The Wonders of Our Planet

As Earth Day nears, we’re sharing insights into the wonders of our planet and what we can do to keep her healthy. Below, you’ll hear from a Native ecologist on what it means to respect plant life, pick up tips for human collaboration based on the intelligence of superorganisms, discover the pure magic of mushrooms, and more.

Gearing Up for Bioneers 2018

From Co-Founder Kenny Ausubel:

We’re living in a thriller that only reality could write. Breakdown and breakthrough – death and rebirth – creative destruction writ large. As this year’s Bioneers Conference will exemplify, there’s as much cause for hope as for horror, and the ground truth is that how this story turns out is up to us. Nothing less than a step change in human evolution will do. Never has it been more important for us to exercise our vision, our agency, our solidarity and our voices. Read more.

A few of the keynote speakers we’ll welcome this year:

  • Michael Pollan – author and journalist
  • Patrisse Cullors – co-founder of #BlackLivesMatter
  • Rebecca Moore – leader of Google Earth Outreach
  • Kevin Powell – political activist and writer
  • Justin Winters – executive director, Leonardo DiCaprio Foundation
  • And many more.

The Big Question: Sexual Fluidity Under the Sea

Research has revealed that many sea creatures see their sex assignments as guidelines rather than rules. Take, for example, one silly, striped species of fish, which has the ability to switch sexes to fill gaps within their community’s hierarchy. Pixar didn’t tell this story. Can you name the species? (Read to the bottom of this email to find the answer.)

Wise Words

“It’s a sign of respect and connection to learn the name of someone else, a sign of disrespect to ignore it. Yet the average American can name over 100 corporate logos and 10 plants. Is it a surprise that we have accepted a political system that grants personhood to corporations and no status at all for wild rice and redwoods? Learning the names of plants and animals is a powerful act of support for them. When we learn their names and their gifts it opens the door to reciprocity.”

—Robin Kimmerer, Potawatomi Indigenous ecologist, author, and professor, in an inspirational keynote address

Video to Watch: Fascinating Fungus

Paul Stamets: “Mushroom Magic”

Paul Stamets, world-renowned mycologist, author and founder of retailer Fungi Perfecti, shares the many astonishing ways in which mushrooms can be used to help solve some of the world’s most puzzling problems.

This Week on Bioneers Radio

  • Fire in the Belly: Women Leading Social Change: Harm to one is harm to all—and prevention is a question of human survival. From oil refinery accidents in California to the aftermath of the BP oil disaster in the Gulf South, leaders Pennie Opal Plant and Colette Pichon Battle are on the frontlines, organizing their communities to stop the harms of the extraction economy and climate disruption. Activist-attorney Adrianna Quintero is making sure the voices of those most affected are heard helping awaken the “sleeping giant” of Latino voters.
  • Growing Collective Intelligence: Democratizing Technology and Citizen Science: A new wave of technologies designed to regenerate people, planet and democracy is emerging in ingenious ways. Designers are creating online software for democratic group decision-making that weaves diverse perspectives into a coherent whole. And citizen science is spreading low-tech, high-impact tools that empower communities to work directly with data and mapping that can save them from harm and hold perpetrators accountable. With: democracy technologist Ben Knight of Loomio, and citizen scientist Shannon Dosemagen of Public Lab.

Book to Read

Teeming: How Superorganisms Work to Build Infinite Wealth in a Finite World by Dr. Tamsin Woolley-Barker

The superorganism way of life persists, even as the world changes. And believe it or not, there are societies even more successful and ubiquitous than these. Beneath the soil you walk on lies a half-billion year old pulsing nutrient superhighway of fungus—a dense fuzzy network of genetically distinct individuals on the hunt for matter to digest, minerals and water to absorb. If a meal is there, they will find it, and when they do, it will flow throughout the system, shuttling wherever it is needed most—because the fungi are fused into one. Each fungal cell gets more as a member of the network than it could on its own. Together, these fungal patches thrive—making up a quarter of all terrestrial biomass.

I’ve studied the evolution of social systems my whole life—everything from baboons and bonobos to orcas and insects—even slime molds and fungal networks. How do they cooperate, and why? What does working as a superorganism mean for individuality, personal freedom, and creativity? How does the fractal, ebb-and-flow math of collaboration and competition contribute to evolutionary change and complexity? And, how do these most ancient societies work to compound their value from one generation to the next? Superorganisms are everywhere, just like we are, and their footprint on the land isn’t small. And yet, we don’t see them choking on smog or stuck in traffic. The fungi aren’t counting carbon credits or worrying about the Pacific Garbage Patch, and termites and honeybees don’t have slums. These colonies have the same kind of metabolic requirements we do, yet they survive and thrive, sustainably—regeneratively—for hundreds of millions of years, through radical waves of change that turned other populations into fossils. Can we do the same?

After nearly thirty years of studying every kind of social structure, my conclusion is that we can. I know that, because it‘s been done before. The math is simple and universal. Botanical philosopher Michael Pollan says it well: “our relationship to the planet need not be zero-sum…as long as the sun still shines and people still can plan and plant, think and do, we can, if we bother to try, find ways to provide for ourselves without diminishing the world.” Other superorganisms have done it, and they can show us the way.

Read more here.

Attend San Francisco’s Earth Day Event: Learn About Protecting Sacred Sites

Native American land-defenders are always at the front lines to protect their sacred sites. These sacred sites are in the middle of our cities, in our hometowns, and in our national parks. While these battles are under-publicized, they are ongoing. This Earth Day, attend San Francisco’s Earth Day celebration, and hear Bioneers’ Alexis Bunten lead a panel in which Native American leaders share their heartbreaking and inspiring campaigns to save the West Berkeley shell mound; Juristac near Gilroy; and Oak Flat near Superior, Arizona. All of these places are sacred ceremonial sites, and all of them are under threat to be destroyed forever by mining and development.

Learn more here.

Around the Web

  • Proving an alternative-energy future is possible, mainland Portugal generated more renewable energy than it needed in March. (via EcoWatch)
  • Providing major insight into how birds navigate, recent research suggests a protein in their eyes allows them to see Earth’s magnetic fields. (via Science Alert)
  • Rights of Nature progress: The Colombia Supreme Court of Justice issued a decision declaring that the Amazon region in Colombia possesses legal rights. (via CELDF)
  • Ready to get your garden going? Microbes in soil have been shown to have similar effects to antidepressants on the human brain. (via Gardening Know How)
  • Take a trip to Sweden to see the world’s first electrified road. It charges vehicles, providing a big step toward fossil-fuel independence. (via The Guardian)

The Big Question, Answered: Sexual Fluidity Under the Sea

Clownfish like Nemo are just one of several sex-changing underwater species. “Many oysters also know sex—in the biblical sense—from both sides of the bed,” writes Dr. Marah Hardt in Sex in the Sea. “The most popularly consumed species, including those Bluepoints and Belons, Sweetwaters and Wellfleets, Kumamotos and Pemaquids, in all their wondrous, buttery, salty, smoky, earthy, fruity merroir—all have the potential to morph from male to female.” Read more here.

Bioneers Indigeneity To Be Featured at the San Francisco Earth Day Festival Saturday, April 21

Alexis Bunten

Bioneers Indigeneity

 

Please join Bioneers Indigeneity this Saturday, April 21 at the San Francisco Civic Center Plaza for the San Francisco Earth Day Festival, where we will be featuring tribal leaders and activists fighting to protect sacred Native American sites on stage at the Redwood Tent from 12:30-2:00 pm. The Redwood Tent is located halfway between McAlister and Grove Streets on the Larkin Street side of the Plaza. You can get directions here.

The Focus of Our Panel is Protecting Sacred Lands and Water

The Apache Stronghold march to save Oak Flat, a sacred site to the Apache, from mining. Meet Apache Stronghold at San Francisco Earth Day.

 

OUR PANEL LINE UP

Alexis Bunten – Our Obligations to Sacred Land and Water

Valentin Lopez – Protect Juristac: No Quarry on Amah Mutsun Sacred Grounds

Isabella Zizi – Protect our Bay: No More Tar Sands Oil in San Francisco

Vanessa Nosie and Carrie Curley – Indigenous Rights and the Fight to Protect Oak Flat

Paloma Flores – Honoring Our Youth: The role of youth in protecting sacred land and water

 

Tribal Stewards Restore and Protect Their Ancestral Territory at the Amah Mutsun Land Trust Near Santa Cruz, CA, but their most sacred ceremonial site at Juristac is under threat right now.

Standing Rock” was a wake up call for many Americans that the battle to save sacred Native lands and water is also a fight to protect all Americans from the ravages of unbridled development. Native American land-defenders have always been at the front lines to protect their sacred sites. These sacred sites are in the middle of our cities, in our hometowns, and in our national parks.

In this inspiring panel, Native American leaders share their heartbreaking and inspiring campaigns to stop the destruction of sacred sites and waters. Learn about what you can do to help stop an additional 93+ tankers from bringing Tar Sands oil into the San Francisco Bay; prevent the proposed gravel mine at Juristac, near Gilroy; and, protect Oak Flat near Superior, AZ from being destroyed for a copper mine.

These campaigns are happening now, in our shared backyards. These campaigns are not just about upholding Native American religious freedom. They are about our human rights to clean air, healthy ecosystems and water.

Besides our amazing panel lineup in the Redwood Tent, this years festival will feature fun entertainment, inspirational and educational panel discussions, engaging speakers and activists, our organic celebrity chef showcase, eco fashion shows, delicious food trucks, wine and beer garden, clean energy and innovation zone, demos of earth friendly products, an electric vehicle showcase, Eco kids zone, green government agencies, science fair, interactive D.I.Y programing and our amazing Eco art gallery. You can check it out here @ earthdaysf.com.

See you there!

Valentine Lopez, Bioneer Alumni, to Speak Up To Protect Sacred Site Near San Francisco at the UN Permanent Forum On Indigenous Issues This Week

By Alexis Bunten

Bioneers Indigeneity

 

Valentin Lopez has spoken at the Bioneers Indigenous Forum twice; once in 2015 about the historic establishment of the Amah Mutsun Land Trust, and again in 2017 to share the brutal history of genocide against his ancestors, the Mutsun People, who were taken to the Missions San Juan Bautista and Santa Cruz. In this historic panel, we learned how Chairman Lopez’ ancestors never surrendered, signed a treaty or gave away the rights to their lands or its mineral resources.

Valentin Lopez speaking at the October, 2017 Bioneer Indigenous Forum Panel, “California Indian Genocide: Truth and Recognition.”

The panel also taught us that the California Indians experienced one of the most brutal genocides in American history through three waves of colonization by the Spanish, Mexican and American periods that systematically dehumanized, enslaved, raped, and murdered the ancestors of today’s survivors until they were forced into hiding their identities and cultures.

 

Many people don’t know that the state of California paid bounty hunters for Indian scalps, reimbursed by the United States government.

Many people don’t know that treaties made between California Indian tribes and the state never made it to Washington DC, and many people don’t know that there are no federally-recognized California Indians tribes from Santa Ynez just north of Santa Barbara to Lytton, just north of San Francisco.

But, this outcome of genocide, doesn’t mean that survivors from these tribes don’t exist or care for their ancestral territories.

There still exist sacred sites to the un-recognized Central Coast California Indians. These sites are cared for, and represent unbroken spiritual ties to the land since time immemorial.

 

The Amah Mutsun have been fighting to save one such site, Juristac, or Sargeant Ranch, from destruction through sand and gravel mining. Just south of Silicon Valley, Juristac is the location of the tribe’s most sacred ceremonies and home to its spiritual leader, Kuksui. You can learn more about this threat to the site of the Amah Mutsun’s most sacred ceremonies, and home to its’ spiritual leader, Kuksui, through this short film.

As we saw at Standing Rock, and time and time again before, federally-recognized tribes are in a poor position to stand up against mining and drilling. Un-federally recognized tribes, like the Amah Mutsun, have virtually no rights to stand up against the ongoing violation of their religious freedoms and even to exist.

On Tuesday, April 17, Chairman Lopez will be taking the fight to save Juristac to the United Nations during the 17th Session of the United Nations’ Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues. Chairman Lopez explains,

“The destruction and domination of our people never ended, it just evolved into the immoral laws and regulations that exist today. These laws allow governments to ignore Native American history, culture and spirituality. These laws allow our cultural and spiritual sites to be desecrated and monetized.”

According to the press release,

In addition to speaking on the floor of the United Nations, Lopez will also hold a press conference before the International Press Corps on Friday, April 20th and co-host a side meeting with international indigenous leaders on Tuesday, April 17th.

Chairman Lopez is attending the United Nations as a delegate of the American Indian Movement (AIM) – West. AIM-West Director Antonio Gonzales said, “The issues of lands, territories and natural resources are inextricably linked to sustainable development and self-determination. While attending the UN Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues AIM-WEST delegates will bring attention to and hold extractive industry projects, who are also the number one threat to climate-change, on our lands, water and territories, by initiating a movement toward a globally binding instrument to hold them accountable.”

The Amah Mutsun working through their Amah Mutusn Land Trust and with many committed partners are calling on the Santa Clara County Board of Supervisors to acknowledge the difficult truth regarding the history of California Indians.

For more information please contact:

Valentin Lopez, Chair

Amah Mutsun Tribal Band

916-743-5833

http://www.protectjuristac.org/

http://amahmutsun.org

https://www.amahmutsunlandtrust.org/

 

The Bioneers Indigeneity Program is committed to uplifting the voices of our partners and allies in our collective efforts to protect our ancestral territories from destructive environmental practices. To learn more about our work, check out our website and our Youtube Channel Indigeneity playlist featuring over 70 presentations on contemporary Native issues.

 

4.12.18 Bioneers Pulse: The Time for Justice Is Now

Delivered on Thursdays, the Bioneers Pulse delivers stories from social and scientific innovators with practical and visionary solutions for the world’s most pressing environmental and social challenges. The newsletter features a weekly note from the Bioneers team alongside insight and context on the stories we share on Bioneers.org. Below is our latest Pulse. To receive these stories directly in your inbox, sign up for the Bioneers Pulse today. Now onto the good stuff:

Greetings fellow Bioneers!

On the heels of the 50th anniversary of Martin Luther King Jr.’s assassination (April 4) and Equal Pay Day (April 10), we’re meditating on the injustices of yesterday while highlighting solutions for a fairer, more equal tomorrow. In this week’s newsletter, you’ll learn about corruption within the restaurant industry, the biggest civil rights settlement in U.S. history, the desecration of a sacred Native American site in Arizona (and how you can help), how the American Dream is transforming over time, and more.

The Big Question: Taking it to Court

In 1999, the largest civil rights settlement in United States history was awarded, resulting in an ordered payout of hundreds of millions of dollars. What were the circumstances of the rarely discussed lawsuit that led to this settlement? (Read to the bottom of this email to find the answer.)

Take Action: Protect Sacred Sites in Oak Flat

Bioneers Indigeneity Program Manager Alexis Bunten writes: “On March 17, 2018, a sacred Native American religious site in southern Arizona was destroyed and it seemed like nobody cared. A representative from the Apache Stronghold came to Oak Flat, a sacred place where the San Carlos Apache people connect to The Creator through prayer and ceremony, and found the crosses marking the four corners of the sacred space intentionally destroyed. Two of the crosses were ripped from the ground and two were left standing, but were violently hacked with what appears to be an ax. Ceremonial eagle feathers were ripped from the crosses and tire tracks criss-crossed the sacred grounds.”

Read more about this unconscionable act, and sign a petition urging the U.S. Forest Service Agency and U.S. Department of Agriculture to take action.

Wise Words

“On the outset, it looks like our nation is more divided than ever before, perhaps since the Civil War, and yet if you drop down to the community level, we see black Baptist Christians and Arab Muslims in the Detroit area collaborating on community gardens. We see an organic farm in the midst of Ferguson, Missouri that’s become the sanctuary where white and black families from Ferguson came together during that time of stress and catastrophe in their community. These cross-cultural projects that are rebuilding our foodsheds and bringing food security to more people are sanctuaries for healing the wounds that have occurred in our communities, and they’re bridging the divides between urban and rural and people of different faiths, races, and cultures.”

—Gary Nabhan, ethnobotanist and author, in an interview with Bioneers

Video to Watch: Fair Pay

Saru Jayaraman’s 2017 Bioneers Keynote on fixing corruption within the restaurant industry

On Equal Pay Day, we were reminded of Saru Jayaraman’s inspirational keynote address at Bioneers 2017. As Co-Director of Restaurant Opportunities Centers United (ROC); Director of the Food Labor Research Center at UC, Berkeley; and author of Behind the Kitchen Door and Forked, Jayaraman reminded us that restaurant workers’ pay in the U.S. is deeply rooted in slavery and inextricably linked to sexual harassment, then offered a path forward.

Help Bioneers Continue This Essential Work

In this time of uncertainty and upheaval, Bioneers is needed more than ever. We rely on you, our community, to help us continue our work. Please consider making a tax-deductible donation to Bioneers.

Donate

This Week on Bioneers Radio:

  • All Love Begins with Seeing: Poetry and Justice for All: Shailja Patel’s unique artistry is a provocative global mash-up of genres. She’s a slam poetry champion and star of her award-winning, one-woman play, Migritude, about the intricate webs of global migration and cultural identity. As an acclaimed poet of South Asian and Kenyan ancestry, through her fearless art she embodies the authentic voices of women, South Asians and Africans who are otherwise seldom heard. For her, the ultimate destination of poetry is justice — too heart-breakingly beautiful to be denied.
  • Backlash Moment: Converging at the Crossroads of Identity and Justice | Kimberlé Crenshaw: When Donald Trump rode a wave of white anxiety into the White House, it was part of a backlash to the Obama presidency — one that revealed an increasingly explicit white nationalism and revived an overtly exclusionary agenda: roll back rights and protections for people of color, immigrants, Muslims, women, and gay and transgender people. Then came the backlash to the backlash: a rapidly spreading awakening that all these peoples, movements and struggles are actually connected in one story. Visionary law professor and changemaker Kimberlé Crenshaw shows that it’s only at the crossroads of our many identities that we will find a story big enough to embrace the diversity and complexity of our globalized, 21st-century world.

Book to Read

The New Better Off by Courtney Martin

An excerpt from the book by Martin, an accomplished writer and speaker who explores topics related to feminism and social justice:

The phrase “new better off” is the shorthand I’ve created for this burgeoning shift in Americans’ ideas about the good life. It’s the patchwork quilt version of the American Dream, not the (phallic) sculpture reaching high into the sky. It’s about our quest to use our current precarity as the inspiration to return to some of the most basic, “beginner’s mind” questions: What is enough money? How do we want to spend our finite energy and attention? What makes us feel accountable and witnessed? It’s about creating a life you can be genuinely proud of, an “examined life” (in the words of dead Greek guys), a life that you are challenged by, a life that makes you giddy, that sometimes surprises you, a life that you love.

It’s leaving a job that pays well but makes you feel like a cog for a freelance life that makes you feel like a creator—the financial highs and lows be damned. It’s sharing a car with a few friends and learning how to repair your favorite pair of jeans. It’s moving in with your grandmother because she needs someone to reach the highest shelf in the kitchen and you need someone who helps you keep our turbulent times in perspective. It’s putting your cell phone in a drawer on Saturday afternoon and having the best conversation of your life that night. It’s starting a group for new dads where you admit how powerful and confusing it is to raise a tiny human.

Read more here.

Attend ReGen 2018

ReGen18 is a San Francisco gathering designed to help foster a regenerative society and economy that supports the mutual thriving of people and planet. Beyond sustainability, and beyond impact, this action-focused event will bring together experts and practitioners working in regenerative urbanism, regenerative forestry and food systems, and innovative finance and will connect the dots between the networks that are emerging. Newcomers to the field are welcome.

The event takes place from May 1 – May 4. Get your discounted tickets at this link.

The Big Question, Answered: Taking it to Court

In 1999, the USDA was ordered to pay hundreds of millions of dollars to black farmers who were historically denied government assistance based on the color of their skin. The payouts are still ongoing to this day, and the case led to similar successful class action lawsuits against the USDA on behalf of women, Hispanic and Native American farmers. Read about the suit (and the Bioneers connection) here.

Conservation You Can Taste: An Interview with Gary Nabhan

Gary Nabhan is an ethnobotanist and author focused on the confluence of cultural and biological diversity. His innovative writings and pioneering projects have raised awareness of the economic and social benefits, as well as the culinary pleasures of local food. He currently serves as the Chair in Southwest Boderlands Food and Water Security at the University of Arizona.

Arty Mangan, Director of Restorative Food Systems for Bioneers, spoke with Gary Nabhan about his work, his perspective on hope and resilience in the current political climate and how collaborative cross-cultural work in local food systems has the potential to bring people together.

ARTY: In the current discouraging political climate, what do you see in your work that is cause for optimism?

GARY: There’s a hidden part of the conservation movement that few people recognize its magnitude even though they’re part of it. It’s the community-based collaborations that are rebuilding our food-producing capacity. Dollar for dollar in the history of American conservation, it’s probably the best investment in terms of its return with regard to social, nutritional and ecological benefits of any investment we’ve ever made in biological conservation in the United States. The restoration of our food-producing capacity by diversifying the number of foods in our food system is helping to heal the habitats that produce our foods and is engaging a wider, more diverse group of people in our local food systems.

60% of all American farmers and ranchers are involved in wildlife habitat restoration on their lands, and yet we never think of them as part of the conservation movement the way some people define it. At the same time, we have urban projects like the work in Detroit that are literally taking thousands of acres in blighted cities and bringing them back not just into food production, but into places where wildlife wants to hang out and where people want to hang out.

We’ve increased the number of foods being grown in the North American food system to over 30,000 edible plant species of heirloom vegetables and grains and culinary herbs and legumes and fruit trees and rare livestock breeds, many of which 25-50 years ago were considered obsolete and on their way out of the food system. We’re bringing back Navajo churro sheep and bison, and camas lilies in the Northwest, and sturgeon species in the Great Lakes and on the Eastern seaboard, wild rice, and many, many kinds of wild as well as cultivated food species. That’s what I call a conservation you can taste.

Rather than locking the species up and protecting them from people, we have the participation of diverse cultures, races, economic classes, faith-based communities, and people of different ideologies and political persuasions all collaborating. There’s basically nothing else in the American media that we can see where people are collaborating across the aisle, across cultures and races, at this point in time.

Gary Nabhan, Chair in Southwest Boderlands Food and Water Security at the University of Arizona

So, on the outset, it looks like our nation is more divided than ever before, perhaps since the Civil War, and yet if you drop down to the community level, we see black Baptist Christians and Arab Muslims in the Detroit area collaborating on community gardens. We see an organic farm in the midst of Ferguson, Missouri that’s become the sanctuary where white and black families from Ferguson came together during that time of stress and catastrophe in their community. These cross-cultural projects that are rebuilding our foodsheds and bringing food security to more people are sanctuaries for healing the wounds that have occurred in our communities, and they’re bridging the divides between urban and rural and people of different faiths, races, and cultures.

ARTY: The food systems work that you and your community are doing in Tucson has been acknowledged by UNESCO.

GARY: Tucson, my home town for the most of the last 30 years, was really hit hard by the economic recession in 2008. We just had the balloon mortgage scandal that knocked out 20,000 jobs in Arizona in one week a year or two before the 2008 recession. So, we were hit by a double whammy that meant that we had higher levels of poverty, unemployment and food insecurity than ever before.

The federal government didn’t step in. The state government certainly didn’t step in. There were a lot of nonprofits and grassroots alliances that began to work on dealing with both the symptoms and the causes of the food insecurity levels that skyrocketed, even as we had many people innovating for reasons other than just working on food security. We had the kind of work that you were doing with Peter Warshall [the Dreaming New Mexico project], looking at resilient regional food systems in New Mexico that was informing what we were doing in Arizona.

We had Brad Lancaster and all the water harvesting people working on amazing solutions to use water off the streets to reduce the urban heat island effect and grow more food in the city. We had one of the most creative community food banks in the country, the Community Food Bank of Southern Arizona, that was forging an alliance nationally, called Closing the Hunger Gap, to reward food banks not for feeding longer and longer lines of hungry people, but reducing those lines by creating livelihoods.

There was a lot of innovation going on in Tucson out of necessity to feed our people and create livelihoods. Rather than saying we should get a UNESCO City of Food Cultures designation because we’ve solved our problems, we said, “Look at us as a living laboratory where we’re working toward solutions, and being designated as one of the United Nations Creative Cities network would help.”

Fourteen nonprofit organizations and a dozen businesses have helped bring over 2,000 varieties of annual food crop species – vegetables, legumes, grains, and culinary herbs – back into local availability for free through our seed libraries and public libraries, or at discounted prices at farmers’ markets and other venues because of the use of EBT cards for SNAP benefits, so that well over 2,000 kinds of garden plants can now be accessed by low-income families for free or for reduced cost.

About 200 kinds of fruit, nut and berry varieties are being grown in Tucson, and they are scion and cuttings and bulbs being shared, about 70 species of food plants, and many of those are being donated by nonprofits like Trees for Tucson to low-income neighborhoods, to prisons or to school and community gardens, or bike trails, where people who are on the street have access to fruits even when they’ve just stumbled into town and don’t know where all the resources are. And because of Desert Survivors Nursery and Desert Harvesters that Barbara Rose, Amy Schwemm and Brad Lancaster have fostered over many years, we have this revival of native wild plant foods in value-added products being sold at farmers markets and being propagated in yards with the harvested water that is coming off the streets.

It’s democratizing the access to affordable food biodiversity, which is of course only one component of dealing with food insecurity, but it’s providing such a strong base and pride within our community that within the last three years we’ve seen 140 different value-added food and beverage products locally marketed from home-processed, home-grown or wild-harvested products with about 45 new micro-enterprises developing in Tucson, a third of them that didn’t exist before we got this designation.

As a result, we’re finally seeing a drop in the number of low-income households in Tucson because the food micro-enterprises are creating new jobs, and the food sector of our economy is the only part that’s improved. Tucson has gotten over $30 million of free publicity from magazines, newspapers, radio, TV, and social media since the designation that’s fueling interest both in the community and beyond about seeing Tucson as this wonderful living laboratory for innovation.

Bioneers on #WorldWaterDay

How do we celebrate #WorldWaterDay? We lift up the Bioneers doing the incredible and visionary work as we move towards a more sustainable, equitable future, where all recognize – Water is Life.

 

Kandi Mossett

Kandi Mossett (Mandan/Hidatsa/Arikara), Native Energy and Climate Campaign Organizer for the Indigenous Environmental Network (IEN), has emerged as a leading voice in the fight against environmental racism at Standing Rock and beyond. Kandi shares the powerful story of how her community drew on its cultural resilience to resist fracking in North Dakota, and how the re-assertion of tribal sovereignty, revitalization of language and restoration of traditional foodways can point the way to a just transition to a clean energy future for all of us.

If you don’t think we’re at war, then you are sorely mistaken. We are on the frontlines.

 

James Nestor

James Nestor, an author and journalist with a passion for extreme adventure who has written for Scientific American, National Public Radio and The New York Times, draws from his mind-boggling, multiple award-winning new book, DEEP: Freediving, Renegade Science, and What the Ocean Tells Us about Ourselves. He describes how groups of athletes and scientists plumbed ocean depths, and researchers collaborating with engineers from Apple, Google and elsewhere worked to “crack” the cetacean language code and send back messages to these giant marine mammals – to make contact. Their weird and wondrous new discoveries might just redefine our understanding of the ocean, and of ourselves.

There’s already non-human intelligent life in the universe, it’s here on our planet. It’s in our seas.

 

Henk Ovink

In the face of global climate disruption, two billion people worldwide will be challenged by too much water, and nearly another two billion by not enough. When you fight nature, you lose, says Dutch water wizard and designer Henk Ovink. He’s dramatically demonstrating on large scales how to shift our relationship to nature and to culture – and climate-proof our cities and coasts.

There is a way forward.

 

Shannon Dosemagen

Shannon Dosemagen describes how communities worldwide are being equipped to use new tools to redefine expertise and mobilize local intelligence to protect public health and ecosystems. As Co-Founder/President of the multiple award-winning New Orleans-based Public Laboratory for Open Technology and Science, she helped launch the Public Lab in response to the BP oil spill. Today it’s a groundbreaking platform and resource for citizen science environmental activism nationally and internationally.

It’s crucial for us to create time and space for us to bring science back out into the public.

 

Brock Dolman

Half of Americans cannot name one component of the water cycle upon which all life depends. Yet water is at the root of every human endeavor – from manufacturing to agriculture, energy production and waste management. No water, no life. Join master permaculture designers Darren J. Doherty and Brock Dolman for both practical and poetic ways to re-educate earthlings in soil and water literacy. Their practical vision for regenerating ecological integrity and social resiliency prepares us for the challenges of climate change and environmental stress. But above all, they illuminate inspired pathways for restoring nature and people in the re-enchantment of Earth.

The water cycle and the life cycle are the same cycle: no water, no life.

 

Bren Smith

Bren Smith, founder of GreenWave and winner of the 2015 Buckminster Fuller Challenge award, tells his personal story of ecological redemption. He dropped out of high school and became a commercial fisherman at age 14, but witnessed the destruction of the ocean firsthand. In a quest for a better way, he pioneered a revolutionary new model of harvesting bounty from the seas. He describes his innovative, practical design and future vision for “restorative 3-D ocean farming”. It restores ecosystems, mitigates climate change, creates jobs in a blue-green economy, and ensures healthy, secure local food for communities.

As fisherman, we are now climate farmers – restoring rather than depleting.

 

Follow along with Bioneers as we dive deeper into this World Water Day revolution with our Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.

Hate Crime Against Tribe’s Holy Ground at Oak Flat

By Alexis Bunten, Bioneers Indigeneity

On March 17, 2018 a sacred Native American religious site in southern Arizona was destroyed and it seemed like nobody cared. A representative from the Apache Stronghold came to Oak Flat, a sacred place where the San Carlos Apache people connect to The Creator through prayer and ceremony, and found the crosses marking the four corners of the sacred space intentionally destroyed. Two of the crosses were ripped from the ground and two were left standing, but were violently hacked with what appears to be an ax. Ceremonial eagle feathers were ripped from the crosses and tire tracks criss-crossed the sacred grounds.

Four crosses mark the sacred space of prayer at Oak Flat before it was vandalized.
(Image Credit: Wendsler Nosie)

 

Vandals destroyed the crosses, ripping sacred eagle feathers from them, and hacked at them in sending a violent, hate-filled message. (Image Credit: Wendsler Nosie)

 

The racially motivated violence embedded in this act of vandalism against one of the tribe’s most important religious sites makes it a hate crime, no different than when a church is attacked. San Carlos Apache elder, Wendsler Nosie, described the reality on the ground to AZFamily.com (and subsequently released his quote to Bioneers):

“This site is like a church. If this attack had happened at a church, it would be considered a crime A lot of people have come here to be healed from sickness and for their loved ones, asking for blessings. Throughout the year, this has been a site for families to gather and teach their children about the land. There are federal laws that are supposed to protect a place like this. We have never seen this kind of violence against us here. There needs to be accountability for this crime.”

 

It sent a terrifying message to the San Carlos people that what they hold sacred is worthless. Unfortunately, while explicit violence such as this is uncommon, overall disregard for sacred sites is nothing new to the San Carlos Apache.

Hate Crime Is Just the Latest In Assaults Against Apache Religion

San Carlos Apache and their allies have been fighting to protect Oak Flat for over a decade. The protectors call themselves Apache Stronghold, and formally organized in 2014, when John McCain snuck a rider into a Defense Bill that essentially gave the (stolen) federal land to Resolution Copper to destroy for mining.

Bioneer, Naelyn Pike, and her tribe have been fighting to protect Oak Flat, a sacred site to the Apache people, for over a decade, from being destroyed through one of the world’s largest proposed copper mines. Naelyn speaking at the 2017 Bioneers Conference.

Following their traditional beliefs, the Apache Stronghold’s first line of defense has always been prayer, supported by marches and other non-violent campaigns. The Apache Stronghold movement is inter-tribal and inter-cultural, inviting anyone who understands the need to protect religious freedom and the environment from faceless multinational corporations who seek to destroy it. Ceremonies and prayer at the holy ground where the crosses to the four directions were vandalized have been central to upholding the Apache Stronghold movement.

Last weekend’s hate crime committed against the Apache at Oak Flat is the latest and most direct assault on tribal members’ ability to practice their religion. According to the FBI, a hate crime is the highest priority of its Civil Rights program and they must be investigated, especially when victims are engaged in a federally protected activity. Chi’Chil’Ba’Goteel, as Oak Flat is the Apache placename for the site, has been a sacred site for Apache people since time immemorial. Under the American Indian Religious Freedom Act, Native Americans have a right to access to sacred sites and the freedom to worship through ceremonial and traditional rights. The act requires all governmental agencies to accommodate access to and use of religious sites.

Is This Hate Crime Being Treated Seriously?

The American Indian Religious Freedom Act requires the U.S. Forest Service to work with law enforcement to investigate and prosecute the perpetrators. When the crime was discovered over the past weekend, members of the Apache Stronghold demanded an immediate response from the U.S. Forest Service and local law enforcement. But the site was not taped off and one bystander alleged that the officer sent to investigate claimed he “couldn’t find the spot.” Unfortunately, this kind of response is common when it comes to crimes against Native Americans. It has been widely reported elsewhere that crimes against Native Americans (especially murders and missing women) regularly go uninvestigated, sending the message that Native lives don’t matter.

The Apache Stronghold wants to cooperate with the U.S. Forest Service and Law Enforcement to ensure this crime gets investigated and brought to justice before too much time has passed. Here is the message Naelyn Pike’s family shared with Bioneers to spread throughout our community and beyond:

“Urgent, Urgent, Urgent…. Call to Action!! Please share!!!

What has happened to our holy ground should be no different then any church and needs the same respect. Who ever has done this hate crime needs to be held accountable. If anyone has information, please contact local law enforcement or Tonto U.S. Forest Service. This is a Non-violent action to demand greater protection from hate crimes in our national forest and to stand together against attacks to prayer site. Please sign our petition in partnership with the Poor Peoples Campaign: A National Call for Moral Revival, or directly contact the Tonto National Forest Supervisor’s Office to tell them that hate crimes cannot be tolerated and that the Apache deserve justice and equal rights to all other Americans at:

Neil Bosworth, Forest Supervisor
2324 E. McDowell Rd.
Phoenix, Arizona 85006
(602) 225-5200
nbosworth@fs.fed.us

 

Taking A Stand for Sacred Sites

As we learned at Standing Rock in 2016, the destruction of Native American sacred sites is ongoing. Just in Bioneers’ Bay Area backyard ,the West Berkeley Shellmound, , the oldest inhabited site in the region, is slated for development. Juristac, a sacred site to the Amah Mutsun tribe near Gilroy, CA, is being threatened with a sand gravel mining operation. These stories are rarely told in the mainstream media. Now more than ever, when America’s values of equality and justice for all are being tested at every turn, it is important that we all stand up for the disempowered peoples whose human rights have been systematically erased for generations. Stand up today by supporting the Apache Stronghold at Oak Flat. Stand up tomorrow and beyond for the many vitally important fights being waged and Indigenous movements being built across this continent and around the world.

Andy Lipkis and TreePeople: Green Cities Grown From Roots of Bioneers Validation

Innovation, by its definition, means bucking tradition. Thinking outside the box. Doing what hasn’t been done before—what isn’t “normal.” Andy Lipkis, founder of TreePeople, spent much of the beginning of his career oscillating between his desire for normality and his need to do world-changing work. Bioneers, he says, was integral in his gravitation toward the latter.

When Lipkis was starting his career, he had big ideas but lacked the financial support he needed to get them off the ground. As a teenager, he was passionate about finding ways to restore his local California forests. While attending a summer camp with a forest-restoration program, he saw immediate potential: Kids at summer camps throughout California should be able to take part in tree-planting initiatives.

Lipkis followed a winding road through several failures (what he calls “failure compost”) and a couple of big successes to finally fund what would become the California Conservation Project: the early nonprofit that would eventually become today’s TreePeople. The support of those close to him, he says, was key.

“Something that my parents did—and it’s what Kenny and Nina are doing in a macro kind of way—is when I had a weird idea, they didn’t judge it. They said, ‘How would you do that?’” Lipkis says.

Sowing Seeds

Getting people working together on a small scale to plant trees was Lipkis’ first big success, but it was far from his last “How would you do that?” experience. Through a deeper connection with his Los Angeles community, he started to notice how broken the social and city systems around him had become. He saw agency leaders working largely in isolation from one another and infrastructures designed to treat humans as simple-minded consumers rather than integral participants.

Lipkis envisioned a better Los Angeles—one that wasn’t a piece of dirt, but a living ecosystem, similar to the forests he loved. It would require biomimicry at a deep, systems level. To start, and armed with the knowledge that people care for what they sow, he was determined to find ways to bring his community together with purpose.

Starting with two massive floods in the late 70s, Lipkis’ ability to mobilize people proved powerful. So powerful, in fact, that city leaders began calling on him to find strong bodies to help mitigate the destruction. He discovered within himself an aptitude for grassroots organizing, but also substantial respect for the people around him. If he could organize people for flood response, he thought, he ought to be able to organize them to support and solve other problems.

In the early 80s, information about global climate change and its effects was starting to be widely disseminated. The 1984 Summer Olympics were held in Los Angeles, and the city had a serendipitous goal of planting 1 million trees before the events began. Lipkis joined forces with government agencies, private corporations, and volunteers to reach the city’s goal, creating an astounding, replicable model of citizen mobility for a worthy cause.

A Flywheel Effect

By the time he attended his first Bioneers Conference as a workshop speaker in 2002, Lipkis had become an expert in grassroots organization and was making impressive gains in the world of urban planning. Over the course of more than ten years, he continued to speak at subsequent Bioneers events, finding that the community often gave even more back to him than he gave it.

“It was a flywheel effect,” Lipkis says of his professional growth alongside working with Bioneers. “I was seeing people I so admired, and their acceptance was a validation. It moved me from outside worm to being recognized by smart people. That emboldened my craziness. Positive feedback in a world that has no positive feedback for that—it kept me in the game.”

Of the “smart people” Lipkis met at Bioneers, one of the most influential was Paul Hawken, one of the world’s leading environmental activists. Lipkis invited Hawken to a large meeting of designers and government officials, tasked with reimagining Los Angeles as a more sustainable, resilient city. Lipkis credits that meeting with laying the groundwork for what is now called “green infrastructure.”

Today, Lipkis and TreePeople continue to use forest-inspired technologies to heal and bring together Los Angeles, which they hope will become a model for many other cities in the future. (Read more about his current work in Bioneers’ Climate Leadership e-book, starting on page 30.) While ingenuity and thinking outside the box have been essential to his achievements, Lipkis says, it’s average people that create the biggest waves.

“Humans are capable of so much more than our modern systems recognize. I’ve learned it through all my life’s works, and I’ve learned it through Bioneers.”

Stay up-to-date on what world-changing Bioneers like Andy Lipkis are accomplishing by signing up for our newsletter.

3D Ocean Farming’s Accelerated Success Through the Bioneers Community

Bioneers co-founders Nina Simons and Kenny Ausubel have spent much of their adult lives cultivating a community that works toward solving the world’s biggest problems. Take, for example, the twin problems of overfishing in our oceans and the fundamental decline of the health of these ecosystems. Greenwave founder Bren Smith’s revolutionary 3D-ocean-farming system offers a solution to these problems and more: Using 3D ocean farming, Smith and a growing pool of independent farmers construct underwater vertical setups that employ cages and ropes, allowing them to farm mussels, scallops, oysters, clams and sea vegetables within remarkably small areas. GreenWave ocean farms produce high yields without requiring substantial resources, making them far better for the planet than traditional fishing and agricultural practices.

When Ausubel, Simons and the Bioneers team heard about GreenWave, they immediately saw its world-changing potential. They booked Smith for a keynote address at their 2016 conference, marking a major positive shift for the 3D-ocean-farming movement. “After speaking at the event last year, we had over 100 people who wanted to start farms in California alone,” Smith says. “We directly raised $100,000 after the event, and I think it was the first time we were introduced and given access to such a diverse set of allies.”

To date, more than 24 ocean farms in the Northeast have been established through GreenWave, and Bioneers is officially partnering with GreenWave to build out a strong California program, starting with two new West Coast farms. In addition to their ability to produce food and jobs, ocean crops are ideal for creating biofuel, and kelp soaks up more than five times the carbon of land-based plants. “If you take an area the size of Maine, you could replace all the oil in the United States, according to the Department of Energy,” Smith said in his keynote address. “The New Yorker recently called it the culinary equivalent of the electric car.”

Building a Community of Solutions

For more than three decades, Ausubel and Simons have led Bioneers, an organization that has come be be known for its knack in identifying inspirational minds and giving them a platform from which to speak and connect. From that platform and the networks it’s enabled, dozens of groundbreaking ideas have become a reality.

Simons and Ausubel credit their community of luminaries, supporters and staff for making this recognition possible. Meanwhile, Smith credits Ausubel and Simons with helping him expedite the expansion of his vision. “That really broad frame and community that they’ve built is really impressive,” he says. “It’s really important to those of us trying to develop solutions to all the problems we face and kind of get all hands on deck. It’s a great, loving family.”

Like Simons and Ausubel, Smith is a believer in the idea that individuals can make change happen. “This isn’t just about jobs,” Smith said in his keynote address. “This is about agency. One of the major deficits in our society today is the feeling that you can make a difference—that you have to be an Amazon, you have to be a Google, in order to tackle the big problems. You don’t.”

Bren Smith’s 2016 Bioneers Keynote

Stay up-to-date on what world-changing Bioneers like Bren Smith are accomplishing by signing up for our newsletter.

Act for Rivers: Kate Horner on Protection and Restoration

We live on a water planet. More than two-thirds of Earth’s surface is submerged and, while life is largely carbon-based in terms of structure, it’s water that makes the whole idea of life possible. As humans, we’re up to 80-85% water by volume as infants, a ratio that decreases as we age. As Brock Dolman, Director of the Water Institute at the Occidental Arts & Ecology Center, has joked, death may be just a function of dehydration. Another obvious but worth-a-reminder fact: 90% of humanity lives within 10 kilometers of a freshwater body. Rivers, in particular, are extraordinarily essential, containing vast biodiversity, transporting billions of tons of nutrient rich sediment to agricultural lands and coastal waters and providing essential spiritual and aesthetic functions for many millions of us who dwell upon their banks.

Today, on the 21st Annual Day of Action for Rivers, we highlight the unique and spectacularly important role that freshwater ecosystems play in supporting both the extraordinary diversity of life on earth as well as the critical role of river systems in allowing humanity to thrive. One of the truly heroic organizations engaged in protecting and supporting rivers and river-dependent communities globally is International Rivers. For nearly 40 years, International Rivers has been engaged at a global level successfully advocating for river health and rights. Bioneers was honored to host Kate Horner the Executive Director of International Rivers at a recent Bioneers Conference and an excerpt of her remarks are included below.

For more information and to take action on behalf of global rivers, visit International Rivers.

Kate Horner, Executive Director for International Rivers:

“I’m very honored to be speaking about the vital necessity of our rivers as part of this immense global challenge that we face. Rivers are the arteries of our planet. They’re an ecosystem that is often overlooked, but they are essential to the livelihoods of billions of people. Rivers are the primary source of protein for millions. Rivers nourish fertile agricultural plains around the world, and for many people they are a sacred source of life in and of themselves.

But freshwater systems are uniquely under threat. I think they’re the most threatened ecosystem in terms of biodiversity loss and species extinction. This is because rivers are threatened with a boom of dam building around the world with 3,700 new dams being proposed globally. These dams will fragment further our precious sources of water and prevent important fish from migrating. There are hundreds of species fish that travel up many of these rivers to nourish millions of people. New dams prevent us from creating the fertile terrain to feed the world.

I was in Thailand recently and had the great privilege of meeting many community members who are defending against a new cascade of dams being planned on the Mekong River, or as it’s known in Thailand, the Mother River, Me and Kong. This river travels through a number of countries and 60 million people are dependent on the Mekong as a primary source of their protein. It’s also an extraordinary source of biodiversity – and it’s under threat from these new dams.

The same is true around the world. In the Amazon, the world’s largest freshwater ecosystem, there are 334 dams being planned. This river sustains not only many who depend on it for their source of protein, but it also feeds the largest rainforest in the world. The Amazon River’s annual floods drench 250,000 kilometers of rainforest with life sustaining sediment on an annual basis. Without that sediment being delivered to the forest system, the lungs of our planet are increasingly imperiled. We need the lungs and we need the arteries; they’re connected ecosystems.

Although we see this massive expansion of dams around the world, I am hugely heartened by the connections that we are beginning to see, and the recent wins that we are having. In recent years, the Italian energy giant that had planned six dams on the pristine rivers in Patagonia in southern Chile relinquished their rights to the rivers. They said that it was because the project was no longer economically viable because communities stood up for their rights.

Around the world, when we gather together and speak as one with nature, the incredible biodiversity that gives us life, we can win.

After years of degrading and channelizing and diverting and damming our rivers, we are now beginning to see the light. These are the rivers that are essential to the health of our fisheries and the health of our agricultural systems. They help us weather the extraordinary storms of an increasingly chaotic climate-changed world.

We know now that when we dam the rivers, we dam ourselves. We must work together to protect these vital ecosystems because they are so important, not only for rivers, not only for people, but the restoration of the biodiversity that they serve.”