Arco Iris
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  • Feb22

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    Spring Break work week March 19 -26 to prepare for Spring Medicine Walk ( La Caminata)

    Astrological forecast: Sat March 19th, Full Moon in Virgo sign of the virgin, pure, sacred, articulate, impatiently aware of things that need to be fixed, improved or healed. Sun at the end of Pisces a mutable water sign,this sign asks us to slow down and contemplate, march 20th Sun goes into Aries a cardinal fire sign, brings us back after a long hard winter, puts a fire under us,wakes us up.

    Projects to be completed before Caminata:

    • rebuild ceremonial lodge (3 folks),
    • trail blaze up north gate (4 folks),
    • work on round house (3-4 folks),
    • build east and west gate doorways and build benches, put grommets on tarps for side wall panels.
    • Cut and gather firewood for round house fire and temescal fires.

    Sunday March 20th, Spring Equinox : Purification lodge ceremony ( temescal) All lead and primary walkers must attend. Sun is in Aries, Moon is in Libra, cardinal leadership sign, element air and spirit, time to balance ourselves and bring balance to forefront.

    April 20th – 24th, 2011: 27th Annual Spring Medicine Walk / La Caminata

    April 23rd Community Walk at Wild Magnolia Land Trust.

    Astrological forecast: Sun in Taurus a Fixed Earth sign, fertilizes our creative soul and garden, grounds us, slows us down, sensual, makes dig to the deeper root of things. Like a bull we do not want to be pushed. Moon begins in Sagittarius mutable fire, gets us moving, cheerfully impatience, refreshing honesty, April 22 moon moves into Capricorn a Cardinal leadership sign, element earth, asks us to check our responsibilities to family, original traditions and our life’s purpose.

    • Day 1: Wednesday April 20th Caminata purification lodge ceremony. Start sacred fire Huehueteyo in round house.
    • Day 2: Thursday April 21st. Sunrise ceremony at round house. Plant1st. prayer staff at Rancho Spring, walk up to North gate plant 2 prayer staff, walk down to Beech Creek and back home. Return to Huehueteyo, give thanks.
    • Day 3: Sunrise ceremony at round house. Walk down to Beech Creek cross creek, climb Wild Magnolia east boundary to WM gate plant 3rd staff at gate. Return to Huehueteyo, give thanks.
    • Day 4: Sunrise ceremony at round house. Community day at Wild Magnolia, plant 4th staff at Earth School site, lunch, community walk to Fairy Pond. Lead and primary walkers continue across Beech Creek to Rancho. Return to Huehueteyo, give thanks.
    • Day 5: Sunrise service at round house. Primary walkers walk up to cliff plant last prayer 6th staff. Return to Huehueteyo, give thanks. Feed Huehueteyo last time, allow fire to rest until next ceremony.
  • Jan18

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    Womens Full Moon Lodge Ceremony January 22, 12 noon. Rancho Arco Iris

  • Jan18

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    East meets West:
    Khentrul Rinpoche and Sun Hawk at Katog Rithrod Mountain Dharma Retreat Center

  • Sep5

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    Fall Bar-B-Que

    Posted in: Events, Home

    Fall Bar-B-Que flyer

  • Jun20

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    The annual Spring Medicine Walk was held June 19, 2010 at the Wild Magnolia Land Trust.

    montage1

    About 40 people were in attendance of diverse ethnic backgrounds.  After ceremonies to reconnect to Mother Earth, a delicious potluck meal was enjoyed by all.

    montage2

    Sun Hawk explained medicinal uses of many of the plants of the Land Trust and how to identify them.  In mid afternoon hiked to Beech Creek and enjoyed a refreshing splash in the water.

    montage3

  • May7

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    newly installed trail signTrails at Wild Magnolia are now marked with newly made trail signs.  Ixchel Trail is marked from the clearing, with the distance indicated to Fairy Pond.  Where Beech Creek Trail branches from Ixchel Trail a sign notes the distance to the creek, and La Salsa Trail is marked at both ends, where it splits from Beech Creek Trail and from Ixchel Trail, also with distances indicated.

    la salsa trail sign

    The signs with routed lettering are carved in eastern redcedar lumber, processed from a fallen tree, made and donated by volunteer Olin Karch.  Vista volunteers Janis Walters and Steven Wilgus installed the new signs.

    maria at the trail

  • Apr23

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    maria2

    Greetings from Sun Hawk — Maria Christina Moroles

    Urgent  Notice from the President

    Arco Iris Earth Care Project and our 400 Acre

    Ozark Wilderness Land Trust Need Your Help Today!

    2009 brought more great challenges to our planet, our world economy and to our organization.  Bold steps are required if we and Mother Earth are to survive and thrive.  Arco Iris Earth Care Project (ArcoIris ECP) is taking courageous action and we need your financial support today to continue.

    This year Arco Iris ECP was nominated for and was awarded 2 Ameri-Corp Vista volunteers for a 1 year term. This is a valuable privilege few small organizations earn. Arco Iris ECP was selected for its stability, years of commitment, and community service.

    Arco Iris ECP also became a member and an investor in FORGE, (Financing Ozark Rural Growth and Development http://www.forgeonline.com/) a non-profit lending organization located in Huntsville, Arkansas. For the first time in our 25 years of existence, Arco Iris ECP borrowed money to finance a building to house our office.  Arco Iris ECP now owns its own office (a requirement to qualify for the volunteer service award), telephone number, Internet access and a place for our all volunteer staff to work.

    This year we also purchased a used 1996 4×4 truck for our stewardship work on our 400 acre wilderness land trust (in the past, stewards have had to used their own vehicles and equipment).

    This winter, volunteers opened a new hiking trail that now loops around our beautiful wilderness land. This new trail will enable us to invite more groups and visitors. These actions will help insure the sustainability of our projects.

    For the past several years we have experienced severe weather that has damaged our dirt road.  Volunteers have worked on improving it, but it will be necessary to hire heavy equipment to repair it, so folks can access the land. The road conditions were such that we postponed our community day Spring Medicine Walk. We are now focusing our energy toward road repairs.

    We, the resident stewards and our local volunteers truly need YOUR support now to help us care for our sacred Mother Earth here in the Ozarks in these challenging times. Yes, we do have a few more expenses, an office, truck maintenance and needed road work. But, with your contributions we can fund a truck load of gravel, a tank of fuel, a utility bill, or other community service work.

    Your support helps us to continue to care for our Mother Earth here in the Ozarks, and helps preserve indigenous and Ozark culture. Please help us protect these precious medicinal plants, trees, springs, creeks and wildlife that all live here.  We all know well how greatly the economy is affecting working folks everywhere.  Nevertheless, let us all act from our BELIEF and FAITH that love and goodness still prevail. Let us see these times as a great opportunity to grow stronger, to get closer, to pitch in and help one another in any way we can.  Your one small act of generosity, courage, or kindness, makes ripples that affects other lives and will even touch the lives those that are yet to come.  You can make a difference.  Please take the time to call us to renew your membership or make a financial pledge or both if you can. Use the Pay Pal buttons on the member page or drop whatever you can in an envelope and mail it to Arco Iris ECP, HC 70, Box 17A, Ponca, AR  72670.

    Please check our events page for details to our annual fund raiser “Protect the Earth Medicine Shield Art Auction”, with dinner, and live music at 7:00 PM on April 10, 2010 in Fayetteville, AR.  We will also premier a beautiful slide show of our 26th annual Spring Medicine Walk ceremony, where we walked the boundaries of our 500+ acres of Ozark wilderness.

    Stewardship of Mother Earth is our Privilege and Sacred Responsibility. To speak directly to a steward call our office at: 870/861-5080

    May you walk in Beauty, Tlatzokamati,
    Maria Christina Moroles, Sun Hawk
    Guardante de la Tierra Madre

  • Nov9

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    office2
    A preconstructed building has been set up to house the project’s office. The 10′ x 16′ building located above the town of Low Gap, on Arkansas 74, provides easy access to enact business, and is provided with satellite Internet access.

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    The building was unfinished on the interior, and has been insulated, wired, and finished by Vista volunteers Janis Walters and Steven Wilgus.

    office3The new office was initiated November 8 with a blessing, and prayers in English and Cakchiquel Maya. A meeting of the board members followed.

    office1

  • Sep2

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    Janis Walters

    Janis Walters

    Janis Walters of Boxley, and Steven Wilgus of Deer, were recently sworn in as members of AmeriCorpsVISTA, the national service program dedicated to helping fight poverty in the United States.

    Steven Wilgus

    Walters and Wilgus have been assigned to the Arco Iris Earth Care Project to coordinate with the local community to help develop The Earth School, which will be established in the Boxley Valley. Walters and Wilgus recently attended pre-service orientation for service with VISTA in Albuquerque, New Mexico.

    AmeriCorps_Vista_Logo smVista builds capacity in non-profit organizations and communities to help bring individuals and communities out of poverty. In the past 40 year, over 177,000 people have served as VISTA volunteers working with local organizations to strengthen communities and start new and innovative programs.

    Today, nearly 8,000 VISTA members serve in hundreds of non-profit organizations and public agencies throughout the country—working to promote literacy, improve health services, create businesses, increase housing opportunities, or bridge the digital divide.

    The Earth School will be a community based facility utilizing a natural and holistic approach that incorporates the cultures of indigenous and Ozark people to promote and teach sustainable living practices to all members of our communities.