A Rainbow in the Wilderness

Following is a post from the Rainbows.

One moon has gone by since we left to be on our own. Two moons since we have been part of nature.

We don’t have a clock–we have sun and the moon.

We don’t need shampoo–the lake makes our hair so soft.

We can drink wild water.

Our nails we cut with our knife.

Toilet paper has grown since our first moons. Leaves, sphagnum moss.

We realize how interesting every day tasks are here! Sometimes if I sit under a tree for a little bit out in the wilderness, a bird, who doesn’t see me, sits close to me and I can watch it while I sit there. Or a little spider comes to say hello.

We don’t miss salt–our meals taste so good without it.

In our heart we are so thankful to be here–to have the possibility to live one turn of the seasons in the wilderness.

We have time to look to the sky, the clouds.

I have time to climb trees, how long it has been since the last time I’ve done that. It felt so wonderful to sit at the top of a big tree!

We cook on open fire. The eggs, too. Or we cook with hot stones.

A few of us have made spoons and bowls that we use now.

We sharpen our knives with flat stones.

With roots, we make rope.

We dug deep holes for our food-pit, to store food in, and it stays really cold in there.

We enjoy this primitive life. We have all we really need. This is luxury for us. This is, for us, modern life. We are so happy to not have to sit in front of a computer or in a car or use a phone. Don’t have to go shopping, or hear the news.

Migwech

Hello From the Rainbows

We want to share a little about our time. For one and a half moons we have lived in the wilderness, and we are getting more and more wild. We enjoy being outside the whole sun in nature and living in the natural rhythm. Drinking wild water, cooking with fire, eating greens from the woods–all these are a part of each sun.

We have been lucky with the weather. Not a lot of rain–warm, sunny weather. The children and us parents love canoeing.

We are still vegetarian and don’t feel a need to eat meat, bearfat, or fish at all.

We are surrounded by many noises–birds are singing, frogs, sometimes we hear coyotes or wolves. Our neighbors are porcupine, squirrels, and some unknowns.

We love to be in the woods! Right now, for about more or less 14 suns, we have lived on the other side of the lake–without the clan. Something was happening that we could not support and we needed to take a stand–and that was that we leave the clan. We are not able anymore to stand with our heart, soul, and our Whole Person, in the Family Yearlong, but we want to have a yearlong in the wilderness. So we are looking forward–greetings from the other side of the lake, from the wilderness.

The Hike Back to Camp from a Nadmadewening Dead Moon Visit

By Alex S.

It was about mid-sun as I decided to walk back to the camp. I told that to the guides. They asked me to wait for a special meeting. I did, and became more and more frustrated because it became late and I knew I would need to rely on the sun for finding the direction.

After the meeting Tamarack told me that I have to walk first straight east, and he drew me a  small map of the area. I started immediately to run. I knew from Tamarack that I had about 3 mealtimes of light. I ran and met a creek. I was confused about that since we did not meet the creek on our way to Nadmad. I followed the creek north, but this direction was different than what Tamarack told me. I traveled through a deep bog, and once I decided to pass the creek to walk on east. As I arrived at the creek I sank into the ground to my chest and decided to return and to walk on farther north. I had also lost my small map.

While running and feeling panic, I poked myself in the eye with a stick. I was panicked because I knew I only had so much light. I ran about 1 mealtime through a bog with cranberries and a nearly impassable area. Suddenly a lake appeared that I knew from stories. I was so happy. At this time there was still light on the tips of the trees to orient myself. I ran close to shore because I knew I had to follow to the eastern shore. I crossed a creek without sinking in again and drank a little bit from the lake water. As I arrived on the eastern shore, it was nearly dark and I was lucky to see some clouds with the sun on them. I knew the camp was south from there.

I ran down some trails not knowing where I was, only following the four directions. At one place a big deer looked at me. I am sure she was wondering what I was doing. Later, the sun was way down. With my few skills I felt unable to orient myself and felt panic again. Finally I arrived at a street that I knew and followed it to the camp. An egg roast before dark I arrived.

Home!

The Gift of Mama Deer — Seeker’s Post

Originally posted on Rose’s website, http://metraylor.com/.

“Hello?”

Alex?

I stare up at the dim ceiling of my tent and blink. The name that belongs to the voice does not belong here. Maybe I imagined it.

“There’s a wawaskeshi!”

Oh no.

“Alex?” I fumble with the zipper of the tent.

“Hey!” I hear his long lope beating through the earth. “There’s a deer.” Palming my eyes, the full realization that I am going to have to deal with this and no one is going to want to get up settling over me.

“I do not want to deal with this,” I tell his kneeling silhouette, pulling on a shirt over my head.

“Yeah,” he says, “I feel a little responsible, even though I’m not.”

“I know how busy things are at the support center,” I tell him, remembering all the times when I was the one bringing the unexpected news. “Okay, who do we have here… Brum.” My brain stutters for names.

“Marcus,” Alex points out.

“Yeah.” The gears are working again. “Maybe we can wake all the men. We’ll have to carry the deer back, gut her…”

“Brum needs his sleep,” Kerstin calls from her tent. I know she’s been concerned that he has enough energy to help her with their daughter. I realize the same concerns strike two more men off my list. “Okay, all the men except the fathers.”

“I’m going to take her out of the van and leave her at the trailhead.”

“Gimme a hug. We’ll take care of her.” I finish struggling into my pants and cumbersome belt and crawl into the night into a comfortingly familiar embrace, being enveloped by someone as wide as a bear and skinny as a toothpick.

I start at the edges of camp.

“Fridolin?”

Fumbled words, all the edges blunted by a taste of the Old World.

“What is it?”

“There’s a deer. We need to go take care of her.”

Silence.

“Fridolin?”

Moans.

“Can I get an answer? Fridolin?”

Irritated, I tell him to meet us at the hearth if he’s coming. Marcus appears, visible as a cloud of hair stuck under a cap.

“I hear there’s a wawaskeshi.”

“Yeah, I’m thinking we get all the men who aren’t fathers. Maybe we could carry her on a pole.”

“We could probably just gut her and hang her in the sweet forest,” Marcus points out. “Then we’d need fewer people.”

Relief as the idea takes hold.

“Okay. Yeah. I tried to wake Fridolin. I don’t know if he’s coming. I’ll go get Alexandros.”

Alexandros’ tent is on the opposite end of camp, and I feel self-conscious crunching and crackling around the tents of a small family and our resident grandmother. I find an empty tent, and I know that if Alexandros isn’t there he’ll be in the other one not a canoe length away. But somehow in two circuits I can’t find it, so I loop back around to meet Marcus.

To my surprise and gratification, Fridolin is there, dressed and alert. We grab a sheet of birch bark for cargo and set out for the trailhead.

There is no moon to paint our path, just a glare reflected downward by an overcast sky. Marcus and I have walked this trail for Turns, a narrow, three-quarter mile winding channel of packed duff as easy to navigate as a straight, paved road. I can feel my resignation lightening.

I am reminded of every book I ever read about elves or other fantastic, wood-savvy folk. I’ve ready hundreds of pages, written thousands of words, played video games of what I’m living right now. I love my life. I love it more each time I leave behind a little more of my conditioning about what comfort and effort really mean.

Fridolin, it turns out, is almost completely night blind. He can’t even see the silhouettes revealed by the cloudlight. Gamely he plunges on as we periodically stop to wait, guiding him back to the trail with pseudo bird calls. As the wood opens up into the sweet forest, I lose the trail, the duff suddenly springy with last autumn’s maple leaves.

“Wait, I’ve lost it.” Fridolin bumps into me. “Back up. Back, back… Okay. I’m on it.” I feel around with my feet, toes pointed like a ballet dancer until I feel packed earth. “There you are.”

We wander along blind to the trailhead, and can’t find the deer. I pull out the beeswax candle and matches I stuffed into a breast pocket. We’ve walked right past Mama Deer, and Fridolin holds the candle as Marcus and I drag her off the road, one of her legs shattered through by the force of the car that ended her life.

I step aside as Marcus pulls out a slender cord we hope will be strong enough to hold her weight, and step out of my clothes. In a world with no soap and no washing machines, clean clothes are valuable. Naked, I buckle my belt around my hips, bonier from the transition of sitting at a computer typing most of the day to walking three to ten miles hauling loads of fir boughs and firewood. I hear the drone of a handful of mosquitoes zeroing in on our carbon dioxide trail.

Marcus loops his string around the deer’s neck and he and Fridolin hoist her up far enough that I can wrap my arms around her bloated belly.

“Okay, one, two, three–”

We heave, she rises, we heave, so close but not high enough–

Something snaps, and darkness rushes in.

We contemplate.

“Well, it was either the branch or the string.”

“Can you find the candle?”

“I haf de candle,” Fridolin says.

“I left the matches by a root over here…” I self-narrate, feeling around in the dark, naked but for a knife.

A rattling box, and the candle blooms to life, Mama Deer staring up at us.

“Looks like it was the string,” Marcus says.

“Ve can use de legs, no?” Fridolin asks.

“Oh yeah! I forgot all about that.” Squatting, I slip out my knife. I’m so used to hanging deer by the neck with the luxury of strong rope that I have blinders to other possibilities.

Taking her foreleg, I cut the tendon away from the bone and try to pull her other foot through. It takes some hauling, and finally I have to brace both feet on her leg to pull her hard, black-tipped toes through. We resume our positions.

“On three, one two three. Little more, little more– There! Okay. You can let go.”

There she hangs, neatly, no rope.

Stripping to the waist, Marcus takes the lead, always so surprisingly reedy under a bush of hair and beard and cheekbones that remind me of chipmunks. He delicately slits the thin skin over her sternum and I help peel the flaps back. A spurt of blood splatters my leg as he cuts open her belly, a bulge of stomachs and coiled mounds of intestines, blessedly intact.

Fisting his hands around the connective tissue holding the organs inside, Marcus tells me, “So if you can grab the liver so it lands on top…”

I take the sold, rubbery shape between my hands and the whole GI tract lands in a neat pile at our feet. We cut the liver off and place it on the birch bark.

“We’ve got one kidney… Where’s the other one?” I poke through the candlelit tangle, mystified. “… Maybe we can find it in the morning.”

Next come the heart and lungs, and nestled in the belly, a gift.

“Oh, baby.”

There’s a sadness there, and a reverence, as I see the tiny white hooves peeking out, for a life cut short as we gently pull the fawn out.

The night is cool enough to leave Mama Deer until the morning. We don our clothes and try to wrestle the organs onto our birch bark platter only to find they keep wriggling out. Finally I pull the fawn out of his placenta and tie his little legs together into a suitcase. He is such a perfect little deer, writ small and spotted, his hindquarters underdeveloped just like a newborn human baby’s. Abandoning the birch bark, Fridolin and Marcus take fistfuls of organs and I lift the candle.

“Are we ready?”

A puff of breath, and darkness swallows us again.

It’s darker now, an iron gray sky barely distinguishable from the tree tops. In consideration of our precious and ungainly cargo –and the fact that Fridolin is essentially blind– Marcus and I start narrating obstacles.

“Knee log… Ankle log… Eye pokers… ‘Nother knee log…” The fawn weighs surprisingly heavy against my arm.

As we circumvent the sweat lodge, a cry rises across the thick night from camp. I think I know who it is, a three year old who has woken the camp nightly for the past quarter of the moon.

The water at the swim area is a rippling sheet of black as we crouch to wash our bounty. The wandering bridge through the bog, two poles wide, feels too ambitious after our adventure. Ready for bed, we walk the last trail to camp, passing silent tents through a brushy corridor of young, anti-septic smelling balsam fir. In the bog near the canoe canal we pull back layers of sphagnum moss to bury our meat and keep it cool. A green glow reaches across the open hearth, a candle in a tent as two parents read from a journal to their wakeful toddler.

“I’m turning in. ‘Night guys.”

“‘Night, Marcus.”

I lead Fridolin as far as the trail to his tent and hopes that he makes it, and crash in my sleeping bag, content.

A Post from the Seekers – Rose’s Stories

This week we have a bunch of posts from the Seeker’s themselves, so stay tuned for more. The following is from Rose’s chronicle of the yearlong. They were originally posted on her website, metraylor.com.

From My Year in the Woods

So my year in the woods living with twenty-five adults and seventeen children commences tomorrow morning. 

So, for those of you who’d like to know a little more: I live here. I’ve been volunteering at this school and editing for the director for the past three years, and I was finally ready to do what I originally wanted to do, which was take the yearlong wilderness immersion program. This year’s going to be different, because the focus is going to be on families.

Twenty-five adults, seventeen children, eleven months, in the heat of summer, the dead of winter, living in the woods. We’ll start out in tents and with matches, and graduate to bark and thatch lodges and bow drill fires. Our food will be supplemented with mostly organic fruits of agriculture, and we will have no sugar, no coffee, no processed foods, no media. We’ll be learning how to forage, collect and prepare craft materials, tan hides, make fire, and most importantly how to work as a community. I’ll be living a lot of what I write into Alan’s culture of origin, and Efeddre and Toney’s people, the ldridrisy and limdri.

The most challenging thing we’re going to be doing is not pooping in the woods while covered in mosquitoes, or running around in -20 F temperatures. We’re going to be facing a lot of things in ourselves that are easy to cover up with TV, reading, comfort foods, movies, music, sugar, caffeine, and drugs. We are going to be forced to look at how we relate to other people, food, the natural world, non-humans, and ourselves. We’re going to be discovering our gifts and our challenges (and having witnessed this program for four generations of students, I know there’s a lot of challenges) and how they all fit together. We are going to learn how to operate not just as isolated individuals, couples, and nuclear families, but as a community. We’re going to be constantly reminded to take responsibility for our own feelings and our own actions that have put us exactly where we are in our lives. We’re going to be examining and coming face to face with the unpleasant reality of the unspoken contracts we have with the people in our lives that allow everything to seem to run smoothly when there’s so much more underneath.

“You don’t do that, so I don’t feel this.”

“I give you this, so you don’t feel that.”

“I didn’t tell you that, because I was afraid you’d do this.”

We’re going to be learning how to communicate consciously, how to listen to what’s really being said underneath, how to say what’s really going on for us. We’re going to learn how easy it is to say we’re saying what’s really going on for us, when really we’re not doing it at all.

Michel Scott, the director of The Horse Boy, is going to be doing a documentary on our experience. So. Movie. For real.

I am utterly terrified, and I know that I am doing exactly what I need to. This is the cliff, and all I have to is jump. I’ll learn how to fly on the way down.

From Arrival

The lake wears a new face each morning.

Neon pink and lavender kissing the mist rising from the water, or the bowl of the lake capped by a rippling, iron gray sky, ten thousand cloudscapes. I used to take hundreds of pictures of the sky, trying to preserve each stunning, sensual instant, and I was so busy taking pictures I had no time to see. The the lines of the overhanging branches of a cedar, a pine, and a wave-worn log frame the swim area, for all the world like a landscaped natural picture window.

I will never see this face of the lake again, and I treasure the gift as I treasure the loss.

“High definition reality,” Marcus calls it.

“I’m stealing that,” I tell him.

The camp is waking up.

We’re crazy.

Twenty-five adults, seventeen kids, three generations, four languages, and all our different beliefs, opinions, biases, experiences, triggers, wounds, living in the woods together for eleven moons. There is only one explanation: We’re all insane.

It’s amazing and fantastic and terrifying and uncomfortable.

We sit around the fire cracking nuts and roasting eggs. A mother translates her delicate toddler’s exuberant outbursts, like closed captioning for the Swedish impaired. Her little girl plays chase with one of the boys and she scrambles over mom, screaming in one part hysteria, one part triumph.

A few of the boys are playing something they call “Dungeons and Dragons,” and I have no idea if it means the same thing to them as it does to me. We have no dice, no books, and not much paper. I smile to myself as I overhear a five-year-old from my tent, “And I told him I was a god and he didn’t want to fight me anymore.”

In our ranks we boast three people who know Thai massage, three who know myofascial release, a smattering of energy workers, and a lot of people who just know how to give with their hands. Almost every sun there’s one or two people in the quiet, sunny spots by the wigwams giving and receiving some kind of massage.

Everyone is basking in novelty and gratitude as the whole camp comes together to help level ground and erect tents and tarps. This is the honeymoon phase, when everyone loves each other and I wonder what it will be like when all our idiosyncrasies and habits start to snag each other like thorns.

But this is the Now. I decide to enjoy it while I can.

 

How Owl Helped Brum Find His Way

The following is a story from Brum.

One early sun, when the Birds had just started singing, Brum got out of his tent to go exploring. This was in the beginning of the Family Yearlong, before the circle had started with meetings around sunrise, so Brum thought he would have some time. Later in the sun the women were going to have a women’s circle, so he wanted to be back for that, so that Kerstin, the mother of his daughter, would be able to join on her own.

There was a light rain this early sun and no notable wind. If Brum had paid more attention he would have noticed that the compact cloud blanket was moving slowly towards the Northeast. He heard some thunder far away in the southwest. Brum wanted to go exploring out east, in an area he did not know almost at all. He walked through Maple forest, Balsam Fir forest, and ended up in beautiful Hemlock groves. Beyond that was a fairly big bog. Brum had thought he walked east more or less, at the same time as he was following the contours of the landscape and the boundary zones of different forest types. The rain kept drizzling down and Brum started thinking about what kind of a shelter he could build in case it started to rain more.

He had a bit of an inner conflict as a part of him wanted to keep exploring and another part wanted to be back for the women’s circle. He decided that the need for him to be with his daughter was more important, so he headed in the direction he thought was to camp. He went by feeling as the Maple forest looked the same to him all around, and he hoped that his feel was correct and that he would come to a place he recognized soon.

After a while of walking around and only seeing forest that he couldn’t recognize, he started to feel some stress around making it back in time.

Right then a fairly big Bird flew over his head from behind and landed in a tree in front of him. It was an owl. Brum did not know which kind, but she looked similar to the one on the Teaching Drum logo.

The Owl was looking at Brum going “hoo-hoo” and leaning her head towards the tree she sat in. “She is trying to tell me something” was the first thought and intuitive feeling that came to Brum. The Owl flew to another tree a bit away and Brum followed her there. The Owl once again went “hoo-hoo” and leaned her head towards the tree she sat in. While Brum was standing there trying to see something that made sense to him, the Owl flew to a third tree. Then Brum realized something–all the trees the Owl had sat on were Pine trees. And then something clicked in him: the Pine trees normally lean towards the northeast due to the prevailing southwesterly winds in this area!

Brum looked at the three Pines that the Owl had sat in and saw that the tops of them were all leaning in the same direction. As the likelihood of them leaning towards the northeast seemed very high, Brum decided to head straight in the direction that should be west, based on the Pines, where he knew camp was.

He spotted three trees standing in a row towards what should be west and followed that direction by keeping an eye on the three trees along that direction. After a short walk he hit a Deer trail he had been walking on earlier that sun and knew where he was again!

He felt very grateful for the help of the Owl and grateful that he had listened to his intuition that Owl was trying to tell him something. He returned to camp and his clan just in time for breakfast, and could be of support during the women’s circle.

Aho.