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In this issue!
Inland
Northwest Permaculture Guild Convergence
| INPG Plant Sale and Garden Exchange
| Medicinal Herb Micro-Farming Workshop
| Plant Walk & Wildcrafting / Foraging
Workshop | PermaBlitz at UHURU
| The Indigenous Traditional Use of Fire
| Footehills Farm Plant Sale |
Friends of the Trees’ Spring 2021 Schedule
| Agroforestry on Clearcuts in the PNW
| 40th Anniversary Permaculture Conferences
| The Inland Empire Gardeners Plant
Sale | NorthWest Vendors Market |
Medicinal Plant Sale in Missoula |
Garden Party: Get Your Personal Invitation
We'll
hold this year's Convergence once again at Ken
Casler's beautiful farm and retreat center,
Casler
Farm
1266 Mosquito Creek Rd.
Clark Fork, ID
Watch our website for details.
First
and third Saturday and Sunday's of the Spring
and Summer months. This is an open
invite for Permie folks to share vision, a few
meals, time around the campfire, some music, and
oh yes! It's a work party, prepping for
the 2021 Convergence. Come for the day, or stay
and camp out. RSVP to Ken at 2O8 55O 3134
voicemail or text. Or email
kennycasler at gmail.
For current info on projects and plans and
possible cancellation call (2O8) 597-4843 for a
recorded message.
You
can pre-order plants from Friends of the Trees
for pick-up at this sale by visiting:
https://friendsofthetrees.square.site/
Have
questions about the plant sale or being a vendor?
Email
Us
with Michael Pilarski / Friends of the Trees Society
Followed by the Plant Sale and Garden Exchange
Register Here
Starts at $70
Location:
Backyard Herb Garden
7213 N. Regal St
Spokane, WA 99217
View Map
This
workshop will be geared towards small-scale,
commercial production and will include hands-on
activities and tool demonstrations. Useful for
those already growing herbs as well as beginners.
Topics Include: Design, planting, species,
harvesting, irrigation, weeding, marketing and so
much more. We will look at examples of rhizomatous
bed crops, annuals, biennials, 4-year root crops,
long-term perennials, sub-shrubs, trees, etc. We
will discus how to start new plots using a tractor
or hand tools. How to achieve good production
starting in year one and every year thereafter.
We will be touring an established herb and
vegetable garden as part of the workshop.
Bring:
Brown bag lunch
Water bottle / Thermos
Garden gloves
Come prepared for the weather
Folding Chair
Umbrella if rainy, so you have a dry place to take
notes
Notebook and Pen
This is an outside event. Masks are optional with
social distancing.
About
the instructor:
Michael Pilarski "Skeeter" is a farmer, educator,
author and permaculture instructor who has devoted
his life to studying and teaching how people can
live sustainably on this Earth. He grows a
diversity of medicinal and food plants in complex,
agroforestry systems. Blending permaculture,
restorative ecology and ethnobotany to enhance
restorative land practices. His Herb Farm, Friends
of the Trees Botanicals, has grown a wide
diversity of crops in permaculture and
agroforestry systems since 1972. He has been
farming medicinal plants for the last 34 years in
Eastern and Western Washington with a focus on
small-scale and low capitalization. Pilarski’s 1/4
acre micro-farm in Chimacum, WA grossed $45,000 in
2020 (year 3).
Website: FriendsoftheTrees.net
It has been
a tough year for many folks. One silver
lining is that more people are growing gardens and
planting trees. The land can sustain us
physically, mentally and spiritually; and we can
help sustain the land. We need symbiotic
relationships with the land and with each
other. I am happy to be coming back to
Spokane this month to share more information on
how to do this.
April 18, Sunday 6:00pm – 8:00pm: Talking
With the Land. All indigenous people
talked to the lands and waters, the creatures, the
plants. Some people still do this
today. Michael is the founder of the Fairy
& Human Relations Congress. By donation. Venue
to be announced. Email me if you want to be
notified.
Michael Skeeter Pilarski
friendsofthetrees@yahoo.com
with Michael Pilarski / Friends of the Trees Society
Location:
Dishman Hills Natural Area - Camp Carol
Parking Lot
698 South Sargent Road
Spokane Valley, WA 99212
View Map
We
are surrounded by useful plants wherever we go.
Native and non-native plants. Food, medicine,
seeds, fibers, craft materials, building materials
& more.
We we will be walking trails and talking about the
plants we meet. The information will be useful for
wildcrafting for home use as well as commercially.
We will introduce the main medicinal plants found
in Eastern Washington with optimum timing of
harvest, collecting techniques, tools, processing,
drying and sustainable wildcrafting guidelines.
Bring:
Brown bag lunch
Water bottle / Thermos
Come prepared for the weather
Umbrella if rainy
This is an outside event. Masks are optional with
social distancing.
About
the instructor:
Michael Pilarski "Skeeter" is a farmer, educator,
author and permaculture instructor who has devoted
his life to studying and teaching how people can
live sustainably on this Earth. He grows a
diversity of medicinal and food plants in complex,
agroforestry systems. Blending permaculture,
restorative ecology and ethnobotany to enhance
restorative land practices. His Herb Farm, Friends
of the Trees Botanicals, has grown a wide
diversity of crops in permaculture and
agroforestry systems since 1972. He has been
farming medicinal plants for the last 34 years in
Eastern and Western Washington with a focus on
small-scale and low capitalization. He is the
author of “Ethnobotany and Ethnoecology Resource
Guide” and “Growing & Wildcrafting Medicinal
Plants in the Pacific Northwest”.
Website: FriendsoftheTrees.net
Get your hands dirty with permaculture
workshops on:
Gardening | Cobb Making | Solar Hot Water |
Mushroom Activities
Things to bring:
Your own dishes | Food to share/donate | Items to
barter/trade | Garden seeds and plants | Gloves
for activities | Chair or sit-upon | Musical
instruments
Saturday Night Dancing and Live Reggae
Music by Fungilion
Honoring Earth | Permaculture Workshops | Camping
| Food | Friends and Pot Lucks | Barter/Trade
Faire | Drum/Music Jams | No Pets unless
pre-arranged
For more info, contact Gabe at (509) 738-7373
Location address:
2332 Scott Rd.
Rice, WA
Please
note: This event is not being publicly
advertised. Limit sharing to friends and family,
but do invite kindred spirits to attend.
In
this video, Dr, Melodi Wynne of the
Spokane
Tribal Network talks about the Spokane Tribal
Food Sovereignty Project. They had a gathering on
April 1 to inaugurate their new tribal
community garden at Little Falls on the Spokane
River near Wellpinit, WA. They had planned to have a
cultural burn to prepare the site in the afternoon,
but windy conditions necessitated that to be
postponed to a later date.
"A cultural burn recognizes that fire in the right
time, place, intention, intensity and amount is
medicine for people, plants, water, animals and the
land. It is a low, slow flame in late winter, early
spring, late fall or early winter, purposefully lit
and tended, for cultural purposes of human
recognition, engagement and relationship with the
scared element of fire as a creative/destructive
force in the seasonal cycle of plant, human, animal
and all life.
"A cultural burn is the implementation of fire as a
sacred element with power to clear, cleanse,
fertilize or signify a new start to use an area for
Tribal food sovereignty, re-vegetation of native
food and medicine plants or other cultural reasons,
resources or significance."
Here are some of the benefits that Spokane Tribal
ancestors sought when using fire:
* A reduction of windfall and dead fall;
* Reduction of competing understory vegetation in
favor of vegetation that deer and elk like to eat,
which draws the animals to a designated area-- "The
traditional practice of controlled burning was used
to increase the productivity of particular flora ...
for browsing ungulates, and most elders could recall
their fathers and grandfathers saying, immediately
prior to burning an area to encourage the growth of
grass, 'I'm giving you food now so later you're my
food;'
* Clearing away the understory also improves
visibility for hunters;
* Release of seeds from pine cones which need fire
temperatures to achieve;
* Reduction of pests like ticks and wasps;
* Prevention of large forest fires.
Other resources:
The art of fire: reviving the
Indigenous craft of cultural burning
Fire and Tribal Cultural Resources
Returing Fire to the Land -
Celebrating Traditional Knowledge and Fire:
Approached for Management and Research
Native Approaches to Fire
Management Could Revitalize Communities
Living With Fire: What California
Can Learn From Native Burns
By Michael
Pilarski, Friends of the Trees Society
Hundreds of
thousands of acres are clearcut every year in the
Pacific Northwest.
On February 4, 2021, I visited a recent 80-acre
clearcut above the Middle Fork Nooksack
River. It was typical of clearcuts in the
region. Yarding logs uphill had disturbed
most of the forest soil. Lots of bare
dirt. Most of the slash had been burned but
there was some around along with charred logs and
wood. The site had been aerially sprayed
with herbicide to kill off all vegetation after
which it was planted with a monoculture of Douglas
fir with a narrow genetic diversity. There
were some fingers of residual vegetation along the
riparian corridors of seasonal streams, but no
trees of any consequence were left on the 80
acres. This is all perfectly legal of
course.
What will happen next will be relatively
predictable. There will be an explosion of
non-native weeds. Already on the site I see bull
thistle, St. John’s wort, yellow dock, horseweed,
and butterfly bush. A lot of native plants will
germinate in the next few years. Typically
the logging company might herbicide the site again
after a few years to knock the deciduous
vegetation and ground cover back to reduce
competition on the Douglas fir. After 7 to
10 years the Douglas fir will close canopy and
shade everything else out. Likely this would
be followed by a pre-commercial thin and then
possibly one commercial thin before the entire
stand is clear-cut again. Such are the
current forest practices for the most part.
How can we intervene in this process using
agroforestry? Read my full article on the
Friends of the Trees website.
The weekend
of April 3 - 4, 2021 marked the 40th anniversary
of the first of two Northwest Permaculture
Conferences hosted by Friends of the Trees Society
in collaboration with Tilth and Children of the
Green Earth. The Interior Region Conference was
held in Sagle, Idaho, April 3-5, 1981, and the
Maritime Region Conference was held near Corbett,
Oregon the weekend of May 8-10, 1981.
The two conferences brought together more than 400
people united by a common desire to heal the
earth, learn about permaculture and natural
farming, and build a sense of community within our
region. We didn't realize it at the time, but the
two Northwest conferences were the first major
permaculture gatherings in North America and the
ripple effects from the events are still being
felt throughout our region and across the country.
To learn more about the two conferences, read
reports on the events, and see a directory of
participants, visit the special archive pages
created by Mark Musick, Michael "Skeeter" Pilarski
and Chrys Ostrander on the Friends of the Trees
Society website. If you attended either gathering,
from the website you can also send in your
reminiscences and any photos you might have.
Footehills Farm is a 10-acre smallholding in a pine/fir forest in Colbert, WA where Torie and Thom Foote are creating a sustainable, energy efficient market garden farm using permaculture principles and agroforestry. They raise chickens, native timber, fruit trees, berry bushes, medicinal and culinary herbs and are in the process of building a 3400 sq. ft. "close to net zero" home. Every year they host WWOOFers in a tinyhouse and teach them valuable agrarian skills. In the future, guest houses, including yurts, will be built for visitors.
Footehills
Farm Website
Footehills Farm on Facebook
Questions?
Send
them an email.
Eastern
Washington
Plant Sale 4:00pm to 6:00pm - Open to the
public.
Pre-order plants online or
just show up and shop in person.
April
15, Tonasket: Medicinal Agroforestry
Farm Tour and Plant Sale at Edible Acres Farm
Farm Tour 1:00pm to 4:00pm
Edible Acres Farm
29 Alvarado Road Tonasket, WA
Free! Please RSVP
Plant Sale 4:00pm to 6:00pm - Open to the
public.
Pre-order plants online or
just show up and shop in person.
April
17, Spokane: Medicinal Herb
Micro-farming Workshop & Plant Sale
Workshop 10:00am to 4:00pm
Backyard Herb Garden
7213 N. Regal St., Spokane, WA
Register
Plant Sale 4:00pm to 6:00pm - Open to the
public.
Pre-order plants online or
just show up and shop in person.
The
Spokane plant Sale will be held in conjunction
with
the Inland Northwest
Permaculture Guild's Plant, Seed and
Garden Exchange.
Bring plants, seeds, seedlings, gardening
tools, books etc. to sell or trade.
Fee for vendors: $10.00
Bring your own table please.
April
18, Spokane: Plant Walk &
Wildcrafting / Foraging Workshop
10:00am to 4:00pm
Dishman Hills Natural Area
Camp Carol Parking Lot
698 S. Sargent Rd., Spokane Valley, WA
Register
All of these are outdoor events with social
distancing
Friends of the Trees Society put on its first tree
sale in 1978. At the height of its career in the
late 1980s, its tree sales were held in 24
different towns across northern Washington, north
Idaho and Northwest Montana. Some of the tree
sales evolved into public plant exchanges.
Tonasket and Twisp Washington were two of the most
regular tree sales. Over 200 tree sales have been
held over the years. Many thousands of our trees,
shrubs and plants are still growing throughout the
region. Let's keep planting!
TIEG
Website
TIEG on Facebook
Questions?
Send
them an email.
If you haven't
received your personal invitation yet,
send an email message to Chrys Ostrander to
request one.
farmrchrys@gmail.com
The party will be at an outdoor venue in the
vicinity of Spokane. Lots of space for distancing.
Music Line-up:
Dustin Busch
- Dustin combines a complete mastery of guitar
technique in the blues style, as well as a relaxed,
nothing-to-prove attitude to make serious music.
American roots, country blues and old time.
Steve Schennum - Guitar, mandolin,
and fiddle. Folk songs, some jazz standards and some
originals. Songs you never hear on the radio, but
maybe you should.
Candace Finity and Ted Hensold -
Traditional music from the Marmite Isles performed
on fiddle and guitar and just maybe harmonica.
Kathlyn Kinney - Kathlyn plays a
collection of Classical, Modern and Celtic music on
the harp. A consummate professional and an excellent
musician, she plays with both outstanding technical
facility and genuine feeling.
Brad Keeler - Brad is an
award-winning multi-instrumentalist, vocalist,
songwriter, composer, and interpreter of Vintage
Music. Retro, Roots, Radio, Americana, Acoustic
Blues, Folk Revival, Country & Alt County,
Bluegrass & Old Time, Standards, Swing & Tin
Pan Alley and Originals
The Working Spliffs - This five
piece band features a horn section, two bass
players, versatile guitar work, and vocal harmonies.
Varied set of Reggae, Ska, R and B, Punk,
Psychedelic Rock with Jazz leanings. A Spokane-area
legend.
We
are just in the process of opening a booth at this
site for
plants, salves, tinctures, etc. There will be 2
booths after April.
These are places where Guild members could sell
things. Those
that do would share in the monthly rent and help
arrange/set
up wares they are selling. Talk to Torie if you
are interested.
torie.foote@gmail.com
Sunday, May 23, 2021 at 9am – 12pm
Now more than ever, we believe people should be growing their own medicinal herbs!
Come to the
Annual Medicinal Plant Sale hosted by Green Path
Herb School. Are you ready to start an herb
garden? Looking for some unusual medicinal plants?
Want some culinary herbs for extra delicious and
nutritious meals? Looking for some native plants
to add to your yard? Or maybe you have some extra
seeds or seedlings to share?
.
Located in the parking lot behind Meadowsweet
Herbs at 180 S 3rd St W in Missoula.