Delve Into Your Passion

What are you passionate about? This was the prompt by writer and workshop teacher, Henry Hughes, this past week at a nature writing workshop at Bald Hill Farm to celebrate Oregon’s Get Outdoors Day.

You know what? Asking people what they are passionate about is a really cool way to spawn an interesting conversation, full of sweet insights into the minds of colleagues, family, friends. Even better when that’s the first question you ask a new acquaintance. I shared my response first, blurting out something about the Willamette Valley, only to kick myself moments later as others shared their own passions, each more interesting than the next. ‘Turtle cognition’ pronounces a writer who I recognize from previous writing workshops. ‘Creative problem-solving’ says another (a lawyer), followed by ‘giving voice to the non-human among us’, and ‘movement’. Wow – what an interesting lot, I think.

With the front door open, we can smell rain as it starts to drop onto the driveway pavement.

Henry probes each of us, teasing out the nuances of our passions, questioning us when we gloss over details. By the end of the circle we share a sense of kinship – a mutual respect arising out of shared vulnerability and inquisition.

We read a few nature poems together – each delightful, poignant. Mary Oliver’s “Turnip-Hearted Skunk Cabbage”, Galway Kinnell’s “Gray Heron”, Lisa Bellamy’s “Wild Pansy” (really – read this one!). Each offering a turn, a surprise, an insight into the natural world around us.

Then, we are tasked to write. Follow your passion, delve deeper and head outdoors, instructs Henry. The group of 25, notebooks at the ready, head every-which-way. Some up the hillside trail, others beckoned to the cows in the pasture. One takes off her shoes to walk in Mulkey Creek.

Too soon, our writing is wrapped – we convene to share scrawled poetry and prose. I am, as ever, humbled by the beauty that spills forth as my peers read. Water is a big theme (it’s hard not to ignore the June rain), and the cows in the nearby field served as muse for many. Spiders and flies also made appearances. Vultures and pansies, too.

A sweet haiku written during our nature writing workshop at Bald Hill Farm during Oregon’s Get Outdoors Day. Thanks to writer, Kathy Fulton, for sharing!

What a great morning!

Bald Hill Farm is a generous host, giving us fodder for filling notebooks among the pastoral pastures, creeks, and fern-forest canopies. I am thankful for this place and for these people who want to create words together.

This is what Bald Hill Farm is about, and I’m glad that it’s there for us all.

So … what are you passionate about?

Fellow writers lounge among the porch to read their works.

Blog post: Jessica McDonald

Nature Writing Workshop with Henry Hughes ***FILLED***

This event is currently full. Join Greenbelt Land Trust for a special writing workshop led by award-winning Oregon author and poet, Henry Hughes. This free workshop at the Little Willamette conservation area along the Willamette River will include a nature walk and writing discussion, personal writing time, and a group reading. Space is limited and this private conservation area is open only to GLT-led tours, so sign up today!

Registration

Thank you for your interest. This event is currently full.

Workshop Leader:

Henry Hughes grew up on Long Island, New York, and has lived in Oregon since 2002.   He is the author of four collections of poetry, including Men Holding Eggs, which received the Oregon Book Award. His memoir, Back Seat with Fish: a Man’s Adventures in Angling and Romance, was published in 2106 by Skyhorse.  An active angler, naturalist, and literary critic, he edited the Everyman’s Library anthologies Art of Angling: Poems about Fishing and Fishing Stories. His essays and reviews appear regularly in the Flyfishing and Tying Journal and Harvard Review. He teaches at Western Oregon University.

 

 

 

 

Get Outdoors Day 

This event celebrates the national Get Outdoors Day in Oregon and is sponsored by Greenbelt Land Trust and the Coalition of Oregon Land Trusts.

Oregon land trusts work to protect our rivers, farms, forests, wetlands, and wild places. Our land is not always easy to see or experience, but each acre benefits our diverse communities.  On Get Outdoors Day, we want you to experience these places, properties, and big open spaces.  Attend an event, bring friends, take pictures, and have fun outdoors! #GetOutdoorsOR