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Reclaiming the Art of Living on the Earth

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Getting Our Land Back from the Pacific Northwest
Ten New Commercial Fruit Crops for the Okanagan
Ponderosa Pine: The Tree at the Heart of a People
The Pheasants are Messing With You (and the Coyotes, Too)
5. A Second Woman and Her Dowry
49. Pierre's Hole, Part 1
Wooden People in the Similkameen
The Day the Sky Came Down to Earth
Muskrats: the Mammalian Goose
15 More New Vegetables for the Okanagan

Soil Atmosphere and Eternity

By Harold Rhenisch on May 1, 2012 • ( Leave a comment )

Plants are creatures of light. They live in the air, eat light photons, and give off oxygen, yet strangely the dimmer the light they’re nibbling on the more efficient their photosynthesis becomes. […]

The Art of the Palette

By Harold Rhenisch on April 30, 2012 • ( 1 Comment )

Art can be made out of land in many ways. One is to build a highway. These art projects often are a form of politics. Take the highways of Eastern Washington, for […]

Reading a Mountain Farm

By Harold Rhenisch on April 28, 2012 • ( 1 Comment )

Eco-Agriculture is a form of social art that unites the earth and human artfulness. Since, as the poet Goethe showed us yesterday, what you put into an exploration is what you get […]

The Mother of All Plants

By Harold Rhenisch on April 27, 2012 • ( 1 Comment )

Miss your Mom? Here she is, the dear: This is the German Poet Johann Wolfgang Goethe’s Ancestral Plant He was taken with the idea that all plants of the world could be […]

The Lesson of the Ladybirds

By Harold Rhenisch on April 26, 2012 • ( 2 Comments )

Yesterday, I was talking about how my mother’s parents, and my father a generation after them, came to Coyote’s country, expecting to find physical freedom, and found something else again. In their […]

Eco-Agriculture in a Spring Light

By Harold Rhenisch on April 25, 2012 • ( 5 Comments )

A friend in Wales wrote yesterday that he was glad to see from these screens that spring was on its way to the Okanagan. So am I. Almost twenty years ago, when […]

Earth Writing

By Harold Rhenisch on April 23, 2012 • ( 5 Comments )

There is a mountain that turns the Similkameen River to the East as it crosses the Canada-US Border, and pushes it on to meet the Okanagan River at Ellisforde. It is called […]

Fire, Art, and Global Warming

By Harold Rhenisch on April 21, 2012 • ( Leave a comment )

Despite vital talk of global warming and increased carbon levels from burning, one thing remains certain and even more primary: the earth is a world of fire. The oxygen that plants separate […]

A New Garden

By Harold Rhenisch on April 20, 2012 • ( Leave a comment )

I’ve been digging. Wayyyyy back when U.S. President Johnson sent his boys into Cambodia, my school teacher told me that I’d better study hard or I’d wind up spending my life with […]

Fun Fun

By Harold Rhenisch on April 18, 2012 • ( Leave a comment )

So, let’s go to that premium human, salmon and wine habitat, Lake Chelan, for a moment, and see how the people are doing. This, after all, is the lake in which hydrofoil […]

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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.
  • Getting Our Land Back from the Pacific Northwest
  • Ten New Commercial Fruit Crops for the Okanagan
  • Ponderosa Pine: The Tree at the Heart of a People
  • The Pheasants are Messing With You (and the Coyotes, Too)
  • 5. A Second Woman and Her Dowry
  • 49. Pierre's Hole, Part 1
  • Wooden People in the Similkameen
  • The Day the Sky Came Down to Earth
  • Muskrats: the Mammalian Goose
  • 15 More New Vegetables for the Okanagan

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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