CicLAvia catalyzes vibrant public spaces, active transportation and good health through car-free streets.
Get the route, and all the details here: www.cicLAvia.org
Free event with ever so many fun activities along the route.
past events
CicLAvia catalyzes vibrant public spaces, active transportation and good health through car-free streets.
Get the route, and all the details here: www.cicLAvia.org
Free event with ever so many fun activities along the route.
Interested in learning all about greywater or becoming a greywater installer for your area? This course is designed for people with either basic plumbing, landscaping, or permaculture skills who want to learn how to design and build simple, economical residential greywater systems.
You will learn about the theory behind simple and high-end systems including the indoor use of greywater. We’ll cover basic plumbing and landscaping skills needed for the four types of common simple greywater systems. You will learn how to conduct a site assessment, determine which system to install and how to maintain existing systems. Additionally you’ll learn about what plants do best with greywater and the do’s and don’t of residential greywater reuse. By the end of the course you will know about proper installation of code compliant washing machine, and simple systems under the CA state code.
There will be an optional exam and installation for people wishing to be certified and listed on our website. The “installer’s page” contains contact info for graduates who wish to be listed, as well as an internal list serve for installers to share info, experiences, and get support.
Location: Los Angeles Eco-Village (117 Bimini Place, Los Angeles, 90004)
Cost: $750 with limited work-trade positions available (To apply for a work-trade position click here)
Learn more about the content and see the week’s schedule here.
A rare opportunity to meet and hear some of the pioneering internationally renown people from Tamera Ecovillage in Portugal plus the “Water Gandhi” from India. Details below.
Our ability to create a future worth living essentially depends on rediscovering our sacred relationship with two basic sources of life: healthy water and vivid love. What water is to nature, love is to humanity. Our modern culture has been following systems incompatible with the true nature of both water and love. Today’s world is marked by progressive desertification and thirst – in nature as well as within people’s hearts – which poses a serious threat to our common future. However, this is not the way our future has to be!
We are excited to announce that two global pioneers will be speaking in Los Angeles, who have been working for decades on revolutionary answers for these pressing crises, showcasing concrete models for the future:
Rajendra Singh, also known as “Water Gandhi.” is a well-known water conservationist from Rajasthan, India. Using a traditional method for retaining rainwater, Rajendra led a popular initiative that transformed approximately 8,600 square km of India’s Thar Desert into fertile land, providing a hundred thousand people with a decent living, and causing dried-up rivers to flow throughout the year again. As a result of this project, regional weather patterns changed causing overall precipitation to increase and extreme storms and droughts to dramatically decrease. The principles used are not limited to India, but tackle the global roots of our current water crisis and could be applied in California as well. Honoring his outstanding initiative, Rajendra just received the prestigious Stockholm Water Prize, an award commonly referred to as “the Nobel Prize for water.”
To him, water is more than only a chemical substance; he sees it as an ensouled being with which we can communicate.
Sabine Lichtenfels, is peace activist, spiritual teacher and co-founder of Tamera Peace Research Center in Portugal, where she heads the “Global Love School.” She is a source of profound feminine wisdom and peace knowledge, grounded in nearly forty years of experience co-leading one of the most radical experiments in community building and healing love of our times. She is the author of many books (among them Temple of Love and Grace. Pilgrimage for a Future without War) and has led international peace pilgrimages through Israel-Palestine and Colombia. Sabine was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize as one of the “1000 Women for Peace” in 2005.
The event will be introduced and accompanied by Benjamin von Mendelssohn, director of The Grace Foundation and one of the next-generation leaders of Tamera, offering a brief insight into the “Healing Biotopes Plan,” the global peace strategy of the heart of Tamera’s work. Operating in the frame of holistic sciences, the plan starts from the premise that a few highly complex model centers around the world might suffice in replacing the informational matrix of violence that steers this planet within a relatively short time with a new global matrix of trust, compassion, and peace; creating a new morphogenetic field of global peace.
More info on Tamera Ecovillage here: http://www.tamera.org/index.html
For more events with Tamera Team in California, go here:
http://terranova.tamera.org/#events
Fall 2015 Classes
Emerson Avenue Community Garden (Beginning)
Address: 6550 W. 80th Street, Los Angeles, CA 90045
Dates: October 4, 11, 18 and 25 (Sunday)
Time: 1:00 to 4:00 pm
Instructor: Dana Morgan
Contact Info: danah.morgan@gmail.com
Fees:
General public – $55 for series or $15 per class
Orville Wright Middle School employees, parents and EACG plot holders – $40 per series or $10 per class
The Filipino American Service Group (Beginning)
Address: 135 N. Park View Street, Los Angeles, CA 90026
Dates: September 5, 19 and October 3, 17 (Saturday)
Time: 9:00 am to 12:00 pm
Instructor: Liza Go
Contact Info: golizago13@gmail.com
Fees:
General public – $55 for series or $15 per class
Qualified low-income participants – $20 for series or $5 per class (contact the instructor for more information)
Fountain Community Garden (Beginning)
Address: 5620 Fountain Avenue, Los Angeles, CA 90028
Dates: October 10, 17, 24 and 31 (Saturday)
Time: 10:00 am to 1:00 pm
Instructor: Dan Fujiwara
Contact Info: (213) 479-3228, dfuji@sbcglobal.net
Fees: $55 for series or $15 per class
Greystone Mansion (Beginning)
Address: 905 Loma Vista Drive, Beverly Hills, CA 90210
Dates: September 20, 27 and October 4, 11 (Sunday)
Time: 10:00 am to 1:00 pm
Instructor: George Pessin
Contact Info: (310) 779-8816, gp305@yahoo.com
Fees: $55 for series or $15 per class
Greystone Mansion (Junior Master Gardeners, Grades 3-5)
Address: 905 Loma Vista Drive, Beverly Hills, CA 90210
Dates: September 13, 20, October 4, 11, November 15, 22 and December 6, 13 (Sunday)
Time: 1:15 pm to 3:15 pm
Instructor: Johanna Arias-Bhatia
Contact Info: (323) 447-2923, jo68@msn.com
Fees: $130 for series ($110 for Beverly Hills residents). Participants must attend all 8 classes.
The Learning Garden at Venice High School (Beginning)
Address: 13000 Venice Blvd, Los Angeles, CA 90066
Dates: September 6, 13, 20 and 27 (Sunday)
Time: 1:30 pm to 4:30 pm
Instructors: Nancy Mills and David King
Contact Info: (310) 397-5723, grandy133@verizon.net
Fees: $55 for series ($82 for a couple) OR $15 per class
Longden Elementary School (Beginning)
Address: 9501 Wendon Avenue, Temple City, CA 91780
Dates: October 10, 17, 24 and 31 (Saturday)
Time: 9:00 am to 12:00 pm
Instructor: Helen Redmond
Contact Info: (818) 371-1766, iamlky@yahoo.com
Fees:
For series – $50 public; $15 staff; FREE for Temple City Unified School District students
Per class – $15 public; $5 staff; FREE for Temple City Unified School District students
MEND, Meet Each Need with Dignity (Beginning)
Address: 10641 San Fernando Road, Pacoima, CA 91331
Dates: October 6, 13, 20 and 27(Tuesday)
Time: 6:00 pm to 9:00 pm
Instructor: Laura Robledo
Contact Info: (818) 288-1965, laura.robledo.89@gmail.com
Fees: Open only for MEND Garden program participants.
Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County (Beginning)
Address: 900 Exposition Blvd, Los Angeles, CA 90007
Dates: September 13, 20, 27 and October 4 (Sunday)
Time: 1:00 to 4:30 pm
Instructor: Florence Nishida
Contact Info: (213) 763-3499, growtips@gmail.com
Go to http://www.nhm.org/site/ and click on “Activities and Programs,” then “Gardening.”
Fees:
Only four-class series is available.
$100 for museum members
$120 for non-members
Limited number of discounts are available for residents of designated zip codes. Contact the museum number for details.
Playa del Rey Elementary School (Beginning)
Address: 12221 Juniette Street, Culver City, CA 90230
Dates: September 20, 27 and October 4, 11 (Sunday)
Time: 10:00 am to 1:00 pm
Instructor: Martha Clayton
Contact Info: themarthaclayton@gmail.com
Fees:
General public – $55 for series or $15 per class
Playa del Rey Elementary staff – $15 for series or $5 per class
Playa del Rey Elementary parents – FREE
Limited number of work trade permits are available. Please contact instructor for details.
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You can also check out our monthly garden tips, read our helpful garden articles or download our manual for beginning vegetable gardeners.
University of California
Division of Agriculture
and Natural Resources
Quail Springs Permaculture www.quailsprings.org Regenerative Water Harvesting and Land Restoration Training Course October 7-11, 2015 Location/Climate: Southern California, High Desert With Instructors: Craig Sponholtz – Watershed Artisans, Inc. Brenton Kelly – Quail Springs’ Land Steward, Farm Advisor & Restoration Program Director Neil Bertrando – R T Permaculture Designer Quail Springs Permaculture invites you to learn about what constitutes regenerative landscape design & restoration. Craig’s workshops offer an understanding of the science of water on the landscape. This 5-day Regenerative Water Harvesting & Land Restoration training offers hands-on experience in the assessment, design and construction of an on-going restorative and regenerative watershed project with intensive immersion and experiential training in: - Healing degraded land by harvesting runoff - Reading the landscape and making informed decisions - Recognizing the symptoms and causes of degraded land - Identifying regenerative natural processes - Understanding how humans affect and are affected by the landscape and watershed - Designing resilient solutions - Understanding management options for degraded land - Deciding what is doable and what should be done first - Planning and preparing to complete a successful project - Maintaining a project and ensuring its long-term success Participants will learn skills needed to do high quality work that will stand up to natural processes over time. These skills will serve a wide spectrum of people and professions, from backyard restorationists to farmers and land managers. Craig Sponholtz believes in doing it right the first time and spends extra time with students on projects to ensure that they understand the subtleties of the work being done. Emphasis on quality ultimately fosters immense pride of a beautiful job well done. "Craig Sponholtz’s Applied Watershed Restoration courses are a must. I was very impressed with the thoroughness, hands-on learning, and Craig’s deep knowledge – based on years of real-life experiences. The strategies taught are simple and effective. They build on natural patterns so you work with natural processes not against them. This way nature does the bulk of the work once the structures are in place. I highly recommend these courses for anyone working with the land and water." - Brad Lancaster, author of Rainwater Harvesting for Drylands and Beyond ~~~~~~~~~~~ Course Cost: $750 (includes camping and meals) $650 *EARLY BIRD DISCOUNT* until September 1, 2015 For more information and to register: http://www.quailsprings.org/regenerative-water-harvesting-training/ Contact with questions: Danielle Brehmer, danielle@quailsprings.org, 805-886-7239 * Financial aid in the form of payment plans and limited partial scholarships by application. Inquire early.
There is a very interesting conversation to be had about the ideas in Bill’s new book New Slow City: Living Simply in the World’s Fastest City.
Free Event: Book talk with William Powers
Date/Time: Saturday, October 3, 2015 at pm
Location: Skylight Books, 1818 No. Vermont, LA 90027
No reservations required.
Bill’s last book, Twelve by Twelve, blossomed into a national “green living” bestseller now in its fifth printing.
OVERVIEW of New Slow City:
Burned-out after years of doing development and conservation work around the world, William Powers spent a season in a 12-foot-by-12-foot cabin off the grid in North Carolina. Could he live a similarly minimalist way in the belly of the go-go beast — New York City? To find out, Powers and his wife jettisoned 80 percent of their stuff, left their 2,000-square-foot Queens townhouse, and moved into a 350-square-foot “micro apartment” in Greenwich Village. Downshifting to a 20-hour workweek, Powers explores the viability of Slow Food and Slow Money, technology fasts and urban sanctuaries, rooftop gardening and beekeeping. Discovering a colorful cast of New Yorkers attempting to resist the culture of Total Work, Powers offers an inspiring exploration for anyone trying to make urban life more people- and planet-friendly.
You can read more about Bill, his bio and previous books, here.
ENDORSEMENTS of New Slow City:
“All of us sense that we could live better, kinder lives. But Bill Powers has the courage to try to change and then — ever so artfully, without the slightest wag of a finger — to show us how.” — Colin Beavan, author of No Impact Man
“Bill Powers has done it again — taken us on an honest, touching journey into living lightly and intelligently in a distracted world. And he’s such a good writer that we don’t even know we are being educated, challenged, and changed.”
— Vicki Robin, co-author of the international bestseller Your Money or Your Life and author of Blessing the Hands That Feed Us
“The reenchantment of urban life — so compromised by the accelerated techno-industrial culture — takes work, and William Powers saves us a lot of time on the learning curve. Hats off, especially to his courage.”
— Douglas Tompkins, founder of the North Face clothing company and the Foundation for Deep Ecology
“Empowered by his experiences, [Powers] gives readers an inside view into a more contemplative, ecofriendly life, no matter the environment. This honest, engaging memoir will please readers looking for inspiration to slow down.” — Library Journal
“In the City That Never Sleeps, in a place whose very definition of success is ‘bigger, better, faster,’ Powers attempts to lead a more deliberate life, to paraphrase Thoreau….Will his time spent off the grid in rural North Carolina prepare him for downsizing to a 340-square-foot micro apartment in the heart of Manhattan? With his new bride? Who soon becomes pregnant? Analyzing what it means to ‘want what we want,’ Powers turns his ecologically contemplative gaze both inward and outward, to matters both personal and global, to reconnect with those increasingly rare pockets of peace, tranquility, and mindfulness that will allow him to appreciate life at a slower pace and from a simpler vantage point. One need not live in a city to savor Powers’ languid, albeit unconventional, advocacy for an unhurried pace.” — Booklist
“Is it possible to live an earth-friendly and spiritually fulfilling life in the middle of the bustle of a big city? William Powers and his wife are the perfect people to find out. I found that the tales of the remarkable people they meet, the challenges they confront, and the beauty and joy they discover nourished a part of my soul that rarely gets fed. Never preachy, always entertaining, and often wise, this is a splendid book for anyone wanting to bring more heart and joy to urban living.”
— John Robbins, author of Diet for a New America
“New Slow City tells an inspiring story. At the outset, Powers’s goal — to live slowly and mindfully in frantic Manhattan — seems quixotic in the extreme. But one should never underestimate a determined idealist. This delightfully provocative book will speak to anyone trying to build a balanced life in our crazy world. I first came to know Powers’s work because we coincidentally share the same name. Now I read him to question my own assumptions and reimagine how to live.”
— William Powers, New York Times–bestselling author of Hamlet’s BlackBerry
Additional Hands-On Training locations will also be offered.
The Permaculture Design Course has truly transformed the lives and enhanced the careers of thousands of people around the world, including architects, developers, social workers, city planners, teachers, students, gardeners, landscapers, homeowners, business owners and others.
• Green Business Models
http://www.permacultureacademy.com/shop/fall-registration/
QUESTIONS?
email: info@PermacultureAcademy.com
(323) 206-5134
Larry Santoyo, Program Director
Also featuring Diana Leafe Christian
Details: http://www.theemeraldvillage.com/itav/
We invite YOU into the “Emerald Village Observatory” for an immersive community experience that will inspire all ages to explore and celebrate what it means to be part of the global family. Bring your childlike curiosity to delve into the science of sustainable shenanigans, get down and (literally!) dirty as we dance in the gardens and then get foamy with your homies!
We are excited to also offer a series of WHYshops that create space for a deep investigation into emerging culture and topics that are relevant to evolving families and burgeoning communities. Conscious parenting, family well-being community building, permaculture, rites of passage, intimacy, spirituality, emergent technologies, and financial and global health are the focal points of “It Takes a Village.”
IPCUK will bring together leading experts and practitioners from around the world.
We have everything we need to create a sustainable world and future. Together we will create a vision of a near future society that is caring, sustainable and fair, and explore how we can collectively design strategies and pathways to make it happen.
Conference, 8-9 September 2015, The Light, Euston Road, London.
Designing the World We Want – two days packed with presentations, workshops, academic papers, exhibitions, music, and art.
Convergence, 10-16 September 2015, Gilwell Park, Essex.
Designing the network we want – for people from around the world using permaculture in their everyday lives and communities.
Edge events, throughout the UK and Europe.
From tours and courses, to talks and more.
Now in its 5th year in Los Angeles, this festival attracted more than 20,000 folks last year. The Festival is full of fun with more than 250 green exhibit booths, dozens of vegan and veggie food demonstrations, children’s activities, arts and crafts activities, a diversity of local and nationally prominent speakers, fashion shows, eco-technology displays. You name it.
Visit the CRSP/Los Angeles Eco-Village Booth #716 and read more below for free or discounted tickets.
Bike to the expo, park your bike at the Stromer Bike Valet and get in for FREE
CRSP/LA Eco-Village also earns $5 for every ticket sold using this special unique code XLA15Y28N but only when you buy your ticket on-line on the ticketing page! And you get $5 off on your ticket.
Go here for more Festival info::
http://www.greenfestivals.org/la/los-angeles-2015
Apply to exhibit, to volunteer, to speak, or for the $5,000 special nonprofit organization award.
Festival Hours at the L.A. Convention Center
1201 S Figueroa St, Los Angeles, CA 90015:
FRI 9/25 noon-6pm
SAT 9/26 10am-6pm
SUN 9/27 10am-5pm
Easy to get there via bus or rail. Go Metro!
See the preview guide here:
http://greenamerica.uberflip.com/t/175190-2015-la-preview-guide
If you’re a knowledgeable friend of Los Angeles Eco-Village and would like to help staff our booth, let me know ASAP. Two to four hour shifts are available. Contact Lois at 213/738-1254 or crsp@igc.org
Hope to see you there.