Chealsea's Lawn

For the Love of Our Landscapes

Manicured Gardens and Lawns

For so long, most western societies have valued groomed lawns and manicured gardens; those considered beautiful for their lack of weeds, crisp edges and often symmetrical landscaping. Having lived in urban areas most of my life, it wasn’t until moving to the Bruce Peninsula that I felt a sense of belonging, being surrounded by many other wild and weedy places. However, as our climate continues to change, more and more people are in search of ways to change course from the predicted direction we are headed for.

Chealsea's Garden

Depending on where you live, some of these impacts may be more noticeable, and in other places, less so. However, on a global scale, many parts of the world are experiencing the effects of rising sea levels, extreme temperatures and warming oceans. Our climate here in Canada is warming twice as fast as the global average. Biodiversity and habitat loss may also be observed, as the conditions of our own health continue to change, while the landscapes around us do too.

Though there are many clever and remarkable ways conservationists are trying to slow the pace of climate change (including the implementation of nature-based solutions and other effective area-based conservation measures), recognizing that many individuals and organizations are implementing strategies to reduce waste and emissions, I would argue that now is time for a change of narrative and for redefining the admirable qualities of the lands that surround us. Whether it be our backyards, community gardens or city parks, these are all opportunities to work together in support of a regenerative way forward, paying respect to every element of life that can help us fight climate change.

Of course, allowing for a wilder landscape is only one of the many actions we can take, it is one that has a cascade of positive outcomes. By creating these naturalized spaces, more land is being added to wildlife corridors (which can exist in different scales and ways), where all forms of life — mammals, birds, fish, amphibians and reptiles — can migrate, feed and drink, and we are connecting more habitats for them to move through as they continue through their different stages of life. Corridors may not have to be continuous, large or perfect to still help.

Chealsea's Lawn

A part of my lawn where only a walking path is mowed and other tall grasses, asters, black-eyed Susans, and more are allowed to flourish

The Impact on Our Own Land

Living in a household surrounded by a naturalized lawn on the Bruce Peninsula of southwestern Ontario, I’ve witnessed these words that I share come to life. Since mowing only enough space for walking paths, planting a vegetable garden and a firepit, my family and I have been able to give back just under half a hectare of land to nature in hopes of creating a small, but thriving, ecosystem. The birdsong, combining melodies of meadowlarks, buntings, blue and blackbirds, sparrows and robins, cheers us along, as we continue to tend to the abundance of new-to-us species — black-eyed Susan, common yarrow, gray goldenrod, and a colourful variety of asters (to name but a few). Though this requires some work, these efforts promote a yard that is, in many ways, self-sufficient.

Another approach to consider is creating a food forest, or planting a diverse array of edible species, in an attempt to mimic the ecosystems and patterns found in nature. This will typically include canopy layers of fruit and nut trees, berry bushes and shrubs, herbaceous plants valuable for food and medicine, ground covers, and, at the root layer, fungi and harvestable root vegetables (this is also a great opportunity to learn what’s native to your area, and to incorporate habitat for species at risk). This concept considers the many necessary layers for maintaining symbiotic relationships, from the tallest tree to the ground below while also creating food for those doing the planting and the species passing through.

A Bee in Chealsea's Garden

In some cases, municipalities have bylaws about what you can do with your outside areas, ensuring you meet a standard or level of care throughout your subdivision or community. Finding out what policies exist can be a great way to spark change.

Other Ways to Contribute

All this said, more and more people today are taking up residence in urban areas, including suburban neighbourhoods with little to no backyard, condos and apartments, group and community housing. This doesn’t mean you can’t make a difference, though! Along with starting conversations and sparking change, community gardens are another great addition to wildlife corridors, and they usually start thanks to the efforts of one or few people. This can be a great way to build community in an effort toward a viable and more biodiverse future, which will further awareness of the importance of maintaining our greenspaces.

Change doesn’t happen overnight. I encourage you to take a look around you. See the landscapes, both large and small, as opportunities to create food, habitats and pathways for those we share our world with, and remember that we are only as resilient as our ecosystems.

Paths on the property

 


Photos Provided by Chelsea Vieira


Truck with a Bike in the back

A Herbal Apprentice's Journey with Dayna & Alexander: Travel Nutrition and First Aid Tips

“Life is filled with so many peculiar little moments and those peculiar little moments are filled with so much life!”

For those of you who are reading this. I suppose a brief introduction of myself would be appropriate. My name is Alexander Jones and I am an herbal apprentice with Penelope Beaudrow. I grew up in the state of Texas but have been living the better half of the last three years in Canada. I am looking forward to blogging and sharing some thoughts with you all over this platform!

I have just arrived in Texas after a long month of traveling. I am sure many can relate to that sense of displacement and confusion that occurs after a laborious journey. The lovely moment of stillness settles into your being, but with it comes an exhausted restlessness that is difficult to ease. All the while you ask yourself, ‘where have I been?’ And ‘ Where am I now?’ ‘Have I been traveling for a month or an eternity?’

Fortunately, during these moments of post travel anxiety I am comforted in ways I never thought I could be. I sit with my dear friend Isabella on the front stoop of my fathers house and close my eyes. The spring air blows through the trees and calms my frazzled nerves. I throw the ball for my dog and talk with my father about his plants. I try my best to move slowly through the day. I have no place to go today and it is time for recuperation and there is no need to rush. I play some fiddle in the sun and then take a nap. Then, when I wake up feeling soft and light I call my partner Dayna and we catch up about our lives for a little while. I am appreciative of all of these little things in life that make me feel good. I am feeling grateful and in a lovely state of peace when I look up and realize I need to get ready for my gig! Then I remember that I haven’t eaten anything all day and I am feeling quite hungry all of a sudden. I ask myself… ‘What have I been eating recently?’

Food on The Road…

French Fries

My diet has been fairly inconsistent while I have been on the road. I try my best to stay healthy but it is hard when you are moving everyday. One morning you skip breakfast and the next you find yourself eating bad Mexican food at a truck stop. You get a nice salad that night but then the next day all you eat is granola. That is until your gig in Philadelphia and you are so hungry you buy a massive cheesesteak hoagie and devour it on the street. You enjoy every bite of it but then afterward your stomach is crying ‘ what are you doing to me!?’ So the next day you buy an avocado, a loaf of rye, a cucumber and some greens. That should keep me feeling good right?

Nevertheless, at 2:00 in the morning you stop to get gas in rural Tennessee. You see two corn dogs sitting on the warmer and plunge into a deep state of self loathing. You eat the corn dogs and enjoy every moment, but your stomach is so utterly terrified of what you are doing that it nearly regurgitates everything you just put in it.

You sit in the silence of the car and curse the fast food industry. These thoughts start to trigger some other questions in your mind. There are people in our country who eat this kind of food every day of their lives. You don’t get the nourishment you need from this kind of ‘food’. The next time you travel through the highways of America think a bit about the cycle of our globalized economy and how what a lot of people consider ‘food’ is not much more than heart disease wrapped in a to-go bag. The industries of production that rule our corporate plutocracy will happily feed the people ‘foods’ of such vile a nature that our body doesn’t even know how to digest it properly. It is yet another systemic atrocity fueled by the fire of capitalism. Nevertheless, I will tarry on this point no longer. This paradigm of our modern industrialized food network can lead to many avenues of discussion and debate. However, no matter the viewpoints of any individual, the question I would like to propose concerning this topic is paramount for the health and longevity of human beings. The overarching question is;

‘How does one stay healthy in such an unhealthy world?’

This question is so multifaceted and can be interpreted and answered in such a rich variety of ways that I would like to be a little more specific with my address. More acutely;

‘How does one stay healthy while traveling?’

We decided to include some of our favourite ways to help care for our bodies while travelling…

Truck with a Bike in the back

Nutrition Essentials for Being on The Road

Hi! I’m Dayna. I’m popping in on the latter half of this blog post to share my tried-and-true herbal first aid and nutrition essentials for being on the road. Both Alexander and I have had many episodes of planes, trains and automobiles in our lives. Since I began learning about herbs, I’ve always had some herbal support for on the road.

Lets talk about herbal essentials for keeping our bodies just feeling well during travel. Here is a non-exhaustive list of some of my travel essentials for keeping my body “regular” in an irregular environment:

  • Trace mineral drops – Bottled water, tap water from all over… We don’t know what we are getting while out on the road and trace mineral drops are your friend!
  • A bag of dried prunes – An age old method for an extremely common problem we all experience while traveling! A few prunes a day will keep your bowel movements regular! Stock up at the bulk store and keep them around 🙂
  • Mineral food powder – Some kind of blend of powdered seaweed, nutritive herbs like nettles and raspberry leaves, nutritional yeast and good quality salt. This can be incorporated by sprinkling it on just about any food you’re eating, takeout or otherwise.
  • Digestif tincture – Eating at hours outside of your routine, unfamiliar meals, the list goes on! A good digestive tincture will come in handy. Taking those bitters before meals is going to do a lot for us.
  • Oatmeal – This seems a bit silly to put in here, but I couldn’t begin to count the amount of times that I’ve made oatmeal in a mason jar using hot water from a gas station. Personally, having a bag of oats at hand helps me have access to fiber and gives me a sense of control over my food intake. We’ve all been subject to having a sad handful of nuts and a chocolate bar from the gas station and calling it “breakfast”.
  • Optional tea blends – Depending on the type of trip you’re going on and what kind of space you have, if you’re able to, bring some of your favourite teas. They simply bring a sense of comfort and familiarity. You may reach for that bedtime blend, or that bloat-reducing blend more than you think!

If you have the space, try to bring something that just helps you feel comfortable. Something that carries a sense of home. Often-times for me, it is a perfume roller. Just some familiar scents! Compact and simple, and very effective for when I need it to ground myself.


Travel First Aid kit

There is definitely a difference between a first aid kit for home and a first aid kit for travel. At home, with the luxury of space, one’s apothecary would be equipped for most anything. However, I do spend a lot of time on the road and I really love to travel light. Like, really really light. Having a compact first aid kit of multi-purpose items is key.

In my years of travel, my first aid kit has changed, expanded and contracted. It still is changing to this day based on which herbs and remedies work best for me at any given time, which season we are in, and so on.

That being said, Here is my Travel First Aid kit – all of which fits into a small makeup bag!

Firstly, I don’t carry medicinal teas for “treating”. They are subject to losing potency, getting wet and perishing and most of all, they are bulky. If I wished to treat anything fully, rather than just having one cup, I wouldn’t have the space to carry the amount of tea required. For this reason, I stick to tinctures for emergency situations.

  • Propolis tincture – For a variety of ailments, specifically treatment of upper respiratory infection, immune function, and to use topically to prevent the infection of and to mend wounds. Propolis is a great “all in one” sort of tincture to have!
  • Some sort of Sleep Tincture blend – For both restless nights and moments of anxiety. It surprises me how often I use this, and how often others need it, too. It’s very useful. I find myself offering this tincture to friends often, and it helps. When we are traveling, we are sleeping somewhere new every night, and having some herbal support can be effective to get our bodies to actually rest even though we are in a new and changing environment.
  • Throat spray of Sage, Marshmallow, Echinacea and Propolis tinctures, with honey in a spray bottle – Extremely useful active responders to upper respiratory infections and symptoms of hayfever, etc. If traveling in dry climates, this is great to keep on your bedside to hydrate your throat in the night when those dry coughs are keeping you up.
  • Pain management Tincture of Willow Bark or California Poppy Tincture -Though, the latter has come in handy for both pain and anxiety and I find myself using it more often. Willow Bark I find more effective during a headache, and if I had the choice I would bring both.
  • Kloss’ Liniment – A plethora of topical uses. A little goes a long way. I’ve used this for an endless amount of situations and now that I have, I wouldn’t be without it. For travel, I keep a 2 ounce bottle of liniment with a dropper top for easy use.
  • An all purpose salve – For dry skin, mending wounds, lip balm, stings, etc. The blend of salve that I travel with changes depending on what I have available. A home-made blend of something like Calendula, Comfrey, Arnica, Plantain, Chaparral, and St. John’s wort would be ideal. However, If I don’t have access to making such things, and there isn’t anything like it made by a local herbalist, I find myself reaching for the “Super Salve” original salve with the green label. It’s a great blend and I can usually find it at any health food store.
  • Sore muscle/bruising salve – I think it best to have a separate salve for this, if I have the space to carry it. A potent Arnica/Comfrey/St John’s Wort blend is great. In a pinch, Super Salve makes a good Arnica muscle balm that is also at most health food stores. It’s good to find brands that work for you that you can rely on when you don’t have your homemade medicines with you!
  • French Green Clay – I’ve used this for relieving pressure headaches, and as a drawing poultice. It does wonders for relieving discomfort from bug bites/stings. Lots to be said about its digestive support in an emergency of the stomach. Sometimes it just makes a nice rejuvenating face mask for tired skin. It travels well and I find myself reaching for it more often than I think I will.
  • Yarrow Powder – for stopping bleeding. I’ve used this in-action before and it worked extremely well. I always keep it on me. Cayenne does the same thing, and is also a helpful ally during a bout of the flu or a cold, among its stimulating effects. Perhaps I could keep some of that around, too.
  • Gauze or Cheesecloth – for making poultices, dressing wounds, creating an emergency sling, for making bandages.
  • A needle and thread – Wishing that I wouldn’t have to give myself or someone else stitches, and that a hospital would be near in such a situation. But in the case that one would not be close, it would be best to have a needle and thread rather than not. And in any case, I’ve always got endless clothes to mend and buttons to replace either way.

If I have ample space, I’ll also bring..

  • A hot water bottle – I often use it for menstrual cramps, but it has come in handy for many other situations in which sustained heat is needed.
  • Emergen-C powder – A real game changer in moments of dehydration, and during the winter months.
  • Thieves Essential Oil Blend – I don’t use essential oils often, but I do find this blend very helpful. It comes in handy for a lot of things, specifically disinfecting. I love to add a few drops to a bowl of soapy water when I am cleaning surfaces/floors. I cured myself of a bad sinus infection with a few drops of thieves oil in face steams once when it was the only thing I had with me.

 


Photos provided by Serena Mor


Coffee Bean

Coffee: The Good the Bad and the Ugly

An Historic Global Enterprise

Coffee is one of the most ubiquitous and widely consumed beverages in the world, second only to water. The already extraordinary demand for coffee only seems to be increasing; global coffee production reached 175.35 million 60-kilogram bags as of 2020/2021, increasing from about 165 million 60-kilogram bags in 2019/2020.

Coffee drinking, and the knowledge of the coffee tree as a medicinal substance, dates back to at least the mid 15th century, where we find our first credible historical evidence pertaining to its use in the accounts of Yemini author Ahmed al-Ghaffar. The coffee tree was most likely introduced into Yemen by way of trade routes with Ethiopia from across the Red Sea. Thus, given that the coffee tree was being traded and exported from Africa, it is highly unlikely that its medicinal, recreational, and social values were only realized in the 15th century, in a country where the tree itself was not native. The use of coffee almost certainly reaches back much further than the 15th century, though specifics concerning its initial discovery by the peoples of the African continent and its use in their traditional systems of medicine and culture remain obscure.

Coffee Plantation illustration from 1881

When it comes to the earliest detailed historical records concerning the use of coffee, we can look to the work of Harvard historian Cemal Kafadar, where it is revealed that the social significance of coffee in Islamic society was established by way of its use in Sufi religious rituals:

“To turn to the early history of coffee and coffeehouses, more specifically, there must have been many instances when coffee was consumed as a plant found in the natural environment of Ethiopia and Yemen, but the earliest users who regularized its consumption as a social beverage, to the best of our knowledge, were Sufis in Yemen at the turn of the fifteenth century. Evidently, they discovered that coffee gave them a certain nimbleness of the mind, which they were keen on cultivating during their night-time vigils and symposia. Thus started the long history of the appreciation of coffee as a companion to mental exercise and conviviality, particularly when one wished to stretch or manipulate the biological and social clock.”1

The Start of  The Coffee House Phenomenon 

It is from this point onward that coffee houses started to appear across Arabia and gradually, over the next three centuries, throughout the rest of the world. The historical significance of the coffee house is inextricably bound up with the historical significance of coffee itself; the coffee house has always served as a kind of public institution and cultural hub through which all manner of information – from the common and mundane to the revolutionary and political – was shared and disseminated amongst the population. Even today, in a world increasingly characterized by digital identities and disembodied forms of social engagement, the coffee house still serves as a place of respite, where people can turn for a semblance of embodied interpersonal interaction and exchange in an evermore alienating and depersonalizing world.

Coffee’s appearance in Europe (especially England and Germany) in the late 17th century coincided with the discovery that clocks could be controlled by harmonic oscillators. This was followed in the 18th century by a series of technological discoveries and breakthrough inventions that lead to increasingly precise clocks, and hence to a heretofore unimaginable regimentation of time itself. Is it a mere coincidence that coffee – utilized by so many for the purposes of maintaining attention and increasing stamina – came to Europe just as machine production and the Industrial Revolution, with the inhuman demands it placed on workers, led to a decline in hand production and the artisanal trades of the past? From the perspective of cultural history, coffee has a dual identity; as a tool for social conviviality and the free flow and exchange of ideas (exemplified by the institution of the coffee house), as well as a crucial ingredient in the engineering of the industrial worker, allowing for the kind of over-stimulation that is required to meet the demands of the fast paced, mechanized world of industrial society. The hegemony of standardized clock time, and the counting of seconds, minutes and hours as measures of productivity and profitability, violated the natural diurnal rhythms that human beings had always used to orient their lives. The question remains as to the extent to which coffee played a role in one of the biggest cultural shifts in recorded history.

Pouring Coffee

Historical Religion and Politics

The opinion of the medical profession with respect to coffee has been divided throughout history. Coffee is exemplary when it comes to demonstrating the degree to which medical opinion can be deeply influenced and shaped by cultural and political trends and assumptions. Indeed, the medical, socio-political and religious views of coffee were at times inextricably bound up with each other, making it next to impossible to disentangle one from the other. Where does religious belief end and medical “fact” begin? We can explore this issue by taking a closer at the early history of coffee in the Islamic world, and the changing tide of opinion with respect to the most influential and powerful drink in the world, next to water itself.

In contrast to the view that the introduction of coffee into liturgical practice was a great blessing in that it allowed worshipers to better execute their devotions to God, other religious scholars argued that coffee should be outlawed insofar as it had never been mentioned in the Quran. Many of these scholars were also concerned about what they perceived to be the deleterious health consequences of coffee consumption. But this controversy is even further muddied when we stop to consider the political climate of the time. While some commentators argue that the various attempts to outlaw coffee in the Islamic world were a consequence of religious and medical opinion, the truth is more likely that coffee (and the social revolution spurred by the birth of the coffee house) was perceived as a political threat.

Between the early 16th and late 18th centuries, a host of religious influencers and secular leaders, many but hardly all in the Ottoman Empire, took a crack at suppressing the black brew. Few of them did so because they thought coffee’s mild mind-altering effects meant it was an objectionable narcotic (a common assumption). Instead most, including Murad IV [the Ottoman sultan who issued a ban on coffee in 1633], seemed to believe that coffee shops could erode social norms, encourage dangerous thoughts or speech, and even directly foment seditious plots.”2

In what is perhaps an unexpected twist, our brief survey of the cultural and political history of coffee has revealed the extent to which many of our deeply held assumptions, sometimes taken as objective fact, in actuality rest upon a socio-political and theological underpinning of opinion and currents of dogmatic belief which colour our perception, of which we may be mostly or even totally oblivious.


 

PART II: Coffee as Medicine, Coffee as Poison

What is the difference between a food and a medicine? In his essay from 1803 titled ‘On the Effects of Coffee’, Samuel Hahnemann (the founder of homeopathy) set out to clarify this distinction and to warn of the deleterious effects of the unchecked consumption of medicinal substances, taking coffee as a paradigmatic example. Hahnemann writes:

Medicinal things are substances that do not nourish, but alter the healthy condition of the body; any alteration, however, in the healthy state of the body constitutes a kind of abnormal, morbid condition. Coffee is a purely medicinal substance. All medicines have, in strong doses, a noxious action on the sensations of the healthy individual. No one ever smoked tobacco for the first time in his life without disgust; no healthy person ever drank unsugared black coffee for the first time in his life with gusto — a hint given by nature to shun the first occasion for transgressing the laws of health, and not to trample so frivolously under our feet the warning instinct implanted in us for the preservation of our life.”3

A medicine is a substance that serves to alter the state of health, whereas a food is a substance that serves to provide nourishment. When medicines are taken in excess, or when they are not properly indicated for an individual person, they can produce an abnormal or even pathological condition. Medicines can preserve life and maintain health, though they can also derange the state of health and take life away when they are given without the requisite attention or care. Food substances can likewise produce states of disease if they are eaten to excess, though the deleterious effects of foods generally take a much longer time to manifest when compared to the stronger power of medicinal substances to affect deep seated changes on the level of constitutional vitality.

While in 1803 Hahnemann condemned the use of coffee, going to so far as to argue that its unchecked consumption was the origin of many of the chronic diseases that plagued humanity, he later toned down his opinion, having developed a much more sophisticated theory of the origins of chronic diseases by way of the concept of the miasms (the 18th century precursor to our contemporary theories of epigenetics, and one of the philosophical foundations of homeopathic medical practice to this day). Nevertheless, Hahnemann was right to emphasize the extent to which medicinal substances, when treated as foods and consumed injudiciously, can exert profound effects on the state of health. This is especially true if conditions of heightened susceptibility to a given substance are at play in an individual’s constitution (think here of the example of severe allergic reactions to substances that to most people are extremely benign). Human response to coffee and to caffeine varies widely, and like any assessment of a medicinal substance, individual response patterns must always be given a higher regard than overly generalized, universal theories and pronouncements. The difference between a medicine and a poison is ultimately in the dose, and the effect of the dose is always weighed in relation to the individual to whom it is administered.

The Hahnemann of 1803 represents one extreme when it comes to thinking about coffee as medicine. A look at the medical literature on coffee, from from the 15th century to the present day, is full of contradictory and opposing points of view. Coffee was for centuries listed in the pharmacological and medical literature that herbal and Eclectic physicians relied upon, such as the Codex Medicus. Coffee remained classified as a medicinal substance in materia medica and pharmacopoeias until the twentieth century, when the use of natural medicinal substances was largely supplanted by the products of the petrochemical drug industry. Maria Letícia Galluzzi Bizzo et al. recount some of the claims made about coffee in the medical traditions of the West, emphasizing and siding with the view of coffee as a universal elixir of health (the poplar opposite of Hahnemann’s position):

As a panacea, coffee has been prescribed as infusions, capsules, potions, or injections against a vast spectrum of diseases— from hernias to rheumatism, from colds to bronchitis. In the first half of the nineteenth century, medical controversies underlined the therapeutic use of caffeine in chronic conditions such as heart and circulation problems because of difficulties establishing the proper doses and the risk of toxicity to the heart. Nevertheless, the notion that such use would be safe prevailed. Recent research has opened new horizons regarding the use of coffee as a medicine, with discoveries of possible distinct preventive and curative applications of coffee’s substances.”4

The Coffee of Today

The medical opinions of the past are in many ways inadequate when it comes to judging the effects of coffee today. The coffee of the 1800s is not the coffee of the 21st century. Consider, for example, the question of pesticides. Only about 3% of the world’s coffee supply today is produced using organic methods, and we now know that the residues of pesticides found on coffee beans, one of the most pesticide ridden agricultural products in the world, are for the most part not destroyed by the roasting process. Many countries that produce coffee use pesticides that have been banned in North America and Europe over health and safety concerns, and a significant number of the countries which import this coffee do not have maximum residue limits (MRLs) when it comes to the pesticides that are used and can be detected on the harvested coffee beans.

Coffee grinder

Mold is yet another issue. When not stored in a temperature controlled storage facility, coffee beans are also highly susceptible to developing mold, which comes with its own host of long term adverse health effects. Even roasting techniques have a great bearing on coffee’s potential effects on one’s state of health. One study carried out by the International Association for Food Protection, for example, comes to the following ambiguous conclusion concerning the question of the carcinogenicity of coffee and how this is affected by the roasting process:

“Roasting coffee results in not only the creation of carcinogens such as acrylamide, furan, and poly-cyclic aromatic hydrocarbons but also the elimination of carcinogens in raw coffee beans, such as endotoxins, preservatives, or pesticides, by burning off. However, it has not been determined whether the concentrations of these carcinogens are sufficient to make either light or dark roast coffee more carcinogenic in a living organism.”5

There are a whole host of other socio-economic and political considerations that should be borne in mind with respect to the global coffee industry of the 21st century. Health is not a purely individual consideration; the health of your body and mind are indissociably bound up with the functioning of the larger natural and artificial systems in which you exist. We are unwitting participants in a global system of capitalist exploitation which, through the untiring impulses of profitability and expansion, inevitably leads towards the total degeneration of the natural world and the complete immiseration of its inhabitants. A sober and careful look at coffee and its economic, political, and agricultural ramifications, inevitably alerts us to a confrontation with this reality.


 

Capitalism, Globalization, and the Politics of Coffee Production:

The pesticide residues found in your average bag of coffee are inconsequential in comparison to the toxicity that third world coffee farmers are exposed to on a daily basis. These farmers, in addition to the dire health consequences of chronic chemical exposure that are an unavoidable part of their work, lead lives that are dictated by the brutal conditions of strenuous labour, physical exploitation and the inter-generational cycles of inescapable poverty, child labour and indentured servitude. Alice Nguyen, in an article written for The Borgen Project (a non-profit organization dedicated to addressing the global issues of poverty and hunger), unflinchingly encapsulates these issues:

Growing coffee requires intensive manual work such as picking, sorting, pruning, weeding, spraying, fertilizing and transporting products. Plantation workers often toil under intense heat for up to 10 hours a day, and many face debt bondage and serious health risks due to exposure to dangerous agrochemicals. In Guatemala, coffee pickers often receive a daily quota of 45 kilograms just to earn the minimum wage: $3 a day. To meet this minimum demand, parents often pull their children out of school to work with them. This pattern of behavior jeopardizes children’s health and education in underdeveloped rural areas, where they already experience significant barriers and setbacks.”6

Facts like these seem to underlie the importance of Fairtrade and Organic Certification for coffee and related products, which in principle strive to ensure sustainable development, equitable trading conditions, and giving autonomy back to marginalized farmers and agricultural workers. However, consumers in the Western world must not fall into the self-congratulatory trap of thinking themselves morally superior because they are able to afford the often vastly more expensive Organic and Fairtrade Certified products that are simply outside of the economic reach of many. The reality is that, in many instances, the increased profits from organically grown coffee products do not reach the farmers and laborers themselves, but end up lining the pockets of the distributors, who in many regions of the world function in similar ways as do drug cartels.

What is more, there are the significant and rarely discussed pitfalls of introducing organic agricultural techniques to farmers who work on lands that have been treated with chemical pesticides for decades. Such agricultural land will require significant time and effort in order to be rehabilitated such that organic farming can be sustained there. This means that farmers who are already struggling to maintain their operations run the risk of falling even further into economic enslavement if they are coerced into adopting the organic methods that righteous and ecologically minded politicians, consumers, academics and other self proclaimed “experts” in the Western world preach about with moral fervour.

Consider the following story, told by the son of a soybean farmer working in El Toledo, Costa Rica. He recalls a childhood memory of the year his father was convinced by Penn State University professors to adopt organic agricultural techniques, under the promise of increased profitability and the ecological restoration of their farmland:

“The professors convinced my dad to make a wholesale change from conventional soybean farming to organic. They warned him that he might lose up to 15% of his yield, but that this would be offset by a number of factors: He could sell his soybeans for more, as they were organic. His soil would be healthier. He would spend less on chemical inputs, and thus save money. The reality was very different. Instead of losing 15% of our yield, we lost 50%. Instead of spending less money, he spent more: the gas he spent to tractor over the weeds alone outstripped his usual chemical spending.

He ended up taking a job in a factory to avoid bankruptcy. All I remember is that when I was eight, I never saw my dad: he was either weeding the soybeans or at the factory. As soon as that season ended, we went back to chemical farming.”7

Many such stories, pertaining to all manner of farming from all parts of the world, can be found if one cares to look beyond the ‘Certified Organic’ and ‘Fairtrade’ labels that one sees plastered on one’s favourite products lining the local supermarket shelves. From coffee and soybeans to chocolate and Brazil nuts and beyond, the exploitation of labourers and the degeneration of the world’s ecosystems are part and parcel of our contemporary agricultural systems of production, whether conventional or organic. Any consideration of “sustainability” must always be understood within the framework of the global capitalist economic system in which we exist. As the political and cultural theorist Mark Fisher so poignantly put it in his book Capitalist Realism: Is There No Alternative?:

“The relationship between capitalism and eco-disaster is neither coincidental nor accidental: capital’s ‘need of a constantly expanding market’, its ‘growth fetish’, mean that capitalism is by its very nature opposed to any notion of sustainability.”8

The preceding section of this article is not intended to inculcate feelings of guilt, a sentiment which only leads to a place of demoralization and further defeat. Rather, it was written out of an honest assessment of the situation in which we all find ourselves as consumers in a system which, in its vast complexity, far transcends the individual decisions that you and I make on a daily basis. It is only from a place of sober awareness that a genuine desire for a better world can be nurtured and allowed to bear fruit.

And now, with these economic, cultural and political factors in mind, let us turn to consider the detailed effects of coffee from a more purely medical perspective. A well rounded discussion of coffee requires that we adopt a multi-perspective view. Single vision is, after all, what the capitalist system of exploitation itself is based on.

Coffee Bean


 

PART III: Coffee’s Medicinal Effects: What Can Reliably Be Said?

Coffee is a nervine stimulant, i.e. an herb that causes excitation and stimulation of the nervous system, specifically by engaging or heightening the activity of the sympathetic nervous system. The most widely known and discussed function of the sympathetic nervous system is the mediation of the neuronal and hormonal stress response pattern known as the fight-or-flight response. The sympathetic nervous system is what allows the body to quickly react and respond to situations of threat and danger, to situations that threaten survival. But the sympathetic nervous system cannot be adequately understood if we look at it as an isolated regulatory or physiological function. The sympathetic nervous system works in concert with the parasympathetic nervous system and together make up what is called the autonomic nervous system. The autonomic nervous system regulates and controls many of the functions of the body’s internal organs. When we consider the interdependence and co-functioning of the sympathetic and parasympathetic nervous systems, then we can begin to understand that the stress response typically associated with the sympathetic nervous system is one pole or extreme of a greater homeostatic controlling mechanism which oversees the feeling and function of the human organism on many levels.

However, excessive stimulation of the sympathetic nervous system can and does result in undue consequences. Herbalist David Hoffmann explains the action of nervine stimulant herbs, and relates their functions to the excessively heightened states of excitation that characterize the frantic and overwrought patterns of 21st century existence:

Direct stimulation of nervous tissue is not often needed in our hyperactive modern lives. In most cases, it is more appropriate to stimulate the body’s innate vitality with the help of nervine or bitter tonics. These herbs work to augment bodily harmony, and thus have a much deeper and longer-lasting effect than nervine stimulants. In the 19th century, herbalists placed much more emphasis upon stimulant herbs. It is, perhaps, a sign of our times that the world now supplies us with more than enough stimulation. When direct nervine stimulation is indicated, the best herb to use is Cola acuminata, although Paidlinia cupana, Coffea arahica, Ilex paraguayensis, and Camellia sinensis may also be used. One problem with these commonly used stimulants is their side effects; they are themselves implicated in the development of certain minor psychological problems, such as anxiety and tension. Some of the volatile oil-rich herbs are also valuable stimulants. Some of the best and most common are Rosmarinus officinalis and Mentha piperita.”9

Caffeine is the most widely recognized and studied active ingredient in coffee as well as many other stimulant herbs (such as those listed in the above quotation). But coffee also contains a wide array of other important constituents such as tannins, fixed oils, carbohydrates, and proteins, which should not be forgotten, as coffee, just like all herbs, are irreducible to their component parts. It is through the roasting process that caffeine is liberated from the raw coffee bean. Caffeine produces diuretic and stimulant effects, specifically on the respiratory, cardiovascular and central nervous systems.10 Caffeine is also an analgesic adjuvant, and hence is incorporated into a wide number of proprietary aspirin and acetaminophen preparations.11 Coffee also contains phytoestrogens, which have been subject of a great deal of scientific debate. Phytoestrogens can play a role in addressing symptoms and conditions caused by estrogen deficiency, which may be especially pronounced in premenopausal and post-menopausal women. They are also implicated in memory and learning processes and have been shown to possess anxiolytic effects. The research into the effects of phytoestrogens on human health is still ongoing, and is a fruitful and fascinating area of research. For example, consider the fact that the consumption of beer, bourbon, mescaline, cannabis, and coffee all produce phytoestrogenic effects – the relationship between psychoactivity and phytoestrogenic compounds certainly needs to be more deeply explored!

When it comes to consider possible contraindications and adverse reactions from coffee consumption, we should note that coffee, along with fried and fatty foods, chocolate and alcoholic beverages, can lead to or serve to aggravate LES dysfunction (the lower esophageal sphincter, which links the esophagus and the stomach). Obesity, pregnancy, cigarette smoking, and a structural weakness of the diaphragm known as hiatus hernia can also contribute to a weakening of the LES. If the LES fails to properly close, stomach acid can easily splash up from the stomach into the esophagus, leading to severe acid reflux and heartburn. Gastroesophageal reflux disease (commonly known by the acronym GERD) is associated with a leaking of stomach contents back into the esophagus. When there is a prolonged period of LES dysfunction, this can lead to acid and chemical damage of the esophagus, that is, to GERD.

The consumption of coffee and other caffeine containing substances can also result in headaches. The headaches that are associated with coffee consumption are often related to caffeine dependence, which can lead to significant withdrawal symptoms in some individuals. As Hoffmann writes:

Caffeine can cause headaches by increasing the body’s expectation for it. When blood levels of caffeine drop, symptoms of withdrawal, including headache, may set in. That’s why some heavy coffee drinkers experience “morning headache” until they have that first cup of coffee. Caffeine headaches are usually experienced as a dull, throbbing pain on both sides of the head. Once the body rids itself of caffeine, the headaches disappear on their own. Such headache sufferers, however, are often unaware that their problem is due to caffeine and will continue to drink coffee, ensuring that the problem will recur.”12

We can look to the homeopathic literature to round out our consideration of the spectrum of effects that coffee can have. In homeopathy, the medicinal effects of a given substance are elaborated through clinical experience as well as through provings. A proving entails rigorous and detailed observation of the effects of a substance when administered at a sufficient dosage in its crude form and/or as a dynamic or potentized medicine (having been subjected to serial dilution and succussion or vigorous shaking), such that it produces modifications to the state of a person’s health and disposition. The fundamental principle of homeopathic prescribing is that like treats like. In other words, if a substance can cause a certain symptom on the physical, mental/emotional, or dispositional level in a relatively healthy person, then it can in like manner work to treat those same symptoms when they are expressed by a patient who comes seeking care.

Dutch Homeopath Jan Scholten describes the essence of the patient needing potentized coffee (Coffea Arabica) in the following way:

“Coffea is the ideal intellectual worker. They feel stable, focused and self-confident in their mind… They are independent and responsible, following their own plans.”13

The coffea patient often possess a great deal of stability, they are responsible, hard working, persevering, and their actions are well organized and carefully planned. Coffee in its crude form can serve to promote these qualities in people, so it is no wonder that many rely upon it in a culture which emphasizes work, productivity, and efficiency. Scholten explains that the mind of the coffea patient can be active and full of ideas. They can have clear, active, and lucid thoughts, are fast and easy learners with great comprehension skills. They can experience a rush of thoughts, a heightened sense of judgment and sharp and acute states attention. They tend to be quite ambitious people, with a strong and even overpowering need to achieve. They can feel that they must work as hard as possible to fulfill their own expectations, as well as the expectations of their parents (especially the father). Given the great demands that they place upon themselves, and the seriousness with which they approach their assigned tasks and responsibilities, the coffea patient can experience states of pronounced nervous agitation, excitement, exaltation, hilarity, restlessness and irritability – think of the states associated with and over-excitation of the nervous system.

Oversensitiveness is a keynote of this remedy, and all of the senses – sight, hearing, smell, taste, and touch – can be greatly heightened. Eating and drinking are things that they do quickly and in a hurried way, as befits their general tendency towards restlessness, hurry, and hyperactivity. The coffea patient may also be the type of person who feels that they cannot live up to the pronounced and unrelenting demands and expectations that they are faced with, and hence suffer from a lack of self confidence, which is improved through the use of stimulants. They feel things intensely, and can have a tendency to exaggerate their emotions and be highly susceptible to the impressions to which they are exposed. Emotional excesses, from extraordinary states of pleasure, optimism, and joy (coffea is a remedy for ailments from excessive joy) to the polar opposite of pronounced despair and despondency, with sharp anger and rudeness. When in this latter state, they can throw everything away, disposing of all that they have been given – in contrast, they can also be excessively clingy, and want to desperately hold on to people and their possessions. They feel pain intensely, and their anguish can run deep. Coffea can have the following delusions: “paradise, magnificent grandeur, beautiful world, heavenly scenes.” They experience states of benevolence and idealism, with a desire to perform good deeds, and veneration for the Supreme Being. Coffea may be prescribed for “ailments from vexation, mortification, frustration; discords between relatives, friends; hurry; anticipation; sudden emotions, pleasurable surprises.” The treatment of a variety of headaches, neuralgic pains and spasmodic afflictions, heart palpitations, digestive disturbances, and states of insomnia may also be addressed with coffea.

Roasted Coffee beans in Jar


 

In Conclusion…

From our explorations into all things coffee, we may conclude that it is, perhaps more than any other substance in existence, paradigmatic of the culture of modernity. From controversies regarding altered states of consciousness to the regimentation of life brought about through the reign of clock time, from the exploitation of agricultural workers in the 3rd world to meet the needs of the Western consumer to controversies in the medical profession concerning the difference between medicinal and poisonous substances, coffee is both practically and symbolically encoded with many of the most pressing concerns of the culture of modernity. Our investigations into coffee have served to reveal the myriad ways in which everyday substances are always already embedded within and serve to reflect the complex cultural, economic, and political realities in which we exist. The tremendous extent to which plants play a role in shaping human culture through modification of the patterns of human thought and behaviour has also become clear. We have long ago reached the point that our world would be unrecognizable without coffee.


Footnotes:

 1 Cemal Kafadar. ‘How Dark is the History of the Night, How Black the Story of Coffee, How Bitter the Tale of Love: The Changing Measure of Leisure and Pleasure in Early Modern Istanbul’ in Medieval and Early Modern Performance in the Eastern Mediterranean, ed. by Arzu Öztürkmenand Evelyn Birge Vitz, lmems 20 (Turnhout: Brepols, 2014).

2Mark Hay. ‘In Istanbul, Drinking Coffee in Public Was Once Punishable by Death.’Atlas Obscura, May 22, 2018. https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/was-coffee-ever-illegal

3 Samuel Hahnemann, The Lesser Writings Of Samuel Hahnemann, ed. and trans. R.E. Dudgeon. New York: William Radde, 1852. Pg. 392.

4 Maria Letícia Galluzzi Bizzo et al. ‘Highlights in the History of Coffee Science Related to Health.’ Science Direct, 7 November 2014. https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/B9780124095175000024

5 Joseph Kim et al. ‘Safest Roasting Times of Coffee To Reduce Carcinogenicity.’ PubMed, 1 June 2022. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35226750/#:~:text=Abstract,or%20pesticides%2C%20by%20burning%20off.

6 Alice Nguyen. ‘Bitter Origins: Labor Exploitation in Coffee Production.’ Borgen Project, 24 September, 2020. https://borgenproject.org/labor-exploitation-in-coffee-production/

7 Brian Stoffel. ‘Urban Elites, Organic Farming & The Hypocrisy of No Skin-In-The-Game’. 14 June, 2017.

https://medium.com/@stoffel.brian/urban-elites-organic-farming-the-hypocrisy-of-no-skin-in-the-game-b9f95b655686

8 Mark Fisher. Capitalist Realism: Is There No Alternative? Oregon: Zero Books,2009. Pg. 18-19.

9 David Hoffmann. Medical Herbalism. Vermont: Healing Art Press, 2003. Pg. 519.

10 Ibid, pg. 124.

11 Ibid.

12 Ibid, pg. 365.

13 Jan Scholten. ‘Coffea Arabica.’ QJURE (undated publication). https://qjure.com/remedy/coffea-arabica-2/


Illustrations/Images:

  • Illustration: Novel “Coffee: From Plantation to Cup. A Brief History of Coffee Production and Consumption” 1881 [x]
  • Photos provided by Serena Mor


Buckthorn Tree

Old Fence Rows and Buckthorn

Spring is Ever Drawing Nearer

My fingers are itching to be in the earth once more – to sow and plant — bringing me into a deeper connection with the Earth once more. Our seeds have all been delivered and our trees ordered, and we are already busy here on the farm. The sugar shack is getting a new wind break and the chainsaw is sharpened and ready to go. With the snows melted and frost still in the ground it is the perfect time of year to work away at controlling the invasive Buckthorn.

As many of you know, besides being a clinical herbalist, educator and tea blender extraordinaire (a tea nut to some), we are a botanical sanctuary member of United Plant Savers. Gifting back to the Earth, thankful for all she has gifted us, especially plant medicine. So, we have been busy planting and rewilding for over thirty years now. Our goal is to plant as many endangered and native medicinal plants and trees as we can each spring and fall.

Over the years, we have had a few comments about the non-native species growing and thriving on the farm, people encouraging me to consider digging them all out, eradicate the invasive species from the land.

(Invasive species:  “An organism that is not indigenous, or native, to a particular area.”)

pearl and buckthorn fence row

This is easy to say for a person who is not doing the ‘work’ or not possessing a strong love for all who grow and live on these one hundred acres of land. Do we cut down non-native trees, who’s limbs hold nests of baby birds? Do I pluck every Plantain plant from the land? Do we dig up the lilacs brought with the pioneers, that still grace this farmstead — reminders of days gone by?  What about her fragrant blossoms that the pollinators seek out each spring? Think about the connection they have already formed to this land.

What about the invasive species that take over an area and swallow up what was there before? These I am trying my best to keep in check and harvest freely for medicine — Phragmites and Garlic Mustard, recently appearing. But Buckthorn is a different story – she has literally kept me awake at night – how do I handle this undesirable invasive small tree?

Buckthorn Tree

Description of Buckthorn:

Buckthorn’s main stem is erect, with bark smooth, of a blackish-brown colour, on the twigs ash-coloured. The smaller branches generally terminate in a stout thorn, giving it the name Buckthorn. There are many older names by which this shrub has been known: Waythorn and Highwaythorn. The leaves grow in small bunches, mostly opposite. They are egg-shaped and toothed on the edges, small greenish-yellow flowers are produced, which are followed by globular berries about the size of a pea, black and shining when ripe, and each containing four hard, dark-brown seeds.

Medicinal Action and Uses of Buckthorn

Laxative and cathartic.

The berries are used medicinally, collected when ripe and made into a syrup of Buckthorn, which was used as an aperient drink.

Until late in the nineteenth century, syrup of Buckthorn was a most favourite remedy, used as a children’s laxative, but its action was so severe that, as time went on, the medicine was discarded. It is now used almost exclusively in veterinary practice only, being commonly prescribed for dogs, with equal parts of castor oil as an occasional purgative.

Nature’s Wildlife Highway

Buckthorn was brought here with the European settlers as an ornamental bush and to line fencerows. Keeping livestock in and to serve as much needed windbreaks for the newly cleared land. Some people may only see Buckthorn when they look at these old hedgerows, but there, amongst their midst, if you look much deeper you will see the Birch, Wild Apple trees, Maples, Mountain Ash, Basswood, Aspen, Puff balls, Morels and blankets of our beloved woodland flower, the Trout Lily – which takes over seven years to receive her first bloom!

The hedgerows on our farm are over one hundred and twenty-five years old, deep within the bushes and trees are the remains of old rotting cedar zig zag rail fences, that once marked the property boundaries. These rails now offering homes for small critters and insects, slowly decomposing and feeding the soil, and nurturing the surrounding plant life. These fencerows provide wildlife with shelter and food, and well used trails for safe travel. Connecting the travelers to other fence rows and more trails. We can’t forget the help these hedgerows gift our pollinators as well, with over thirty Wild Apple Trees — all a blossom in the spring and a buzz with life. Providing rich pollen and nectar that our bees use for nutritious food and to make their honey. Many of these old fencerows are being cleared on neighbouring farms. Cleared for more workable land and giving the huge farm equipment of today more room to maneuver with ease.  Saving the farmer’s valuable time, but at what cost to our wildlife?

Do I dare disturb this delicate ecosystem? Do I disturb the hidden trails within – taking the safety from the Deer, Coyote, Fox, Wild Turkey, Lynx, Fisher, Bear, and many other creatures who frequent these paths. Buckthorn has been a crucial part of the hedgerow, nurturing the young trees and plants. With connections like these the decision is easy, my intuition has always known, the Buckthorn filled fencerows will NOT be disturbed in any way.

This is my heartfelt commitment to this land.

 

“Look deep into nature, and then you will understand everything better.”

~ Hans Christian Andersen


Photos Provided by Serena Mor


Inside the Bee Hive

Preparing our Hives for the Colder Days Ahead

Welcome to Our Winter Beehive

Now that snow covers the ground where we live, I know that even though I can’t see them, the honeybees are still working hard within the hive’s four walls. Up until now, on any day warm enough to do so, they continued to collect and store food for the winter, and utilized propolis to fill in any cracks or openings to minimize the potential for drafts and cold air getting in. During this time, the colonies also downsize, determining who stays and who goes, reining in their numbers for the colder days ahead.

Foresight, I think, is something the honeybees know all about, thinking always and planning for the future.

Bee Hive with snow

In efforts to try and help keep our honeybees alive, after two consecutive years of losing them to the Varroa mite, we are hopeful going into this winter. The Varroa mite, which hadn’t been introduced to North America until the 1980s, has been an ongoing problem for most beekeepers in our area. This parasitic mite feeds on the honeybee, attaching itself to the honeybee like a tick, until it overcomes them.

Varroa Mites

Most beekeepers use thymol-based products, which are said to help keep them at bay. However, our first year of beekeeping we thought this seemed unnecessary, giving notion to the idea that they have long since survived without the use of our man-made chemicals. We discovered the following Spring the little red spots, which at closer look, we knew to have been the mite we had not done anything to prevent. That being said, still being new to beekeeping, we looked at this unfortunate circumstance as a learning opportunity, a way we could look into the hive more closely than we could have, had they survived. The second year, we used the recommended strips, but again the Varroa mites got the best of them.

Inside the Bee Hive

This year, we thought we ought to do something different. In the process of trying to learn as much as we can, we came across the works of Michael Bush and Leo Sharashkin. In addition to speaking to local beekeepers and a good friend, Bella Donna, after some time and a little leg work, we built a second hive.

“…each little thing you can do makes a difference”

Our second hive works horizontally, as opposed to the traditional Langstroth hive, which stands tall, vertically stacking boxes, the type of hive you will most often see, driving by farms and down country roads. In contrast, this new hive we built in the spring sits honeycomb filled frames side by side, in a long row. With two-inch thick walls, as opposed to the 3/4“ walls, we hope to better insulate the hive without having to add any exterior casing. Some other modifications we made were creating only one entrance, hence reducing the potential for invaders and allowing the bees to more easily guard the opening. Our hive sits roughly two and a half feet off the ground, helping to prevent small mammals from sneaking their way in and stops us from needing an entrance reducer – a piece of wood which you’d typically insert into the opening of a traditional hive that spans the width of the box. Our frames, where the bees build and fill honeycomb, also have had their plastic backings removed, as it was suggested to us that the size of these molded plastic pieces is the ideal size for Varroa to lay their eggs in. It has been said that each little thing you can do makes a difference, if only increasing their odds by a percent at a time.

Wide view of the Bee Hive

So in preparation for winter this year, we prepared our old hive the way we always have, reducing the size of the entrance, again preventing invaders and decreasing drafts, insulating the top of the hive with wool and surrounding the hive with its reflective winter casing. As for our new horizontal hive, all of the preparations were done in the process of its build. Making these changes we hope will not only will prevent the mites, but keep the honeybees warm enough all winter long, In both hives, we decided to use Thymol, one of the major constituents of essential oils of thyme (Thymus vulgaris L., Lamiaceae), hoping to keep the mites at a distance with its strong aromatics.

In hopes of giving them a better start going into winter, we also give them the opportunity to collect what remains off the frames we’ve extracted honey from. By the end of Fall, when the weather’s still warm enough for them to fly, there isn’t a whole lot for them to forage from, so giving them back these trays allows them to collect whatever they can to use again. This is also the case for trays where the honey has crystallized and can no longer be extracted. This year we had been so busy, we didn’t get around to our honey harvest until late October, and unfortunately by then a large amount of our honey had already turned. Typically, this would be a great opportunity to keep the comb intact, storing the honeycomb as is, in jars. However, since we removed the backings from all our frames, we want to keep the newly constructed honeycomb intact to strengthen for next year’s use. As we’ve been told, the honeycomb hardens over time, and through the seasons.

“As we learn, we hope to always do right by the bees”

All this to say, we certainly aren’t experts in the matter of beekeeping. But as we learn, we hope to always do right by the bees, doing the best we can to give them the best chance to survive the days to come. We are hoping that by the time Spring rolls around again, we are gifted with the hum of our honeybees, a sound we always look forward to hearing as the ground turns from white to green.


Blog photos provided by Chelsea!


Top 10 Best Practices for Herbalists

Giving back and acting in a way that is regenerative, benefits us all”

– Penelope Beaudrow

1. Know your Endangered & At-Risk Species

Whether you’re foraging yourself or purchasing herbs at your local natural health food store, it is very important to know the circumstances around the plants you are working with. When it comes to species at risk, it is always recommended that you purchase herbs that are sustainably grown and cultivated and to avoid foraging or wildcrafting (as much as this part of herbalism is often a favourite!). This helps maintain the wild population and helps promote the livelihood of these endangered species. As well, there are often many substitutes for those that are at-risk, and this can be a great approach to avoid harming the population altogether. Alternatively, if no substitute can be found, then it is always recommended that actions are taken to give back what you’ve taken, and then some. For example, if you’re purchasing Goldenseal (Hydrastis canadensis), which again should be purchased and not foraged, it would be recommended that you plant some of your own. Whether that means planting in your own garden, or sprinkling seeds on your favourite trail – regardless of how, there are a ton of ways you can give back to help encourage the repopulation. For more information and resources, contact your local conservation group or management area or get connected with groups such as the United Plant Savers, or visit a local sanctuary – like Penelope’s sanctuary; Kina Kegoo, in Cannington, Ontario (sanctuaries can also be found listed at UPS!)⁷. More information can also be found on your government’s website. 

2. Choose Your Resources Well

It is important to remember that the magic and medicine of plants are only as good as the quality of the plants themselves. These days, where herbs are being cultivated and sold in abundance, it can be easy to overlook the quality of the plants, especially underneath the often appealing packaging. It’s safe to say that growing your own is always recommended, as it gives Herbalists the opportunity to get to know the plants they’re working with and helps foster a tangible and therapeutic relationship that comes along with it. Whenever possible, if not growing your own, herbs should be purchased and grown locally. Not only just to support our farmers, but so you can gain a better understanding of the growing methods and so the plant material doesn’t have to travel as far (often along the way, herbs are sprayed through inspections in order to meet guidelines and regulations, which can be avoided purchasing directly from the grower). However, if that’s out of the question, it is wise to always look for herbs that are organic, forest-grown or wildcrafted. As many great healers would say, wildcrafted and/or organic signify that the herb was collected or grown with conscious awareness of the plant’s life cycle, and was picked according to the seasons, at the right time of day, and dried in the best drying conditions. It implies a certain conscious responsibility of the environment and the non use of chemical fertilizers or sprays¹. 

3. Honouring your Harvest

An easy rule of thumb: always leave an area as beautiful as you found it; keeping in mind the animals, pollinators, germinated seedlings, and seeds left behind. It is also recommended and highly encouraged that you ask permission of the plant, which can be done by sitting with intention to take it and noticing how it feels, or directly through holding the plant in your hands. Like a grazing animal, it’s mindful never to take everything you’ve found, but rather take a little bit here and there along the way, leaving as much of what you can behind. 

In addition, most of the land that we take ownership of was first tended to by the Indiginous Peoples of Canada, who understood that we are impermanent stewards of this earth, and we must take care of it with what little time we have. Many similar ceremonies and rituals can still be practiced today, or by creating those of your own, doing what feels authentic for you. At the end of the day, it’s important to pay respects to the plants that came before us, and for those that long outlive us – however that might look for you. You can even speak or say to yourself a land acknowledgement, such as, “every community owes its existence and vitality to generations from around the world who contributed their hopes, dreams, and energy to making the history that led to this moment. Some were brought here against their will, some were drawn to leave their distant homes in hope of a better life, and some have lived on this land for more generations than can be counted. Truth and acknowledgment are critical to building mutual respect and connection across all barriers of heritage and difference. We begin this effort to acknowledge what has been buried by honoring the truth.”

Penny in Queen Annes Lace

4. Learn your Alternatives & Substitutes

Though it can be difficult to find a single plant medicine with the same mechanism of action as our endangered native plants, herbs are diverse and there are many options on plants that have a few similar medicinal properties that can be used instead. For example, one can use Berberine from Amur Cork Trees or Barberry instead of using the aforementioned Goldenseal. With that being said, whenever foraging, make sure you know the plant you are about to harvest, to avoid accidentally wildcrafting species at risk. There is a great Analog List created by Jane Bothwell to help navigate through choosing a less threatened species, and a great quote from her publication on United Plant Savers:


“When cultivated species are not available, then it is best to find a plant analog. An analog is an herb having a parallel action, function or end result to other medicinal herbs. In most instances, it is important and necessary to use a variety of analogs for the at-risk herb because an analog generally satisfies only some of the therapeutic actions of a particular plant species and does not demonstrate all medicinal actions of that plant. It is sometimes difficult to find replacements for our tried and true herb friends, but it also can be very satisfying and will expand your expertise, while helping to replant our future. Choose alien (non-native) plants for food and medicine, leaving the more fragile native plant species to flourish. Many alien plants are extremely powerful medicinals and will be a welcomed addition to your medicine chest.”² 

5. Find Ways to Give Back

Of course there are many ways in which Herbalists and natural healers alike can do their part, and it doesn’t always have to create work. In some cases, doing nothing is doing something. Take for example rewilding – it is estimated that 20% of the earth is covered in grass, much of this being maintained lawns that are wasteful and void of diversity. Instead, If let be, these areas can slowly become diverse ecosystems, holding space for native species to come back, or even utilizing these newfound areas to plant native and endangered species. This also helps insects and animals find new homes and allows more plants to flower for our vulnerable pollinators! Needless to say, rewilding can help heal the wounds we’ve long since inflicted⁹. 

For more information on rewilding, what it is and how to do it, there’s a great short film with Penelope Beaudrow, where she shares how her family’s land has evolved into what has become a thriving place for threatened and at risk medicinal and native plants, as well as how the work on their farm and sanctuary gives back to the land and animals that live here and benefits us all, and some of the things you can do to help make a difference.³

Another preservation action you can take, is to save plants that are soon to be destroyed by developments and transplant them somewhere safe, be it your lawn or someone else’s. This one may take getting your hands dirty and a little bit of heavy work, but the payoff is rewarding and the opportunities to do so are endless.

As Tao Orion beautifully puts it, “Native plants are not just native to a place, they are essential elements of a culture that stewards them. Native species like milkweed, echinacea, trillium, bloodroot, dwarf trout lily, elderberry, huckleberry, hickory and countless others are not just wildflowers but food, medicine, fiber, shelter, tools.”¹⁰ Once we can change the way we see the the world around us, the world around us begins to change.

6. Give Thanks

Some Indigenous peoples have a tradition of leaving tobacco after gathering, as a way to show their gratitude for that which was taken. In the same way, every Herbalist can offer thanks in some way that feels authentic to them, whether by saying a few words or leaving something behind. You can also do some research on what rituals (if any) your ancestors may have practiced regarding reciprocity that may have been lost, and that you can rekindle and bring back into your own practice. 

When it comes down to it, there are so many meaningful ways to insert ourselves into nature in a way that shows gratitude through action – causing a ripple of change through everything we do. Through stewardship of the land we can mediate disturbances to create high density areas, refashion long standing relationships with landscapes that provide for our needs, and work to prioritize habitat connectivity by envisioning a continuous corridor of wild spaces that butterflies, birds, lizards, frogs, skunks, bobcats, and bears move through,¹⁰ to name a few examples. 

Whatever your way, always be mindful of the concept of exchanging rather than taking and bringing awareness of the symbiotic relationship between humankind and the plant kingdom. 

Goldenseal

7. Know your Symbols

When it comes to ethical purchasing, being able to understand the symbols and indications on packaging can be very important to help you purchase the most sustainable option possible. Oftentimes when we go into our local natural health food stores it can be hard to get a clear idea of where what you’re buying came from, but understanding your symbols can help bring some transparency to this supply chain process.

When it comes to Certified Organic labels, these standards vary by province and state, so look into your government’s website to learn more about what entails of this certification. Though, it’s safe to say, seeing an organics label is better than not seeing one at all. You may also see things like wildcrafted; meaning plants are collected directly from their natural wild habitat such as forests, fields and undeveloped areas of land, and they should be unadulterated by chemicals such as fertilizers and pesticides. This of course is something that should be avoided when in search of at-risk or endangered species, but for all other herbs, it’s almost always a good indicator of quality. Forest-Grown is another great attribute to look out for; whereby each verified forest farmer has a dynamic story of land stewardship, often taking decades of dedication to grow the forest botanicals in their care⁵.

So whatever your label, make sure you understand what you’re buying before you spend your hard earned dollars. 

8. Empower Yourself

Considering everything is made up of energy, growing your own herbs can be wonderfully therapeutic for yourself, loved ones, and community. From the very beginning your devout care and attention goes into watching your seeds sprout into seedlings, all the way up until they’re ready to harvest – allowing the plants to become a vessel of your attentive nurturing, embodies the reciprocate and synergistic relationship between us and the plants.

One of our favourite local places to get all of our essentials is Richters Herbs. They offers plants, seeds, books, dried herbs and so much more⁶.

9. Get Educated

In Canada, most endangered species live in the south, which is also where most of us humans live. It’s no coincidence: there are more species in the south where the climate is warmer, and people have transformed southern landscapes to make way for agriculture and cities. We live in close proximity to many endangered species, yet many of them fly under our radar – especially the plants⁸.

However, there are so many ways to continue your education and to earn credits each year on endangered and at risk plants in your area. The awareness that comes along with staying current and aware of these plants can be of huge benefit to your practice, and to the world around you. It is to be noted that each province and state has their own list of endangered plants, which you can refer to and begin to pay homage to. This can also be a fun activity to do by yourself or with family: anytime you travel to new towns or cities, keep a lookout for any you can find or purchase seeds to bring with you ahead of time to sprinkle along your journey!

There are many organizations and conferences that are now offering lectures on at-risk and endangered species, such as the Ontario Herbalists Association, Back to Your Roots Herbal Retreat, Heartwood, Canadian Herb Conference, American Herbalist’s Guild, and National Institute of Medical Herbalists.

10. Be the Educator

Share as much information as you can within your own social circles, family, and community. The more widespread the information, the more that can be done about it! Plus, this is a great way to bring communities together and enjoy activities together like planting in local parks, going on identification walks, and through speaking and sharing with local garden groups and clubs, and even schools.

Change starts with you, and the ripple never stops once it starts!

Wild Flower Patch


Post Contributors:

Penelope Beaudrow, RH

Penelope Beaudrow is a Registered Herbalist and educator who has devoted the past 25 years to helping others foster deep and resilient connections with the living intelligence of the natural world and the regenerative, healing forces of plants and the medicine they carry.

Chelsea Vieira, Community Herbalist 

Chelsea is a community herbalist and an all-around plant enthusiast. From a young age being fond of the wonders of the natural world, she’s since gone on to help others reconnect and rekindle this relationship, and the magic it encompasses. 


References:

¹ Rosemary Gladstar. The Science and Art of Herbalism. Lesson One, page 6.

² Jane Bothwell. UPS List of Herbs & Analogues

³ Penelope Beaudrow. For the Love of Medicinal and Native Plants. Everything Herbal, 2021. 

Penelope Beaudrow, Lauri Hoeg. Sacred Plants – Spiritual and Medicinal Uses. Everything Herbal, 2021.

United Plant Savers. Forest Grown Verified Program, 2019.

Richters Herbs, 1969.

The Ginkgo Tree. Kina Gegoo Botanical Sanctuary. UPS Member, 2015.

Jenny McCune. The Endangered Species Hiding in Plain Sight. Canadian Geographic, 2019.

David Suzuki. Rewilding can help heal wounds we’ve inflicted. David Suzuki Foundation, 2021.

¹⁰ Tao Orion. Beyond the War on Invasive Species. 2015.

United Plant Savers, Become a Herbal Business Member

Government of Ontario. Species At-Risk in Ontario, 2020.

United Plant Savers. Medicinal Plant Conservation Certificate Program.

The Canadian Encyclopedia. Endangered Plants in Canada, 2021.

United Plant Savers. Species At-Risk Assessment Tool. Downloads and resources.

Canadian Wildlife Federation. Canada’s Plants in Peril.


Photos provided by Serena Mor


Moon and Grass

A Herbal Apprentice's Journey: Season's Turn

December, 2021.

Look at this one.” My mother says to me, extending her arms toward me to display her treasure. A bouquet of gemstones, iridescent and gleaming even in the scant light of the overcast day.

Look at THIS one!” I respond, placing another treasure into her bouquet.

“Wow.”

We stood under the layers of clouds, rotating fresh corn in our hands and marveled at each new pattern and colour. One by one, revealing a story beneath the husks. I wasn’t certain of the kind of corn we had planted. It was an unmarked seed package that bestowed upon us what seemed like a million colours. A million gemstones. Rich in the palette of autumn.

We sunk digging forks into the soil in search of our next treasure; potatoes. This summer was my first time growing them. The relationship I gained while doing so was surprising. Witnessing their blooming was utterly charming. Witnessing their decay was similar. Trusting that they would continue to grow under their little mounds, out of sight.

We ate lots of early potatoes as the summer waned. I watched my partner one morning from the window as he stepped out to the garden in the fragile light. Barefoot and squatting in the greenery, choosing one plant that may be willing to offer our breakfast. Clearing away a little mulch and soil to retrieve just enough for our meal. Stopping for a moment of thanks before bringing them in to clean in the sink.

Now I stood in an empty garden bed, a bucket of potatoes unearthed. Autumn feels like that to me; an abundance and an emptiness. A direct example of reciprocity. An opportunity to recognize how we collaborate with the earth in such a clear and tangible way. Where once there was soil, now has returned to soil, and, miraculously, I carry this bucket of potatoes.

 

It was spring when I began my apprenticeship work with Penelope. While we spent time in the sanctuary, our conversations would whirl with personal anecdotes and philosophy. For some time, death was our muse. For days, nearly everything we did seemed to shine with the beauty of death and, in effect, start a passionate conversation. How death is a portal, a ceremony, an honour. If we can imagine that Winter may represent death, Autumn would be our chariot to take us there. There’s something mournful about the slowness of the Autumn months.

Come Winter, a season of inward incubation. Maybe a return to the womb, to emerge in spring reincarnated. That’s how I like to see winter, though it may be daunting. I always know that after months of a dark, deep freeze, I begin to daydream longingly of touching plants, swimming in water, feeling the sun. And yet I trust, as I trusted the potatoes to grow out of sight, that come spring the world would transform into lushness again. Truly a miracle, for the earth itself to be resurrected.

Socrates said “death itself may be the greatest of all human blessings”. While his friends wept for him in his dying he asked them to not cry, for he was at last meeting the greatest mystery of all.

 

What mystery are you meeting this winter?

I read a wonderful passage written by Italo Calvino in his book The Complete Cosmicomics. I’d like to leave you with it and hope that you may savour it. I do think that winter is our time of implosion.

 

To explode or to implode -- said Qfwfq -- that is the question: whether 'tis nobler in the mind to expand one's energies in space without restraint, or to crush them into a dense inner concentration and, by ingesting, cherish them. To steal away, to vanish; no more; to hold within oneself every gleam, every ray, deny oneself every vent, suffocating in the depths of the soul the conflicts that so idly trouble it, give them their quietus; to hide oneself, to obliterate oneself: perchance to reawaken elsewhere, changed.

Changed... In what way changed? And the question, to explode or to implode: would one have to face it again? Absorbed by the vortex of this galaxy, does one pop up again in other times and other firmaments? Here sink away in cold silence, there express oneself in fiery shrieks of another tongue? Here soak up good and evil like a sponge in the shadow, there gush forth like a dazzling jet, to spray and spend and lose oneself. To what end then would the cycle repeat itself? I really don't know, I don't want to know, I don't want to think about it: here, now, my choice is made: I shall implode, as if this centripetal plunge might forever save me from doubt and error, from the time of ephemeral change, from the slippery descent of before and after, bring me to a time of stability, still and smooth, enable me to achieve the one condition that is homogeneous and compact and definitive. You explode, if that's more to your taste, shoot yourselves all around in endless darts, be prodigal, spendthrift, reckless: I shall implode, collapse inside the abyss of myself, towards my buried centre, infinitely. “

 

Moon and Grass


Photos provided by Serena Mor


Rock with Moss

A Herbal Apprentice's Journey: Discovering Self Trust

November, 2021.

There are a few notable reasons why I first began studying herbal healing, and alternative healing modalities. The first, unsurprisingly, would be my interest in the natural world. I was raised in rural Ontario, and for half of that time, my family was off-grid. As a child in that time, I would have nothing but moss, loon calls and rare wolf sightings to delight my dreams. My brother would build zip-lines from tree to tree. I have a cherished photo from a disposable camera of myself proudly displaying a bow and arrow I’d fashioned for myself out of a branch, some twine, and a bit of time with a pocket knife. The world was full, and so alive in those days. I would spend an entire afternoon squatting on the Canadian shield, in the middle of a quiet lake, studying the language of the moss formations that had dried in the sun. Each molecule of water, sky and earth sang to me.

As I grew older, my fascination with moss and water and dreaming about what the fish and the birds had to say began to dwindle. Elders and peers of mine had fascinations with other material things. Such things were framed as more important. I still longed for deep conversations with the soil and rocks. I still longed to play among them, while they held me up and I called out for the fairies to reveal themselves, wielding my wooden dagger and a pocket full of stones.

Mica rock

I was a sort of weird kid in a small town. I struggled to find a community that truly resonated with me. In my adolescence, I found yoga. I listened to The Grateful Dead and wrote songs about the earth that I didn't yet understand. These were practices that felt grounding to me. A way to connect with that inner child that found wonder in all. I took psychedelics and marveled at the magnificence of trees. One evening, I lay in the soil and told my friends that I knew deep in my soul, that I was a stone. Part of the Canadian Shield.

I often find lots of humour in the revelations I’ve had while sitting with psychedelics. I think the most amusing part is how simple the lessons are. How it sometimes takes a great journey to understand that we are one, that you were correct all along in your childhood wonder, that magic exists and that god is nature and nature is everything. The simplicity of knowing.

I am a seeker of knowledge. You may have guessed by now. All of my life I have attempted to outfit myself with a metaphorical tool belt, equipped with things to allow me to understand the great mysteries of life. One of the most pivotal moments for me - with the guidance of psychedelics - was realizing how much I needed to trust myself.

Mushrooms on a Log

Trusting myself began my journey in herbal medicine. It was what I turned to when I realized that I had given so much of my autonomy to doctors. I do trust doctors and I believe that they are deserving of trust - what made me uncomfortable was realizing that I had never trusted myself, or my intuition, when it came to my health. I had given doctors complete authority over my body and health. I would often go to a doctor, tell them my symptoms, and I would be met with an answer similar to, “it’s all in your head”, or leave with a prescription for something that I would know nothing about. It was frustrating, yet I felt as though there was no way out of that system.

It feels like it has taken me a long time to arrive here. Knowing that my body is always healing, perpetually. When we treat the body for something, we are simply encouraging the body to heal. Whether it is traditional plant medicine, or modern allopathic medicine, the sentiment remains the same.

Your body is healing every moment of the day. Your body wants to be healthy, to exist in the world with ease and in harmony. Our greatest tool in health is to trust this fact: the body knows how to heal itself. From this perspective, it isn’t exactly plants that are healing us. It is our own selves doing the work of healing. The herbs become a supporting role, a reminder, a tool to help with the work.. But the actual “ work” is done by the body. Herbalists don’t heal you, herbs don’t heal you, it is your own body that is in collaboration with all of these things.

I’ve heard allopathic medicine described aptly as “Heroic Medicine”, which makes a lot of sense when we learn the history of its development in war. In herbal medicine, there is not one hero. Herbal medicine is “Wholing Medicine”, in which one works in collaboration with plants, spirit, knowledge and an understanding and trust in the complexities of healing. May our healing be as dynamic as this life and this world. May our healing be a collaboration with the healing of all, and for all generations of the past and future.

Rock with Moss


Photos provided by Serena Mor


Herbal Tooth and Gum Powder: Oral Hygiene & Herbal Medicine

The Importance of Oral Health

It is said in many holistic healing traditions that all disease begins in the gut. But it’s important not to forget that the entire digestive process, and the beginning of our GI tract, starts in the mouth. A healthy mouth is essential for maintaining optimal immune system function, which becomes quite clear when we consider that a very significant part of the immune system resides in the digestive tract. Just as is the case with the gut microbiome, the microbiome of the mouth needs to be well cared for – the healthy bacteria need to be allowed to flourish. The condition of the mouth, gums, tongue, and teeth reflect many things about the health of the whole body. Rudolf Steiner went so far as to say that, “the teeth are the sum of the world mysteries.” Herbal tooth and gum powders are an excellent way to help care for the mouth. This particular blend can do wonders when it comes to weak tooth enamel, preventing (and, as per my own clinical experience, even reversing) cavities, tooth and gum sensitivity, soreness and pain.

The herbs in this formula have a long and continued history of use in herbal medicine, though since the advent of modern dentistry, are no longer quite as esteemed as they once were for their ability to keep the mouth, teeth and gums in optimal shape. Perhaps most notably from a historical perspective is the bark of the White Oak tree (Quercus alba). The astringing inner bark of this mighty tree contains tannins, saponins, and minerals (including calcium) – all of which, when properly balanced (i.e. found in the form of a whole herb, as nature intended), are greatly beneficial not only for the teeth, but also for the tendons that attach the teeth to the jaw. Looking back at our herbal literature, one can find many references to the use of Oak bark for gum disease, cavities, loose and brittle teeth, sensitive, sore and bleeding gums, foul breath, canker sores and ulcerations of the mouth.

Tooth and Gum Powder Recipe

Combine equal parts of the following finely powdered herbs:

  • Horsetail
  • Peppermint
  • Licorice
  • White Oak Bark
  • Cloves
  • Prickly Ash Bark
  • Bayberry Bark
  • Slippery Elm Bark
  • Neem Bark

Tooth Powder in bowl

Application

Once finished, use this powder as you would any tooth paste (it can also be applied to any problematic spots in the mouth and let sit).

Cloves, Peppermint and Licorice, which can help to prevent the accumulation of biofilms – including plaque – on the teeth and gums, are strongly flavoured herbs and may be left out according to individual preferences. Many of the herbs in this formula exhibit broad spectrum antimicrobial activity, and leaving one or two of them out will not significantly affect the efficacy of the product.

Tongue Cleaning

In addition to the use of a herbal tooth and gum powder, one thing that I recommend to nearly all of my patients is tongue cleaning (preferably with a metal tongue scraper) – a practice which is considered to be of the utmost importance in the maintenance of one’s oral hygiene in the Ayurvedic tradition. As Karta Purkh Singh Khalsa and Michael Tierra explain in ‘The Way of Ayurvedic Herbs’: “Cleaning the tongue is a critical part of maintaining oral health. Ayurveda, in particular, emphasizes this daily practice. Brush your tongue while brushing your teeth, or use a tongue scraper. Tongue cleaning reduces bad breath, and helps to prevent plaque.”

Try incorporating herbal tooth powders into your daily routine. Please feel free to let us know about your experiences or if you have any recipes of your own.


Comfrey and Bee

A Herbal Apprentice's Journey: Summer

July, 2021.

No matter your background, education, or practice, as a herbalist you are walking a path that was once walked by your ancestors. Our ancestral lineage includes our human ancestors, but also includes the community of plants, rocks, wind, water and soil that all took part in the creation of you. To be an herbalist - or simply, someone who connects with plants - you are participating in a spectacular woven tapestry that has been in creation since time immemorial.

Our deep relationship with Earth and the universe is our first and our last. Our relationship with the universe is the only relationship we ever truly participate in... Each interaction we have is simply a reflection of our own inner becoming; with our friends and relatives, as well as the plants and sky are all communicating as one. To be in relationship with the Earth and with plants, we are discovering again and again new layers of our own selves. In the journey of herbalism, there is a choice to venture deeply into one’s own mystery.

It is for this reason, and of course many others, that I pursued an apprenticeship. I wrote in my previous blog post that I split my time between two placements, and one of which is a plant sanctuary for at-risk plants called Kina Gegoo. For decades, Penelope Beaudrow has been stewardess to many acres of rewilding land, including a plant sanctuary for endangered plants. Penelope is one of my mentors and friends. The work that she has selflessly dedicated herself to is sacred.

To build a relationship, first we must listen. This first step is essential, especially in non-verbal conversation. The language of plants. The language of the universe. Most times, a conversation begins with an introduction, a check in, and a sharing of intention. Seems familiar, yes? Most at-risk plants become at risk due to habitat loss and overharvesting. Humans are most certainly a fault, with agendas that often hold space only to exploit land. If we take some time to listen, it won’t take long for the plant to tell you that. It is our responsibility to do whatever we can to maintain the life of these plants. We have a lot of power, and a lot of hope for regaining plant communities that are at risk of being lost.

“I didn’t participate in those atrocities” (devastating land for extraction of “natural “resources”, unsustainable agriculture practices, slavery, indigenous genocide... the list goes on and on.) Aha. This is a refrain used by many to weakly deflect their responsibility. I want to make this next thought very clear: there is a mirrored relationship of at-risk plants and racism, and how there is a clear and parallel path to addressing them. This comparison is by no means an equivalency - I am using endangered plants as a metaphor, and in doing so I hope to encourage you to explore the relationships that herbalism has with politics... but that’s for another blog post, perhaps. I’ll simply plant this seed of thought for now.

Let these plants be our teachers. Let them teach us what it takes to show up for our communities. Whether those communities are human or otherwise. We are creating safe spaces for one another to flourish, based on individual needs. We are listening, trying, failing, continually humbled, and continuing to show up at the table for one another. That is what community care looks like - and that’s exactly what it looks like when you are trying to care for at-risk plants. We are taking responsibility while holding ourselves accountable.

And what is our responsibility, then, when considering endangered plants? Knowing which ones are endangered, knowing how to identify them, choosing not to use them, growing a colony of your own, informing others who may not know. This is the very least we can do as herbalists and plant lovers, and it truly does a lot! On a large scale, you may wish to cultivate your own plant sanctuary. Some people have made it their life work to do so. I’ve been fortunate enough to see and participate in the stewardship of a plant sanctuary, at Kina Gegoo.

dayna with spruce

Toting buckets of water to ensure everyone has had a good drink. Hauling bales of straw for mulching. Checking in with each newly planted tree. Pruning. Collaborating. Breaking in the heat. Sitting in the grass and connecting about anything and everything that feels relevant... Or not. Planting and transplanting. Kneeling down to say hello. Keeping invasive plants at bay just enough so they don’t completely swallow the land. An exercise in boundaries. “You can stay, buckthorn, but you mustn't take all of this land for yourself. You can stay, but you may not harm these other plants we are trying to cultivate. You can stay, because it’s clear that you wish to, but you will not have total control of this sacred mission.”

There is extensive and inspiring work being done by the United Plant Savers. If you are a plant person, which I am assuming you may be if you’ve found your way to this page, I greatly encourage visiting their website and taking a look at their resources at https://unitedplantsavers.org

 

I’d like to take this next moment to ask you… What are you doing for your community this month?

Sometimes community work doesn’t look like direct action. Sometimes taking care of yourself is necessary, so you can show up in a better way for your community. Perhaps you are journaling, opening your heart, learning something new, easing your resistance to new things, or putting your hands in the dirt and enjoying the beauty of July sunshine.

Whatever it is that you are doing... thank you. May it benefit all beings.


(Blog photo provided by Penelope!)