April 27, 2015

April 20-27

After the weekend in Seattle, I stayed over for a few days because I had registered for a plant identification walk in Discovery Park with Michael Pilarski and Arthur Lee Jacobsen. Both are brilliant at this, with long histories in the field. It was a great day.

 Arthur Lee & Michael P

Yarrow 

In ancient China, the yarrow stalk was traditionally dried & used for casting I Ching hexagrams. It is also a powerful medicinal plant with a wide variety of uses. It was well known among the native peoples of the NW.


Time to Mow
I arrived home just in time to hop on the mower and mow the meadow before the grass got totally out of control. There are many stories about mowing the meadow and building of hay piles back in the early days of camp. When Leonie and I first came to Indralaya, there were often brigades of people out raking the grass after mowing. This changed when a camper suggested we purchase mulching blades for the mower. 


Mowing ramps up considerably in the Spring, when we need to mow once a week. We generally do the mowing between programs. With the exception of the garden, the grass usually slows down considerably by mid-July and mowing is less frequent. The grass in the garden never seems to stop growing - it must be those happy nature spirits!

wavy patterns on the volleyball court

It's a lot of fun to mow the meadow, and also time consuming. It takes at least four hours to mow the meadow and another couple hours to get to all the fringe areas and garden. 

freshly cut

Wisteria Time
The wisteria has taken to its new bower very happily. With the mild spring weather that we have experienced it is no surprise that it is blossoming about three weeks early than usual this year.


April 23, 2015

April 13-19

Picture at an exhibition

Last weekend we headed to the Seattle area and set up a table in the exhibitors room at the 2015 Therapeutic Touch International Association (TTIA) conference. The theme of the conference was “A Community of Healers”. We had a great time. There were a lot of great stories from the frontiers of healing. It was an inspiring gathering of many friends and accomplished women -- including Dr. Dolores Krieger -- who is still going strong in her early 90’s. She gave an impressive keynote address that strongly pointed a path to the future.

On Sunday afternoon it was over to the Theosophical Society in Seattle, where Leonie and I spoke on the virtues known as the Four Immeasurable. These are loving-kindness (metta in the Pali language), compassion (karuna), joy (mudita) and equanimity (upekkha). They are also known as the Brahmaviharis, which translates as the abodes of Brahma. These are said to be innate qualities that reside within each of us and can be awakened with practice. They are immeasurable (as Brahma is immeasurable) in that once awakened there is no limit to our capacity to put them to good use in helping to relieve suffering and discontent.

April 14, 2015

April 6-12

It was a lovely week at Indralaya with warm sunshine by day and cool star shine by night. While Leonie was doing battle with the slugs in the garden, the first mowing of the meadow was completed. We are hoping that the steady clear weather will bode well for the fall fruit harvest as the pollinators have had plenty of time to do their work with the blossoming fruit trees.

On Friday we headed to Seattle for a meeting of the Indralaya Board of Directors. It was a very full agenda, including discussion of how best to approach special events that fall outside of the established program schedule, review of the 2014 financials, the possibility of providing wi-fi for program participants, and updates on where things are with the many Spring projects and preparations for the program season that is just around the corner.

A Study in Crabapple

There is one crabapple tree at Indralaya. It is located on the edge of the meadow near the Grove. This year its blossoms have been remarkably effulgent. See for yourself!

from across the newly mown meadow ...

closer ... 

closer ...

close enough

Sunday in Seattle

Leonie and I will be speaking at the Theosophical Society in Seattle this coming Sunday, April 19 from 4:00-5:30 pm. We will be discussing the Four Immeasurables (Loving Kindness, Compassion, Joy & Equanimity). Please join us, we'd love to see you there. The meeting will be at the Theosophical Library, just behind the Quest Bookshop at 717 Broadway Avenue on Capitol Hill.

April 13, 2015

Policy Interlude

Indralaya is now a non-smoking facility
At their December meeting, the Indralaya Board of Directors voted to change the policies around smoking. As a result, Dogwood cabin has been retired as the smoking lounge and Indralaya is now a smoke-free facility. Those who wish to have a smoke (including e-cigarettes) will be expected to leave the property prior to doing so.

Dogwood Cabin ~ no longer a smoking lounge

The Board is interested in hearing your feedback on this topic. Do you agree or disagree with this decision? What are your views on the balance between individual freedom of choice and the shared values of community?

The Board is looking forward to seeing your replies. Please post your comments here.

April 7, 2015

March 30-April 5



Walking the Winding Way
Leonie and I have been walking the Indralaya labyrinth more frequently than usual this year. Doing so seems to fit with where we are both in ourselves and in our understanding of the ways of Indralaya. Coinciding with this development has been further study and reflection upon the nature of the labyrinth itself.

I have, for example, been working with the realization that as one walks the winding way to the center, each transition in the path, from one course to another, actually compels one to turn away from the center. It is a curious thing, worth pondering, that one gets closer to the center by continuously turning away from it. Continual approach leavened by continual turning away.

Then there is the center itself. This is a place of visitation, a place where one ‘goes to see’ but not to permanently reside. One who walks the true labyrinth with persistence and a certain measure of luck eventually arrives at the center. But one can not choose to stay there and remain alive. This is, after all, the dwelling place of the Minotaur, a place of heroic testing. The path of the hero or heroine is to heed the calling of the world and return from the center with their hard won ‘pearl of great price.’ The center is not the final destination, it is a place along the way.

As one leaves the center and enters again upon the winding way, one finds oneself turning both towards and away from the center in the transitions between circuits. This alternating pattern provides opportunity to both reflect upon the experience of the center (turning towards) and to prepare oneself for the departure (turning away) from the labyrinth. Eventually one reaches the final turning away and returns again to the world that awaits.


Family Week coordinators: Lars, Sasha, Alayna, Elliott, & Ondine
(that other fellow is Desmo, he won't be attending)

Summer is Coming!
Over the weekend, I headed to Seattle to sit in on a meeting of the folks who will be leading the first family week. This year’s theme for both family weeks is ‘play’. At the week one meeting there were many good ideas being discussed. 

Registrations for summer programs are coming in steadily. Both the Deep Singing Week and Family Week Two are close to being full and are likely to be on wait list status soon. We are quite fortunate that many of our summer programs fill up one year after another. If you are giving thought to visiting Indralaya this summer, now is a good time to be making your final plans and registering for the times that you would like to be here.