| written by Rachel Turiel Hinds
 Early October, aspen leaves almost down. 
                        A storm has swept through the mountains leaving first 
                        snow on the peaks like a billboard announcing winter to 
                        town. Today is the day to go into the high country, dig 
                        osha roots and bid farewell to the fading light of summer. 
                       The Forest Service road I travel is quiet, just a few 
                        preseason hunters scoping out the territory behind rolled-down 
                        windows of American trucks. We exchange obligatory waves 
                        – hands raised in quick salutes – scrutinizing 
                        each other as our trucks pass on the road, perhaps wondering 
                        what the other wants from this land. Is it as simple as wild meat and healing roots? Maybe 
                        we have not strayed so far from our hunting and gathering 
                        ancestors.  The 
                        wind plucks yellow leaves from aspens and returns them 
                        gently to the forest floor. A view of the La Plata Mountains 
                        opens up to reveal first snow on the peaks, a light dusting 
                        from this morning’s storm. The snow is startling 
                        after a long, luxurious summer, but familiar, too, like 
                        once again seeing your friends in the wool caps they don 
                        each winter. These mountains are where Dan hunts, tucked 
                        away in the shady fir trees below timberline. In three 
                        days, start of first rifle season, he will be out here 
                        moving silently through dawn, hoping for a shot at an 
                        elk.
 I park the truck and with shovel in hand and osha prayers 
                        on my lips, I head down an old, overgrown logging road. 
                        The plants, zapped by weeks of frosty nights, are brown 
                        and tattered, tangled together as they lay down for the 
                        long night of winter. This may be one of the last days 
                        to dig osha, soon it will be indistinguishable from the 
                        other decomposing plants, or buried under snow. My hands are cold on the shovel under the shade of old 
                        spruce trees. The soil easily loosens around the base 
                        of the osha plant, and I squat in front of it, following 
                        the root runners with my fingers, prying them from the 
                        earth. It is a small plant I have chosen, just enough 
                        for one year’s medicine: potent antiviral and respiratory 
                        tonic. I break open a root and bitter resin smears onto 
                        my hand like the plant’s very blood. The taste is 
                        strong, earthy carrot.I am always surprised at how difficult it is to snuff 
                        the breath of a wild plant, to slice into the earth and 
                        pull out life. I smooth the dank earth back around the 
                        wound I’ve created and scatter an offering of a 
                        powerful herb from my home garden.
 With my treasures in a bag, I continue down the logging 
                        road, not yet ready to leave the land and last vestiges 
                        of summer’s reign. Chickadees, nuthatches and woodpeckers 
                        narrate my slow stroll, singing the dirge of summer passing. 
                        The logging road opens into a large clearcut studded with 
                        young spruce and fir emerging through the ruddy grasses. 
                        Beyond the clearcut, the Hermosa drainage has settled 
                        into winter gray with the exception of two bright patches 
                        of yellow, autumn’s flame almost extinguished. Beyond 
                        the leafless aspen groves, white peaks – Grizzly, 
                        Engineer, West Needles – rise into the sky, reclaiming 
                        their imposing winter stance over the land. It is quiet here. In a few more days, the woods will 
                        be filled with hunters and explosions from their loud, 
                        high-powered weapons. How do the animals make sense of 
                        this invasion? How is it to be stalked, tracked, pursued 
                        while you are simply trying to live? I think of the mama 
                        elk and their young calves fleeing from gunshot and a 
                        deep sadness clamps onto my chest. And yet, Dan has brought home elk and deer from these 
                        very woods, and I have eagerly helped butcher, cutting 
                        garnet flesh from snowy bone. On winter nights, I wrap 
                        a thick elk skin blanket around my shoulders, and in all 
                        seasons every meal of rich, wild meat is savored. I am 
                        slowly learning what the animals have always known, that 
                        joy and sorrow, life and death, all live in the same house. 
                        I can only hope that my heart is open enough to hold both 
                        the gifts of living and the pain of loss, not like opposite 
                        sides of a coin, but as equal parts of a whole.Looking out over the vast Hermosa watershed, I offer a 
                        prayer to the animals, for their safety and well-being 
                        this hunting season. May the deaths that occur be swift 
                        and the lives taken with respect and gratitude.
 It begins to snow. Graupel they call it, compact balls 
                        like cold, wet styrofoam. I walk slowly back, feeling 
                        the coldness wrap around me like a shawl and the land 
                        closing in on itself, becoming winter. The few birds that 
                        were calling have stopped, and the land is silent and 
                        still. I reach the truck though remain outside caught 
                        by the snow’s glitter, falling in my hair, collecting 
                        on the ground in shallow piles of white balls. Then, like the most natural thing in the world, a coyote 
                        crosses the road in front of me, tail fluffed out behind 
                        her like a furry flag. She stops on the other side of 
                        the road in a clearing and sniffs at the ground. Her coat 
                        is the color of spruce bark, grayish-brown stitched with 
                        threads of red. But it is her tail that mesmerizes me, 
                        thick and luxurious, like a banner of flagrant wealth 
                        in this muted, winter landscape. I imagine her laying 
                        it across her babies as they sleep. The coyote digs gently into the earth, scraping up pieces 
                        of dark soil. She lowers her snout to the ground and sniffs, 
                        bringing the secrets of the underworld up through her 
                        nose. Occasionally she looks up at me through the falling 
                        snow and I freeze in the place she’s caught me, 
                        leaning forward in concentration, blowing on my hands 
                        to warm them. She presses one ear close to the ground and pauses for 
                        10 beats of my heart. Then, like an expert yoga practitioner, 
                        she rotates her head in the opposite direction, probing 
                        the ground with her other ear while keeping her body perfectly 
                        still. Her motions are smooth and fluid, ages of instinct 
                        choreographed into a dance of the hunt. She stops and 
                        sits on her haunches, eyes clinging to this spot of earth 
                        like ice on the north slope of a mountain. The snow falls 
                        harder, pressing on the withered, roadside stalks of yarrow. Watching the coyote hunt, I am let into an intimacy outside 
                        of my realm. For this moment – as I am locked on 
                        the coyote, and she on her prey – we are the only 
                        creatures alive, and the snow draws us closer like a curtain 
                        sealing off the rest of the world. Suddenly the coyote pulls back onto her hind legs and 
                        then springs forward and pounces. I hold my breath, waiting 
                        for her head to emerge. She immediately rises with a long, 
                        gray squirrel tail hanging from her mouth. The spinning 
                        world stops, and my mouth falls open. The coyote walks 
                        a few feet away and, without taking the squirrel out of 
                        her mouth or using her paws, she begins eating the animal. 
                        In less than a minute the squirrel is devoured: fur, bones, 
                        eyeballs and all. The coyote glances up at me and then 
                        walks back to the hole from where she pulled the squirrel, 
                        squats over it and urinates (this is how I know she is 
                        female). She then trots back across the road and disappears 
                        into the spruce trees where I had dug the osha. I thank the coyote for her presence and for showing me 
                        one of the oldest, most natural relationships, that between 
                        predator and prey. From death, life again is sustained. 
                        I get in the truck, turn on the heat and head back to 
                        town; the smell of osha roots, earthy and pungent, fills 
                        my nose.    |