14 episodes

Psychotherapist-turned Flower Farmer Gretchen Winterkorn uses her tools in her own life and shares the results of her dirty work - growing as a human and working with her hands.

In each episode, Gretchen explores how we can improve our living experiences as humans, create with our hands wherever we are and take more ownership over our own lives. Connecting to hunters, potters, weavers, artists, farmers, kindergarten teachers, acupuncturists and more in her native Hudson Valley, Gretchen is interested in reconnecting to our human legacy as the true builders of our own lives.

Into Our Own Hands Gretchen Winterkorn

    • Society & Culture

Psychotherapist-turned Flower Farmer Gretchen Winterkorn uses her tools in her own life and shares the results of her dirty work - growing as a human and working with her hands.

In each episode, Gretchen explores how we can improve our living experiences as humans, create with our hands wherever we are and take more ownership over our own lives. Connecting to hunters, potters, weavers, artists, farmers, kindergarten teachers, acupuncturists and more in her native Hudson Valley, Gretchen is interested in reconnecting to our human legacy as the true builders of our own lives.

    Introducing: Real Live Human Therapist

    Introducing: Real Live Human Therapist

    Introducing my new show: REAL LIVE HUMAN THERAPIST with Gretchen Winterkorn!

    Find it wherever you listen to podcasts!
    I’m Gretchen Winterkorn, Psychotherapist with over 15 years of experience and real live human being with 41 years of struggle. Welcome to my anti-advice column podcast where I share my own personal struggles and how I work with them every week.

    My intention with this podcast is to:
    Heal the myth of the split between mentally healthy and mentally ill people Reduce shame in seeking mental health support by sharing my mental health challenges as a mental health professional Inspire you with ways to work on/consider your own challenges Get curious about/question this role of therapist I occupy and all the benefits and challenges associated with it Follow the show so you will be notified when a new episode goes live.  Learn more about Gretchen via her website www.gretchenwinterkorn.com

    • 2 min
    OPEN PIT FIRING WILD CLAY: Desperate making with Emily Brownawell

    OPEN PIT FIRING WILD CLAY: Desperate making with Emily Brownawell

    How an urgent need to make can lead to simple, accessible tools and methods.  Open pit fire the wild clay you harvested and processed with us earlier in the Season - if you don't have land, use a trashcan!  Can your earthenware make the transition to becoming ceramic?  Emily shares her artistic process and methods as a ceramic artist.   
    This is Part 3 of a three-part making exercise over the season of the show – harvesting wild clay (Ep 2), processing wild clay (Ep 11) and firing your wild clay in an open pit (Season finale and Part 3).
     
    About Emily: 

    Emily Brownawell is a New York based ceramic artist. She earned her MFA in Ceramics at the State University of New York at New Paltz. Grants and fellowships include the Haystack Mountain School of Crafts Technical Assistant, Andrah Scholarship, Research and Creative Projects Award, Bolton Scholarship, and the Virginia Fuller Prize.  She has exhibited at the Dorsky Gallery Curatorial Programs, The Samuel Dorsky Museum of Art, Williamsburg Arts and Historical Center, and Pittsburgh Center for the Arts.  
    Raised by oceanographers across the street from an intertidal region of Long Island Sound, the marine ecosystem played a powerful role throughout her childhood and continues to inform her practice through visual inspiration and systems of organization. Her work focuses on the physicality of the landscape. In her practice, the ceramic process represents a transformation of natural materials into objects of culture and records of time. Through ceramic sculpture and installation, she explores various relationships between natural and synthetic processes. 
    www.emilybrownawell.com
    instagram.com/emilybrownawell/
    Music credit: "Song We Came To Sing" by Living Roots livingrootsmusic.com
     

    • 58 min
    PROCESSING WILD CLAY: How we relate to clay with Andrew Sartorius

    PROCESSING WILD CLAY: How we relate to clay with Andrew Sartorius

    What clay are you from?  Process the wild clay you harvested alongside us in Episode 2 with Andrew Sartorius at the Oki Doki studio.  Turn a bucket of land chunks into a beautiful, silky, moldable clay.  Exploring different relationships to clay bodies.  Andrew shares what it takes to live and work as a full-time artist and the legacy of making passed down from his parents.   
    This is Part 2 of a three-part making exercise over the season of the show – harvesting wild clay, processing wild clay (Part 2) and firing your wild clay in an open pit (Season finale and Part 3).
    About Andrew:
    Andrew Sartorius is the program manager at the Oki Doki studio and a full time wood fire potter living in Germantown NY with his fiancé and fellow ceramic artist Tanya Lee Hamm, and his pup named June.
    https://www.andrewsartoriusceramics.com/
    https://www.theokidokistudio.com/
    Connect with Andrew on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/asartoriusceramics/
    Music credit: "Song We Came To Sing" by Living Roots livingrootsmusic.com

    • 1 hr 21 min
    INTENTIONAL COMMUNITY FARMING & TINY HOUSE LIVING: Sharing life with Beth Romaker and Spencer Crawford

    INTENTIONAL COMMUNITY FARMING & TINY HOUSE LIVING: Sharing life with Beth Romaker and Spencer Crawford

    Meet the strangers-turned-landmates we are experimenting with in intentional community farming.  Beth and Spencer towed a tiny house onto our farmland in September of this year in exchange for labor on our farm.  How to trust and flow with a life shift that like that, keeping a "what if" mind during the whole process.  Imagine transitioning your life into a tiny house and moving it around nomadically.  Beth and Spencer share their love and wisdom of biodiversity, the merits of native plants, how to think about invasive species (including humans) and ways you can show up to an intentional relationship with the natural world.  
    About Beth & Spencer:
    Beth Romaker is a woods walker, food grower, tree planter, and homemaker. She has worked in the field of forestry with the nature conservancy, the national parks service, and the forest ecosystem monitoring cooperative doing inventory and monitoring work on long term ecological forest plots as well as forest restoration. She has also worked on various organic farms and most recently, a native tree and wildflower nursery. 
    Spencer Crawford is a naturalist, forager, and avian field technician with a special focus on grassland breeding birds. Most recently, he worked for the Saltmarsh Habitat & Avian Research Program studying Saltmarsh Sparrow and Seaside Sparrow demographics for two years. This upcoming spring he will be working on a demography study of the Golden-winged Warbler and Blue-winged Warbler. 
    Music credit: "Song We Came To Sing" by Living Roots livingrootsmusic.com
     

    • 53 min
    Ep 9 FORAGING FOR FREEDOM: Co-creating with plants and master herbalist Dina Falconi

    Ep 9 FORAGING FOR FREEDOM: Co-creating with plants and master herbalist Dina Falconi

    Make friends with wild plants so you feel at home and a little more powerful everywhere you go.   Foraging as a path to slowing down, being present, and getting into a long term relationship with nature.  Let nature teach you how to be messy and beautiful at the same time.  Dina invites you into her rich, textured and alive relationship with life through herbs and wild foods. 
    About Dina:
    Dina Falconi is a clinical herbalist with a strong focus on food activism and nutritional healing. An avid gardener, wildcrafter, and permaculturist, Dina has been teaching classes about the use of herbs for food, medicine, and personal care, including wild food foraging and cooking, for more than thirty years. She offers online courses at www.InTheWild.Kitchen. She produces Falcon Formulations natural body care products and Earthly Extracts medicinal tinctures. She is the author of Foraging & Feasting: A Field Guide and Wild Food Cookbook and Earthly Bodies & Heavenly Hair: Natural and Healthy Personal Care for Everybody. 
    Please check out her website: www.botanicalartspress.com 
    And there is her full stocked YouTube channel for your educational viewing pleasure: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCGaikA4Vq0S00kNOhm3uPyg?sub_confirmation=1
     IG: https://www.instagram.com/foragingandfeasting/
    Music credit: "Song We Came To Sing" by Living Roots livingrootsmusic.com

    • 1 hr 5 min
    MAKING A HOME: Historic Preservation with Kate Wood

    MAKING A HOME: Historic Preservation with Kate Wood

    How to deeply have a relationship with your home, your time and your place in history.  How honoring those who came before us helps us have gratitude for our contemporary lives.  Confronting the uncomfortable as well as the beauty in history.  The healing power of getting invested and interested in what we are doing creatively, whether we use our hands or not.
    About Kate:
    Kate Wood grew up criss-crossing the country with her educator parents and two brothers in her family’s Volkswagen Bus, visiting house museums, battlefields, Main Streets, and wildlife sanctuaries. Today she is an award-winning preservationist, real estate broker (with with Patricia A. Hinkein Realty in Germantown) and principal of the full-service historic rehabilitation firm, Worth Preserving. Recognized as the go-to expert on properties of exceptional character and integrity, Kate partners with clients to unlock the potential of old buildings using her unique skill set and extensive network of trusted resources.
    Preservation is Kate’s passion, rooted in over 15 years’ experience as the CEO of a major organization advocating for New York City landmarks including the iconic 2 Columbus Circle and Central Park West skyline. A sought-after public speaker and authoritative source for The New York Times and other media, she was recruited to teach preservation planning, advocacy and law at Columbia University and to co-author the book, Interior Landmarks: Treasures of New York, published in two editions by Monacelli Press. Today she is a regular presence on CIRCA Old Houses.
    www.worthpreserving.com
    Music credit: "Song We Came To Sing" by Living Roots livingrootsmusic.com

    • 1 hr 1 min

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