[Lapg] Oct.2 - Nov. 21, 2010 /LA Permaculture Design Course/The Los Angeles Arboretum & Botanic Garden Register Soon!
Wesley Roe and Santa Barbara Permaculture Network
lakinroe at silcom.com
Tue Aug 31 08:19:18 PDT 2010
PDC- Permaculture Design Course
Permaculture Design Certificate (PDC) Course
The Los Angeles Arboretum & Botanic Garden
Oct.2 - Nov. 21, 2010
8am - 6pm
<http://www.saypermaculture.com/>www.SayPermaculture.com
Contact for more info. Caitlin Bergman <cait_bergman at yahoo.com>
<http://www.arboretum.org/>www.Arboretum.org
Permaculture is sustainable land use design based
on ecologically sound principles. Its aim is
harmonizing habitats and inhabitants, creating
richly productive food systems. Permaculture is
an eye-opening set of principles and concepts
that make a tremendous impact on communities.
This experiential course is a practical,
project-oriented, support training. It moves
beyond theory to hands-on applications.
Participants will become certified permaculture
designers upon successful completion.
More than a gardening program, this lively course covers:
Habitat restoration
Rapid soil rebuilding
Thriving food production
Rain and grey water use
Community integration
Earthworks
Sustainability
Urban food forestry
Recognizing landscape patterns
COURSE DATES: 8 Saturdays and 1 Sunday, 8am-6pm
8 Saturdays (Oct. 2, 9, 16, 23, 30, Nov. 6, 13, 20)
1 Sunday (Nov. 21)
VENUE: <http://www.arboretum.org/>The Los Angeles Arboretum & Botanic Garden
WHY: This course is fun and applicable to real
world experience, giving participants a solid
foundation in permaculture design. Our work
changes lives as it changes the Earth.
An environment of support and unity between
classmates is fostered, which
will enable collaboration in design projects and
a strong network of fellow designers. The
subjects to be covered have the potential to
generate green jobs and abundance of all kinds.
COURSE FEE: $200 non-refundable holds deposit
due by September 13th deducted from $1200
tuition. Be sure to sign up early as course is
limited to 30 registrants.
INSTRUCTORS:
Warren Brush is a certified Permaculture
designer and teacher as well as a mentor and
storyteller. He has worked for over 20 years in
inspiring people of all ages to discover, nurture
and express their inherent gifts while living in
a sustainable manner. He is co-founder of Quail
Springs Learning Oasis & Permaculture Farm,
Wilderness Youth Project, Mentoring for Peace,
and Trees for Children. He works extensively in
Permaculture education and sustainable systems
design in North America and in Africa through his
design firm, True Nature Design. He can be
reached through email at
<mailto:w at quailsprings.org>w at quailsprings.org or
by calling his office at 805-886-7239.
Howard Yana-Shapiro, PhD is the rare visionary
who is also a success in his own lifetime. He is
currently the global director of plant science
and external research for Mars, Inc. Howard has
guided Mars toward the goal of 100%
sustainably-sourced carob production since
joining up with the company in the latter
1990Åås.
His more than 35 years working with sustainable
agricultural and agroforestry systems, plant
systems, plant genetics, and food production
systems in Europe, Asia, Africa, Mesoamerica,
South America, and in the United States have led
to his being a party to functional ecological
enhancements the world over. During his years as
a geneticist, he released over sixty lines of
maize, helianthus, and tagetes into the public
domain.
In 2008 Howard was named a fellow of the World
Agroforestry Centre, and was lead author on the
biotechnology and biodiversity chapter of the
International Assessment of Agricultural Science
and Technology for Development, a study initiated
by the World Bank.
Howard's latest ventures include directing Mars'
global cacao genome sequencing work (in
conjunction with IBM and the USDA's agricultural
research service) and engaging the 17 heads of
state that comprise the African Union to
implement an economically sound ecological
roadmap for Africa.
Lois Arkin is the Executive Director of CRSP
(the Cooperative Resources & Services Project),
the nonprofit organization she founded in 1980 as
a resource center for small ecological
cooperative communities. In 1993, she co-founded
the <http://www.laecovillage.org/>Los Angeles
Eco-Village. Lois' current focus is CRSP'
emerging Institute for Urban Ecovillages which
provides training, education and resources for
urban ecological cooperative community
development.
Lois is the former editor for the "Ecovillage
Living" column in Communities Magazine,
represents the Western U.S. with the Ecovillage
Network of the Americas, and is on the board of
the Global Village Institute as well as on the
Community Advisory Committee of the Wilshire
Center/Koreatown Redevelopment Area. A co-founder
of the Beverly-Vermont Community Land Trust, she
lives and works in LA Eco-Village, and is
passionate about reducing auto use in L.A.
Lois co-authored and co-edited Sustainable
Cities: Concepts and Strategies for Eco-City
Development which won an American Planning
Association-L.A. Section award. A second book she
co-authored and co-edited, Cooperative Housing
Compendium: Resources for Collaborative
Living, was published by the Center for
Cooperatives at U.C. Davis. She received a second
award from the APA-L.A. Section for Advocacy
Planning in the late 1980s, and recently the L.A.
Eco-Village received the Local Hero Award from
the Returned Peace Corps Members of Los Angeles.
Anaturalist from a young age, and a childhood
witness to rapid land degradation in one of the
world's biodiversity hotspots, Owen Hablutzel has
since taken a whole-systems approach to the
ecological design and management of ranches,
farms, and landscapes; working with landowners
and communities to address this global issue.
Having worked and lived in Africa, Australia ,
and much of the western United States , he
received world-class training in Permaculture
systems-design science through Bill Mollison and
Geoff Lawton, and Keyline Design® under mentor
Darren Doherty. His ecological work includes
Keyline soil building and water harvesting;
building swales, farm dams, riparian and wildlife
buffer strips; integrated whole farm planning;
watershed restoration, dryland afforestation,
grazing planning, garden and food forest
extension; gully rehabilitation; greening
desertified rangelands, Holistic Management® and
more. Integrating a broad spectrum of practical,
leading-edge solutions to the global ecological
crisis, Owen serves as director for the
<http://www.permacultureusa.org/>Permaculture
Research Institute USA, while growing his
ecological consulting and education businesses.
Owen holds a masters in Eastern Philosophy from
St. John's College, New Mexico.
Kirstie Stramler holds a Bachelor's in
Geophysics from UC Santa Barbara and a Doctorate
in Atmospheric Science from Columbia University,
where she apprenticed with climate scientists
Anthony Del Genio and William Rossow at the NASA
Goddard Institute for Space Studies
<http://www.giss.nasa.gov/>(NASA/GISS). After
working at a government laboratory for a few
years, Kirstie's impatience with the glacial pace
of scientific revolutions compelled her to leave
the field of basic scientific research in pursuit
of solutions that have the potential to stabilize
the earth's fluid envelope and failing ecosystems
while simultaneously allowing humans to thrive.
After realizing that Permaculture is an
ecological design system that has such potential,
Kirstie trained with Geoff Lawton for the
Permaculture Design Course, and with Rosemary
Morrow for the Permaculture Aid Worker Course.
Kirstie is currently developing sustainability
curricula for schools and communities,
researching alternative economic systems, and is
a producer at
<http://permaculture.tv/>Permaculture.TV.
A permaculture designer and educator from San
Francisco, California, Lindsay Dailey is part of
a new generation of permaculture teachers working
on the edge of what permaculture can do to
restore landscapes and create abundance.
Lindsay has worked passionately in the realm of
sustainability education since 2001. She is a
founding member of
<http://www.villasobrante.blogspot.com/>Villa
Sobrante, an urban permaculture and natural
building demonstration site and community in the
East Bay. She also founded
<http://www.earthrepair.com/>Earth Repair, a
regenerative design and education firm inspiring
people to build topsoil and rehydrate the land
while growing useful and edible plants.
Lindsay works extensively in a range of
bioregions, farms, watersheds and city
environments, and is a leading advocate and
educator on how permaculture principles can
provide food security, build community, and heal
our planet.
Gavin Raders is a co-founder and
volunteer-executive director of
<http://plantingjustice.org/>Planting Justice, a
social justice activist, and a permaculture
demonstrator/teacher. Gavin has gone through
extensive training with some of the most
inspiring and effective permaculture teachers in
the world: Geoff Lawton, Penny Livingston-Stark,
Brock Dolman, Darren Dougherty, and Nik Bertulis.
Prior to co-founding Planting Justice, Gavin
interned at the Regenerative Design Institute in
2007-2008, studied cultural anthropology at UC
Berkeley, and organized on a range of anti-war,
anti-nuclear, environmental and human rights
issues, including knocking on nearly 30,000 doors
in California, New Mexico, Colorado, and Nevada
as a community organizer with Peace Action West.
In India, Gavin studied and advocated for the
right to water and against its privatization by
massive water corporations (such as Coca-Cola),
which you can read about in
his <http://goog_1621325111/>Berkeley
Undergraduate
Journal<http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/4d73n733#page-1> publication.
Gavin thus came to permaculture and ecological
design through a social justice framework which
recognizes the right of all people to peace,
security, housing, healthy food, clean water,
jobs and healthcare, and the rights of future
generations to a just and livable world. For this
to happen, he believes that Americans need to
understand and respect the intimate connection
and the shared fate we have with all people and
all life on this planet, and organize effectively
on the local level to come up with replicable and
effective solutions to the range of hardships and
oppressions we currently face. Gavin explained
Planting Justice's socially and ecologically just
philosophy and successful business model to a
rapt group of food justice activists at this
year's US Social Forum, and encouraged his
audience to replicate Planting Justice's efforts
in their own locales
[<http://permaculture.tv/new-gavin-raders-pathways-to-sustainable-self-governance/>link
to watch videos of Gavin at USSF 2010].
Caitlin Bergman is a permaculture designer,
consultant, and educator. She is
<http://arboretum.org/>The Los Angeles Arboretum
and Botanic Garden's full-time permaculturist and
Lead Designer of
<http://www.saypermaculture.com/>SayPermaculture!.
Caitlin works closely with various colleges,
schools, and residences to educate students and
homeowners about putting permaculture into
action. Working with both an international and
local clientele, she is passionate about green
living, caring for the earth, and providing
students with warm, solution-oriented
information. She delights in linking others to
this rapidly-growing global sustainability
movement.
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