Walter Jehne: Restoring the Water Cycle Webinar Replay + 3 Quick Notes from the Sustainable Design Masterclass

Published: Sun, 01/21/18

Dear , ​​​​​​​
3 Quick Notes from the SDMC:
1Thursday we did a fantastic webinar with Walter Jehne, a microbiologist who shared a crucial message about water’s role as a greenhouse gas and how our land management affects the hydrological cycle. This was one of those big-picture presentations that ought to fundamentally shift how we approach the issues surrounding climate change.  If you missed it, check the link below.   
We were really excited to hear the response from you all.  This one definitely resonated.  Here's what John D. Liu said about it: 
"I find this to be one of the most rational and informative webinars I have heard. I really hope that people will listen and then join in a discussion so that this level of understanding becomes part of collective consciousness. This also requires that we realize that we are required to act on this and restore the Earth's natural regulatory systems. This is the reason we need to create ecosystem restoration camps all over the world as quickly as possible. I hope that everyone who understands how urgent this is will join the Ecosystem Restoration Camps movement. To learn more and join visit Ecosystemrestorationcamps.org"
We were moved by all your responses and decided that we will keep this webinar free to watch and download, forever.

2:  Raleigh and I have been disappointed with the software we’re using for these webinars and are considering Zoom, or going back to Webinarjam (we’ve heard they fixed a bunch of issues); if you’ve got experience with either of these recently we’d love to hear what you think.  

3. Many of you have asked us about accessing old webinars; we are in the process of revamping our website so that all the webinars we have done can be easily found and accessed, and we will be packaging them so that you can get bundles of them at a discount. 

For those of you who are subscribers, we deeply appreciate your support; it keeps us running and able to pay our software and equipment costs.
 


Till Next Time,
Neal Spackman and Raleigh Latham
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www.sustainabledesignmasterclass.com