I got home from my east coast trip at midnight on Monday, October 14,
after my Spokane Symphony Chorale rehearsal.

Mary Portera at River Gallery in Chattanooga took all the ceramic
animals I had and even bought a large frog with an injured eye with her
personal check.

With an Anthroposophic Chattanooga friend, I visited Union Agricultural
Institute when Hugh was speaking in Michigan and Lorraine was at market
in Atlanta.  Their apprentice, Sylvia, showed us around.  I loved their
cows.  I wish we could have cows, but it's not possible.

When I got home, I found a root cellar full of apples, peppers, some
tomatoes and the tomato coldframes full of brown tomato plants.  We
ended up with 25 cases of salsa.  Herb and Ed had brought in the manure
for our compost pile and I got three sets compost preps and a cow horn
from Hugh Courtney at the conference.  I am also going to make BC.

On Wednesday, I attended a meeting of the new Selkirk Weed Management
Area Board which includes people from four counties, the Forest Service
and the Nature Conservancy.  These are the people who will read my
report on the Rapid Lightning Weed Control Project and who decide what
projects from our area will be presented to the state for funding.  I
had a chance to tell them what we had done on our road project.  As soon
as I mentioned Bio-Dynamics, though, Randy, the Bonner County (my
county) Weed Committee Chair, the one who blocked my using Pfeiffer
Field Spray by inquiring whether it was registered as a soil amendment
in Idaho, started in on me in front of everyone--declaring that Pfeiffer
Field Spray was full of bad nematodes.  Of course, I countered that this
was not true.  When I explained that BD Preps have a spiritual component
and that this is why we don't want to subject them to the state
registration process, he said something about the separation of church
and state.  He raised his voice and succeeded in taking the whole floor
and stopped my presentation.

Even though the man is raving, he still managed to control what happened
in the meeting.  What I did was close my eyes, meditate right there for
a few seconds and put myself in the most positive attitude I could
muster.  When I left the meeting, I felt a lot of good vibrations,
especially from the women on the Board.  I think I handled myself all
right.  Time will tell.  The worst possible scenario, I hope,  is that
Iwill just have to demonstrate Bio-Dynamic weed control on our own
place, our private road and contiguous neighbor's properties.  Randy
will probably do everything he can to block any future state grants for
our project.  It will be interesting to see what the SCWMA Board does
with our report and future funding.  They have to deal with many people
whose livelihood is based on the use of pesticides.  Before he spoke,
there was interest in combining our work with Bio-controls.  The
strategic plan of the group that was presented had all kinds of
objectives such as "Restoration of the land - keep as close to the
natural state as possible."  Can you all visualize them supporting our
work and Randy having a change of heart and becoming less threatened by
people who work with natural processes?

Thanks to everyone at the conference in Lovettsville for your presence
there.  I certainly was delighted with what I learned.

Best,

Merla

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