Ontario

Little Nut Struggles to Survive.

Hickory Dickory Dock

The mouse ran up the clock

The cluck struck one

Down he’d come

Hickory Dickory Dock…

Every big nut tree starts from one little nut hitting the ground and surviving.  On my little slice of ancestral land, there are plenty of hickory trees.  Both the edible shag bark (sweet nuts) and the in edible (but horrible tasting) bitter nut trees are plentiful.

I mentioned before that the biggest shag bark hickory I ever saw is there.  I imagine that when she was a nut that my Lenape ancestors were still hunting there with bows and arrows.  I can only imagine what she has survived.  Drought, occupation, war, floods, the great depression, countless ice and wind storms and the axes of builders.  Still even a nut knows when life is ending and I too knew she was at the end of her life-cycle over the past couple of years.  With only a few branches remaining, and some animals have taken up living in her scars, she has been looking weak.  This spring when I came I found that her only two remaining large branches have left her and are sadly laying on the ground next to her.  Since the biggest one is her top branch, this loss reduced her height by half.  Just like human beings, she shrinks with age.

She looks small, feeble, fragile now.   Even so, she hangs on to her life with tenacity because seems to be budding out on her remaining little branches.  I believe what I see here is her last remaining spring hoorah before she becomes an apartment for the forest creatures.  Still, remember that perhaps 200 years ago she was just a little nut, she has lived a long life, witnessed much!

Hickory dickory dock.

Here is creation story which shows the importance of trees.

Lenapé Kishelamàwa’kàn

(The Lenape Creation Story)

Here is how the creation myth was explained by a Lenape patriarch when a Dutchman asked him where the Indians came from: He was silent for a little while, either as if unable to climb up at once so high with his thoughts, or to express them without help, and then took a piece of coal out of the fire where he sat, and began to write upon the floor.  He first drew a circle, a little oval, to which he made four paws or feet, a head and a tail. “This,” he said, “is a tortoise, lying in the water around it,” and he moved his hand round the figure continuing. “This was or is all water, and so at first was the world or the earth, when the tortoise gradually raised its round back up high, and the water ran off of it, and thus the earth became dry.

“He then took a little straw and placed it on end in the middle of the figure and proceeded, “The earth was now dry, and there grew a tree in the middle of the earth, and the root of this tree sent forth a sprout beside it, and there grew upon it a man, who was the first male. This man was then alone, and would have remained alone; but the tree bent over until its top touched the earth, and there shot therein another root, from which came forth another sprout, and there grew upon it the woman, and from these two are all men produced.”

*Jaspar Dankers & Peter Sluyter, Journal Of A Voyage To New York In 1679-80.

Categories: Environmentalism, Erazim Kohák, Forest, Kingston, Nature, Ontario, Open your eyes, Tiny House Ontario | Leave a comment

The Ancestors Noweta

Before Tiny House Ontario was built, I thought I would build back a lot farther on my land than I did.  Perhaps it was the Pukwudgies, that made me dream about building?   I don’t think so, I feel that the ancestors have a plan for me. I dreamed a few nights before I was to build that my Grandma Moreland was standing there in the forest and she said that I should build it, there where she stood, so I did what she said.

I had been living there about a week last summer and while I sat writing I felt that there was someone watching me.  It did not scare me, but rather I felt it was someone familiar who would protect me, who made me Noweta (welcome).  When I looked up, I saw a face looking at me from a Maple tree that sits VERY close to the corner of the Tiny House.

I call this my Ancestor tree and I give the Ancestor treats like cheese, coffee and tea and I also burn sweet grass and white sage near the base.

This afternoon, I caught the Ancestor smiling at me and I decided to take his photo of the face in the tree and also to take a photo of the tree, from the upstairs window… I was very surprised to see such a straight line of trees in the forest!  Funny that I had not noticed it before but it really is right at the corner of the house so I cannot see in this due South-West Angle, at all, because of the corner beam.

I think I have to give a little bit more research into my Native Delaware Folklore!  Does anyone know about tree spirits?

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Categories: Erazim Kohák, Forest, Nature, Ontario, Open your eyes, Simple living, Tiny House Ontario, View, Writing | 1 Comment

One For the Show

Well… it has been a long time.  Those of you who know me will know that I spent my early life painting and selling these works in shopping malls across Ontario.  I was just a teen and out of my teens then and for some strange reason that I cannot remember, I used to sign my paintings with the name Lana, or Jamey.  I suppose I thought it sounded cooler than Laura or using my last name, as I do today.  Anyway… the news is, that I just started selling paintings again.  It is exciting to go full circle.

I now have 12 pieces on display at Hatter’s Bay.  I hope you will stop by at this wonderful small business!  You can’t buy a lemon tart today though because I bought them all!  Sorry (not really).  Last night we had a wonderful butternut and sweet potato soup from there with an artisan bread loaf from Fred’s that she carries there. YUM!

If you are interested in my work you will want to know that am asking $190/painting inclusive for each one.  The frames are (of course) Canadian made.

If you are making a day trip of it, just around the corner on Mowat, there is a new little shop with beautiful things made by a sweet and chatty artist/seamstress, another artist/painter and also a jeweller.  It is in a little white house there and NOT well marked.  (SHHHH!  I got the cutest little hand made bloomers for my new niece.)  It is a great little outing.  Creative things and then a lovely bunch of local food on your table for supper!

 

The show is now over.  To see any works please contact Laura here.

Categories: Art, Kingston, Laura Moreland, Ontario, Original Art work of Laura Moreland, Tiny House Ontario, Wind Farm, Windmill painting, Wolfe Island | Leave a comment

Celery

A while ago the folks and Frugally Sustainable mentioned that they were regrowing celery.  WHAT?

Anyway… It is easy and it works.  I have not clipped and used any yet but I will be toting it with me to Tiny House Ontario so that when it is a little bigger I can eat some of this lovely plant, and also because my husband is a plant killer.  Just cut one or two off from the outside and let it keep on growing.  I wonder how long it will last?

Introducing Ms. Celery.  (She uses pot!)

Categories: Environmentalism, Off Grid, Ontario, Simple living, Sustainable living | Leave a comment

Battersea Beautiful at Loughborough Lake Ontario

I  have been pretty fortunate in my life to have had the opportunities that I have had.  Travel being one of the privileges I have enjoyed.  For me, there are places that are just so breathtaking and unique that they stay with you forever.  I have not been around the world but I have seen many places.  Few are as enchanting as Battersea, Ontario.

Right where the Canadian Shield meets the South, water, rocks, inlets, trees, sky, and marsh, are beyond beautiful.  It seems shady everywhere there, except at the store’s parking.  It is funny how mostly we don’t notice this when we come from the area, and only remember when we leave.

This, my friends, I am going to share, is the best place in the world to sit and have an ice-cream cone, or a Popsicle (for my Vegan friends).  The cars drive slowly past, the boats make their way into this little harbour to go to the store or the local hang out for a beer or something.  I don’t know why exactly, but it is just a place that you want to sit at and breathe for a bit.

I think that Erazim Kohák might say that this is a place that holds it’s history and when you are there, you can almost feel the lives of those that have been there before you, sitting right there, eating an ice-cream.

I hope that I have done it some small justice.  8×10

Categories: Art, Erazim Kohák, Kingston, Laura Moreland, Ontario, Original Art work of Laura Moreland, Simple living, Time | Leave a comment