2015-04-27T11:33:49-04:00

An overview of global seasons and resulting celebrations during the midpoint between the equinox & solstice. Read more

2014-06-24T14:42:00-04:00

New blog from Lupa Greenwolf and Rua Lupa on ecotheology, permaculture, animism, bioregionalism, and more! Read more

2015-04-27T11:33:34-04:00

An overview of global seasons and resulting celebrations during the Equinox. Read more

2014-02-27T12:28:53-04:00

I just finished reading Bernd Heinrich’s Life Everlasting: The Animal Way of Death. On one level, it’s an in-depth look at some of the undertakers of nature–burying beetles, vultures, fungi and their ilk. Most of us recognize that when an animal, plant or other living thing dies in the wild, it quickly becomes food for others; the nutrients in its body are cycled back into the system of life and death, eating and excreting. Not surprisingly, numerous creatures evolved to... Read more

2016-12-18T17:32:43-04:00

Transequilux can be a busy time of year, when for most people it is the slowest. Not for this Saegoah! Read more

2015-04-27T11:33:23-04:00

An overview of global seasons and resulting celebrations during the midpoint between the solstice & equinox. Read more

2014-01-09T09:37:13-04:00

I recently read Jack Nisbet’s The Collector: Davis Douglas and the Natural History of the Northwest. Douglas was a prolific naturalist in the early 1800s, sent to the Pacific Northwest and other portions of what would become the U.S. and Canada to collect botanical specimens for the London Horticultural Society. Unlike many biographies, this one barely touches on Douglas’ childhood, instead focusing almost exclusively on his explorations between 1824 and 1834. It draws heavily from his journals and other writings... Read more

2016-12-18T17:31:41-04:00

One Saegoah's way of celebrating the longest night of the year. Read more

2015-04-27T11:33:14-04:00

An overview of global seasons and resulting celebrations during the Solstice. Read more

2014-06-27T20:37:57-04:00

Last week, Reid Wilson published an article with the Washington Post outlining what the continental United States might look like if state lines had been drawn along watersheds instead of the various boundaries they have today. John Wesley Powell, a geologist and civil war veteran, proposed this very idea; unfortunately, he was outgunned by Cyrus Thomas and the railroad lobby, who stood to benefit greatly from the more artificial ways in which state boundaries are drawn today. Enter John Lavey... Read more

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