The Earth Skills Correspondence Course is a ten block course that leads students through the skills of wilderness survival, in your own bioregion. It emphasizes the mastery of shelter, water, fire, camp skills, plants and trees, cooking, safety & hazards, attitude & philosophy and instructor training. Ricardo Sierra mentors the course through e-mail, this blog and a private Facebook Group, and students are self-guided. The course provides a wealth of skills and a powerful foundation from which to build and grow in any personal or wilderness study direction.
Get more information about this learning tool here: The Earth Skills Correspondence Course
Monday, September 14, 2009
October 10, 2009: The Next Earth Skills Correspondence Course Weekend Event
It's coming. October 10, 2009. Yep, it's the next Correspondence Course Weekend. Come on Friday evening, stay overnight, then spend the day with me and my students/staff, practicing skills, talking about the course and other relevant topics, explore the land at Hawk Circle and get answers to your skills and philosophy questions....
It's free. (Bring your own food!)
You don't even need a tent! (We have cabins!)
You won't be given a guilt trip if you haven't been working on the course. We can just hang out and get some new inspiration.
If it rains, we have a great workshop room, heated by woodstove. Come learn, sharpen your knife, make hand drill fires, bark containers, grass mats, or whatever else you want to work on! I will even bring some venison to share around the campfire...
There is the great town of Cooperstown, or Cherry Valley, if you want to bring your family and they want to explore the museums or the lake or the hills. They can stay in the cabins too, and be around while we do our thing. (I am very laid back!)
Save the date, and send me an E-mail if you can make it. Let me know what you would like to study or work on, and it will help me plan!
Thanks, everyone and have a great fall!
P.S. The pics are from last spring's Skills Retreat, with Brad and EW. Man, that was a great day!
Wednesday, September 9, 2009
Finding Time
We are all busy. Unbelievably so, in many cases. Here at Hawk Circle, we seem to go in waves. Summer camp staff training starting=Super Busy. Camp is Underway=Slightly Less Busy. Adirondack Expedition Packing/Prep=Super Busy. Camp ends=Slightly Less Busy. Assembling a Timber Frame Cabin=Super Busy..... well, you get the idea!
When it is so busy, well, it does make it hard to work our jobs, get our yard/house work/chores done, hang out and have family or relationship time in and then rest and relax. Where do we get the time to actually practice skills or learn new skills? How do we find time without having to invent a time machine?
This fall, it is just Trista and myself running Hawk Circle, with a small crew of apprentices, and we are going to be flat out all season. On top of that, I am timberframing cabins, cutting firewood, getting the camp and cabins ready for the winter, teaching several workshops, leading four afterschool programs each week and trying to write my book. When am I going to have time to go Bowhunting? Well, that's the great thing about finding time. You just have to make it happen. You just have to GO!
Each fall, I am so busy that there is no way I will have time, and yet, somehow, I find the time. I just go. Sometimes, I go early in the morning and get back in time for Trista to take Jesse into school in Cooperstown. It isn't a full morning hunt, but it is better than nothing. Other times, I just go in the afternoon, when a school cancels their program, or on weekends or holidays. I go every chance I get.
As the season goes, I somehow find more and more time to get out. It is a great feeling, sitting in a tree stand, or leaning against a big pine and listening to the wind in the trees and the squirrels chasing each other fighting for apples. I seem to settle into a deeper place, almost a sacred place, and though I only have a few hours, it can feel like an eternity.
This fall I am running a workshop called The Sacred Hunt, and if you are a new hunter or just want to get together with a group of us and learn to hunt in a respectful and honorable manner, please feel free to check it out and join us. Looking back on last year, some of the most powerful lessons and skills I learned all year happened during the hunting season, for myself as a man, as a teacher, as a parent and a husband. I learned and I grew and it was good.
Somehow, I managed to get everything done that I needed to do, and the things I didn't get done, well, the world didn't end, either. (It almost did, though! See: Recession!)
The bottom line is, sometimes you have to make a stand. Not against anything, but for yourself, for your own inner knowing, for your own soul to grow and shine. Sometimes you have to do it for the good of the whole, even if it is something that might seem like it is an inconvenience or whatever. You have to trust your instincts.
I know that there are lots of things I would like to do, like go fishing, or visit friends or catch up on my emails or letters, or whatever, but I have my priorities! I know when to push and when to stay home and get my other work done....
The biggest point of this post is to say that even if I, or you, get all of your 'work' done, you still need to find ways to grow, personally, spiritually, and intellectually, or take a retreat to renew yourself or recharge so you can be there, fully present, for the people you love and care about. It seems almost counter intuitive, but life is sometimes like that, isn't it? If you have a personal approach to finding time, to taking care of yourself and your own growth and development, please post and share!
In the meantime, enjoy the last of the summer blackberries and I will leave you with these words:
"There are two mistakes one can make along the road to truth...not going all the way, and not starting. ” - Buddha
Ricardo
Tuesday, September 8, 2009
Finding Time
We are all busy. Unbelievably so, in many cases. Here at Hawk Circle, we seem to go in waves. Summer camp staff training starting=Super Busy. Camp is Underway=Slightly Less Busy. Adirondack Expedition Packing/Prep=Super Busy. Camp ends=Slightly Less Busy. Assembling a Timber Frame Cabin=Super Busy..... well, you get the idea!
When it is so busy, well, it does make it hard to work our jobs, get our yard/house work/chores done, hang out and have family or relationship time in and then rest and relax. Where do we get the time to actually practice skills or learn new skills? How do we find time without having to invent a time machine?
This fall, it is just Trista and myself running Hawk Circle, with a small crew of apprentices, and we are going to be flat out all season. On top of that, I am timberframing cabins, cutting firewood, getting the camp and cabins ready for the winter, teaching several workshops, leading four afterschool programs each week and trying to write my book. When am I going to have time to go Bowhunting? Well, that's the great thing about finding time. You just have to make it happen. You just have to GO!
Each fall, I am so busy that there is no way I will have time, and yet, somehow, I find the time. I just go. Sometimes, I go early in the morning and get back in time for Trista to take Jesse into school in Cooperstown. It isn't a full morning hunt, but it is better than nothing. Other times, I just go in the afternoon, when a school cancels their program, or on weekends or holidays. I go every chance I get.
As the season goes, I somehow find more and more time to get out. It is a great feeling, sitting in a tree stand, or leaning against a big pine and listening to the wind in the trees and the squirrels chasing each other fighting for apples. I seem to settle into a deeper place, almost a sacred place, and though I only have a few hours, it can feel like an eternity.
This fall I am running a workshop called The Sacred Hunt, and if you are a new hunter or just want to get together with a group of us and learn to hunt in a respectful and honorable manner, please feel free to check it out and join us. Looking back on last year, some of the most powerful lessons and skills I learned all year happened during the hunting season, for myself as a man, as a teacher, as a parent and a husband. I learned and I grew and it was good.
Somehow, I managed to get everything done that I needed to do, and the things I didn't get done, well, the world didn't end, either. (It almost did, though! See: Recession!)
The bottom line is, sometimes you have to make a stand. Not against anything, but for yourself, for your own inner knowing, for your own soul to grow and shine. Sometimes you have to do it for the good of the whole, even if it is something that might seem like it is an inconvenience or whatever. You have to trust your instincts.
I know that there are lots of things I would like to do, like go fishing, or visit friends or catch up on my emails or letters, or whatever, but I have my priorities! I know when to push and when to stay home and get my other work done....
The biggest point of this post is to say that even if I, or you, get all of your 'work' done, you still need to find ways to grow, personally, spiritually, and intellectually, or take a retreat to renew yourself or recharge so you can be there, fully present, for the people you love and care about. It seems almost counter intuitive, but life is sometimes like that, isn't it? If you have a personal approach to finding time, to taking care of yourself and your own growth and development, please post and share!
In the meantime, enjoy the last of the summer blackberries and I will leave you with these words:
"There are two mistakes one can make along the road to truth...not going all the way, and not starting. ” - Buddha
Ricardo
When it is so busy, well, it does make it hard to work our jobs, get our yard/house work/chores done, hang out and have family or relationship time in and then rest and relax. Where do we get the time to actually practice skills or learn new skills? How do we find time without having to invent a time machine?
This fall, it is just Trista and myself running Hawk Circle, with a small crew of apprentices, and we are going to be flat out all season. On top of that, I am timberframing cabins, cutting firewood, getting the camp and cabins ready for the winter, teaching several workshops, leading four afterschool programs each week and trying to write my book. When am I going to have time to go Bowhunting? Well, that's the great thing about finding time. You just have to make it happen. You just have to GO!
Each fall, I am so busy that there is no way I will have time, and yet, somehow, I find the time. I just go. Sometimes, I go early in the morning and get back in time for Trista to take Jesse into school in Cooperstown. It isn't a full morning hunt, but it is better than nothing. Other times, I just go in the afternoon, when a school cancels their program, or on weekends or holidays. I go every chance I get.
As the season goes, I somehow find more and more time to get out. It is a great feeling, sitting in a tree stand, or leaning against a big pine and listening to the wind in the trees and the squirrels chasing each other fighting for apples. I seem to settle into a deeper place, almost a sacred place, and though I only have a few hours, it can feel like an eternity.
This fall I am running a workshop called The Sacred Hunt, and if you are a new hunter or just want to get together with a group of us and learn to hunt in a respectful and honorable manner, please feel free to check it out and join us. Looking back on last year, some of the most powerful lessons and skills I learned all year happened during the hunting season, for myself as a man, as a teacher, as a parent and a husband. I learned and I grew and it was good.
Somehow, I managed to get everything done that I needed to do, and the things I didn't get done, well, the world didn't end, either. (It almost did, though! See: Recession!)
The bottom line is, sometimes you have to make a stand. Not against anything, but for yourself, for your own inner knowing, for your own soul to grow and shine. Sometimes you have to do it for the good of the whole, even if it is something that might seem like it is an inconvenience or whatever. You have to trust your instincts.
I know that there are lots of things I would like to do, like go fishing, or visit friends or catch up on my emails or letters, or whatever, but I have my priorities! I know when to push and when to stay home and get my other work done....
The biggest point of this post is to say that even if I, or you, get all of your 'work' done, you still need to find ways to grow, personally, spiritually, and intellectually, or take a retreat to renew yourself or recharge so you can be there, fully present, for the people you love and care about. It seems almost counter intuitive, but life is sometimes like that, isn't it? If you have a personal approach to finding time, to taking care of yourself and your own growth and development, please post and share!
In the meantime, enjoy the last of the summer blackberries and I will leave you with these words:
"There are two mistakes one can make along the road to truth...not going all the way, and not starting. ” - Buddha
Ricardo
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