Okanagan Okanogan

Reclaiming the Art of Living on the Earth

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The Sun Rises on a New Farming Year
Earth and Moon
Okanagan Chestnuts
New Water Collection Technologies for the Okanagan
The Tragedy of Kickininee Point, the Redfish, the Whitefish and Chief Soorimpt
Temporal Photography … With Cool Insects!
What Colour is Big Sagebrush?
Reading Faces in the Rock
Pacific Wild Currant Having a Great Day in the Sun
Gravity and Water and Deer Make Trails Together

9. The Healing Land?

By Harold Rhenisch on August 22, 2022 • ( Leave a comment )

After a meditation on what the benchlands of the mid-Similkameen produces on its own at The Place of Yellow Flowers… it’s time to return to the orchards that are there now. In […]

8. Calling Things By Their Right Names

By Harold Rhenisch on August 19, 2022 • ( 2 Comments )

Blind Creek, “the place of yellow flowers”, might indicate “rabbit brush…” …the bright, feathered sage that catches the sun in October and draws in jewelled bee flies, with their dense, brightly-coloured fur […]

7. Frustrations All Around

By Harold Rhenisch on August 18, 2022 • ( Leave a comment )

In 1923, Paul Terbasket went to jail for contempt of court for using siwiɬk, his ancestor, to irrigate the fruit trees at his inheritance, the story called Blind Creek. siwiɬk, a spirit […]

6. Converting tmxʷulaxʷ into “Land” & “Person” and then Property

By Harold Rhenisch on August 17, 2022 • ( 2 Comments )

After watching the dowries of two women, Lucy Simla and Florence Louden, become transformed into ownership over the last 2 posts, today we’ll take a bit of time to track the continued […]

5. A Second Woman and Her Dowry

By Harold Rhenisch on August 16, 2022 • ( 3 Comments )

It looks like some deal was struck. In 1894 Frances Xavier Richter left his syilx wife Lucy in a log cabin on her land, which was now in his name… …assigned his […]

4. A Woman Loses Her Dowry at a Poker Game

By Harold Rhenisch on August 15, 2022 • ( 1 Comment )

            In 1958, I was born into the tmʷwulaxʷ, a hundred years after it was enslaved as land and water. I lived first on an orchard above the Great Northern Railroad’s Similkameen Station and […]

3. How to Steal Water

By Harold Rhenisch on August 12, 2022 • ( 3 Comments )

At first, there was the ancestor called siwɬkʷ, who nourishes animals, plants and people. siwɬkʷ This is a spiritual force, like field mice, red osier dogwoods, golden eagles, or the peach leaf […]

2. Why This Book is Talking

By Harold Rhenisch on August 12, 2022 • ( 2 Comments )

This book is a grassland in written form. That is: it is a community of living beings in a geographic space created by grass, just as hemlocks and western red cedars create […]

1. How the Sukʷnaqinx Became the Okanagan and then the Sukʷnaqinx Again

By Harold Rhenisch on August 11, 2022 • ( 4 Comments )

Now, after all the years of this project, a story that reaches deep into American Imperial history and ends in what is now territory claimed by Canada in the north of my […]

House, Home and History

By Harold Rhenisch on August 6, 2022 • ( Leave a comment )

It costs $2400-$4500 to rent a house in the North Okanagan. Really. Look. In comparison, a wasp just needs to find a hidden place out of the rain. It costs an average […]

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The Okanagan in History: Table of Contents

This is a Blog about People in Place

I have worked here since 2011 telling stories of the Earth as preparation for a history of the Intermontane Grasslands of Central Cascadia and the rainswept coast that keeps them windy and dry. Now I am presenting this history, step by step, as I have learned it, often from the land itself. The history of this region includes the Canadian colonial space “The Okanagan Valley”, which lies over the land I live in above Canim Bay. The story stretches deep into the American West, into the US Civil War, the War of 1812, and the Louisiana Purchase, as well into the history of the Columbia District of the Hudson’s Bay Company. In all, the story spans the Chilcotin and Columbia volcanic plateaus and the basins that surround them. In this vast watershed lie homelands as old as 13,200 years (Sequim) and 16,200 years (Salmon River.) That’s how far we are walking together here, who are all the land speaking.

https://okanaganokanogan.com/harold-rhenischs-shop/ Click to buy my new book The Tree Whisperer, an extension of Thoreau's Wild Apples and a book about learning to write poetry by pruning fruit trees. Only Olaf Hauge, from Norway, and I have followed such a path.
  • The Sun Rises on a New Farming Year
  • Earth and Moon
  • Okanagan Chestnuts
  • New Water Collection Technologies for the Okanagan
  • The Tragedy of Kickininee Point, the Redfish, the Whitefish and Chief Soorimpt
  • Temporal Photography … With Cool Insects!
  • What Colour is Big Sagebrush?
  • Reading Faces in the Rock
  • Pacific Wild Currant Having a Great Day in the Sun
  • Gravity and Water and Deer Make Trails Together

Jesmond Mountain, Where the Coast and the Grasslands Meet

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  • December 2011
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This is a blog about living in place.

News, politics, art, literature, commentary, and happenings of importance to the watershed and path of the Okanagan River, no matter how far it flows.
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