• Shop
  • The Ground Shots Podcast
  • Press
    • more about this project
    • photography work with Kelly Moody
  • Of Sedge and Salt blog archives
  • Botanical Profiles
  • Testimonials
  • Substack: Ground Shots Web
  • Sign In My Account
Menu

of sedge & salt

  • Shop
  • The Ground Shots Podcast
  • Press
  • about
    • more about this project
    • photography work with Kelly Moody
  • Of Sedge and Salt blog archives
  • Botanical Profiles
  • Testimonials
  • Substack: Ground Shots Web
  • Sign In My Account
podcast.png

The Ground Shots Podcast is an audio project exploring our relationship to ecology through conversations and storytelling


How do we do our work in the modern age, when the urgency of ecological and social collapse feels looming? How do we creatively and whole-heartedly navigate our relationships with one another and the land?

 

access more candid writings from the host, Kelly Moody, engage in more conversation about the podcast and the topics we discuss and access Ground Shots extras episodes with a paid subscription on substack:

 



listen and subscribe on : Stitcher / Tunein / Apple podcasts / Spotify / player.fm / google play


The podcast explores story, connection, heart and grit : what drives people to love our earth, creatively express ideas and passions about our world, tend the wilds or walk long distances?

I'm interested in the ways in which we can find bridges of commonality with the land as our shared interest and concern. 

Paypal: paypal.me/petitfawn Venmo: @kelly-moody-6

Make a one time donation to support the podcast
ongoing support for the podcast

(It’s Turtles all the way down… Photo of Ted I took in 2008?)

Episode #67: Ted Packard on bodies as a multiplicity, coyote-trickster troubadour-ing, music as ecological channeling, kids and nature connection, & creating communities of mutuality

March 20, 2022

Episode #67 of the Ground Shots Podcast is a conversation with Ted Packard, who currently lives in Ignacio, Colorado, just outside of Durango, Colorado.

Mariner’s Museum Park (which we talk about on the podcast)

(Pentax film photo Ted took of me typing things to his hair- 2010?)

Ted and I were friends in college and have kept up all these years. Ted studied History and Anthropology at Christopher Newport University, got a Master’s in Teaching, went on the road with the Momentary Prophets band for awhile, and then went went to study nature connection mentorship with Alderleaf Wilderness College and Wilderness Awareness School. He taught various program for youth around the greater Seattle and Puget sound area for many years before relocating to Durango, Colorado to dry out, as he says. After some years of a break, Ted just started up a new nature connection program for youth in the Durango community. Ted does lots of things, including various handcrafts, refurbishing guitars and other instruments, music-making, writing, wood-burning and more. We talk about many of those things in this episode but also basically do a 15 year check-in since we first met. As college peers, we spent a lot of time in the library together researching things like mushroom cults, the esoteric origins of Judeo-Christian religion, the anthropology of psychedelics, zen koans, and more. We both have lived in different places since this time and woven in and out of each others’ lives so we spent some time really checking in about how we think about things now vs. when we were radical activist driven neo-pagan coyote-trickster troubadour mind-melters.

(photo I took of Ted in 2008)

old photo I took of Ted and his art (2008)

In this episode with Ted, we talk about:

  • Ted’s nature connection mentorship work with youth in Washington and Colorado

  • Ted’s upbringing in northwestern Virginia

  • Our experience in college of community: artists, philosophers, musicians, activists, and neo-pagans and our reflections on that time now

  • seasonal ritual as a somatic map

  • ways that Ted’s anger at an eco-cidal culture has transformed over the years to a yearning for finding points of connection vs. telling someone they are wrong or how to live

  • what is a community of mutuality in a broken society that emphasizes hyper-individualism?

  • activism can look many ways and can even be in small moments of advocacy

  • awareness of the isolation of capitalism is often crippling

  • the reality that financial security is generally not available to our generation (millennials)

  • Ted’s musical projects which include Momentary Prophets from his early 20’s, that had a coyote-troubadour element with community driven instigation, as well as his own solo projects

  • paying attention to ‘nature’ bringing you closer to crazy synchronicities that become signposts to keep going

  • weaving a web of interrelated ideas and ecologies as a way of being, our reflections on how we’ve done this since we first met

  • trauma, neutrinos, quantum physics intersecting eastern philosophy, bodies as multiplicity, the mycelium nature of everything, music as ecological channeling

A little throwback to when Ted and I were in college, many of these photos I took:

oldcrazies.jpeg
oldphototedus.jpeg
tedold.jpeg
throwback3.jpeg
throwbacklord.jpeg
metedold.jpeg
tedold3.jpeg
tedol4.jpeg
tedart2.jpeg


A couple poems of Ted’s:

Rising Star Lane

Tonight,
walking by light of moon

On this, the second-longest night
(I’d say who’s counting but
by one god or another
We sure as hell have been for a
very
long time)

snow crunches into softness beneath me
and the cottontail tracks float like Legolas above
and I am all hard crust
and I am all soft underthing
and maybe, I am floating too

and there - oh, waxing poetical - there

is the irrigation ditch

And
is
she
transformed 

from some vulgar line of cow shit and roundup ready imposition
to transcendent sheen, shimmering smooth and bubbling cold,

so suddenly worthy
Of coyote going along
edgewise
picking just. this. spot. to step down waterside
where, next week,
(dark god of winter willing)
There may be a way across this half-frozen body of life

Until then,
I look into the shadows
beneath piñon and juniper, 

knowing that
all my bright-nighted wandering
hasn’t yet touched
the deep
wondering below those trees
where dreams beyond the wary sleep of deer
are growing

12-21-21 


 There, Underneath

in what would otherwise be

a new moon’s dark

this is new snow’s Shining Night among

the standing ones

needled and barked

still as growing stone

I find the place

shelter enough for

long enough to chew, for

long enough to melt snow down to earth,

which they did,

before they left

So, I am gifted their bare ground

needled and barked

to lay my body down

where snow falls upon my cheek

shards of tiny quiet,

almost painful

And that petty desert god

did not know any three

of the hundred names of snow

And he does not know me

tonight

•••

When I open my eyes again

after uncounted breaths of

warm wool comfort and

cold ground seeping,

I stand and see

There, Underneath

dark form of my body

curled, knees drawn, head on hand,

black ground among the new-white-snow

And that mark

I am proud to leave

upon this earth:

A shadow to be covered,

a heart once held so close

as to be a blanket under snow

12-30-21

Below: Video I shot of Momentary Prophets with an old school video camera that Jake, one of the members of Momentary Prophets, converted to digital back during this time (2006-7) when that wasn’t so easy. No smartphones at this time or digital media. This recording really started the Momentary Prophets project that Ted mentions in the episode.

Links:

The Emerald Podcast, mentioned on the podcast

Daniel Quinn, author we mention on the podcast

Mystic Moon of Norfolk, VA, pagan community mentioned

Terence McKenna, mentioned on the podcast

Mountain Justice: organization dedicated to ending mountain top removal in Appalachia

Momentary Prophets on Facebook

Momentary Prophets on Bandcamp (Interstitial music featured on the episode)

Ted’s music on Bandcamp (he is putting out a new album RIGHT NOW, his individual music featured in the intro of this episode)

Wilderness Awareness School

Living Earth School

Sophie Strand

Ted’s Patreon for his music, art, writing

Ted’s revived blog of writing (do yourself a favor and read and savor)

Ted’s Venmo if you’d like to donate to help support his musical projects : @Theodore-Packard

Support the podcast on Patreon to contribute monthly to our grassroots self-funding of this project 

For one time donations to support this podcast:

Paypal : paypal.me/petitfawn

VENMO:
@kelly-moody-6

Cashapp: cash.app/$groundshotsproject 

 Our website with an archive of podcast episodes, educational resources, past travelogues and more: http://www.ofsedgeandsalt.com 

Our Instagram pages: @goldenberries / @groundshotspodcast

Join the Ground Shots Podcast Facebook Group to discuss the episodes

Subscribe to our newsletter for updates on the Ground Shots Project

Music: by Ted Packard and Momentary Prophets

This episode hosted by: Kelly Moody

Produced by: Kelly Moody and Ted Packard

In podcast Tags batch3, philosophy, art, colorado, coyotes, momentary prophets, ted packard, reflection, somatics, paganism, reconnection, ecocide, quantum physics
1 Comment
← Newer Posts Older Posts →

newsletter

Sign up with your email address to receive our occasional newsletter.

We respect your privacy.

Thank you!
The Ground Shots Podcast RSS

Find us on iTunes

follow us on spotify

overcast

pocketcasts

listen on stitcher

tunein

google play coming soon.

thanks for listening!

find us on patreon to join us in a deeper exploration of this work.

Featured
IMG_2199 2.jpg
Episode #87: Samuel Bautista Lazo and Mandalin Sattler on becoming good food for rock woman in Oaxaca, Mexico
IMG_1904.jpeg
Episode #86: Wild Tending Series/ Samuel Bautista Lazo & Damián Jiménez Martínez on Tseé Xigie radio - ecology, wild tending, land politics (Español/English)
cara2.jpg
Episode #85: Dr. Cara Judea Alhadeff: Viscous Expectations: Justice, Vulnerability, The Ob-scene
Episode #84: We all eat the Colorado River: this watershed is a microcosm of our society with Jeff Wagner
Episode #84: We all eat the Colorado River: this watershed is a microcosm of our society with Jeff Wagner
IMG_2281.JPG
Episode #83: Callie Russell on tending ecosystems with goats
jasonhone.jpeg
Episode #82: Jason Hone on biblical ethnobotany and ecology of the holy lands
Episode #81: Ethan Bonnin on Ecological Degradation at the Borderlands
Episode #81: Ethan Bonnin on Ecological Degradation at the Borderlands
nightowlfoodforest-4.jpg
Episode #80: Elizabeth Yaari on regenerating desert land at the Night Owl Food Forest in Paonia, Colorado
sam zipplorah.jpg
Episode #79: Samantha Zipporah on radical fertility & the politics of birth
Episode #78: Jacquie Hill on the medicine of Ponderosa Pine and botanical research ethics
Episode #78: Jacquie Hill on the medicine of Ponderosa Pine and botanical research ethics
image_6487327.JPG
Episode #77: Calyx Liddick of Northern Appalachia School on the historical connection between ecological conservation and eugenics
Episode #76: Sylvia Poareo on Planting Seeds of Collective and Inclusive Regeneration
Episode #76: Sylvia Poareo on Planting Seeds of Collective and Inclusive Regeneration
9C54EFC7-0297-4D8B-8B99-138A4ADC81FD.JPG
Episode #75: Kelly solo on teaching riparian ecology, preparing for a season on the land
Episode #74: Alex Zubia on the importance of good food, community and love in Fresno, California
Episode #74: Alex Zubia on the importance of good food, community and love in Fresno, California
Episode #73: Kelly solo on borders, rising to the occasion, weaving ecologies and land immersion
Episode #73: Kelly solo on borders, rising to the occasion, weaving ecologies and land immersion
Episode #72: Lisa Ganora on molecular level connection, the magic of herbal constituents
Episode #72: Lisa Ganora on molecular level connection, the magic of herbal constituents
Episode #71: writer, botanist, Susan Tweit on being a walking ecosystem, writing the deserts of the West
Episode #71: writer, botanist, Susan Tweit on being a walking ecosystem, writing the deserts of the West
sarah2.jpg
Episode #70: checking in with Sarah Galvin: internal and external landscape tracking to address ancestral trauma, mothering in the modern world
thackerpassnikki.png
Episode #69: Nikki Hill with Sigh Moon on Botany as Archaeology, to Stop a Lithium Mine
sharpeningstone2022-46.jpg
Episode #68: Wild Tending Series / A conversation in a Camas meadow. Adam Larue of Sharpening Stone on tending wild plants in southern Oregon
Episode #67: Ted Packard on bodies as a multiplicity, coyote-trickster troubadour-ing, music as ecological channeling, kids and nature connection, & creating communities of mutuality
Episode #67: Ted Packard on bodies as a multiplicity, coyote-trickster troubadour-ing, music as ecological channeling, kids and nature connection, & creating communities of mutuality
vscoeditsoct2018farm-110.jpeg
Episode #66: An ode to Doug Elliott, Appalachian storyteller, herbalist and naturalist (plus photo diary)
IMG_1217.jpg
Episode #65: Wild Tending Series / Dave Meesters and Janet Kent of the Terra Sylva School of Botanical Medicine on disempowering the engines of disruption through intentional land-tending
DSC02237.jpeg
Episode #64: Mary Morgaine Plantwalker of Herb Mountain Farm on care-taking a botanical sanctuary in Appalachia
New Mexico 2010 011.JPG
Episode #63: A life of living in the wilderness, fermenting on the road and facing the immediacy of death with Marissa Percoco
IMG_9480.JPG
Episode #62: Chama Woydak of Homegrown Families on birth, death, and land connection
may2021-100.jpg
Episode #61: Jillian Ashley aka. Jill Trashley on the origins of the NOHM collective, nomadic business, community & plant tending across ecologies [plus photo diary]
may2021-13.jpg
Episode #60: Land Diary / Southern Appalachia and Nettles in Spring
2015_09_arbas_salt_cedar_az-8.jpeg
Episode #59: Is there such a thing as an "Invasive Species"? A conversation with Matt Chew Ph.d. hosted by Kollibri terre Sonnenblume, Nikki Hill and Gabe Crawford
seancroke2.jpeg
Episode #58: A conversation with Sean Croke of the Hawthorn School of Plant Medicine out of Olympia, WA

find more episodes in our archives:

Archive
  • 2018 8
  • 2019 20
  • 2020 22
  • 2021 13
  • 2022 6
  • 2023 9
  • 2024 4
  • 2025 3

Get on the newsletter list

Get on our newsletter list (different from our substack publication!)

    We won't send you spam. Unsubscribe at any time.
    Built with ConvertKit

    © 2023 All writing and photographs on this website are by Kelly Moody unless otherwise noted. All content is copyrighted. Use only with permission.

    The products and statements made about specific products on this website have not been evaluated by the United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent disease. All information provided on this website or any information contained on or in any product label or packaging is for informational purposes only and is not intended as a substitute for advice from your physician or other health care professional. You should not use the information on this website for the diagnosis or treatment of any health problem. Always consult with a healthcare professional before starting any new vitamins, supplements, diet, or exercise program, before taking any medication, or if you have or suspect you might have a health problem.