From Kengi, Boltonia decurrens, which is an endangered plant, with bonus insect and spider. Click for full size.
© Kengi, all rights reserved.
From Kengi, Boltonia decurrens, which is an endangered plant, with bonus insect and spider. Click for full size.
© Kengi, all rights reserved.
From Kengi: The primary bloom is no longer attracting pollinators. Engage the auxiliary flower! This is the first sunflower I’ve had that sprouted a secondary bloom. It’s been a wild year for our sunflowers. Click for full size!
© Kengi, all rights reserved.
The protests at Standing Rock. Ruth Hopkins has a good column about watching the feds, and why they are so distrusted. If you hadn’t read it before, catch it now. Revos.2040 breaks the news that the Army Corp of Engineers do not have a written easement for Dakota Access. Mike Myers has a wonderful column up on the Ties That Bind, about the Haudenosaunee Confederation’s longstanding treaty with the Sioux Nations.
Black Lives Matter in solidarity with Standing Rock protectors. This makes me so happy. #NoDAPL #RezpectOurWater pic.twitter.com/M0nf53xRkT
— #NoDAPL (@N8VChey) August 29, 2016
Josue Rivas is doing incredible work, documenting the protectors and life at the camp.
School has started for the children at the camps. The 2016 Tribal Summit will take place as planned, and there will be discussion about the pipeline. Pow Wow is on, and Sacred Stone Camp will have information and education booths up. We stand, not only for ourselves, but for all people. Please, don’t lapse back into resignation, don’t let weariness win. We have been fighting for hundreds of years. The camps in this one resistance have been standing for 5 months now, since April, and we are not going to stop now, so please, don’t you stop either. We must endure, and every voice, every signal boost, every supply, every donation, every person who comes to the camps, you hold us up, you brace the foundation of our obligation to and protection of our earth, our water. We still need help. Holler, shout, spread the word, signal boost, please! Join us, stand with us. Come to camps. If you can’t, please signal boost, send or drop off supplies, or donate. Sign the petitions, whatever you are able to do!
Support Sacred Stone Camp. Legal Fund Help. Support Native Youth. Sign the Petition. Sign urgent petition.
Flood it with calls! #NoDAPL pic.twitter.com/9OQT9TI1vO
— Matt Remle (@wakiyan7) August 30, 2016
#BlackLivesMatter arriving at #NoDAPL camp pic.twitter.com/9hgi6ctGMM
— Ruth Hopkins (@RuthHHopkins) August 28, 2016
Me waiting for all those Cherokee princesses & NA culture "appreciators" to offer solidarity or amplify #NoDAPL pic.twitter.com/2iCUnHu7cO
— #RezpectOurWater (@morniiiingstar) August 29, 2016
About this ^ last, because I’m sure someone somewhere will be offended. If you look at Etsy, or any other site where people sell stuff, you will always find a fucktonne of people happily appropriating all things Indigenous. Non-Indigenous people run around wearing Plains headdresses with abandon, people dress up as “Pocahotties” and all kinds of other thoughtless, bigoted isht. If you’re one of those people, this last applies. If you know one of those people, this last applies. If you’re busy making money and taking advantage of appropriating Indigenous culture, the very least you could do is to support those you rip off.
The Lummi Nation of Washington held a blessing and send-off ceremony on Thursday for the 2016 Totem Pole Journey.
Master carver Jewell James created a 22-foot tall pole that will travel 5,000 miles to raise awareness of the impacts of fossil fuel development in Indian Country. One of the first stops will be the Camp of the Sacred Stones near Cannon Ball, North Dakota.
“We need to be heard as many people and one voice,” James of the House of Tears Carvers said in a press release announcing this year’s journey. “We need to let them know they cannot in the name of profits do this to the people, the water, the land, and to the future generations. We will never give up. They must not pass!”
The Standing Rock Sioux Tribe established the Camp of the Sacred Stones to protest the $3.8 billion Dakota Access Pipeline, which comes within a half-mile of the reservation. The pole is expected to arrive at the site on Tuesday, August 30, before departing on Friday, September 1. This year marks the fourth Totem Pole Journey It comes after the Lummi Nation successfully defeated a coal export terminal on its treaty territory in Washington.
You can read more at Indianz.com, and the Journey’s route is here. Support Sacred Stone Camp. Legal Fund Help. Support Native Youth. Sign the Petition. Sign urgent petition.
New Stories: Dakota Access: Stars From Hollywood to Washington Support Water Protectors.
Important Message from Keeper of Sacred White Buffalo Calf Pipe.