1
50
7
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Title
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Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians Records
Description
An account of the resource
<em>Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians</em>, later simplified to <em>Katúah Journal</em>, was published from 1983 to 1993. A quarterly publication, it was focused on the bioregion of former Cherokee land in Appalachia. <br /><br /><span>The early issues of the journal explain the meaning of the Cherokee name, </span><em>Katúah</em><span>, and why the editors wanted to view the world through a bioregional lens, rather than political boundaries. A volunteer production, the editors took a holistic view in tackling social, environmental, mental, spiritual, and emotional topics of the day, many of which are still relevant. </span><br /><span><br />The <em>Katúah Journal</em> was co-founded by Marnie Muller, David Wheeler, Thomas Rain Crowe, Martha Tree and others who served as co-publishers and co-editors. Other key team members included Chip Smith, David Reed, Jay Mackey, Rob Messick and many others.</span><br /><br />This digital collection is only a portion of the <em>Katúah</em>-related materials in the W.L. Eury Appalachian Collection in Special Collections at Appalachian State University. The items in AC.870 Katúah Journal records cover the production history of the <em>Katúah Journal</em>. Contained within the records are correspondence, publication information, article submissions, and financial information. The editorial layouts for issues 12 through 39 are included as are a full run of the Journal spanning nearly a decade. Also included are photographs of events related to the Journal and a film on the publication.
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This resource is part of the <em>Katúah Journal Records </em>collection. For a description of the entire collection, see <a href="https://appstate-speccoll.lyrasistechnology.org/repositories/2/resources/937" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Katúah Journal Records (AC. 870)</a>.
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The images and information in this collection are protected by the Copyright Law of the United States (Title 17, U. S. C.) and are intended only for personal, non-commercial, and educational purposes, provided proper citation is used – i.e., Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians Records, 1980-2013 (AC.870), W. L. Eury Appalachian Collection, Special Collections, Appalachian State University, Boone, NC. Researchers are responsible for securing permissions from the copyright holder for any reproduction, publication, or commercial use of these materials.
Date
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1983-1993
Format
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journals (periodicals)
Language
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English
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Text
Dublin Core
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Title
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<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
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Rob Messick
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1993
Language
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English
Type
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Text
Format
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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
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<a title="In Copyright – Educational Use Permitted" href="https://rightsstatements.org/page/InC-EDU/1.0/?language=en 8" target="_blank" rel="noopener"> In Copyright – Educational Use Permitted </a>
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
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ISSUE
AUTUMN
NO. 1
1983
�BIOREGIONS :
"The Trail To Home"
FROM ULSTER TO CAROLINA :
(The Scotch-Irish Migration To N. Carolina)
1
3
(""!
N
4
PERHACULTURE PRACTICES
A Story
MOSHKA & LAKIMA
N
By
Snow Bear
<
z
H
,.J
0
''Wind Rose" By George Ellison
MAP MEDITATIONS
6
8
OLD TIME APPLES
POETRY
......
co
The Katuah Bioregion
9
10
i:x:
<
u
::c
f-1
i:x:
MOUNTAIN GUIDES
A Resource Bibliography
i.2
BIOREGIONAL CONGRESSES
14
ALTERNATIVES TO ECONOMICS
17
FINDING KATUAH
0
z
19
A Bioregional Questionnaire
FALL CAL EN l}\R
21
CREATIVE DISTRIBUTION
22
..
(""!
......
co
�"A TRAIL TO HOME": continued from page l
By W1frI of definition of this word, Peter Berg writes :
The teim refers both to a gecgrapti.cal terrain and a terrain of consciousness - to a place and the ideas that haVe
developed about how to live in that place. Within a bi.ore9ioo the oonditicns that influence l ife are slllli.lar, and
these in turn have influenced lunan ooc:upancy.
EDITORIAL STAFF:
Bonrue .CamJ;:bel.l
'1b:mas Rain Crowe
IDretta Rattler
Arrly Feinstin
Oluck Marsh
a:1 McNeil!
Olip Smith
Ida Mc:Neill
Mamie Muller
David Reed
Sam Sutker
Martha Tree
David Wheeler
A bimegioo can be detemined initially by the use of climatology, physiognqily, animal and pl.ant geogra?lY, natural history, and other descriptive natural sciences. The final
boundaries o f a bioregioo are best described by the people who
live within it, th:cough hunan rec:cgnitioo of the realities of
livin:;J-in-place.
All life al the planet is ocmected in a f&1 obvious ways, and
in many nme that are barely explora:i. But there is a distinct
resonance lllDl19 living things and the factors which influence
them that occurs specifically within each separate place al the
planet. Di.soovering and describing that resonance is a way to
describe a bioregion."
EDITORIAL OFFICE FOR THIS ISSUE:
Long Branch Environmental
~ducation Center
Route 2, Box 132
Leicester, N.C . 28748
PRINTING:
Sylva Herald Publishing Co.
Sylva, N.C.
ADDRESS CORRESPONDENCE TO:
Kat.µab: Biorez1onal Joµrnal of the
Southern Appalachians
Box 873
Cullowhee, N.C. 28723
'lbe effects of seeing the world in this W1frI would be far-reaching.
WOUld our national policies be the sane if the land was seen as a
sacred being? WOUld our eoonanic:s be the sane if the <X>St to the
biosphere were reckoned into the price of production? WOUld our politics be the same if power over an area were in the hands of the
people who lived there? lllat if oak, bear, fox, and chickadee had a
voice in the decisial-lll!lking oouncils?
The key to this transitioo is in the spiritual realm, for
in disoovering the land as she is in the place \othere we
live, we di.soover ourselves in the izooess. 'DleJ:e is a necessary connecti.cn here, for the self we see axoum us is
not our own nature in metapx>r or reflection. I t is our
own aelf tJ:uly and actually. 'lbis is the mystical oonneotion that makes healing, knowl.edl;Je, and power all possible. If we make a gesture to the earth, the earth gestures
back - this is the source of the nagic.
'!!le geological fomations urx3erpinning the land, the sprinq
rains every year, the wims sweeping in f%an the west, the
tan;Jled uniergrowth of a rhoc!odermon slick, the juna>es
playing anong the forest trees - these are mcng the forces
that shape our bioregion and give it its unique character.
'lbese forces also shape the landscape of our own cxnscicus-
ness.
But our mind is a creative force as well, and the attuned
h1.1nan mind can be a power for encx:iuragi.ng the ecological
health of an area. 'lb:>se who see thEmlelves as sta.lards,
protectors, and healers will be uniting the power of their
minds to this task.
To these pe:>ple falls the responsibility of keeping the essential nature of the nountain area intact. 'lbe .A{pllac:bjans are the oldest irountains, and they are strong sources
o f power for the whole eastern half of TUrtle Island. This
is .iJttx>ssible to explain to those who do not already understand it fran their own experience. To them, this po-
....
-·.,,.-··
.
sition would seen reactionary and a::>unter-pr:oduc:tive, and
they cannot see why it is ultimately inportant to the
survival of us all.
we are here to make changes, but the biggest changes are
within ourselves. We are here to learn and grow and, like
the great trees of the forest, to develop roots and beo:rne part of this place.
In this way the process of transfomation begins. It is a
healing process, a voluntai:y marriage of ourselves to the
land. As we help the land to repair the damage done by a
careless humanity, so does she help us to repair the damage done within our hearts and minds by a bankrupt system.
By infomling our
vision and giving a a::>ntext to our work,
the idea of a bioregion can be a powerful tool in our
spiritual, ecxxanic, and political liberation. It can help
us to becane whole in our spirit, in our bodies , in the land,
and in our experience.
Prayer chant:
"Ancient M::>ther I Ancient M::>ther
You who have waited so l.alg,
You Wio have waited so lcn;J
For your children to return,
Your children are oow returned Here we are"
,
KATU1!.H - page 2
'lbe Blue Ridge M::>untains are under duress, but the area
still has a feeling of sacredness, an aura of power that
has protected it sanewhat fran the ravages of humankind.
we are lucky in the land that has been left to us. 'lbis
area is a prine location to hatch an ecologically sane
and healthy society - the no.mtains are equal to the task
if we are. We have an area that is relatively untraapled
and not overpopll.ated. Because of its inaccessibility, it
is econ::mically depressEd and therefore relatively \mindustrialized. Because of its isolation many of its p e o p l e ,
are unsqhlsticated and still feel close ties to the
mountains.
aubml 1983
�FROM ULSTER TO CAROLINA
The Migration Of The Scotch-Irish To Southwestern North Carolina
The study of migration is particularly valuable to Americans, for either in an
ancient past (for American Indians) or in more recent centuries, all Americans
are immigrants. To an amazing degree we have remained a migratory people,
profoundly mobile, moving from city to city, state to state. Alexis de Tocqueville
observed of early American society that the American "grows accustomed to
change." Once having moved, it was easier to move again and again.
Migration frequently leaves only a sketchy historical record. While the great
sweep of events might be clear, the details are often lost in the confusion of move·
ment. Many family histories remain incomplete and often even the names of those
who first came are lost. The problem of understanding and evaluating the ex·
perience of the Scotch-Irish is made more difficult by the eagerness with which
they threw over the culture of the Old World which might have identified them
as a group in America. Still, their presence surrounds us in the Southern Appalachians in the evidence o( family names, in the stamp they placed upon the
customs of the region and in lingering memories. A distinctive feature of the
Southern Appalachian region is that its relative isolation in the late 19th and
early 20th centuries has preserved a strong sense of a Scotch-Irish past.
At the close of the American Revolution, the territory west of the Blue Ridge
and Allegheny Mountains quickly opened to the first legal white immigra.nts.
Southwestern North Carolina was one of many regions across the new American
nation that received a flood of new people. For perhaps two decades before the
area was opened for settlement, it had been admired by the inhabitants of the
western Piedmont and Watauga who hunted there and fought with General
Rutherford against the Cherokee in 1776. In the last year~ of the Revolutionary
War, North Carolina passed legislation granting mountam lands to ve~erans of
the state's militia and the Continental Army - from 640 acres for pnvates to
12 ()()() for brigadier generals. For others, land was available throughout the period
fo; five and ten cents per acre plus fees. A series of treaties with the C~erokee
between 1785 and the 1830s progressively opened the land and kept tt cheap
and plentiful. Beginning in 1787, when the first grants were made on t~e Swan·
nanoa and French Broad Rivers, war veterans and settlers from the Piedmont
and Watauga, as well as a steady flow of people down the Great Wagon Road,
settled the mountain lands with surprising sp~. Although early census figures
are notorious for underestimating populations, the census of 1790 recorded 88
families some 559 souls already settled on Reems Creek, and a considerable settlement' to the south ~here Bee Tree Creek enters the Swannanoa River.
Between 1787 and 1840 the Old West Frontier passed through southwestern
North Carolina and a new society evolved. The census of 1840 recorded a population of approximately 34,000 people in that region west of the eastern boundary
of Buncombe County, divided at that time into Buncombe, Henderson, Hayw?°'1,
Macon and Cherokee counties. Like all frontiers, the region was never static or
isolated but constantly growing and changing. For many new settlers, western
North Carolina was only another temporary stop. There were people who grew
a few crops on land they never legally claimed and then pushed on either westward
into Tennessee and Kentucky, or southward to Georgia and Alabama. Some
raised children before seeking another home and still others stayed. ~os~ who
settled amongst and frequently displaced the Cherokee were of ~tverse
backgrounds: English, German, French, Black, Welsh as w_ell as Scotc~·lr1Sh: No
single ethnic group can claim an exclusive role in the creation of fr~~tte~ ~1ety,
but a careful examination of the family names in the new communmes md1cates
that the largest group among the early settlers was the Scotch-Irish.
aubm'l
1983
Mountain Agriculture
"I doubt not that those
(Scotch-Irish) pioneers who
came to the South and gave
all cheir strength and devotion
to the fabrication of such
civilization as we have were
grim and decermined and stiff.
necked and opinionated and
fearless people. le is probably
easier to admire chem than it
would have been pleasant to
live with chem. I spent my
earliest days amongst them
and I have no doubt that their
arrributes had been transmitted almost unmodified to them
by their ancestors for generation after generation. They
were and they are
undemonstrative, apparently
without affection and superficially cold. But they generally
have opinions, right or wrong,
and they are altogether willing,
if nor anxious, to stand by
their opinions to their last
breaths. I scarcely think our
government could have come
into being without them."}.
K. Hall on his Scotch-Irish
ancestors in North Carolina,
personal correspondence, 1941.
This large, mobile and adaptive group of immigrants brought to their new homes
a culture formed in Scotland and the north of Ireland and molded by migration.
Much of the Ulster legacy had been put aside for new ways with few signs of
regret. The Scotch-Irish brought a simple, practical and unadorned style of life,
but in at least two essential areas, religion and agriculture, thier mark upon mountain life still bears witness to their Ulster origins.
The other area besides religion where the Scotch-Irish left their mark upon
mountain life was their use of the land. The pattern of mixed farming which
they develop«P was one that they brought with them and which they found wellsuited to their new environment.
This mixed farming was appropriate for the mountains because it did not require enormous amounts of first-quality land and could in fact utilize unclaimed
"open range." Nor did it require the kind of capital that was needed to obtain
the best lands, so it was better suited to a people most of whom had left Ulster
with little material wealth. and it was appropriate to a heavily-forested and laborshort area.
This type of mixed farming is described in the wills and farm inventories of
the earliest settlers, such as those surviving for Haywood County. Grains were
the dominant crops with Indian corn far and away the leader, followed oy oats,
wheat and barley.- Plows are listed in most of the inventories, indicating that in
addition to hoe cultivation many fields were also being cleared and plowed as
agriculture moved out of the earliest pioneer phase. Other crops such as flax and
cotton were also grown, though in small amounts for local use.
This .t ype of agriculture, using slash and burn techniques to remove trees and
the hoe to cultivate around the stumps which were left, as well as the raising
of small numbers of animals, was a pattern which had been practiced in Ulster
in the infield-outfield system, and it was a pattern which the Scotch-Irish stamped
upon the mountains of western North Carolina.
James Patton, the weaver from County Derry, offers a valuable insight into
that.aspect of the frontier economy. In the Philadelphia area he had found various
employment as a casual laborer until he had accumulated enough money by 1789
to purchase a supply of·goods and set out for western North Carolina. His experiences in Pennsylvania indicate that in fact Patton knew little about farm work
and had no taste for it. This marked the beginning of his new career as a traveling merchant, taking trade goods south to the North Carolina mountains and
driving livestock north to the cities of Washington, Balti!Ilore, and Philadelphia.
His experiences give a good idea of what it took to prosper as.a merchant working
the Great Wagon Road and into western North Carolina. During his life, he
saw economic activity grow from the late 1780s, when there was little money
available in the mountains, to the 1830s when his inventories of trade goods reveal
a significant expansion of commerce. The primary "cash crop" that mountaineers
raised was livestock, whici1 according to Patton was driven out of the mountains
in large numbers, supplemented by furs, feathers, beeswax, and roots for medicine
such as gipseng and snake root. He observed:
... I settled in the upper part of North Carolina at that time the poorest part
of the country I ever saw to make property; but I do not entertain the same opi·
nion now. Changes and improvements have convinced me that there are few sections of country superior to the western part of North Carolina.
,
KAW.AH - page 3
�WHAT IS PERMACULTURE
" • • • Pe.Jtma.c.u.ltwr.e. -l6 ~ a c.oMdoU6ly duigne.d ag.Jtic.uli:WLe. .t>y.t>tem • ••
that c.ombinu land.6c.ape. duign wi;th pe11.e.nniai. pf.ant.6 a.nd a.nimai.6 to make a.
.t>a.6e. a.nd .6U6tainable. 11.uoWLc.e. 6011. town a.nd c.ou.ntluj• •a. :t.Jwly a.pp11.op.Jtia.te.
te.c.hnology giving h-i..gh yie.ld.6 6011. low e.ne.11.gy inpd.6, a.nd U.6.lng only hu.ma.n
.t>IUU and Welle.ct to a.c.hie.ve. a .t>table. ILe..l)oWLc.e 06 g11.e.a.t c.ompf.ex.lty and
.6tabil..ity•
• • • ( pe11.mac.u.ltwr.e.) -l6 a philo.t>ophy 06 woll.h.ing wi;th, 11.athell. than agaiMt
na.twr.e; 06 p11.otll.a.c.te.d a.nd thought6ul ob.6M.va.tion 11.athell. than p11.otll.a.cte.d and
thoughtlu.6 labo11.; and o~ looking a.t pf.a.nt.6 a.nd a.n.imal.6 in all the.ill.
6u.nc.tionli , Jta:the11. than tll.e.a.ting a.ny a.11.e.a. a..6 a. .t>ingle.-p11.odu.ct .t>y.t>tem."
---&ill. Molti..6on
a..6 quoted in AGAYULI , Pvuna.c.uli:WLe New6lette11.
THE CHICKENWIRE DAM
EVERY YEAR HUNDREDS OF MILLIONS OF TONS OF TOPSOIL
WASH OFF OF OUR AMERICAN LAND INTO THE OCEAN. SOIL IS
ONE OF OUR K>ST PRECIOUS RESOURCES . WITHOUT F!ln'I LE
SOIL. AGRICULTURE -THE FOUNDATION OF OUR CIVILI ZATI ONFAILS. THE LAND CAN NO LONGER SUPPO!n' BUMAN LIFE. THIS
HAS HAPPENED THROUGHOUT THE HISTORY OF OUR PLANET MANY
TIMES. IN FACT. MANY OF THE WORLD'S DESERTS ARE THE
DIRECT RESULT OF POOR AGRICULTURAL PRACTICES AND DE FORESTATION THAT LED TO SOIL LOSS THROUGH WIND AND WATER
EROSION.
PEBMACULTURE IS AN ATTEMPT TO DEVELOP AGRICULTURAL
SYSTEMS THAT ARE ECOLOGICALLY SOUND,PERMANENT.SUSTAINABLE AND ENERGY AND RESOURCE CONSERVING. THE PRACTICE OF
PERMACULTURE DRAWS FROM THE BEST OF EXISTING AGRICULTURAL PRACTICES AND COMBINES THE DEVELOPMENT OF NEW TECHNIQUES TO CREATE CONSCIOUSLY DESIGNED, H!GH QUALITY LIFE
SUPPORT SYSTEMS. THE CllICKENWIRE DAM. WHICH WAS DISCOVERED QUITE BY ACCIDENT. CAN PROVIDE A USEFUL TOOL FOR
SOIL AND WATER CONSERVATION FOR SMALL STREAMS IN THE
DEVELOPMENT OF PERMACULTURAL SYSTEMS.
THE CHICKENWIRE DAM, WHICH IS ESSENTIALLY A RUMANMADE BEAVER DAM, IS QUITE EASY TO BUILD. SET LOCUST POSTS
AT 4- FOOT INTERVALS ACROSS A SHALL STREAM BED AND UP THE
SIDESOF THE STREAM BANK TO THE TOP EDGES. SECURE THE TWO
END POSTS WITH GUY WIRES OR SOME OTHER BRACING SYSTP.M.
ATTACH 36" OR 48" HI GH, l " OR 2" MESH CHICKENWIRE TO THE
POST IN THE SAHE MANNER AS IF YOU WERE FENCING A CHICKEN
YARD. IN FACT THIS DAM CAN BE INCORPORATED INTO A CHICKEN ENCLOSURE. SECURE THE BOTTOM EDGE OF THE CHICKENWIRE
TO THE STREAM BOTTOM AND BANKS WITH PEGS OR ROCK. FLOAT
HAY, LEAVES. OR SIMILAR DEBRIS DOWN THE STREAM ABOVE THE
FENCING AND ALLOW IT TO BUILD UP ON THE FENCING AND GRADUALLY SEAL ON THE MESH .
WATER WILL BEGIN TO DAM UP BEHIND THE DEBRIS-CLOGGED
FENCING, WHILE SOME WATER ~LL CONTINUE TO PASS THROUGH
AND OVER THE DAM.
THIS STEP WILL HAVE TO BE REPEATED SEVERAL TIMES TO
INCREASE THE HEIGHT OF THE DAM, AS DEBRIS PROGRESSIVELY
BUILDS UP HIGHER AND HIGHER ON THE FENCING. EVEN THOUGH
AT FIRST THE DAM WILL LEAK COPIOUSLY, OVER TIME THE DEBRIS
WILL SEAL MORE TIGHTLY AGAINST THE CHICKENWIRE.
THE CHICKENWIRE DAM HAS MANY POTENTIAL PERMACULTURAL
APPLICATIONS. THE FOLLOWING ARE SOME OF THE SYSTEM'S VIRTUES AND USES. IF YOU CAN COME UP WITH ANY MORE, PLEASE
LET ME KNOW.
1. THE DAM IS INEXPENSIVE AND QUICK AND EASY TO
CONSTRUCT. OTHER MATERIAL THAN CHICKENWIRE. SUCH AS
WOVEN CANE OR BRUSH SECURED IN THE CREEK BEAVERDAM
FASHION COULD BE USED.
2. THE DAM IS FLOOD PROOF. WATER JUST FLOWS THROUGH
THE DAM OR OVER THE CHICKENWIRE CLOGGED WITH DEBRIS.
IN FACT. FLOODS CAN ACTUALLY MAKE THE DAM POND DEEPER
BY ADDING DEBRIS HIGHER UP ON THE DAM FENCING.
J. THE DAM SLOWS WATER LFAVING THE PROPERTY AND
INCREASES THE WATER' S POTENTIAL USES.
4. THE DAM ACTS TO COLLECT SILT AND SOIL BEING
CARRIED DOWNSTREAM. THUS REDUCING A PROPERTY'S SOIL
LOSS AND PROVIDING A SOURCE OF RIGH QUALITY , EASILY
COLLECTED SOIL FOR RETURNING TO FIELDS AND GARDENS.
THESE DAMS CAN BE PLACED IN A SERIES ALONG A STREAM
FOR EVEN GREATER SOIL CONSERVATION AND COLLECTION.
THE SILT THAT EVENTUALLY WOULD FILL THE AREA BEHIND
THE DAM COULD BE USED FOR STREAMSIDE GROWING AREAS
FOR SUCH PLANTS AS WILD RICE. CATTAILS, SAGITTARIA,
CREEK MINT AND .OTHER AQUATIC PLANTS.
5. PONDS SO CREATED MAKE "
GREAT POULTRY WATERING
HOLES AND HABITAT FOR DOCKS . GEESE, FROGS , CRAYFISH,
AND OTHER WILDLIFE OR DOMESTIC ANIMALS.
6. THE DAMS. IF PLACED NEAR CULTIVATED AREAS.
CAN BE USED FOR IRRIGATION PONDS FOR FLOOD. GRAVITY
OR PUMP IRRIGATION SYSTEMS .
By: Chuck Marsh , Bountiful Gardens ,
P.O . Box 509 , Dillsboro, NC 28725
(70 4) 586- 5186
,
I<ATlWI - page
4
autum 1983
�SCOTCH-IRISH MIGRATION
a-/fer ]uia,
b°'J'
t:lt &atlt
continued from page 3
ij nf
aJ4 :J }J,..lt Ml 1'.W\li:
~ HtAo""J ,,., k tu tfD.," ;,,, ft""' JJAilu.re1.
'JI JA°'rt:f wilh ,,,_ i1j c/,eu,., wa.h1J1
"These mountains /of North
Caro/ma/ begin ro be
populated rapidly. The salubri·
ry of rhe air, rhe excellence of
rhc warcr, and more especially
rhe pasrurage of rhese wild
peas for the carrle, are so
many causes char induce new
inhabiranrs ro serrle rhere.
"Esrares of rhe first class are
sold at rhe rare of two dollars,
and rhe raxes are nor more
rhan a half.penny per acre. In·
dian corn, whear, rye, oats,
and peach rrees, are the sold
ob1ecr of culrure.
"The inhabitants of these
mountains are famed for being
excel/enc hunters. Towards the
middle of aurumn mosr of
chem go in pursuir of bears, of
which rhey sell rhe skins, and
rhe flesh, which is very good,
sttves chem in sr:.ear measure
for food during that season.
They prefer ir ro al/ ocher
kinds of meat, and look upon
it as the only thing rhey can
ear wirhour being indisposed
by it. They make also of their
hind legs the most delicious
hams ... They hunt chem
wirh great dogs, which,
wirhouc going near chem,
bar/c, cease, and oblige chem
to climb up a rree, when rhe
hunter kills chem wirh a car·
bine." F. A. Michaux, Travels
il nulu.r11 "'Y jDUl.
'); luJJ 1"I i.IO!Jf f/,I J4ih If rtpl ihidi"f
/w ilj oi.m JIM.
gtt~ 1~"f1' :J fA1Ut ~11WfA- ttltcYJ
A~ j/u.""'1j #f iWAUJJ f
:J f•r M tvf/, fo,. 11¥ &.rlJ, ij wilA. Mes
Llj ~hl.a.inj w ilj JIA)
ihtj fJ!mflJrl ~.
0, fta1 &ulJ,,, ym M je1 tl ""1«~vd
i,. ilcl ~ '1f Mj tMM-~) I
'-n filt1J, ""f 1'1i1Wi ,.,jlJi. n111t..l#ttj ~
""°'!
1-ttJ MY 14JO!HJI,.
jur1ly lit# iur 41'11 IJ,,e J'4j4,.j
;Mil
..n
lite
l4YJ If
fo/1""'
Ml
,,.r Zift
uJ :; 1c1>ZZ J.in
j,,,
The Drovers' Road through
North Carolina
connected rhe region ro
Charleston and Savannah. Ir
was a roure of serrlement in
che early 19th century as well
as rhe sire of rhe carrle and
swine drives char were so im·
porranc ro che regional
economy.
sourhwesr~
i
l!Je ha.vlf ef ih~
far1r1r-.
_,y,. 1if:
~J ~.u,. CJr41111
HOW THE APPALACHIAN MOUNTAINS GOT THEIR NAME
- FROM A GUEST CONTRIBUTOR
It is worthv notice, that our mountaini; are not liOlitnn• and scattered
confusedlv o~er the face of the countrv; but that the~ c:ommcnce at
about 15~ miles from the sea-coast, are' disposed in ridges one behind
another, running nearly parallel with the sea-coast, though rather
approaching it as they advance north-eastwardly. To the south-west,
as the tract of countrv between the sea-coast and the ~l ississippi
becomes narrower, the ~1ountains converge into a single ridge, which.
as it appronches the Culph of :\lexico, subsides into plain countr~'· and
gives rise to some of the wilters of that ~ulph. and particularly to a
ri\'er called the Apillachicola, probably from tht- :\p;1l;1d1il'S, an Indian
nation formerh· n•sidin~ on it. Hence the mount.tins ~i\'in~ rise to that
river, and s~n from its various parts. ,,.l'rc e;1lll•d thl' :\p;1lachi;1n
mountains, being in fact the md or ll'rmination only uf tlw ~'feat rid~es
passing through the <.'Ontinl'llt. European gcograplwrs howc\'er l'Xtended the name northwardlv ns far as the mountoins extended; some
giving it, after their separation into different ridges, to the Blue ridge,
others to the North mountain, others to the Alleghaney, others to the
Laurel ridge, as may he seen in their different maps. But the fact I
believe is, that none of these ridges were e,·er lmo\\11 by that name
to the inh;1bitants, either nati\'e or emigrant, but a~ tht>y saw them liO
called in European maps. In the same dir<.'C'tion ~t·1wr;11l\' are the \'t>ins
of limcstmll'. coal. and other minerals hitherto 1lisl~l\'t•rt•tl : :incl so range
the foils of our ~rt·at ri\'ers.
-TllOM.\S jEFt'Ell.>;OS
Xotc1 0 11 tl1c State nf \ 'ir::,i11ia. 1781-82
West of the Alleghania,
1802.
Two fundamental features of the early Scotch-Irish do stand out. The first is
the cultural interaction they experienced with people around them throughout
their migrations. They never settled in isolation from others. The second is their
readiness to change and adopt new ideas and practices. Perhaps their most per·
sistent trait as settlers on the American frontier was their way of using the land,
evolved in the uplands of Scotland and Ireland and ideally suited to the frontier
that unfolded south and west of Pennsylvania in the 18th and 19th centuries.
Their familiarity, even contentment, with this way of life drew them to the fron·
tier and invited them ever onward in search of plentiful land and game. And
here too their preference for the single family farm over the village community
sustained their strong spirit of individuality and the importance of family and
self-sufficiency. This is where their greatest influence lies - in the kind of land .
use and social organization they brought to much of the South. The open range
system in which crops were fenced and livestock roamed free prevailed across
much of the South into .t he 20th century and is an important element in the
shaping of Southern history.
Southwestern North Carolina had by the mid-19th century created a society
that was a synthesis of cultures and peoples reacting to their new environment.
This new Appalachian culture was shaped by forces distinct to the region. Ethnicity
was largely submerged by regional conflicts within the state; by new economic
activities such as logging, mining, and tourism; by the intervention of the federal
government in land policies and development projects; and by continuing in·
and out-migration as the Southern Appalachians became increasingly differentiated from surrounding regions. Those who would understand modern Appalachia would be right to pursue these themes; but a true understanding of the
traditions of the region and its sense of itself still calls us to back to the ethnic
heritages the first settlers brought.
~
Migration of rhe Scocch·lrish People
A Comprehensive Ex hibition Produced By
Mounrain Heritage Center of Western Carolina University
Sam Gray: Project Director
Curtis Wood and Tykr Blethen: Hntorical
autum 1983
R~arch
and Writing
'
I<ATUAH - page
s
�MOSHKA. t LAKlMA
The. moon .6m.U.e.d Jted .thJr.ough the. ne.u a:t the. edge
06 the meadow. TJr.Unk, bMnc.h a.nd lea6 .6ha.dOW.6 .6netc.hed a.c.Jr.0.6.6 a. JLlppUng .6ea 06 the. t:a.ll gMUU a.nd wil..d6loWelL6 belong.lng to Ealith Mathe.Jr.' .6 late .6wnmeJt. Ro.6e.
c.oloJted ha.Jr.vut moonU.ght .6lowly ga.ve. wa.y to .6h.,i.n,lng
.6il.ve.1r., a.nd a..6 the. nee .6ha.do1Al6 .6hMnk, the. .li..ght 6eU
upon the. two 6ox pup.6 pe.1r.c.he.d upon the. ta.ll.., .6mooth,
Jr.Ound gMnlle. boulde.Jr. ,ln the. VeJL':f c.e.n.te.Jr. 06 the.
meadow.
A STORY BY SNOW BEAR
Mo.6hka. a.nd La.IWna. 6eU the a.nc.ient powe.Jr. 06 .tha:t
Jr.Oc.k .6.lng.lng thJr.Ough them, c.oUIL6ing ~d.6 th/Lough
the pa.d6 06 the.iJr. plW6. But the.iJr. ga.ze tAn-6 6.bc.e.d upon
the meadow; .6lowly .the.iJr. .6.talr.e. c»r.c.J.e.d .it., taJUng bt
the. bowa:ty 06 ti6e tha..t .tlvt.ive.d on that JUc.h, bla.c.k
.60il. and the plant.6 a.nd wec.U tha..t gJte:w on a.nd w.lthbt. The.iJr. e.alt.6 c.a.u.ght .the. c.on.tented IWmbl.lng 6Jr.Om .the
bla.c.k beaJL '.6 thJr.Oa..t a..6 .6he. e.66oltt,lu.6lq lti.pped open
.the Jr.Otten hemlock tha..t ha.d 6a.Ueninto .the. me.a.drxu. She
.6a..t on he.Jr. hau.nc.hu, tic.k.lng 6Jr.Om he.Jr. pa.w the. wh.U:e.
g.ltl.Lb.6 tha:t ha.d lived w.i.tkin the. log. HeJt c.ub poked
a.nd .6c.Jr.a..tc.he.d a..t .the. .6o6t wood, 6incllng he.Jr. own 6ood .
Clo.6eJt .to .the. a.nc.ie.n.t Jr.Och .the. wh.ue. 6la..6h 06 the
.6kunk '.6 .6.tJU.pu dlr.w .the..ilt a.tte.n.tlon. A6 .they wa-tc.he.d
he. .6c.Jr.a..tc.he.d a. hole. ,ln the. .6oil., Jte.a.c.hing down wLth
one pa.w a.nd wlth.dJr..aw.in a. gJtea..t p.(.nk ri.igh.t CltaWleJr..
Then .tluwr. lz.e.e.n eyu caught the. UniJ Jtu.6.tting 06
gM.6.6 a..6 the. 6,le.ld mou.6e. Mn thJr.Ough hi.6 tunnel, c.otte.c.U.ng 6a.Ue.n .6e.e.d. They .6e.n.6e.d hi.6 6eaJL a..6 he. 6Jr.Oze.
when the. .6ha.dow pa.ue.d ave.Jr. hi.6 ba.c.lz.. Vown-!Wrlne.d
6ea..the.lr..6 mu.66te.d the. .6ound 06 the. gJtea..t ho1tned owl' .6
6.li..ght a..6 .it. .6WOOped bt a..t gM.6.6 top level. to ha.Jr.vut
IJU a.no.their. /,i..e.ld 110U6e. The. .6p.iJLlt6 06 the. boo young
6oxu .6oa.Jted upon the. .6ong.6 06 the. night: .the. c.hiltp
0 6 the. c.Jr.ic.lz.e.t.6, the. wlU.6 pelt 0 6 the. glta.6.6 e.6 tha..t
ntaltke.d .the. pa.u.i.ng 06 .the tung .6nake., the. .tJt.iLllng 06
the. nee. 6Jr.Og.6, the. yipp.i.ng a.nd how.U.ng o 6 the c.oyotu,
.the. de.e.p-.tlvr.oa..te.d hooting 06 .the owl.
But then, 6Jr.Om the. wut, ca.me. a. ha.Jr..6h Jr.Oa.!Llng .tha:t
dlr.owne.d out the .6ong.6 06 .the night. Mo.6hlz.a. a.nd LalWna.
tultned a.nd IAJ!Lin.k,l.e.d theAJr. nw.LZzlU a..t the. .6meU a.nd
.6ound 06 da.nge.1r. .tha..t wa..6he.d oveJt them. They c.Jr.Ouc.he.d
down tow, pltU.6.ing the.tn.6e.l.uu a.ga.in.6t the. gMnlle. be.neath, gJr.Owt..i.ng a..t the. btv.l6ible. .thltea..t ,ln .the. w. A.nd
.then, a..6 the. Jr.Oa.!Llng gJtw unbea.Mbly loud, .they .6a.w .it.
c.oming ! A. bU.teJt, ove.1r.powe.Jt.lng w.ind bUIL6.t upon .the.
va.Uey, .6na.pp.lng wea.lz. tJr.e.e..top.6, upending .6ha.Uow Jtoote.d
nee tltunk.6 and 6la.tte.ning .the deU.c.a..te. meadow gJta.uu.
It .6la.ppe.d the. two 6oxu, nybtg to tea.Jr. them aJAJa.':f 6Jr.Om
.the a.nc.ient .6.tone., but they hehl on w.it.h a.U the.iJr.
.6ne.ngth. Ic.y 6.ingell.6 cfug be.neath theAJr. .61z.bt; .the.Vt
ha.c.lz.lu we.1r.e. M.l6ed, .theAJr. ha.iJt .6t.ood on end. And then,
a..6 .6wi6tty a..6 .it. ha.d c.ome., .it. pa.ue.d on. They looked
up bt we to .6 ee. .tha..t teM.lble. w.ind Jtoa.!Llng down the.
vall.ey, .6 na.ppi.ng ne.u a.nd 6latte.n.i.ng gM.6.6 u a..6 .it.
went.
The. wind ha.d le.6.t; .it..6 biting c.hilt wU:hbt .them; the.
on the.iJr. ne.c.lz..6 .6til.t .6tood out, the.iJr. eyu we.Jte
wide. a.nd gla..6.6y with teJr.Jr.OJt. Looking a..t the. meadow they
.6a.w d.tvtk .6ha.dowy c.la.IAl6 a.nd teeth Jr.U6hing a:t them. The.
moonUgh.t 6-lU.e.d .the. .6pa.cu be.tween the .6ha.dow c.la.IAl6
with gho.6.tly .6il.ve1t .6ha.pu .tha..t CltaWle.d a.long .the. e.dgu
06 the 6ie.td. The. moon .it..6e.l.6 Wd.6 .tro.l6.te.d in.to a. .6c.owl.lng huma.n 6a.c.e.. PaiJr.6 06 a.ngJty Jte.d eyu .6t.alr.e.d a:t .them
ha,iJr.
KATOAR - page 6
autlm1 1983
�6Jtom wltkin .the g.11.a.uu thlr.eate.ning .to pou.nc.e and claw
and b.lte. F1tom a.U. cU/r.e.c;tion6 came kideou.6 AntL'Ll.6 g1towl6
and Al.U:he.Jt.ing noi6u .
'
Pa.n.i.c made. .them dlUJw down w.ltJWt .them6elvu 6rwthe.1t
and 6WLtheJL; .they e.a.c.h. weJLe. 4b.6otu.telq alone., 601tgo.tten
to ea.ch o.theJL. They coul.d onhj hu.nc.h oveJL and Ah..i.veJL.
r.t l.00.6 Lak..ima. who 6.irralt.lJ ga.the11.ed the. 1tenw.Uning 4.tl!.e.ngth
06 hi6 Ahltin#Ung .6p.iltU and .in an .i.Jvr.u..Uta.bte. bu;t .6.U.e.nt
vo.i.c.e. Aa..id, " Mo.6hka, took at me.I Look .into my e.yu l "
She. twr.ned he.It he.ad and looked .in.to he.It bJto.the.Jt '.6 e.yu.
A4 .the»r. eyu met, a Apalr.k l.00.6 tu..ndled. The tonge.Jt they
looked, the AtltongeJL .the 6lame 61tOm .that Apalr.k g1te.w,
until. .the 6.i.Jte 06 Ap.ilt.lt bl.a.zed .in .the.ilr. .6ou.l.6, rn.<.nd4 and
bod.i.u. That IAJtVUnth .6plle.a.d .thJtOu.ghou;t to dutltoy .the cold
6e.a.Jt .that had COn6u.med .th~.
When .the l.tu.t .tlutcu 06 6e.4Jt we.1te. gone, they bltOke
.the.ilr. gaze upon ea.ch o.the.1t. They looked to the E44.t .into
.the n,ight .that ha.d Awai.towed .that cold, powe.1t6u.l wlnd
and .they .6en6ed a Ao6t Jtu.4.t.Ung 6.tow.i.ng up .the. valley.
A '4Wlm, gentle bJte.eze moved .the .tl!.eu .into a Jthy.thmic.,
.614.tly.i.ng danc.e. It U6.ted up .the gll.444e6 .that had been
p1r.u.6ed 6la.t and ILi.ppt.ed them gently, 44 .i.6 .the meadow
l.00.6 the 4u.Jt6ace. 06 a AIWrrneJL.i.ng lake. The. &«1IUll iAJind
calte.6.6 ed the.iJr. 6aCe6, and played wUh .the.i.Jt 6u.Jt 44 .lt
had wUh .the. gJUZUe.6, JUppLi.llg .lt .in IAllVe.6 06 lted,
white and black. Then .they 6elt .lt pa.u .in.to .the Wut,
Jtutolt.i.ng eve11.rJ-th.i.ng .to .the calm .that had been be601te
.the. cold wlnd lt4vaged .the. va.U.e.y. Once. 494.i.n .the meadow
l.00.6 a pt.ace 06 be.a.u;ty .that frilled them IAllth Aong. The
Aong came 6oltth ucaping .in.to .the. cte.a.Jt n.ight aAJr. and
l.00.6 dJuuAwt .in.to .the he.a.Jtt 06 e.veJLy Uv.ing .th.i.ng .in .that
pt.ace.
Exha.u.6ted, .they padded Atowl.q and 40(,t.l.y u.p .the. Vlt.i.p
Spll.i.ng Hollow and cLimbed .the. hA..U to .the. ltOck owt:Cltopping .that hel.d .the.ilr. home.. S.i..tt.i.ng .in a c.i.Jtcte .in 61tont
06 .the. den we11.e. Tlt..i.4hka and Ka.lwn4, .the.ilr. mo.the.It and
6athe11., and w.i.4e. old W44hte., the IUlcoon. The1te we.Jte
.6.tlutnge du,i.gn6 .6CIUltched .into .the e.a.Jtth be601te. .them;
they Aat .touch.i.ng ea.ch o.the11. '.6 paW6 and A.i.ng.i.ng .i.n a
la.ngu.a.ge .the young 6oxu had neve.Jt he.a.ltd be60Jt.e.
When .they dlr.e.w clo4 e, fAl44hte looked u.p and 44.i.d,
" Thi6 n.i.ght you. have 6ou.ght tong and luvtd wUh an
enemy 6e.w Me able .to conqu.e.Jt. FoJt you. have conqu.e11.ed
the Sp.(Jt.lt 06 Fe.a.It and though .lt mtL1J 4444u.lt you. o6ten,
you. wlU a.l.wa.y.6 be .lt4 ma.6.tell.. The. powe.Jt 06 .the. love
.i.n you. that m44.te.Jted .lt wlU g1tow .6.tl!.onge.Jt .in .the
1Je.a.lt4 ahe.a.d. We .thJtee have 14Nltc.hed you. g1tow, r..m..tJUng
.the Path 06 TIW.th, and knew you Welte 1te.a.dy .to 6ac.e
.thi6 tJUal.. r.t l.00.6 we Jto Ae.nt .that Sp.(Jt.lt 06 Fe4Jt
upon you., .to .6.tl!.e.ng.then you. and 40 you. m,i.ght know .the
powe.Jt .that h44 601t Ao tong AptVr.k.t.ed wl.th.in you.Jt eyu.
F1t0m .tw day on, you. have. w.ltJWt you.Jt Ap.i.Jr..lt .the
c.hih.llten you. we.1te, bwt we wlU .tl!.U6t you. 44 ou.Jt .tJtu.ebJto.the.Jt and .t1we-.6i4.te.1t. But now, .into .the den
wUh you.. "
When .they CltaWled wl.th.i.n .the. 11.oc.k.6, be.6 011.e. .them a
6eJU.t l.00.6 la.id ou;t 06 a.U. .the.i.Jt 6avolt.lte. 6Jtu..lt4 06 the.
meadow: bla.c.kbeNtq, .6br.awbeM.y, ll.44pbeM.IJ, and pe!t4..innon,
all luvtvu.ted and dlr..i.ed .in .the. ti.me. 06 the.i.Jt Jt.i.pene.6.6.
They ate glt4.te6u.lty, .then la..i.d down .in ne.w, .606.t bed.6
06 pu!Li6y.ing c.e.dalr. bou.gh.4 and went glt4Ce.6u.lty .in.to
.the IA10lthJ. 06 dlr.e.am.6~
autmn 1983
Snow Bear is a teacher and herbalist of traditional
alternatives for children and adults. He and his
wife Khalisa are founders and directors of the
Pepper land Farm Camp in Farner, Tenn.
~ - page 7
�In the North Carolina mountains,
people have developed an appreciation
for a variety of apples because apples
were used in so many ways. In the old
days, apples were not an occasional
treat. They were a staple food. From
the planning of the home orchard to the
drying of the apple slices, every way
possible was used to extend the apple
season and preserve the fruit. In the
absence of modern refrigeration, various
kinds of apples came to be known not
only for their taste but also for their
rate of ripening and their capacity for
preservation. Each apple had its specific
season and purpose. Some apples are
early apples and some are better late
in the season. Some are for drying ,
some are best suited for sauce while
others are best for canning. There are
juicy ones for cider and hard ones for
storing and, of course, there are plain
And who knows how the Leatherman,
old eating apples.
the Milam, ~he Democrat and the
During the season, some of the best
Knotley Pea got their names. Many
by Dou;J Elliott
old-time eating apples are Crow's Eggs,
of the apple varieties I mention
Bellflowers, Black Hoovers, Virginia
here are found only in a particular
Beauties, and Spice apples. The small
area, perhaps as small as a portion
yellow Spice apples actually have a
Just about anyone who's been raised of the county. And some names might
distinctive wintergreen-mint flavor .
be a local name for a widespread
in·· the mountains or who's looked at
Some eating apples will keep for months,
variety. For example , Theron showed
apples in the western part of our
while others might be right for eating
me what he called a "No-rthern Spice
State has come cross Winter Johns or
during only a few weeks of the season.
Apple" that looked suspiciously
some of the other old and almost
Theron showed me a little apple called
like a common New England breed
forgotten varieties of apples. Until
a Stripey. Early in the season the apple
called "Northern Spy . "
recently, an apple was just an apple
has a crisp, tangy, white flesh; but if
One of the great proponents of prefor me. That was before I started
it gets too ripe or you let it sit around
serving the many varieties of apples
ranging the hills and hollows with
the house too long, sometimes even for a
was L.H . Bailey whose 1922 book, The
Jheron Edwards, a sharp-eyed mountain
few days, its crisp texture turns mealy.
Apple Tree, lamented that of the more
man from Yancey County raised in the
"It'll almost choke you," says Theron of
mountain tradition of self-sufficiency than 800 varieties listed in nurseryits sawdust-like texture. As good as this
men's catalogues in 1892, not more
and well in touch with much of the
delicious morsel is fresh from the tree,
than a hundred were available at the
old-time wisdom and ways . After a
you'll never find it in the suppermarket.
time of book's publication.
couple of seasons of seeing apples
Sauce apples and canning apples each
'
through Theron's eyes, I felt like
have different properties; they aren't
someone who had been shown a rainjust labeled as cooking apples . Good
bow in full color after seeing only
canning apples are firm-fruited and won't
black and white.
turn brown while a whole panful is peeled
The fact is, there's an incredible
andsliced. The slices hold their shape as
variety of apples in the mountains of
they are exposed to the rigors of home
North Carolina. And by biting into a
canning. Some good canning apples are
few of these old-time apples we can
Winter Johns, Pippins, Milams, Sweet
tap the richness of a rapidly distA~
Russets, Knotley Peas, and Spitzbergens.
appearing culture and life style.
Although it is possible to make sauce out
When I asked Theron how many types
a,
of almost any apple, the best have a soft
of apples he knew, he rattled off a
texture that will break down into sauce
list of more than 20 varieties . Just
with little cooking. Bellflowers and
the names of these almost forgotten
Stripeys are ideal for sauce-making. Juicy
breeds left my head reeling with deapples like Winesaps and Sheep's Nose lend
light. Some were named for what they
themselves well to cider-making. Pippins
resembled, like the elongated, lopand Crow's Eggs are favorite pie apples.
sided Sheep's Nose apple, the oval
The large Stripped Ben Davis is a favorite
Crow's Egg, and the yellow Bellflower.
"Why do we need so many kinds of
baking apple.
Others took people's names, presumapples?" Mr . Bailey asks. "Because
Good canning apples are usually good
ably the ones who developed the
there are so many folks," he says.
drying apples because of their firm flesh.
variety or who first brought it into
"A person has a right to gratify his
Apple-drying was an important home industry
the area. So there's Stark Apples,
legitimate taste. If he wants twenty or in many parts of North Carolina . Itinerant
Betsy Deatons, Black Hoovers, Stripforty kinds of apples for his personal
merchants traveled back country buying or
ed Ben Davis's and Ducketts. Still
use, running from Early Harvest to
trading dried apples. Theron tells of
Others, like the Winesap, Sweet
Roxbury Russett, he should be accorded
peeling and slicing basket after basket
Russet, Stripey and Spice apple are
the privilege. There is merit in
of apples which were dried on racks over
named for their distinctive tastes,
variety itself . It provides more
the cookstove . In some areas the apples wer
color patterns or both. The
contacts with life, and leads away
cored and sliced into rings which were drie
_ Spitzbergen and the Virginia Beauty
from uniformity and monotony."
by stringing the slices on a pole . Drying
refer tn their place of origin; the
Today, according to the North
is one of the simplest and, if you have a
Horse apple is so big and sour that
Carolina Agricultural Extension Service wood stove, one of the most efficient ways
it is considered fit only as feed
90% of the State's co11DDercial apple
to preserve apples. Just slice the apples
for horses; the Limbertwig was
crop is made up of only their varieties thinly and spread them on window screens
named for the distinctive shape and
Red Delicious, Golden Delicious, and
CONTINUED ON
flexible limbs of
arent tree.
Rome Beaut •
aubml 1983
KMUAH - paqe 8
,,
=1nd by bitin.y into
a few of tAese
old-time apples
we can ttLf
rtc/in,ess '?f
:ap tdl_y dts°i'feartTtj cutture and
lifestyle.''
�...- :·
. ~,.
. •>...,, .
--
· _ _
..,.....a
-
.-
-~---~
for B, a geopolitical song as emblem,
in this 22nd year of heavenly deadlock
"The bastard wilde Popple is called ••••• in English winde Rose •• ••• "
Gerarde, Herbal (II, lxx 301), 1597
"In those days, even though ancient astronomers had learned to divide the circle mathematically, directions were not
marked by degrees, but in terms of winds • Every experienced seaman, however untutored, knew his winds. They meant more
to him than any number 0 to 360. Since the ancients recognized 12 primary winds, at first the medieval compass cards
were circles divided into 12 directional points •• ••• And the way they were drawn, often with artistic flair, reminded
sailors of a 32-petaled flower. Hence the compass cards became known as wind roses. To this day the Portugese call the
compass card a rosa dos ventos, a wind rose, and any modern cartographer wishing to affect an old chart places in one
corner an elaborate and full- blown wind rose."
John Noble Wilford, The Mapmakers, 1981
Finally, of course, there are oo naps, oo c:arpasses, oo
destinations.
No plans . No yesterdays. No tarorrows. Just place.
The only lodestar is your heart.
Switchbacking
fran the cul-de-sac above the shade
we pass through air so still
it is a balm
but we can see that sure breeze
jagging treelight
on the crestline
& when we get there, love, I pranise you
it will swirl us into pattern
up the main ridge to CliJ'9'1BllS
(passi1'¥3 over the JUdge's eyrie at Sharp Top
we' 11 raven-croak in unison into his solanness)
& sail us Cbwn the high divde to Silers Bald & 'lhurderhead
& on & on & on
devouring the upgrades & laurel hells with the sheer ease
of flight
(the ridges west in Tennessee are negligible
but eyeing the other incline
we'll tick off
Forney Welch Jenkins Twenty Mile & IDI¥3 Hun;p:y
&you&I
will spy the threads in this tapestry glinting in the
norni1'¥3 sun
Peachtree Noland Forney Hazel
for this is our
&
Eagle
range)
till the downdraft shelves to Fontana
& ~ering back through the old river valley
finds us
wieldil'¥3 these walkID]sticks
tryi1'¥3 to get a little higher
on the slope
together •
.
..• .
... . ;,.,·
autl:lm 1983
KAnfAH - page 9
�......
"I WAS VRIVING BACK ON 1-40 FROM RALEIGH, AMV I
STARTEV TO GET THIS EXCITEV FEELING AS I VROVE INTO
THE FOOTHILLS. I BEGAN TO FEEL THAT CERTAIN FEELING
OF BEING IN THE MOUNTAINS AGAIN AS I STARTEV TO
CLIMB, ANV I KNEW I WAS COMING HOME.
THE MOUNTAINS WERE IN FRONT OF ME, LOOKING MAGNIFICENT. YOU KN(XJJ THE WAY THEY ARE SOMETIMES, WITH l
BIG CLOUDS GATHEREV ALL AROUMV THE TOPS ANV THE SUNLIGfT SLANTING THROUGI, LIKE GOV WAS SAYING, 'THESE ~
ARE MY MOUNTAINS, KEEP THEM HOLY'."
THE APPALACHIAN BIOREGION,
LIKE THE LAND ANYWHERE, IS AN
EXPERIENCE. IT IS THE BEING
THERE, THE WORKING , THE EXPLORING, THE COMING TO GRIPS
WITH ITS MYSTERIES THAT ULTIMATELY .PROVIDES OUR PHYSICAL
SUBSISTENCE AND OUR SPIRITUAL STRENGTH.
WRITINGS AND MAPS CAN NEVER
SUBSTITUTE FOR THIS EXPERIENCE. THERE IS A SPECIAL INTENSITY IN STANDING AT THE
TOP OF A STEEP MOUNTAIN
RIDGE LOOKING OUR OVER FORESTED VALLEYS OR IN ARISING
AT DAYBREAK ABOVE ROLLING
BANKS OF CLOUDS THAT ISOLATE
THE MOUNTAINTOPS LIKE ISLANDS
IN A GRAY OCEAN. THERE IS A
PERVADCNG SENSE OF ALIVENESS """
AND AWARENESS IN A FOREST OF
TALL TREES THAT AWAKENS THE
MIND TO THE NATURAL SURROUNDINGS AND REVEALS A SPECIAL
SENSE OF PRESENCE.
BUT WORDS AND PICTURES CAN BE
GUIDES TO POINT THE WAY. IT
IS PLAIN TO SEE ON THE LAND
SURFACE MAP OF THE EASTERN
RALF OF THE CONTINENT, TURTLE
ISLAND, THAT THERE IS AN APEX
OF INTENSE ENERGY: THE BLUE
RIDGE AND SURROUNDING MOUNTAINS, WITH THE GREAT SMOKY
MOUNTAINS AS THE ENERGY CENTER.
FROM THAT CENI'ER, THE ENERGY FLOWS OUT, RADIATING IN ALL
DIRECTIONS. JUST AS IRON FILINGS WILL DELINEATE THE INVISIBLE FLOWS OF MAGNETIC FORCE, THE LINES OF THE RIVERS ON THE
MAP SHOW THE ENERGY PATHS RADIATING OUTWARD.
THE RIVERS ARE BORN IN THE MOUNTAINS. TREY FLOW OUTWARD IN
ALL DIRECTIONS: EAST TO THE ATLANTIC SEABOARD; SOUTH INTO
THE PALMETTO COUNTRY OF SOUTH CAROLINA, GEORGIA, AND FLORIDA; INTO THE GULF OF MEXICO THROUGH THE ALABAMA LOWLANDS OR
BY WAY OF THE MISSISSIPPI RIVER TO THE WEST; EVEN NORTH TO
THE GREAT LAKES. THE POWER OF THE EARTH SPIRIT FLOWS OUT
OVER ALL THE LANDS
THERE ARE BOUNDARIES TO THE MOUNTAIN REGION; BUT THEY ARE
"SOFT" BOUNDARIES. NATURE DOES NOT LEND HERSELF TO HARDAND-FAST LINES, BUT RATHER TO TENCENCIES. NIGHT MOVES INTO
DAY, WINTER MOVES INTO SPRING - THE DIFFERENCES ARE APPAI<A1lJAH - page 10
RENT, BUT THE PRECISE POINT WHERE THE TRANSITION TAKES
PLACE IS IMPOSSIBLE TO DEFINE. SO IT IS WITH THE LAND. AS
ONE TYPE OF CLIMATE, VEGETATION, OR TERRAIN MERGES INTO
ANOTHER, IT IS IMPOSSIBLE TO MARK THE PRECISE CROSSOVER
POINT.
/
t<ATUAH: THE CENTER
"ON CEREMONIAL OCCASIONS, THEY FREQUENTLY SPEAK OF
THEMSELVES AS "ANI-KITUHWAGI" OR "PEOPLE OF KITUWHA", AN ANCIENT SITTLEMENT ON THE TUCKASEGEE RIVER
ANV APPARENTLY THE ORIGINAL NUCLEUS OF THE TRIBE."
- Jamu Mooney, My.th.6 06 .the. CheJr.Oke.e.
~
THIS NAME, KATUAH, APPEARING IN A VARIETY OF PHONETIC SPELLINGS, REFERRED TO THE CHEROKEE VILLAGE LOCATED JUST BELOW
THE JUNCTION OF THE TUCKASEGEE AND OCONOLUFTEE RIVERS IN
autmin 1983
�WHAT IS NOW CALLED SWAIN COUNTY, NORTH CAROLINA. THIS VILLAGE DOMINATED THE "MIDDLE TOWNS" OF THE CHEROKEE NATION,
THOSE VILLAGES LYING ALONG THE TUCKASEGEE AND THE UPPER
PART OF THE LITTLE TENNESSEE RIVER, AND THAT AREA WAS FREQUENTLY REFERRED TO AS KATfiAH.
..
THE MEANING OF THE WORD KATUAH HAS BEEN LOST, BUT IT IS ONE
OF THOSE WORDS THAT CARRIES A SIGNIFICANCE DEEPER THAN ITS
DEFINITION. THE WORD WAS USED WITH DEEP RESPECT, AND, ACCORDING TO MOONEY, WAS "FREQUENTLY EXTENDED TO INCLUDE THE
WHOLE TRIBE".
...
THESE RANGES PERHAPS RELATE MORE TO THEIR LOCAL ENVIRONS
THAN TO THE APPALACHIAN SYSTEM AS A WHOLE.
ON THE EAST SIDE OF THE APPALACHIAN CHAIN, THE PIEDMONT
PLATEAU FOLLOWS THW MOUNTAINS SERVING AS A TRANSITION AREA
BETWEEN THE HEIGHTS AND THE COASTAL PLAIN •
APPALACHIA IS BOUNDED ON THE WEST BY THE TERRITORY DEFINED
BY THE OHIO, CUNBERLAND, AND TENNESSEE RIVER DRAINAGES.
TO THE SOUTH, THE MOUNTAIN SYSTEM DIMINISHES IN NORTH
GEORGIA AND NORTHEAST ALABAMA UNTIL IT CEASES ALTOGETHER IN
,
THE VICINITY OF THE GREAT ETOWAH MOUND NEAR MARIETTA, GEORINDEED, IT CAN BE SEEN ON THE MAP THAT KATtl-·- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . , GIA.
AH IS THE GEOGRAPHICAL CENTER OF THE CBER<r
KEE TERRITORY, AS TH.§ INDIANS APPARENTLY
ECONOMICALLY , THE CITY OF ATLANTA , ORIWERE WELL AWARE . KATUAH ALSO COINCIDES WITH
GINALLY THE OLD RAILROAD JUNCTION,
THE ENERGY CENTER FOR THE EASTERN HALF OF
FACES AWAY FROM THE HIGHLANDS TOWARDS
THE TURTLE ISLAND CONTINENT. IT IS FROM
THE PROFITABLE COMMERCE OF THE SOUTHTHIS CENTEJ WE BORROW THE NAME FOR OUR PR<r
EASTERN FLATLANDS. YET .THE MOUNVINCE, l<ATUAH. AND '!T IS THROUGH THE NAME
TAINS ARE ALWAYS THERE, SENDING
KATLJAH WE HOPE IN OUR MODERN CONTEXT TO REOUT THEIR INFLUENCE, AND STILL
AWAKEN THE SPIRITUAL IDENTITY THIS AREA HAS
HAVE A HOLD ON THE HEARTS OF MANY
HAD IN THE PAST.
OF THE CITY'S PEOPLE.
THIS PROVINCE, THE FOCUS OF OUR ENERGIES
THE APPALACHIANS ARE THE OLDEST
AND OUR OWN BIOGEOGRAPHICAL NICHE, ROUGHLY
MOUNTAINS ON THE CONTINENT. IN THE
COINCIDES WITH THE ORIGINAL AREA OF CHER<r
EONS OF THEIR YOUTH, IT IS HYPOTHEKEE SETTLEMENT IN PRE-COLUMBIAN TIMES.
SIZED THAT THEY STOOD AS TALL AS THE
THIS AREA IS ALSO LARGELY COINCIDENTAL WITH
HIMALAYAS. NOW, ROUNDED AND WORN WITH
"OLD APPALACHIA", THE GEOLOGICAL NAME FOR
AGE, THEY ARE A DEEP STORE OF WISDOM,
THE EARLIER FORMATIONS OF THE APPALACHIAN
STRENGTH, AND ENDURANCE. THEY ARE THE
CHAIN - THE BLUE RIDGE MOUNTAINS, THE UNAKA
ELDERS OF THE LAND, AND THEIR ENERRANGE, AND THE TRANSVERSE RANGES BETWEEN
GIES ARE MORE SUBTLE AND DEMAND MORE
THEM .
~""" d.e. "'-.P
ATTUNEMENT THAN THE RAW PRIDE OF THE
Tll f.: CllJ:;HOJ<EI·:
MOUNTAINS TO THE WEST GLORYING IN
THEIR PHYSICAL STRENGTH.
THE APPALACHIAN CHAIN WAS FORMED IN TWO
DISTINCT STAGES. "THE GREAT APPALACHIAN
.JAMl':S :-.100.N t-:\"
THE POWER OF THE APPALACHIANS IS A
11:)00
VALLEY" - THE TENNESSEE AND SHENANDOAH
STRONG FORCE IN THE LIVES OF ALL
RIVER VALLEYS SEEN AS ONE - DIVIDES
@dui-rft..J K~ ..t~ site.
THE PEOPLE UNDER THEIR INFLUENCE.
"OLD APPALACHIA" FROM "NEW APPALACHIA" ~
.__ __ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ __.THEY STAND STRONG ABOVE THE RUSH OF
THE ALLEGHENIES AND THE CUMBERLAND
THE COASTAL POPULATION CENTERS.
MOUNTAINS, YOUNGER RANGES THAT CONTAIN THE MASSIVE COAL DECALM, IMPASSIVE, ENDURING, THEY GROUND AND BALANCE THE
POSITS SO CHARACTERISTIC OF APPALACHIA JN MANY PEOPLE'S
l'KENETIC ENERGIES OF THE PROFIT-SEEKERS AND THOSE TOO
MINDS.
ABSORBED IN SIMPLY MEETING THE BILLS ON THEIR LIVES TO
NOTICE WHERE THEY ARE OR THE WORLD OF LIFE AROUND THEM.
THE MOUNTAINS ARE IN MANY WAYS SIMILAR THROUGHOUT, BUT THE
MINING OF COAL HAS PERMEATED THE HISTORY, CULTURE, ECONOLIKE THE MOUNTAINS' POSITIVE BENEFITS, THE CHANGES THAT
MICS, AND CONSCIOUSNESS OF THE PEOPLE OF "NEW APPALACHIA"
WOULD COME ABOUT IF THEIR INFLUENCE WERE DIMINISHED BY
TO SUCH AN EXTENT THAT ENTIRELY DIFFERENT CONDITIONS HAVE
THE MISTAKES AND EXCESSES OF HUMANKIND WOULD ALSO BE
BEEN CREATED BETWEEN THE TWO HALVES OF THE APPALACHIAN
SUBTLE AND FAR-REACHING. IN WHAT MANNER THESE CHANGES
CHAIN. HOPEFULLY, THESE WILL BE RESOLVED IN THE COURSE OF
WOULD APPEAR IS IMPOSSIBLE TO SAY, BUT THEY WOULD
POST-INDUSTRIAL HISTORY, BUT IT WILL TAKE TIME.
SURELY aE DESTRUCTIVE AND WOULD LESSEN THE VITALITY OF
THE HUMAN SPECIES AND OUR POTENTIAL FOR SURVIVAL.
APPALACHIA: O SIORE&lON
UR
THE APPALACHIAN MOUNTAINS FROM EASTERN PENNSYLVANIA TO THEIR
SOUTHERN LIMITS IN NORTHERN GEORGIA AND ALABAMA COMPRISE OUR
COMPLETE BIOREGION.
PROTECTING AND MAINTAINING THE LIFE OF THE MOUNTAINS
IS A VERY PRACTICAL SORT OF WISDOM, FOR OUR WELL-BEING
AND THE SPIRITUAL HEALTH OF THE LAND ARE INTIMATELY
LINKED.
CLWTINUED ON PAG£ tO
GEOLOGICALLY, THE APPALACHIAN CHAIN PICKS UP AGAIN TO THE
NORTH AS THE CATSKILL AND ADIRONDACK MOUNTAiNS IN NEW YORK
STATE AND THE GREEN AND WHITE MOUNTAINS IN NEW ENGLAND. BUT
aut\ml 1983
r
KATlWl - page 11
�A RESOURCE BIBLIOGRAPHY FOR KATUAH AREA
THE BIOREGION IVEA
AKWESASNE NOTES. A BASIC CALL TO CONSCIOUSNESS: THE RAV DENO SAU NEE ADDRESS TO
THE WESTERN WORLD. AKWESASNE NOTES, PUBLISHER-cJo MOHAWK NATION, ROOSEVELTOWN, NY 1368~e bioregional ethic as lived by the Iroquois Nation from
Paleolithic era to the present and the attack upon it by European colonialism.
BERG, PETER, ed. REINHABITING ! SEPARATE COUNTRY. PLANET DRUM FOUNDATION, BOX 31251,
SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94131. 1978. The bioregional experience, Northern California as example.
BERRY, WENDELL. THE UNSETTLING OF AMERICA. SIERRA CLUB,
LAND. NORTH POINT PRESS,
SNYDER, GARY . EARTH HOUSE.ti:OLD. NEW DIRECTIONS; THE OLD WAYS. CITY LIGHTS; THE
REAL WORK. NEW DIRECTIONS; TURTLE ISLAND. NEW DIRECTIONS. Bioregional
classics - poems and essays of respect to Gaia and the "real work", getting
in touch with ourselves and nature.
TUKEL, GEORGE. TOWARD! BIOREGIONAL MODEL ; BERG, PETER. t?IGURES OF REGULATION;
TODD, JOHN & TUKE~. GEORGE. REINHABITING CITIES AND TOWNS. PLANET DRUM
FOUNDATION, publisher. Some of the publications from Planet DrlDD which
give a good overall $ense of designing for sustainability.
periodicals:
AKWESASNE NOTES. c/o MOhAWK NATION, ROOSEVELTOWN, NY 13683. Official publication
of the Mohawk Nation; Best statemect of the traditional Native viewpoint
on modern problems .
CoEVOLUTION QUARTERLY (CEQ). "WATERSHE!'JS" ISSUE. WINTER, 1976-77. published t;y
the Whole Earth Catalog, Box 428, Sausalito, CA 94966.
CoEVOLUTION QUARTERLY. "BIOREGIONS" ISS!.iE . no . 32 WINTER 1981. published oy tile:
Whole Earth Catalog .
RAISE 7HE STAKES.PLANET DRUM FOUNDATION, Box 31251, Sa& Francisco, CA 94~31.
- - Tri-annual publication dedicated to "deve:!.oping, analyzing <i-:ld communicating the concept of a bioregion". Interested in developing an exchange
among individuals and groups "tnat are exploring cultural, environmental
anci economic forms appropriate to L:he places they live in".
GEOLOG'I
ROGERS, JOHN. THE TECTONICS OF THE APPALACHIANS. WILEY-INTERSCIENCE, 1970.
NATURAL HISTORY
Use any good field identification books ( The A~dubon Field Guides
good) plus the following of special regional interest:
BROOKS, MORRIS. THE APPALACHIANS.
~re
particularly
Natural History textbook.
CAMPBELL, HUTSON, SHARPE. GREAT SMOKY MOUNTAIN WILDFLOWERS . UNIVERSITY OF TN PRESS.
CHILTOSKEY, .'1ARY & HAMEL, PAUL . CHEROKEE PLANTS. HERALD PUBLISHING, 1975. Syl va, NC
ELLIOTT, DOUG. ROOTS. CHATHAM PRESS . Exceller.t 5uide to r:ne underground world of
medicinal and othe::vide useful plant rhizomes.
GRAY, SAM. HAZEL CREEK: PATTERNS OF LIFE ON AN APPALACHIAN WATERSHED. MOUNTAIN
HERITAGE CENTER, WESTERN CAROLINA UNIVERSITY, CULLOWHEE, NC.
HESLER, L. R•. ' MUSHROOMS OF THE GREAT SMOKIES.
KROCHMAL, ARNOLD AND CONNIE. GUIDE TO MEDICINAL PLANTS OF THE UNITED STATES . QUADRANGLE PRESS. Experts on Appalachian plant life.
KATUAH - page 12
autunn 1983
�LINZEY, ALICIA AND DONALD. MAMMALS OF THE GREAT SMOKY MOUNTAINS NATIONAL PARK.
UNIVERSITY OF TN PRESS.
STUPKA, ARTHUR. NOTES ON THE BIRDS OF THE GREAT SMOKY MOUNTAINS NATIONAL PARK;
TREES, SHRUBS AND VINES OF THE GREAT SMOKY MOUNTAINS NATIONAL PARK.
One of the best-k. lwn naturalists specializing on this area.
STUPKA, ARTHUR AND HUHEEY, JAMES. AMPHIBIANS AND REPTILES OF THE GREAT SMOKY
MOUNTAINS NATIONAL PARK. The Smokies are known for the varieties of
amphibious creatures.
BARTRAM, WILLIAM. THE TRAVELS OF WILLIAM BARTRAM. BARNES & NOBLE. One of the
first whites into the area, Bartram wrote of the land and the Indians
in almost an untouched state.
TIME-LIFE. THE SOUTHERN APPALACHIANS . TIME-LIFE BOOKS AND JEROME DOOLITTLE, 1975.
NATIVE INHABITANTS
There are a lot of books on the Cherokees, but it is hard to find information
about their traditional ways. Mooney is the best source.
MOONEY, JAMES. MYTHS OF THE CHEROKEE AND SACRED FORMULAS OF THE CHEROKEE.
CHARLES ELDER, BOOKSELLER.
GRAY, SAM. MYTHIC MAPS: CHEROKEE LEGENDS OF WESTERN NORTH CAROLINA. MOUNTAIN
HERITAGE CENTER, WESTERN CAROLINA UNIVERSITY.
ULMER, MARY AND BECK, SAMUEL. CHEROKEE COOKLORE . PUBLISHED BY MARY AND GOINGBACK
CHILTOSKY, 1951. MUSEUM OF CHEROKEE INDIAN.
JOURNAL OF THE CHEROKEE HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION. CHEROKEE, NC 28719 . Periodical .
Sometimes interesting, sometimes boring accounts of Cherokee life and
history, almost always by white academics.
WHITE SETTLERS: HISTORY ANO CU L
TURE
CAMPBELL, JOHN C. THE SOUTHERN HIGHLANDER AND HIS HOMELAND. UNIVERSITY PRESS OF
KENTUCKY .
KEPHART, HORACE. OUR SOUTHERN HIGHLANDERS . UNIVERSITY OF TN PRESS
LOVINS, CLIFFORD R. OUR MOUNTAIN HERITAGE. MOUNTAIN HERITAGE CENTER, WESTERN
CAROLINA UNIVERSITY.
PARRIS, JOHN. ROAMING THE MOUNTAINS ; MY MOUNTAINEERS, MY PEOPLE; THESE STORIED
MOUNTAINS. A good storyteller and knowledgeable"""'ibout the mountains, if
you can get through his descriptive verbiage .
VAN NOPPEN, JOHN AND INA. WESTERN NORTH CAROLINA SINCE THE CIVIL WAR. APPALACHIAN
CONSORTIUM PRESS.
WIGGINTON, ELIOT, ed. THE FOXFIRE BOOK and FOXFIRE 2-6. ANCHOR PRESS/DOUBLEDAY.
The famous interview series on mountain culture.
SEEING
BERRY, WENDELL. THE WHEEL (poems) ; FARMING:~ HANDBOOK : THE COUNTRY OF
MARRIAGE
CARTER, FORREST. THE EDUCATION OF LITTLE TREE. DELACORTE PRESS.
A young boy learns from his Cherokee grandparents in East Tennessee.
DILLARD, ANNIE. PILGRIM AT TINKER CREEK. HARPER'S MAGAZINE PRESS.
PORTER, ELIOT (PHOTOS) AND ABBEY, EDWARD (TEXT). APPALACHIAN WILDERNESS .
BALLANTINE BOOKS. NEW YORK, 1973.
POLITICS
ASKINS, JOHNSON, LEWIS, editors . COLONIALISM IN MODERN AMERICA: THE APPALACHIAN
CASE.
EMERGING 810REGIONAL CONSCIOUSNESS
THE SOUTHERN APPALACHIAN RESOURCE CATALOG. PUBLISHED 1980-82 . AVAILABLE NOW
IN LIBRARIES OF WNC AREA.
autunn 1983
�FOLKS IN THE OZARKS HAVE BEEN MEETING AS
A BIOREGIONAL CONGRESS EACH YEAR FOR THE
LAST THREE YEARS. OTHER BIOREGIONAL CONGRESSES AROUND OUR CONTINENT ARE BEGINNING TO CONVENE AS WELL. IN FACT, THERE
IS EVEN GOING TO BE A NORTH AMERICAN BIOREGIONAL CONGRESS IN SPRING OF 1984 TO
BRING TOGETHER ALL OF THESE CONGRESSES.
WHY ARE THESE CONGRESSES HAPPENING AND
WHAT ARE THEY ABOUT? WELL, FIRST OF ALL,
BIOREGIONAL BOUNDARIES ARE CLEARLY DIFFERENT THAN POLITICAL BOUNDARIES.WHEN YOU
BEGIN TO THINK BIOREGIONALLY, YOU BEGIN
TO HONOR WHOLE PROCESSES THAT SURROUND
YOU. YOU CANNOT CUT OFF A MOUNTAIN RANGE
JUST BECAUSE IT HAPPENS TO EXTEND INTO
ANOTHER STATE; NOR CAN YOU SAY THAT YOU
CAN FORGET WHAT HAPPENS DOWN RIVER BECAUSE IT HAPPENS TO BE UNDER OTHER'POLITICAL JURISDICTION'. IN OTHER WORDS,
BIOREGIONAL BOUNDARIES INCLUDE "WHOLE
SYSTEMS" AND HONOR THE NATURAL, ECOLOGICAL "LEGAL" SYSTEM THAT IS ALREADY
FUNCTIONING.
BIOREGIONAL CONGRESSES A.lIB INFORMAL LEGISLATIVE BODIES WHICH HAVE 'CROPPED UP',
SO TO SPEAK, WITHIN THEIR RESPECTIVE BIOREGIONS. A MAIN PURPOSE OF A BIOREGIONAL
CONGRESS IS TO REFLECT WITHIN THE HUMAN
CONSCIOUSNESS/CULTURE THE WIDER "BIOLEGAL" STRUCTURE THAT EXISTS IN THAT BIOREGION; IN OTHER WORDS, TO TRANSLATE INTO HUMAN TERMS THE ECOLOGICAL LEGAL SYSTEM WHICH IS ALREADY FUNCTIONING IN THAT
BIOREGION.
ANOTHER PURPOSE OF A BIOREGIONAL CONGRESS
IS TO FACILITATE THE ADAPTATION--INTEGRATION--INTER-FACING OF THE HUMAN CULTURE
INTO THE WIDER BIO-SYSTEM. HERE THE EMPHASIS IS ON "SUSTAINABILITY". ARE HUMAN
PRACTICES THERE --ECONOMIC, SPIRITUAL,
SOCIAL,ETC.-- ALLOWING FOR OR CONTRIBUTING TO THE SUSTAINABILITY OF THE BIOREG- ION.
THE FOLKS IN THE OZARKS WHO CONVENE EACH
YEAR AS THE OZARK AREA COMMUNITY CONGRESS
(O.A.C.C.) HAVE BEGUN TO EVOLVE A VIABLE
PROCESS FOR "CONGRESSING". THEY HAVE FIRST
IDENTIFIED ALL THE VARIOUS ASPECTS IN THE
BIOREGION WHICH THEY CONSIDER TO BE SIGNIFICANT. HAVING IDENTIFIED THESE ASPECTS,
THEY , THEN, HAVE SET UP ELEVEN PERMANENT
STANDING COMMITTEES TO ADDRESS THESE INDIVIDUAL ASPECTS AND TO CAUCUS DURING
EACH CONGRESS. THE ELEVEN COMMITTEES ARE
AS FOLLOWS : APPROPRIATE TECHNOLOGY
ENVIRONMENTAL/ECOLOGICAL
COOPERATIVE ECONOMICS
COMMUNITIES/ALTERNATIVE LAND TENU
AGRICULTURE/DIRECT MARKETING
BIOREGIONAL/ECOLOGICAL POLITICS
ENERGY/RENEWABLE RESOURCES
HEALTH
EDUCATION/NETWORKING/COMMUNICATION
PEACE/HUMAN RIGHTS
SAFE ENERGY
KAT6AH -
page 14
autunn 1983
�EACH REPRESENTATIVE ATTENDING THE CONGRESS
IS ASKED TO JOIN ONE OF THE ELEVEN STANDING
COMMITTEES AND TO CAUCUS WITH THAT COMMITTEE DURING THE CONGRESSIONAL SESSION. THE
COMMITTEES MEET SEVERAL TIMES DURING THE
FOUR-DAY SESSION OF THE CONGRESS --DOING
INTENSIVE NETWORKING, INFORMATION-SHARING,
AND PLANNING WHAT THEY WILL DO AS A GROUP
FOR THE COMING YEAR.
A MAJOR FUNCTION FOR EACH STANDING COMMITTEE IS TO DRAFT A SET OF RESOLUTIONS -WHICH ACT AS A PERMANENT GUlDELINE FOR
THAT COMMITTEE'S DIRECTION. TOWARDS THE
END OF THE CONGRESSIONAL SESSION , THE RESOLUTIONS ARE THEN BROUGHT TO THE FULL CONGRESS IN PLENARY SESS ION AND ARE REVIEWED
AND RATIFIED . TAKEN AS A WHOLE THE BODY OF
RESOLUTIONS FROM THE ELEVEN MAJOR COMMITTEES THEN FORMS THE CONSTITUTION/MISSION
STATEMENT FOR THE CONGRESS.
THROUGH ITS CONSTITUTION , THE CONGRESS-BY IDENTIFYING THE MAJOR AREAS OF SIGNIFICANCE OF THE BIOREGION -- HOPES TO PROVIDE
A "ONE-TO-ONE CORRESPONDENCE" TO THE ACTUAL
BIOREGION, IN ORDER TO ACKNOWLEDGE ITS COMPLEXITY AND INTERWOVENESS AND, THEREFORE,
TO CONSCIOUSLY PLAN FOR ITS SUSTAINABILITY.
IN OTHER WORDS , THE CONGRESS HOPES TO
"MIRROR" THE BIOREGION.
THE REPRESENTATIVES WHO ATTEND THE CONGRESS
ARE MAINLY PEOPLE FROM THE BIOREGION WHO
ARE ALREADY INVOLVED IN THE "SUSTAINABILITY" OF THE BIOREGION IN SOME WAY --EITHER
THROUGH THE ARTS, THE ENVIRONMENT, THE
REGIONAL ECONOMY,ETC . THE CONGRESS IS NOT
"JUST ONE MORE THING TO DO" -- IT IS A WAY
OF LETTING PEOPLE WHO ARE ALREADY WORKING
ON PARTICULAR ISSUES OR IN SPECIFIC AREAS
SEE HOW THEY ' FIT IN' TO THE WIDER PICTURE
OF SUSTAINING THE BIOREGION AND TO RENEW
THEIR SENSE OF THE IMPORTANCE OF THEIR PERSONAL ACTION .
IN THE YEAR BETWEEN CONGRESSES, THE STANDING COMMITTEES MAY MEET PHYSICALLY , OR JUST
MAINTAIN COMMUNICATION BETWEEN MEMBERS , OR
DO NOTHING AT ALL. THEIR DEGREE OF ORGANIZATION IS ENTIRELY SELF-DETERMINING AND DEVELOPS OVER A PERIOD OF YEARS. O.A.C.C.
FEELS THAT IT IS KEY THAT THE CONGRESS DEVELOP IN A NON-FORCED, ORGANIC WAY -- THAT
THERE NOT BE STRONG EXPECTATIONS LAID ON
THE CONGRESS OR ITS COMMITTEES IN ITS FIRST
YEARS. THE METAPHOR IS THAT OF Ni\TURAL
AND ECOLOGICAL PROCESSES: LET IT UNFOLD,
REMEMBERING THAT THE BIOREGIONAL CONGRESS
MODEL IS NOT BASED ON "HUMAN LAW" AND
HUMAN PRIORITIES BUT RATHER ON THE WIDER
RHYTHMS.
THE VARIOUS BIOREGIONAL CONGRESSES ON
THIS CONTINENT AND THOSE BEGINNING IN
EUROPE ARE EMERGING BECAUSE THE STANDARD
LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLIES, BOTH REGIONALLY
AND NATIONALLY, ARE NOT TAKING INTO ACCOUNT THIS REALITY OF WHOLE, INTERDEPENDENT SYSTEMS NOR ARE THEY TAKING ON THE
TASK OF SUSTAINING OUR ECOLOGICAL, CULTURAL INFRASTRUCTURE. THESE EMERGING BIOREGIONAL CONGRESSES ARE PROVIDING A MEANS
FOR HEALING AND RE-NEWING THE BODY POLITIC,
IN ITS TRUE SENSE. THROUGH THESE CONGRESSES,
WE HUMANS CAN AGAIN ALIGN OURSELVES WITH
THE FORCES THAT ALLOW THIS PLANET TO
EXIST.
dltawn 61Wm c.onveJt6a..Uon6 wlth Vav.ld Hae.nke.
HERE IS A LIST OF BIOREGIONAL ORGANIZATIONS,
BOTH EXISTING ONES AND THOSE IN FORMATION:
OZARK AREA COMMUNITY CONGRESS , O.A.C.C. O.A. C. C., Box 129, Drury, Missouri 65638. Thia Congress meets in the fall of each year. Bioregionaliata from other areas are welcome to attend. O.A. C.C.
is also spearheading t he co-ordination of the upcOIDing North Amer ican Bioregional Congress .
THE GREAT LAKES BIOREGIONAL CONGRESS G.L.B.C. , Box 24 , Old Mission, Michigan 49673. Thia
Congress is now being formed and plans to hold its
first congress in October ('83).
OCOOH AREA COHMUNITY CONGRESS OCOOH, c/o Spark Burwiaater, Rt.l, Box 77A, Chaseburg
Wisconsin 54621. This Congress is now organizing and
may hold a Congress this fall ('83).
NEW YORK STATE BIOREGIONAL CONGRESS -
c/o Alan Casline/ROOTDRINKER, Box 864, Sarasota
Springs , New York 12866. Thia Congress is now
forming and is planning for a Congress to be held
July 4, 1984.
KANSAS AREA WATERSHED COUNCIL, KAW KAW, 816 Mississippi St, Lawrence, Kansas 66044.
Thia Congress formed in Kay, 1982. A Congress is
scheduled for tbJ.s fall ( '83).
O. S.INTERIOR PACIFIC NORTHWEST c/o Michael Pilarski, Friends of the Trees Society
Box 1064, Tonasket, Washington 98855 . A bioregional gathering is being planned for this winter ('83).
SOUTHERN APPALACHIA BIOREGION c/o KATUAH, Rt . 2 Box 132, Leicester, NC 28748.
A strong bioregional consciousness is coming out
of this area. A new bioregional journal KATUAH
will be published quarterly, beginning i~
fall ('83). There is also interest in forming a
Congress for the area .
U.S.SOOTHEAST c/o Southern Onity Network/Renewable Energy Projects (SUNREP) P.O.Box 10121, Knoxville,TN 37919 .
SUNR!P organized the Southeastern Connections Conference which was held in August '82 and was cosponsored by over 77 organizations in the Southeast. This conference included vorbhops on bioregional organizing. SUNREP offers to help facilitate people in the Southeast to s et up bioregional organizations in their area.
COLORADO PLATEAU Southwest Bioregional Congress, 227 Eas t Coronado,
Santa Fe, New Mexico 87501 . A Southwest Bioregional Congress is in the process of being formed. A
Congress was scheduled for fall ' 83, but has been
postponed.
OHIO RIVER BASIN Ohio River Basin Information Service (ORBIS) c/o
Sunrock Farm, 103 Gibson Lane, Wilder, KY 41076.
The Ohio River Basin Information Service has been
formed to facilitate bioregional awareness in this
vast watershed .
TENNESSEE BIOREGIONS c/o Louise Gorenflo, editor , Tennessee Organic Growe r, Route 6 Box 526, Crossville, TN 38555. Bioregional consciousness is being developed in this area
and a bioregional gathering is being planned.
INTERNATIONAL
THAMES VALLEY BIOREGION c/o Mark ltinzley, 7 Gayshaa Avenue, Cants Hill ,
Ilford, Essex IG2 6TB England. A bioregional
organization is beginning to form in London.
IF YOU ARE INTERESTED IM LEARNING
MORE ABOUT BIOREGIONAL CONGRESSES
OR IN HELPING TO FORM A CONGRESS
FOR OUR SOUTHERN APPALACHIAN BIOREGION, PLEASE CONTACT:
Marnie Mulle r c/o KATUAH
Rt.2 Box 132, Leicester,NC 28748
RNIE MULLER
autum 1983
KATdtw -
page 15 '
�" TheJte. ne.e.d.6 to be. Continent Con91tu6
that the.
occ.upa~
6.inai.1.tj become
60
06 Nollth Ame.JU.ca can
.inhabUa~
LEARN TO BUILV A LCXll-COST, FUEL-EFFICIENT
FINNISH MA.SONRV WOOV-HEATER
and frind out
whVte the.IJ Me.•• Th-U ti.me Con91tu6 iA
a veJtb •.. Cong1tu6, come togetheJt. Come
togetheJt with the continent. "
- PeteJt Be.Ilg, 7976
THE NORTH AMERICAN BIOREGIONAL
CONGRESS ( NABC ) IS SCHEDULED TO
BE HELD IN MAY, 1984 IN THE NORTHERN OZARKS. IT WILL
BE THE FIRST MAJOR CONVENING OF THE CONTINENTAL BIOREGIONALIST MOVEMENT AND WILL INCLUDE THOSE WORJ<ING
IN 'GREEN POLITICS' AND FOR SUSTAINABILITY, IN GENERAL,AS WELL AS NATIVE TRIBES AND ORGANIZATIONS.
A HANDS-ON
CONSTRUCTION
WORKSHOP wU:h
an in-depth 1teview 06
it.6 contJt.a-ntow duign
pll.inciptu
SEPT.16-18, 1983
Workshop leader:
Tom Trout
FOR THE EXPERIENCED
AND INEXPERIENCED
SINCE 1981 WHEN A RESOLUTION WAS PASSED BY O.A.C.C.II
ALIKE
(OZARK AREA COMMUNITY CONGRESS) CALLING FOR A NORTH
AMERICAN BIOREGIONAL CONGRESS, INDIVIDUALS AND ORGAN- Thi6 week-end wo1tfuhop
IZATIONS HAVE BEEN WORJ<ING TOWARDS CO-ORDINATING THIS
6e.atWle both a
CONGRESS.
1tev.lew 06 the F.lnn.i.6h
Ma.6onlllj He.ateJt du.lgn
IF YOU ARE INTERESTED IN YOUR ORGANIZATION BECOMING
A CO-SPONSOR FOR THIS CONGRESS OR IF YOU WANT TO PART- M well. M the hand.6on con.6.tlw.ct.ion 06 it
ICIPATE IN CO-ORDINATING THIS CONGRESS, CONTACT:
---at Long Bllanch EnTHE BIOREGIONAL PROJECT/N.A.B.C.
v.i.Jr.onmentai. Education
BOX 129
CenteJt.
DRURY, MO 65638
rwt
--~:::c;;:CCI
P.-.-n--.:::=~-
I.ONG BRANCH
t:N\?IRONMl:NTAl
t:OUCATJON
Cf:NTt:R
Rl'ul.z 2. Box 132
1..ek:es\er. N .C . 28748
INFORMATION
683-3662
PLANET DRUM BOOKS
Planet Drum Foundation is dedicated to the vision
of communities living within the natural cycles and
energy flows of their particular bioregion-in the city
or in the country-as conscious participants in the biosphere. Many people and a growingnumberofcommunities have adopted a bioregional stan~-they
retnhabit their regions, they choose to Uve-inplace and intend to restore and maintain that
place in the planetary web of life.
HOW ABOUT YOU?
We foster and report the bioregional
movement. and relate It to devolution,
Native American issues and dec:entralism
in Raile tlw Stoia, a trl-annual review.
We network amon1 emerpnt bioreg·
Iona I sroups to provide needed information. reference to expertise and contacts with potential memben and other groups.
Planet Drum Foundation memben
set Roi# tlw Stalra.
Planet/ Drum "Bundle1"
and publications from Planet Drum Books. We
respond to requests for information and
contacts. and consider memben as
bioresional correspondents. Membership
also helps support our efforts to achieve recognition for bioregions and create a reinhabitory society.
Yearly Membenldp/115
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
We invite you to join the Planet Drum circle.
D S15 regular membership (one year)
Help us help your bioregional ettorts
Name ··- _ _
-~
Addn·'~
(1!\
Zip
BOX 31251 SAN FRANCISCO. CALIFORNIA. 94131 USA
• Rrlnhabiling a Srparatr
Country: A Bloregional Anthol·
OJ.!!/ of Northern California.
editt'<i hy Peter Berg. 220 pages.
E~ay,, natural history, biographies, poem~ and stories re\·ealing Northern Co&lifomia as a di.~
tinct area of the planetary biosphere. SS postpaid.
• Devolutionary Note1 by
Michael Zwerln. 64 pages. A fir~t
hand account or European M>parati~t movements today. S3.50
postpaid.
• Eco-Derf'ntrali.st Dmgn: A 3.
,·olume set including Figura of
Regulation: Guides for Re-Bala ncing Society with Thr Biosphere by Peter Berg; Toward a
Bioregional Model: Clearing
Ground for Watershed Planning
by George Tukel; and Reinhabiting Cities and Towns: Delignlng
for Swtainability by John Todd
with Geori~e Tukel. 98 pages
complete. Critical preliminary
readings for intentional bioregional planning. $10 postpaid.
• Bloreglons: Winter l 981 / 2,
issue 132 or CoEvolution Quar·
terly. Guest edited by Peter Bertt
and Stephanie Mills. 144 pages.
Murra)' Bookchin on social ecology, Jan Morris, Gary Snyder,
and Peter Berg with essays on
de\'olution and the Fourth
World. Jerry Mandt>r. Winona
La Dukt•, \\'t"' Jac-kson and Paul
I la" kt•n art' amon2 othl'f'i "ho
l'ontrih11tt• tu thi' il'.,•1t·. R<·1l<1rt'
on tlw South"t"t. Gre:.11 Plain\.
'1:11rtl1 \\ 11e11k ,111d :\la,k.t in tht•
l ' ~.A. ~4 l''"tpaid
BUNDLES
• Rur l..lm111 Tiie Rm kir\. A \IX·
p.ut l\11ndl1· of l"-\a\·s. p0t•m,.
j1111rnak c·alt·ndar' and prnpmah
ahout tht• fral!ilt Rock' ~toun
tain,. $4 po\lllaid.
PLEASE CUT AND MAIL IN TODAYi .
.
~
- page 16
autam 1983
�ALTERNATJVES
TO ECONOMJCS
SUSTAINABILITY OF OUR BIOREGION IS INTIMATELY BOUNV TO
OUR ABILITY TO RE-CONCEPTUALIZE OUR ECONOMIC SYSTEM. WE
AS A CULTURE NEEV JO GET OURSELVES BACK ON AN EVEN KEEL
WITH OUR ENVIRONMENT BY FIGURING OUT HOW TO INTEGRATE
OUR HUMAN ECONOMIC SYSTEM INTO THE WIVER 'PRIMARY ECONOMIC SYSTEM' OF THE BIOSPHERE. RIGHT NOW OUR HUMAN
ECONOMIC SYSTEM IS OPERATING OFF-BALANCE BECAUSE IT
VOES NOT REFLECT THE ACTUAL ENERGY INPUT-OUTPUT THAT
IS OCCURING ANV BECAUSE IT EXTERNALIZES A PORTION OF
ITS BASIC COSTS OUTSIVE OF ITS BUVGETING SYSTEM.
A GOOV TEXT TO REAV ON THIS SUBJECT IS HAZEL HENVERSON'S
THE POLITICS OF THE SOLAR AGE: ALTERNATIVES TO ECONOMICS
(Ancho~ Book'6~, 1981). THIS VERY REAVABLE BOOi<°IS ACTUALLY A TREATISE ON REFORMULATING ECONOMICS --HlXAJ TO SHIFT
"FROM ECONOMIES THAT MAXIMIZE PROVUCTION ANV ARE BASEV
ON NONRENEWABLE RESOURCES, TO ECONOMIES THAT MINIMIZE
WASTE, RECYCLE EVERYTHING, MAXIMIZE RENEWABLE RESOURCES,
ANV ARE MANAGE'O FOR SUSTAINEV-YIELV PROVUCTIVITY".(p. 81
HENVERSON APPROACHES THE QUESTION OF RE-CONCEPTUALIZING
ECONOMICS FROM A PLANETARY PERSPECTIVE, BUT HER "MEASURING STICKS" CAN WORK ON A BIOREGIONAL LEVEL, AS WELL.
FOR OUR BIOREGION, WE CAN BEGIN TO ASK THESE KEY QUESTIONS:
If the economic system in the bioregion is considered to be efficient/beneficial/productive, FOR
WHOM is it efficient/beneficial/productive and OVER
WHAT PERIOD OF TIME is this being judged?
-Since no system is value-free, what are the
VALUES inherent in our EXISTING economic system?
In terms of scale, what is the best scale to
use when the variables of RENEWABLE ENERGY, FULL EMPLOYMENT and ENVIRONMENTAL SUSTAINABILITY are being
considered?
RE-CONCEPTUALIZING ECONOMICS FOR OUR BIOREGION MEANS
THAT WE BEGIN TO KEENLY EXAMINE THE PRACTICES OF OUR
CULTURE TO SEE IF THEY REFLECT OUR TRUE VALUES ANV TO
SEE IF THEY ARE IN SYNCHRONICITY WITH THE WIVER ECOSYSTEM. WE NEEV TO STUVY A WIVE VARIETY OF PRACTICES
INCLUVING: BANKING PRACTICES; BUILVING COVES; FOOVPROVUCTION; TRANSPORTATION SYSTEMS; SOIL ANV WATER
CONSERVATION; HEALTH CARE SYSTEMS; RESEARCH SECTOR;
MARKffiNG SYSTEMS; GOVERNMENTAL BUVGET PRIORITIES;
ANV SO ON.
,,
KATUAH WOULO LIKE TO PROVIVE A FORUM FOR THOSE OF
US IN THIS AREA WHO ARE PARTICULARLY INTERESTEV IN
RE-CONCEPTUALIZING ECONOMICS FOR OUR AREA. IF YOU
ARE INTERESTEV IN RESEARCHING A SPECIFIC AREA OF
THIS ISSUE OR IN WRITING AN ARTICLE OR IN SHARING
IVEAS, PLEASE LET US KNOOJ.~
- MARNIE MULLER, A..lteJtna;t,lve Econom.i.C.6
,,
EditoJr.
KATUAH, Rt. 2 Box. 132, LeicuteJL, NC
FROM POLITICS OF THE SOLAR AGE:
ALTERNATIVES TO ECONOMICS
Hazel Henderson • • ••••. • • • ••
'
v ..
'
. .
'~ -. ··
'
•.
l!n··
. ff il
~.
"The task for all of us committed to these
social-change movements (human rights, corporate accountability, economic justice, ~onsumer
and environmental protection, holistic health,
appropriate technologies and those promoting
stmple living, personal growth, and greater
awareness of the interdependence of the human
family on this blue planet) is to see that
we a.te. 011e. coa.Lltlort in the larger politics of
reconceptualization . Together we must demystify today's counterfeit priesthood of •puppet•
leaders, and map and align our own energies
with these larger-field forces and the energies
that, in reality, drive our planet: the daily
solar flux, which in turn drives our planetary
weather system; the cycles of oxygen, of nitrogen, and of hydrogen, and the plant photosyntbeais that is our ~ e.collOm.i.c 4114tem•••••••••
• • • we can see ourselves and our diverse socialchange activities as part of a living orchestration, generating larger patterns, out of which
grow new paradigms of knowledge, policy, and
personal behavior.•
• •• For many of us, activities in various movements for social change have helped us understand our own and each other's inner space and
to tap the deeply coded knowledge of the creation. This inner/outer search provides a base
for healing the body politic. Some of us, in
the environmental movement for example, began
with the objective manifestations of human
pathology or, as in my case, with diagnosing
the pathology of economics . Now we are coming
together in a growing coalition with the potential for 'wholing' ourselves 111td recycling our
culture.•
"Farmers have always understood what
sustained-yield productivity means -now we have to teach it to economists."
"When asked for advice by the U.S.State
Department concerning the formulas that
economics might develop, my response was
that the economic method was entirely
inappropriate, since economic models do
not take account of bio-productivity,
the requirement for diversity in ecosystems. the widely differing approaches
to production and consumption in each
culture and value system as lte.60WtCe.6 ••• "
28748
autmJn
1983
f
KA'lUNI - page 17
\
�CONTIMIED FROM PAc.£ 8
(preferably nylon screens) suspended a few
The apple tree, like most of us who call
ourselves American, is not native to the
feet above your wopd stove or oth~r heat
source. The drying usually takes three days
Americas. Some crab apples are an exception,
to a week. During warm, dry weather
but the apple tree actually originated in
(a rarity in the Appalachains) apples can
Persia although it had been cultivated in
Europe for at least 2000 years before it
be sun-dried, but they must be taken inside
every night to protect them from the dew.
was brought to the New World. Despite its
Traditionally, people who were preparing
foreign origins, no tree has contributed
more to America than the apple tree . Besides
apples for the market peeled them to make
the vinegars and tonics , it's given us apple
a more refinerl product. However. this is not
necessar y, especially if the apples have not
jack, apple brandy, apple wine and apple
been sprayed.
cider ; there's apple jelly, apple sauce,
The art of preserving fresh-eating apples
apple butter, apple cake and pie; and
l\'\Cr't-,
nowadays has been relegated to the relm of
don't forget apple leather (broiled and
horticultural science and refrigeration
dried apples), candy apples, baked apples,
engineering. Modern storage houses are vaporscalloped apples, apple grunter and apple crisp
sealed and have massive refrigeration systems
that maintain a constant temperature of 31 F.
and a relative humidity of at least 85% .
However, the-old-time methods of storing
apples are still worth knowing, not only
because they may be of use to those who
might like to store a few bushels of apples
for home use but also because they demonstrate
a creative relationship with the enviornment
app~.
and a sensitivity to nature that is disappearing from our modern world.
Eor· th~ person versed in the art of applestoring, the first thing to consider is the
hase of the moon. As Theron tells it ,"keeping"
apples are best picked on the "down side"
of the moon (yhen it is waning). During this
phase, any bruises that occur will most likely
dry up and not ruin the apple. However, if
you make hard cider or home brew, you'd best
make it during the "comin' up" of the moon,
since things "work" or ferment better as the
on is waxing.
Next you must choose a good keepingapple variety. Winter Johns and HardThere are apple toys like apple-faced
enings are the favorites in our area .
dolls and apple games like bobbing for
The apples are picked carefully, each
apples. Appl e wood is prized wherever
apple lifted upward to snap off the
a hard, fine- gr a ined wood i s called for.
stem. If it is pulled so that the stem
In colonial days, it was used for marips out of the apple , decay can soon
chinery, particularly cogs, wheels and
ruin it. In colonial days two men, a
shuttles. Even the apple tree bark can
picker and a packer, harvested each tree
be used as a vegetable dye to give vivid
with gloved hands . The picker handed
golds and yellows.
two apples at a time down to the packer
Jonathan Chapman, better known as
who carefully laid the apples in straw
Johnny Appleseed, said, " Nothing gives
on a sled. (A sled juggled and bumped
more yet asks less in r eturn than a tree,
less than a wagon or a wheelbarrow.)
particularly the appl e."
When loaded, the sled was skidded over
Whenever you roam the hills and the
hay to the packing cellar.
hollows of the Appalachians and come upon
The apples were then stored in cellars .
an apple tree, stop and look around . You
In Vermont and Connecticut where there
will probably see others as well and
was ready access to quarries, some apple
perhaps some ancient rose bushes, lilacs
cellars actually had marble shelves to
or other cultivated plants. Nearby, you
keep the fruit cold and dry. Sometimes
may see the ruins of an old cabin, perhaps
they even had windmills that operated
no more than the fallen chimney and a
fans inside them to keep the air moving.
depression i n the ground that marks the
Noah Webster recommended packing apples
cellar where many an apple was stored.
in heat-dried sand . Others used grain
Living in the space age, it is difficult
pr dry straw. Sometimes really special
_
for most of us to understand the richness
apples were hung "by their tails" (stems) ~-~ ~- 7 -~
as well as the hardships of that kind of
from the cellar 's rafters. One favorite ~ -:::;../
l lfe. Other than reading a little history,
down-home Appalachian apple sot rehouse
~'=:--:::;-~ - "
listening to the music and the s tories of
is a hollow chestnut stump. It is cleaned
the old-timers, there aren't many ways for
out, lined with dry leaves, filled with
us to get a flavor of the old times-unless
apples, covered with more dry leaves and
it's through the flavor of old-time apples.
some slabs of bark to shed the rain .
Theron has also piled apples on the ground
and then covered them with a thick layer
Voug Elliott iA c.uJrJr.enti.y Uvi.ng i.n
of "loose blade fodder"-dried corn leaves8UIUt6 ville, N. C. • He iA well.-known
tied in bundles. This insulates the apples
i.n :the mounta..LM a.6 an heJLbai.iA:t a.nd
from severe cold, yet allows plenty of
a. hil.alti..olLA i,tolltj:telle.JL. He -l6 :the
air circulation. "They'll keep all winter,"
au:tholl 06 a. book, Root.6: An UndeJr.Theron says.
gJr.Ound Follag eJL' .s GUlde.
'Not~i" ~i'ffll,S
fet
lt7j
a7K7
m rtlur111
pdtrtt.<,tki~ r.!f
,,
tfw;
~
KA1UAH - page 18
autmn 1983
�WHAT IS THE ELEVATION OF THE PLACE WHERE YOU LIVE
WHAT IS THE GEOLOGICAL UNVERPINNINGS OF YOUR PLACE
?
?
HOW WAS IT FORMEV
?
TRACE THE ROUTE OF WATER FLOW FROM YOUR HOUSE TO THE OCEAN - -TRACE THE PATH OF THE ENERGY THAT POWERS YOUR HOME FROM ITS SOURCE TO YOU --FROM WHICH VIRECTIONS ARE THE SEASONAL PREVAILING WINVS IN YOUR AREA
?
NAME SEVEN COMMON TREES IN YOUR AREA --NAME SEVEN COMMON WILV ANIMALS IN YOUR AREA --NAME SEVEN VARIETIES OF BIRVS COMMON TO YOUR AREA - ARE THEY WINTER OR SUMMER
RESIVENTS ?
VO YOU TALK TO TREES
?
PLANTS
?
LIST FIVE CRITICAL ECOLOGICAL ISSUES IN YOUR AREA ---
· ·~ ~;;%;:.
.
~~~I!~~~
WHAT ANV WHERE IS THE CLOSEST NUCLEAR FACILITY TO YOU
?
WHAT ANV WHERE ARE THE LARGE INVUSTRIES NEAR YOU ?
A.) WHAT ARE THEIR WASTE PROVUCTS ? HOW ARE THEY TREATEV ?
8.) VO THEY SELL WITHIN OR OUTSIVE OUR BIOREGION, OR BOTH ?
WHAT IS THE POLICY OF YOUR LOCAL VUMP ON SALVAGE ANV RECYCLING
?
WHAT IS THE STORY BEHINV THE NAME OF YOUR LIVING PLACE ( cove, CJteek, town, etc. ) ?
We woui.d Uk.e yowr. JLupon.6 e and po.6.6-i.ble .6k.e.tchu t.o the tJAJO qu.ution.6
below. Plea.6 e mail. to: Katuah, P.O.Box 873, Cu.Uotdtee, N.C. 28723.
WHAT IS THE TOTEM CREATURE FOR OUR REGION ? ( That -U, the CJtea.twr.e that
by at; wU.qu.enu.6, at; ,impo!Lta.nce to the na:tu.lta.l ecology, oil at; pJLevalence
but expJLU.6U the. .6p.i.Jr1;t 06 owr. aJLea - example.: Pac-i..6-i.c. Nold.hwut - .6a.lmon I
WHAT IS THE TOTEM PLANT FOR OUR REGION
? (
example.: Ozallk. Mou.nta-i..n6 - oak )
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _l_ _ _I
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
......... ,,,.•
A..
.....
I
-=-
I
~ ~
........
11.....
•
lll&P..."llli
....1p•11•u-1. , :"°'.
--
I
I
I
111111.'llll
...........
~-Wmrpml belt representin3 the fonnation of the Il:oquoian League with design meaning "one heart for all the nations. n
--------------------------------------------
autumn 1983
IOOU'AH _ page 19
/
�_Q:O:oo~®.oQ....oc.Qo_~_.o-~.oo-or~
REmIABITATIOO
••• IT IS TI ME TO RETURN HOME . .. TO LI VE AS ~
NATIVE PEOPLES OF THIS AREA, MAKING OUR LIVING BY SKI LL ANV ~
ATTUNEMENT TO THIS PLACE, AJJIARE ANV SENSITIVE TO ITS
CHANGES, LIVING SO ITS CHANGES REALLY MATTER ..• RATHER THAN
LIVING IN ONE PLACE ANV SUPPORTING OURSELVES BY EXPLOITING
J:l
THE RESOURCES OF SOMEWHERE ELSE, IT IS TIME TO ROOT OUR
~
LIVES HERE ••• TO SHARE THI~ PLACE WITH TffE LIVING BEINGS
1--J
WHO SHARE IT WITH US...
~
SUSTAINABILITY
... THE LEVEL AT WHICH A BIOREGION CAN
CONTINUE TO PROVUCE WITH INTEGRITY ... MEETING OUR FOOV, WATER ANV ENERGY VEMANVS FROM WITHIN OUR OWN AREA BY TECHNIQUES APPROPRIATE TO THAT AREA ... SHAPING OUR VE
MANVS TO THE
ABILITY OF OUR REGION TO PROVIVE .•. "LIVING FOR THE SEVENTH
GENERATION OF OUR CHILVREN'S CHILVREN"...
g
JJ:
tl
Li
D
~
P.
••• "A VOMICILE ••• LJALLS OF HILLS OR MOUNTAINS, A
FLOOR OF A RIVER OR A LAKE, A ROOF OF RAINCLOUVS . .. CLOUVS ~ ·
PART WITH RAIN WHICH FALLS ANV EROVES THE WALLS INTO THE
AQUEOUS FLOOR WHICH EVAPORATES BACK INTO THE CLOUV R OF ...
O
THE WATER CIRCLE/CYCLE FORMS A BIO-SPHERE"...
N
(Pe.tell Wa11..6ha.U.)
l'1
WATEBSHED
0
ECOLOGICAL LA/JI OF THE BIOSPHERE AS
~
EXPRESSEV IN THE FORCE OF THE FOUR ELEMENTS - EARTH, WATER, ~
FIRE, ANV AIR - IN MOTION ••• THE RELATIONSHIPS AMONG THESE
ELEMENTS VEFINEV AS LIFE-FORMS , OF WHICH THE HUMAN SPECIES IS ONLY ONE AMONG MANY .•. GREEN LA/JI: BEAUTIFUL, VISPASSIONATE, INEXORABLE, RUTHLESS, ANV TOTALLY JUST...
~
"GREEN IM"
••• THE
~
••• A COUNCIL MEETING OF THE BIOTIC
~
A GOVERNMENT, BUT ITS NATURAL ALTERNATIVE •••
HERE ALL ARE REPRESENTEV, BE THEY CLOUVS, ROCK, SOIL,
PLANTS , ANIMALS, TREES, OR PEOPLE ... WHERE CONSENSUS IS
SOUGHT ON THE ECOLOGICAL LAJJIS OF THE LANV AS WE REAV THEM
IN THE BIOREGION ANV THE LIFE THAT SURROUNVS US . .. WHERE
THE STEWARVS ANV CARETAVERS OF THE LANV VEVELOP STRATEGIES TO VEFENV AN1J PROTECT THE NATURAL ECOLOGY ANV TO
STRENGTHEN THEIR RELATIONSHIP WITH THE NATURAL WORLV ...
BIOREX;IOOAL
COMMUNITY ... NOT
~
•• •"ALL THE THINGS OF THE WORLV ARE REAL, MATERIAL THINGS. THE CREATION IS A TRUE, MATERIAL PHENOMENON,
ANV THE CREATION MANIFESTS ITSELF THROUGH REALITY •.. THE
SPIRITUAL UNIVERSE, THEN, IS MANIFEST TO HUMANS AS THE
CREATION .. . (64om the Invoca.tion)
Appalachian Physiographic Provinces
MA? ME.D\TAT\ONS -- c.oNT!NUEO FROM PA•E II
LAND/LIFE/FORMS
WE CAN NEVER COMPREHENV HER, BUT WE CAN KN()il HER. VEEP
IN OUR EVERY CELL, VEEP IN THE SOUL O~ OUR BEING, THERE
CAN AJJIAKEN AN AFFINITY FOR THE LANV SO THAT ONE MOVES
INSTINCTIVELY TO HER RHYTHMS, KNOWS WHERE TO FINV VEER
OR GINSENG, KNOWS WHEN IT WILL RAIN, KNOWS HOW TO
SPEAK TO MOUNTAINS.
••• OUR MOTHER GAIA, THE EARTH, SINGS TO US ••.
IN EVERY PLACE THE SONG IS VIFFERENT: BE IT STEEP, FORESTEV
MOUNTAINS: WIVE, FLAT PLAINS; OR PALM TREE BEACHES ... EACH
EXPRESSION IS UNIQUE ANV REQUIRES A UNIQUE RESPONSE IN THE
THIS IS NATIVENESS. THIS CAN COME FROM GENERATIONS OF
ECONOMIC, CULTURAL, ANV SPIRITUAL LIFE OF THOSE HUMANS
LIVING IN THE SAME AREA, OR IT CAN BE CULTIVATEV BY
WHO ARE LISTENING ... THE PLACE, THE SONG, THE RESPONSE:
~ CONSCIOUSNESS ANV AWARENESS OF OUR RELATIONSHIP TO THE
THE BIOREGION...
~ LAN1J ANV HER WAYS ANV HOW WE LIFE OUR VAILY LIVES IN
HER PRESENCE .
BIOREGION
..n... cs-cro.QtrcJLL>®..o~_o:o_p_g_ :o:o::.o..~
a
''THE IDEA OF A BIOREGIONAL IS CULTURAL. IT DEFINES
BOTH A PLACE AND ADAPTIVE IDEAS ABOUT LIVING IN THAT
PLACE," SAYS PETER BERG OF THE PLANET DRUM FOUNDATION.
THE BIOREGION, AS WELL AS BEIN D
G EFINED B THE LAY OF
Y
THE LAND AND THE FORCE-FLOWS OF THE ELEMENTS, IS ALSO
IN THE HEARTS AND MINDS OF ITS PEOPLE.
IN THE FINAL ANALYSIS, THOSE WHO LOOK TO THE MOUNTAINS TO SEE BEAUTY, THOSE WHO LOOK TO THE MOUNTAINS
FOR STRENGTH AND INSPIRATION, THOSE WHO DEFINE THEMSELVES IN THE MOUNTAINS' TERMS ARE ALL RIGHT THERE IN
THE MOUNTAIN BIOREGION.
THE BIOREGION DOES NOT HAVE TO BE ORGANIZED OR PROCLAIMED. IT IS ALREADY THERE, WAITING FOR US TO DISCOVER IT. IT IS A PROCESS BEGUN LONG AGO, WAITING
ONLY FOR US TO PLUNGE INTO ITS STREAM.
,P'
autum 1983
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FOR TH E I DEAS AND INFoRMATioN !.!il.:!;!: 1!¥.!!m;::~:~~
ABOUT BIOREGIONAL CONSCIENCE
ll{17:~;;tt;.1~~u~~tl~!~~:1
•t1•·-r1 Jt--ffll.,... -~.
THAT WE ARE TRYING TO BRING
~·!!ll~·1r~:rr~:.:.:!r:l:.~
FORTH IN KATt1AH TO BE SPREAD
~tfu~~j~;~:filf.4il~!fJ
FAR AND WIDE WITHIN THE REG:Ujtilf~JHl~~riE~:~}).!.j~
ION, WE NEED THE JOURNAL TO
~iif,lt;1m=.-1~~~-ni';tr.~1J
..... (1:•·l- ·-··l~:·.hl ...~
REACH AS WIDE A GROUP OF PEO- ~:.m!u;~~)jmi!;h.!.:::.i.:.;:
~ ... .!~~m1 1 !L!;!a:!:Cct:\r1
PLE AS POSSIBLE.
:!r.:;!;:t!,~:i~1!~!J·~~~rn~!•
: •r···~t"·J··~1~· , ... ,r
SEEKING THE ,;,~-ur.-·:li:ta :7!,Ji;~.!r~~
TO THIS END WE ARE
·
1 ~:~:;n...:....!-:;,·1:1t':;i.;;
SUPPORT OF OUR READERS IN DE- :~..t-~~:ti!:\!~j!~~!llj~?5i
VELOPING A REGIONAL DISTRIBUTION SYSTEM. IF YOU ARE INTER-mi.=ifoil~Bi:"..;~~~::
··· ··:t··-:::?l!~!f~:S.~t·
1
h;!§nil~filH;~ilii'!lli-
ESTED IN HELPING TO DISTRIBUTE
THIS JOURNAL IN YOUR AREA
,
BY
ILLING
PLEASE CONTACT us
F
... ,,..,·,,.,f, ..oi
r..:.F.f!i':!a-r• OUT T HE FORM BELOr.T
'".
· · ....... ·
:w.~~:~m;r.i.lli:!..~tn~:=
~m!;as;.·?~..!<~~:i !;-~hi
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...::,n,-.:--
[r.··f·'·ft~··· 1 c .......n . 1lt
':i;.~.{!i .• 1.~:.::~r~-:!~~
DISTRIBUTORS CONTRACT TO BUY THE JOURN~L AT THE
WHOLESALE PRICE. ALSO FOR EVERY 20 COPIES OF THE
JOURNAL THAT THEY SELL, DISTRIBUTORS GET ONE COPY
FREE TO SELL OR KEEP.
;t;j;
~.
~m·
1.?J
.. ,.
~ii
~-
THIS INCENTIVE IS TO ENCOURAGE DIRECT DISTRIBUTION :irt~
BECAUSE, AS WELL AS BEING A MEDIA COMMUNICATION,
THE JOURNAL IS A "TALKING TOOL" TO HELP INITIATE
DIALOGUE. IN FACT, IT WORKS BEST THAT WAY. THE
~~
STRONGEST CONNECTIONS ARE FACE-TO-FACE AND HEART- :J.::~j
fiiEl
;rn
···TO-HEART. PLAIN WORDS CARRY A STRONG MEANING THEN· ~ll!
PERHAPS YOU FEEL THAT YOU WOULD LIKE TO KNOW MORE
ABOUT KATUAH AND THE BIOREGIONAL IDEA IN GENERAL
so AS TO FEEL MORE COMFORTABLE DIALOGUING AND
FIELDING QUESTIONS FROM YOUR NEIGHBORS OR PEOPLE
ON THE STREET.
THIS IS WHY WE PROPOSE LOCAL MEETING GROUPS. THESE
ARE GROUPS OF PEOPLE IN EACH COUNTY OR CITY WHO
MEET TO TALK ABOUT BIOREGIONAL ISSUES IN GENERAL,
AND TO STUDY THEIR LOCAL HABITAT, IN PARTICULAR.
THEY GATHER STORIES OF UNIQUE PEOPLE AND PLACES IN
THEIR AREA AND SEND THEM TO THE JOURNAL. THEY
COALESCE INTO AN AFFINITY/ACTION GROUP IN CASE OF
AN ENVIRONMENTAL EMERGENCY.
THIS IS WHY THERE ARE ONLY I MEMBERS' AND NO I SUBSCRIBERS. TO KATUAH. THE DISTRIBUTION SYSTEM FOR
THIS JOURNAL WILLHOPEFULLY GROW INTO A PROCESS A DYNAMIC PROCESS OF INTERACTION, OPENING, AND
CHANGING ON ALL SIDES THAT WILL FOSTER A GROWING
AWARENESS OF WHAT Is AT STAKE FOR OUR LIVES AND THE
LAND IN THE DAYS TO COME INTERESTED? WRITE US, AND WE'LL EXPLAIN THE DISTRIBUTION PROCEDURE AND HOOK YOU UP WITH OTHERS
NEAR YOU WHO WANT TO GET INVOLVED. THESE ARE THE
TIMES!
U1.{
#
•
#
~-' about KA""·~Ah and a u.<..uueJtulA. uny
-': ', A~.,.
~
0,
0
loofU.liln a:t and Uv,lng wl:t.h theliind, they might al.-60 C1VVr..IJ
·~
h
nO
a c.ameJul and maybe a. .6maU ta.pe /[.eC'.oltdeJt. At:, t: ey .tlr.a.v~,
they .talk wlth people about Ka..tU.a.h, note thw JtUpon.6U,
and pellha.p-6 take thU!t p.i.c.tu.11.e. Fii.om t/W, ,lnteJr.c.hange
c.omu mateJLial.. 60/[. the next .U.6ue 06 the j 0wr.na.l. -- the
c.a.nclld though.t.6 and 6ee.li.ng.6 06 oUJr. ne-i.ghboJUi .
... ""he -v'LU. ~-v ..... "OV"" """"~-vAo,,,.~ ~ -v.. ""he ,...,"""- '\A.In ""'d agni"', .o\.l'i
.. ,... +e "":-e ~·
""L.elj
tW ""........,,
leaJLn the te.Jr.JIJU.n. They Lind .6topning "'""c.u: .the homu
06 new 61Llend6 wheJte they ft.ind a :;;;i.C'.c:;- whetheJr. 6Ji.om
old mountai.n 6olk.6, new age homuteade.JU,, 0/[. .60cia.l.
o.ct.lv.Uu Uv.ing ,ln a ~ a""'""'"... ent.
,,;-1-..
~...,..,,,
The ,,;,.A .. : .,. ,,.;d,, .. /··~01..,,,.~ IM.Q\...
..J:.,.,OV"" n""' mou~""ni .....:0.1_
~...., ..~ .....
'""-1',-v ....
,IA._... ~
0 An-'· nnd 6 ;.,.d "Ov"• "nd .. idgn• .,.L.A.,. •oon be"ome 0°-'
u.o """
"""'' '- ~ ""'
~ ""-nuA... ""
'-'.
Ao
• : .,. ""h
·
LJLle.nu.o. The Vta.v~M.6 J[.e.tuJul to V;(..6-v\.. ""- em '\.,. :- and aga..ut.
A,111e
o
Pe!Lha.fl6 they w.ill be 91Llded onto l.lttte-U.6ed tJw.il..6 that
they Vi.ample down and wlden by thw c.ontinued pa.6.611gU
.60 that t:hey }[.ema.in M r.ooi.fUng }[.OutU 60/[. othell.6 to 60.U.Ow
on thw own joUJr.netj.6 ,ln lateJr. ti.mu when people w.iU
enjoy r.ooi.ki..ng to the,Vr. du.ti.na.ti.on-6.
V.UVUbu:ti.ng KatUo.h c.ould be a new uny to .6ee OWl land
and heJL. people ClMe up.
AnotheJr. .6C'.ene: A 6am-U.y ta.ku Ka:t&.a.h to the c.ornrnunay
At:,
t hey CJVVr..y t he.
WO'W
0
'V ..
.(..U.
'V..
""""
.(..U..
'V\..
potlllc.k and .6eU up a ta.bte to hell. the joWtniJ..l to the.ilt
61Llend6 and ne,ighboJUi. "HeJte, ta.ke a. look. 16 you like U,
you c.a.n. butj .lt. )U.6t don, t .6p.i.U a.ny o6 tha:t g1U1vy on a,
now. Tell. me what you th..i.nk."
::µ:
~~
Olt p.i.dWte th,U,: The .60und 06 dlr.wn6 WU OVVl the bU.6tte
and din 06 the mountain 6a.ilt OJ[. CJLa6t .6how. People W.6t
ii~.~-_: OVeJt to a b!Li.gh:tty C'.Olo}[.ed booth ba.c.ked by a l<Vtge map 06
-··
the Ka,tilah mountai.n Me.a. TheJte they jo,ln people al.Jr.eady
i~~ da.nc..ing to the ciJw.m6 and c.hanting vo,lc.u, "Ka-tu-ah.
*~ Ka-tu-ah. II The .6ound6 JtLLn up and down thw .6p.i.nu,
~ij~; M.ng,lng deeply, open-ing .6e.cJLet pla.c.u c.lo.6ed by c.en.tWLiu
~ht: o6 c..i.v.illza:t..Um.
Hii±~ Then the mU-6,l('. -6.top.6 and .6omeone .6pe.a.k.6 b1Lle6ly .06 a bio~nm 11.eg,lonal 6u.tUJr.e ,ln KatJ.a.h. Thvr.e Me quu.tion-6 and an.6we!L6,
~·f\'{f. and .6ome n_innau'..nu Me .6old. The mU-6.lc. c.ontinuu. A .6eed
:..~!·-·!,n.
-:i
d -·--' b ·
.,.
_ • 06 ®Wi.enU.6 and c.omrrun.lttJ .U pla.nte u.na eg-<..n-6 "-o g}[.ow.
t~·~
~ij~ AnotheJr. ..<.de.a: Young people U.6ed to peddle nW6papeJL6 on
~&T ,,;-1-,, .6:t.1Leet.6 to make a Li.;t;Ue ex.tlul money. Tho.6e da.tj.6 may
f.!t~ b;bac.k, but now U' .6 .in the wl.de c.oMA..doJUi 06 hhopping
i:E~ rnali.li, a:t the c..i.v,lc. c.enteJt on c.onc.eJtt rr-ight, 0/[. maybe a:t
H~ a c.oun:tluj da.nc.e. 16 you know .60me !fOung 60.t.k.6 tha-t would
j~!?. .Uke to make ~ome money 6oJt them6e1.vu, Ka:tUa.h wil.t .6upply
~~~g the mga.z.i.nu.
!"(•--·
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t1~.•~!>.1.,,~., ,.,,~!~r!E!i:·~ ,· ···;J"····,~l.fl·,,,, .:.:!..!J. ····,···.' ·.!~:;! ......:.,.. !H.~ •• ,.......J ......, ',,· •!ll~•• ·;tr.. , , ......
....
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f"1'1~. ~
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":!.
YES, I AM INTERESTED IN FINqING OUT
.:-cm.~~:
MORE ABOUT DISTRIBUTING KATUAH. I
·•·r··~~,1
UNDERSTAND THAT I CAN RECEIVE COPIES
•:,:-~:~.o.:
OF KATUAH AT THE WHOLESALE PRICE OF
r-Jfu-t~'.
$1.10 AND CAN SELL THEM AT THE RETAIL {~¥~ki~
PRICE OF $1. 50. I ALSO UNDERSTAND THAT .;!:m;i~
NO PAYMENT IS DUE UNTIL THE COPIES ARE r:.u··:t:~
i~~h!~
SOLD •
''-''·~~~:::.
:.r;,m::iii
PHONE--------
~
RETURN TO:
KATUAH
P.O.BOX 873
CULLOWHEE,NC 2 8 7 2 3
KMUAl:I - page 22
autmn 1983
�WMATTO 8JUN<t t
SCHEPULE:
10 - 12:30 - Discussion of bi oregional
concerns, issues, and directions for
future gr owth
12 : 30 - 2:00 - POT-LUCK LUNCH
2:00 - 5:00 - Tradin', pl ayin ', socializin ' , and interest group meetings
-Covered dish and utensils for the
whole family
-Items for trade , barter, sale (plant s,
craft s , produce, canned goods)
-Information to share : issues, topics ,
interesting folks , organization
bioregional happenings
-Hope , good humor, and ideal ism
OCTOBER 29
at DEEP CREEK CAMPGROUND
GREAT SMOKY MTN . NATIONAL PARK
Driving : Go to Bryson City, N.C. and follow signs
to " ~ ep Creek Campgrounds"
EVERYONE WELCOME!
For more information , contact:
paqe 23
�ISSUE
NO . l
AUTUMN
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1983
mmmooomnunoog
I
1n the beginning, we we/le told that t he human
being.6 that IAXli.h.. abou..t on :the Ecvvth have been
g
pMvided with all the thing.6 nec.Ul>aJl.y f,011.. li6e ..E!
We we/le ..i.n.6.tJw.eted to C'.aJl.ll..y a love. f,011.. one.
~
arto.thell, and to l>how a 11..upeet f,011. all the be- g
ing.6 of, thl.6 EaM:h. We aJi.e L>hown that ouJL li6e ~
exi-6.t.6 with the .tll.ee Uf,e, -that oWt we.U-being ~
depe.nd.6 on the wei...t-being of, :the. vegetable.
g
Uf,e, that we. a11.e. the. c1.o.6e. 11.e.f.ativu of, the.
~
6oWt-legged being.6. In OW!. VXJ.lj.6, .6p,i.Jt,(;twi£
~
c.on.6eioU.6nU.6 i.6 the. highut f,oJun of, poUt-i.c6 .
g
OW!..6 i.6 a v.xi.y of, Uf,e. . We. believe. that all
Uving thing.6 aJl.e. .6 pi!U:tua..f. be.ing.6 . S pVU;t-6
~ c.an be exp11.u.6ed M e.nellgy f,Oll.1116 manif,uted
i= ,(.n mat.tell. A biade ofi gJt.aM i.6 an ene11.gy f,011..m
manif,ute.d in rna:ltell - gJt.aM m
atte.11... The
~ .6 pilU:t 0 6 the gll..a.6.6 ,(A that U.n.6 een f,011.c.e whic.h
f3 p11.odl.1.c.u the. .6 peciu ofi gll.M .6 , and it i.6
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~ U.6 :thMu.gh 11..e.af.it.y. Th e. .6 p,i.Jt,(;tual u.nivelll> e.,
o then, i.6 man-i.Lu t t o man M the. Cll..eation, the
~ Cll..eation wh..i..c.h i,u.ppoJtt.6 Li6e. . We believe that
e man i.6 11..ea.l, a paJtt o6 C11..e.at.lo n, and that
g hi.6 du..ty i.6 to .t>u.ppoll.:t Uf,e. in c.onju.netion
with o.t:heJr. be.inQ' •
Oo
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o The 011..igina.f. 1n.6.tJw.etion <Li.Jr.eet that
~
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who
v.xi..f.k abou..t on the Ea.11.:th a.11.e to e.xp11.u.6 a
g11.e.at 11.upe.et, and a6f,e.etion, and a g.Jta.t..ltu.de
toVXJ.Jt.d all the .t>p.i.Jr.i,t.6 wh.i..c.h c.11.e.ate. and .6u.ppoll.:t Uf,e. . We give. a g11..eeting and a tha.nkl>giving to the many .6u.ppoll.:tell.6 of, ou.11.. own Uvu the c.011..n, the. bean.6, :the .t>qu.a..6h, :the wind.6,
.the i,u.n. When people c.eMe :to 11.upe.et and explle.6.6 glLD.t:-i;tude f, 011. :thue many :thing.6, then
all Uf,e. wlU be dutll.oyed, and human Uf,e
on thi.6 pl.a.net will. c.ome to an end.
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we have a g.11.e.at love 6011. ou.11. c.ou.n:tll.y, f,011. ou.11.
e fWtthpl.a.c.e i.6 the/le . The. .6oil i.6 11..ic.h f,11.0m :the.
g bonu of, thou.L>and.6 of, ou.11. g.e.nellation.6. Eac.h 06
~ U.6 VXJ..6 c.11.e.ate.d in :tho.6 e .f.a.nd.6, and i:t AA Ou.IL
~ dl.1.ty to take. c.a11.e. of, them, bec.a.u.L>e 611.om thue.
g
dl.1.ty to take. g.11.e.at c.a.11.e. o6 them, be.c.a.u.L> e. 611.om
I ~~~~e.~~~~~ri11!e.t~~~~~~f~~~~
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.6ac.11.ed pl.ac.e...
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p---
address of the Hau De No Sau Nee
to the western world (presented
to the United Nations, Conference
of Non-governmental Organizations;
Geneva, Switzerland, 1977)
9
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1
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"The land is sacred," the Indians told the European ool onists.
It is only in this generation, un:ier the threat of nmaway uraniml,
runaway in:iustrialization, and the ravages of EX>isol'OlS sprays am
waste-EX>llutants that we are CDning to realize the true depth and
meaning of these words. Now we have rediscovered the web of life,
called "the ecology" am the spirit of the lam, "the envirorment."
cnly now, alm::lst 500 years after Colurbls, refugees fran the invading irdustrial society are anbarking on amther voyage of exploration into the New World. We are looking at the lam with new eyes to
fin:i space, subsistence, am meaning for our lives. Ia:>king arourXi,
we see a different world, alive and p.tlsating, a spiritual being.
OUr planet seen in this way, we call GAI A. a living organism with a
will and an intelligence of her own. She dances to her own time,
and it is to our own peril i f we do oot follow her lead.
'lhe ancient name of this continent we inhabit is TURTLE 1SLANV.
0
"Turtle Island - the old/ new name for the continent based
on many creation myths of the people who have been living
here for rnillenia, and rea.pplied by sane of than to "North
.America" in recent years. Also, ari idea fourxi world-wide,
o f the earth, or the cosnos even, sustained by a great
turtle or serpent-of-eternity.
g
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name: that we may see ourse lves 11Dre accurately on this
continent of watersheds and life-camnmities - plant zones,
piysiograpri.c provinces, culture areas; following nat\Jral
boundaries. 'lhe "U.S.A"and its states and oounties are arbitrary and inaccurate inp::>sitions on what is really here."
- Gary Snyder
A
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speak of the world 11Dre accurately, to speak of the world that is
really here instead of the arbitrary ploitical boun3aries, we speak
of BIOREG!ONS.
TO
0
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autum 1983
�
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 1, Autumn 1983
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1983
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
Apples--Varieties--North Carolina, Western
Apples--Storage
Traditional Farming--United States--Appalachian Region, Southern
Alternative agriculture--Appalachian Region, Southern
Permaculture--Appalachian Region, Southern
Animals--Folklore
Appalachians (People)--History
North Carolina, Western
Blue Ridge Mountains
Appalachian Region, Southern
North Carolina--Periodicals
Description
An account of the resource
The first issue of <em>Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians</em>, published in the fall of 1983, sets the platform of the publication which expresses and overall tone of respect and stewardship of the land and all life in it. Topics in this issue include Katúah and its meaning, the world as bioregions, the migration of Ulster Scots to North Carolina, and sustainable practices. Authors and artists in this issue include: Chuck Marsh, Thomas Rain Crowe, Sam Gray, Curtis Wood, Tyler Blethen, Snow Bear, Doug Elliott, George Ellison, and Marnie Muller.<br /><br />Beginning with Issue 19, Spring 1988, the journal title was shortened to <em>Katúah Journal</em>. The journal 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. <br /><br />
Table Of Contents
A list of subunits of the resource.
Bioregions: "The Trail to Home".......1<br /><br />From Ulster to Carolina : <br />(The Scotch-Irish Migration to N. Carolina).......3<br /><br />Permaculture Practices.......4 <br /><br />Moshka & Lakima : A Story By Snow Bear.......6 <br /><br />Old Time Apples.......8 <br /><br />Poetry : "Wind Rose" by George Ellison.......9 <br /><br />Map Meditations : The Katuah Bioregion.......10 <br /><br />Mountain Guides : A Resource Bibliography.......12<br /><br />Bioregional Congresses.......14<br /><br />Alternatives to Economics.......17 <br /><br />Finding Katuah : A Bioregional Questionnaire.......22 <br /><br />Fall Calendar........21 <br /><br />Creative Distribution.......22<br /><br /><em>Note: This table of contents corresponds to the original document, not the Document Viewer.</em>
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
Bioregional Definitions
Economic Alternatives
European Immigration
Geography
Glossaries
Katúah
Permaculture
Poems
Reading Resources
Stories
Turtle Island
-
https://omeka.library.appstate.edu/files/original/3e9189ae1600329a1984e9503b662c4a.pdf
c04c06016795d378da7269be5fab0d52
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 5, Autumn 1984
Description
An account of the resource
The fifth issue of the <em>Katúah Journal</em> focuses on topics such as Cherokee sculptor John Wilnoty, Celtic heritage, issues surrounding protecting wilderness areas, and ginseng's role in the mountains. Authors and artists in this issue include: Barbara Reimensnyder, Barbara Singer, John Wilnoty (Wilnota), Phillip Daughtry, Thomas Rain Crowe, Robert Zahner, Marnie Muller, Robbie Gordon, and Chuck Marsh. <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
1984
Table Of Contents
A list of subunits of the resource.
<p>Harvest.......1</p>
<p>Cherokee: The Old Days, The Old Ways.......3</p>
<p>The Work of John Wilnoty.......4<br /><br />Our Celtic Heritage.......6</p>
<p>The New Celt by Philip Daughtry.......7</p>
<p>"You Must Go Home Again" by Thomas Rain Crowe.......8</p>
<p>Wilderness, Appalachian Style Part III by Robert Zahner.......10<br /><br />Nuclear Waste in Our Mountains?.......13<br /><br />The Politics of Participation by Marnie Muller.......14<br /><br />Good Medicine "The Healing Darkness".......18<br /><br />Ginseng.......19<br /><br />Mountain Agriculture: a series by Chuck Marsh.......20<br /><br />Bioregionalism: Past, Present, Future by J. Linn Mackey.......22<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
Cherokee Indians--History
Forest management--Appalachian Region, Southern
Appalachians (People)--History
Radioactive waste disposal--Appalachian Region, Southern
American ginseng--Appalachian Region
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 Definitions
Cherokees
European Immigration
Forest History
Forest Issues
Good Medicine
Katúah
Permaculture
Plants and Herbs
Poems
Politics
Radioactive Waste
Stories
Turtle Island
Wilderness
-
https://omeka.library.appstate.edu/files/original/c82c3f935775ed3110b8fcfeafafa78d.pdf
1202447159c8ecfad77b920b89467f66
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
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1983-1993
Format
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journals (periodicals)
Language
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English
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Text
Dublin Core
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Title
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<em>Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians</em>, Issue 6, Winter 1984-1985
Description
An account of the resource
The sixth issue of the <em>Katúah Journal</em> focuses on topics such as Cherokee mythology and art, Winter Solstice ceremonies, log cabin history, mountain farming, and the Horsepasture River. Authors and artists in this issue include: Steve Nelson, Barbara Reimensnyder, Martha Tree, Drew Langsner, Thomas Rain Crowe, William Taylor, Gogisgi/Carroll Arnett, J.Ed Sharpe, B. Oldham, Chuck Marsh, Marilou Awiakta, Chip Smith, and David Liden. <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
1984-1985
Table Of Contents
A list of subunits of the resource.
<p>Wintertide by Steve Nelson.......1</p>
<p>Closer to the Fire by Barbara Reimensnyder.......3</p>
<p>Creation of the Moon and Sun: A Story by David Wheeler.......4</p>
<p>Winter Solstice Earth Ceremony by Amy Hannon.......5 </p>
<p>European Roots of the Appalachian Log Cabin by Drew Langsner.......7</p>
<p>The Mind and Work of William Taylor.......8</p>
<p>The Old Man Said: A Poem by Carroll Arnett.......10</p>
<p>Soaring Bird, Eagle Killer: A Story by J. Ed Sharpe.......11</p>
<p>Mountain Agriculture by Chuck Marsh.......12</p>
<p>The Coming of the Light.......15</p>
<p>Prayer of the Poet Hunter: A Poem by Marilou Awiskta.......15</p>
<p>Turning Our Differences into Strength.......18</p>
<p>Children's Page.......19</p>
<p>Environmentally Speaking (Horsepasture River) by Chip Smith.......20</p>
<p>The Future of the Forests by David Liden.......21<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
Cherokee mythology
Winter festivals--Appalachian Region
Cherokee art
Hill farming--Appalachian Region
Water quality--North Carolina--Horsepasture River
Log cabins--Appalachian Region--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>
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
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Appalachian Region, Southern
Is Part Of
A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included.
<a title="Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians" href="https://omeka.library.appstate.edu/collections/show/79" target="_blank"> Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians </a>
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
PDF
Journals (Periodicals)
Agriculture
Appalachian Mountains
Appalachian Studies
Bioregional Definitions
Cherokees
Children's Page
European Immigration
Fire
Folklore and Ceremony
Forest Issues
Good Medicine
Katúah
Permaculture
Poems
Stories
Turtle Island
Water Quality
Western North Carolina Alliance
-
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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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---
:w..i~~not jU-6t 06 the. human body bu;t 06 ail .U6e. 60~
'°'
011 OWL plana . WouncUi, qu.i..te. m)JuJ.cu1.oU-6ly, he.al-- e.ve.n wouncUi in.6Uc.ted on OWL e.aJl:thplacu .
The. Jt.oo.t 06 'he.al' and 'he.ali:h' ..iA 'whole.'. To he.al
lite.ILD.ll.y me.an.\ '.to ~ke. whole. 011. Liound' . Whole.null comu
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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.
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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
.11.eme.mbe.1ted ~ugh myth. My~a.IU.ng hah o.1.wayli be.e.n a g.i6.t
06 .the. .6peuu--a way 06 1-0e.av-<.ng owr. de.e.p-Lie.a.te.d inn.ell. con.6c.i..oU-6ne.6ll w.i..th that wh.lc.h ..iA 'ou.t.6.i.de.' o 6 OWl.6 e.lvu. Commun.il.y Jr1.;tu..ah, alho encompa.Med the dll.e.amwolli.d .the. n.i.ght
.the. ~null, -0e. 6e.aM. Thue Mpe.c.U 06 :the ~ye.he. we.1te.
~~ -<.ncluded ,(.11 .the ~u ' heali.ng p11.ac.t.<.cu. V11.e.am6 ,
v-<-6.Wn.6 would o6te.n b1Ung he.ali:hy hOlu.t.i..on.\ 60.ll. .i..nd.i..v.icfu.al
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.
He.al.th alho a.t t.Unu 1te.Uu on ' me.d.i..c.ine' and aga.in
'place.' ..iA .impoJt.:tan.t. •'Place' hah p11.0v.i.ded plan.th 'c.l.ay.6 '
~~ 601t .me.cl<;c.in.al 11.emed.i..u 60.11. .thoU-6and6 06
.
P.fo.ce. hah ,(.rthP<)l.ed .60ngli. 06.te.n U-6ed .i.n anc.ie.n.t t.Unu ah
'me.d.i..c.i..ne '•• ._.and hah p11.ov.i.de.d .image.Jty 6011. .the 'li.tu66' 06
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
.'
~ JRV0CllT:10H
RAISE THE FRUIT
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In the. w.i.nte11. 4ol.4.t,lc.e.
.the. 11.e-twi.n.btg 4t.ln
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haltvut
In hunge.11. and dMkne.44
We. dM.nk .the. ccrmiu.na.l Ught
IU.4.ing w.Uh all. e11.e.a.twt.u ,
.into .the. peJt.pe.:tual.
ILU.ing .sun.
IU.4.ing .in ancu.tJta.t dU4t
611.om 6UMO'~ 06 rh.tfl9 and blood.
Out o6 @4 enc e.
TU.4.ing .in poUe.n
we. rum.it each o.the.11..
Ea/I.th 1t.OCL4ed wlU bll..Utg IL4 home.
.in 4e.etf and pollen.
Va.nee. .the. ceJU!mon.<al toge..the.11.
.in .the. e.n.ti.11.e. 4oltvt. Ug ht.
Swt 4 h.in.ing on all. 6Jt,.le.nd4 •
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 !
,.-
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.
We. beg.in by .invo/Ung .tlte. CheJtOlle.e. name. "Ka..W.a.h" 44
.th£. old/nw na.me. 6011. .tlt.i4 a.11.e.a. 06 .the. moun.t.a..i.n4 and
~ 011. it4 j olJllJltl.l. 44 wen.
The. e.d.U.o!WJ.t. p!ti.oll.Ulu 6011. IL4 a.11.e. to coUe.ct and
.i.tt6OJtma.t.ioR and e.rt'-/tgy wh..i.ch pe/lW.n4
4pe.c...i.6~ to tJi.i4 Melt, a.nd to 604.te.Jt .the. 1114W1.e.llU4 tha..t the. la.nd .<A 4 Uv.ing be..ing du eJLv.ing o6 olLlt.
ltJve. and 11.upe.&. L.i.v.ing .in th.i4 ma.nne.11. .<A the. only
'41!/ to e.1141Llt.e. .the. 41L4.to.i.nabil..ltl( 0 ~ OILll. b.io.Sphe.11.e. a.rid
a. la.4.t.ing place. 6011. ot411.4e.lvu .in U4 con.ti.ntWtg evocLi.64 em.i.na.tt
luli.oMJt.y
p'WCe.44.
We. 6e.e.m to ha.ve. 11.eo.c.he.d the. 6uWwm po.int 06 a "do
011. d.ie." 4Uua.t.lon .in .tVUll6 06 a. cont.inue.d quo..li.ty
4ta.nda.Jt.d 06 U6e. on .th.U. pl.a.net. It .i4 .the. a..i.m 06
th.i4 jolLlt.nal. to do it4 pall.t .in the. 11.e.-.inha.b.<..t:a.Uon
a.nd 11.e.-cultwi.a.U..on 06 the. Ka..tW:ih pitav.ince. 06 .the. Sou..the.Jtn Appab.cMP.114 . ThM pitav.irtce. .<A .irtdlc.ttte.d by U4
na.twr.a.t. bou.nd.alt...i.u : .the. Ne.w IU.veJL v.ic.in.i.tv to the.
nolt.th; the. ~oothil..t.4 o~ .the. ple.dmon.t a.11.e.a. to .the.
eJUt; Yona Mowita..ln a.nd .the. Ge.o11.g.i.o. hil..t.4 to .the.
.sou.th; a.nd .the. Te.rtnuHe IU.veJL Va.U~ to the. wut.
Hwnbl!f, 44 4e.l6-a.ppo.inted .ste.cm.Jt.d,t. IAlUh. 4a.J!Jl.e.d .into piwte.c.t and pllU'-11.ve.
it4 4a.J!Jl.e.dnU4, we. a.dvoca..te. a. cuite.11.e.d a.pp!tOa.ch to
.the. con.cE.pt 06 dtte.ntlla.l..i.za:t.ion a.hd hope. to becomE. a.
.suppolt..t 4!f4te.m 6011. .tho4e. a.cce.pt.ing the c.ha.lt.e.nge. 06
~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..
4.tJt.ILc..t,ion1t 44 "nw na..t.i.vu''
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
.tha.t Ka.Oia.h wlU 911.0w to .se.11.ve .the. but .inte.Jtt.4t4 o6
/
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
du-4Jne.d wtde119.it.ound Ji.tone 6.tli.uetwr.e
Jiil.I. 6.il.e.nilq in .the. daJtk.ne.t.6, ~
.i.ng, 116 ..it luu. done. 6011. .thoiu.and6 o 6
60Jt. thM moJUl,(ng '6 6ttMMe..
I.t ha.6 be.en Cillle.d a ".tomb", 6011.
bod.i.u 06 .the de.ad weA.e C411..e.6u.ltq .i.nljllOJl.6,
.te.Me.d .the11.e., bu..t .the me.an.<.ng and pwi. po6 e. o6 .tlilt. dolmen, 116 .thu e. 4.tJr.uc .twi.u a11.e. Cillle.d, Me. 6M mO-'le .than
.tha.t, 116 .the. 6.i.Ju>.t 1t.O..IJ6 o 6 .the JL.i..6.i.ng
6wt 11.eveal.
They b!JIL6t .th.lt.Ough .the open en.tltancema.y and Uhun.i.na.te. .the. .twe.n.ty6oot-h.igh back c.u:tU 06 .the. 6.tone.Une.d pit, whi.c.h .i.6 COVVl.e.d with de.6'4Jrl6 and pe.t.Jt.Oglyph6 to.bo!Lloiu.ty
callve.d by Ji.tone-age 1111160116 .to ce.leblta.te. tlUI. VeJUf moment:, 601t .the. .light
.touchu .them 601t onl..tj a 6e.w hoWl.6 a
!le.all p.'l.e.c.iJ. e.ly a.t .the. time. o6 .the win.tVL 4 oU.t.i.ce..
Wha-t .the. 6ymbol6 mean 6pe.c..i.6.i.Cillly
.i.6 .the C4U.6e. 06 much conje.ctwr.e. and
debate, but .tJW. 6.Ue.nt ceJt.emony, 6011.
whlch .the 6.t4ge &a1.6 4 e.t 4. 000 !fe,a.Jtl,
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
'li-
I
I
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jj'
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KATL<hl>' - •pa[i.<e
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Wint~ L'9&5-8'6.
�111 (j,rcleJ
7owarJ f-/e.a/1n9:
mtwlene m~~ ~ wnttui "''/U.#t of h~ ~
f'r#wtl""J fh17Ct44 /Alfu°Vh- IJ,(.f,IJ#fa;n,lf4 hey f/Xkitn't .
''4W
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r
"Jw,.t a l..lttle. a6.teJr. he.U.o, he. 6a.IJ6 I 've. got
6ome.th.Utg " - -t®Lte.veJr. .U .U, .U hUILtl> Wl.e. 6.ilr.e..
Tlvte.e. thoMa.nd dothvi.6 woJLth 06 tu.a. 6atJ a tu .ion on .the. mtje.li.n 4he.a.th 06 mtJ 6p.i.na.l c.oll.d.. MS
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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A\®Jh._JA\@J) \VJA\@/A\@JA\@:/}.\@11'\@IA\®IA\@11'\@l/\\®IA\@IA\.®IA\®IA\@JA\®IA\®®
,
K.~ 7L
oil-
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8P 1 °J 1a.tW
~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
I
,t
•
..
•
I
•
~age,
>
1\~ll~I
~a-Wr~
I
... ,
'
I
t - •
•
I
'
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
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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
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For more i n fo : call Marn ie Muller (70 4) 252- 916 7
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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
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This resource is part of the <em>Katúah Journal Records </em>collection. For a description of the entire collection, see <a href="https://appstate-speccoll.lyrasistechnology.org/repositories/2/resources/937" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Katúah Journal Records (AC. 870)</a>.
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The images and information in this collection are protected by the Copyright Law of the United States (Title 17, U. S. C.) and are intended only for personal, non-commercial, and educational purposes, provided proper citation is used – i.e., Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians Records, 1980-2013 (AC.870), W. L. Eury Appalachian Collection, Special Collections, Appalachian State University, Boone, NC. Researchers are responsible for securing permissions from the copyright holder for any reproduction, publication, or commercial use of these materials.
Date
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1983-1993
Format
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journals (periodicals)
Language
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English
Type
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Text
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
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<em>Katúah: 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
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English
Type
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Text
Source
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<a href="https://appstate-speccoll.lyrasistechnology.org/repositories/2/resources/937"> AC.870 Katúah Journal records</a>
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<a title="In Copyright – Educational Use Permitted" href="https://rightsstatements.org/page/InC-EDU/1.0/?language=en 8" target="_blank"> In Copyright – Educational Use Permitted </a>
Coverage
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Appalachian Region, Southern
Is Part Of
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<a title="Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians" href="https://omeka.library.appstate.edu/collections/show/79" target="_blank"> Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians </a>
Format
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PDF
Journals (Periodicals)
Acid Deposition
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/c5f08e481824615d18c6f5c6bd8ddef8.pdf
ab8164d46d387f7db9c40c17d5a6eb35
PDF Text
Text
--~
ATUAH
$JOO
ISSUE XIV
WINTER 1986-87
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LLOYD CARL OWLE...........................................................................1
8()()(3ERS AND MUMMERS...............................................................3
ALL SPECIES DAY .............................................................................6
POEM BY WILL ASHE BASON.........................................................9
GOOD MEDICINE..............................................................................10
CABIN FEVER UNIVERSITY.........................................................12
POEMS BY OLIVER LOVEDAY ......................................................13
KEEPING WARM: HOMELESS IN KATUAH ................................ 14
HOMEMADE HOTWATER...............................................................18
A STOVEMAKER'S NARRATIVE. ................................................19
NATURAL WORLD NEWS..............................................................20
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ISSUE XIV
WlNTER 1986-87
ART AND SURVIVAL
Lloyd Carl Owle is a Cherokee Indian, a
descendent of Yonaguska. He is field
director of the Save the Children Federation
program for the southeastern Indian nations,
but he is best known for his powerful and
expressive stone carvings. His works are on
display at the Qualia Craft Co·op and the
"Miz-Chief' store in Cherokee. NC.
Su 'The Work ofUoJd Ctul Owlt~ pp. 16-17
There is an old legend that says there
are two people inside of us. One is young,
and the other is old. These two figures of
the legend represent two different
viewpoints: the young one th:u does not
discriminate, that sees the world as a whole;
and the old one that is linear, that picks the
world apart and focusses on only one thing
at a time.
This is 1rue for us. Kids have to be
trained to think in a linear way. They take
to the other way naturally. When I was a
kid in school, I enjoyed looking at a Little
bug with all its intricacy and detail more
than doing English or math.
Even now I have 600 things in my
mind at any one time. As I'm working on
one carving l have a lot of other things
going on at the same time. They are all
pictured individually in my head, but I can
only put a part of what I see into any one
piece. Even so, when I'm doing something
with maybe ten ants and six people, it gets
very intticate and complex. I have to keep it
all in my mind at the same nme. I have to
see a piece from several different sides at
once. Either a person can see in that way or
they can't.
Size has always been strange to me,
too. 1 play with that. Neutrons, atoms,
planets.....all arc equally important to the
functioning of the universe. So in my
carvings a little ant can be as big as a
person's face, or a snake will be larger than
a person's body.
When I'm working in my shed at two
or three o'clock in the morning, I feel tuned
in to a different time. h is a time or a place
in my mind that is very primitive. My
carvings reflect this. One might say that this
"primitive" art comes from a place of deeper
vision. From this place the activities of life
have more meaning than they do to a person
of the modem culture. This is because these
things arc seen as being connected. Life is
viewed as a whole, rather than "my life",
"your Life", "their Life". This is a special
way to see Lhe world.
This power of mind is a gift that only
some people have. Medicine men have this
power, but they don't "make" it, it's already
within them. In the same way, art is a part
of a person. h's in their DNA, or their
life-soul, however it is called.
It is less an ability to consciously
make something happen than to let
something work through us. Sometimes I
have the feeling l'm just watching my hands
do something on their own. I just let them
go. Often, afcer working late at night, I have
to look at a piece again in the morning and
re-identify with it. It seems sLrange and
foreign, not like something I did myself.
And, in a way, that is true, because a good
angel came through and helped me.
This reminds me of the legend of "the
little people'; The "little people" represent
the different dimensions of the mind. All
the dimensions are here, and sometimes we
slip into another time or another phase of the
mind, and we find ourselves seeing things
in a different way. It feels SLrange to us
only because we have become separated
from ourselves.
The 'little people' are a sense that has
been given us to help us survive and protect
ourselves. Native American people have
always listened to that other voice. It is
something that has helped us to survive.
Call it ESP, call it good judgement, or
intuition-it is a way of thinking, but also a
way of communicating. The basic power of
the native medicine person was the ability to
bring up the thought in someone else's mind
that they were going to ge1 well. The
medicine person would not do this by
putting a thought from the outside into
another person's mind. They helped their
patients communicate with themselves and
the Creator so they would be well. If their
mind was not whole, they lYm sick!
Some people might say, "Why is he
talking about things like that in these
modern times?"
But this deep
communicauon still works for us, because
on thac level of the mind everything is
connected. We are simuhaneously tuned
into different times in the history of this
world, faraway civilizations of long ago,
different people living in differenc places, or
even inco space.
In dreams I've seen bowls with
arrowheads and similar designs on them that
are still buried in the ground. I know
someday they'll be found, not only in this
country, but in South America, and even in
Egypt in places along the Nile. I've seen
visions of a sculpture of a head with an
elongated face that they'll dig out along the
Nile someday. l put that face in a carving I
did. Someday they may try to relate that
carving back to the ancient Egyptian culture,
to the art I do, or even to similar carvings
from South America.
ART AS LANGUAGE
Masks, myth, music, art--anything
that arises from that deep place is a
language. Whether it's "Indians" from
North America, Indians from lndia, or any
other people, we can communicate through
that language. In that deep place we are
already connected.
People have to protect themselves and
the ways they have learned and survived.
The Cherokee tribe protects itself, its
customs, and its beliefs. The Hopi and the
people in India do the same. But art cotcrs
people's minds through the back door.
Something pleasing to the eye relaxes
people. It releases them, whether they are
creating it or looking at it. People of any
race or any culture in the world can see a
piece of art, and, simply because they love
and appreciate the beauty of it, they are
taken to that place where they experience the
same thoughts or feelings the artist bad
when be or she created it. By seeing it or
touching it, they can grasp that thought in a
way no one could explain with words. And
they also grasp that thought in a way that
doesn't threaten their beliefs. Art is a way
to communicate the differences between
people.
I'm not a doom-crier, but we need to
communicate -- blacks, whites, Indians,
Russians -· all of us. Our beliefs may be
- continued on page 25
KATUAH-page 1
Winter 1986-87
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EDITORIAL STAFF THlS ISSUE:
Scott Bird
Sylvia Fox
Judith Hallock
Rob Messick
Mamie Muller
Manha Overlock
Michael Red Fox
Chip Smith
Brad Stanback
Manha Tree
David Wheeler
EDITQRIAL ASSISTANCE:
Tom Hendricks
Mark Kelly
Brooks Michael
Jeff Fobes
Sara Jane Thomas
Julie Gaunt
EDITOR CAL OEACE
THIS ISSUE:
Asheville, NC
PRTNIEQBY:
Sylva furalQ
Publishing Co.
Sylva, NC
WRITE US AT:
Katiiah
Box 873
Cullowhee, NC 28723
TELEPHONE:
(704) 252-9167
COVER: "Primitive Fear" by Lloyd Carl Qwle
The ln1cmal Revenue Service hu declared .K.a.W&h a non-pr
organization under section SOl(c)(3) of lhc Internal Revenue Code.
All con1nbu1ions 10 K.ni!Jh arc deductible from personal income
y
WI.
.K!n1lb wishes 10 thank lhc Salisbury Community Foundation
for lheiT generous cran1 in suppon of our work.
JRV0CllTJ0R
Enter within
The cave ckep dark
:Below mountains
IVhere ln slup
tjona, 9reat black bear
And we to9ether clream
New patterns of existence
New futu res for the world
Green, blue, and white
Lcoki~back
From w£thin infinite ni9ht
Our souls m~fe
:Bri9ht amo~ the crystal stars
KATUAH - page 2
Here in the sowhem-most heartland of the Appalachian
mountains, the oldest mou111ai11 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
na11ual scale and balance ofuniversal sys rems and laws. We
begin by invoking the Cherokee name "Karuali" 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
specijicafly to this area, and to foster the awareness thal the
land is a living being deserving of oiu love and respect.
Living in tlris manner is the only way to ensure the
sustainability of our biosphere and a lasting place for
ourselves in its continuir1g evol11tior1ary process.
We seem to have reached thefulcrtvn poim ofa "do or
die" situation in terms of a cominued quality standard oflife
on this planet. It is the aim of 1/ris journal to drJ its part in the
re-inhabitation and re-cultura1ion of the Ka1Uilh province of
the Southern Appalachians. This province is indicated by its
natural boundaries: the New River vicinity to the north; tlie
foothills oftlie piedmont area to tlie east; Yona Mountain and
the Georgia hills to the south; and tlie Tennessee River Valley
to the west.
Humbly, as self-appointed stewards with sacred
instructions as "new natives" to protect and preserve i1s
sacredness. we advocate a centered approach to tlie cor1cep1
of decentralization and hope to become a support system/or
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 Kmlttlh
wilf grow to serve the best imerests of this region and all its
living, breatlUngfamily members.
- The Editors
Winter 1986-87
�BOOGEAS AND MUMMEAS
While collecting material for his book
Cherokee Dance and Drama, Frank G.
Speck, on January 2, 1935, observed a
performance of the "Booger Dance" during
a social gathering at the house of Will
Pheasant in the Big Cove community on the
Cherokee Indian reservation.
He described the dancers as being "a
company of four to ten or more masked
men, occasionally with a couple of women
companions, representing people from far
away or across the water - Germans,
French, Chinese, Negroes.....Each masked
dancer has a personal name, usually
obscene, which is given upon request to the
host of the house party.... Europeans show
exaggerations of features--bushy eyebrows,
moustaches. chin whiskers, red cheeks, big
noses, ghastly white pallor, and bald heads.
Animal masks are occasionally worn by the
boogers when they desire to represent
themselves as hunters and then they carry
guns, bows, or clubs. Other equipment of
the boogers may be a dead chicken to
represent a wild rurkey, a dead lamb, or the
skull of a cow or a horse. Boogers may
distort their figures by stuffing abdomen,
buttocks, or shins. Some carry an imitation
phallus of gourd neck or wrapped cloth
concealed beneath a quilt of sheet, which
they expose when dashing toward women
and girls. Sometimes the gourd phallus
contains water, which is released, adding to
the burlesque."
The dancers would enter the house
acting at the same time clownishly and
violently--falling on the floor, swinging at
the men, and making rushes at the women
and girls. When questioned by the host of
the party, who acted as master of
KA TUAH - page 3
ceremonies, they said they wanted "Girls!"
and they wanted "to fight", but they were
mollified and introduced themselves with a
song and a dance solo by each member of
the cast.
The host then invited the group to
dance. Customarily, the boogers would do
one of the "winter dances", the Bear Dance
or the Eagle Dance. During the second
round of the dance, women from the
audience joined as the boogers' partners in
the dancing.
The boogers then left as boisterously
as they had come, some dashing into the
crowd of women and clumsily trying to
carry off struggling victims, amid screams
and laughter.
The Mummers
In lrcland, within living memory, it
was the custom for companies of young
men, called ''The Mummers" to go from
house to house during the nights after
ChristmaS wearing costumes and tall masks
of plaited rushes, performing a ritualized
drama of death and rebirth. The play was
ostensibly to raise money for a large
community dance, The Mummers' Ball, that
took place early in January, but the roots of
the custom go back into antiquity.
The mummers were led by a captain
who acted as master of ceremonies and was
responsible for the conduct of his tr0upe in
the kitchens of the community. In recent
years, the company consisted more or less
of eight basic characters: the Captain,
Beelzebub, Prince George (of England),
Oliver Cromwell, Saint Patrick, the Doctor,
Big Head (a musician), and Miss Funny
(the treasurer).
The captain requested entrance into
the house, and if it were granted, he strode
into the kitchen, proclaiming:
"Here comes/, Captain Mummer,
And all me men.
Room, room, gallant boys,
Give us room to rhyme.
We'll show you some diversion
Around these Chrisrmas times."
One after another the members of the
cast came into the lighted kitchen, declaring
in rhyme, and each introducing the next,
until the character of SL Patrick entered:
"Here Comes/, St. Patrick,
And tile reason I came
I'm in search ofthat bully
Prince George is his name.
And if I do find him,
I'll tell you no lie,
I'll hack him to pieces as small as a fly."
Prince George and St. Patrick then
had an altercation that ended when Prince
George drew his rapier (stick) and ran his
opponent through. The Doctor was called
for and entered, bearing
"...a wee bottle here in the waistband ofme
trousers.
Tlzey call it
Hokey pokey halicumpain.
Rise 11p dead man and jighi again."
the Doctor would say as he revived the
patient, and he would then call for Big
Head, who entered and played music for
two dancers to relieve the dramatic tension
of the perfonnance.
Miss Funny would then come in and
ask for money, "All silver and no brass."
At this point the show became more
- continued on next page
Wrnter 1986-87
�- continued
ijfonnal, and members of the household
were enco uraged to request songs and
<Wices, or to step in for a dance with Miss
Funny. At the conclusion of the event it
was customary for the people of the house
to try to guess the identity of the mummers,
and if there were girls in the house bold
enough, they might attempt to maneuver a
position where they could knock the mask
off one of the performers. The mummers
would defend their fellow by pushfog and
tickling, which frequently led to much
squealing and giggling. Then with a
farewell and good wishes the mummers
would depan into the night
In these days when people nightly
invite murder and violence into their homes
via their TV sets, the mummers' play may
seem bland and unconvincing. But it was
not as often seen in those days, and it was a
live performance: "Rhyme and action
render it all humorous, but the words are
clear. There are many young men, armed
with sticks, standing around your kitchen
who would like you to give them some
money," wrote Henry Glassie in his book
on the mumming tradition, All Silver and
No Brass,
Common T hreads
The two performances, boogers and
mummers, from disparate cultures on
opposite sides of the ocean, vary greatly due
to the differences in geography and culture.
Yet, even in such a superficial presentation
of traditions that had evolved through
centuries, certain srrong similarities stand
out.
First, the masks. These were the core
of the presentation. They lent a compelling
sense of presence to the dramas, and
plunged the audience, the familiar
household, and the players into a different
reality. This was a visitation from the spirit
world. T he masks were frightening, but
they could also amaze and delight. The
masked players were from outside the
bounds of convention. They could talk and
act in a way not permi11ed in ordinary
community life. They could speak of things
usually left unspoken. They could talce
deep tensions and transfonn them through
humor, song, and dance.
The second similarity was the time of
year. Both of these plays were done at
night as part of the winter season
celebration. Hayes Lossiah, who danced
the Booger Dance in Big Cove, said, "We'd
do it in the winter. It'd snow two, three
days, mebbe, after the dance."
"It was the performance of the
season," said Peter Flanagan of County
Ferman agh, Ireland of the Christmas
mumming shows.
'
KATUAH-page4
a• -
~-«¥ • I
t:llltec.,... ...._...,-.,.IT
The Booger Dance was sometimes
origins a nd the original purpose o f the
used by medicine men in the healing of the
Booger Dance-, for the Iroquois marked the
sick. These appearances would, of course,
transitidn between the old and new years
happen in any season needed, but: "In its
with <t winter celebration called the "festival
earliest form, the Booger Oilflce, 'strong in
of dreall'.IS~, which is. described by James
Frazer in bis book The Golden Boui:h:
magic', was undoubtedly ti mi ted to win ter
performance. since its association with
'The whole cel'cmonies lasted several
days, or even weeks, and formed a kind of
'ghosts', those of aliens, is believed to
bring killi ng frosts," said Speck.
saturnalia. Men and women, variously
The connectipn with healing shows
disguised. went from wigwnm to wigwam
smashing and throwing down whatever they
the original spiritual nature of the masks,
and should make us look closer to find the
came across. It was a time of general
purpose in the buffoonery of the winter
license; the people were supposed to be out
of their senses, and therefore not to be
Booger Dance.
The character and conduct of the
responsible for what they did ....On one day
mummers and th·e boogers is another
of the festival the ceremony of driving away
evil spiriis from the village took place. Men
similarity. In both performances the casts
showed highly exaggerated characteristics
clothed in the skins of wild beasts, their
of aggressiveness and clownishness. The
faces covered with hideous masks, and their
interplay bet ween the audience and the
hands with the shell of the tortoise, wem
performers contained an clement of the
from hut to hut making frightful noises; in
risque in both of the dramas, but it was
every hut they took the fuel from 1he fire
and scattered the embers and ashes about the
more highly ,exaggerated and exploited by
the boogers.
floor with their hands. The general
It is bold indeed to speculate on the
confession of sins which preceded the
origins of these two events of folk theatre,
festival was probably a preparation for the
when little p recise information is known
public expulsion of evil influences; it was a
about either. But the structure of the
way of stripping the people of their moral
mummers' play strongly reflects the old
burdens, that these might be collected and
cast out"
myth of the god of the new year killing the
god of the old that dates back to earliest
Clearly the booger masks of the
history in Europe and the British Isles. In
Iroquois were aiding in the exorcism of
other areas of Britain the same story is
demons - the pent-up emotions of the winter
enacted by the "wranboys" during the same
and the stale energies of the old year. This
could have been the original purpose of the
days after Christmas, who hunt and kill a
~n. the deity of the year past, in the name
Cherokee masks, as well, but as the
of "Cock Robin", who represents the
Christian missionaries inhibited the old
coming cycle of regrowth.
spiritual forms, and as European oppression
The Doctor of the mummers and his
anacked the Indians and their way of life,
"wee bottle" of "hokey pokey halicumpain"
the whites could have been given the
also provides a death and resurrection theme
principal role of devil-demon scapegoat to
act out and carry away the year's negative
symbolic of the regeneration of the year.
A solstice play would have had an
energies.
important role in an early agricultural
If we can accept, or even consider,
these intuitive conclusions as to the origins
community to teach the young and remind
of the mask dramas, we see that these two
the old that the changes of the year, while
cultures approached the challenges of the
dramatic and threatening, were a normal pan
of the yearly cycle.
winter season in very different ways: one in
The influence of the Christian church
an active, volatile way, and the other by
internalizing the energies of the season by
would have caused the substitution of St.
Patrick as the main protagonist, as it did in
re-enacting them as a story. But although
so many other holidays and rituals. But
very different from each other in their
original form, the two events seem to spring
then, as secular concerns became more
immediate, SL Patrick and St. George could
from a deep, common, spiritual matrix: the
need to maintain the community, first in the
have come to represent the relations between
Ireland and England, which had so much
changing flow of time, then of history.
bearing on the life of the poor Irish farmers.
That required that conventional social
This was of special significance in the
barriers be temporarily broken down to find
a new and basic starting point from which
divided communities of northern Ireland
the people could move together into the new
where those: tensions have continued at a
slow, smoldering bum for centuries.
year. It required exaggeration of the human
capacities for violence and foolishness, that
Wild Dreams
we normally do not wish to acknowledge,
that by laughter, movement, and song
The booger masks, it is currently
people could accept and come to terms with
thought, came to the Cherokee from the
their negativity and weakness.
Iroquoian culture of the northeastern
woodland tribes. This lends a hint as to the
u
Winter 1986-87
�rim
: . Al
look • mask plays ...,
ippc.r IO have bcea ~and iUJICiaiaiola4
pno..-doa1,;anachronisms from a primiliwi
put. Bus lookinJ
one misfit sec a
IOpbisaiCaled psycbolo&IW lbcnpy IO beal
. ,-
.....
*'ai"'
~DNA daal ~beck
the QDIDIDunity and ttansform the inner
demons that take shape in the world duriri1
the dadt winter months. We could extend
Land Roots
gradually faded away.
THE BOOGER D
ANCE
as witnessed by Tom Underwood
Tom Underwood is the proprietor of
the Medicine Man Craft Shop in Cherokee,
a long-time meeting-place for those
interested in Cherokee Indian artwork and
culture. Tom had tire rare privilege,
although he did not realize it at tlte time, of
being one of tlte few white people to see tlte
Booger Dance performed/or healing .....
I grew up in lhe Birdtown section of
the Cherokee Indian reservation. When I
was growing up, my dad had the only
automobile in that pan of the reservation, so
he was often called upon to be ambulance,
laxi, or messenger. I remember one day an
urgent message came for Bird Panridge, a
medicine man and a fine old fellow.
I was a boy, 12 or 13 at lhe time, but
I can remember it was getting dusky dark
when we neared old man Partridge's house.
My dad spoke a few words to a woman at
the door, and she motioned up the hill
behind the house. We walked up a rough
sled road through the woods. It was a pretty
good little climb, and when we got up there
we could hear people talking and chants
a'going on.
We followed a trail to a clearing
40-50 feet in diameter . There was a circle
of people around the perimeter of the
KATUAH - page 5
dwup
time from the deaceadanta o r die
Henry Glassie's statement that. "The
mummers (and the boogus) attacked the
forces that keep people ap:m."
The Cherokees and the subsistence
farmers of lhe Irish countryside shared the
heritage of a land-based small village
culture. Both groups came under the
dominance of the prevailing European
industrial culture. As their societies came
under auack, the conditions of life were
changed, and their cultures were changed as
well. The critical alteration was that, in both
cases, the strong, enduring ties to the land
that had nourished their people for centuries
were forcibly broken by the invading
culture. This was the crucial link. and when
it was severed, the masks, which
represented the spirits of the land, were
doomed.
Oppression became the primary
demon that haunted these peoples, and the
message of the masks changed. They
spoke about the invader. They spoke about
life and death in tenns the people could
understand. They were so strongly rooted
in the lives of the people, it took the
maskings 200 years to die, but once their
lifeline to the land was cut, their vitality
. \'ct.dle~-lhe---.
aiecblc.S
. . . . . . . . tlcllC .
' ia ~ . . . two eul1*'CS meet. n.
qirk ~ die .m1 •nmcn' .p1ay1 bas 4:0lne
acroa IM Waler oa the ·toa1 1trands".o(
And so, unfonunately, the last item
that these two traditions share in common is
that both are, for all practical purposes,
extinguished as meaningful communication
among the people. Although there are
elders alive who have done lhe Booger
Dance and the mummers' show, apparently
the dramas are no longer in use.
So it is relevant to question, "Why
even write about these traditions from two
culrures t hat are so distant from and so
unlike each other? Why pay so much
attention to old traditions that have already
passed away?"
It is tr ue. To study the mask
traditions, the kachjnas of the Hopi Indians,
which have been brought vinually intact
through the time barrier of modern
civilization, offer a much better subject for
study. There the myth stories of the land
and the e lemental beings still live in the
wbite-llci.nftcd immigrantS 10 lhcir anceslOR
in Europe. The booger spirits, too, lie
dormant in the mountain shadows. their
native home - sleeping, waiting to be
aroused once again.
The masks are looking for ne w
fonns, for new meanings, and for a new
generdtion to bring them alive . It would
require only that some of lhe hu mans
reconnect the vital link between themselves
and the land, and the masks and the spirits
they represenl would be resurrecled to chant
and dance and amaze the people in the
community circle once again.
They are old, litera.lly "as old as the
hills'', yet when lhe people call upon the
masks, they will arise and come, bringing
powers of invocation, communication,
liberation, and delight.
Resource Reading:
All Silver and No Brass: Henry Glassie
(Indiana University Press, Bloomington,
IN) 1975
Cherokee Dance and Drama: Frank G.
Speck and Leonard Broom (University of
California Press, Berkeley, CA) 1951
yearly cycle of mask celebrations.
clearing. In the center was a fire, and by the
fire lay a person all wrapped up, obviously
sick, and over him hovered another, the
medicine man. I didn't see it, but I suppose
the medicine man had given the pat.ient some
medicine.
Around this pair at the center were
about 15-18 people with masks of many
differenl kinds. Every one of them was
covered up with blankets or old raggedy
clothes, so no one could tell who they were
at all. They wore all kinds of scarey masks.
One was a hornets' nest - it was an old
hornets' nest with the eyeholes and a
breathing hole cul out. Most of the masks
were faces cut out of wood. The m:tsked
figures were dancing in a circle around the
medicine man and the sick person at the fire.
All of them were chanting. I knew the
medicine man was old Bird Panridge, even
though a mask covered his entire face.
That went on for a little while, until a
few of them noticed us, and then every bit
of it just quit. My daddy stated his business
and said that someone had an emergency.
maybe it was a death in the family, and that
he would carry the person back down.
The people in the circle never moved
another peg until we got out of lhe clearing
and over the hill. As we walked down the
hill, I could hear them taking up the chanl
again.
That was the only time I ever actually
saw the Booger Dance performed in
sincerity like it was done a long time ago. I
was just a boy, but I remember it very
vividly. My interest in it at the time was
very casual, but later l became much more
interested as I began to read and talk with
other people.
Masks were used in other ceremonies
as well, but the booger masks were usually
thought of as scarey masks. I have one at
home I've had for 50 years. My father
acquired it. It is very, very scarey-looking.
~
100-year-otd mask by famed Cherokee mask-maker
Will West Long
Winter 1986-87
�.
~LL SPtC~tS
DAY
by Marnie Muller
Ahead of the pageant, each person is asked to choose a
plant or animal that they feel closest to, that they would like
to represent at the celebration. Then there are mask-making
sessions with a great deal of storytelling going on during this
time about how individual creatures have helped the Earth
and how many indigenous peoples have regarded the Eanh
as the sacred being that it is. There are also stories of the
interdependence of all life.
"For more than 99 percent of human
history, the world was enchanted
and [humans] saw (themselves] as
an integra l part of it. The complete
reversal or this perception in a mere
four hundred years or so has
destroyed the continuity of the
huma n experience and the integrity
of the human psyche. It has ver y
nearly wrecked the planet as well.
The only hope, or so it seems to me,
lies in a reenchantment of the world.
Morris Berman
In his book The Reenchantment of the World, Morris
Berman explores the possibility of reawakening the integral
or participating consciousness of the human psyche through
a rich, sensual, ecological perspective of the world around
us. This visceral, int.ellcctual, full re-understanding of the
human connection with all life allows a deeper, more
ttuthful perception of our "place" in the universe and in the
specific place we inhabit
An exciting educational project which nurtures this
sense of "reenchantment" rooted in an ecological base is
The All Species Day Project. Successful as a school
curriculum activily or as a full-blown community pageant ,
All Species Day has provided both children and adults with
an opportunity to celebrate and become the myriad species of
plants and animal that co-inhabit _the place where we live. A_n
All Species Day event usually Ulcludes a parade, dramanc
presentations, storytelling, displays and a 'Creature
Congress'. The Congress is a rime when each person who
has represented a species can speak for or perform on behalf
of that species. During this time, species may dialogue with
each other in improvisational ways and can make requests or
pleas, for example to humans. The Congress is a rime for all
the species to convene and share a common vision of the
world with each other and to speak to each other about the
region they inhabit They can speak of its beauty and wealth
but they can also speak of problems they as a species may
face. All Species Day may also include a potluck picnic and
music and games as well.
With mask-making, movement and sound as well as
storytelling, drama and dance, the many plants and animals
and lifeforms that inhabit our world are able to "visit" and
share with us their stories and visions. The bear, the hawk.
the rainbow trout.... the cougar, the chickadee, the tunle... the
ginseng, the willow, the chestnuL..all can come join in the
festivities.
KATUAH ·page 6
"All Species Day offers an
educational fest ival in which
ecological r eality is brought to life
through a n organic, animistic
celebration wher e the ancient,
mimetic sense of identifying with
plants and a nimals is playfully
enacted in mask-making, parade,
storytelling and drama."
-Amy Hannon
The mask-making itself is full of fun and
creativity..and ingenuity. Some masks are made out of
"found" materials such as bark... while others are fashioned
from wood or gourd...and others from baling wire and paper
mache..or cloth or clay. Some paint their masks very
"realistically" while others superimpose images onto the face
of the mask of things that remind one of the creature.. .for
example, the trout mask may have a rushing stream pass
across its face. Also, costumes may be made ...and the same
motif may be used ... with clouds painted on the back of the
eagle.
Each person is given the opportunity to become
Winter 1986-87
�familiar with the sounds, movements and feelings of the
lifeform they are to represenL They are encouraged to caw as
a crow or sway as a willow or chauer as a jay. It is suggested
that their dreams at night may be helpful in getting them more
in rune with their choice.
In terms of originally selecting which animal or plant
they want to be, it is always helpful to first go on a field
trip... to a wild place... .leuing everyone "slow down" and
take a deep breath...and listen to the sounds around them.
Lemng them close their eyes and relax ...and settle in to the
place where you are helps to encourage a time for
daydreaming or reverie. It is in this kind of 'slowed down '
time that a choosing of "who to represent/ who to be" can
best happen. After each person selects their totem animal or
plant or lifeform, it is helpful, then, to consider the species'
relationship with the place where you are...the water, the air,
the wind, the sun, the night, the other plants and animals. If
it seems appropriate, everyone may be ready to "practice"
becoming/being their lifeform....through sounds, movement,
and imagination.
Afler masks and costumes are made and time is spent
getting prepared, it is then time for the celebration. It can be a
one-classroom event, a whole school event or an entire city
pageant. It can be splashy with full media coverage...or it
can be more intimate and less fuss.
All Species Day celebrations began in the early l 970's
and are now beginning to crop up in communities around
Turtle Island (Nonh America). The All Species Project,
located in Santa Fe, NM, assists groups and communities in
setting up an AU Species Day in their locale. This non-profit,
educational corporation offers several packets of materials
and information: Packet #I (sample press release, sample
poster, calendar listing, public service announcement, and
mayor's proclamation) cost: $7 ; Packet #2 (suggested
songs, some bibliography, short theater pieces, and
information on sets, materials.and costume making) cost:
$10 ; Packet #3 ( Newsletter/poster of recent events) cost:
$5. The address /telephone:
The AU Species Project
1349 Cerro Gordo
Santa Fe, NM 87501
(505) 982-2768
About All Species Day
"We have to bring back the animals and plants, and we have to do it
through the children. I've been looking for this for a while."
- Roberta Blackgoat
Big Mountain Navajo Elder
• cononucd on next page
KATUAH - page 7
�~LL Sf£C~tS D~Y in Greenville NC
" Self-unfolding, self-educating
for the sheer joy of it ...The
students were inspiring the
teachers with enthusiasm. 'This
is what teaching is au about', a
teacher told me."
-Amy Hannon
All Species Day Coordinator
for Greenville, NC
All Species Day 1985
Greenville, NC
Site: Sadie Sa ulter Elementa ry School,
Green ville,NC
Scale: School-wide
Inspired by the Santa Fe, NM All
Species Project , Amy Hannon, a parent of
three, initiated this effort at her children's
school in Greenville, NC. The event was
endorsed by the school principal, the
Enrichment Program director and the school
librarian as well as others.
It was a day-long, school-wide
celebration. Each student chose 10 be a plant
or animal and studied itS habitat, behavior
and ecological relationships. Several classes
focused on the sea and others on lhe coastal
plain as a habitat. In the hallways and
classrooms, there were 16 "centers" set up
for students to visit
School projects included murals,
models, poems, displays, dioramas, and
puppet show s. There were games,
including tbe Food Web game, as well as
storytelling. Students dressed in their plant
and animal masks and costumes paraded
around the school, singing.
ALL
All Species Day 1986
Greenville, NC
Site: River Park North, G reem ille, NC
Scale: Are:a-wide
Enthused by the wonderful reception
of "All Species" at Sadie Saulter Elcmenmry
School, Amy Hannon felt that it would be
good 10 expand All Sp ecies Day imo a
communiiy-wide event. She contacted the
director of Greenville Parks & Recreation
who liked the idea very much and offered
River Parle North. In addition, she gained
the support of the Pamlico-Tar River
Foundation, and the local chapters of the
Sierra Club and The League of Women
Voters. By applying to the NC Humanities
Commiuee, Amy was able to procure a
SP£Ct£S
D..ty
In a ll the world or living creatures (birds a nd fish,
mammals and insects, algae and fungi, trees & flowers, etc.)
AC'J'LV'L'TY
grant to fund storytelling, mask-making and
drama activities for the Day. She also
contacted a number of school and
community organizations working with
youth groups who might like 10 set up
displays. etc.
The result: A tremendous success! All
S pecies Day 1986 took place on Saturday,
May 3rd. Many species themselves
attended the festival: Carolina Raptor Center
brough t a Golden Eagle, Barn Owl, Great
Homed Owl, Red-tailed Hawk and Kestrel;
the River Park's nature center had a
community of tunics living in the touch tank
including Spotted Turtle, Painted Turtle,
Musk Tunle and Yellowbelly Slider; the NC
Museum of Na tural History's outreach
program brought a variety of snakes; a
display prepared by a representative of the
US Soil Conservation Service included a
dozen perennial grasses. The trees and
wildlife of the Park were also present .
The day was filled with narure walks,
storytelling, displays, and games as well as
the celebration itself. There was a parade
with the sound of drum beat and flute ...and
then an improvisational drama, "The
Parliament of Critters". Amy describes the
day: " Animals and their powers came to
light in stories told to small groups all day
long under the shade of a large Loblolly
Pine. Tunic. Whale, Rabbit, Fox, Crow
and Mouse spoke through the mouths of
s1orytellers ...Each story invited the humans
present to entertain the world from a bird's
eye view, as it were, or perhaps a whale's.
"The next step in the magic of A ll
S p ecies Day was to move from the
enchantment of hearing stories to actively
assuming the perspective of a non-human
species by wearing masks or face and body
paint, representing the creatures. In
preliterate societies it is serious busrncss to
discover the animals in one's soul.
Elaborate ceremonies and endurance-testing
vision quests prepare the way before one
can wear the symbol of Eagle or Bear,
Salmon or Wolf. At All Species Day it was
largely a children's game save for some
mature humans who would not have all
playfulness relegated only to children."
- continued on page 22
1J01UGSK££'J
3) How long has your species lived on Ea rth?
choose one you would like to represent for AU Species Day.
My choice is:_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
(common name)
(scientific name)
4) Describe your acti vities as the seasons cha nge from
spring to s ummer, fa ll and winter. (If your life s pan is
shorter than a year, describe your life cycle.)
belonging to the _ ..pl...,.a... l.........
nt.., a n jm,....a!...__ kingdom.
(circlt ont)
For the rest of this worksheet play the game: " If I were
a
" using the plant or anima l you have chosen,
and tell about yourself.
5) What is your place in the food web? (What food do you
eat? Who eats you?)
6)
Is your species in danger of ex tinction? If so, tell why:
1) Describe yourself. (Your colors, your size, your s pecial
features, your voice, etc.)
2) Where do you live? (Continent, geographical region,
habitat.)
4
KATUAH ·page 8
-
7) When all the other plants a nd anima ls, including the
humans, gather at the Parliament of Critters on All Species
Day to talk to one another, what would you like to say or do?
-
-
; " ' '
..
Winter 1986-87
�catkin, hair, scarab, pear, redwood, ragweed, lousewort, bear,
willow, leek, ear and cheek, euglena, spirolina, talon and beak,
raven, hemlocks, ginseng, volvox, stinkbug, rosebud, black widow,
hollyhocks, bluegill and kiwi vine, chestnut and pinion pine,
dolphin, sunflower, chinquapin and human kind, sagebrush,
endosperm, nectarine, arctic tern, onions, grunions, date palm,
bracken fern, orchid, grouse, sumac, mouse, rhubarb, baobab, lotus,
louse, lupine, lizard, fin and gizzard, phylum, xylem , trout and
wizard, wolf and whale, nettle, quail, earthworm, sycamore,
nutmeg, nightingale, elephant's eye, comfrey, rye, hawk's wing,
trillium, thistle, thigh, gland, goose, bark, spruce, panther, anther,
apple, moose, buzzard, knee, navel, pea, goat's horn, amaranth,
beaver, bumblebee, mushroom, fig, termite, pig, oyster, violet,
pigeon, maple twig, joe pye weed, alder seed, coyote, bluejay,
parsley and river reed, cannabis, petiole, oak tree, blue cheese
mold, salamander, rattlesnake, blackgum and oriole, large-mouth
bass and lemongrass, coral, laurel, sorrel, and sassafrass
Everyone who lives and breathes
With hide or feathers, scales or leaves
We invoke ourcellves in total range
To bring about the needed change
Poem by Will Ashe Bason
KATUAH - page 9
Winter 1986-87
�A Katuah Conversation with a Cherokee
native. Here a re his words about getting in touch
with each other, our world, and our own selves:
It seems to me that human beings probably do the
worst job of communicating of all other species on the
planet. We can't even communicate with one another. We
still have wars and such..... People who are sensitive and
conscious of the environment want to develop some kind of
communication with plants and animals. Since they're so
stuck in the mode of~. they try to communicate with
plants and talk with plants on that level. Our relationship with
the rest of the planet, though, is~ in most cases, and
so the communication has to come through .thnl level, not a
verbal sort of thing.
The human inability to communicate well with other
plants and animals comes from the fact that many of us have
separated ourselves from the very environment that provides
for us, living instead in an artificial, controlled environment.
We ~ in houses instead of using housing just as shelter.
When people are so completely self-oriented and out of touch
with themselves, it's hard to communicate with plants and
animals.
I had an experience when l was about founccn. There
weren't very many roads around where I lived. I was visiting
a friend who lived two mountains over. There was a
well-used trail going over there. Everybody had traveled it
for years and years; it was like a super-highway of trails. I'd
crossed this trail a hundred times - it was real familiar to me.
One time, it was dusk, "long shadow time", and coming
down the trail, all of a sudden I started to feel cold chills. I
was feeling something. The farther l went down the trail, the
more scared I got. All my instincts said to me: "Don't go any
farther, there's something down there that's going to hurt
you, don't go any farther." I ttied to push it a little bit more,
but then I just turned before I panicked. I walked away very
quickly, and it seemed that the farther I got away from that
place, the better I got. By the time I had come down the trail
a couple of hundred yards, I felt just fine. Then my rational
mind came over and said: "You're just imagining all this."
And I turned around and started back. The same thing
happened to me again. So this time I went back and took
another trail and everything was just fine.
Later on that night I came back through the traiL It
was dark, but nothing happened. I never again had that
experience, that fceling ...and I was looking for it when I
came back through. Well, when I got back home. I sat down
and talked to my grandfather about il, and he said that the
plants had been ta!Jdng to me. They had been communicating
with me in a spiritual sort of sense. He said that when we're
KATUAH- page 10
in harmony with things and meeting our responsibiltties as
human beings towards the other things, that the other forms
of life would be in communication with us all the time.
Things are coming to us all the time, but if we are so
self-indulgent within ourselves, focussing only on our own
ideas and thoughts, we block out everything else. He said it
all goes back to the separation ...our original sin is
separation ....and that the more people can hook into the
Great Life, the more control they will have over their lives,
and the more ability they will have, not only to communicate,
but also to listen. That was one of my first experiences
communicating with green things.
Since then, throughout my life, things like that have
happened to me. I have walked in the woods at night and
have stopped and had something reach out and touch me and
I'd look behind me and there would be nothing there. Then
something would touch me again, and I would look around
and sec that it was a limb from a tree. Now, my
rationalization would say that the wind had blown it and
knocked it down .....
Leaming to Communicate
My grandfather said every child should have a dog,
and I said, "Why, just because they're neat? " And he said,
"No, it's a way for a young child to learn to communicate
without talking." Even though dogs can't talk, they'll let
their needs be known, and so children can learn how to
communicate with them without talking.
Winter 1986-87
�When we communicare, it's imponant to pay attention,
to listen and to be conscious of aJl the communicating that is
going on. It takes practice. In this culture, communication
isn't valid unless it's words. Someone may be
communicating a message with all their being, but when
somebody else begins to act upon that communication, the
first person starts dropping back and denying that they said
that. It creates mixed messages. It happens all the time,
because we don't see that wider kind of communication as
reliable, trustworthy, and valid.
Animals like the dog species all communicate with
their noses. Everything's coming in that way. I was
watching a herd of deer the other day. They use their noses
and their eyes...and they use signals. The female of the
species flags, throws her tail up and waves it up and down,
and no one even considers discussing it, you know, like
"what'd you see?". They all leap and are gone, right now.
Signals..... As a boy I used to huni squirrels with a
blow gun. The nice thing about the blow gun is you could
miss a squirrel two or three times and it would not even
know you were shooting at i1. My hair was always long
then, and when they'd catch me or see me, I would make a
chattering noise with my lips and grab my pony tail and
shake it up and down, flipping it. Their response might have
been fear at first when they saw me, but I did the right
signals, and they stopped and we just went back and forth at
one another. hollering and waving our tails. It would get to
the point where I couldn't even shoot the animal because
we'd developed this communication, this relationship--even
if it was a little hostile on his pan because he wanted me to
get the heck out of his territory.
All of our hunting skills are from observation and
imitation of animals who are good hunters. That's where it
all starts. We've probably learned more from animals than
we have from each other. Imitation, though, is not a very
well-accepted thing in the dominanc culture. Everybody
wants to be original, and they won't admit that they admire
or wish to take on certain traits.
The Plant Spirits
It's our custom when we collect plants 10 give thanks
and 10 wait 'til the fourth one before we pick the species
we're looking for. And if it's a medicine plant, we circle it.
Someone can have lived in the mountains all bis life and
never found ginseng, although he has looked for it lots of
times. Then, finally, one day he may find it. My people say
it was hiding from him.
One time I went into the mountains with some people
that I was to show herbs to, and I wasn't doing it in the right
way. I should have stopped and explained how to collect
them. They were interested in ginseng, so I took them to this
particular place, because I had found ginseng there lots of
times - an incredible amount of times. It was like my "sure"
place to find it. r went there, and we walked up and down
that whole mountainside and never found ~plant. Well,
three days later my daughter came to me and said, "I wane to
find some ginseng, I've never found any". So we did all the
right things that we should do, and then we went out to the
same place, and ginseng was everywhere. It was a sunny,
fall day, warm and beautiful, but suddenly there was a wild
crack of thunder. I was still overwhelmed by that when my
daughter said, "Dad, here's a ginseng plan1." And that was
her first one.
I think attitude is important. If you go into the
mountains or the woods or the forest and you have a
"grabs-all" type attitude, where you're there to exploit and
there's no feeling, you may find some stuff, but you ~
will be successful. And if you're using it for medicine, it
may not work for you. You know what I mean.
The problem sometimes is tha1 people close themselves
off. They have c lear, defined lines of what reality is within
!hemselves. Some people are so strong about that, they inflict
u on other people as rules and such. So when 1hey hear
soo:icthing that is outside of their ordinary "reality", ii doesn't
register.
The western philosophy is almost desi~ned to separate
a p~rson from their environment. II is a war against the
environment. Look at what's happened since
industrialization. Western culture has changed the whole face
of the Earth, and it is destroying many of the plants and
animals. With that atcitude, it's hard to communicate with
plants .and animal~. The crux of the whole thing is
separauon. And until someone can come back and get in
couch with what's around them, it will be difficult to have a
right attitude.
The whole thing all comes down to the fact that
there's only one equation and that's ONE. There's only
ONE. And we're all pan of that ONE. We're not separated
from it. People suffer from intellectual separation - they're
not Wl1J.x separated, but they have a strong~ that they're
separated. The artitude of 'individualism' puts one at war
against their environment. So, it starts again. Everything
starts from where you're at. And so to get in touch with the
environment, you've got to get 2lll there, first of all. You've
got to start wilh yourself. And you've got to start serving,
being a servant You've got to help your own species in what
ways you can. All these things will chip away that
'individualism'. Trust, absolute trust, is what's needed.
Y'know, I've extended myself a lot in my life and
been whupped down, crushed, and badly hun. Well, there
was a point when I said, "I'm not going to do that anymore."
~n~ ~o I t?~ that tactic a while. I started becoming more
10d1v1dualisnc, and then I sraned to get more self-oriented. I
just didn't like the way all those things felt; I felt an
emptiness and a loneliness that I had never felt before. Then I
sat down and thought, "Well, it's better to extend myself and
be hurt than to feel this emptiness." So what I'm saying in a
simple way is: first of all, stan extending yourself...not in a
suicidal son of way, though. When your flags go up, when
lhe bushes say "Get the heck out of here" - listen. Or pull
back to a point where you can see that you're safe. and then
act. But it all starts with "self" and trust - and getting out
there and looking at plants and bushes and animals and
seeing how they live their lives. Start looking at your fellow
humans. Stan listening to what they say. And then stan
ruyfilg.
And then, all of a sudden, a plant is going to reach out
and snatch you, stretch out it's limbs and wrap them around
you or something. Or you may go for walk in the woods and
~et lost, and confounded •. when all of a sudden something
Jerks you and drags you nghc ou1. Then you will know that
the Earth has spoken to you. Because the Earth is not dead·
it's alive. Everything is alive.
/
KATUAH - page 11
vi
Winter 1986-87
1lAv 11\A
=>(!i>q •
�(.1l131N
What do horse logging, learning
disabilities, and the Sweetie Pie Bake-off all
have in common?
Answer: They are all classes and
evencs offered as part of Cabin Fever
University. Cabin Fever You is dedicated to
the proposition "that all seasons were not
created equal and that wQJ1llth and light gin
be found in mid-winter". If you are looking
to find that warmth and light....read on!
The idea for Cabin Fever University
came from Dick Kennedy, a resident of the
Cclo Community near Burnsville, NC. Dick
had participated in a similar project in
Detroit, Ml called "Open City". The basic
principle in both organizations is to facilitate
neighbors coming together to share skills,
ideas, laughs, philosophies, food, and
music. All the courses at Cabin Fever U.
are free unless someone's professional
skills and/or materials are needed. One of
the many positive benefits of the program is
that it promotes a feeling of unity within the
community during the winter months when
it is needed most
Seven years ago when Dick Kennedy
staned CFU, he bad to work hard to get 20
or 30 listings for that year. Now that most
people in the Celo area and others
throughout Yancey and Mitchell counties
know about the program, the work is much
easier, and the catalog has 80-90 listings
each year.
To organize the Cabin Fever
curriculum now, volunteers begin in
November to gather the listings from their
KATIJAH- page 12
DNIV€~SICY
neighbors and to print the catalog. Peggy
Tibbits, John Pence, Miki Rolett, Douie
Morgan, and Joanne Hodshon call all the
people who held classes last year and ask
them what they would like to offer this year.
Any new families who have moved into the
area are asked to panicipate also. Each
person making calls is responsible for
scheduling a two week period of time. Once
all the calling has been completed, the
schedule is checked for conflicts. The
catalog is then copied on Dick Kennedy's
copying machine. The entire job of
producing the catalog - including calling,
typing, layout, copying, and collating - can
be completed within a total time of 25
hours. They are sold for $0.75 each. Jn
1985 150 catalogs were distributed.
The classrooms for Cabin Fever You
are the homes of the people who offer each
course. All arrangements are made direclly
with the "faculty person" leading the course.
There are usually limits placed on the
number of panicipants allowed in each
class. Everyone in the Cclo area knows who
are the best cooks in the community, so
places at cooking classes are filled quickly!
The kitchen and dining room at the
Arthur Morgan School are used to host the
Dreams Die Hard Diner every New Year's
Day. Robin Dreyer opens for business at 9
a.m. as a New York City diner complete
with hot coffee, bagels, eggs, and an
occasional bag lady.
Sometimes the classroom is under the
wide-open sky as in the moonlight walk 10
Crabtree Falls offered by Sue and Lyle
Snider. Other events include printing on
clay with Catherine Brown, Contra and
Square Dancing (with live music and
callers), and Bad Food Night with Jan and
Beth Plummer - a potluck gathering
featuring the likes of macaroni and cheese,
frozen pizzas, and Boone's Farm wine.
The course offerings for CFU are a
blend of serious studies and frivolous fun.
If someone cannot find something in the
catalogue that sparks their interest, they
must be seriously devoted to staring at the
fire in the wood stove during the winter.
lf you do not live in Yancey or
Mitchell counties, you can stan a Cabin
Fever University in your own community.
Basically, all it requires is one person to
generate some interest in the project and a
small investment of money 10 produce the
catalog. Almost everyone knows a dozen
people. Call them and find out what their
interests are and what classes or events they
would be willing to offer. Usually people
are more than willing to get involved, and
oftentimes they have been waiting for the
opponunity 10 arrive. You would be
surprised what your friends, people you
have known - or thought you have known for a long time, are into.
If you have any questions about CFU
or are interested in staning a similar project.
call Dick Kennedy at (704) 675-5286.
- by Martha Overloc~
Winter 1986-87
�sequence: fire
sequence: dream
and winging the wind against the fog
sailing across the silence below; into the vision
and the atoms shirt
and the stars re-align
and the fog forms fractions
I the tea still gets cold before I've drunk it.
the heart's song resounds across the winds of time
there is no broken heart
there is love that is given through the shell that refuses
the circle of love is bigger than any wall of hate.
love is the loudest song of all
the path of love is like the mountain trail; stony, steep,
with many ups and downs
and getting from one place to the other that are only
a few steps across the gulf, but are many miles through reality.
and after the traveler has walked his last few steps
and has one last prayer to whisper
one prays that the path has led a full circle
to return from whence he came
to end as he began
a child created through love
"the path of love
is like the mountain trail.. ... "
Poems by Oliver Loveday
•
and should we have a moment to turn and reflect
no thought would be given to the trail blister
or the skinned knee, nor the moments of doubt and confusion.
time spent in the valley would leave memories of the tall trees,
the bright flowers, the laughter of children, and the cool,
clear stream.
and the high points would be moments of solitude and freedom
of far ranging vision and thoughts.
of seeing the eagle in flight
catching the first rays of the morning sun
and feeling the wind from far above.
sure the weary traveler would have a limp
with slumped shoulders
and a wind much too short to let his laughter run its full course
but there would be a twinkle in his eye
and a marked space in between his words that only the fire
of love could possess.
and there would be a strength in his manner of one who has run
his course, remained firm to his choice even when lhe path ran
the razor-sharp ridge top, when it would have been easier to
tum back to the lush son forest floor below.
the traveler has his moment of rest at the end of a race well run.
but when asked to run the next; a longer, harder trail.
the choicer stands to say yes and then is on his way
not even a glance backward. sequence: love. yes.
tonight, the path is well-lit
by a moon so bright it dims the stars
and reflects the clouds of steam
billowing from my nostrils.
As I drop into the cove the air
becomes colder, crisp, clear,
snapping with the intensity of ice;
but the only sound I hear is my own motion.
the cabin fire warms me as I recall
the walk down. Its hissing name breaks
the silence as smells of roast apple enters
my senses like the incense of a meditating Buddha.
I relax and listen to the clock reminding me
of my humanity while my time is measured by the
sound of boiling water for tea.
I breathe and feel my blood rushing through
my body like a million dreams cutting through
the silence. I smile as I lay down my pen
to listen closer. Outside a rabbit pauses
in the frost to curse the dogs and the Full Moon.
KATUAH-page 13
Winler 1986-87
�Keeping Warm in Winter:
Homeless in Katuah
All creatures need shelter ... a
home...a nest. As human creatures become
more and more dependent on the urban
economy, they become removed or
abstracted from the means to preserve their
own survival. No longer is it easy for a
human creature to be "native" with the
earth... to find shelter and gather food to
keep alive. One usually has 10 rent or own
"propeny" which may include a house or
apartment. No longer are community wells
or water sources available... usually one
must "pay" for the use of that very basic
many plant closings around here; others
never had a job to lose, nor the training to
get one. This brief look at this issue is
presented in hopes that a more humane,
viable, life-centered economy can be
developed in this locale and in this region.
The human "systems" here are not working
as well as they could ...families should nor
be financially forced off their
farms ... productive industries need to be
regionally owned so there is less chance of
multination,al-type plant closings... more
cooperative small businesses need 10 be
encouraged to start up in order 10 provide
steady employment. .. and on and on. Our
human "systems" need to be re-designed to
ensure right livelihood for .i!.11 inhabitants of
this area.
People who are homeless do not so
much need our sympathy but more our
empathetic push towards looking at
new/old ways in which our human
community can live comfonably and gently
within this land called Katuah.
At present, the three people
interviewed here are using the facilities of
the Laurentine Shelter in Asheville, NC run
by volunteers and the Asheville-Buncombe
Community Christian Ministries. Other
shelters in this locale include the Western
Carolina Mission, the Salvation Army
Emergency Lodge and a newly forming
independent shelter, the Hospitality House
which hopes to be able to accommodate
people during the day as well as evenings.
At present, uhere are not enough facilities to
meet the needs of the homeless people in
Asheville.
Here is the transcript of the interview:
element One may be fonunate enough to
grow a garden but often it only supplements
one's or one's family's diet. The truth is...
much of survival in the city requires
money-quite a lot of it.
The following is an interview with
three men in their 40's and 50's who grew
up here in the KatU'ah region who have no
shelter of their own to call home--no nest,
nor economic niche. Two of them grew up
in the country. For one of them, the city
expanded into the 'country' thus he became
urbanized by just staying put Another could
not make it by living in the country, so
moved into town. This interview is a
glimpse into their stories and their lives.
There are many more people like
them, men and women, who too are
homeless in this region. Some have lost
their means of livelihood because of the
KATUAH - page 14
K: Are you from around here?
AM: I grew up here in Asheville near Oteen.
K:What about your family; are they around
here?
AM: I have a mother living here now but I
can't live with her because she lives in one
of those low-income housing, so I'm out.
[Katiiah checked with the Housing
Authority and found that only families, the
elderly and the handicapped are eligible to
apply for housing assistance. Single
adults-male or female-are not eligible to
apply for any housing. A family can be any
two or more blood relatives living together,
so under that category AM. could apply for
him and his elderly mother to live together
as a "family"; however, there is a waiting
list. -Ed.J
K: When you were growing up, did you
live in town or out in the country?
JG:
Where we lived was out in the
country, still in Buncombe County, though.
K: Did y'all do any farming?
JG: Oh Lord, yes. All the time. Me and my
grandmother and granddaddy.
K: Was it tobacco fanning?
JG: No, just com and other food.
K: Did you sell any of it or just grow it for
your own use?
JG: Mainly, for our own use. We canned it
and used it ourselves. 'Had to back in them
days.
K: Can you share with us why you feel that
you need to use the Shelter.
JG: I was born and raised here in this
coun~ and you can't find a job nowhere.
K: Have you tried to find if there is any kind
of govemment way for you to get housing?
JG: Well, I don't have no income and you
have to have an income before you can do
anything like tha1. [Recently, the Housing
Authority has begun to accept applications
for people who have no income. However,
unfortunately, JG is not eligible to apply
because he is a single individual. -Edi
K: So, there's no way that the government
will help you to get housing?
JG: No. I know it doesn't sound right.
Winter 1986-87
�K: Have you been offered any possibility
for a work training program?
JG: No. I do know how to do bnckwork,
but I haven't been able to get work doing
that. [There is a training progmm available
in the area under the federal Job Training
Partnership Act, administered by the
county. -Ed.]
K: Did you grow up in this area?
DJ: Yes. In Asheville, right in town.
K: What has been your experience with
getting work-with getting by?
DJ: I haven't done much work at all in my
life, not at all. I've sold clothes. worked in
bars and banks. That's about it. A liule bit
of construction. I'm a diabetic and an
epileptic. I'm trying to get the disability.
That's why I cannot work at all.
K: Do you apply for disability through
Social Services?
DJ: Yes. For what good it does, I really
couldn't tell you.
K: How is it going?
DJ: Well, I was just turned down for the
second time. The first time it took me
basically about six months to even hear
from anybody. And I had at that time, the
first time, only one doctor who said I
should not work. And now this time, I had
three different doctors that told me I should
not work. And it took them about three
months to say 'no', again. So, now I am
going to appeal it, this time. Without the
shelter, really and truly I have no idea of
what I could have done. My parents are
divorced. My dad remarried and he just
recently rnoved back to the area. But he
doesn't even like to say hello. My mother,
she's basically in the same situation as JG's
mother. She's lives in low income
housing ... in Atlanta. My mom, she and I
get along very, very well but I only get to
sec her about once every two months
because of the regulations there about family
visitntion.
DJ: This area is a terrific place in the
summer but it sure gets cold in the winter.
K: What are the hours that you can be at U1e
Sheller?
DJ: Pretty much 6:30 in the evening til 6:30
in the morning.
K: Well, in winter, what do you do?
DJ: Just try basically to know somebody,
where you could go. What I've been doing I
go down to [a fast-food restaurant] and I am
lucky enough that they don't ask me to
leave.
K: It seems your choices are very limited.
DJ: I'm afraid a lot of days are like that.
K: Did you grow up in this area?
JM: Up in Madison County, out in the
country.
K: That's beautiful land up that way.
JM: Yeah, it's nice if you can make it. Some
folks go up as far as Tennessee for work.
K: All the way to Tennessee?
JM: Yeah, most of them do. You know, the
ones who've got steady jobs. Most of them
just farm down there.
K: Are there people who just stay and try to
hang on by the skin of their teeth?
JM: Yeah, a lot of lhem.
K: Do you think they're getting enough
food and keeping warm enoogh?
JM: Well, some of 'em is and some of 'em
ain't I guess. A lot of 'em sleep in old junk
cars.
K: Do any of them h:l\e land themselves?
JM: No, they're just out on the street.
K: Is there any place up that way where
people can spend the night?
JM: No, they don't have a shelter up that
way.
K: Are there any ch urches that informally
offer people an option?
JM: I don't think there are.
K: Are there any seasonal jobs available to
these folks?
JM: Yeah, chere're some jobs lhere in the
summenime. But it's like around here in
the wintertime, there just ain't nothing.
K: Well, what do people do in \~inter?
JM: They just do the best they can. There'rc
not lhat many really there, you know, most
of them are here in Asheville.
K: How many folks do you know that came
from Madison who need a place to live?
JM: Well, there's quite a few. There's a lot
of them around here and there's a lot of
them down in Greenville, SC. They just
stay around that mission down there as long
as they can.
"You set there, you stay
warm. If you've got money
to buy a cup of coffee or
something, why it's alright.
If you don't, they'll run you
off."
K: What's your story? Did you used to do
fanning?
JM: Yeah, we raised tobacco and stuff like
that. My daddy worked for the Southern
Railroad and we done farming and raised
tobacco, com and stuff like that. We sold
the tobacco and the other was garden
vegetables that we used.
K: Did your family stay up in Madison?
JM: No, my brother and sister both moved
to South Carolina.
K: What do you think needs to happen here
in the Asheville area in te rms of this need
for housing?
JM: I'd like to see them open up another
shelter so we can get some more people off
lhe street 'cause if it wasn't for the Shelter
I'd be out on the street myself. The Shelter
is one of the best things that happened here
in Asheville.
K: What do you do in winter? Do you have
to figure out how to keep warm from 6:30
in the morning til the evening, too?
JM: I sure do. Well, through the week it's
not too bad 'cause , you know, things open
up pretty early. Now, on the weekends,
there ain't a thing to do.
K:Hmrnmm.
JM: You know, you can't go in no cafe if
you ain't got no money to buy nothing. If
they don't sell you nothing, they're going to
run you out.
DJ: They don't appreciate that. Even at the
fast food resrourant I was talking about.
JM: Yeah, they don't appreciate it if you go
in there and just set. You set there, you siay
warm. If you've got money to buy a cup of
coffee or something, why it's alright If you
don't, they'll run you off.
K: What do you think wo uld be good,
particularly through the wintertime... would
you appreciate if there was a place, sav, a
church social hall, wher e you could. be
during the day...even have projects to work
on there?
JM: Yeah, that would be a good thing. For
people who ain't got no place to go during
the day.
K: If there were projects the.re, what would
you like to see there?
JM: Mainly, woodworking.
JG: Yeah, that'd be a good lhing.
DJ: Sure would.
K: When you moved to town from
Madison, did you have work for a while?
JM: Yeah, I worked last summer.
K: What were you doing?
JM: I stayed at lhe Mission down there [in
Asheville) last summer and people called in
there and wanted you to come out and
work. I worked just about every day.
K: Now this was at the Mission and people
would call up there?
JM: They'll let you work, you know, about
three days a week. They split it up between
everybody, so everybody gets a little bit of
it. Mainly, that comes through the
employment security office.
K: How long have you been in the county
here?
JM: Well, off and on for the last 15 years.
K: Before the mission was around, where
did you go?
JM: Well, mostly, 'fore they built that
mission I was working down in Greenville,
SC. You know, I had a preuy good job
down there and I could afford an apanment
and everything. But now, l ain't got
nothing.
K: What work were you doing down there?
JM: Construction work. And I've worked in
a lot of mills, too, you know, cotton mills.
K: And then, what happened to the work,
did it dry up?
JM: Yeah, they just started laying people
off, you know. They just kept the ones
who'd been there the longest.
- continued on page 23
photos by Mamie Muller
KATUAH - page 15
\\linter 1986-87
�the w
Lloyd C
Survfrol ofthe Clans
'This speaks of relationships, who our kinfolk are. The
names of the seven clans translate into the seven parts of the
world."
Tsali's Wife
'That woman is the center of the piece. All
to do with the matriarchal society.
'The strength of the woman: how strong she
can endure. She knows the dongers. She kno1
than tlie male's. You ca11't break her down."
Tsali's Wijj
The Family
'The mother, the father, the child. The mother's hand of
control, of survival, is close to the child. They learn from
her. The moving lines tie it all together, but the same themes
move through all my carvings. It's hard to speak of one
carving separate from the rest, because the ideas appear in
one fonn or another in all the different carvings."
�rR of ·
rl Owle
Releasing the Spirit of tlze Stone
'There's something in chat rock, and once I carve it, and you
can see it, the spirit is released."
life is going on around her. It must have something
How she can take care of the children, and how she
1ow to go on. Her system in a lot of ways is stronger
I
Tribute to Those Who Have Died
'The person is just barely there. Just a whisper, or a touch,
or a mention that she is there in the scone."
�-
--
Each line from the solar panel must have a gate valve
installed as close to the tank as possible. A boiler drain valve
must be installed at the bottom of the solar panel. Finally, a
vacuum breaker must be installed at the top of the panel.
by Avrarn Friedman
Did you know lhat more than half lhe electricity
consumed by the average American household is used to heat
water? If people employed alternative methods of heating
wacer, such as solar energy or wood heat, there would be no
rationale for the continued use of nuclear energy which
supplies only about 12% of the nation's elecnicity.
Unfortunately, many solar hot water systems on the
market today are "active" systems which depend on some
external source of energy to operate and which use
electronically operated pumps, sensors, valves, controllers
and elaborate networks of piping which leave homeowners in
awe and bewilderment. It is not uncommon for such
systems to remain inoperative for weeks, months, or forever,
because repair work requires so much technical expertise.
But solar energy systems do not have to be expensive
and complex. If the user is willing to play a small active
role, the system can be totally passive and all the fancy
gadgets can be eliminated. This article will outline how a
virtually maintenance-free system can be constructed
inexpensively.
Basic Principles
This type of system is called a "thermosiphon". It
requires that the bottom of the water storage tank be located
at least 18" above the beat source. In this case there will be
two sources of heat: a wood stove and a solar collector.
This system can provide 100% of a household's hot water
needs.
Since cold water is more dense, it falls to the bottom of
the system, displacing the less dense hot water to the top of
the tank. The cold water continually returns to the bottom
where it gains heat and rises to lhe top, etc. As more heat is
added, the tank "builds down" with hot water.
Components
The major components of the system arc a wood
stove, a hot water collector, a 40 gallon hot water tank. and
copper tubing.
Before any construction begins, a diagram of the
system should be shown ro the local plumbing inspector.
S/he can give you valuable pointers and steer you away from
possible dangers. Most inspectors are glad to help.
The Tank
Any available hor water tank can be adapted to use in
this system. It is best to use a new tank to be assured that it
will last for a good while.
Look for a tank that has at least two outlets on top.
The side outlets are for the thennosiphon loop pipes. The
top outlets will be used for the cold water supply and the pipe
carrying hot water from the tank to the house fixtures (sinks,
showers, etc.). The cold warer supply will enter the top and
travel down a "dip tube" to the bottom of the tank. Most
tanks already have dip tubes installed. Whenever hot water
is demanded in rhe house it will come from t.he top of the
tank where the water is honest, and is replaced by cold water
entering through the dip rube to the bottom of the tank.
Be sure to install a temperauue and pressure relief
valve at the tOp ofthe rank!
"Dielectric unions" at au outlets where copper pipe
meets the galvanized steel tank will protect both tank and
pipes from galvanic corrosion and extend the life of your
system.
Pipe Work
The next step is to insulate all the pipes and the tank.
ll is very important to maximize heat retention. Pipe
insulation and hot water "blankets" arc commercially
available and relatively cheap. The pipes should be secured
with pipe supports, clamps, or fasteners. Make sure there is
no stress on any soldered or threaded joints.
Maintenana!
If all work has been done carefully, the system should
be virtually maintenance-free. When the sun is shining or
when a fire is burning in the stove, hot water will be
produced and available on tap.
The only active role the user must play is 10 drain the
solar collector in the fall, before freezing weather sets in, and
to refill it in the spring, when all danger of freezing has
passed. This can be done by the operation of the two "loop"
valves and the boiler drain at the bottom of the solar
collector.
For more information, write: Friedman & Sun Design, Inc/
PO Box 657
Dillsboro, N.C. 28725
A PASSIVE SOLAB .\NO
~
Wood.stove Hot Water Loop
Virtually any woodstove can be easily adapted into a
thcrmosiphon system. There are several ways to do this, but
probably the easiest way is to coil ten feet of 1/2" copper
tubing and place it inside the firebox near the exhaust of the
stove. This requires that a hole be drilled in the side of the
srovc where the "intake" of the coil wilt enter from the
bottom of the tank. In addition a hole must be drilled in the
stovepipe, about 6" above the stove, where the coil exit.s and
runs up to the top of the tank- This creates a "closed loop"
between stove and tank. Whenever the stove is used. hot
water will be produced. One thing to remember is that the
pipe carrying hot water should run continuously in an
upward direction and about 3" from the rop. Never loop the
hot pipe above the tank and then down through the top of the
HEAT HOT \o/ATEP.
SV5TEM
tank.
Solar Loop
The solar panel is connected to the tank in the identical
fashion as the woodstovc. In this case the panel is the "coil"
and forms a closed loop with the tank.
If you are building your own solar panel, have the
intake at the bottom diagonally positioned from the exit at the
top.
The solar panel pipes may "T' into the corresponding
woodstove pipes instead of attaching directly into the tank.
KATUAH - page 18
~
.
l£='=
_..,..J'''~I " )
/
\
\
I \
I \
Winter 1986-87
I
�Homage to Prometheus:
A Stovebuilder's Narrative
I grew up with fireplaces and Warm
Morning heaters that burned both wood and
coal as a heat source during winter. As
ecological concerns became popular in the
late sixties, I became aware of several
air-tight, fuel-efficient wood stoves that
were available on the market. While they
offered a solution to one problem, they were
often beyond the budget of most of the
community in the area where I grew up.
There was also a cenain romance involved
in the "back to the land" folks who wanted
to be self-sufficient as much as possible,
which included building their own stove or
fireplace. The fireplace is considered the
most inefficient means of heat, but it is
unbeatable in conveying a sense of home to
a space in the winter.
During my college days I picked up
some welding skills in sculpture class while
at the same time learning a good deal about
fire and heating processes in pottery classes.
With lhis background, I was taking a
welding course at the local vocational school
when the need for a woodstove arose. This
offered us the opportunity to make a stove
as a class project By using as a model a
wood stove made domestically based on a
Finnish stove design, I developed a design
for a srove that utilized one-quarcer inch
steel plate, with three of the sides and the
bottom lined with regular fire brick. With a
baffle chamber and an air-tight door, this
stove offered many advantages that appealed
to my ecological attitude. While the welding
process is not the most balanced of
processes in the ecological spectrum, the
use of salvaged steel from scrap yards and
the ability to build a fuel-efficient stove that
could fit into the budget of most folks more
than balances this drawback. As more
people in my community became aware of
my stoves, there was a good deal of interest
in how to improve on the design. I received
a lot of practical advice and was given recent
articles and books about wood stoves.
The design I have developed offers a
versatile stove that can be customized to fit
individual needs while increasing the price
of the stove by little or nothing. By using
the size of a regular fire brick as the basic
unit of size for the box, I am able to offer
two sizes of stoves as a general idea of what
I can do. Recently I was commissioned to
build a large furnace using the same design
with simple modifications.
After building the furnace and several
examples of variations on the basic design, I
became interested in two new designs; one
being a wood cookstove that used the
firebox design and the second being a
modification of the barrel stove using large
pipe instead of an oil drum with its thin
walls. I began the wood cookstove three
years ago as a side project using whatever
steel was available at the end of other
projects. I spent as much time working out
the design on paper as I did actually
building the stove. This stove was recently
completed, but I have not used it enough to
be sure that a person can cook on it, bake in
the oven, and still not be run out of an
overly heated room. There are advantages
and disadvanrages in the design, but the
disadvantages should become minimal with
minor alLerations.
The second project proved much
easier to apply. After locating a section of
pipe two feet in diameter with half-inch wall
thickness, I designed a stove for a friend
who did truck farming for a living. He
needed a stove for his greenhouse that
would hold a fire all night and not bum out
after one season's use. The stove more than
satisfied that need. I used half-inch plate to
weld a "V" to the top of the horizantally laid
pipe to make a baffle chamber. With an
air-tight door, the stove was fuel-efficient
and easily adaptable to the space needing
heat
A current project is to modify my
original stove design to fit in the stone work
Weld a " V" of 112" plate in 2' pipe of
3/8' wall for a r ugged but effective stove
of the house a friend has built. The stone
was laid with vents for forced draft to
generate uniform heat. We are considering
separating the baffle chamber from the
firebox so that the forced draft can go
between them to increase the amount of
BTU's available. Being an anist, I am
interested in building stoves that are
customized to project an individual
statement for the home-owner, while
remaining cost-effective and fuel-efficient
I plan to explore the use of other fuels
and other building materials in the future.
Natural gas, while it is a non-renewable heat
source, is the most practical fuel for urban
residents. It would be easy to design
unique, efficient stoves of salvaged pipe
(cast iron sewer pipe, etc.) for this fuel.
Cast earthenware clay is another material
that has been largely ignored in this country
in recent years. While clay would not
withstand the shock of loading wood into it,
it could offer a lot of versatility in design as
a material for a gas stove.
l have fantasies of someday starting a
non-profit co-operative of stove builders to
meet the needs of the community and the
Earth Mother. While I would be glad to
share my ideas with others, I am also aware
of the need to get patents on som.e of my
original designs so I could continue to use
them without someone else gaining legal
control over them.
With all the advancement of the
innovative ideas, my favorite source of heat
remains the open-pit fire. I have done little
to improve on this design.
-Oliver Loveday
KATUAH - page 19
Winter 1986-87
I ,..1; I ,;'
�NATURAL
WORLD
NEWS
LOW-LEVEL RADIOACITVE
WASTE UPDATE
Natural World News SCNicc
In the present winter session, the srate
legislature will decide whether or not Nonh
Carolina will remain in the Southeast
Low-Level Radioactive Waste Compact. If
North Carolina chooses to remain in the
compact, it wilJ receive all the low-level
waste from eight states in the southeast for
the next 20 years. If the legislature chooses
to withdraw from the compact, the state will
still need a smaller facility to accomodate its
own low-level waste.
State legislators and the governor arc
presently saying that the pros and cons of
both courses of action are being studied.
An underlying assumption of the
radioactive waste debate is that the nuclear
induscry will continue to operate its waste
generating power plants and perhaps even
add new nuclear plants to the grid in the
future. The debate, then, is presented 10 the
public as merely one in which we decide
where and how we bury the waste. The
idea of limiting our waste output is not even
discussed.
In this case, however, the waste
dump issue docs affect the source of a large
pan of the waste, the nuclear power
induscry. If North Carolina and other states
choose to handle only their own low-level
wastes, it creates a powerful incentive to
minimize the waste produced. It would then
become a problem each state must deal with.
It could not be passed on to "the other guy".
Electorates and governments would resist
the construction of new nuclear power
plants, and they might even press to shut
down existing plants.
This prospect terrifies the nuclear
induscry. This is the real issue at stake. in
the Compact debate. Nuclear industry
lobbyists are right now twisting arms in
~eigh, causing legislators to give indirect,
wIShy-washy answers to public inquiries
concerning their positions on Compact
m~mbership: "Right now I tend to favor
withdrawal, but I'm going to wait until all
the facts are in before I commit myself." lf
!cgislat~rs ~ait until the legislative session
is over, 1t will be too late to withdraw from
the Compact.
False issues are being raised to dilute
the public sentiment to withdraw from the
Compact. For instance, the fear is raised
that "if we go it alone we'll have to accept
waste from all other states", because we
won't have the exclusionary clause which
protects Compact members. But in reality,
KATIJAH - page 20
the Low-Level RadioacLive Waste Policy
Act of 1980 directs all states Lo either deal
with their own waste or to join a Regional
Compact. If every state complies with this
federal law by 1993, there will be no one
left to send waste to Nonh Carolina.
It is particularly disturbing that in this
process the will of the people of North
Carolina is being basically ignored. The
public is being "informed" of the situation
and "prepared" for what is to come in the
future. This is an arrogant posture for
public officials to assume on an issue that
the electorate is relatively well-informed
about.
Democratic government is only
democratic if the people realize their power
and exercise it. Legislators will operate
under the illusion that they can ignore the
p~blic until they arc proven wrong. The
V 1etnam War and Watergate are examples of
arrogant lawmakers learning about the
power of the people in this country.
le is obvious that the people of Nonh
~li~a don't want a regi~nal waste dump
rn tbetr state. But to influence their
legislat~rs l? act accordingly, the public will
have to msntuie a popular movement which
will r~nder the nuclear industry's massive
lobbying effon useless. We can not just
assume that the legislature will do what is
best for the public. Legislators must be
made to realize that their political lives
depend on voting to withdraw from the
Compact.
Citizens for a Choice on Nuclear
Waste (CCNW) has been circulating a
p~tition statewide demanding either
withdrawal from the Compact or a binding
referendum on the issue. To dare over 5000
signatures have been collected on the
petition, and it has been supponed by 20
legislative candidates. This is a good start
but it is not nearly enough.
'
All concerned people need to get into
action again, quickly. Circulating this
petition is just one of the iasks that needs to
be done. Legislators need to be called
written, and confronted directly. Publi~
demonscrations need to be organized and
well-attended.
In general, it's rime for us all to wake
up. If you live in Nonh Carolina and have
an opinion about low-level radioactive waste
being shipped into the state, call Governor
Martin at his toll-free number:
1-800-662-7952 and telJ him how you feel.
For copies of the petition, write to:
CCNW
P.O. Box 653
Dillsboro, NC 28725
MRS: BEHJND CLOSED DOORS
from Natural RigltlS Ncwslc11cr
The United States Coun of Appeals is
deliberating on the case of Tennessee v
Herrington. The lawsuit, initiated by th~
State of Tennessee to prevent conscruction
of the "temporary" storage and processing
facility for High Level Nuclear Wastes
known as the MRS (Monitored Retreivablc
Storage) which the Dept. of Energy (DOE)
wants to site in Oak Ridge. Meanwhile,
DOE operatives are quietly at work behind
the scenes to bring the nation's waste to Oak
Ridge irrespective of how the coun rules.
. Last F~bi:unry. District Judge Thomas
Wiseman enJorned DOE from submitting
any Monitored Retreivable Storage proposal
to Congress that was based on the "fatalJy
flawed" Oak Ridge siting study. DOE
appeale~ that injunctio~. arguing among
other things, that the Judicial branch has no
constitutional power to enjoin the Executive
bra~ch . from commu~icaring with the
Lcg1slauve .branch. As 1f to prove the point,
DOE conunues 10 engage in extensive
communications with senators and
con.gressmen in an effon 10 win suppon for
!h~1r ~RS plan, despite the court's
lnJUnCUOn.
Now it appears 1ha1 a bill to create an
MRS is being drafted by Senators Johnson
(D-LA) and McClure (R-ID) for
introduction as soon as the court
proceedings are concluded. Such a bill
wouJd shortcut the Nuclear Waste Policy
Act process and simply authorize DOE 10
construct and operate an MRS at the site of
the abandoned Clinch River Breeder
Reactor. 30,000 spent nuclear fuel
assemblies wouJd be rrucked to that site.
Suppon for the Johnson-McClure bill
is the trade DOE is offering the 34 senators
and 164 representatives in the 17 Second
Round Nuclear Waste Repository States and
the 12 senators and 53 representatives in the
6 states studied for the First Round
Repository. In exchange for help with
MRS, DOE is offering 10 slow First Round
studies and drop the Second Round
selection process entirely. By agreeing to
put an MRS in eastern Tennessee, these
senators and representatives could t:ruLhfully
bra~ about having kept nuclear waste out of
their home state in future re-election
campaigns.
It is not responsible waste
~anagement to put all the nation's
high-level nuclear waste in an open field
beside a waterway that flows through 8
states before washing into the Gulf of
Mexico. It is stupid and dangerous to truck
it~ over interstate highways; once to
Winter 1986-87
�Tennessee, t~e.n later to a final repos11ory.
But the. $4 b1lhon that the plan will cost is
~01 s~bJCCl 10 qramm-Rudman cuts because
It will be paid by electric ratepayers.
Hopefully. _those who worry about the
hazar~s o_f nvers and highways - and their
elc~~nc bills - will be powerful allies in the
pohucal battle ahead.
NUCLEAR FUEL SERVICES
AGAIN
'
from N1lu1"11l Righis Ncwslcucr
In the l 970's, Nuclear Fuel Services
Inc. (NFS) simply walked away from it~
reprocessing plant in West Valley. NY, and
left 10 state and federal agencies the
$400,000,000 task of cleaning up 560,000
gallons of _highly radioactive wastes leaking
from the sue. NFS moved its operations to
Tennessee, where it went into the business
of supplying nuclear fuel for submarines
and selling uranium bullets to the
international anns trade.
Congre.ssperson Edward Markey
(0-MA) studied the NFS plant in Erwin,
TN as part of a survey of nuclear waste
handling in this country. On September 18
1986 Re~. Markey !CP,?"ed to congress 1ha;
the. Erw1~ pla~t 1s a toxic nightmare,
ooi.mg rad1oacuve contamination into work
areas, into lunchrooms and other
non-working areas, and into the soil outside
work buildings. The plant has coniamina1ed
groundwater and off-site railroad land.
Even parts of vending machines had 10 be
disposed as radioactive waste.
In
addition. rndioactive waste buried on the
plant site linancially endangers state and
federal ta_xpaycrs". Markey is conducting a
congressional inquiry into union charges
1ha_t .NFS an~ NRC conspire to keep the
facility operanng despite safety violations.
/
. The Namral Ri2f1ts Newslecrer is
ava1/ablefrom tl~e ~atural Rights Center, a
non-pro/11 public 111terest law project of
USA; P.0.Box; Summertown, TN
';/MBJ·
EPA PIGEON HOLES CIIAMPION
by
Mi!Uc Buch•mlll
Environmentalists and friends of the
Pigeon River won a major legal battle this
month in the continuing srruggle to clean up
the long-polluted river.
U.S. District Judge David Sentelle on
Dec. I. dismissed a lawsuit brought by
Champion International Corporation against
the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.
Sentelle ruled that EPA did not overstep its
autho_ritr _when it. took away North
Caroltn~ s i;ght. to write a _Pem1it governing
C~amp1on s discharge 111to the Pigeon
River. Champion was joined by North
Carolin.a in its .l egal challenge to the EPA
move; rntervemng on behalf of EPA were
the State of Tennessee, the Pigeon River
Acti~n Group (PRAG), and the Legal
Environmental Assistance Foundation
(LEAF)._ ~hampion has 30 days to appeal
the d~1s1on. If the appeal fails, both
Champion and North Carolina will have to
accept the terms of the permit currently
being drafted by the EPA.
. N_orth C~rolina's long history of
penmssive penruts has left the Pigeon River
below Champion's Canton plant
coffee-colored and nearly devoid of life, in
sharp contrast to the pure crout scream !bat
emerges from the mountains of Haywood
County above the plant. Efforts by PRAG
and the State of Tennessee led to the
unprecedented EPA decision to take back
pennitting authority from a state.
Key issues in the struggle are the
color of the river, which is still brown when
it crosses into Tennessee; and the elevated
temperature, which has consistently violated
Nonh Carolina water quality standards.
For more information, contact:
Millie Buchanan
Qean Water Fund
102 Tacoma Circle
Asheville, NC 28801
Pigeon River Action Group
P.O. Box 105
Waynesville, NC 28786
(704) 627-9774
BILLBOARD BLIGHT:
EYE POLLUTION SOLUTION
Natural World News Servu:c
. Recently, the meager efforts made by
legislators to deal with the advancing
onslaught of billboards grai.ing the
mount_ains have been compromised by hard
!obbymg on the part of the billboard
tndustry. To combat this unyielding
invading unsightliness, cicizens groups have
sprung up and are confronting the billboard
industry and its legislators. Carolina
Coalition for Scenic Beauty, with its 350
members in Hendersonville and chapters in
Buncombe County and Charlotte, has a
two-fold plan modeled after the new
Waynesville, NC sign ordinance: I) halt
ereccion of new billboards (there are now
over 17,000 billboards gracing the land in
Western Nonh Carolina and the NC coastal
tourist areas); 2) repeal laws which allow
cutting of crees to put up billboards.
f" ~inc m~mber governmental study
commission which held hearings for eight
months on possible sii.e reduction made no
recomendations to reduce the number
p_rotect i:ees, or meaningfully reduce th~
sii.e of billboards. Co-chairperson Senator
Bo Thomas was the only commission
member who recommended any meaningful
refo~ and he couldn't even get a second
for h1s_p~posals from the nine person study
commission.
One observer wryly commented that
she thought the commission was accing out
of self-interest when it was revealed that 2
members owned billboards, another rents
land for billboards and yet another member
uses billboards for his personal use.
Now is the time to get active! Write
your legislators, call them on the phone,
meet them face to face. Plant trees not
•
billboards!
For more info on ordinance guidelines &
legal advice, call:
Kay McNett
Southern Environmental Law Center
Charlottesville, VA (804) 977-4090.
I
Carolina Coalition for Scenic Beauty
POB 1433. Hendersonville, NC 28793
(704) 693-6776.
KATUAH- page 21
Winter 1986-87
�NATURAL WORLD NEWS - continued
BEARLY MAKING IT
Natural World News Service
Black bears in Katiiah are facing lean
times. In addition to the lack of hard mast
(nuts, acorns) resulting from the drought
this summer, Roger Powell (Dept. of
Zoology, NCSU, Raleigh) of the Pisgah
Bear Project reports that because of
increased hunting pressure bear "mortality is
outstripping reproductivity". Poaching
accounts for 50% of all kills, while legal
kills account for 30-40% of all bear
mortality. In addition, of the 15 bears
studied at the Pisgah Bear Sanctuary (one of
28 bear sanctuaries in NC) only one bear is
a breeding age female!
Previous studies reveal a history of
poor "population management".
Warburton's 1981-82 study of the Pisgah
Bear Sanctuary showed that, of the bears
being monitored, 60% were killed, 75% of
which were females.
~LL SftC~tS
D~~
22
• continued from page
In the drama perfonned at the end of
the day, Mother Nature expresses
"especially dear to me is Earth, the
blue-green gem io space, the watery Living
planet where I take delight in all of you and
in your spectacular diversity." Amy shares
with us, in her own words, the progress of
the play: "Then, one by one the critters
stood and named themselves. They told
each other about troubled times, poisoned
waters, disappearing forests, mass
slaughters. They confessed fear for the
future. They wondered aloud whether their
na.~Ln9
Pa.per n a.chi
rta.s~s
Making a head mask of paper mache
is simple in description, but often hard and
tedious in practice until, through much
repetition, some degree of skill is gained.
The fust step is to make a rough
frame of wire mesh to stiffen and hold the
paper mache as it dries. The frame will be
incorporated into the mask.
The best material for the frame is
regular chicken wire, which is both strong
and flexible. If the holes are too big to
adequately support the paper mache, two
layers may be used.
KATUAH - page 22
The N.C. Wild life Resources
Commission (N CWR C), whose stated
goals are to 1) maintain a stable viable bear
population, and 2) maimain an abundant
surplus for hunters is "not living up to their
mandate as wildlife managers" according to
Paul Gal limore, coordinator of the Bear
Action Network. T he NCWRC has
disregarded Powell's and Warburton's data
and maintains that although the bears are
facing hardships this year , the "natural
mechanics" are such that the bear population
normally fluctuates with mast production.
Fortunately female bears are denning-up
early, and the impact of hunting (legal and
illegal) may be lessened this year.
Recently, Tennessee shortened their
bear season to the last week in December
after research from black bear expert Dr.
Mike Pelton of the University of Tennessee
and the Tennessee Wildlife Commission
revealed that populations could be sustained
if hunting was restricted until after the
denning of females and cubs.
Clearly it is time to bring pressure to
bear on the NCWRC. The data is in and the
bears aren't going co be with us unless WE
take action.
young cousin s, the humans, understood
how all the world was alive, balanced and
beautiful, and how they were devastating
the entire planet.
"Meanwhile people playing 'humans'
sauntered in their midst, oblivious to the
creatures' plaints. Earphones covered their
human ears. The gaze of their human eyes
was fixed on television or computer screens
or o n literal mirrors. Mother Nature
assessed that they were hypnotized and so
wrapped up in thoughts of themselves that
they had forgotten their place in the magic
web of life.
"'But if we call Lhem, all of us in our
different voices, perhaps we can waken
them before it's too late,' suggested Mother
Nature. Three times a cry went up from the
The frame must be big enough to sit
over a person's head; sometimes it helps to
begin to form the wire frame over a log or
ball of adequate size. The frame must also
be formed so that the eye holes and perhaps
the mouth and nose holes will line up in
advantageous places that fit in with the
design of the mask, particularly if it is larger
than lifesize.
The frame needs only to give a rough
outline of the head shape, because the actual
contours can be filled in with layers of paper
mache. Bur the closer the frame is to a true
outline, the better, because building layers
of paper mache is slow work. Bend all wire
ends into the frame so that they do not catch
or poke.
Once the frame is constructed, strips
of newspaper I 1/2 to 2 inches wide need to
be cut. A lot of them! Paper mache work
demands a lot of newspaper, and the more
that is used, the sturdier the mask. The
major limitation is usually time and patience.
Call or write the NCWRC now. Ask
them to reopen Powell's data and restudy
his research. Ask for a moratorium on
killing bears. Ask for a shoner season (NC
has the longes t bear hunting season in the
Southeast). so the females and their cubs
have a chance.
Executive Director
N.C. Wildlife Resources Commission
.
512 N.SalisburySt. ~
IWdgh, NC 27611
.Br"'
To repon poaching or other violations, call:
NC.......... 1-800-662-7137
1-800-922-5431
TN.......... 1-800-262-6704
GA .......... 1-800-241-4113
VA .......... 1-804-257-1000
sc..........
For more infonnation, contact:
Paul Gallimore
Bear Action Network
Route 2, Box 132
Leicester, NC 28748
(704) 683-3662
throat of Lion, Owl and Hawk. Three times
a call from Gull and Frog and Dolphin.
Three times a call from Heron, Snake and
Oak Tree, un til finally the humans
responded. Then all joined ha nds and
danced to the closing music of flute and
drum."
All Species Day-Greenville Coordinalor
Amy Hannon is a pioneer in the creation of
ceremonies and community riwals with an
ecological focus. She holds a PhD in
Philosophy from Boston College where she
taught for seven years. A Winter Solstice
earth ceremony based 011 Amy's a1mual
solstice ceremony for Greenville was
adaptedfor our Kat'iiah region and appeared
inKmfla.b..lssue VI, Wimer84-85. , ,
Then a large bowl of flour-and-water
paste needs to be mixed. This is a legitimate
use for the cheap, white, bleached flour.
Fill the bowl about 1/3 full with flour, and
then dip some of the flour into a cup or
smaller bowl. Add water (enough to make a
thin soupy mixture) and stir until the flour is
thoroughly dissolved. The resulting
mixture may be added to the larger bowl.
Mixing it gradually in this way (always
adding the water to the flour) insures a
smooth mixture with no lumps. Add water
to the mixture unril it is slick and wet and
slides off a strip of the newspaper when you
run your fingers down it leaving only a thin
film adhe.ring.
Construct the mask, first defining the
general shape and then building up around
the ridges and hollows to emphasize the
finer features.
Paper mache should
optimally be added only one layer at a time
- continued on next page
Winter 1986-87
-
•y
.
�W~11rm
KeeJl))fting
Wimiteir:
nmi
ftmi
IHiommeiless
OC11h1illbl
- continued from page 15
K : Do you talk to m any other people who
have the problem of no wor k, too?
JM: Yeah, 1here's a !or of 'em righ1 here in
Asheville. I know a bunch of 'em sleeping
down here in these old junk cars. r don'!
know how they can stand ir, it's cold.
K: Did they try to get in the Shelter?
JM: Well, some of them do. And, you
know, they come in, slay awhile. Then,
1hey migh1 ger drunk and miss a night or
two and somebody else gets their place.
And there they are again.
"Most of the time, I'm not
even hungry. Two meals a
day, I can make it on that."
K: What about food? Do you get supper at
the shelter, then an early breakfast?
JM: Yes.
K: What about a midday meal?
JM: Well, mos1 of the time, I can go down
to the Christian Ministry down there to eat,
if I'm hungry. Most of the time, I'm not
even hungry. Two meals a day, I can make
it on that.
K: Is that midday meal available aU the time?
JM: Just during the week, five days a week.
K: So on Saturday and Sunday what can
you do?
11.a.'-t.n9
Pa.pet" 11.a.ch.e 11.a.s'-s
- continued &om page 22
to allow thorough drying. In any case, do
not build up more than 1/8 inch wi1hout
allowing a drying time, so that no wet spots
(which may rot) are left between the layers.
Usually the inside of the mask. or at least
the top, is lined so that the wearer is not in
direct contact with 1he wire frame of the
mask which will poke or catch the hair.
Lining can be made with layers of paper
KATUAH - page 23
JM: Well, on Sa1urday and Sunday, you can
go down 10 the Mjssion and they'll give you
a sandwich or 1wo.
K: Let's see t here's t he Mission a nd the
Shelter, is there any other place in town?
JG: The Salvation Am1y, bu1 all you can
s1ay is three nights a month.
K : Three night.s a month ?? Have you stayed
over at the Salvation Army?
JM: Oh, yeah.
JG: I can'1 stay a1 1he Salvation Army,
'cause I'm a local and they wilJ no1 keep a
local there, so they 1old me. They won't
even~ a local.
K: Is that true?! [Katuah called the Salvation
Army and was 1old 1ha1 Lhe Lodge was for
"ttansienLs" and LhaL "locals" were
discouraged from using it]
DJ: The only way [ got in was someone
from the Sheller called down there and sfild
to let me stay !here.
JM: If he hadn't called, you wouldn't have
got in.
DJ: That's exactly righ1. fm aware of it.
They Lold me LO get lost the next morning,
LOO.
K : Wha t a r e the requiremen ts for the
Mission?
JM: Their reqllliremems are an ID.
K: What does that mean?
JM: A driver's license or something to
prove where you're from.
K: Can a local person go to the mission?
JG: Oh yeah.
K: Is there a restriction on how many nights
you can stay there?
JM: Well, they go1 a program down there. If
you get on tha1 program, if they let you get
on tha1 program, you can stay 45 days.
JG: But you got to be alcoholic [or have
drug-rela1ed problems -Ed.] to gel on 1ha1
program.
JM: Yeah, you have 10 be alcoholic to get in
the program. If you stay there long enough,
it'll drive you 10 drink.[Jaugh1er] Even if
you never touched a drop of ii in your life.
K: So, really the Shelter is providing a real
service in ter ms of offe ring you an option.
Is th er e a ny r est r iction on the length of
days? I n other words, if you don 't get
'bumped', you can keep coming back?
JM: Yes.
K : Do you have to p resent an y ID at the
Shelter?
JG: They ask who you are and where
you're from, then they sign you in. And
you get a ticket the next morrung to get back
in the next night.
K: And bow many beds are there?
JG: Twenty.
K: I asked about food, what about clothing?
Are ther e clot hes ava ilable to you if you
need them? Coats, etc?
mache laid on the inside of the invened
mask or by glueing in pieces of lhin foam or
fabric. (Too much foam, however, makes a
mask stifling and stuffy.) Sometimes
padding is needed for extra protection for
Lhe nose or chfo or where the mask rests on
the shoulders.
When the shape of the mask looks
right, it can be painted, or colored paper,
fabric, or ornaments may be glued on.
Oil-based enamel paints adhere best to paper
mache and leave the best finish, but la1ex
paints will work also. Water-color pamts
DJ: Basically, clothes are available through
the Christian Ministry.
K: What about basic spending money? You
know, you need som e mon ey to get
by...JM, have you applied for a ny monies
or any kjn d of thing?
JM: No, I haven't. Now and then, I get a
day's work so I've made it so far.
K: So, you 've at least had some pocket
money, ever y once in a while. J G, what' s
your situation, a re you able off and on to get
a day's job?
JG: Well, just now and then.
"I know a bunch of 'em
sleeping down here in these
old junk cars. I don't know
how they can stand it, it's
cold."
K: Is the Shelter able to help you find work?
Does the E mployment Commission call over
to the Shelter a t aU?
JG: I don'1 1hink. I never heard tell of them
calling over there on account of you can't
call over there during the day. It's after 6:30
in the evening and til 6:30 in the morning
that the Shelter is open.[The Shelter does
encourage people to go over to the
employment office, though. -Ed.)
K: Would that be good, t hen, for a shelter to
stay open longer and connect in wit h the
E mpl oyme n t Commisssion a nd other
sources so you'd know about possible jobs?
JG: Why, sure that would be about the best
thing that ever happened. lf we had a "day"
sheller here to do 1hat.
K : Let me ask you a nother q uestion about
t he possibility of a " day" shelter... what if
no salaried jobs came up, but say "volunteer
jobs" came up, for exam ple, to work on a
project or to hel p out in some way.... would
that be something you'd like to know about?
Particularly, during t he winter so you could
keep occupied, indoors.
JG: Well, tha1'd be helping somebody that
needed it. Cause I know a wealthy person
ain't going to ask you to do some1hing like
that.
DJ: Why, it would be great! I sure 1hink it
would. It would be something to do, just
ge1 away from the boredom.
JM: It would keep your mind occupied.
--interviewed by Marnie Muller
will not work.
Now the mask is finished. Put it on.
Identify with it Practice the animal's (or
element's) sounds and motions in front of a
mirror. Forge1 what is inside the mask and
be the creature that is visible in the mirror.
To aid in the 1ransference of identity,
practice doing things and makfog noises
(privately at first) that you would not do in
your own body. Gradually an empathy
between you and the crea1ure of the mask
_,
will arise.
Winter 1986-87
�DRUMMING
LETTERS TO KATUAH
Hello Karuah,
Herc is a poem that I think you might find interesting.
Dark Ridge Creek is in Jackson County and I have walked
quite a bit of ii.
We are not down to the last trout yet. There are lois of
native speckles swimming around; a lot of rainbows, coo. If
you want to use the poem, feel free. Keep up the good
work.
11iE LAST TROUT IN DARK RIDGE CREEK
The only mate I have ever known
the only one of my kind to ever
swim beside me
lies on his side in still water
color fading like an autumn leaf
sinking to the stream's bonom
If I had voice
Dear Friends:
Your Fall, 1986 issue, centering on the subject of
death, is great! I especially appreciate the attention given to
DealinK Creatively with Death,
I would have liked to see more attention given to
memorial societies. There are nearly 200 of these societies
and they are the major consumer advocates in the funeral
industry. You might like to publish the name and address of
the Continental Association of funeral and Memorial
Societies and perhaps the names and addresses of societies in
the Appalachian area and nearby.
I was delighted to see you publish a detailed
description and instructions for building burial boxes. Along
this same line, a few paragraphs on dealing with the legal
details of non-professional bunal might be helpful.
Cordially,
Ernest Morgan
like the bird in the laurel
that can sing her young
from a tangle of twigs
and slow the sun's flight across the sky
I would not be alone
Our spawn
our children
once growing
breathing
wombed in a bed of gravel
lie smothered under a blankec of silc
as if dark grains of nighc
fell from the sky
and buried a thousand sunrises
Truly,
Thad Beach
Waynesville, NC
Many thanks 10 Ernest Morgan/or his contributions tQ
KarUah#J3.
The addresses of the memorial societies serving the
KatUah province are asfo/kJws:
ConJinelllal A.ssodalion cf FUMral aNl Memorial Societies
2()()1 s strtl!l NW (Suitt 530)
Washi11g1011, DC 20009
Dear Katiiah,
I so enjoy reading the Kllllahl I would like to lcnow
more about it, and if there is a group meeting, etc.
I have enclosed a poem about "A Place of Warmth for
Me".
Mtm0rial Society ofGeorgia
191 I Cliff Vality Way NE
A1/an1a. GA 30329
Blw Ridge Memorial Society
Bo;c2601
ArMvillt, NC 2/WJJ
East Tt1111essu Memorial Society
Bo;c 1057
KnoJC11illt, TN 37919
Memorial Society ofROQ/IOke Valley
Bo;clJIX)l
ROQ/IOke, VA 24014
As to the legal details of Mn-professional burial, all
sources say, "Consult Tlie Manual' (Ernest Morgan's book
Dealing C&tivefy wjth [)emh>."
-The Edif()rs
Keep up the journal; the reading is great!
A PLACE OF WARM1H FOR ME
rve searched for my own special place,
Where nature's views reflect in my space.
My very own plot of ground,
Where I could live year 'round.
A cabin, small, I'd build,
With flowers on the window sills,
A happy place, where I could dream,
As I listened quietly to a stream.
Then, when winter's full of cold and snow,
A log fire burning all aglow.
The smoke rising ever so high,
Like an Eagle in the sky.
I've wandered far and near,
My place must be full of cheer,
Where peace and Jove abide,
With God close by my side.
I'd dream, I'd sing, I'd write, I'd paint,
You'd never hear me say "I can't."
l'd look from my mountain top, oh, the beauty I'd see,
I'd be just as warm, happy. and content as I could be.
Sincerely,
Barbara Ann Satterfield
Sylva, NC
KATUAH - page 24
Wimer 1986-87
�INITIATION
Wrapped in buckskin
Anllercrown
the wind was her king
down in the grove
where the trees whisper.....
Shandoah ..... Shandoah
she runs with the deer
to her place of power
she sleeps on the Earth
Her Mother's heartbeat
in her ear
She receives her Mother's smile
knows what to do
She walks with the deer spirit
to the river of life
falling starS in her eyes
Moon bath
Swimming
She is born
She is rising
The river is sweet
She drinks from iis blood
She anoints herself
and lays in the thicket
full and ripe she falls
into the world of 1he undreaming
She forgets 1he meaning
of her Mother's tongue
of her Grandmother's sorrow
She wears the robe of shadow
She mee1s her test
with the promise
that she will live
in all that is
that she will awake from the dream
to be reclaimed
that lhe river flows on through
her body
and will always empty
into her heart
-Colleen Rcdman·Copus
More Thoughts On Death
ToKat6ah:
Dear Friends,
I enjoyed the issue on death, that
cheerful topic. h is something I have been
thinking about a lot recently, in connection
with my praccice of the "Tac Kwon Do"
karate technique.
The ancient warrior codes all pivo1ed
on !hat stark moment when the warrior was
face-to-face with his own death. that was
the focus of all their rules of conduct and
practice. Whether it was among the
Japanese samurai, the Celtic chieftains or
the American Indian braves, the key
principle was to meet death wherever it
came. or, even, 1n the words of Mushashi,
the 15th century Japanese swordsman and
philosopher, " If you have a choice, seek
your death."
The concept of facing one's death
was also central to lhe "spiritual warrior"
practices of, say, Tibetan Buddhism and the
classic case of Carlos Castenada's Don
Juan, the Mexican b.IJUQ.
The practice of the warrior was of
course concerned with facing death for
pragmatic reasons, but to a large extent it
was also because of the depth and meaning
it brought into their lives. Sometimes it
takes an encounter with death to wake a
person up to the richness of life. The
warriors saw themselves as examples to the
people, as well, teaching them to regard
death fearlessly. In those times, war was a
personal thing a point of honor. It was
fought as much for the glory as for the
conquest. The battlefield was a
testing-place, an initiation. Compare that to
the craven coward with his finger over the
nuclear button, who would sacrifice an
incalculable number of lives to achieve his
own ends. For these men, death is no
longer real. Their lives, and all of our lives,
arc diminished as a result.
For the warrior, living in close
proximity to death was the only way to live.
The teaching there is that this is the human
condition. It is the same for all of us, all the
time. Even if we do not make it so
graphically clear by seeking our own death,
"Death is always over your shoulder"( in the
words of Castaneda's Don Juan). We
would benefit greatly from having teachers
brave enough co tell us that 1he way to die is
the way to live.
Thank you for bringing the notion of
"death" into the Katuah Journal. This is a
much-needed discussion, as our culture
purposely avoids the idea of death.
Death is something to be swept under
the rug ...flushed down the toilet ... carried
out like the trash. Out of sight, out of mind.
The main reason for this, I think, is
fear. Our culture is scared to "death" of
death and tries to protect its people from
having to face the experience of death
during the course of their lives. And so we
as individuals are left to meet our own
demise unprepared and unfamiliar with
death. This only promotes confusion and
deepens the fear. and so the spiral of
alienation continues.
The results of this have been
disastrous, both for us as people and for the
planet as a whole. A tremendous amount of
energy and resources go into insulating
ourselves from lhe world and propping up
the fallacy of the individual ego. We would
rather sacrifice whole species of other
creatures than allow and accept our
individual death.
Our neurotic fear of dying has
contributed in a large pan to the
overpopulation of humans, the
degeneration of the planetary environmoot,
and our own alienated lifestyles. Of course,
the fear of death is not totally responsible
for this, but coming to terms with our own
monality and realizing the importance of
death in our lives would go a long way to
helping us change our attitudes and
accepting our place in the world.
Thank you for helping to lead us a
few steps in this direction.
Sincerely,
Ava Livingston
Roanoke, VA
My best,
E. Thornton
Charlotte, NC
>'I'
KATUAH - page 25
Winter 1986-87
U \IU\.., •••,.It
AC'.,.,..,, -
~ATITA ;f
�- continued from page 1
different, bm we need to take counsel
together. This was desirable before, but
since the splitting of the atom, this has
become a necessity.
I carve a lot of pieces with figures that
have what I call "visionary eyes". There is
fear in those eyes. Those eyes have seen
the bomb, and they're afraid. I guess I'm
afraid too. I ge1 the feeling I had as a kid
when I read in the Bible of how "They shall
have sores and splotches, and so many
wounded, and so many of the people will be
killed".
At the time of the Chernobyl accident
they said 1he Chernobyl plant was
unprotected and without containment, but
later it turned out that the reactor rug have all
of that.
There are lots of those
graphite-cooled nuclear plants within range
of us. If four or five of those were to have
a meltdown, it would change the nature of
life on this planet.
When I was in the siitth grade, I was
pro-nuclear. I was really for it. "What a
wondeiful ideal All that energy!" But we
didn't know about nuclear waste.
We're primitive when it comes to
dealing with our nuclear waste. We think
we can bury it in holes in the ground, and
that it won't go into the water, and
everything will be alright. Bm how delicate
the world isl
I guess everything is beautiful to me.
Everything has its own way. When I see
people out there, all together, by the
millions, it's beautiful the way that they
move. But again, speaking face to face is
beautiful because o( the way people are and
the ways they are different.
I try to communicate through my art.
I think of people touching my carvings
when I make them, because I know that the
love and affection I feel are not for me to
keep to myself. Any artist knows his or her
work is for all people. An is to help bring
out a lot of things about the Creator and
how we have come to be humans living as
we do. An is also about how to improve
ourselves to be better people. Through time
artists have helped us more than almost
anyone else to figure out who we are and
what we're doing.
h's a healing feeling to know that
God does give us the power to do all these
things to feel better or 10 appreciate life
more. I ask God to make or to bless each
carving that 1 do and ask that people can
appreciate and take care of ii. Bui it's just
art It should just be appreciated as art, but
I guess every artist does feel some
attachment to their work. I would like
people to understand the thoughts and
feelings I put into my carvings. Otherwise
they might use a carving for a doorstop. Of
course, that's o.k. too, I suppose. It's a
rock-it'll hold a door open.
But a rock is not "jus1 a rock". The
rock I carve is the old pipestone: s1eati1e or
chloride schist. It gets a nice finish when I
sand it, and it turns darker as people handle
it
Rock seems primitive, but one
wonders whether it's back in time or
whether it's in the future. Rock itself is
alive. Rock has been ~where and seen
~thing. Rock has traveled the tracks of
the stars. It has traveled through all of time.
Each time the Earth has gone 1hrough
another cycle, the rock has become more
condensed. There is an incredible amount
of history and eitperience condensed in each
chunk of rock.
I search out my own pipestone to
carve. I see things in the rocks: arms, legs,
faces, animals, spirits - all the things of the
universe. Sometimes where granite and
quartz come together r see designs.
When I carve, often I will leave some
of the rock in its natural state. Then, along
with all the other creatures I represent, the
spirit of the stone is in the carving, too.
PASSING IT ON
people and had no way to eitpress that. So
they got upset about it and went to war with
the world.
Maybe we could have at least a small
effect on the problems of the future--the
neglect and the abuse.
Maybe by
communicating or working with some an,
people could be more happy, more creative,
and perhaps they would be less abusive.
It's o.k. to use something, whether
it's land or a creative gift, as long as you
give something back. That's why l like to
show carving to a lot of kids: to give
something back.
Sometimes on Saturday morning I
like to have kids and their parents who are
really intcreSted come over here, and I show
them how to do some of the carving. Kids
are smart, y'know. Often I.bey know more
than adults, because their view of the world
has not been broken and fragmented. There
is as much or more in their minds than in an
adult's, bul they don't have the mentnl tools
to explain it. There are adults like that, too.
A lot of people in prison have seen the
world in a different way from the rest of the
Interview by Martha Tree, David Wheeler,
and Michael Red Fox
Joe Roberts
258· 1038
734 Town Mountain Rd
FRIEDMAN &
8
Asheville, NC 28805
~
DESIGN, INC.
-
ENERGY SYSTEMS
THAT PAY FOR THEMSELVF.S
AVRAM FRIEDMAN
OESlGH~TECHNICIAN
KATUAH - page 26
garmiN Water System
.........
Ul. IRAVIOl.U PURIFICAllOtl AHO FILIERIHG SYSIEMS
SOlAA PAOOUCIS • WAIER ANALYSIS
HWY. 107
PO BOX657
DIUS80RO. NC 28125
RANDALL C LANIER
704 293 51112
AT. 68 BOX 125
CULLOWHEE, NC 28723
Winter 1986-87
�A CHILDREN'S PAGE
WHAT Wll..D ANIMAL
WOULD YOU LIKE
MOST TOBE?
Darby,8
Miles, 5
A mountain Jion...because I've
A rattJesnake...because I
like their colors.
always liked them...and
because I could run fast.
Jason,5
Tshu-Tshu, 5
A rattlesnake...because I like
how their tail is rattly.
A bluejay"'because I like
how they ny and how they drop
their feathers.
Karl, 7
Tyler, 8
A squirrel ....because they're
kind if you don't pick them up.
Being a squirrel, I can climb up
trees and I can run fasLand
I can live in a 'treehouse'.
An eagle. ...because I Jike to be
high....when you're an eagle it's
easier to hunt for food ....... .
ah, lunch!
Lars,8
A robin...because you're able
to fly ....you'd be free...you'd be
able to see everything•...
no limitations...
Amanda,7
A wild bird...a cardinal
I think it would be neat
to see how they live......
and because I could fly
above the sky•..
Sara, 7
Ariel, 7
A deer...they seem so quiet...
they look so nice...they look
gentle,too...
Jay, 8
A mountain lion...because
they like to roam in the
mountains...and so do I.
A squirrel....because they'd
be protected, not too many
creatures could get at them.
I would like to be a squirrel
because people can't climb trees
as well as they can.
We welcome original drawings, stories, poems, ideas, or
Thanks lo Rainbow Mountain School, Asheville, NC
KATUAH - page 27
comments by individua1 children or groups for this page. Let
us know what the children of KatUah are doing!
Wiruer 19116-87
�J.........
.,..~ -
'"'"'"'• A.Aov: .·
fO~ ·n•e.
atUGN0 ntE RULf.S:
' A NOTE ON NEW GRAMMAR .
\.
We all learned in school dw •a
pronoun must agree widl the object oi the
JP. RfN~ 3
G~T'N6RCNG
The Spring Gathering will be happening 7) Katuah ecology in the 80's
again in April. We would like some input 8) Drumming
from our readers on activities they would 9) Living outside & inside (dealing with)
like to have available. Here are some to
the 80's economy
choose from. Let us know if these 10) Dowsing
suggested topics or others would make 11) Sweat Lodge
interesting workshops for the gathering:
12) Community planning, etc.
13) Spirituality (individual and as a whole)
l) Herb identification and usage
Anyone interested in being on a
2) Tree identification
steering committee to bring this gathering
3) Primitive strucrure construelion
together please write to us at Katiiah; Box
4) Wilderness survival techniques
873; CuUowhcc, NC 28723.
5) Crystals
6) Wild food foraging and preparation
Thi powerful GOl..OEN EAGLE
nlH abon lh11iu.
tlus tull
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l ontSlunT: Adolt·S14.00ppd.
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All designs, except Golden Eagle. also available
in sweatshirts. Feather or tracks imprinted on
sleeve.
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!,
~• When looking over the Kl1Uh
Journal. English teachers and sharp-eyed
proofreaders cringe and soflly curse the
KaWAh staff for the recurrence of sentences
such as: "The attitude of individualism puts
one at war against their environment."
The pronoun in that sentence is used
in a way that violates the precepts of
orthodox grammar. But the orthodox
grammar assumes that the basic unit of the
human race is the archetypal "he", an
assumption that we can no longer subscribe
to because it leaves the feminine half of the
population as non-entities - just one of the
subtle ways we are all taught 10 disregard
women and their role.
Trying to overcome this has led to
various complexities in the alternative
printed media. If we were to write out the
above sentence, for instance, it would
read, "The attitude of individualism puts one
at war with his or her environmenL"
Rather than encumbering our
sentences by writing out "his or her", "he
and she" each time, we have often chosen to
refer to them collectively as "their" and
"they", so that in fact that "someone"
potentially has become two, and the
pronoun agrees with this possibility. That's
not any harder to under~tand than it was in
sixth grade, is ii? (Or is it still just as hard?)
Some may be pleased at this change,
others may consider it th e rankest of
heresies, most probably could care less. But
language is a process and subject 10 change,
and there probably will be other changes as
we continue to modify our language to
conform to the conditions of our lives.
We welcome comments and
suggestions on this, as we do on all aspeclS
of the KluYah journal.
Changing our speech is another way
we can participate in creating ourselves a life
suitable to face the rimes we live in and the
times that are to come.
"'""'- ------------- - -t
i
i
'- CMck ......... FR(( COlOll CATAUKO ol all eur W1tdltt. Gl•pll••'OU.LU INQUllll[$ UMTlO
CIBII!NlE§IE
NAWRAL FOOD STORE
&DELI
~C1Un»1UNC'll'1UlilE
AM»
IHl~llllOLOGV
cn...nmc
107 Merrimon Avenue
Asheville. rt.c.
(704) 258·90 J6
KATUAH - page 28
MALAPROP'S
BOOKSTORFJCAFE
160 Broadway
Asheville, NC 28801
(704) 253-7656
BOOKS - CARDS - RECORDS
Where Broadway
61 HAYWOOD ST., ASHEVll..LE, NC 28801
(704) 2S4-6734
Meets Menimon
Andl-240
Open 7 Days A Week
Monday - Friday
9:00 a.m. - 8:00 p.m.
Saturday
9:00 a.m. - 6:30 p.m.
Sunday
1:00 p.m. - 5 :00 p.m.
Winter 1986-87
�a
•
~
S
· 4.!'J!sv:t./J•.:.l
'Jf1-.Jh ,, 'J.i ~,1 ~~o
:rro ~,.,
DECEMBER
21
ASHEVILLE, NC
"A Festival of Lights: A Winter
Solstice Celebration" with Unity of the
Mountains. 6:30 pm. 70 Lexington Ave.
Donation. Call 669-9276.
MARCH
JANUARY
10 & AS HE VILLE,NC
17
Literacy Workshop to train
volunteers to teach people how to read.
10:00 am to 4:30 pm. Pack Library. More
info: (704) 254-3442.
"Parenting for Peace and Justice"
conference with Jim and Kathy McGinnis at
University Hills Baptist Church. Contacc
Joanne Frazier (704)372-9140.
16-17
tANCEL THE COUNTDOWN
17
27-1/4 HOT SPRINGS, NC
New Year's Meditation Retreat with
John Orr. Southern Dhanna Retreat Center;
Rt. 1, Box 34-H; Hot Springs, NC 28743
COOKEVILLE, TN
Tennessee Alternative Growers'
Association Annual Conference at
Tennessee Tech Aqua Facility. For more
information, contact TAGA; Rt. 6, Box
526; Crossville, TN 38555
Major national action to protest
Trident missiles and "Star Wars" testing,
Cape Canaveral, FL. For more information,
contact Rural Southern Voice for Peace;
1901 Hannah Branch Rd.; Burnsville, NC
28714
30-1/4 W AYNESVILLE, NC
New Year's Retreat at Stil-light
Center. $5.00/day. Pre-register: Rt. 1, Box
326; Waynesville, NC 28786
CHARLOTTE, NC
6·9
17
20-22
ASH EVILLE, NC
Martin Luther King Prayer Breakfast. 8:30 am. Asheville Civic Cenrer.
WAYNESVILLE, NC
"Numerology" workshop with
Karol Kettering. $20. Stil-light Center.
Pre-register. see 12/30-1/4.
ABINGDON, VA
Teach Our Children Well Festival in
honor of Martin Luther King. 3:30 pm.
Washington County Library.
18
The Cente r for New Prioriti es is now
open, in Asheville, NC, for all groups
dedicated to working towards genuine,
life-oriented, change for the community.
Office space, small meeting space, and
kitchen facilities are available. The Center
plans to sponsor workshops as welJ as
provide a place for groups to network. In
January, there will be a meeting of all
groups-environmental, peace, social action,
spiritual, cultural, etc-who are interested in
participating in the formulation of the
"scope" of the Center's goals and activities.
For more infonnation, call (704) 254-4714
or write the Center, 54 Starnes Avenue,
Asheville, NC 28801. The Center
appreciates donations, large or small, to
help wilh its upkeep and activities.
GERTON, NC
24
Drumming Workshop/ African &
Haitian, featuirin~ Darrel Rose. Potluck
lunch & potluck dinner. $ 25. (partial work
scholarships available). Call (704)
625-9722 (ask for Martha) or wrire P.O.
Box 65, Genon, NC 28735
FEBRUARY
13-15
W AYNESVILLE,NC
Group study weekend: "The Yoga
Sutras of Patanjali". $20. Pre-register:
Slil-lighr Center. See 12/30-1/4.
Rainbow Family Tribal Gathering '87
By a council decision at the 1986
Rainbow Family Tribal Gathering in
Pennsylvania, the 1987 gathering of the
continental Rainbow people will be held in
the Appalachian Mountain Bioregion from
July 1 - 7.
The Rainbow Gathering currently
brings together 10-15,000 people during the
week of the event, although people arrive
long before and stay long after at the site.
They gather in remote natural settings to
promote and practice an alternative lifestyle
free from the constraints of the dominant
culture. Everything is free and shared
communally at the gatherings. The
temporary village takes care of its own
food, medical, sanitary, and security needs,
and prides itself on leaving behind a site that
is clean and green. The stated goals of the
gathering are peace, unity, love, and respect
for the Mother Earth. All are welcome.
Scouts are moving into the National
Forest lands in Appalachia to search for a
suitable site on which the Rainbow family
can gather in July. They arc looking for
1987 NEW IJOJlLt>
eyer,£ Of' e£L£BRAT'LON8
eAI..£N1>...t1t JOURNAL
about a 50-acre area of flat or rolling
meadows and open woods with a good
water supply. The site must be remote from
towns and paved roads, yet must have
adequate parking for 1,000 or more vehicles
somewhere nearby. T o discourage
unwanted interference, the site should be
accessible only by several miles of trail or
road that is closed to vehicles.
If there is anyone in the bioregion
who knows of a suitable site with a stable
ecosystem and soils that would not be
dislocated by a great amount of human
activity, please contact the Rainbow scouts
at the Rainbow regional center:
~ !ftl' ~
~
Rainbow Family of Living Light
Box 1097
Newport, TN 37821
8 1/2" x 1", 160 p ci9es, over 100 cfi.cin s
cind tUus trcitlons. r\vcilLci&te f or Sl l.80
ppcL. from:
For more information on the
continental Rainbow Gathering. contact
their publication:
All Ways Free
Box664
Bearsville, NY 12409
Cross-Cu t turat CaLe nr:!ar
Journat of Celebrations
New 1Jortc£ Ce!e&r citt.ons
L
P .O. Box. 6054
CfmrCotte , NC 28207
......
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~__.
KATUAH - page 29
Winter 1986-87
�Ridge mountains with facilities available to rent for
groups or individual retreats, either guided or
unstructured. Send for information and seasonal
calendar of healing, iransformativc events to: Indian
Valley Holistic Center: RL 2, Box 58; Willis, VA
SCIENCE CENTER dedicated to the understanding and appreciation of the
natural world. For membership or visiting info,
write P.O. Box 2771; Gainesville, GA 30503.
24380.
AMRITA HERBAL PRODUCTS - Comfrey,
Eucalyptus, or Golden Seal Salve, Lemon or
Lavender Face Cream. Made with natural and
essential oils and love. Send for brochure: RL I,
Box 737; Floyd, VA 24001.
HEROES CONCERT - Music and stories about
Martin Luther King, Rosa Parks, and other
champions of peace and courage. For mformauon and
bookings, contact: Meg Macleod, 160 Flint SL.
AsheviUe, NC 28801 (704) 254-6484.
APPALACHIAN PATCHWORK - Mountain talcs
and songs by the Appalachian Puppet Theatre.
Cassette tape S7.00 from: Appalachian Puppet
Theatre, 355 Cedar Creclt Road, Black Mountain,
NC 28711 (704) 669-6821.
HEALTH and FITNESS SELF.CARE CENTER: A
private centet offering comprehensive programs or
scientifiealJy and medically docwnented approaches
to opumum health and fitness. Seminars,
worlcshops.and private consult.a.lions for individuals,
famili~ and businesses. Contact: Jeffrey Brown;
HFSC; POB 278; Lexington, NC 27293 (704)
2464919.
ASHEVILLE I BUNCOMBE COUNTY SOLID
WASTE ALTERNATIVES PLANNING
WORKSHOP: A design for handling solid wasics
in any urban contexL SIS from Long Branch
Environmental Education Center. RL 2, Box 132:
Leicester, NC 28748.
TWO PAPERS - "How to Stan a Co-op" and
"Steps Toward Forming an Auto Repair
Cooperative" by Dr. Rodney S. Wead, PhD.
Available from Appalachian People's Service
Organization; P.O. Box 1007: Blacksburg, VA
THE LONE RECYCLER - Comic book adventures
of humankfod's early struggle to combat
wastefulness. $4.00 pp. from Long Branch
Environmental Education Center. Rt. 2, Box 132;
Leicester, NC 28748.
HOLOGRAPH1C ASTROLOGY - Every pan of a
hologram contains all the info about the entire
hologram, and each cell in your body contains all
the genetic data about your whole body. Similarly,
every body contains all the information about the
entire solar system - you are the solar system and
each of your planets is one of your potentials. Chnrt
&. Consultation, SS0.00 Harriet Witt Miller (704)
684-0810.
MOON DANCE FARM HERBALS - hctbaJ salves,
tincnues, &: Olis for birthing & family health. For
brochure, please wriic: Moon Dance Fann; RL I,
Box 726; Hampwn, TN 37658
DRUM WORKSHOPS - for children of all ages.
therapeutic massage - Relaxes the body &:
mind ...Call Martha for more info 11 (704)
258-6016
FAIRGLEN FARMS offers organic, biological
fCltil.i7.ers for fann and garden. Send SASE for price
list Biologically-grown produce to sell? We arc
interested in acting as cooperative marlccting agenis
with other growers. Write: Route I, Box 319;
Clyde, NC 28721.
DRUMS - Custom handcrafted ceramic dumbecks &:
wooden medicine drums. CalJ Joe at (704)
258-1038 or write to:
Joe Roberts, 738 Town
Mountain Rd.; Asheville, NC 28804.
24060.Frce.
CUSTOM CELTIC HARPS • A'Court Bason;
Travianna Fann; Rt. I: Check, VA 24072.
•AS WE ARE" - Women's music by Pomegranate
Rose, a four-woman group playing lively original
music. Cassette tape available for S9.00 ppd. from
Rt. 2, Box 435; Pi1tsboro, NC 27312.
CRAFTS FROM SALVADORAN AND
GUATEMALAN REFUGEES lN NICARAGUA:
cards, plaques, boxes, puzzles, paiches; This trade
benditS refugees dittctly. Brochure from:
Dry Creek Coopemive Trading
918 Jennings Ct.
Woodbury, TN 37190
I CAME TO A MOUNTAIN - by William Walters.
A book about the Light Ccntet (in Black Mountain,
NC) and the power of prayer for peace in the world.
Includes a look at the Center's activities for peace
and their prayer tours around the world. Avai lable
for $9.00 pp. from New World Bookstore, WNC
Shopping Center, Hwy 70, Black Mountain, NC
a non-profit organization.
FOUR WINDS VILLAGE • health and spiritual
retreat; home for children in need. For visiting info,
write: Box 112: Tiger, GA 30576.
28711.
FLOWER ESSENCES - Harmony with Nature&:
SpiriL Gentle emotional support during transitions,
specific issues, relationships. Opens
communications. Self-adjusting, non-toxic,
awareness "tools" for improving the inner quality.
Correspondence to: Elaine Gcouge, c/o Patchwork
Castle, Celo, 3931 HWY 80 So.. Burnsville, NC
28714.
"PEACE THROUGH MUSIC" - Ethereal &:
Tranquilizing Celestial Music tapes by Medicine
Wind/George Tortorelli. Plus exotic Bamboo
FluteS, rate scales. Send for free brochure: Medicine
Wind Music, 86 NW SSth St., Gainesville, FL
32601.
ACCESS is a fiee telephone information service on
peace issues including military spending,
environmental impacts of military activity, connict
resolution, etc. Your only charge is your
long-distance phone call. ACCESS # Is (202)
328-2323.
KATUAH • page 30
APPALACHIA 1987: THE SIMPLE LIFESTYLE
CALENDAR - Distributed by Appalachia Science
in the Public Interest to fund their work of
developing, an appropriate technology for
Appalachia Photos of the "Children of Appalachia"
by Warren Brunner. $6.00 pp. from ASP!; Rt. 5,
Box 423; Livingston, KY 40445.
"CELEBRATION SPACE: Songs to Celebrate
Life" - A cassette tape completely produced,
performed. and recorded by mem bets and friends of
the Floyd County community to raise money for
the Floyd County Community Hall. This audio
songbook contains IS original songs and chants and
3 traditional songs to learn and sing in your own
community. The sound quality is uneven, but the
energy, spirit, and joy shine through.
For the cassette tape with lyric sheet (ppd.), send
SI0.00 to the Floyd County Community Hall
Project; Rt. l, Box 735; Floyd, Va 24091.
At ARTHUR MORGAN SCHOOL 24 students and
14 staff learn together by living in community.
Curriculum includes creative academics, group
decision-making, a work program, service prop:ts,
extensive field trips, challenging outdoor
experiences. Write: 1901 Hannah Branch Rd.;
Burnsville, NC 28714.
WEB WORKING is free.
Send submissions to:
KA1GAh
P.O. Box 873
Cullowhcc, NC 28723
Winter 1986-87
�MediciHt'-' Allies
K.IJJiilJ.Jl wants ta communicate your rl@ughts and
feelings I() the other people in the bi.oregi.onal province. Send
them to us as letters, poems, stories, drawings, or
plio~ographs. Please send your contributions to us at:
Kmfmh; Box 873; Cullowhee, NC 28723.
The Spring Klu.U.ah. Issue XV, will focus on Women's
Issues. The deadline for all submissions for that issue is
January 31.
Please send your ideas for future themes for Kaiiia.b.
ISSUE EIGHT · S UMMER 1985
Celebration' A Way of Life . Katuah
18,000 Years Ago • Sacred Sites • Folk
Aru in lhe Schools • Sun Cycle/Moon
Cycle Poems: Hilda Downer • Cherokee
Herit age Center • Who Owns
Appalachia?
BACK ISSUES
full color
T-.s6irt.s
ISSUE TWO · WINTER 1983.84
Vona - Bear Hunten • Pigeon River •
Another Way With Animals • Alma •
Bceoming Politically Effective .
Mountain Woodlands • Katuah Under the
Drill - Spirilual Warriors
In the traditional Cherokee Indian
belief, the creatures in the world today are
only diminutive forms of the mythic beings
who once inhabited the world, but who now
reside in Galuna'ti, the spirit world, the
highest heaven. But a few of the original
powers broke through the spiritual barrier
and exist yet in the world as we know it
These beings are called with reverence
"grandfathers". And of them, the strongest
are K.ma.1i. the lightning, the power of the
sky; Utsa'natL the rattlesnake, who
personifies the power of the earth plane; and
Yynwj Usdj, "the little man", as ginseng is
called in the sacred ceremonies, who draws
up power from the underworld.
Each is the strongest power in its own
domain. Together they are allies: their
energies complement each other to form an
even greater power. As medicine allies,
they represent the healing power of the
Appalachian Mountains.
The medicine powers of Katuah have
been depicted in a striking T-shirt design by
Ibby Kenna. Printed in 5-color silkscreen
by Ridgerunner Naturals on top-quality,
all-cotton shirts, they are available now in
all adult sizes from tbe~joumal.
"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 Karuah."
To order, use the form below.
ISSUE NINE · FALL 1985
Tho Waldcc Forest · The Trees Speak •
M ia:rating Foresu · Horse Logging •
Star1ing a Tree Crop • Urban Trees •
Acom Bread · Myth Time
ISSUE THREE • SPRINO I984
Sustainable Agriculture • Sunflowers •
Humm Impact on the Forest • Childrcns'
Education • Veronica Nichotas:Wcmm
in Politics • Little People • Mcdicme
Allies
ISSUE TEN · WINTER 19&5-86
Kate Rogers • Circles of Stone • Internal
Mytlunatting • Holistic Healing on Trial
• Poems: Steve Knauth • Mythic Places •
The Uktcna's Talc • Crystal Magic •
"Drcamspcalcing •
ISSUE FOUR · SUMMER 1984
Water Orum • Water Quality • Kudm •
Solar Ecbpsc • Clearcunin& • Trout •
Going to W ater • Ram Pumps •
Microhydro • Poems: Bennie Lee
Sinclair, Jim Wayne Miller
ISSUE ELEVEN· SPRING 1986
Communily Planning • Cities and tho
Bioregional Vision • Recycling •
Community Gardening- Floyd County,
VA • Gasohol · Two Biorcgional Views •
Nuclear Supplement • Foxfire Oomes
Good Medicine: Visions
ISSUE FIVE - FALL 1984
Harvest - Old Ways in Cherokee
Ginseng - Nuclear Wute • Our Celtic
Heritage • Bioreg1onalism: Past, Present,
md Future - John Wilnoty • Healing
Darkness • Polities of Panic1pation
ISSUETWELVE - SUMMER 1986
Livmg in the Garden • Sbiitakc • The
SICRCI Scuab • NC Nuclear Rcfctcndum •
Sun Root.s • Aquaculture • "HILAHl'YU":
The Form ation of lhe Appalachian
Mountains • WISC Woman Herbal • Good
Medicine: Tobacco
ISSUE SIX · WINTER 1984-85
WinLCt Sobticc Earth Ceremony
Horscpasturc River • Coming of lhc
Light • Log Cabin Roota • Mountain
Agriculwrc: The Right Crop • William
Taylor· The Future of the Forest
ISSUE THIRTEEN· Fall 1986
Center For Awakening • Eliubelh
Callari • A Oenllc Death • Hospice •
Emel! Morgm • Dealing Creatively with
Death • Home Burial Box • The Wake •
The Raven Mocker · Woodslore and
Wildwoods Wisdom • Good Medicine:
The Sweat Lodge
ISSUE SEVEN - SPRJNO 1985
S11Stainablc Economics • Hot Springs •
Worlccr Ownership • The Orea! Economy
• Self Help Credit Union Wild Turkey •
Responsible Investing • Working in the
Web of Life
J<AIUAH: Bjoregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians
Box 873; Cullowhee, North Carolina 28723
Back Issues
Issue# __@ $2.00 = $_ _
Issue# __@ $2.00 = $_ _
Issue# __@ $2.00 = $_ _
Issue# __@ $2.00 = $_ _
Issue# __@ $2.00 = $_ _
Complete Set (2· J3)
@ $18.00 = $ _ _
For more info: call Mamie Muller (704) 252-9167
Regular Membership........$10/yr.
Sponsor.......................$20/yr.
Contributor...................$50/yr.
Name
Address
Enclosed is$
I() give
this ejf an exrra boost
on
City
State
Zip
I can be a local contact
person for my area
Area Code
Phone Number
...
T-Shirts: specify quantity
color: tan
S_ _ M_ _
L_ _ XL_ _
@ $9.50 each............$_ _
TOTAL PRICE=
postage paid
KAWAH - page 31
$_ _
Winter 1986-87
�
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 14, Winter 1986-1987
Description
An account of the resource
The fourteenth issue of the <em>Katúah Journal</em> focuses on varied topics such as the work of stone carver Lloyd Carl Owle, a comparison between the Cherokee Booger dance and the Irish Mummers dance, human beings' place in nature, and an interview with people who are homeless. Authors and artists in this issue include: David Wheeler, Marnie Muller, Tom Underwood, Will Ashe Bason, Martha Overlock, Oliver Loveday, Avram Friedman, Millie Buchanan, Colleen Redman-Copus, Martha Tree, David Wheeler, and Michael Red Fox.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1986-1987
Table Of Contents
A list of subunits of the resource.
Lloyd Carl Owle.......1<br /><br />Boogers and Mummers........3<br /><br />All Species Day........6<br /><br />Poem by Will Ashe Bason.......9<br /><br />Good Medicine.......10<br /><br />Cabin Fever University.......12<br /><br />Poems by Oliver Loveday.......13<br /><br />Keeping Warm: Homeless in Katúah.......14<br /><br />Homemade Hot Water.......18<br /><br />A Stovemaker's Narrative.......19<br /><br />Natural World News.......20<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
Appalachians (People)--Social life and customs
Human ecology
Native American--History
Cherokee Art
Homeless persons--North Carolina, Western
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
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Journals (Periodicals)
Alternative Energy
Appalachian History
Appalachian Mountains
Appalachian Studies
Black Bears
Cherokees
Children's Page
Community
European Immigration
Folklore and Ceremony
Good Medicine
Habitat
Katúah
Katúah Organization
Pigeon River
Poems
Politics
Radioactive Waste
Turtle Island
Water Quality
-
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ISSUE 25 FALL 1989
.
for all things wild
I
,..
�October 27, 1989
"Restoring Biodiversity in the Southern Appalachians:
A Strategy for Survival"
Owen Conference Center, University of ~orth Carolina Asheville
A major conference bringing together scientists, educators, government land managers,
and conservationists to speak about the condition of the Southern Appalachian habitat and
the necessity to
initiate new programs for habitat
preservation
and restoration to
maintain the
the southern
diversity of life in
mountains.
For more
information
call (704)
251-6441
Registration: $20.00.
October 28
October 28
"Wild
in the Streets:
The Feral Ball "
"For All
Things Wild"
Warren Wilson College
Swannanoa, NC
Issues and strategy
discussion among activists
directed to arrive at means of restoring
biological diversity in the Southern
Appalachian region.
Speakers: Reed Noss, Laura
Jackson, Robert Zahner, Peter Kirby,
Jamie Sayen, David Wheeler. Open
discussion period.
Registration: $5.00. For more info:,
call (704) 298-3325 (Ext. 250).
rock to the music of
Grandmother
and
One Straw
We call upon the spirits of the wild!
Come costumed as one of our native
mountain species - or to express your
own wildest self!
8:00 pm. Location to be announced.
Postage Paid
Bulk Mail
Permit #18
Leicester, NC
28748
P.O. Box 638 Leicester, NC Katuah Province 28748
ADDRESS CORRECTION REQUESTED
�The Great Forcst ........................... 3
by Sam Gray
Restoring the Old-Growth Forest........5
by Robert 'Zahner
Regional Planning
for Habitat Intcgrity................... 8
by Laura Jackson
A Question o f Value ...................... 10
hy Dm·id Wheeler
Closing the Gate
on Forest Devastation ................ 12
by Anna Muir
Poem: "Sparrow Hawk" ................. 13
by Julia NUlllllJJ/y Duncan
A Place for Bears ......................... 15
An Interview with Dr. Michael Pelton
Poem: "There Fell the Rain Healing" .. 16
by Annelinde Metzner
Eastern Panther, Where Are You?...... 17
by Patrick Clarlr.
Oak Decline ................................ 19
by Hetllher Blair
People and Habitat ........................ 2 1
by Chip Smith and Lee Kinnaird Fawart
Perpetual Wild Sanctuaries ..............23
Natural World News..................... 24
Drumming ................................. 26
Living Green .............................. 29
Baner Fair................................. 30
(Natural) Resources ...................... 31
Events Calendar........................... 32
Webworking ............................... 34
1'"iirt. t 989
To sense what ls happening In the
mountains, we begin by perceiving
the Southern Appalachian region as
an ongoing. functioning. organic
euent. ..within the greater biosphere.
We can then tdenUfy ourselves and
our species In relation to It and sense
our place within Its evolutionary
history and cycles of renewal.
From the perspective of the whole
we are one species among many each \vith its own contribullon to
make. each wilh its own demands for
habitat. When there is a disturbance
in the pattern of the whole. the
effects even tu ally reach every
inhabitant.
Human beings have been here for
very few of the millions of years the
forest has been patiently growing
within a dynamic balance. In recent
times. our perception of these forests
has often lacked wisdom and
humility. resulting In actions
destructive to our home.
We can sense our relationship to
the whole, but we will never be able
to encompass It with our Intellect
alone. We are in it and of it. This Is
the Great Mystery of existence.
Intuitively we can perceive this
Mystery.
We can revere It and
celebrate lt. And by acting tn concert
with the Life cycles, we can come to
know It more fully. This knowing
then leads us to respond.
In thls issue of Katuah. we look at
biodiversity and habitat ln the
Southern Appalachian region and
how they are being disrupted.
Finding out about the current
situation In Katuah prompts us to
acuon--to speak out. protect. restore.
Throughout the articles. it becomes
apparent that to truly understand this
region. we need to experience.
acknowledge, and serve the region as
a whole.
-The Editors
Biodiversity is defined by ecologist Recd Noss llS "a
full complement of the native plant and animal species in
their natural or normal patterns of abundance."
Biodiversity is the foundation of evolution in any
biorcgion.
Habi tat is defined as an interdependent community of
life that supports the various species that live within iL
Habitat is the foundation of biodiversity.
�STAFF THIS ISSUE:
R.ichacd Lowenthal
Christina Morrison
James Rhea
Manha Tree
Rob Messick
Mamie Muller
Chip Smith
David Wheeler
EDITORIAL ASSISTANCE:
Scott Bird
Jack Chaney
David Red
Kim Sandland
Heather Blair
Sam Gray
Marsha Ring
Morgan Swann
Thanks as well to Joe and Rhea and the Mountain Garden.
We offer special thanks for the influence of
Grandfather Mountain.
COVER by James Rhea
PUBLISHED BY; Ka11"1h Journal
PRINTED BY; The Waynesville Mountaineer Press
EDITORIAL OFFICE IBJS ISSUE: Globe Valley
W&ITEUS AT:
TELEPHONE;
(704) 683-1414
Katt1ah Journal
Box 638
Leicester, NC
Katuah Province 28748
Diversity is an imponant clement of bioregional ecology, both
nmwaJ and social. In line with this principle. the KatU/Jh Journal lrics
to serve as a forum for the discussion of regional issues. Signed articles
express only the opinion of the authors and are not necessarily the
opinions of lhe Ka1Uah Journal editors or staff.
The Internal Revenue Service has declared KatU/Jh a non-profit
organization under section 501 (c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code. All
contributions to KatU/Jh arc deductible from personal income tax.
'LNVOCA.TWN
Do you think you can take over the universe
and improve it?
I do not believe it can be done.
The universe is sacred. You cannot improve it.
If you try to change it, you will ruin it.
If you try to hold it, you will lose it.
-from imsage 29. Tao Te Ching
attributed to Lao Tzu
™E SOUTHERN APPALACillAN BIOREGION
AND MAJOR EASTERN RIVER SYSTEMS
STATEMENT OF PURPOSE
Here in the southern-most heartland of the
Appalachian mountains, the oldest mountain range on
our continent, Turrie Island; a small bur growing
group has begun to take on a sense of responsibility
for the implications of rhar geographical and cultural
heritage. This sense of responsibility centers on the
concept of living within the natural scale and balance
of 1miversal systems and principles.
Within this circle we begin by invoking the
Cherokee name "Kaufoh" 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 nonh; thefoorhills of the
piedmont area to the east; Yona Mountain and the
Georgia hills to the south; and the Tennessee River
Valley ro the west.
The editorial priorities for us are to co/leer and
disseminate information and energy which pertains
specifically to this region, and to foster the awareness
rhar the land is a living being deserving of our love
and respect. Living in this manner is a way ro 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/or all living beings on this planet. As a voice/or
the caretakers ofthis sacred land, Kac-Uah, we advocate
a centered approach to rhe concept ofdecentralization.
It is our hope to become a support system/or those
accepting the challenge of sustainability and the
creation ofharmony and balance in a total sense, here
in this place.
We welcome all correspondence, criticism,
pertinent information, articles, artwork, etc. with
hopes that Kac-Uah will grow to serve the best interests
of this region and all its living, breathing members.
-The Editors
f"~U..
1989
�It may be that
s.ome little rcx:::>t
of the sacred tree still
lives.
"-lou-ish it then,
that it may leof and
bloom and fill
with singing birds.
- Q,lock Elk
Until recent time a great inland forest overlay the eastern
ponion of Nonh America-a continuous biologic fabric extending
from Nova Scotia to Alabama, west along the tributaries of the
Mississippi, and boundaried in the east by the pine barrens and
lowland marshes of the coastal plain.
This forest had its origins in an ancient circumpolar forest
system that dominated the temperate zones of Asia, Europe and
Nonh America in the Eocene epoch of the Teniary Period (50
million years B.P. [Before Present]) when the continents were
closer together. In spite of the intervening continental drift,
successive ice ages and vast chasms of time, there remain, to this
day, striking botanical linkages in the existing forest remnants of
these continents. This is panicularly evident in genera such as Acer
(maples), Panax (ginseng), Cory/us (hazels}, Populus (poplars),
Cornus (dogwoods), and Rhododendron.
(continued on ncxl page)
f'ca!t. t 989
Ji:.ati&ah Jo\lrnQL p1i9e 3
�(continued &om page 3)
The vast inland forest of Eastern America was geophysically
dominated by the long spine of the Appalachian Mountains which
determined the Forest's biological stTucture and diversity.
Contemporary references to what remains of this forest employ
terms such as "mixed mesophytic", "eastern hardwood" or
"temperate deciduous" to describe it. For purposes of this essay,
acknowledging its extent, its ancient origins, its astounding
diversity and resilience, its immense productive capacity, and its
profound effect on various human populations over the past 10,000
years, it will be telllled "The Great Forest".
When ecologists first began attempting to describe temperate
forest ecosystems, they developed the model of succession and
climax growth. This model, describes a developing forest that is
undergoing a series of stages in which pioneer plant communities
and their associated fauna colonize the area and are then replaced by
successor communities of larger trees until a forest of dominant
trees, known as the "climax forest" establishes a stable equilibrium.
This climax old gTOwth would cominue until some "disturbance"
such as fire, disease, climate change or human impact takes out the
climax community and the succession cycle begins again.
The succession-climax model is a useful one for
understanding the ecology of the Great Forest. It helps us to
recognize the importance and relative stability of old growth forests
and it describes how biotic communities in a forest maintain and
transform themselves over time as they respond to discontinuities
and disturbances, panicularly those caused by humans.
The first humans in the Great Forest were nomadic
gatherer/hunter groups who arrived after the last glaciation some
10,000 years B.P. These groups ranged over many thousands of
acres of oak-chestnut climax growth as well as other forest biomes
and while their impact on the forest was small by contemporary
standards, it was nonetheless important. Fire was the principal
instrument of ecologic change and was to remain so even into
recent rimes.
By 1900, the only remaining large boundary
of the original Great Forest lay in Katuah - the
Southern Appalachian highlands. Within two
decades that too was gone.
Seventeenth century Europeans observed and commented on
the burnings. "The savages," wrote Thomas Morton, "are
accustomed to set fire of the country in all places where they come
and to burne it twize a year, viz: at the spring and the fall of the
leafe." The purpose of the burnings was no less than ecosystem
management: facilitation of travel, augmentation of browse area for
game, encouragement of desirable herbage such as blackberry.
raspberry, and cenain grasses. the increase of mast-producing trees
Uke oak and chesmut on the drier, warmer soils of a burn area, and
the destruction of vermin and pests such as fleas. Selective burning
by the lndfans promoted a mosaic quality in the forest ecosystem
and created areas in many different stages of succession wilh
extensive boundary areas and a greater variety of game and plant
habitats - a phenornonen ecologists refer to as the "edge effect".
Thus the Indians practiced their own subtle kind of forest
management and husbandry. So subtle in fact, as to be undetected
in early European descriptions of the Great Forest. When 17th and
l 8rh century promoters of North American real estate extolled the
"natural" abundance of the land, they were unaware that they were
describing an ecosystem that the natives had been shaping for
thousands of years.
Other imponant aspects of the complex relationship between
the Great Forest and its native inhabitants escaped the notice of the
Europeans. As William Cronon points out in his masterful
ecological history of New England, Changes in the Land, a central
fact of temperate forest ecosystems is their periodicity. The
overlapping cycles of light, dark, long days, short days,
waxing/waning of the moon, the flow of sap, the rurting of deer,
spawning of fish, the matings of turkey, bear and frog, the fruiting
of plants and the migration of birds... these and myriad other
contrapuntal rhythms of the Great Forest's energy cycles were
understood and celebrated by the natives. Their own life rhythms of
seasonal nomadism, work, ritual and play were evolved from the
greater cycles of the forest . The European immigrants' experience
of natural cycles, on the other hand, had been filtered for over a
millenium through a culture offixed abodes and a social hierarchy
that discouraged nomadism as well as wilderness.
It is in the context of the periodic cycles of the forest that
Native American spirituality can best be understood. The Indians
did not attempt to manipulate, through magic and ritual, these
cycles to their own ends and were often confounded or amused by
the imprecatory prayers of the whites seeking the blessings of good
harvest and fortune from an awesome and distant god. Rather, their
own spiritual practices were designed to attune and inform
themselves to the subtleties of the forest's cycles. The
anthropologist Bronislow Malinowski recognized this when he
wrote in Myth and Primitive Psychology, "Magic never originated;
it never was created or invented. All magic simply was from the
beginning, as an essential adjunct to all those things and processes
which virally interested man (sic)." The natives inhabited an
animated forest world that was alive unto its fanhest recesses with
seen and unseen powers. Their task - the task of mind - was to so
organize themselves as to develop understanding of and
consonance with these powers.
When Europeans began to arrive at the Great Forest of North
America in sufficient numbers by the mid-17th century, they were
not disposed to recognize the animated universe that sustained the
natives. They could not or would not see the forest that the natives
knew, nor could they recognize the subtlety and intelligence behind
the Indians usage of the forest as habitat, susraining process, and
sacred ground. The European immigrants faced the Great Forest
with a conflicting array of perceptions and attitudes. The forest was
at once a threat and an opportunity.
The dominant sentiment in regard to the forest was that it was
an enormous commodity. Coming from lands long divested of
forests held in common, the right to extract and expon timber
almost at will was an overwhelming prospect 10 early
entrepreneurs. Wood was the main raw material for residential and
commercial building on both sides of the Atlantic, but it was even
more in demand as an energy source. Seventeenth and eighteenth
century industries in metallurgy, glass making and ceramics
required enormous amounts of wood for firing furnaces and for
charcoal. Individual household consumption was also extraordinary
by european standards. Peter Kalm, a Swedish naturalist visiting
colonial eastern America in 1749 wrote," an incredible amount of
wood is really squandered in this country for fuel..." As early as
1640, Boston was experiencing wood fuel shortages and most
major New England and mid-Atlantic settlements were soon to
follow.
foll, 1989
�The principal commodity that the Great Forest represented to
the E.uropeans was the land itself. Their original concepts of real
propeny were derived from the manorial system of feudal Europe
and can be ascenained by reviewing the terms or the Royal Charter
to the Massachusetts Bay Company:
"To have to houlde possess and enjoy the aforesaid
continent, lands, territories, islands, hereditaments and
precincts, seas, waters, fishings, with all and all manner their
commodities, royalties, libenies, prehemynences, and
profitts that should thenceforth arise from chcncc, with all
and singular their appunances and every pane and parccll
thereof unto the said councell and their successors and
assigns for ever."
The comprehensive, medieval, abstract quality of these early claims
underwent an evolution as they passed through the lexicon of 17th
and 18th century New World institutions, but the focus on
"commodities, royalties, liberues and profitts" never changed.
What also wen1 unchanged, leading to countless
misunderstandings and much bloodshed, was the European
assumption of the sovereignty of propeny rights granted through
'legal' title 10 Land. To the natives, the notion that parcels of land
could be considered commodities, bought and sold like cattle,
boundaried, possessed, 'improved', divided and sold again or
transferred to heirs was absurd. For them, land tenure was a
function of usage and usage was linked 10 the mobility that was a
central part of the strategy of resource management based on
periodicity. The Indian villages moved from habitat to habitat to
find maximum abundance with minimal work and reduced impact
on the land while the Europeans, in fixed abodes on their titled
propeny, worked long hard days 10 intensively farm or 'improve'
land with the eventual result being ecological degradation. It was
the concept of 'improvements' - replacing forest with fields and
pasture and the building of sheds, barns and homes - that soon
became the colonial justification for dispossessing the natives. A
people who moved around on the land and worked it so lillle could
have no justifiable claim to possess it. There were plenty of
references in the bible and in Calvinist theology to back up such a
sentimenL The unimproved forest with its native inhabitants was
eventually seen as an affront to progress, and Christian community.
r"u, t 989
With God's backing the righteous began to exterminate or conven
the savages and 'improve' the Great Forest out of existence.
The decimation of the Great Forest proceeded in two fairly
distinct historical phases - the first, occurring in the colonial period
and lasting until about 1850, can be termed pre-capitalist. It was
characterized by the deforestation patterns of an agricultural
economy. The best land was cleared for field crops and pasture.
Commercial extrnction of timber for energy or wood products was
confined to terrain accessible by human/animaJ power. The second
phase was indusoial/capitalist and it continues to the present day.
Utilizing machinery, organized capital, and cheap local labor, the
forest was harvested to satisfy national and international timber
demands. As habitat for the incredible diversity of wild plants and
creawres was impoverished, fonunes were amassed by men far
away who were never required to look upon the devastation. By
1900, the only remaining large boundary of the original Great
Forest lay in Katuah - 1he Southern Appalachian highlands. Within
two decades 1ha1 too was gone.
As humans, we have known the forest in many ways - as
home, as sustenance, as sacred ground, as repose, as commodity,
as teacher, as refuge. Our species is only now realizing the extent
of its power 10 diminish the radiance of the Great Forest. We are
beginning to understand a glimmer of what was... for we were once
forest-dwellers. Today there is an archetype becoming known in
the human spirit ...of regeneration. There is an embryonic
recognition of what we have lost and of what we must restore. We
cannot continue as we have done. The forest calls 10 us to come
back, for our own sake and for the sake of all our relations
dwelling therein.
The quotation from Black Elk that begins this essay captures
this hope for us when he speaks of the roots of the Sacred Tree the Tree of Life. The Sacred Tree, a universal symbol of
regeneration of both the human spirit and of the Earth, nourishes
our memory to recall that though the Great Forest has been felled, it
cannot and will not ever leave us.
wriuen by Sam Gray
plU>co ofJoyce Kilmer Memorial Forest on page 3 by
larry Tucker
x.at.Uah JounuiL p!UJ•
s
�Restoring the Old-Growth Forest
by Robert Zahner
A thing is right when it rends to preserve
the inregriry, stabi/iry, and beauty of rlze biotic
community. Ir is wrong when it tends
otherwise.
- AldD Leopold (I 949)
We stand at the threshold of a great
decision. We are on the verge of re-defining the
importance of our mountain landscape, its
natural habitats, and the Life forms they support.
Science has shown tha1 such habitats are vi1al to
planetary life support systems where natural
communities of interdependent plants and
animals can maintain reservoirs of biological
diversity.
When extensive logging destroyed the
primeval fores1s of the Southern Appalachian
Mountains, a critical factor for biodiversity,
habitat continuity over large areas, was
eradicated. During the century between 1830
and 1930 forest clearing and burning ravaged
native bio1ic communities and terminated
unknown numbers of plant and animal species.
Habitats were fragmented, and many surviving
endemic species were left in smaU, isolated
communities.
ln the first quaner of the twentieth century
the Southern Appalachian National Forests were
established as watershed preserves. Federal
conservation policies permined many forest
habitats to begin the natural process of restoring
themselves. This regrowth ecosystem, or
second generation forest, was similar to the
original primeval forest only in that it still
contained most of the original plant and animal
species. Today, after 60 to 80 years of recovery,
the new forest is still maturing, still unfolding its
species composition as new niches are created in
the complex progression toward what modem
ecologists term an "old-growth forest." But it
still has a long way to go to reach biological
maturity.
There is now the potential to restore a
diversity of species that would resemble the old
primeval forest. There is also the danger,
because of present National Forest management
plans, of losing much of the restoration already
gained. The United States Forest Service
(USFS), administered by foresters who are
highly competent timber managers, interprets the
Congressional Multiple Use-Sustained Yield Act
of 1960 with a strong bias toward harvesting
commercially mature timber. The Act states
implicitly, however, that al/ resources of the
Notional Forests ore to be managed for sustained
yield. Other acts of Congress go on to define
natural diversity as a vital resource of 1he public
lands, and mandate that this resource shall be
maintained through habitat preservation. This
paper is written with the intent of furthering
public knowledge of this important
environmental issue.
Three Levels of Diversity
lo the despoilment and fragmentation of
the original forest, three levels of diversity were
either destroyed or placed in jeopardy: ( l)
genetic diversity within species, (2) species
diversity within habitats, and (3) habitat
Xatium Jo~rrmt P"9e 6
diversity within landscapes. We have no record
of how many species were irretrievably lost, but
1oday we are beginning co count the numbers
that are presently endangered and threatened
with extinction. Let us consider how lhese three
types of diversity are essential for a healthy
bioregion, and how all three can be restored as
the new forest grows toward biological
maturity.
Genetic Diversity: A great many
species counted as rare today could again
become more abundant if we allow natural biotic
processes to evolve unmolested.
For example, in the forest of today the
mountain gentian plant (Gentiana decora
Pollard)_grows singly or in small colonies in
damp, rich wooded habitats, generally isolated
from other members of the species by unsuitable
habitats. Gentians are pollinated by several rypes
of inseclS who are able to cross-fertilize separate
colonies of the plant. Thus, if undisturbed by
human activity, pollen exchange will increase
genetic diversity within the gentian species over
an ever-increasing area of 1he mountain
landscape. This renewed generic vitality is
critical to the future well-being of the species, as
human-caused environmental changes continue
to force all forms of life to adapt to such stresses
as aunospheric pollution and accelerated climatic
warming.
The same situation is true for literally
thousands of species of plants and animals
throughout the mountains. Each example
f"~U.. t989
�requires its own special sening, but the common
theme is natural balance. An endemic terresual
mole salamander, Ple1ho<k>n1ordani, is a highly
significant insectivore in the world beneath the
leaf litter of a mature hardwood forest. This
salamander requires large areas of ~ontinuous
forest cover to afford geneuc n11gra11on among
populations. Thus. when the cwopy overhead is
fragmented or removed. breeding populat!ons of
this animal disappear to reco.,,er only w11h the
re-establishment or the mature hardwood fores t.
Many species of reptiles. amphibians, and
anhropods w11h limited mobi:ity have similar
requirements for genetic exchange.
Conditions that promote generic diversity
arc essential so each species can adapt and
evolve, panicularly in light of the accelerating
environmental changes expected in the next
century.
Species Diversity: The next scale of
diversity is that of species within habitats. This
is often misinterpreted by federal land managers
to mean "the greatest number of differe nt
species for each given unit of land."
It is well kno wn that the na tural
succe ssio n of weed y species occupying
disturbed sites provides a wealth of diversity in
te rms of to tal numbe rs. The Southern
Appalachian Mountains today abound w ith
disturbed sites, the result of Jar.d clearings, road
bui lding, comme rc ial and reside ntial
development, forest c learcuuing, agricultural
activity, and wildfires. Therefore. the weedy
plants and small animal species that characterize
early succession habitats are most commo n
throughout lhe region.
But what about species diversity in other
habitats once prevalent in the primeval forest?
Two hundred years ago a north-facing site at
3,SOO feet elevation in the Blue Ridge
Mountains would likely have supported a mature
oversrory of 20 or more tree species, with many
large trees over 200 years old. The midstory
would have been composed of perhaps 20 or
more species of smaller trees of all ages, from
reproduction saplings fillin1 canopy pps to
very old species adapted to live out their lives in
the shade.
Many tree species, such as basswood
(TUia ~rerophylla VcnL), yellow birch (Betula
alleghaniensis Britt.), buncmut (J1111lans cinera
L.), mountain maple (Acer spicatum Lam.),
mountain winterbcny (Ila mofllana T . and G.),
ycllowwood (Cladrastis kentulcea Rudd), and,
of course, American chestnut (Castanea delllQta
Borich.). were more common in this ancient
foresr lhan they are today.
Shrub spec ies were numerous, and
carpeting !he ground in many places were large
colonies of painted trillium (Trillum undulatum
Willd.), baneberry (Actaea pachypoda Ell.),
do g-tooth violet (Eryrhronium americum Ker.),
um brella-leaf (Diphylleia cymosa Michaux).
jack-in-the-pulpit (Arisema triphyllum Schott.),
and many fem species.
Rotting logs provided substrate and
micro-habitats for many S1>ecies of fungi.
mosses. splecnwons. and all the attendant
invertebrate and small vertebrate animals that
were essential to the health of the entire larger
community. The large trees. living and dead.
provided food, shelter, and breeding situations
for many birds and other venebrate animals that
require a biologically mature. undisturbed.
mixed hardwood forest habitat. The mature
forest was a dynamic biotic community that
f'Q{L, t989
supported a large array of
interdependent species.
!'\one of the plants or
animals mentioned above is
exceptionally rare today. although
a number of today's threatened or
endangered species. such as the
small whorled pogonia (lsotria
medeoloides Rafinesque), could
well have been present in such a
habitat. The particular
corn/Jination of these species.
however, taken together as a
functionmg ecosystem. is today a
rare occurrence.
What species m ight be
present on such a site today'!
Following the indiscriminate
logging and burning at the the
tum of the century, conditions
were so severely altered that the
second-grow t h forest now
consists typically of a mixture of
60 to 80 year o ld oaks and
hickones, with perhaps fewer than 10 other tree
species. More prominent today are the
m1d-successional species: yellow poplar
(liriendendron tulip/era L.), eastern white pine
(Pinus strobw L .), black locust (Robinia
pseudoacacia L .). sourwood (Oxydendron
a rboreum L.), sassafras (Sassafras albidum
Nee s.), and stump sprouts o f Americ an
chestnut. Scauercd individuals of most of the
original species are also present, but the species
composition is so drastically altered that the
highland forest is typically c lassified as
~oalc-hiclcory" ralher than "mixed hardwoods."
Large cavity trees arc rare. The large
decomposing logs that typify biologically mature
habitat are largely absent from today's regrowth
forests.The number of undcrstory and ground
cover species are now reduced, retaining those
that thrive on disturbance, such as species of
berries (Vaccinium and Gaylussacia) and
rhododendron.
Early succession habitat caused by human
disturbance is the only habitat type that is
well-represented on the second level of
biodiversity, the diversity of species within
habitats. But the forest communities are slowly
maturing, and species enric hment is occurring
gradually in those habitat s that arc left
undisturbed. Biologically mature habitats, or
old-growth mixed hardwood forests, are again a
possibility within the next century.
Just as genetic diversity within a species
is e ssential for adaptation for survival in a
changing enviro nme nt, so spec ies d iversity
with in a habitat is essent ial for the whole
community of interdependent plants and animals
to meet the demands of evolution. The future of
those species combinations best adapted to old,
mature hardwood forest communities depends
on the integrity of the entire habitat.
Habitat Divers ity: Differentiation on
the third level of biological d iversity, that of
habitat diversity in the regional landscape, has
also been gradually emerging in the Southern
Appalachian Mountains throughout the second
half of this century. The national forest-; provide
large, contiguous blocks of forest area. which,
if they continue to be left und1stur_bed. ha~e the
potential to mature into a mosaic of diverse
forest habitats, each accommodating its own
composition of species, and all together making
provision for the genetic diversity essential for
species evolution. The key requirement for this
regional diversity lies in maintaining a continuity
of undisturbed habitats across the landscape.
Disconnected habitats that are left to
mature as isolated fragments cannot serve as
more than small rcfugia for generic material.
Such limitation confines ecnetic variation within
the boundaries of each of these tiny habi1a1 areas
and restricts the potential for evolution to
respond to future changes in the cnvironmenL
The current policy of national forest
management is to accommodate landscape
diversity by pwcscrving fragments of old growth
stands dispersed throughout a landscape that is
predominantly even-aged
st~nds .of
commercially valuable tree species wnh
provisions for a few important species of game
animals. This concept of diversity is analogous
to the preservation of species in arboretu ms.
bota nical gardens, and zoos. Cen ainl y a
bead-lily (Clinronia borealis Raf.) in a cultivated
garden has lost most of its wild "lily-ness,"
because a wildflower removed from its natural
habitat is no longer serving its role as a strand in
the web of life. In like manner, a fragment of
old-growth forest preserved in a landscape of
managed young forests has lost its essential
nature, as it is no longer a pan of the web of
biological e volution in the region its generic
material serves.
At the level of habitat diversity. just as at
the two lower levels. the ability or an entire
bioregion to adapt and survive environmental
change depends on the diversity of its natural
habitats. The greater the number of mature
�REGIONAL PLANNING FOR HABITAT
INTEGRITY
by Laura E. Jackson
Laura Jackson is the author of the study
Mountain Treasures at Risk: The Future of the
Southern Appalachian National Forests, a
comprehensive overview and critique of the US
Forest Service's Land and Resource Managemem
Plans for the six national forest areas of the
Southern Appalachians.
Laura is completing graduate work at the
School of Forestry and Environmental Studies at
Duke University. She wrote the sllldy in
cooperation with Peter Kirby, regional director,
and other staff members of the Southeast
Regional Office of the Wilderness Society under a
Stanley Fellowship grant The book is published
and made available by the Wilderness Society.
Mountain Treasures at Risk is an excellent
resource for anyone who is concerned about
habitat i11 the Sowhem Appalachians. The text is
clear a11d to the point. The graphs and tables are
pleasing to the eye and revealing in their content.
Forest issues are de-mystified in a way that only
someone with a clear comprehension of the
dynamics involved could articula1e. 8111, most of
all, Laura Jackso11's suuiy is invaluable because it
is wriuen by someone with no ves1ed economic or
poli1ical in1eres1 in 1he Appalachian public lands b111 rather by someone with 011ly the interests of
1hefores1 01 liean.
The book talks in a straigluforward way
about tlie effects 011 the forest of below-cost timber
sales, over-roading, and the i11equities i11 budget
and emphasis show11 i11 Forest Service
management programs. The swdy co11clt1des with
guidelines/or managing the Sowhern Appalachian
11a1ional fores ts 10 protect wild la11ds a11d the
biological diversity they harbor, meet recreatio11al
and aesthetic demands, and restore the forest
1wilo1.
011 page one of Mountain Treasures at Risk
the report states that the two major flaws i11 the
Forest Service ma11ageme111 approach is the
agency's emphasis 011 commodity ex1ractio11from
the mow11ai11forests Olld their failure to recog11ize
the Somhern Appalachia11s as a regional habitat
system (in other words, a bioregio11).
/1 says, 'This report is the only ctunulative
analysis to dote to examine the Forest Service's
plaru for thil unique nwumuin environment." This
is true. Many t/1a11ks.
In the following article Laura Jackso11
explains further the differences in understanding
that result from viewing the Ka11'iah provi11ce a11d
its disti11ctive habitats as a whole, rather than
breaking it into administrative pieces....
·DW
Mountain Treasures at Risk is available at M
charge by writing to tht Wilderness Society Southeast
Regional Office at 1819 Peachtru St. NE; Atlanta, GA
30309. (Jlowevtr, consider making a volU11tary donation.
Tht reference is wt// worth It.)
>C.at i'.&ah Journat paqe 8
T he fragmentation of Souther n
Appalachian habitat is the familiar result of a
utilitarian value system that prizes goods
production and consumption over a healthy
relationship with our land. Forest managers ask
how their stands can fulfill national timber
quotas. State governments ask if thei r
wilderness fragments arc sufficient to satisfy
recreational demand. But their questions are
framed within self-imposed limits of vision that
reach only to the orderly edges of administrative
boundaries. Consequently, they are too narrow
in scope to address what arc now the most
critical issues. In this age of dwindling native
populations, dying mountaintops, and other
large-scale ecological catastrophes, we must
adopt a broad regional perspective in order to
evaluate and implement essential environmental
solutions.
The regional framework provides a logical
context by which to approach land management
decisions. The natural expanse of an ecosystem
(like a prairie, desert, or mountain range) with
its local resources, indigenous populations. and
traditional activities, can suggest
environmentally appropriate patterns of growth
and development. Requiring collaboration
among public agencies and private owners, the
regional perspective is gaining support around
the world as the solution to maintain ecological
systems and the integrity of the
human/environment relationship.
As the dominant land manager in the
Southern Appalachians, the US Forest Service
is in a position to best exemplify the philosophy
of regional stewardship. Currently, however,
the agency is under extensive criticism for its
unimaginative, homocentric planning and
management techniques. The Forest Service
conuols approx:imatcly three million acres in six
Southern Appalachian national forests. Despite
the contiguity of these lands, each national forest
is administered as a separate unit. Staff vision
and authority stop at the legal boundaries. As a
result, individual forest planners have set
inconsistent standards for managing shared
animal populations, lost opportunities to protect
roadlcss areas that straddle state lines, and
purposefully altered rare habitat in order to
incroduce elements already common on adjacent
private lands.
In the Katuah province, towns and private
inholdings comprise about half of the acreage
within official national forest boundaries. These
lands support agriculture, industrial forests,
developed and roaded recreation, and other
human-altered environments. Consequently they
have attracted hardy, invasive wildlife that
thrives in modified senings and displaces native
mountain species. A crucial role of federal
stewardship, therefore, is to promote natural
habitat continuity as a public investment in
biological diversity, clean air and water, and the
Southern Appalachian wild native heritage.
A satellite's-eye view of the Southern
Appalachian Mountains shows the Appalachian
public lands as a green island standing alone
above lowlands crowded with human beings
and the products of their ac1ivi1ies. This
mountainous ecosystem of tremendous natural
beauty and scientific importance is also in
increasing demand as a source for consumptive
supplies. A closer look would show public
forests fragmented by private inholdings,
development spreading across newly-cleared
hillsides, and wildlands straining under
increased resource use. Yet, to date, the core of
the Southern Appalachian habitat survives
relatively intact.
Invisible from overhead, yet just as real in
its effects on the highland forests, is the
administrative fragmentation that further stresses
the region's habitats. Southern Appalachian
forests fall under the jurisdictions of five state
governments, as many federal agencies, and
dozens of counties with differing objectives for
the use of their mountain commodities.
Countless private corporations also make
decisions based on their own perceived interests
in the resources of the Ka1uah province. The
accumulated effects of numerous land-use
decisions made in the isolation of corporate
boardrooms, federal office buildings, and the
offices of county or state agencies threaten 10
mortally fragment Katuah's natural systems and
desuoy their ecologi.cal functions.
If the administering agencies could view
the mountain region from the viewpoint of our
imaginary satellite hovering above, their
perspective and consequently their management
priorities might be changed:
• From overhead, it is clear that the
Southern Appalachians are a biological island,
the last remaining large block of forest habitat in
the southeast. Many areas can contribute to the
regional and national timber supply, most of
them better than these steep mountain forests.
But where better can we look for wilderness,
and the shady, moist storehouses of
undiscovered ecological value?
• The region's remote ridgelines and
pristine streams constitute rare wildland linkage
opponunities for migration, genetic exchange,
and the daily roamiogs of wide-ranging
mammals. These travelways could also extend
to wildlands in the Central Appalachians to the
north, and perhaps south into the Florida
peninsula as well, to ensure strong, adaptable
populations of black bear, mountain lion, and
other large predators. Broad corridors
connecting natural habitat areas along the length
of 1hc Appalachian range would serve as
ecological escape routes in cases of severe
environmental stress, whether of human or
natural origin.
rau.
19e9
�•The Appalachians are the headwaters of
all the great rivers east of the Mississippi. If
streams and rivers are not pure at their origins,
they can never be clean anywhere along their
length.
The expanses of forest that cover the
green mountains are also a fountainhead of
valuable oxygen in an increasingly polluted
armospherc.
• A regional perspective would correct the
misconception that each national forest should
provide the public with equivalent proportions
of all resources. The southeast supports an
abundance of cleared fields, thickets or young
"pioneer" trees, and the understory plants and
animals associated with early successional
habitats. However, areas of contiguous, remote
forest and old-growth comrrunities are precious
and rare. Species plentiful in one nationaJ forest
might be uncommon everywhere else; therefore
these should be preserved at the expense of
more ordinary forest uses.
• Research priorities and resource
inventories also attain broader significance when
framed in a regional perspective. State wildlife
officials and federal land managers currently
repon environmental characteristics in terms of
acres, head counts, and dollars. Such data arc
easily tabulated and readily available by state and
ownership category. Yet these quantitative
measures fail to capture the more comprehensive
information that is critical 10 effective habitat
management
Ta!L, 1989
• To ensure that resource u1ili7.ation docs
not deplete an ecosystem's natural variety,
managers must monitor across the landscape.
They must mitigate the encroachment or
common edge habitat into the diminishing forest
interior. They must delineate and protect
multi-state blocks of continuous forest and
migration pathways. Responsible stewardship
also requires improved biodiversity
measurements, the promotion of ecologically
rich old-growth stands, and the restoration of
degraded lands. These and other research
objectives necessitate inter-agency cooperation.
working relationships with private landowners,
and a more holistic view of the natural
environment and our relationship to it.
The responsibility for regional planning
docs not lie solely with public agencies.
Farmers, industrial foresters. university
administrators, even individual homeowners
must ask how their lands contribute to the
environmental landscape. Particularly those who
profit financially from Katuah's natural features
- the outfitters, resort managers. and members
of the entertainment and service sectors that
surround public lands - should suive to maintain
the integrity of the regional environment both as
a business investment and as a means to
compensate the land for its free use. Private
landowners can do a great deal to strengthen the
vitality of the region by managing their land to
help reconnect the broken pieces.
The time has come for landowners and
managers to acknowledge their shared
responsibility for environmental stewardship.
We can no longer afford to view properties as
discrete units unto themselves. to be modified,
unadvised, by their current legal authorities.
Businesses, families, and public agencies arc
but temporary guardians of many tiny pieces of
the Eanh. Yet the natural processes that permit
our physical survival, as well as foster creative
imagery and inspiration, besr operate
unconstrained by anificaJ divisions. In order to
maintain for the future the fundamental
life-support systems of humans and other
species, we must begin to counter the legacy of
fragmentation with a commitment to
environmental unity.
We must explore land uses that do not
deplete the Eanh's suitability for the other life
forms with whom we exist. We must instill a
deep appreciation for nature and natural
processes in our schoolchildren. We must not
insist on using. viewing, or populating every
available surface, so that truly wild expanses
may sustain the large animals who suffer in our
presence. Much to their credit, federal agencies
in the Southern Appalachians arc now
experimenting with cooperative management
programs. These require our encouragment and
participation. Ccnainly sacrifices of power,
pride, and privacy will be necessary to restore
our suffering environment Yet their significance
wanes beside the tangible and spiritual rewards
of a cooperative survival mission never before
attempted and never more important.
x.atfulh Journm pCUJe 9
�A Question of Value
by David Wheeler
The decades between 1880 and 1920
were the years of the timber barons in the
Southern Appalachian Mountains. This was the
great "logging boom," in which virtually all the
first-growth, "virgin" forest was cut off the
Appalachian slopes.
Fortunes were made during those years,
but the money did not stay in the mountains.
The wealth went to the corporate magnates and
investors in the eastern cities and in Europe.
When the ravishing of the Appalachian forests
was completed, the big companies headed for
greener forests to the west, and the local people
were left with a strong dependency on the
wage-earning system and without the means to
support it.
Today the old-growth forest, the first
forest, is gone, but the view that the forest is a
collection of resources, there for the use and
benefit of human beings still underpins our basic
attitudes and policies toward the Appalachian
woodlands.
The US Forest Service exemplifies that
attitude. Their policies and priorities suue plainly
that they consider the growing of hardwood
timber to be the fir.a purpose of the Southern
Appalachian national forest land.
In the Jefferson National Forest in
Virginia, two-thirds of the Forest Service budget
goes into timber-cutting and road-building,
which is directly tied to logging operations. In
the Nantahala-Pisgah National Forest, 40% of
the budget is allocated to timber and roads.
Beyond that, a good portion of the
adminis1rative budget (which comprises 25% of
the overall budget and is tallied separately) also
goes to overseeing timbering and road-building
operations. Only 3.4% of the NantahalaPisgah's annual budget goes to monitoring and
providing for the needs of wildlife.
The road-building that logging operations
demand is the most expensive and damaging of
all the activities carried on by the Forest Service.
This is particularly true in the southern
mountains where the slopes are steep and highly
erosive (see page 12).
The justification for this continued
environmental destruction and human intrusion
into remote habitat areas is the familiar "jobs and
money" refrain. Much ado is made of the timber
shortage that would result if unconstrained
logging in the national forests were to be
stopped. Timber industry lobbyists declare 1ha1
old-growth forest is wasteful, that there is
already more than enough land set aside for
habitat, and argue against evidence that shows a
forest diminishing in native diversity and
threatened in its ability to provide the clean water
and air that help to nourish life on the planet.
Unhappy over the timber quotas set in the
Forest Service's Land and Resource
Management Plans for the National Forests in
the Southern Appalachians, the timber interests
demanded, and won, an agreement from the
Forest Service to sponsor a timber demand
study, thinking that would give them leverage to
XQt\mh Journc:i! pa9e 10
Phoro by Roo Musick/Profea Ligltthawt
further increase the Forest Service's emphasis
on timber cutting.
The result was the "Southern Appalachian
Timber St udy" prepared by a team of
researchers headed by J. Edward de Steiguer of
the Forest Service's Southeastern Experiment
Station. The repon exploded like a bombshell
onto the environmental scene.
First, rather than verifying a strong
demand for hardwood lumber from the National
Forests, che repon found that the prices offered
had actually been decreasing over the last
decade!
. And, rather 1han showing that the
Nauonal Forests were making an important
contributi?n co the region's timber output, che
report pointed out that che National Forests
contribute only 10 percem of the regional timber
supply. And this 10 percent is largely wood of
poor quality, used mostly for making pallets and
boxes, but also for railroad ties, mine props
plywood, chipboard, and finally paper pulp. A
portion of the better-quality hardwoods are used
as veneer woods and in the manufacturing of
furniture, decorative trim, and hardwood
floorin~, but the study mentioned in passing that
a growing percentage of best hardwoods were
being exported out of che country 10 buyers
overseas!
The Forest Supervisor's office in
Asheville, NC stated that only 700 jobs
throughout the North Carolina mountains were
directly relating to timber harvesting in the
national forests. In rhe Ka111ah province only
rwo counties, Graham and Swain, are dependent
on logging in the national forest as an important
pan of their overal I economies.
But the forest, like anything that lives, is
much greater than the sum of its parts. The cash
price of the standing timber is a paltry amount
compared to the true worth of the forest. How
could one appraise the rich diversity of life in
Karuah, unequalled in the temperate zones of the
world? We can on.ly be grateful for the priceless
blessings of dark soil, pure water, and clean air.
We cannot calculate the inestimable value of the
fragile quality of wholeness.
There has been much controversy lately
about clearcutting and the methods by which
timber is cut in the National Forests. However,
as biologist Glenda Zahner has said, in the face
of the perceived dangers to the survival of the
whole Appalachian habitat it appears that the
question is not how timber is taken, but whether
timber should be cut at all in the Southern
Appalachian narional forests.
Well-known are the infamous national
forest "below-cost timber sales" that have come
to light in the past few years. These are sales in
which the expense of the wood, site access and
preparation, and the administrative management
of rhe sale are not covered by the price received
in the sale con1rac1. Thus, the Forest Service has
actually lost money selling timber in many pans
of the country, including the Southern
Appalachians.
Figures collected for 1987 from the six
National Forests in the Southern Appalachians
(including the Pickens Ranger District of the
Sumter National Forest in South Carolina) show
that the Forest Service lost $5.5 million dollars
in that one year alone from their disastrous
timber policies.
Below-cost timber sales constitute an
unauthorized hand-out 10 the lumber interests
from the agency • and thus from the US
taxpayers. The $5.5 million deficit from one
year of clearcutting the forest could pay 275 of
those 800 working timber-related jobs in the
North Carolina national forests one year's salary
of $20,000 to leave the forests uncut and to
protect them as viable and living habicats.
The succeeding generation of trees that
replaced those carried away during the great
Appalachian lumber rush are now reaching 60 to
80 years of age. The trees are approaching
sawlog girth and soon their growth rate will
begin to slow. This is the age of economic
maturity (not to be confused with biological
YaU.1989
�•
maturity, which is anywhere between 200 and
500 years of age). This is a critical decision
point in our policy-making: is the forest to be set
back to the staning point again, or is it to be
allowed to continue on toward the old-~wth
stage to provide optimal habitat for the native
foresr species?
The Forest Service has made its position
clear. On page 33, de Steiguer's "Southern
Appalachian Timber Study" said, "From 1977 to
1986, the National Forests progressively
increased the harvest volume of all stumpage
products except softwood pulpwood. Real
prices fell during the same period. In fact, the
price lines are pracrically a mirror image of the
volw11e lines." The report showed that the rate
of timber cutting in the Southern Appalachian
National Forests doubled from 63 million board
feet in 1977 to 126 million board feet in 1986,
even as prices were declining.
Wise business practice would suggest
witholding supplies when t.he price is low. The
Forest Service has done e1tactly the opposite
during the last decade, selling more and more
timber for less and less money. Because timber
quotas have been determined on the basis of
political considerations rather than a response to
the real market, taxpayers have been paying for
the privilege of having the National Forests
clearcut by the timber industry.
At the time of this writing, the Forest
Service is planning to again double timber
cutting levels in the Southern Appalachians
between 1986 and 1996. If timber sales continue
10 lose money at the same rate that they are now,
then the money lost on below-cost timber sales
wiU also double during that time.
Under the current versions of the Forest
Service's Land and Resource Management
Plans for the Southern Appalachian national
forests, almost 2/3 of the national forests are
deemed suitable for logging, and all of that area
is scheduled 10 be cut within the next 50 years.
The narural cycle of succession leading to an
old-growth, climax forest habitat will be cut
short throughout two million acres of the
national forest lands. Oak trees, many of which
will be just beginning to produce the acorn mast
so important to black bears and many other
forest inhabitants, will be toppled in clearcuts,
and a portion of the cut-over areas will be
burned or sprayed with poisonous herbicides
and planted in straight lines of white pine trees,
which create inferior habitat for most forest
species. The large, open clearcut areas left to
regenerate naturaUy wiU invite yellow poplar
trees to invade and take over land that may have
been dominated by oaks and other tree species
that prefer some degree of shade. Clearcuts do
encourage diversity - a diversity of weedy plant
and animal species at the expense of increasingly
rare old-growth habitats.
Today the old pattern of lumber
extraction is being renewed as "the international
timber commodities market." Once again,
Appalachia is being relegated to the position of a
t:olonized economy from which raw materials
leave the region for processing elsewhere, along
with the power and the profits.
The United States is vinually the only
country in the world with the capability to
produce temperate hardwoods for expon. Most
of the American hardwoods, particularly the oak
lumber that is most in demand, come from the
ratt.
1989
Appalachian Range. Canada is supplied almost
enurely from the nearby Nonhem Appalachians.
Because they are of higher quality, the northern
hardwoods are also preferred in the
discriminating European market. Buyers in the
Far East, however, are more price-conscious,
and increasing amounts of Southern
Appalachian wood has been sold in Asia.
It is difficult to determine how dependent
on foreign sales the mountain timber industry
has become, because lumber to be shipped
overseas is shunted from logger to wholesaler
and perhaps to several brokers before it finally
reaches its port of embarkation. The US
Depanmenr of Commerce conveniently requires
no records of the point of origin of exported
lumber.
Industry representatives and Forest
Service analysts say that of the total amount of
hardwood cut each year, only 40-50% is large
enough and of a quality that could be considered
for export. They estimate that approximately
20-25% of that export-grade wood is sent
overseas. However, because this is the
highest-quality material of the wood species that
are most in demand, the economic value of the
exponed hardwoods is much greater than their
percentage in volume and is very important to
the hardwood market as a whole.
Distribution of Annual Timber Removals
in the Southern Appalachians. 1980-1986
Fnrms
25.5%
Miscclb ncous
Owner.>
l1riV"J tC
52.8%
Nauona I Forests
10.0%
Oz hcr l'uhlic Aboencics
1.9%
S~ Moun1ain Treasun.sOI Rislc
Much of the expon trade in hardwood is
in kiln-dried, rough-sawn lumber. which is
processed in foreign plants and used for
cabinetry and furniture manufacturing. The
country of Taiwan is among the largest buyers
today. UnHke Japan and West Germany, which
produce furniture largely for their own internal
consumer markets, Taiwan manufactures
furniture for export, mostly to the United States.
The Taiwanese furniture industry is modern and
efficient, and labor in that coumry is so cheap
that they can pay to import lumber from the
United States and then ship finished products
back 10 sell at competitive prices in this country.
John Syme, forest economist at Clemson
University says, "Quite a lot of the furniture
manufacmrers, panicularly in North Carolina,
Tennessee, and Virginia, are buying fumimre or
components produced in Taiwan and other
Pacific Rim countries and then selling them
along with what they manufacture domestically.
This is typical of chairs in particular, and other
items that have a high labor content."
It is possible that consumers in the town
of Sylva, Nonh Carolina could buy furniture
that was made in Taiwan of wood that was cut
within 25 miles of their own home. While they
might notice that a piece is stamped "Made in
Taiwan," they probably would not notice that
the price tag includes fees for shipping the
materials halfway around the world and then
shipping the finished product aU the way back
again.
To stimulate a market that is not
fast-paced enough for their liking, timber
industry profiteers are supplying materials to
keep alive wood-based industries in countries
that, due to misuse and overpopulation, have
already displaced their native forests. On paper,
the hardwood timber industry generates great
profits at the export game, but little of the money
made ever returns to the region where the wood
was originally grown. The materials are sold
from the mountains with a minimum of
processing - jobs are being shipped away along
with the wood. II is the brokers and traders in
the large eastern cities who benefit from timber
exporting. They are few, bur they benefit
greatly.
Sending raw materials to have value
added elsewhere is not advantageous for the
regional economy, but ultimately it is the forest
that pays the greatest price. Ir is the Southern
Appalachian lwbicat that is being cut and shipped
away overseas. It is the black bear's food
supply, the shady canopy protecting the ginseng
plant and the delicate ladyslipper. It is the cover
that hides the thrush, rhe tall guardians who
draw down and measure out the pure running
water. It is the integrity of the biological system,
that subtle sense of balance that is intangible, yet
so important.
Here again is that persistent question of
value: for what we are losing, what do we gain?
The approach that sees the forest trees as
materials for human use requires chat the trees be
cut down and carried away - extracted - before
they are of value.
But the other approach that sees value in
the wholeness of living communities requires
that humans keep their hands (feet, and wheels)
off large areas of the foresL The Southern
Appalachian national forests are a significant
land area in the Southeast. They could be a
magnificent habitat area. Timber cutting, which
supposedly is providing the greatest economic
benefits, is proving to be a public liability
instead. The national forests in the Kan1ah
province are providing very litcle timber, very
few jobs, and very litlle money to the local
people. Yet for those scanty benefits the
mountain forestlands are suffering inestimable
damage to the natural habitat chat will take
centuries to repair where it is reparable at all.
It is time 10 bring our forest policies back
into balance with the forest.
The "Southern Appalachian Timber Study" by de
Steiguer. ct al., is available from tlze USDA Forest
Service; Box 2750: Asheville, NC: Katuah Province
28802. This anicle also drew heavily on the excellent
resource Moumain Treasures at Risk by Laura E.
Jackson (see page 8).
�Let's Close The Gate To Forest Devastation
by Anna Muir
"Our forests are national rreasures nor national rreefanns."
- St1u11or Wye/le Fowler, Jr. (D-GA)
As far as land use is concerned, the key to
protecting the Southern Appalachian forest
habitat is to deny human access. Access means
roads.
"In 1985, narionalforesrs in the sowliern
Appalachians contained 4 ,95 J miles of
permanent Forest Service roads. The agency
plans ro add 3,263 miles of new road ro this
transportation sysrem by the year 2030 in order
to meet increased timber sale levels. The
resulting 8,2 14 miles will surpass rlie distance
from Denver, Colorado, to New Zealand. In
less than 50 years, these national forests will
support alrrwsr two miles of road per square
mile of land, nor including state, county, or
private roads."
budgeted $13,600 per mile c road gentle slopes
o
and $22,700 per mile/or sreep slopes."
- Laura E. Jackson, Mountain Treasures at Risk
Timber sales add up to a net liability for
the Forest Service and thus for the US
taxpayers. In the Southern Appalachians alone
logging cost taxpayers $5.5 million in 1987. It
is a vicious paradox, because preliminary road
building doom;; any chance that a timber sale
might clear a profit before cu1ting even starts.
Present policy states that the only viable
method of timber cutting is clearcutting. Under
repeated clcarcuning the original forest is never
given a chance to grow back, thus clearcuuing
represents forest fragmentation and species
discontinuity on the grossest scale. But loggmg
depends on the expensive permanent roads
installed at the taXpaycr's expense. No roads, no
clearcuts.
- Laura£. Jackson. Moumain T~ at Risk
R oad const ruc ti on c reates severe
disruption throughou t many square miles of
national forest habitat. The soil erosion and
stream siltation associated with logging
operattons arc predominately the result of the
roading necessary to remove the timber. Great
amounts of topsoil, D"CCS, and native herbaceous
plants arc displaced all along the many miles of
roads pushed into the forest habitat. Roading in
steep areas undercuts soil and rock structures,
maximizing erosion, often res ultin g in
rockslides and soil slumping.
"Access is rhe demise of bear habirar, and
anybody with comrrwn sense will tell you that.
The bear in the Piedmont has been wiped out
and replaced wirh people. For every mile of
road you punch imo these rrwuntains and leave
open, you're jusr pulling anorher nail in the
bear's coffin." - John Collins, wildlife blologw and
big gamt program coordinawr, NC Wildlife Resources
Commission. quoted 111 Wildlife in Nonh Carolina
rrrJg<UIJIL
In an inter-depanmental memo released to
the public, US ForeSt Service Regional Forester
Jnck Alcock stated that, "Approximately 98
percent of all recreation (in the national forests)
takes place within three-fourths mile of a road."
Oisregardfog the obvious question of where is
one to find a patch of national forest that 1s nor
three-fourths mile from a road, the regional
forester's statement gives some idea of the
tremendous negative impact of forest roads on
the natural habitat and how tremendously helpful
closing roads would be to the rejuvenation of
that habitat.
'This is a wasteful program that continues
a Jcind offar red calf existence even in these days
of tremendous budget dejicirs ....ln the last si.:c
[!Seal years alone the Forest Service constructed
3,725 more miles of road than needed, by its
own projec1ions, for rimber harves1ing. Such
unnecessary roadbuilding was1es the taxpayers'
money, while valuable fish and wildlife habirar
is destroyed."
- Sen. Wyche Fowler. Jr (D-CA) on the floor of
the US Stnate. July 29. 1989
The primary purpose of the forest roads
in the Southern Appalachian national forests is
to bring in logging trucks. The Forest Service
has claimed that the mosaic of roads interlacing
the national forests is necessary to support the
jobs and money generated by timber cutting.
However, this claim has been proven false.
Timber sales on the national forests have
actually been losing money in recent years (sec
p. 10 ), and a primary reason is the cost of road
building in the steep mountain terrain.
"Across rhe nation, approximately
one-half of all Forest service rimber expenses
are artribwable to road costs. Road construction
is expensive, particularly in mountainous
regions where many national fores rs are located.
Planners for 1Jie Jefferson (Na1ional Foresr)
Jc:.citUah Journm
p ~ 12
197S
11l6S
19115
2030
T OTAL REGION.
• Past, Current, and Projected Forest Service
Permanent Road Milage on the Southern
Appalachian National Forests, 1974-2030.
Soun:..
flfowitam Trtasuru ill Risk
"The excessive logging scheduled for
remore and sreep terrain requires a degree of
roading that will severely degrade rhe moumain
environment. Within 50 years. 3,263 miles of
new, permanent roads are pro;ecred for rhe
Sowhern Appalachian national foreslS. Road
consrrucrion is rhe most damaging activity
conducted in norional fores1 management. Even
miligalion ml!asures cannor prevent erosion, soil
compaction, and habiratfragmentarion - ongoing
results of road consrruction and subsequent
use." - Laura E. Jackson. Mounu11n Treasures at Risk
The greatest damage by forest roads 1s to
habitat values as they occur in remote areas of
the national forests. And the most damaging
aspects of the forest roads are those caused by
"cumulative cffectS" - those incremental changes
that considered together add up to debilitating
qualitative changes in the overall environment.
Here is an example of "cumulat ive
effects:' A road was bulldozed to a clearcut site.
The logging trucks and heavy equipment went
in, did their job and, after some months, came
out, leaving a treeless forest area compacted and
criss-crossed by caterpillar tracks.
Some of the loggers were bear hu nters,
and they noticed bear sign while they were
doing their work. So, that fall, trucks with
kennel boxes mounted on the back raised dust
up and dow n the road, until the bear s were
hunted out, and the hunters moved elsewhere to
finish off the season.
Now familiar with the area, some of the
hunters brought a picnicking party to a pleasant
pool they found in the creek flowing beyond the
logged-over area. The following year some of
the families rerurned to the clearcut to pick
blackberries. And o ne of the teenagers
remembered the picnicking party when he and
his friends needed an isolated place to park and
drink beer, so four-wheel-drive vehicles
careened up into the forest several weekends in
succession.
The Forest Service, noticing all the use
their small, rough forest road was attracting,
upgraded the road to "meet the traffic demand"
with the result that tourists in their large cars
could ride all the way to the top of the ridge to
enjoy the view .... And so it goes.
Each of these uses is not significant in
itself. Each is legitimate in its own way. But.
compounded together, the overall effect is
devastating to the natural habitat that once
existed on that ridgetop, protected by several
square miles of impenetrable forest. Cumulative
effects all too often add up to a habitat
destroyed.
f"l:ltt, t 989
�"Anyone who can't see that open roads
hurt bear habitat has got to be blind."- John
Collins, wildlife biologist and big game program
coordilliltor, NC Wildlife ReS(Jurces Commission
Besides the direct monality due to road
kills and increased hunter ingress, roads are a
primary cause of the forest fragmentation that is
one of the greatest threats to habitat in the
Karuah Province. Roads mean people, and black
bears and other large forest-dwelling animals
shy away from traffic-bearing roads, so that
large areas of previously umouched habitat, far
wider than the actual area of the roadbed itself,
are eliminated with the construction and
subsequent use of new roads. Thus, the
creatures native to the old forest are pushed into
smaller and smaller range areas that are less and
less desirable as living spaces as roads are
constructed in areas that were once prime
habitat.
New roads also mean wide strips of
cleared land and carry "edge effects,'' one of
which is rapid invasion by early-succession
("weed") species of plants and animals, deep
into the once-unbroken foresL
Multiple Use M o dule
(MUM)
Rud NDM ill NaJural Areas JoMrnol
"Mr. President, we already have an
excess of Forest Service roads through our
national forests ...."
- Sen. Wyche Fowler. Jr.
(D-GA) on the floor of the US Senate.July 29, 1989
In the interest of habitat preservation, not
only should the US Forest Service halt its
road-building program in Katuah completely,
but in key habitat areas existing roads should be
closed, erased, and planted with fast-growing,
hardwood, pioneer tree species to restore the
natural character of the once-roaded areas as
quickly as possible.
Closing forest roads completely and
permanently would open large expanses of
forest in which the black bear and other
old-growth dependent species could roam
freely, strengthening the gene pool, and
rejuvenating and expanding the present
populations. Closing roads is a necessary
prerequisite for any programs to reintroduce
large carnivorous animals, such as the mountain
lion, to restore proper predator/prey balances in
the forest. Closing roads is a key pan of any
program to restore old-growth habitat in the
,
Southern Appalachian Mountains.
SparrowHawk
The sparrow hawk became his friend,
though distrusting him at first,
not seeing that when the man found it
entangled in fishing line at the junkyard,
he meant anything but harm.
But it softened as he sat in the
dark room beside it
silent, his eyes averted,
letting it discover that he held it captive
only because he cared
and would offer freedom when the May hills were green
and the air sweetened and warm.
Trust came when he fed it chicken
and trained it to fly from his fist
at field mice and grasshoppers,
nurturing its strength and confidence
to face the world again.
Yet he was reluctant to give it back
to the endless sky and distant Blue Ridge,
saddened not to hear its chirp
or feel the light talons as it lit on his head
or see the solemn brown gaze;
but his time with the hawk was borrowed,
and as it flew beyond the pines vanished with the stirring breeze he was glad to have known 1t at all.
- Julia Nunnally Duncan
T11Ct, 1989
D1awU1g by RobM~sick.
�TA
by Heather Blair
fg[(,
1989
�A PLACE FOR BEARS
An Interview with Dr. Michael Pelton
(This 1nttr11itw 1s a continuation of a
conlll!rsation btg"" ill issut 17 of the Ka!Uah Journal.)
Katuah Journal: What are the basic
clements for good bear habitat?
Pt/ton: In 1970 we questioned
southeastern state fish and wildlife agencies
about bear habitat Respondents indicated across
the board that black bears need good food
sources (acorns and berries) and thick
understory cover of some type There seemed to
be common agrccmcnt that these were necessary
clements for good bear habitat.
1bc third element is privacy - some degree
of seclusion and remoteness. Of these three
clements there is no doubt that the
privacy/protection element is the most irnponant.
Black bears are omnivores and have a broad
food habit. Throughout their range in North
America nuts and berries are always present.
Where these arc present the species will survive,
but only if there is some degree of privacy.
Kattlah Journal: Then how about the
effect of roads?
Ptll()n: Road density and rramc volume
arc the two factors that interact to determine the
degree to which a bear will avoid crossing or
even coming close to a road.
The animals can be affected in two major
ways. First, the road may make the habitat less
desirable. Therefore they shift their home range,
usually to a less desirable habitation. Thus they
would be more vulnerable to monality, as they
would have to move around more to find
adequate food, denning sites, or cover.
Secondly, a road may result in direct
monality. Besides obvious factors like road
kills, the mere presence of a rood invites people
to use ii. The more it is used, the greater the
possibility that hunting will be one of those
uses.
Katuah Journal:
Are there other
cumulative effects of roads?
Pelton: Certainly. Once a road is in place
and opened, it attracts all kinds of human
intrusion, whether it's logging or hunting.
The Twelve Mile Strip (an area between
the east border of the Great Smoky Mountains
National Parle and the Pisgah 1"ational Forest) is
an imponant dispersal area from the Park. It is
also a major hunting area. However, the Twelve
Mile Strip is essentially devoid of a resident bear
population. There is a high degree of road
access, which means heavy hunting pressure,
and the 1-40 freeway separates the Twelve Mile
Strip from the national forest, which is ccnainly
a barrier to bear migration.
A recent ttaffic surve)' we did on l-40
found that during the daytime a vehicle passed
the counting point every three seconds. At night
the traffic slowed to one vehicle every seven
seconds. The only real land bridge is the steep
ridge that runs over one tunnel. We also know
that there arc 13 or 14 culvcrtS in that area which
could be used to cross under 1-40, but we don't
f'11U, t 989
~ "11-Rltea
know if they arc being used. From road kills
we've found, we do know that bears do
occasionally tty to cross the highway.
When traveling the coastal area of Europe
last year, l found it very interesting to see their
road construction techniques. At locations where
we would "cut and fill" in this mountainous
countty, they "bridge and tunnel." It struck me
immediately that the "bridge and tunnel"
concept, for whatever reason they used it, is
ideal for animals in that it leaves large corridors
for dispersal movements, in contrast to the "cut
and fill" method that we use at present
The availability of acorns
drives the dynamics of the black
bear population in the Southern
Appalachians.
Katuah Journal: That's interesting,
especially since another major freeway is being
proposed up the 1-26 corridor into Tennessee. It
seems like it would be time to bring up
something like that.
You have also talked about acorns and
their imponance to the black bear population.
Pelton: The availability of acorns drives
the dynamics of the black bear population in the
Southern Appalachians.
Black bears react to this concentrated
energy source in amazing ways. Ecologically,
physiologically, and behaviorally they go
through a ttemendous change each fall.
Bears tty to incorporate prime acorn sites
into their home ranges. But acorns produce
sporadically, and in any given year black bears
will leave their traditional home range areas and
travel for miles to congregate at oak stands that
have abundant acorns.
During this "feeding frenzy," as we call it,
they sometimes seem to ignore a human
presence in situations in which at any other time
they would have jumped into the bushes and run
away. They also show much more tolerance for
one another at these focal eating areas. There
seems to be larger numbers of animals in smaller
areas than at any other rime of the year.
It also appears that bears can shift their
ability to digest various foods, particularly to
assimilate the fall mast more efficiently. Acorns
account for their ttemcndous fall weight gains,
which arc all put on as fat
Considered together, all these changes
point to the importance of acorns as a source of
food for the black bear. During the fall months
they put on their most significant weight gains.
This fat accumulation must carry them through
the winter denning and into the cub-bearing
season. We have been able to correlate the
availability of white oak mast and the percentage
of females lactating, and we found a direct and
significant relation to acorn production. More
dramatically, in the event of a failure of the
acorn crop, there is an almost complete faillll'C of
black bear reproduction. If alternative mast
c rops fail as well, it could mean w inter
starvation for the animal
The size of the acorn crop also directly
affects black bear mortality. A scarcity of mast
necessitates greater movements on the part of the
bear population. This makes them much more
vulnerable to all the factors of monality. It
affects them coming and going: natality
(reproduction) and mortality.
For example, in Tennessee this year the
state fish and wildlife agency is having to deal
with a lot of three year old male bears moving
out of the Great Smoky Mountains Narional
Park and ending up in Gatlinburg and
Sevierville. There is a dominance hierarchy
among black bears, and the subadult males of
two or three years of age tend to be the ones
who get kicked out and have to disperse to new
ranges.
This example fits in with events that
happened in 1984 when there was a tremendous
mast faillll'C. No cubs were born that year in the
Great Smoky Mountains National Park. That
meant that all the females were available to be
bred in 1985. Therefore, they all had cubs in
1986. These are the young bears that are now
(conlinuod on peg~ 16)
XAtUAh Journot Pll98 t 5
�bein& forced to look for new homes. It's
interesting how this situation today was
precipitated by the events of five years ago.
Katllah Journal: How docs clcarcuuing
affect black bears?
Pelton: My main concern is that
clearcutting may be subtracting from the
"principal," 10 put it in economic terms, of mast
producuon. There is a trade-off between the
summer mast that is produced for a few years
and the years of hard mast production that are
lost when oaks arc cut down. But my main
concern is that it appears that foresters still don't
have a full understanding of how 10 carry out a
clearcut and have predictable results in terms of
good, strong oak regeneration. We have made
numerous observations on the Pisgah National
Forest. In those instances it seemed that they
were not getting the regeneration they should
have. Thus this becomes a major concern. Once
a srand is cut, it may be lost to acorn production
for many, many years.
Another concern is denning. Bears do
sometimes den in the areas of thick undergrowth
created by a clearcut, and that's fine, but where
dogs are used for hunting, there is greatly
increased hunting pressure. The bears seem to
sense their vulnerability. The more exposed they
are, the more apt they arc 10 leave and abandon
their cubs. Female bears in particular need
secwe sites, such as large cavities in old, hollow
trees or rock crevices, in which to den. The
more secure the denning site, the more likely
they are to stay put.
Twenty-five or 30 years ago clearcuts
were hundreds of acres in size. Over the years
they have been shrunken in size until now they
are down to less than 40 acres in the Southern
Appalachians. These are beuer for most forest
species. It means more unbroken. contiguous
areas. Smaller cuts spaced apart seem 10 be a
more logical cuuing regime. Adjacent stands
should be allowed 10 mature to mast-producing
age.
Katllah Journal· What specifically could
we do to help improve habi1a1 for 1he black
bears?
Pelton: I think we need longer timber
rotations. I still contend that we need 10 examine
rotation times in light of the importance of
acorns 10 bears and other species. I have a
feeling that the rotation times need 10 be
lengthened to give the forest as a whole a chance
to be as it productive as it can be 10 produce the
food that is necessary. That production time
varies a lot from one variety of oak 10 another,
but I think that the rotations are probably still too
short
The other need is, as I mentioned before,
that foresters pay a 101 more attention to oak
regeneration when they cut. They need 10 make
ha1
sure that regeneration is advanced enough, 1
there are enough young oak seedlings and
saplings on the ground, so that maple or tulip
poplar or any other species don't overwhelm the
oaks and take over the site. Clcarcuts should
also be spaced so that acorn-producing stands
are adjacent.
roads. We have had a history of roads being
opened and closed, opened and closed,
re-opened and closed again in response 10
various political pressures.There needs 10 be a
consistent and Slandard policy throughout lhe
region regarding roads. Without it, there's no
doubt that roads are going to be quite detrimental
to black bears. Even gated roads arc being used
for illegal hunting. Total closwe may have to be
undenakcn.
The state agencies in North Carolina and
Tennessee are bolh putting a lot of thought into
their bear sanctuaries. It migh1 be timely 10
examine the sanctuary boundaries in relation to
where timber management activities and roads
will or won't be, so that lhe efficiency of the
system can be enhanced. They could make sure
I.hat the boundaries of a sanctuary take advantage
of a cenain prime white oak stand, for instance.
I think we need to learn more about designing
sanctuaries, but with a liule bit of thought and
planning, perhaps the system could be improved
considerably.
Dr. Michael Pelton has studied the
black bears in the Sowhern Appalachians/or the
last twenty years. He is recognized world-wide
for his knowledge and experience with bears
and has advised bear research and restoration
projectS in Norrh America and Europe.
Rtcortkd by David Whukr
Transcribtd by Marsha R111g
Edictd by Kim Sandland and Dovid \Vhttltr
About roads .. .ln a report I presented in
1985, I said that under present conditions black
bears needed 10 have wilderness or
quasi-wilderness, because of the indeterminate
policies of the Forest Service about closing
'Jfu:rc fell tl1e min liealin9
forty rlays
am! w e were fwatl ng, we w ere spfushi"'J
am! Caugfi£119
boos wUh our rwses in f wwers
aml throu9h tlui trus, nug9ets of s unlU)ht
and •v•rywhcr• 9run reachL"'] to fwld us
bark to touch am! 9run sprou ts, forgotten
in corners wfu:r• 9run had com. rw more.
C£u
7Mr• /eJ1. tlu& rain fu:ali"'],
mil£"'] am! f a!l£119,
remLmli"'J us of paths. rivulet.s /or9otten,
paths unilwtujit of, ways too new to Lrn<UJi.ne,
the joy of clesctmt unforesun, abandoned
to tlu& twists of mud am! stone, un.ltwwn,
new, quid.Ly. abrupt, steep.
rai,n remlndL"'J to fall w'tlwui ceasi"'],
fall 9Uully, /all gratefully,
fafl, lo119Cr and try f or tlu& bottom,
Ln mud, Ln stornJ, Ln green, Ln greetJ$St
magnif£ceru;e of rain,
the rain that falls ~lL119.
f"aCL, 1989
�ArlWOl'.I: l¥y JamM Rhea
If you ever talk to an old-timer, and you mention the word
"panther," be prepared for some emotion-laden and perhaps
superstitious stories. Human fear of the unknown has influenced
and shaped the Eastern panther's destiny. Because of this fear the
Eastern panther has been almost completely wiped out in eastern
Nonh America.
This article is an.anempt to decipher myth from reality and
to present evidence for or against the existence of the Eastern
panther today.
TI1e following is an example of the typical panther story
told to an old-timer of today by his or her parents:
'The night was dark and still. Daddy put a log in the
fireplace and then tricked us liule'uns in bed. The only sounds
were the hoot of a screech owl and inseccs serenading. And then,
all of a sudden - a clt1unp, on the roof!
Wha1's that, daddy?'we asked in fright.
They got us children down and we gathered around the
fire. We could hear the creature pacing back andforch above our
heads. It was rryinR ro claw up some shinRles!
'Don't be afraid,' Mommy cold us, 'it'll be alright.'
Daddy grabbed his gun from the wall. We knew it wasn't
a/rig Ju. Then there was a loud, piercing scream! We knew it was
the call of the painter."
Is this scenario accurate - or is it just exaggerated mountain
folklore? Was the Eastern cougar, or "painter," as it was called
by the mountaineers, so bold as to come up to a human home and
threaten to attack and kill humans? Do panthers still exist in the
Southern Appalachians? What were, or are, they really like?
Cougars were almost completely eliminated in eastern
Nonh America soon after it was seuled by European immigrants.
The attitude toward the great cat was the same auitude which
caused the "taming" and destrucrion of the wilderness. The
settlers anacked the animal, fearing it would prey on livestock
and humans. Also, the destruction of the deer population through
over-hunting and land-clearing, and direct hunting of the Eastern
cougar saw this subspecies to its demise.
1"aCC.. l989
According to Robert Downing, former Forest Service
officer in Clemson, South Carolina, the Eastern cougar (a
subspecies which differs from the Florida panther, western
panther, and twenty-seven other subspecies of Nonh American
panthers), is as elusive as the answer to the questions asked
about it. Many factors complicate the picture. First we must
understand the habits and peculiarities of the panther.
A cougar (Fe/is concolor) will live almost anywhere there
are deer, or enough of the other animals of its prey base, such as
racoon, opossum, rabbit, skunk, and fox. Deer, however, are by
far the preferred prey of the cougar. All predators are best
adapted for a specific prey animal. The deer is the right size and
speed for the cougar and has come to be almost the cougar's only
food source. ln Mexico where deer are few or non-existent,
panthers prey on smaller rodents solely. This means that the
panthers must spend more time and energy to kill more animals,
but also shows their exrreme adapuibility. Unlike bears. panthers
will not eat the meat of an animal they have not killed themselves.
Occasionally an individual panther will acquire the habit of
preying on livestock, although that occurrence is rare. Cougar
are not and have never been a real threat to livestock. Wild boar,
however, are definitely a possible prey animal for the cougar
(which has implications for restoring balanced ecosystems in the
Great Smoky Mountains National Park). Panthers feed only once
every week or two. They kill only when hungry, usually eating
pan of the deer and caching or hiding the rest to finish later.
Robert Downing is called at least once, and sometimes
several times, a month to investigate reponed sightings of the
Eastern panther. He is presently rraining other Fish and Wildlife
officials how to identify and verify rracks and scats. Only a
rrained expen can tell the difference between a panther track and
that of a large dog. Cats walk with their nails retracted (to keep
them sharp). except on rare occasions when they are in a hurry.
Panther scats average one and onequaner inches in diameter, and
are smooth like those of a bobcaL Another panther habit is to kick
up a pile of din and leaves on the edge of its territory and urinate
on it. This habit is also shared by bobcats and foxes, so it takes a
trained eye to determine the difference. Tracks are difficult 10 find
in the mountains because the ground is either hard clay or the
(continued on p:ige t8)
JC.at ®h Jo1mmC. pa9e t 7
�FRONT
COUGAR
"'"~
(continued from page 17)
constant rain washes the tracks away. Snowfall helps to locate
tracks, but high mountain winds, subsequent snow storms, and
melting make tracking in winter as challenging as any of the
seasons.
With so many sightings reported, Robert Downing finds it
hard to believe they can all be wrong. But it is also hard to
understand why there has never been an Eastern panther hit on
the highways, when 5-15% of the Florida panthers (another
subspecies) arc killed each year on the road. Perhaps the Florida
panthers find roads more desirable to navigate than low, rugged
wetlands. a problem the Eastern cougar would not have.
Cougars were formerly common throughout North and
South America. where they existed mostly on deer, bison, and
elk. Today only small pocket populations survive, mostly in the
western United States. Panthers are loners, rarely traveling in
groups or packs. An individual cougar in the west occupies a
10-20 square mile territory. In Florida each panther uses 50-60
square miles because the population pressure 1s not as great
There is no regular mating season for panthers. They will
breed any time of the year once they come to maturity at three
years of age. However, breeding for any one panther occurs only
once every two tO three years. The two or three kittens in each
litter are raised by the female. After weaning at two to three
months of age, they accompany the mother on hunts.
The panther ranges in length from five to eight feet,
including the tail, and weighs from eighty to two hundred
pounds. Their call varies. It can be soft like the cooing of a dove,
a rattling growl, or an eerie shriek -- sometimes described as
resembling the scream of an old woman. The panther does not
scream when it is about to attack, as myth would lead us to
believe. The bark of the grey fox is sometimes mistaken for a
cougar call, although there is no resemblance. Some owl calls
have even been mistaken for panther howls.
In Florida, and many eastern states, panthers are protected
as an endangered species. In western states cougar are managed
by state fish and wildlife departments as a game animal. In
Texas, there i s no protective legislation for the cougar
whatsoever.
A known population of panthers exists in Manitoba which
has spread west into Ontario, and south into the Upper Peninsula
of Michigan, Wisconsin, and Minnesota Maine is an ideal habitat
for the panther, as there are large areas with no public roads and
large deer populations. But so far no panthers have been
officially sighted there.
Before there can be any action taken to protect the Eastern
cougar and its habitat, the presence of the Eastern cougar must be
confirmed. Roben Downing has written a report fol' the USDI
Fish and Wildlife Service entitled: "The Current Starus of the
Cougar in the Southern Appalachians." In it he describes recent
reports, historical aspects, searches for sign, and research needs.
The Forest Service and the Fish and Wildlife Service pooled their
resources and sponsored Roben Downing's study when the
controversy came to a head in 1977. At that time several groups
threatened to bring suit against the Forest Service unless it hailed
timber harvests in an area where several cougars had reportedly
been seen. If you think you have seen a cougar or its sign, this
repon may help you to determine a true sighting.
The conclusion of Robert Downing's study is basically that
there is yet no conclusion as to the status of the Eastern cougar.
Although it seems fitting and right for panthers to be inhabiting
the southern mountains, not one official sighting has been made.
Until then, panther advocates have no basis for demandfog
protection for cougar habitat
The best thing one can do at this point is to get a copy of
"The Current Status of the Cougar in the Southern
Appalachians," learn all one can about tracks and panther habits,
and keep one's eyes and ears open when roaming the hills. The
true spirit of native Appalachia will shine forth when species such
as the panther (along with the American chestnut, gray wolf, and
black bear) are existing together in stable and self-sustaining
populations.
Roberr Downing's reporr, "The Current Sratus of the
Cougar in the Southern Appalachians," is available from rhe
Denver Wildlife Research Center; Department of Forestry;
Clemson Universiry; Clemson, SC 29631.
The Earth First! Biodiversity Project is collecting data for
an Eastern Cougar Study. Your help is needed to document
cougar sightings and habitat use in the eastern states.
If you see a cougar, remember as accurately as
possible the location; a description of the animal including height,
length, approximate weight, length of the tail, and distinguishing
marks; a description of the terrain; and an account of the event
Send information to: Eanh First! Biodiversity Project
2365 Willard Road
Parkersburg, WV 26101
Cougar tracks have four toe pad marks in a
semi-circle ahead of the larger metacarpal pad. There are usually
three lobes on the back of the metacarpal pad. The tracks of adult
cougars measure 2 3/4 inches or more in width. Cougars have a
central lead toe on each foot, and the two middle toes are not
symmetrical, but one is normally farther forward than the other.
Dog tracks appear similar to cougar tracks, but the toes arc
almost directly opposite each other, and claw marks arc always
visible ahead of the toe marks. Bobcat tracks are similar in
appearance to cougar tracks, but smaller. The tracks of a young
cougar will appear the same as those of a bobcat.
If you see a cougar track, make a plaster cast.
Here is how:
I) Prepare the ground surrounding the track by removing
any debris. Carefully remove any loose objects in the track itself.
2) Take a strip of light cardboard or plastic long enough to
surround the track, fold it into a circle and fasten lhe ends
togelher. Set it around lhe track.
3) Mix Plaster of Paris according to directions on package.
Once mixed, plaster sets quickly, so be prepared to pour
immediately.
4) Pour the plaster slowly over the track, taking care to fill
all the recesses, especially the toe marks, to avoid air bubbles.
Pouring too quickly will disturb the track. Pour plaster one inch
over the track.
5) Allow the plaster to harden. Then lift the cast and
carefully wipe away excess din and debris.
/
raet,1989
�Last fall, when the mornings turned c
turned to gathering firewood, we didn't hav
south-facing slope behind rhe cabin was doned
oaks. We discovered enough snags just along
the wood stove stoked all winter, and without I
summer I've found enough dead and dying oak
house next wioter, too.
Oaks are treasured trees -- valuabl~ fo~~r. !f!l~per
provide, valuable for their shady canopy and
wood and their sturdy beauty. But something is
oak forests of sourbcrn Appalachia. Since the
ll980's,
we've seen an increase in the mortality of oaks la
~land
h3nlwood fcxests throughout the eastern United ~ This
phenomenon, called• decline, has been o b s e r v e - y
since the early 1900's, bat foresucs~.ud 1
are just beginning to tmensi.v~ it! Ciiiil'di
k
is having on the forest ecosystem.
Oak decline is not caused by a single discaa odDlilllPa. bot
a series of interactions between environmenw strelles,
diseases, and insectS. A healthy oak ~ will begin to dec:Uae
when it is subjected to unusual stress, such u drought; fiosl
iniury or spring defoliation by insects. This causes physiological
changes in the tree and its root n~omes vllJn~ IO
lltlCk by the annillaria root'l'Offungus (Ari1tiJJaria metled), wllil:b
aormally lives on roOlS of dead trees. This runaus killS put oflhe
mot sySl!Cm, further weakening the tree and making it sa~
above ground auaclc by other diseases and iosects. The
two-lined chestnut borer (Argilus bilineatus) is often fond in
uees at this stage, its larvae making meandering galleries dna&b
the inner bark and eventually girdling the tree. As the aee
declines, ns growth slows down and the crown dies bact. Tbe
dead branches exposed as the leaves die are the most obvious
signs that a tree is being seriously stressed. If good condieiom
return, a young, vigorous tree may be able 10 recover, bat an
older tree will continue to decline and eveniually die, UiUll1y iwo
to five years after the stress first occured.
The U.S. Forest Service has been conducting surveys
throughout Karuah to determine how widespread oak decline ~
and which areas arc affected most severely. By combining aerial
surveys and data collec1ed on 1hc ground, resarchcn have
de1crmincd that oaks are declining in all southern upland
hardwood forests, but the damage varies greatly in different
areas. Oak species in the red oak group (including bhd. scarlet
and nonhcrn red oaks) are much more likely to decline lhan !hose
in the white oak group (white and chestnut oaks). Oak decline
1ends 10 be grca1cs1 in areas where trees naturally grow most
slowly -- on ridgc1ops, on shallow, rocky soils and on southand wes1-facing slopes.
Age is a fac1or, too. "Declines arc, by and large, diseases
of ma1ure trees." according to Sieve Oak, forest pathologist with
the Forest Service. "However, chronological age may not f>e the
best measure of tree maturity. On a high quali1y site, an
80-year-old black oak might be considered middle-aged, but on a
poor site the same ttcc would be a senior citizen, and probably
more prone to decline".
Oak seedlings arc relatively intolerant of shade so they
••id
br
'°
have a hard time establishing themselves under a forest caoopy.
Once a dominant tree dies and more fight reaches the g10lllld.
1hey tend 10 be out-competed by fas1cr growing seedling -yellow poplar, maple, sourwood, black locust In order 10 be
sure !hat oaks will be present in the next stand, it's generally
agreed tha1 there must be a substantial number of oak seedlings
and saplings already growing in tbc undcrstory before lhe
dominant trees die.
"If it doesn't maucr what kind of trees replace declined
oaks, then decline is of no consequence because some
regeneration will happen", Sieve Oak says. "But given the
problems of oak regeneration, it's not at all clear !hat oaks wilt
replace themselves after decline".
Understanding the biological causes of oak decline and
where it tends to occur gives some clues as to why we are seeing
ao increasing number of dead oaks in the green mountains of our
bioregion. Kan1ah forests were almost decimated by the "cut ou1
and get otlt" logging practices which prevailed around the tum of
!he century. As a result, the majority of these next-generation
forats are now in the 60 10 90 year range -- the age al which
oaks become more vulnerable to the stresses that cause decline.
1llc long-1erm drough1 we arc experiencing is surely a
contributing fac1or. Overall, the raie of global wanning since
1970 is higher than a1 any earlier recorded rime. If our heedless
consumption of fossil fuels continues to blanket the earth with
increasingly heavier layers of carbon dioxide, the drought stress
caused by higher tcmpcra1ures will have dire consequences for
the whole ccosys1em, and oaks may be among the firs! obvious
casualties.
Oak decline is also predicted 10 increase with the steady
advent of the leaf-hungry gypsy moth as It chews its way south
into these foresis. The gypsy moth, an insect pcs1 introduced 10
Nonh America in the ninc1eenth cen1ury, is expected 10 cause
significant amounts of defoliation in the near future.
One of the major current concerns about oak decline is the
impact it has on wildlife. As their crowns die back, declining
oaks produce less hard mast (acorns) and the nutritional value of
the mast may not be as high. In one declining stand surveyed, the
acorn yield was predicted to be 58% lower over five years than
would be cxpcacd in a hcahhy stand.
"Acorns arc very high in fa1 and carbohydrates", explains
Lauren Hi1hmn. Forest Service wildlife biologist. "They arc one
of 1he highest energy foods in !he forest".
This shortage creates a grave situation for all animals
which depend on acorns for fall and winter food -- black bear,
deer, eastern wild turkey, racoon, squirrel and other small
mammals. The populations of preda1ors such as bobca1, cougar
and raptors a.re also adversely affec1cd by decline, since much of
their prey consists of small mammals dependant on acorns.
According 10 Hillman, decline also decreases the diversity
of acorn species. Having a variety of mast in the forest, she says,
"cushions failure in one crop which may have a poor production
year. Given periodic hard mas(shonages, this could be a critical
fac1or for wildlife survival".
And !he impact of oak decline on wildJife wilJ be even
grca1er in the future because many dying oaks will be replaced by
(continued oo page 20)
foU, 1989
JC.atimn Journa! p1i9e 19
�olher species of trees which won't produce any hard mast.
"Black bear reproduction is directly dependent on. hard
mast availability", continues Hillman, and she asscns that 1f oa1c
decline continues to jcapardizc this food source, "the black bear
.
.
might not stnive".
If we consider long term trends m climate, the s1e~dy
advance of the gypsy moth and the current age of our .f?"=sts, 1.t is
reasonably safe to predict that oak decline is.a cond1uon wh~ch
will not be disappearing in the near future. Is 11 a problem which
needs to be addressed by forest management practices. or should
oa1c decline be viewed as one factor among many in the evolution
of a continuously changing ccosyst~m 7
.
The oak-dominated forests m the mountains of southern
Appalachia arc a result of land use history ov~r the last 200 years.
Past agricultural use of the land, woods _grazing, fire control and
the chestnut blight have all contributed to the present
predominance of oaks. But given ~hat we know a.bout ~ak
regeneration, it's a fair bet that there will
fewer oaks an K~u3!1
forests in the future if some oak decline management 1s!11
undenaken. If the resultant changes in wildlife habitat, species
diversity, wood supply and aesthetic valu~s are acceptable, t~en
there isn't any reason to try 10 reduce the impact of oak decline.
In areas where there is liule or no interference by humans, such
as in designated wilderness areas, oak decline and other n~tural
events are allowed 10 run their course. Then the ?Utc.ome 1s not
influenced by the imposition of management ObJecuves which
determine which resources to promote, oflen a1 the expense of
other resources.
However oak decline is increasingly being perceived as a
problem of fo~st health in forests which are being managed to
maximize one or more of these resources. The recently released
Draft Environmental Impact Statement co".ering the Grassy Gap
and Wesser timber sales in Nantahala Nauonal Forest. is one of
1he first public documents to address oak decline as a
consideration in the action alternatives.
The environmental and topographic factors which inc~
the incidence of decline cannot be altered by forestry pracuccs.
However there arc silvicultural treatments which can reduce the
effects of decline if the objective is to maintain a vigorous oalc
forest.
be
One such treatment is thinning. Reducing the density of
trees by thinning, especially when the trees arc ~l~tivcly young,
should help alleviate water stress. However, 1h1~mg can cause
an increase in armillaria root rot fungus, and u may actually
increase moisture stress if decline is already in progress by
exposing more of the soil surface to the drying effects of the sun.
Another management strategy involves encouraging oa1c
seedlings and saplings to grow in the understory of o~ stands
which arc declining, or which arc at high risk for dechne. As
noted earlier, oa1c seedlings under the shade of mature trees tend
to be out-competed by more shade tolerant species. If the growth
of these competing seedlings, saplings and shrubs is controlled,
the young oalcs will be in a position to talce advantage of
increased light when the mature trees arc gone.
The method chosen to control competing understory
vegetation is likely to cause some. controversy, si.nce .using
herbicides appears 10 be more effecuve and economical m the
shon tenn than cutting down the competing plants by hand.
Hopefully, this decision will be carefully considered in view of
its potential long term costs.. Much more needs t~ be ~nown
about the complex interacuons of these che1D1cals rn the
ecosystem before herbicides arc given a seal of appi:oval.
.
Some silviculturists advocate a second phase m the crcanon
of a vigorous stand: cuning down the declining mature trees.
From a silvicullural point of view, harvesting the big trees allows
enough strong light to reach the ground for the oak seedlings to
begin growing rapidly. Forest manag~rs "!BY .also .choose to
harvest declining trees based on economic obJCCUves, 1f the trees
can be sold as timber.
Harvest methods have been at the center of a great deal of
debate recently, with clearcutting generating most of the
opposition. And the controversy is likel>: to become eycn ~ore
intense with this issue, because clearcutung has been identified
by many silviculturalists as the most effective way to manage.oalc
decline. They affirm that if ~equate numbers of oak Sec<!lmgs
and saplings arc present rn the understory, clearcumng a
declining oalc stand is the most reliable way to ensure that ~e
following stand will be less susceptible to the stresses which
initiate decline.
The major harvest alternative to clcarcutting is managing an
uneven-aged forest by selectively cutting small groups of trees.
This harvesting is done periodically, usually every 10-20 .Y~·
and the trees arc selected in such a way that at least three d1sunc1
age classes will remain in the forest Uneven-aged stands are
valued for containing a diversity of ages and species of trees and
for their basically intact forest canopy.
However, oak decline is more likely to increase in stands
which arc managed this way than they arc in clearcut stands,
because uneven-aged harvest requires more logging road
construction, as well as more entries into the stand. This means
there is increased potcmial for soil compaction, i:oot system
damage and mechanical damage to the trees which arc not
harvested. These injuries decrease a tree 's resistance to the
stresses which cause decHne.
Skillful horse logging would subs1amially decrease lh~se
risks and would make uneven-aged management a beuer option
for declining stands. Unfonunatcly, neither the timber industry
nor the Forest Service consider logging with horses an
economically viable practice. Small woodland owners, without
the market pressures of big business, may find that using horses
to log decline-prone areas, thereby creating space_ for youn.g
vigorous trtts 10 grow, is a good way 10 m:in11ge de.chn .. on 1he1r
land and encourage biodiversity.
.
Oak decline is a biological fact in the forests of Katuah.
Watching robust, bountiful oak trees slowly lo.se th~1r stren~th
and die is an emotional experience. Oak decline is an issue which
gives us a chance 10 discuss what we value most about our
.
forests, and how we want 10 influence future forests by the
decisions we make now.
Photo abow, armillaria root rot fungus, courtrsy c{Strp~tt W. Oak
f"llU,1989
�PEOPLE & HABITAT
While many view the pastoral scenes and
remote majesty of the Southern Appalachians as
all-enduring, trends in human population
l migration and unrelenting resource extraction
have had monumental effects upon wildlife and
the diverse flora of their native habitat. Today
litlle remains unaltered by the effects of human
activity. The landscape we view today is a
threatened glimmer of what was once, but it still
exists as one of the most diverse ecosystems on
the North American continent.
A universal tenet that holds true for every
form of life is the ecological principle of
carrying capacity: a given habitat can only
suppon so many individuals of any given
species. Beyond that threshold the numbers of
the given species begin to decline or that species
begins to impinge on the ability of the habitat to
function and support other forms of life.
The principle of carrying capacity holds as
true for human beings as for any other life form.
The difference is that we are so insulated from
the greater environment by the barriers of
civilization, that we often do not realize the
impact we are having on local, to say nothing of
distant, habitats. In the case of homo sapiens the
situation is funher complicated by the effects of
a highly-developed technology, which adds an
additional element to the equation by magnifying
the impact of a given number of individual
humans.
Bioregional awareness leads us to become
as regionally self-sufficient as possible, so that
we restrict the impact of our presence to our
own bioregion. We also realize our
responsibility to accurately determine the
region's carrying capacity for human beings and
to limit our numbers accordingly.
A historical perspective of human
manipulation of the Katt.lab province will help
raise the question of the proper carrying capacity
for human beings in our bioregion - the level
that allows for the preservation of wild habitat.
land already subject to conditions of dire
overpopulation. The Old World represented a
virtually inexhaustible well of humanity that
flooded over the new frontier. After the
mountain highlands were first penetrated by
DeSoto in 1540, the question of access was of
paramoum importance in the development of the
Southern Appalachians.
The Indian culture tied to the land and her
offerings was rapidly overrun by the streams of
white-skinned settlers that moved in along the
major Indian trails 'through the Shenandoah
Valley and from the Atlantic Tidewater area,
widening the trails into roads as they went so
that others could more easily follow.
The first small communities sprang up
along the river valleys and larger coves of the
Watauga, French Broad, Little Tennessee, and
Hiwassee watersheds. Although few and far
between, their presence was marked by the
agrarian need for cleared land. The bottomlands
and wellands were cleared or drained firs1, and
!hen trees were felled on the side slopes to make
room for more fields and pastures. As the first
sertlemen1s became towns, the clearings spread
deeper into the mountains following small and
muddy roads that wound along the river and
stream tributaries.
Early In habitants and First Immigrants
The Cherokee Indians and the indigenous
people before lived in balance with their world,
utilizing the offerings of their Eden. Sources
estimate the native population co be about
22,000 individuals throughout the entire region
in the early 17th century. This number is
somewhat lower than pre-Columbian levels
because of war and disease brought by white
settlers. (Today, that number would be
considered only mediocre actendance at Fulton
County Stadium in Atlanta.)
The native people manipulated their
environment with a technology based on fire and
scone tools. Even though they had developed a
sophisticated system of agriculture before the
arrival of the first white people, it is clear they
never exceeded the ability of the region to
support them. They did not interfere with the
capability of the habitat to provide for other
forms of life; quite to the contrary, the native
people relied on that capability for their
continued existence.
The arrival of the first Europeans,
however, changed conditions drastically. The
first immigrants represented the overflow from a
1'a!L, 1989
Plwlo by Rob MusidJProject Ug/llhawlc
These first settlers lived largely off the
land, much in the manner of their native
predecessors. Like the Indians before them, the
white settlers annually burned off the forest
floor. However, because of their greater
numbers, this had a much greater effect on the
forest than it ever had before. Even so, until the
end of the 19th century most of the mountain
highlands remained an impenetrable wilderness.
Daunted by the richness of the New
by CHIP SMITH and
LEEK. FAWCETT
World, the Europeans regarded the productive
capacity of the land as limilless, leading them to
farm and hunt carelessly and without regard for
the future. Because they were completely
ignorant of ecological balances, they
exterminated game species of animals and birds
and slaughtered the native predators so that their
domestic livestock could free-range in the
woodlands. Hogs and turkeys were particularly
well-adapted to the forest environment and
thrived on 1he fall mas1 provided each year.
Once fattened, these were gathered into large
"droves" and walked along the "drovers' roads"
to markets in the piedmont
Mountaineers also traditionally foraged
for medicinal roots in the forest. As commercial
demand for these natural remedies began to
grow, medicinal roots became a prime baner
item in town and at the crossroad country stores.
As wagonloads of ginseng and other potent
roots and herbs began to roll down the twisting
mountain roads to the eastern cities, the rate of
trade began to threaten the survival of ginseng
and other herbaceous forest plants.
The Industrial Era
Grinding mills and small saw mills were
the height of industrial production in the
highlands until the mid-I 800's. The barter
system was the usual means of exchange. The
US Census estimated the population in the 18
western counties of North Carolina ac 200,000
in 1890. The lifestyle was still based primarily
o n subsistence agriculture, hunting, and
foraging.
However, in 1880. the first train into the
mountains pulled inco Asheville, and the
Southern Appalachians were changed forever.
The railroads represented a new degree of
access, and they brought exponential population
growth, absentee land ownership, and industrial
commerce.
The population of the city of Asheville
(which today is only somewhat greater than
65,000 people) mushroomed from 2,000 in
1880 to more than 10,000 by 1890. Tourism
also arrived on the rails, and sanitariums and
luxury hotels offered all the comfons a tired and
ailing flatlander could desire.
Commerce was the primary reason for
pushing through the railroads, and in the
Southern Appalachian region, commerce meant
timber. Large traces of land, often
30,000-200,000 acres in size, were opened up
to exploitation and soon surrendered their
bounty. Temporary company towns were built
at the base of major watersheds and railroad
lines extended into the highest coves.
The early timber barons were
industrialists, not foresters, and they neither
knew nor cared about the ideals of sustained
timber )'ields and forest regeneration. Their
mastery of the new steam technology gave them
access to the most remote reaches of the
mountain forest, and the destruction they
wrought there was unprecedented. The damage
to the species composition of the forest was
irrevocable, as was the damage to the soil. By
the early 1930's 80 percent of the mountain
(continued on page 22)
JC.awc:ih Jo'4rnat plMJe 21
�(continued from pqc 2 1)
landscape had been burned over. Little was left
to shield the soil from the area's high levels of
rainfall , and severe flooding occurred in 1896,
1901, and 1909, and periodically into the
1940's.
A mountain native, the Reverend A.E.
Brown provided first-hand insight in an
interview in the Manufacturer's Record ip 1910:
" ... these mountains were full of sparkling
brooks and creeks which required a two or three
week rain to make them muddy; today a few
hours of rain will muddy them .... Many of the
mountain streams are dry throughout the
summer and fall, while in winter, the waters
descend in torrents and do vast damage
rendering wonhless the bouom lands... The
sides of mountains have been denuded of their
topsoil and bouom lands have been overflowed
and swept away... "
Shortly after the end of World War I most
of the timber barons had tom up their tracks and
moved on to the Pacific Northwest. By 1930
only a few companies, such as Champion
Corporation, were left In the wake of the timber
rush, and at the onset of the nation's worst
drought and the chestnut blight, little was left for
human or beast.
The Present-day Forest
(or Wha t You See Is What Is Lefi)
Between the I 940's and the I 960's the
population of the Ka1uah province remained
static or even dropped The mountai n binhrate
remained high, as it had in the past, but many
young folks left the mountains to find wage
work in the cities of the east and the midwes1.
The bumpy roads offered a way out of the
mountains tO seek the American Dream.
During the 1960's and the I 970's,
however, a change took place. The isolation of
the "backward" Appalachians began 10 look
appealing to flatlanders sick of noise, crowds,
and pollution, and perhaps sick at heart at the
manner in which they earned their wealth. The
very isolation that had protected the mountains
from industrialization for so long now proved
their strongest attraccion. City-dwellers realized
that they could "have" that isolation - all they
lacked was a way 10 get there. Thus began the
era of the four-lane. The Appalachian Regional
Council brought in federal money 10 help state
governments upgrade old roads and build
modem expressways.
During this same period agriculture
declined sharply in the mountains - and with it
declined the traditionally high binhrate that had
always characterized Appalachia in the minds of
outsiders. With the construction of new roads,
in-migration became the driving force in the
population growth of the Ka1uah province.
Today the rate of biological growth (che ratio of
the binh rate 10 the death rate) remains at flat
zero or in fractions of a percentage point (0.07
percent in 1984), while the rate of in-migration
continues 10 rise dramatically, putting the overall
population growth of the Southern Appalachians
well above the national average. The number of
retirees translcx:ating to the mountains raises the
percentage of monality, but a look at the figures
shows the dominant influence of migration on
the regional population.
Lack of access has always been the
limiting factor on growth • the growth of human
populations, economic development, and
Xat®h Journal pa9e 22
industrialization - in Appalachia. Lack of access
protected the wild nature o f the mountain
habitat. Now the cork is out of the bottle. The
sporadic stream of in-migration has turned into a
flood. As over-populated Europe once offered
an inexhaustible supply of humanity to fill up
the New World, the large eastern cities now do
the same for the mountains, as the in1ersu1te
highway system offers an easy means of travel.
Along with the increaSe in new residents,
there has been a tremendous increase in demand
for recreational opponunities in the Great
Smoky Mountains National Park and the
national forests. Today, human management and
human use penetrates 10 the deepest reaches of
the forest on 4,900 miles of forest roads and
touches every aspect of life on virtually every
acre of the mountain forest habitat.
Meanwhile, wildlife has been pushed
back to the most remote areas of the forest in
search of food and safety due 10 the clearing
necessary for roads and development and the
associated noise.
Environment Committee assures us that al l this
developmen t can proceed with no impact
whatsoever on the "beautiful mountain scenery
that is so imponant to all of us" - in fact, it'll be
even beuer, because there will be more people
here to enjoy it wilh us.
Typical of this approach is the l-26
Corridor Association, a coalition of Western
Nonh Carolina industrialists, developers, and
their followers, who believe it is imperative 10
immediately upgrade the present Route 23 to
interstate proportions through Madison County
10 the Tennessee state line providing a d1rec1
connection between Asheville, Johnson City,
TN, and the large industrial cities of the
mid west.
Jerry Grant, the biggest developer in the
Katuah mountains, provides the following
insight via the /-26 Corridor Association
Newsletter: "We would be on the way to
somewhere - not the end of the line. We think
Asheville and this region are extremely fortunate
10 have an excellent liveability factor. We are
able to attract the right kinds of industry."
Those who still espouse this approach
have not yet realized that whenever we perceive
something as a resource, then it is automatically
for sale. And once sold, it is no longer ours. It
is gone.
In another public relations publication of
the l-26 Association, WNC at the Crossroads:
Crisis or Opportunity?, this theme of
development continues:
"Improving the US 23 gateway to
interstate standards opens the entire Ohio Valley
and Nonheastem US to the WNC mountain
expenence....Imagine how many more travelers
would discover WN~ if traffic now using I-77
and 1-75 could re-route via 1-26 through the
scenic Southern Highlands.... An interstate
would produce many business opportunities
away from its interchanges. Well-designed and
The North Carolina Highway Bill
(or Come One, Come All!)
This summer in Nonh Carolina the state
legislature passed a $9.1 billion Highway Bill.
Governor Ji m Manin's plan is 10 place "every
resident in the state within 10 miles o f a
four-lane road," build by-passes around seven
urban centers (includi ng Asheville), pave
10,000 miles of secondary gravel roads by
1999, and the remaining gravel roads in the state
by 2006 (see page 25).
To hear the road boosters talk, the new
roads are going 10 bring in all the good aspects
of industrial culture and none of the bad.
There's big bucks in it for everyone, we are
told, and, because we live in the mountains,
things will be as nice as they always were. The
;
N
PR(S(NT 4 LA~ES
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fV\Ul'l.E CONNfClORS - - -
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f'aU:, 1989
�perpetual wild sanctuaries
It ts both a form of reverence
and a human need that we learn
at this time to intentionally leave
some wild places alone forever.
At this lime In Earth history. our
human species Is severely and Irreversibly
tmpacttng the ecosystems of the planet. As an
acknowledgement of our reverence for Life and
for the sake of our planet's biological heritage.
ll Is Important that we lntenllonally leave
perpetual wild sanctuaries where humans do
not enter....places where the non· human life
fonns tnd1genous to a pan.tcular area arc able
lo proceed lndeflnltely. undisturbed by human
presence. judgement. or Intentions.
This Idea Is not wtlhout precrdrnt. In
New Guinea there arc small areas of natural
vegetation left amid lands that have been
ovcr·grazed and ovcr·cut for cooking fuel.
These small fragments of natural diversity are
the burial grounds. rabu areas. sacred to the
spirits of the ancestors. where It Is blaspht>my
to tread.
In old English estates. amid the
Impeccably kept lawns and gardens. there Is
one comer kept wild "for the fairies • that Is
never entered These are probably areas that
would difficult lo matntaln anyway. and these
days the tradition Is most likely kept with
tongue tn cheek. but ll Is slill kept, as ll has
been for generations.
In the small country of Costa Rica the
newly-established tropical dryland forest
national park Is divided Into three pans: one
pan ts open to appropriate commercial use.
one pan Is only open to tradltlonal native use.
and the remainder Is not open to human use at
all.
Here In Katuah. there have always been
energy centers and sacred sites endowed with
spiritual power that were never entered except
by lndlvlduals or small groups of people who
felt compelled to venture there to fulfill a
specific spiritual mission.
ThJs idea could be easily translated lnlo
our own lime. lf people took ll to heart. Small
areas could be set aside on small tracts of land.
but setting aside a mountain range or large
areas of the forest to be forever undisturbed by
human presence would make a significant
difference tn the conditions of habitat and. no
less Importantly. would transform our
relationship to the land.
It Is both a form of reverence and a
human need that we learn at this lime to
Intentionally leave some wild places alone
forever. All who feel so tncllned are Invited to
set off an area of land - however large an area
for whJch the tndlvldual or group feels ll can
accept responsibility - as a perpetual wild
sanctuary. This could be done by purchase.
decree. or by personal witness. The areas could
be regarded as sacred shrines. devlc
dwclllng-places. burial grounds. or liberated
1.ones. In whatever manner It Is undertaken.
this commitment tnvolvcs a responstbtllty lo
respect the boundaries and lo urge others who
might come tn contact with the area to do the
same. It also Involves educallfllt the young
about the nature of this area and the purpose
for selllfllt ll aside. that they might be willing
to continue the practice.
ll Is time lhts Is brought forward as a
serious suggestion.
May all beings live wUd and free!
Plca.\C !lend any commcnis expressing your
rcacuons, dreams, or visions about a perpetual wild
sanctuary lO KatiUih Journal: Box 638: Leicester, NC
28748.
(conlJnUOd from Pl&C 22)
developed interchanges therefore not only
enhance the corridor's immediate environs, but
also seive as gateways which entice additional
development into surrounding counties.
"Regionally, the 1-26 gateway will
increase traffic throughout WNC. Thus,
thousands of businesses - both established and
yet-to-be stand to benefit...The US Chamber of
Commerce has determined that each additional
100 manufacturing jobs have the following
positive (sic) benefits on a given locale:
Non-manufacturing jobs .. ...............&!
Population increase...................... 202
Family units .............................. I 02
Increased school enrollments............ 61
(t ndguote)
The effects would certainly be positive for
the developers and real estate speculators who
stand to make a lot of money selling off the
mountain habitat. For current residents,
however, land booms do not necessarily mean
more jobs. They do mean higher taxes as the
local people absorb the costs of expanded water
supply and waste disposal services to provide an
infrastructure for the new industries. They do
without fail mean over-crowded schools, higher
crime rates, increased noise. congestion,
sedimentation. air and water pollution.
Richard Stiles. an economist for the
Western Nonh Carolina Tomorrow group, a
primary motivator behind the push for an 1-26
corridor, actually maintains that an
interstate- level highway would be less
ecologically damaging than expansion of the
present Rt. 23. He says that this is because an
interstate would have only limited access, rather
than being lined with development.
Such an analysis shows a complete
ignorance or disregard for the idea that there is
any limit to the regional canying capacity for
human beings.
T11U, 1989
Ptn:cmage Change in !>()pulation Size. Ra1c of Na1ural lncrcase.
and Net Mignuion Rate for lhc Average of !he Eighteen
Wt"stcm Counlle• of We.tern Nonh Carolina, 1940-1980
LEGEND:
- - Rate of PopulallOD Change
-""" ··· · Net Migrabon Rate:
· • • - - Ra1e of Natural ln~ase
25
20 -
15 10 5-
0-5 ·IO·
. :?Q -
1940-50
1950-60
1960-70
1970-80
(1971 l'"'JOC- )
Source: S«io-£c()namlc OverviLW of W~s1u11 Vorrli. Carol1NJ
fo r ti!, Vtu11aMla PusaJi VaiwNd Fou compilttl by the
.•t
Sou1hnn Appalachian Ccnlef, Man Hall College, Mars Halt,
NC
Direct displacement by the interstate
construction and resulting commercial
development will remove thousands of acres of
relatively undeveloped habitat. Migration routes
and range areas of different animals will be
disrupted by the cut-out, paved-over, and
fenced-in interstate route.
A new interstate route will greatly increase
fragmentation of habitaL The forest north of
Asheville will be severed by a route comparable
in size and volume to the 1-40 interstate. Instead
of one habitat area • however patchy and ragged
it is at present - there will be 1wo smaller areas.
The local gene pool, already in disucss, will be
divided in half once again.
However. the most damaging effect will
be the ucmcndously increased volume of traffic
that will pass over the new highway. A new
superhighway will mean more use. more
commerce, more in-migration, more human
demands on the already over-stressed
habitat. We long ago overshot the capacity of this
region to suppon the weight of our population.
As access opened the mountains to the ravages
of unrestrained technology at the turn of the
century, so now is it bringing in unrestrained
numbers of human beings. We arc the greatest
threat to habitat in the Southern Appalachians.
Rather than manage the forest to meet our
unending demands, we need to manage
ourselves. our numbers and our way of life. that
the forest may continue. In the long run, this
would be the best for all the inhabitants of the
mountain forestlands. ourselves included.
This process requires values that are at
once new and at the same time very, very old.
These values arc the substance of the biorcgional
vision. We need to learn/remember them and
pass them on. Only then will we be able to
approach a reasonable carrying capacity of
human beings in the Katuah province of the
Appalachian biorcgion.
~
Xot.Uah Journot p119e 23
�J
CAPTIVE BEARS FREED!
"ROAD MANIA" SLOWED
NabJral World News Service
Senator Wyche Fowler, Jr. (D-GA) led the US
Senate lo adopt an amendment to the interior
appropriations bill that cut the road-building budget of
the US Forest Service by $65 million.
Vowing lO curb "road-building mania" in the
Forest Service, Fowler called on his Senate colleagues to
pass the amendmenL They responded 55-44 in favor of
the measure. Twenty-rive million of the recovered money
would be returned to the federal treasury. The balance
would be used for stewardship programs, habitat
improvement, and land acquisition.
In calling for support of the amendment, Fowler
cited a Congressional Research Service study that found
that road construction was the most environmentally
damaging aspect of the Forest Service timber program.
OTTERS MAKE A COMEBACK
... AND A GETAWAY
Natunil World News Service
CARNIVOROUS PLANT LISTED
Norural Wbrld News Service
NllUnl) World News Service
Recent events in Cherokee drew attention to the
plight of caged and exploited black bears. One evening
this summer, several bears were "liberated" from
Saunooke's Bear Den show by unknown individual(s). A
large hole was cut in the outer wall of the enclosure,
through which the bears escaped along the creek into the
surrounding woods, and hopefully into the Great Smoky
Mountains National Parle.
The outcome for the escapees is unknown:
Saunooke has made no comment as to whether or not the
bears were quickly recaptured or escaped into the wild. In
any case, this evem effectively brought the bear's
situation to the attention of local media.
People for the Ethical TreaUTient of Animals
have annouoced plans to protest in Cherokee on
September 9, 1989. They have been warned off by the
Chief of the Eastern Band of the Cherokee Nation,
Jonathan L. Taylor. A clear message appeared on August
15, 1989 in the Asheville Ci1iz11n-Times that any animal
rights protesters would be arrested and prosecuted for
"interfering• with the reservati.on practice of exploiting
bears. lo a pointed way. it is clear that on the
reservation, as in many areas or Katuab. the rights or
humans to exploit the bears supercedes any rights of the
animal species.
Loss of freshwater wetland habitat has
eliminated or threatened many plant and animal species
throughout the country. The US Fish and Wildlife
Service has recently proposed to add to the Endangered
Species List the mountain sweet pitcher plant (Sorrounio
rubro ssp. jonesii). Native only to a few motmtaln bogs
and streamsides in southwestern North Carolina and
northwestern South Csrolina along the Blue Ridge
Divide, the mounuiin sweet pitcher plant has been
reduced from 26 known historical populations to only
10. The pitcher plant has been the victim of drainage of
bogs. flooding. convctsion or the land for agriculture and
grazing, various other forms of land development, and
collection. Eight of the remaining 10 populations
survive on private land where they may be subject to
habitat alteration and collection by fanciers or
carnivorous plants; the other two are situaicd on State or
South Carolina lands. but are also vulnerable to
recreation and illegal collection.
The mountain sweet pitcher plant, like other
carnivorous plants, traps and digests insects for food. 11
grows up to 29 inches in height, producing showy.
typically maroon flowers gracefully suspended on single
tall stems, each covered with a hood. Insects. attracted to
the mouth of the pitcher by sweet secreted nectar, crawl
or fall into the pitcher. Their escape is prevented by a
smooth slippery surface just inside the mouth of the
pitcher. and by stiff hairs lining the interior or the pi!Cher
tubes, pointing downward. The insects are digested in the
enzyme.filled fluid secreted int the pitchers.
The mountain sweet pitcher plant and its related
species have long inspired curiosity and wonder. Unless
they are protected and s:ived they will soon inspire only
memories. Your comments can be addressed to the
Asheville Field Office: US Fish and Wildlife Service;
100 Otis Street (Room 224); Asheville, NC 28801.
ACID RAIN A PROVEN KILLER
NabJral World News Service
A link between acid precipitation and a wsease
which bas killed thousands of dogwood trees may have
been proven by US Forest Service plant pathologist
Robert Anderson and colleagues. Dogwood anthracnose,
or dogwood blight, caused by Disculo fungus species,
was first found to be infecting trees in the Northeast and
the Pacific Northwest about 10 years ago (see Kotuoli
Journal #21). Since then, it has spread lO many of the
Southeastern states and caused high mortality among
both woodland and ornamental dogwoods. More than one
quarter million acres in Kllttiah have been affected by the
disease.
Otters, absent from the Smoky Mountains
following excessive trapping and logging activities
during the 1930's, are making a comeback. Not only are
they successfully surviving in several reintroduction
sites, they arc claiming ierritoric:; across mountain ronges
from their points of rcintr0duction. Nine nvcr otters
were rclea.~ into thc Little River on the Tennessee side
of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park, and at
least two have crossed into Nonh Carolina drainages.
The ouers arc eluding the tracking efforts of
researchers. even though fitted with surgically-implanted
radio transmitters. Kim Dcl..o'1ier, wildlife biologist for
the Park. says, "Most of them have moved extensive
disuinces from the release site to other drainages. We
really don't know why they are moving so much."
Recently, biologists have been able to track the otters
only by air. A few oucrs from a 1986 release project an
the Cades Cove area of the Parle also were sighted later in
Nonh Carolina waters.
FtShermcn have expressed concern that ottcrs will
destroy game fish, but analysis or oner scat from river
banks bv University of Tennessee researchers revealed
that scat piles contain no trout bones.
"Trout are fast and much harder to catch," says
DeLozier. Instead. the otters prefer slow-moving fish like
white suckers. daces, sculpins, and hogsuckers, says
DeLo1Jer. For the ouers, •...these slow-moving fish ate
like picking sweets from a candy store."
The next proposed release of river ouers will Ulke
place as early as this winter in a watershed on the Nonh
Carolina side of the Park...but don't expect them to stay
there for long.
Xai.imh Journal pmJe 24
The disease is chanictcrized by putple-rimmcd leaf
spots. followed by twig, brunch. and stem cankers. Trees
ID the forest • parucularly trees growing ID moist
environments at high elevations - suffer more from
anthracnose than omrunental dogwoods located where the
disease can be controlled by cultural practices. Among
wild dogwoods, the disease is expected to continue 10
spread throughout the South.
In the past researchers had not been successful m
producing anthracnose symptoms on trees which had
been inoculated with lhe Disculo fungus in the
laboratory. In the recently reported experiments. one year
old dogwood seedlings were exposed to various levels of
simulated acid rain at a Forest Service lab. The seedlings
were then exposed to Disculo inoculum and the
subscquem rate of infection was noted. Exposed to the
fungus alone, the trees showed no sign or the blight. but
as the rain acidity levels were increased there appeared a
corresponding increase in infection. Research is
continuing to determine if the acid rain/anthracnose
connectio~an be observed in dogwoods growing under
field cond111ons.
Anderson's work will be helpful in effons to s:ive
the tree that bears the North Carolina state nowcr.
Perhaps more importantly. however, his experiments
have proven a link bclwecn acid rain and plant disease and
decline. It is commonly accepted that airborne pollution
is contributing 10 the deaths or red spruce and Fraser fir
treeS at high altitudes in the mountruns, but Anderson's
experiments offer the first scientifically accepted proof
that acid min is a major culprit in any instance or forcs1
degradation.
The logo above symbolizes the commitment of
the Blue Ridge Environmental Defense League to protect
the integrity of the New River. The group is demanding
that the State of North Carolina carry ou1 its
rc.~nsibility to protect the river as a fcder:illy-dc.~ign:ncd
Wild and Scenic River area. The New is presently
designated a Wild and Scenic River for 26.5 miles or its
length, but this designation is threatened by an alarming
rate of de,•clopmcnt along its banks and a proposed water
treaUTient plan! upstream of the fcderally-pro1cc1cd zone
(sec Ka1t1aliJourna/ If 24).
Join the Blue Ridge Environmental Defense
League's efforts on behalf of the New River. Contact
BREDL: Box 1308; W. Jefferson, NC 28694.
raC!., 1989
�.
SAHC TO REVISE PROPOSAL
Nmural World News Strnce
The Southern Appalachian Highlands
Conservancy (SAHC) has announced !hot il will drop o
proposed National Scenic Area Proposal thllt the group
hnd drafted as potential leg1slauon 10 define m:inagemcnt
policy for the 24,000 acres of spcc18Cular landscape
known as the Highl:inds of R0311.
The ongin:ll propos:>I met w11h protest from local
l:indowncrs and building conl13Ctors who felt thllt lhcii
propcny rights would be violated by the plan.
The SAHC sud m a prepared sl3tcmcm, "Since u
has been our hope from the beginning !hot a proposal
could be drafted which met with the approval of all
part1e~ •... SAHC has withdrawn 1ts proposal for lhe
present and 1ntcods IO revise the same <;<>as IO hopefully
'™=Ct the conocms of local l'CSldcnts md landowners.•
The conservauon group pbns to hold both formal
and informal mceungs with all CO'ICcmcd to come up
wilh a new and belier proposal for keeping inl.3Cl the
beauty of the Roon Highlllnds.
NC ROAD BINGE
Nonnl World News Service
The North Carolina state legislature
overwhelmingly passed a bill o~ July 26 that will
contnbute greatly to mushrooming development in the
Klllliall province. By a House vote of 95-19 and a Senate
vote of 39-11, lhe legislature raufied a highway package
rood bill calling for S9. I billion for road construction
throughout the Slate.
In campaigning for the bill carher, Republican
GovClllOI" J1m Martin vowed IO bnng every resident of
the state within 10 miles of a fow--lanc highway. The
bill would fund major road-building and road-widening
projects and pave thousands of miles of ara,-cl roads.
Pnrndox1cally, the governor turned against his
own bill when Senate Democrats added a provision to use
incrca~ vehicle sales taxes for 11110 years to fund pay
raises for 1eaehcrs and swc employc:cs. But legislators did
not respond to the governor's last-minute call to tum
down lhe revised bill.
Among the projects IO be funded by the massive
highway constrUCtion act are widening of US 23 in
Madison County 10 cn::ue a four-lane roadway between
Asheville, NC and Johnson City. TN: widening of US
19-19E between Mars Hill and Ingalls m Avery County:
expansion of US 19 between Bryson City and Andrews:
widening of US 441 soulh of Franklin: and construction
of a loop IO circle west of Asheville between 1-26 and US
23.
1"c:i[(, I 989
FRIENDS OF GRANDFATHER
temperawrc in the river, which would cause populations
of fish and olha- life to decline.
Geologically, the Grandfather Mountain Window,
where some of the oldest rock exposed on earth juus out
of the gl'OWld, provides a unique glimpse into the past. 11
is estimated lhat Grandflllher Mountain is between 625 to
680 million years old, placing its formation during the
Precambrian era, a time when life still existed primarily
in the seti. and microorganisms were prom111CnL
Fncnd~ of Grandfather is c , rently securing
501(c)3 non-profit status with the Elisha Mitchell
Audubon Soc1c1y. It has also received suppon from the
Blue Ridge Group of the Sierra Club and is worlcing with
the Trust for Public Lands. To become involved or 10
send a donation to the Friends of Grandfather Mountain
Fund please write to them at: P.O. Box 239: Sugar
Grove, NC 28679.
Nonnl World Ne"°' Service
On !he northwest slope of Grandfather Mountain
hes 1,200 acres for sale. 900 acres of lhis is owned by
lhc Wilmore Corporation, headed by John Williams and
Hugh Monon. A master pion has been drawn up which
any developer interested in buying the property must
agn:c to. Tiie sellers see this master plan. which includes
a ski slope, shopping mall. convention center, golf
course, and 200 or more homesiteS as being earned out m
an envll"Ol\mentally conscious way.
Friends of Grandfather Mountain is a group of
concerned local citir.ens working to keep these
envuonmentally sensiuve areas mtact by initiaung a
media cnmpaign and an effort to purchase the land. By
purchasing the land and placing it in the care of a
conservation organi1.auon, perhaps future generations can
enJOY at least one moun1:1m whose i.rrcplacable beauty
lives unscathed.
In protceting the land, douns of species of plants
and animals would also be protccted. Many vnriwes of
irces, and several rare nnd threatened plants and animals
eiust on and near the 900 acre tract up for sale. Of pnme
botanical concern are the Blue Ridge goldenrod and the
Hclleri bla7jng star, both growing on the Profile Cliffs
directly above the endangered land. These species are
listed as critically globally imperiled by the Natural
Heritage Program. The Blue Ridge goldenrod is also
CODSJdered endangered by the State of North Carolina.
DU"CClly off the Shanty Springs Trail arc bent avcns and
lnuhng wolfsbane. These bcauuful plants arc also
globally imperiled. Their ap(>C3rllllce is considered rare
nnd highly localized.
The proposed development would also displace
hundreds of animal species mcludmg: deer. racoon,
opposum. red and grey fox, bobcats and an occasional
bear. Newly discovered is the presence of the northern
Oying sqwrrcl, a "Jlt'CiCS endangered in the Sl&IC of North
Carolina, just above the glade on the Shanty Springs
trail. These small, nocturnal creatures seem 10 be
declirung because of changes in vegetation and habitat
disturbance. The population of these rare squirrels at
Grandfather Mountain is the farthest north the species has
been discovered in the state. Also, disturbing the territory
below the hacking site for young endangered pe.rigrine
falcons may reduce the chance of the mature birds
renuning lO breed in lhal area.
From the westtm slope of Calloway Peak, the
highest peak in the Blue Ridge Range, spring three
pristme streams which form the headwaters of the
Linville and Watauga Rivers. Both rivers are currently
being proposed for designation as Outstanding Resource
Waters. The Watauga River may be unable to support
additional treated wastewat.Ct, awaillng further LCSts by the
NC Division of Environmental Management. Wastewater
treallllent standards for the nver have already been made
motC Stringent, and in some 111.S1allCC$ new pcnmts have
been denied. Any silt or 1dditional emuent into lhcsc
headwaters may ruin the nver"s quality. Of critical
imponance is the potentinl increase of average water
ACID VEINS
Narunl World Ne"°' Sen-a
The final mslallment of a ten year study on acid
rain for the Kau1ah biorcgion has recently been released
by Lhe Environmental Prolec:tion Agency. The final
rcpon states th:11. 1f current sulfur emissions continue et
the present rate, 129 streams in the region will become
acidic within SO )'ClltS, and 203 additional sueams will be
occasionally acidic.
Researchers also projected the possibility of
increases in sulfur emission during the same 50 year
period. Starling with a steady inc= of 20% in the first
10 years and continuing for 15 years, then leveling offin
the next 2S years. At lhis level 159 streams would
become acidic:, and 340 would be potcntJally vulnerable
IO periodic acidification.
Presently there are no S11C811lS in KatWlh that are
considered aciC:ic, and jUSt lhree are eswnated IO have an
ac1d-ncutrali21ng capacity or lower than 50
m1cro-equ1valcnts per liter • the estimated vulnerability
threshold or streams becoming temporarily acidic during
heavy snow melts and rainstorms.
Sulfur dioxide, wh.icb is convened in the
atmosphere into acid, 1s primarily produced by
C031-buming power plants and other industries.
Oxides or n11.rogcn arc released in approxim3tely
similar amounts by automobiles and industry. Even
though the CIU"Tcm presidential admlnlscraUon has
proposed a 10 million ton reduction in sulfur diollidc
emissions and a two million ton reduction in nitrogen
oxide releases over the next decade. one of lhe best means
to reduce poisonous emissions is energy conservation,
which lessens lhc need for both existing and proposed
power plants.
Here are some organizations that offer catalogs
contammg energy-effiCIClll products: Tiie Renew America
Prop:t: 1001 Connecticut Avenue NW (Sutte 63&):
Washington, DC 20036 (&02) 862-2999 and The Rocky
Mountain Institute: 1739 Snowmass Creek Road: Old
Snowmass. CO 81654.
�Gathering
I dream the spirits gather,
Gather in a space outside my
Room. They call my name over
DRUMMING
And over, I stand
Before them and their voices are
The howling of wolves, lhe cooing of doves,
LETIERS TO KATUAH
We are in another place,
They are touching me,
I feel like a candle
With a tall flame,
They give me messages,
When I wake I can only remember
The voices of doves,
Of Wolves, and the way
We wavered over this world,
Dear KatUah.
I'm writing to thank you for sending the
Katilah Journal all the way over to Swil.l.erlandl h's
very important lhat people sian to think and care more
and more about our environmental problems ALL
OVER the world!
I'm looking forward to your next issue!
The seem of sandalwood.
- Palricia Claire Peters
YourS sincerely.
Christine Moser
~t:.~S·
p$.
o-t$S
~ ri..~ \)~ tjl{C\;1!1
~G·s~~s
.~'.tS ....o~
,.c9v~st:.•S v
J\}t>G1!i :iS ~~
Dear Friends at Katrlal1 Journ(l/:,
Dear Katilah Journal People,
Your summer '89 issue on Ptau in the
Mowttains was a moment of serendipity for me as well
as good energy and inspiration. It connected with my
moment of comple{ing a silk screened print inspired by
and incorporating the Cherokee words for Water and
S~
7~(~:t;;)are:\JA 0' (pUJL'-)
Phone~ally pronounced:
~
-
q Ma.
Justice prevails - this time - in S.E. Georgia. If
here, anywhere! Your publication is excellent, keep it
running. Can we do an exchange with you?
At this time, it's a little out of balance, but the
best we can do. h's all part of the same problem greed and power.
Pax,
Martina. John and Donna
St. Mary's, GA
~
L/A1.,;1
-tho 1t1 :JU..
Several Cherokee people (Laura King, Pheasant
Driver, Mary and G.B. (Going Back) Chiltosky) helped
me with this identification and pronunciation.
~ 1hi1 G: spoken with urgency because water is
critically essential to life.
yours, delighted and connected,
Margaret Gregg
Jonesborough. TN
love Story
! lie wirh the Eanlt
Ukea lover.
Embracing Her
Enfolded in Her fragrance
In the heat of Her body
Through langucrous swooning afternoons
And rhythmic pulsing nights.
She is
With me
Dear KatW!h folks.
A new book is out. that all serious gardeners
and fanncrs should have. h's called Secrets of the Soil
by Peter Tomkins and Christopher Bird (Harper &
Row, 1989). Please try to get a copy!
- from Knotts Island, NC
Arowuim£
Inside me.
Oneness.
Greenness.
Wilderness.
Wildness.
Swirling in the spiral
Lost in Mystery.
Knowing the Unknowable.
-Mary dt La Va/ttte
Xatiulh Jou.rnal p1i9e 26
f'aU., 1989
�Dear Friends.
Greiuly enjoyed your spring issue. ns usual.
need to call your attention, however, to what I consider
the Planet Art article's wholely uncritical appr~~al of the
current 'crystal craf.e'. So I thought I would send along
Earth F1rster. Karen DcBraaJ's brillnnt linlc piece on
crystals as an 31ltcdote. from 'Live Wild or Die', n recent
Eanh First! dcnvauve. Please consider pnnting 1L
Sincerely.
Bill McCormick
Crozet. VA
Enclosed anic:lc {b) Karen OcBf.131):
Crystals. Their shimmering beauty vibrates
deep into your being, helping your being, helping you
setf-actuahzc wuh healing powers und guided
imageries. Cool and hip, right? New age and stylin',
yes? But at what price? Well. hell, can a price be put
on spirituality? Can a price be put on how the earth
feels when her powerful energy trnnsm1uers and hc:llers
arc ripped from her bowels for a profit, be u monetary
orspmtual?
The ripping (np off) of crysuils from the earth
is causing her to ulcerate. Great eroding <;ear; rc,ult
from the hungry hordes scouring the U.S.N:uional
Forcsts (mainly in Arkansas) and areas in other
counties, such as Mexico and Brazil. Armed to the
teeth wuh screwdrivers, shovels and bulldozers,
new-age hucksters and spiritual profiteers.
well-meaning heaters and seelcers of the sacred arc
mining and tearing at the earth with no thought of the
cost to her. The environmental impact of our
spiritually starved, buclc-hungry droves is not a
consideration.
Think about it. The next time you stroll by
Toots for Fools (no kidding) or any other nashy
crystal store in Santa Crut or elsewhere, and sec those
t.v. si1~ cryslJlls glimmering in the display window,
think about the hole it left when it was wrenched out
by its roots. like a bloody wisdom t00th from a gum.
And all those smaller oncs... thcy aren't laying around
the forest noor like pine cones.
"It resembles Gold Rush Days." said
Montgomery County Sheriff James Carmack in
Spectrum (Dee. 23, 1987). when asked about crysllll
seekers in the Oucitn National Forest and surrounding
areas in Arkansas. According to Carmack, people
vandalve the area by stealing crystals from legal mines
and digging illegal muics. These all cause erosion. The
Forest Service liberally grants crystal mining permit,,
3Ccording to Spectrum. but the fees generated don't
begin to cover the cost of m:>nitoring the mines or
contr0lhng 1llcgnl hunters.
Sure. crystals are poweiful. But maybe they are
where they are for a reason. Leave them there, where
the earth c11n use them as she sees fiL It is mter.:sung
thnt newagc folks, who profess to care for the earth are
so blinded by the crystal light that they are dcstr0ymg
whnt they profess LO love. Their cryswls are bloody.
Docs our endlessly raped earth need more of this?
The NFS and the crystal-hungry massc.~ need to
hear from environmentalists: crystal mining 1s yet
another massive wounding that our earth doesn't need.
We need to heal ourselves by healing the earth.
Boycou crystals! If you own them, don't O:iunt them,
which encourages others to get them. Let the NFS
know th3t you don't want them to grant any more
crystal mining permits. Let people know that crysrols
belong to the earth!
''
• J
'·
I
.'
Draw111g by Sw Adams
Dear KatUah,
I picked up the wonderful winter issue of your excellent and much needed publication at the Tremont Center in
the Smokies. This issue has changed my perception and my life. I hope to live in the area some day. although I mny
Opl to have a cabin in the woods of Kentucky or Indiana. It has been a dream LO live m the forest for a long time • by
a stream. I wish to support and join the struggle for unity with the planet we inhabit. for stopping heedless
exploiUltion and destruction, for nurturing life. I am in the process of nunuring my own life (much damaged in
childhood). This nunurmg is most harmonious with the healing of the planet.
Thanks for your work,
Starfire
Forest Voices
I
Sleeping on the wall of the world
arching over the sun with the c11n•e
off est trees
or
wlwse tips are rwe11ry leagues high
i11 the morni11g light
casting golde11 leaf shadows
in this green place.
The high wind
orchestrates irs wisdom
with the forest:
Be at peace with the fly
and pain of bursitis
Let the heali11g ofthe pla11et
be pan ofyou.
Be one with me
2.
Hush, the gods of the forest
are speaking.
They toss the sun with their fingers.
The liale gods rising
from the growui
are staffs oftruth,
each blade ofgrass
a word of wisdom.
3.
listen,
the voice ofthe wmer sings,
the naiad ofthe stream
whispers
10 the silent one
who rests by her way.
The butterflies above
are mating
and the weefolk
are white water rafting
dow11 her tiny rapids
in small spherical crafts.
She says thar happiness
is here with the jwnpingjish
alld the drops of rain
quietly sampling
the edge of1he storm.
Here hidden and safe
I would wish to stay.
4.
W01erfa/ls
in nLrlung laugluer
as white fire ascends
in balance
ofcoll/I/er energies
providing
one another's needs
in mandala
of reality,
body alld spirit.
-S111rfire Soledad
f'p(t, 1989
�(conlinucd from page 7)
habitat types represented in the landscape, the
belier the possibilities for rhc survival of rhc
whole. Older, more mature forests musr extend
over many contiguous sites, not just on ridges
and in coves, for successful migration of
species. For life to adapt 10 changing conditions,
reproduction of all but the most highly .inobile,
weedy species must occur on adjacent sites.
Following the mosr recent ice age, forest
communities migrated at a rare of only a few
miles per century as the climate v.'nmled over rhe
course of thou,ands of years In the coming
century, species tha• cnmnnsc marurc fore t
communities musr migrate ar a rate perhaps I0
times faster, an impossible feat from isolated.
fragmented habiratS.
Optimum regional biodiversity, therefore,
requires a continuity of habitats across the
landscape in a mosaic of mature communities
that includes all topographic conditions: ridges,
nonh and south slopes, coves, streams and
gorges, balds, and bogs. FederaJ protection has
recently been extended 10 many of rhc latter
communities (at least those thar are not
commercially imponant) as Congressionally
designated Wilderness Areas. But nearly all of
the remainder - the large areas of contiguous
second-growth forests that arc now
cconomicaJly mature - is destined for violent
disturbance before the tum of rhc cenmry.
Defining Old-Growth Forests
Forests managed for commercial timber
and wild game species provide a great diver:;ity
of plant and animal species through logging and
other planned disturbances. Therefore, it is the
conclusion of Forest Service policy makers that
timber and game management activities meet the
legal requirement for biodiversity. The one
condition that managed forests do not meet is
that of providing for the types of natural
diversity in critically short supply: those
associated with mature old-growth forests. The
condition "old-growth" is defined by the
Southern Region of the US Forest Service as
any forest stand over 100 years of age. This
completely arbitrary definition fails to meet the
biological requisites for a mature forest, because
it simply means that any forest stand older than
an economic rotation for commercial timber
harvest is classed as "old-growth."
From the biological standpoint, an
old-growth forest contains trees in all age
classes, including dying, standing dead, and
fallen dead trees. Because most of the trce
species that comprise old-growth stands in the
Southern Appalachian forests do not reach
biological maturity for 200-400 years (and
pcrhnps longer 10 be wcll-rcpresenied in t11e
dying and dead tree categories), the present-day
second-growth hardwood forests must be left
free of disturbance for at least another 150
years. Even then, many micro-habitat niches
provided by old windthrown trees, standing
dead snags, and rotting logs will not become
available until yet another century has passed.
More imponantly, most of the plants and
animals of our second-growth forests represent
mid-successional species, which are not those
that will eventually be present in the climax
communities. The maturing forests of today will
undergo dynamic changes in species
composition when left undisturbed until they
reach a condition of biological old-growrh.
JCGtwm )o"rnaL paq~ 28
Artwork by Joma RN!a
Herc we should dispel several common
misconceptions regarding old-growth forests.
First, old-growth srands arc not decadent.
On the contrary, they arc dynamic and teeming
with life. As old crees fall. many new niches are
created for other plants and animals, both in the
canopy overhead and in the rotting wood on the
forest floor. Many microhabitats undergo
constant micro-successions of plants and
animals, as new niches arc created and old ones
disappear.
A second myth is that "old-growth" is
synonymous with "wilderness." This is
cenainly not true in eastern Nonh America,
where we have very liulc true old-growth in
areas that have been Congressionally designated
as "Wilderness." There is one important
difference between the two. Legal Wilderness is
by definition for hwnon beings. a commodity
for people to enjoy as a recreational experience,
and it is managed as such by the public
agencies. Old-growth forest is for bioro,
preserved for the intrinsic value of all the
various forms of biological diversity therein.
Managing for old-growth, however, does not
exclude use by people. rn fact, old-growth
forests enhance benefits such as recreation,
wildlife habitat, visual quality, and stream
quality, as well as providing for essential
biological diversity.
Restoring Old-Growth Diversity
We return full circle to the opening
paragraph of this paper. "Today we stand at the
threshold of a great decision" - one of the most
imponant for public land use since the creation
of the national forests.
Current management plans for the
Southern Appalachian national forests call for
widespread timber harvest, largely by
clearcurting, for most of the 60 to 80 year old
second-growth stands that have reached
economic maturity. There arc provisions in
some forest management plans to temporarily
preserve five percent of each harvested
component (approximately 50 acres for each
1000 acres harvested) for old-growth .
However, these temporary reserves are only
fragments surrounded by young managed
stands, and even these may also be harvested in
the future. Tree species in the young stands
created by harvesting will be heavily biased
toward those with known commercial value,
such as eastern white pine, yellow poplar, and
the red and white oaks. This would reduce
natural diversity ai.d would also reduce the
potential for genetically stable communities in
the future. An orientation toward timber
management is not going to maintain regional
biological diversity in its broadest sense.
The United States IOOth Congress stated,
"The Eanh's biological diversiry is being rapidly
depleted at a rate without precedent in human
history....Mosr losses of biological diversity are
largely avoidable consequences of human
activity ....Mointoining biological diversity
through habitat preserv01ion is often less costly
and more effective than ejforrs ro save species
once tltey become endangered." (Quoted from
H.R. 4335. 1988, emphasis added).
We frequently hear reports of
distinguished biological scientists warning that
human-caused destruction of naturaJ habnats is
the single most serious threat to survival of life
as we know it on our planet. The loss of genetic
diversity and the loss of entire ecosystems arc
occurring at an accelerating pace around the
world. The Southern Appalachian Mountains arc
a pan of this grim picture. But the existing
public lands have the potential to restore the
natural diversity provided by the old-growth
forests currently missing from the Appalachian
biorcgion. Unbroken, naturally-functioning
habitats must be restored here to provide the
basic life suppon systems necessary to carry all
forms of life through rhe unfolding ecological
catastrophe of our times.
We can overcome rhc mental blindness
that would have us believe that providing
commodities for people is the uhimote use for
the Appalachian national forests. We can expand
our vision to keep in mind the value of habitat,
the foundation for all life. Whole and healthy
habitats provide the necessary elements for the
continued survival of the entire global
ecosystem.
Robert Zollner was a professor of
forestry at Clemson Universiry specializing in
the ecology of Sowhern Appalachian hardwoods
until lus retirement in 1988.
f'~U.. 1989
�LIVING GREEN
<O Christoph and Mary-Clayton Endcrlein
The Oreen Movement is more than 1 political ideology because Green vallltS also involv~ how we live every
day. This list is for thl>se who have lhe "Green Spirit" and would like IO i~rponlle II further tnlO _daily
living...Only by activating the ilel1IS on lhis list, can our grea1-grea1-grea1 gra~c~1ldren have an opponunuy.
interacl directly wilh lhe grea1 whales, lhe elephanlS. the ravens, lhe wolves. This hs1 was created by Interspecies
Communication board member ChrisU>ph Enderlein and his wife Mary-ClaylOll. Feel free IO copy. bul do llOl change
i1 wilhoul permission.
'°
Recycle paper, glass, and metals
.
Recycle motor oil, dispose of hazardous waste responsibly
Use cloth diapers
Reuse egg cartons and paper bags
Avoid using styrofoam
.
Avoid disposable plates, cups, utensils
Use rags instead of paper towels
.
Use paper bags, not pa~r towels to drain ~se
Give away rather than dispose of unneeded nems
IO. Use the back of discardable paper for scratch paper
11. Be responsible and creative with leftover food
12. Use the water from cooking vegetables to make soup
13. Mend and repair rather than discard !llld replace
14. Invest in well-made functional clothing
15. Buy bulk and unpackaged rather than packaged ~oods
16. Purchase goods in reusable and recyclable containers
17. Buy organic, pesticide-free foods
18. Avoid highly processed foods
19. Eat foods from low on the food chain
20. Compost your food scraps
21. Grow your own food (even small kitchen gardens)
22. Volunteer to start or help with a community garden
23. Suppon your local food co-ops
24. Discover where the foods and goods you buy come from
25. Buy locally grown produce and other foods .
26. Use glass and steel cookware rather~ alu1TU11um
27. Volunteer to maintain local parlts and wilderness
28. Buy living Christmas trees
29. Plant trees in your community
30. Learn about the plants and animals in your re~on
31. Discover your watershed and work to protect II
32. Oppose the use of roadside defoliants in your area
33. Use non-toxic, biodegradable soaps and cleansers
34. Use non-toxic pest control
35. Don't buy products tested on animals
36. Keep hazardous chemicals in spillproof containers
37. Put m a water conserving shower head
38. Take shoner showers
39. Tum off the water while you brush your te~th
40. Put a water conservation device on your toilet
41. Learn where your waste and sewage goes
42. Learn where the energy for your home comes from
43. Suppon your local utility's conservation programs
44. Hang your clothes out to dry
45. Be sure your home is appropriately insulated
46. Weather-seal your home thoroughly
47. Heat your home responsibly, with renewable energy
48. Don't bum green wood
49. Choose the longterm investment of solar energy
50. Tum off lights when not in use
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
Ta!!.1989
Drawing by Rob Messi<:lr.
51. Tum down your hot water heater
52. Lower your thcnnostat and wear warmer clothes
53. Buy energy efficient elccuical appliances
54. Keep your car engine well tuned
55. Drive a fuel-efficient car that uses unleaded gas
56. Walk, bicycle, carpool, and use public transponation
57. Shop by phone first, then pick up your purchases
58. Use rechargable batteries
59. Research socially-responsible investments
60. Suppon local credit unions
.
61. Suppon local shops and restaurants. not chruns
62. "Adopt a grandparent" from the local senior center
63. Volunteer to cook for senior citizens
64. Provide for children in need
65. Hold a community potluck to meet your neighbors
66. Pick up liner along highways and near your home
67. Sponsor a clothes swap
68. Become involved with community projects and events
69. Organize or panicipate in community spons
70. Be responsible for the values you express
71. Educate yourself on global and "Third World" issues
72. Participate in sister city and cultural exchanges
73. Learn about the cultural diversity in your region
74. Work for global peace
75. Learn how your legislators vote, let them know your views
76. Be an active voter and anend town meetings
77. Vote for candidates who support green values
78. Become involved with your child's school
79. Encourage your child's natural talents and interests
80. Organize or join a toy co-op
81. Put toxic substances out of reach of children
82. Teach your children ecological wisdom
83. Listen to your children's needs and suppon their dreams
84. Discourage the use of violent toys in your household
85. Communicate openly with your co-workers and friends
86. Acknowledge someone who provides quality service
87. Work to understand people with different values
88. Be conscious of the struggles of oppressed people
89. Unlearn cultural sexism and racism
90. Acknowledge individual spirituality in yourself and others
91. Donate blood if your health permits
92. Explore ways to reduce the stress in your life
93. Practice preventive health care
94. Exercise regularly and eat wisely
95. Bring music and laughterinto your life
96. Learn about the medications you put in your body
97. Practice responsible family planning
98. Learn First Aid and emergency procedures
99. Take time to play, relax and go into nature
JOO.Decrease TV watching and increase creative learning
IOI.Have fun and be joyful!
JC.atiuah JournGt p!MJB 29
�Whether you are a New Age prosperity
afti m1a11onist or an idealistic pauper avoiding
guilt by association with money, either way you
look at it, inflation has deemed our dollars paper
symobls of wealth that does not exist. A
practical person cannot help but wonder how
long before the big balloon pops and blows all
our preny greenbacks away.
There is a low-level anxiety present
concerning our inflated economy which has
prompted many people 10 s1ockpile food. move
back to the land, and in many other ways be as
self-sufficient as possible.
This awareness is helpful in keepi ng us
on our 1oes and ready for change, which is
inevitable, even if it is unpredictable. However,
survivalist consciousness can be devastating if
you spend all your energy preparing for the fall
of the existing order and deny yourself the
bounty of the present, which is all we have
really got.
It seems important to balance respect for
the preseni solu1ion of problems within 1
he
world in which we live, however imperfect,
with a vision and steps LOward an economics
rooted in life.
Barter Fairs offer a deeply satisfyin g
eicperience for those who long to participate in a
tangible, life-oriented exchange system, where
true value is considered.
As an example, here is a trade I witnessed
at a Saner Fair in Idaho a few years ago:
George had an anvil that Dennis wanted,
but all Dennis had brought to trade were
moccasins, which George did not need. Dennis
kept coming back to George longing for that
anvil, which George could not find anybody
else to take. Meanwhile, George had found
some gorgeous jewelry he could not live
without, and in talking to the crafter he
discovered that she was looking for some
footwear. George told her about Dennis. They
did a threesome, and the goods shifted hands.
All three lightened !heir loads and left richer.
Ideally the three people involved in the
trade did not translate their goods into money
value and compare their worth that way. They
each il~d a.a abundance of something of which
they no longer had a need and convened it into
something they preferred to carry around with
them. The anvil may have been worth $150
new, but to George it was just unused heavy
baggage. Those jewels might have carried a
hefty price tag at a craft fair. but since George
had such a yearning gaze and such an open
smile, the artist easily chose to exchange them
for Dennis' moccasins, which could never have
been sold for so much money, but fit her feet
like her own skin, to her infinite comfort and
delight.
BARTER
FAIR
All judgement on money ethics aside,
bartering goods and services without the value
translation of money is a stimulating,
heart-warming, and enlightening activity. The
true value of things is discovered to be
subjective. The shifting of a fair full of items to
their most valuing recipients is wondrous in its
unfoldment; the grounds for transfer are
infinitely variable.
The phenomenon of the modem American
Bane. Fair originated in the Pacific Northwest, a
r
region with a well-developed bioregional
awareness and a strong emphasis on
self-sufficiency . The fairs are held
semi-annually. The autumn fairs, coinciding
with harvest season, are heavier on agricultural
produce. In the spring, people bring more
handmade items produced during the long
winter. Both fairs are rich in reunions of
friends, music-malting. sitting around campfires
late into the night, and all the peripheral activitiCl>
of the time and place.
Barter Fairs are different than flea
markets, although many people do bring used
clothes, tools, and other goods to trade. They
are more akin to the county fairs in the country.
There is a spirit of festivity and pride in personal
accomplishment and a sense of the bounty that
comes of humanity working with nature. They
are a celebration of the fruits of this union within
a region of Earth.
There is no reason I can see that Saner
Fairs need to remain unique to the Northwest.
Our southern highlands, historically short on
money and high on resourcefulness, seem
naturally suited to generate and support this kjnd
of community celebration and self-sufficiency.
Barter Fairs carry on a spirit with ancient
roots in prehistoric times, when wandering
tribes periodically gathered together in great
council circles to define and experience their
cultural autonomy. During later agric ultural
periods fairs continued to stir human souls.
Now in the age of K-Mart when you can hardly
find a service station for your car, and pliers fall
apart after one use, it is especially good to come
together to celebrate our connectedness and
support each other in our skills. Barter Fairs in
Katuah will breed a healthy blend of personal
pride and community empowennent.
(Anyone with ideas on a good location to
hold a Baner Fair in Kat1'ui11, please contact me.
The main considerations are a flat place large
enough to accommodate camping, parking, and
trading for l ()() or so barterers and some daytime
visitors; a good water source; and reasonable
access by larger vehicles.)
- Morgan Swann
wrire clo KatUahJournal,
orcaU (704)298-1770
'1\iaee, '1Wll~l 'Nat\Jri\ls
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f'at!, !989
�The dates are set. The location is chosen.
The Fourth Norch American Bioregional
Congress (NABC IV) will be held August
19-26, 1990 in the Gulf of Maine Bioregion on
the shores of Lake Cobboosseecontee ("where
the sturgeon leap" in the Penobscot language)
just west of Augusta, Maine and the Kennebec
River.
This Congress finds the bioregional
movement at a critical juncture. The burgeoning
ecological crisis is going to test the depth of the
movement's commilment. The stakes are high,
and while Third World countries are currently
taking the brunt of the ecologicar impact, we 100
feel the
pressur~
here in North America
a.~
the
fortes maintaining industrial society struggle 10
keep their power.
But times of crisis are also times of
change. What we are witnessing could possibly
be the last days of induscriaJ civilization. A great
deal depends on what we do in the decade
ahead. The bioregional movement could be at
the pivot point of a great change, or it could end
up as just another bit of flotsam sucked down
the tubes. The values we hold to and the actions
we take are what will decide. At NABC IV we
will have an opportunity to clearly state those
values and decide how we will put those values
into action.
Excerpt from World Charter for Nature
NABC IV
The Eanh is calling to us. Are we ready to
listen?
A delegation of bioregional folks from ·the
Kaulah province will crave! to the Gulf of Maine
for the NABC IV. We would like to see the
Southern Appalachians well-represented at the
Congress. Make plans now if you are interested
in attending.
For information on the forming Katuah
delegation, contact:
K011"1h Journlll
Box 638
Leicester, NC
Kanlah Province 28748
(704) 683-1414
For information on the Congress, contact:
Gulf of Maine Biorcgional Network
61 Maine St.
Brunswick, ME
Gulf of Maine Bioregion 04011
• Leopold, Aldo; A Sund Country Almanac; Oxford;
Oxford University Press, 1949
• Lovelock, J.E.; Goio: A New look at Life on
Earth; Oxford; Oxford University Press, 1979
A Shon List of Sources and References on
Biodiversity and Habirat Relevant to the
Southern Appalachian Forest
• Margolin, Malcolm; The Earth Manual: I/ow to
Work on Wild Land Wi1hou1 Taming /1, Berkeley:
Heyday Books, 1985
• Berger, John J.: Restoring the Earth: /low
Americans An Working to Renew our Damaged
Environment; New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1986
• Maser, Chris; Tht Redesigned Forest: San
Pedro, CA; R. & E. Miles, 1988
• Berry, Thomas. Tile Dream of 1h11 Ear1h; San
Francisco; Sierra Club Books, 1988
• lfuxton, Barry and Melinda Crutchfield, eds.:
Tiie Great Fores/: An Appalachian Story: Boone, NC;
Appalachian Consortium Press, 1985
• Cooley, James L, and Jane H. Cooley, eds.;
Natural Divtrsi1y in Fores/ Ecosystems: Proceedings of
tht Workshop: Alhens; Institute of Ecology, University
of GA. 1984
• Frome, Michael: Strangers in lligh Places;
Knoxville, TN: University or Tennessee Press, 1966
• Gordon. Lorimer C.: S1and flis1ory and
Dynamics of a Southern Appalachian Virgin Forts/; Ph.
D. dissenation, Duke University DepL of Forestry and
Environmental Studies, 1977
• Harris, Larry D.; Tht Frogmenltd Forest: Island
Biogeogrophy Theory and 1he Prtstrvo1ion of Bio1ic
Diversi1y; Chicago, IL: University or Chicago Press,
1984
• Jackson, Laura; Moun1oin Treasures al Risk;
Washingion, DC; The Wilderness Society, 1989
• Kulhavy, D. L., and R. N. Conner,
eds.;Wi/derntss and Natural Artas in Eas1ern United
States: A Monogtmenl Chai/tinge; Nacogdoches, TX;
Stephen F. Austin State University, 1986
1"titL, I 989
• Ma.stran, Shelley Smith and Nan Lowerre;
Mountaineers and Rangers: A flis1ory of Federal Fores1
Monagemenl in 1he Sowhern Appalachians. 1900-1981:
Washingion, DC; US Dcpan.mcnt of Agriculture, 1983
• Michaux, F.A.; Travels 10 tht Westward of 1he
Alleghany Moun1oins in the States of Oliio. Kentucky,
and Tennessee in 1he Year 1802; London; Barnard and
Sulizer, 1805
• Myers, Normnn Or., gen. ed.; Goia: An Atlas of
PIOlll!tory Monagtmem: New York; Anchor Books, 1984
• Nash, Roderick F.; The Righ1s of Nature: A
History of Environmental E11iics: Madison; University of
Wisconsin Press, 1989
• Norse, Elliot A.; Conserving Biological
Diversiry in Our National Fortsis; Washington. DC; The
Wilderness Society, 1986
• Norton, Bryon G., ed.; Tht Preservation of
Species: Tht Value of Biological Diversity; Princeton,
NJ; Princeion University Press. 1986
• Pringle, Laurence and Jan Adkins; Chains,
Webs, & Pyramids: Tht Flow of Energy in Na1ure; New
York; Thomas Y. Crowell, 1975
• Raven, Pete.r H.; The Global Ecosys1em in
Crisis; Olicago:The MacAnhur Foundation, 1987
Adopted by the United Nations
General Assembly
(9 Nov 1982)
".... I. Nature shaU be respected and iis essential processes
shall not be impaired.
2. The genetic vinbility on the earth shnll not be
compromised; lhe population levels or all life forms, wild
and domesticated, must be at least sufficient for their
survival, and to this end necessary habitaL~ shall be
safcguan:lcd.
3. All areas or the canh. both land and sen, shall be
subject to these principles of conservation; special protection
shall be given to unique areaS, to representative samples of
nil the different types or ecosystems and to lhe habitats or
rare or endangered species.
4. Ecosystems and organisms, as well as the land,
marine and atmospheric resources that are utilized by
humans. shall be managed to achieve and maintain optimum
sustainable productivity, but not in such a way as to
endanger the integrity of those other ecosystems or species
wilh which they coexist.
5. Nature shall be secure.<! against degradation caused by
warfare or other hostile activities.
6. In lhe decision-making process it shall be recognized
lhat humans' needs can be met only by ensuring the proper
functioning or natural systems and by respecting the
principles set forth in the present Chnner...."
This UN Charter can serve as a starting point for
local areas and regions to draft their own Charter for
Nature. Legally recognizing the rights of other
species is a critical step in bringing our species' syslem
more in balance with the Life systems in which we
pa rt id pate.
If you would like a copy of the entire UN
Charter, send a SASE to: Mamie Muller, Katuah
Journal, P.O. Box 638, Leicester, NC 28748 Katuah
Province.
Please keep us in touch with your efforts. Ho!
• Seed. John, Joanna Macy, et al.; Thinking Wee
A Moun1oin: Towards A Council Of All Beings:
Philadelphia; New Society Publishers, 1988.
• Shands. William E. and Robert G. Healy; Thti
Lands Nobody Won1ed: Washington, DC; The
Conservation Foundation, 1977
• Shands, William E., and John S. Hoffmnn, eds.:
The Greenhouse Ef!u1. Climate Change, and U.S.
Fores1s; Washington, DC; The Conservation
Foundation, 1987
• Spurr, Stephen H., and Bunon V. Barnes; Forts/
Ecology {3rd edition); New York; Wiley and Sons,
1980
• United States Congress: Technologies to
Main1ain Biological Diversity; Washingum, DC; Office
ofTechnology Assessment, 1988
• United States Department of Agricult.ure, Forest
Service, Southern Region; Atlanta, GA; Land and
Resource Monagtmenl Plans and Final Environmenlal
Impact S101emen1s:
C!Jauaboochee-Oconec National Forests
(Georgia), 1985
Cherokee National Forests (Tennessee), 1986
Nantahala-Pisgah National Forests (North .
Carolina), 1987
• Wharton, Charles H., and Harvey L. Ragsdale;
The Values of Unmanaged Notional Fores1s in 1he
Sou1hern Appalachians; Atlanta, GA; The Georgia
Conservancy. 1983
�evenrs
SEPTEMBER
19-22
ASHEVILLE, NC
"Parkways, Greenways, Riverways: The Way
More Beautiful" linear parks conference. lnt.crdisciplinary
discussion of al1ematives to preserve the scenic landscape
againsl development, pollution, billboards, and
commercialism. Sponsored by the Appalachian
Consonium. Great Smokies Hilton. Regis1rotion: $~25.
For more info., call (704) 262-2064.
,,
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HOT SPRINGS, NC
"Walking Gently on the EartW' ~
with John and Penelope Youngb L
J
ynam1cs o evo UJ1on a t. e I ig so~ 't,.;p "
psych_ology ...a new evolutionary mysn.~sm.
Reading: The Dream of the Ewth b~ Tf":mas
Berry. SI 10. Sou~ern Dharma RylrQal C\\J'te~ RL ).
°·
/
(
OCTOBER ,
~
·
C,f{EROKEE, NC
Cherpkee Indian Fall Festival. Crafts, dance,_
stickball, archery, blowguns. exhibi~. midway. o..ilyadm~n: $3. A,! lhe Indian Ccremon,il\l Grounps.
3_7
Box 34-H; Hol Spnngs, NC 28743
t~
¥"' \ ) ,/
V--V \~
ASHEVILE NC
P
Child ~musical fantaS al>oul children
.
•
. .
eace th •
\, Y1
bnngmg peace to c world. Thomas ,vohe Audiionum.
Advance: S6 aaulls, $4 children and sr. citizens. Door: $7
d SS ~ . (704)
_
684 5530
an
·1
n
"I~ ~his r_etreat we will explore togetJ1er n
spmtual1ty of the Earth 1n harmony_w1
· if
J ·
nd h ·nS· hff ,, ~th
d
22-24
r
~
)
MORGANTON, WV
"
John Henry Blues feStiv#. ~usic,
workshops, theaLCr, more. Greer P•vill~. W~ver (
Park. Contact: Ed Cabbell; John HeorWl
SQl\iety;
Box 1172; Morgantown, WV 26507. 0fl4)~9 60?.
ASHEVILLE, NC
'11ie 'Dream of the 'Eartli.
'I1iomas 'Berry, autlwr of '11U '1>rtam
'Eart/i, 'flli{! sfum with us his concerns a6out mu
pfanet anti What fu means 6y "reinventin9 tk
fuiman at tk species kveC. 9:00 AM Iii Noon. Al
the Jubilee! Community Ccmer, 46 Wall StrccL For
more info, caJJ Mamie Muller (704) 683-1414.
23
ASHEVILLE, NC
African Drumming Workshop with Darrell
Rose. Noon 'ti! 3 pm. S20. At Troy Set7.ler's For
directions and info.: (704) 683·3405.
Evening African Drum performance with
Darrell Rose and Michael Saleen. Al Stone Soup, 9 pm.
FINCASTLE, VA
Firsl Annual Southeastern Men's Conference,
"Male Initiation and Isolation· wilh poet Rohen Bly,
James Hillman, Michale Meade (storyteller and musician
in the Ccllic tradition). and John Stokes, tracker.
Jn the post the "emotional bodies" of men were directly
ae1iva1ed by the interaction with elders, grand/others, and
mentors...What happens when the grandfathers are
aistant? ...How to hold to the duryofa father and not lose
the passion of a son? ...How to explore the rage, grief.
s'lro.me, anger, and joy inherent in the male psyche?
Registration: $450. For more info, wriie Fred Stephens;
'Box ~2; Raleigh, NC. or call Doug Lcaster(919)
782-2900.
·FILLED·
Write to bll put on mailing Ii.st for next year.
1
5-JS
MADISON, VA
"Wilddmcss Leaming Quest" - exploring lhe
viild, exploring ~e self. Sl60. Sevenoaks Pathwork
Center; Rt. I, BOX'~; Madison, VA 22n1.
17-20
'°6-8
JONESJWROUGl:f, TN
NAP~S Na~al Sl~rytelling Pe$,tival
fcaturirig mllJly famous nam~ in story·tellirjg. S5°'adull
»<>j·membets, S2S chi\dtt.n, $125 f~milie$. For ~re
inp>.• write f4ation3J AssQciailon for th~ Pn:se._rvalion &l\d
pcrpc1uati6o of Storytelll{lg: Box.__309; Joni;s,boroug~ .
37659foc call
~l~ 75~·2171.
- )
™
23
14-19
!p'tOXVl,LLE, TN
~nnual mecling of the Natural Areas
Assoc!lidon, \lllldentlal land conservation and restoration
organization. The fust day of the meeting will be devOLCd
1o th~lJibila.t of'lhe Soulhem Appalachian Mountains.
PulilcffiiViteb.. Hrau Regency Hotel. Contact J. Ralph
JordaJ;\TV ~; Norris, TN 37S2S (615) 494-9800.
.,_)
I
20.22
BLACK MOUNTAIN, NC
The Black Mountain Fall Festival wilh
,.s
lRASSTow ll, NC
~
/ ,.....
Vassar Clements, Allen Fontenot and the Country
Fall Festival al the JobD C. Campbj)ll Folk
dljuns. Roy Bookbinder, Rhythm in Shoes (step dance),
SchooL-'Mus)c. craftS, country danci1,1g. · )ohn._C.
• and more. Grey Eagle and Friends; Box 216; Black
Campbell Follc Sch09l; Brasstown, ~c· 28906,
Mountafo, NC 28711.
11·15
H.IGHLANDS, NC
20-22
HOT SPRINGS, NC
"Visual EnvironmentaHsm· photography
"The Song of Creation al Harvest Time•
workshop in the field and in lhe dnrkroom wilh Robert
harvest celebration in the Jewish tradition with Lynn
Glenn Kelchum and Michael Wilder. $250 includes
Goulieb, storyteller and rabbi of the Nahalat Shalom
lodging. Appalachian Environmental Ans Center: Box
Community, Albuquerque, NM. SI LS. Sou.them Dharmn
5SO; Highlands, NC 28741. (704) 526-4303.
Relreal Center. See 9/22·24.
12
BLACK MOUNTAIN, NC
WomnnSong at McDibbs. "Socilll concern
through harmony." S3. 119 Cherry St. (704) 669-24S6.
27
ASHEVILLE, NC
Thomas Berry will give the sermon at the
Equinox service of the Jubilee! Community. Service
begins at llAM 46 Wall S1rcc1. {704) 252-5335
ASHEVILLE, NC
"Mountain Sweet Talk" - a lwo-acl play with
the Folktellcrs, Barbara Freeman and Connie
Rcgan-B lake. The Folk Art Center Theater. Thursdays
lhru Saturdays - S pm: Sundays - 3 pm. TickctS: SS
advance from Malaprop's; SIO dooc. Reservations, cnll
(704) 25S-l l 13.
29- LO/I
ASHEVILLE, NC
"Restoring Biodiversity in the
Southern Appalachians: A Strategy for
Survival" conference on mountain habitat
13-19
24
NEW MARKET, TN
STP (Slop the Poisoning) School al the
Highlander Center. Tactics, strategy, and networking for
those working to stop industrial pollulion. Pre-register.
Call Highlander at (615) 933-3443.
30
CULLOWREE, NC
Moumain Heritage Day at WCU campus.
Clogging, shape-note singing, exhibils, crafts, food,
musical events, kids' shows. For more info, call (704)
227-72ll.
30-10/l
SWANNANOA, NC
Women's class on Jamaican culwral ceremony
with Rev. Queen Mother Azula. For more info, call:
(704) 29S-3935. The Eanh Center; 302 Old Fellowship
Rd.; Swannanoa, NC 28776
12-29
HI GHLANDS, NC
"Praying Feel and Dirty Hands"
Intergenerational Peace Conference led by Stepanie
Nichols. Carol Powers (The Peace Network) and Bob
Alpern. Programs on US/USSR cooperation, connict
resolution and non-violence, overcoming slrCeotypcs,
more - "leading people into action." SSS includes meals
and lodging. The Mountain Camp and Conference
CenLCr; 841 Highway 106; Highlands. NC 2S741. (704)
526-5S3S.
14
AS HEVILLE, NC
"Danger Down Under" groundwnter pro1CCli011
workshop. Health risks, citizen action, simulations.
Keynote: Larry and Sheila Wilson of Highlander Center.
S:30-4:00. Owen Conference Center, UNCA.
Pre-register: S15 to Clean Water Fund of North Carolina:
l lS Person St.; Raleigh, NC 27602. For more info, call:
(704)251-0518.
(Sec ad on back cover.) Pre-registration: S20 to
"Resloring Biodiversity..." c/o Box 233; Hot Springs,
NC 28743. For more info, call: (704) 251-6441.
27
ASHEVILLE, NC
Earth First! Road Show with Dakou Sid nnd
Roger Featherstone. Music and rabble-rousing. Stone
Soup, Broadway and Walnut. al S:OO pm. $4.
28
ASHEVILLE, NC
"For All Things Wild" Forest
Rescue Action Workshop. Strategy meeting
for activists wishing to help defend and restore
Appalachian habitat. (See ad on back cover.)
Pre-regiStration: SS to "For All Things Wild" c/o Elmer
Hall; Box 233: Hot Springs, NC 28743. For more info..
call: (704) 29S-3325 (ExL 250).
Drawing by Rob Messick
f"aCC., l 989
�10-12
28
4
ASHEVILLE, NC
·wt1d In the Str••h: The Feral
Q.all· Do.-..:• with Grondmother o"d
Strow
Com•
c::o&-tutT\ed
o.s
your
Q,...
BLACK MOUNTAIN , NC
David Wilcox, vinuoso local songwriter, at
McDibbs. S4. See 10/12.
fovortt•
~"·"'• onlmal or bird ... or .som•tN""S
10-12
MADISON, VA
"Living the Sacred Round: Lessons from the
Medicine Wheel.• Sevenoaks Pa!hwork Center, see
1W15-18.
wlldl
B 00 """" Loccrtlon to be c:>l'V'C>unc:.ed
10-12
CAMP NEW HOPE, NC
Celebrating the Dream ofthe Eanh
Earth, isn't this whaJ you want
28-29
WA YNESVlLLE, NC
"Chi Kung: An Ancient Taoist Mysiery" with
Ellen Hines of the Chinese Acupuncture and Herbology
Clinic, Asheville, NC. S50 includes room and board.
Contact S1il-Light Retreat Center; Rt. I, Box 326;
Waynesville, NC 28786 (704) 452-4569
NOVEMBER
4
FLETCHER, NC
"Improving and Maintaining Soil Fertility," a
conference sponsored by the Carolina Farm Stewardship
Assocuiuon. $15 includes lunch. For more info., call
Fairglen Farms (704)252-4414.
invisibly to arise in us?
11
(Rilke)
Reflecting the key Lhemes of Thomas
Berry. the conference will focus on the cerebral
as well as ki11esthetic interpretations of the
Dream of the Earth. With Miriam Therese
MacGillis, Amy Hannon, Marnie Muller, and
others. Workshops include: "Evolutionary
Remembering," "Exploring the Dream through
Movement and Sound." Annual Conference of
the Center for Reflection on the Second Law.
Info: CFRSL; 8420 Camellia Dr.; Raleigh, NC
27612
Cost: $9.50, includes postage
(NC residents please add S~ sales tax.)
raU,1989
CELlNA, TN
TN Alternative Growers Assoc. Fall
Conference. Includes soil improvement and backyard fruit
production. At Sta.nding Stone State Park. info: (615)
232-7777.
DECEMBER
BLACK MOUNTAIN, NC
Mike Cross at McDibbs. Shows at 8 and 10
pm Tickets SIO in advance. See 10/12.
..
...
Please specify size: Sm.. Med., Lg., X-Lg.
11·19
BLACK MOUNTAIN, NC
Livingston Taylor at McDibbs. Shows at 8
an 10 pm. Tickets SS in advance. Sec 10/12.
15-17
Beer & Wine Making
Supplies
•: Bulk Herbs, Spices, & Grains :.
In the traditional Cherokee Indian belier. the
creatures in the world LOday are only diminuitive forms of
the mythic beings who once inhabited lhe world, but
who now reside in Galuna'li, the spirit world, lhe highest
heaven. But a few of the original powers broke through
the spiritual barrier and exist yet in the world as we know
it These beings arc called with reverence "grandfathers".
And of !hem, the sirongest are Kanali, the lightning, lhe
power or the sky; Utsa'nati, the rattlesnake, who
personifies the power of the eanh plane; and Yunwi Usdi,
"lhe little man•, as ginseng is called in the sacred
ceremonies, who draws up power from lhe underworld.
Each is lhe sirongest power in its own domain.
Together !hey arc aJJies: tJ1cir energies complement each
other 10 form an even grcatct power. As medicine allies,
they represent the healing powers of the Appalachian
Mountains.
The medicine powers of Katuah have been
depicted in a striking T-shin design by Ibby Kenna.
Printed in 4-color silkscreen by Ridgerunncr Naturals on
top quality, aU-couon shins, they are available now in
all adult sizes tllrough the Kal:mu bioregional mail-order
supplier.
Order shirts from: KRLANU
Box 282; Sylva, NC
KatW!h Province 28779
SWANNANOA, NC
Marketing Alternative Crops seminar at
Warren Wilson College. Call Fairglen Farms (704)
252-44 14 for more info.
2
Natural Foods
rt'.ED'LC'LN'.E A.LL'L'.ES
WAYNESVILLE, NC
Weekend Meditation Retreat with Dorothy
Abbenhouse, president of the Theosophical Society in
America. $60. Stil-Light Retreat Center. See 10/28-29.
Vitamins & Supplements
Wheat, Salt,
& Yeast-Free Foods
Dairy Substitutes
•: Hair & Skin Care Products
111
200 West Kina Street. Boone NC 28607
\.•
'\..,_
704-264-5220
~~':"'
WAYNESVILLE, NC
Discussion and practice of "The Yoga Sutras
of Patanjali" wilh Leon Frankel. $60. Stil-Light Retreat
Center. See 10/28-29.
224'. broadway
ashcvi.lle. n.c
288o1
704-252-8404
=•
Ill
..
carolina costume
compaey
_J~ .._________________,
1
=-~
MOON
Gilts of Celebration
(EARTHWAY BOOKSTORE)
Books • New Age Music
Wildcrafted Herbal Producu
Gemstones • Unique Cards
Magazines • & More
WATER PURIFICATION EQUIPMENT
SOLAR PRODUCTS
Member NC Water Ouallly Assoeiallon
RANDALL C. LANIER
704-293-5912
HWY. 107
RT . 68 BOX 125
CULLOWHEE, NC 28723
(704) 264-7242
315 E. King Street, Boone NC 28607
e1ti11ese .,4(11p1111(/11re
DESIGNS
111tli
Jler/Jp/gl/I e/iHi(
by Rob Messick
lllustralion & Design
in Pen & Ink and Colored Pencil
P O Box 2601 • soone. NC 28607 • 1704)754-0097
78 EMT CMESTNUT STREET
AS>il:VIU.E. NC 28801
704 2S8-llOl6
M.C. M.VEBE. M.S., Ao.0.
UC. ACUPl.INCT\JRIST
EU.£H Hll<ES M.Ac.. ¥ M.
UC. ACUPUNCTIJRIST
�LEAD TESTS • Is your plumbing leaching
poi.~onous lead into your drinkingwatcr? Find out
for sure • lead-testing kit from the non-profit Clean
Water Fund of NC. All you need for Sl2. Send a
check w/ name and address to CWF: 138 E.
Chestnut St.; Asheville, NC 28801
MOCCASINS, handcrafted of elkhide in the
traditional Plains Indian style. Water-resistant,
rcsolable, and rugged - great for hiking! Children's
and infant sizes available. Write: Blue Feather
Moccasins; Box 931; Asheville. NC 28802. or caU
Patrick Clark at (704) 253-5047.
BLIGHT RESISTANT CHESTNUT - hybrid
American/Chinese Dunstan chestnut lJ'CCS - blight
resistant, limber growth form, productive orchard
crop with large, sweet easily-peeled nuts. Chestnut
Hill Nursery: Rt. I, Box 341-K; Alachua, FL
32615 (904) 462-2820
APPLE TREES - old-timey and popular
contemporary varieties on standard, semi-, or dwarf
stock. Send SASE for prices: Jeff Poppen: Long
Hungry Creek Nursery; Red Boiling Springs. TN
37150.
UNION ACRES, an alternative community for 20
families based on principles of stewardship,
equality, consensus, and simplicity. Spaces
available. Apply to Caroline Grant: Rt. I, Box
61-J; Whittier, NC 28789 or call (704) 497-4964.
ADOPT-A-TREE. Trees are the great conservators
of the planeL The Adopt-A-'Ire.e program will help
malce the vital connection between individual people
and individual trees. Donations accepted. For more
info. write to Box 144, Sugnr Grove, NC 28679
CHRISTIAN MA TCH-A-FRlEND seeks to bring
together Christian men & women. Interested
persons, advenisc free. We arc non-profit. For
information please send a self-addressed envelope io:
Gospel Ministry. P.O. Box 654, Clinton, TN
37717.
RENEWAL PROGRAMS- I provide individual and
corporate renewal programs for businesses &
organizations interested in healing themselves and
providing empowerment 10 others. Write: Kathie
Pieper c/o Pieper Associates, Rt. I, Box 238
Waynesville, NC 28786.
NEEDED: CHJLD-LOVING PERSON who loves
Lo be a nanny and housekeeper for my four
children. Hours, wages negotiable. Rm. and bd.
available. Asheville area. Call Morgan (704)
689-5382.
NEW AGE - group forming. All interested in
shnring about spirit to spirit communication,
channeling, visualization, healing, chakras, tarot,
etc. Emphasis on spiril and our connecLion lo
Mother Earth, visualizing positive growth and
nunuring. ConUICt Theresa C&rlson, 7501 Ruic Rd.,
Knoxville, TN 37920.
PEPPERLAND offers a variety of outdoor education
programs for church, school, or civic groups
year-round. We will help you design a program for
your group. Send for information packet to:
Pepperland Farm camp: Star Route; Farner, TN
37333.
"THE GREENHOUSE EFFECT' - a complete
rcpon on our changing environment for the next 60
years. $17.00 poslpaid, or write for more
information. Lorien House, POB 1112, Black
Mountain, NC 28711-1112.
APPALACHJAN GINSENG CO. ·stratified seeds,
seedlings, roots. Send for price list to: P.O. Box
547; Dillsboro, NC 28725.
DRUMS ·Custom handcrafted ceramic dumbecks &
wooden medicine drums. Call Joe Roberts at (704)
258-1038 or write 10: 738 Town Mountain Rd.:
Asheville, NC 28804.
THE PEOPLE OF THE ONE SONG - booklet of
stories and poems that tell of the people's dreams,
rituals, roles, and relationships from the arthetypal
memory of the past, present, and future. S3 to
Colleen Redman: One Song Scribe; Box 634;
Floyd. VA 24091.
MOON DANCE FARM HERBALS - herbal salves,
tinctures, & oils for birthing & family health. For
brochure, please write: Moon Dance Farm; RL I,
Box 726: Hampton, TN 37658
WOMANSONG - ongoing choral group forming.
Songs of beauty, meaning spirit, fun, peace,
cooperation, sisterhood. Come and sing! Mon.
evenings, 7:30-9, Asheville, NC. (704) 254-7068.
X-citUah Jo1mmL pci9e 34
SEA KAY AKlNG - Come enjoy peace and
solitude traveling with the rhythms of the sea.
Classes. day trips, overnight tours, custom charters.
Kayak/Sail boat tours to the Bahamas. Kayak tours
to Costa Rica. For more information contact:
Chnrlie Reeves, Sea Level Inc. POB 478 Tybee
Island, GA 31328 (912)786-5853
ORGANIC HONEY - Tulip Poplnr, Sourwood
and WildOowcr. From Patrick County, Virginia. No
chemicals. no white sugar, no heat, ever Strained
through cheesecloth and packed in heavy glass
canning jars. For a 4-oz. sample of our premium
sourwood and our catalog, send $4 to: Wade
Buckholts & Megan Phillips; Route 2. Box 248:
Stuart, VA 24171. (703) 694-4571
LO cook
NAMASTE FAMILY needs brothers and sisters to
join us in Lovi~g. Giving, Growing. Send Sl2
donation for writings and videotape to Namast~
Family; RR2, Box 578: Barnstead, NH 03225.
THE WATAUGA LAND AND WATER
CONSERVANCY • is a not-for-profit charitable
trust set up to protect the values and ecological
settings which sustain us both spiritually and
economically. If you are concerned about the purity
of the headwaters and watercourses, and the
preservation of wild and agricultural lands GET
INVOLVED. Write to Quality Living Publications,
POB I, Valle Crucis, NC 28691
"MAGIC AFTERNOONS" - for children at the
Unitarian Church of Asheville. An an program with
Linda Metzner in music, Norma Bradly in visual
arts, and Barrie Barton in creative movemenL It
begins Sept.ember 18th. Call 254-7068 for details.
NATURE LOVERS' COMMUNITY· Christians
only. SIOOO gives you life time ownership rights
on .5 acres. Whole prope.n y consists of 45 acres of
wooded calm and privacy. Write: Gospel Ministry,
P.O. Box 654, Clinton, TN 37717.
ITS THE ACHOO! SERVICE - Patch the clown
brings laughter and fun to the hospital. Join him
and the Gesundheit Institute at 2630 Roben Walwer
Place, Arlington, VA 22207 or (703) 525-8169.
PURE SORGHUM - and sorghum based desserts
toppings and chocolates. Handmade in the
Appalachian foothills. Free sorghum recipe brochure
send SASE. Candy sampler (2-KY Buckeyes &
2-Bourbon Balls) $2.00 postpaid. Golden Kentucky
Products, POB 246, Livingston, KY. 40445. (606)
453-9800.
MOUNTAIN DULCIMERS • made of black
walnut, red cherry, or maple. Tops available in
wormy chestnut, butlernut, sweetgum, sassafras,
western cedar and other woods. Contact: Mize
Dulcimer Company Rt. 2, Box 288, Bloumville,
TN. 37617 (615) 323-8489.
WEBWORKING is free. Send submissions to:
RHYTHM ALIVE • Handcrafted African- Style
Drums, workshops, learning tapes. drumbags. and
accessories. Please send SASE to Rhythm Alive! 85
Phenix Cove Rd. Weaverville, NC 28787 (704)
645-3911.
Drawing by Rob Messick
Kat1'ah Journal
P.O. Box 638
Leicester, NC
Katuah Province 28748
:r~u;.1999
�The Karuah Journal wants to communicate your thoughts and
feelings to the other people in the bioregional province. Send them
to us as letters, poems, stories, anicles, drawings, or photographs,
etc. Please send your contributions to us at: Kattiah Journal; P. 0.
Box 638; Leicester, NC; Kan1ah Province 28748.
The Winter 1989-90 issue of the Katuall Journal will be
concerned with the challenges and opponunities involved in
"Raising Children into a New Consciousness." We are interested in
hearing first-person stories, alternative schooling information,
children's resources (books, places to go. etc.), and any other
creative or pertinant ideas. Don't forget the canoons (kids love
canoons!).
BACK ISSUES OF KATUA H JOURNAL AVAILABLE
' ,!,!';;..,
~
~-
-
The Spring 1990 issue of the K atuah Journal will be
focusing o n "Wellness in the Mountains." We are looking for
information and articles on those who contribute to the healthful
quality of life in our southern mountains; especially through
accivities which promote self-responsibilicy and a high level of
wellness as the nonnal living state. A broad look at wellness might
include topics like stress management, spirirualfry, retreats and
adventures, service to others, Earth stewardship, having fun,
education, family and other relationships, fitness and nutrition, or
other areas of a satisfying lifestyle.
lncluded in the "Wellness" issue will be a directory of goods
and services related to wellness. There is no cost for a listing in this
directory. Please send in your name, practice, and a shon
explanation of your work or product, if you wish to be listed.
ISSUE EIGHT · SUMMER 198S
Celebration: A Way of Life · K.uuah 18,000
Ycan Ago • Sacred Sites - Folk Ans in lhe
Schools Sun Cycle/Moon Cycle - Poems:
Hilda Downer - Cherokee Heritage Cenaer Who Owns Appalachia?
.
ISSUETHREE SPRING 1984
SUSllllJUlble Agricuhure - Sunflowcn - Human
lmpac1 on lhe ForcSI - Childtcns' Education
Veronica Nicholu:Woman in Polilics - Uule
People - Medicine Allies
ISSUE FOUR ·SUMMER 1984
Water Drum Water Quality • Kudzu • Solu
"i Eclipse · Clurcu1ung · Trout • Ooing IO Weier
~I Ram Pllmps . Microhydto - Poems: Bennie
Lee Sincl&ir, J1m Wayne Miller
ISSUE FIVE · FALL 1984
Harves1 • Old Ways m Chcrolt~ • Ginseng •
Nuclear Waste - Our Cehic Heritage Bioregionahsm: Put, Prucnt. and Future John Wilnoty Healing Oatkness • Politics of
Partlcipation
ISSUESIX - Wl.NTER 1984.SS
Winter SolsticG EAl'lh Ceremony - Horsepasturr
River - Coming of lhe Ligh1 - Log Cabin
Root• • Mountain Agriculture: The Right Crop
- Williun Taylor . The Future of lhe Forw
ISSUE SEVEN • SPRING 1985
Sust1111able &:onomM:s • Hot Springs • Wortcr
Owncnhip - The Gru1 Economy • Seit Help
Credit Union • Wild Turltcy - Responsible
lnvCS1m1 • Working in lhc Web of Life
ISSUE NINE - FALL 1985
The Waldce Fo re11 - The Trees Speak Migrating Forats - Horse Logging - S1ar11ng a
Tree Crop · Urban Trees • Acom Bread • Mylh
ISSUE FIFTEEN - Spring 1987
Coverlets • Woman Forester • Susie McMahan
Midwife - Ahcmativc Contraception •
Bioscxuolity - Biorcgionalism and Women Oood Medicine: Mairi.=hal Culture . P1t1Jrl
LSSUE SIXTEEN - Summer 1987
Helen Waiae • Poem: Visions m a Garden Vi11on Ques1 • First Flow • ln1llllllon
Learning in lhc Wilderness • Cherokee
Olallcngc - "Valuing Trees"
Time
ISSUE TEN · WINTER 1985-86
Kate Rogers • Circles of Stone - lntemal
Mylhmalting • Holistic Healing on Trial •
Poems: Steve Knaulh - Mythic Places - The
Ulttcna's Tale - Crystal Magic •
ISSUE EIGHTEEN · Winier 1987-88
Vernacular Archiaecrure . Drcanu in Wood and
Stone • Mountain Home • Earth Energies •
Earth-Shchcied Living - Membrane Houses •
Brush Sheller • Poems: October DMsk. • Oood
Mcdic111C: "Shclaer"
~g·
ISSUE ELEVEN SPRING 1986
Community Planning • Cities and the
Bioregional Vision • Recycling · Community
GIJdenin&. Floyd CoWll}', VA - Guohol Two Bt0rcgional Views - Nuclear Supplement
Foxfire Gatnes • Oood Medicine: Visions
ISSUE THlRTEEN · Fall 1986
Cenaer For Awakening · Eliu.bclh Callari · A
Gentle Death • Hospice - Ernest Morgan Dealing Creatively wilh Oealh • Home Burial
Box • The Wake • The Raven Mocker •
Woodslore and Wildwoods Wisdom · Oood
Medicine: The Sweat Lodge
LSSUE FOURTEEN . Winier 1986-87
Uoyd Carl Owle • Boogcn and Mummers - All
Species Day • Cabin Fever University •
Homclca in Katuah - Homemade Hot Watu
Saovernalter's Narrative • Good Medicine:
lnaerspccics Communication
~UAt;)OURNAL
ISSUE NINETEEN - Spring, 1988
Perlcandra Gorden - Spring Tonics • Bluebarics
Wildnower Gardens - Granny Herbalist •
Flower Essences • '"The Origin of lhe Arumals ·
Saory • Oood Medicine: "Power" • Be A Tree
ISSUE TWEJIITY - Summer, 1988
Preserve Appalachian Wilderness - Hig)ilands
of Roan - Celo Community - Land Trust •
Arlhur Morgan School - Zoning hsuc • "The
Ridge" • Farmers l1ld lhe Farm Bill - Oood
Medicine: "Land" - Acid Rain - Duke's PowcT
Play • Cherok~ Microhydro Project
uve
Regular Membership........ $10/yr.
Sponsor.........................$20/yr.
Contributor .....................$50/yr.
Address
Enclosed is $
10 give
this ejforr an extra bOost
Zip
I can be a local contact
person for my area
Area Code
"'"'· 1989
Phone Number
ISSUE TWENTY-FOUR · Summer, '89
Deep Listening • Life in Atomic City - Di.reel
Action! · Tree of Peace - Community Building
Peacemakers • Ethnic Survival • Pairing
Projcc1 - "Baulesong· • Growing Peace in
Cultures - Review: The Chalice and the B/Dde
P.O. Box 638 Leicester, NC Katuah Province 28748
Name
State
ISSUE TWENTY-THREE - Spring, t 989
Pisgah Village - Planet An • Green City •
Poplar Appeal - "Cl- Sky" • "A New Eanh"
Black Swan - Wild Lovely Days • Reviews:
Sacr('Jf land Sacred Sa, / cc A1e • Poem:
"Sudden TaOils"
lSSUETWENTY-ONE - FaU, 1988
Chestnuts: A Natunl History - Restoring lhc
Chestnut - "Poem of Preservation and PnUc"
Continuing lhe Quest - Forests and Wildlife
Chestnuts in Regional Diet • Chestnut
Resources • Herb Noie • Oood Medicine:
"Changes to Came" - Review: Wliue u1ends
For more info: call Mamie Muller (704) 683-1414
City
-·-
ISSUE TWENTY-TWO - Wintu, •gg.g9
Global Wanning - Fire This Time • Thomu
Berry on "Biorcgions" • Eanh Exercise • Kor~
Loy McWhirtcr - An Abundance of Emp1iness
LETS - Chronicles of Floyd • Derry Wood
The Bear Clan
Back Issues
Issue#_@ $2.50 $_ _
Issue# _ _ @ $2.50 = $_ _
Issue# _ _@ $2.50 = $_ _
Issue# _ _@ $2.50 = $_ _
Issue#_@ $2.50 $_ _
Complete Set (3-11, 13-16,
18-23)
@ $35.00 = $_ _
=
=
�
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 25, Fall 1989
Description
An account of the resource
The twenty-fifth issue of the <em>Katúah Journal</em> focuses on biodiversity and habitat: forest ecosystem, old-growth forest, regional planning, forest devastation, black bears and Eastern panthers, and living green. Authors and artists in this issue include: Sam Gray, Robert Zahner, Laura E. Jackson, David Wheeler, Anna Muir, Julia Nunnally Duncan, Annelinde Metzner, Patrick Clark, Heather Blair, Chip Smith, Lee Kinnaird Fawcett, James Rhea, Rob Messick, Marnie Mikell, Patricia Claire Peters, Mary de La Valette, Sue Adams, Starfire Soledad, Christoph and Mary-Clayton Enderlein, and Morgan Swann, <br><br><em>Katúah: Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians</em>, later simplified to <em>Katúah Journal</em>, was published from 1983 to 1993. A quarterly publication, it was focused on the bioregion of former Cherokee land in Appalachia. The early issues of the journal explain the meaning of the Cherokee name, Katúah, and why the editors wanted to view the world through a bioregional lens, rather than political boundaries. A volunteer production, the editors took a holistic view in tackling social, environmental, mental, spiritual, and emotional topics of the day, many of which are still relevant.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1989
Table Of Contents
A list of subunits of the resource.
The Great Forest by Sam Gray.......3<br /><br />Restoring the Old-Growth Forest by Robert Zahner.......5<br /><br />Regional Planning for Habitat Integrity by Laura Jackson.......8<br /><br />A Question of Value by David Wheeler.......10<br /><br />Closing the Gate on Forest Devastation by Ann Muir.......12<br /><br />Poem: "Sparrow Hawk" by Julia Nunnally Duncan.......13<br /><br />A Place for Bears: An Interview with Dr. Michael Pelton.......15<br /><br />Poem: "There Fell the Rain Healing" by Annelinde Metzner.......16<br /><br />Eastern Panther, Where Are You? by Patrick Clark.......17<br /><br />Oak Decline by Heather Blair.......19<br /><br />People and Habitat by Chip Smith and Lee Kinnaird Fawcett.......21<br /><br />Perpetual Wild Sanctuaries.......23<br /><br />Natural World News.......24<br /><br />Drumming.......26<br /><br />Living Green.......29<br /><br />Barter Fair.......30<br /><br />(Natural) Resources.......31<br /><br />Events Calendar.......32<br /><br />Webworking.......34<br /><br /><em>Note: This table of contents corresponds to the original document, not the Document Viewer.</em>
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
<em>Katúah Journal</em>, printed by The <em>Waynesville Mountaineer</em> Press
Subject
The topic of the resource
Bioregionalism--Appalachian Region, Southern
Sustainable living--Appalachian Region, Southern
Forest management--Appalachian Region, Southern
Human ecology
Black bear--Appalachian Region, Southern
Regional planning--Appalachian Region
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 History
Appalachian Mountains
Appalachian Studies
Bioregional Congress
Black Bears
Community
Ecological Peril
Economic Alternatives
European Immigration
Forest History
Forest Issues
Forest Practice
Geography
Habitat
Hazardous Chemicals
Katúah
Poems
Politics
Reading Resources
Transportation Issues
Turtle Island
Wilderness