Practice in the wild is an established part of Zenki Roshi's teaching.
Each September, the mountains-and-waters journey takes place in the Sangre de Cristos, the extensive and rugged mountain range where Crestone is located.
For more information on Zen practice in a wild nature context, read an interview with Zenki Roshi in Tricycle Magazine or a participant’s account of his experience on the Sangre de Cristo trip.
The daily practice includes walking, zazen, sense awareness and mindfulness practices, chanting the Heart Sutra and Mountains and Waters Sutra, ecological literacy, and dharma discussion.
September 3-9, 2023
Member pricing is on a sliding scale of $1200-840.
Non-member pricing is $1200.
Pricing includes a 1 night stay at Joyful Journeys Hot Springs, all meals, use of group gear, and an experienced mountain guide.
This trip is limited to 10 participants, in addition to Zenki Roshi and one mountain guide. To apply and get on the wait list, email us at office@boulderzen.org.
We will then set up a phone call and send you an application. Applications will be considered on a first come first serve basis.
Wildness, as Gary Snyder says in The Practice of the Wild, is “the process and essence of nature” and “not far from the Buddhist term Dharma with its original senses of forming and firming.”
Listen to an introductory dharma talk by Zenki Roshi on liberation and the teachings of the wild:
The following dharma talk introduces six basic practice participants can take into the field.
by Zenki Dillo Roshi
We are fascinated and nourished by wild nature, yet we are strangely alienated from it by our civilized, sheltered human lives. How will we come to recognize ourselves as one of the many life forms that co-create the beauty and ordinary magic of the earth, our home?
Buddhism, we can say, is to study and practice how to be fully alive.
Dharma practice is to actively investigate that aliveness through still sitting, through studying wisdom teachings, and through entering the moment-to-moment appearance of the world with our whole body and mind.
The brewing ecological crisis of our times urgently calls for our response. We feel the tension between the enormity of the peril and our perceived powerlessness as individuals. Yet we must respond if we want to be fully alive.
Being alive means being alive with and through others, with and through mountains, rivers, oceans, rocks, pebbles, plants, animals, the sun, the moon, the stars – and with and through other fellow human beings.
If we don’t want to be stuck in a separate self looking out at the world as an assemblage of objects that are more or less useful to us, we need to get out there and immerse ourselves, and learn to see the earth as an intimate communion of life forms that not only includes us but generates and sustains us – is us.
This is what Wild Dharma Practice is about. It is responding to our longing for wonder, beauty, joy, and connectedness. It is awakening to how we belong and are at home in the universe.
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