Chaga Saga

Last weekend saw our third, for once long-expected but for the time-being final, encounter with the World Drum (it's gone to Belgium).


I'd been booked to play at a British Druid Order event at Wildways in Shropshire, which also happened to be Philip Shallcrass's 60th birthday. On the bill were Philip himself, the Northern Lights Shamanic Band (from Norway), acoustic guitar wizard Jake Thomas, and none other than the Chief Bard of Britain, Robin Williamson. Quite an honour, then, to be asked to play.

It was a fantastic night and everyone was on fine form. Robin Williamson had us laughing so much we were crying. For myself, I'd forgotten how much I love solo, bardic, gigs in yurts and other intimate performance spaces. I'd always rather play acoustic, without electrickery, so it was a triple delight to perform in such a lovely space, on such a bill, and in front of such a warm and welcoming audience (if you've got a yurt and want me to come and play, just give me shout - it's about time I did more solo stuff).


Photo by Elaine Wildways

But the weekend held so much more. It was another chance to unclench. We got to walk through spring woodlands that were filled with birdsong...


...I got to bond with some sheep in Wildways' very own, bespoke stone circle...


...and then there was the opportunity to take part in an extremely powerful chaga healing ceremony. It was led by none other than the founders of the World Drum project, White Cougar and Morten Wolf Storeide, and two other Norwegian shamans from beyond the north wind, Lena Paalviig Johnsen and Willjar Rubach: men and women of knowledge, all.

Oddly, I'd never heard about chaga before, but it's a parasitic fungus found on birch trees in Northern and Eastern Europe, where it's prized for its curative properties. There's a certain amount of scientific evidence which supports its traditional usage, but I was happy to enter into the shamanic worldview, that this is simply a benign and healing plant (how do we know? Cos it told us). It's harvested, dried, and then made into a kind of tea, a ritual process that takes several hours.

The ceremony took place at night in Wildways' reconstructed Iron Age Roundhouse. We were asked not to drink any alcohol beforehand and to remain silent throughout.




For obvious reasons I don't have any photos of the ceremony but I can tell you that it was powerful and profound. Philip and the four Norwegians led it using the traditional shamanic technique of drumming. Now I've endured many hours of 'shamanic drumming' in my time and all too often it feels like a kind of monotonous hectoring, about as otherworldly and transporting as having your teeth drilled. Not this time. The drums were rich and sonorous, brimming with the North, and, played with sensitivity and musicality, had a noticeably transporting effect. 

In fact, the leaders had created such a powerful atmosphere that before I'd even drunk the chaga (which, in case you were wondering, isn't hallucinogenic) I was weeping and shaking, a welcome opportunity to grieve some more. When the World Drum came round, I was able to pound out some of my demons and to pray for those of my friends outside the circle also in need of healing.



Over the weekend we had some extraordinary conversations with each of the four, who told us not only how they'd come to their profession but also about some of the wonderfully odd things that had happened to them since. I cannot thank them enough for the blessings they bestowed upon us both.

For when we left, it was as if I'd been pulled out of a boggy mire, one through which I've been tramping for months. I felt unstuck. I don't know if it was the chaga, or the gig, the ritual, the gifts or the conversations, but the wooji worked, good and proper. The world is a happy place to be in once again.



9 comments:

  1. Aho my Brother, healing went both ways during this and during the whole magical weekend. Thank you for being You my new friend

    Blessings
    Morten

    ReplyDelete
  2. I'm grateful to hear your experience of their drumming. I have always felt similarly about the monotonous, shamanic drumming - it has NEVER worked for me... keeping the same beat when the energy is shifting and the story needing to be told is stronger or softer or anything other than that same thing. My drumming follows some other kind of path in ritual. I'd love to hear Norwegian shamanic drumming. I suppose I've heard bits of it in some of the obscure traditional northern music I listen to.

    Happy for you that you shook something loose.

    ReplyDelete
  3. I had never heard of chaga before I went to Wild ways too, had an amazing experience with the womens drum session in the round house ealier on in the week, even without chaga or alchol, I became a different person when I played that drum, think it was the drum that got to me. So sorry I missed your performance though.

    ReplyDelete
  4. The way of the wooji is good.
    Wonderful stuff.
    Surely it's time to bring the Chaga to Chagford?!
    Love to you both, beautiful ones - looking forward to seeing you down here in the singing hills.

    Tom x

    ReplyDelete
  5. Ah, I read somewhere "the test of a bard is that he can make an audience laugh, cry, or fall asleep at will." Robin Williamson has been the embodiment of that definition for a long time. Back in the 80s when he used to tour in the US, he did a show at the University of Washington during which he told stories of playing at a European rock festival with the Incredible String Band... Then he played a beautiful, heart-breaking ballad, and when he had us all starting to weep he went back to the story "and members of the German Hell's angels were hacking off bits of the stage, setting them on fire, and throwing them into the Black Sea..." until we were all laughing, and then back to the ballad until the entire audience was simultaneously laughing and weeping. The most gorgeous display of the bardic art I've ever seen.

    Good fortune to be in the land of bards and chaga!

    ReplyDelete
  6. So glad you and Nomi were able to, as you say, 'unclench' a little more. I know exactly what you mean.

    And ahhh, an intimate bardic evening with Robin Williamson...will you look at that, I seem to have turned a strange shade of green..............!

    ReplyDelete
  7. Hi evrybody, Morten is going to prepare for a (free !)Chaga Ceremonie in the Neteherlands on Shamanfest which takes place from 27 till 29 of june 2014. I am verry curious about how it works and what will happen to me and all participants.
    Info: www.shamanartsociety.nl
    Love and respect:
    Anu van Leeuwen

    ReplyDelete
  8. Chaga mushroom also known as inonotus obliquus in scientific terms is a mushroom that grows on birch trees. Unlike other mushrooms that draw heir nutrients from the soil, this mushroom draws its nutrients from the birch tree. Other than drawing its nutrients from trees, another unique feature of this mushroom is that it’s usually hard instead of soft like other mushrooms. The insides of chaga have the color of rusted iron and the veins are cream-colored. The texture of the mushroom is cork-like and it has a charcoal-like appearance.

    ReplyDelete

 

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