Climate and Weather

Why do you hate our great State and Nation so much?
I don't hate either one, just hate what you libs have done to Ca and are trying to do with the USA.
It iz run by a bunch of libs who don't know or care who lives her and who wants to pay everything for anyone.
My son went to Cabellas [out of state] yesterday, showed his ID and took his new Glock home then and there.
Oh, then there iz the little fact that we are the highest taxed state.
There iz much more, but you wouldn't and don't want to understand.
 
‘Forest bathing’ takes tree hugging to new extremes
By Steve Rubenstein

April 18, 2018 Updated: April 18, 2018 3:10pm
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‘Forest bathing’ takes tree hugging to new extremes
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The Chronicle has launched a new weekly Travel newsletter! Sign up here. Enter your email at the top and check the box marked “Travel.”

There’s a revolutionary new way to walk through the forest. V-e-r-y slowly.


  • Take a few steps. That’s far enough. Now sit down and talk it over with the person next to you, for a long time.

It’s a New Age thing in Sonoma County. Walking very slowly through the forest — while thinking about walking very slowly through the forest — is a full-blown movement. It could be a paradigm. The people who do this call it “forest bathing.” It doesn’t involve actual bathing, the kind with water. It’s figurative bathing. You soak in the wonders of the forest. Take your time, a whole lot of it. And bring a cushion.


About a dozen of us forest bathers were sitting on the ground the other morning at Quarryhill Botanical Garden, in Glen Ellen (Sonoma County), to find out what it was all about. We had taken an hour to meander from the parking area 50 yards down a manicured garden trail overlooking a vineyard. The idea was to look closely at absolutely everything. Examine all twigs. Inspect all leaves. If you see an ant, stop and take it in. Get up close and personal with your ant.

At a half dozen steps per excruciating minute, covering 50 yards takes some doing.
 
‘Forest bathing’ takes tree hugging to new extremes
By Steve Rubenstein

April 18, 2018 Updated: April 18, 2018 3:10pm
  • 920x920.jpg
  • 1024x1024.jpg
  • 1024x1024.jpg

‘Forest bathing’ takes tree hugging to new extremes
1 / 3
Back to Gallery
The Chronicle has launched a new weekly Travel newsletter! Sign up here. Enter your email at the top and check the box marked “Travel.”

There’s a revolutionary new way to walk through the forest. V-e-r-y slowly.


  • Take a few steps. That’s far enough. Now sit down and talk it over with the person next to you, for a long time.

It’s a New Age thing in Sonoma County. Walking very slowly through the forest — while thinking about walking very slowly through the forest — is a full-blown movement. It could be a paradigm. The people who do this call it “forest bathing.” It doesn’t involve actual bathing, the kind with water. It’s figurative bathing. You soak in the wonders of the forest. Take your time, a whole lot of it. And bring a cushion.


About a dozen of us forest bathers were sitting on the ground the other morning at Quarryhill Botanical Garden, in Glen Ellen (Sonoma County), to find out what it was all about. We had taken an hour to meander from the parking area 50 yards down a manicured garden trail overlooking a vineyard. The idea was to look closely at absolutely everything. Examine all twigs. Inspect all leaves. If you see an ant, stop and take it in. Get up close and personal with your ant.

At a half dozen steps per excruciating minute, covering 50 yards takes some doing.
Why do you concern yourself so much, with others people's business?
 
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