Our Summer 2019 Herbal Immersive

Our Summer 2019 Herbal Immersive

“Got my own way of Prayin’ but every one’s begun, with a Southern accent where I come from” - Tom Petty

“Got my own way of Prayin’ but every one’s begun, with a Southern accent where I come from” - Tom Petty

The Southern Herbalist Darryl Patton was in the house and on the land this weekend. Making the trip from his northeast Alabama homestead, the Pejuta Wicasa Master Plant Medicine Man shared his extensive knowledge, treating attendees of the Southwest Michigan Summer Herbal Immersive weekend to talks, treks and sessions on both the culinary and medicinal value of herbal formulas. Walking in the footsteps of old-school Mountain Medicine Men like his teacher A.L. “Tommie” Bass and other elder herbalist of the Southern Appalachians, Darryl offered a glimpse into his vast pharmacopeia as well as his skills as chief cook of a wild woods kitchen. Crossing paths with him last year at his summer 2018 workshop hosted by Maggie Baker Conklin of Douglas, Michigan’s Ladyhawk Holistic Nutrition, I was impressed with Darryl’s knowledge, easy-going, engaging, storyteller style, and the way he treated his wife Jane. “The ability of a bark, leaf, or root to transform the body in a positive manner,” states Darryl, “is a mystery that serves to daily rekindle my passion for the natural world.” A passion that clearly fires the same ardor in others.

Darryl’s eyes on the land open one’s own understanding to the natural world’s abundance of healing plants, herbs that can help establish a sustainable, natural approach to well-being. Whipping up syrups made from Chaga and Milkweed turned us on to nourishing ourselves at home with healing foods. Crafting fusion tacitos with kimche venison and wild vegtables, coupled with spicy Fina’denne’ — a condiment found in many Guam households — we were also treated to Yellow Dock pancakes and small, savory, deep-fried hushpuppies made from a Chicken of the Woods-based batter. He brought along tinctures of Lion’s Mane Mushroom — offering a range of health benefits from improved cognitive functioning, to memory and brain cell rejuvenation — along with Wild Lettuce, a natural remedy promoting sleep and muscle or joint pain relief. 

In a discourse on the benefits of Chaga, a parasitic on birch trees with the appearance of burnt charcoal well-known today for its cancer fighting properties, Darryl expounded: “When I was first doing primitive skills, no one was into Chaga except as a fire starter. And it was cheap - no big deal getting it. Then people in this country discovered its medicinal value — for cancer, for the immune system — and all of a sudden it went bonkers, and can be quite expensive at times.” Darryl recounted the history of Chaga, citing Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, the Russian Dissident writer who was also a doctor and author of the novel Cancer Ward. As an outspoken critic of the Soviet Union and communism helping to raise global awareness of its Gulag forced labor camp system, Solzhenitsyn was sent off to Gulag Archipelagos prison camps every few years to shut him up. Applying his skills as a physician, he’d seek out black market medicines for groups of 40-50,000 prisoners, an assemblage with all the health challenges and diseases of a small city. Yet amongst these populations, cancer was oddly statistically non-existence. What were these people doing collectively to prevent the disease?

Solzhenitsyn soon realized that the poor people of the rural area area only drank Chaga coffee, made from a rich Chaga syrup tasting like hot chocolate, and when boiled down thick becomes Hershey cocoa-like. Looking into the phenomena and its properties more closely, Russia and China made Chaga a prescription drug for cancer. “It’s the one I like to put anybody on for cancer because of the way it works overall,” Darryl explained. “What’s the big therapy in cancer now? Immunotherapy. They rev your immune system up to fight cancer, but sometimes that system in its firing can kill you, because its out to kill something. And if it doesn’t have cancer cells to kill, it can go after healthy cells. Chaga gives you a very strong immune response, but resets the system so that it doesn’t see the body as the enemy”

On wooded walkabouts, Darryl expounded on the virtues of Indian Ghost Pipe (once referred to as Fit Root, acting on opium receptor sights and increasing pain tolerance), Bitter Dock (boiling it down for its asthmatic curative powers) and Wild Sweet Violet (with leaves that contain more Vitamin C than an Orange and a Rhizome – the subterranean plant stem - that stops heartburn in its tracks. There was talk of warm potatoes sucking the poison out of Brown Recluse bites, maggot therapy, frying up Queen Ann’s Lace in pancake batter (just confirm that under skirt and the central purple flower), Alchemists like Sir Isaac Newton and others, the story of a Chinese Governor who faked his own death just to acquire a drop of Reishi on his tongue, and mushroom folklore. Speaking of mushrooms, Anthony Michael Blowers, our local, well-loved amateur Mycologist also showed up, identifying an aggressive patch of Purple Tooth, expounding on the intelligence and nimble nature of Slime Mold, and pointing out some incredibly yummy ramps that grow all along the river bed, “if (you) can get to them before the deer do”. 

As to future happenings, I heard through the Vitis Vinifera Vine that Darryl runs a hardcore primitive excursion, leading a circle of dudes into the wilderness with a knife and little more. I dubbed it the Darryl Patton Weight Loss Program and am hoping to learn more, with an eye toward the Summer of 2020 and Lake Huron’s Les Cheneaux Islands archipelago. Anthony will certainly be back this Fall for a ‘Shroom Stroll akin to our first as we work on rolling a mushroom hunt in with a culinary experience. Anthony creates a legendary ice cream from Blue Spruce tips, along with his butter poached Chanterelles, Black Trumpets and other wild mushroom inspired dishes. If there’s an interest shout me out, as we gear up for our monthly Ceremonial gathering this coming weekend, our upcoming Fall Women’s Retreat, a Men’s Retreat Weekend in the works, and other upcoming Fall classes and workshops. Toksha

I (HEART) Pechakucha

The Western Michigan Pechakucha June crew in St. Joe, with yours truly’s arms raised at approximately 3:12.

The Western Michigan Pechakucha June crew in St. Joe, with yours truly’s arms raised at approximately 3:12.

Have you heard of PechaKucha? With so many platforms for creative self-expression arising today, I recently attended a PechaKucha night in southwest Michigan, finding the event and presentations inspiring and genuinely intimate. Pechakucha 20 x 20 uses a simple Power Point presentation format where presenters shows 20 images for 20 seconds, with images advancing automatically, coupled with spoken word ‘captioning’ of each, making for a sometimes hilarious, sometimes wildly creative mini-performance. People have referred to PechaKucha as a “Local Ted Talk”, but while TED is brilliant it is very different. TED is top down but PechaKucha is bottom up, giving a lot of everyday people a chance to share extraordinary ideas.  

The whole deal was started by a group of Japanese architects almost 20 years ago in Tokyo, Japan, with PechaKucha Nights growing globally into informal and fun gatherings where creative people get together and share their ideas, works, thoughts, holiday snaps -- just about anything, really -- in the PechaKucha 20x20 format. Every PechaKucha Night city is hosted by a local organizer – in this case Lana Defrancesco of St Joseph, Michigan - who has an annual Handshake Agreement with PechaKucha HQ to run their event series, ensuring that each PechaKucha Night is relevant to that city, and can create a unique platform to uncover that community’s creativity. And it does! 

Many cities beyond Tokyo offer virtually no public spaces where people can show and share their work in a relaxed way. If you have just graduated from college and finished your first project in the real world, where can you show it? It probably won't make a magazine, and you may not have enough photos for a gallery show or a lecture, but PechaKucha is the perfect platform to show and share your work. Anyone can present -- this is the beauty of PechaKucha Nights. Astrid's daughter presented when she was 5 (about her artwork) and Mark's mother presented when she was 69 (about her elaborate wedding cake creations).

The key to a great presentation is to present something you Love. Good PechaKucha presentations are the ones that uncover the unexpected -- unexpected talent and unexpected ideas. Some PechaKuchas tell great stories about a project or a trip. Some are incredibly personal, some incredibly funny, but all are very original to each individual.  The best presentation of our recent Thursday night gathering by far was by the die-hard quilter whose entire talk sprang from how she deftly hides fabric from her husband. In the Q & A afterward, when people asked where they found the inspiration for their talk, she answered, “I said to my sister, ‘I’m the most talentless person in the world. All I can do creatively is hide fabric all over the household’ To which my sister responded, ‘Why don’t you do a talk on that?’ And a star was born. You never know when your contribution - no matter how small - might move others, evinced by room of hundreds in attendance who gave her slides of fabric as a table runner, fabric hidden in stacks of picnic baskets and on and on a standing ovation. I’m considering my own personal talk before the year is out, with working titles like “Me and My Indian Chief” and “Serpents, Snakes and Rethinking The Garden of Eden.” Stay attuned.

Our Ceremonial Weekend

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I know, I know… a beautiful Blue Racer may not be the most ideal marketing tool, considering the aversion so many — too many — folks feel when a snakes suddenly reveals its secret presence. But this scaly beast’s fluid movement had mankind recognizing the creative life force and fertility as well as duality symbolized by serpents from The Beginning . Associated with some of the oldest rituals known, snakes shed their skin, becoming entirely new creatures, making them potent figures of rebirth, transformation, immortality and Healing. “Sometimes snakes can’t slough. They can’t burst their old skin,” the writer DH Lawrence reminds us. “Then they go sick and die inside the old skin, and nobody ever sees The New Pattern. It needs a real, desperate recklessness to burst your old skin at last. You simply don’t care what happens to you. If you rip yourself in two, so long as you Get Out.” Sure there’s work to be done, trudging and sloughing and even bursting involved, but the result is a renewal, of mind, body, and Spirit, and advancement from the stagnant past into the new energetic and vital.

That’s the work that went on here this weekend during our monthly Ceremonial gathering. I’ve told so many of these weekend success stories from my own perspective, I thought I’d leave this one up to the people. “Last evening was Fantastic,” wrote Wild Heart Guide J. Scott Campbell. “Love the power of the energy that gets going at Higher Haven.” Scott is truly a Force of Nature and you’ll have to come out and discover what his Forest Therapy Walks — inspired by the Japanese practice of Shinrin-yoku, or "Forest Bathing”— are all about. I’ll close with Mindy’s takeaway, a new community member who experienced her first visit here. We’ll be doing it again next month, along with our Medicinal Herb Walk Weekend, Summer Wednesday Meditation class, and other happenings into the late Summer and early Fall. Toksha, Until then.

"The Higher Haven Retreat Center is a truly wonderful and majestic place. The property is breathtaking and the retreat house has one feeling instantly at ease. Paul is an incredibly gracious host and a joy to converse with. Upon arrival and getting settled in, Higher Haven immediately felt like a home away from home. The overnight retreat culminated in an ancient Ceremony that led to an overwhelming feeling of release and being born anew. It felt like everyone in attendance had all bonded and become a little community. The celebratory feast after was fresh, healthy, and delicious, as was the food provided throughout the entire retreat. My experience at Higher Haven was one on I look back upon fondly. It truly is a place above all others. I want to thank Paul for facilitating such a healing experience, and look forward to returning!" – M.R.