A petroglyph site on the Snake River south of Asotin, called “Buffalo Eddy” because of the dominant figure below, speaks to the river day and night. The figure appears nowhere else and […]
A petroglyph site on the Snake River south of Asotin, called “Buffalo Eddy” because of the dominant figure below, speaks to the river day and night. The figure appears nowhere else and […]
In much of Cascadia, public space is very limited. Here is a narrow strip of it, winding through the Palouse, in one of our regions administered by the USA. Washington State Highway […]
Well, yes, it is. You can see the flood basalts here in the Grand Coulee, the thin pours of lava that made the Columbia Plateau, and you can see the result of […]
We went downtown today. Here’s one of the main intersections above Lake Lenore. Settler culture calls this a rock that has fallen off a cliff, which it is, but if you are […]
The other day, here, https://okanaganokanogan.com/2024/10/17/what-does-rural-british-columbia-need/, I rephrased the question “What does rural British Columbia need?” as an entirely different one: “What do the land and water need?” Beaver Bay, Big Bar Lake. […]
Well, respect, really. Dr. Sarah-Patricia Breen from Selkirk College is clear on that. The respect to be allowed self-determination. The respect to not be seen as a place somehow inferior, or substandard, […]
First, the work. New garden boxes built, in time to plant the garlic before winter. Schedules are set by the Earth. Then some wrestling with fish. They are slippery, and hard to […]