(What is Annora Brown saying in her painting titled “wild sunflowers”? Might that scene be her message warning the non-Aboriginal people of South Alberta to emphasize the value of “Nature’s Landscape” in the 1940s?)
The painting featured on the cover of Annora Brown’s autobiography “Sketches from Life” shows a scene of fenced, cropped fields reaching to the horizon. In the foreground wild sunflowers grow along the ditch and beside the utility pole.
Her painting is reminiscent of a story she told about sketching a similar scene in the Fort Macleod area. When it got too dark, she resolved to pause and finish her sketch the next day. But alas, the road crew had mowed all those “weeds” along the ditch before she returned. People didn’t understand what she was trying to tell them about the essential value of “Nature’s Landscape”.
In the Preface of her autobiographical book, written when she was nearly 80 years old, Annora recalls how she “lifted the lid” on the fragments of her memories “that buzzed about” – memories that caused her to sometimes chuckle and sometimes feel “bruised and beaten” and dissolved in tears.
Annora’s thoughtful insights speak volumes. This scene is echoed through a couple of news-worthy articles from the Western Producer about research being done on soil health (July 4, 2019). The question researchers are now asking is if producers facing changing climatic circumstances can develop improved “regenerative agricultural practises”?
The basis for these practises harkens back to the way ancient agrarian cultures used plants and animals to enhance their soil for generations.
The researchers remind us that “chemical and mechanical practises aren’t working so well” from the point of view of productivity. “Our soils are bleeding carbon” … and “we don’t just go to town and buy a remedy.”
We must focus on giving attention to the health of soil. It is possible to use plants and animals as a major resource to again make the land productive. Practises like “over-cropping” and “inter-cropping” are being studied. Livestock herds can provide valuable organic compound even as they mulch the grassland. Crop resilience can be improved in times of drought, and fewer inputs are needed when considering profitability.
“Soil is a living organism”. Treat it with care. Respect it … and be amazed at how Mother Nature provides! Annora Brown, through her life, work and witness, provides a rich bounty of Legacy Learnings. Faithful stewards of the land can do no less!
(see www.annorabrown.ca )
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