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#howto #transplant #indianhemp Affiliate- check out "Lost Ways II" for old ways, survival and more. https://297a22gc7rpgte-9sf6lou1qcv.ho... In this video, wildtending nomad Michael Ridge delves into the beauty of processing, digging and transplanting dogbane. Directed by: Michael Ridge Filming/editing: Amanda Barnett More on Edison's story and The Chiloquin Act: "Edison Chiloquin earned international attention in 1974 when he refused to accept a $273,000 payment from the federal government as compensation for terminating the Klamath Tribe. He was the only tribal member to do so. In refusing payment, Chiloquin said: “It would be like selling a part of you or a part of our ancestors. This is sacred land where my grandfather lived. His bones are here. I belong here.” Chiloquin repeatedly said that no value could ever be placed on land where his relatives lived. He lived simply and did not consider money important." "...Congress had passed the Klamath Termination Act in 1954, and all federal services were lost in 1961. The tribe also lost a million acres of ponderosa pine forest and their claim to the headwaters of the Klamath River. In 1954, 1,659 of the 2,133 enrolled members of the Tribe each received $43,000 from the federal government. By many accounts, the payment was a disaster for the Klamaths. They received no financial counseling or consumer education and were often charged excessive legal fees, and many squandered their payments. In addition, termination resulted in tribal members losing federal benefits, such as housing, education, and medical care. In November 1974, the 473 “remaining members,” including Chiloquin, received their payments. Instead of accepting his payment, however, Chiloquin lit a Sacred Fire at the site of his grandfather's village along the banks of the Sprague River near Chiloquin, a town named for his grandfather. The fire burned continuously for five and a half years, beginning on April 18, 1976. Chiloquin along with his family and friends erected teepees and built an earth lodge, sweat lodge, and stone-lined fire pit at the village. He maintained the fire to “have the smoke from the fire carry prayers for the land to the Creator.” In January 1980, President Jimmy Carter signed the Chiloquin Act, which gave Edison Chiloquin and his descendants title to 580 acres for what is known as Pla-ik-ni Village. The boundaries for the village were finalized on April 8, 1985. The Klamath Tribe was eventually restored on August 28, 1986, but it received no land base. During his lifetime, Chiloquin was sometimes not embraced by other tribal members, but in recent years some tribal members have asserted that his refusal to let the government take his land was a factor in the tribe seeking restoration..." Source: https://www.oregonencyclopedia.org/ar... Social Media Links: http://walkingwithwesternwildflowers.com / walkingwithwesternwildflowers / walkingwithwesternwildflowers http://anchor.fm/walking-with-western... / mountain.manders / themountainpen Support the journey: http://paypal.me/MRidge711 http://venmo.com/MRidge711