November 18, 2011
August 29, 2011
Toadstool Woods
Filed under: One A DayHunting in the Scottish gloam for scarlet-capped fairy tale mushrooms.
August 27, 2011
August 27th, 2010 II
Filed under: Asphalt & EntrailsThe August 27th, 2010 story doesn't actually end with the discovery of #01. (What, you were expecting an easy fucking read? Honey, I'm Ms. Dirty - every-motherfucking-thing I do is overly complicated and supremely fucking epic.) After a week of non-stop Harvest work - i.e., from dawn till dusk foraging, late night (and early fucking morning) wild mushroom processing, fleshing roadkill, bone cleaning, graveyard garden hooching and preparing my container garden (aka Gothel's Garden) for the inevitability of winter - I had to throw my towel in early last night due to some low energy levels.
I mean, what kind've weak ass initiatory experience would have me running down a Scottish country road at six in the fucking morning with Chippy strapped to my back - all, like, papoose-style - as the mummified remains of a roadkill deer ecstatically swing in a plastic bag hanging off my arm for all the early commuters to see only once? To ensure that I'd forever be emblazoned as the crowned queen of fucking weirdos to the very local people of this community the Universe decided I needed to repeat the performance, stat.
Within an hour of cramming #01's dehydrated body into a grocery bag and running breathlessly to my car with a muffin-top of bones'n'fur (much to the confusion, disgust and wonder of passing drivers; which, hey, is to be expected, but if you ask me - I'll just pretend you did (you're welcome, btw!) - the real confusion, disgust and wonder comes from the crazy fucking idea of spending 6-10 hours in a cage thinly disguised as a semi-personal office cubicle), I was, once again, running breathlessly to my car with another plastic bag bulging with the dried remains of a second roadkill deer (#02; a juvenile).
My motherfucking trunk? Packed. (<- Just FYI: I'm still talkin' about the car, although that statement's totally applicable to other areas of my life...ahem.) Despite the severe lack of trunk space - it's not like my ass wasn't warned, right? - August 27th, 2010's day of initiatory experiences wasn't over just yet.
I didn't know at the time, but I had one more significant find to make because I had one last niggling curiosity to sate.
It was curiosity that pulled on my fucking reigns as I began passing the familiar skank ass carpet, so I slowed the fuck down until the rolled up offcut transformed into the motherfucking deer I had been waiting for. It was curiosity that lured my adrenaline-buzzing body out of the effing car and into a coniferous hedge with hopes of locating a basket worth of pine-lovin' boletes that lead to #02's discovery (and subsequent rescue), and it was that same siren song of curiosity that drew me out of my car one last fucking time because I had to know just one more goddamn thing before going home that day: what the fuck did the Black Laird's loch look like?
It wasn't growing on the banks of the Devil-ridden loch, but along the moss-covered footpath leading up to the manmade reservoir. Nestled snuggly between the fairy tale dimples of a shadow-filled forest was one perfect toadstool (Amanita muscaria) swaddled in woodland down. It was the first fly agaric I had ever seen, ever touched, and ever held, and when my deer-scented fingers sank into the damp cool of the earth to accept the chthonic (psychoactive) gift I suddenly understood the intrinsic connection between me, the deer, the Old Woman, our land and the ancient, conscious entity living beneath our collective feet.
This is how I became the Old Woman's resurrectionist butcher, and its story of initiation, death and rebirth? Has finally been told.
August 24, 2011
August 23, 2011
One Goddamn Picture
Filed under: LifeTwo days ago I: made an edible anointing oil from herbs growing out of the garden container with #01's remains, used one of my in-laws' crystal vases to macerate some pheasant bones (if you don't tell them they'll never notice), finally pulled out all the motherfucking fireweed and ragwort that's been driving Italics's allergies in-fucking-sane, made an executive decision to prune all the effing patio shrubs Mr. Awesome's been ignoring, tackled five years worth of invasive ivy that's slowly destroyed our fucking fence, seriously contemplated the possibility of pulling Mr. Awesome's non-hedge hedge out and planting something actually useful (i.e., elder), recklessly bounced way too enthusiastically for far too long on an epic mountain of garden debris (to compact the shit into a bag...well, mostly to compact the shit into a bag), freed one of the plum trees from being completely swallowed by a neighbor's tall line of monster fucking cedars and then watched the setting sun illuminate portions of the backyard for the first time in fucking years.
And I didn't take one goddamn picture.
Yesterday I: dragged my sore fucking ass outside to examine and flesh the heads of #08, #09 and #10, shallowly buried the decomposing remains I removed from their skulls so our fox(es) have access to a quick meal, packed the three flayed deer heads into my upgraded roadkill altar to begin the process of rot, checked on the assorted pieces of #01, #02, #03, #04 and #05 macerating in one of the outside rooms, potted on some home-fucking-grown comfrey seedlings, excavated the skeletal remains of Love & Sorrow's mature rabbit from one of my gardening pots, transplanted one of my container lavenders using some of the decayed rabbit dirt, dressed my sage, bay tree and tiny little gooseberry plant with leftover rabbit dirt, paid a visit to the roadkill graveyard situated beneath our office window (where fleshy remains are buried until they become bone), clipped small coniferous tufts from huge motherfucking juniper branches (pruning casualty; why let good magic shit go to waste?) and spent the next eight motherfucking hours in the fucking kitchen rubbing my hands raw by squeezing juice out of seven motherfucking pounds of wild necro-gooseberries - by fucking hand - to make four different motherfucking types of Hedgerow Hooch.
And I didn't take one goddamn picture.
Today I: swore my supremely sore fucking ass that I'd take the day off until I remembered the last time I performed any sort of mushroom sweep was last Friday (work is work, Internet), cackled madly - and even paused to call Italics mid-picking - at the completely unexpected porcini harvest, stumbled across a new bolete-tastic hot spot situated between two other bolete-tastic hot spots, indulgently savored the first mothereffin' brambles of the season, paused to admire the late evening sun reflecting across the ripe blackberries' latex shine, briefly returned home for Italics so we could toadstool hunt together near the banks of the Black Laird's loch, crawled through low-hanging boughs of birch and pine, and scrambled over crumbling, lichen-encrusted walls filling a second magic wooden basket with cherry-red agarics, a birch bolete explosion of massive fucking proportions and the incomplete remains of a carrion crow, single-handledly cleaned - and processed! - 1085 grams of porcini, 1194 grams of mixed boletes and 8 effing toadstools for dehydration, stirred every fucking 2011 Hedgerow Hooch (all (lucky) 13 of them), made a helluva meal which included homemade holubsti (Ukrainian stuffed cabbage) inexcusably smothered with leftover Poulet Marengo sauce and a quick chorizo-smoked pancetta-homegrown sage chicken thing, prepped #11's body for its future funeral and watery interment, and preened vainly in the mirror all evil sorceress-style when I caught the secondhand stains of midnight sex smeared garishly across my lower face.
And I didn't take one goddamn picture.
August 20, 2011
Lost'n'Found
Filed under: Witch in the WoodsHow do you locate a lost cairn? Take a loaf of bread, a pomegranate and a bottle of water to the projected location and walk around until you trip over absolutely nothing. Lost cairn? Found.
Other things found on this adventure: more porcini and fly agarics, an unseasonal badger roadkill (too far gone to take, although I did manage to rescue a piece of jaw with some teeth), nearly ripe currants, crazily ripe raspberries, almost ripe gooseberries, blooming comfrey and two new mushroom hot spots.
August 01, 2011
July 14th & 15th
Filed under: Witch in the WoodsJuly 14th saw us racing out the fucking door to make a mucho belated offering at the Stone Throne as storm clouds loomed ominously over the heather-covered hills in the not-so-distant distance. Most of the oblations? Stretched all the way back to Easter (when we perform the Great Rite/Hieros Gamos), and had spent the past several months occupying the lower vegetable shelf without paying rent (what can I say? it's just been that sort've year). With Harvest quickly approaching I knew I needed to get the belated offerings to my seat'o'sovereignty, and I had to do it quick.
Pictured above: a bottle of menstrual blood-infused water (to "wash" my throne; the blood's significant because it came from my first REAL period in over two years), a bottle of beer, a loaf of Ukrainian ritual bread traditionally baked at Easter (paska), a row of motherfucking Peeps (how can you celebrate the blessed union without chick-shaped marshmallows covered in granulated sugar?), half of a homemade Peking duck (an offering to the local kites and raptors who suspiciously watch us when we're outdoors) and some microwave popcorn (popped before being offered, obviously) and organic beef mince for the crows at the Pine Hedge Rookery (where TC's from).
Despite taking a beer it never occurred to me to take a fucking bottle opener, so I convinced Italics to use the side of a rock. The bottle promptly exploded, embedding tiny bits of fucking glass in his hand while soaking the one person who absolutely can't eat gluten with a wheat-based beer. (Sorry about that, baby.) There was no mojo in the air, just a teeth-grinding sense of utter failure and frustration. I blamed myself for not getting shit done on time, but accommodating the Universe's every whim and tangent makes it hard to keep a schedule.
It was a fucking depressing experience. Hot and sweaty for all the wrong reasons, sticky and wet because of a stupid idea, itchy and drainage-y thanks to rolling around in clover (to make a flat space for the crow offerings). I felt so fucking demoralized as we drove home; it was the first time my magic wooden basket was going to come home empty (well, almost empty: there were two naturally shed feathers and one tiny little pine bolete). I'm not ashamed to admit that I was taking it all as a not-so-subtle portent of unpleasant things to come.
Just as I was about to officially lodge a complaint with the Universe about the piss poor results of every-motherfucking-thing that day I jammed the fucking brakes to the motherlovin' ground because, holy fuck, there was a roadkill pheasant at the side of the fucking road. And not just ANY roadkill pheasant, but a beautifully plump hen that was hella safe for human consumption. My magic wooden basket? Didn't fail me after all.
Having finally fulfilled all of our spring obligations we were ready to turn our attention to the season at hand: mothereffin' Harvest. The day after our Stone Throne pilgrimage we were free to begin poking around our favorite hotspots, so we decided to officially open mushroom picking season at a local castle (a terrific place for birch boletes, penny buns and fly agarics).
Pictured above is a young and particularly phallic Boletus edulis (aka penny bun, cep and porcino) growing amongst forest debris.
Older Boletus edulis specimens (aka penny bun, cep and porcino); they look a bit ragged and past their best, but their spongy undersides were still unblemished.
More Boletus edulis specimens (aka penny bun, cep and porcino) partially hidden by long grass.
The very first Amanita muscaria (aka fly agaric, fly Amanita & toadstool) of 2011. Some critter enjoyed the psychoactive properties before we could, so we left the mostly pockmarked toadstool behind for the agaric lovin' inhabitants of the beech hedge.
Past the field of clover and line of trees you can hazily make out the bared breast of Bennachie (appropriately named Mither ("Mother") Tap). It's the the highest point in this area and, unsurprisingly, contains evidence of very local, very ancient goddess worship. Whenever I'm outdoors working, playing or fucking Mither Tap is always just once glance away.
June 27, 2011
Aug. 31st, 2010
Filed under: Witch in the WoodsTwo days ago my oldest friend in the world got married (oh, we go back to the first fucking day of 3rd grade), and my fat, psychopomp-attractin' ass wasn't there. (<- Long story involving lumps (of the worrying HOLY SHIT, ONE'S IN YOUR FUCKING TESTICLE?! kind), broken cars, the lack of a valid driver's license and a certain injured crow (who, incidentally, has begun perfecting its trepanning technique).)
And the worst fucking part? I mean, other than not being there in some sort of vampire-goth-witch designer dress (she made a special request that harkened way back to my teenage years) to exercise all the liberties that only the oldest fucking friend in the world can get away with? She admitted that she was going to force me - in my vampire-goth-witch glory - to read from the good fucking book during the marriage ceremony.
(Cue a never-fucking-ending string of Cartmanesque GODDAMMIT, GODAMMIT!, with each repetition being more fucking ridiculous than the one before. <- But, like, ~forever~.)
Why the fuck am I even mentioning this? Because without her there would be no Ms. Dirty. Or, at least, the dirty wouldn't be the grimy-nasty-algae-scented-sloppy-mud-splattered-nude-body-running-through-the-motherfucking-hedges-and-feral-fields-with-a-recently-found-detached-deer-leg dirty y'all love (and/or hate) today. She might've not created the spark, but she definitely cultivated it, nurtured it and encouraged it to flourish.
Too young to be self-conscious we tore through Midwest thickets around her small farm with wild, half-naked abandon decimating quiet, peaceful patches in irrigation streams (until the clear water ran brown with disturbed silt), scaling deformed, toppled willows bare-footed (much to the chagrin of buzzed deer hunters who had a slightly harder time clambering up to their tree house hunting lofts) and always returning home muddy, bleeding, and tired, but full of anecdotal tales which, to this fucking day, we still reminisce over as if they happened last effing week.
(Our parents, in particular, loved our WE ALMOST GOT EATEN BY WILD FUCKING HOGS! story. <- For fuck's sake! THERE WERE MOTHERFUCKING PIGS IN THE MOTHERFUCKING WOODS! How the fuck were we supposed to know they weren't fucking Cujo hogs? Jesus.)
So, for soppy, sentimental reasons this entry - in which I introduce you lot to my little secret hedge - is dedicated to my first, oldest and most beloved hedge sister: Nicole (even though she has no idea this site exists*, and that I finally found a way to profit off my eagerness to get naked, get dirty and get as goddamn wild as Nature will let me).
* She's just married into the FBI; the less they know about my amphetamine-fueled gardening sessions the better.
This hella expired bolete mushroom's a lot more fucking useful than it seems. In the cutthroat world of mushroom hunting (you think I'm fucking joking?) it's known as a flag; a large specimen that alerts would-be pickers that they're in prime mushroom country. Normally flags are too deteriorated to consume (although there are occasional exceptions), but they do provide valuable information about the different sorts of mycelia underfoot. When you find one of these fuckers - and it's of an edible variety - take note, that's a spot you'll want to return to next year for a fresher crop. The bolete season in this hedgerow had already past by August 31st, which means it'll be one of the first stretches of local land to provide the very first fungal fruits of 2011.
While trying to sniff out younger boletes (which I found, but they were also too far gone for a pleasant eating experience) amongst old beech trees and grass-encrusted rock formations I spied something excitingly old and fabulously rusty nestled amongst moss, lichen and stone.
Internet, I give you Thor's motherfucking hammer. (<- Actually, it's an ancient-as-fuck piece of bicycle that somehow miraculously draped itself across a small boulder for Christ knows how fucking long until I found it (TRANSLATION: not Mjöllnir), but you get the point.) Leaving it would've been a waste of a perfectly good symbolic omen, so it got tucked into one of my magic wooden baskets and hauled back home for future witchcrafting.
One of the many spectacular views from my secret little hedge. In the distance you can see the purple bloom of wild heather hugging the exposed cap of a nearby hill, and the all-to-familiar ragged line of pine trees that farmers use to separate forested wilderness from open agricultural fields.
Amethyst Deceivers (Laccaria amethystea); they might look poisonous, but they're not. I was so goddamn focused on BIG EFFING GAME (i.e., porcini and toadstools) last year that I never allotted myself any other edible wild mushroom harvest time. Hopefully this year I'll remember to bag myself a couple of baskets of deceivers when out foraging in the woods. (These fuckers? Love beech trees. Find a row of beeches and you'll almost always find amethyst deceivers, toadstools and a variety of boletes.)
What's good about a single fucking bilberry (also known round these parts as blaeberry and whortleberry)? One's all you need to help you realize you're standing in a patch of wild motherfucking blueberry bushes. You can see I JUST missed out on 2010's crop, but now that I know where I can locally source wild blueberries (they are slightly different from blueberries, but they're close enough for me to be fucking lazy about it) we're planning multiple trips this year to ensure a bottle of homemade liqueur, a batch of hedgerow jam and enough dried reserves for multiple installments of my new favorite Ukrainian dish: dried fruit compote.
If my ass goes into the wild you can be sure of two fucking things: I will come out with an assortment of bones, and I will desperately have to take a motherfucking piss within two seconds of entering any sort of woodland. (That last curse? Has dogged me all of my goddamn life. I'm so naturally fucking pushy that I can't help but mark my territory wherever the fuck I go.)
While crawling through the hedgerow - just after being knee-deep in bilberry bushes - I stumbled across the whitewashed remains of a long dead deer. I scoured the area for other whiter-than-fucking-white pieces, but only found a single rib bone and part of the spinal column. This wasn't the only encounter I had with deer on the 31st; after my hedgerow expedition I rescued my first skinnable roadkill doe (#4; my lactating doe), so in addition to everything I found, foraged and ferreted out in my secret little hedge I also had an adult roe deer to wrestle with once I got home.
The sun - partially obscured by towering pines - eased through branches and crevices, leaving marks of dappled light along my shadowy, fern-filled path.
A miniature forest of infant beeches bursting out of their protective braces.
Too afraid that the forest would steal me away I stuck to the darkened, shrub-choked hedge and gingerly tip-toed around the illuminated paths (<- sometimes shit's overly inviting for a reason) as I made my way back to the car.
Something managed to enjoy this fly agaric (Amanita muscaria) before I could, so I left the partially eaten toadstool behind. When I returned for my second dose of hedge exploration the local rabbits were kind enough to leave a little magic out for me.
Chippy; my foraging companion. When Italics can't join me in my rural adventures I take Chippy to keep my ass company (laugh if you want, but he's got a sharp fucking nose for roadkill - he's successfully nailed several outcomes before I managed to start the goddamn car). For obvious reasons he spends the majority of the time strapped to my back like a motherfucking papoose, but he gets his 15 minutes of freedom when it's time for lunch. (<- I try and keep him leashed; cattle and sheep react badly to my presence when I'm out "walking" him, so to spare us from a stampede he's not allowed free reign outdoors unless it's in the yard.)
As if the first exploration of my secret little hedge wasn't successful enough, I found the chthonic nesting site of stinging, parasitic insects. (<- It takes a true witch to see potential in all things, and it takes a really fucking hacked-the-fuck-off witch to flex that potential.)(<- Consider that one of the few warnings I ever publicly make, Internet.)
I'm an equal opportunity forager to the point that scavenging has become more of a lifestyle than hobby. It doesn't matter what the fuck it is - i.e., dropped jewelry, rusting farm equipment, dead animals, reduced-to-clear-food and, in this case, the remains of a pheasant egg - if it's in my path then it was most certainly meant to be. In addition to being a bone magnet (snort), I have a weird ass talent for finding discarded wild bird eggs. (Psst! If you're looking for eggshell fragments from carrion crows or game birds I'm totally your dealer.)
June 21, 2011
May 10th, 2011
Filed under: Asphalt & EntrailsI'll be completely fucking honest with y'all - I love every effing aspect of my roadkill work (from building altars, exercising funerary rites, to carefully fishing out still-warm organs with my bare fucking hands - which, BTW, isn't recommended, but it does give you a better entrails reading) except for having to tackle pictorial logs of our rescue expeditions. Because, really, what the fuck do I have to cleverly offer other than "OH, HEY, CHECK IT OUT - ANOTHER DEAD ANIMAL WE FOUND" with each passing picture? So it goes without saying that I deliberately leave the tres undesirable work* for as long as fucking possible in the hopes that somehow it'll miraculous write itself up (hey, it could happen).
* When you designate evisceration, flaying and psychoactive-fueled butchery as "FUN AND AWESOME WORK OMG" there's only one direction for the coma-inducing boredom of record keeping to go - it becomes the dirty work you try to avoid with almost every motherfucking inch of your life.
Even though I've had my eye on it for years, May 10th was the first time we managed to explore this particular carrion crow rookery. It's very local - by car, anyway - although it's set back in agricultural fields and scrub woodland so the nesting sites (there seem to be several very large clusters) are a safe distance from the hustle and bustle of human life. (<- I've seen way too many fledglings flattened by cars due to rookeries being built over areas of heavy fucking traffic.)
I haven't had a chance to sort, edit and upload the funeral pictures - so I can't check my Flickr photostream for verification, and I'm too goddamn lazy to hunt down my physical roadkill journal/log - but I think we left the rookery that day with the remains of 10 carrion crow fledglings that died a natural death. (Not necessarily a painless, comfortable or easy death; just a death that wasn't at the hands - whether intentional or not - of humans.) My roadkill crows tend to be unlucky adults or inexperienced juveniles, but my fledglings are almost always found at the base of their nests. (As you may have already guessed, birds have a devastating infant mortality rate - something like 1 out of every 3 or 4 actually make it past a certain stage of life - so the body count isn't abnormal, even if it is heartbreaking.)
OH, HEY, CHECK IT OUT - ANOTHER DEAD ANIMAL WE FOUND! (Snort.)
Even though we pass by this field every effing time we perform any sort've roadkill round-up we've never, ever noticed this so-suave-it's-super-fucking-natural stallion. The second it caught sight of us walking back to the car it immediately began posing for pictures, and we couldn't help but stop for a few minutes to immortalize the uber ridiculous vogue-like flaunting (oh, that motherfucker was workin' it).
The majority of our rookery excursion was beneath a heavily overcast sky, but - and I kid you not - the second we became aware of the suave stallion's presence the rolling clouds parted and a single ray of sunlight broke through the crevice and fell like a heavenly beacon RIGHT ON THE MOTHERFUCKING HORSE. We stood mesmerized as that solitary beam expanded, engulfing the entire field with warm, radiant light while Euan Garlogie, wonder horse extraordinaire, effortlessly stole the moment by striking many a pose.
June 14, 2011
Gone to Flowers
Filed under: One A DayWhere have all the graveyards gone? Gone to flowers, everyone.
June 09, 2011
Taste of Grampian
Filed under: One A DayOnce a year in early June a one-day food and drink festival is held close to home that showcases the natural talents and products of regional farmers, craftsmen, bakers, butchers, fishmongers, distilleries and other culinary-themed businesses. Despite our restrictive diets (we need to eat gluten/wheat-free, and - if not reduced-to-clear - our meat has to be locally sourced with absolute satisfaction of the animal's welfare) we still came home with a ridiculous amount of locally produced food made by folks with a sincere interest in working harmoniously with nature, life and the environment.
Pictured: a bottle of non-alcoholic sparkling elderberry drink, a bottle of non-alcoholic sparkling elderflower drink, a balsamic, honey and rapeseed oil-based salad dressing, a bar of homemade lemongrass and rapeseed oil soap, two punnets of fresh strawberries, two containers of organic crowdie (it makes a terrific European cheesecake), one organic clava round, a tiny, snack-sized venison pie (stashed in the back of the freezer for when the Old Woman visits later this year), a traditionally dry-cured ham shank, two packs of half-price rose veal mince, a huge ass beef and lamb boerewors, one beautifully colored venison tenderloin, a half-price pack of rose veal cutlets, a pack of dry-cured streaky bacon and a pair of half-price rose veal rib-eyes.
June 06, 2011
June 3rd, 2011
Filed under: TrespassingToday's going to be a helluva push. It's Chippy's birthday - which we've expanded to "Animal Appreciation Day" this year - so a cake's got to be baked (a middle eastern pound cake using goat-based milk, butter and yogurt), this year's homemade strawberry vodka needs to be made (strawberries are one of his favorite foods) and we've got to haul our collective asses into town to run errands and pick up super special offerings (Burger King; don't ask me why, but spirits, animals and almost anything with a cock goes in-fucking-sane for flame-broiled burgers), party hats and mealworms for a certain injured crow.
Because I'm running on a tight schedule this morning I'm going to (mostly) skip the word count thing and sweetly serenade you guys with photos of an old Scottish kirkyard (churchyard) I discovered on the 3rd, along with one or two quick shots of a local castle I passed (Craigievar) when returning home. (Yeah, you nailed it: this is a pic dump journal entry, but isn't it a glorious fucking pic dump journal entry?) I haven't hammered out any commentary to go with the photos, but everything'll get explained away later since Italics is really fucking keen to explore the new graveyard - and I'm equally as keen to take him there for early morning cemetery sex - so you can expect a better set of pictures in the near future.
June 04, 2011
5:30 AM
Filed under: One A DayAt 5:30 in the morning there was only me, the dead and the early summer sun.
June 01, 2011
Scarecrow
Filed under: One A DayAt first I thought NO FUCKING WAY, IT COULDN'T BE, but by the third body it was undeniable - some barbaric cunt actually made real life scarecrows out of dead fucking birds. And the worst fucking part? IT WASN'T EVEN EFFECTIVE.
The one goddamn thing it succeeded in doing? Bringing down a hardcore case of agricultural blight straight out've the 16th fucking century. In fact, I'm ready to Janet Horne this motherfucker and ride his bridled ass across country until nothing's left except ashes like I'm some mothereffing Wendigo.
March 15, 2011
Old Calton
Filed under: Adventures & ExplorationsA stairway leading up to one of the older graveyards (Old Calton) in Edinburgh.




























































