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LEARN ABOUT
Our school features medicine workers and elders working across a spectrum of the healing arts. Students have an opportunity to study medicine in the context it is relevant to and classes are often taught in a nonacademic way. Several of the teachers have written books, and may have a masters or PhD but this is not our focus. We value the grandma healers, and the ones who carry the knowledge of many generations of their elders doing the same thing, the people who are actively working with their community and being in touch with their roots.
CLASSES & TOPICS
CLASSES & TOPICS
CLASSES & TOPICS
Malia Roe is a practicing indigenous pagan who walks the six-fold path. As a practitioner, she draws deeply from her lifelong experiences with the invisible world (spirits, ancestors, energy) that began in her childhood and were nurtured through a long line of engagements and teachings with seers, wise women, cunning folk, herbalists, and medicine people from a diverse set of cultural and ancestral traditions. She has been called to share those teachings and experiences with others in ways that support their own journeys of self-awareness and empowerment. In addition to thirty years as a practicing intuitive advisor and life counselor, Malia is a member of the Order of Bards, Ovates, and Druids (OBOD) as well as the Ancient Order of Druids in America and the Sisterhood of Avalon. She is a certified Life & Mindfulness Coach, a certified Master Herbalist, an OBOD-trained Celebrant and legal ceremonial officiant, and a member of the Native Roots Medicine Collective. She is also an active member of the Taos Healing & Reconciliation Project and a trained HRI facilitator.
CLASSES & TOPICS
Power of Hands
Grounding Down with Healing Thoughts
Healing Mind & Healing Body
Herbal Connections
Earth People
New Mexico Indigenous People and land based spirituality
Energetic Cleansing with Plants
People of any age and physical ability are welcome to join us. Our medicinal plant journeys are slow and mellow, we stop often.
We will be camping at a campground with bathrooms and running water.
Please note materials are not included but we can find you extra jars or containers and lend you camping gear if needed. We have a limited amount of extra tents, blankets, and coolers.
Camping gear including tents, bedding and sleeping pad, food, cooler, a long rain coat, comfortabe walking shoes and your own 1-8 oz mason jars, oil and alcohol, you must carpool with other students for transportation as parking is limited at campgrounds or pay for parking
Our trip begins in Los Alamos as we stop en route for an herb walk along Pajarito area. We then camp at an established campgroudn near Jemez Springs close to San Antonio and Spencer hotsprings along a bubbling creek under the shelter of Ponderosa Pines that smell of butterscotch. There is no cell phone service here but there is a convienance store 3 minutes away and a motel for those that prefer to stay in the motel we can arrange for that with enough advanced notice. The convienance store has ice, and wifi.
June 16-19
10 am start, 3 pm finish
By donation to tribally affiliated members of New Mexico
*Our programs are offered on a sliding scale, and we ask that you pay within a spectrum of what you can afford.
The lower end of the scale applies to people on the lower income tier who also: work full time, are single parents, New Mexico residents or indigenous. To qualify for this you MUST show proof of medicaid or income as a full time employee that has proof of income at poverty levels. Proof must be sent before admitting to class if you are unable to prove this or additional fees for the middle part of the scale plus tax before admiral to class. Payments made are non-refundable.
Please note materials are not included but we can find you extra jars or containers and lend you camping gear if needed. We have a limited amount of extra tents, blankets, and coolers.
Our sliding scale is
Tribally Affiliated people of NM may pay on a donation basis and a 10% NM Heritage discount is offered.
Please follow the link below and fill out the registration form.
Please reach out to in**@na****************.com if you need to set up a payment plan. All payment plans must be completed 2 weeks before the start date of class and include tax.
Bio:
Morgaine Witriol is founder of the Native Roots School of Ancestral, Folk & Herbal Medicine in Taos, NM, a collective of 10 different teachers that teach each about their own ancestral healing modalities. Morgaine is a clinical herbalist, wild crafter, gardener, medicine maker and intuitive being in service to the plant and fungal folk. At her private practice in Taos, NM people can recieve a combination of clinical, spiritual and medical intuitive treatments including bodywork, herbal consults, somatic trauma release, repatterning and reconditioning intergenerational and ancestral wounds, lymphatic drainage, abdominal massage, and sound healing. Morgaine’s focus in her practice aside from trauma work is focused working with people that were diagnosed with cancer, diabetes, arthritis, depression or hard to treat chronic disease that western medicine is stumped by. At Native Roots, Morgaine teaches about reclaiming one’s own ancestral traditions as a displaced person, Jewish Folk Medicine, SW Materia Medica, Herbal Allies for Trauma & Grief, Ethics, Cultural Appropriation, Plant Energetics, Energywork, Clinical Herbalism, Flower Essences, Medicine Making and leads several multi-day field trips doing medicinal plant walks. Really she feels she teaches how to come into relationship with elemental, plant and fungal medicine, and then the indigenous science from all cultures of listening to the body and its layers of epigenetic, ancestral, childhood, organ, and energy center imbalances. Morgaine developed and ran educational programs accredited through the University of NM, has taught at the American Herbalist guild conference twice, UNM Albuquerque and is now teaching at Northern University on herbalism for the nursing department. Her favorite people to teach are doctors, nurses, children and teachers. She has led plant and mushroom walks for the New Mexico Association of Osteopathic Medicine, Flower Hill Institute, presented for Native Plant Society, and taught wellness through plant and mushroom medicine for Taos Municipal Schools Employees.
In 2010 Morgaine lived in Belize and had the opportunity to apprentice tropical medicine with one of the most revered medicine men in the country the late Don Heriberto Cocom for 1.5 years and with his good friend Don Reginaldo Chayeux in Guatemala. She brought groups down to study Mayan medicine, herbalism and abdominal massage with him for 7 years until creator called him home. She collaborated for 10 years with his Nonprofit Association to support the protection of the fully Mayan run rainforest Reserve Bio Itza and brings groups of students to study with him. Morgaine has recognized the importance of honoring healing modalities of all cultures and especially the ones of our own tradition even if they have been forgotten by a few generations.
Morgaine studied at the Northwest School for Botanical Studies, The Dandelion Center, California School for Herbal Studies, The Dhyanna Center, Blue Otter School, Acutonics Institute for Integrative Medicine, Ethnic Studies and Anthropology at the University of Colorado. She often attends herbal and mushroom conferences.
She grew up with an immigrant community and found herself easily honoring the elders that still remembered their own language, their own healing modalities and traditions from that community. It was a journey of many years before she started to look deeper into reclaiming the healing practices of the ancestral traditions that she came from and hopes to share with all people of European descent to remember to honor their own ancestors, to connect to the land and the people that are currently practicing and keeping the context of European tribal healing traditions alive today. She hopes to create a safe space to bridge the intergenerational gap of knowledge, cultural similarities and healing tools to encourage self healing and community healing.
Morgaine worked for Teambuilders counseling Services in 2008 in Taos, New Mexico as a Comprehensive Community Support Specialist teaching “life skills” including communication, stress and anger management, and parenting skills and offering social work opportunities for children and their parents. Later she worked at nonprofit Rocky Mountain Youth Corps with “at risk youth” doing hands-on experiential learning in nature focusing on useful life skills and training once a week for teens. Afterwards she ventured to Guatemala to volunteer at an orphanage and was responsible for 30 girls ages 10-17 as their live in caretaker and teacher for 5 months. in 2011 Morgaine found herself homebound and endured hurricane Sandy’s destruction leaving 13 million people on the East coast without electricity. She coordinated one thousand volunteers a day in Staten Island, New York and spent months doing grass roots disaster recovery with Feeding Family including immediate needs donations and distribution of water, food, respiratory masks, clothing, tho food, medications and animal rehoming, demolition, and later therapeutic urban gardening in elevated community garden beds, fundraising, and more demolition, raw sewage clean up and mold control.
Rates:
$225-375 sling scale for 1.5 hours, $300-500 for 2 hours
Miram’s sessions are intuitive. Her body and words are a vessel for divine healing and often she channels intuitively the heart medicine that supports one to create and develop their own healing. Miriam awakens the self worth, self value and realignment with ones higher self.
A combination of these services is provided in one session. Distance sessions and in person.
$150 deposit is quired in advance
Rates:
$225-375 sling scale for 1.5 hours, $300-500 for 2 hours
By-donation for all New Mexican heritage peoples