NatureWorkshop

NatureWorkshop Promoting the economic, physical, psychological, and spiritual benefits of nature and sustainable pr

06/02/2026

An exploration of how biological cooperation underpins all life - and why we’ve overlooked its power until now - makes thrilling reading. Penny Sarchet reviews Rowan Hooper's radical new view of life, Togetherness.

05/31/2026

Healing does not always come from a bottle or a prescription. Sometimes, it comes from the quiet things we forget to value — a walk beneath the open sky, the warmth of sunlight on your skin, a deep breath after a long day, or the comfort of being surrounded by people who care. Many of the simplest moments carry a kind of medicine the spirit understands.

For generations, Indigenous teachings have reminded us that balance matters. Time in nature, gratitude, kindness, stillness, and connection are not small things. They are part of living well. In a world that moves too fast, slowing down can be an act of healing in itself.

Maybe the medicine you need today is already around you. A sunset. A moment of peace. A kind word. A reminder to pause and simply be present. Sometimes, the strongest healing begins with the simplest things.

05/31/2026

In a historic first for the UK, the River Wye has been formally recognised as a living ecosystem with its own rights, including the right to flow naturally, thrive, and remain free from pollution!

The new charter is the result of years of campaigning to protect the river, which has suffered from severe pollution linked to sewage discharges and agricultural runoff.

Supporters hope the recognition will help strengthen conservation efforts and encourage greater accountability for those harming the river's health.

05/30/2026

Starting Aug. 1, a new law will go into effect in Louisiana. It prohibits the intentional outdoor release of Mylar and latex helium balloons.

These balloons come down – polluting waterways, harming animals, and getting caught in powerlines.

So, bravo to Louisiana on this. Every state should follow.

05/27/2026

My ecological journey started in the forests of the Himalaya. My father was a forest conservator, and my mother became a farmer after fleeing the tragic partition of India and Pakistan. It is from the Himalayan forests and ecosystems that I learned most of what I know about ecology. The songs and poems our mother composed for us were about trees, forests, and India’s forest civilizations.

My involvement in the contemporary ecology movement began with “Chipko,” a nonviolent response to the large-scale deforestation that was taking place in the Himalayan region.

In the 1970s, peasant women from my region in the Garhwal Himalaya had come out in defense of the forests.

Logging had led to landslides and floods, and scarcity of water, fodder, and fuel. Since women provide these basic needs, the scarcity meant longer walks for collecting water and firewood, and a heavier burden.

Women knew that the real value of forests was not the timber from a dead tree, but the springs and streams, food for their cattle, and fuel for their hearths. The women declared that they would hug the trees, and the loggers would have to kill them before killing the trees.

A folk song of that period said:

"These beautiful oaks and rhododendrons,
They give us cool water
Don’t cut these trees
We have to keep them alive."

In 1973, I had gone to visit my favorite forests and swim in my favorite stream before leaving for Canada to do my Ph.D. But the forests were gone, and the stream was reduced to a trickle.

When officials arrived at the forest, the women held up lighted lanterns although it was broad daylight: “We have come to teach you forestry.”

I decided to become a volunteer for the Chipko movement, and I spent every vacation doing pad yatras (walking pilgrimages), documenting the deforestation and the work of the forest activists, and spreading the message of Chipko.

One of the dramatic Chipko actions took place in the Himalayan village of Adwani in 1977, when a village woman named Bachni Devi led resistance against her own husband, who had obtained a contract to cut trees. When officials arrived at the forest, the women held up lighted lanterns although it was broad daylight. The forester asked them to explain. The women replied, “We have come to teach you forestry.” He retorted, “You foolish women, how can you prevent tree felling by those who know the value of the forest? Do you know what forests bear? They produce profit and resin and timber.”

The women sang back in chorus:

"What do the forests bear?
Soil, water, and pure air.
Soil, water, and pure air
Sustain the Earth and all she bears."

From Chipko, I learned about biodiversity and biodiversity-based living economies; the protection of both has become my life’s mission. As I described in my book Monocultures of the Mind, the failure to understand biodiversity and its many functions is at the root of the impoverishment of nature and culture.

When nature is a teacher, we ­co-create with her—we recognize her agency and her rights.

The lessons I learned about diversity in the Himalayan forests I transferred to the protection of biodiversity on our farms. I started saving seeds from farmers’ fields and then realized we needed a farm for demonstration and training. Thus Navdanya Farm was started in 1994 in the Doon Valley, located in the lower elevation Himalayan region of Uttarakhand Province. Today we conserve and grow 630 varieties of rice, 150 varieties of wheat, and hundreds of other species. We practice and promote a biodiversity-intensive form of farming that produces more food and nutrition per acre. The conservation of biodiversity is therefore also the answer to the food and nutrition crisis.

Navdanya, the movement for biodiversity conservation and organic farming that I started in 1987, is spreading. So far, we’ve worked with farmers to set up more than 100 community seed banks across India. We have saved more than 3,000 rice varieties. We also help farmers make a transition from fossil-fuel and chemical-based monocultures to biodiverse ecological systems nourished by the sun and the soil.

Biodiversity has been my teacher of abundance and freedom, of cooperation and mutual giving.

Rights of Nature On the Global Stage
---------------------------------------
When nature is a teacher, we ­co-create with her—we recognize her agency and her rights. That is why it is significant that Ecuador has recognized the “rights of nature” in its constitution. In April 2011, the United Nations General Assembly­—inspired by the constitution of Ecuador and the Universal Declaration of the Rights of Mother Earth initiated by Bolivia—organized a conference on harmony with nature as part of Earth Day celebrations. Much of the discussion centered on ways to transform systems based on domination of people over nature, men over women, and rich over poor into new systems based on partnership.

We need to overcome the wider and deeper apartheid—an eco-apartheid based on the illusion of separateness of humans from nature in our minds and lives.

The U.N. secretary general’s report, “Harmony with Nature,” issued in conjunction with the conference, elaborates on the importance of reconnecting with nature: “Ultimately, environmentally destructive behavior is the result of a failure to recognize that human beings are an inseparable part of nature and that we cannot damage it without severely damaging ourselves.”

Separatism is indeed at the root of disharmony with nature and violence against nature and people. As the prominent South African environmentalist Cormac Cullinan points out, apartheid means separateness. The world joined the anti-apartheid movement to end the violent separation of people on the basis of color. Apartheid in South Africa was put behind us. Today, we need to overcome the wider and deeper apartheid—an eco-apartheid based on the illusion of separateness of humans from nature in our minds and lives.

The Dead-Earth Worldview
---------------------------------------
The war against the Earth began with this idea of separateness. Its contemporary seeds were sown when the living Earth was transformed into dead matter to facilitate the industrial revolution. Monocultures replaced diversity. “Raw materials” and “dead matter” replaced a vibrant Earth. Terra Nullius (the empty land, ready for occupation regardless of the presence of indigenous peoples) replaced Terra Madre (Mother Earth).

This philosophy goes back to Francis Bacon, called the father of modern science, who said that science and the inventions that result do not “merely exert a gentle guidance over nature’s course; they have the power to conquer and subdue her, to shake her to her foundations.”

Robert Boyle, the famous 17th-century chemist and a governor of the Corporation for the Propagation of the Gospel Among the New England Indians, was clear that he wanted to rid native people of their ideas about nature. He attacked their perception of nature “as a kind of goddess” and argued that “the veneration, wherewith men are imbued for what they call nature, has been a discouraging impediment to the empire of man over the inferior creatures of God.”

The death-of-nature idea allows a war to be unleashed against the Earth. After all, if the Earth is merely dead matter, then nothing is being killed.

As philosopher and historian Carolyn Merchant points out, this shift of perspective—from nature as a living, nurturing mother to inert, dead, and manipulable matter—was well suited to the activities that would lead to capitalism. The domination images created by Bacon and other leaders of the scientific revolution replaced those of the nurturing Earth, removing a cultural constraint on the exploitation of nature. “One does not readily slay a mother, dig into her entrails for gold, or mutilate her body,” Merchant wrote.

Today, at a time of multiple crises intensified by globalization, we need to move away from the paradigm of nature as dead matter. We need to move to an ecological paradigm, and for this, the best teacher is nature herself.

This is the reason I started the Earth University/Bija Vidyapeeth at Navdanya’s farm.

India’s best ideas have come where man was in communion with trees and rivers and lakes, away from the crowds.

The Earth University teaches Earth Democracy, which is the freedom for all species to evolve within the web of life, and the freedom and responsibility of humans, as members of the Earth family, to recognize, protect, and respect the rights of other species. Earth Democracy is a shift from anthropocentrism to ecocentrism. And since we all depend on the Earth, Earth Democracy translates into human rights to food and water, to freedom from hunger and thirst.

Because the Earth University is located at Navdanya, a biodiversity farm, participants learn to work with living seeds, living soil, and the web of life. Participants include farmers, school children, and people from across the world. Two of our most popular courses are “The A-Z of Organic Farming and Agroecology,” and “Gandhi and Globalization.”

The Poetry of the Forest
---------------------------------------
The Earth University is inspired by Rabindranath Tagore, India’s national poet and a Nobel Prize laureate.

Tagore started a learning center in Shantiniketan in West Bengal, India, as a forest school, both to take inspiration from nature and to create an Indian cultural renaissance. The school became a university in 1921, growing into one of India’s most famous centers of learning.

The forest teaches us enoughness: as a principle of equity, how to enjoy the gifts of nature without exploitation and accumulation.

Today, just as in Tagore’s time, we need to turn to nature and the forest for lessons in freedom.

In “The Religion of the Forest,” Tagore wrote about the influence that the forest dwellers of ancient India had on classical Indian literature. The forests are sources of water and the storehouses of a biodiversity that can teach us the lessons of democracy—of leaving space for others while drawing sustenance from the common web of life. Tagore saw unity with nature as the highest stage of human evolution.

In his essay “Tapovan” (Forest of Purity), Tagore writes:

“Indian civilization has been distinctive in locating its source of regeneration, material and intellectual, in the forest, not the city. India’s best ideas have come where man was in communion with trees and rivers and lakes, away from the crowds. The peace of the forest has helped the intellectual evolution of man. The culture of the forest has fueled the culture of Indian society. The culture that has arisen from the forest has been influenced by the diverse processes of renewal of life, which are always at play in the forest, varying from species to species, from season to season, in sight and sound and smell. The unifying principle of life in diversity, of democratic pluralism, thus became the principle of Indian civilization.”

It is this unity in diversity that is the basis of both ecological sustainability and democracy.

Diversity without unity becomes the source of conflict and contest. Unity without diversity becomes the ground for external control. This is true of both nature and culture. The forest is a unity in its diversity, and we are united with nature through our relationship with the forest.

In Tagore’s writings, the forest was not just the source of knowledge and freedom; it was the source of beauty and joy, of art and aesthetics, of harmony and perfection. It symbolized the universe.

In “The Religion of the Forest,” the poet says that our frame of mind “guides our attempts to establish relations with the universe either by conquest or by union, either through the cultivation of power or through that of sympathy.”

The forest teaches us union and compassion.
---------------------------------------
The forest also teaches us enoughness: as a principle of equity, how to enjoy the gifts of nature without exploitation and accumulation. Tagore quotes from the ancient texts written in the forest: “Know all that moves in this moving world as enveloped by God; and find enjoyment through renunciation, not through greed of possession.” No species in a forest appropriates the share of another species. Every species sustains itself in cooperation with others.

The end of consumerism and accumulation is the beginning of the joy of living.

The conflict between greed and compassion, conquest and cooperation, violence and harmony that Tagore wrote about continues today. And it is the forest that can show us the way beyond this conflict.

---

Vandana Shiva is an internationally renowned activist for biodiversity and against corporate globalization, and author of Stolen Harvest: The Hijacking of the Global Food Supply; Earth Democracy: Justice, Sustainability, and Peace; Soil Not Oil; and Staying Alive.

05/26/2026

In 2017, the Batesville School District in Arkansas faced a $250,000 budget deficit and struggled to retain teachers due to low salaries. To address these challenges, the district conducted an energy audit and implemented energy efficiency measures, including the installation of over 1,400 solar panels across its facilities.

These initiatives reduced the district's annual energy consumption by 1.6 million kilowatt-hours, transforming the budget deficit into a $1.8 million surplus over three years. The financial turnaround enabled the district to increase teacher salaries by up to $15,000, making Batesville one of the highest-paying districts in the region.

Superintendent Michael Hester highlighted that the solar project not only improved teacher retention and recruitment but also provided educational opportunities for students to learn about renewable energy.

This success story has inspired other school districts to explore similar renewable energy solutions to address financial constraints and invest in their educators.

05/26/2026

A juice company dumped 12,000 tons of orange peels on a barren, overgrazed pasture in Costa Rica — then a lawsuit shut the project down.

The site was abandoned. The peels were left to rot. And for 16 years, nearly everyone forgot about it.

When scientists returned in 2014, they found not a wasteland, but a jungle: tree biomass up 176%, three times more plant species, soil richer in nutrients .

The peels had smothered invasive grasses, decomposed into fertilizer, and given nature the head start it needed.

Today, this accident of agricultural waste is a model for low‑cost forest restoration — proving that sometimes, the best soil amendment is whatever you were about to throw away. 🍊🌱

05/26/2026

Japan is exploring one of the most futuristic concepts ever imagined — a self-sustaining underwater city powered by the natural temperature differences of the ocean. This ambitious vision combines advanced engineering, renewable energy, and marine science to create a habitat where humans could one day live and work beneath the sea.

The proposed underwater city would use Ocean Thermal Energy Conversion technology, often called OTEC. This system generates electricity by taking advantage of the temperature gap between warm surface water and the cold deep ocean. Warm water heats a fluid into v***r, driving turbines that produce electricity, while cold water cools the v***r back into liquid so the cycle can continue continuously. Because the ocean constantly maintains these temperature layers, the energy source is renewable twenty four hours a day.

Scientists believe underwater communities could help reduce pressure on overcrowded cities while also creating safer and more sustainable living environments. These futuristic habitats may include homes, research laboratories, hospitals, farms, and transportation systems connected beneath the ocean surface. Some designs even imagine giant dome shaped structures capable of supporting thousands of residents.

Living underwater could also provide unique advantages for scientific discovery and environmental protection. Researchers would gain direct access to marine ecosystems, allowing better monitoring of climate change, ocean pollution, and deep sea biodiversity. The city could also support aquaculture and clean food production using advanced underwater farming systems.

Although the project still faces major technical and financial challenges, Japan continues to lead the world in futuristic infrastructure ideas. If successful, this underwater city could represent a major step toward sustainable living and inspire a completely new relationship between humanity and the oceans. The future of civilization may not only rise into space but also descend beneath the waves.




05/26/2026

"New legislation will soon make it far easier to hold major polluters personally accountable"

A new article by Stuart Spray in The ENDS Report discusses the latest developments in the movement to make mass environmental destruction - ecocide - a crime, including in the UK.

He speaks to Stop Ecocide International’s Jojo Mehta, as well as legal experts who describe the extraordinary global momentum and progress characterising the movement for ecocide law right now.

Leading barrister Gerard Forlin KC describes domestic legislation as "inevitable in the not-too-distant future," while environmental lawyers Paulo Busse and Alexa Culver say laws would introduce a powerful new deterrent dynamic for corporate decision-makers.

Read the article here: https://www.endsreport.com/article/1957841/why-ecocide-laws-coming-far-sooner-predict

05/25/2026

In a landmark case, a British resident successfully challenged her local council over the installation of bright LED street lights. After presenting evidence of the negative effects on both human health and local ecosystems, the council agreed to replace the lights with warmer, less intense alternatives. The case highlights growing concerns about light pollution and its impact on sleep, circadian rhythms, and vulnerable wildlife populations including insects, birds, and bats.

Images are generated by AI and for demonstration purposes only.

Source: Rodoy, S. (2024). Legal settlement regarding LED street lighting impacts. Barnet Council, London.

Address

1312 17th Street, Suite 960
Denver, CO
80202

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when NatureWorkshop posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Share