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Reclaiming the Art of Living on the Earth

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The Sun Rises on a New Farming Year
Ancient River
Watercourse to Nowhere
For Apricots, Spring Starts Early and Lasts All Year
A Life of Hazard in the Fields of the Sun
The Mystery of Buffalo Eddy
Quick Light, Slow Light, Great Two-Sided Heart
By These Fish We Take Our Measure
Why Does the Biggest Fir Tree Matter?
The Story of the Spirit of the Okanagan

Do You Digest Your Food Outside Your Body?

By Harold Rhenisch on February 18, 2020 • ( 1 Comment )

Birds do. Here’s a clutch of haws that have used frost and sun to break their acids down into sugars. This is the time of year that birds will come for them […]

Hope for the Earth: Settler Lessons from the Voles

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

The bunches grass bunches up. With the help of snow, it mounds. We could call it mound grass. We could call it a village. Note the vole highway in the lower centre […]

We Are the Sun

By Harold Rhenisch on February 15, 2020 • ( Leave a comment )

The sun came up last Wednesday. Isn’t that great! Looking west, away from it, was great fun. But not so much fun as looking east. Look at it projecting itself on ice […]

Changing the Climate One Porcupine at a Time

By Harold Rhenisch on February 13, 2020 • ( Leave a comment )

This is the closing of a series on mitigating climate change through local action. The Earth is very responsive. We can trust that. This estuary on Vernon Creek, for example, with its […]

Healing Climate Change in the Grasslands of the Okanagan

By Harold Rhenisch on February 12, 2020 • ( 4 Comments )

In the last couple of posts, I talked about the industrial, environmental and social costs of growing fruit in the Okanagan Valley. You can have a peek in this post: The True Costs […]

Race and Orcharding in British Columbia and Washington

By Harold Rhenisch on February 10, 2020 • ( Leave a comment )

This is the second of three posts about the costs of farming. This one is about the tangle between land and race. The next is about broader environmental and social factors. If […]

The True Costs of Farming in the Okanagan

By Harold Rhenisch on February 9, 2020 • ( 3 Comments )

Farming is expensive in Canada. One way of looking at it is shown by the apple plantation below. Let’s look: Posts: harvested on the plateau, trucked, milled, impregnated with toxic copper compounds, […]

How the Earth Flies

By Harold Rhenisch on February 8, 2020 • ( Leave a comment )

The air lowers its pressure with altitude, and fog appears. It lowers its pressure above draws of water, as well (the ones that are usually considered draws in the land), creating streams […]

How Fences Change the Climate

By Harold Rhenisch on February 5, 2020 • ( 4 Comments )

Last week in Kelowna, I talked to a group gathered at the library about the price of fences, such as this ‘deer fence’ around an orchard in Vernon. Deer need to go […]

The Life of Water

By Harold Rhenisch on February 5, 2020 • ( Leave a comment )

Under certain conditions, water freezes in curves around the expanding pressure of air, in a shape reminiscent of liquid water giving way to form. At other times, it freezes in the shape […]

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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
  • Watercourse to Nowhere
  • For Apricots, Spring Starts Early and Lasts All Year
  • A Life of Hazard in the Fields of the Sun
  • The Mystery of Buffalo Eddy
  • Quick Light, Slow Light, Great Two-Sided Heart
  • By These Fish We Take Our Measure
  • Why Does the Biggest Fir Tree Matter?
  • The Story of the Spirit of 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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