Img 6054

Fever Trees

 The American southwest, like most deserts of the world, is rich in hallucinogenic plants that have been a source of medicines for indigenous people for millennia.  Deserts, due mostly to their dryness, are also rich sources of allergens . Plants have evolved to survive in these inhospitable regions with astonishing ingenuity that stretches back into the prehistoric record. The strangeness and intoxicating magic of desert plant properties and their evolution is an ongoing source of study and inspiration and is also highly endangered. I have walked with many indigenous custodians of different deserts who have offered me natural plant medicines, healed my headaches and sorenesses with leaves, roots and berries and astounded me with their skills of identification and depth of knowledge. The richest source of desert plant knowledge lies with these indigenous custodians and their folklore is being lost with the loss their native lands and ways of life. These elusive  hallucinogens and allergens may have a yet to be revealed vital elixir for our creative imaginations and dreams.

Jo Bertini: Deep in Land
  1. Wayfinding
  2. Fever Trees
  3. The Water Tree of Doubtful Creek
  4. Wind Swimming Sierra Negra's Upside Down Country
  5. Breath of the Last Wild River
  6. A Geography of Mythologies and Lost Little Histories
  7. Saguaro Creek in Hollow Land
  8. Salt Creep Telling Stories
  9. Storm Birds
  10. Dark Sky Park Approaching Nowhere
  11. Two Boys Dreaming
  12. Hunting for Darkness
  13. Basin of Indifference
  14. Call and Response from the Last Frontier (Night Heron)
  15. Dryland Reef
  16. Scar Tree - 'The Love of Man is a Weed of the Waste Places' (Randolph Stow)
  17. Tracing Red Jasper - Water Witching and Spirit Stones
  18. Blood Moon Birthing Tree
  19. Badlands - A Deliberate Forgetting
  20. Wasteland Nursery