Hello Colin,
In response to your announcement, I disagree with you on your
hypothesis that: "There's an audience for gathering to
practice and share stone-age/primitive/indigenous skills. We see Quail
Springs (a permaculture farm) offering workshops that fit in this
category--and there seem to be many for whom gathering to practice
stone-age skills and awareness is easier to get excited about than
permaculture.
Partly this may be because the stone-age skills are portable
while permaculture design is more meaningful when one has long-term
control over some land.." Firstly, origin skills
are not dead in the "stone age" yet live on today through many peoples
and traditions because they have developed over thousands of years of
people's relationship with the land. When you relegate it to the past
you demean its spark of life that still feeds the world. Most people
in times where they were intact with the land had very definitive
caretaking roles with the wild lands that more often than not crossed
over into cultivation of the forests for better hunting and foraging.
This is where Permaculture draws much of its foundational root.
Being able to move was generally relegated to the young person
needing to find who they were and where they are by defining those
things outside of themselves to better be able to see the substance of
who they are inside. When you look at the land, whether a hunter,
planter, or casual observer....you are exerting a form of "control"
over the land especially if you are working from ego rather than from
divination. There was usually part of the tribe that was nomadic
(ranging from one traditional hunting ground to another) and another
that was sedentary cultivators and gatherers. In either case, there
were long-term relationships with the same lands or as I hear it from
you, "control," that allowed for enhancements to human and non-human
life. It is well documented that land that is being care-taken by
humans in a stewardship effort can be more vital in diversity,
resilience and stability than lands without human intervention. This
leads me to believe that humans have a purpose here on earth and it is
wrapped into our ability as stewards of the lands through long term
relationships.
I hope you are well and wrapped in the learning journey of life.
Blessings,
Warren
Warren Brush
Co-Founder
Quail Springs Learning Oasis
Trees for Children
Mentoring for Peace
P.O. Box 417
New Cuyama, CA 93254
805.886.7239 - Quail Springs
805.715.0607 - Trees for Children
Fax 866.321.1102
"May culture spring to life as we learn together how to know all
that sustains us and to honor those things deeply"
On Mar 24, 2008, at 11:49 PM, Colin Leath wrote:
There's an audience for gathering to practice
and share stone-age/primitive/indigenous skills. We see Quail Springs
(a permaculture farm) offering workshops that fit in this category--and
there seem to be many for whom gathering to practice stone-age skills
and awareness is easier to get excited about than permaculture.
Partly this may be because the stone-age skills are portable while
permaculture design is more meaningful when one has long-term control
over some land.
Whatever the reason, to help communicate about SoCal stone-age
skill-sharing events there is now
The SoCal
Indigenous Living google group
Please announce any SoCal (SLO and south) skillshares there--
If there already are socal networks for this, please let me know.
peace,
Colin
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