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		<title>Keynote Address Saturday &amp; Sunday</title>
		<link>http://bioneersinak.org/?p=122</link>
		<comments>http://bioneersinak.org/?p=122#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 10 Oct 2011 14:19:49 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>jennifer</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[October 15th Saturday Evening 7:30pm-9:30pm Keynote with Thomas J. Elpel The New Era of Self-Sufficiency It is easy to be overwhelmed at the magnitude of the challenges we face as a species, when the whole world seems to be careening &#8230; <a href="http://bioneersinak.org/?p=122">Continue reading <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>October 15th Saturday Evening 7:30pm-9:30pm</strong><br />
Keynote with Thomas J. Elpel  The New Era of Self-Sufficiency </p>
<p>It is easy to be overwhelmed at the magnitude of the challenges we face as a species, when the whole world seems to be careening towards economic and environmental collapse.  How can we adapt to a rapidly changing world, build a sustainable civilization, and put the brakes on climate change?  Thomas J. Elpel, author of Participating in Nature: Wilderness Survival and Primitive Living Skills, suggests that we can start by taking our shoes off and getting back in touch with the earth. We can rediscover our connection to nature through the traditional knowledge of our ancestors. By living close to the earth we can gain the physical grounding necessary to re-examine the challenges we face as a society and find answers to some of the most vexing problems that face our species.</p>
<p>Thomas Elpel is the director of Green University® LLC and Hollowtop Outdoor Primitive School LLC in Pony, Montana. (www.hollowtop.com).  He has authored six books and produced six videos on topics ranging from wilderness survival and botany to green building and consciousness. Elpel connects the dots from wilderness survival to sustainable<br />
living, showing how the quest for survival in nature functions as a metaphor for living that empowers us to see new solutions in the modern world.</p>
<p>Keynote with Tamarack Song  Remembering: a Key to Weathering the Changes </p>
<p>Coming from a technological culture, we are conditioned to look for technology-based solutions to our rapidly deteriorating global environment. However, some Native elders point out that when we try to fix something our way, we often wind up making more of a mess. &#8220;Maybe you don&#8217;t have the answers,&#8221; they say, &#8221; maybe you don&#8217;t NEED answers.&#8221; They tell us we are missing a fundamental component of survival: trust. So out of fear, we approach problems from our heads rather than our hearts. We hold on to what is familiar—to electricity, private vehicles, animal husbandry—and look for alternatives to them rather than asking the fundamental question, &#8220;Do I really need this?&#8221;<br />
The question for many is how we would accomplish the transition from technology to trust. The elders say we need to remember what it is to be human. As nomadic hunter-gatherers, our ancestors had to constantly adapt to a changing environment. Through stories from his experience guiding groups through an entire year of primitive wilderness living, Tamarack demonstrates a technology that is neither tool nor resource based, and it is perpetually sustainable. It comes from forgetting what we think we know and remembering what we&#8217;ve always known. </p>
<p>Tamarack Song is a seeker of truth who works to bridge ancestral ways with our modern times. Tamarak runs the Brother Wolf Foundation sanctuary, and Teaching Drum Outdoor School in Northern Wisconsin. He helps participants rediscover what it is to be human, to live both natural and modern worlds, and respect the Earth, themselves, and each other.</p>
<p><strong>October 16th 10:45am-12:15pm  Sunday Keynote Address</strong>                                                                                  </p>
<p>Keynote with Tim Meyers  Sustainable Agriculture in Rural Alaska  </p>
<p>Meyers was told years ago that gardening most likely wouldn’t be very successful in Bethel.  What he discovered was that the soil in Bethel is perfect for growing vegetables. While the temperatures in Bethel are less than ideal, Meyers has learned how to deal with that by using hoop houses, a root cellar, innovative warming methods and a focus on soil ecosystems. Meyers is known as an innovative farmer who figures out how to make things work.  Meyer’s will share his ideas on food security and sustainability in rural Alaska as well as his housing ideas which could make housing affordable in rural Alaska.</p>
<p>Tim Meyers, owner of Meyers Farm, grows local to provide the community of Bethel, AK, with affordable, fresh,  free of pesticides, herbicides and chemical fertilizers produce, all summer long.  Meyers Farm now exports to Anchorage, and intends to expand to become a year round source of Bethel produce.  Meyers Farm is committed to sustainable farming, providing high quality fresh local produce, and an affordable, healthier alternativeto keep consumers and the environment healthy. Meyers sustainable farming focuses on building soil fertility with natural material, resulting in rich, vital field ecosystems that produce fruits and vegetables as pure and healthy as they were intended to be!</p>
<p>Keynote with Karen Evanoff,  Dena’ina Elena: A Celebration –a Window into Dena’ina Culture </p>
<p>Karen shares her most recent experience gathering and editing oral histories into “a window into Dena’ina culture.” As a younger leader, Karen seeks to honor elders who generously shared their knowledge, values, and memories, describing Denaina traditions on place-naming, name meanings, and traditional ways of seeing and being of the Dena’ina (“the people”&#8211; one of 11 Alaskan Athabascan groups).  Culminating a 10 year effort by James Kari, National Park Service, and many others, Dena’ina Elena: A Celebration, was published in September, 2010. </p>
<p>Karen Evanoff is from the Dena&#8217;ina Athabascan Tribe and was born and raised in the Qizhjeh Vena &#8216;a place where people gather&#8217; known as Lake Clark region. Karen works as a Cultural Anthropologist for Lake Clark National Park, and is the Vice-Chair of the Native village corporation of Kijik. She has worked extenstively in cultural resouce preservation, working to incorporate Traditional Ecolgical Knowlege (TEK) and Native perspective into various programs. This work included incorporating TEK  into the Alaska state-approved Quality Assurance Project Plans (QAPP) template for Tribal water quality programs. With UAF Oral History Office, Karen assisted with the Lake Clark Project Jukebox, to collect oral histories on village life prior to contact: how children were instructed; traditional uses of land; transportation before planes, boats, and motors; and traditional resource values, which continue throughout Native life today. She also designed a Dena&#8217;ina tools slideshow, providing a view into Native education and craftsmanship.  Karen has presented on “Understanding Resource Impacts through Ethnographic Research”, and works on land use planning and protection in the Lake Clark region.</p>
<p>Karen Evanoff is from the Dena&#8217;ina Athabascan Tribe and was born and raised in the Qizhjeh Vena &#8216;a place where people gather&#8217; known as Lake Clark region. Karen works as a Cultural Anthropologist for Lake Clark National Park, and is the Vice-Chair of the Native village corporation of Kijik. She has worked extenstively in cultural resouce preservation, working to incorporate Traditional Ecolgical Knowlege (TEK) and Native perspective into various programs. </p>
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		<title>Workshops</title>
		<link>http://bioneersinak.org/?p=102</link>
		<comments>http://bioneersinak.org/?p=102#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 04 Oct 2011 02:49:35 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>jennifer</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Friday]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Saturday]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Workshops]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Click here to download the workshop time grid Session 1 9:00-10:30am 1) Technology-Free Orienteering and Weather Forecasting with Tamarack Song What would you do if you were lost in the wilderness without map and compass? Imagine you are out of &#8230; <a href="http://bioneersinak.org/?p=102">Continue reading <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://bioneersinak.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/Workshop-Grid-9.3011.pdf">Click here to download the workshop time grid</a></p>
<p><strong>Session 1 9:00-10:30am</strong><br />
1) Technology-Free Orienteering and Weather Forecasting with Tamarack Song<br />
What would you do if you were lost in the wilderness without map and compass? Imagine you are out of radio contact and needed to know if you can make it over a pass before the snowstorm hits. Our early ancestors faced challenges such as these all the time and had ready answers. In this workshop, you will learn the basics of lost-proofing: how to read the landscape and tap into your innate sense of knowing. At a glance, you will know what the clouds are telling you, or what that change in wind direction means. This workshop will be geared toward what you want to know, so bring a notebook, along with your orienteering and weather-related questions. Author, inspiring storyteller, and trekker, Tamarack Song is a seeker of truth who works to bridge ancestral ways with our modern times.  Tamarack runs the Brother Wolf Foundation sanctuary, and Teaching Drum Outdoor School in Northern Wisconsin. He helps participants rediscover what it is to be human, to live both natural and modern worlds, and respect the Earth, themselves, and each other. </p>
<p>2) Clean Energy Opportunities for Alaska with Chris Rose<br />
Alaska is at an energy crossroads.  Villagers in small, remote villages that rely almost exclusively on oil for heat and electricity are paying some of the highest energy prices in the country.  In the Upper Cook Inlet where more than half of the state’s population lives supplies of already discovered natural gas are diminishing quickly. In June 2011 the local Anchorage heating and electric utilities announced that they are preparing to import liquefied natural gas (LNG) from the world market, beginning in 2014.  But Alaska also has vast renewable energy and energy efficiency resources.  This presentation will discuss the challenges and opportunities associated with developing these clean energy resources, and what Alaskans can do to expedite a clean energy future. Chris Rose is the founder of REAP, and has served as its Executive Director since October 2004. He is an attorney, mediator, and activist. He graduated Phi Beta Kappa from the University of Iowa and received his J.D. from the University of Oregon, with a certificate in environmental and natural resource law</p>
<p>3) Alaska Food Challenge with Saskia Esslinger &#038; Matt Oster<br />
Matt and Saskia are four months into a challenge to eat all Alaskan for an entire year.  Come find out what they’ve learned about growing, foraging, and sourcing local food, as well as how this challenge has affected their finances, time, and health.  We will discuss the larger implications of this project and how all Alaskans might become more food secure. Saskia is a certified Permaculture designer and teacher, and has a master’s degree in Regenerative Entrepreneurship from Gaia University.  She co-owns Red Edge Design with her husband, Matt, and offers edible gardening workshops, consultations, and designs. Matt is a general contractor and certified home energy rater, and has helped over 1000 homeowners in Alaska save money and live more comfortably in their home.  He is certified in Permaculture design and utilizes systems thinking to analyze homes and their outside environment.</p>
<p>4) Transitioning your Neighborhood: Building Resilience into your Community with Cindee Karns.<br />
Have you heard of the Transition Town movement but never took the time to read Rob Hopkinsʼ book? Have you always felt like you should connect more with your neighbors? How DO we ride the slide with grace in a post peak world? This workshop will give you the basic ideas you need to start a transition neighborhood of your own. Be prepared to practice the tools/methods needed to be successful. Cindee Karns is owner and operator of the AlaskanEcoEscape Permaculture Center, Alaskaʼs only Bioshelter, and has been involved in Anchorageʼs Transition Movement for 2 years.</p>
<p>5) Tumbleweed-inspired houses: Building and Living in a Tiny House on a Trailer with Kevin Cassity &#038; Dave Mortensen<br />
In this workshop Kevin will share his experience designing and building a tiny house on a trailer, dealing with municipal requirements, and living in the house.   Kevin’s house is an  original design inspired by the well-known Tumbleweed Tiny houses and built with some extra attention to using non-toxic components and finishes and minimizing negative environmental impact.  This workshop will include slides of the house in progress and a house tour if this can be arranged. Kevin has been an itinerate river/wilderness guide and private music instructor. He lives in a 150 sq. ft. moveable cabin on a trailer on the Anchorage hillside, getting to know the area and preparing to build a more permanent dwelling.</p>
<p>6) What are On- Line Food Cooperatives?  with Andrew Crow.<br />
Many communities in the lower 48 have turned to on line cooperatives as a way to increase access to local food.  This workshop will describe how on line food cooperatives have been organized, how they function, and will give suggestions to anyone interested in setting up an on line food co-op  </p>
<p>7) Ancestral Celtic Knowledge for Today’s Sustainable Communities with Nancy Lee-Evans PhD<br />
Cheap oil has produced many layers of separation in our lives &#8211; from family, traditional knowledge, the land and our spiritual connection to all of life. Expensive oil will of necessity force us back together into more locally close, interdependent systems. While we mayhave the technical means for sustainability, how we negotiate the social aspects of that reconnection will have a great deal to do with  the level of ease with which we live with our sustainable solutions.Nancy Lee-Evans PhD, author, Celtic scholar, permaculturist, holistic healer and director of The Anam Cara Program teaches classes  on wild plant lore, the sacred relationship with all life, ancestral knowledge and lifeways that are central to indigenous traditions and which support the social fabric of sustainable communities and lifestyle.</p>
<p><strong>Session 2 Saturday 10:45-12:15</strong></p>
<p>1) Farming on the Tundra; Specifics of Cold Climate Agriculture with Tim Meyers<br />
Tim and Lisa Meyers own a 17 acre farm in Bethel and successfully grow thousands of pounds of crops every summer, in spite of the in hospitable climate. This workshop will detail the experience and details of cold climate agriculture. They built a 40 X 40 ft. building with 11 ft high ceiling in the ground root cellar to store their crops in. The root cellar can store up to 250 thousand pounds of vegetables at no cost through the winter.  Tim Meyers, owner of Meyers Farm, grows local to provide the community of Bethel, AK, with affordable, fresh,  free of pesticides, herbicides and chemical fertilizers produce, all summer long.  Meyers Farm now exports to Anchorage, and intends to expand to become a year round source of Bethel produce.  Meyers Farm is committed to sustainable farming, providing high quality fresh local produce, and an affordable, healthier alternative to keep consumers and the environment healthy. Meyers sustainable farming focuses on building soil fertility with natural material, resulting in rich, vital field ecosystems that produce fruits and vegetables as pure and healthy as they were intended to be! </p>
<p>2) Solar Design and Net Zero Energy Buildings with Richard Seifert<br />
This course will use the “Solar Design Manual for Alaska” , 4th Edition which is available for $15 hard copy ( I will have copies with me)  or on the web at www.alaskasun.org . The Introductory material will be used, and focus will go to the final Passive Solar Design chapter where we shall look at three of the most recent houses in Fairbanks which are pushing the limits of net zero energy design at our high latitudes. These are featured in the summer 2011 Alaska Building Science News  ( volume 16, issue 4. which I’ll attach to this application  and which is located at: http://www.uaf.edu/ces/housing_energy/absntoc/  .   Professor of Energy and Housing  for 28 years, author of the manual to be discussed, Now Professor emeritus UAF40 year Alaska resident, solar hot water heater owner and optimizer, Seeker of truth, advocate for sustainable infrastructure and food security for Alaska’s communities. </p>
<p>3) Play with Permaculture  with Leslie Patrick &#038; Leslie Tose<br />
Have you ever wondered what “Permaculture” might be, or perhaps what “Care of the Earth, Fair Share, and Care of the People” might mean? In this introductory workshop you can discover how Permaculture ethics and principles could already be part of your life. Come and explore how these design principles and thinking systems easily apply to everyday situations. Leslie Tose took her first Permaculture class in ’93 and hasn&#8217;t looked back. Leslie Patrick discovered permaculture when a friend told her she was already doing it.  They met in a yurt at the first Alaskan Permaculture Design Course held in Homer last year.  Curiously, they found they lived a few blocks from each other in Anchorage.  They look forward to bringing Permaculture Power to the People!</p>
<p>4) Wellness Through The Arts: Shifting Perspective, Creativity and Finding Oneʼs Niche in Nature with Carol Loftfield<br />
A multimedia workshop that includes music, art, poetry, story telling, video and hands-on activities to explore shifting perspective, multiple perspectives, creativity, finding one&#8217;s niche in nature, and connecting to the larger design. I offer a Wellness Through The Arts teacher-training, graduate-level class through U of A, and the hands-on activities offered in my workshop are used extensively in this class, encouraging the development of creative cooperation, creative expression and story-telling. One of the highlights of the workshop is a hands-on, cooperative art/story-telling activity. Carol is an Alaskan artist, educator and pilot living in Nondalton, an Athabascan village situated on Six Mile Lake between Lake Clark and Lake Iliamna. I have a unique perspective and an extraordinary program for healthy living. My art and my wellness programs are meant to both instruct and inspire.</p>
<p>5) Natural Building in Alaska with Lasse Holmes<br />
This workshop aims to cover and perhaps uncover various methods of natural building in Alaska. By getting to know the abundance of natural materials around us, studying traditional native culture construction methods for our climate and integrating more appropriate modern and experimental approaches we can build affordable, healthy, breathable natural structures that shelter ourselves and resonate with our souls. Experiences will be shared and sample materials available for hands on sensory analysis to help anyone begin to connect with the possibilities of constructing anything from a garden wall, sauna, cabin, home or even a village out of what can be found in the region. Come learn, share or both! Lasse Holmes has two decades of experience in residential and commercial construction in Alaska but began to “break out of the box” and experiment with alternative construction about a decade ago. He continues to learn and teach workshops, sharing his passion for creating spaces from the abundance of local natural materials which surround us.</p>
<p>6) Way Beyond  Reduce, Recycle, and Reuse with Katie Conway, David Johnson, &#038; Elaine Albertson. Learn easy &#038; fun ways to save money, inspire others, and make a difference.  Join Alaska Energy Efficiency, the Valley Community for Recycling Solutions, and the Mat-Su Carbon Crew in a workshop to take you beyond the mundane and reenergize you to the benefits of reducing, reusing, and recycling. Former aide to Anchorage House Representative Les Gara, Katie Conway now works at AEA. She is a dynamic speaker for the public-private sector working group that is leading Alaska to reduce energy usage, and energy costs. A business student at UAA, David is the founder of Mat-Su Carbon Crew; an environmental sustainability club on the campus of Matanuska-Susitna College. An avid community volunteer and Education Specialist at VCRS, Elaine teaches student groups on field trips, helps train staff, and provides accurate information to guests. RH316</p>
<p>7)Sustainable Home Heating – Best Practices for Residential Wood Heat with Valerie Barber &#038;Meg Burgett<br />
As the costs and impacts of fossil fuels increase, more individuals are looking for ways to lower heating costs and potential impacts to the environment. Wood energy is a viable and affordable alternative for many Alaskans. However, today’s wood-burning appliances are not your grandfather’s woodstove. Modern technology has decrease emissions and increased efficiency significantly. Selecting the right wood stove, utilizing properly seasoned wood fuel and safely storing those fuels around your home are critical to maximizing the benefits associated with burning locally harvested and processed wood. Whether you currently burn wood in your home, or are interested in learning more, this workshop is for you. Workshop topics include selecting the right wood burning appliance and best practices for heating your home with wood.Val Barber is a Forestry Specialist with UAF-Cooperative Extension and a Research Professor with the UAF-School of Natural Resources and Agriculture. She runs the UAF-Forest Products Program and does applied research, outreach and education with forest products and biomass.  She also studies climate change and effects on the boreal forest. Meg Burgett is a natural resource educator with the UAF-Cooperative Extension Service. For the past 18 years, she has worked with communities, formal and non-formal educators and students from pre-K through college level increasing awareness and knowledge of all aspects of the natural world and our place within it. </p>
<p><strong>Session 3 Sunday 9:00-10:30am</strong><br />
1)The Patterns Method of Plant Identification with Thomas J. Elpel<br />
Join Thomas J. Elpel, author of Botany in a Day, for an introduction to the patterns method of plant identification.  Instead of approaching plants one-at-a-time, discover how related plants often have similar characteristics and similar uses.  Learn to recognize these patterns to facilitate identification of new plants and their likely properties. We’ll play some fun games and practice plant identification skills. You will never look at plants the same way again  Thomas J. Elpel had the rare opportunity as a child to spend hundreds of hours with his grandmother, Josie Jewett. Together they explored the hills and meadows near Virginia City, Montana, collecting herbs, looking for arrowheads, and watching wildlife. Grandma Josie mentored Tom in edible and medicinal plants and wilderness survival skills, igniting a passion for nature that has inspired Tom ever since. </p>
<p>2)Rocket Mass Heaters – Affordable Organic Masonry Stoves with Lasse Holmes<br />
This workshop will introduce participants to an efficient, low cost wood burning system that can dramatically lower the amount of fuel used while increasing the comfort level of the occupants. By working with mostly cheap and salvaged local materials, do it yourselfers can build their own heated mass bench that is shaped organically according to the particular space and inspiration of the builder. Discussion will cover the theory, design considerations, ingredients, construction steps and use of rocket mass heaters. Examples of the ingredients will be available to touch and feel in order to set people on a trajectory to find, evaluate and obtain the necessary materials to build comfortable freedom from fossil fuel heating. Lasse Holmes has two decades of experience in residential and commercial construction in Alaska but began to “break out of the box” and experiment with alternative construction about a decade ago. He continues to learn and teach workshops, sharing his passion for creating spaces from the abundance of local natural materials which surround us.</p>
<p>3) Local Food Procurement and the Development of Experiential Ecological Knowledge with James Van Lanen<br />
 Local foods are essential to an ecologically resilient future.  Meeting food needs from local sources in a post-peak-energy future will likely require both the production of domesticated foods and the procurement of wild foods.. Currently wild food harvests in Alaska are almost entirely dependent upon fossil energy use. The importance of practical subsistence activities in wild nature as it relates to the development of local ecological knowledge will be highlighted.  Participants will be asked to share their own experiences and develop a plan of action for a more sustainable wild food procurement scenario than currently is practiced by the majority of Alaskans. James Van Lanen is a human ecologist and avid subsistence fisher, hunter, and gatherer. His interests include the study of resilient socio-ecological systems, wild foods, permaculture design, primitive skills, paleolithic nutrition, evolutionary psychology, and rewilding. James works as an anthropologist studying subsistence issues across contemporary Alaska and holds an MA in anthropology from Colorado State University. </p>
<p>4) Adapting Descent Principles to Alaska with Mary Logan PhD, RN<br />
This advanced seminar is geared towards prioritizing both Alaskan and individual needs for a prosperous descent. For the first 30 minutes we will outline fundamental relationships between the environment, the economy, complexity, energy, and limits as they relate to Alaska, and address key Alaskan descent issues if we are to localize successfully. Following the brief lecture, we will spend an hour comparing Alaska As It Is with Alaska As It Could or Should Be. Following the brainstorming, we will do a gap analysis and prioritize the results, with an emphasis on personal and group actionables.  Mary Logan received her PhD in Nursing, and has taught at UAA in Nursing and Honors. She teaches a sustainability course called “Limits to Growth Revisited.” She learned most of what she knows about ecological principles and descent over 40 years, from her father and uncle, the Odum brothers.</p>
<p>5) Living Buildings of the North; Rising to the Challenge in Alaska with Mark Masteller<br />
Imagine a building designed and constructed to function as efficiently as a flower: a building informed by its bioregion&#8217;s characteristics, that generates all of its own energy with renewable resources, captures and treats all of its water, and operates efficiently and for maximum beauty.  Now imagine this &#8220;Living Building&#8221; in a remote Aleutian village.  This was the genesis of the &#8220;Living Aleutian Home Design Competition.&#8221;  The Aleutian Housing Authority and Cascadia Green Building Council are challenging design teams around the world to create a home that is both affordable and meets the imperatives of the Living Building Challenge.  This presentation will cover the basics of the Living Building Challenge, as well as the Aleutian Design Competition and other efforts to promote high-performance buildings in Alaska.  Alaska Director for Cascadia Green Building Council, Mark is one of five original co-founders of Bioneers in Alaska.  He also worked for 28 years in Alaska as a wildlife biologist and director of the Alaska Center for Appropriate Technology. Mark is dedicated to promoting sustainable community development across this diverse and beautiful state.  </p>
<p>6) Creating CoHousing in Anchorage: Putting the &#8220;Neighbor&#8221; back in hood with Mary Miner M.P.H., P.E. &#038; Leslie Kleinfeld, M.P.H., MEd., C.P.F.T.<br />
This presentation will introduce the concept of cohousing, discuss the pro&#8217;s &#038; cons of cohousing in general and in Anchorage in particular. We will present information on the development phase of the project underway now and open the discussion for questions and comments from the audience.   The target audience will be people in Anchorage who are interested in living in cohousing. Mary&#8217;s been interested in cohousing since the 1980&#8242;s when she lived in Fort Defiance, AZ a community of neighbors who regularly shared meals, movie nights, the food co-op and childcare.  She is a wife, mother of 3 and a civil engineer who views cohousing as a fun, affordable, sustainable alternative for Alaskans of all generations. Leslie was raised by a community of caring adults who never locked their door.  As the owner of Fit for Health, Leslie has spent 15 years providing personal fitness, lifestyle and yoga coaching for teens to seniors.  She believes that cohousing can be a holistic support system for being fit for health.</p>
<p>7) Don’t Flush it; Compost it  with Charlie &#038; Delisa Renideo</p>
<p>What is the difference between “humanure” and “human waste?” How can we begin to perceive and use our humanure as the resource it is to keep the nutrient cycle intact rather than as a source of pollution and waste? How can we stop dumping excrement into pure water, thus contaminating it? This workshop will deal with all these questions and then present a readily available solution for the average homeowner: composting your humanure in a safe manner which destroys all pathogens and results in a rich source of nutrients to return to the soil.  Charlie and Delisa Renideo have taken this step and will share their experiences, with pictures and videos of their system. Delisa and Charlie Renideo love living on a small lake surrounded by the natural beauty of Alaska.  They are both committed to living consciously and learning ways to live more responsibly and respectfully on the earth.  They grow a large organic vegetable garden, compost all their kitchen scraps and garden materials, and began taking responsibility for their lives in a new way by composting their own humanure a year ago.  </p>
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		<title>Bioneers on YouTube</title>
		<link>http://bioneersinak.org/?p=75</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 06 Sep 2011 20:57:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>jennifer</dc:creator>
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		<title>Donate</title>
		<link>http://bioneersinak.org/?p=71</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 06 Sep 2011 20:53:43 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>jennifer</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[Bioneers in Alaska is self-sustaining. Any donations help us bring the conference to you, and are deductible to the extent allowed by law. Tax ID # 92-0159506 Checks can be made to &#8220;Green Star&#8221;. Please write &#8220;Bioneers in Alaska&#8221; on &#8230; <a href="http://bioneersinak.org/?p=71">Continue reading <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Bioneers in Alaska is self-sustaining.  Any donations help us bring the conference to you, and are deductible to the extent allowed by law.<br />
Tax ID # 92-0159506 </p>
<p>Checks can be made to &#8220;Green Star&#8221;. Please write &#8220;Bioneers in Alaska&#8221; on the notation line<br />
Checks can be mailed to:</p>
<p>Bioneers in Alaska c/o Green Star<br />
333 West 4th Avenue, Suite 310<br />
Anchorage, AK 99501</p>
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		<title>Conference-At-A-Glance</title>
		<link>http://bioneersinak.org/?p=62</link>
		<comments>http://bioneersinak.org/?p=62#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 06 Sep 2011 02:27:28 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>jennifer</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://bioneersinak.org/?p=62</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Conference-At-A-Glance (subject to change) Friday October 14th 4:00pm Registration opens in Wendy Williamson Lobby 5:00 Opening Ceremonies 5:45 Plenary Session 1 8:15 Plenary Session 2 Saturday October 15th 8:00am registration opens in Wendy Williamson Lobby 9:00 Workshop Session A 10:45 &#8230; <a href="http://bioneersinak.org/?p=62">Continue reading <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Conference-At-A-Glance<br />
(subject to change)</p>
<p>Friday October 14th<br />
4:00pm Registration opens in Wendy Williamson Lobby<br />
5:00 Opening Ceremonies<br />
5:45 Plenary Session 1<br />
8:15 Plenary Session 2</p>
<p>Saturday October 15th<br />
8:00am registration opens in Wendy Williamson Lobby<br />
9:00  Workshop Session A<br />
10:45 Workshop Session B<br />
12:30 Lunch &#038; Interest Circles<br />
2:15 Plenary Session 3<br />
4:30 Plenary Session 4<br />
6:00 Dinner &#038; Interest Circles<br />
7:30 Keynote speakers Tamarack Song and Tom Elpel</p>
<p>Sunday October 16th<br />
8:00am registration opens in Wendy Williamson Lobby<br />
9:00 Workshops Session C<br />
10:45 Special guest speakers  TBA<br />
12:30 Lunch &#038; Interest Circles<br />
2:15 Plenary Session 5<br />
4:30 Plenary Session 6<br />
6:00 Closing Ceremonies</p>
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		<title>Vendor</title>
		<link>http://bioneersinak.org/?p=59</link>
		<comments>http://bioneersinak.org/?p=59#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 06 Sep 2011 02:24:18 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>jennifer</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://bioneersinak.org/?p=59</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Bioneers is hosting a limited number of vendor spaces this year. Bioneers reserves the right to decide which vendors will have displays. Booths will be set up in the Wendy Williamson lobby, where registration and tea/coffee are located, as well &#8230; <a href="http://bioneersinak.org/?p=59">Continue reading <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Bioneers is hosting a limited number of vendor spaces this year.  Bioneers reserves the right to decide which vendors will have displays.</p>
<p>Booths will be set up in the Wendy Williamson lobby, where registration and tea/coffee are located, as well as keynote and plenary speakers. Cost for a commercial booth is $50. You are expected to provide your own table. </p>
<p>Once finalized, vendors will receive a schedule so they know when they might like to &#8220;man&#8221; the display. It will also contain set up and tear down instructions.</p>
<p>For vendors who want to attend the conference, there is an additional cost to register, since vendor fees are so small.  Please indicate whether you would like vendor conference registration information, and how many would be attending. </p>
<p>A third option would be if a vendor wanted to become a conference sponsor.  At $250, you recieve your name in print in the program, and on the web, plus 1 free conference admission.  At $5,000, you receive 8 conference admissions, a full page display ad in the program, logo on print marketing materials (must be received by September 30, 2011), and being thanked during the conference.  Sponsor names are posted on the powerpoint screen and shown between plenaries.</p>
<p>Please send us an email indicating which option you&#8217;re interested in (vendor? vendor plus conference registration?  sponsor?), and we will send you further details.<br />
Or you can call Colleen at 907-242-0730.</p>
<p>Thanks again for your interest.  We look forward to seeing you at Bioneers!</p>
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		<title>Sponsor</title>
		<link>http://bioneersinak.org/?p=56</link>
		<comments>http://bioneersinak.org/?p=56#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 04 Sep 2011 02:22:35 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>jennifer</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://bioneersinak.org/?p=56</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Bioneers offers the opportunity for you to become a sponsor of the conference, and help us host this worthy endeavor in 2011. Sponsorship levels range from $250 to $5,000 or more. At $250, you recieve your name in print in &#8230; <a href="http://bioneersinak.org/?p=56">Continue reading <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Bioneers offers the opportunity for you to become a sponsor of the conference, and help us host this worthy endeavor in 2011.</p>
<p>Sponsorship levels range from $250 to $5,000 or more.</p>
<p>At $250, you recieve your name in print in the program, and on the web, plus 1 free conference admission.</p>
<p>At $5,000 and above, you receive 8 conference admissions, a full page display ad in the program, logo on print marketing materials (must be received by September 30, 2011), and being thanked during the conference. Sponsor names are posted on the powerpoint screen and shown between plenaries.  There are also several levels in between.</p>
<div>
<p>Please indicate which option you&#8217;re interested in, and we&#8217;ll send further details.  You can reach Colleen Leibert at 907-242-0730</p>
<p>Thank you again for your support. We could not do this without you.<br />
We look forward to seeing you at Bioneers!</p>
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		<title>Alaska Workshop Presenter</title>
		<link>http://bioneersinak.org/?p=42</link>
		<comments>http://bioneersinak.org/?p=42#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 01 Sep 2011 01:17:24 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>jennifer</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://bioneersinak.org/?p=42</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[We invite you to share your skills, insight and expertise at the 8th Annual Bioneers in Alaska Conference, to be held October 14-16 2011 at U.A.A..  Our mission is to create a movement to educate, connect and inspire people to &#8230; <a href="http://bioneersinak.org/?p=42">Continue reading <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>We invite you to share your skills, insight and expertise at the 8th Annual Bioneers in Alaska Conference, to be held <strong>October 14-16 2011 at U.A.A.</strong>.  Our mission is to create a movement to educate, connect and inspire people to act effectively with practical solutions and innovative social strategies for restoring the Earth&#8217;s imperiled ecosystems &amp; healing human communities.  Our vision is to be a leading catalyst for reinventing the human relationship with each other and the Earth.</p>
<p>Bioneers in Alaska is part of a larger movement.  Kenny Ausubel founded our parent organization, Bioneers, in 1990 because he realized that people working to restore health and justice in the interdependent arenas of economics, jobs, ecology, cultures, and communities didn’t know about each other’s work.  The annual Bioneers Conference brings together these “biological pioneers” to cross-pollinate ideas, strategies, and plans for action.  The conference expanded in 2002 to include communities across North America who recieve the plenary speakers via satellite.  Anchorage became one of these satellite sites in 2004.</p>
<p><strong>*** In keeping with the spirit of Bioneers, we are looking for workshops that emphasize practical solutions, instead of staying stuck in the problem or factors creating the problem. ***</strong> Conference participants are generally more aware of problems – and even many solutions – than many past presenters seemed to realize.  Bioneers attendees want to know what they can <em>do</em>, both individually and collectively, to make a difference <em>here and</em> <em>now.</em> We are looking for workshops that reflect Bioneers’ 13 areas of interest:  ecological medicine, social and environmental activism, ecological food and farming, environmental education, women’s leadership, ecological design, independent and alternative media, indigenous knowledge, youth leadership, restoring our ecosystems, eco-nomics, the arts, and nature, culture, and spirit.</p>
<p>Our workshops are generally 90 minutes in length and we encourage dedicating 45 minutes to participant interaction.  We will also consider workshops for longer durations (up to 3 hrs total). <strong>We urge you to stretch your thinking about how you can make your workshop more experiential for participants</strong> – is there a key question that they can discuss in small groups?  Is there any activity they can do?  Can they brainstorm ideas for action, or even create an action plan?  Or maybe they have experiences or suggestions to offer<strong>.  In our conference evaluation forms, participants repeatedly ask for more experiential workshops.</strong></p>
<p><strong> </strong>We invite all Bioneers participants – presenters and attendees alike – to consider themselves simultaneously “teacher” and “learner,” as we all have both ideas to offer and ideas to absorb.  Presenters are given free admission to the entire multi-day Bioneers in Alaska event.  We urge presenters to take advantage of this opportunity to connect and collaborate with fellow Alaskans – that’s what Bioneers is all about.</p>
<p>We look forward to reviewing your workshop proposal.  We prefer that you fill out the proposal and submit it electronically.  <strong>Please submit by August 31st to </strong><a href="mailto:bioneersinak@gmail.com">bioneersinak@gmail.com</a><strong>  and we will let you know by Sept. 8th whether or not your workshop has been accepted.</strong>  If there is not space for your workshop this year, please let us know if you would be interested in presenting another time outside of the conference.   Thank you again for your time, and for your important work in healing our world.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
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		<title>8th Annual Conference</title>
		<link>http://bioneersinak.org/?p=1</link>
		<comments>http://bioneersinak.org/?p=1#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 12 Aug 2011 03:38:16 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>jennifer</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://bioneersinak.org/?p=1</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Attend the 8th annual conference Fri – Sun., Oct. 14-16 at University of Alaska Anchorage for plenary speakers from the Bioneers national conference main stage in San Rafael, CA, featured local keynote speakers, and more than 20 workshops sharing innovative &#8230; <a href="http://bioneersinak.org/?p=1">Continue reading <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Attend the 8th annual conference Fri – Sun., Oct. 14-16 at University of Alaska Anchorage for plenary speakers from the Bioneers national conference main stage in San Rafael, CA, featured local keynote speakers, and more than 20 workshops sharing innovative sustainable living practices.</p>
<p><a href="http://bioneersinak.org/?page_id=14" target="_blank">Registration </a>is still open now, for the regular rate.   </p>
<p>Local keynote speakers:<br />
<a href="http://www.meyersfarm.net/" target="_blank">Tim Meyers</a><br />
Sustainable Agriculture in Rural Alaska – an organic farmer in Bethel, Tim now exports to Anchorage! Focus is on using natural material to build soil fertility into rich, vital ecoysytems to produce healthy fruits and vegetables.</p>
<p><a href="http://hollowtop.com/" target="_blank">Thomas Elpel</a>:<br />
The New Era of Self-Sufficiency – a Montana-based author and botanist, Elpel connects the dots from wilderness survival to sustainable living, showing how the quest for survival in nature functions as a metaphor for living that empowers us to see new solutions in the modern world.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.tamaracksong.org/" target="_blank">Tamarack Song:</a><br />
Remembering: a Key to Weathering the Changes &#8212; an inspiring  storyteller, wilderness guide and naturalist from Wisconsin, Tamarack works to bridge the ancestral ways to live in both natural and modern worlds. </p>
<p><a href="http://bioneersinak.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/9-30-11-Description-Bios-1.pdf" target="_blank">Local Workshops</a> ~ Choose from 20+ local workshops on ways to practice sustainability in daily Alaskan life – from home-building and urban farming, to sustainable heating or living off the grid!</p>
<p><a href="http://bioneersinak.org/?p=102" target="_blank">Live Plenary Speakers Telecast from Mainstage</a> : ifteen inspiring speakers, telecast from national Bioneers stage, including:</p>
<p><a href="http://www.bioneers.org/presenters/gloria-steinem/?searchterm=Gloria%20Steinem " target="_blank">Gloria Steinem</a>:<br />
When Women Are People…&#038;Corporations Are Not: Why the First Inequality Will Also Be The Last  (feminist, social ,environmental justice activist)</p>
<p><a href="http://www.bioneers.org/presenters/philippe-cousteau" target="_blank">Philippe Cousteau: </a><br />
Continuing Legacy: Building a Sustainable World in the 21st Century, (environmental advocate, explorer, conservationist, grandson of French explorer, Jacques Cousteau.)</p>
<p><a href="http://www.bioneers.org/presenters/paulstamets/?searchterm=Paul%20Stamets" target="_blank">Paul Stamets </a><br />
Solutions from the Underground: How Mushrooms Can Help Save the World (nationally acclaimed inspiring fungus expert)</p>
<p><a href="http://bioneersinak.org/?page_id=14" target="_blank">Register NOW!</a> (Regular rates end soon):<br />
A variety of registration options accommodate various levels of participation. Your registration helps cover speaker costs, live satellite telecasts, and helps ensure sustainability for Bioneers in Alaska into the future:</p>
<p>•	Attend a keynote event for only        $ 10<br />
•	Register for the full conference       $180<br />
•	Daily walk-in rates                    range from $20 to $120 </p>
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