Just Us 4 Food Justice is a daylong intensive that takes theory and practice and blends them into Praxis. The program will use the framework of Social Permaculture- using ecological permaculture principles and applying them for social good and community building. We will weave together the elements of self-love, meditation and mindfulness, food sovereignty, culture and skill-building activities.
Led by Permaculturist Pandora Thomas with breakout sessions led by holistic health educator Brandie Mack, Ceres Garden Manager Sara McCamant, and Forest Fein of the Mindfulness Program for Urban Youth.
Youth will have the opportunity to gain an understanding of social permaculture, how it can be used to improve their lives, and how it is useful in designing solutions to challenges within their organizations and communities. At the end of the day we will all make dinner together in Ceres’ commercial kitchen.
The event will take place at Ceres Community Project in Sebastopol, CA
9:30am – 7:00pm June 23, 2017
Lunch and dinner will be provided.
This is a free event, but space is limited. If interested in participating please send over a brief paragraph describing your organization, the work it focuses on, and what it hopes to gain from participating in this food justice intensive over to ernesto@bioneers.org or youth@bioneers.org.
We will respond within one week if your group has been accepted to participate in the intensive.
New Mexico has a multi-cultural legacy of traditional food and agriculture. Native American and Hispano community leaders, academics, farmers, activists and government officials speak to this legacy and how it informs the dream of a healthy statewide food system.
What do Hawaii’s Poet Laureate, a MacArthur Genius, and the 2016 recipient of the National Arts and Humanities Youth Program Award have in common?
They are all featured presenters in the 2017 Bioneers Indigenous Forum.
Organized by our all-Native Indigeneity Program staff, and advised by our Native Board members and allies, the Bioneers Indigenous Forum has long served as a place for Indigenous intellectuals, activists and community leaders to convene in a safe, intercultural space to foster critical dialogue around environmental threats and social injustices Indigenous peoples experience. Indigenous voices and world views have always been critical to Bioneers’ mission to share practical solutions to the world’s most pressing issues, and since 1993, we have hosted such luminaries as Winona LaDuke, Oren Lyons, Robin Kimmerer, and Tom Goldtooth.
Tom Goldtooth, Executive Director of the Indigenous Environmental Network, speaks from the heart at the 2016 Indigenous Forum Panel, The Art of Intergenerational Activism.
The 2016 Indigenous Forum brought us powerful and emotional stories about the horrifying aftermath of Canada’s boarding school system in a panel about Truth and Reconciliation, and the first-hand accounts of what it’s like on the front lines at Standing Rock in our Indigenous Rising panel.
In 2017, the Indigenous Forum will continue the tradition to bring to light issues often ignored by the mainstream media, but are so critical for all people to learn.
Across 3 days, we will be focusing on three themes: Frontline Solutions, California Indian Survival, and Pacific Connections. Panelists representing over 20 tribal nations will present innovative, heart-breaking, and inspiring programming that will make a lasting impression on the spirits and minds of those who will join us.
Here’s an overview of our incredible line up:
Friday, October 20: Frontline Solutions
From Alcatraz to Standing Rock, Indigenous activists have long been recognized as at the forefront of innovative and effective movements. Our first panel, “Reclaiming Indigenous Worldviews: Implementing the Rights of Nature in the Bay Area and Beyond,” explores ways that First Peoples’ traditional worldviews can be adopted into Rights of Nature policy to protect natural systems for all peoples. Our second Friday panel, “Fighting Racism in School” is near and dear to our hearts, as we feature some of the most incredible teenagers we know, who will come together to share personal stories of successful battles to bring the real history of America into the classroom and to abolish dehumanizing Indian mascots once and for all.
Saturday, October 21: California Indian Survival
California Indians are the most culturally and linguistically diverse in all of North America. California has the largest Indigenous population in the US, and Los Angeles has the second biggest urban Indian population in America (just after New York City). Yet, people in California and across the broader US are woefully ignorant of the massive genocide and cultural revitalization that have taken place in the state. Through two powerful back to back panels, California Indian elders, leaders, and storytellers come together to tell the truth about surviving generations of kidnapping, slavery, and mass murder, and the healing power of traditional storytelling.
Sunday, October 22: Pacific Connections
As an Alaska Native, I grew up hearing stories about knowledge passed across thousands of miles of Pacific Ocean for generations, knowing that I was somehow connected to Hawaiians, Maoris, and other peoples across the Pacific. Yet, neither the mainstream public nor even other Native peoples not living along the Pacific Rim are aware of the rich body of shared knowledge about the seas and how they have changed over millennia. Our First Sunday panel, “Pacific Connections: Indigenous Approaches to Climate Change from Tanax Amix to Aotearoa,” brings together culture bearers from across the Pacific to share first-hand observations of the effects of climate change and explore how Indigenous seafaring traditions, knowledge and connections can launch innovative solutions and inform policy. For the first time ever performed on the West Coast, our final event will feature a special performance, “The Story of Everything,” by Hawaii’s Hawaii’s Poet Laureate, Kealoha. His epic, multi-media feast for the soul explores life’s biggest questions—“Where do we come from?” “Where are we going?”—drawing from sources as diverse and yet interconnected as astrophysics, disco, biology, Michael Jackson, and the Kumulipo.
We hope that you are as excited about the line up as we are! Want to know more? Download a complete description of the 2017 Indigenous Forum panels and speakers.
Psst: We have much more Indigenous programming planned for the 2017 Bioneers conference –from arts installations to main stage speakers, and our annual TEK one-day intensive. Keep an eye out for more updates.
As Ever,
Alexis Bunten (Aleut/Yup’ik) and Cara Romero (Chemhuevi)
In the midst of a world that seems to be violating all things we hold sacred, we turn to our Bioneers for hope and inspiration. Today we lift the voices of those who’ve been stifled within our current system, celebrating the resilience and survival of our Earth and those who honor her.
Winona LaDuke, the renowned indigenous rights leader and two-time Green Party U.S. Vice Presidential candidate highlights the struggles of indigenous peoples to protect their food sovereignty, restore their food systems and protect their cultures and foods from genetic modification.
It is possible to have a worldview that is not related to empire, and that’s very important for where we need to be going.
Severn Cullis-Suzuki, daughter of David Suzuki, graduated from Yale with a B.S. in ecology and evolutionary biology, and is on track to outpace her father as an activist. She founded a children’s environmental group at age 9, addressed the Rio Summit at age 12, and hasn’t stopped since, starting several groups and project and becoming a dynamic, luminous light in a new generation of eco-leaders. In this talk Severn discusses our responsibilities toward future generation; how to heal our disconnection from nature and each other; and how to draw from the best of ancient traditions and modern innovation to build a sustainable future.
Each of us has the power to inspire and influence.
Adrianna Quintero, a Senior Attorney at the NRDC and founder/Executive Director of Voces Verdes, says that if we want to have any chance of succeeding in securing a healthy future and a livable planet, it’s time to re-imagine the environmentalist. All of us have a connection to nature, and we need to embrace a new vision that reflects the realities of our time and the growing diversity in our country. As the U.S. moves toward being a minority majority nation and the Latino population asserts its very high commitment to environmental concerns, more and more of us need to feel welcomed and a part of the movement – even if we’ve never been on a hike.
We need diversity to thrive: in our movement, our nature, our thoughts, our voices. We need to welcome those in and find our connectedness – there are so many common threads.
The award-winning Canadian journalist, international activist and best-selling author (The Shock Doctrine, No Logo) depicts climate change as more than an “issue.” It’s a civilizational wake-up call delivered in the language of fires, floods, storms and droughts. It demands that we challenge the dominant economic policies of deregulated capitalism and endless resource extraction. Climate change is also the most powerful weapon in the fight for equality and social justice, and real solutions are emerging from the rubble of our failing systems.
Our challenge is less to save the earth from ourselves, and more to save ourselves from an earth that if pushed too far has ample power to rock, burn, and shake us off completely.
Erica Fernandez, a remarkable eighteen-year-old environmental justice activist and Brower Youth Award winner, helped mobilize her diverse community in Oxnard, California to defeat the placement of a liquefied natural gas facility just offshore.
Let our voices rise for a better world.
How are you celebrating Earth Day? We’re following you, Bioneers.
As you may already know, Xiuhtezcatl Martinez is now a member of the Bioneers Board of Directors. The burgeoning young hip-hop artist is one of the main voices of his generation in the fight against climate change. As part of Bioneers’ celebration of Earth Day 2017, we talked to him about why it’s important for young people to be engaged in matters they care about. He also shared his biggest victories throughout his journey as an environmental activist.
Feeling inspired? Then share this with your friends and support us in elevating the voice and message of a generation!
Bioneers: How did your relationship with Bioneers start? Xiuhtezcatl Martinez: I think I was invited to speak at Bioneers for the first time in 2012 or 2013. It was such an incredible opportunity to be immersed in a community where there’s a strong representation of youth and of Indigenous peoples, I was stoked by that. I hadn’t really seen that in a whole of other places, Bioneers really captured the importance of diversity of ideas in this movement. It was fun, it was beautiful, it was one of my first times in California and I continued to return ever since. From the organizers to the attendees, everybody was stoked to be a part of this monumental shift.
Bioneers: Why is it important for you to be a part of our Board of Directors and how will the organization benefit from it? Xiuhtezcatl: For me, it’s important to be a part of the Board of Directors because I think I’ll both learn a lot and gain a lot of experience from this. And I think I also have a lot to offer as far as bringing a fresh, young perspective to a lot of the ideas. I think that the future of this movement begins with youth and therefore we need to begin bringing young people further into the decision making process than we have traditionally done.
Bioneers: You started your activism journey really young. What urged you to get involved? Xiuhtezcatl: I think what got me super interested in engaging in environmental and climate activism and all of this when I was younger was just the deep connection and respect I have for nature. I love being outside, I love being in the forest, in the mountains. My father taught me to have a really significant connection with that and this is such an important thing. I think that once I began to see the actual impacts that humans were having in our environment it really pushed me to fight to protect what I love, which in this case was Earth, was the environment. I had that sense of connection that allowed me to realize the importance of fighting for something that I believed in.
Bioneers: Why is it important for youth to get engaged in causes like fighting climate change? Xiuhtezcatl: Climate change is primarily affecting young people and is going to primarily affect this younger generation in the future, not the adults, because the adults will be gone when the greatest impacts of climate change are felt. I think there’s such a critical connection between youth and the state of action on climate change. I think that more young people need to be involved because first of all, we’re powerful and our voices need to be heard. We’re passionate, we’re entrepreneurs, we’re creative. The way we think about movements and issues like these is really out of the box, diverse, and this movement needs that. I think we need to break down the barriers and the walls that identify climate change purely as an environmental issue. It’s about human rights, it’s about our future, it’s about justice. Young people have a really important role in changing the entire conversation about climate change with the understanding that the importance of solving this issue is building and creating a multi-generational, diverse, creative solution-based movement. And that it’s gonna come from the youth because what we are fighting for is nothing more than our future.
Bioneers: What were your biggest victories in this fight so far? Xiuhtezcatl: Two different lawsuits. One of them being the class-action lawsuit against the US Federal Government. Essentially, in this lawsuit we’re asking for massive primary recovery plans to be put into place by our government because of their failure to defend our constitutional rights from adverse climate impacts. A motion to dismiss was filed by the US Government and the fossil fuel industry, but after that two different judges signed on with us, with the youth, that we have the right to file a lawsuit, that our government does have the responsibility to protect us from climate impacts, that a sustainable climate is a fundamental right for young people. So that was a huge win that we had and we’re now taking this on to court.
There were different wins locally in Colorado as well such as banning fracking in five different municipalities and transitioning my own personal community in Colorado to getting off of a power grid controlled by Exxon Energy.
Another one is the birth of the Earth Guardian movement, how it went from just a handful of small crews, to thousands and thousands of people across the planet engaged and excited about making a difference in the world and using their passions to create change. I guess the biggest victory that I’ve seen is individually inspiring people to act and do a little be more and be better. Yes, we can change laws but the biggest thing you’ve got to do is change the hearts and minds of people and from then the movements that will create the big changes will follow.
Bioneers: Who are your biggest idols? Xiuhtezcatl: Van Jones is one of the most inspiring spokesman of our times. He’s very involved in the environment, in politics, in racial and social justice, economic justice. I’m super stoked to have him really engaged in this movement. A lot of my other idols are artists as well, musicians and people who use their platforms to talk about important issues and about change – Kendrick Lamar and Joey Badass being two of them. There’s a lot of cool people out there, the power of using art to influence change is huge.
Bioneers: What should youth be paying attention to now? Xiuhtezcatl: Youth should definitely be paying attention to Bioneers. Bioneers is a huge step forward in the climate justice movement and the evolution of human consciousness. Their whole movement really creates incredible things in humanity today, building solutions looking to the kind of world we want. Especially for young people that want to be involved in the world, I think that Bioneers is definitely something to keep track of.
My organization Earth Guardians is also super cool for youth that want to get involved. I think it’s important to look at it as an opportunity and a platform to engage and use your passion to do something about the problem you care about. Go to the website and reach out to us to get involved.
Our Children’s Trust is involved in getting young people engaged in legal actions to address climate change particularly and different environment solutions.
Looking at energy too, I think it’s cool to check out this project called The Solutions Project to check out the implications of transitioning to 100% renewable energy.
And there’s plenty more out there. Go Google, search it out, there’s a lot you can find out.
On April 18, 2017, the Bioneers Indigeneity Program was honored to present our Native Youth Leadership Program at the #genindigenous Northern California Convening hosted by Native Americans in Philanthropy. A part of the Generation Indigenous initiative launched by President Obama in 2014, the purpose of the gathering was to bring together Northern California Native youth organizers and funders to dialogue around shared goals for improving the lives of Native youth and cultivate the next generation of Native leaders.
We shared the story of how the Bioneers’ Indigeneity Program has grown in five short years from an initial cohort of 4 Native youth participants to 125 who we are able to support in terms of transportation, lodging, healthy food, and innovative cultural arts and leadership programming.
We were proud to announce our program’s launch from an event-based leadership retreat to a year round resource of information and networking opportunities for Native youth passionate about social and environmental justice, as well as educators and community leaders looking for Native American curriculum developed by Native organizers, artists and educators.
We live-tweeted throughout Program Manager, Alexis Bunten’s presentation, who shared impact through powerful youth testimonial videos and a program report.
We were also incredibly excited to use this special event to make a special, early bird announcement of our excited 2017 Indigenous Forum lineup which features panels on Indigenous Communities and the #RightsofNature, California Indian youth fighting racism in schools, #Californiagenocide and survivance, traditional storytelling, climate change across the Pacific and must more…
We hope many of our colleagues, old and new friends will come join us at the 2017 Bioneers Conference and at the world renowned Indigenous forum.
As Ever,
Cara Romero (Chemehuevi), Indigeneity Program Director
Alexis Bunten (Aleut/Yup’ik), Indigeneity Program Manager
Cara Romero, Indigeneity Program Director, receives the Yawa’ Award alongside San Manuel Band of Mission Indians, Chairwoman, Lynn Valbuena.
On Tuesday March 28, the Bioneers Indigeneity Team was presented the prestigious Yawa’ Award from the San Manuel Band of Mission Indians. The award gala, Forging Hope, was held at the National Orange Show in Highland, California and hosting awardees, tribal leaders, and dignitaries including city mayors and heads of Goodwill Industries, the Boys and Girls Club, the Girl Scouts and many more non-profits.
From Left to Right: Sedonna Goeman-Shulsky, Indigeneity Associate; Ernesto Reyes, Bioneers Youth Program Manager; Alexis Bunten, Indigeneity Manager; Cara Romero, Indigeneity Director.
A term meaning, “to act from one’s beliefs,” Yawa’ embodies the giving spirit of the Serrano peoples. The Bioneers Indigeneity Program was recognized in the “special projects” category for its ongoing commitment to provide opportunities for Native youth to participate in, network at, and be empowered by attending the annual Bioneers Conference and world-renowned Indigenous Forum.
Established in 2011, with a cohort of 4 youth, the Native Youth Leadership Program has grown to provide scholarships to over 100 Native youth and their chaperones. 2016 experienced the largest cohort yet, with the most comprehensive programming to make the conference a welcoming and safe space. Attendees represented 44 tribal nations from across Northern and Central America, with 14 California Indian tribes represented.
Native youth leadership program attendee playing music in front of the Native youth art space at the 2016 Bioneers Conference.
We consider the San Manuel Band of Mission Indians a key partner to our work as it grows to impact more Native and non-Native peoples around the world. At the Gala Awards ceremony, we expressed our deep gratitude to the San Manuel Band of Mission Indians, who have supported the vision of the Bioneers Indigeneity Program’s Native Youth Leadership Program since it first began.
We finished our speech with a sneak peek of the next stage in the growth and sustainability of the Native Youth Leadership Program. We’re proud to announce our expansion from an event-based program to a year-round resource for Native youth, their parents, and teachers through our social media presence, original curriculum development and special events. Keep an eye out for upcoming announcements.
The idea that a feature of nature, like a river, is a living being might seem like a strange concept to some, but it is nothing new to Indigenous and other traditional peoples around the world. While the Western philosophical system is underpinned by the idea that man is separate from nature and in dominion over it, Indigenous philosophical systems tend to conceive of humans as a part of nature, often in a stewardship role to help maintain its balance.
The “Rights of Nature,” which codifies this Indigenous philosophy, has been in the news lately. On March 15, the the New Zealand parliament passed the Te Awa Tupua Bill, which granted the Whanganui River the rights of legal personhood. Less than a week later, on March 20, the Ganges, and Yamuna Rivers in India were also granted legal personhood status. Should these rights be threatened by human activity, legal cases on behalf of these rivers can be brought before a court to uphold their rights.
“Recognition of personhood rights are an important step forward toward the recognition of the full rights of the rivers to be healthy, natural ecosystems. Such rights would include the rights of the rivers to pure water, to flow, to provide habitat for river species, and other rights essential to the health and well-being of these ecosystems.”
For more, read CELDF’s press statement on the Uttarakhand High Court decision.
A woman in sunrise prayer in the Ganges River, by Nanak26
Though the political and historical contexts underpinning each policy
decision are different, all three rivers share these basic features in
common:
— The local peoples have a deep spiritual connection with the rivers, and consider them as living entities.
— Since colonization, these rivers have been highly polluted by toxic chemicals released into them from farming and industry.
— Local people’s ability to steward the rivers have been violated through commercial interference (pollution, diverting water, over-fishing, etc.).
Indigenous Foundations
Because the Whanganui decision influenced the Ganges and Yamuna ruling, it’s important to understand the role that New Zealand’s Indigenous Maori people played in catalyzing the legal personhood status of rivers (the Whanganui directly, and Ganges and Yamana indirectly). In a brilliant turn of events, Maori claimants wielded the Western legal system, essentially formed to protect the property of the “have’s,” on its head to recognize the Rights of Nature.
By granting the Whanganui River the rights of legal personhood, the Te Awa Tupua Bill affirmed the Maori relationship with the river as a life force of its own, a spiritual place of cleansing and renewal that must be protected for the sake of its own existence. If this seems like a radical idea to pass through a national governing body, it is. The bill came on the heels of the 2016 Whanganui River Settlement between the Crown and the Whanganui Iwi [Maori tribe]. Marking the longest running legal case in New Zealand history, the case closed 148 years after Maori made a settlement claim for land surreptitiously alienated from them. As part of the settlement, the Whanganui River was granted full legal rights, $30 million was provided to restore its health, and $80 million in redress was granted to the Iwi.
The Original Whanganui River Claimants
The testimonies of countless Maori helped the court to understand that the river and the people are inexorably intertwined, that the process of colonization disrupted both the river and the people’s health, well-being and ability to survive. Because the river and nearby lands were wrested from Maori stewards in a less-than-legal manner (and we can’t go back in time), the settlement became a symbolic means to remediate for the irreparable damage done –the lives lost, systems disrupted, and cycles broken involving the river and all that depends upon it. To learn more, check out the trailer for the moving documentary film, Te Awa Tupua – Voices from the River (2014).
We are witnessing a shift in global consciousness
Indigenous peoples’ understanding of the Rights of Nature is a part of our worldviews, reflected in our languages, songs, art, traditional economies, and customary law. But you don’t have to belong to an Indigenous tribe or practice Hinduism to understand that nature has a right to exist.
Rights of Nature is a growing movement of like-minded allies from every culture, background and walk of life, as our colleagues at CELDF have proven through their work with communities around the world. Nearly ten years before the Whanganui, Ganges and Yamana rivers gained the rights of personhood, Ecuador and Bolivia adopted Rights of Nature provisions into their constitutions. In the US, more than three dozen communities have now enacted Rights of Nature laws, with communities now joining together in several states to drive such rights through state constitutional amendments.
Until we are able to shift mainstream perceptions of nature from something to be exploited to something to be protected for the benefit of generations to come, this strategy could at least buy us time to protect parts of the planet from immediate, and specific threats. Inspired by the the Ho-Chunk Nation, the first U.S. tribe to vote to amend their tribal constitution to include the Rights of Nature, the Bioneers Indigeneity Program is partnering with CELDF to share this groundbreaking legal strategy with tribal partners. We feel that with our deep knowledge of natural systems combined with sovereign legal status, Native American peoples are in a unique position to advance the Rights of Nature. Stay tuned for more updates from the Indigeneity team!
Cara Romero (Chemhuevi) and Alexis Bunten (Aleut/Yup’ik)
Organic strawberries protect the ozone layer as industrial agriculture trades one toxic chemical for another. By Arty Mangan
“Living is easy with eyes closed, misunderstanding all you see.”
– John Lennon
In the early days of Odwalla, “BC” (before Coca-Cola bought it), the juice plant was a state- of-the-art remodeled brussels sprouts packing shed that stood on the cliffs of Pacific Coast Highway One. Just up the road was Swanton Berry Farm, run by one of America’s truly great, innovative farmers.
Jim Cochran was the first commercial organic strawberry grower in the country. He was also the first organic farmer to unionize his work force, when he invited the UFW in to “formalize the professional relationship we have with our employees as co-partners.”
Jim would harvest his utterly delicious organic strawberry seconds— the fruit that was misshaped or too small for market – and deliver them to the juice plant, with which we (I worked for Odwalla in those days) would promptly make strawberry lemonade, a euphoric nectar, thanks to the Swanton strawberries- genus fragaria named for their fragrance- suitable to serve a potential lover during an artful seduction.
Initially Jim was told that it was impossible to grow strawberries organically for commercial markets. The conventional “wisdom” was that without sterilizing the soil with methyl bromide – a highly carcinogenic soil fumigant that burns holes in the ozone layer- growing strawberries for market just couldn’t be done.
But Jim through crop rotation- artichokes, cauliflower and broccoli are part of his mix- and other organic fertility management practices, created optimum conditions for a healthy soil food web instead of destroying the soil biology with methyl bromide, proving conventional wisdom dead wrong to the culinary and ecological delight of his customers and his land.
In 2002, Jim Cochran received the EPA’s Stratospheric Ozone Protection Award for being the “pioneer…in developing the technology of farming strawberries…without relying on the soil fumigant methyl bromide”.
Nutritionally strawberries are rich in vitamins C and B and contain good amounts of potassium, iron, and dietary fiber. Conventional strawberries, however, are notorious for consistently being among the foods with the highest pesticide residues.
Methyl bromide under the Montreal Protocol on Substances that Deplete the Ozone Layer and the Clean Air Act was phased out in 2005, but strawberries were given an exemption because there was no feasible alternative; apparently they neglected to talk to Jim Cochran about that.
In 2007 the EPA approved methyl iodide as an as alternative to methyl bromide. Methyl iodide does not cause ozone layer depletion, although it is, according to the Pesticide Action Network, “so reliably carcinogenic that it’s used to induce cancer in the lab.”
California has proposed more stringent regulations on its use but at the same time seems to have largely ignored the California Scientific Review Committee findings that “any anticipated scenario for the agricultural…use of this agent would…have a significant adverse impact on the public health.”
Unless there is a substantial public outcry the chemical will become legal in California, which grows almost 90% of the nation’s strawberries. The comment period has been extended to June 29. Comments can be sent tomei_comments@cdpr.ca.gov.
Michael Pollan, in a 2006 Bioneers plenary, speaking of the “technocratic vision” of agriculture said, “As industrial agriculture fails and sickens us, the solutions promote more industrialization of agriculture.”
Dr. Miguel Altieri, agro-ecologist from UC Berkeley, describes the flaws in the industrial agricultural methodology and mind set saying, “Each ecological disease [in this case ozone depletion] is usually viewed as an independent problem rather than what it really is- a symptom of a poorly designed and poorly functioning system.”
After forty inches of rain, more than double the historical average, the Blue Ridge and Capay Hills that border the beautiful Capay Valley had turned green. I was traveling through this rural fertile valley, the traditional home of the Wintun people and now home to 60 organic farms, as part of a farm tour hosted by the California Climate and Agriculture Network (CalCAN). The first stop on the CalCAN farm tour was Three Feathers Ranch, part of an extensive farming operation comprised of 1400-acres of which 250 are organic. The farm and ranch, owned by the Yocha Dehe Wintun Nation, raise livestock and grow olives, almonds and row crops. Three Feathers Ranch is home base for 600 head of cattle that rotationally graze on 10,000 acres.
Capay Valley almond orchard
The day before the farm tour, CalCAN produced the California Climate and Agriculture Summit at UC Davis. The summit hosted programming on the latest developments in climate smart agriculture including farm biodiversity, carbon farming, farmland conservation, integrated livestock and crop systems, renewable energy, and water conservation. Thanks in no small part to CalCAN’s efforts, California is a global leader in researching and implementing climate smart agricultural policies and practices. One critically important example is the Healthy Soils Initiative, funded by the Cap and Trade program, which has $7.5 million to distribute among California farmers to design and implement plans to reduce on-farm greenhouse gas emissions and increase soil carbon stores. California has allocated $40 million for water conservation (SWEEP), $37 million for farmland preservation (SALCP), and $50 million to reduce dairy methane emissions with anaerobic digesters (methane is a greenhouse gas that in the short term is twenty-five times more damaging to the climate than carbon.)
On the farm tour, we met with Three Feathers Ranch Manager Adam Cline, who works with Point Blue biologist Corey Shake and the NRCS (National Conservation Resource Services) to promote the conservation of wildlife and the local ecosystem by studying nature-based solutions to climate change. Federal programs like EQIP and State programs like the Heathy Soil Initiative provide monetary incentives for farmers to operate as ecosystems mangers in conjunction with their farm management.
Empowering and training farmers/ranchers to be ecosystem mangers and land stewards is a transformational concept. During the Dreaming New Mexico project, a whole-systems look at what a sustainable and regenerative future for an entire state might look like, Peter Warshall wrote, “A landowner does not just own land. He/she owns a piece of the watershed(s) that helps regulate: floods; fires; water flow and soil health; the spread of pathogens, pests and disease; biomass production (photosynthesis); food webs and biodiversity; and nutrient cycling. The land carries memories of the family or beauty or spirit, and may provide space and time for recreation and refuge. Caring for these assets has rarely or adequately been rewarded.”
Programs like EQIP and the Healthy Soil Initiative encourage and compensate the right activities, farming in more enlightened ways to produce food in partnership with nature. Clearly there are not yet enough financial resources allocated, but it is an encouraging start.
Staff members at Full Belly Farm
It was a pleasure to meet and learn from the farmer-biologist team of Adam and Corey and later in the day the great folks at Full Belly Farm who are focusing their intelligence on understanding and working with nature’s power and complexities.
And where it gets fascinating is at the ground level, the interaction between a farmer and the land through observation, experimentation, learning and making adjustments. The localization of knowledge, the grounding of the art and science of farming to a very specific landscape is a completely different worldview from chemical mono-crop farming that degrades the living system by treating it mechanistically. Respect for the complex life forms in a biologically active farming system is the foundation for creating a resilient, sustainable, food production system and a vibrant and flourishing agrarian culture.
This respect for the complexity of life forms was evident even as Adam and Corey talked about the challenges of balancing a healthy ecosystem with the need for the land to be economically productive. They have developed a dynamic process that takes into account diverse factors including conditions on the ground, wildlife, vegetation communities, soil sampling, water infiltration, soil organic matter and soil carbon, and ongoing adaptive management. They are managing photosynthesis to save carbon in the soil by planting deep-rooted perennial grasses, like Perla grass, that penetrate the soil breaking up compaction and facilitating water infiltration. Deep roots go through growth and dieback cycles, leaving carbon-rich dead roots in the soil. The live roots exude carbon in the form of carbohydrates to feed the beneficial soil biota. Maintaining a healthy riparian zone stores carbon in woody shrubs and trees and provides wildlife habitat. Three Feathers Ranch practices rotational grazing, leveraging animal disturbance on the land to enhance and stimulate new growth instead of weakening plant vigor by overgrazing.
Perennial Perla Grass at Three Feathers Ranch
Ten miles north of Three Feathers Ranch is Full Belly Farm, one of the truly remarkable organic farms in California. Full Belly has 350 acres of certified organic production growing 80 different crops and selling all their produce within a 120-mile radius.
The forty inches of rain that the region experienced this year, an eighty-year weather event, added to the complexity, particularly coming after several years of drought-conditions. Paul Muller, one of the four partners of Full Belly Farm, said, “It’s a sobering moment and mud on carrots dwarfs the potential risks if the rain keeps coming and the storms turn warm and melt Sierra snowpack. We certainly keep an eye on the hills above us, realizing that we are simply subject to a much larger power of nature that humbles us and challenges our short-term assumptions of stability and regularity.”
For Full Belly Farm this has meant adjusting planting schedules and techniques around the variables and extremes of drought and torrential rain. Paul led us out to one of the fields that was planted with a cover crop mix of Sudan grass, cow peas and buckwheat that was grazed down by sheep and has now grown back. He explained that having plants on the soil buffers the soil surface from the erosive impact of rain and the root system supports deeper infiltration of rainwater, which mitigates runoff. Using sheep to mow down the cover crop instead of a tractor is a form of no-till agriculture. Paul dug up a shovel full of heavy clay soil to show its friable structure, ideal for root growth and healthy microbial activity, and full of earthworms.
“The trick to no-till is to grow enough biomass and put it down in place rather than using fossil energy to harvest it, compost it and bring it back to the land. How do we make this system fairly stable so the biology is working so we are not using a lot of energy to get the mulch here? There is a lot of experimentation … the mulch is fairly well digested so it could remain as a mulch or be incorporated into the soil. We are trying to figure out how different systems respond.”
Paul added that healthy soil supports soil fungal populations that colonize the sheep manure and decompose it eliminating pathogens. UC Davis has done testing on Full Belly pasture that has had animals on it for 15 years and could not find any e-coli. Interestingly they also found that after cultivation bacterial populations increase and e-coli is present. The thinking is that cultivation disturbs the healthy fungal populations that break down the manure and e-coli. Reducing tillage is not only good for the beneficial microbial populations of the soil food web, but it also reduces the amount of carbon the soil emits to the atmosphere when fields are plowed.
Contrary to industrial farming practices and food safety regulations that try to sterilize the fields, ultimately the answer is more healthy biology in a living system from the soil to the canopy that is not only a food safety buffer, but also the best way to create a climate resilient farming system.
Knowledge-intensive farmers like Adam Cline and Paul Muller, who are keenly observing the dynamics of their land, are experimenting and learning how to manage soil biology and carbon not just for the benefit of their production, but also for the health of the ecosystem and ultimately for the health of the planet. They deserve an enormous amount of respect and must be financially incentivized so that it’s not just the pioneering few who are climate smart farmers and ecosystem managers, but a whole system that culturally and economically supports all farmers to follow their lead.
Many of us of a “progressive” bent are still in a state of shock akin to a waking surrealistic nightmare following the U.S. presidential election, and the Trumpists have if anything so far proven to be even more horrific than our worst fears in their policy initiatives. The saving grace is that if one has to endure authoritarians and xenophobes, far, far better for them to be bungling than hyper-efficient, and this crew has, mercifully, so far anyway made the Keystone Cops and Three Stooges look like Swiss technocrats. Sadly, one can’t count on that to last forever, as tremendous pressure is building among government and business elites, and basic empire-maintenance chores are already forcing the recruitment of some competent managers in at least some key posts.
The best-case scenario would be that the Caligula-esque figure at the top remains impossible to completely rein in, so that his unhinged pronouncements continue to destabilize the governing process and thereby prevent the consolidation of this vile regime’s agenda. Enormous harm is being done and will be done to a wide range of our nation’s institutions, but whether this period proves to be an aberration and that damage can be at least partially reversed, or whether Steve Bannon’s project gains real traction and has “legs,” is an existential question. Does the body politic have sufficient antibodies to repel this viral infection, or is it too weakened and moribund to effectively mobilize its defenses? If the latter proves to be the case, we are in enormous danger.
The upcoming elections in Holland, France and Germany will tell us whether the barbarian hordes will succeed in breaching the last defenses of the post WWII status quo and in cementing the global conquest of right-wing “populist” nativism, or whether the center can hold in “old Europe.” As a lifelong leftist, I find myself in the odd situation of praying for the success of centrists, even the center right — any vestigial forces of relative sanity capable of uniting to hold back the far-right tide. That the dour center-rightist Angela Merkel, the pipsqueak Emmanuel Macron and a Catholic Pope seem to me like heroes of resistance and the last hopes on the barricades plunges me into a state of cognitive dissonance.
That dissonance is even more pronounced here, stateside, where at least some of us on the left, who for decades stridently denounced the CIA and NSA and their ilk and the mainstream media and the centrist elites, now find ourselves in the mind-bendingly hallucinatory condition of praying fervently for the saner parts of those institutions and social groupings to be able to derail the budding neo-fascist vulgarians occupying the pinnacles of state power.
I have gotten into many passionate arguments with my comrades on the left who insist now is not the time to compromise but to push ever more forcefully for a radical leftist agenda. Of course, these people have always made that argument, no matter the situation, like test animals banging their noses into the glass partition trying to get to the food behind it, over and over. They seem to believe that if only the left had pushed a more populist economic agenda, then the gains of the far right would not have occurred. There may be slivers of truth to that, but the left has almost always followed in Rousseau’s footsteps and overestimated people’s fundamental goodness and their desire for solidarity and downplayed the hard-wired tribalism, selfishness, and fear of change and strangers that are also central components of the human psyche, and that are far easier to awaken and exacerbate in large swaths of the population than any latent angelic traits.
The fact is that any classic left/progressive formation in Europe or the U.S. is not currently capable of coming to power or of pushing forth a truly leftist platform if it does miraculously succeed in acceding to power locally or regionally (e.g. Syriza in Greece, Podemos in Madrid). I like Bernie Sanders, but I don’t believe he would have won the election, and he would not have been able to enact any substantive legislation if he somehow had. There is a very large swath of the voting public that is motivated by fear of the other, anger at the disorientation of too rapid social change and xenophobia as much or more than by purely economic factors.
Whether in Russia, Turkey, Egypt, Europe, or the U.S., a very large group of rural, suburban and exurban dwellers are very religiously conservative and/or cling to traditions and their own ethnic and national identity. They vote for Putin or Erdogan or the Muslim Brotherhood….or Trump. And it’s not just because they feel left out of economic prosperity (though that of course contributes). If they have a choice between a leftist promising a bigger share of the pie but with tolerance for foreigners and immigrants and those of other faiths, and a nativist promising a bigger share of the pie but protection against the evil other/outsider as well, the second one has been winning, over and over, in recent years.
Far too many people engage in political action as a form of self-expression and are therefore incapable of adaptation to changing conditions. This is excusable in the young and inexperienced, but inexcusable among the more sophisticated, those who should know better. Of course all political ideologies have a utopian foundation. At the core of everyone’s political orientation is a vision of what, given one’s view of human nature and potentials and one’s fundamental ethical orientation, an ideal society would look like. Even those pessimistic about human nature, such as Hobbesians, still have a concept of the best possible societal structure (in Hobbesians’ case one that best constrains people’s basest impulses). What most people don’t seem to understand, though, is that the utopian aspirations that inform one’s core political ideology and navigating the realities on the ground in complex, rapidly mutating societies are two very different things.
To encourage an insurrection when one has insufficient forces to prevail, for example, is a form of suicide, not cogent political action. If one wants to be an effective, coherent political actor, one needs to lucidly analyze socio-political realities as they are, not as one wishes them to be. The left has historically been very bad at this (other than some ruthless Leninist/Stalinist types, but they had other serious problems…). This doesn’t mean one shouldn’t advocate for one’s beliefs or campaign for those issues closest to one’s heart (as long as one understands that most of these are very long-term struggles that take generations), but it does mean that one also needs to have a broader vision and to be alert to changing conditions, so that one can respond intelligently to the actual situation, to the facts on the ground.
Global civilization is indeed in a major ecological and social/economic/political crisis that the band-aid remedies of centrist elites are woefully inadequate to address, but in the immediate moment the reality is that if all the social forces from the sane center right to the left don’t make common cause and build temporary electoral coalitions to stop the forward motion of the far right, we face the very real risk of plunging into an abysmally dark period, one that might preclude ever being able to effectively address the root causes of that civilizational crisis, or that would, at best, radically retard those efforts by generations. We can return to our internecine struggles with wild abandon after the current crisis is over, but if we insist on focusing solely on our divisions rather than on building a broad-based, multi-faceted resistance, history will judge us very harshly (if there are any competent, independent historians left standing in the rubble…). I’m not saying we should abandon our specific issues or campaigns, just that we have to also focus on the gestalt as well.
Some revolutionaries have always argued that it’s best to root for the most oppressive segments of the ruling classes to accede to power, as they will “exacerbate the contradictions” and awaken people to the true nature of the system. This is easy for a few intellectual theoreticians to tout when it is not they, or at least not they alone who pay the price, but large swaths of the most disenfranchised who bear the brunt of authoritarian regimes. Those who said there would have been no difference between Hillary Clinton and Trump were horribly misguided. In life it is far more important to first avoid catastrophe than to constantly seek one’s ideal of perfection. You can return to that pursuit of perfection in due time, but if you drive your car off a cliff, you will have permanently precluded all hope of pursuing those refined ideals. Many said they weren’t excited about Hillary, but I urge everyone to develop the capacity to get very excited about avoiding abysmal horror, and to develop an appreciation for muddling through when it’s the best one can do.
Does anyone today remember who ran against Hitler in 1932? It was Paul von Hindenburg, a stuffy military man and far from an enlightened chap, but can anyone doubt that even a potted plant or a schnauzer would have been a vastly preferable alternative to the National Socialists?
In my heart of hearts I am a utopian anarcho-socialist who yearns for a world without money, with genuine meritocracy, free of racism and misogyny and all forms of discrimination, with no poverty or hunger, in which workers and stakeholders own their enterprises, with nothing but totally sustainable green, biomimetic technologies, organic food, half the world reserved for the non-human natural world, etc., and I will argue for that ideal model in contexts in which it feels productive, and in my work I hope to continue to highlight positive, inspiring models and initiatives that point the way to aspects of such a world. I’ll also continue supporting those heroic folks who engage in resistance to the most egregious abuses of power, whether governmental or corporate. But I’m also a realist and a grown up, and in my life I’ve often had to negotiate far from perfect situations to find the least bad outcome. We all have to do that. I urge us to grow up and to apply that real-world experience to our political lives as well.
J.P. Harpignies, Bioneers Conference associate producer, is a Brooklyn, NY-based consultant, conference producer, copy-editor and writer. The author of four books: Political Ecosystems, Double Helix Hubris, Delusions of Normality, and Animal Encounters; he also edited the collection, Visionary Plant Consciousness; and was associate editor of the first two Bioneers books: Ecological Medicine and Nature’s Operating Instructions. A senior review team member for the Buckminster Fuller Challenge for the past seven years, he was formerly a program director at the New York Open Center and the founder/co-producer of the Eco-Metropolis conference in NYC. JP also taught t’ai chi chuan in Brooklyn, NY for nearly 25 years.
On International Women’s Day, we celebrate and uplift all the powerful leaders in our lives and we are honored to share 10 incredible talks and performances from our most recent Bioneers Conference with you:
Legendary Mohawk midwife and environmental health researcher and advocate Katsi Cook illuminates her dynamic new work strengthening Indigenous communities and addressing the cultural and physical safety and thriving lives of Indigenous girls and women. As Program Director of NoVo Foundation’s Indigenous Communities Leadership Program for Indigenous Girls and Women, she’s building bridges across communities and existing networks to increase synergy in the protection of Indigenous girls and women from multiple forms of violence and oppression.
The wisdom and energy for a movement is at its edges.
Ericka Huggins, the renowned former Black Panther, political prisoner, human rights activist – and educator, poet, and professor of Sociology and African American Studies at Merritt College in Oakland – has advocated for Restorative Justice and the role of spiritual practice in sustaining activism and promoting social change for 35 years. Grounded in her belief in the greatness of the human heart, Ericka says each one of us has the ability to look there for the answers to questions about the future of our world.
Once your heart is awakened, you can’t help but speak the truth.
Bioneers invited frontline activists from Standing Rock and the Alberta Tar Sands to speak about Indigenous efforts to protect water, air and other natural resources for all. These visionary leaders highlight the need for mainstream understanding of the benefits of protecting human rights as they apply to resource extraction and Mother Earth.
It’s no coincidence that [in pregnancy] when we carry our babies, we carry them in water.
What does it mean to bring the “feminine” forward in leadership from diverse cultural and ethnic perspectives? How might a spectrum of views help us to integrate relational intelligence into all our leadership? With poet Noris Binet; Nikki Silvestri, former Executive Director of Green for All and The People’s Grocery and Pat McCabe, or Woman Stands Shining, a Navajo teacher working on Indigenous frameworks for gender and all of life.
“Many devices have been used on the five-fingered ones to create the illusion of separation, but none has been more effective or longer running than the illusion of the war between the men and the women, and the masculine and the feminine.”
Vien Truong, director of Green For All, has worked tirelessly to bring equity, social justice and climate justice to the frontlines of the environmental movement and public policy. She has been a central force in putting environmental justice at the center of California’s groundbreaking climate policy, legislation and cap-and-trade funding. Vien shares her wise perspectives on how to build a new clean-energy economy that brings prosperity and justice to low-income communities and communities of color.
This Climate Justice fight is not just a fight for a new energy system – it’s also a fight for a new economy, a new democracy, a new relationship with the planet and to each other.
Our species is finally turning toward other species for their embodied wisdom, borrowing these insights to solve challenges such as delivering nutrition in a way that nourishes both planet and people. Biomimicry author and visionary Janine Benyus shows how nature-inspired breakthroughs in agriculture are evolving from plant-focused “silver bullets” to system-savvy healing. Cooperation, naturally enough, is the best way to learn from life’s genius!
“Reclaiming Relationship & Tradition: Towards a Future that Works for All” – 2016 Bioneers Conference opening remarks by Bioneers co-founder and President Nina Simons.
Anyone who considers the practice of long-term relationship to be a soft-skill clearly has not tried it.
Extraordinary award-winning poets, performance activists and cultural architects Alixa Garcia and Naima Penniman of Climbing PoeTree explore the network of mutuality that binds our existence through the ricochet of oppression and the reciprocity of liberation. Their art is a tool for catalyzing action, cross-pollinating solutions, getting at the root of our most pressing social and ecological issues, and reminding us that we all belong to each other.
Creativity is the antidote to destruction. It’s the opposite of the violence that divides us, a force that builds empathy across difference and awakens us to new ways of participating in the creation of the world.
For those of you who are parents, I want you to pledge that you will teach your son about feminism – the all inclusive feminism. And I want you to pledge to me today that you will spend this year in particular doing everything you can to remove the barriers that face us. (“The Pledge”, Alicia Garza)
Globally renowned playwright and activist Eve Ensler performs one act from her new “Fruit Trilogy”. Coconut is mesmerizing and provocative edge-walking that explores a woman’s mystical journey into her body. Eve is the creator of “The Vagina Monologues”, perhaps the most performed play in history, as well as the founder of the immensely impactful V-Day movement, which seeks to end violence against women and girls globally. As an author-artist-activist, she has fearlessly explored women’s oppression, empowerment and emancipation with unparalleled intensity and influence.
I want the power of your watching, the force of your acknowledgment – not for praise or judgment, permission or acclaim. I want to know that I am safe in the open eyes of the world.
Need more? Check out our Women’s Leadership video playlist and Everywoman’s Leadership audio playlist, and our latest International Women’s Day-inspired newsletter!
Keep Your Finger on the Pulse
Our bi-weekly newsletter provides insights into the people, projects, and organizations creating lasting change in the world.