The ReMembering and ReEnchanting Podcast
In this episode, we are uplifting some of the ideas in Elspeth Hay’s remarkable book, Feed Us with Trees: Nuts and the Future of Food [https://newsociety.com/book/feed-us-with-trees/?srsltid=AfmBOooceluW2hZ0KkE6y-3rBvPzW4A_f1n6-FK1YDgJVQFABy2Uj6Gz]. After starting with Sara Jolena offering a su [https://newsociety.com/book/feed-us-with-trees/?srsltid=AfmBOooceluW2hZ0KkE6y-3rBvPzW4A_f1n6-FK1YDgJVQFABy2Uj6Gz]mmary of some of the big ideas in the book, we move into a conversation with author Elspeth Hay and a few of the many people whom Elspeth has mentioned in the book: Ron Reed, Karuk tribal member and cultural biologist; Joanna Brooks, settler scholar and author of Why We Left; and Gale Pettifer, commoner and scholar of the New Forest in England. Together they trace a set of histories that turn out to be deeply entangled: Indigenous land dispossession in California, the enclosure of the English commons, the suppression of cultural burning, the erasure of ancestral foodways — and the folk songs, forest laws, and buried memories that survived all of it. Timestamps 0:00 — Welcome & introduction: Sara Jolena introduces the episode, inspired by Elspeth Hay’s book Feed Us with Trees, and the “no farm, no food” myth it challenges. 2:51 — Guest introductions: Elspeth introduces Ron Reed (Karuk Nation, cultural biologist), Joanna Brooks (Why We Left), and Gale Pettifer (New Forest commoner and commons scholar). 5:44 — Ron Reed’s opening story: childhood memories of harvesting acorns, mushrooms, and salmon; the Klamath Dam removal; and the ongoing fight to restore Indigenous fire practices with public trust objectives. 9:20 — Gale Pettifer on the New Forest: a thousand years of contested common rights, Norman forest law, and what it means to still practice ancient commoning in the 21st century. 12:58 — Joanna Brooks on settler scholarship and song: tracing her European ancestry through folk ballads, a grandmother’s lullaby, and a plate of hazelnuts at the British Museum that the curators couldn’t explain. 18:29 — Fire across continents: Elspeth connects her experience of gorse burning debates in the New Forest to Ron’s work on cultural burning — the same argument, on opposite sides of the Atlantic. 30:58 — Dragons, sacred fire, and colonial memory: a discussion of how fire moved from sacred to feared in Anglo-Saxon and English tradition, illustrated by the New Forest dragon legend and the introduction of Christianity. 34:31 — Songs of grief and displacement: Joanna traces the emotional record of enclosure through English murder ballads — songs about hazel trees, beaver hats, and families starving off the land — and what they reveal about why colonial settlers “lost their minds.” 43:12 — Magna Carta, common law, and the 1877 New Forest Act: Gale traces how brutal Norman forest law paradoxically became the foundation of commoners’ rights, and how public outcry saved the New Forest from privatization. 47:33 — The allotment parallel: Elspeth draws a striking connection between English allotment gardens and the U.S. federal allotment system used to break up Indigenous tribal lands — the same word, the same colonial logic, on both sides of the ocean. 1:10:42 — Cycles of colonization and reverse transmission: Sara Jolena traces how colonial practices — from plantation timekeeping to fire suppression — were exported back to Europe, and the importance of distinguishing imperial forces from common people’s forces within every culture. 1:16:11 — Closing round: guests share what is shifting now — prescribed fire training in Wellfleet, MA; intergenerational transfer of fire ecology knowledge; the joy of reconnecting with the New Forest through free-roaming ponies — and an invitation to listeners to bring these ideas into their communities. Elspeth Hay Book: Feed us with trees [https://newsociety.com/book/feed-us-with-trees/?aff=65] Website [https://elspethhay.com/] Bio [https://elspethhay.com/about] Insta [https://www.instagram.com/elspethhay/] Ron Reed Article about Ron Reed - How Karuk ceremonial leader Ron Reed used Western science to take down the Klamath dams [https://mavensnotebook.com/2025/08/26/notebook-feature-how-karuk-ceremonial-leader-ron-reed-used-western-science-to-take-down-the-klamath-dams/] Interview featuring Ron - Fire is Food: A Virtual Brown Bag Discussion with Ron Reed and Kari Norgaard [https://online.ucpress.edu/esr/article/44/2/5/118437/Fire-is-FoodA-Virtual-Brown-Bag-Discussion-with] Joanna Brooks Book: Why We Left [https://www.upress.umn.edu/9780816681266/why-we-left/] Website [http://joannabrooks.org/] Bio [http://joannabrooks.org/about/] Linkedin [https://www.linkedin.com/in/joanna-brooks-9010566/] Gale Pettifer Linkedin [https://www.linkedin.com/in/dr-gale-pettifer-32148918/] Bio [https://speakernet.co.uk/speaker/505/gale-pettifer] Send us a message [https://www.buzzsprout.com/310226/fan_mail/new] Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/310226/support] Learn more [https://www.sequoiasamanvaya.com/] about Sara Jolena Wolcott and Sequoia Samanvaya Music Title: Both of Us Music by: madiRFAN Don't forget to "like" and share this episode!
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