Category Archives: Wing Medicine

Birds of a Feather

“It’s not enough to have the feathers. You must dare to fly!”                   ~ Cass van Krah

My life is filled with circles.  I live within circles – the trees, Echo Lake, the communities I serve, the spaces where I pray.  I’ve studied in several circles and I am guided teach to many as well.   This weekend I have been invited to mentor to a circle of women  – Sisters,  Regine della Luna, in the craft and use of feather fans.  Their beautiful and graceful teacher entrusts me with imparting this wisdom knowing that I am guided by my Ancestors, and that they always lead the way.  Our co-creations together have always been a gorgeous blossoming forth.  I am deeply grateful for this opportunity and the gifts the day will bring.

This group of 8 women have been studying together for some time now.  It’s my understanding that they are bonded with deep integrity and respect for one another.  I can hardly wait to meet them.  My drum is talking, he too is eager.  Drumming for a journey to make the introductions is quite often a part of the teachings here at Soul Proprietor.  I am guided to suggest to them that they tell the spirit guide of the medicine “who they are and why they are coming” to this medicine.  And to ask, “what does the medicine of the pheasant want them to know?”.    This is only the beginning, the crafting follows and the relationships begin to solidify.  Sometimes it may take a while to find the footing and comfort in working with a feather fan – learning to receive the wisdom of the pheasant and how to integrate the wisdom into ones life.  And it may well come easily for these women as they have been well prepared by their teacher.

“It is not only fine feathers that make fine birds.”
~ Aesop

The feather fans crafted today may be for personal work or possibly for work in the community, both – either way, the medicine of the pheasant makes for a strong transmitter of energy.  the clearing potential and intelligence of the bird will now within the grasp of these women who are claiming their place in the world as healers – of themselves and potentially others.  A relationship will be forged for doing good – the Four Winds, Earth and Sky, and the Mystery to support them with only the highest good as our intention.

Pheasant medicine teaches patience, confidence, enjoyment of variety and new experiences.  Open spaces without boundaries are most suitable for Pheasant – suggesting a desire to roam, literally and metaphorically.  Color.  Vitality.  Sexuality.  Creation.  With Pheasant, it is best to stay grounded yet discover and explore the esoteric and spiritual, to investigate past lives.

“Life is a full circle, widening until it joins the circle motions of the infinite.”    ~Anaïs Nin

The sun is shining on golden leaves, still on the maple trees.  The Douglas fir surround the maples, like arms around the shoulders of friends.  Gray clouds hold them both.  All are mirrored onto Echo Lake – the sun sees to it the reflections are cast long and far.  Many Mallard, Hooded Merganser and American Wigeon are on the water, scattered among the reflected colors.  It’s always a good day at Echo Lake.

In Gratitude  ~  Aho Mitakuye Oyasin

 

314

“Since its founding in 1905, Audubon has always stood for birds, and science-based bird conservation has been our mission.  Following that tradition, our science team recently completed a seven-year study of the likely effects of climate change on North American birds populations.  The findings are heartbreaking: Nearly half of the bird species of the United States will be seriously threatened by 2080, and any of those could disappear forever.” ~Audubon

314 is the number of bird species at risk from climate change according to The Audubon Report.  As a committed bird nerd I find this heartbreaking indeed.

I’ve been in love with birds my entire life.  It was the little red-breasted nuthatch that piqued my desire to know birds.  Who was that at my feeder?  The ferocious and growly, stripy faced little bird took my love in a new direction, deepening my relationship to birds.  In 1987 I began my quest to identify half of the birds in my field guide in my lifetime.  This has led to many joy-filled days in my own front yard, weekends at the hawk-watch on Cooper Mountain, vacations all across the country, into Canada, Mexico and Europe.  A Big Year of birding is on my bucket list.  I keep notes in the margins of my original bird identification book, a National Geographic Birds of North America, the first of several types of field guides I’ve purchased and my favorite.  It is derelict and tattered as well as outdated – much has changed when it comes to the identification in the ornithological world.   My notes are sweet reminders of those first moments when I made an identification, beginning my relationship with a new bird species, where I was, the date and if anyone else was with me – A chronology of my 25 years of birding. I haven’t actually counted but I’m certain that at best, I am only to the half-way point of identifying the bird species in my favorite guide-book.  Audubon’s study and the constant threat to the Boreal forests of Canada where more than 300 North American species breed and nest leave me somewhat discouraged – will I be able to see half?

Warming of the climate system is unequivocal, and since the 1950s, many of the observed changes are unprecedented over decades to millennia. The atmosphere and ocean have warmed, the amounts of snow and ice have diminished, sea level has risen, and the concentrations of greenhouse gases have increased.  ~Intergovernmental Panel On Climate Change

The wheels of change are in motion.  Little has actually been done to mitigate the current climate conditions that are continuing virtually unchecked.  While there are many climate change activists world-wide (thank you very much!) there are still those who refuse to budge from a stance of denial that is both divisive and dangerous.

The Environmental Performance Index (EPI) (2010) is a leading ranking of the environmental performance of countries around the world based on 10 policy categories and 25 performance indicators grouped under two key objectives: environmental health and ecosystem vitality.  The 25 indicators and 10 policy categories provide measures of agriculture, air pollution, biodiversity and habitat, climate change, the environmental burden of disease, fisheries, and forestry.  ~Global Sherpa

Iceland, Switzerland, Costa Rica, Sweden, and Norway are ranked the top five counties on the EPI.  The United States ranks 61 out of 155 countries.  Not quite the “greatest country in the world” nor leading the way when it comes to this critical concern.  Policy makers acquiesce to special interests leaving the populations of birds and frankly all life forms on earth at risk.  This includes the human species.

Birds are joyful – color and song.  Birds are medicine – each species offering a unique power.  And birds are a vital part of a well-balanced ecosystem.  Education and sharing my passion are two small ways I can be actively engaged with conservation, there is a roadmap to action.  Elders benefit.  Children develop patience as well as many other life skills by learning to bird watch.  Cornell Lab of Ornithology reminds us in their Citizen Science blog of the importance a healthy habitat.  In a time a severe habitat loss, planting native plant species is vital to the overall health and survival of the bird populations, a simple thing that one person can do for the long-term health of their local ecosystem.  Shirley Doolittle of Tadpole Haven offers a bit of advice to those of us in the Pacific Northwest – plant Cascara, Indian Plum, Ocean Spray, Red Elderberry and ALL of our native conifers, the basis for healthy forest habitat she states.  We plant native plants because they are good for the environment. Native plants heal damaged land, provide food and shelter for creatures large and small, filter runoff and cool streams. Indian Plum is a favorite of mine, usually the first to bloom here in the PNW in late winter – I have both a male and female to assure they fruit each year.   I’ve seen the secretive Swainson’s thrush with a dirty elderberry face on more than one occasion – a very funny sight.  Won’t you please find a native species grower in your locale and plant something for the birds in your garden?

There truly is little an individual can in the grand scheme of this scenario.  Coming together as a community of concerned citizens for our own best interest and for all our brethren seems vital.   Putting pressure on elected officials.  Electing officials who will not bow down to the cronyism of our political system, who will take a stand for the people and Mother Earth.  Talk about the realities.  Attend to the depletion and to the dying as though in hospice.  Being midwives to revitalization and sustainability.  Revel in the glory of birds while we can, sharing their beauty and wisdom with others.  I am keeping my binocular handy, getting outside for a look as often as possible.  Offering what I can in action and prayer.  I am grateful for the birds, grateful for the  joy they are in my life and grateful for those bringing these concerns to the forefront.  Wopila!

“There is hope if people will begin to awaken that spiritual part of themselves, that heartfelt knowledge that we are caretakers of this planet.” ~Brooke Medicine Eagle

                                           ~Aho Mitakuye Oyasin

The 314 species at risk:  Allen’s Hummingbird, American Avocet, American Bittern, American Black Duck, American Dipper, American Golden Plover, American Kestrel, American Oystercatcher, American Pipit, American Redstart, American Three-toed Woodpecker, American White Pelican, American Wigeon, American Woodcock, Ancient Murrelet, Anhinga, Baird’s Sparrow, Bald Eagle, Baltimore Oriole, Band-tailed Pigeon, Bank Swallow, Barn Owl, Barrow’s Goldeneye, Bay-breasted Warbler, Bell’s Vireo, Bendire’s Thrasher, Black & White Warbler, Black-backed Woodpecker, Black-bellied Plover, Black-billed Cuckoo, Black-billed Magpie, Black-capped Vireo, Black-chinned Hummingbird, Black-chinned Sparrow, Black-crested Titmouse, Black-crown Night Heron, Black-headed Grosbeak, Black-legged Kittiwake, Black-throated Blue Warbler, Black-throated Gray Warbler, Black-Throated Green Warbler, Black Guillemot, Black Oystercatcher, Black Rosy-finch, Black Skimmer, Black Swift, Black Tern, Black Vulture, Blackburnian Warbler, Blackpoll Warbler, Blue-winged Teal, Blue-winged Warbler, Boat-tailed Grackle, Bobolink, Bohemian Waxwing, Boreal Chickadee, Boreal Owl, Brant, Brewer’s Blackbird, Brewer’s Sparrow, Broad-winged Hawk, Bronze Cowbird, Brown-capped Rosy Finch, Brown-headed Nuthatch, Brown Creeper, Brown Pelican, Bufflehead, Bullock’s Oriole, Burrowing Owl, California Gull, Calliope Hummingbird, Canada Warbler, Cape May Warbler, Caspian Tern, Cassin’s Auklet, Cassin’s Finch, Cave Swallow, Cerulean Warbler, Chestnut-collared Longspur, Chestnut-sided Warbler, Cinnamon Teal, Clapper Rail, Clark’s Grebe, Clark’s Nutcracker, Clay-colored Sparrow, Common Goldeneye, Common Loon, Common Merganser, Common Poorwill, Common Raven, Common Redpoll, Common Tern, Connecticut Warbler, Cordilleran Flycatcher, Crested Caracara, Double-crested Cormorant, Dovekie, Dunlin, Dusky Flycatcher, Dusky/Sooty Grouse, Eared  Grebe, Eastern Whip-Poor-Will, Emperor Goose, Eurasian Wigeon, Evening Grosbeak, Ferruginous Hawk, Fish Crow, Florida Scrub Jay, Foster’s Tern, Franklin’s Gull, Gadwall, Gila Woodpecker, Gilded Flicker, Glaucous Winged Gull, Glossy Ibis, Golden-Cheeked Warbler, Golden-crowned Kinglet, Golden-fronted Woodpecker, Black-backed Gull, Great Gray Owl, Greater Sage Grouse, Greater Scaup, Greater White-fronted Goose, Greater Yellowlegs, Green-tailed Towhee, Gull-billed Tern, Gyrfalcon, Hairy Woodpecker, Hammond’s Flycatcher, Henslow’s Sparrow, Hepatic Tanager, Hermit Thrush, Hermit Warbler, Herring Gull, Hooded Merganser, Hooded Oriole, Hooded Warbler, Horned Grebe, House Finch, Hutton’s Vireo, Juniper Titmouse, King Eider, King Rail, Kittlitz’s Murrelet, Laughing Gull, Lawrence’s Goldfinch, Le Conte’s Sparrow, Le Conte’s Thrasher, Least Bittern, Least Flycatcher, Least Grebe, Least Tern, Lesser Prairie Chicken, Lesser Scaup, Lesser Yellowlegs, Lewis’s Woodpecker, Little Gull, Long-billed Curlew, Long-billed Thrasher, Long-eared Owl, Louisiana Waterthrush, Magnolia Warbler, Mallard, Mangrove Cuckoo, Marbled Godwit, Marsh Wren, McCown’s Longspur, Merlin, Mexican Jay, Mississippi Kite, Montezuma Quail, Mountain Bluebird, Mountain Chickadee, Mountain Plover, Mountain Quail, Mourning Warbler, Nashville Warbler, Nelson’s/Saltmarsh Sparrow, Northern Fulmar, Northern Gannett, Northern Harrier, Northern Hawk Owl, Northern Pygmy Owl, Northern Saw-Whet Owl, Northern Shoveler, Olive Warbler, Orchard Oriole, Osprey, Ovenbird, Pacific-slope Flycatcher, Pacific Golden Plover, Painted Redstart, Palm Warbler, Parasitic Jaeger, Peregrine Falcon, Philadelphia Warbler, Pigeon Guillemot, Pine Grosbeak, Pine Siskin, Pine Warbler, Pinyon Jay, Piping Plover, Polarine Jaeger, Prairie Falcon, Purple Finch, Purple Sandpiper, Pygmy Nuthatch, Razorbill, Red-breasted Merganser, Red-breasted Nuthatch, Red-breasted Sapsucker, Red-cockaded Woodpecker, Red-faced Warbler, Red-napped Sapsucker, Red-necked Grebe, Red-throated Loon, Red Crossbill, Red Knot, Reddish Egret, Redhead, Rhinoceros Auklet, Ring-billed Gull, Ring-necked Duck, Rock Sandpiper, Roseate Spoonbill, Royal Tern, Ruddy Turnstone, Ruffed Grouse, Rufous-crowned Sparrow, Rufous Hummingbird, Rusty Blackbird, Sage Thrasher, Sagebrush Sparrow, Sandhill Crane, Sandwich Tern, Scarlet Tanager, Seaside Sparrow, Sedge Wren, Semipalmated Plover, Sharp-tailed Grouse, Short-billed Dowicher, Short-eared Owl, Smith’s Longspur, Snowy Owl, Solitary Sandpiper, Spotted Owl, Spotted Sandpiper, Sprague’s Pipit, Stilt Sandpiper, Surfbird, Swainson’s Hawk, Swallow-tailed Kite, Swamp Sparrow, Tennessee Warbler, Thayer’s Gull, Thick-billed Murre, Townsend’s Solitaire, Townsend’s Warbler, Tree Swallow, Tri-colored Blackbird, Tri-colored Heron, Trumpeter Swan, Tundra Swan, Varied Thrush, Vaux’s Swift, Veery, Vesper’s Sparrow, Violet-green Swallow, Virginian’s Warbler Western Bluebird, Western Grebe, Western Gull, Western Screech-Owl, Western Tanager, Western Wood Pewee, Whimbrel, White-breasted Nuthatch, White-crowned Pigeon, White-faced Ibis, White-headed Woodpecker, White-tailed Hawk, White-tailed Kite, White-throated Sparrow, White-throated Swift, White-winged Crossbill, Whooping Crane, Wild Turkey, Willet, Williamson’s Sapsucker, Willow Flycatcher, Wilson’s Phalarope, Wilson’s Plover, Wilson’s Warbler, Wood Duck, Wood Stork, Wood Thrush, Worm-eating Warbler, Yellow-bellied Flycatcher, Yellow-bellied Sapsucker, Yellow-billed Loon, Yellow-billed Magpie, Yellow-headed Blackbird, Yellow-throated Vireo, Yellow-throated Warbler, Yellow Rail, and Zone-tailed Hawk.

Today’s Bird Count

I hear Raven, that gorgeous deep voice in the distance, I don’t see him yet.  Many Mallard (and one domestic duck!) scatter as a lone kayaker paddles by.  Great blue Heron takes silent wing, flying low to the other side of the lake.  One of several resident crows is cawing the urgently, “CAT! CAT! CAT!” and songbirds erupt from the cover of grapevines and hardhack.  There are both chestnut-sided and black-capped chickadee, Oregon and slate-colored junco, Rufous-sided towhee, purple finch (a female came in the house by mistake yesterday, she quickly exited the way she came!), song sparrow and the first of the golden-crowned sparrows that arrived just a day or two ago.  If history can be counted on, soon there may be many and hopefully with them the white-crowned and maybe the white-throated sparrow too.  Fingers crossed.  Steller’s jay, of course.  Northern Flicker and Downy Woodpecker taking turns at the suet.  Kingfisher.  Starling – a noisy mob! – I can hear JP say, “starling!” with that despising tone of Snidely Whiplash.  American robin fill the lawn since the crow went quiet, feeling safe so easily perhaps or just driven by making a their living?  There’s a voice I don’t recognize in the apple tree.  And Anna hummingbirds are bickering and getting used to the new feeder.  They don’t seem to like it as well as the old one, but the gray squirrels having torn out the small openings leaving big holes and making for an easy sweet syrupy meal for dozens of hungry yellow-jackets  – so even the feisty little hummers would steer clear.  Nothing against yellow-jackets but I prefer to feed the birds, thus the new feeder.

All of these visitors to my Echo Lake yard are considered of least concern with conservationist.  I am fortunate for the abundance and grateful for their ability to sustain themselves.

There will be more as the day goes along.  I’ll keep watching.  Such a bird-nerd!  🙂  JOY! JOY! JOY!

Aho Mitakuye Oyasin!

Workshops & Circles ~ Autumn 2014 Schedule

The Ceremonialist Children’s Circle

September 13, 2014 ~ noon to 4pm
Join in this open circle to celebrate the coming Autumnal Equinox.  Open to girls and boys ages 9 to 13, both moms and dads are welcome.  We will honor the abundance of the season and the turning of the wheel here at Echo Lake. Email Barbara for details on what to anticipate and what to bring for sharing.

Rattle Crafting Workshop

September 14, 2014 ~ noon until complete
In this workshop you will learn to craft a rawhide rattle that will be perfect for clearing energy, for meditation and journey work, for calling up your allies.  Craft with horse, deer, elk, bear or buffalo hide, using cedar, fir, driftwood, bone or antler as your handle.
Register to attend this workshop or email Barbara for details.

Wing Medicine Workshop

September 20, 2014 ~ noon until complete
Learn to use smudge for clearing and cleansing with a feather fan. Craft a medicine wing to use in your personal or professional practice that serves your needs at this time. Wing Medicine is a powerful way to tend to the energetic needs of the mind, body and spirit of the individual, family, office and community.
Register to attend this workshop or email Barbara for details.

Drum Birthing Workshop 

September 27, 2014 ~ 10am until complete
What is calling you – deer? elk? bear? buffalo? horse?  Each voice is unique, the power of the four-legged is immeasurable.  The Standing Ones give us a sacred hoop that holds the hide yet it does not contain it – instead it is a vehicle that gives rise to voice and one of its purposes in the world.  Use a Shaman style hand-drum for journey work, for meditation, for the joy of it. Register to attend this workshop or email Barbara for details.

New @ The Bodhi Center on Bainbridge Island       

Drum Birthing Workshop – October 11, 2014

Rattle Crafting Workshop – November 23, 2014

These workshops are being taught at the beautiful and tranquil Bainbridge Bodhi Center on Bainbridge Island, WA.  These two workshops are being offered at a special reduced rate.  Space is limited.  Register to birth a drum and register to craft a rattle on this website or email Barbara for details.

The Ceremonialist’s Children Circle

October 12, 2014 – 11am – 4pm

Hard to say what sort of fun and adventure we’ll have this day but we will for certain!  There’ll be sweetness and ceremony, outdoors and discovery.  Come and see for yourselves!

Moccasin Crafting Workshop       

October 18 & 19, 2014 ~ 10am to 8pm each day
This two-day workshop is a great time in community sewing moccasin that are just for your feet!  These hand crafted one of a kind moccasin are sewn from the hide of the buffalo who will support your walk in the world with sweet guardianship. You will have a pair of moccasin you won’t want to take off. Register to attend this workshop or email Barbara for details.

Feeding the Fire Ceremony   

November 7, 2014 ~ 4pm until 9pm
This circle is a celebration of the feminine open to any girls that are nearing their moon time and beyond.  Invited are Mothers, Aunties, Grandmothers or any other Woman who is supporting this girl as she grows into a young woman.  Our time together is a common narrative of what it means to be in the skin of a woman, a sacred feminine being.  We share a place at the fire with stories, songs and respect. A simple and healthy shared meal honors our ceremony.  Email Barbara for details.

Experiential Gifting

In our consumer driven society, where most of us truly have far more things than we need – an experiential gift is both meaningful and worthwhile.

A Soul Proprietor Learning Workshop is a gift of significance.  Each time we come together to craft, we create purpose, intention and substance.  Whether for a celebration occasion like birthdays and anniversaries or to deepen time with family and community – a children’s day, girlfriend time, male bonding, new babies, emotional and spiritual healing or for no reason at all – schedule a time to immerse yourself and your intended  in a positively influential endeavor.  The time spent together creating is a lasting gift – wing medicine for smudging, a talking stick for council,  a drum to journey with, a rattle or custom fit moccasin crafting – a gift that can alter life in a good way for many years to come.

The experience of a medicine gift nurtures the mind, body and spirit of the one receiving as well as the one who gives the gift, the medicine working in subtle and mysterious ways.

Gift for the joy of it!

Blessings for your good health, happy and whole hearts and all the help you might need…. Aho Mitakuye Oyasin!

 

I call it FOO

FOO ~ Family of Origin.  The past 7 years or so a flock of about 40 Evening Grosbeak have been coming to my yard in the waning of the winter days.  Eagerly I awaited their arrival this year.  They didn’t return like usual until nearly half-way through spring.  Their entrance was  marked by their sharp loud calls and low whistling trill, waking me early one Saturday morning.  I was thrilled to see them back at the feeders, bickering with one another for position and the promise of sunflower seeds.  And I knew there was more, and new, work to do.

Grosbeak medicine teaches about family of origin matters, about healing the family heart.  What is it I need to learn this year?  What FOO issues will rise to the surface to be looked at, potentially healed or rejected?  What is in my heart to be cleared and allowed to be truth (with a capital T) in this new year of Grosbeak medicine?  I’ve got three sisters.  We don’t bicker but we don’t actually talk much either.  What holds me back from engaging with them?  Am I showing up?  What is it that leads me to retreat into the margins?  Am I willing to show myself for who I truly am?  Can I take a stand for myself within the dynamics of my family, shifting into a higher truth?  Can I share the seeds at the feeder so we are all nourished?  How can I heal the family heart by healing myself?

So many questions.  And now the Black-headed Grosbeak have arrived too, singing the most melodious song.  There are reminding me there is beauty in the FOO and my heart holds them.

I love you Dad.  I love you Mary.  I love you Patrice.  I love you Sandy.

May 2014 Workshop Schedule

Please email barbara@soulproprietor.org to reserve your seat in any of these workshops, to inquire about fees or with any questions.  Aho Mitakuye Oyasin

5/4       10am to completion   ~  Hanblechya Rattle Crafting

5/6       6pm-9pm    ~  Tuesday Evening Crafting Circle

5/10    1pm-5pm    ~   Moms & Kids Group

5/11    noon-6pm   ~   Wing Medicine Crafting

5/13    6pm-9pm    ~   Tuesday Evening Crafting Circle

5/17    9am-7pm    ~   Moccasin Crafting Part 1

5/18    9am-7pm    ~   Moccasin Crafting Part 2

5/19   6pm-9pm    ~    Monday Medicine

5/20    6pm-9pm    ~   Tuesday Evening Crafting Circle

5/24   9am-7pm    ~   Hanblechya Moccasin Crafting Part 1

5/25   9am-7pm    ~   Hanblechya Moccasin Crafting Part 2

5/26   10am until completion   ~   Drum Making Workshop

5/27   6pm-9pm    ~   Tuesday Evening Crafting Circle

 

Wing Medicine Workshop

Join in for a celebration of Mother and all things divinely feminine.  Wing Medicine Workshop – May 11, 2014 – noon to 6pm                    Workshop fee $75 – all materials included

Please RSVP your intention to join so I may prepare for you.

Ted Andrews writes in his book Animal Speak, ” The turkey is sometimes called the earth eagle.  It has a long history of association with spirituality and honoring of Mother Earth.  It is a symbol of all the blessings that the Earth contains, along with the ability to use them.”  Is it time to transcend the mundane and put your energy to good use for the greater good?  What is needed at this time in your immediate world, that of your family or community?

The Wild Turkey is a very intelligent and complex bird native to North America.  The Wild Turkey has acute senses and a highly developed social system often found in flocks of up to 60 individuals.  They are known to work cooperatively both in their foraging needs and with rearing their young.  Not only are they big and beautiful but the females are excellent mothers taking up to two years to fully raise a brood.  There is so much a young turkey must learn.  Is it time to mother yourself in a really good way?  What would feed you?  Are your physical needs being met?  How about your spiritual needs?  What could you do for yourself to bless yourself up in a good way?

Crafting a feather fan for energetic clearing with the wing or tail of the Wild Turkey creates the opportunity for receiving gifts – material, spiritual or intellectual.  I believe now is the time to use all the gifts available to us to their fullest potential.  By doing so, we give back to the Divine in a truly wonderful way.

 Aho Mitakuye Oyasin