the reminders of turning spring soil - I remember a time not
too long ago when I thought one could not have food
without the hard work of digging, planting, and weeding.
Lamb's Quarters
M ind you, gardening is work I love, especially in the
springtime, but in recent years I have disct:Jvered the joy of
foraging for wild foods, food that is Earth's gift - available at
the cost of some study and a walk in the sunshine (although
some plarts I hardly have to leave my door to find!). I feel a
wonderful balance when I take a break from the garden to
seek out a treasvred wild food which grew gloriously without
my help or work. It gives an insight into how the Earth
worlcS..... who, after all, really grows the food.
I start to forage early, pulling bad< snow looking for
that first new growth. By the time spring arrives •officially"
there is food abounding - rooch moffJ than I find in my garden
at that point. This is a time when mountain people tonic with
wild foods, knowing their health will be more vigorous year
round. It is a tradition worth embracing.
My favorite cooked green is poke, which roost be
cooked when young and tender. ff the stems are red or the
plant is over 12" high, it is too old, because it becomes
poisonous with maturity. The roots and the seeds are
medicinal, but they are poisonous and should be used under
the guidance of an experienced herbalist. Some folks will say
that poke should always be eaten cooked. I always do, but I
have seen ffJCjJes that cal for it raw.
Another fine cooked green, ff you don't mind the
hassle, is nettle, the stinging variety. Anyone who's ever
been caught in nettle knows the respect the plant requires.
Long pants, long sleeved shirt and heavy gloves are
necessary to gather and handle it until it's cooked or dried.
Repeated cookings, each in fffJsh water, get rid of the
stinging hails. It's a wonderful food rich in vitamins A and C
and high in protein. It is also a lot of wolk. I always gather a
bunch to dry for nettle tea in the winter.
There BffJ so many edib/8 plants and so many ways to
eat them. An old timer is a great ally in teaming local plants.
and theffJ are also many books that contain good pictures
and important information. I am fond of Foraging For Dinner
by Helen Ross Russell, Roda/e's Herb Book, and also the
Foxfire books. It is important to know your food plants,
because there are others which can poison you.
Early spring salads can begin with a base of sorrel
rumex and sorrel moxalis. Rumex sorrel can be eaten in great
quantity; moxalis sorrel must be eaten In small amounts to
avoid too much oxalic acid. Both have a slightly sour taste. I
add small amounts of the more bitter plants - dandelion,
cress, and the docks (yellow, curled, or burdock) - using very
young leaves because they get more bitter the bigger they
grow. I try to pick dock leaves before they have completely
unfolded. In early salads I also use leaf lettuce from my
greenhouse, and I add in violet leaves and flowers as soon as
I see them. Violets are also a favorite hiking food, a nice
munch while you walk.
Later in the spring saxifrage comes in season,
followed closely by lamb's quarters. a great salad green which
will carry you to the first frost. Late spring salads are also nice
with purslane leaves and shepherd's purse leaves. Dock and
Plantain
A nother way to prepare spring foods is green drinks.
Rll your blender with leaves • violet, plantain, mints,
dandelion, or other tasty greens (either singly or as a mix).
Cover with water and whiz in the blender until it is a pretty
green color. Strain and drink immediately.
I have heard that you should blend green drinks for at
least a minute, but that makes a powerful drink, which Is too
heroic and strong for most. When I use bitter plants In a drink,
I add a lot of mint to sweeten it. Some vegies like carrots w11
1
also sweeten the taste. Experimentation will lead you to the
tastes you like. Green drinks have become a standard In our
home when the children decide to hate green food. Then
they get a ChOice - they can eat a salad or drink a green drink •
it's the same great nutrition whichever they choose.
Ramps are a food which people either love or love to
hate. I love them - in moderation. The blend of onion and
garlic taste is a wonderful seasoner to food. A few ramps will
season a pot of beans or a mess of greens. Try them cooked
if you don't like the strong raw taste. Ramps are not only
good tasting, their lily·like appearance makes them one of
the prettiest plants.
Violet
KATUAH - page 6
illustrations by Ellen John
SPRING - 1988
�rooting blueberries
After a warm rain, when the darl< blue violets bloom,
the morel ~shrooms grow. They Jove old apple groves in
the fn!'Untams.....and they are the highlight of spring
foragmg. Morels are all one piece and they are hollow. f went
rooshrooming ona tifn8 with a neighbor to be sure I could
cfistingufsh the right kind, before I set off on my own. Morels
are fun to hunt, beause they hide In the undergrowth.
Sometimes one will appear beneath your feet, as though in
that instant it had magically popped to full growth. .... perhaps
by Will Ashe Bason
it did.
In my kltehen the best meal of springtime happens in
May when we have stir-fried rafTfJS, morel rooshrooms and
asparagus with a wild green salad. To me it's Thanksgiving
spring-style • knowing that each food is there because the
Earth grew It, and we were blessed to find it. We look forward ~
to it and celebrate It. The Earth Is good to us.
P'
Scientific classifications and vitamin/mineral information on
above mentioned plants:
Nettle (urt/ca d/oica) • contains almost all vitamins and
minerals necessary for human growth and health.
Vitamins A, C, 0, K. Calcium. potassium, iron, sulphur,
silicon, copper.
Lamb·~ quaners (Chimopodium abum) - contains calcium,
silicon, follc acid.
Dandelion (Taraxacum otricinale) ·contains vitamins A, 81.
82, niacin, C, E. Calcium, phosphorous, potassium,
magnesium and many trace minerals. The bast
at(angthener of tha liver.
Yellow dock (Rumu crispus) • Fully absorbable,
non-consllpating source of iron.
Burdock (Att:tium lappa) • Vitamin C, iron.
Watercress (Nasturtium ofrlcina/e) • contains Vitamins A,
81, E, calcium, phosphorus, potassium, magnesium,
Iron, manganese, flourine, copper, sulphur, Iodine,
zinc.
Plantain (P/anlago ma;or) - contains calcium, potassium,
sulphur
Sorrel (Rumex aa.tosa} • oontains iron.
Violet (Viola psp/lionacea) • contains vrtamin A, calcium
Shepherd's purse (Capsella bursa-pa. toris) - contains
s
calcium, Vitamin K. A great remedy for all bleeding
problems
Poke (Phytolacca amerlcana) • contains vitamin A. C,
calcium.
Lucinda Flodin lives a1 Moon Dance Fann in Hampton,
TN where she crea1es herbal health care products, Moon
Dance Farm Herbals. Moon Dance Farm, Rt. I , Box
726, Hampton, TN 37658.
First Dogwoods
Now I don't know what is going on.
These days I wale the fJBJds with tears
in my eyes. Spring is so lovely
l follows fn8 around and gives mB shame.
In quiet little D~minations of the moment,
when rlJbons of light descend between the ic.B and snow,
my heatt achBs with death and dying itto the nBW land.
Sure it is good to bum li<e the eatth with desire,
and then by aystal beauty to be cooled. Each brief
rainshower glistens the air so the sollBI)' trees
in first leaf glow li<e candles on the mountainsides.
During spaC6s between the birds singing so freely,
my lamentation unfolds. My mind bursts open
like the hard·held ctUst finally gona to green.
My woe Is akin the whispers of an errant breeze
enveloped and carried off by the long west winds.
SPRING · 1988
© ev'J
B lueberries are an excellent crop for Katuah. They
bloom late enough to almost always escape spring frosts and
love acid soil. Here In Floyd Co. VA we doni have the high
quality wild blueberries found in most of the rest of Katuah
The oldest planting I know of is a half acre in the Riverflow
Comroonity that is seven years old and doing very well.
Last year, as my friend Alta was pruning the Riverflow
blueberries, we decided to try to root the prunings. Alta put the
prunlngs Into water In which I'd placed willow cuttings several
days before. The willow has magic rooting enzymes which the
blueberries lack. Chris, my wife, cut these prunlngs Into pieces
about 3 or 4 Inches long, and dipped their tower ends In
rooting hormone powder. She then Inserted the cuttings Into a
propagation frame filled with a mixture of half sand and half
peatmoss.
T his frame was oovered with a layer cl plastie and then a
layer of burtap. The plastic keeps the environment humid and
the burtap reduces the amount of sun to a tolerable level We
made our frame 2' by 4', from 1x4's and with a bottom of
hardware cloth. We made the ribs for the covering from some
bent rebar we had but bamboO, lath or pvc pipe would wort<.
We watered the cuttings mostly with comfrey and with a
ittle manure tea We took the poly oover off in June and the
burtap off In August although I think this last could have been
e811ier. We had about a 90% soocess rate and some cl cuttings
put on 6 inches of new growth.
We were worl<lng with highbush varieties but this year
we are rooting some rabblt-i!ye varieties as weU. These are
larger bushes and though oonsldered less oold tolerant than
highbush or lowbush, some are thriving in the riverflow
oomroonity and we are at neal1y 2500 feet at the northern tip of
Karuah. Rabbit-eye blueberries fruit later than the hlghbush
and, In our area, continue till frost. They are supposed to be
harder to root.
-Will Ashe Bason /
KATUAH - page 7
�..
©~
rot\li
Ejardtns "f-t11e 13(11f.
'RiJ,t..
...Each displaying its own particular
beauty beneath the young sunshine and soft
waters ofspring
·
...Each with its own particular niche
in tMwoodland habitat benelllh the tall rrees
- the right balance of fll()iscure and light, the
particular soil that will encourage its
growth.
...And each with its own unique
capabilities and strategies for sustaining life
and reproducing its ldnd.
The world of the forest wildflowers is simultaneously
one of exquisite beauty, rigorous specialization, and
demanding competition. Though the soft colors and delicate
textures of their blossoms delight the eye in springtime, these
plants have evolved through eons of stress. and change to
prove their sturdiness and resiliency among the life forms,
great and small, inhabiting the Appalachian forest.
Their magical appearance in the spring, their apparent
daintiness, and their impossible beauty, have enchanted the
human beings of every age. And in these days, when people
want their affluence to be tasteful, there is a resurgence of
interest in purchasing the small wildflowers of the eastern
forest for shade gardening and home landscaping.
KATUAH-page 8
There are several companies now catering to that
interest, but none have been in the trade longer than a small
concern located off Highway 221 near ihe smaU town of
Linville, NC at 4,000 feet elevation in the heart of Katuah
province. The Gardens of the -Blue Ridge was begun in
1892 by the family of a surveyor named S.T. Kelsey. The
sense of power and grandeur around nearby Grandfather
Mountain had always atttacted people to the area. In Indian
times it was known as a sacred place of power. In Kelsey's
day, Grandfather Mountain Corporation and the Linville
Improvement Co. were founded on a cenain reverence for
the area's durable real estate values.
Kelsey was called to use his surveying skills to help
parcel out the lands at the Grandfather's feet. He liked the
area and bought a tract for himself for the nursery from
which he sold ornamental shrubbery.
A young man from the area, Edward C. Robins, took
a job at the nursery and worked there steadily until 1923,
when he bought the operation. Since then the Gardens of the
Blue Ridge has been a Robins family enterprise. Members
of t~e fourth generation of Robins' are now worlcing in the
company.
For a time E.C. Robins carried on the business as
Kelsey had left it to him. He dug a tremendous number of
nati\'e rhododendrons, azaleas, mountain laurel, and
dogWood trees and shipped them by rail throughout the East.
As a sideline, he also collected and sold the small woodland
wildflowers.
. But the ornamental shrubs trade grew more
competitive, and the native varieties began to be eclipsed in
the eyes of wealthy buyers by new hybrids developed
especially for the color, holding capacity, and brilliance of
thei{ blooms. Robins decided to deal exclusively in
wildflowers and began a tradition that the family has adhered
to since.
In those early days of the Garden's development, the
trees still stood tall in many areas of the forest. The ground
was largely clear beneath the great trees' massive crowns,
and hunters and bikers could still stumble into clearings
carpeted in ginseng or brilliant with the color of an extensive
colony of pink ladyslippers in full bloom.
In those days it seemed that the forest would never die,
and .the wildflowers would always grace the forest floor.
Robins employed 30 - 40 men digging, transplanting, and
shipping shrubs and flowers. They dug wherever they could
and took all they could find. Trilliums and lilies were
popular at the time, and Robins shipped thousands of
individuals of the various trillium species, the (now rare and
endangered) Gray's JiJy, (Lilium Grayii) and the Tur.k's cap
lily (Lilium superbum) to the eastern cities. As he became
more completely committed to the wildflowers, Robins
gathered all the local varieties he could find, until he was
offering 200 varieties of plants.
E.C. Robins lived until 1969, when he died at the age
of 93. Today the Gardens of the Blue Ridge is run by hrs
son, Edward P. Robins. The company still offers 159
varieties of flowering plants, 22 varieties of native fems,
and 38 types of trees and shrubs. But the plants are now
propagated almost exclusively in 10 acres of mulched, raised
beds at the nursery.
Logging practices and extensive development were
largely responsible for changing the face of the forest, and it
was in the late 1940's -and early 1950's that the Robins
realized that the supply of local flora was limited and that
their methods of coUecting were helping to diminish the
supply. The family shares with their customers a deep
appreciation for the subtle beauties of the native wildflowers.
So, once begun, the transition to nursery propagation was
made swiftly.
In 1969 ginseng (Panax quinquefolium) became a
protected plant in the state of Nonh Carolina. Now the small
plant known as shortia or Oconee bells (Shortia galacifolia)
and the medicinal plant golden seal (Hydrastis canadensis)
SPRING - 1988
�are also registered plants, requiring a special certificate to
accompany each individual sold. Pink ladyslipper
(Cypripidium acaule) in all probability will soon join the list.
The Robins family follows scrupulously all regulations
for producing and selling the native plants. They note that by
making wildflowe~ available, they are relieving pressures on
the wild natives and that they are actuaUy aiding several
species of wildflowers to survive by spreading them as
domestic plantings, while their native habitats are being
destroyed or drastically cunailed. In particular, they have
helped ex.tend the range of shortia by shipping it throughout
the East. The plant grows on runners and is easy to
establish, if it is planted in a moist spot or kept wet until it is
well secured. E.P. Robins remembers one private wildlife
preserve in western Massachusetts where they planted
"thousands, literally thousands" of shortia as a ground cover.
Pink ladyslipper is harder to establish. The plant
depends on a relationship with a particular variety of funius
that lives in the soil close to the plant roots. Wherever 1t is
planted, pink ladyslipper will prosper for the first year, but
unless the soil is such that it can produce the particular strain
of symbiotic fungus, the plant will soon languish and die.
Once the business of collecting native plants '+'as
strictly a matter of stamina and endurance. E.P. Robins
remembers fondly the day when the company received a
permit to collect plants on some land near the North
Carolina-South Carolina state line that was to be cleared by
Duke Power Company. "We dug 10,000 shortia that day."
But idiosyncrasies such as that shown by the pink
ladyslipper make propagating the wild plants in nursery beds
more a question of familiarity and accurate attention to detail.
The demand for the graceful natives has been steady
through the years, and there is room for new companies to
enter the field.
"There's good prospects for this business," says E.P.
Robins. ''It's always been steady. Even during the
Depression it was a good business. Wildflowers are
becoming popular, so the demand might go up for awhile.
But we have all the business we can handle right now, so we
don't care if it goes up more or not.''
Breaking into commercial wildflower raising requires
more initiative and careful attention than capital. It is a
business that can sran small and grow to whatever ~ize is
desired. But it is slow work. While most of the flower
varieties are easy to raise, some varieties have special
requirements that can only be learned through long familiarity
and by suffering through mistakes. It takes time to establish
a market and to~ain a reputation.
"We never got rich," says E.P. Robins, "but we didn't
expect to get rich, and we're making a living. As long as we
keep our bead <tbove water and have a liltle, that's all·we
·:.:· .....
.··
..·:
:-.
·.
.! ·.
shortw
·:·..·.
.
·: ...
©~
Shortia, Oconee bells (Shortia galacifolia), the
mystery plant of the mountains of western North Carolina
was first discovered by a French botanist, Andre Michaux,
on December 8, 1788. He had been sent to America by the
French government to seek new plants that might be of value
ro France. In his search through western North Carolina and
eastern Tennessee, Andre Michaux found and described
many new species and carried back to France pressed
specimens to be placed in the Jardin des Plantes in Paris.
Some were labeled "unknown" and among these was a leaf
and root of this plant from the mountains of western
Carolina.
care."
Perhaps many botanists studied the specimens with M
identity over a period of the next fifty years. In 1839 Asa
Gray, a young American botanist, became intrigued with a
specimen and recognized it as a new genus, and wrote a
scientific description of the genus from the single specimen
in France. To lwMr Dr. Charles W. Short, an able botanist
of Kentucky, Gray devised the scientific name of tlte genus,
Shortia. And, since it resembled galax, the species name
became galacifolia.
But growing the native wildflowers offers rich
rewards in satisfaction. The international reputation for
quality plants developed over the last 96 years by the
Gardens of the Blue Ridge is obviously a source of d~ep
pride to Mr. Robins. Propagating the native wild plants is an
occupation that takes little from the land and offers much in
the way of natural beauty. And it is good to walk beneath the
tall trees and see the colors of the flowers shining in the
spring rain.
~
Gray soon returned to America and began his search,
high in the mountains ofNorth Carolina and Tennessee.for
shortia. In 1842 Dr. Gray was appointed professor of nanual
history at Harvard University. For 38 years on every field
trip high in the mountains of North Carolina, Gray hunted
for the elusive slwrtia. He found many plants and published
manuals on botany, but always the little specimen in Paris
continued to haunt him.
Sources for wildflower plants:
- Gardens of the Blue Ridge
P.O. Box 10
Pineola. N.C. 28662
- Appalachian Wildflower Nursery
RL I, Box 275-A
Reedsville, PA 17084
,P'
Further reading:
Growing and Propagating Native
Wildflowers. Harry Phillips (UNC
Press; Chapel Hill, NC. 1985)
SPRING - 1988
Then, on an April day in 1877, George HytllnS went
fishing in the Catawba River in McDowell County. His
father was a botanist employed by Wallace Brothers of
Statesville, NC, whose firm collected plants for
pharmaceutical purposes. Nodding and swaying in the breeze
were some charming bell-shaped, waxy white flowers, on
slender stems, with irregularly-toothed petals, growing from
a roserre of wavy-margined, roundish, shiny evergreen
leaves, similar to the familiar mountain galax. George
decided to take a piece Jwme to his father. Mr. Hyams did
Mt know the plant, but it looked so interesting that he sent a
specimen to Dr. Gray at Harvard University for
identijicaJion. Dr. Gray replied, "You have smmbled on what
for many years I have tried so hard to find."
continued on page 26
KATUAH - page 9
�;-
--
- ____.,._...,..,.
_
_,_
-- -- ---·-------~
F'inclitUJ Out Abou t lka!int] with Plants ....
A Visit with Granny
An Interview with Carolyn Port
by Karen Watkins-Decker and Christina Morrison
Carolyn Porr has been a practitioner
of herbal medicine in Burke County, NC for
over 50 years. She has also given lectures,
classes and workshops on herbology and
will soon publish a book of herbal
remedies.
As a single woman, Carolyn raised
two adopted childre11 and now has several
grandchildren a11d great-gra11dchildren. She
is fondly referred to as "Granny" by family
and friends.
Katuah:: How did you begin your work?
G r anny: I'm a registered nurse. I also
carried a midwife's certificate for years until
retirement age pushed me out
K: How did you become specifically
interested in the use of herbs?
G: I don't know that I was more interested
in herbs than anything else. The body is a
whole. If it's sick one place it's sick all
over, and it needs help all the way around.
Anything that brings it back to normal is
good.
K: Yet you've found that herbs treat the
whole body better than olher medicines?
G: Yes. I believe that herbs build health
as well as treat symptoms. And if an old
woman told you that wall link tea would
save a baby's life that had bold hives, you'd
try it.
K: What is wall link? I've never heard of
it
G: It's a kind of lichen that grows in spring
have to take a knife and scrape those little
roots off to make it clean enough for the
baby.
Editor's ll()te: Wall·linJc "lichen" is actually a type
of liverwort (probably Marcha!ltla polymorpha).
conjectured to bt among the very first plants to
exist on land. It is interesting that such a primitive
plant is healing to humans in our tarly stages of
developmen1; i.e. infancy.
branches. Some people call it "turkey
tracks."
K : Where did you gather all your
knowledge? From your own experience?
K: And bold hives - what kind of illness is
this?
G: People told me things just like I'm
G: I don't really know. I think in the
medical profession some would say that
there is no such thing as bold hives. The old
folks said there was. The babies would just
tum blue - they'd find them blue in the bed.
Some of them broke out in a red rash first.
like pimples, and not be able to catch their
breath - so they'd die.
K: The symptoms you mention remind me
of sudden infant death syndrome for which
no cause or cure has been discovered. I'd
like to know just exactly which lichen
you're talking about.
G: I can't show it to you as good as if I
had you over on the creek bank. It's a deep
green • not a green green. It has a ridge right
under the center seam and its hair-like roots
go down into the moss to get moisture. You
KATIJAH - na2e 10
telling you. They told me about the wall link
tea and I said I'd remember that and try it
and see if it works .. .if I need it • and I did
need it again for a baby that was JO months
old. They called me in the night and I went.
The baby had been blue for two weeks.
They'd had her to the doctor twice and in
the hospital once for a day or so. It didn't
do her any good - still she was blue and
beginning to get the red rash. Quick as I got
there, I gave her a hot and a cold bath to
stimulate circulation and it pinked her up
right away. She seemed a little more alen,
but as soon as she was out of the bath she
began to look blue again. So I asked if
anyone knew where I could find some wall
link. They said there was some in an old
spring half way down the mountain. I asked
if anybody would go get some. One woman
said she'd go if I'd go with her; nobody
else wanted to - they knew how bad the
road was. (she laughs, remembering). We
took a pine pitch torch and climbed down
the mountain at 2 o'clock in the morning
and gathered wall link. I got a nice handful
of it and went back and made some tea.
When the baby got a taste of it she just
drank that bottle Hke she'd never had
anything good before. And before she was
through she began to get pink. I stayed
around to 5 o'clock when I was sure she
was alright, and then I went home... and
that's the way I got the remedy.
K : From what age did you begin paying
ancntion to these things?
G: I decided I was going to be a nurse
when I was just three years old. My mother
was a nUTSC and while she treated people I
treated my doll. I'd give my doll an enema
and then hang her on the clothesline by her
toes to dry. (laughs)
K: Your mother took care of people at
home too, just as you do?
G: Yes, and my father was a veterinarian.
K: Did your mother use many herbs?
G: What she knew she used. For instance,
when they learned that raspberry leaf tea
would stop hemorrhaging we always kept it
on hand. She used blackberry roots for
diarrhea; things like that
K: Did you and your parents work
together?
SPRING - 1988
�G: Yes. When we moved here (to
Morganton) in 1920 we built a home across
K: Do you have any' favorite plants that
you work with?
the street. We had three private room units
and an upstairs for father and mother. We
could take up to 4 mothers with their babies.
G: I just get whatever people need. rve
also got a greenhouse full of aloe and I use
K: So that's when you became a midwife?
G: I was a midwife from the time I finished
school in 1929.
K : You already had your degree by the
time you were 20?
G: Yes. You didn't have to finish high
school back then, so I went straight into
nursing school. Then when I was about to
finish up, they said I couldn't take the stare
board exams because I was 100 young to
become a nurse. But my supervisors
worked things ou1 for me to take the exams
anyway and I made a 98 average.
K: Do you use any standard medicines in
your practice?
G: I never have. That's the reason I didn't
nurse in a hospital professionally. I had 10
find some other way to help people, because
I'm not going to give others something I
won't take myself.
K: And how did you develop that attitude?
Did your mother have that approach?
G: Yes. She never gave drugs. She was an
old Battle Creek, Mich. graduate if you've
ever heard of that school. When she was
there it was in its heyday. It was around the
tum of the century and they had patients
from all over the world. They used many
kinds of therapies like hydrotherapy, diet,
herbs ...as well as standard medicine.
K: That must have been quite a departure
from the general trend in the rest of the
country.
G: Yes. They believed the body was the
temple of God and they treated it that way.
They used very few drugs.
K: Seems that possibly we've gotten away
from the use of herbs because people have
come to mistrust them - they're unknown,
unfamiliar. Maybe if we stan using them
more we'll come to trust them again.
G: We've got to.
K: They can even become like old friends.
G: You wouldn't think that the humble
little violet would cure stomach ulcers - bu1
it does.
K: Do you gather most of the herbs you
use?
G: Yes, I love to... but I don't have time to
pick many. And I try 10 get people to gather
them on their own. If they're going to get
any real lasting benefit they'll have to learn
10 do it themselves. That's why people
don't doctor with herbs - they think it's too
much trouble to get out and hunt for them
and fix them up.
it for lots of things - it helps people with
cancer who are losing strength, its good for
the stomach if drunk· as a juice... ! make
suppositories with it for hemorrhoids or
vaginal infections. And of course for bums
there's nothing that takes its place.
So, many herbs li,kc aloe can be used
for different things, but when you think of a
malady you should use the plant that's the
I!!Qfil ~ for that problem. For instance,
aloe is good for the stomach but if you have
an ulcered stomach and are having pain,
violet leaf tea is the thing you wanL There
are also lots of remedies for colds, flu and
bronchitis, but the best one l know is a tea
made from mullein and cockleburrs
(xanthium pensylvanicum)... the cockleburrs
really make it taste good. And the beauty of
it is, you can put it right in a baby's bottle just dilute it a little. (see REMEDIES)
G: Comsi1k tea and Queen Anne's lace tea
are good for kidney ailments too. A woman
came to me who was going to the hospital
the next day to have one of her kidneys
taken out as she had so many stones in it. It
was right in the summer when Queen
Anne's lace was in bloom all over the place.
I told her I believed I'd try some Queen
Anne's lace tea before I had an operation.
She said, " Alright, I will." We went up on
the hill and galhered flowers and stems to
make the tea. I told her to drink a cup every
thirty minutes 'til bedtime and whenever she
got up in the night to use her chamber pot
she should drink some more. Well, by
morning she'd filled that pot up half-way,
but the bottom of it looked like red clay In."
thick. Those stones had dissolved. And as
far as I know, she's never had that problem
again.
Editor's note: Queen Anne's lace (Daucus
carota) somewhat resembles poison
hemlock (Conium maculatum). Be sure to
know the difference.
K: My neighbor's baby often has colds I'll recommend it.
G: You know, when you give a child herbs
you're giving them a kind of nourishment
they don't get any other way. And it seems
to immunize them to that same malady.
They won't have it nearly so quickly or so
badly again, and they'll get over it faster.
K: Why do you think the medical
profession has gouen so far away from
using herbs?
"Of course these
common weeds we walk
over all the time, like
dandelion and chickweeds,
are some of the best - if
you can get to them before
the mower does!"
G: How would they make any money with
it? Oaughs). I knew a doctor once whose
little girl nearly bled to death with a nose
bleed. I told him to give her raspberry leaf
tea to stop the bleeding - and he did and it
worked - but he didn't seem interested in
finding out why it worked or in using it
again.
K: What do you think about when you're
harvesting herbs?
G: I think about how quick I can get this
person enough plant to do some good
Oaughs) and get home and get it fixed up.
And I don't get to go out and harvest all the
time. If I did I might be like the man I know
who went up on the parkway towazd Jonas
Ridge. There was a whole bank of ttailing
arbutus there and he decided to gather
some. He'd filled a bag half full when a
lady patrolman came along and asked him
what he was doing. II was against the law
up there to pick those leaves, so she took
them and put them in the back of her car. He
told her, "I hope you know what to do with
them!"
K: What arc ttailing arbutus leaves used
for?
G: Kidney stones, or as the old folks say,
"gravel" ...some folks call arbutus, "gravel
weed" because it eases the pain in passing
kidney stones by dissolving them.
K: Sounds as though it's been a useful and
well-known remedy.
K: How did you learn to identify plants?
G: We always studied nature in our family.
Sabbath afternoons we'd go for hikes in the
woods and look for bmls and flowers ...and
whatever we didn't know we'd look up. Of
course these common weeds we walk over
all the time, like dandelion and chickweeds,
arc some of the best - if you can get to them
before the mower does! Chickweed is a
wonderful little weed.
K: ... and it tastes so good fresh.
G: Yes, and it's a good wash for any skin
ailment. But it's not only the wilder plants
that arc good, we have tame things like
marigolds and calendula which arc good for
salves.
K: You use marigolds? I use those for a
dye.
G: If you grow them in your gazden they
keep the bugs off your plants ... and a
tincture of them will keep the bugs off your
head! A young'un of mine got uce at scnool
and we rubbed the tincture into his scalp and
wrapped it in a towel overnight. Next
morning we washed it out and that was thaL
(see REMEDIES) You can also dry the
blossoms for tea that takes polyps out of the
intestines.
• continued on next page.
SPRING - 1988
KATUAH - page 11
u. OSCO - nn.v '""
�- continued from page 11
K: I never knew marigolds had so many
uses!
G: Well, when you get started on
something you find so many things its good
for ...
K: What is your feeling about the healing
properties of plants - the origin of that?
G: God put it there. That's exactly where
it comes from. He knows what we need.
Now right around here, there's lots of
kidney stones ...something in the soil
contributes to that problem. There's also a
lot of trailing arbutus. It's like an herbalist
once telling me to gather stinging nettles and
I said, "Yes, if I can stand the sting." And
she said, "Wherever the nettles grow you'll
find yellow dock - just rub your sting with
its leaves and it won't hurt."
K: That reminds me of using jewel weed to
neutralize poison ivy. Do you primarily
make teas with herbs?
G: Most herbs do yield their strength best
to water - some to cold, some to hot - either
boiled or steeped - according to what you
need. For high blood pressure you use cold
mistletoe tea. (see REMEDIES) But if
you've got epilepsy or seizures then you
make a hot infusion. (see REMEDIES)
K: I know of a dog with epilepsy - maybe
it would cure him. (laughs)
outlawed in the U.S. And now I've beard
they're closed down. I hope its not true.
K: Did you keep the literature from that
course or do you just remember everything?
G: Well, I got all hepped up studying it and
ii worked so good...that I got the address of
Indiana Botanical Gardens - and what I
didn't know I'd order so J could recognize it
and test it out.
K: Did your father use herbs as a
veterinarian?
G: Yes, we studied together. One day a
man came to us who'd overworked his
horse. He said her heart was pounding like
a hammer and she was standing with all
four legs splayed - wouldn't eat; wouldn't
drink. So I fixed some lobelia tea and filled
up a big drenching bottle full. When we got
to the mare the sweat was running off her in
a stream and her nostrils were red and
looked like they would burst. We lifted her
head and drenched her but only got half of it
in her before she reared up and came back
down and slobbered. After a while she
began to walk around and drink water. He
asked if she'd live and I said I didn't know she might have burst a blood vessel.
Months later my father saw him again and
asked about the horse. He said he'd been
logging her everyday.
G: Well, you just be a brave woman and
drink it down - and drink some water after.
K: What if someone's ailments demanded
remedies of an opposite kind - of opposing
forces, so to speak'?
G: Nature fits with nature.
K : Lobelia is an herb I've beard you
should be careful with.
G: Did you ever taste Indian Turnip?
Lobelia's like that - very strong. It smells
good, but nobody's going to eat much of it.
Only a very little is needed for healing.
K: I've also heard that the seeds of the
poke plant are supposed to be poisonous,
although I've eaten them myself. The young
shoots are very good cooked Do you use
poke?
G: Yes, I've given the berries for arthritis
(see REMEDIES) and folks have had good
results. Some harvest the berries every fall
and freeze them to have oo hand all year.
K: Staghom sumac berries (rhus typhina)
crushed and soaked in water make good
lemonade. Have you used them as a
remedy?
G: The tea is good for bedwetting - helps
K: Not quite as hard, I hope! That's
retain the urine.
interesting - lobelia grows in my holler
G: A woman came to me one day and said,
where horses are still
used for
logging... Has anyone ever had a bad
''What can I do for my poor little doggie?
reaction to remedies you've prescribed?
He's having seizures one right after
another." So I said, "Give him some
G: I don't give them anything that would
mistletoe tea." She said, "That's poison,
cause a bad reaction.
isn't it?" I said, "They say so - but birds eat
it." She said, "Well ..." A couple wee.ks
K: Are there any herbs that you finally
later I saw her and she said, "What can I do
decided to stop using?
for my doggy?" And I said, "Did you give
him the tea?" She said, "No." So I said,
G: Some are easier to get than others...and
"Well, just let him die then." And she
some taste a lot better than others.
looked at me as if I was the meanest thing in
Personal) y I like things that taste better. If I
the world. I didn't think she was very
much impressed. Then a few months later I
saw her husband and he said, "Did you
hear-the dog's all well." I said, "Good what did you do?" He said, "We gave it
mistletoe tea!" (laughs) The dog had gotten
so weak he couldn't get into his little wicker
bed. He wouldn't drink water and hadn't
eaten for days. She put down a bowl of tea
and she said his nose twitched and he raised
up and began to drink. When he finished
she set down another bowl and some food
and water. She expected him to be dead by
morning. But in the morning the tea was
gone, the water was gone, the food was
gone and the dog was gone! He was over
V'.......~~~*::;:;:·~rt;.l'!D
across the carport in his bed.
K: What a great success story! So how did
you learn how to prepare so many different
herbs - was it just from people telling you?
G: No, honey, l see what you're after.. .!
took a correspondence course from
Canadian Herbal College in the early '30's.
They had to go to Canada because they were
K: Do you have any ideas about the
intelligenc.e behind plants?
G: The same God that made you and me
made the plants. He knows what they need and they haven't perverted their appetites
like I have. So they take only the
nourishment they need from their
environment..! think the.main good we get
comes through the life of the plant - from
the minerals and food value it gives us.
K: It's very pure, isn't it..
G: It gives your body just what it needs.
K: Do you feel the plants you gather have
any awareness of your picking lhem?
G: I don't feel they have a ...what would
you say?... a soul...or a menrality. But they
do have some kind of feelings and ability to
communicate. And I think in the new earth
state, after sin is gone, that we'll be able to
communicate with animals and plant life
better than we can now.
K: But you don't feel like you do thar at all
now - when you're working with them?
G: No...when I'm gathering plants I think
Mullein
illustra11on b'f Ellen John
give people somerhing that tastes good
they'll probably use more of it.
K: How do you mask the ones that don't
taste good?
of the good they're going to do. I don't
believe in nature spirirs or fairies ... Angels
exist, and can lead us to plants, but God is
the spirit And He is a personal God. I le
made us and He made the herbs. He knew
what we needed so He put their healing
qualities in them.
- continued on page 27
KATIJAH- page 12
SPRING - 1988
�Frower Essences:
Harmony wtth Sp£r£t and Nature
Flower essences serve as catalysts to
awaken the natural life force and spiritual
consciousness within us. Each flower essence
embodies the hamumious vibrational panern of
the particular flower species used, and thus
attunes and resonates with specific human
energy patterns. The essences stimulate an
enhanced awareness and ability to transform
limiting attitudes, emotions and behavior into
more creative and health-affirming ways of
living.
Flower essences are liquid, potentized
preparations which carry a distinct imprint ofa
given flower and only an insignificant material
component. They are prepared from
sun-infusions ofj[Qwers in water, diluted and
preserved with brandy and generally taken
orally af~ drops at a time, several tim&r per
flower, coltsfoot In the joy of the moment we
found the radiance within one another and
made our life commitment together, although
the golden flower eluded us then. Since that
lovely day, coltsfoot has found us often...and
in most surprising places... along highways
and mountainsides, dry bulldozed places and
small streams...during needful, dark and
joyous moments. Each time she Earths the
Light for us along our journey. Each time she
opens us to our own knowing.
day.
yellow is used to dispel depression. One
spring, Edward and I both developed 'lung
fevers' - my first, his, a long endured ailment
It was this particular Spring that we felt
agreement to prepare the flower essence. I'd
been relating with friends with 'lung troubles'
and this encouraged my own healing. fd been
holding grief for so long. The Equinox came
brightly and we t.ook our healing bodies to the
cold creek to be with the coltsfoot flower. In a
sacred way we happily created coltsfoot
essence, with her permission. Her radiant light
dispelled our 'darkness' and we got welU
These essences are completely safe and
do not inteifere with and are not ajfected by
other medications. They show a lack of
effectiveness if used improperly but if too
much is taken they do no harm. Flower
essences harmonize well with other health and
growth practices including exercise, nourishing
diet, relaxation, balanced lifestyle, and
appropriale medical care.
Always gentle and strengthening.flower
essences bring a continual union between soul
and body, Higher Self and personality. The
graduiJJ attuning within blends and connects
one with one's source.
As a medicinal herb, ~o farfm
(coltsfoot) is traditionally used for lung
ailments. The lung is an "earth" organ and
Drawing by Shell Lodge
Cottsfoot
~tooc£t"oot
C oltsfoot is the earliest blooming flower
here where we live in Katuah, appearing in
February before the cold snows have finished
melting. Blooming fully bright, coltsfoot
brings her Promise of the Light and Radiance
of Spring from the deepening regenerative
forces of Winter's Dark.
In early Spring, before leaves cast
shadowy images, petite candles stand erect on
hardwood forest floors. Arriving at dawn, one
can lie amongst their glow. As the sun warms
the day, one then can watch the delieate
unfolding petals of the beautiful bloodrool
flower. A single protective leaf shelters this
flower in her early development As it matures,
the candlelight shoots up from the leaf and
opens to fullness. Then the forest ground
covering is a myriad of white stars with
glowing golden centers.
Heaven laying to rest a s~ll on Earth...Spirit
blossoming with matter.
Her special way of responding to the
sun lends to us knowledge of her use as a
flower essence. She follows the arc of sunlight
across the blue Heavens then closes up silently
to the cold night awaiting the Sun's ever
re-appearing warmth for opening each day. The
large green leaves developing at the end of her
flowering season grow in the shape of a "
colt's foot" and tell us of her ability to ground
us as well as enlighten.
My husband and I affectionately call
coltsfoot our initiator. On a clear sunshiny day
along a delightfully cold rushing mounrain
creek, Edward and I searched the banks and
boulders for signs of the radiant yellow ray
F eelings of my sacredness flow while in
the presence of Red Puccoon ( Indian for
bloodroot). a revelation of my opening psyche.
My initial experience of using bloodroot flower
essence came like the swift flooding river over
rapids, gurgling forth in living affirmations.
Life affirming words came pouring forth from
my being, streaming out. fd been struggling
with the use of affirmations, but no more! I
experience their inner wadrings now; I foci
surprise and delight and laughter. The aeative
process of receiving the Divine Feminine
within began blossoming.
T hrough this process Bloodroot
becomes my friend ...sharing her self wilh me
through the opening of my feminine
psyche...and being so intimately here with me
while I clear the cobwebs from my ancient
cauldron. The exhilarating union with my
feminine creative spirit and ageless wisdoms is
coming home using bloodroot flower essence.
As an herb, this member of the poppy
family is known to be internally poisonous in
all but small doses. The red root was used
medicinally to make tinctures and decoctions
for internal use , and external washes for skin
Edward & Elaine Geouge are flower ess~nce
infections. When freshly dug, the root of
sanquinaria canadensis bleeds a red juice. Dried lovers living in Yancey Co., NC ga1herinY'
flowers and wisdom to co-create flower
and powdered roots were used by the Indians
essences with Nature in KaJUah.
as a dye and as a body paint
These Appalachian Gower essences are available lhtough
Flower Essence Services, P.O. Box 586, Nevada City,
CA 95959. A.sic ror the research flower essence list.
SPRING - 1988
KATUAH-page 13
�THE ORIGIN OF THE ANIMALS
by Clyde Hollifield
" lam a storyteller. You can take this
story any way you want to - as a dream, a
Ue, an exaggeration, a vision, or as the
truth. l am only required to tell the tale. "
Long, long ago, at the dawn ohime,
there were only plants upon the Earth. No
people, no animals, no birds, no fish - only
plants.
At first the plants were rather meager.
T here were onl y algaes, liule mosses,
lichens, and fems, but gradually they grew
into larger species. The early trees began to
develop.
If you look at the geological record,
you will see that animals came into existence
about the same time that plants began to
develop fruit, nuts, and grains. Of course,
the animals could not have existed before
this, because there would not have been
anything to eat. Here is how it came to
happen.
Plants bad evolved for millions of
years before any animal was even thought
of. For eons they had experimented with
dispersing seed using water and air as
carriers. For a lot of the plants, this was a
problem. Some, like the milkweed, bad
learned to send their liule seeds on
parachutes through the air. The cattails and
the rushes experimented with floating seeds
that were carried to the other shore of the
lake and took root there. But many of the
other plants could only drop their seed at the
base of their own stem, and were thus
crowded out by their own offspring.
As the plants evolved, and their
intelligence grew, some among them began
to discuss a radically new way of dispersing
seed. The oak trees, in particular, were
precocious plants. They watc hed the
mistletoe, the only mobile plant, which had
no roots and flew from one oak tree to
another. From this the oak trees got an idea:
they would devise a small, living creature
that could move !lllml around from one place
to another, as the mistletoe was able to do.
They called together the hickory trees, the
walnut trees, the hazel, and all the other
nut-bearing trees, and they made their plan.
It being such a new idea, it was
difficult at first to convince the other plants
to allow it.
"It'll never happen."
"Ridiculous."
"Go away," said the other trees, but
the oak tree persisted. (Oaks are very
persistant trees) .T hey agreed that they
would design their creature so it would not
harm the environment or intrude on the
living spaces of the other trees and plants.
They also agreed to provide total care for
this little "animal" creature.
You have probably guessed already
that the animal they were devising was the
squirrel. His job would be to plant oak
seeds at some distance from the parent tree.
lo exchange, the tree would offer him a
place to live, hollow places in which to take
shelter, and food in the form of acorns and
nuts.
They finally completed their task,
and, as you can see to this day, the plan
KATUAH- page 14
worked very well. A squirrel will get a
mouthful of nuts, run down the tree, and go
off into the woods a little way. Then he will
dig a little hole, plant the seed right side up,
and pack the din back around it very
carefully. Then be will promptly forget
where he's planted it. That's the business of
the squirrel; it's in his nature.
With the help of the squirrel, oak
trees began to become a dominant tree on
the Earth. The other trees began to think that
maybe this was not such a silly idea after
all, and the persimmon tree, the
serviceberry, and the pawpaw got together
and decided to create a creature of their
own. The persimmon tree suggested an
idea, and they all thought it was a good one,
and carried it out. They made the possum.
The possum was different from the
squirrel. It was completely nomadic, it
never denned up. This was an improvement
because they did not have to provide the
possum with a home, only food.
The fruit trees were not as determined
as the stout nut trees, and the possum was
the lazy approach to making a squirrel. The
fruit trees did not waste a lot of energy
filling up the possum's brain housing. The
possum, therefore, is not quick and clever
like the squirrel. Face it, a possum is dumb.
But the possum does not have to be
smart, because it has a natural design
advantage. It eats the sweet, ripe fruit off
the trees. Then, as the possum meanders on
through the forest, the fruit passes through
its body, and when the possum is a good
distance from the parent tree, the seeds are
deposited .among tho leaves, neatly packed
in a small bundle of fertilizer.
But neither squirrels nor po5sums can
cross large bodies of water;·and some of the
other plants began to think that they would
have a big advantage if they could come up
with an animal that could fly.
What a totally outrageous idea! None
of the other plants thought it would work,
but a daring group of plants - blackberries,
blueberries, mulberries, and even cherries got together on it, and so many of them
were working on the plan that they actually
made it come about. They took the best
features of the possum, passing the seeds
through the digestive tract, combined with
the brightness of the squirrel, and they
designed their creature with wings and a
new invention, feathers and this new being a bird - actually flew!
With their mobility and sense of
purpose, birds could fly to where a crop of
berries were ripening, eat these, and fly,
often for hundreds of miles, to where other
berries were coming into season, depositing
their seed packages along the way.
These plants, too, took care of their
own particular creature. They gave the birds
materials to use in building a nest and a safe
place back in among the briars or high in the
tree branches to protect themselves and
safely raise their young.
The new idea worked splendidly, and
there came to be more and more birds of all
sizes and varieties, and at the same time
more new and different animals were being
created as well.
SPRING - 1988
�But what plant devised the human
beings? This is a question that bas baffled
science for centuries. Some say that the
humans were thought up by the intestinal
bacteria. but l happen to know that the apple
tree was responsible.
The apple tree felt that life was
becoming too confusing, because there were
too many kinds of apples. Each young tree
created from seed was different from its
parents, and when the young ones crossed,
they themselves produced entirely different
types. It was a dilemma that required a
quick and drastic solution. So the apple tree
devised a creature with the intelligence to
help them reproduce by cloning. In this way
a strain would remain true to its original
form.
This required a creature with special
qualifications. This creature needed to be
able to graft a tree, and, when the graft was
established, to transplant it in a good
location, and then wait seven to ten years
before being rewarded with any apples.
This was a remarkable achievement. None
of the other trees had created a creature that
could do that. It took a coalition of different
kinds of plants - the apple tree and other
fruits, the grains, and the vegetables - to
create and sustain the human animal.
The new "animal" system was turning
out to be successful beyond any plant's
wildest expectations. The plants were doing
extremely well. and there was hardly a pan
of the Earth that they could not coloniz.e.
But too much was happening at
once. It was too much to control. The fust
sign of trouble was when some lower
orders of plants. being too lazy to take the
trouble to devise and maintain their own
animal or bird, grew seeds that could ride in
other animal's fur. These were the
hitcbikers: cockleburrs, beggar lice,
agrimony, and others like them.
This was just the beginning of the
troubles. The animal kingdom that the plants
had created took on a will of its own, and
new animal species began appearing that the
plants bad never dreamed of. Animals
apppeared that ate the flesh of other animals
and were not under the control of any of the
plants. Other animals began to manipulate
the environment to their satsfaction.
Beavers, for instance, began gnawing down
their host trees to build dams and lodges.
Shocking! Before this only the plants had
done anything to change the way of the
world.
A bad day came when the humans
discovered fire. With fire they became the
greatest threat to the plant world that had
ever appeared. They could start fires, but
they were not so proficient at putting them
out. The humans made a lot of mistakes and
did a lot of damage in the early days when
they were learning how to manage fire.
·
The beautiful system the plants had
created was careening out of control, and
the plants could do nothing to bring it back
into balance. The plant kingdom began to go
on the defensive against the very creatures
they themselves had created. Poisonous
plants developed, vines and brambles
appeared to hinder the animals' way through
the forest. Long prickers grew on the locust
tree and other plants that had never bome
thorns before.
The humans, their most complex
creation, turned out to be devilishly adept at
cutting, cleating, digging, and poisoning the
SACRAMENT
Candlemas Day divined one blue violet.
Yesterday trout lilies were spawning
down at the creek.
I have saved a beeswax candle;
there will be other times to celebrate
the rites of spring:
the planting of peas & potatoes,
signs of urging warmth, a stirring of the earth,
the surging of the body to stir the earth.
One honeyed candle burns at an altar of lilies.
bringing the poems of spring to light.
-Janeice Ray
RAIN HAS COME AGAIN
Rain has come again
after the dryest spring recorded
deep in me the garden has leapt
these past weeks-mullein sends up spires
in the moonlight.
The four o'clocks burn a bush
of sweet purple, effigy of efflorescense.
The garden is a dense verdant
mass of growing summer vine & bush & stalk
screaming recklessly open to
foraging bees, wasps, bugs, birds, me.
I think I have seen it climax,
baptiz.ed in pale the night of the last
full moon of summer, wide wide open
and singing with life.
Flowers of luffa glow yellow and grow long.
Vines vein white; leaves in a mad ebb
of chlorophyll drink in the sudden
abundance of water
and are reborn.
The mute sundial casts gray & wan.
Stolons passing underground
fountain into spearmint.
These are the showers of blessings.
From the wetness comes redemption.
- Janeice Ray
- C01llinuod on page 21
SPRIN,9 - 1988
_ KATUAH-pagel5
�(These are lhe words of a traditional Cherokee 111-0dicinc person.)
ON POWER
There are three types of power, and they are:
Power over others or power over ideas. This is the
power to force other people to do certain actions,
whether they would like ro or not.
Personal power. This is the power of will. This power
can bring ideas into physical form. A person can also use
this power to step into a negative situation and change it
into a positive situation by simple strength of will.
The third kind of power is spiritual power, and this kind
of power comes when one is connected to the Greater
Life, which is the totality ofcreation. We must recognize
that we are only a part of a greater whole. Then we will
be able to receive spiritual power. This is the greatest
power ofall.
To attain spirirual power, one has to be open to it. This
is done, not by cultivating a strong desire for spiritual power,
but by recognizing a need for that power. This creates a hole
or a space that the spiritual power can flow into.
In the story of the Garden of Eden, it was separation,
not fornication, that was man and woman's original failing in
the Garden. Separation from the Greater Life is the source of
all our limitations. We limit ourselves by emphasizing and
valuing our egos, our fears, and our prejudices. This limits
the spiritual power we can contain. We cannot be changed by
the spiritual power if we indulge ourselves by dwelling on
our limitations. What if your mother did do something that
was not right to you when you were a kid?! The hell with it!
We all have to continue and to live our own lives.
Ask some spiritual people the simple question "How
are you doing?" and they will say "Oh, I'm working
on...... " and give a whole involved list of what they see as
their personality defects. These people devote a good part of
their attention and energy to what is holding them back,
instead of thinking about how far they have gotten. If those
people would think about how far they have gotten, they
would be amazed at the resources they have to work with and
what they could do. If they would share those resources and
put them to use, they would find that they would grow mucli
faster than by "working" on their limitations.
0
ne way to overcome our limits is by serving
unselfishly. Most people begin to practice this in order to
increase their spiritual power. This is ''serving selfishly," but
service becomes a habit that is performed without thinking,
and then it begins to woik. Another way to gain spirirual
power is by practicing unconditional love. This means to
love somebody without requiring that the person do
something, be something, or act in any particular way to
"deserve" that love. What a strong magic this is!
Fasting is also useful in helping to become conscious
of our limitations. We may feel that we cannot go four days
without food or four days without food or water. But when
we accomplish that, even if there is some bitching, we learn
about how we can go beyond our limits.
Praying is talking to the power of creation. When
praying, express your feelings clearly. Any person who
would pray for 15 minutes every day would witness
remarkable changes in themselves and in the world. It does
not maner how you identify the Spirit to which you pray.
The action and sincerity of praying will bring amazing
changes in just a few months.
We have been told not to pray for ourselves, but to
pray on behalf of others. The only thfog to ask for oneself is
the strength and endurance to continue to serve the Creation
and to help others. Praying is a humbling activity, because
prayers must be humble to be sincere.
A sincere prayer is powerful and can bring about real
accomplishments. When even just one person is convinced
that something is true, the power of that belief is enough to
set changes in motion. If only one person sees an obvious
injustice and knows that it is an injustice, that is enough to
change the situation a little bit
It may appear that nothing has happened, but if one
person out of 100 can be changed, then much has been
accomplished, because an idea grows like a seed, and once
the seed is planted in someone's mind, that person will
change somebody else, and the idea will keep growing and
spreading in that way.
Spiritual power is greatly magnified in the circle of the
people. We need to get over our separation - literally - and
come together to pray. If 20 people who are fairly clean
inside gather together in the circle and hook into the power,
that group could accomplish almost anylhing. Of course if
there are people working in opposition to the goals of thls
group. that limits the degree of unity that can be reached.
And, of course, we cannot eliminate negativity and evil. If
we did, there would be nothing in the world! Each of the
opposing forces, positive and negative, is the basis for the
other, but the negative can be neutralized or deflected by
people's focussed energies.
How is this done? On the spiritual level we do not try
to defeat other people or their energies. Instead we 1ransform
them by bringing them to the awareness that the world is a
unified and connected entity, and that we are not separate
from the world or from each other. Thus we achieve our
goals by increasing the opposition's spirirual power!
Conjuring in the traditional Cherokee medicine is a
way a medicine person empowers his or her prayers. To
bring about a healing, a medicine person first would pray and
then would do conjuring, which is acting out the cure and
seeing the result already accomplished. The act of conjuring
opens part.S of the mind that do not act through verbalization
and focusses the deeper power of the mind on the task at
band.
The old-time conjurors knew that praying does not
take the place of action. The old Cherokee belief is: "You put
the seed in the ground before you pray for the crops to
grow." You do your work, and then you hook into the
Greater Power to bring it to fruition. This is very sincere,
very humble. The physical work is an important part of the
magic.
- continued on page 26
KATUAH - page 16
SPRING - 1988
�BEA TREE
by Brian Ellis
The following is a brief exercise I
use frequently with children at camp and
with adults at conferences. You may want to
adjust the vocabulary to the child or group
you are working .with. Be sure to add lots of
pauses... and speak In a soft voice.
F ind a tree that you feel really
drawn towards, one that speaks
of beauty...perhaps, one that you
may have climbed in your youth.
Stand facing that tree. If a small
group, hold hands encircling the
tree. Then, begin to center down,
breathing deeply and relaxing.
(At this point, I introduce the
idea of "deep listening" or
"hearing with your inner ear".)
Ask, "Have you ever been sitting
quietly, maybe thinking about a
problem, and all of a sudden you
hear a voice inside that tells you
what you need to know? Or have
you ever sort of known
something and not known exactly
where it came from? Well,
that's a kind of deep listening.
What we are going to do is to let
our "inner ear" open to what
this tree may want to share with
us. Some of you might hear a
song, a poem, or a story of what
happened here long ago. For some
of you it might be a feeling,
pictures, or Images.
Continue to breathe slowly and
deeply. Keep your eyes closed
and focus your attention on your
feet. Wiggle your toes a little.
Now imagine that you are
growing roots. Feel your roots
sinking down Into the soll,
sprouting out In all directions.
And like a tree, draw energy
from the earth. Feel warm,
healing energy flowing Into your
roots, into your feet and legs, up
your strong straight trunk. Feel
Iha! energy coming from the
earth up into your heart,
shoulders, arms, and head.
SPRING - 1988
Now Imagine yourself growing
limbs, reaching out in all
directions. Send earth energy
from your body, up, out into
your branches. Draw the
warmth of the sun into your
leaves. Feel the warm light soak
down into you, filling your
heart, filling your body and
sinking down into the earth.
Earth energy surging up through
your roots; Sun energy pouring
down through your
branches...and mixing in your
heart.
Now feel your own heart send
love, warm light, into this t.ree.
Open your heart to this tree.
Allow the love to flow back and
forth. Take a few moments of
silence and listen with your
inner ear to what this tree might
have to share with you...open
your heart to this tree... (pause
2 - 5 minutes)...and know that
you can always reconnect In this
way. (again, pause)
Now it Is time to finish up.
Remember to give the tree
thanks...now draw back into your
heart. Feel your body becoming
human. Feel how strong and
healthy it feels to be a human
being. Wiggle your toes and
fingers, drop hands and stretch.
Open your eyes and shake your
arms and legs. Feel how vibrant
and alive you feel! Now give the
tree a hug, maybe a kiss and a
deep thank you.
At this point, I give folks a
chance to share what it felt like
to be a tree, or something the
tree shared with them. Almost
every time people have really
powerful feelings of empathy and
often some neat idea or bit of
wisdom.
I remember once a girl shared a
real clear image of what the
place looked like when the tree
was a sprout. Another time a
child said, "The tree told me how
old it ls...157". I have counted a
lot of rings on a lot of trees and I
would have guessed it was about
150orso.
Please be careful when you lead
this exercise with a group. Let
them know what they are getting
Into and carefully guide them
out. Please try it many times by
yourself or with an experienced
guide before leading others. And
make offerings to the spirit of
the forest. Mo/ All my relations/
Walk in Balance~
BRIAN ELLIS (alias Flying Fox)
/iv9s in Celo, NC. HB is a dynamic
storytBllBr, pOBt, and songw1iter
as well as a membBr of lhB National
Association for the PBrpetuation
and Preservation of StorytBliing.
KATUAH-page 17
�an issue when dealing with the giant utility
corporations, but Duke Power Co. in
panicular seems to have a hazy conception
of the difference between public service and
corporate adventurism. The company bas
promised
ratepayers
in
t h e ir
recently-acquired NP&L territories that for
several years their rates will remain lower
than those of Duke customers on !he
piedmont. After that promise has expired,
however, Dulce's new dependents may find
themselves contributing the capital to fuel
Duke's continued corporate expansion.
NATURAL
WORLD
NEWS
THE LATEST WORD IN
NUCLEAR WASTE
P ANTHERTOWN SOLD!
Nllllr&I Worid Naws Service
High at the headwaters of the east
fork of the Tuckaseegee River lies a valley
called Panthertown. The beauty of the
valley's striking features was for many
years a secret known only to a few. But
Panthertown may soon be crossed by a
Dulce Power high-voltage electric al
transmission line.
The site has recently been the focus of
much attention and activity, but for a long
time it lay in relative obscurity, the property
of the Liberty Life Insurance Company,
which limited access to the area. Before last
year few people knew of the white, domed
cliffs that framed the valley and the sttcams
and waterfalls that graced the location.
When Liberty Life decided to unload
the 7100-acre tract, they tagged it with an
aslcing price of $10 million. Congress
passed bills in both houses, one sponsored
by NC Senator Terry Sanford and the other
by Rep. Jamie Clarice of the NC Eleventh
Distriet, that appropriated $6 million toward
the purchase. But this was not enough for
Liberty Life, so the Nature Conservancy, a
private land conservation organization, went
to work to try to engineer the purchase to
bring the prized site into the public domain.
For financial reasons, the Nature
Conservancy let its option on the
Panthenown tract lapse. Immediately Duke
Power stepped in and bought up the
prope.rty for the $10 million asking price.
Dulce is in the final stages of acquiring the
holdings of the Nantahala Power and Light
Co. (NP&L), and the utility has been
rapidly buying up land in the Panthertown
area to create a link between the NP&L
territory and Duke's other facilities in the
Piedmont. The high-profile, high tension
wires will span 30 miles to join a station in
the Jocassee watershed area to a tie-in in the
Tuckaseegee district that links with all the
NP&L facilities. The proposed ttansmission
line will cost $30 million to build.
It is unclear whether Dulce's
expressed interest in the Panthertown
property contributed to Liberty Life's
intransigence in the land dealings. Duke has
been willing (and is certainly able) to pay a
high price to obtain clear ownership and
avoid any public accountability over the
route. The corporation has reportedly paid
exorbitant rates for small-acreage tracts, so
as to have complete control over the
proposed right-of-way.
That control is now virtually
consolidated, and Duke is acting the part of
a magnaminious benefactor who might
KAUIAH- page l8
- - -~--~
compromise its own interests to accomodate
those who wish to preserve the beauty and
habitat areas in the Panthertown valley,
rather than a public agency that must
consider the best interests of all in its
decisions. In other words, Duke is holding
all the cards, and those who arc interested in
keeping the valley in a wild state arc
scrambling to petition the company to take
the least obtrusive route for the proposed
power line.
While the utility corporation's first
proposal was to run the high-tension wires
down the middle of the valley corridor,
there are now several alternate routes under
consideration. Ralph Bauman, land
acquisition officer for the US Forest
Service, has indicated that the agency is
open to land swaps of adjoining National
Forest land to make alternative routes
possible. Congressman Clarke's office and
the Nature Conservancy are still hopeful of
acquiring the unused remainder of the
property a fter the locatio n of the
transmission corridor is set
The route of the proposed power line
will affect other areas as well. From the
power house at Bear Lake through the
magnificent Tuckaseegee Gorge, the
Tuckasccgee River valley is pristine with no
sign of human habitation. A route should be
chosen that would spare the river the
massive intrusion of a high-voltage line.
The installation of the new power line
will be tho culmination of decades of
corporate planning and desire on the part of
Duke Power. The company has the dubious
honor of being known as efficient and
effective managers of nuclear reactors,
because they have been making their
stoclcholdcrs substantial profits from the
generation of nuclear power while other
utilities have beeen backpedaling from the
nukes lilce the proverbial "hot potato."
In recent years Duke has maintained
an aggressively expansionist stance. Their
insistence on initiating a gig antic
engineering project to generate electricity on
Coley Creek in the Jocassec watershed
when the need for that amount of power
remains still unproven, and the enormous
size of the proposed transmission line that is
to penetrate the Panthertown area has raised
questions that perhaps the company is
contemplating a move into TV A territory in
east Tennessee, as the TVA nuclear plants
along the Tennessee River are currently
inoperable. There has been speculation that
Duke plans to install yet another reactor on
the shores of the Oconee lakes to funnel
power west to accomplish this goal.
Public accountability has always been
Nllunl Worid News Service
Under the t e rms of the
Johnston-McClure Bill passed by Congress
in December, 1987 an unwilling state of
Nevada was chosen as the site of the first
nuclear waste repository.
The bill also eliminated the eastern
repository - which in politicians' language
means, "eliminated the eastern repository
for awhile." An area overlapping Madison,
Buncombe, and Haywood counties in
Katilah was considered a lilcely site for the
eastern dump.
The Monitored Retrievable Storage
(MRS) facility, a "temporary" storage area
which the Department of Energy is counting
on to hold tons of spent nuclear fuel rods
that become government property in 1996,
was re-ratified in principle, but no
construction work may be begun until a site
for the first underground repository is
clearly decided. As part of the political
dealings around the bill, the states of
Tennessee and South Carolina were grant.e d
immunity from consideration as MRS sites.
A . three-person panel will be
appointed by Congress to study the need for
a MRS facility, which may delay plans for
the facility somewhat, and a negative
finding by the commission will most
certainly strengthen opposition to the MRS.
A DOE study at Yucca Mountain,
NV, the favored first repository site, shows
a strong possibility !hat groundwater
contamination may occur. This may delay
first repository siting and therefore slow the
MRS as well.
Johnston-McClure serves notice that
if a politically feasible solution presents
itself, Congress will seize it immediately to
hasten an end to the nuclear waste debacle.
The bill does buy us additional time.
Meanwhile, heed the words of
Congressman Clarke: "We must be prepared
to fight any future plans to locate an MRS
facility in our region."
ENDANGERING AN
ENDANGER ED SPECIES
T he Roanoke logperc h, an
endangered species, will become more
endangered if developers and ignorant
public officials of Roanoke County, VA
have their way. Their plan is IO withdraw
most of the flow of the Roanoke River and
pump it into the proposed Spring Hollow
Reservoir.
Even after strenuous opposition from
a citizens' group, "Friends of the River" and
SPRJNG - 1988
�milder opposition from the US Fish and
Wildlife Service and the State of Virginia, a
colonel of the US Army Corps of Engineers
responsible for the project "leans" toward
approval of the reservoir.
The question for people interested in
the future of the river is, "Arc the profits to
be made from this project worth sucking
away the habitat of an endangered species?"
If the answer to this question seems
clear, send a letter of protest to:
US Army Corps of Engineers
P.O. Box 1890
Wilmington, NC 28401
EVEN CANTON IS
DOWNSTREAM
Na.tural World News Scrv""'
"We have to give quality water to our
people!" shrilled C.W. Hardin, the mayor
of the town of Canton, NC.
A turnabout on the question of
Champion International Paper Company's
effluent discharge?
Not hardly. It was discovered that a
faulty wastewater treatment system was
discharging improperly treated effluent into
the little Pigeon Creek, which feeds into the
Pigeon River from which Canton draws its
drinking water. The system handles wastes
from the Pisgah Inn, a concession on the
Blue Ridge Parkway at the head of the
Pigeon River watershed. It was Canton's
tum to be downstream.
Public health officials closed down
the old treatment plant, but the inn bas a
permit to install a new system that would
again discharge imo Little Pigeon Qcclc.
Unfortunately, that permit was sought
and received without consultation with the
Environmental Advisory Board of the Blue
Ridge Parkway. The board has among its
members Dr. Dan Pittillo and Dr. Garrett
Smathers, well-known and respect¢d
scientists in the region, who sincerely care
about the fragile ridge-top environment the
Parkway traverses.
"Overload on the original facilities
was a contributing cause to the system
failure, " said Pittillo, ''but they are adding
even more buildings and extending the
paved roads in the campground even
further. And flushing down oil from the gas
station and chemicals from RV chemical
toilets is not going to help. Those
substances kill organisms in the biological
treatment system and will slow or possibly
stop decomposition.
"The Pisgah Inn is acting like any
business: it's trying to get more and more
people in. And the Parkway administration
is saying everything is alright, but it's not
alright.
'They need to remember where they
are. That is a very delicate area, and the
greatest resource they have up there is the
area itself.
''The whole operation needs to be
reviewed. Perhaps it is time for a study to
determine a ceiling on the traffic the area can
handle."
Serious questions arise when people
throng to a delicate area like the top of the
Pisgah Ridge. Those questions are always
close to tho surface when vigilant
watchdogs like the Environmental Advisory
Board and the town of Canton are standing
up for water quality.
SLOWING THE LAND RUSH
NllUnl World News Seivice
Two concurrent bills now before the
Georgia state legislature offer some relief
against the rampant development proceeding
unimpeded in the north Georgia hill
country.
The Senate unanimously passed Bill
393, the Mountain Protection Act, which
restricts development on lands over 2200
feet in elevation and with more than a 25
percent slope to one single-family unit per
acre. Within the area of the bill's
jurisdiction only one single-family dwelling
or six-family unit could be built per acre.
No structure may extend more than 40 feet
above the ridge line. The measure also
provides that any land on which more than
40 percent of the forest cover is removed
must be reforested.
Other minimum standards would
require an environmental assessment and
landscape plan for commercial construction,
a soil erosion prevention plan for
agricultural activities, and would permit
private logging activities only after a harvest
plan had been professionally prepared.
A similar bill is now before the
Natural Resources Committee of the GA
House of Representatives. The House bill
has been modified to restrict construction on
lands over 1200 feet in elevation that
maintain a 33 1/3 percent slope over a
distance of 500 feet
In other respects the bill as it stands
before the House is only slightly different
from the measure that passed the Senate.
One clause in the House bill attempts to put
some teeth into the Soil Erosion and
Sedimentation Act by allowing the GA
Department of Natural Resources (DNR) to
charge counties and municipalities for the
services of the DNR if the agency has to
move in to enforce the terms of the
anti-erosion law.
Although the Mountain Protection Act
is just a beginning at alleviating human
pressures on the north Georgia habitat, it
bas attracted a major amount of attention.
With the legislative session nearing its
close, it is in doubt whether there is time for
the House to pass its version of the bill and
work out a joint measure with the Senate to
give Georgia a much-needed land use
Statute.
EARTH SHAKE!
NlllnU World News Seivice
The mountains trembled Wednesday
evening, February 17, as a minor
earthquake shook Cherokee, Clay, and
Graham counties in western North Carolina
and parts of eastern Tennessee at 7:30 P.cc.
The tremor, centered near Robbinsv11le,
NC, registered 3.8 on the Richter scale.
No damage was reported. Residents
who experienced the quake felt a vibration
and beard a rumbling noise at the time of the
event. Some reported feeling a brief
sensation of being under pressure, as is
experienced when one goes deep
underwater.
©~
TRACHEAL BEE MITE
INVADES WESTERN SLOPE
Nallllal World News Service
Bee colonies in the Katuab region
have come under attack by the tracheal bee
mite, a destructive intemaJ parasite.
Officials of the Tennessee State
Agricultural Extension Service announced
that the state bee inspector found hives
dying from mite infestations in Greene
County, TN and Monroe County, TN
during the month of January.
The mites are suspected to have
arrived in shipments of bees from South
Carolina. Once established, the mites spread
rapidly. The infestation was first reported
within the national boundaries of tho United
States only four years ago. Since that time it
has spread to locations in 30 states. Bees
throughout the region are now under
immediate threat of the parasite invasion.
Chemical poisons cannot be used
inside of bee hives, as they contaminate
honey and beeswax in the hive, so
commercial beekeepers are deprived of the
orthodox method of recourse. The TN
Extension Service does not know of any
natural defenses the bees have against tho
parasite.
The only known method to protect
bees from the tracheal mite is complete
isolation of the hive. Hardest hit by the
infestation will be commercial apiarists who
routinely import bees and equipment. To
commercial producers, replacing lost hives
means a financial loss in labor and
equipment costs.
Honey producers who survive the
mite attack will not receive premium prices
for their honey, according to the Extension
Service announcement, because cheaper,
imported honey will make up for any
shortage in the regional supply. Allergenics
and those who depend on local honey
supplies may have to look harder for honey
this summer, and there will be fewer
honeybees to pollinate the apple blossoms
and sunflowers this year.
- continued next
SPRING - 1988
~
KATUAH- page 19
�EPA TESTING FOR DIOXIN
IN PIGEON RIVER
Nllllnl World News Service
Who knows what evil lurks in the
murky shadows of the Pigeon River?
Officials of the Champion
International Paper Co. have consistently
claimed that it is only the excessive
coloration of their corporate effluent that
keeps the Pigeon River barren and lifeless
below the Canton paper mill in Haywood
County, NC. They are fond of deriding
"environmentalists'" and other residents'
concerns about the river as a big flap based
on arbitrary regulations of "harmless"
colorants.
River fish say otherwise, having
deserted the river in droves, leaving only a
few species of pollution-tolerant "garbage
fish" to inhabit the lower reaches of the
Pigeon.
Now, alerted by reports of the highly
toxic compound dioxin being found in the
effluents of other paper-making companies
that employ a process similar to that used at
the Canton mill, the federal Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA) has ordered that
fish samples be taken from the river to test
for that substance, which is a deadly
carcinogen.
Dioxin was a primary component of
the herbicide 2,4,5,-T, which gained
notoriety as the defoliant Agent Orange in
Vietnam and which came under attack in this
country as a dangerous substance that
causes cancers and mutations.
Fish samples from both the NC and
TN stretches of the Pigeon River have been
sent to the EPA for analysis. The samples
were obtained by an elecao-shock technique
that stuns f1Sh within an eight-foot radius of
the point of contact with a powerful
electrical source.The fish are then gathered
and sent to EPA laboratories in Atlanta for
testing.
Tennessee officials had to return to
the river for a second round of
fish-gathering after taking initial samples in
January, 1988. They did not bring in
enough fish in their first try to make an
adequate sample.
The government fishermen said that
the water in the deep pools where they
fished was a dark brown color. They
complained of the foul smell of the river.
Local people living along the
riverbanks said that although fish were few
in the river, they would catch what they
could, untiJ lhrcc years ago when, according
to one resident, the fish "had a lcind of blue
mold on them and their eyes were
funny-looking."
Dioxin has been shown 10 pass along
the foodchain via small, bottom-feeding fish
and into the larger predator fish.
Officials from Champion International
and the state of Tennessee are involved in
protracted negotiations that might perhaps
resolve the immediate fate of the river. The
EPA has indicated that it would be amenable
to ratifying a compromise agreement on
color standards for the Pigeon, if one could
be reached.
The fish say that unless the river is
cleaned up completely, they will noc return.
The Dead Pigeon River Council
(DPRC) is a group of western slope
residents who feel victimized by
Champion's misuse of the river. The group
KATIJAH - page 20
was a strontt voice urging the EPA to
undertake the dioxin testing. They also have
been persiste.ntly urging the TN Department
of Health and Environment to undertake a
study of the abnormally high number of
cancer deaths of residents of the
downstream community of Hanford, TN.
An informal survey by residents of
the town (population 500) revealed that 167
cancer deaths have occurred there in the past
20 years. The Cocke County commu ' t;y is
.locally known as "Widowville."
The TN Water Quality Control Board
will test Hanford's well for contamination
of the local water table by river water
pending a review of the EPA 's dioxin tests.
ConlOCI:
The Dead Pigeon River Council
803 Prospect Ave.
Newport, TN 37821
MEETINGS CALLED
ON TOXIC SPRAYING
Nanni World News Set\lice
Carol McGincbey, Mary Ann Delany,
and Nancy Barnhardt are three women who
litcralJy cannot stand toxic chemicals in the
environment. The women, who are from
neighboring Floyd and Patrick counties,
VA, have body systems that are extremely
sensitive to toxic chemicals. They have
suffered acute symptoms of poisoning in the
presence of chemical insecticides and
herbicides.
The three arc acting as a liason
committee between community people and
state agencies on the questions of
agricultural and silvicultural spraying. They
are meeting with Dennis Anderson of the
Vrrginia Forest Service and a representative
of the state Agricultural Extension to discuss
the spraying of the herbicide "Round-up" to
weed out young broadleaf trees, particularly
yellow locust, which contend with young
plantings of white pines, and the spraying
of "Paraquat" as a pre-emergence herbicide
oo "no-till" com plantings.
Nancy experiences liver problems and
respiratory ailments in the presence of the
poisonous sprays.
"When I feel an aching sensation in
the area near my liver," she says, "I start to
ask around. If I investigate, I always find
that someone is spraying nearby."
Carol has more extreme symptoms in
the presence of the toxics. Her body reacts
with a high fever, sore throat, numbness of
the extremities, nausea, and extreme fatigue.
"I was laid out in bed for three or four
days at a time in several instances last spring
and summer," she said.
The
women
maintained
communication with Anderson during last
year's spraying season. The Forest Service
officer said it was almost uncanny how the
women pinpointed his spraying schedule
through their bodily reactions.
The women also approached the
Appalachian Power Co. about clearing
brush under their transmission lines by
mechanical means rather than with
poisonous herbicides. The company is now
considering the idea.
This year the three are meeting with
Anderson and the state Extension Service
before the spraying season to communicate
the depth of feeling that some area residents
have about this question and to suggest
measures like publicizing spraying
schedules so sensitive people can avoid the
toxic clouds.
"We are going to meet with them in a
non-confrontational way," said Carol, "to
tell them about our needs and viewpoints,
and to seek out any common ground we
may have about this issue."
"Everyone, whether they know it or
not, is affected by these poisons near our
living-places," said Nancy. "Everyone who
is exposed accumulates those complex
chemical compounds within their bodies to
the detriment of their life and overall health.
Because our special sensitivity causes us to
have immediate, visible reactions to the
poisons, we have been selected to be the
buffer between the sprayers and the general
community."
Suppon the women advocates of air
that is clean and safe to breathe. Investigate
toxic spraying in every part of the
bioregional province. To offer suppon, or
to receive advice and a standard survey form
to evaluate the effects of chemical poisons in
the local environment. write to:
Nancy Barnhardt
P.O. Box 417
Aoyd, VA 24091
US FOREST SERVICE
RELENTS ON RIVERS
Nawn! World News SCNlce
104 miles of eleven rivers in Katuah
are among 35 rivers and 98,000 acres of
riparian land in the southeast that are at least
temporarily protected by agreements with
US National Forest supervisors.
"Binding comminmcnts" by the US
Forest Service (USFS) provide for
evaluation of ponions of these rivers to be
included into the National Wild and Scenic
Rivers System and five 10 ten years of
protection while the study is being carried
out. Only the parts of the rivers on National
Forest land arc presently under
consideration.
The agreement was negotiated by the
American Rivers organization with the
assistance of the Sierra Club Legal Defense
Fund. Highly pleased with the results of
their talks, American Rivers withdrew
motions of appeal the group had filed
against the forest management plans for the
National Forests involved.
American Rivers is a non-profit
organization seeking legal protections for
rivers in the US.
FORECAST: CLOUDY UNLESS THE PEOPLE ACT!
Nllllnl World News Service
Against overwhelming economic,
scientific, and ecological evidence,
incineration still persists among technocrats
as a preferred choice for solid waste
disposal. The engineering mentality
apparently demands a technological solution
to the waste disposal problem, as it has in
so many aspects of our society.
Yee, when the Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA) announced their
opinion that incineration of Asheville's
dehydrated sewage sludge by the
metropolitan Sewage District (MSD) would
require no environmental impact
assessment, such a squall of protest arose
that the agency extended the public comment
period, and is now considering public
SPRING- 1988
�petitions for a full environmental irnJ?act
statement.
Local residents and organizations
have sent documentation to the EPA that the
most favored alternative, biological
composting, as well as being cheaper, is
ecologically safer. The airborne emissions
from incinerator p lants simply move
pollution into the upper at:m0sphere, and the
leftover ash is in most cases classified as a
hazardous waste. Dangerous cadmium
levels from industrial process wastes in
Asheville's sludge can only be removed by
an electrostatic precipitator. This is much
more expensive that the Venturi scrubber
process currently budgeted by the MSD and
might make the cost of incineration
prohibitive.
Activists have also informed the EPA
that land next to the MSD facilicy is available
to buy, which would considerably lower
MSD cost estimates for composting, which
were boosted by the addition of expenses
for transportation and transportation
equipment to move the sludge to a distant
site.
Cocke Councy, TN is also flirting
with the incineration alternative for waste
disposal. A Nashville, TN company,
ironically called Resource Recovery
Tech nology, has approached the
commissioners of the west slope councy
with a package plan in which the private
corporation .would assume all construction
costs for an incineration facilicy and charge
a disposal fee of $18-22 per ton of trash. As
Cocke Co. is producing about 100 tons of
refuse daily, the cost for incine.ration would
likely be over $100,000 per year.
Steam power from the incineration
plant would be sold to a local industry for
additional profits for the contractor.
Apparently, Resource Recovery
Technology Co. did not mention toxic gases
and heavy metal particulate matter among
the benefits of the plan.
CSI WASTE INCINERATOR
waL BE CLOSED
The county commissioners of
Caldwell Councy announced that they will
close the Caldwell System Inc. (CSI)
hazardous waste incinerator.
There is a major law suit pending
involving the county commissioners,
Caldwell Systems, and several local
ci ti:zens. At issue is the fate of a dairy farmer
located just below the plant who bas
suffered a complete Joss of his business due
to health concerns about his product. Other
local citizens in the neighborhood have
suffered r ashes and burns, and a study
commissio ned by members of the local
chapter of the Western North Caro lina
Alliance uncovered evidence of toxic soot
falling miles away on the 1-40 expressway.
CSI is offe ring an out-of-court
settle ment, whic h is meeting mixed
reactions from local citizens. The company
wants to shut down its operation but use the
site for hazardous waste storage for five
years. Many feel that plan is unacceptable
and want guarantees of verifi able
monitoring written into any agreement.
From WNCA "Issues Update"
available from WNCA; Box 180
~
Asheville, NC 28814
P'
SPRING - 1988
The Origin of the Animals
continued from page IS
plant people. They even learned to hybridi:ze
the plants. By stealing their reproductive
power the humans gained control over the
plant kingdom. They made the plants serve
as human food sources, instead of
cooper ating in serving the plants as
seed-bearers, as it was intended to be.
This is a most dangerous new
development. Hybridization is causing the
disappearance of the str0ng, old varieties
that could reproduce themselves. They are
being replaced by new varieties that,
although they better serve the humans'
immediate purposes, are weak and not able
to stand up to stressful conditions like the
natural varieties. By their desire for control,
the humans are putting themselves in
jeopardy. If their ltost plants cannot swvive
in the world as it changes, then the humans
will perish as well..
The humans also have still not learned
to control their fire. Their powerful nuclear
fire is the most dangerous form yet
discovered. This above all causes the plants
to be concerned about the future of the
world which has been thrown so out
balance by their wayward experiment.
But the story continues. It is not over
yet. There may be other developments in the
evolutionary game.
Who knows? The world may be
returned to the plants. once again. Plants are
more immune to radiation than animals.
They mutate and change in the presence of
radiation; they are not as likely to die and
become extinct. Plants eat sunlight, which is
one fonn of radiation. They may find the
means to utilize other types of radiation.
They are far ahead of the humans in that
respect and may once again become the
masters of the planet
It is obvious from this look at our
history that if we want to fulfill our true
purpose on Earth, we should save seeds and
propagate plants. That is our inborn duty
and one of the most healthy things we can
do for our world.
/
Rediscovering Heirloom Seeds
Janeice Ray
Hybridization has taken the ancient art
of seed-saving away from us. F-1 hybrids
(meaning first filial generation) are a forced
genetic cross between two unalike parents and
exhibit unusual vigor and uniformity. Their
seeds, when grown out, revert back to some
ancestral strain. Hybrids must be re-crossed
year after year by seed companies, so we
become totally dependent upon them for the
basic source of our food.
The uniformity of hybrids produces
vulnerability to crop failure. Hybridization and
the lack of varieties shrinks the genetic base of
our crops, leaving them in a weakened state.
This caused the potato famine In Ireland in the
1840's · the people were growing only a few
varieties of potatoes, which were not blight
resistant, and the country starved when the
disease spread through the fields.
Crop diversity may save us in the future
when we are searching for a gene that may
withstand the environmental problems that our
world faces. Are there varieties that can take
the effects of acid rain? Or of shifting weather
patterns? Some old variety may be the answer,
and we need to keep those gene pools alive.
So I am convinced to buy only standard,
open-pollinated varieties, no matter how
amazing the hybrids sound, and I am learning to
save my own seeds. I buy seeds from small,
family-owned seed companies. Many of the
major companies have been taken over by
huge corporations, usually petrochemical in
nature. The smaller companies with the less
glossy catalogs (most of whJch enoourage seed
independence) need our support. The Graham
Center Seed and Nursery Directory published
by the Rural Advancement Fund is a wonderful
resou rce for localing these seedspeople.
Send a few dollars to:
Rural Advancement Fund
P.O. Box 1029
Pittsboro, NC 27312
I am beginning to plant heirlooms -
vari eties our foreparents grew for generations.
With the advent of seed companies, many of
these were lost, many endangered, and only
now are folks rediscovering them and returning
them to our collective gene pool. The book to
read is Heirloom Gardening by Carolyn Jabs,
and the place to connect with like-minded
people is:
The Seed Savers' Exchang~
Rt. 3, Box 239
Decorah, IA 52101
Here are a few seed companies offering
open-pollinated and traditional varieties:
Johnny's Selected Seeds
Albion, ME 04901
JL. Hudson,Seedsman
P.O. Box 1058
Redwood City, CA 94064
(Catalog: $1 J)())
F/Qating MoUlltain Seeds
P.O. Box 1275
Port Angl!les, WA 98362
forganically-grqwn heirWoms ca1a/og: $1 .00)
BounJiful Gar<kns
5798 Ridgewood Rd.
Willits, CA 95490
(open-pollint1led, untrea1ed)
Southern Exposure Seed Exchange
P.O. Box 158
North Garden, VA 22959
(Caralog: $1 J)())
Peace Seeds
1130 TetJu:row Rd.
Williams, OR 97544
(Caralog: $1 .00)
Seeds Blum
ldalw City Stage
Boise, ID 83707
(1-ltirloom seeds, catalog $2.00)
KATUAH - page 21
�DRUMMING
LETTERS TO KATUAH
Dear Katuah My husband and I own 40+ acres in Kaniah. We have no
children and are concerned about whnt will happen to our
land when we die. We would like 10 sec it prorected, not
subdivided, and used in a way that is kind to the earth hopefully continuing the organic gardening & orcharding we
arc doing, carefully using and preserving the forest land, etc.
Ideally we would also like to sec it benefit people in need. A
lot to ask! If you have any ideas or can refer us to anyone
with solutions for this sort of situation, we would appreciate
it. We don't want to sec the place tied up in such a way as to
be useful to no one.
Thanks for any help you can give us.
Shalom,
Sheila Wofsy
Reggie Lenoir
Rt. 1Box178
Suchcs, GA 30572
Dear Editor,
Someone who did not identify themselves sent me an
unsolicited photocopy of your Fall, 1987 issue of K.i1.iah
containing the article "Smells Like Money To Me" CKiW.i\11
#17 - ed.)
The author presented a corporacc image of the wealth
of the Champion Corporation, however implications in the
article were critical because Haywood County had not
diversified the economy, and because Champion did little to
support quality of life, including this generation of Haywood
County residents. True, the mill is old, and Haywood
County should be offering incentives to keep the industry,
and to assure that better environmental controls arc the goal.
In the meantime, children are threatened by the attitude
of fear and unrest that prevails because their parents,
grandparents, and neighbors are frightened.
If your publication is truly interested in the
bio-technical development of Southern Appalachia, publish
positive approaches about appropriate industrial development
which will match our workforce, our geographical terrain,
our water and sewerage supply, our cultural and ethnic
heritage.
Please include articles 10 which the common man who
has a sense of stewardship for the earth can relates. l am of
Scotch-Irish descent, a daughter of generations of farmers
who valued land. Today I see developers cutting into the
mountains wilhout regard to the sediment which will be
altered and moved into our streams. l see local real estate
developments over-building on fragile land sites. J see that
the larger number of land holders are no longer full time
residents of the county. A land use plan is a critical issue for
Haywood County. An indusrrial recruitment plan would add
balance to the economy.
Yes, I care about poUotion, but try to be
comprehensive in future articles rachcr than singling out our
"greatesc bread basket" in Haywood. r believe a reasonable
solution such as a five-year plan could be implemented.
Sincerely,
Ernestine E. Upchurch
Maggie Valley, NC
Thank you/or your thbughtful reply. - The Editors
Hopefully KJJ.nu11J 1120 will be ofsome help. - Editors
The Stones at Laurel Creek
The stones here are
shoulders and elbows of the lover I
looked for everywhere I travelled
to anive hen:
poking through her
garment of rhododendron, shaped
by the rush of her laughter,
pools of thought
I feel her
enjoying my step best when I step
naked, enjoying it
Like the pause
when the fingers seem to listen to the skin
and forget which name the lover has
and what color the skin,
I bend
to soothe my bands on her tender grain
Through the slow, gigantic
pulse of sun in stone I suddenly
recognize her- "Mother!" (bur even thar
is just a name
She lies
under every itch and movement ofmy f001
and I have only known her
by names-)
- Stephen Wing
KAlUAH - page 22
Awakening
Soft vault of sleep
attended darkness
Quiet folds around me
silence screams
In the midst of pitch
my eyes arc opened
to wondrous views
ineffable
Angel's garments, as white smoke
gently billowing
as they tum
My mouth is opened to kiss
hot coals
burning away mortality
I change
and enter, again, the womb
of infinity
- Diane Yeager
SPRING - 1988
�Dear Katuah -
An idea we have been considering here in Spring
CTCCk is the Community Computer Bulletin Board This is an
interlocking system of computers in users' households that
are connected by telephone lines to a central computer that
stores the messages that folks wa.nt to share with their
neighbors. The networlc could be set up on a local or regional
level.
The system could be used for communication, keeping
records, playing games, word processing, and planning
various projects. The network could coordinate bulk
purchases of commonly-used items like clothing, shoes,
tires, seeds, and fertilizer to obtain substantial discounts.
People could barter, buy and sell, call for help, announce a
baby, share car-pool infonnation.....the list of uses is
endless.
The information on the bulletin board appears on the
individual TV sets or monitors in the users' homes or places
of business. The central computer is located in the home of
the system operator. If desired, the computers could connect
to national and international networks, so the bulletin could
extend all over the world.
If a user had a telephone and a TV set, the minimum
cost to buy a computer would be around $270. The cost of
the central computer and its operation would be shared by the
users.
If any readers are interested in the Community
Computer Bulletin Board idea, please have them contact me.
John Artley
Rt 1, Box 27-A
Hot Springs, NC 28743
(704) 622-7421
Flowers
I'm cleaning up
the inner environment
I'm plowing the fear
to prepare the soil
I'm mixing the elements
to make my hean fertile
rm weeding the hun
4:00 A.M.
Grandmother moon
is caught in the branches
of the tulip tree.
My husband's arm
is around me.
She calls out her longing.
We hold the crystal aloft
and catch her Light
in its center.
This moment is Forever.
Our moccasins
lie still
Upon the flintstone.
to care for the love
I'm coming up flowers
- Colleen Redman
SPRING - 1988
- Rose Morningstar
Bryson City, NC
Drawings by Kore Loy McWhiner
KATI IAH - oa2e 23
�continued from page 5
From The Perelandra Garden Workbook:
Deva of Soil
When Jmmans open a garden, any garden, a note is
sounded within the devic level. One mustn.'tforget that a
garden is a man.made invention. Therefore, the sounding
of the note indicating that one is w be created must come
from humans. When such a thing occurs, 1he devic level
immediately responds by creating the numerous energy
units which will even.tually be grounded into form.
When a human sounds the note with the intent to
work in co-creative partnership with devas and n.ature
spirits, that note is very different in sound, quality, and
vibration. If I were w use an orchestra as an example, I
would say that in the case of the ordin.ary garden, the
note sounded would be that of one instrument. Add to it
the intent to co-create the garden with nature itself, and
one would suddenly hear a full orchestra sounding a
deep and vibran.t multi-levelled chord.
Nawre, on all its levels, will respon.d in kind. The
various energy units we on the devic level create when
the single note is heard is very different from the units
we create when the full orchestra is sounded. So from
the instant you sound the note with the more expanded
intent, you will set off creation and movement on a far
grander scale.
As Machaelle's relationship with the garden grew,
she found herself appreciating the quallity and integrity
of the relationship itself as much as the fruits and
vegetables produced.
From The Perela11dra Garden Workbook:
Deva ofthe Pere/andra Garden
The physical planting process of a garden is not the
primary issue. What is of utmost importance is attitude
and i111ent...
I have specifically chosen dance (as metaphor for the
garden)for in order w parricipatefully within dance, one
must lift his spirit, center his senses.focus his thoughts in essence, he must strike an attitude that will allow him
to hear the mu.sic all the way into his soul and move in
accordance to that music. It is this attimde I wish to
convey for one who wishes to move into the garden in
harmony with what is happening there....
...Through (your mind and heart), the music will
1nove an.d you will naturally move with ~t both within
and outside yourself. And you will be most surprised at
the ease and grace in which you. your tools, and your
young plants and seeds join in effortless movement.
...My experience in the harvesting process has been
to sense joy and celebration for a job well done. At
special times, I can feel all of nature around me, on its
various levels, literally celebrate not just the health and
balance of the garden, but the resulting incredible
production as well. When I approach gardening, it is
with my sights set on creating a bala111ced, healthful
environment. I don't consider production. That
automatically takes care of itself. So there is always a
moment of happy surprise on my part when 1 realize the
green bean row has produced a whole slew of beans. It
may sound terribly naive, but I think this probably
illusttates best how changed my thoughts, focus and
intent are around gardening.
The larger issue of humankind's relationship with
nature is a central theme in the messages Machaelle
receives from the devas. It is in her garden that the
macrocosm becomes revealed by the microcosm.
KATUAH - page 24
Photographs by Clarence Wright
The devic messages address the importance of
reverence for life in the Perelandra garden as well as
the importance of reverence for all of life. Machaelle's
sensitivity and attention to the Perelandra garden opens
up for her a "window" on the needs and cures for the
whole planet.
Machaelle Small Wright's journey to the center of
her garden was a long one. The first half of her
autobiographical work, Behaving, recalls a childhood
of intense pain and trauma. Yet the chaos of events,
memories, and feelings has now become a sensible
whole.
Through her garden, the healing of herself and of
the land has become a single and continual process. It is
in her garden that Machaelle has taken the opportunity
to interact in a daily, conscious way with the dynamic
energies present there. Through her works, she offers
us the inspiration and encouragement t_o begin the
endeavor ourselves.
From Tiie Perela11dr0: Garden Workbook:
...The Perelandra garden is my life, my. heart aoo .
my very breath. It is my friend, my healer, my nurturer
and teacher - about myself, my planet and my unjverse ...
.. .It has taught me about power - my own and that
which is contained in all life around me. About equality.
About balance. About teamwork on a peer level...
... And it has taught me that we are a vibrant, active
planet fully participating in a larger, loving whole. /
Excerp<s rq>rinJedfrom The Pcrclandra Garden Workbook with f"m1issit111.
Machaelle Small Wriglu has just completed her third book, eniitled
Flower Essences: Reordering Our Understanding and
Approach to Illness and Health. It will be available in June 1988.
Gardening workshops and an annual open house are held at
Perelandra during the summer and early fall. For schedules and infomlillion
or to order any of Macluulle's books. meditation tapes orflower essences,
write 10: Perelandra, Box 136. Jefferson/on. VA 22724.
Excerpts selected by Christina Morrison with Mamie Mui/er
and Sam Gray assisting.
SPRING - 1988
�The
true art
of dancing
is
dancing what
comes out and not
following the rules.
Dancing
ho~ you want.
Because if you
follow rules
your soul
will never
get to show you
the dance you've
known ever since
you were born.
- Emily
1dance within myself
And look without
Joy within
Sadness without
Music within
Silence without
Lying on my bed
Waiting for morning to come
The moon sings to me
About the sun
Words by Emily Turner, age 6 with
Drawings by Amelia Brommer, age 8
SPRING - 1988
KATIJAH - page 25
�900€£ me€£i.ci.ne
continued from 1>3ge 16
What people call "visualii.ation" today
is a fonn of conjuring. People can visualiu:
a healing and by putting their collective
energy behind it and getting some sense of
how it fits in with the all, they can "push it
with power."
It is best not to try to visualize a
specific end to a situation, because that
limits lhe possibilities. Also, things seldom
tum out the way we plan. It is bes1 10
visualiu: a return to balance and hannony
and to encourage the awareness that the
lives of all things are interrelated. However,
I do see anything lhat works against the Life
Force as a whole as being negative and evil.
Nuclear arms and nuclear power, for
instance, appear to be destructive forces as
far as l can see. They seem like something
we can gel along without.
The human species is a high
consciousness, bu1 a1 the same time 1he
human race is a cancerous cell that is trying
to diges1 its host, the Greater Life. Yet
people on the spiritual path are always
searching for the connection to the whole.
As individuals 1hey realize their separation,
and they are searching for that connection
with every part of every cell from the
marrow of their bones outward.
One of the greatest blocks for us
.humans is our intellect. lt is self-defeating to
try to comprehend the universe with the
intellect, for it is not designed to
comprehend the whole. Being in a linear,
critical culture as we are makes it even more
difficult. Not impossible, but certainly more
difficulL It leads us to try to understand the
whole by adding up all of the parts. But the
whole is greater than 1he sum of its parts.
Organ ic Gr owin g Coop e rotiue
The Organic Gardening Cooperative
of Western North Carolina was started in
the early spring of 1987. A small group of
enthusiastic people came together 10
promote the merits of organic gardening and
fanning and the health and life-giving value
of organically-raised food. Meetings are at
Unity of Arden on Airport Road. The
cooperative meets the third Monday evening
of each month. There is time for sharing at
6:30 pm and a meeting at 7:00 pm.
The name "cooperative" was chosen,
because the group wished 10 create an open
forum for sharing experience, infonnation,
resources, and projects. There is a steering
committee that plans and coordinates the
meetings and other activi1ies. 01her
commiuees take on the tasks of a newsletter,
education, publicity, and telephoning. These
committees are volunteer efforts, and new
participants are always welcome. Th~ are
no dues. A small voluntary donation per
meeting helps to cover expenses.
The cooperative's meetings offer an
array of interesting activities such as songs
and music about gardening and nature; an
educational program with speakers, films,
slide shows, etc; a short nutritional update;
news on environmental issues; and a time
for sharing among the group. The main
topic of each program usually pertains to
gardening ac1ivities appropriate for that
month of the year, such as composting, soil
preparation, seed starting, etc. A varied
program is designed to meet the needs of
beginning gardeners as well as the
experienced ones in the group. There are
presentations of resources like magazines,
seed catalogs. extra seeds and produce, and
group seed or narural fenilizer orders. Glass
(clear and colored) and aluminum are
collected for recycling at each meeting.
We who are active in the cooperative
feel it is an exciting opportunity to
encourage each other and the public at large
to learn how to live in harmony with the
Earth and to produce quality food, which
will make us all more healthy and happy.
We invite newcomers to come and
participate at the meetings. Together we can
create rewarding adventures in learning and
"growing!"
- Ellen John
For more information about the
Organic Gartkning CooperaJjve, call Cheryl
Stippich a1(704)687-1741.
Herbology
Clinic
M. C. Majebe
Licensed Acupuncturist
78 E.ast Chestnut St. Ashevllle, NC 28801
(704) 258-9016
KATUAH - page 26
• conlinucd Crom JlliC 9
Dr. Gray soon arrived in Statesville
bringing several eminent botanists. Dr.
Gray had been misled by Miclraux's
description of the habitaJ of slwrtia. ltistead
of the moun1ain tops where he Juul always
looked, it Juul been found along a stream in
the foothills. Michaux's directions had been
fairly specific, bw his continual references
to the "high mountains" misled Gray, the
botany detective. Shorria, the mystery
flower of the mountains, soon became so
famous that pressed specimens of a single
plaru were selling/or fifty dollars.
SJwrtia makes a good grour1d-cover
under rhododer1drons. It needs a shady sire
with an acid soil rich in humus, plemy of
water, and regular mulching with oflk
leaves. It spreads mostly by runners, and
grows in luxuriant, dense colonies where
conditions are to its liking. Its delicate white
flowers lost for several days. It is one ofthe
most coveted plants of any wild flower
garden.
A collector has written, "No idea of
the beauty of this planI can be formed unJil it
hos been seen in its native Jwme. The mass
of glossy green and white, once seer1, car1
never be forgotten." It was never Gray's
privilege to see shortia at the height of its
blooming period, which is the latter part of
March into early April.
Of the 25,000 botanical specimens
that Gray classified before he died, Gray
asked that shortia cover his grave at
Cambridge, Massachusetts. In Gray's life,
many honors had come to him, but they
were os naughl compared to the discovery
ofthe little mountain pla111 thal Dr. Asa Gray
named shortia.
The mystery plant, sJwrtia, lost/or a
hundred years, because ofits limited narural
distribution, is probably to be found
growing more in culdvarion now than in the
~ild. This is especially significant today
because of the destruction of much of
shortia's native habiuu in North and Sowh
Carolina due to artificial lake construction.
Rtprinltd from the Noah Carolina Native
p(o111 Proaagqljon Handbook prepared by the North
Carolina Wild Flower Prtsuvalion Sociery (Tollen
Chinese
Acupuncture
and
sh.ot"tta
Garlkn Centtr 3375; University ofNorth Cmolina;
Chapel Hiil, NC 27599 - $5.00 ppd.) /
Natural Food Store
& Dell
160 Bro.ctway
Ashevllle, NC 28801
Whlf-e llroadwmy n..ia
MlrTlmon Ave I. ~240
OPEN 7 DAYS A WE. K
E
Mond•y·Salurday: 9am·8pm
Sunday: 1pm-Spm
(704) 253-7656
DE_51GNS
by Rob Messick
Illustration & Design
In Pen & Ink and Colored Pencil
P.O . 8o)( 260t . eoone. NC 28U07 • (704J7a4 tiOQ7'
SPRING - 1988
�· continued from page 12
K: How d o you think people first
determined how to use herbs?
G: The first herbs that were used were the
leaves of the Tree of Life in the Garden of
Eden. And we'll never find the fountain of
youth until we get the Garden of Eden back
and get back to the Tree of Life.
K: Until we get back in touch with nature?
G: No, back to the Tree of Life. God took
that to heaven before the flood. And when
he makes this earth new again he's going to
bring it back. And when we see the Garden
of Eden we'll see herbs as they're s'posed
to be.
K : Do you think this will be a sudden
occurence or will it be a gradual awakening
of God, and now Satan's walking up and
down, to and fro on the earth. You see, this
battle isn't something done in a comer; this
earth is the theatre of God's love. God had
to let us tear things up and let things go
because our natures won't accept the truth
otherwise.
Are you passing your knowledge on to
them? Are they receptive?
G: No young people are interested like I
was when I was young. Some are interested
and could learn, but they're all afraid of
being tied down. They're interested when
they feel like it, but when they don't feel
like it they don't want to be bothered.
K: Do you know when your book will be
out or what you11 call it?
G: When there are enough people that will
G: No, I don't. I was held up all summer
be true to God then Christ will come. Think
how all this time the angels have tried to
help people to think of these things and do
what's right Still we go on in our lives and
don't study, don't stop to read what God's
given us. And just look what a mess we've
made. Think of the Garden of Eden - the
beautiful flowers and trees - and then loolc at
that hillside over there (points to trailer park
across road) ... all the death and dying. Of
course there's still a lot of beauty here...
Satan tried his best to get Christ to give
up and not go through with his plan of
salvation, but He stuck to it and proved that
God's truth could be followed. Adam sold
out because he chose to obey Satan instead
with my eyes - couldn't see to read. And
many days like today are holding me
baclc...(laughs). [While talking to us,
Granny gracefully received five patients and
several phone calls. We arrived at 10 a.m.
and by 5 p.m. she hadn't paused once.]
K: Thanks so much for your time and
energy! We both have personal questions
but they can wait 'til another day.
G: Oh, I can help you now - would you
like that?
K: Sure, but you must be tired...
COMF TOlHf
FOR
Drcamwcaver l!Boomllcn:
Books and Tapes by Mall and Special
Order. Metaphysics, Comparative Religion,
Psychology, Children and Women' s
Studies. New Age Music. Call Barbara,
(912) 233--5934 for Info.
NEW AGE SEMI NARS
\llHOLISTIC lf[ALTH
RETRf;ATS
&md fnr our Ire,.. bcuchurtr:
L.1.F. E. • Bo• 144K
Pullmon WV 26421
(.1041 t.5?·319:1
'Living In Full E nergy
K : Everything!
REMEDIES
K: What about your great-grandchildren?
among people?
l.l.F.E. RETREAT
CENTER
G: What have I been doing?
Cockleburr and Mullein cold remedy:
A large handful each of cocldebuns and mullein
leaves to 2 qts waJtt. Boil 20 minutes. Suain well
and drink. Burrs and leaves can be used a 2nd time
with 2 more quarts waier boiled 20 minutes again.
Mar l&old tin cture for lice:
Chop marigold blossoms fine. Cover with rubbing
alcohol in glass jar. Sel in sun for 2 wect.s, stirring
once each day. Strain and boWe.
MislldOt tea
For lal&b blood pressure: 1 Tbsp crushed
mislleioe leaves 10 1 qt cold water. Shake and let
Slalld ovcmighL Strain and drink 1(2 cup before
breakfast; 1/2 cup after brealdasL Repeat wilh
supper.
Mlstlttc>t tea
For epilepsy or Stizuns: Pour 1 pint boiling
water over l Tbsp crushed leaves. Take 2 Tbsp.
every 2 boors.
Poktbtrry artbrlt.ls remedy:
Take one berry at each meal the lst day, 2 at each
meal the 2nd, 3 the 3rd and so on for 8 days. Then
drop back to one berry again and begin climbing
back up IO 8. Continue until joints feel free. Then
drop back one berry per meat 8-7-6-5, until you're
baclc to ooe, and quit
mtl&n
WEEKLY CRAFTS COURSES
~
Woodcarving,We aving,
Blacksmithing,Basketry,
Pottery,Spinning,etc.
John C. Campbell Folk School
Brasstown, NC 28902
(704) 837-2775 o r 837-7329
T-SHIRTS, SWEATSHIRTS
For ADULTS and CHILDREN
15 ORIGINAL
HAND·PRINTED
NATURE DESIGNS
,_.'?
ULTRAVIOLET l'UNFICATIOH AHO FILTENNG SYSTalS
SOI.AR PflOOUCTS ·WATER ANALYSIS
.HWY. 107
EACH COLORFUL
DE.SIGN IS
RT. 88 BOX 125
CULLOWHEE, NC 28723
PRIN'IED ON
QUALITY T' s
Alill SWEA'IS
APPALACIDAN BUILDING
& DESIGN
Passive Solar,
Eartlt-Shellered Homes
Greenhouses, Spas,
Decks
SCOTI BIRD
(704) 683·1414
GREG BLACK
683-4795
SPRING - 1988
KATUAH - page 27
�MARCH
20
evenrs
SPRING EQUINOX
23-24
ASHEVILLE, NC
Rhythm Alive! Classes in African
drumming with Martha Overlock and Dean
Buchan:ln. Ongoing. Wed and Thu evenings, 7: l S al
Asheville Academy of BallcL Call (704) 645~
16
canoes.
New Moon
CULLOWHEE, NC
Tuckaseegee River Cleanup. Rllfts,
kayaks. Mcct 11 am. 227-7206 for more
info.
14-15
GREAT SMOKY MT'NS.
Spring WildOower Pilgrimage. Auto,
wal.lcing tours lO view plants and birds of the
Smokies. SS. Call (615) 436-1257.
27-29
24
ASHEVILLE, NC
Sierra Club meeting. Spcllkcr Bill
Thomas, "TheJocasse WatcrShed" with slides. 7:30.
Unitarian Univcrsalist Church, Edwin Pl. and
Oiarloue.
25-27
WAYNESV ILLE, NC
"Vibrational Healing" with Joyce
Keane. "Flowers arc the highest vibratory
expression in the vegetable kingdom." Lc:im to use
Oower essences - gentle, yet powerful. $20.
Stil-Light Center; Rt. I, Box 326: 28786. (704)
452-4569.
26
ASHEVILLE, NC
The Paul Winter Consort,
"Celebration of Creation." Central Methodist
Church. Tickets $10.SO at Malaprop's.
and meditation with Fr. John Groff. SSS.Southern
Dharma Foundation; RL I, Box 34-H; Hot Springs,
NC28743.
29-30 & T ANASJ RIDGE
MAY I Come to X.~.'TU.~K SJ>1t1.N<l
(l.~'JKE1t1.Nlll Worlcshops, waterfall, crystals,
mountain meadows. Join the family circle! (Sec ad
next page.)
30
BELTANE (MAY EVE)
ROANOKE, VA
Sixth Annual New Horizons Festival
of alternative healing and lifestyles at Roanoke
Civic Center. Pre-register. S26.00.
TRENTON, GA
Caving Expedition with Snow Be:ir.
Learn safety, techniQue, geology.Camping at
Cloudlaad Canyoo. f.quipmem provided. Sec sn.s.
IS
New Moon
BLACK MOUNTAIN, NC
The Black Mountain Music Festival.
Taj Mahal, Rare Air, Robin and Linda Williams,
Elise Win and the Small Family Band, Fred
Armstrong-Park, and more will be there.
Pre-register: $35 for the weekend. For more info,
ctll Gray Eagle and Friends, (704) 669-2456.
20-22
20-22
WAYNESVILL E, NC
"Therapeutic Touch" • using hands to
direct human energies in healing with Maria
Parisen. SLil-Light Sec 3(25-27.
WILLIS, VA
"Finding Our Place.• Developing a
deeper relatiooship with the land and the spirilS who
dwell there. Brian Ellis. Pre-rcgisler. $85. Indian
Valley Holistic Center. Sec 4/8-10.
28-29
APRIL
31
2
Full Moon
CELO, NC
Full Moon Drumming Celebration al
Mountain Gardens. Call (704) 675-5664 for more
info. ONGOING.
Full Moon ("Blue Moon")
JUNE
1·30
3
CHEROKEE, NC
"Cherokee Concepts of Birth and
DcBlh" art exhibit on display al Cherolcee Hcriwge
Museum and Gallery.
EASTER SUNDAY
8-10
WILLIS, VA
"lmaginccring Ourselves and the
Crystal Planet." Exploring Earth energies with
Mary and Joseph Jochmans. Pre-register: $95.
Indian Valley Holistic Center; Rt. 2, Box 58;
Willis, VA. (404) 789-4295.
APPALACH IAN TRAIL
Trail work. Bring gloves. Call
Thelbett Dowdy, (704) 684-3053 for dcUlils.
4
MAY
9
9
BLACK MT'N., NC
David Wilcox, singer and songwriter
Bl McDibbs'. $4. Sec 3(l2.
9-10
ATLANTA, GA
Shamanic Jowney, Power and Healing
workshop. $100. Call Barbara Hmison, (9 12)
233-5934.
HELEN, GA
EARTHSKILLS WORKSHOP Lc:im
old ways, a new awattllCSS of the woods with Snow
Bear, Darry Wood, and EUSUllCe Conway. For more
info, call (404) 878-2201.
GREAT SMOKY MT'NS.
"Forests and Trees or the Smokies."
Pre-register: $25. Smoky Mountain Field School;
Univ. of TN: 2016 Lake Ave; Knoxville, TN
37996.
F ull Moon
GREAT SMOKY MT'NS.
•A Historical Perspective of the Great
Smoky Mountains NP." Natural and human history
of the Park with Wilma Dykeman. Pre-register:
$25. See 6/4.
!!
1-31
ASHEVILLE, NC
Robert Johnson's paintings on exhibit
t the Asheville An Museum. One of the main
themes that runs through his work is the
tionsbip between the inner world of dreams and
visions and the world of Natwe.
He has lived in the Cclo Community near
o, NC for the past 16 years and the Katuah
ioregion has had a strong innuencc on his worlc. %
o Community. Burnsville, NC 28714.
lS-16
14
15-19
HIGHLANDS, NC
"Meianora• with Walter Chappell.
Recording the ethcric image or local nora. $250
includes accommodations.Highlands Biological
Center. P.O. Drawer 580; Higblllnds, NC 28741.
WILLIS, VA
"HEALING WISE • an Herbal
Medicine Intensive.• Work with botanical
medicines, spirit healing, body systems, and
self-love with herbal healer Susun Weed.
Pre-register: S9S. Indian Valley Holistic CenlCr. Sec
-4/8-10.
KATUAH - page 28
CHEROKEE, NC
"The Eagle Dancer." exhibit or the
worlc or carver John Julius Wilnoty on display at
Cherokee Heritage Museum and Gallery.
17-19
7-8
IS-17
New Moon
1-31
17-19
FARNER, TN
"Wild Foods and Medicines• taught by
Sn.ow Bear. Peppcrland Farm Camp; Swr Rt;
Farner, TN 37333. (704) 494-2353.
13-15
HOT SPRINGS, NC
"The Mystic Journey
Rc1tc~11·
- talks
BOT SJ>RINGS, NC
"A Rinz.ai Zen Retreat" with Sandy
Stewart. Pre-register: SSS. Sec 5/13-15.
WAYNESVILLE, NC
Workshop: "Fundamentals of the
Ancient Wisdom.· Esoteric philosophy with Ed and
Mary Abdill. Pre-register: S20. Stil-Light. Sec
3(}.S-27.
20
SUMMER SOLSTICE
..
SPRING - 1988
�KATUAH JOURNAL is beginning
compilation of a regional directory... a
GREEN PAGES of political, food,
environmental, clothing, arts and
crafts, shelter, healing, and other basic
resources in the Katuah bioregional
province. Listings will be free. If you or
your group would like to enter a listing
( including a brief description ) in these
or any other categories, please send
to:
KatUah Journal
P.O. Box638
Leicester, NC 28748
The International 4th World
Assembly wilJ 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 about their own
lives. The theme this year is "Community
Economics As If the Earth Mattered".
Registration is open to all. Full conference
fee including meals, lodging and
proceedings is $150. ($130 before June 1).
For more info: School of Living, 7th
assembly; 3030 Sleepy Hollow Rd, Falls
Church, VA 22042.
News Flash!
Environmentalist in NC
Governor's Race
NABCID
The third North American
Bloregiolllll Congress will be
held in the bioregion ofthe Ish
River Confluenc-e, north or
Vancouver, British Columbia. It
will be held August 21·26, 1988.
NABC I ('84) and NABC II
('86) brought together local and
regional peoples from all over
Turtle Island to celebrate and
work towards preservln& the
spiritual, environmental and
cultural diversily or this
precious continent. NABC Ill
will continue lhis work and
discover other ways to cooperale
in this way.
Katuah has been represented
at these congressings. If you
are Interested In participatin&
in this upcoming coneress,
please contact KaJilah, P.O. Box
638, uicttter, NC 28748 or
write to: NABC m, Box 1012,
Lillooet, BC, VOK lVO, Canada.
... Avram Friedman (Bruce A.
Friedman) announces his candidacy
for Governor of the state of North
Carolina...
As director of the NC Political Action
Committee to Dump the Co~act. Avram had
been looking lor candidates for all the NC state
offices who oppose NC's membership In the
Southeast Low Level Radioactive Waste
Compact. Because there was no gubernatorial
or lieutenant gubernatorial candidate who was
In favor of withdrawing from the compact, he
began a statewide search to enlist a candidate
for governor. Because he found no one who
would be willing, he registered himself as a
democratic candidate right ahead of the
deadline.
He Is basing his gubernatorial campaign
specifically on getting NC out of the Compact
although he stresses there are many more
related Issues including NC's economy and its
future.
For more information, w rite: CCNW, P.O. Box
653, Dillsboro, NC 28725
on the Tanasl Ridge, near Blue Ridge Parkway
'.F'rtday - Sunday, A.priL 29-'.M.a.y 1
Wor~nops:
Nati.ve Crysta.Cs
Kerb f"ora.91..n<J
Women 's Ci.rcCe
The ftiorecJional Poet
Commu.ni.ty
nowsi.n<_J ... and: others
..USo: M.eadows, Waterf~ . M.usic,
Dancl.tuJ, & Drummi.tuJ
and
Cdebratl.on of the first of ttay
wUh MoypoCe, Dc:mc1.!19 !o S""e4 Ckc;C.e
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------Tent or RV Camping
Bring your shelter, bedding and utensils.
Bring clothing for all weather conditions.
Friday night potluck
Other meals community cooking,
with food provided
Name:_______________________________
Address:_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ __
Phone: L_)_ _ _ _ __
Number of Adults_ _ _ _ __
Number of Children_________
SPRING· 1988
$15/adult before April15
$1 O/child before April 15
$17/ adult at camp
$121 child at camp
Mail to: Karen Rodriguez
U.S. 19W, Box481
Bryson City, NC
Katuah Province 28713
KAnJAH · page 29
�PEPPERl.AND FARM CAMP - a unique summer
camp experience for child!Cn 6-16 years. Adventure
trips, riding, Indian lore, swimming, more.
Delicious vegetarian meals - special diets
accomodatcd. Also seeking counsellors and staff.
For info: Pepperland Farm Camp; Star Route:
Farner, TN 37333 (704) 494-2353
STIL-LIGHT THEOSOPHICAL RETREAT
CENTER - a quiet space for petSOnal meditation,
group interacti. n through study and community
o
work. and spiritual seminars. Contact Leon Frankel;
RL l, Box 326; Waynesville, NC 28786
RM DESIGNS - I use the media of pencils, colored
pencils, gouache, pen and ink, and pholOgraphy in
creating unique fine and grafick an. l can make
diagrams, logos, finished prints, and designs for
brochwes, calenders, cards, books, ete. Mandalas and
symbols are my tendancy among other styles.
Coo tact Rob Messick (704) 754-6097.
ALTERNATIVE JUNIOR HIGH SCHOOL - Al
Arthur Morgan School students and staff learn
t0gether by living in community. Curriculum
includes creative academics, group decision-making,
a worlc program, service projects, extensive field
trips, cballcnging outdoor experiences. Write: 1901
Hannah Branch Rd.; Burnsville, NC 28714 (704)
675-4262
SEEDS FOR SALE - organically grown lurfa
sponge, purple globe amaranth, Mexican sunflower,
bushel basket gourd, garlic chives, holy basil SJ/pkt. w/SASE. Velvet beans, jack bean - S2/pkL
w/SASE lO Janeice Ray; RL. I Box 188-H; Quincy,
FL 32351
SIX RURAL COMMUNITIES - established over
lhe last 20 years, invite visitors/members.
Nonsexist, Nonracist, genlie cullUres based on
equality and cooperation. Write (SI appreciated):
Federation ofEgalitarian Communities; Twin Oaks,
KH8; Louisa, VA 23093
FREE CATALOG - Our books cover solar energy,
natural foods, metaphysics, fiction and poetry. The
latest project is Black Mountain Review, with
themes on the individual vs. society. Write: Lorien
House; P.O. Box 1112; Black Mountain, NC 28711
(704) 669-621 l.
KA1UAH- page 30
HAND CARVED WOODSPIRITS. mystical
hilting staffs and wall hangings by Steve Duncan.
For brochure, please write Wippoorwill Studio; RL
4, Box 981; Marion, NC 28752.
SOCIAL ECOLOGY SUMMER SEMESTER June 10 lO July 24. For more information call (802)
454-8493, or write: Institute For Social Ecology;
P.O. Box 89, DepL K; Plainfield. VT 05667
CENTER FOR ROBERT BLY STUDIES - Ally
Press is now maintaining a mailing list for people
who would like lO be informed of Robert Bly's
workshop and reading sciledules. An updated listing
is sent out twice a year along with a catalog of all
available books and tapes. Please write Ally Press;
Box K; 524 Orleans SL; SL Paul, MN 55107
1988 SUMMER WORKSHOPS at the Penny
Royal Center (Winged Heart Homestead) by Sufi
teacher Muzawir. How to prepare spiritually for
Earth Changes, How to build a no mortgage shelter
and much more. Send SASE lO P.O. Box 552;
Floyd. VA 24091
TEACHER NEEDED: Alternative, parent-governed
elementary (K-6), set in Monongahela National
ForesL Send resume lO Valley School; P.O. Box
83; Elkins, WV 26241.
DRUMS • Custom handcrafted ceramic dumbecks &
wooden medicine drums. CaU Joe Roberts at (704}
258-1038 or write to: 738 Town Mountain Rd.;
Asheville, NC 28804.
REVERSE OSMOSIS WATER PURIFICATION better than dislillers. To find out why write New
Energy Products; 660 K SL; Pullman, WV 26421
BLIGHT RESISTANT CHESTNUT - hybrid
American/Chinese Dunstan Chestnut trees - bliglht
resistant, timber growth form, productive orchard
crop with large, sweet, easily peeled nuts. Chestnut
Hill Nursery; RL 1 Box 341K; Alachua, FL 32615
(904) 462-2820.
NA1lVE AMERICAN MEDICINAL PRODUCfS:
white sage, cedar, sweet grass, k:innikinnick and
more. Please specify your needs and send SASE lO:
Good Medicine; 77 Parle Terrace East, D38; New
York, NY 10034 (212) 304-9605.
M. TREE DESIGNS: Illustrations and design
Beyond the pages of this journal, I work in pencil,
colored pencil, ink, cut paper, and batik. Fine and
graphic art to express and enhance our lives. Logos,
brochures, books, portraiture, window and wall
hangings. Cont.act Martha Tree (704) 754-6097.
HANDWOVEN WOOL BLANKETS - inexpensive,
from Mexico. Federation of Christian Cooperatives;
P.O. Box 120154; San AnlOnio, TX 78212
LETT'ERS OF FRlENDSHIP AND SUPPORT
would be appreciated by incarcerated brother. Write
t0: Rick Whilalcer #85670; Box 2000; Wartburg,
TN37887
WANTED: IDEAL SPACE FOR RURAL
COMMUNITY/HEALING CENTER. 50 - 150
acres, at least 30 arable, with southern exposure,
privacy, within 45 min. of Asheville or equivalent
urban center. One large house and several cabins
preferred. StteamS, springs, river, lalcc? Finder's fee.
Write Hibiscus; 521 Northeast Blvd.; Gainesville,
FL 32601 or call collect (904) 376-2146.
GARDENERS are encouraged lO visit our Paradise
garden for instruction and inspiration (free) and/or
pereMial plant sale (cheap). Artists are invited 10
come and create in the garden - painting, drawing
and photography are encouraged. We also bnvc a
cabin available in exchange for working in lhe
garden. Mountain Gardens; 3020 While Oak Creek;
Celo, NC 28714 (704) 675-5664
"TREASURES IN THE STREAM" - a cassette tape
of songs by Bob Avery-Grubel. $10 postpaid to Bob
at RL 1 Box 735; Floyd, VA 24091
ALTERNATIVE COMMUNITY NOW FORMING
in the mountains of north Georgia. Join others
seeking greater cooperation and self-sufficiency.
Based on spiritual and ecological values. Propeny is
now available. (404) 778-8754
'ESSENCE' - the all-one skin - dress - jumper pantaloons with nursing pockets. Earthwear; RD 1,
Box 75-Cl; CarllOn, PA 16311
WOMANSONG - ongoing choral group forming.
Songs of beauty, meaning, spirit, fun, peace,
cooperation, sisterhood. Come and sing! Monday
evenings 7:30 - 9. Also Orff Schulwerk:
music-making for beginners of aU ages. Come and
sec the studio! CaU (704) 254-7()68
WANTED - LAND in western NC. Family seeks 5
or more acres, preferably near Cullowhee, 10
preserve and eventually inhabiL If you have or know
of affordable land, contacl Bob & Mary Davis; 213
Westmoreland Cowt: Georgetown, KY 40324 (502}
863-4267.
WISCONSIN RENAISSANCE FAIRE - 2-story
shop for sale or renL Weekends July 9 - Aug. 21.
Excellent location with sales and living space. Write
or call Becky Farnam; RL 1: Check, VA 24072
(703) 651-6170
WEBWORKING is.free.
Send submissions to:
K.a.IW.
P.O. Box 638
Leicester, NC
Kaulah Province 28748
SPRING - 1988
�I
Comt.n«J Up . . .
Mtdfrfn,.. Allfts
The Katuall Journal wants to communicare your thoughts and feelings to the
other people in the bioregional province. Send them to LIS as letters, poems, stories,
arricles, drawings, or photographs, etc. Please send your co111ribwions to u.s at: Katuah
Jo11r11al, P. 0. Box 638, Leicester, NC, Katuah Province 28748.
The summer issue of Katiiah will concern itself with "Our Relations with the
Land" ...our effect on the land, new forms of relating, visions of our fumre habitat, and
other perspectives.
In the fall, Katuah will look at Castanea dentata, tile American cliestnut
tree. Any information abo1a this great tree's past andfmure will be welcome.
BACK ISSUES OF KATUAH AVAILABLE
ISSUE ELEVEN · SPRING 1986
Community Planning
Cities and the
Bioregional Vision • Recycling • Community
Gardening· Floyd Couruy. VA • Guohol •
Two BIORgional Views • Nuel- Supplemau
Foxfire GllllCS ·Good Medicine: Visions
ISSUE THREE · SPRING 1984
Sustainable Aj!ricuhure · Sunflowers - Human
Impact on the Forest • Cllildrens' Education
Veronica Nicholas:Woman in Politics· Ullle
Ptopl.e . Medicine Albea
ISSUE FOUR - SUMMER 1984
Water Drwn • Waiu Quality • Kudzu • Solu
Eclipse· C~tling ·Trout ·Going IO W1.1U
Ram Pumps. Microhydro · Poems: Bennie
Lee Sinclair, Jim Wayne Miller
full rolor
T-s61rts
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 splritual barrier and exist yet In the
world as we know fl. These beings are called
with reverence •grandfathers·. And of them,
the strongest are Kanai/, the lightning, the
power of the sky; Utsa'nati, the rattlesnake.
who personifies the power of the earth plane;
and Yunwi Usdi. ihe little man", as ginseng is
called in the sacred ceremonies. who draws up
power from the underworld.
Each Is the strongest power in Its o wn
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 t he
Appalachian Mountains.
The medicine powers of Kawah have been
depicted in a striking T-shirt design by Ibby
Kenna. Printed In 5-color silkscreen by
Ridgerunner Naturals on top quality, a/I-cotton
shirts, they are available now in ail adult sizes
from the Katiiah Joumsl.
"To show respect for this supernatural trinity
of the natural world is to in tum become an ally
in the continuing process of maintaining
harmony and balance here in the mountains of
KatUah."
To order. use the form be/Ow.
ISSUE TIURTEEN - Fall 1986
Ccnicr For Awakening • Elizabeth Callari ·A
Gentle Death • Hospice • Ernest Morgan •
Dealing Creatively with Death • Home Burial
Box • The Wake • The Raven Mocker •
Woodslore and Wildwoods Wisdom • Good
Medicine: The SWeat Lodp
ISSUE FIVE • FALL 1984
Hatvest ·Old Ways in Cherokee - Ginseng Nucleu Waste • Our Celtic Heritage •
Bioregionalism: Put. Present. and Future •
John Wilnoty • Healing Dukness • Politics or
Plttiaipation
ISSUE SIX-WINTER 1984·85
Winia Solstice Earth Cuemony • Horsepas1ur•
River - Coming or the Uaht • Log ~in
Root• • Mounl&in AgricullW'C: The Right Crop
• W"tll.i.IJn Taylor· The Furore or the foiat
ISSUE SEVEN • SPRING 1985
Sustainable Eco~ics . Hot Springs ·Worker
Ownership • The Great Economy • Self Help
Credit Union • Wild Turkey • Responsible
Investing • Woriting in Iha Wab of Ll!e
ISSUE EIGIIT ·SUMMER 198S
Celebration: A Way or Ufe • Katuah 18,000
Ycan Ago • Sacred Sites • Folk Aru in the
Schools • Sun Cycle/Moon Cycle • Poems:
Hilda Downer • Chciokee Hcri• Cenu:r •
Who Owns Appalachia?
ISSUE NINE- FALL 198S
The Waldee Forest • The Trees Speak •
Migating Foresll • Horse Logaing • SW1lng a
Tree Crop - Urban Trees • Acom Bread - Mylh
lllllC
'
ISSUE FOURTEEN· Winlef 1986-87
Uoyd Cul Owle • Boogcrs and Mummen • All
Species Day • Cabin Fever University •
Homeless in Katuah • Homemade Hot Waicr
Siovemakcr·s Narrative • Good Medicine:
lnLcrspCcics Communication
ISSUE FIFTEEN· Spring 1987
Coverlets • Wo~ Forester • Susia McMllwi
Midwife • Alternative Contraception •
Biosexuallty • Bioregionalism and Women •
Good Medicine: Matriacharial Culwre • &ad
ISSUE SIXTEEN· Summer 1987
Helen Waite • Poem: Visions in 1 Garden •
Vision Quest • First Flow • Initiation •
Leaming in the Wildcmeas • Cherokeea
OWlcnJ!C ·"Valuing Trees"
ISSUE EIGH1E£N ·WU- 1987-88
Vemaculu Atehi1eeiure ·Dreams in Wood and
Stone • Mowllain Home • Earth Energiea •
Earth.Sheltered Living • Membtanc Houses •
Brush Shelter • Poems: Oc1ol!cr Dusk • Good
Mcdk:inc: "Shelia" •
ISSUE TEN. WINl'ER 1985-86
Kate Rogers • Circles of Sione • Internal
Mylhmaking • Holistic Healing on Trial •
Poems: SleVe Knaulb • Mythic Places • The
Uk:ten a's Ta.la • Crystal Magic •
"Dmmspeakin&.
/'"r"
~UA~URNAL
P.O. Box 638
Leicester, NC Katuah Province 28748
For more information:
(704) 683-1414
Name
RegularMembcrship........ $10/yr.
Sponsor- .......................$20/yr.
Contributor.....................$50/yr.
Address
Enclosed is $
to give
this ejfon an extra bOOst
City
Area Code
State
Phone Number
Zip
I can be a local contact
person for my area
Back Issues
Issue# _@ $2.50 = $_ _
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Complete Set (3-11, 13-16, 18)
@ $25.00 =$_ _
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color: tan
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SPRING - 1988
KATUAH - page3 1
�
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
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1983-1993
Format
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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 19, Spring 1988
Description
An account of the resource
The nineteenth issue of the <em>Katúah Journal</em> focuses on springtime, plants, and the New Age movement: gardening with "nature intelligences", rooting blueberries, native plants, and herbal medicine. Authors and artists in this issue include: Michael Hockaday, Clyde Hollifield, Janeice Ray, Lucinda Flodin, Will Ashe Bason, Karen Watkins-Decker, Christina Morrison, Elaine Geouge, Sheli Lodge, Martha Tree, Brian Ellis, Stephen Wing, Diane Yeager, Colleen Redman, Rose Morningstar, and Ellen John. <br /><br />Beginning this issue, the title of the journal was simplified to <em>Katúah Journal</em>. A quarterly publication, it was published from 1983 to 1993 and 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.
<p>The Perelandra Garden.......3<br /><br />Spring Tonics.......6<br /><br />Rooting Blueberries.......7<br /><br />"First Dogwoods" a poem by Michael Hockaday.......7<br /><br />Gardens of the Blue Ridge.......8<br /><br />A Visit with Granny: An Interview with Carolyn Port......10<br /><br />Flower Essence.......13<br /><br />The Origin of the Animals: a story by Clyde Hollifield.......14<br /><br />"Sacrament" <br />"Rain Has Come Again:"<br />poems by Janeice Ray.......15<br /><br />Good Medicine: "Power".......16<br /><br />Be A Tree.......17<br /><br />Natural World News........18<br /><br />Drumming: Letters to Katúah.......22<br /><br />A Children' [sic] Page........25<br /><br />Events.......28<br /><br />Spring Gathering.......29<br /><br />Webworking........30<br /><br /><em>Note: This table of contents corresponds to the original document, not the Document Viewer.</em></p>
Publisher
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Sylva Herald Publishing Company, Sylva, North Carolina
Subject
The topic of the resource
Bioregionalism--Appalachian Region, Southern
Sustainable living--Appalachian Region, Southern
Herbs--Therapeutic use--North Carolina, Western
Plants, Edible--Appalachian Region, Southern
New Age movement--Appalachian Region, Southern
Wild flowers--Blue Ridge Mountains
Heirloom varieties (Plants)
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>
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"> In Copyright – Educational Use Permitted </a>
Coverage
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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
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PDF
Journals (Periodicals)
Agriculture
Appalachian Mountains
Appalachian Studies
Bioregional Congress
Children's Page
Earth Energies
Electric Power Companies
Geography
Good Medicine
Habitat
Hazardous Chemicals
Health
Katúah
Katúah Organization
Pigeon River
Plants and Herbs
Poems
Radioactive Waste
Stories
Turtle Island
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
l
l
�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
I
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1\:
Winter, t 989-9l
' f
I
1
•ll
�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
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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
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 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
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
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
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>
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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
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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
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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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(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>.
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 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
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>
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<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>
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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
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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)
~
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,
• 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>
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
PDF
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
Recycling
Sacred Sites
South PAW (Preserve Appalachian Wilderness)
Transportation Issues
Turtle Island
Water Quality
Western North Carolina Alliance
Wilderness
-
https://omeka.library.appstate.edu/files/original/5ac6c68fc9a4ef339c7624f779acbcb4.pdf
d9ea21ad706d54448902d9872b20ba5c
PDF Text
Text
ISSUE 34 SPRING 1992
$2.00
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~UAlrljOURNAL
PO Box 638
Leicester, NC
Katuah Province 287 48
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Drawing by Rob Mcssiclc
Postage Paid
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Permit #18
Leicester, NC
28748
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Printed on recycled paper
ADDRESS CORRECTION REQUESTED
�Paradise Gardening....................
3
by Joe Hollis
Community Sponsored Agriculture..5
by Hugh love/
"lfYouDidn'tGrowlt... "...........
by Ralph Garrett
7
Eating Close to Home.................
by Peter Bane
9
Silas McDowell's Vision............
by Perry Eury
11
Poems..................................
by Allison C. Surherland
12
Native Foods..........................
by Bear with Runs
13
Cover Crops..........................
by Mark Schonbeclr.
15
Plant For Tomorrow: Hemp........
by John Ingress
17
Katuah Cultivars......................
by Lee Barnes
18
Blowing in the Wind.................
by Charlotte Homsher
19
The Web of Life:
A Katuah Almanac...................
by Lee Barnes
and Rob Messick
20
Good Medicine.......................
22
Natural World News.................
24
"Whose Rules?"......................
by David Wheeler
26
Big fvy.................................
by Emmett Greendigger
and David Wheeler
27
Drumming.......... ..................
28
Saving Wild Seeds...................
by Lee Barnes
29
Resources.............................
31
Review:
"Apple Pie in Your Face" .............. 34
Webworking..........................
37
Events..................................
38
Sprl.nq , 1992
Sustainable Agriculture and Regional Diet
It is rrom the atoms of our bioregion's
soil, water and air that our cells are
constructed and renewed. Within many
unique webs of life, we become our physical
selves and thus must share responsibility for
our impact on the delicate systems which
allow us life.
Bioregions need to become more
self-sustaining, self-governing, and
self-healing. An imponant step in obt.aining
this goal is the development of regional
sustainable agriculture and greater utiliz.ation
of seasonal diet.
Agriculture must be more ecologically
sustainable and regionally specific, since each
bioregion is unique in its combination of
climate, soils, and adaptable plants for food,
fibers and fuels. Within each bioregion:
• Cultivaled crops should be
ecologically produced in harmony with the
Earth's gifts of sunshine, frost-free growing
season, am renewable cycles of soil fertility.
• Sustainable agriculture teehniques
must maximize soil regeneration and nutrition
produced per acre, rather than simply
maximizing yields.
• All materials and energies must be
more efficiently recycled within the biaregion
that produced them. We must blanket our
soils wilh greater gifts of cover-crops and
green manures .
• We must reduce our total dependency
on a dangerously narrow base of major food
crops and monoculture techniques, and
diversify our use of currently recognized and
potentially usable wild-food plants.
• Preservation of remaining genetic
diversity is critical to prevent the final loss of
irreplaceable gene combinations. We need 10
renew the use of genetically diverse,
open-pollinated seeds to retain variability in
our fields to insure protection from
catastrophic crop loss due to genetic
uniformity. Local seed-saving could allow
independence from extra-regional seed
sources.
• Most imponanlly, humans in each
bioregion must accept total responsibility for
their region's ecological health and
self-sufficiency in food production.
A regional diet should be nuaitious and
healthy; pleasant to eat; consumed more "in
sync" with regiona.V seasonal cycles of
production; and involve foods which can be
preserved using, low-technology food
preservation techniques, such as solar
drying, smoking, salt preservation and
pickling.
We need to review each region's
traditional diets, as guides to efficient,
non-destructive food production, and
carefully learn from each region's own
unique seasonal production of abundant
crops such as fruits (berries, etc.), nuts
(chestnuts, acoms,etc.), and wild seeds
(grains).
"Getting back to the garden," as Joe
Hollis tells us, will be no easy taSk.. We must
embra.ce the best featureS of current and
developing techniques and philosophies for a
sustainable future.
In this issue, we address the potential
for regional, sustainable agriculture and
regional diet by reviewing Katuah's historical
foods and agricultural cycles. We explore
new ideas for food production and marketing
systems, and provide some specific
information on wild plant seed-saving,
recommended vegetable varieties, and cover
crops.
We hope this issue will "seed" further
investigations into sustainable agriculture,
regional autonomy, and self-healing. We are
what we eat, and are ultimately responsible
for the heallh of ourselves and "all our
relations."
May we be more receptive to our
planet's council, and our mutual future.
Dr""'Ul8 by Pcgi
- Lee Barnes
�~JAH JOURNAL
EDITORIAL SLASH:
Maria Abbruzzi
Lee Barnes
Chris Davis
Charlone Homsher
John Ingress
James Rhea
Susan Adam
Heather Blair
Emmen Grecndigger
Jim Houser
Rob Messick
David Wheeler
EDITORIAL ASSISTANCE:
Sherman Bamford
Jesse Jones
Bill Melanson
Pegi
Breeze Bums
Richard Lowenthal
Mamie Muller
Donna Stringer
Thanks 10 Celo Community and RSVP for hosting Xa,uah lhis time.
Special thanks to l<Alherme Adam and Staff of ATIRA
COVER: by Rhea Rose Ormond
STATEMENT OF PURPOSE
PUBLISHED BY: Karuah Journal
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 Valley of the Roanoke and the Southern Plain
on this Turtle lsland continent of Mother Ela, the Eanh
PRTNTED BY: The Waynesville Mouniaineer Press
EDITORIAL OFFICE THIS ISSUE: Billy Home and Gardens.
WRITE US AT: Kaniah Journal
Asheville
Box 638; Leicester, NC; Kaniah Province 28748
TELEPHONE:
(704) 754-6097
Diversity is an imponant clement of bioregional ecology, both narural
and social. In accord with this principle Katuah Journal tries to serve a.s n
forum for lhe discussion of regional issues. Signed articles e.xpress only the
opinion of lhe authors and are no, necessarily the opinions of the Katunh
Journal editors or staff.
The Internal Revenue Service has declared Ka1uoh Journal a non-profit
orgnnization under section 501 (cX3) of the Internal Revenue Code. All
contributions to Ka1uah Journal are deductible from ))Cl'SOlllll income c.ax.
Articles appearing in Katuah Journal may be reprinted in other
publications with permission from the Katuoh Journal stnlT. Contact the
journal in writing or call (704) 754-6097.
tNVOCATLON
The Greatest Friend I have in life
Has brought me here to dwell
Awhile among these green, green hills
And by the watery well.
The water from that wondrous well
Has made my eyes to see
And loosed my tongue to sing with joy
That such a Friend could be.
Here,
In this place we dedicate ourselves to remembering our deep
connection to the spirit of the land.
We bring lhis 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 1he land is no longer an ideal; it is an imperative.
The land is a living being. She is sacred.
As 1he land lives, so do we.
As the spirit of the land is diminished,
our spirits are diminished as welL
Kacuah Journal sends a voice...
with articles, stories, poems, and anwork
we speak 10 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 Edit.ors
j
• The Incredible String BQ/ld
Bonier by Jason Tueller
KATUAH JOURNAL wanrs to communicate your rhoug/,rs and
feelings to the other people in the bioregional province. Send
them t.o us as leuers,poems, stories, articles, drawings, or
photographs, etc. Please send your coruributions to us at:
Karuah Journal; P. 0. Box 638; Leicester, NC; Katua/1 Province
28748.
OUR NEXT ISSUE will be involved with the continually
controversial topic of Councils, and how to create more viable
methods of decision-making in the future. Possible topics
include: Native American sovereignty, the State of Franklin,
JCQtuah Journat page 2
Town Meetings, Council of All Beings, Regional Rainbow
Gatherings, Grassroots Groups, Conflict Resolution, and more?
Submit all material by April 30th, 1992.
THE FALL, 1992 ISSUE will be about the role of wood in
the life of the mountains. Please send articles evaluating the
present timber industry, logging stories, and visions of ecological
and sustainable ways to cut and use wood. Please also send
pictures and drawings of wood and woodworkers. Deadline is
July 30, 1992.
Spri.ng, l 992
�PARADISE GARDENING
by Joe Hollis
W c wam 10 save the world, and we
want 10 save ourselves. It's the same thing.
The problems confronting us arc enormous
and at every level: personal, social, planetary.
l will spare you a list. My aim is 10 suggest
that they are all symptoms of one problem,
and to propose a solution.
The problem: 10 find a way to live on
Earth which promotes our health and
happiness, conducive to the full development
of our innate potential, and, a1 the same time,
is "democratic," that is, available to all, not
using more than our share, and harmonious
with the biosphere's evident drive toward
increasing diversity, complexity, and
stability.
Our world is being destroyed, in the
final analysis, by an extremely misguided
notion of what constitutes a successful
human life. Materialism is running mmpant
and WILL CONSUME EVERY11iING,
because its hunger will never be sated by its
consumption. Human life has become a
cancer on the planet, gobbling up all the
flows of matter and energy, poisoning them
with our waste. What can stop this monster?
Nothing. Just lhis: walk away from iL
It is time, indeed time is running out, to
abandon the entire edifice of "civilization/the
State/ the Economy" and walk (don't run!) to
a bener place: home, to Paradise.
J
•••
1) Paradfae is, first of all, a garden. A
garden in which everything we need is there
for the taking.
2) And Paradise Gardening is a way or
life which serves to maintain the garden, and
is in turn maintained by it. Ecologist Eugene
Odum calls this being the 'ecosystem
manager:' "an organism that utilizes a small
frac tion of the total energy budget and in
return provides a service which aids the
system in its funclion and continued
survival." (This concept "illustrates the ideal
which man should imitate in his auempts 10
manage a natural ecosystem.") Genesis, with
the characteristic compression of myth, says
we were put into the garden "10 dress it and
keep it." Same thing.
3) Parndise Gardening is not work.
Work is a subjective concept: one person's
play may be another person's work. h has
nothing to do with effon: tennis, for
example, is usually "play" (unless you're a
"pro"), sitting at a computer terminal is
frequently "work." Work is whatever you are
doing when you'd rather be doing something
else. Paradise Gardening is "not work" in the
same sense that what a bear does all day is
"not work." This distinction is the same as
that which the Taoists make between "doing"
and "not-doing." Genesis refers to the same
matter in saying that only outside the garden
do we have 10 earn our living "by the sweat
of our brow."
4) Paradise Gardening is not
agriculture. From chemical to organic
sprLr19, t992
agriculture is a step in the right direction, but
only the first step. Agriculrure itself is, after
alI, half of the one-two punch that knocked
us out of Paradise in the first place. Good
farmers, to be sure, love nature; but they love
her in the context of plowing her up every
year and deciding what to grow next. Our
addiction 10 annual species and disturbed
habitats has put us at odds with the main
thrust of the biosphere (and with ourselves).
Oh, Eanlt is patient and Earth is old
And a mother of Gods, but he breaks lier,
To-ing.fro-ing, wit!, tlte plow teams going,
Tearing the soil of her, year by year
Sophocles, Antigone
Every spring, nature begins again 10
clothe the Earth in beauty. It is the process of
succession, the initial strands of the intricate
web, the rebirth of the Tree of Life. And
every autumn we scrape it off, rake it into
barns, take it to market: we increase human
diversity and complexity (butcher, baker,
candlestick-maker ...) by appropriating to
ourselves processes which are meant to
benefit all
•••
Drawina by Rob Messick
Paradise is a habitat and a niche. Mircca
Eliade refers to the universal "yearning for
Paradise": Memories coded into our genes of
our place, our fit. How, after all, does a bird,
for example, select a place to build a nes1? So
many factors to consider (and such a small
brain!). It simply picks the most beautiful
spot available. It was born with a "template"
of paradise.
Concerning this the Book ofOdes
says, "The twittering yellow bird, the bright
silky warbler, comes to its rest in the hollow
corner of the hill." and Confucius commented
"Comes to rest, alights, knows what its rest
is, what its ease is. Is man, for all his wit,
less wise than this bird of yellow plumage
that he should no, know his resting place or
fix the point of his aim?"
Like any other creature, we are our
niche. By our physiology and behavioral
programming we arc born to live a ccnain
kind of life. Paradise is our birthright and our
duty,
Now, instead, we take up a niche in
civilization. The premise of civilization is that
if everyone is a less than complete human
being (''1'11 be the brains, you be the back"),
ii will be beuer for all of us. This insulting
premise has guided us for so long that many
of us are unaware of an alternative. We
(cnnunucd on next page)
Xotl'.wf, )ourlfflt pcu_,e 3
�(COlllinucd from page 3)
equate "making a living" with "making
money." Thus we spend the best hours of
our lives pursuing our careers, being pan of
the cancer.
But everything needful to be
completely human is available to us close by
in our environment - the garden and the
ocighborhod. We can rely on the truth of this
because "human-ncss" is a creation of the
environment, the most recent manifestation of
a coevolution between our genes and all the
other genes in the world that has been going
on since the beginning of life on eanh. Much
chancier is the possibility that everything we
need to be completely human is available to
us in the city, or through money.
population level, live and coexist as foragers
(ecosystem managers)? "Caught in the devil's
bargain " how can we "get ourselves back to
the garden"? (Joni Mitchell, "Woods1ock")
The strategy here proposed, Paradise
Gardening, may be described as :'in1ensified
foraging." David Harris, in a scnes of
papers has explored "alternative pathways to
agricul'ture." Particular!~ valuable is ~s .
distinction between "agncultural mampulaaon
and transfonnatfon ... agricultural utilization
•••
The last time we lived in paradise it was
as "foragers": hunters and gatherers,
omnivorous, opponunistic exploiters of a
variety of environments. Specialists, not of
disturbance but of diversity.
This lifestyle has attracted much
attention recently (at the very time that the last
vestiges of it~ being eradicated). Toe view
that foraging is an adaptation superior to
agriculture is now well established in
academia and the same theme appears in
popular literature (e.g. Bruce Chatwin, Tl~
Song/Ines and Vargas Llosa, The Storyteller,
both inspiring).
A revolution in the study of the human
niche was prompted by the realization that
foragers, far from living on the brink of
starvation, as previously imagined, actually
had more leisure than anyone else since (Lee
and deVore, Man the Hunter).
Boserup (The Conditions ofAgricultural Growth) suggests that there have
never been any "agricultural revolutions," in
the sense of a sudden invention of a great
new way 10 produce food; but rather that
increases in food production always come at
the cost of even greater increases in labor (or
fossil fuel) input, that the techniques were
always well known to the producers, but
resisted until finally demanded by rising
population (or the demands of the upper
classes for a surplus, a 'cash crop').
"Agriculture permits denser food
growth supponing denser population and
larger social units but at the cost of reduced
dietary quality [less diversity to choose
from), reduced reliability of harvest [eggs in
less baskets], and equal or probably greater
labor per unit of food ... agricuhure is not a
difficult concept but one readily available to
hunting and gathering groups ... " (Mark
Cohen, The Food Crisis in Prehistory).
Agriculture, in rum, allowed population
to expand more rapidly. Any attempt to live a
foraging life in the modem world would
seem to be onJy an interesting but ultimately
imlcvant exercise of the "historic village"
variety. That "there is no going back" is
merely a truism. What those who recite it
mean to say is that there is no changing
direction, progress can be only a straight line
- from an original home in natw-c 10 a world
eventually completely human, domesticated,
fanned.
At this point, I would rephrase the
"problem" with which this essay began: How
can we, with our contemporary tastes and
Xatuafl Jou~ P~. 4
"better" future. "No act is good unless its
goodness is seen in the innnediacy of the act.
An act which justifies itself by appealing to a
later good ... all appeals to reason,
expediency, and necessity, are appeals to the
very forces that wreck all ideals. One must
have courage and be willing to take risks."
(William Thompson, Evil and World Order)
Ecology teaches that a "pioneer"
(disturbed) environment favors life forms that
are fast-growing but shon lived,
wide-spreading, ''greedy" - designed 10
capture the maximum of sunlight and
unoccupied soil. But eventually they are
succeeded by the trees, which, because they
invest energy in making wood, grow more
slowly at first, but are more stable,
longer-lived, and finally faster growing,
more influential, the "dominant species,"
towering above.
We have spread ourselves over the
Eanh, and used or burned just about
everything that is easy to get The age of the
greedy ones draws to a close. (They don't
know it yet.) At last, we may hope, the
'competitive advantage' passes to the
practitioners of permanence, rootedness,
slow growth and steady accumulation, the
vertical expansion of the human spirit into
realms unchanecl, or long forgotten. A tree
derives its satisfaction from the view
achieved.
•••
may - and, if sufficiently intensive, usually
does - lead to the IJ'llnsformation of a natural
into a largely artificial ecosystem: lhe
replacement of a tropical forest by plantation,
of temperate woodland by whcatfields ...
But agriculture may also proceed by a
process of manipulation which involves the
alteration of selected components of the
natural system rather than its wholesale
replacement - a method of cultivation which
involves substituting certain preferred
domesticated species for wild species in
equivalent ecological niches and so simulates
1he structure and functional dynamics of the
natural ecosystem."
Harris has recently edited a collection of
papers (From Foraging to Fanning) which
further explores the emerging realization that
many "non-agricultural" peoples were in fact
engaged in intensive and sophisticated plant
exploitation, previously unrecognized
because their plant management practices did
not fit our idea of agricuhure.
•••
Our goal is to "naturalize" ourselves
in lhe environment. This will involve
changing ourselves and changing the
environment: convergence toward "lit"
Perfect fit means the free and easy flowing of
matter and energy between ourselves and our
environment: life lived as a complete gift from the garden to us, from us to the garden.
But that is in the future; what we need
now is a process, leading to that goal, which
is justified on its own terms. Focus on the
ideal Paradise Garden wilJ tempt us to ta.Ice
shoncuts, perpetuating the same old panem
of selling out the present for some imagined
The process of Paradise Gardening
involves:
- Extricating our life-support system
from civilization/the Economy (bluntly,
money), and reattaching it to the natural
world of garden and neighborhood. This will
be a gradual process requiring a real analysis
of our needs and expenditures.
Thus, for example, cars and gasoline
arc nor needs but only the means to the
satisfaction of needs. The solution is not
gasohol but reducing the reason for travelling
(usually the getting and spending of money).
Concerning this the TM Te Ching says, 'The
country over the border might be so near that
one could hear the cocks crowing and the
dogs barking in it, but the people would .
grow old and die without ever once troubhng
to go there." (sec Joseph Needham, Science
and Civilization in China, vol. D, ch. 80) for
a discussion of ''the political program of the
Taoists: the return to cooperative
primitivity. ")
The key 10 the self-justifying nature of
the process is this: things made or done .by
professionals or machines may be technically
superior to one's own efforts, but are
generally lacking in a quality which,
following Carlos Castenada, I will call
"hean.
0
Satisfaction from things bought usually
peaks at the moment of purchase and declines
rapidly. Needs which a.re met by the
interaction of ourselves and nature are more
deeply mer.. and there are wonderful surprises
along the way. The truth of this will be
evident to anyone who has ever made
anything "from scratch." What seldom occurs
to us (someone doesn't want it to occur to us)
is that an entire life can be constructed on 1h1s
basis.
(c:on11nuod on page J2)
Drawing by Mkhacl Thompson
SprLt1-9, !9!12
�.,,..
.
..
It ,
•
'
#
'
••••••
,
''•
,.,.
COMMUNITY SPONSORED AGRICULTURE
As lhe end of the century nears,
several things must be faced. Tho food
supply is not only tainted. it is devitaliz.ed. In
particular, foods lack nourishment for
integrity, uprightness and willingness. These
qualities depend upon individual attitudes,
but they require nutritional support
Things could get worse, and probably
they will. But, here and there people are
looking at their options and choosing 10 make
a difference. They want to suppon endeavors
that remedy the problems caused by lhe
bigger-is-better mindset. One of the worst
concerns is the loss of more than seventy
percent of the world's topsoil in the last
hundred and fifty years. Instinctively people
sense a need to encourage sound agriculture.
At the same time they want 10 buy food that
not only is free of pollution, but has an inner,
vital impulse toward life. The..-.e and related
faclOI'S motivate a trend toward agriculturally
based producer/consumer communities that
regenerate the land which feeds them.
The acronym CSA stands for
Consumer Supported Agriculture,
Community Sponsored Agriculture, or
Community Supponed Agriculture,
depending on whom you are talking 10. In all
cases it indicates a vertically integrated
agricultural operation.
However it may be done, the CSA
group provides what is necessary to grow
their food. Fortunately, not everyone has the
same things 10 contribute. Usually fanners
who can work the land successfully are in the
shortest supply. But, from these farmers'
points of view, consumers are in shon
supply <>r laborers are hard 10 find at crucial
times. The CSA is not functional until
farmer, farmland, labor, operating capital and
consumers arc lined up in cooperation.
CSA fanns vary. Some are located in or
near metropolitan areas where consumer
interest is high. Olhers involve more distance
between the land and consumers. Many sell
"shares" in advance of their year's
production. Others require an advance
deposit, refundable in everything from
produce, canned goods, eggs, honey and
cheese, to meat, flowers, herbs, firewood or
wool. Tn some cases consumers come 10 the
farm to get their food. In others, weekly
deliveries to distribution points may be
necessary. One CSA may have monthly
potluck dinners, developing strong core
groups and dividing up tasks between
mothers, accountants, farm apprentices,
lawyers, fixers, and fanners; while others
may be seat-of-the-pants operations stripped
to the bare essentials.
CSA's have several things in common.
[n one way or another they all encourage
farmers and consumers 10 understand and
suppon each other. They enable participants
to invest their resources in the land and ilS
beuennenL 1be means of production belongs
to both producers and consumer.;, as they
contribute skill, labor and capital, and take
responsibility for leaving the land better off
for their use of it. Nevenheless, in some
cases the land is owned privately while in
Spnnq, l992
by Hugh Lovel
others the CSA is organized as a cooperative,
a land trust or a research and training
institute.
Besides nutritious food and a healthier
environment there are many subsidiary
benefil!i. By having the moral and financial
expenses. In 1985 I was laid off as a bridge
carpenter in Atlanta, and in 19861 tried to
farm full time, selling produce to stores and
in pl!lking lolS. It was hardly a way 10 make
ends meet. I knew there had to be a better
way. The Biodynamic Association quarterly,
support of a community, the farmer has
backing for experimentation. Members may
want exotic items like Chinese cabbage,
Annenian cucumbers. Roquefon cheese or
Louisiana hot sauce, and the fanner has 10
learn how to produce these items.
The CSA can also be an educational
opportunity for young adults interested in
becoming farmers. By apprenticing on a CSA
farm they experience growing and preparing
a wide variety of products. Moreover,
members and their children learn how their
food is produced, and there .ue therapeutic
benefits in this especially for those growing
or convalescing. Lastly, the farm is a haven
from the vicissitudes of city life. Conceivably
it will provide alternatives 10 employment in
economic hard times.
The idea h that consumers support the
farm and the farm supports the consumers.
Biodynamics, ran an anicle on CSA's. I
drew up a prospectus with a copy of the
ruticle and distributed it to a few people in the
Atlanta area. They told friends, and for the
first season l had twenty-eight members sign
up.
r did not want to promise 100 much, so
I only offered breads, honey. pollen, eggs,
yogurt. and vegetables in season. I asked for
$100 deposits, refundnble in groceries. This
money got me through February, March, and
April when I planted but had nothing 10 sen.
A1 the end of April I had my first
delivery of spinach, lettuce, and seasonal
herbs. The season went on to green onions,
garlic, English and sugar snap peas, yellow
onions, potatoes, cabbage, beans, com,
summer squash, tomatoes, okra, beets,
collards, leeks, winter squash, turnips and
Chinese radishes. The garden was finished
by mid-November, though I made one last
delivery of pork after Thanksgiving.
Because che fann, Union Agricultural
lnsutute, Blairsville, Georgia, was 125 miles
from Atlanta, I made a Saturday run 10 three
Since the only CSA I can re.tlly
describe is the one I founded, I should tell
how it was set up.
During the 1980s I directed a fledgling
founccn acre biodynamic research and
training farm, working off the farm to pay
(QOl\linued on nut page)
Drawing by Pcgi
X.awah Journot pc:a(Je 5
�(OOlllinuod &om pegoS)
drop-<>ff points. Members received a weekly
newsletter and order fonn that 100k me rwo
hours a week at the typewriter and copy
machine. Bookkeeping was on index cards
with names, addresses, dates, and sums.
Mostly I concentrated on running 1he fann,
picking the number one vegetables, recycling
the residual vegetation through forty
chickens., twenty rabbits, and 1wo pigs for
fertilizer, and n:planting with the next crop in
the rotation. Although I kept bees, the honey
and millc for yogun came from nearby farms.
1brought in organica!Jy grown wheat and rye
for bread.
Out of26 weekly deliveries, I counted
on members to order at leas1 half the time
with average orders of twenty dollars, a
gross of $7,280. I believe I took in a littJe
more than that, but my bookkeeping did not
prove it. J realize lhis may not seem like
much, but my expenses were low enough 10
make ends meet All I had was the land and a
small pic_!cup truck, rototiller. lawnmower.
scythe, pitchfork, axe, scuffle hoe, claw
cuJtivator, wheel hoe, push planter, and
seeds bred for response 10 my methods. It
was a start.
Consumer int.crest was strong simply
from word of mouth. I could expand, but a
larger investment was required. The fann
needed woods, barns, fences, greenhouses.
pastures, orehards, and fields all in good
measure. none at the expense of the others. I
did not have to hurry things. The land
consisted of mixed forest slopes and
bottomland with good water bur not
especially good sun. There was plenty of
brush clearing, rock picking and hay planting
to be done. And there were only three or four
acres that could be added to the truck garden
no mancr how I adapted 10 having more help
and machinery.
At my organii.ationaJ meetings in
February and Man:h of 1988 I asked for a
S33 membership fee as a capital invesuncn1 in
the fann, plus the hundred dollar deposit.
Again bookkeeping was only sufficient to
show how much was paid and how much
was delivered. Picking, bnlcing, and packing
orders were changed from Fridays 10
Saturdays, and deliveries were changed to
Sundays. This allowed members 10 visit the
farm and panicipa1e in picking on Saturdays,
while I caught the least city traffic on
Sundays and still picked up organic grains
and supplies for the farm
An apprentice, Matthew Persico, cut
intensive beds into three acres of sod with the
rototiUcr. We planted a fourth of it in
potatoes, for which we had compost In the
rest we inu:rplanted com with soybeans for a
modest fodder crop. We built a smaJI barn
with three sta!Js, hay storage, and an
apprentice's apartment. I bought two calves
to raise in the small barn yard, and phased
out rabbits since the cows made more
compost and were easier to feed on a large
scale.
For fcrtiliu:r I brought in hay, com,
and soy meal for the animaJs while J cleared
~ I _pastures, arch~. and hay fields. The
m~bon was to achieve self-sufficiency,
WJth the £arm producing its own feeds,
s~, and ttansplants, breeding its own
livestock:, and producing its own compost
Starting its fifth year in 1992, this
Xatiloh Jouf'nQ( PQ«Je 6
CSA, UAI Coop, can service 80 households.
We have a reconditioned 35 year old tractor,
three or four apprentices, six aCICs of row
crops, cheesemaking, three bovines, eigh1y
chicke_ns, two pigs, and a smaJI transplant
operanon.
. O_u1side_ of i1s soil: the farm is 001 ye1 a
capuaJ mtenswe operauon, despite a $16,000
gross in 1991. Dynamics and momentum arc
a large part of the operation. Herc are some
derails:
Peas must be planted as early as
possible. In Union County, Georgia 1hat is
lat~ February or early March. Lenuce,
spmach, and onions may aJso be planted
from early March on. Lettuce, cabbage and
collards should be planted under row
coverings for transplanting as it warms up.
The early plantings are better able to stay
ahead of the weeds, though frequent
cultivation - weather pennitting - is advisable.
It helps considerably to have pennanent sod
around cultivated beds.
In winter and early spring the cows are
eating hay in the barn and every so often it
can be mucked out to make a compost pile.
With spring warmth, the rye and clover
covers on the beds shoot up and are cut for
fresh feed or for hay. The stubble is
cultivated two or three times over a three
week period, so that it is digested and mellow
before planting.
. I set out my cabbages and potatoes in
Apnl; followed by com, beans, and cucurbits
in May; and tomatoes, peppers and okra in
June. Garlic is planted early the preceding
October, so that it and yellow onions are
harvested in June and followed with bush
beans. Crops like spinach, lettuce, com and
beans can be staggered to produce a moderate
but steady flow of each vegetable, extending
the season. Compost is given especially to
the greens, while root crops like carrots,
radishes, and turnips do much better
following behind without compost.
Since my grassy borders around beds
an: level with the beds, both borders and
beds can be mowed simultaneously for the
cows, pigs or chickens. In May 1here is so
much to cut that haystacks must be made, 10
be fed in the winter when all the summer's
com stover is gone.
During the growing season the chickens
are fenced in a long, hillside coop containing
a thick stand of bamboo and a nesting house.
At the top of 1he coop, sawmill bark,
sprin.kJed with dust from the locaJ granite
quarry, is added for bedding. My
lawnmower has a rear bagging feature, and
every day I give the chickens a heaping
wheelbarrow load of grass, clover, and herb
clippings from around the beds, which I
mow on a monthly schedule. This keeps the
egg yolks yellow while adding to the deep
litter in the coop. Every so often this is made
into a compost pile.
I use a biodynnmic planting calendar for
working crops according to 1heir root, fruit,
flower, or leaf characteristics. For example,
while potatoes are actually a swollen stem
formation, they are plamed as though they
were roots because the roo1-like characteristic
is being emphasized. Likewise, cauliflower
and broccoli, although 1hey an: flowers, are
plan1cd as leaf crops because they have to be
held back to 1he leafy stage of development.
They an: eaten only as buds, not flowers.
l also apply biodynamic preparations,
which have profound nutritionaJ significance.
And I grow speciaJ crops that do not
contribute income but contribute to the overall
balance and heaJth of the farm. Finally. I
avoid faulty practices. Planting the whole
fann in cucumbers or semng off all the
compost, 1 would never do.
One of the goals of crop rotation is to
allow for a healthy nitrogen cycle while
cropping. Compost is given liberally to leafy
crops that need plenty of nitrogen, such as
lettuce, spinach, cabbage, and collards. It
may be given more sparingly to fruiting crops
which follow the greens, such as com,
squash, tomatoes, and okra. It is withheld
entirely from the roots, such as carrots,
radishes, and turnips, which follow the
fruits. Then I plan1 legumes such as beans,
peas and lentils to draw in new nitrogen and
produce rich compost as their vines are
digested by the farm animals. Then the cycle
begins again wi1h compost to the greens.
Another goal of crop rotation is 10 vary
as much as possible the kinds of plan1s
grown. Thus it may be a good idea to follow
lettuce with carrots, or collards with onions,
but it is a bad idea 10 follow le1wce with
spinach or carrots with parsnips.
There is aJso interplanting. Planting
com with soybeans, spinach wi1h garlic,
tomatoes with sweet basil, dill with cabbages
su_mmer squash with popcorn, and pumpkins
with field com, makes for a lively variety.
Nature has ways to create abundance.
Perhaps most imponantJy, the
pennanent grass and clover walking strips
between and around the beds keep the soil
fauna heaJthy and erosion to 1he minimum
regartlless of the weather. We need to think
abou1 these things.
Not so long ago all farms produced
food out of soil, water, air, and warmth
because there was life. Nature charged
nothing for her pan.
Orawu,g by Rob Mcuid<
(continued on p. 32)
Sprl.mj, 1992
�"IF YOU DIDN'T GROW IT,
YOU DIDN'T EAT IT"
Food Production on a Self-Sufficient Mountain Homestead
as told by Ralph Garrett
Way back when Twas a boy, I lived at
my grandma's and grandpa's up above the
Lown of Sylva in Jackson County, NC. My
grandpa was a farmer and a brick mason, and
he also made bricks.
I grew up during the Depression. IL was
a little worse than it is right now, but it's
going 10 get worser than this, I'm afraid.
My grandpa and grandma owned about
three and one-half acres around their house,
but we tended a 12 or 15 acre bottom that
was up in Addie where the band mill is now.
We also planted 10 or 12 acres up on Fisher
Creek in com and different things. It was
about 25 or 30 acres all told. We grew
enough for everybody in our family, some 10
sell besides, and enough 10 feed the animals,
too.
We raised cows, chickens, and pigs to
eat, and we had horses, mules, and oxen 10
help us with the work. With them we plowed
and planted com, beans, field peas, Irish
'taters, sweet 'taters, sorghum for molasses,
and all different kinds of cornfield crops.
And grains. We'd sow a great big thing of
wheal for our flour, as well as winter oais 10
feed the horses while we were workin' 'em
in the summer time.
Then in the garden we had carrots.
radishes, parsnips, rumips, and different
kinds of greens - leuuce, onions, collard
greens, and all those.
We also had peach u-ees. I got a
whuppin' many a time for getting in the Blue
Goose peaches - big, fine, pretty peaches.
They'd get to tumin' a little bit, and us liule
boys, we'd slip around and try 10 get us one.
J remember how we used to eat. The
usual thing of a morning when we got up,
we'd have side beef or ham - fried good and
brickle · brown-eye gravy, some eggs, and
some biscuits.
Some days we'd have homemade
applesauce for breakfasL We'd heat it up and
have some hot biscuits and butter, and put the
butter and some sugar in the fruit, and you
had a good break.fast.
We'd also cut com off the cob, and
have it fried with biscuits and homemnde
molasses. That's what we had a whole lot of
mornings.
Our big meal was at dinner time, 12
noon. Supper was the evening meal. Al
dinner we'd have cornbread, hog meat or
maybe beef stew with vegetables. You can
get beef stew now in a can in the store, but
we had big pois of it, homemade, with two
or three vegetables in it, and some vegetables
on the side, too. Or we'd have great big pots
of homemade vegetable soup. We'd make the
soup with okry (olcr.1), tomaters, beans, and
onions. We put every kind of vegetable in
there.
In the summerumc for supper we'd
usually have com on the cob, new 'taters,
green beans, cornbread, and biscuits.
Sometimes we'd eat supper without meal, but
Sprtng, 1992
usually we had meat at the table three times a
day, whether it was beef, pork, or chicken.
We didn't have desserts every meal,
like they want now. Dcssens came mostly on
Sunday or Saturday when there was family
coming. We'd have plain ca.Ices with
down there 10 get some flour, some salt,
sody (baking soda), balcing powder, coffee,
and sugar. We just bought small amounts of
sugar, until it come canning time. Then we
would buy whatevercanningjars and lids
that we needed and 50 and 100 pound bags
of sugar to put up jellies and jam. We
young'uns liked LO get old-time candy, like
wax candy, horehound candy, and all kinds
of stick candy at the store. But we never had
money to buy very much there.
A year on the farm went like this:
Winter was kinda slow. We'd be cutrin'
firewood, sittin' by the fire, and relax.in'.
DrawiJI& by J.,,.,. Rhea
applesauce spiced up and pu1 in between the
layers. They called that old-time fruit cake.
They'd pile four or five of them up in a
straight pack with the applesauce in between
each layer, then applesauce down over the;
top ofic. Now, that was a dessen! Today if
someone gets two layers of cake, they think
that that's 100 much, but we had.five layers
of cake! We ate what we wanted, because it
was simple.
Or maybe they'd make a cherry pie.
What they call a cherry pie now is just a little
ol' thing. What we called a cherry pie was a
big bread pan full of cherries with dough
through 'cm. They call 'em cobblers now,
but we called 'em cherry pie.
Grandma also used 10 make sweet
potato custards and sweet potato pie and put
sweetening on it - marshmallows or brown
sugar, good things like that.
If we didn't grow it, we didn't cat it.
That's right. There wasn't no supermarkets,
there was only an old country store. We'd go
We'd spend time a-shuckin' com and
thrashin' out the peas, Crowder peas and clay
peas, through the bad days.
We also had 10 get our harness and
equipment fixed up and in first-class shape.
We had to be ready. so that when the ground
got right we could go right to work.
We didn't use no fertilize (fertilizer).
We used compost, and we gathered that in
the winter, too. We'd clean out the horse
stalls and the cow stalls. We'd throw it in a
bin that was outside the winder (window),
and we'd mix leaves in with iL That would
cause it to heat in the bin. In the spring we
wouW haul out that compost. spread it on the
field, and plow it in. That enriched our land
and made our crops do better.
We staned plowtn' in February and
March, what we didn't already have plowed.
The first crop we put out was the
different kinds of greens - cabbage. collard
greens, you could do them early. Usually,
(canlinucd on nai pqe)
Xatuah Journal POCJI'- 7
�(cullinucd from page 7)
people around here would sow a bed of
turnips or rutabagas, too.
Irish pouuoes were planted next during
the dark of the moon in Man:h, and maybe
we'd put some green peas out in the garden.
Radishes, onions, and parsnips were early
crops, we could get an early start on them,
100.
We would s1an our own S\l,'CCt pouuo
sets. We'd get them bedded down between
April 10 - 15. Then they'd be a-comin' up in
May. Sweet potatoes was a big crop. We
used to plant big fields of 'em.
Around April 15 - 20, we'd plant the
first corn. It would grow up a linle bit, but
not enough that a frost would hurt it bad.
Unless there come an ex try unusual hard
freeze, com would grow on though.
Flour com, popcorn, and com for the
livestock: those were the main kinds of com
we planted. We also had a liule of what we
called llim com. When it got hard, it was
hard as a rock, but it made real good roasting
ears. When sweet com came along, we
started planting sweet com in the garden.
Now people plant fields of sweet com.
The biggest thing was to rotate the com
plantings so that they would come in slowly,
so we could harvest them and take care of
them, instead of having all the com oome in
at once. We would plant some com on April
15, some the first of May, and then again at
the last of May.Hit's not a dry year, you can
plant com in June. It's starting to get dry
then, but sometimes a crop'll make. It's a
short season up here in these mountains, but
some years I've bad three different spaces of
com comin' in.
We always figlftd the last frost would
come around the tenth of May. 1bcn we'd set
out OUT garden vegetables. Any kind of plant
that the frost would affect - like peppers and
tomatcrs - we'd wait 'ril after the tenth of
May, after the frost line.
The cornfield peas, we'd plant them
after we worked (cultivated) the com for the
first time. I'd wait until the com was up
around my throat, and then l'd plant the peas
in between the com. We did the cornfield
beans, like the White McCaslan bean or the
Kentucky Wonder, the same way. l would
plant big com where I was going to plant the
cornfield beans. Then the com would support
'em and shade 'em. Shade is what keeps the
insects away better than any of this spray that
we can buy today.
We'd harvest the wheat when the heads
bowed and tumed yeller. The timing
depended on what kind of wheat we had. and
when we had planted it in the fall. We
harvested it by hand with a cradle. We didn't
have combines like those that cut the wheat
now. We had to do it with a cradle.
At the end of June, we'd finish up with
the wheat and we'd sun our first mowing of
hay. We mowed the hay with a mowing plate
and raked it up with a pitchfork. We'd shock
it • put it in shocks or round piles - and then
we'd come through with the wagon or the
sled, and load it 10 the barn. and put it in the
barn loft We'd pct up great barns full, and
then we'd put up big stacks of hay around
stackpolcs. We'd sUtCk com tops and fodder
the same way around the Stackpole at the
XatuQf1-Journat PCUJe 8
barnyard, where we could jusr go get it to
feed the cows and the horses.
All summer, we were mostly hoeing. It
kept us busy. We'd start work as soon as it
got light enough to sec what we was a-doin',
and we worked 'til dark.
Now at dinnertime, right at the heat of
the day, we gave them horses a good full
hour to two hours to be at rest. And we done
the same thing. We ate, we rested, and then,
when we went back 10 work, we worked 'til
dinner.
ln July when the blackberries and the
raspberries came in, we'd pick berries. We
would take a wagon up on Fisher Creek, and
we'd pick washtubs full of blackberries!
w11.i)
J'"J~
Everybody went, everybody picked,
everybody washed - everybody helped with
canning berries for a few weeks. Some of the
men might be off working on a job
somewhere, but everybody up at the house
just flew in and got busy.
Pretty soon the com would start coming
in, and we'd stan getting roasting cars with
our dinner. And we'd start canning
vegetables. too. We'd can all kinds of
vegetables. We canned beans, 'matcrs,
peaches, fresh ok:ry (okra), fresh com - all
different kinds of food out of the garden.
In the fall of the year, we'd be pectin'
the apples, and pcelln' peaches. Them Blue
Goose peaches came in about the same time
as apples. We'd boil the fruit down and make
apple and peach bu11er.
We had an apple peeler. You just stuck
the apple on and tumcd the handle, and ii
peeled the apple and took the core out of iL
Then we just cut it and made bleached fruit.
Or we mashed it up, cooked it, and made
applesauce.
Bleached fruit is made by burning
sulfur. We'd put the fruit on a rack, cover it
with a cloth, light the sulfur in a sulfur
burner, and leave it all night The action of
the sulfur makes the fruit stay white, it
doesn't tum brown, and it will keep all
winter. Then we would put it in big 60-gnllon
oak barrels, and we'd put up so many barrels
of bleached fruit.
We also P.l!t up ~ I s ofp\cld~
beans. Wr:!d !\ii up big barrels of beans
broke up and washed, put water in there and
add salt to sour 'cm and make 'em pick!~.
The same way about roasting CaJ'S. That was
our pickling stuff.
At canning time we also fixed a lot of
jellies and jams. We'd make apple jelly and
grape jelly. And we'd make peach preserves:
we'd peel sweet, cooked peaches like we
were going to can 'em, and put sugar in there
and cook it down until it come clown like
makin' candy, and 1ha1 was good preserves.
Around that same time we'd also be
cuttin' the com and puuin' it up in the com
crib. We'd cut the tops, and pull the fodder,
and put that up to feed the cows and horses.
We didn't leave nolhin' in that field that a
cow could eat. We kept the com in the com
crib, and we kept the peas in big bags inside
in the house where they'd be getting drier and
drier from the heat, so they'd shell easier.
Whenever we got that done, it was
coming to frost, and we had 10 get them
sweet potatoes out before it frosted. If it
frosted on the vines, we had LO get the vines
off right quick before it rained. so that the
frost wouldn't run into the sweet potaroes
and ruin ·cm. When we got 'em up, we'd
wash 'cm, and take 'cm to town to sell them,
anywhere from a gallon to five bushels,
whatever people wanted.
After the frost was the time to cut the
sorghum and make molasses. We had to strip
the cane down. cut all the blades off it. and
cut all the tops off. Then we'd haul all those
cane stallcs to lhe cane mill and put 'em
through the crusher. The juice would run out
into a vat. and we'd cook it off in what. they
called an evap<ntor until it came out syrup.
Several families made sorghum. Some
had bees. We didn't have no bees, but we
had some people who had bees. We'd just
get some stands of honey from them.
We also used to go into the woods and
gather up chestnuts. I'd go bacJc yonder and
gather up a 75 pound short sack. all the
chestnutS I could carry, and bring 'em home,
and we'd eat on them. I also used to like to
get pawpaws and persimmons. Now I'm
tcllin' you, them old persimmons make a
good pie.
And there were always some bear
hunters who would bring in some bear meat.
l know I ate a IOl of bear meat. Back when I
was a boy, bears were just as common as a
milk cow. It was nothin' to see a bear down
at the settlement. But they just got to bang,
bang, bangin', killin' 'em all they wanted, 'tit
there was a 101 of waste.
Right at the first of November, we'd
have to go back into the fields and clean the
'tater patches off. The usually thing was that
there was late roasting cars and some late
beans in the 'tater patch, and after we
gathered them, we cleaned all that off, weeds
and all, so we could plow our 'taters out
After they dried good, we'd put 'em in the
root cellar. Everybody had a root cellar. Lots
of them were dugouts in the bank, but they
were still root cellars where we'd keep the
bleached fruit, the potatoes, and the lcrnut
Everybody also bad a smokehouse
where they'd smoke their meat. and they'd
(ainunlllld on page 33)
Ornwing by Miehkl Thompson
Spri.ng, 1992
�~, ... .. w ...
EATiNG · LbsE ro HOME
c
by Peter Bane
The Logistics of a Permanent Culture
Consider your next meal: It's
mid-winter and what can be found to eat
nearby? The supermarket offers Iowa beef
and Idaho potatoes, Cnlifomia rice and
broccoli, Mexican lettuce and tomatoes, salad
oil from Brazil or Dakota, Aorida citrus,
Washington apples. The Standard American
Qiet is a marvel of technical complexity and a
sad reflection of cultural banality. Divorced
from place and season, available nationwide
and year round, itS cosmetic perfection and
shiny packaging are a glamour concealing
enonnous unmarked costs and catastrophic
instabilities.
Lurking behind the plastic sheen are the
collapse of rural communities, bankruptcy of
farm families, loss of topsoil (an average 20
tons per ton of grain produced), poisoning of
farm-workers, toxic residues in food, air,
soil, and water, cruelty to animals,
destruction of wildlife habitat, deforestation,
and the cultivation of plagues and diseases
heretofore unknown.
Most of the food we presently eat is
seriously denatured (lacking in nutrient value)
by chemical destruction of soil life and is
funher degraded by transport over long
distance. Our diet, combined with poor air
and water quality and compounded by the
stresses of crowded and hwried lives has led
directly to an epidemic of degenerative
diseases: heart attack, cancer, diabetes,
hypertension, leukemia, AIDS.
Worse than all of this, if that is
possible, our food now requires from 10 to
50 times the energy to produce and deli vet to
the table as it returns to the eater as calories of
nourishmenL We couldn't continue this way
without a huge subsidy of fossil fuels. We
are literally eating oil. And when it runs out as we know it will in 30 to 40 years - we will
starve. Of course, long before that
eventuality, our agriculture will have
collapsed from a host of other problems: the
shortage of water, excess UV radiation,
susceptibility of our genetically-narrow
monocultural staples (com, wheat, rice, and
potatoes) to insectS, diseases, climate shifts,
war, and revolution disrupting trade. The
production offiber and timber is similarly
vulnerable and destructive.
If the Standard American Diel is insane
and bound for collapse, then how should we
grow and eat our food? Imagine, if you will,
the life of our predecessors in this land. The
Cherokee, the Iroquois. and other Eastern
forest dwellers cultivated com, beans. and
squnsh; hunted deer. turkey, and small game
which were abundam in the woods; gathered
wild berries, nuts and greens. They caught
fish in lhe streams and collected mushrooms
from the forest floor. Around their
seu.lemcnts they selected and planted fruit
trees. berry bushes, and other useful
perennials.
The world of global IT3de, of oil W:lJ"S
and industrial production is a world of
artificial surpluses and scarcities, of unjust
expropriations and moral decadence. Yet we
have a vision of living in Katuah with natural
abundance, and a dedication to libeny and
1
SprLng, 1992
Drawing by Rob Messick
justice for all. How then can we move from
this disturbed and troubled world into one In
which all our true needs and wants are met
without despoiling the earth and robbing
from our grandchildren and our neighbors in
other countries?
aim of producing the greatest sum of yields in
the least practical area for the murunl benefil
of all creatures. He was certain thal small
areas dedicated to human needs could provide
net surpluses of food, fibre, and energy
while augmenting both genetic diversity and
We need a new way of thin.Icing and
seeing and new tools for problem-solving.
And we need to address fundamental human
needs: clean air, water, and food in sufficient
quantity, shelter appropriate lO climate,
satisfying and useful work, meaningful
human contact, and immersion in a natural
world.
This search for a new paradigm in the
built environment and our interaction with
nature emerged as a response to industrialism
and gradually merged into the science of
ecology. Frederick Law Olmstead, the great
I9th-century American landscape architect.
realized that the growth of cities and of
industrial work threatened the natural
foundation of human sanity. He sought to
ameliorate the effects of both by renewing
vistas of nature in urban parks and
greenways. ln this century, Lewis Mumford
extended these considerations of human scale
and sanity 10 the choices we make about
technology, and Ian McHarg and his
associates projected a concept of design
based on intrinsic capabilities of landscape.
Aui.1rlllian ecologi~t Bill Mollison
transformed his own studies of
environmental psychology imo a practice of
landscape design and coined the term
"permaculture" from "~nent agrioonm:."
or "pem1anent culture" to describe a proce,;s
of assembling artificial ecologies of crop
plants and animals to mimic nature with the
wildlife and resource conservation.
Toe understanding and application of
permaculture design over the past fifteen
years has taken several main forms: the
restoration of degraded landscapes; the
creation of naturalized food foreslS as a locus
for human habitation; the building and
retrofitting of strueturtS to incorporate
climatically appropriate energy and water
harvesting, and to suppon food production;
and the design of economic and
communication structures appropriate to local
production and trading. The work may be
found on American homesteads, in European
municipalities, and among African villages.
New towns have been created in Australia.
and long-term economic decline reversed in
regions of Nepal and India using
pennaculrure principles.
Pcrmaculrurc draws 1tS models from
patterns in nature and embraces many
integrative disciplines: agricultural ecology,
urban planning. landscape architecture.
decent:ralist economics. and shamanism.
among other.. Key insights which apply to
all living )ystems include the following
principles:
I) Design by Relative Location place all elements {house. pond, road, plants)
so as to maximize beneficial relationships and
minimize antagonisms.
2) Select clemcntS to perform \lultiple
Funclions.
(contmual on nc,1 page)
Xotuah JounlO! page 9
t
�!'
)
(001Uinuod &om pegc 9)
3) Suppon every important function
with Multiple Elements.
4) Efficient energy planning through
analysis by zones of access and Sectors of
outSidc influence.
5) Use Biological Resources favor perennials.
6) Recycle Energy on site.
7) Use and accelerate Natural
Succession to establish favorable sites and
soils. Integrate animals, plants, humans, and
StruCt\Jl'CS.
8) Polyculture & Diversity of
beneficial species to promote productive,
stable, interactive systems.
9) Pay attention to Edges & Natural
Patterns.
Pcnnaculture rcstS on an ethical
foundation of care for the earth, including all
living and non-living things; of care/or
people, so that all people everywhere may
have their basic needs met; and the
contribution of surplus time, money, and
energy to achieve the aims of earth and
people care. Permaculture also has a Life
ethic, valui.ng life and all ilS multiplicity for
its own sake. Cooperation, not competition is
the key.
How then might a permanent culture
take shape in Katuah? We can begin at our
doomeps by cultivating a diet appropriate to
our region - one based on the planlS and
animals which grow here naturally and which
have acclimated following introduction - and
extend that process into gardening and
fanning those same species regeneratively.
We can learn to eat seasonally even as we
take advantage of other cultural IJ'ad.itions to
Xatuah Journot pQ(J& l 0
enrich our diet.
Anyone can fimd space for a few leafy
greens and herbs, vegetables which
pound-for-pound afford more nutrition than
any other food category. Grown within a few
steps of the back door in mulched soils, they
will survive almost year round if given a bit
of care against summer drought and winter
frost. Even apartment dwellers in the city can
grow in containers on a balcony or in a
windowbox. Cold frames against a south
wall, a small greenhouse, or even movable
cloches can supply a steady stream of salad
which didn't have to cross the Continental
Divide to grace our table. The familiar
European and Medilerranean vegetables:
lettuce, celery, carrot, onions, broccoli, and
many others, are adapted to cold climates and
may with protection, overwinter in the
ground. Root crops and brassicas (cabbage,
kale...) are especially well-suited to this
method. These same vegetables don't grow
best in our summer heat, but that is the
season when the tropical American and
Indian plants - tomato, corn, beans, squash,
melons, eggplant, peppers, and okra
flourish.
We arc blessed throughout Katuah with
generous forests whose dominant members
include excellent nut trees: walnut, chestnut,
oak, hickory, and pecan. We should
recognize these allies for the food resources
which they offer. Let us plant them in our
yards and parks; conserve and catalog elite
trees where they Stand; and take care in
harvesting to leave the best, tallest,
straightest, healthiest, most vigorous, and
most fecund trees for seed, and tnk:ing only
the lesser examples for timber and fuel wood.
Fruit trees too should be planted in
every yard, along roadways, in parks, and in
neglected spaces in lhe cities. Besides the
traditional apple, pear, peach, plum, cherry,
and apricot, many areas arc suited to ugs. We
have the native pawpaw, the maypop vine,
and the persimmon which holds itS fruit on
the tree well into winter. And the mulberry,
which is one of the earliest fruits in spring, is
hardy, easy-to-grow. and prolific. Members
of the Eleagnus family - autumn olive and itS
cousins, provide not only a shower of tasty
fruit, but improve soils by fixing nitrogen at
their roots, as docs the
juncberry/serviceberry/saskatoon tribe
(Amtlanchiet spp. ).
~~
By inrerpianting and stacking vertical
layers into the garden, we can achieve greater
total yields than is possible with single crops.
Our naturally forested region provides the
model for a productive food forest with crops
grown at the canopy, mid-level, understory,
shrub, herb, and root layers, and on vines
running throughouL These food forests
prpvide abundant wildlife habitat and make
excellent forage systems both for humans and
for domestic poultry, sheep, and pigs where
access can be controlled. In very small
spaces, even in the city, bees, rabbitS, and
pigeons can be tended co augment food
production and household income.
Even more important than the
establishment of food forests everywhere is
the organizing of food markelS. We need to
connect capable growers throughout the
region with networks of town and city
consumers to support the development of
healthy fanns and to increase urban-rural
exchanges. These community-supponcd
farms stand a much better chance of
implementing the diverse cropping strategics
needed for ecological restoration than isolated
fanners trying to outwit the commodity
traders. Subscription farming is a way to
create new jobs in agriculture and offer
alternatives to existing farmers.
Strengthening the farm economy;
marketing food locally; and cultivating our
natural suengths in uee crops, fisheries,
berry and bulb production, can provide the
basis for many new, locally manufactured
hand tools, farm implements, craft- and
housewares. These burgeoning local
economies need methods to augment local
trading, and to retain and recycle wealth
wilhm the community. Local currency and
baner systems work well. The L.E.T.S., or
Local Employment & Trading System, is one
such example. (Further infonnacion from the
Institute for Community Economics,
Somerville, MA.).
If we ask again about sustainable
agriculture and pennanent culture, "What is
to be done?", the answer becomes clearer.
1) Eat what you grow and what is
available locally and in season.
2) Grow things that you like that arc
adapted to the area, and which do not travel
well.
3) Plant and tend food forests
everywhere people live, especially in cities,
using public as well as private space.
4) Conserve genetic diversity and
excellence by nurturing elite specimens and
by exchanging heirloom seed and
scionwood.
5) Trade sw-pluses locally. You needn't
grow everything, or even anything, if you're
a good plumber, teacher, baker, or
candlestick maker.
6) Organize food production to suppon
responsible growers.
7) Make direct market links wherever
possible. Know ~here your food come~
from and where u goes.
,,P'
Peter Bane publishu The Pcnnaculturc
Activist. a fUJlional quarttrly journalfor North
A=rico Born in Illinois, M now lives with his
family in Middle TtnnLSst.t w~re Mis putting his
itkas inJo practice. For m«e information please
contact him at Route I, Bo:i 38; Primm Springs TN
38476
· Drawing by Dawn Shiner
Sprt119, t 992
�I,
Silas McDowell's Vision Of
Mountain Agriculture
by Perry Eury
"Amongsr rhe valleys of the somhern
Alleg/UJllit!$ somerimes winter is succeeded
by wann wearlzer, which, cominuing through
the months of March and April, brings out
vegetarian rapidly, and clothes theforests in
an early verdure. This pleasant spring
wearher is renninated by a few days rain, and
the clearing up is followed by cold, raking
winds from the ,wrrhwest, leaving rhe
atmosphere of a pure indigo tint, though
which wink bright stars, bur ,ftlte wind
subsides at nig/11, the succeeding nwrning
shQws a heavy hoar frost,· vegetation is
unerly killed, including all manner offruit
germs, and the la11dscape clothed in verdure
the day before ,ww looks dark and dreary."
- Silas McDowell
On the morning of April 28, 1858,
Silas McDowell encountered this bleak scene
when he went out to inspect his fann. The
Macon Coumy fruit grower hnd spent almost
thirty years establishing his orchard of 600
apple LreCS near the banks of the Cullasaja
River. However, this late spring freeze
"made nearly a clean sweep from mountain
valleys in Western North Carolina of lhe
richest promise of a fruit crop that we have
ever had." For anyone else, the incident
would have been a crushing disappointment.
For McDowell, it was another opportunity to
examine nature's mysteries and to find a
bener way of fanning in the mountains
McDowell had deliberately selected a
shehered valley for his orchard. Only a settler
too poor to buy bouom land would have tried
to grow fruit hiJh on the mountainsides. And
yet, on this Apnl morning, McDowell
realized his mistake. While his own aces
"seemed as if clothed in a black pall," he
observed on the mountains looming over his
orchard a broad horizontal band of vegetation
left unscathed by the freeze.
Around 1780, Thomas Jefferson had
witnessed similar temperature inversions in
the Shenandoah Mountains of Vtrginia. He
reported, "I have known frosts so severe to
kill the hiccory trees round Monticello, and
yet not injure the tender fruit blossoms then at
bloom oo the t. p and higher parts of the
o
mountain."
Silas McDowell understood that this
was more than a quirk of topography and
climate. He suspected that thermal belts could
be the secret to successful fruit production in
mountainous areas. By the summer of 1858
he wrote that "all description of fruit trees
which have the good fortune to be located in
this vernal region, are now bending beneath a
heavy crop of fruit." He began to promote the
value of this zone for fruit growers and
contributed a repon to the United States
Agricu/cural Reports Jor 1861.
In his articles on the "belt of no frost"
McDowell explained, "The beautiful
phenomena of the 'Verdant Zone' or
Thennal Belt' exhibits itself upon our
mountainsides, commencing about three
hundred feet vertical height above the valleys,
SprLng, 1992
and traversing them in a perfectly horiz.ontal
line throughout their entire length like a vast
green ribbon upon a black ground."
Born in South Carolina in 1795,
McDowell moved to Asheville in his youth
for training as a tailor. He practiced his trade
in Charleston and Morganton before settling
in Macon County's Cullasaja Valley, where
he gained renown as a fruil grower, amateur
Silas McDowt/1
naturalist and story teller. His articles on the
mountains were published in popular
magazines and caught the auention of leading
botanists, who sought his help in finding rare
plants of the Southern Appalachians. When a
visiting scientist asked which college he had
auended, McDowell pointed to the hills
surrounding his farm and replied, "These
wild mountains are the only college at which
my name has ever been entered as a sruden1!"
In a tribute to Silas McDowell, T.F.
Glenn remembered him as modest and
unassuming, and also "intuitive, impulsive
and passionate. His companionship with
nature was a marked feature to the most
trivial objects of beauty and sublimity. By a
native force of genius, by dint of fiery energy
of will, by persistent application, he
sunnounted obstacles."
McDowell's tenacious efforts to raise
winter keeping apples had earned him a
reputation among southern fruit growers even
before the thennal belt episode. When
McDowell and his bride, Elizabeth, moved to
Macon County in 1830 they brought a baby's
cradle filled with small apple trees from her
grandfather's orchard near Asheville. Being
especially fond of winier apples, McDowell
chose varieties recommended by northern
pomologists. His results were like those of
other southern growers. "I made a complete
failure," he confessed, "for when my trees
began to bear fruit, it matured and fell from
the tree long before the proper time, and
though they were an excellent collection of
Aurumn Apples, there was n0t a good Winter
keeper amongst them."
For fifteen years, McDowell struggled
to raise winter keepers. Then, the editor of a
farm paper in Athens, Georgia, suggested
that he lake grafts from native seedling
apples. McDowell followed James
Cannack's advice and searched the hills
around his home for fruit stock. His quest
was successful.
"Amongst old Oterokee seedling Apple
trees - as well as other Southern seedlings, I
have succeeded in conferring on Southern
Pomology a llist of names of Winter Apples,
which both as to their highly aromatic taste,
as well as late winter keeping qualities,
cannot be excelled by as many varieties of
Winter Apples in the United States." His
catalog of new apples featured the Carmack,
Nickajack, Bullasage, Mavereck Winter
Sweet, Royal Pearman, Hoover, Golden
Pippin, Buff, Kingrussen, and Neverfail.
"None but late keepers in the list," McDowell
n01ed with delight.
ln 1870, William Saunders with the
Agriculture Department concluded, 'There is
not a doubt about it, the fmest winter apples
in America arc grown on th.ese mountain
lands." McDowell could take much of the
crediL
McDowell, always concerned with the
region's economy, believed that vineyards
established within the thennal belt could be a
mainstay of mountain agriculture. 'The
Grape," McDowell predicted, "will never fail
to yield to the husbandman a rich and
abundant crop of its luscious and
hean-cheering fruit; and had the vine
locomotion, corporal and mental sense, I
would bid it to 'Tarry not in all the plains; but
flee to the mountains for its life,' and take
refuge under the protection of lhe Thermal
Stratum!"
Much as he had in his quest for winter
apples, McDowell explored the mountains to
find superior varieties of grapes. He
speculated on the potential of hybridizing
some of the specimens, "W e cannot well
command our risibles when, in fancy, we
anticipate the aspect of that monster Grape
that will be produced by the hybridal cross
betwixt the Hon. A.G. Semmes's eight
pound bunches and the Mammoth Grape
Prof. C. D. Smith and ourself measured
yesterday, the single berries of which gined
three and a quaner inches around."
Afler the Civil War, McDowell
continued to write on agricultural topics,
presided over the Fruit Growers Association
and pleaded for extension of the Western
Nonh Carolina Railroad. He was constantly
learning more - from natural phenomena, the
culrure of the Oterokees and the latest farm
journals. In his judgement, the climate and
the terrain of the mountains did not have to be
obstacles to successful farming. Instead, the
unique character of the mountains could
suppon a distinctive form of agriculture.
Diversity was one aspect of the
mountain agriculture he envisioned.
"Dairying, grape culture, bee culture, sheep
(continued on page 34)
�Mountain People
The grey winter sky hovers over the village,
threatening to swoop down with nightfall.
A woman carries burdensome logs to her cabin
and feeds them to the wilting flames in the heanh.
She wraps a moth-eaten quilt
tightly about her sinewy frame,
to shut out the icy strands of December
squeezing through chinks in the walls.
Her hands are weathered with time like the mountain, the palms
grooved like the tire tracks frozen into the eanhen road.
These are hands that once held warm lovers,
brought orphaned raccoons in from a storm,
angry, caring hands that spanked naughty children,
and comfoned them when frightened by distant coyotes,
and scratched their backs until they found the itch,
and opened the tightest jars of jam...
The people of the mountain are quiet,
one with themselves, one with the mountain,
but in the lines on their faces, in their strong hands,
in their calm way,
they tell how they work and breathe,
and brim with life,
like the woman rocking before the fire
in that small cabin on the hill,
her heart a smoldering ember,
warm despite the howling wind outside,
whipping through the firs on the mountainside.
- Allison C. Swherland
Quintessence
Never have I seen the sun like one winter's afternoon
late last February. The wannth was drenched into those
hills of the Blue Ridge, into the stalks of yellow and orange,
rolling back finally to the dark mountains, and the still
darker clouds.
We ourselves were engulfed in shadow, steadily
approaching that sunlit stretch of road before us, that
splash of quin1essen1 light.
A gentle warmth touched !he back of my neck.
and I turned, 10 see but a sliver of silvery white light
at the horizon, light which eked out from under the stormy
tumul t of blue-black clouds.
And soon we were immersed in it, bathed in Ught,
the light of spring, or almost summer. It glinted through
the strands of hair in my eyes, and I squinted to keep looking.
So I closed my eyes and breathed, and let it seep into my
veins, and warm my forehead and my cheeks and my shoulders.
And suddenly it was gone. We were in darkness. among the
mountains, and then just shadow. We meandered through those
hills of greenblack forests like a mountain brook in early
evening, now and again coming upon a splash of sunwashed
hills, searching for that light, until the sun went down.
- Allison C. Swherland
J(Qtu.!Jh Journal
p09e 12
Drawings by Mictu,,,I Thompson
Spri-119, 1992
�NATIVE FOODS
I was brought up in the remote
reaches of the Cherokee Indian
Reservation. My family were "a-aditionals."
That means that they stuek to the old ways
of the lncJjan people, believing them 10 be
the beSL We did some things in exactly the
same way they were done by our people
before contact with the white man. As a
boy, I used to go into the woods and hunt
squirrels with a blowgun, for instance. In
other ways, our life, while not exactly
similar 10 the ways of the anc~stors, echoed
the manner in which they lived and gave a
clue to how it was done before.
In the earliest times, our people lived
off the land. They hunted their meat and
gathered plant foods in the foresL Later,
agriculture became their base, that's when
their culture really blossomed, because they
spent Jess time in gathering food.
Agriculture was a stable way of
surviving, but they also hunted and foraged
food from the wild. A srnple food in times
past was chestnut bread. This represented
the Cherokee's mixed food supply: com
from the fields and chestnuts from the wild.
An abundance of both. And if one source
failed, they could fall back on the other to
carry them through.
I heard that a professor said that a.bout
the time the white man came here the
Cherokees were spending about three days
a week for survival. Most of my life in
modern society l couldn't make a living
working seven days.
In my life. I've spent a lot of time in
the woods, and l lcamed that the secret of
survival in the forest is to puc no limits on
what you eaL Like a bear, see everything as
a potential meal. Everything! Game and
fish, of course, but also crawdads, frogs.
bugs, worms, grubs in the logs. Hornet
larva popped on a hot rock are very good.
It used to be a kid's job to sit under a
holly tree with a blowgun stuck up between
the branches to shoot at the cardinals.
robins, or any other little songbirds that
came. People say. "How did you pluck
them?" but we never plucked them. We just
threw them into the fire and rolled them
around until the feathers had all been singed
off. We treated all the little birds and small
animals like that. We never skinned a
squirrel.
I remember one time I was out, and I
ate tent caterpillars that were feeding on a
wild cherry tree. I roasted them. The fire
singed the hair off - most of it. They
swelled up into little puffy morsels. They
did have a queer taSte, but I was hungry
and I ate all of them I could find.
But we did not have 10 eat insects
except in famine and songbirds were more
hunting trophies for the young. Larger
game was plentiful. In the older rimes the
people ate woods bison, deer. birds like
passenger pigeon and grouse, and
groundhogs.
Drawing by James Rhea
But they would not eat possums. The
Cherokees thought the possum was the
lowliest creature on the Eanh. When
DeSoto came th.rough, one of his company.
a man called The Gentleman of Elvas,
wrote that when they SlOpped at the village
that was near the present ciry of Asheville,
they demanded food for their travel-s from
the natives. He recorded that they were
given "several hundred dead dogs without
any hair on their tails." He did not realize
how the Cherokees despised the possum as
a food sourt:c and what a political sutement
this was.
Plant food was plentiful as well. The
people would gather berries in the
summenime, chestnuts in the fall. When
the che~tnut trees were alive. there was a
large chesmut harvest every year • bushels
and bushels of chestnuts. Properly dried
and stored, they would last all winter.
The people also ate chinkapins.
Chinkapins are related to chestnuts. The
by Bear W ith Runs
tree looks very similar 10 a chestnut tree.
The nuts were a little bit smaller than
chestnuts - somewhat larger than a beech
nut.
Acorns were imponanl, too. They
leached them in water to get out the tannic
acid and then ground them into flour or
roasted them in the fire. They probably
preferred the white oak acorns, because
those have !he least tannie acid.
My grandmother used 10 make little
cakes out of white oak acorn nour, com
meal, and honey. She would also add
persimmons, if we had them. Those cakes
were good! They were a heavy food • a
little bit went a long way
In the old limes. the people would eat
a lot of ,mnas, the wild potatoes that grow
:llong the creeks. And in the spring. ramps
and wild greens, like branch lettuce,
s/10-1011 (or so-chan, green conenower •
ed.). Indian cucumber, and nettles, arc
(cxmlinucd on nnt page)
:KAtuan Journot ~ 13
�(continued
rrom page 13)
plentiful. Mushrooms are good, if you
know what you are looking for, but they
aren't very filling.
It's interesting. One person can
forage really well alone, while foraging for
two people is difficulL But with three
people it becomes easier, because two can
forage and the other one can prepare the
food.
When the Cherokees smned planting,
they added some new foods to their dieL
Com, of course, was a staple, beans, and
"punkins," as they called them in my
family, meaning any lcind of squash.
We ate green com as "roastin' ears,"
dried corn was ground into flour and eaten
as cornbread. Everybody grew their own
corn, and everybody thought their own was
better than everybody else's.
The com we would keep in a com
crib. We put the beans in sacks and hung
them up in the barn or under the dogtrot
(roofed, but open air passageway between
two separate sections of a building - ed.) at
the house.
The early people built very neat,
efficient com cribs. They were raised off
the ground on poles, bad a tight thatched
roof, and walls made of panels woven of
bark or wood splits that were daubed with
clay or mud to keep varmints out. The com
was stored in there on the cob.
Mother trimmed the com husks and
packed them to save for cooking chestnut
bread, bean bread, or com dumplings. The
traditional way was to wrap them in com
husks and boil them. When the corn shucks
ran out, Mother would wrap them in green
oak leaves. That would tum the com blue.
Mother ground com a litlle bit at a
time as she needed it. She never ground
very much because weevils would get in
into ground meal very quickly.
Back long ago, before they had ovens
to bake in, they made mealcakes that were
either boiled or roasted. We used to do !hat
when l was young. We would call !hem
hoecakes. We always carried com meal
when we were traveling. To prepare the
cakes, we would mix the meal with boiling
water to "kill the com." Killing the com
causes the dough to stick together. Then we
would flatten them out, lay them on a flat
rock, and let them roast as brown as lhey
could be.
In the old days, lhc warriors would
carry parched com in a long bag by their
side when they were on the trail. They
parched shelled com by throwing it into a
hot fire and leaving it until it got brown (or
more likely black), and then grinding it into
powder.
On the trail, they would trot from
dayUght to dark, heading for Iroquois
country. When they saw a stream up ahead,
they would pour some of the powder into
their hand while they were running. As
they crossed over the stn:am, they would
bend down while they were still moving
and grab a handful of water and keep
trotting. That was the only food that they
would take alo11g their route.
Beans were important to us, too. The
elderi; told me that the originnl bean was red
and white, and it came from the south.
Xatuah J~rnoL pf.UJC 14
Pinto beans were my family's
favorite, and we must have raised one-half
acre of pinto beans every year. A visitor
could come into our house any day of the
week and find a pot of pinto beans on the
stove and bread in the warmer on top of th~
stove - cornbread, and later when l was
growing up there were occasionally flour
biscuits, but lhat was not often.
We had meals only once or twice a
day, but we ate whenever we got hungry.
That was the way I was raised. If 1 got
hungry in the middle of the day, l'd just
run in, take a bowl of beans, grab some
bread, and eat up.
When people found that
domesticating livestock was easier lhan
hunting, they began raising animals as well
as growing crops. My grandfather said that
the turkey was the first animal to be
domesticated, and it domesdcated itSClf.
When the Cherokees began raising com,
they would build litllc racks in the cornfield
and assign the kids to keep watch to scare
off the crows and wildlife. The turkeys
loved the com so much they just wouldn't
scare, so the people just penned up the
turkeys and fed them com in the pen to
keep !hem out of lhe fields.
The Cherokees ate turkey, but !hey so
prized the turkeys' feathers for making
ornaments and beautiful capes, lhat my
grandfather said, "We used to care more
about 'em for their feathers than for the
meaL"
Because we ate what was provided
locally, lhe diet of the Cherokee fndians
changed with the seasons of the year.
In the green com season, when the
first com turned ripe enough tO eat, besides
the roasting cars we would cat squash and
other vegetables, fish, and chicken. But we
never ate game in the summenime, because
we were afraid of a parasite we called
"weevils" or "foxes." (insect larvae, also
called "warbles" by white people - ed.)
This was a big wonn that got into squirrels,
rabbits. and deer. You could often see two
or three of them sticking out of an animal in
the late summer and early fall. IL was large
and black, pointed on one end. It would
bore into the skin and live off the moisture
and the blood of the animal.
We never ate game at all until the
worms were killed by the first frost. There
were taboos about killing animals until after
the weevils were gone.
But we ate chickens. And we caught
fish all summer long. The old way to catch
trout was with trout baskets. They built up
weirs in the stream made out of rocks.
They piled up rocks forcing the fish into a
narrow channel that flowed into the trout
basket. As kids, we used to build weirs in
Lhe stream, too.
We also ate frogs and any turlles we
came upon during the summer season - if
we came across a mud turtle, that was just a
didn't have any lard on them at all. But they
tasted really good. We fed them some
garbage 10 keep them around, and they ate
bugs and snakes, but we would kill them
right after the acorn crop was down, and
that's when they would be their nicest.
Hogs raised on acorns and com taste totally
different than the meat you buy today. Fall
was the fat time for everything that lived in
the forest - including the Indians.
Father smoked meat, and Mother
would can trout and other kinds of meat in
jars. She would boil them outside in a big
washtub that would hold 30 or 40 cans. We
ate a lot of meat in the fall and early winter,
and then we ate dried food until the spring.
ln the old days people would put
dried food in clay pots and carry them up 10
the asi, their dugout winter shelter. The
food would store there until the wintertime
when the people arrived and would live in
the asi surrounded by their food supply.
My Mother would dry berries,
persimmons, squash, any kinds of food we
could get. We had a tray about lhe size of a
screen door made of honeysuckle vines
woven into a mat. h was hung it over the
wood stove. We would lower it, she would
lay out all the slices, and then we would
help her pull it back up. When it wasn't in
use. we just pulled it up against the ceiling.
It always stayed over the wood stove.
I like to think that is how they did it in
the old times: hung a mat over lhe central
fire in the house under the smoke hole.
We had chestnuts, and we had com,
so no one really went hungry. The diet may
not have been nutritionally stable all year,
but we had enough.
The hardest time of year was late
February and early spring. By then we
were craving greens. Tobacco helped with
the hunger. Tobacco depresses the appetite.
But we were doggin' for vegetables. In the
meantime we drank teas: sassafras tea,
birch tea, pine needle tea, which had a lot
of vitamin C, and spicebush tea.
My mother used to make cough
medicine for me, anyway l think it was for
me, but Grandpa would drink a lot of it.
She'd catch him at it, and he'd go "Hunh.
hunh, hunh (like he was coughing)." It was
wild cherry bark and pine need.Jes. They
were boiled down and after all the needles
and bark were taken out of it. she added
honey until it was really !hick, and then she
cooked it down some more. It was nice. It
was really nice. It was good and sweet.
Then, a little later in the spring, the
sho-tan came in. Everyone would have a lot
of that. get the shits, and clean out their
bodies. My grandmother would also make
us a tonic from a gray lichen called
"turkey's tail." Later the ramps would be
ready, the growing things would be getting
green, and everything would balance out
/
again.
treat.
We were meat eaters in the fall, for
sure. We never did have any cows. 1 didn't
eat beef until l was 2 l or 22 years old. But
we did have some old skinny hogs. They
were as lean as they could be. l remember
my father complaining about how lhey
In spilt ofth.t: droll nomt he has odopttd/or
this articlt, Btc.r With Runs IJ a full-blooded
Chtroku Indian. lit livl.S in quiet anonJmity ofl
tht Cherolctt India/I Rt.str.•ation
Drawing by Pcgi
Sprl..™3, 1992
�COVER CROPS
On-farm, Solar-powered Soil Building
by Mark Schon beck
During my four years as an agricultural
researcher at the New Alchemy Institute, I
chose to focus on cover crops because they
perform so many different functions on the
farm, utilizing primarily solar energy. The
only off-farm input is the seed - a few
pounds to one hundred pounds per acre,
from which thousands of pounds of organic
matter arc accumulated through
photosynthesis. In contraSt, most soil
amendments entail imponing hundredweights
or tons of materials for each acre.
A cover crop is a crop grown not for
harvest. but to protect, maintain or enrich the
soil A green mallW'e is any crop (but usually
a cover crop and/or natural weed growth)
which is tilled into the soil to add organic
matter and feed the soil biota. Cover crops
and green manures protect soil against wind
and water erosion, suppress weeds, provide
habitat for beneficial insecis, add organic
maucr, add nitrogen (legumes only), and
make other nuoients more available to the
next crop. Most cover crops can also be
grown for grain (e.g., rye, buckwheat)
and/or livestock forage (e.J/ ., clover, annual
ryegrass, alfalfa).
Cover cropping is a cornerstone of
sustainable agricultural systems in most
bioregions, and this is cenainly true for
Kawah. Why do I make this claim? I'll Stan
with a brief digression into soil ecology...
In both natural and agricultural
ecosystems, plant growth depends on the
organic matter cycle in the soil. Soil
organisms continually break down soil
humus, thereby releasing nitrogen,
phosphorus, potassium, and other nutrients
for plant roots to absorb.
The carbon from the organic matter
appears in the atmosphere as carbon dioxide.
Plants convert carbon dioxide b:ick into
organic compounds in photosynthesis. In
natural ecosystems, leaves, other plant
residues and animal dung thar fall to the
ground feed earthworms and other soil
organisms. These creatures change the
residues into humus, thus replenishing
organic matter reserves. Most of the nucrients
can cycle back and forth between soil and
plant almost indefinitely, except when intense
rains wash some of them away.
Nitrogen is more volatile, and some of
ii inevitably slips away into the atmosphere or
groundwater. Fortunately, there arc
numerous species ofbac1eria and blue-green
algae in the soil that can fix (convert)
atmoSpheriC nitrogen back into forms that
plants and soil organisms can use. The most
effective nitrogen-fixing bacteria, the
rhizobia, form a symbiosis with the roots of
leguminous plants such as clovers, beans and
black locust trees.
Sprl.fflJ, 1992
Agriculture disrupts this
nutrient/organic matter cycle in three ways.
First, clearing the natural vegetation exposes
the soil surface to sun, wind and rain.
Because humus is a lightweight and
finely-divided material, a disproportionate
amount of humus is lost when soil erodes.
Extreme temperature and moisture
fluctuations at the soil surface can also bum
up the humus and deter biological activity,
leaving a son of "dead zone" in the top inch
or so. Second, tillage accelerates the r(lle at
which soil organic manerdecomposes. This
happens because soil disturbance brings
additional oxygen into the topsoil, thus
speeding bacterial action. Initially, the
resulting burst of nucrient release promotes
heavy crop yields, but the soil wears out
unless the organic mauer is replenished from
other sources. Third, harvest removes
nuoients, and these must be replaced
regularly. Because synthetic chemical
fertilizers do not feed the soil life and tend to
upset the soil's balance, biological farmers
use organic and natural mineral fcnilizers,
such as compost, leaf mold and ground
limestone.
Organic fanning often entails adding
large amounts of organic amendments to the
soil. lf these materials are brought in from
off-fann sources, this is not sustainable
farming, as this removes materials from the
organic matter cycle on someone else's land.
Also, iransporting bulky amendments from
their point of origin 10 the farm consumes a
lot of fossil fuel. Composting manure and
crop residues produced on the farm is more
ecologically sustainable, but may be quite
labor·intensive. Often, the amount of
residues produced on the farm docs not meet
all the land's organic matter needs.
Cover crops use sunlight to produce
organic matter in place, and, in the case of
legumes, to fix nitrogen. In contrast,
manufacture of synthetic nitrogen fertilizer
uses a tremendous amount of fossil fuel.
Once a cover crop is established, its l"OO(S
bind the soil together, significantly reducing
erosion even before the foliage fully covers
the ground. As the cover crop canopy closes,
it effectively stops erosion.
Cover crops such as buckwheat
suppress weeds by growing rapidly and
casting dense shade, whereas winter rye, oats
and sudan grass release natural substances
that suppress weed seedlings (this
phenomenon is called allelopathy).
Legume cover crops often add 50 to
150 pounds of nitrogen per acre in a single
season, thus replacing the nitr0gen harvested
in most vegetable and grain crops.
Buckwheat, lupines and sweet clover have
roots that can absorb relatively insoluble
fonns of phosphorus that other crops cannot
access. When the cover crop is tilled in, the
phosphorus is released to the next crop.
Some cover crops and deep-rooted weeds can
extract potassium, calcium, or ccnain
micronurrients from the subsoil or from
insoluble minerals.
A mixed gra:.s/legume cover crop (e.g.,
clover/timothy, or winter rye/hairy vetch) can
produce three to four tons of dry organic
matter per acre in a year, and the proportion
of nitrogen to carbon in such a mixture is
often ideal for humus formation. A three ton
cover crop provides about as much organic
matter and nitrogen as a 10 to 15 ton manure
application, and the cover crop does not need
10 be hauled into the field, but simply mowed
or tilled in.
The biggest challenge in using cover
crops is allowing them enough time to reach a
good size without sacrificing a whole season
of vegetable or grain production. The
simplest approach is to plant the cover crop
immediately after harvest, but this is often in
fall, leaving the cover crop little time before
winter.
One altenullive is overseeding, or
planting the cover crop while the production
crop is still growing. In moist, fine•texturcd
soils, small-seeded cover crops like clover,
alfalfa and ryegrass can be broadcast on the
soil surface between rows of com. squash,
1oma1oes. broccoli or other widely-spaced
crops. Jn coarser soils or drier conditions. the
se.ed can be incorporated by light hoeing or
cultivation. The cover crop grows slowly
beneath the esmblished vegetable. then spuns
ahead after the lauer is harvested and cleared.
Another method is to plant a slowstaning cover crop such a.\ clover~ the same
time as a grain is planted. After gram harvest,
the clover is grown until the following
spring, then tilled in. Clover plus grain
(ciontinucd an p1gc 16)
Ora..,ing by Rob Musick
�stubble give excellent wintertime erosion
conuol, and provide a lot of organic matter
with a good c:irbon-nitrogen balance.
When a green manure is ,tilled into the
soil, a burst of biological activity occurs
which can be detrimental to crop seedlings
for a shon rime. Thus it is a good idea 10 wait
two or three weeks after turning the crop
under before direct-seeding vegetables,
especially small seeds like lettuce and carrots.
An alternative method is to mow the
aboveground pan of the cover crop, and
gather the clippings to mulch another bed or
build a compost heap. 11 is much easier to
spade or plow up the crop stubble withou1 all
that shoot biomass there, and the waiting
period needed before direct-seeding should
also be shoncr. Some cover crops can be
killed by mowing at the nght ume. Their
clippings can be left in place and vigorous
crop seedlings (e.g., cabbage, 1oma10)
lnlnSplanted through the mulch without
tillage. Success with this varies because the
mulch cools the soil and can aurac1 slugs.
Clearing an eight to twelve inch diameter area
around each seedling reduces these problems.
Different cover crops arc suited to
different purposes. A few specific examples
follow. The first six are non-legumes and do
not add nitrogen, the rest are legumes that can
fix niuogen.
Winter rye is very hardy, overwintering
as far north as zone 3a (annual minimum -35
10 -40 degrees F). In the Katt.iah bioregion,
rye planted by early October will protect the
soil and suppress weeds effectively. Rye
planted in early November will do well and
produce lots of organic matter in spring, but
there is a risk of winter erosion, as the cover
will be thin.
Rye is useful for talcing up and
conserving any soluble soil nitrogen left over
from the growing season. The crop can be
difficult to manage in the spring because it
rapidly gets very tall and tough. When grown
alone, it can also ccmporarily 1ie up soil
nitrogen and release allelopathic substances
that can inhibit growth of the nex1 crop. If ii
gets away from you, mow-kill the rye after
the heads have emerged and begun shedding
pollen. Or let the rye go to maturity and reap
some nice grain and/or seeds for next year's
cover crop. Seeding rate is 90-150 lb/acre
(note: one pound per 1,000 square feet equals
about 44 lb/acre). using the higher rates for
later plantings.
Win~r wheOJ can be used similarly 10
rye, though it is a little less hardy, somewhat
shorccr and later to mature. It may also be
easier to manage in the spring. Sow 90-120
lb/acre.
OOJS, another small grain, is much less
frost-hardy, and is generally killed the first
time the temperature drops to 15 or 20
degrees F.. Oats can be planted in early
spring and mowed or turned under in early
summer. They can also be planted in August
or early September and allowed to grow until
killed by hard freezes. This leaves a thick
protective mulch that is easier 10 manage in
spring than a live rye crop. though the
~um of organic matter will be less. Sow
90-120 lb/acre..
Annual ryegrass is marginally
winter-hardy in zone 6b (annual minimum -5
to 0 degrees F), and can either be planted in
early spring or in August-early September.
Ryegrass fonns an unusually dense root
sysiem that gives excellent erosion
protcccion, fosters good soil strUcture and
"mops-up" leftover soil nutrients so they
don't wash away. Unlike the three preceding
crops, ryegrass ca11not be mow-killed, and
must be spaded or tilled in. Rye and rycgrass
are often confused, bu1 they arc easy 10 tell
apart. Rye has the edible, wheat-berry sized
seeds, while ryegrass has fme, fluffy seeds
that look a lot like lawn grass seed. Sow
20-50 lb/acre.
Sudan grass is a fast-growing,
fros1-sensitive summer annual that can
produce a tremendous nmount of biomass. le
requires warm, fertile soil, and is well suited
to planting after harvest of early spring
vegetables like lettuce or peas. It suppresses
weeds through both competition and
allelopathy, and can be cut twice for mulch
(prized by strawberry growers), compost
mmerial or fodder (cawion: let it grow a1 least
24 inches tall, preferably more, before
feeding to livestock, as young sudan grass
contains toxic amounts of cyanide). The
stubble may be subl.tantial enough 10 hold the
soil over winter and add a li1tle organic matter
when turned under in spring. Sow 20-50
lb/acre.
Buckwheat is a mos1 useful green
manure for shon fallow periods in vegetable
culture. It can be planted any time after the
las1 frost, up to the middle of August.
Buckwheat emerges and shades the ground
rapidly, choking out weeds. It reaches 2 to 4
feet and begins 10 flower about 30 days after
planting, and should be mowed or turned
under at most 45 days after planting 10
prevent self-seeding. Two or three successive
plantings of buckwheat, followed by winter
rye, with each crop tilled under, reduces
populations of stubborn perennial weeds like
quackgrass. Buckwheat is also excellent bee
forage, and is good for mobilizing the
phosphorus in a rock phosphate applica1ion.
Sow 50-100 lb/acre.
Clovers are small-seeded legumes that
Stan slowly, but can fix 50 to 100 pounds of
nitrogen if allowed to grow a full year.
White clover is a low-growing (4-18
inches, depending on variety), long-lived
perennial, and is suited to "living mulch"
applications (be sure you don't confuse it
with white sweetclover which can reach five
to 10/eet).
Red clover is taller (18-30 inches),
faster-growing, shorter lived and very shade
tolerant. ll is we11 suited to overseeding into
established vegetables in August if moisture
is adequate.
Alsike clover is intennediate between
white and red clovers, and is more tolerant of
clayey, wet or acid soils. Unlike the 01hers,
crimson clover is an annual, which can be
planted in August or early September and wi11
overwinter in the milder pans of Kaniah (it's
risky here in zone 6b). h can also be planted
in early spring. ln addition to fixing nitrogen
and producing 3 t0ns/acre of organic matter,
crimson clover has spectacular deep red
blooms. Sow clovers in early spring or late
summer, 4-8 lb/acre for white clover, 8-15
lb/acre for red or alsike, and I5-25 lb/acre for
crimson. Clover seedlings don't like ho1 sun,
so it helps to plant oats at 35-50 lb/acre with
the clover to provide light shade, then mow
the oats at heading. Crimson clover can be
mow-killed just after 0owering, while the
other clovers cannot.
Hairy vetch is a legume which has
recently enjoyed a resurgence of interest. h is
a winter annual vine with small purple
flowers and can fix 100 to 250 pounds of
nitrogen per acre. Vetch is hardy to zone Sa
(annual minimum -15 to -20 degrees),
although frost-heaving can be a problem if
harsh freezes alternate wilh !haws. It can be
planted in September, either alone or with
rye, wheat or oats, at 20-30 pounds of vetch
plus 50 pounds of grain per acre. Vetch/rye is
an excellent combination because the rye is
strong enough tO support the vetch vines in
spring, 1he rye roots help prevent frost
heaving, and the combination is more
effective than either crop alone in stopping
erosion, suppressing weeds and building
humus. Also, vetch can be mow-kilJed once
it has begun to flower, which happens about
the same rime that rye sheds pollen. Other
vetches include bigflower vetch (hardy in
most of Katt.iah), common vetch and purple
vetch, both of which are winterlcilled at 10 to
20 degrees F. Their residues release nitr0gen
in the spring, thus these vetches may be
valuable planted in August ahead of the next
year's early spring greens.
Sweet clovers are biennial legumes with
very deep taproots that open the soil and
bring up nutrients. White sweetclover likes
rich, moist, somewhat clayey soil, and gets
very large in the second season, while ye11ow
sweetclover tolerates droughty, sandy soils
and is somewhat smaller, about 4 LO 6 feet
tall. Hubam sweetclover is an annual white
variety that produces lots of organic maner in
a short time, but may self-seed and become a
nuisance weed. Sow sweetclovers in April or
August at 12-18 lblacre. alone or wilh 35-50
lb oats/acre.
Alfalfa, the "queen of forages" can also
make a heavy nitr0gen-fixing cover crop and
provide a highly nutritive mulch. Alfalfa is
somewhat finicky, requiring deep, rich,
nonacid soils high in phosphorus, potassium,
and calcium. Under good conditions, it is a
long-lived percMial lhot can be cut for
several years for mulch, compost or forage.
Sow a1 15-20 lb/acre, pn:fembly with oats at
35-50 lb/acre and/or timothy or other
perennial forage gross at half its normal
seeding rate.
Mark Schon/Jeck Ph.D.•formuly a rcscarckr
with Ntw t\lchtmy. is now inll()/vtd with tht
fnstitutt for Sustainable Living. Wind.n..-ept Farm;
Rt. I, Box 35: Chtck, VA 24072 which products
{JII uctlltnt ncwsltlltr, TcJtinh.
Sprlll<J, 1992
�Plant for Tomorrow:
HEMP
by John Ingress
"Whal is c/wJ uncercainflush low on
the ground, tlwt irresistible rush of
mulci111di,w1LS green ? Aformigl,t later, and
the field is brown no longer. Overflowing ir,
burying it out ofsight, is the shallow tidal sea
of the hemp, ever rippling. With that in
view, all ocher shades in namre seem dead
and coUIII for nothing. Far reflected,
conspicuous, brilliant, strange; masses of
living emerald, saturated wirlt blazing
sunlight."
•from The Reign of Law; A Talc or lhc Kentucky
Hemp Fields by l=s Allen Lane (1900)
Although the Earth has always had
"environmentalists" - people and entire
cultures who respect the forces of Nature and
who try 10 learn from and work wirll those
forces - our industrial/scientific society is
coming 1ownrds environmentalism from the
opposite pole: by discovering how pollution
has disrupted the web of life.
The thread that binds these issues is
1he non-sustainable nature of our dependence
on fossil fuels (and u-ees, because forest
habitats cannot be replenished a1 the rate at
which treeS rue being cut). To dismiss hemp
as a possible solution because ii is of the
genus Camwbis with "marijuana" ( a
pejorative misnomer) is akin to dismissing
Galileo because "the world is flat." For the
moment, let's consider only those varieties of
cannabis referred to as "headache weed,"
containing little psychoactive THC.
Hemp is one of humanity's oldest
cultivated crops. The weaving of hemp fiber
as an industry began 10,000 years ago (see
Jack Herer, The Emperor Wears No Cloches,
1990). By the 27th century BC. the Chinese
cultivated hemp for fiber, medicine, and
herbal use. Since that time, cannabis has been
continuously incorporated into virtually all
the cultures of the Middle East, Asia Minor,
India, China, Japan, Europe, and Africa, and
its uses for oil, food, and relaxation were
developed.
The first laws governing hemp in 1he
Americas were those requiring colonial
Virginia fanners to grow hemp. Violators
could be imprisoned. Washington grew i1,
Jefferson smuggled Chinese seed at great
peril; the first drafts of the US Constitution
were written on hemp paper. The Census of
1850 counted 8,327 hemp plantations of
2000 acres or more, mostly in the South.
In 1916, USDA Bulletin No. 404
reponed that one acre of cannabis hemp, in
annual rotation over a 20 year period, \\0Uld
produce as much pulp for paper as 4.1 acres
of trees, requiring no polluting chemicals.
The hemp pulp technology wa~ invented by
USDA scientists in 1916, but awaited the
mvcntion of dcconica1ing and harvesting
machinery. These arrived in the mid-10-la1e
1930's. at the same time as the DuPont
Company was patenting processes 10 make
plastics from oil and coal, as well as new
Spn119, 1992
sulfate/sulfite processes to make paper from
wood pulp.
Coincidentally - some say
conspiratorially - the Marijuana Tax Act of
1937 effectively outlawed the entire cannabis
plant family on the basis of it's "reefer
madness" properties. No1 only DuPont
profits, but those of large timber holdings,
were wriuen into law. (William Randolph
Hearst, whose "yellow journalism" was
instrumental in the marijuana scare, owne-0
hundreds of thousands of acres of timber,
destined for newsprint).
A working definition of sustainable
agriculture might be those practices that
assure the means of survival - food. fuel,
fiber, and medicine. The mining and use of
fossil fuels. unless absolutely necessary. is
only "economical" in 1cnns of shon cerm
profits. As Buckminis1er Fuller poinis ou1 in
1he book Critical Patl1, it took millions or
years of pho1osyn1hesis, decay, and
accumulation of organic material 10 produce
the oil and coal we use today. By determining
replacement values. he calculates gasoline to
be wonh $2.'i million dollars per gallon! One
might say it's priceless. Or. since burning it
is killing the planet. one could say it has
negative value when removed from the
ground for applications for which a
renewable, sustainable resource, such :is
hemp. is available.
The cannabis hemp seed is a
complete source of vegetable protein, :ind the
USDA food comparisons found hempsecd
lower in saturated fats than any other cooking
oil. including soy and cnnola.The byproduct
of pressing hemp seed for its oil is a high
protein seed cake.
Hemp fiber makes fabrics that are
stronger. more insulating, more absorbent,
and tonger lasting than cotton. More than
half the textiles we use today are imponed,
due to environmental concerns and labor
costs. Hemp requires little fertilizer, and no
pesticides. Local industry could revive.
Hemp is the world's most prolific
source of plam cellulose, which is the basic
raw material used for plastics, fabrication
material, chipboard, fibelboard and other
construction boards.
For more than 3,500 years, cannabis
has been, depending on the culture or nation,
either the moi;1 used or one of the most
widely used plants for medicines. If legal, i1
would immediately replace an estimated lO to
20 percent of all pharmaceutical prescription
medicines and could be added, as extracts, 10
another 20 to 30 percent. From 1842 10 1900
ii made up half of all medicines sold, with
vinually no fear of its "high."
In 1937, the AMA and drug
companies testified against the Marijuana Tax
Ac1, because cannabis was known to have so
much medical potential and has never caused
any observable addictions or death by
overdose. It is known to be helpful in ca.~s
of asthma, glaucoma. tumors, nause:i
resulting from chemotherapy or AIDS,
epilepsy, back pain, and stress among its 100
or so kno\\ n applications.
If we would let it. cannabis hemp
could have a bright future providing
humankind with food, fuel, fiber, an~~
medicine.
fr
For addiuonol informaJu,n on w u.ses of
rhe MIii/i plan/, wme 10: Fnendsofllemp: Bo;(98/:
Mars /lilt, NC 28754,
x.cituah Journal. JJCllF t 7
�KATUAH CULTIVARS
Cultivated Varieties of Vegetable and Fruits
Recommended for Ka mah Bioregion
We received a handful of Kaniah
gardeners' lis1s of favorite fruil and
vegetables varieties. The resulting list is a
chefs' cornucopia. and generally includes
personn.l favorites for productivity, taste,
nuaition, and relative freedom from
problems. Codes for seed sources for the
more difficult-to-find varieties (when known)
are included at the end of the article. Happy
Gardening!
We invite Katuah readers to send us
your favorite varieties (esp. Open Pollinated
{O.P.) or non-hybrid varieties) and your
list of not-so-m:ommendcd varieties (this is
also imponant info!) for developing a more
comprehensive regional listing. Thanks for
your giving...
Perry Eury (Kalmia Center, Sylva, NC)
-rates Red Jewel sweet poiato as a
favorite! He continues to have problems
with disease on legumes. but has had good
luck with a crowder pea, Purple
Knucklehull (SH). He highly recommends
the recovered "Cherokee" Com, a delicious
white com with pinkish blush-- makes lhe
BEST cornbread! (from Cherokee Boys
Club).
Hueh Love! ( Union Agricultural
Instirute, Blairsville, GA) -- Hugh is a CSA
Producer, dedicated to regenerative,
biodynamic agriculture. He loves the English
green pea. Little Marvel which does not
require staking in his intensive, three rows
per wide bed spacings. Sugar Snap edible
pod peas are a favorite with his cus1omers.
He recommends Blue Lake Pole and
Yellow Wax Bean, as productive, but
recommends choosing "rust" disease
rcsistanL varieties. He recommended
Purple Top Tumips (greens and root multicrop!) and rape greens (Vates).
Cherry Belle radishe~ are recommended
for quick maturing spring radishes, and for
Fall planting, Chjna Rose radish.
Touchon is a great coreless carrot, and
Bloomsdale Spinach is recommended as a
standard. Hugh notes that spinach will last
longer in the spring (nor "bolt") if you grow
spinach with low levels of nuaients (esp.
nitrogen).
G}en Hubel (Certified Organic Grower.
Waynesville, NC) has done well with edible
podded pea Snowflake and Sugar
Daddy, and the english pea Knight. He
suggests the beans Easy Pie and the Yellow
Wax bean, Gold Crop. He likes the shon
season tomato Russian, but has had much
"Blight" disease problems with his tomato
varieties. His best crop is his potato crop
including Kennebec, Purple Peruvians,
Red Pontiac, Yellow Finn (SB) and
rates Butte average. He recommend!. agains1
Yukon Gold because of potato bug
problems (lururtm, might be a "trap-crop"! ).
He has had good yields with Black soybeans
and the edible at green-stage Butterbean
soybean. His best crops are his lenuces,
:IC4Nan JO\lf'nat PCUJe 18
recommending Red Oakleaf, Sangria,
Lolla Rossa, and Red Romaine
(SHP).
Will Ashe Bason (Floyd Co.• south.of
Blacksburg, VA) especially likes Lutz
Greenleaf Keeper (SESE) bee!li, as the
~ I keeping. sweetest and mos1 render. He
grows white, yellow and red po1a1oes, but
has had worst "Scab" disease on reds which
do 001 keep as well. He likes his yellow
poiatoes best! He notes broccoli and cabbage
do well. but need to be treated with the
biological insecricide, Dipel (B1). He
advises to plant fall varieties of cole crops
and plant these seeds in late spring. He has
found Sunroofs (the native sunflower,
Jerusalem Artichoke) easy 10 grow and s1ores
well in the l!:r0und over winter. He
recommends blueberries as a fruit crop which
tolerates warm early spells and l:11e frosts, but
recommends additional peal or organic matter
in the planting hole. Will states that Shiitake
mushrooms are relanvely easy 10 inoculate
int0 chestnut oak logs, but may require a year
to get going, but then may "fruit " for years.
He is especially happy with Scarlet
Runner Beans, which are best in flavor,
and make a ''preny good" dried bean. These
are most easily shelled when ''perfectly" dry.
He grows his beans in the garden space left
available after the spring crop of snap peas
(although this may eventually lead to disease
problems in time- ed.)
Mark Schonbeck (Instiru1e for
Sustainable Agriculture, Windswept Farm,
Check. VA) shares his favorite varieties of
"non-hybrid, good flavored, nuaitious, with
good keeping qualities, resistance to pests
and diseases, and ease of haJvest and
processing." (Whew! What criteria!)
Windswept Farm gardeners were
impressed by the grain sorghum.
Mennonite (SESE), yielding over 7 lbs. of
grain from a 100 square foot plot . The
cooked grain iasted somewhat between wheat
berries and brown rice (but had 10 be leached
of the tannins from the grain by boiling and
changing the cooking waters). Hickory
King white flour com, although it grew 10
feet tall, survived thunderstorms, showed
little earwonn damage, and had little mold or
maggot problems. They no1ed that Purple
Peruvian and Saginaw Gold potatoes had
less potato beetle problems than other
varieties. They had problems growing carrots
in their poor soil but Danvers U6 carrot
grew well withou1 becoming woody, and bad
little weed problem. They especially favored
Long Standing Bloo~dale spinach,
with its excellent flavor and winter hardiness.
They recommend several beans including
Chinese Red (SESE) azuki beans
(yielding equivalent 10 2500 lbsJacre), which
grew without any Mexican bean beetle attack!
Swedish Brown common bean had lower
yields (eqiv. 1500 lbs/A.) but have an
unusually good flavor. A local adapted
pinio-type October Bean, obtained from a
neighbor, yielded well and had slightly less
bean beetle damage than other varieties. A
Redkloud Kidney (SESE) bean was
badly chewed by beetles, but managed to
yield as much as the azulcis.
Barbara Duncan (Herb Enthusiast,
Franklin, NC) -- recommends her favorite
perennial Greek Oregano (SHP) which
she prefers for its ease-of-culture (although
hard 10 genninate) and strong, distinctive
taste.
Lee Barnes (Plantsman, Waynesville,
NC) - I've had repeatable success with
Peruvian Purple potatoes tender,
finger-sized and beautiful mixed with yellow
or white potatoes in Potato Salad! Early
Jersey Wakefield cabbage is more tender
and sweeter than other varieties. Celery
(Golden Self-Blanching and Giant
Red(actually pinkish) (SB) does well if
seeds are sown indoors early (60 - 90 days
prior to transplanting). Favorite superhot
peppers are Thai and Habanero (RCS)
(great for hot vinegars, too (()() hot to eat!),
which do best if transplan1ed after mid-May,
or when soil 1empera1ures are greater than 00°
F. My favorite eggplant is the tender
"finger-shaped" Japanese varieties, and I'm
currently addicted to the hybrid eggplant
"khiban". Can anyone recommend an O.P.
variety? Purple Top turnips are favorites!,
while ruUlbagas and kohlrobi do very wcJI if
sown 2-3 weeks earlier than for turnips.
SESE • Southern Exposure Seed
Exchange, P.O. Box 158, North Garden,
VA22959
SH - R.11. Schumway. P.O. Box
I, Graniteville, SC 29829
HA - Hastjng.s. P.O. Box 115535,
Atlanta, GA 30310
SB -Seeds Blum, Idaho City Stage,
Boise, ID 97333
SUP- Shephard's Garden Seeds,
6116 Highway 9, Felton, CA 95018
RCS- Redwood City Seed Co.,
P.O. Box 361, Redwood City, CA 94064
(See KJ # 32 Fall 1991 or master
Resource List for additional seed sources.).
By Lee Barnes
Drawing by Rob Messick
Spr\n4), 1992
�..
--BLOWING IN THE WIND
by Charlone Homsher
When 1 was growing up in
southeastern Colorado, my family hnd a
Sunday afternoon ritual. Every Sunday we
drove to the wheal fields south of town lo
check the moisture content of the soil.
There were usually live or six children;
sisters, brothers and cousins who piled out
of the pickup. My father knelt on the
ground and dug into 1he soil with his bare
hands as we surrounded him waiting
breathlessly. If the subsoil was moist Lhcn
he held up his handful of din, triumphant.
If it was dry, then the eanh sifted Lhrough
his fingers. We all goL a chance to look at
lhis little piece of eanh, wrenched up :IIld
turned over by the sweat of man, the inner
eanh which in some mysterious way would
either give us an ample crop or wither the
grain on the stalk.
This memory of my father, first
digging and than holding the soil in his
palm in a gesture of triumph, is stlU vivid in
my mind. More than anything else it
symbolizes to me the ambivalent
relationship he had to the eanh and 10 his
inherited occupation of farmer.
Before the Homestead Act of 1862
brought white seulers in hordes, there were
no towns or setdements on the prairies. The
Cheyenne and other Plains Indians were
nomadic hunters and gatherers. They found
an ample supply of wildlife sheltered in the
tal1 prairie grasses that grew as high as a
man's chest. By the I 930's the virgin
prairie grasses had been plowed under.
Everyone knew the plowing was out of
contr0l but no one could stop it. There was
always a new wave of homesteaders
detennined 10 farm. One of the excuses
used for plowing up the prairies was I.hat
the grasses were just weeds, after all; and
like weeds everywhere, they would thrive
on their own. Unfonunately the grasses
never returned. What did grow back was a
scraggly grass, euphemistically called
buffalo grass, only a few inches high, nor
high enough 10 sprout under the layers of
sill deposited by the high winds.
Not many people realize I.hat I.he
dusrbowl didn't stop with the depression
era. Even in the fifties, the fields were still
blowing. A dustsronn that would lai;L for
days could be sianed by one farmer. If a
fanner plowed his field in a dry spell and
the farmer next door happened to plow his
at the same time, it could stan a chain
reaction. The lifegiving topsoil from one
field could blow overnight into the next
county suffocating all vegetation in its path
and causing the hair 10 fall off the backs of
grazing animals.
Once 1he prairies were plowed there
was never a settled farm life. The eanh
simply could not sustain the population.
The first mass migration off the prairies
were the Okies of the dus1bowl era who
abandoned their small holdings for
California. The postwar era continued the
cons1an1 trickle of fanners into the cities.
SprtncJ, 1992
Since the land was no longer fenile and
intact as it was as a prairie, ii was the
evolution of fann pracrioe LO acquire larger
properties in order to make a profit This
me.int depending on ever more
sophisticated farm equipment LO handle all
that land, and borrowed financing to pay
for the whole operation. The foreclosures
and farm auctions of the seventies and
eighties where a result of the farmers'
inability 10 repay their massive loans.
Postwar govemment policies
encouraged expansion, as did the ever
burgeoning agribusiness industries. One of
the biggest hoaxes ever perpetrated on the
American fanner was the postwar sentiment
that the American fanner was responsible
for feeding the world. This grandiose
responsibility with its heavy psychological
load, was just more fuel for the
expansionist fodder of big crops at any
cost. Politicians stressed the imponance of
the fanncr in protecting democracy, a
responsibility that reached beyond national
borders. (Empty bellies not only cause
suffering but foment revolution.) The
postwar farmer had a mission and a duty.
Fanning is a pan of the myth of
creation. The farmer is supposed to
understand things 1ha1 other people don't.
He works in cooperation with nature. He
knows when to plant and when 10 harvest.
The farmer feeds everyone. A land without
its local farmers soon shrivels up and dies.
or so the myth goes. Or at the very least the
food prices escalate. The farmer as
supposed to be the sail of the eanh, the real
backbone of America, the man who keeps ii
all going while the rest of the country runs
amuck in the cities. At the same time he is
expected 10 remain isolated, cut off from
the mainstTCam of society, a laborer whose
opinions are considered wonhless. The
fnnner is dealing with some heavy
propaganda from without and expectations
from within. The fanners of the fifties ond
sixties were nearly frantic in their push to
mtiinstream fanning into the standnrd of
living of the while middle class. Fanners
wanted cash in the pocket, brick ranch
houses and college education for their
children. The very idea of making fanning
a respectable profession is a historically
brazen tissurnption. ln every civilized
society the farmer is the low caste, the
ignorant, humble servant of the soil.
Here is another sticky contraclictlon.
Farmers were forced off the fa.nm that they
said they wanted 10 keep and lost a way of
life that they professed 10 Jove, yet they
pushed their children into learning skills
that would be of use only in the cities, thus
assuring that the way of life could not
possibly be handed on. This could be seen
as either a foresighted concern for future
generations or a disinheritance. I never did
find an easy answer 10 Lha1 one. When I
was about fifteen my father drove me to lhe
original family homes11:ad. We walked 10
the middle of the field behind the rock
house between Lhe apple ort:hard and !he
sandy banks of the dry creekbed. I hadn't
been 10 that field in years.
Dad pointed ar the bare eanh under
the stubble of lhe last crop. With great
solemnity, he told me that he had hired a
water witcher (a dowser) who had said that
there was enough wa1er in that panicul:!r
spot for a well. The drilling crew was
arriving the next day and he wanted me 10
know how things really stood. If they hit
water, I would get to go Lo college. If
no1 ... well ...1here was nothing worse for a
young girl than lO rot in some dying farm
town.
I Ils arrirude was typical of the worry,
fear, and despair of fann fathers of that era.
In contrast to this dreary scenario, I am
reminded of the description of small scale
farmers in Japan in the wonderful
philosophical treatise on nature and
fanning, The One Straw Revolution. In
that book, Masanobu Fukuoka describes
how fanners of old Japan, before
mechanization and before life got so
frenetic, took off for a three month holiday
in the winter 10 hunt rabbits in the
mountains. They also wrote Haiku poetry.
Fukuoka claims that there was even a time
when fanning was considered a sacred
work.
In my family, of all the children who
knell with my father in the fields and got
that first lesson of the harshness of the
Eanh and its potential fertility, lam the
only one who still owns land and I do not
own fannland. In an ironic cwist of fare it
was the sudden, unexpected sale of my
grandfather's ranch that paid for my piece
of mountain.
Over the years, l occasionallv run into
one of the ex-fannboys with whom I grew
up. Meeting them is very similar 10 how I
have heard Vietnam veterans de..~be
encounters \loith each other. Looking into
each other's eyes we recognize the vast
expanses of psychic space between our past
and our present, the bridges that we have
had 10 bum to travel such distances
00Cllinuod on page 32
Draw111g by Rob Messick
Xatuah Jo\4rnm pQ()e 19
�~
5
E
p
T
E
M
B
E
A
0
11th
• ~fore C.1ting wild
edibles, be sure or their com!Ct
Identity and proper preparation.
Times may vary in your area.
Native and naturaliud plant
listings rcncct average beginning of
�- .-
0
18th
~
-
C
r
�"MEDICINE TRAINING"
These are the words ofa traditional
Cherokee medi'cine person:
My grandfather was one of those who
believe that everything has a spirit - the
stones, the grass, Lhe soil, everything. To
him, it was apparent that anybody could
communicate and work with these beings.
He believed that no one was any more
magical than any other person. It was just a
pan of being human, and civilization
domesticated that part of ourselves, and
turned everybody's reality around to
whatever white man's reality is. Everybody
had to have the same reality.
As soon as I was born, he saw physical
signs on my body thOt told him that I was
destined 10 be a medicine man. One of the
biological signs that he noticed were simian
creases (sharply-defined creases extending
from between the thumb and forefinger
across the palm - ed.). I have two of them.
When a baby is born in the hospital,
western doctors look at it to see if it's eyes,
teeth, nose, mouth, etc., are all in order,
and then they check for simian creases,
because they are a sign of Down's
syndrome. Eight out of ten babies who
have a simian crease have Down's
syndrome. I had one on each hand.
Now my grandfather had no idea what
simian creases were or what Down's
syndrome was. But he did notice that they
were an unusual physical occum:nce on my
body. There were other physical signs, but
I don't know what they all were.
He took the matter up with other old
people that he talked with, and they all
agreed with his interpretation of the signs.
After that, r was preordained by my
grandfather 10 be a medicine person and
blessed by the elders.
They gave me a naming ceremony.
They held me up and called in all of
Creation from all the directions and
introduced me. Then they offered my spirit
to the Creation, saying, "This is your
relative. This is how he will be known."
When I was a child, I would "make
things happen." 1t was like fantasizing. 1
would see something happening in my
mind, and it would occur. I could make
somebody come over to my house. r could
find something in the woods. Little things,
but r was encouraged 10 exercise that
ability.
I was also encouraged in things that the
white culture would consider foolish. If I
came home and said that I saw some Little
People in the woods, the adultS would said,
"Well, that's great! What were they doing?
How were they doing it?"
In while society parents would say,
"You're a fool," "Don't do thaL Act like an
adult," or, if they were very liberal, "Ooh,
he's got an imaginary play friend."
Most of culture is just habits. If things
don't work for you, over and over, then
you drop them. If something works, over
and over, then gradually it becomes part of
your reality and then pan or your identity.
And as a child the fact that r had certain
abilities just became a fact of my life. I was
encouraged in special ways 10 follow a
certain direction.
For instance, one of the very first
memories I cnn remember was seeing a
baby push out of a woman. Kids were nol
normally allowed to be present for that sort
of thing. But the elders thought that I was
good luck, juSt by being the. '".~ause
people thought that I was special, they
reinforced it b) IJ>"..ating me that way. Of
course, it didn'l take much to convince me
that I was special! Everybody thinks that
they have a special destiny. That's
unders1andable, and it's true to a certain
extent, but it very seldom comes oue in the
way that we would like it 10.
That was the way they began my
training. It was the most natural thing in the
world. A lot of it was just being raised by
my grandparents and being around old
people a lot of the time.
Most of the kids my age grew up
around fathers who had been in World War
ll. My grandfather wns 69 years old when l
was born. And as a boy he had lived with
his grandfather, who had fought at
Horseshoe Bend with Andrew Jackson.
Through my grandfather, l had a direcl
connection to those times. In my childhood
adventure games I pretended 1 was hiding
in the mountains during the Removal,
eating grubs and bugs, and running from
white soldiers with tall hatS.
I lived in a world that in many ways
was quite archaic. The Cherokee language
that my grandfather spoke was an archaic
version of the language they speak today.
Growing up among these elders, pan of my
thinking was archaic. I don't know if it was
because of the way that I was raised, but I
was more marurc than most males my age.
r also had a sense of being content to be
with myself. When I think of my
childhood, r think of myself as being alone
much of the time. That leaves a mark upon
you. For one thing, it made me more
peaceful being with myself. I never seem to
need entenainment. l don't need diversion.
My mind is all the diversion I need.
My early training was just spending
time with those old people. We might be
out collecting sho-un or ramps, and we
would run across a woman whose specialty
was birthing. She would point out a plant
and say, "This is good for teeth, cutting
teeth, cutting teeth," she'd say. Or "Sore
mouth," or "This is good for white
tongue," (thrush). Another time we would
meet somebody who had a lot of
knowledge in another area. That was the
way I teamed. lt was structured, but it
wasn't a structure. It was spontaneous. Yee
I had a sense that it was importanL
The only les.wns r learned by rote were
hem were long, but
the formulas. Some of 1
they all have basic Structures and themes
that run through them that make them
simple to remember once you catch the
pattern.
The formulas were in a special
ceremonial mode of the Cherokee language
that was symbolic in its meaning and older
even than the speech my grandparents
used. A modem-day speaker would not be
able to understand it. When you say, "Way
up on high where the four black ravens
rest, r call you down here, and r ask you 10
pull the black smoke all over this," what
does that mean to a modern Cherokee? It
doesn't mean a thing. But II is incredibly
meaningful to me.
Sprt.119, 1992
�Most of my training was learning how
to learn. Leaming how to use my mind.
They taught me by giving me the answers
to questions· questions I hadn't even asked
ye1. I had the answers; I had to find om
what the questions were. h's a good way 10
learn. It talces a lot of patience.
1 might be walking with my gr.indfather
or one of his friends, and we would sit
down and build a fire, cook a little
some1hing, and, as we were sitting there,
he might say, "Ginseng." Or he might say,
"lt's inside yourself." Or he might say, "It
comes when all doubt is cleared from the
mind." Just out of the blue. It would have
no reference to any1hing that we were
doing. The first few times, l started to ask
questions, but after awhile I stopped asking
qucs1ions.
My grandfather would say, "You may
not understand now, but you will
understand. You're not ready for it. But
lis1en. Pay attention to everything."
"Don't trot around knowledge," he
would say. "Knowledge without
understanding is worse than tits on a boar
bog, so wail Ir will come to you."
And it has come to me. I have been
caught up in new experiences, when I did
not know what to do, and, all at once, the
answer would be there, clear as a bell. I'd
had the answer all along, and I had finally
ran into the question.
People talk to me about their life
problems. Often they are going through a
Jot of suffering. SomeLimes I feel like a
third person sitting there watching myself
talk to them and helping to solve their
problems. rm not egotistical. I know
where it's corning from. Still, T feel
absolutely amazed. rm not me any more!
That's the way my whole life has been:
I've had the answers, but I haven't had 1he
questions. fve been running into the
questions throughout my whole life. In that
sense, it has made my life easier. I don't
know if I have run into all the questions
yet. I'm still looking. though, because
sometimes the answers will fit many
questions.
•
canvas bag. He kept everything · absolutely
everything • in this bag.
I would be walking down the trail past
a clump of bushes or a blackberry thicket,
and all of a sudden he would sL,nd up in it.
He scared me every time. He \\Ould just
appear. And he'd grin. A1 that most people,
even those who knew him, would run. But
he was a boyhood friend of my
grandfather, and I think my grandfather
was his only friend. He never manied,
and, when my grandfather died. in his own
way he took responsibility for me for
awhile. This wasn·t much, because he was
very seldom around. But he always
appeared when I needed him · every time r
needed him.
Owl did magical things. He was the one
who taught me how to eliminate doubt in
my mind. And that's the best gifL he ever
gave me.
Eliminating doubt makes magic happen.
I was brought up with no limits as to what
my mind could do. but then, as I got older
and exposed to other people, they put doubt
in my mind. Owl taught me how to remove
that doubt.
He did not give me a set of simple
instructions like, ~stick your nose in your
ear, and this will all go away." It was a
combination of things. He said that 10 clear
the doubt out of my mind I had to go
through a rational, linear process. It was
something that one had 10 be taught over a
period of time. And with my formal
experience of magic, it didn't talce me very
long to learn it.
Talso learned how to focus. If I can
visualii.e something, and see it in my mind,
and hold it in my mind, and do it in my
mind • and drop it! - it never fails. When I
was a child, I could do it easily. But as I
grew to be an adult and developed doubt. I
had a more difficult time. The fonnulas
would help me to keep my focus, son of
like daydreaming.
*
One of the old men was a special
person to me. He was a medicine person.
People came to him for conjuring and
docroring, and he was good at it. I always
referred to him as Owl, but that wasn't his
name.
He was probably six foot four, if you
straightened him out, but as a child his leg
had been broken and badly set, and he
leaned over to the left. He also had an eye
that hnd been damaged, so that although he
could see ouc of it, it was puckered up into
a fearsome squint. He was a fierce,
mean-looking old man, but he was as
gentle, caring, and loving as he was
scary-looking.
He always had a long World War I
overcoat with him. I can remember Lhe big
brass buuons that went all the way down
the front. When he wasn't wearing his
coat, he would roll it up, tie strings around
it, and carry it over one shoulder. On his
other shoulder he would carry a funky old
1
I remember a scene that happened
repeatedly. Owl and I would be walking
down a trail, and I would be talking to him,
when suddenly he would grab me by my
shirt and pull me into the bushes.
"Stand still and be quiet," he would
say.
We would stand there, sometimes for
ten minutes. Then 1 would hear somebody
coming down the trail and look up. It
would invariably be somebody that Owl
didn't want to see.
After the person was gone, I would
say, "How did you know he was coming?"
Re would say, "You know it, 100! You
know it, tool But you're so goddamn busy
chattering and talking. Busy! Give yourself
a break."
He would say, "You know
everything."
faery time I would ask Owl weighty,
involved questions looking for profound
answers, he would just look at me and
shake his head.
He'd say, "You kMw I.he answer," and
I.hen "Goddamn it, you don't need no
teachers."
And it's true. That's the big lesson. The
minute we become leaders or followers, we
have lost our power.
Owl also taught me the imponant
principle that most things don't maucr, and
I don't have any place to go anyhow. When
1 somehow indicated that I had learned this,
he was delighted.
"You got it!" he said." That's
absolutely wonderful! lf I've never done
anything else in my life, this is the greatest
thing I have ever done!" /..;:.!Ill"
He was great.
p-
End of PART I
)
Drawings by Troy Scwa
Sprt.mJ, Hl92
C
�., ~
PROTECTING THE PARK AND THE BIOREGION
Nanni World News Service
Since itS dedication in 1940, the Great
Smoley Mountains National Parle has been the
crown jewel of the Southern Appalachian
ecosystem. The Park is protected as a de
facw wilderness throughou1 much of ilS
550,000 acres and is the keystone of the
natural habitat in the southern mountains. The
Parle occupies a cemral location in the region
and acts as a preserve for rcmnanlS of the
original old growth forest and many rare and
endemic species of plant and animal life. It is
a natural habitat large enough to accept
~introductions of wide-ranging mammals
like the red wolf and the ouer. It is a dispersal
poim from which species can migrate to
replenish the the three million acres of less
protected national forests that sWTOund its
borders. Eoologically, the Great Smoky
Mountains National Park is of great
importance as a stabilizing factor 10 the
natural life community of the Southern
Appalachian Mountains.
The Great Smokies Parle also stands as
the ecological standard by which we judge
the health of the rest of the forest. But
although the Park is pro1ec1ed on the ground
throughout most of its area, the Park
ecosy~tem is deteriorating from pervasive
polluuon that drops from the skies. Because
of the high altitude of 1he Park's highest
ridges, clouds carrying contaminants gather
a1 their creslS and drop their deadly burdens.
Thus, atm0spheric pollution that affects the
w~ole re~on tends to be concentrated at high
alntude s11es such as those in the Great
Smoky Mountains Na1ional Parle. The Park
acts as a barometer for the ecological health
of the region as a whole.
1:"10.w the Park is also sailing fonh as a
flagship in the defense of the regional
ecosystem. Under the provisions of the Clean
Air Act, most national parlcs and some of the
larger wilderness areas are defined as Class r
meaning that no significant deterioration of '
the air quality in those areas is 10 be
permiued. Yet continued indusaial
d~elopment constantly increases the already
senous pollution that is undem1ining the
ecological health of the Park and the
mountain forests.
Thus, in the fall of 1991 James M.
Ridenour, Direc1or of 1he National Park
Service ~S) of the federal Deparunem of
the lmenor issued a statement declaring that
proposed developments near the Great
Smoky Mountains National Park and the
Shenandoah National Park in Virginia would
have an adverse ecological impact and were
unacceptable under the tenns of the law.
ln Tennessee, Ridenour's s1mement
referred specifically to a proposed expansion
b%" me Eastman Chemicals Company in
Kmgspon that would include construction of
a new$ I00 million coal-fired boiler that
woul~ spew 1,542 tons of nirrogcn oxide per
year mto the atmosphere.
Ni~gen oxide is a precursor of
atmosphenc 01.0ne. Resource specialis1s in
the Park have already identified 95 plant
species that show signs of damage from
~mne contamination, indicating that pollution
m the Park already is extensive.
NPS researchers also point out that
since 1950 visibility in the Park has declined
40%, and the famous blue haze from which
the Great Smoley Mountains derived their
name has turned into a siclcly gray or a
poisonous-looking yellowish white pall
depending on the season.
'
Because of aonospheric contmination
"Soil and water resources are at serious risk "
wrote NPS Regional Director James Col~
in a letter 10 the State of Tennessee
expressing the Service's opposition to the
Eastman expansion project The NPS holds
that any debilitating influences within a circle
tha1 extends 120 miles around the Park in all
directions would adversely affect the air
quality of the protected area.
LICENSE TO DUMP
Nanni World News Service
. ~n E~vir?nroental Protection Agency
adm1mscranve Judge on February 12 struck
~own challenges.to the discharge permit
ISsued to Champion lmemational Co.
allowing them 10 put was1es from its Canton
papermaking plant in10 1he Pigeon River.
The primary objections came from the
Dead Pigeon River Council, an organization
of downstream residents. The group's ma.in
complaint is that dioxin produced in the plant
is affecting 1heir health and the health of the
environment below the mill. They are also
concerned about the color and odor of 1he
river\ "':'hich are evidence of the heavy waste
load It 1s forced to carry and are hurting the
economies of the towns below the Canton
plant
The five-year discharge pem1i1 has been
stalled in coun since 1989. Confident of
victory, the company has proceeded with a
$250 million modernization plan for the
antiquated paper mill, installing new,
non-chlorine bleaching lines and water
mwcrs for recycling water that may cu1 river
use by one-third. The company hopes 10
approach a 50-unit color limit that during the
~nnit c~ntt;?versy ~our years ago i1 &aid was
1mposs1ble 10 attain and would force
closure of the plant.
The Dead Pigeon River Council is
deciding whether 10 appeal the judge's rulmg.
ECOTAGE,
Nanni World.Newt Service
''
In what might be another case of
"ecotage" in Karuah, over $50,000 wonh of
damage was done to various pieces of
logging equipment in the Buck Creek and
Rich Mountain Areas of Macon County on
February 2, 1992. lnves1igators claim that the
incident is the worst recent example of
apparen1 ecotage directed at the timber
industry in western Nonh Carolina, stating
that virtually every piece of equipment on the
rwo sites was affected. The saboteurs
punctured truck and skidder tires, cut
elecaical wires on bulldozers, cut hydraulic
and air lines on other equipment, and placed
tacks on roads leading to the sites. According
to officials of Hennessee hardwood, one of
the timber companies hit, new skidder tires
will cost $1025 each, and the hydraulic lines
will cost from $60 to $400 apiece to replace.
Hilton C3bc. an independent logger whose
equipment was damaged, said he has no
insurance 10 repair or replace his equipment,
and Jack Hennessee, Jr. stated that the
deductible is so high on his insW'ance that
damage suffered by his equipment would not
be recovered.
No individual or group has come
forward to take responsibility for the action,
but the loggers are certain the sabotage was a
protest against logging in the national forcs1s.
"(lbe ecotage) is against the timber
industry," logging contractor Lloyd Cook,
also of Macon coun1y. told the Asheville
Citizen-Times. "They've started a war. 11
looks like we are going to have to defend
ourselves. They are not playing fair."
The Hennessee company plans to hire
security persoMel to guard their logging
sites. "They brought it to me," said
Hennessee to the Citizen-Times. "I didn't
take it to them."
Forest Service investigators and Macon
County law enforcement officers reported
that they bad found foot and tire prints at the
sites. On February 6 the Macon Coun1y
Chapter of the Western North Carolina
Alliance posted a $200 reward for
"infonnation leading to the arrest and
conviction" of the perpetrators. However, at
press ume no progress had been made in the
investigation.
CUB KILLERS ARRESTED
Naunl Wnrld N""'• Scr,,,cc
A mother bear and her three newborn
cubs were killed by poachers on January 3,
J992. Michael Lee Correll of Black
Moun1ain, NC was arrested and charged wi1h
the slaying. Another man and two women,
also from Black Mountain, were charged
with transponing a bear out of season.
The crimes are all misdemeanors and
carry a fine of at lea.,t $2,000 per offense
plus a restitution cos1 of $1,035 for 1hc bear.
The two men said that they were
raccoon hunting when their dogs roused the
mother bear. Apparently the mother bear was
denning on the ground and was awakened
and frigh1ened by the hun1er~. She died, nm
only a vicLim of poachers, bur also of a lack
of mature den rrees in which she could hide
during her winter dormancy.
Spr1.t19, 19!12
�RADIOACTIVE SURPRISE
Narunl World News Service
A congressional hearing held before
Rep. George Miller's Interior Committee
heard evidence that barrels of hazardous
materials sent from Oak Ridge Tennessee
came with a free surprise in every barrel radioactive waste!
The hearing was caJled after journalist
Peter Schenkel of the Stare-Times Moming
Advocate in Baton Rouge, LA collected
irrefutable evidence that the Martin Marietta
Company, contractor 10 the Department of
Energy (DOE) at the Oak Ridge, TN nuclear
weapons complex, had been mismanaging
radioactive waste. Since 1980 the company
has sent about 10,000 tons of hazardous
wastes containing small amounts of
radioactive materials to 16 commercial
incinerators not licensed to handle such
substances.
The company knew it was violating
regulations. All references to uranium were
whited out from shipping orders. Clyde
Hopkins, the president of Martin Marietta,
told the congressional committee that the
documents were altered for "national security
reasons."
Leo Duffy, specialist in waste handling
for the DOE, disavowed any DOE
responsibility, saying that if Martin Marieua
thought that changing documents was a
proper interpretation of DOE regulations, the
company was very wrong.
Martin Marieua's actions were not only
inappropriate, but also clearly illegal, in
violation of Nuclear Regulatory Commission,
Environmental Protection Agency, and state
regulations. However, no criminal
investigations have yet been begun in the
case.
Ralph Hutchison, of the Oak Ridge
Environmental and Peace Alliance (OREPA),
said, "What happened was that Martin
Marietta unilaterally decided that there was
not enough radiation in the wastes to worry
about Although the toxic substances
contained more radiation than they were
allowed 10 bum in their own incinerator, they
still sent the shipments on to other private
facilities. The company in effect established
its own private BRC (below regulatory
concern) levels."
Journalist Schenkel was investigating
Rollins Environmental Services, a large
hazardous waste processing facility in Baton
Rouge, in January of 1991 when he
discovered documents indicating that they
may have received waste materials from
Martin Marietta Energy Systems that were
contaminated with radioactivity. As Schenkel
probed deeper, he began to run into the kind
of roadblocks that suggested that he was onto
a story that was bigger than he had expected.
llis persistence uncovered the Martin Marietta
activities. Fearing a scandal, the company
stopped all off-site shipments of hazardous
wastes during the summer of 1991.
Shenckel is not content that the full
implications Martin Marietta's actions have
been revealed. He was quoted in the OREPA
newsletter as saying, "I am not convinced by
any degree that they know the full extent of
radioactive material released."
Sprlf\9, 1992
He said that papers recently procured
from Oak Ridge give chemical analyses of the
shipments. They show the presence of
cobalt, strontium. and yttruim, which can
occur naturally but often arc radioactive
isotopes. The chemical analyses give no clue
as to their isotopic form. When Schenkel
asked, "Were any of these radioactive
isotopes?", company representatives admitted
that they did not know and no longer had any
way of finding out.
What is clear is the nature of Martin
Marietta management. Ralph Hutchison says,
"Martin Marietta took over (as the major
contractor in Oak Ridge) in 1983 after Union
Carbide was caught with mercury on their
hands, and Martin Marietta has supposedly
been doing everything right. Now in the last
month we find out that they have been doing
the same old stuff."
"A PATTERN OF ABUSE"
Natural World l',cws Savsu
The firing of Karin Heiman (see Karuah
Jour110l #31) as a US Forest Service botanist
was not an random incidence of arbitrary
authority. Repression against employees who
arrive at conclusions contrary to agency
policy has been a common occurrence in the
Forest Service.
This was uncovered in hearings held by
the Howse of Representatives Civil Service
subcommiuee, chaired by Rep. Gerry
Sikorski (0-MN). The comnunee found that
the Forest Service offered harsh punishment
to whistleblowers, even when they were
pointing out illegalities in Forest Service
activities.
At the close of the hearings on January
23. Rep. Sikorski said, "This needs to 1,c
investigated by the Depanment of Justice.
There is a pattern of abuse. There is a pattern
of ignorance. There is a pattern of delay and
retaliation."
NATURAL WORLD NEWS BRIEFS
NO RADIA TION...THIS TIME
The truck was wheeling down I-26 on
February 27 when just outside of Asheville,
NC flame spouted out from one of the
wheels. A Buncombe County sheriffs
deputy pulled the truck over and Sgt. N. K.
Goering of the State Highway Patrol
appeared on the scene. It was just another
breakdown.
"It appears that it was a just a truck that
broke down and this particular truck
happened to be carrying a radioactive
product."
What?! Yes, radioactive waste, going
from Northern State Power Co. in
Monticello, MN to the Barnwell Waste
Management Facility in Barnwell, SC.
"Until I obtained all my readings, I was
concerned," said Sgt. Goering. State troopers
carry geiger counters in their vehicles?
Apparently the possibility of a nculear
accident has become accepted as a
probability.
"You never know what kind of wreck
you might be called to," said Goering,
"because you never know who is going up
and down the highways."
Maybe this is something we need to
know.
The fire m the radioactive waste truck
was contained. No radiation was released. It
was just another day on the highway...this
time.
tnforma1ion from ,~ Asheville Ci1i1.cn-T1mca or
'1.mfn.
"Warh.tod WatcMrs" art o,-ganizing to monitor
move=nt of truck comY>ys carrying nuclear weapons
maJcriaJs on 1-40 and 1-26 /OWdl'd tht Trilknl
Submarine base in St. Mary's. GA. For in/ormolion
on becoming a Warhead Watcher, call Amy Mozingo
(704) 253-3854.
• To protect imperiled aquatic species
and their habitats, the NC Wildlife Resources
Commission has submitted a proposal to the
state Environmental Management
Commission asking that portions of 33
watersheds in IO of the state's river basins be
protected as High Quality Waters. Included
are portions of the New, the Watauga, the
Tuckasegee, the Linville. and the Little
Tennessee Rivers.
• The "Ballenger bill," proposed by
conservative Rep. Cass Ballenger, a
Republican from North Carolina's 10th
District, has passed the House and awaits
action by the Senate. The bill would protect
the Lost Cove and Harper Creek areas in the
Posgah National Forest.
Sen. Terry Sanford (D-NC) has
introduced a companion bill in support of
Ballcnger's legislation.
• Charles Taylor is the best friend the
local timber industry has in Washingt0n. It's
true - he said so himself before a meeting of
the Multiple Use Council, a timber lobbying
group.
• A Superior Coun judge in Wake
County ruled that the town of Highlands
needs no environmental impact statement 10
build a sewage treatment plant that would
dwnp 500,000 gallons of treated sewage a
day in the Cullasnja River. The citizens group
Save Our Rivers immediately appealed the
judge's ruling and asked for a restraining
order 10 stop work on the project until the
appeal is heard
• Ten otters were reintroduced into
streams arounci the Great Smoky Mountains
National Park last February. Six were
released into Cataloochec Creek and two
more pairs were released into Hazel Creek
and the Little River. Three of the Otters
released in Cataloochee were pregnant
females expected to bear young this spring.
NII/IJroJ World N~ws I, rdilrd •,
e-m Crundit,:rr.
�WHOSE RULES?
The Drinking Water Protection Controversy in North Carolina
"ll's the biggest cave-in in the history
of the Environmental Management
Commission. lt's remarkable that big money
overpowered science and public suppon."
This was the conclusion of Bill
Holman, environmental lobbyist in the Nonh
Carolina state legisl.nrure, about the change in
the watershed protection rules proposed by
the state's Environmental Management
joined the campaign after it got going, but the
finances and the strategy came largely from
big urban developers in the three metropolitan
areas.
The development consortium had paid
little attention to the 1990 public hearings. In
1991 they turned up the heat. They called up
association. Carla DuPuy was formerly a
eouniy commissioner in Mecklenburg
County.
Barnes is from Wilson, NC and Brady
is a lawyer from Lenoir.
. . ~Wc~s~ ~~~-~:f~~i~~f~:~
, . 'liearings on regulations adopted in 1990.
The original regulations, created in
1990 under a mandate from the Water Supply
Watershed Protection Act passed by the state
legisl:uure in 1989, were designed to protect
sources of pure drinking water for towns and
cnies across the stale. They basically set up
two areas around a lake or an intake point
from a river from which drinking water was
drawn: a critical area, one mile around the
water supply point, and a protected area, five
miles around the water supply point.
Watershed iypcs were graded according to
the amount and iype of development that
would be allowed within the critical areas.
A WS-1 watershed was the highest
grade. in which the entire area was essentially
publicly owned and development was not
allowed. Residential developmenr was limited
from one house per every two acres in a
WS-Il area 10 one house per acre in a
watershed graded WS-IV.
Industrial and large commercial
development, like large shopping malls, were
prohibited in the critical areas or WS-Il and
WS-ITI watersheds, which were designated
as primarily residential or agricultural areas.
These restrictions raised the ire of
well-monied and powerful developers. ln the
words of the Charlotre News and Observer,
''The developers realii.ed that the standards
the commission approved in 1990 were real
con1rols. They actually would protect the
water permanently - and thus could threaten
the making of forrunes of the quicker, dirtier
son."
The developers argued thru the EMC
had substantially changed the rules since the
public hearing, and therefore the commission
should hold more hearings.
Leadcrniip for the eonsonium came
from a development project in Durham called
Treybum. The two developers of that project
are Clay Hamner and Terry Sanford. Jr..
Also involved were the North Carolina
Homebuilders Associntion; Duke Power's
Crescent Land and Timber Company; John
Crosland, an intluential homebuilder in
Chnrloue; the Cornwallis Development
Company, which is a subsidiary of Coon
Mills textile company; the backers of an0ther
project called Watt Creek Park, an industrial
development in the City of Burlington's
watershed; and prominent developers in
Guilford County.
Most of the energy for this effort came
from the Piedmont. Some of the smaller
developers in the mountains, and some of the
agricultural interests - like the Fann Bureau :KatilM Journm pO<Jf 26
connections, pulled strings, and contacted
local builders and real estate companies
across the state to pack the local hearings. As
a result the hearings were divided · often
bincrly (sec Koruah Journal #32). Because of
the public interest, the EMC extended the
comment period. They received 2,652 leuers,
the most comment the commission had seen
on any issue except hazardous waste. Ninety
percent of the tellers were in favor of
retaining the stricter watershed conirols.
But apparently hearing rooms are not
where government policy is formed. The
developers pulled strings W1Lh the EMC and
organized a campaign to frighten local
officials about watershed regulation. lf the
watershed protection regulations were kept in
place, they maintained, economic
development in the Stale of North Carolina
would cease entirely. The members of 1he
EMC wilted under the heal. They repudiated
1he1r fonner conclusions and offeted up a
watered-down version of their own
proposals.
Of a panel of six hearing officers, four
supported weakening the rules. and two were
opposed. The four supporters were Virgil
McBnde, Doug Boykin, Robert Griffith,
Carla DuPuy, while Cllnrlic Brady and
Michael Barnes opposed the changes.
Boykin and Griffith are developers
themselves. Virgil McBride was fom1crly a
lobbyist. Although he never lobbied for
development intercsis directly, he worked for
industries closely connecting to development
and construction, primarily the trucking
Orawu,g by Midu,el Thompson
In the end, by a vo1e of 11-5 the EMC
cul the size of the critical area in half, from
one mile to one-half mile in radius. The new
rules doubled the amount of residential
development allowed in WS-JI and WS-UJ
areas, to one house per acre in WS-n areas
and one house per one-half acre in WS-m
areas. Under the new regulations industrial
development and shopping malls are allowed
in the WS-ll and WS-lll areas (only landfills
are prohibited), if they do not discharge
wastes directly into the streams and lakes
from which people will be obtaining their
drinking water. In a WS-IV area industrial
discharge is allowed directly into the scream.
The new, weakened regulations do not
go mto effect until 1994, so developers have
two years to begin projects that would not
come under the junsdiction of any watershed
protection rules.
Bill Holman's assessment is that, ''The
hearings were only for show. Big money
working behind the scenes gulled the rules."
Whereas the earlier watershed
protection regulations were drafted with
assistance from environmentalists, business
people, local governments, and scientists,
'"There was no technical basis in the hearing
record for the changes that were made.
There's nothing in the hearing record that
said it was alright to double tl1e density of
development in protected watersheds. There_
was n01hing in the hearing records that said u
was alright to have indusoial developmenL
The changes were totally political. h was
government behind the scenes," Holman
Sprl.nq, 1992
said.
�Observations by commission mem~r
Barnes seem to verify Holman's conclus10n.
"I never saw any facts and figures 10 change
what we passed in 1990 10 what we have
here today," Barnes Lold the Asheville
Citizen-Times.
Holman said that conservation groups
are going to appeal the EMC vote on the
watershed protection regulations and that they
are going back to the State legislature to ~sk
for more specific drinking water protecnons
10 be enacted inLo law.
The threat to people's health and
well-being resulting from inadequate
protection of drinking water supplies is real
indeed. However, the drinking water
controversy also brings to light broad
questions about how decisions are made in
Nonh Carolina.
The Environmental Management
Commission is the policy-making board for
the Deparunent of Environmental
Management (DEM), part of the Depanment
of Health, Environment. and Resources.
Many of the s1affo~the pEM have.scientific
credentials, but their acnons are gwded by the
EMC, which consists of lay people, chosen
for their influence and political orientations
more than their expertise. And chosen not by
the people of the state, but by !h~ go,vernor,
who appoints 13 of the comm1ss1on s 17
members, and by the lieutenant governo~ and
the speaker of the house, who each appoint
two.
The Environmental Management
Commission makes important decisions, as
the present controversy shows. These
appointed members of a government
commission have great power over sia~e
policy the future of the land, and the hves of
many people. Yet the~ 3:e insulated ~ro.m
informed scientific opinion and pubhc input.
rn effect they constitute a ruling elite,
ostensibly legal and aboveboard, duly
.
constituted by state law, yet more responsible
10 powerful special interest groups a_nd state
power brokers than to any democrauc
institutions or interest in the natural
environment.
The actions of commissions like the
EMC are shielded from public panicipation
and control, and are carried out largely
unnoticed except in cases such as the
drinking water proteetion controversy. The
public does not often get to see the degree of
power wielded by the members of _th:
Enviromental Management Comnuss10~ and
the others like them, much less to be pnvy to
the directives coming from the high officials
who appointed them. l~ their ~c~ons ~ere
more visible, the resulung pohc1es rrught be
quite different.
People need clean drinking water.
Aquatic habitats need protection from
development. And the power of "government
behind the scenes" must be broken.
- by David Wheeler
BIG IVY
The hiker moves quietly, in awe of the
great trees beneath which she walks: u_ntil she
is brought up short by a splash ofbnlban1
color on the forest floor. A small cluster of
the rare Gray's lily shine in the dim forest
light. A short way down the the trail her eye
is drawn by the bright yellow of broadleaf
coropsis, and, there! - t~e pale be~uty of~
bleeding heart plant. This clearly 1s a special
place. This is Big Ivy.
.
Located in the Black Mountains beneath
the much-visited Craggy Gardens, the Big
rvy area is less well-known but. in its own
way, equally as beautiful and scientifically
perhaps much greater in importance than the
popular scenic attraction above.
Big Ivy contains large areas of
old-growth forest and a long list of rare plant
and animal species. Thirty-two rare plants
(including 18 listed as "rare" in the State of
North Carolina and 14 species that are
"watch-listed" in the state) and eight rare
animal species inhabit the area.
The large patches of old-growth
forests, a disappearing habitnt in the Sou.thern
Appalachians, account in part for the vanety
of unique species in Big Ivy. But an unusual
geological formation has given to the area
soils that are "circumneutral," nearly neutral
in pH, compared to ~e aci<l;ic soils gene~ly
found in the mountains. This has resulted 10 a
number of plants and plant as~iati~>ns n?t
found in other areas of the Katuah b1oregion.
Big Ivy is critical to the overall biodiversity
of the Southern Appalachians.
But all is not idyllic in Big Ivy. Because
of its diversity, the area has c_ome under
much scientific study, and sc1enus1s feel that
conditions in Big Ivy are declining largely
due to timber sates, which have caused loss
of endangered habitats and rare species as
well as fragmentation of the irreplaceable old
growth forest. The area is at a critical
Drawing by Mich11el Thomp,on
Spri.NJ, 1992
moment: there are healthy habitats and
populations yet in Big Ivy, but each
succeeding activity in the forest m~es new
inroads into already-threatened habitat areas
and further tips the balance toward
irrevocable destruction.
The big trees, however, offer an
irresistable lure co loggers and the US Forest
Service which concrols the area. In July of
1991 th~ Toecane Ranger District rel~ a
draft environmental assessment for a nmber
sale in Sugarhouse Cove. The assessment
designated approximately 2,3~ acres of
timber in the project area as ''swtable f~r
cutting." Mentioned in the plan altem~nves
was the construction of about four miles of
new road into a previously undisturbed area.
The response from area scientists and
environmentalists has been blunt and
passionate. Local biologists and botanists in
particular, have offered Lhe USFS the
benefits of their research and learned
opinions about how a logging ope~tion.
would affect the rich diversity of this unique
area.
Among them is Jim Patrenka, a
.
biologist at the University ofNonh Carolina
Asheville, who in a scoping letter.to the
USFS informed the agency that his research
indicates that every acre that is clearc~t in
Sugarhouse Cove will mean the derruse of
some 3 200 salamanders, including members
of rare ~d threatened species. This is a death
rate, according 10 Patrenka, that will ~ a
chronic depression of salamander populanons
in the area.
Biologists in other specialties share
Patrenka's concerns. In the past, accord!ng to
local activist Haywood Greer, planned umber
sales in the Big Ivy area hav~ caused. some
friction between Forest Service officials and
scientist.s working with the Nonh Carolina
Wildlife Resources Commission, who
objected to the damage that would be done by
the logging activities. Other i:e~hers have
found lhm p1m timber upc:niu~~~ in the area
have decimated local commumues of
sensitive plant species, such as goldenseal,
whose recovery has been very slow, if the
species is recovering at all.
Right now the proposed lo~ing in
Sugarhouse Cove is on hold.~n~ng further
studies of the plant commumn~,; 10 tJ:ie
planned sales units. These s1ud1es will be
carried out this spring. Hopefully they,
combined with the weight of scientific_
opinion, will dissuade the Forest Se~1ce .
from carrying out their plans to cut umber m
Sugarhouse Cove.
AnOLher action being considered by the
Forest Service is the construction of riding
trails through Big Ivy for the benefit ~fa
nearby commercial riding stable. While.some
people would be able to have pleasant rides
through the old growth f~st areas, they
would unwittingly be cau~m~ severe effects
10 the forest they were enJoying.
Big Ivy does not need 10 be logged or
suffer rides-for-pay 10 be of value. The area
is of greater value as it is: This val_ue can be
maintained by only one sunple acnon: to
leave it alone. Big Ivy is just too special to
end up being just another timber sale.
• by Emmm Grw1djgger ond David W~elcr
~
�Wblz Wisdom (01' the Two Uggeds
DRUMMING
DearKatuah,
I found your anicles on the past
history and possible future desirability of
human use of fire to influence Southern
Appalachian ecology t0 be most interesting,
and l believe that fire could be a valuable tool
for ecosystem management At pxescnt we
have 100 much early successional habitat in
Kauiah, and we should, for now, lay down
the tools (such as fire) that reverse
succession.
Organic matter is a critical element in
the regeneration of new forest soil. The soil
organic mauer harbors the life of the soil. It is
where microorganisms live, grabbing
nutrientS and cycling them back into plant
growth, instead of losing them to erosion or
leaching. Microorganism.~ also attack rock
particles, breaking them down 10 create new
soil.
Organic mauer also keeps I.he soil
cool and moist, protecting plants' fine root
hairs and giving I.hem a fertile medium in
which 10 grow, thus keeping up plant growth
and production.
Burning destroys organic mancr, and
we should be encouraging and conserving it
to nourish the next generation of I.he forest
There is also I.he possibility that the
greenhouse effect will result in massive fires.
We need to protect the forest against that as
well.
Since the arrival of the white man,
cool, moist habitatS have been greatly
decreased, and xeric, hot sites have been
greatly increased throughout the region as a
whole. There arc plenty of overgrazed slopes
near human habitations which would suppon
pines and oaks. If we want pines, let's plant
them on overgrazed hillsides. If we want
oaks, let them invade our pines.
Cool, moist, habitats are under auack
in Katuah, while hot, dry ones are all too
abundant Don't play with fire.
Sincerely,
Jesse Jones
Asheville.
Swannanoa River Watershed
Dear Ka11lal1 staff,
What I'd like 10 know is this: how
do you do it?! lime after time you people
keep coming up with inspiring themes and
relevant materials and then laying it all out in
visually inviting spreads which seem to get
beucr and better all the time?
David Wheeler's anicles in the recent
Fire issue, as is usual with his work, speaks
so clearly and comprehensively. Rob
Mes~ick's excellent organic artwork produce
depth and flow. I can't imagine the
tremendous amount of work, much I'm sure
donated, going into the production of each
Katuah! What a sense of pride it must be for
all involved when it finally slides together
and goes to print.
Being an "outsider" from over in the
Ohio ruvcr Bioregion, I find the journal none
the less relevant and immediluely meaningful.
At our Solstice gathering l passed the latest
issue around and many jotted down your
address, so expect to hear from Lhem soon.
(Raves on Rob's tunle on the back cover).
Hoping the coming seasons bring all
of you much peace and contentment,
inspirations and joy.
Sincerely,
Dave Ort
Phoc,, councsy or lhc Mounl.lDI Hcriiqc Center
Dear Editors,
l discovered Ka111ah Journal at
Mountain Crossings in Blairsville, GA last
summer. That well worn issue has been
re-read on many occasions - its time 10
subscribe!
While I currently don't reside in
Katuah, this summer I'll be moving closer 10 Cherokee County, GA. r wani to rap into
the Kauiah spirit and become aware of the
environmental issues and concerned people
of the area. The Appalachians have always
been like home for me, maybe because I
spent my childhood summers there.
Keep up the good work and positive
efforts.
Piss not into the water,
nor on any mother, child, or father.
Water is not the proper medium
to relieve repeated bladder tedium.
Piss off the walk, path, pavement, or road,
piss not on flowers, birds, or toads.
Piss near, never on, the plants and trees
where no one cares, hears, or secs.
To kill poison ivy or athletes feet
join Latinos: peace on cet.
Never piss in the same spot twice,
not anywhere that h's not nice,
nor within the sight of prigs or wardens.
Piss near borders, hedges, gardens.
Piss on national, state,
jurisdictionnl boundaries
on conventional and nuclear weapons
foundaries.
Follow wolf and coyote
10 the reaches of your domain.
Piss on dogturds and cowpies,
mountain and plain.
Piss not on the trail, campflIC,
bed, or nursery,
nor writing cursive, cursorial, or cursory.
Piss not on any creature, especially fishes,
nor hasty love, slow rage, good wishes.
Piss not on tools, machines,
electrical devices,
electric fences, antennae,
nor ho1wire splices,
not TV sets nor video games,
tho' temptation may be great.
Piss on prejudice, injustice, hate.
Piss on all oil spills and spillers.
Piss on dream-, plant-, or animal killers.
Piss on soil and compost heaps,
never on sailers, flyers, or creeps.
Piss on dirtied or painted stones
on sca1tered or unburied bones.
Put piss little by little where it belongs,
nor in sink, creek, spring, or ponds.
Give proper pisscrs privacy and honor.
Piss on llfe-pissers, messers, conners.
Piss on anyone caught on fire
with anything less than true desire.
Piss not intO Lhe wind nor in the water
but on the idea that it doesn't mauer.
- version read at Coifee House one night,
Fall,1990
by Erbin Crow.from his legacy
SPRJNG
Sincerely,
Nancy Moreland
Kasuah Peoples,
Another tender, angry, beautiful, and
compelling year of Kamalr Journal! This last
year's writings and illustrations were
exceptionally insuuctive and reverent. In
what other publication does lhis combination
of an, education, acnvism, and prayer exist?
1 love you very much,
Nancy Ligni12.
Old winter has retreated
10 the nonh, her snowy remnants
wasting into pools that feed
the swelling bulbs and heave
life fonh • all bursting cells
and swarming molecules.
· Caroline Rowe Marrens
�SAVING WILD SEEDS
by Lee Barnes
Individuals should sttive to collect,
preserve and increase their bioregions'
remaining wild and cultivated plant genetic
diversity. (See "Seed Saving to Preserve
Biodiversity," Ka11,ah Journal# 32). While
the best means of protecting a region's
genetic heritage is by preservation of large
areas of natural ecosystems, we can collect
seeds and cuttings of useful wild plants and
further increase these plants in our gardens
and backyards. The most valuable,
irreplaceable, and exportable resource of a
region arc copies (seeds, cuttings, etc.) of its
unique genetic heritage, the value of which
far exceeds any mineral or energy wealth
which could be exponed. Talce care not to
collect over a quarter of an individual plant's
seeds, leaving plenty for wild animals and
natural seed disaibution and renewal.
Wild-plant seed collection and
germination techniques vary greatly from
those commonly used with normally
cultivated fruit and vegetables. Our cultivated
varieties have long been genetically selected
and modified over historical times by
gardeners who selected for ease of harvest
and unifonn germination. It is preferable to
collect seeds of wild-plants which grow
within one degree of latitude (about 70 miles)
and from similar elevations to which they are
to be grown. This is to maximize the
favorable selection of locally adapted genetic
traits which will result in winter hardiness,
and other adaptations to local growing season
and regional micro-climate.
Wild seeds commonly mature and are
released over periods of several weeks.
These seeds are genetically programmed 10 be
released, remain donnant through winter, and
then germinate irregularly over long periods
of time. This trait serves as generic insurance
by preventing all seeds from sprouting at one
time and perhaps be lost to a major natural
catastrophe, such as major drought or fire.
The simplest seeds for the wild
seed-saver to collect and save a.re the "dry"
fruit seeds (nuts, dry legumes, sunflower,
cattail, grasses, etc.). These dry-fruits mature
and release relatively "clean'' seeds which can
be collected and stored with a minimum of
cleaning and processing. Most seeds need 10
be cleaned of any remaining fruit pans (chafl)
to reduce disease and insect damage during
storage and germination. Most "dfy" seeds
need to be dried to six 10 ten percent
moisture, then stored at low temperatures and
low humidities. Plant seeds which are usually
"dry-processed" include apple, pine, spruce,
fir, sumac, and grapes.
The most important factors affecting
seed life are humidity changes and storage
temperatures. Seeds for planting should be
stored in moisture-proof (also insect and
animal-proof) containers. Save only "sound"
and firm seeds and nuts. Some seed-savers
place a bay leaf in their storage containers to
repel bugs. (Anyone know of local herbs for
~is purpose?). Storage in wide-mouth glass
Jars with rubber gaskets is ideal. Preferably,
store these at low temperarures between
Drawing by Rob Messick
Spri.nq, 1992
40-32° F. - each 9° F. decrease in storage
temperature below 80° F. (to 32°) will
commonly double seed longevity.
Plants which produce "fleshy" fruits,
(such as persimmons, berries,
jack-in-the-pulpit, etc.) require additional
cleaning and processing. Aeshy fruits
encourage natural disaibution by being
"tasty" to animals and humans. These seeds
often require additional processing by being
passed through an animal's acidic gut, or by
natural fermentation by microbes to remove
the fleshy fruit tissues. Fleshy fruits
(especially members of the Solanaceae plant
family) can be processed by a honicultural
process called "fennentation," whereby
mashed-up fruits nre allowed to fennent to
destroy pathogens and chemicals that inhibit
germination. Then the seeds arc separated
from the pulp, washed, dried, then stored.
Another technique to separate small
seeds from their fruit is called "floatation."
Small fruits are "mashed" and soaked in
water for several days, so that
microorganisms can Stan 10 soften and digest
the fruit pulp. This partially digested fruit
pulp is then mixed with additional water and
processed by being agitated in a blender
using short "pulses" (or by rapid whipping
with a whisk). Healthy small seeds then settle
to the bottom where they can easily be
collected by pouring off the floating "pulp"
(some plants have seeds which normally float
- look for whole, uniformly shaped and
colored seeds). For better results, replace the
steel blender blades with a shon piece of tire
rubber so as to cause less damage to the
seeds. This technique is successful with
fruits of dogwood, strawberries, persimmon,
holly, juniper, magnolia, and sassafras.
Most wild seeds of temperate zone
crops require additional handling to duplicate
the natural conditions of cold winters. These
seeds require a cold, moist "stratification"
period to overcome genetic and
environmental blocks to germination.
Temperate wne plantS have biological means
of counting time ("internal clocks"), and
measuring day-length and "chilling"
temperatures. These seeds will not grow until
their internal clocks are satisfied with a
sufficient number of genetically detennined
hours of effective chilling (for example,
requiring a minimum number of hours
exposure - hundreds to possibly thousands of
hours of temperatures between 4S O and 3S 0 ).
Examples of plant seeds requiring moist
stratification include beech, walnut, many
oalcs, and filbens. It is especially imponam if
you collect wild nut trees to be sure to collect
seeds from areas which have similar numbers
of chilling-hours as the location where you
plan to grow them.
Another factor to consider when
choosing to grow plants from seeds is the
mnturation period of many long-lived
perennial plants (esp. fruit and nut trees).
Perennial trees and shrubs must grow
through a genetically influenced maturation
period before they begin to flower and bear
fruit (a son of transition from juvenile to
sexually mature, adult phase). These plants
are usually propagated by asexual means (not
involving seeds, but by cuttings or grafting).
Most of these plants produce seeds by
cross-pollination, and do not reproduce
"true-to-type" (the offspring are not
necessarily similar to their parent-plants)
from seeds, and may hove long maturation
periods. By asexually propagating fruiting
trees (cuttings, budding, etc.), one can select
superior plants (such as with larger fruit, or
tolerance to pests) and produce genetically
identical rooted planrs. These rooted cuttings
from marure trees will usually produce fruit
in just a few years, thus skipping the I ~20
years (or more!) before fruiting if grown
from seeds.
Seed longevity (defined as the average
period during which seeds can survive and
then grow) falls into three categories slum-lived (need to be sewn immediately or
within days/weeks of collection, and never
allowed to completely dry out); medium-lived
(months to S-10 + years); and /011g-lived
seeds (which may remain viable IS to 100
years, and arc able to survive until
environmental conditions are favorable for
germination.
Shon-lived varieties (spring-seeded
maples, serviceberry, paw paw, persimmon,
and sumac) - must not be allowed to totally
dry or they will die. Some seeds must be
sown immediately upon release from mature
fruits to prevent funher development of
growth-inhibiting chemicals which affect
their ability to grow. This group includes
Franklinia, trillium and many
difficult-to-germinate seeds.
Most medium-lived temperate wne
plant seeds (most K.aruah native plants)
require cold, moist stratification, whereby
seeds are stored in moist conditions (in moist
peat or sand) at 32-40° F. for two 10 three
months to overcome internal blocks to
(continued on p. 30)
Xatuah
Journot
P°'J& 29
�germination. Ao easy way to treat these
species is by mixing cleaned seeds with i:qual
pans of moist sphagnum moss or coarse sand
(in a medium that is moist, but not too wet squeeze out excess water!) in moisture
retaining conrainers (zip-lock bags work
well) stored at normal refrigerator
1emperarurcs (40-45° F). Many long-lived
seeds (thick-seeded legumes, water lilies,
morning glories) require physical thinning of
thick seed coats by microorganisms, or
hastened by partially filing, or nicking
partially through the impervious seed coats to
allow passage of gases and moisture to the
donnant embryo.
Saving wild seeds for home
germination is the first step in establishing
wild-food gardens in your back yard. (avoid
trying to transplant mature plants from the
"wild" - this is rarely successful due to
massive root-damage, and also saips the
natural habitats of productive wildlife foods
and new plants). Native agriculturists first
cultivated wild plants which natu:rally
established themselves from seeds and
discarded roots thrown onto their trash-heaps
(original "compost" piles!) and disturbed
areas (fire cleared areas, etc.). ff one can
provide the proper growing conditions, the
low-input culture of these planiS will allow
easier plant gathering without excessive
demands on the diminishing wild
populations.
Earing wild and "semi-wild/
semi-cultivated" plants in "season" will
provide one with fresh, nutritious foods and
a "reunion" with the cycles of nature.
Eat weU and give thanks for 1he tasty
gifts of our Green Spirits!
C.S. Schopmeyer. 1974. Suds of Woody
Plants in tM United States Fon:st Service, USDA
Agriculture Hnndboolc No. 450. USDA. 883 pp. •
TIIE reference for seed handling and gcrmin3tlon of
188 genera of woody plants ruuive or IUIIW'lll'faed in
the U.S. Very detailed with additional rcfcn:nccs.
fbrry Phillips. 198S. Growing and
Propagating Wild Flowers. U.N.C. Press, 331 pp.
$14.95 • especially well-written !llld beautifully
illustraled rcforencc on seed nnd spore p~tion or
native NC plants. Includes calendar of blooming d:ues
and commercial plant production timetable. &ccllentl
BURNING BUSHES
Azaleas, with mouths aflame,
Plant Propagation References
Ignite the mountainside each spring:
Hudson Hanmann and D. Kester. 197S. Plant
Propagation: Principles and Practicer. 3rd Ed.
Prwlic:c-Hall, 662 pp.• the defmilive text-book on
plant propagation l The-Ory and practlcal inro.
cry out In tongues no man can claim,
lheir ancient message siuling.
Michael Dirr and C. Heuser. 1987. Tiu!
Reference Manual of Woody Plant Propagation: From
Sud to Tisiue Culture. A Practical Working Guide to
the Propagation of Over I 100 Spt1cies, Varietit!f and
Cultivars. Varsity Press, 239 pp. - TIIE guide 10
propagatlon or woody plants used in Nonh America.
Includes prcfcmd l)l'Oll0gation ICChniques (seed,
cuttings, cu:.}, as well as. seed treatmc,us and specific
rooting percentages, etc.
Caroline Rowe Martens
ddu of the Big Cove dance
tpeak• of traditions and tinp tb.c
Booger Danu,
Com
Dance and • dotCJI 01hcrt with
drum and ranle.
c...,.n
WHERE TIIE
Get a set of 10 assorted
folding cards with
artwork you see in
Katuah Journal.
(Envelopes included.)
byRobW~ck
Send $11.25 postage paid
to:
Rob Messick
P.O. BOX 2(,()1
BOONE, NC 28607
RA YENS ROOST
~
Chcrolcce traditional
tonp of Wallcc:r Calhoun
__,._...,...,
CA.11111'1 ANO IOC*UT
It WAIL Sil
....,..
ATTil&c:e,ru$JO
MOI/NTAJN tlurrAGl ~
Wll'l'Ul< CAIIOUl'IA Utll\llllSITY
Cuu.ow11D, NC l87ll
(704)227-7129
Spring, 1992
�I•:.,,.
tt•· r ,.
9
Sustainable Agriculture and Regional Diet:
Annotated Resources
These l'CS0W'0CS were nx:ommendcd by KJlumh
ConlribulOl'S as their favorites. Price estimates are
included for reference and may not be currcnL Most
are in print or available from Inter-Library loans. A
more complete liSt ( 11 pps. w/ 117 resowces) is
available from Lee Barnes (P.O. Box 1303:
Waynesville, NC 28786) for S2.50 ppd. or send five
or more annOla!Cd resources for a liee copy. Ho!
Sustaioab(c Agrirollocc
Trauger M. Groh and S.S.H. McFadden. 1990.
Farms ofTomorrow: Communiry Supporttd Farms;
Farm Supported Communities. Biodynamic Farming
and Gardening Associalion. Inc. 169 pp. About
$12.00 - begins with several essays on the
philosophical underpinnings of CSA's (Community
Sponsored Agriculture), then describes 7 successful
farms, and concludes with practical info on slllrting
and managing a CSA. Valuable to both CSA
growers and sharers.
Jeavons et al.1983. The BacJcyard llomuttad
Mini-Farm. & Garden I.A)g Book. 10 Speed Press.
196 pp., 58.95 • gives economic data about intensive
gatdening income profits.
Eliot Coleman. 1989. The New Organic
Grower. Chelsea Green. 269 pp., $19.95. excellent
guide 10 beginning mlltket gardeners, stressing the
8-ycar crop rotnlion developed by Coleman,
including inlClScedcd green manure crops, etc.
Robert Rodale. 1971. The Basic BOQk of
Organic Gardening. Rodalc Press. 377 pp•• a classic
(and inexpensive) inlrO to organic gardening
principles and techniques. If you buy only one Rodale
Book, buy this one!
Sustaioabtc Piel t FQQd PcrsccvaOoo
Cherokee, 19th, and 20th Century recipes used by
sculcr; on Hazel Creek, in Ille Cire.u Smoky
Mounmins. Includes information on historical
cooking Lechniqucs uulizing mostly regionally
produced foods.
Jerry Conner. 1991. Eats From IM Peaks
Carolina Mountmn lleritage Cookvy. Ridgetop
Assoc. Pubt.. 111 pp.• $14.95 - modern adap!Otions
of trndilional recipes by n mastcr cheri Delicious!
Mary Ulmer. 1951. Cherolc4!t Coolclore.
Self-publ. 71 pp.· tradilional Cherokee recipes. Great
mush!
Stephen Facciola. 1990. Cornucopia: A Souru
Book ofEdible Plants. Kam pong Pub!. 677 pp.
$35.00 • i.ncrcdibte botanically arranged guide to
edible plnnts, the best of its kind! Describes over
3000 edible plants Md lheir commercial .sources.
Extensive review of cultivars of over 100 major food
planlS. LislS 52 pages of domestic. foreign and
commercial sowces for these plants. Exten~ive
Bibliography and appendices. Chcclc It out!
Lee Peterson. 1977. A Field Guide to Edible
Wild Plants of Easttrn and Ctntral North America.
330 pp. $9.95 · illustrated with plant grouped by
habitat where they can be found.
Paul Hlltnel and Mary Chiltoskey. 1975.
Cherout Plants and Their Use.s • a 400 Ytar 1/istory
. Self-publ.. 65 pp•• reference to 450 plants used by
the Cherokee, including botanical names and uses.
Noc illustrntcd.
Tom Brown, Jc. 1985. Tom Brown's Gui.de to
\Vild Edible and Medicinal Plan1s. Berk.Icy Books.
241 pp. S7 .95 • another in a series of spiritually
sensitive guides to co-surviving with wildness.
H.ighly recommended!
Stanley Schuler and E. Schuler. 1973.
Preserving the Fruits of tht Earth; How to 'Put Up'
Almost Evuy Food Grown in the United States in
Almost Everyway. Galahad Books.· 234 pp.·
general chapters on methods or food pre.wvation
(drying. smoking. brining, etc.) followed by a most
complete encyclopedia of foods and tl1eir common
preservation methods.
USDA. 1977. Canning, Freaing, Storing
Garden Product. USDA Agric. Info. Bull 410.86
pp. Free· Excerpt from 1977 Yearbook of
Agriculture. Gardening/or Food and Fun. Ovczview
or canning and drying techniques • This is
representative of nU/ll(l'()us free publications available
through your Agricultural Extensioa Service. Be sure
to chock out other tax-paid resoun:es available.
Bcginnnl Cookbooks t wna-PJ;int Eocai:1011
John Freeman. 1985. Survival Gardening and
Survival Gardening Coolcbook. John's Press, 102
pp., $10.95 ea. · excellent guides 10 sustaimtblc.
healthy food growing and pre~n. Thorough
coverage of human nulriti011:1.I needs and how to meet
these using foods from the garden.
DW1J1C Oliver. 1990. Cooking on /laze/ Creek:
Tlit Best of Southern Mountain Cooking.
Sclr-publishcd. 261 pp., $13.95 • ll'lldiLionaJ
Spri.tuJ, 1992
Deborah Lee. 1989. Exploring Nature's
Uncultiva~d Garden. Havelin Pub!. 195 pp. $14.50 •
extmotdinary guide to wild foraging which deals with
eastern and west.em philosophy and sensitivity to
plants. Very highly recommended!
Nccessruy Trading Company: Box 305; New
Olstlc, VA 24127. offers wide vllricty of organic
glltdcning supplies, naturnl pest controls, cover crop
~.etc.
Sandy Mush Herb Nursery; RL 2, Surreu
Cove Rd.: Leicester, NC 28748 (704) 683-2014 •
extensive Iisling of herb plants, unusual perennials,
CIC. (Cat. $4.00)
Edible Landscaping; Box Tl; Arion, VA
22920 • specializing in locally-adaptCd, pest-resistant
varieties of common and unusual fruits.
Qcenoizatioos t Nmslcuccs t blaeazioes
The Mountain GardtfU!r Ntwslt!Jtu from
Organic Gardening Cooperative; Rt. 3, Box 409-N:
Sylva, NC 28779 (ncw/monlhly). sponsors
monthly moctings (3rd Wed.ncsdoy, 7:00 pm) at
Jackson Co. Library (Sylva).
Appropriate Technology Tranefu to Rural
Areas. ATTRA 1991. ATTRA l-800-346-9140 -a
fedemlly-funded resource organization aimed at tnilarcd
information-search for assisling commercial and
production-level clients (their funding limits their
ability 10 help backyard, individual growers). Have
helpful Resource LiSIS. "Videol:/Slides/Tapcs oo
Sustainable Agriculuue• (18 pp). "Sustainable
Agriculture Organizations and Publication LiSt (24
pp.), etc •• Also produce lnformation Packages on
diverse info such as "Green Crops and Gtccn
Mllnurcs; "Direct Marteting." CIC. Excellent
resource! Writennd thnnlc your officials forconlinued
funding of this experienced, J'eSOW'Ceful, enlhuswtic,
and dedicated group.
The Virginia Association for Biological
Farming; Box '252; Flint Hlll, VA 22627 •
non-profit organizalion, co-ocdimucs organic
cenificalion, seminars, Flltm Held D3ys, and
farmer-to-farmer networking. S25.00 year.
Carolina Frum Stewardship Association; Box
511; PillSboro, NC 27312 -organic ccnification for
both Carolinas. Involved in LISA grnnts, on-farm
demos, and annual Farm F'ield Days.
The U.S. Dispen.flltory. (any editioo prior
1930.) • invaluable info on plants, their makeup and
how olficially used at the tum of the century (avail.
for SS0-100 from used boolc dealets).
Tennessee Alternative Growers Association;
Rt. 2, Box 46-A-1; Indian Mound, lN 37079
Bceioool Sctd aoa r1001 Spoo(i«:cs
Georgia Organic Growers Association: 1185
Bend Creek Trail; Suwanee, GA 30174
Southern Exposure Seed EJtchange; Box 158;
North Garden, VA 22959 (804-973-4703) •
specializes in heirloom varieties adapted to the
Central Virginia Mountains. Recently founded "Seed
Shares TM: The Gardener's Seed Bank", a project 10
distribute extremely rare plant Cultivars. Also sells
Seed Saving Supplies. (OIL $3)
~
R.H. Shumway; Box I; Gmniteville, SC
29829 (C:u. $1.00) • dependable, well established
(since 1870) seed house specializing in traditional
varieties. Also southern ad:lpted fruit and nut
variclies.
Kalmia Farms: Box 3881: Chnrlotlc.sville, VA
22903 • spccialiJ.CS in multiplier onions. shallolS and
garlic,
)C.Qtuafl Journot J)O()C 31
�Parld~ Gardens
(con:linocd Crom p. 4)
- The (re)integration of needs: not to lhe
market for food, the spa for exercise, the
doctor for healing, theatre for entertainment,
school for learning, studio 10 create, church
for inspiration, etc., but to lhe garden for all
these ar the same rime.
- Enriching the garden with useful and
beautiful species and learning to incocporate
them into our lives. We begin, of course,
with the present and potential natural
vege1ation, to which may be added species
introductions from similar areas worldwide;
then sUgh1 modifications of the environment micro-habitat enhancement - and lhe resultant
possibilities for new species: a paleue of
plants, a Cornucopia• never available 10
previous generations.
- Hand labor. We all have two hands,
one lifetime, 24 hours in every day. These
are "democratic" factors. Working by hand
on a small piece of land we can create a
Paradise with relevance for all. Money, and
machines can not get us there any faster, in
fact can't get us !here at all. They only lead us
astray.
•••
We live during a narrow window of
opponuoity. Having come, at lase, to lhe
realization that a revolutionary shift of
consciousness and lifestyle is required, we
find that we have only a few generations in
which to complete the changes, before it will
be too late to make a ttansition (environment
degraded, resources depleted, species cxtinc1,
soils eroded/polluted, population doubled ...).
Our enemy is a paper tiger because it
cannot deliver the goods. The world waits for
examples: to be shown, llOI told, a better
way. Paradise Gardening is vastly more
meaningful than the 'biodomc' experiment,
and anyone can play.
We have been putting thls off for too
many lifetimes now.
Commuaity Sp(IIISC)ttd Agriculture
(continued from p. 6)
Blowing In the Wind
Now we arc told that modem farm
inputs make unprecedented levels of
production possible. Without heavy spending
on inputs lhe world supposedly could not
suppon all its people. We have absurd
quantities of petroleum and natural gas going
into food production, leaving an eroded,
salty, toxic wasteland behind. We should
know beuer, no matter what our twin "big
brothers" of government and industry say.
The most basic rule is balance. We
want balance between opposite polarities,
heaven and canh, silica and Lime, grass and
clover, bee and canhworm, give and take.
This also means balance between people,
plants, animals, microbes, and minerals.
With balanced crops and livestock, rhythms
and activities build up momentum within the
fann organism. This rule implies that the
greater the diversi1y the greater the health and
stability of the farm. That is something to
think abouL
In the past five years hundreds of
CSA's have sprung into being across lhe
continenL It is an idea whose time has come.
It is catching on. A few bits of land here and
there arc being turned into healthy farms
again. Wealth made at the expense of the
countryside is seeking its return. In half a
century we may no longer see com to the
horizon in a toxic cloud.
On lhe one hand we face slavery and
ruin due to our own hypocrisy and moral
poverty - giving ourselves up to the good old
new world order. On the other hand more
and more people are taking responsibility for
their own Lives by way of home birthing,
home schooling, alternative medicine,
recycling, edible landscaping, and building
energy smart, non-toxic homes. CSA's are a
natural developmenL We have a choice.
geographically and emotionally. Instantly
we recognize in each other a shared
experience that is purely American. intense,
evocative, and yet of which very few
people can speak.
In !heir eyes I sec bitterness, guilt,
denial and nos1algia all at the same time.
Many of these ex-farmboys are very
successful by city stanclards. They have no
more tie to the land than a vague frustration
of being tom without emotional healing
from their roots. I have often thought that
the way we, as a society, raise farmers is a
very good way to raise the kind of farmer
who so thoroughly hates the land that he
would wish to wreak vengeance upon il for
not giving him the life he wanted or was
told 10 wanL At the very least these
fannboys are suffering from heavy psychic
wounds.
War is a good analogy for what we
have done to ourselves and our land.
Clcarcuts and plowed prairies are
devastated, barren places. Modem,
environmental warfare, which threatens the
fertility of the land, extends the acts of
aggression to furure generations.
Some of us have begun to sec the
Earlh as sncrcd ground. We realize that
whatever our occupation, farmer or not, we
are sustained by lhe fruits of the Earth. The
real challenge of Earth stewardship is not to
rcrum 10 some slavish peasantry, wiling
relentlessly upon the soil, but to sec the
way (The Tao) in which the rhythms of the
needs of man, can fit into the rhythms of
nature.
My vision of the future farmers of
America is men and women who are able to
combine the very best of themselves with
the cultivation of the Earth. r would like to
see farmers celebrate the fenility of the
land. I would like to sec the balance
between the needs of an individual and the
getting of nourishment. I would like to see
the plowing of a field done with grace, as
an act oflove, quietly waiting for the right
moment, then turning the earth gently,,., #
reverently.
fr
llqh lo\lCI is a biodynamic and CSA/ar~r
maruting in the Atlanta. GA ar~ At his/arm, Unu,n
Agricu/11ua/ Institute; Rt. 4, Box"63S: Blairsvilk,
GA 30512, llugh restarchn rtgtntrarive ogricult1Uc
and is tk\lC/oping local cu/ti vars of ltafy g r ~
(continued from p. 19)
"You see the beauty of my proposal is
Jr needn't wait on general revolution
I bid you ro a one-man revolution
The only revolution tlUJJ is coming"
(Robert Frost, "Build Soil")
• Corn11COf11a. S. Facciola. Kampong Pub.,
1870 Sunnse Dr., V1SU1, CA 92084. Astounding new
pubhQltion. Three lhousand edible species, many
more lhousnnds of culliva,s, sourocs of supply .ind
infonnation for c.ich entry
ltH /loll,s mttnds 10 product anothtr amclt
dtalmg mL>rt wtth local practice. /It is also
dn<tlopmg a ~,.sfe11u b) and/or fJ<fJOnJ, engaged ,n
t!M! rtaliuuu,n cf Parodi~ os a gartkn PltOJt stnd
,a-nts. and sugg6tions UJ him at 3020 Wht1t
Oai. Cruk Rd : Burn.rvtllt.NC 287/4
l'ho4o COUJ1eSy of Ille Mo11n1ain Hcn1.1sc Ccnll!r
:>i:A\hmh Journot JXUJe 32
Spnng, 1992
�o.
(continued from page 8)
I
J
!4'1 ,
•ft -,
.,.
just keep the meat out in the smokehouse. It
was nothing to kill two or three yearlings to
make the beef. My grandfather, he know'd
how to blister beef and hang it up. He'd bum
hickory wood to where it would just be
a-making the smoke. We would cure hog
meat and smoke that as well.
We'd cook a piece of that ham down,
and it would naturally-born have brown
gravy. Yeah! Not guessed at. I know by
experience.
We'd always make sure to have greens
in the spring, greens in the fall. In August,
when we was plowin' the com for the last
time, we sowed late greens in amongst the
com. We'd sow turnips and rutabagas
mostly.
As soon as everything was put up, we
started fall plowin'. We didn't have these fast
tractors that can plow everything in a day or
two, so we'd plow whenever we got the
chance. We tried to get as much done in the
fall as we could. And we plowed in the
winter, if we were able. I've plowed many a
day and it was snowing.
It was a lot of work, back then,
growing all our own food. But everybody
did it. If anyone wanted to go out and do that
now, I'd have only one thing to say ro them:
"Get busy!"
Halph Garrell is 71 years old, still
working as a mason, and still living in his
hometown · Sylva, NC in the Tuckasegee
Rivu watershed.
This article was excerpted from a
conversation with Ralph recorded by David
Wheeler and Avram Friedman on Jarwary 29,
/992.
Painting by Susan Adam
Kalmia Center, Inc.
Sylva, NC
(704) 293-3015
Custom tilling, organic fe:rtilli:ers, kelp meal,
colloidal phosphate & many more products
and services for abundant gardening and
healthful living.
f'~.~11<\
"I
told
the
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pm;onaJ aeriv1sm roo1ed Ill earthen
sp,nruali1y. Pa.'il tSSUeS have
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Slarbawk, Jobn s-i, Joanna
Macy, Bill Devall, Lone Wolf
Circle!>, Barbara Mor, ecc.
Ta/Jcj11g ua,-es ,peaks for the
oarural world and for the rekindling
of our oWD wild spmt.
Subscriptions arc SI 8.00 one
year/ S24.00 outSide U.S.
Talking UOl't'S
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•Ill IO QIIN'CU!t II 111W datllls f«91' 11
TIii ll\S- IS IIO , - no!''
_.....,,..._'"'-
Don't Pay Taxes for War
,fc,tlT'I It
I\ 11'\d '"•
0
I! l
National War Tex Resistance
Coordinating Committee
REGIONAL RADIO
Featuring Crossroads music, NPR news and music
programs, regional news and information
concerning health, education, government,
recreation, and the environment.
PO Box 774 Monroe, ME 04951
WNCW- FM r.O. Box804 Spindale, NC 28160
12071525-7774
(704) 287-8000
�Si.las ~tcDowen -~n1inucd from p. II ,
,
husbandry supplemented by a woolen cloth
fac1ory. Are these the only iu:ms of new
indusuies our moumain section is capable
of?"
He went on 10 suggest one more. "I
have recently learned tha1 a man studied Fish
culture, constructed him a lhree-acre pond
near the city of Atlanta, Ga., and then from
Florida procured a can of eggs of the Scaly
Trout species." After hatching lhe eggs and
raising lhe fish to marwity, lhe man realized
an income of fifteen lhousand dollars in one
year.
Wanting to anempt a similar venlUie
with mountain trout, McDowell had a small
pond build amid a grove of oaks near his
home. ',Oeir feed will consist of lhe waste
from the kitchen and table, with all small
animals tha1 come my way, chopped up fine,
supplemented by a lazy ca1, in an emergency.
1bere is nOlhing but lhe lack of a pure srream
and vim to hinder any man having a mountain
fann, to do the same thing, and have fat trout
for breakfast every day lbe year lbrough."
McDowell lived long enough to see lhe
impact of extractive industries on the
mountain environment. When Western North
Carolina's first corundum mine opened near
McDowell's farm in 1871, he turned a
disaster into a blessing.
Thiny years before, a flood had swept
across the best portion of his farm, "a fertile
bonom field of about 50 acres." McDowell
described the damage, " I found !hat field, on
which I expected to make forty bushels of
com to the acre, to be a miniature Sahara of
white sand, and would no longer pay lhe
expense of resetting and keeping up the
fences." The field had remained in !his
condition until the coming of the corundum
mine, which was polluting the Cullasaja
River. "As the mine was worked by means of
a hose-pipe, a red stream of clay and water
came running down the mountain's side
defiling our beautiful river and Cb8$ing away
lhe fish."
•"
• ·,•
ft occurred to McDowell that he could
protect the river and reclaim his field at lhc
same time. ',Oanks to Sir Samuel Baker for
his suggestions in relation 10 redeeming some
of the African desens by silting chem with the
muddy watc.rs of the Nile. And I forthwilh
applied to Col Jenks, who controlled the
mine, for leave to run a ditch down the
mountain from lhc mine to my sands - a
distance of three-fourths of a mile. The next
thing I did, was to throw up a dike on the
river side off the bottom, 10 hold on lhe sands
the muddy waters until they are absorbed - a
thing not hard 10 do, as the sands swallow
them up very fast and 'thirst for more.' The
water of my ditch performs the carrying
service of ten dump cans, and does the thing
for nothing and we may add, loads itself.
This enterprise I view as my last act in life's
drama, and I feel ambitious to do the lbing
well, and make my bes! bow to my
fellow-farmers as the curtain drops."
Silas McDowell died in 1879. His life
work, promoting agricultural practices
appropriate to the region, endures. McDowell
brought curiosity, ingenuity, perseverance
and humor 10 the task, qualities that would
enhance any effons to renew mountain
agriculture as we approach the 21st century.
01992
Perry Eury and his wife, Laurel, are the
founders of Kalrrua Center, Inc.. an org011iwtion
devoted 10 Sfl!Will'dship of the land in •die,u;e to
God Kalmia Center is a ,wn-profit organiu11ion
ojferiflg sv.ices and produasfor abundant gardening
and healthful living.
Perry is completing a btx,i, entitled
Appalachian Arcadia: Mouniain Fnrms and the _~
ProvidcnceofN31Un:.
~
HAWK'S HOOPS
A unique experience in
Designing, Creating, and
Learning to Play
your own Earth Instruments.
SPfCIALIZING IN
• OE.t}HS
0.:1oqon.,t .,nd Round
• f.ATTLE5 Gouto .ind l!••h""'
• ftUTE5 I!,,..,, am, and s.,mooo
• t.AINHAKEIS c. 11,_1~ Sound l'l.lkm
ttJWflUv,,t
Rt l So• 2411
O.q,G•, NC 28fila
'7041 26:11401
Jenti1ah Journal Pt196 34
REVIEW:
"APPLE PIE IN YOUR FACE"
as American as you
a cassette by Robert Hoyl
To paraphrase Edward Abbey, "lf
you're going to fight for your country, you
have to take on the government."
Roben Hoyt remembers one moment
that had a profound effect on bis life. He was
leaving nonhem California after combatting
corporate power and FBI harrassment as pan
of the effon to save the old growth forest
during Redwood Summer, 1990. A friend
met during lhe action gave him a hug and
said, "Roben, you're a good American."
This insight crystalliz.ed in Roben's mind,
and when he arrived back home in Georgia
he wrote it down as a song:
"All you good Americans
read between the lines
Help your siblings everywhere
w open up closed minds
Stand up to those who are ro blame
For crimes commi11ed in our name,
All you good Americans
Things can't stay the same."
Roben Hoyt "grew up a child of the
military complex," moving from base to
base. Yet somewhere along the way he found
a vision of hope for a different kind of
"American." His vision includes act.ion for
peace, racial equality, and the environment; it
involves compassion for animals and his
fellow human beings. lt also involves outrage
that lhe dreamkillers have a comer on the
national vision. Roben has launched a
personal crusade to assign a new meaning to
the word "American."
Robcn's original, guitar-driven music
is about that struggle against the powers both internal and outside - that want to kill lhc
world and stifle the human spirit. His
newly-released cassette, as American as you,
is a musical treat. The acoustic folk sound
provided by Robcn, David Ormsby (bassist),
and friends is fast-moving and crisp.
Roben's unique singing voice is elecll'ic,
charged with intensity and truth. His lyrics,
too, are charged particles !hat do not abide a
stagnant complacency, and if one harbors
secre1 staShes of illusion, prejudice, or
selfishness, they can sting. Yet to those
whose hearts arc open to the world, the
songs of Roben Hoyt arc energizing nnd
enlightening.
. The S~uth has a new regional pocL
W1th his guuar, a paraplegic cat, and a lot to
say, Roben is staning to travel more beyond
his home city of Atlant3. Lisicn fOr him!
We1I be hearing more from Roben Hoyt.
-DW
'as American as you" is available on
cassette/or $JO postpaid from Folk-the-Boat,
8 ox 2355; Decatur, GA 3003 I
Spri-n9, 1992
�Emergency Appeal for
European Seed-Saving Groups
Political changes in Europe have not
only upset govemmems. but have threatened
the survival of over a dozen grassroot
seed-saving and rare animal pre~rvation
organizations. Nancy Arrowsmith, a
well-published seed-saving promoter ~ow
living in Austtia, repons that the resulung
chaos threatens the survival of numerous
non-governmental organizations (NGO's)
involved in seed-saving projects and the
potential loss of irreplaceable varieties of
vegetables, grains and rare animal breeds.
In her article, "Emergency Appeal For
European Seed-Saving Groups"(l 991,
Harvest Issue, Seed Savers Exchange), she
outlines the activities of over a dozen
organizations and provides contact addresses
to which donations may be sent. These
groups are solely responsible for the
preservation and dissemination of
open-pollinated, non-hybrid plants and rare
animal breeds.
For more information contact Nancy
Arrowsmith, clo Noah's Arie; Postfach 139: A-3500
KreMU/ Donau, Austria. (DonaJions should bt! by
checks made out in U.S. Currency).
For a photocopy of the article men1ioned, write
to Lu Barnes: P.O. Bo:;c 1303: Waynesville, NC.
28786.
"The arc.i's old~
and larg~t natural
foods grocery •
Bulk Herbs, Spices, & Grains
Vitamins & Supplements
Wlieat, Salt & Yeast-Free Foods
Dairy Substitutes
Hair & Skill Care Products
Beer & Wine Making Supplies
200 W. King St, Boone, NC 28607
(70-1) 264-5220
Listening to the Military
"Save Our Rivers":
The Armed Forces Listening Project,
created by the Rural Southern Voice for
Peace based in the Celo Community,
Burnsville NC is looking for "a few good
men and women" to survey active-duty
soldiers at miJitary bases throughout the
world.
The Listening Project (see Kanlllh
Journal #24) is an open-ended survey
designed to involve both the listener and the
speaker in a joint vemure of discovery. The
Anned Forces Ustening Project is designed
to stimulate nationaJ discussion about
alternatives to violence, bridge ideological
boundaries, and stimulate discussion about
issues of personal responsibility and national
ethics.
Topics for this Listening Project will
vary depending somewhat on the location,
but will include: solving intemationaJ
conflicts without violence; solutions to racial,
religious, and ethnic strife, civilian-based
defense, and especially questions generated
by previous Armed Forces Listening
Projects.
The Arnled Forces Listening Project
was begun at the US Marine base Camp
LeJeune, where conscientious objectors
to the Persian Gulf war were being
court-manialed The Project subsequently
traveled to naval bases at Norfolk, VA and
St. Marys, GA. The Listeners found
that sailors displayed "a strong streak of
pragmatism." They were surprised that half
the sailors interviewed were in disagreement
with the Gulf War. HaJf the speakers also
voiced suppon for nonviolent solutions to
international conflict But as important as the
stanling answers that they heard, were the
effects on the interviewers of personal
contacts with military personnel. Volunteer
Lois Miller said, "The Listening Project was
a revelation to me. I had no idea that I would
encounter such depth of feeling from big,
tough Marines."
To take pan in future chapters of the
Armed Forces Listening Project, write: Rural
Southern Voice for Peace; 1898 Hannah
Branch Rd.; Burnsville, NC 28714 or call
{704) 675-5933.
The Cassette Tape
The Town of Highlands, NC_ h!IS
obtained a permit to dump half a million
gallons of wastewater per day int~ the scenic
Cullasaja River. Appeals, both neighborly
and legal, have so far proved futile.
This river has always been used for
recreation. Since ancient times it has been
used for the Cherokee Indian ritual of Going
to Water. Since 1837 local churches have
held baptisms in lhe river.
Local musicians have rallied and
produced a tape containing original songs by
Barbara Duncan and gospel runes sung by the
Foxfire Boys. Barbara sings "Save Our
Rivers," the group's theme song; "You Don't
Miss Your Water Til Your Well Runs Dry,"
written years ago but unfonunately still
timely; "Go Fishin'," "the only real love song
she has ever written," according 10 her
husband; and the beautiful ''Rainbow
Springs."
The Foxfire Boys were recorded live in
a concen in Clayton, GA. The churches of
Macon County, panicularly the Baptisis,
have united in the effon to protect the
Cullasaja.
The tape "Save Our Rivers" is available
for $10.00 postpaid from Save Our Rivers;
Box. 122; Franklin, NC 28734.
FUTONS ETC. ~~
... the new al temative
to the sleeper sofa
with over 4,000 years of
customer satisfaction built in.
~
,.
r/ 'Thu
~ S aru!JMush
Htrb Nur-se,y
WREATHS • POTPOURRI
NATIVE FLUTES
• HERBS • TOPIARY
Complete I ferb Catalog - $4
Describes more titan 800 plants from
Aloe to Yarraw
Rt 2, Surrett Cove Road
Leicester, North Carolina 28748
Plione for appointment to visit
(704) 683-2014
Sprin<J, 1992
Two styles made of cedar or walnut
woods in the traditional manner
WHOLE FOODS
VITAMINS
ORGANI C P RODUCE
160 Broadway
Hawk Littlejohn
Sourwood Farm
Asheville, North Carolina
Rt 1, Box 172-l
Open 7 Days a Week
Monday - Friday 9 am - 8 pm
Saturday 9 am - 6:30 pm
Sunday 12 pm - 5 pm
Prospect Hill, NC 27314
(919) 562-3073
)(.ati&an Joumm poge 35
�The Katuah Tapes
TURTLE ISLAND
BIOREGIONAL CONGRESS V
POPULATION EXPLOSION
"ln the next seven years the population
of Nonh Carolina will explode. Are you
ready?
'The August issue of MaIUTiry Market
Perspectives predicted Nonh Carolina will be
fifth in the nation as a retirement choice. This
is in addition to the regular population
movement from Florida to North Carolina.
"Seeking to escape from a nightmare of
pollution, high crime, water shonages, and
traffic congestion, these re-retirees are
heading north ..."
This is not a warning to county
commissioners and planners to have their
1.0ning ordinances in place. This is a call to
action for developers and real estate investors
from Green Watch, an environmental
newsleuer for the real estate indusuy.
(Environmental? Yes, "the financial
environment of real estate." as the paper's
masthead proclaims in green ink.)
Another word of environmental
wisdom from Green W01ch; "Remember,
they aren't making any more Nonh
Carolina."
- - life's nec1:Ssitiesfarlas - -
Tara Clayton, a long-time friend of the
Kat1wh Journal from Rougemont., NC, is
May 17-24
Camp Stewart, Kerrville,
near San Antonio, Texas
Every two years people gather from all
the bioregions of the Turtle lsland continent
10 communicate and celebrate the bioregional
movement at the Continental Bioregional
Congress. This year the event is being held in
south central Texas.
The focus of the 1992 Congress is on
Circles of Change. These are levels of work
ar the gathering and in people's home
bioregions:
- Mapping and Organizing
- Links of Communication
- The BioregionaJ Story
- Living at Home, and
- Ecosystem Conservation and
Restoration
There will also be time devoted to
sharing biorcgional cultures, men's and
women's gatherings, and young people's
activities.
Admission will be by preregistration
only and all registrations must be received
before May l. Registration is $225-300 for
adults, $100 per child aged 3- 11. All food
and lodging are included for the entire week
of the Congress. Checks should be made
paynble to "Realistic Living· TIBC V."
now recording the contents of each issue of
the journal on cassette Ulpes "for the purpose
of reaching elderly Native Americans in the
Veterans Administration Hospital in Durham
and for nursing homes as well."
Others who are interested in procuring
recorded versions of the Katuall Journal may
be able to purchase tapes from Tara.
Anyone who would like 10 send n
donation to help this idea along is encouraged
10 do so, as funding for the project is limited.
ConlOCt:
TaraClayr.on
Box461
Ballama, NC 27503
Mail to: Realistic Living; Box 140826;
Dallas, TX 75214.
FRENCH BROAD Fooo Co,oP
90 Bn.TMOR£ A ~
~ AsKEvu.LE
(704)255-7650
your community
grr,«ry•tou
....,.,....,...... 10,_.. ....,....... ,,..
....................
EARTH KIN
Programs to 81'1COU'oge
58lf and Earth oworeoess.
celetl<allon. kl~p and hope
O~<::?Jto
c\....., S c ~ s
l'\UI\"\..$
to""°'itlG- t.ool(.S
CA.~~s
~086~ 1804
~-\)~'l, M.c.
Q.871$-
• You1h Camp& • School Program,
• Fam,ly Camp& • Teacher Tnalning
• CommUOlly
Union Acres
Programs
• Camp Slal1 Tra,n,ng
• Ou1door Prog,.m Conl\Jllong
An Alternative
j
PO 800C 130C>
Gottinbl.fg. Teme~ 37738
61 S-43o-6203
NATURf\L MARKET
WHOLE FOODS • BI.Jl..K
FOODS • VITAMINES • HERBS
• FAT FREE FOODS• TAKE
OlJT FOODS • SNACKS • NO
SALT, NO CHOLESTEROL
265 2700
823 Blow,ng Rock Rd
Boone, NC 28607
Acrolgtfur Salt - Smoky Mountain living
with• focus on spiritlllll and
«ologiclll tlQ/ues
For more information:
Contact C. Grant at
Routt 1. &x 61/
Whittier, NC 28789
(704) 497-4964
whole earth
grocery
•
NATURAL
ALTERNATIVES
FOR HEALTHFUL
LIVING
-146 c J>.lrkway cr~ft center • suite 11
g;,tlinburg. tcnn~
37738
615-436-6967
�ECHOES OF AVERY • a cassellC recording or songs
writlen and performed by Avery Q>uniy, NC
elementary school Sllldcnts with artis1 in residence
Thad Beach. Historical songs with II regional
flavor, lyric reciiaLion and singing. Casscuc liner
includes lyrics. Send $4 .95 (includes posiage} io:
Thad Beach; RL 2, Box 422, Waynesville. NC
28786.
THE RJVER CANE RENDEZVOUS 1992 • is on
April 28th - May 3rd a1 Unicoi Staie Park an
Georgia featuring in-depth canhskills training,
tools & techniques for living in the natural world.
Over a dozen top.ranked instructors including Snow
Bear, Dany Wood, Doug Elliot, Tammy Beane,
Jim Riggs, John & Geri McPherson. Scott Jones,
Sieve Wa:us and Oierolcee elders Walker Calhoun,
Eva Bigwiteh and Eddie Bushyhead. $145.00
regisualion includes meals. For more info eontac1
Bob Slack c/o Unicoi SLalC Park; Helen, GA 30545
(404) 878-2201.
BEGINNING CHEROKEE LANGUAGE BOOK·
supplemenled with two casseues. Slll:Sses alphabet
& proper pronunciation. The first textbook wriuen
for use in IC8Cbing and learning the Cherokee
language. (346 pages) S39.95 plus $5.00 shipping.
Catalog also available with ca.~ . books. pipes,
dance slicks, drums, feathers, furs, buffalo products
and more. Craft supplies also available. (plcaso
specify). Send $2.00 to the Muskrat Trader; P.O.
Box 20033; Roanoke. VA 24018.
HIGHLANDER CENTER - is a community-based
educational organization whose purpose is to
provide space for people to learn from each other.
and to develop solutions to environmenlal
problems based on their values. experiences. and
aspirations. They also publish a quarterly
newsletier called Highlander Reports. For more info
contact Highlander Cerucr; 1959 Highlander Way:
New Mankel, 1N 37820 (615) 933-3443
PCEDMOm' BIOREGlONAL INSTITIJTE · For
those who Ii vc in the Piedmont area, there's a
biorcg.ional effon well undc.way. Join Us! We
would appreciate any dooalion or Lime or money to
help meet opcra1ing expenses. For a gif1 of $25.00
or morc, we will send you a copy oCJohn Lawson's
journal, A New Voyage to Carolina. Also come
find ou1abou1 the Lawson Project PBI; 412 W
Rosemary S1ree1; Chapel Hill, NC 27516;
Uwharria Province. (919) 942-2581.
EARN $200-$500 • wcclcly mailing travel brochures.
For informal.ion send a siampcd 3ddn:.sscd envelope
to: Galaxy Travel, lnc.; P.O. Box 13106; Silver
Springs, MD 20911.
I WV£ TH£ EARTH - a casseue recording of
environmental songs by the GrcaJ Smoky
Mo110U1ins JnsLi1u1c at Tremont in celebration of
the 20th anniversary of Eanh Day. Includes "SCAT
rap," "Tho Garbage Blues; and morc. S9.95 plus
$2.50 shipping for each tasSellC. Mail Otder plus
check to Grea1 Smoky Mountains N&1uml History
Associauon: 115 Park HcadqWlltCrs Rd.:
G11Llinburg, TN 37738.
NATIVE AMERICAN CEREMONIALS Hnndcrafled Native American Ceremonial supplies,
include Drums. Cus1om Pipes. Medicine B3gs,
Swcctgnw, Sage, Feathers, Rawhide R:ur.Jes,
Tobaccos. Pipe Bags, Native AuteS, and more! For
free catalogue write: P.O. Box 1062-K Cherokee,
NC28719.
• Spf1,n9, J992
NATIVE AMERICAN CEREMONIAL HERBS • we
offer a lllrge variety of sages, sweet gross, natural
resins, and evcsything necessary for smudging.
Native smoking mix1urcs, 0ute music, pow-wow
tapes, and ceremonial songs. EssentW oils. and
incenses specifically made for prayer, offering, and
meditation. For catalog call or write: Essencial
Dreams; Rt 3, Box 285; Eagle Fork; Hayesville,
NC 28904 (704) 389-9898.
SUMMER APPRENTICE WEEK JULY 3·9 Weekend opt.ion, July 3·5. Wtth Wise Woman
Tradition leacher Whitewolf. Workshops, weed
walks, harvesting medicinal hetbs, Moonlodge,
Women's Spiri1uali1y. Beautiful location one bouJ
from Asheville. Cornfonable dorm or tenting:
vegelari3n meals included. Sljding scale.
work-exchange avai.lable. Write: Wolf, P.O. Box
576; Asheville, NC 28802.
THE ALTERNATIVE READING ROOM· is an
unconvenlional library, free and open to lhe public.
Our collection interests include lhc envll'Ollllleni.
social and poliLical issues, lhe media and peace. We
have over 200 magazine suMCripLions. The book
and video collections also emphasize the
environmcot and political concems. Books and
VCR's can be checked OUI. A VCR player is
available for watehing films in lhc reading room.
Located 812 Wall St #114: Asheville, NC 28801
(704) 252-2501. Mon/Wed/Fri 6-Spm • Tues/Thur
1-8pm • Sat/Sun l-6pm
COHOUSING COMMUNITY BEING FORMED·
in lhe Asheville area Residenis organize, plan, and
design a cooperative community where individual
homes cluster around a common hoUS8 with shm.d
facilities- laundry, workshops, children's room,
dining room, cu:. Opponunitles for energy
efficient, ecologically sound land use. Inquiries
invited. Contact: John Senechal; P.O. Box 1176;
Weaverville, NC287&7 (704) 658-3740.
A VIDEO ABOUT LAND TRUSTS • has been
produced by lhe Land Trust Alliance to explain in
layman's tcnns what a land trust is. 2.7 million
acres of land have been saved by nonproli1 land
trust organizations in America, This video
documents this movement's successes. Cos1 is
S2l.00 for individuals and $14.SO for LTA
members (include $4.SO for J)OSl3gc). Contact: The
Land Trust Alliance; 900 17th SI. NW Suite 410:
Washington, DC 20006 (202) 785-1410.
HAWKWIND EARTH RENEWAL COOPERATIVE
- is o 77 acre wilderness reucot locatcd on Lookout
Mountain Parkway in norlhcm Alobama. Easy
access, safe family camping, year round weekend
programs fealUring Nalive American elders and
earth teachers from around lhc world. Strong
spiritual foundation with Earth Renewal emphasis,
membership discoun1 co-op. There is no charge for
Native American ceremonies; rescrvali.ons rcqu.irod
for all visits please. Childcare often available.
Wriie: P.O. Box I I; Valley Head, AL 35989 (205)
635-6304. For quancrly ncwslcuer 1111d program
updlucs send S10.00.
TURTLE ISLAND PRESERVE· Summer Youth
Camps nre a unique cnvironmcnlal education
experience_ Learn primitive living skills,
Appalachian Mountain living skills. ond Eanh
awareness.
• Boys Camp (ages 11-17) June 28 -July 11.
•GirlsCamp(ages 11- 17)July 12-July 18.
• Junior Youth Camp (ages 7-10) June 14 • 20.
For more info conlaCt: EuslllCC Conway; RL I.
Box 249-B; Deep Gap, NC 28618 (704) 265-2267.
LIFETIMES & AGES - a new release from Bob
Avery-Grubel full of new age vocal music
~ploring lhe mystery or life - lyrics included.
Available on casseuc for SI0.00 plus :SJ.00
shipping, and oo CD for S 15.00 plus $1 .00
shipping. Send to: Bob Avery Grubel; Rt. I, Box
735; Floyd, VA 24-091.
DAVID & CATifY BROWN • known by lheir
friends as Ahwi & Wohali arc looking 10 network
wilh people who live in lhe Katuah area and who
wan1 to form o community along tradilional
Cherokee lines as closely as possible. They are
both of Cherokee-Scots hcricage. They have lhree
home-schooled boys who would like some pen
)'31s. If you are inierestcd in ne1WOrking conlllCt:
Ahwi & WohaU Brown: 1915 Buckley Sireet;
Chattanooga. TN; Chickamaugan D1striel 37404.
• Webworking costs! T~re is now a charge ofS2.JO
(pre-paid) per entry of50 words or lus. Submit
entries for Issue #35 by May 15th 199210: Rob
Messick; Box 2(,(JJ; Boone.NC 28607. (704)
754-«>97.
Alternatives ...
The Diuctory of ln1tntio11al Conumu1111e., is lhe product or 1wo years of intensive rcscarcil, and is lhe mosl
comprehensive and accuraic dirccLOry a,ailable. II documcnis the vi~ion nnd the daily hfc of more than 350
communi1ies in Nol'lh America, and more than 50 on
other continenL~. Each community\ listing includes
name, address, phone, and a dcscnJ)tlon of lhe group.
Ex1CDs1vc cross-rclercnc mg and imkxmg makes the information =y 10 access for a wide vanc1y of users. Includes mnps, over 250 addiuonal Resource listings. and
40 rel3tcd a.rucles.
32!1 P3gcs
8-1/]:,.l l
Perfectbound
Ocwbcr 1990
ISBt,; Number:
0-9602714-1-4
$16.00
Adil S2.00 postage
& h3Jldling for first
book. S.50 for each
additional; 40%
discount on orders
of 10 or more.
Alpha Fann. Deadwood, OR
(503J964--5l02
...
�18
GIU".AT SMOKU:S PARK
·Gourmc1 Gnvin' in Ille Great Smolucs·
class will le:leh edible pl.int ID and preparation
Pre-register S30. For mfo on this and other field
courses, comact Smoky Mounlain Field School,
Un1v~1y of Tcmiesscc, Non-Credit Programs,
600
Henley St.. Suite IOS, Knoxville, TN 37902.
(800) 284-8885.
21
ASHEVILLE/CLEVELAND
National Day of Outtage Against
the US Forest Service. Let the forests live!!
Demonstrations wiU be held at 11 am al
Forest Service offices in Asheville, NC and
Cleveland, TN. For infonnation about the
Asheville action, call (704) 299-0860 or
(704) 586-3146. For information about the
Cleveland action, call (615) 524-4771.
GREAT SMOKIES PARK
Spring WildOowcr Pilgrimage. G u,ded
walks to the bcs1 wlldOowcr Siu:.s in the Parle.
lntcipretative prcscnllllions each evening. Conl3CL
23-25
evencs
SWANNANOA, NC
Annual Western North Carolina
Environmental Summit will be hosted by
Warren Wilson College and include
infonnation on current issues, workshops
and a legislative update. Pre-register:
contaet WNC Alliance; Box 18087;
Asheville, NC 28814. (704) 258-8737.
BLACK MOUNTAIN, NC
"Facing the Automobile Crisis" cransportation issues conference will
examine NC's ttansponation priorities and
feasible alternatives. Man:ia Lowe, senior
researcher with Worldwatch institute,
keynote speaker. Workshops, panels. Ar
Camp Rockmont. Pre-register: $75-125
includes meals and lodging. Contact WNC
Alliance (704) 258-8737 or (704)
689-5988.
4
28-5/3
MARCH
4
18
FULL MOON/ WORM MOON
21
SPRING EQUINOX
21
SWANNANOA,NC
Foll Moon Sweat Lodge beg.ins at
noon. Fat info about participaiing, and dau:.s of
GSMNP; Gatlinburg, TN 37738. (61S)
436-1262.
24-26
Oilier monthly full moon lodge ccn:monies, con1a0t
The Earth Cenlcr, 302 Old Fellowship Rd.,
Swannanoa, NC 28n8. (704) 298-3935.
27-29
BOONE, NC
African Drumming Workshop, presented
by Rhythm Alivcl at H1l11Dp Haven Rctrc3t Center.
Prc-rcgi5uauon rcqwred: drums available eo rent for
lbe woricshop with advllllCC notice. Coniac1 Akal
Der Shatonnc 01 (704) 264-1384. for info on Olher
dlUmming workshops and events, con111e1 Rhythm
Alive!; Box 3331; Asheville, NC 28802. (704)
255-8020.
KNOXVILLE, TN
River Rescue - cleaning up the
fLTSt 50 miles of the Tennessee River. Help
the Clean Water Project clean up the river!
For infonnation, call the Center for Global
Sustainability at (615) 524-4771.
9
18-29
VALLEY HEAD, AL
ASHEVILLF.., NC
Forestry Commission Forum w1U
Seventh generation Cherokee herbalist,
Medicine Bear (D. Walt Burchcu) will :Juw
knowledge abou1 lhc use or plants during a 1wo diay
workshop. Pre-rcgisier: $125. For info on lhlS and
n~~.ct WOllcshops, comact Hawkw,nd Eartb Renewal
Cooperative; Box 11; Valley Head, AL 35989.
inv11e di5cussion of forest use and wildlands
preservation. Co-Sl)OnSOl'Cd by Sierra Club and
other group~. Contact Nick Stcfanou at (704)
685-3881.
(20S) 635-6304.
Environmental and Earth Skills Famil)•
Gruhcring, with Hawk and Ayal HW1'1. Fire by
friction, uacl:ing and $Ulll<1ng, sptnt animal
journeys, plant and medicine walks, llinllulapping,
cordage nnd hide 13ruling. Adults: $80, chi~:
S70. Contac:1 Long Bl'OIICh Environmcnwl
Education Center: RL 2, Box 132; Lc1ces1cr, NC
28748. (704) 683-3662.
APRIL
3-5
SWANNANOA,NC
ApprcntJce cias:; with Morgan Eaglcbcar
will e.tpl~ IJlc proper use of herbs and other
'1calmg tools from the Native American
perspective. First clllS.~ in a four-pan series. For
info on Lhii and other classes, con1ae1 The Eanh
Ccnlet. Sec 3/21.
Xouiah JournaL p~ 38
'
10-12
17
LEICESTER, NC
HELEN, GA
''Rivercane Rendezvous" is
Eanhskills !raining, tools, and techniques
for living in the natural world. Instructors
include Snow Bear, Drury Wood, Doug
Elliott, Tammy Beane, Jim Riggs, and
Cherokee elders Walker Calhoun, Eva
Bigwitch and Eddie Bushyhead.
Pre-register: $145 includes meals. Contact
Bob Slack, Jr., Unicoi State Park, Helen,
GA 30545. (404) 878-2201.
MAY
1-3
TANASr RIDGE
Bchane (May Day) Gatbc:ring BJ
Morningstar Farm. May pole, song, dancing.
Celebrate High Spnng! For informntion and
uavcl directions, call (704) 586-3146.
1-3
ROAN MOUNTAJN, TN
34th Annual Roan Moun111m
WildOowcr Tours and Birdwalks. Con111e1 Ro:in
Moun111in Sl3le Park at (615) 7n-3303.
Fl;LL MOON /PTNK MOOS
Drawing by Rob Mel.Sick
Spr~»9. 1992
�··:KATUAH
2
WFSTF.RN NORTH CAROLINA
Clean SIJ'Callls Day will involve
coordinated clean.up in Buncombe, Madison,
Henderson and Transylvania counties. For info
and lrnShbags, contac1 Quality Forward. Soc 4/6.
MARSHALL, NC
Spoon Carving WOl'kshop is an
introduction 10 lmditional woodworking IOOls and
rcchniqoes, iaughl by Drew Langsner.
Pre-regis1cr: SISO includes meals and camping
(dormilory also available). For info on this and
other woodworking classes. conU1C1 Country
Workshops, 90 Mill Creek Road, Marshall, NC
28753. (704) 656-2280.
KONFUSION =·
Rob Messic\<.
coniact Great Smoky Mount:1ins lnslltulc at
Tremoni; Rt I, Box 700; Townsend, TN
37882.
(615) 448-6709.
JUNE
HOT SPRINGS, NC
"Taoist Medilation for Beginners" will
include instruction, group mcdiuuion, and periods
or silence. Led by Linda Gooding Md Sllaron Reif.
Pre-register: S145 includes vegan meals Md
lodging. For info on this and other retreats, conLaC1
Southern Dhnrma Rctre31 Center. RL I, Box
34-H,: H01 Springs, NC 28743. (704)622-7112.
5.7
16
FULL MOON / FLOWER
MOON
2·3
9-10
VALLEY HEAD, AL
Earth Slcills workshop with Darry
Wood. "Wilh a knife. on axe, and a saw, I can
mnke a life in lhe woods.· R~l and
undcrsianding are what allow us lO live ligh1ly
on lhe land. Hawkwind Earth Renewal
Cooperative. See 3/28-29.
14-18 CHEROKEE NF
Sou!hPAW Spring Council. Join
the region's biocentric environmental
group to plan forest rescue and !he
Kan1ah evolutionary preserve. USFS
appeals, paving moratorium, Earth skills,
non-violence training for direct action,
and more. At Jennings Creek area. For
travel directions and info, caJI (615)
543-5107 or (704) 299-0860.
GREAT SMOKIES PARK
Spring Naturalis1 Wccl(cnd is a chance
lO lewn about the natural hisiory oflhc park
Crom local cxpertS. lnstruciors will include Dr.
Mike PellOn, Dr. Fred Alsop, and Dr. Ed
Clebsch. Pre-register: S75 includes meals Md
lodging. For info on lhis and other progrnms,
15-17
KERRSVILLE, TX
The Fifth Tunic Island Biorcgional
Congress. Bioregional people from across the
continent will gather 10 celebrate and sll':llCgi1.e
an ecoccnlric way of living. Pre-register:
$225-300 includes meals and lodging. ConlllCt:
Realistic Living; Box 140826; Dallns, TX
75214. (903) 583-8252.
17-21
The Black Mountain Festival.
Four days of great music with Goose
Creek Symphony, Norman and Nancy
Blake, Ada Korey, The Chicken Wire
Gang, Brooks Williams, songs and
stories for children wiLh Bob Rosentahl,
Ian Bruce from Scot.land, Steelorama
reggae, the Flying Mice, other
performers, and more dancers than ever
before! $65 for the duration. For more
info, call (704) 669-2456.
CHEROKEE, NC
Sieve Moon, shell engravings. and Joel
Queen, s10ne sculplUl'C and pouery, in a
two-person show at lhe Musewn of lhc Cherokee
Indian.
30
WAYNESVILLE, NC
Bead Weaving workshop: me peyote
stilCh for medicine or spirit bag weaving.
Pre-register. $30 plus materials. For info on this
and olhcr programs, conl3Ct Sl.il-Ligh1
Theosophical Retreat Center; RL I, Box 326;
Waynesville, NC 28786. (704) 452-456
/,
-
Spr~. 1992
-
'
Kaluah Province 28748
For more info: call Rob Messick a1 (704) 754-6097
PO Box 638 Leicester, NC
Regular Membership ........$10/yr.
Address
Sponsor.........................$20/yr.
Contributor.....................$50/yr.
State
Zip
FULL MOON
20
SUMMER SOLSTICE
AMONG THE TREES
Katunh Rainbow Tribe Solstice
Gathering. Somewhere in lhe national forest brothas
and sisters will gather 10 create a magical village or
love and lighL Location Md exact dates 10 be
annoWlCed. For information wriie lO HO! Newsle11er,
Box 5455; Allania. GA 30307, or call Allanta
Rainbow Light Line, (404) 662-6112.
17(?)-21
Enclosed is $::----- to give
!his effort an extra boost
12-14
MASSANETT A SPGS., VA
6th Annual National Forest
Refonn Pow Wow will include group
discussions, workshops and field trips 10
view several forest management
techniques. Pre-register: $76-122 includes
meals and lodging or campsite. Contact
Forest Reform Network; 5934 Royal Lane
(Suite 223); Dallas, TX. 75230. (214)
368-1791.
3-10, 13-16, 18-20, 22-24, 26-27, 29-33
- - - - - - -- - - - - - - - -
Ke°UA~OURNAL
Name
15
23-24
- -- -- - -- -- - - -- -- - --- - --- -- - --
City
JOHNSON CITY, TN
"Places and the Displaced" is drama
inspired by lhe quinccntcnninl of Columbus's
voyage, written and performed by The Road
Company. Box 5278, Johnson City, 1N 37603.
(615)926-7726.
22-25 BLACK MO UNTAIN, NC
BACK ISSUFS OFKATUAH JOURNALAVAILABLE
34
9-13
----
Back Issues;
Issue# __@ $2.50 = s.--Jssue # __@ $2.50 = $•--Issue# __@ $2.50 = s.--lssue # __@ $2.50 = $____
Issue# __@ $2.50 = $_ __
postage paid $_ __
Complete Set:
(3-10, 13-16, 18-20, 22-24, 26-32)
postage paid @ $50.00 = $_ __
Phone Number
XA~ JournaL page 39
�
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 34, Spring 1992
Description
An account of the resource
The thirty-fourth issue of the <em>Katúah Journal</em> focuses on sustainable agriculture and regional diet. Authors and artists in this issue include: Joe Hollis, Hugh Lovel, Ralph Garrett, Peter Bane, Perry Eury, Allison C. Sutherland, Bear With Runs, Mark Schonbeck, John Ingress, Lee Barnes, Charlotte Homsher, Rob Messick, David Wheeler, Emmett Greendigger, Michael Thompson, James Rhea, Dawn Shiner, Troy Setzler, Erbin Crow, Caroline Rowe Martens, 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
1992
Table Of Contents
A list of subunits of the resource.
Paradise Gardening by Joe Hollis.......3<br /><br />Community Sponsored Agriculture by Hugh Lovel.......5<br /><br />"If You Didn't Grow It..." by Ralph Garrett.......7<br /><br />Eating Close to Home by Peter Bane.......9<br /><br />Silas McDowell's Vision by Perry Eury.......11<br /><br />Poems by Allison C. Sutherland.......12<br /><br />Native Foods by Bear with Runs.......13<br /><br />Cover Crops by Mark Schonbeck.......15<br /><br />Plan for Tomorrow: Hemp by John Ingress.......17<br /><br />Katúah Cultivars by Lee Barnes.......18<br /><br />Blowing in the Wind by Charlotte Homsher.......19<br /><br />The Web of Life: A Katúah Almanac by Lee Barnes and Rob Messick.......20<br /><br />Good Medicine.......22<br /><br />Natural World News.......24<br /><br />"Whose Rules?" by David Wheeler.......26<br /><br />Big Ivy by Emmett Greendigger and David Wheeler.......27<br /><br />Drumming.......28<br /><br />Saving Wild Seeds by Lee Barnes.......29<br /><br />Resources.......31<br /><br />Review: "Apple Pie in Your Face".......34<br /><br />Webworking.......37<br /><br />Events.......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 Mountaineer</em> Press
Subject
The topic of the resource
Bioregionalism--Appalachian Region, Southern
Sustainable living--Appalachian Region, Southern
Sustainable agriculture--Appalachian Region, Southern
Appalachians (People)--Social life and customs--History
Community-supported agriculture--Appalachian Region, Southern
Cherokee Indians--Social life and customs--History
Cover crops--Appalachian Region, Southern
Permaculture--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)
Agriculture
Appalachian History
Appalachian Mountains
Appalachian Studies
Bioregional Congress
Black Bears
Book Reviews
Cherokees
Community
Ecological Peril
Economic Alternatives
Folklore and Ceremony
Forest Issues
Good Medicine
Habitat
Health
Katúah
Permaculture
Pigeon River
Plants and Herbs
Poems
Radioactive Waste
Reading Resources
Stories
Turtle Island
Water Quality
Western North Carolina Alliance
Wilderness