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Posts tagged with:  Dreams

By: The Posts Author | Posted on: 12 Jul 24

Dreaming of the Ogallala :: The Second DayWe continue exploring what it would take to #RegenerateTheOgallala…On our second day, we went out into the landscape to feel the southern edge of this massive groundwater system that spans from Amarillo, Texas all the way north into Nebraska and Wyoming. This is the beginning of the high plains and an arid region that fundamentally depends on infrequent rainfall for all who live here.In the morning, we visited ponds where trees have grown high around their edges to provide shelter and shade We observed the sandy soils and smooth rocks that piled up here in alluvial

Dreaming of the Ogallala :: The Second DayWe continue exploring what it would take to #RegenerateTheOgallala…On our second day, we went out into the landscape to feel the southern edge of this massive groundwater system that spans from Amarillo, Texas all the way north into Nebraska and Wyoming. This is the beginning of the high plains and an arid region that fundamentally


By: The Posts Author | Posted on: 11 Jul 24

Dreaming of the Ogallala :: The First DayOur dreaming about how to #RegenerateTheOgallala begins…We arrived in Amaraillo, Texas and were received by our friend Will Masters who has been doing dryland restoration work in these beautiful landscapes for several years now.Our first few days will be spent at Kritser Ranch — a 33,000 acre piece of land that seems to go on forever. As we journey into stream beds that no longer have flows of water, I can feel what it would take to restore their former abundance.We are already deep in conversations about intergenerational change among those who own this land, how to organize

Dreaming of the Ogallala :: The First DayOur dreaming about how to #RegenerateTheOgallala begins…We arrived in Amaraillo, Texas and were received by our friend Will Masters who has been doing dryland restoration work in these beautiful landscapes for several years now.Our first few days will be spent at Kritser Ranch — a 33,000 acre piece of land that seems to go on forever. As we


By: The Posts Author | Posted on: 20 Apr 24

Something magical happened in the last week as Penny Heiple and I traveled through Maine, Connecticut, Massachusetts, and New York. We found ourselves inside the dream of bioregional regeneration for the Northeast Forest of Turtle Island.Our journey began in Norway, Maine where Roberta Hill welcomed us at the office of the Center for an Ecology-based Economy (CEBE). It was there that I took a photo of this wonderful decolonial map for North America.This felt appropriate because we were about to begin a journey of discovery into the Northeast Forest — something much bigger and more ambitious than what brought us to Maine in the

Something magical happened in the last week as Penny Heiple and I traveled through Maine, Connecticut, Massachusetts, and New York. We found ourselves inside the dream of bioregional regeneration for the Northeast Forest of Turtle Island.Our journey began in Norway, Maine where Roberta Hill welcomed us at the office of the Center for an Ecology-based Economy (CEBE). It was there that


By: The Posts Author | Posted on: 7 Jan 24

It is the dead rivers that stir something deep within me…This one is the Paramera and it drains into the Barichara River. When I walk to these places, I am pondering how the locals say that water continuously ran in this drainage until about 25–30 years ago.I add to this my knowledge that 95% of the native forest has been cut down in the last eighty years. The entire region is in the process of becoming a desert. It is a human-caused calamity.My imagination stirs at the thoughts of bringing back the forest, connecting the biological corridors, and weaving of human activities

It is the dead rivers that stir something deep within me…This one is the Paramera and it drains into the Barichara River. When I walk to these places, I am pondering how the locals say that water continuously ran in this drainage until about 25–30 years ago.I add to this my knowledge that 95% of the native forest has been cut down


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