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Soy de Barro: Women’s Initation & Rites of Passage Guide Training (Clay Cook Pot Making)


  • Mandala Springs Eco-Retreat 445 Stoney Fork Road Barnardsville, NC, 28709 United States (map)

Soy de Barro is an elemental rite of passage —where every woman learns the ancient earth-skills of harvesting wild clay, shaping a functional cook pot with her hands, friction fire and firing our pots in a firing ceremony.

Clay is a primal teacher; raw and gritty at the same time refined and supple. This sculptable rock dust under our feet is a miracle of a changing, alive creative planet.

As are we, being made of the same minerals of the earth shaped into vessels that hold these life giving waters. May we be fortified and flexible to face the obstacles of our times and incite everyday acts of love, beauty, and peacemaking.

Clay cook pots hold a time-honored place at the hearth of folklore and myth.

They are clay serpents coiled in our hands up from the earth, into the shape of a belly to cook up something potent.

Cook pots feed family and community, they breathe under heat and take their time, retaining the nutrients of the foods we are cooking.

Across the world and throughout time, cultures have cooked in clay and developed their unique flavors and recipes of their land. Building one of your own is like planting a seed in our ancestral memory as humans.

Soy de Barro | I am of the Clay

A Wild Clay & Elemental Initiation for Women

September 9th - 13th | Sacred Mountain Waters, North Carolina

Soy de Barro is an elemental rite of passage —where every woman learns the ancient earth-skills of harvesting wild clay, shaping a functional cook pot with your hands, and firing our pots with in an open fire ceremony.

We form the vessels of our cookpots as our a reflection of our bodies. The wombs of our creation that will cook up the nourishment physically and spiritually that we offer ourselves, our family, our communities and this precious Earth for decades to come.

We reflect on how we have shaped our lives, repaired our cracks and fed our dreams and visions, as we prepare to surrender our creations to the fire.

Soy de Barro is built of these four pillars:

  1. Creative immersion and skillbuilding with clay: harvesting and processing clay, making a cook pot, cooking in clay, fire making and tending

  2. Time with the earth: camping, swimming, overnight solo, outdoor activities, night fires, and more

  3. Community ritual, storytelling, and song

  4. Facilitation and guidance in the work of initation and rites of passage for women

phase 1 — Offering Ceremony & Wild Clay Harvest

We meet the land with humility and awakened senses, making offerings and learning their story. The harvest starts a conversation with this place through the clay that unfolds through the processing and building of our vessels.

We will harvest local clay to use in our cook pots and for smaller ritual items. This clay will be used alongside a commerical cooking clay body.

phase 2 — Clay Cook Pot Apprenticeship (Each Woman Makes Her Own Pot)

You learn — slowly, intentionally — how to transform clay into a functional cooking vessel:

  • process and prepare the clay with our hands and feet

  • build using ancient coiling and shaping techniques

  • smooth and decorate a pot that can withstand flame

  • learn how our ancestors made resilient pottery with the elements before electricty

  • ground into the earth and embody presence

    Every woman makes her own cook pot, from start to finish.

phase 3 — Earthen Pigments & Body Paint

We grind pigments from soil and stone. We decorate our pots, and our bodies, with prayer and intention. We will also weave in storytelling with the pigments; telling our stories with the rainbow of the rocks, we will share a story stone ceremony

phase 4 — Fire by Friction & Fire Tending

You will learn how to:

  • make fire by friction (bow-drill)

  • build confidence chopping wood, starting and sustaining fire

  • learn to cook in clay pots

We approach the sacred fire as one of our eldest teachers, here to cook us into who we came here to be.


phase 5 — Sweat Lodge: Becoming the Vessel

Before our pots enter the fire, we enter the fire.

Through a guided sweat lodge ceremony, we:

  • release old patterns that no longer serve the vision we are becoming.

  • step into personal power, face fears, receive the heat

  • Deeply connect with fire and our ability to raise our vibration

    We prepare the inner vessel before we fire the outer vessel

phase 6 — Ancestral Ceremonial Firing

We place our pots into the center of an open outdoor fire —not a kiln.

This is ancestral firing — intimate, alive, ceremonial. We are practicing an ancient technique of firing and creating a protective womb oven over our pots with the ancestors of fired pots. As if all that has been broken, all of our mistakes, all of our failures, and the majesty of all that has come before- joins in protection, to hold the heat of our transformation.

We are not soley producing pottery. We are restoring culture. We are building cultural topsoil. Join us Woman of the Earth, Woman of the Clay, Woman who Remembers


WHAT YOU WILL LEARN

  • Harvesting and processing wild clay

  • Making your own functional clay cook pot

  • Earthen pigments & body paint

  • Fire by friction (bow-drill)

  • Fire tending & fire safety

  • Somatic + embodiment practices

  • Rites of passage facilitation techniques (see below)


Soy de Barro is apart of the certification pathway for Earth Path Education’s Women’s Rites of Passage Guide Training. You do not need to be interested or committed to the training to participate in Soy de Barro as a personal initatory journey.

Cost - $1400 - includes lodging, meals, materials, and facilitation. Reach out directly for a payment plan.

Questions about this initation, contact us here!

 
 

Soy de Barro Guides

Hosanna White

Hosanna is dedicated to learning slow crafts like primitive firing, weaving, and foraging that connect her with the source of her materials and the magic that comes from transforming them for everyday use.

Hosanna lives in the foothills of Western Oregon, a geologically rich landscape that has inspired her studio work, Whitesnake Arts. She blends bio-regional history and land stewardship into her artwork and place based pottery.

Hosanna has led girls mentorship and supported adult rites of passage in her community since 2016. She is enlivened by ritual, the teachings of the land, and the power of coming together in community to witness each other rise and grow through the challenges and celebrations of our lives.

Lena Eastes

Lena is founding director of Earth Path Education and is devoted to cultural renewal, Earth connection, and sacred rites of passage. With contagious joy and deep empathy, she inspires others to live in alignment with their inner wisdom, the rhythms of nature, and the call of justice and beauty.​

For over 16 years, Lena has led transformational Rites of Passage for girls and women, including Earth Path’s five-day “Growing Goddess” ceremony. As a thresHOLDER, she lovingly officiates life’s major thresholds—birth, motherhood, marriage, self-marriage, and the sacred passage from girlhood into womanhood.​

She is a singer for the Earth, a protector of childhood and human dignity, and a creative artist of community and ceremony. Whether she's playing flute to the sunrise, blessing waters, crafting herbal medicine, or hiding in a bush during a Deer & Coyote game, Lena brings fierce grace, presence, and a wild-hearted devotion to all she touches.

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Portland Wild Clay Intensive: Intro to foraging, clay chemistry and local glaze materials

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Intro to Weaving with Willow