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Healing Wounds - Giving Back to Nature

By Gary Eldred with Mark K. Leach

$20.00

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HEALING-B

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Healing Wounds: Giving Back to Nature – by Gary Eldred and Mark Leach 
 
Healing Wounds is both a coming-of-age memoir and a call to action.  Each page simmers with barely restrained rage at the injustices to people, plants, animals, and the land.  Eldred shares how he learned to redirect that energy, channeling it towards restoration efforts.  The book explores Gary Eldred’s timeline, meeting and following influential characters and prairie sites as they weave into his life story.   
 
Eldred explores his tumultuous past and sifts through enormous emotions like depression, anxiety, and feelings of inadequacy.  The reader follows along as Eldred grows beyond the strained and unfulfilling relationships of his family.  He becomes self-aware and open to love, reshaping himself as he preserves and restores natural areas.  On page 23, Eldred explains that “We need more understanding of nature’s vulnerabilities to intelligently repair ecological damage.”  And in many ways, Healing Wounds is as much about environmental healing as it is about Gary Eldred digging through his own human injuries and how he healed through the regenerative powers of people, nature, and prescribed burns. 
 
The author learns from both people and nature, adding that knowledge to his toolbelt while building momentum for the more-than-just-conservation movement that has become The Prairie Enthusiasts.  Eldred’s life works are peppered throughout the Upper Midwest: remnant prairies protected from the plow. Rehabilitated woods and waterways that are returning to their former glory.  Lands set aside for further restoration.  And an organization that is fueled by passionate people who are taking notes from Eldred and running into the remaining wilds to do more good work.  Every chapter shows how Eldred furthers his inner, self-work while keeping his hands busy with properties throughout the Upper Midwest. The final chapter is a resonant encore about passing the drip torch to keep the prescribed fires burning.     
 
Enlarged print makes for easy reading.  This publication also features Eldred’s original illustrations: beautiful black and white renderings of the plants, creatures, people, and landscapes that are the focus of this book.
 


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Seed

Growing your own plants from seed is the most economical way to add natives to your home. Before you get started, one of the most important things to know about the seeds of wild plants is that many have built-in dormancy mechanisms that prevent the seed from germinating. In nature, this prevents a population of plants from germinating all at once, before killing frosts, or in times of drought. To propagate native plants, a gardener must break this dormancy before seed will grow.

Each species is different, so be sure to check the GERMINATION CODE listed on the website, in the catalog, or on your seed packet. Then, follow the GERMINATION INSTRUCTIONS prior to planting. Some species don't need any pre-treatment to germinate, but some species have dormancy mechanisms that must be broken before the seed will germinate. Some dormancy can be broken in a few minutes, but some species take months or even years.

Seed dormancy can be broken artificially by prolonged refrigeration of damp seed in the process of cold/moist STRATIFICATION. A less complicated approach is to let nature handle the stratifying through a dormant seeding, sowing seeds on the surface of a weed-free site in late fall or winter. Tucked safely beneath the snow, seeds will be conditioned by weathering to make germination possible in subsequent growing seasons.

To learn more, please visit: How to Germinate Native Seeds

Dormant Bare Root Plants

We dig plants when they are dormant from our outdoor beds and ship them April-May and October. Some species go dormant in the summer and we can ship them July/August. We are among the few still employing this production method, which is labor intensive but plant-friendly. They arrive to you dormant, with little to no top-growth (bare-root), packed in peat moss. They should be planted as soon as possible. Unlike greenhouse-grown plants, bare-root plants can be planted during cold weather or anytime the soil is not frozen. A root photo is included with each species to illustrate the optimal depth and orientation. Planting instructions/care are also included with each order.

Download: Installing Your Bare-Root Plants

Potted Plants

3-packs and trays of 32, 38, or 50 plants leave our Midwest greenhouses based on species readiness (being well-rooted for transit) and order date; Spring shipping is typically early May through June, and Fall shipping is mid-August through September. Plants shipped in spring may be overwintered and still emerging from dormancy. Potted plants are typically 4-9 months old when they ship. Plant tray cells are approximately 2” wide x 5” deep in the trays of 38 and 50, and 2.5" wide x 3.5" deep in the 3-packs and trays of 32; ideal for deep-rooted natives. Full-color tags and planting & care instructions are included with each order.

Download: Planting and Care of Potted Plants

*PLEASE NOTE: we are a mail order nursery and have no retail facilities, but you may pick up your order if prior arrangements are made. Pick up orders are subject to 7.375% MN Sales Tax.

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