Who? Us?

We are two disabled, oldish women who have been adventuring through life for years. We are talking about how disabilities, both visible and not, change the way we enjoy our retirement.
Showing posts with label mountain view ar. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mountain view ar. Show all posts

Sunday, October 18, 2015

Scootering at the Ozark Folk Center

Finding an accessible tourist attraction around here is difficult at best.  The Ozark Folk Center, spotlighting the way Ozark living was generations ago, is a living museum with real practitioners of their crafts like blacksmithing, printing, broom making, weaving and even coopering demonstrate their crafts daily.  The Folk Center is accessible to everyone. Someone has to open the doors for the scooter rider and getting around in the gift shop is close to impossible, but inside the park is easy, Paved, wide paths making seeing the exhibits a piece of cake.


One of the biggest reason for tourists to come to Mountain View is the Ozark Folk Center.  One of the events the Folk Center is famous for is their Heritage Herb Garden developed and maintained by Tina Wilcox, the head gardener.

The heritage Herb Garden
Photography by Donna Morse


 In 1986, Hillary Rodham Clinton said of the Ozark Folk Center herb garden, "It is not just a decorative garden, it is a repository of past knowledge"  

This 'repository of past knowledge' began humbly in 1977, when volunteers began to bring their own herbs and ideas to the Ozark Folk Center to start a dedicated herb garden. Volunteers transplanted seeds from their own garden and sowed the idea of the Heritage Herb Garden. 

 Elizabeth Warner, one of the first volunteers, was also instrumental in organizing The Committee of 100, which organizes fundraisers (the first in 1982) for apprenticeships, equipment, and authentic displays. To quote Hillary Clinton, Mrs. Warner's “...main objective" was "to create a garden that would become nationally recognized ... a center for study, workshops, and seminars, and thereby increase attendance to the Ozark Folk Center.”

Mrs. Warner and the center's other volunteers did, indeed, accomplish their objectives. A testimony to these achievements is the Heritage Herb Spring Extravaganza.  Each spring and fall, leading American herbalists spend a weekend in the Ozark Mountains to teach, share and learn.




Tina Marie Wilcox, herbalist at the Ozark Folk Center in Mountain View, AR, organizes workshops, invites speakers, sets up walks through the park, a luncheon for all and the participants come.
This event started in 1989 as the Garden Gala and has evolved into a gathering of renowned herbalists who come together to share knowledge both in the spring and in the fall.


Tina Marie Wilcox


Tina Marie Wilcox, hired as a gardener for the folk center in 1984, continued sowing seeds and ideas of these first volunteers. Today, the herb garden is a living, breathing, ever-growing repository of past knowledge, and a hands-on teaching and learning experience for all who come to the Ozark Folk Center.  
She has carefully organized the semi-annual fests to showcase the herb garden by opening it for the season with speakers, teachers, and general fellowship every year combined with fantastic food made from the very herbs picked fresh from the herb garden.

The event is the anchor for the Center's season opening and closing yearly. Herbalists from as far away as Maine, and as close as Izard County, Arkansas, students from Louisiana to Oklahoma and beyond, enjoy sharing their knowledge and experience, along with fellowship and food, every year.

 The Heritage Herb Extravaganzas, not your ordinary workshop, is two days of celebration, of reconnecting with nature, of sharing the unique knowledge of herbalists from the folk center and across the country, and of experiencing this ‘repository of past knowledge’ in the present day. 




At a recent year's extravaganza,  well-known herbalists, Rosemary Gladstar, Steven Foster, Sasha Daucus, Susan Belsinger, Kathleen Cannole and Jennifer Blankenship joined Tina Marie Wilcox in the quest to carry out Hillary Clinton's aims.  For two days they educated and entertained their eager audience of almost 200 as they wandered around the Ozark Folk Center gardens. Attendees were ‘mixed and matched" in groups and all had the opportunity to learn from each herbalist in a more intimate setting


Susan Belsinger
Exchanges of knowledge and experience, and question and answer sessions, spiced up their wanderings and laughter was not in short supply
"Here's some henbit," she pointed out.  And, further along, "Chew on this", she invited, as she agilely stretched and grabbed a handful of Chickweed and said, "Pass it around."  The crowd happily chewed as Susan explained, "These and other 'weeds' are usually mowed down... but they can be valuable as medicinal teas or poultices, and many are delicious in salads and cooked dishes."  

These culinary herbalists used these "weeds", and many others herbs, in planning and, with the help of the dedicated staff at The Skillet, a restaurant attached to the Ozark Folk Center in executing a scrumptious lunch for workshop speakers and participants.  Second helpings were common and no one knows how many absconded with the delicious herbal biscuits as they reluctantly departed the restaurant.


Tina Marie Wilcox proudly informs that, at her urging, the restaurant at the Folk Center, The Skillet, now uses only recyclable take out containers.


      
Not far from Susan, the folk center's gardener of almost 30 years, Tina Marie Wilcox, enthusiastically gesticulated and firmly stomped the now fertile soil emphasizing,
"Use everything you can think of to 'make your garden grow'. Compost veggie and fruit waste put that newspaper down to discourage weeds, don't burn those fallen leaves; use 'em for mulch. 

And shred those fallen limbs for use on paths." Wilcox believes that almost 100% of what most consider 'garbage' can be used, not discarded to fill up more landfills.




"  


Steven Foster, (seen below) who became interested in herbs in 1974 in Maine, bussed one group to Mountain View's city park to view thousands of blooming wildflowers, but upon arrival, discovered that all plants had been mowed down.  Undaunted, the laid-back Foster, whose mentor was Rosemary Gladstar, went on with the show.




Steven Foster
This Eureka Springs, AR, author, photographer, and Chairman of the American Botanical Council, truly enlightened, informed, and entertained.
  


















He baited his audience with claims of                      "aliens in our  midst" and explained that at least  2/3rds of all plants in the U.S. were "alien", i.e., brought here, knowingly 
or accidentally, by scientists and sailors, gardeners and gauchos.

Foster invited his audience to 
introduce themselves, share if they desired and ask questions of each other and/or of him.


















Rosemary Gladstar





The diminutive Rosemary Gladstar, the author of nine books including "Herbal Healing for Women", has mentored more herbalists than she can count.  As a youngster, Steven Foster was mentored by Gladstar. She is the founder and director of Sage Mountain Herbal Retreat Center and Botanical Sanctuary in her home state of Maine. The ultimate professional, Rosemary shared her philosophies and herbal practices while competing with a jackhammer doing renovations in the park.










Jennifer Blankenship, a pharmacist, farm owner and supplier of Townsend Spice and Supply, spoke to participants in the cool of the center's auditorium. 
Ms. Blankenship encouraged blending herbal and traditional medicine, pointing out that herbal remedies will become increasingly more important as the costs of traditional medicines skyrocket. "Your knowledge of the use of herbs for medicinal purposes will be very important." Ms. Blankenship will soon chair The Committee of One Hundred and continue to lead the volunteers in their fund raising activities for the Herb Garden.
Sasha Daucus, a master herbalist and energy healer has been in practice since 1984 and is the owner of The Golden Light Center in the Missouri Ozarks.  Sasha and her groups traipsed through wooded areas - from the folk center to Mt. View's city park - stopping here and there to examine medicinal plants and discuss their uses.  Laughing, one participant was overheard saying, "Sasha is gonna have to give me an 'energy treatment' after this hike.” 

Kathleen Cannole, the Ozark Folk Center's nursery specialist and artistic gardener, lead groups around inside the center, explaining the genesis of the pond and waterfall, as well as how to best grow some of the herbs native to the Ozark area.  Ms. Connole earned a BS in Plant Science and Ornamental Horticulture, "after my kids were grown".   She, however, admits that her knowledge has grown in leaps and bounds since apprenticing with Tina Marie Wilcox and beginning work at the center. 



The Herbal Workshop is presented every spring and fall by The Ozark Folk Center.  Attendance has grown every year and will continue to do so. This event is a semi-yearly highlight of the Folk Center and makes it a destination for anyone interested in using herbs medicinally.








Wednesday, October 14, 2015

Mountain View Arkansas - Small Town Living

We made a choice 5 years ago to live in Mountain View AR when we both retired. I had wanted to leave New Orleans for a very long time. Hurricane Katrina made me know that decision was the right one.

Living here is different, for sure. First of all, our little town and county are beautiful.  More than beautiful. 


                                       The view from our front door

 It’s a rural small town with a co-op, feed stores, and tack stores. Tack is what you put on horses so you can ride them.  I think.  Anyway, you can buy it here. You can buy overalls, muck boots, cowboy boots, 50-pound bags of almost anything. Not what we are used to in New Orleans. At all.



Hay baled in the fields

If you don’t want animal food or muck boots, your choices become a bit limited.  There are a couple of local grocery stores with limited choices and of course, a Walmart. This is Arkansas, after all. Walmart started here and its headquarters are about 3 hours away from here. The rest of the stores are either second hand stores, souvenir stores or antique stores.

The choices are unusual at our rural Walmart.  Seems as if there is really no call for red beans or Zatarain’s seafood boil here in Mountain View.  Don’t ask for file’ to make file’ gumbo. Store personnel haven't the faintest notion what that is. The file’ or the gumbo. There are some folks who relocated after Katrina here, but they have not opened any restaurants or grocery stores. They must have relatives back in Louisiana who send them care packages when needed.

Restaurants are in short supply as well. There are a few family-owned ‘American’ restaurants serving hamburgers or maybe tuna fish sandwiches.   And maybe apple pie. I don’t really know because they are not accessible nor do they serve any vegan food.  They may not know what the word means and sure don't care if mobility impaired folks can get in their restaurant or not.  

There’s a Mexican restaurant that has changed hands at least 3 times since we have been here. That does not bode will for the next owner.

Here in Stone Country, we have stones. Lots and lots of stones. We run out of ideas about what to do with them.  We haul them around and build fences out of stones. And we budget for replacement of lawnmower blades because we need them. The rocks come up out of the ground every spring and we run into those stones regularly.


Built without mortar.  Science and art and beautiful


One thing I find so strange about Stone County specifically, and Arkansas in general. 51% of our population gets some sort of government assistance. This county is so poor that most get food stamps and welfare.  But no one wants the government to interfere with their lives. Store owners will never install accessible ramps or clear their aisles for folks who use mobility scooters or wheelchairs. Why? They will not do it because it’s federal law. Remember, “We don’t want no guv’mint telling us what to do.” But we will take checks every month so we can buy groceries. And we will keep electing the people who are trying as hard as they can to take welfare away or reduce it. Go figure.  

These US legislators from Arkansas voted against Hurricane Sandy federal relief:

Tom Cotton
Tim Griffin
Steve Womack

Arkansas is a prime target for tornados.  Here’s hoping there is never another one. But if there is a natural disaster, Arkansas will be first in line asking for federal aid. Why do you do vote against yourselves, you hypocrites? And yet Arkansans keep reelecting them the very people who do not have Arkansas needs at heart. 

There are no jobs in Stone County.  Youngsters aspire to be clerks at Walmart. Oh, they can work in chicken-processing plants. Wanna kill chickens every day? There is a big tourist industry here, so there are service jobs, but tourism is seasonal, so winters are times of unemployment.

For all of its problems, Mountain View is a beautiful place to live.  It doesn’t cost much to live here. And we love it.  


As a social activist since the 60s, I can’t seem to stop being one.  I don’t march anymore, but I do write letters about accessibility to the editor.  Maybe Mountain View can start making some businesses accessible. It would be nice.


Monday, May 18, 2015

Ballard CPA Rating - 3

Ballard & Company Ltd.

Sunday, April 5, 2015

Bill Nixon, DVM - Inaccessible

Bill Nixon, DVM, a beloved Mountain View veterinarian's examining room is not accessible. One can only reach it by going up narrow steps in a tiny space.For those who are disabled wish to be in the room when their dog or cat sees the vet, it is not possible. The ADA has been contacted. I don't know if he has complied yet.