Knowledge Keepers: Cedar Harvest

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  • Опубликовано: 4 янв 2025

Комментарии • 30

  • @hhwippedcream
    @hhwippedcream Год назад +6

    This is rarer than rare and more precious than gold. A roof over ones head and a healthful meal is invaluable. So grateful for those willing to share this life giving knowledge.
    Much Love.

    • @hhwippedcream
      @hhwippedcream Год назад

      Thank you so much for gifting us. I too feel the same connection to our Great Sycamores in the Santa Clara Valley. It is a heroic tree that protects all life within.

  • @graceyan964
    @graceyan964 4 года назад +11

    Wow, listening to Jessica talk, I marvelled at all the life skills and relevant learning she has received through her grandmother. Her gratitude for this passing down of knowledge has blessed her with a strong connection to the land and to
    her ancestors. Thanks Jessica and Robert, for giving me a glimpse into an important way of your culture!

  • @cadys6976
    @cadys6976 3 года назад +21

    That’s my auntie!

  • @bethmwl
    @bethmwl Год назад +4

    I love to see these traditions. The craftmanship is amazing. I always wonder how long it took the earliest of peoples to determine what a Spruce tree can offer as opposed to another type of tree. For all of these 'tribes' their environment gave them what was needed, they taught themselves how to use it. I watched a man make arrows from Dogwood, it was available to his tribe. A woman making a robe from thousands of turkey feathers, cordage made from a plant. No cotton, no synthetics...love it!
    I have one thought, I would like to see how a tree heals, survives after a harvest as shown here. Perhaps a forest where one can see the trees that sustained earlier generations and how it looks today. Perhaps they don't last long enough... Excellent.

    • @TheMommylupul
      @TheMommylupul Год назад

      Where I live, you can see culturally modified trees in every park and trail. They have a very distinctive scar pattern called a seam

  • @ewgoodwin2152
    @ewgoodwin2152 8 месяцев назад

    Thank you so much, especially Jessica for sharing your heart, your thrills, your fears and your love. This is so inspiring!

  • @MarieHu-p3n
    @MarieHu-p3n 10 месяцев назад

    Beautiful. Loved so much go out into the forest. Makes you feel alive😊

  • @orlandominichiello
    @orlandominichiello 2 года назад +2

    Great to continue traditions, thanks for sharing.

  • @CanadianMapleleaf
    @CanadianMapleleaf 2 года назад +2

    They are such beautiful people, I love the diverse native community within Canada.

  • @lauranicholls9421
    @lauranicholls9421 7 месяцев назад +1

    I love your ways Thanks for sharing..🦌

  • @TheUNORGANIZED
    @TheUNORGANIZED 3 года назад +1

    Thank you Jessica and Robert

  • @rainroamingtree1215
    @rainroamingtree1215 Год назад

    Thank you for sharing this.

  • @seanjustg5425
    @seanjustg5425 7 месяцев назад

    Respect for our home is a priority and rsponsibility. Integrity should not be sacrificed to make a profit or any reason really. I mean mother Earth is only the provider of everything...Thankz for sharing💚🌳🌎🙏

  • @ROOWHETSTONE
    @ROOWHETSTONE 3 года назад

    Lovely video and personal story. Thanks for sharing you two!

  • @NirvanaFan5000
    @NirvanaFan5000 11 месяцев назад

    beautiful video

  • @CossyXY
    @CossyXY 2 года назад +1

    11:37 this is the feeling of truth, the truth we are connect to mother earth, that without her, we could not survive. We are made of mother earth, every element we are made of and rely on is mother earth. It is emotional, because so many people don't know the truth, without mother earth we would not be.

  • @joenieman8976
    @joenieman8976 Месяц назад

    Do these two have a RUclips channel? I would love to watch more from them.

  • @donaldhenhawke5187
    @donaldhenhawke5187 Год назад +2

    what time of the year is it?

  • @guylainedeschenes2399
    @guylainedeschenes2399 Год назад

    Thank you for teaching us i am new at weaving basket and i whant to thank mother eart so thanks for your teavhing!✌❤

  • @tilliadixon1709
    @tilliadixon1709 2 года назад

    Thank you for sharing. ❤

  • @marcellawynja2372
    @marcellawynja2372 2 года назад

    I love trees always did, used to go in the woods all the time by myself.Trees are so medicinal in many ways. In our area we usd the leaves off trees for medicines.

  • @maddysonnyberg438
    @maddysonnyberg438 Год назад

    What are they sprinkling around the tree? Is it tobacco?

  • @kimanderson7200
    @kimanderson7200 3 года назад

    Thankyou so much !

  • @kristakaufman-y6j
    @kristakaufman-y6j 5 месяцев назад

    Do you go to the areas where they clear cut and burn stumps to get the ashes for soap making traditional ways ?The nitrites go back to fertilize soils and then the ashes will make lye for soaps with bear fats or tallow boiled and sea salts to harden it after . Make videos how the elders made soaps and such too!

  • @zeusfloreus
    @zeusfloreus 3 года назад

    Inspired!!!

  • @yourfavoriteceltictarotlad8324
    @yourfavoriteceltictarotlad8324 2 года назад

    💚💜

  • @Edenmm
    @Edenmm 3 месяца назад

    🙏❤️🥹🥹

  • @damageincorporatedmetal43v73
    @damageincorporatedmetal43v73 8 месяцев назад +1

    That's why my my Elders belong in a Cedar Casket... Be bugs & stuff like that ??? Worm crawling through my eye holes & stuff like that... 🤔

  • @donedinjackson5216
    @donedinjackson5216 3 года назад

    Gunałchéesh!