Happy June Days by Janine Fron

"There will never be any peace on this earth until we all learn to live, work and think together.” -Jens Jensen


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Jens Jensen’s Council Ring is an important design motif in Prairie Prose, Harvest Dreams, Prairie Fairies, and Princess on the Prairie, in which this ‘magic circle’ becomes part of the rhythm of play.

Jens Jensen’s Council Ring at The Clearing in Door County, Wisconsin.

Jens Jensen’s Council Ring at The Clearing in Door County, Wisconsin.

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Jensen  experimented  with  the  council  ring  design  on his nearby property in Highland Park, on Dean Street where he lived until retiring in Door County, Wisconsin.    The  council  ring  was  made  of  natural  rocks,  assembled  in  the  shape  of  a  circle with  a small  opening  for  people  to  enter  it.  He  hoped  people would use the rings as an outdoor room for storytelling, conversations,  singing,  dancing,  performing,  and  enjoying  each  other’s  company. There was a place in the center to kindle a fire, like the Native American Indians and Norse Vikings of long ago. 

Prairie Fairies Cooperative Game Set: Jensen orchestrated fairy festivals, theatrical pageants in the local parks, and dramatic masks in the woods to help save the environment.

Prairie Fairies Cooperative Game Set: Jensen orchestrated fairy festivals, theatrical pageants in the local parks, and dramatic masks in the woods to help save the environment.

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Working with the shape of a circle was important instead  of  a  rectangle,  where  there  could  not  be  any  single  person  at the  head  of  a  table,  like  the knights of King’s Arthur’s roundtable in the legend of  Camelot.    All  people  were  equal,  sitting next  to  one another, arm‐and‐arm, as one group united in friendship.  We are all part of the human family - there is no separation, we are all connected as one.  

Players enjoy gathering fairy costumes for the Prairie Fairies, inspired by Carl Sandburg’s children story published in 1922 called “How to Tell Corn Fairies If You See ’Em”: “All corn fairies wear overalls. They work hard, the corn fairies, and the…

Players enjoy gathering fairy costumes for the Prairie Fairies, inspired by Carl Sandburg’s children story published in 1922 called “How to Tell Corn Fairies If You See ’Em”: “All corn fairies wear overalls. They work hard, the corn fairies, and they are proud. The reason they are proud is because they work so hard. And the reason they work so hard is because they have overalls.”