From: joann@ariadne.SLAC.Stanford.EDU (Jo Ann Malina) Newsgroups: alt.pagan Subject: Forward from group alt.co-evolution Date: 13 Aug 92 06:36:39 GMT I thought people might enjoy this article about paganish-sounding methods of gardening. +From: toma@hyperion.gsfc.nasa.gov (Tom Atwater) +Subject: Re: Perelandra ( was Re: a newsgroup for Whole Earth...) +Date: 11 Aug 92 12:42:09 GMT +Lawrence.London@bbs.oit.unc.edu (Lawrence London) writes: + >I'm very interested in their [Findhorn's] organic gardening + >methods. I am an organic market farmer building an extensive system + >of raised beds on my six acres... [more very impressive stuff] +Well, we are sort of at opposite ends of the spectrum :-). I live in +a townhouse in the DC suburbs. My wife and I have a garden of about 60 +sq ft, consisting of a few tomatoes, cukes, beans, broccoli, peppers +and assorted herbs. + > >There is a place in Virginia called Perelandra that is similar. + >I've heard of it and seen 2 books on it. One is "Behaving As If the + >God In All Life Mattered" A New Age Ecology, by Machelle Small Wright. + >1987, Perelandra Ltd., P.O. Box 3603, Warrenton, Va., 22186, $9.95; + >the other is an organic gardening primer. + We have been using the ideas in Wright's "Perelandra Gardening + Workbook I" to develop our garden this year. +For those unfamiliar with Wright's work, she runs a center for +research into cooperation with nature spirits and devas, or beings (if +you prefer that term) that provide the non-physical intent and essence +behind vegetable and flower gardens. It is like Findhorn, except that +it is essentially a one-woman operation, whereas Findhorn is a +community. +In the co-creation of our garden, we followed the deva's advice in +matters like what to plant, where to plant it, and what fertilizers to +use (e.g. bone meal, dried blood, etc.). Our method of communication +is a Ouija board, through which the answers to our questions come +through very clearly. +The results have been very good. For the first time in our experience, +we grew good heads of broccoli. Some of the cukes were very large, and +the tomatoes are good-tasting. The most important result to me, +though, has been the good feeling I get from doing this. I just know +it's the right thing to do. My wife is somewhat more skeptical than I, +but she has kept an open mind about it, which is all anyone can ask +for. We will be attending Wright's annual open house, and a few of +her workshops. +So how do you feel about all this? Ever feel that you are in touch +with something deeper while gardening? Could be just a nagging +feeling, or an impulse you can't ascribe to your conscious mind, or +something. Any thoughts?