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

Apples and Dollars and Sense Through a Lens of Fear and Respect

By Harold Rhenisch on February 28, 2022 • ( 2 Comments )

Apple growers are in trouble. The government has a plan. “B.C.’s tree fruit growers play a key role in our province’s food system and our government is committed to the industry’s lasting […]

Where Trees Live in the Mind

By Harold Rhenisch on February 24, 2022 • ( 1 Comment )

You could also say: where the mind lives among the trees. Similarly… … the point where the trees become the land is the point where the land becomes the trees. It is […]

Great Big Lake Talking to the Sky

By Harold Rhenisch on February 24, 2022 • ( Leave a comment )

With this First Quarter of a Moon, I thought, the lake is breathing. Such intimate changes, step by step and wash by wash. In the creek, too. Psychedelic, even! When you look […]

Ice, Out of this World

By Harold Rhenisch on February 23, 2022 • ( Leave a comment )

Look at the ice I found up on the mountain today! Here’s the ice right beside it: And a few more centimetres to the left. Isn’t that beautiful! The bottom image appears […]

Apples and Economy in Crisis

By Harold Rhenisch on February 21, 2022 • ( 7 Comments )

Here’s an orchard planted 4 years ago. Well, a tiny bit of it. Note that the trees are dwarfs, planted as close as liners in a nursery. Note also that each tree […]

Race and Apples 10: A Positive Future

By Harold Rhenisch on February 19, 2022 • ( 4 Comments )

This is the tenth of a series on race and apples in Northern Cascadia and the stresses this racial past places on food security and affordability, land access and environmental resilience. I […]

Race and Apples 9: First Steps to a Better World

By Harold Rhenisch on February 18, 2022 • ( 2 Comments )

The 10+ years of this blog have consistently explored steps to a world beyond racial divisions in this valley, despite its racial history. We have a long way to go, but there […]

Race and Apples 8: Connecting food costs, land prices and white privilege

By Harold Rhenisch on February 17, 2022 • ( Leave a comment )

Before 1923, Indigenous farmers contributed to apple growing in Cascadia in four primary ways: As labourers at such places as the Hudson’s Bay Company gardens at Fort Vancouver, Fort Okanogan, Fort Colville […]

Race and Apples 7: Production and Distribution

By Harold Rhenisch on February 15, 2022 • ( 2 Comments )

Here we are, seven steps towards the future. It’s getting close! I’ve been following the trail of the racialized beginnings of fruit growing in Cascadia, to the costs of that in our […]

Race and Apples 6: Cherokee Peaches

By Harold Rhenisch on February 14, 2022 • ( 4 Comments )

Let’s talk about peaches for a moment. I think they will cast some light on one man’s solution to racial divisions, through fruit picking. The man was Henry David Thoreau, and in […]

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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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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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