Sunday, December 28, 2014

Since October...




We moved out to our friends land, near Selma, OR, and have this to look at everyday.

The last morning we had in our tipi before moving into our bus.

making a willow bender sweat lodge




Illinois River about 10 miles from our home.
Bus trip to Olympia and Portland for Yule.

Washington Park Archery Range in Portland with bowyer friends!

taking "old knobby" out for a bit
Fair learned how to make leaf roses

Cascadian Yule celebration in Olypmia at Millersylvania State Park

Whitman found a double bolete!
.
Whitman took over my machine for patch-making.
Meet a lot of fellow artists and crafters at the Cave Junction Holiday Artisians Faire

Sunday, October 05, 2014

Bow of the Month!


Our daughter, Fair, won bow of the month in Primitive Archer Magazine!!!  Michael guided her in making the bow earlier this year while visiting family in Missouri.  We are really proud of her and hope she continues working on her second bow, from an osage orange stave gifted to her when we were at OJAM.

Glimpses

Our favorite twins of the Upper Rogue Farm.

Michael mentoring friends on making bows

Fair and her poetry

Michael found the ever elusive bagpiper to make music with

Moonrise with my fancy new camera

The music of Sangre de Muerdago by candlelight.


Fair Ophelia Designs at Leaf and Dragon

Tipi pitching in Chiloquin
The first time I have cheated and used a ladder for lacing pins...

Success!

Swifts in Portland

Bow drill firemaking with homeschoolers

The trick to bow drills is to be barefoot.

The best play structures are of nature.

Sunday, August 24, 2014

St. John's Wort


The first thing to stand out to me about St. John’s Wort was its name, a bit odd, but I found out “wort” is simply Old English for “plant”.  There are many folklores surrounding this herb.  The most common one, of the Western world, is of how the blood-red oil from its bruised petals is in honor of John the Baptist.  One of my favorites is from Brittany where the picking of the herb is symbolic of the dismembering of the God, the Summer Lord. When one gives the plant as medicine to the sick, you are re-membering the God:  putting his scattered pieces back together.  Many feel the scent alone repels evil spirits, causing them to fly away.  It is also a charm to be hung above one’s door to protect from demons and unwanted mischief makers, especially on Midsummer’s Day.  It is usually ready to be picked from Summer Solstice through August, depending on elevation.  This plant, at one time, could be found very easily, but due to its classification as a “noxious weed”, it is becoming harder to find.  In our area it is referred to as “Klamath Weed,” with very little respect showed for its powerful healing abilities.  I find it in hidden pockets throughout the mountains here, often close to creeks at the animal trail cross paths or in the middle of overgrown roads.  I reserve patches found along the roadside for dyeing, while off-road growth for medicine.   
My first experience with this plant was from a fellow mother at Tipi Village, who used it regularly to heal herself and others.  She brought our family a jar of oil she made and there began our relationship with this amazing plant.  We use it for cuts, scrapes and burns from the fire, watching its quick work.  I was introduced to many healing plants, while at Tipi Village, and have noticed a unique connection to St. John’s Wort.  I began making the crimson St. John’s Wort Oil myself, by solar infusion with olive oil, and eventually turning it into salve, with the addition of beeswax.  In our family’s travels over the last year, I have shared this healing salve and oil with people all over the country… giving it away more than selling it!  Giving medicine, as a gift, feels best to me.
The dye from St. John’s Wort will give many colors depending on whether one is or is not using alum, as a mordant, and the re-use of the same dye bath.   I have tried dyeing with this plant a few times and only once successfully extracted a brilliant maroon.  I believe I will figure it out next year.  Natural dyeing is one experiment after another and since I am self- taught it takes a bit longer to produce consistent results.

Calendula Oil and St. John's Wort Oil 3 weeks in the sun.
Just picked buds and blossoms.




Here are a few books I regularly use as reference when researching plants:
Dewey, Laurel.  The Humorous Herbalist.  1996.
Grieve, Mrs. M.  A Modern Herbal. Vol. I and II,  1931.
Hopman,  Ellen Evert.  A Druid’s Herbal.  1995.
Moore, Michael.  Medicinal Plants of the Pacific West.  1993.
Pond, Barbara,  A Sampler of Wayside Herbs.  1974.

I also have started listening to herbalist Susan Weed’s podcast, free through iTunes.  She has a long history of practicing plant medicine and I have learned a lot from the few podcast I have listened to so far.

I hope to write about the other plants I have worked with, including:  elder, nettle, yarrow, and usnea.


Monday, August 18, 2014

8.18.2014

It has been quite some time since my last post and, as always, life is keeping my family busy.  We currently are ranch-sitting for a friend, which puts us in a bit of an uncomfortable living situation…in house and not in our tipi. With a fire ban and county regulations, tipi living is not an option at this current location. Our bodies have gotten soft and the spring in my step is fading.  It is hard living somewhere where everything is at an arm’s reach and my body is not being fully used.  I look forward to the days when we return to the woods, chopping firewood and cooking over our hearth and bending ourselves in the dance with nature. I feel a disconnect, but know that my commitment is almost fulfilled and we will be out of here come Fall.

There are newly formed relationships and untended old ones swirling around me.  Our family said farewell to living in Tipi Village and in the wake there is a pile of knots sitting, waiting to be picked through… We meet a family, new to Ashland, who recently opened a store The Leaf and Dragon.  They sell all things eco, faerie, pirate, fantasy, Viking and folklore related and I am consigning my creations with them.

I dug out all of my slips, lace and linens,  collected over the last few years, dyeing  them and turning them into fancy clothing.  Bodices, wrap skirts, slip dresses, waistcoats, pixie caps and lots of other accessories.  I am hoping to run through all of my supplies because refilling them is always an adventure.  Thrift stores and antique malls call to me throughout our travels…


Here are the things I have been making and a glimpse into our summer so far.


  












 



More to come!!


Sunday, June 01, 2014

Tipi Poles!!!

Our family has returned from our Winter travels and is currently harvesting tipi poles in Central Oregon.  This is the beginning of a new cycle for us and many paths are laid out before the family.