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of sedge & salt

  • Shop
  • The Ground Shots Podcast
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  • Of Sedge and Salt blog archives
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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

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Episode #71: writer, botanist, Susan Tweit on being a walking ecosystem, writing the deserts of the West

December 21, 2022

Episode #71 of the Ground Shots Podcast is a conversation with author and scientist Susan Tweit.

Susan Tweit is a plant biologist with a calling to restore nature and our connection with the community of the land especially close to home. Plants are her people, as she says, fascinated by the myriad ways they weave the world’s living communities, forming the green tapestry that covers this planet. Susan began her career as a field ecologist studying sagebrush, grizzly bears and wildfires. She reveled in the work and the time outside in the west’s expansive landscapes, but eventually realized she loved the stories in the data more than collecting those data. So, she learned how to tell those stories, not an easy trick for a scientist schooled in dispassionate and impersonal prose.

Susan and I met at the Paonia Books opening event in Paonia, Colorado in late fall 2022. During the event, we ended up getting into a conversation about plants by the hard cider sample table, and decided to try at some point to do an interview for the podcast. I was curious about Susan’s work as a writer and botanist, ecology scientist and was excited to dig deeper. We managed to meet up a few weeks later and recorded a conversation in Paonia Books’ back room where they hold writing workshops.

She has written a handful of books on a variety of themes. Some of her titles include ‘Barren, Wild and Worthless, Living in the Chihuahuan Desert,’ ‘The Rocky Mountain Garden Guide,’ and ‘Bless the Birds: Living with Love in a Time of Dying.’

In this conversation with Susan, we talk about:

  • some animal and plant co-evolutions in desert ecology

  • politics in desert areas and beyond relating to cattle, wolves, coyotes, prairie dogs, and jaguars

  • the cultural influences in science on what is a ‘weed’ or a plant that doesn’t belong

  • science as a system of gathering information and isn’t necessarily objective

  • how different worldviews and cultures deal with ‘invasive species and conservation goals

  • what do ‘invasive species’ tell us about our human behavior?

  • how we need to change our relationship to private land in relation to land conservation and ecological health

  • speaking to kudzu, salt cedar, cheatgrass, houndstongue, and wild horses

  • the effect of wild horses on springs in the Chihuahuan desert

  • the state of groundwater in deserts in the west

  • fear and revering wildness

  • the importance of giving up lawns to pollinator plants

  • we are walking ecosystems yet we see the wild as ‘out there’

  • how BLM land was formed west of the Mississippi

  • the current state of the sagebrush steppe ecosystem

  • how marrying emotion and the depersonalization of science is a part of critically evolving the field of ethnobotany

  • how Susan dealt with sexism as a young scientist

  • how writing can help us take a reflective look at our culture and how we see ourselves on land

  • how ecological grief and personal life grief are inseparable

  • death is the other half of life. grief is an essential part of life, and the expressions of it should be boundless

  • expressions of grief and how it varies according to culture and our relationship to death and uncomfortable feelings

  • what does unconditional love look like and how can it be our greatest gift to the world?

  • how sharing joy and sadness together is necessary for a less isolated culture

  • poisoned land is also whole just as much as pristine land is—- and this is just like our human relations— wholeness is our sadness, crazy, suicidal thoughts, unreasonable reactions and also our laughter, joy, tenderness and care

  • Susan’s memoirs and their messages relating to the themes we talk about in this conversation

  • writing as a process of undressing in public and you get to choose how many layers you take off

  • Wrestling with home, connection, culture and belonging through writing

Links:

Susan’s website

Paonia Books

Support the podcast on Patreon 

For one time donations to support this work:

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

Theme music: 'Sweat and Splinters' by Mother Marrow

Interstitial Music: Old Maid’s Draw by Riddy Arman

Hosted by: Kelly Moody

Produced by: Kelly Moody

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find more episodes in our archives:

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