Things in the forest are changing. Temporarily.
This is the Lord of the Land:

A real-life moglie, he is so in-tuned with the land that a mongoose trespassing in the middle of the night will awake him so violently he will leap to the porch and hollar wildly to save his chickens, who are sleeping soundly in the trees (for lack of a coop). He all sorts of useful tips for
tending to and
leveraging the awesome power of nature, he instinctively knows
his way through the 20-acre maze of forest paths, and he can
protect even the most unsuspecting visitors from the dangers of wilderness. He feels this place, craves it, loves it.
But he's in Canada now.
Enter Monica and me.
I am in Auroville to launch an NGO that will introduce a complimentary cuurency into the bioregion. Monica, who is a graduate development policy student pursuing are urban creatures more acclimated to navigating metro systems

than forest paths. We seek out the best happy hour specials, not the ripest fruit or veggies from outside our window. We linger at street-front cafés for best middle-of-the-night study sessions and afternoon wine breaks. We know very little of nature. And for the next three months, we're watching the land.
Wish us luck.
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