Why are we gathering?
Things are changing fast. New patterns are forming. We want time to think together, and to find how best to communicate what we know.
The foundational agreements and regional systems that most people thought were relatively stable are rapidly reorganizing. This involves everything from rainfall patterns, to food systems, to governance. Different patterns and systems will emerge, for better or for worse. Many people are panicking, and looking for new approaches and new leaders.
Are we those leaders? I'm pretty sure we are. But how do we communicate what we know, in ways that people can use? How do we spread the seeds of cultural change, consciousness of the power of living systems, and capability to make the shifts?
Those of us who have been working to understand and communicate a "living systems" approach to decision making ("the living climate", small and large water cycles, the biotic pump, the soil sponge, holistic management, and hydrological cooling) have a unique opportunity to step up and be resources during this time.
As a growing community of practice, we have approaches (to land practices, planning, and policy) that transcend divisions and adapt to real-time changes. We have knowledge and collective experience that can create healthy societies and biosystems, and provide food sovereignty, abundant clean water, and regional resiliency to fires, floods, heatwaves and drought. Our approaches can reduce forced migration and conflict over resources, address the public health crisis, and bring life back to degraded land.
The foundational agreements and regional systems that most people thought were relatively stable are rapidly reorganizing. This involves everything from rainfall patterns, to food systems, to governance. Different patterns and systems will emerge, for better or for worse. Many people are panicking, and looking for new approaches and new leaders.
Are we those leaders? I'm pretty sure we are. But how do we communicate what we know, in ways that people can use? How do we spread the seeds of cultural change, consciousness of the power of living systems, and capability to make the shifts?
Those of us who have been working to understand and communicate a "living systems" approach to decision making ("the living climate", small and large water cycles, the biotic pump, the soil sponge, holistic management, and hydrological cooling) have a unique opportunity to step up and be resources during this time.
As a growing community of practice, we have approaches (to land practices, planning, and policy) that transcend divisions and adapt to real-time changes. We have knowledge and collective experience that can create healthy societies and biosystems, and provide food sovereignty, abundant clean water, and regional resiliency to fires, floods, heatwaves and drought. Our approaches can reduce forced migration and conflict over resources, address the public health crisis, and bring life back to degraded land.
How do we communicate these approaches, during these interesting times, to bring forward something that wasn’t possible before? And how do we know that a landscape is actually becoming more resilient?
Join us August 10-14 for a retreat in Vermont. We will gather for deep discussion and strategic thinking using living systems frameworks. We will work on effective ways of communicating, that engage people for the long haul in a time of short attention spans. We will head out with simple tools to observe and measure changes in the land around us.
There will also be plenty of "being" time for jumping in the pond, walks among the lilacs, music, food, sleep, laughter and maybe some tears of grief and joy. We will get to know each other in person (and for some of us, reunite) as we share and sharpen our understandings of living systems at work and design effective interventions during these exciting times.
This deep dive will be designed and led by Didi Pershouse, Founder at the Land and Leadership Initiative, with occasional presentations by various participants of the retreat.
Here are some of the kinds of questions we will look at:
Join us August 10-14 for a retreat in Vermont. We will gather for deep discussion and strategic thinking using living systems frameworks. We will work on effective ways of communicating, that engage people for the long haul in a time of short attention spans. We will head out with simple tools to observe and measure changes in the land around us.
There will also be plenty of "being" time for jumping in the pond, walks among the lilacs, music, food, sleep, laughter and maybe some tears of grief and joy. We will get to know each other in person (and for some of us, reunite) as we share and sharpen our understandings of living systems at work and design effective interventions during these exciting times.
This deep dive will be designed and led by Didi Pershouse, Founder at the Land and Leadership Initiative, with occasional presentations by various participants of the retreat.
Here are some of the kinds of questions we will look at:
- What examples do we know of that can best communicate the potential of regeneration?
- How do we engage people's own physical senses to understand concepts of the living climate?
- How do we use language and observation in ways that bridge political divides?
- How does the way we communicate evoke images and feelings in the reader/listener?
- What is the role of "the expert" or models, versus lived experiences?
- How do we communicate what's needed now to keep our systems operational? How do we make sure we can keep the basic needs of ourselves and our society met, keep foundational ecosystem processes going, and provide food, water, and shelter from the storm to our communities?
- How do we coordinate our communication efforts to build on each other's work?
- How do we awaken a sense of caring, responsibility and response-ability between neighbors (of all species)?
- What is of great value in this time, that is being ignored?
- How do seemingly impossible situations create entirely new possibilities?
- How do we bring out the uniqueness and ongoing potential in each place, to become more of a fertile womb, rather than a silent tomb?
Registration, lodging, travel
REGISTRATION:
Use this form to let us know you are interested.
SPONSORSHIP AND DONATIONS
We still need additional donations in order to help certain people attend. You can find these options on the sponsorship page. If you can, please donate to support others who cannot pay the full price to attend, and to make our next retreat (this summer)affordable for all.
The cost for registration is $600.
This includes attendance August 10-14, 2025 (2 partial days and 3 full days) and most meals (with vegan and gluten free options), Lodging is not included in this fee.
This fee pays a modest working wage to those organizing, hosting, and leading the retreat, and covers expenses for food, meeting space and amenities. This event is a labor of love, not a big money maker.
Spots are very limited. If we are overbooked, we will refund your payment or put you on a waiting list.
LODGING OPTIONS
1. Lakeside Lodging at Lake Morey Resort, a few miles drive from our meeting place. To book a room, click here.
2. Camping, glamping, and couch surfing options will also be available for a very reasonable fee within a 10 mile radius of the resort. When you submit the registration form, you can request help with alternative lodging.
3. There are other hotels and AIR BNBs available as well--check Google Maps for lodging near Thetford, Vermont, USA.
TRAVEL
Our home base for the event is at a large lovely home with a swimming pond in East Thetford, Vermont
FILL OUT THIS FORM TO LET US KNOW YOU ARE INTERESTED! Registration open now.
Use this form to let us know you are interested.
SPONSORSHIP AND DONATIONS
We still need additional donations in order to help certain people attend. You can find these options on the sponsorship page. If you can, please donate to support others who cannot pay the full price to attend, and to make our next retreat (this summer)affordable for all.
The cost for registration is $600.
This includes attendance August 10-14, 2025 (2 partial days and 3 full days) and most meals (with vegan and gluten free options), Lodging is not included in this fee.
This fee pays a modest working wage to those organizing, hosting, and leading the retreat, and covers expenses for food, meeting space and amenities. This event is a labor of love, not a big money maker.
Spots are very limited. If we are overbooked, we will refund your payment or put you on a waiting list.
LODGING OPTIONS
1. Lakeside Lodging at Lake Morey Resort, a few miles drive from our meeting place. To book a room, click here.
2. Camping, glamping, and couch surfing options will also be available for a very reasonable fee within a 10 mile radius of the resort. When you submit the registration form, you can request help with alternative lodging.
3. There are other hotels and AIR BNBs available as well--check Google Maps for lodging near Thetford, Vermont, USA.
TRAVEL
Our home base for the event is at a large lovely home with a swimming pond in East Thetford, Vermont
- Note that there is NOT much uber or taxi service in the area, so you will need to arrange a pick up with us, or come by car.
- Boston Logan Airport has bus service via Dartmouth Coach (to Hanover NH, where someone can pick you up) and car rentals, and is about 2.5 hours away.
- Burlington VT Airport has car rentals--and is about 1.5 hours away.
- Amtrak Train service comes through once a day to White River Junction, VT from NYC, Washington DC and other locations.
FILL OUT THIS FORM TO LET US KNOW YOU ARE INTERESTED! Registration open now.
About Didi Pershouse
Didi Pershouse is well known as an innovative international educator both in-person and online. She is the founder of the Land and Leadership Initiative. Her facilitator's guide Understanding Soil Health and Watershed Function, is used in over 90 countries.
She became deeply involved in the intersection of food systems and health systems while providing rural health care for two decades at The Center for Sustainable Medicine, and wrote The Ecology of Care: Medicine, Agriculture, Money, and the Quiet Power of Human and Microbial Communities.
She has written a field training manual for the UN-FAO Farmer Field School Program and the Andhra Pradesh Community Managed Natural Farming Initiative in India, involving over 1 million smallholder farmers. She was a contributing author to The Climate Emergency: How Africa Can Survive and Thrive; Climate Change and Creation Care; and Health in the Anthropocene. She was one of five speakers at the United Nations-FAO World Soil Day in 2017.
She serves on the Planning Commission for her town, is a board supervisor for the White River Natural Resources Conservation District, and is on the board of directors of the Soil Carbon Coalition and the Vermont Healthy Soils Coalition. While serving on the state appointed Payment for Ecosystem Services and Soil Health Working Group, she helped to reorient the program back to its public roots. She led a successful effort to conserve the Zebedee Headwaters Wetland while serving as a Vermont Conservation Commissioner.
She is a lineage holder of the Change Agent Development Community founded by the late Carol Sanford.
She has worked closely with Walter Jehne for many years, hosting retreats together at Lake Morey, where they co-founded the "Can We Rehydrate California?" initiative, and helped inspire Pre-Monsoon Dry Sowing in India.
She became deeply involved in the intersection of food systems and health systems while providing rural health care for two decades at The Center for Sustainable Medicine, and wrote The Ecology of Care: Medicine, Agriculture, Money, and the Quiet Power of Human and Microbial Communities.
She has written a field training manual for the UN-FAO Farmer Field School Program and the Andhra Pradesh Community Managed Natural Farming Initiative in India, involving over 1 million smallholder farmers. She was a contributing author to The Climate Emergency: How Africa Can Survive and Thrive; Climate Change and Creation Care; and Health in the Anthropocene. She was one of five speakers at the United Nations-FAO World Soil Day in 2017.
She serves on the Planning Commission for her town, is a board supervisor for the White River Natural Resources Conservation District, and is on the board of directors of the Soil Carbon Coalition and the Vermont Healthy Soils Coalition. While serving on the state appointed Payment for Ecosystem Services and Soil Health Working Group, she helped to reorient the program back to its public roots. She led a successful effort to conserve the Zebedee Headwaters Wetland while serving as a Vermont Conservation Commissioner.
She is a lineage holder of the Change Agent Development Community founded by the late Carol Sanford.
She has worked closely with Walter Jehne for many years, hosting retreats together at Lake Morey, where they co-founded the "Can We Rehydrate California?" initiative, and helped inspire Pre-Monsoon Dry Sowing in India.