Upcoming Webinars: The Science of Creating Rainfall and Water Harvesting +Restoring Hawaiian Ecosystems
Published: Tue, 02/21/23
Hi Folks,
We've got some great webinars scheduled over the next month, and if you're interested in restoring ecosystems and rainfall, you won't want to miss these....
Brad Lancaster -The Water Harvester: An Invitation to Abundance- Feb 28th, 3:30PM PST
Brad Lancaster believes that Tucson, and other cities around the world, can live off rainwater. This is the story of how he transformed his neighbourhood by experimenting with water harvesting, worked with the city of Tucson to legalise those methods, and has
become a beacon of hope and possibility for abundance rooted in sustainability. Join the webinar and film premiere with Brad Lancaster, the director David Fenster, along with Zach Weiss and Raleigh Latham
Cindy Morriss-Biology Makes the Rain: The Science of Restoring Rainfall
Most of us know about the Water Cycle, but how is rain actually generated? In a world where landscapes have been degraded on a continental
scale...what role do plants, forests, and fungi play in restoring rainfall to our ecosystems? To give you a hint...it depends on plants, microorganisms, and fungi.
In this webinar, microbiologist Cindy Morris will share the science of how microorganisms generate rainfall, and what we can do to restore the water cycle and the biotic pump. Learn all about her recent findings on how we can restore the bioprecipitation that
sustains our local ecosystems.
Carl Struck brings decades of land and forest management experience to the event, innovating regenerative forestry management.
If you are interested in
learning how we can restore rain and our climate...this webinar will show you how.
More Epic Earth Terraforming
I wanted to share an amazing film from an amazing Permaculture designer and Educator: Andrew Millison. In this film, he reveals the work of the Nation of Hawaii to restore the ancient Ahapua'a system, which sustained the Hawaiian people for thousands of years before colonial agriculture took over the
islands. If you want to see an inspiring vision of a people restoring ancient methods of abundance, from the mountains to the Sea, then you'll want to give this a watch...
If you like what you see:
If you like what we've shared over the last few years and want to keep the lights on for the films, webinars, workshops and events we do,
feel free to donate whatever feels right to our paypal.
“The thing the ecologically illiterate don't realise about an ecosystem is that it's a system. A system! A system maintains a certain fluid stability that can be destroyed by a misstep in just one niche. A system has order, flowing from point to point. If
something dams that flow, order collapses. The untrained might miss that collapse until it was too late. That's why the highest function of ecology is the understanding of consequences.”