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The Sun Rises on a New Farming Year
Ancient River
Illusions of Water Create Realities of Drought
A Hungry Day
The Mind of a Thistle
What Does Rural British Columbia Need?
The Chilcotin Ark Gets Her First Review
One of my Shanties is on the CBC Poetry Prize Long List
Indigenous Land Use and the Agricultural Land Reserve
For Apricots, Spring Starts Early and Lasts All Year

Apple Harvest, Gloriously

By Harold Rhenisch on September 29, 2020 • ( 7 Comments )

She’s a beautiful apple isn’t she, all knobbly like a green tomato, and with hail scars, to boot! Today was picking day! What a grand day. The box on the left are […]

Flowers Holding Flowers Up and Making a Festival Tent for the Birds

By Harold Rhenisch on September 28, 2020 • ( Leave a comment )

Today, a little story about what flowers are up to when I’m not watching. I thought I’d plant some cosmos, in memory of ones I had in a big garden under a […]

Living in the Mountains for Real

By Harold Rhenisch on September 25, 2020 • ( 2 Comments )

Let us compare rocks. Here’s a dry basalt flow at Chasm. The river that cut through it is gone. Painted Chasm Here’s a rock  halfway across the mountains, above the Fraser Fault. […]

The Spirit Caves of the Lower Fraser Canyon

By Harold Rhenisch on September 24, 2020 • ( 1 Comment )

High above the Fraser River at Yale…   … the mountain’s bones break apart. From here… …they tumble down to the river, broken apart, I presume, all the way down. Within them, […]

Rain Collection Technology Revisited

By Harold Rhenisch on September 22, 2020 • ( 1 Comment )

To catch the rain, you don’t need a bucket, a plate, a cup, or any other receptacle at all. As Horsetail teaches, spikes will do, rough spikes that provide enough surface that […]

Pine Grass: Fighting Fire with Fire

By Harold Rhenisch on September 21, 2020 • ( 1 Comment )

Pine grass is really cool stuff. It does what grass does, which is to say it grows up, but then it falls over. It doesn’t break its stalks to do so, and […]

How Wide is a Mule Deer’s Mouth?

By Harold Rhenisch on September 20, 2020 • ( Leave a comment )

A deer has been eating my plums. I didn’t think to get out there with a tape measure to get an exact measurement. I was too busy shooing her away. But it […]

Beyond the Settler Gaze

By Harold Rhenisch on September 19, 2020 • ( 1 Comment )

Beams of light, we say, meaning lines. Dusk on the Big Bar Esker Beams of light, we say… …meaning trees. A beam is a Baum, the Germans say, a bough, they say […]

Salt Lake in the Cariboo

By Harold Rhenisch on September 17, 2020 • ( 2 Comments )

Salt Lakes, that live from snow and evaporate in the sun, are terrible for cattle but great for humans, being sacred and all. Long Lake, Canoe Creek Illahie They are a fine […]

The Watcher and the Watched

By Harold Rhenisch on September 16, 2020 • ( Leave a comment )

What you see sees you. This makes no sense if seeing is identified as an personal act, but if sight is present, like light, then both the seer and the seen are […]

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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
  • Ancient River
  • Illusions of Water Create Realities of Drought
  • A Hungry Day
  • The Mind of a Thistle
  • What Does Rural British Columbia Need?
  • The Chilcotin Ark Gets Her First Review
  • One of my Shanties is on the CBC Poetry Prize Long List
  • Indigenous Land Use and the Agricultural Land Reserve
  • For Apricots, Spring Starts Early and Lasts All Year

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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