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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4 Comments

  1. I’ve really enjoyed all your articles. One of these days, Dancing Rabbit for me. I have high affinity for this sort of thing. Learning/doing. The tree articles have been my favorite tho:) I swear I can feel them, especially when they are traumatized!

    1. Hi Avacalla, I’m glad you resonate with the articles! I love trees–there will be more posts to come :). I just finished up the TreeLore Oracle so I’m taking a break for a while till I start some more :).

  2. It sounds like we need more Dancing Rabbit villages! Friends of mine live in a passive solar cob-strawbale house with a post-and-beam frame, so the strawbales aren’t taking the weight. It took some years of building and rebuilding to get it to the point of livability and was certainly a series of experiments. I think I did spend a day or two plastering clay onto straw with them. It’s now quite comfortable and has most of the usual indoor amenities (admittedly fossil fuel-driven), like a gas stove and a refrigerator, but it’s still heated with a woodstove. Once they went on vacation in the dead of winter and the fire was out for a week, but the interior temperature never went below 40 degrees and they had no frozen pipes, although it was below zero outside. (The downside was that it took days to warm the place up again.) If I were considering new construction, I would definitely want a passive solar design. I’m so glad you had a chance to experience this and learn these techniques!

    1. Hi Karen,
      Your friend’s house sounds pretty incredible. These are such learning experiences….it takes a while to get them right. Strawbale can be loadbearing if it is compressed, but compressions can be difficult. We saw some good and bad examples of this at Dancing Rabbit! Blessings 🙂

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