Albuquerque Journal

PEACE in the woods

Annual Rainbow Gathering settles in Carson National Forest

- BY CEDAR ATTANASIO

CARSON NATIONAL FOREST — Across a mile-long stretch of forest in a remote part of northern New Mexico, the party is in full swing. Tents dotted mountain meadows flanked by dense stands of trees. Makeshift kitchens were erected to feed the hundreds of people gathering for what would be a weekend-long celebratio­n attended by grandmothe­rs, families with children and others in search of peace, camaraderi­e and perhaps to smoke a little weed.

This is the Rainbow Family.

The Carson National Forest, just beyond the tourist enclave of Taos, was chosen as the spot for this year’s national gathering. But people also were congregati­ng for the July 4 celebratio­n in Pennsylvan­ia and elsewhere.

The so-called Rainbow Gathering — which draws an array of characters who range from office workers looking to get away from the daily grind to nature lovers and those who have mastered van life — was set to culminate Sunday in a silent hand-holding circle punctuated by a loud “ohm.”

Normally, the gathering, which was first held in 1972 in Colorado, draws around 10,000 people to a single forest. This year, the participan­ts are less numerous and heading to regional meet-ups because of COVID-19 concerns. Last July 4, regulars joined each other online to “ohm from home.”

For Gina “Mama G” Prince, the gathering is about peace. For others, they are united by antiauthor­itarianism rooted in the religious and congregati­onal freedoms guaranteed by the First Amendment.

With pandemic restrictio­ns easing, Prince said she was happy to be at her first Rainbow Gathering since 2019, when the event was held in Wisconsin.

“I’ve been counting the moments to come out here,” said the 67-year-old Florida resident, who picked up a fellow Rainbow participan­t in Tennessee on the way. Wary of the virus and bogged down with underlying health concerns, her partner stayed in Florida.

In one camp, cooks prepared sweet strawberry pastries and served them to whoever was around the campfire. Money is frowned upon at the gathering, and participan­ts bring food donations to share. Volunteers run every aspect of the camp, from piping water out of streams to digging latrines, to cleaning up the camp and packing up trash.

Drum circles are a nightly event. So are fireside discussion­s about everything from dinner plans to the nature of existence and metaphysic­s.

The annual gatherings also draw close scrutiny from the U.S. Forest Service.

Officials with the Carson National Forest held an online forum last month for residents to ask questions about enforcing drug laws, respecting sacred tribal lands in the forest, and the plan for taking out the trash.

Forest Service officials say gatherings in recent years left surprising­ly little impact on water, erosion and other areas of concern to forest officials. With a fraction of the normal participan­ts this year, the concerns are even fewer.

Still, rangers had seized an undisclose­d number of guns and cited people for things as minor as a cracked windshield. Other charges involved marijuana and methamphet­amine possession.

For decades, the Rainbows have complained that law enforcemen­t assigned to patrol them have used any excuse to pull them over and search them.

Prince said she and another woman were searched on their way into the gathering, and her friend’s marijuana stash was seized. New Mexico last week legalized the recreation­al use of marijuana, but it’s still illegal on federal land.

“They pulled people over and took all their weed,” Prince said. “Pulled over a couple of grandmas.”

The gathering normally boasts a giant bakery, hauled up mountainsi­des by hand and constructe­d out of metal barrels. Volunteers crank out as many as 8,000 dinner rolls per night from their perch in the woods.

“It takes about 35 of us to make the magic happen,” said longtime Rainbow member Darrell Schauerman­n of Taos.

There are perils that can come with camping in a remote spot at high altitude.

On Friday, an elderly man with cancer fell gravely ill. It took an SUV, a Forest Service pickup truck and an ambulance to get him to a spot miles down the mountain where he could be loaded into a helicopter and taken to a hospital. Along the way, he was tended to by John Hartberg, a 33-year-old physician from New Orleans who was attending the event.

Shirtless and wearing a hat and a turquoise stethoscop­e, he declined to comment on the patient’s condition, citing medical privacy rules.

Usla Gregory, 45, of Taos said the patient was his best friend. “We share the same astrologic­al signs,” he said, before breaking into tears.

After the July 4th celebratio­n, Rainbows who choose to participat­e in a selection committee will pick a spot for next year’s gathering. Insiders suggest that Colorado is the leading contender.

 ?? CEDAR ATTANASIO/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Rainbow Gathering participan­t Kendra Strebig on Friday in the Carson National Forest outside Taos.
CEDAR ATTANASIO/ASSOCIATED PRESS Rainbow Gathering participan­t Kendra Strebig on Friday in the Carson National Forest outside Taos.
 ??  ?? The entrance to the annual Rainbow Gathering on Friday in the Carson National Forest outside Taos. More than 2,000 people have made the trek to northern New Mexico as part of an annual countercul­ture gathering.
The entrance to the annual Rainbow Gathering on Friday in the Carson National Forest outside Taos. More than 2,000 people have made the trek to northern New Mexico as part of an annual countercul­ture gathering.
 ??  ?? Women beat a drum in a drum circle at the annual Rainbow Gathering. Last July 4, regulars joined one another online to “ohm from home.”
Women beat a drum in a drum circle at the annual Rainbow Gathering. Last July 4, regulars joined one another online to “ohm from home.”
 ??  ?? Gina “Mama G” Prince of Florida said she was counting the days when she could return to the Rainbow Gathering.
Gina “Mama G” Prince of Florida said she was counting the days when she could return to the Rainbow Gathering.

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