Posts

Ramon’s Bioregional Education Project

By Ramon Cedeño Loor / November 26, 2006 / 2 Comments

November 26, 2006 On the 15th of November the Bioregional Course started and students from Bahia, Leonidas Plaza and San Vicente participated. On their first day they learned what a Bioregion is and about its importance for sustainable development. Further, they worked out a series of questions and answers and put them in an Ecogram. On […]

Read More

Report from Interim Manager Dan Robbins.

By Dan Robbins / November 11, 2006 / 0 Comments

November 6-11, 2006 This is our first week as a group without Patrick as acting Project Manager. Instead of relying on Patrick as the sole leader and teacher, I think we could all sense that we were beginning to pool together our resources and skills to compensate for the loss of such an invaluable mentor. There […]

Read More

Dispatches From The Road and Reports of Actions

By Peter Berg / October 10, 2006 / 0 Comments

In his numerous peregrinations, Peter sent us dispatches from distant bioregions, our eyes and ears, a sort-of latter-day combination of Darwin (as chronicler of minute botanical/zoological detail) and Bakunin (as pollinator of the Reinhabitory Movement). Bioregionalism Meets Local Autonomy in Mexico reports on the November 1996 Turtle Island Bioregional Gathering (TIBG) in Tepoztlán, Mexico.  1999-1010 index […]

Read More

Finding a Bioregion in the Sea

By Peter Berg / October 8, 2006 / 0 Comments

Peace Boat off Baja CaliforniaOctober 8, 2006 This story is atypical at the start, then becomes progressively more unusual. It began when I gave a talk/show about living within the natural systems of the place that one inhabits for Be Good Café (a traveling media event that changes venue for each performance) in a large […]

Read More

The Core of Eco-tourism

By Peter Berg / September 20, 2006 / 0 Comments

Bahia de Caraquez, Ecuador There is an intriguing cultural paradox mixed in with the conflicted assortment of values and human experience that have evolved from contemporary globalism. How can there be “world” identity and preservation of diverse cultures at the same time? Eating fusion-nationality food, working as an importer of flowers from Ecuador, discussing Saudi Arabian […]

Read More

New Weather and You

By Peter Berg / September 19, 2006 / 1 Comment

The planet is always changing, Gaia knows. Remember that our ancestors lived through The Ice Age. They may have shivered but they made some magnificent art. We are beginning to see The Warm Age induced by greenhouse gases. More and stronger hurricanes and cyclones, extended rains, heavy snowstorms…as well as mounting heat spells and drought […]

Read More

Reality Checks

By Peter Berg / September 12, 2006 / 0 Comments

Bahia de Caraquez, Ecuador August rain is nearly unheard of during the desert-like dryness of summer and fall in Bahia de Caraquez and the State of Manabi. So when there was a week of it last month with two days of memorable monsoon downpour people were bewildered and out of their confusion sprouted divergent theories. […]

Read More

2300 seedlings inventoried in the expanded greenhouse.

By Patrick Wylie / September 3, 2006 / 1 Comment

August 28-September 3, 2006 The greenhouse received a lot of love and affection last week. After nearly two months of construction we began a fresh inventory of the seedlings. With nearly 2300 seedlings we began reorganizing to make room for the upcoming growing season (November). It is incredibly helpful to have nearly double the amount […]

Read More

Unseasonal rains and changing views.

By Patrick Wylie / August 27, 2006 / 0 Comments

August 21-27, 2006 What a difference a week can make! Following a light sprinkling of ash from the recent volcanic eruption of Tungurahua to our east, the weather here has changed. Every day for the last 8 days it has rained. Not only is rain in August unheard of here, but we are receiving five […]

Read More

Watering collaboration in the persistent dry season

By Patrick Wylie / August 20, 2006 / 2 Comments

August 16-20, 2006 Greetings from the Pacific Coast of Ecuador! The dry season persists here in Bahia, and with the lack of rain we continue to water the 500+ trees that are planted in the surrounding hills.  As our site at La Cruz had recently begun being cooked by the sun, we have increased the […]

Read More