Por Penny Livingston y James Stark (Español)

Gaia University Associates Penny Livingston and James Stark are the founders of the
Regenerative Design Institute
(RDI) in Bolinas, California. RDI has hosted a Gaia U orientation for
the last two years and is currently in development to become an
autonomous Regional Center in October of 2010.
In the mere five years that it’s been running, RDI is has become a
powerful hub of advanced Permaculture and leadership training. RDI
offers hands-on experience with permaculture design, food production,
animal husbandry, beekeeping, and wildcrafting, and much more. One of
their main focuses is the Regenerative Design and Nature Awareness
(RDNA) program led by James Stark and Jon Young, which places a strong
emphasis on regenerative design, cultural mentoring, community building
and nature connection. RDNA will soon become a degree pathway for Gaia
U Associates interested in focusing their work in these areas. Stay
tuned for more information on this in the coming months.
James is also co-creator and teacher, along with Christopher Kuntzsch, of the Ecology of Leadership (EOL) training program.
“EOL is a leadership training model that looks at how people can lead
from the inside out,” says James. “It involves identifying patterns
that no longer serve us and doing ‘inner tracking’ work on what’s at
the root of these patterns. It’s about creating an intentional design
process for every aspect of our lives – our relationship to our bodies,
the land, family, health, spiritual practices, etc.”
The RDI team recently received a grant from the Kalliopeia Foundation
to use EOL as the basis of a nature-based peacemaking council for Bay
Area urban youth. It has long been Penny’s vision to help create
opportunities for urban youth to connect with the natural world as an
experiential platform from which they can foster peace within their own
communities. Participants will spend three days in retreat at RDI
followed by five months of Ecology of Leadership training. Over fifteen
organizations will be working with RDI to create this Peacemakers
Council.
This past year RDI has also begun expanding its vision for
sustainability and regeneration across the globe. Penny traveled to
Turkey and offered a series of Permaculture workshops that were met
with great enthusiasm. “People were so excited about the simple things
they can do in their daily lives to soften their ecological footprint,
like installing grey-water systems and bucket gardening…And what was
really exciting for us was that the people who came to the trainings
weren’t all from alternative communities, the way it usually is at
Permaculture courses in the U.S. It was mostly people from professional
backgrounds, including 6 engineers and 2 university professors.”
Several local sustainability projects have formed as a result of
Penny’s work and she will be returning to Turkey next year to follow up
with the various communities involved.
Penny has also been collaborating in the development of Permaculture
trainings in Hawaii with the Sunrise Center and the community at
Hale Akua Garden Farm
in Haiku, Hawai’i. Currently 95% of Hawaii’s food and energy are
imported from California, despite the natural abundance of both of
these resources. The RDI team hopes to work with the local Hawaiian
Permaculture movement to create local food sovereignty in the coming
years. They will be running a 2-week
Permaculture Certification Course on the island of Maui in January that includes a special component on Hawaiian culture and agriculture.
Closer to home, RDI has been heading up an initiative for better land
management and broad-acre farming methods for agricultural producers in
the Salinas Valley in California. This project began after an RDI
workshop on keyline design for ranchers, which drew over ninety
participants from the local farming community. “A 1.6% buildup in
hummus (topsoil) could bring the earths CO2 levels back down to
pre-industrial levels…It’s essential that we get large-scale producers
on board with practicing regenerative earth-care techniques,” says
Penny.
For more information on upcoming events and trainings at RDI, visit
regenerativedesign.org