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A Mountain Hearth

Tales of Modern Homesteading and Outdoor Adventure

November 4, 2012

Passing Through the Graveyard on Halloween Night

I aimed for an old fashioned Halloween this year, with creative handmade costumes, lots of jack-o-lanterns, a party, bobbing for apples, homemade cupcakes, and a bonfire. In keeping with this idea, we began and ended our trick-or-treating at the old Masonic pioneer cemetery that sits on a forested hilltop with winding paths lined with native plant ID plaques, and interpretive historical plaques at each of the founding pioneer family plots. It’s one of my favorite urban green spaces in our town. Passing through the graveyard on Halloween night felt like a fitting way to bring the awareness of the celebration back to the theme of remembering and honoring the dead, during this time of the cycle of the year, of Autumn, Halloween, All Souls Day, Sawhein, and Dia de los Muertos. So the whole bunch of us; Super Botany Woman (myself), Calvin and Hobbes, the Jedi Night, the princess, the vampiress who lost her teeth, the mad scientist, the scandalous Frenchman, the furry minion of Death, and her red demon sister all wandered along the paths on our way to the University neighborhoods for trick-or-treating, and back to our cars in the dark when we were done. The wildness, and focus on native plant restoration and education of this particular cemetery, reminded me of this poem by Brian Patten.
In Tintagel Graveyard
Who brought flowers to this grave?
I, said the wren.
I brought them as seeds and then
Watched them grow.

No, said the wind. That’s not true.
I blew them across the moor and sea,
I blew them up to the grave’s door.
They were a gift from me.

They came of their own accord,
Said the celandine.
I know best. They’re brothers of mine.

I am Death’s friend,
Said the crow. I ought to know.

I dropped them into the shadow of the leaning stone.
I brought the flowers.

No, said Love,
It was I who brought them,
With the help of the wren’s wing,
With the help of the wind’s breath,
With the help of the celandine and the crow.

It was I who brought them
For the living and the dead to share,
I was the force that put those flowers there.
~Brian Patten

Filed Under: Life, Seasons, Words to Live by

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Out here in Oregon, I enjoy the rough-hewn life of a modern homesteader and mountain woman, weaving the outdoors into the fabric of daily life. Whether tending this McKenzie River homestead hearth or a campfire in the backcountry, I find great enjoyment in the work of a sustainable life. Gather around as I share my tales of outdoor adventure, conservation, restoration, land stewardship, wildcrafting, handcrafting, growing food, and keeping chickens. It is my hope to share ideas and inspiration, and strengthen connections with the land and wild places. Read More…

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