Dana O'Driscoll

Dana O’Driscoll has been an animist druid for 20 years, and currently serves as Grand Archdruid in the Ancient Order of Druids in America (www.aoda.org). She is a druid-grade member of the Order of Bards, Ovates, and Druids and is the OBOD’s 2018 Mount Haemus Scholar. She is the author of Sacred Actions: Living the Wheel of the Year through Earth-Centered Spiritual Practice (REDFeather, 2021), the Sacred Actions Journal (REDFeather, 2022), and Land Healing: Physical, Metaphysical, and Ritual Approaches for Healing the Earth (REDFeather, 2024). She is also the author/illustrator of the Tarot of Trees, Plant Spirit Oracle, and Treelore Oracle. Dana is an herbalist, certified permaculture designer, and permaculture teacher who teaches about reconnection, regeneration, and land healing through herbalism, wild food foraging, and sustainable living. In 2024, she co-founded the Pennsylvania School of Herbalism with her sister and fellow herbalist, Briel Beaty. Dana lives at a 5-acre homestead in rural western Pennsylvania with her partner and a host of feathered and furred friends. She writes at the Druids Garden blog and is on Instagram as @druidsgardenart. She also regularly writes for Plant Healer Quarterly and Spirituality and Health magazine.

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9 Comments

  1. It takes about 30 years for a reasonable wood to grow after desecration of land, as I have seen happen with replanting projects in Colchester, UK.

    1. Good to know. I think we’ll be planting herbs or gardens or something else there…Deanne and the rest of us volunteers are considering all the options at this point!

  2. Heartbreaking.. At least there are people there such as yourself to be aware of and acknowledge the goings-on.

    1. Yes, its very sad–but awareness is a good thing, right? 🙂

  3. It always saddens me to see the destruction of living trees, that clean our air, make it possible for life on our planet.

    I’ve been watching a similar path opening, here in Oregon. Houses and their very large trees torn out of the ground,,, to make a wider road for more cars, that put more carbon into the air, making the air harder to breathe. (I now have asthma, something I never had until I moved to Oregon 🙁 ) All to make room for ‘50,000 more people who want to live comfortably in the suburbs of Portland’. Funny enough, because of the congestion (caused by people who refuse to ride more than one in a car, anywhere) of the cars on the road, the average MPH is 25. Slow enough to spew even more than normal, into the air.

    I don’t think I got a picture of the HUGE old tree (species unknown) before they tore it down. (I refused to watch that.) It’s trunk was AT LEAST 6 ft in diameter.

    I’ve planted many trees on our land. But our soil is hydrophilic.. and many plants die as soon as the roots get deep enough to hit the nasty layer in the dirt. Amending doesn’t work. We’d have to dig it all up and move it elsewhere, something we just can’t afford.

    The dinosaurs will get revenge on us for taking over the world instead of them 😉

    btw, I just found out that one of my new Facebook friends is involved in fracking… he doesn’t feel responsible… he ‘only sets the pipe and then moves on’. Sad. What’s GOOD is that he has a 6 yr old boy. Once that child is older, and gets sick, which he will, my friend may finally understand.

    I’ll keep reading. 😀

    1. Meran, I know what has been going on where you live for some time. I haven’t heard any updates lately–are things still safe with your own land? As for your soil–is it heavy with a clay base? Have you tried adding lots of organic matter? Raised beds also come to mind.

  4. You are really on the front lines of the Long Descent–between the zoning problem, the fact that you live near Detroit, and now this. Yikes! Forests can regrow, but what’s under the ground won’t go away. Namaste.

    1. Yeah, I kinda feel like the front lines are here in Detroit, among other places. But we have the auto industry here driving us, literally, off an environmental cliff. And we are seeing all of that right here.

      But in the midst of this chaos, we are also seeing such a vibrant community surrounding sustainability grow! We are motivated and determined–perhaps moreso because of what is happening around us :).

  5. […] fall, I discussed the Enbridge Oil Pipeline digging project that was going through my good friend Deanne’s land at Strawbale Studio. In the fall, I went and […]

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