Didi Pershouse
  • Home
  • About
    • About Didi
    • Patreon Community
    • Bios
    • Watch & Listen
    • Media Kit
    • Newsletter
    • Donate
  • What I Teach
  • Events
    • Soil Sponge Conference August 2019
    • Online Courses
    • Upcoming Events
    • Soil Carbon Sponge Tour 2018
  • Books
    • The Ecology of Care
    • Understanding Soil Health and Watershed Function
    • Soil Health Principles
    • Health in the Anthropocene
    • Resources
  • Blog
  • Contact
  • Home
  • About
    • About Didi
    • Patreon Community
    • Bios
    • Watch & Listen
    • Media Kit
    • Newsletter
    • Donate
  • What I Teach
  • Events
    • Soil Sponge Conference August 2019
    • Online Courses
    • Upcoming Events
    • Soil Carbon Sponge Tour 2018
  • Books
    • The Ecology of Care
    • Understanding Soil Health and Watershed Function
    • Soil Health Principles
    • Health in the Anthropocene
    • Resources
  • Blog
  • Contact

Seventeen questions you might never know the answer to.

7/16/2019

1 Comment

 
I love questions. Questions are like doorways that keep opening into other worlds. Our skill at asking questions peaks around age four or five and then is quickly hammered out of us by tired adults. We have to relearn the art of asking good questions, and that's one of the aims of my teaching.

The list of questions below is the list that the soil sponge course I've been teaching works to answer, through my own understanding, through the mentors I have studied with, and from the experiences of the incredible people who join the course. 
  1. What are the large and small flows that make a landscape work? How do flows of carbon, water, nutrients, biological work, and human decisions interact with each other? 
  2. How can I tell whether a landscape is generally healthy and functional? What are the signs of poor function and soil degradation?
  3. How can we cool and rehydrate the landscape around us while providing abundant clean water through simple changes in land management? 
  4. How can we pay for land regeneration without carbon markets or fundraising? How can we pay farmers a living wage for building a soil sponge?
  5. Why is the soil carbon sponge the basic infrastructure that makes life on land possible? How does it protect against extreme weather events?
  6. How are farms, towns, roads, and regions affected by the presence or absence of healthy soil or "the soil carbon sponge"? 
  7. What is the biological workforce, and what essential jobs do other species do to create a functional landscape and climate? 
  8. What are the principles at work in a healthy landscape? 
  9. How does nature grow food without degrading soil?
  10. Why does soil fail and what can we do to prevent that from happening?
  11. What should we be monitoring, noticing, tracking, observing, and watching? How do we know whether change is going in the right or wrong direction? What are the warning signs that things are deteriorating?
  12. What kind of citizen science data mapping can we do to track change over time? Why are maps useful for driving change?
  13. What are some of the ways I can get involved? What is needed most? What groups/projects already exist? What is missing that I might provide?
  14. What are simple ways of communicating these ideas? 
  15. What stories can I collect around me and share? What photos do we have, or could I take that would help? What information and data can my community collect? 
  16. How do we facilitate groups to make sure people are engaged, learning and listening to each other?
  17. How do we get actual projects off the ground, and shift from information to implementation?

I hope you'll join me as I continue to seek the myriad answers to this set of important questions.

Picture
1 Comment

    Sign up for my monthly newsletter.

    * indicates required

    Didi Pershouse's
    ​BLOG

    Didi alternates between traveling and teaching with Peter Donovan in the Soil Carbon Coalition school bus, and raising two sons and doing research and writing in Vermont.

    Archives

    April 2020
    July 2019
    September 2018
    March 2018
    December 2017
    September 2017
    July 2017
    January 2017
    November 2016
    August 2016

    Categories

    All
    Carol Sanford
    Courses
    Microbiomes
    My People
    Newsletter
    On The Bus
    Regeneration
    Soil Health
    The Great Post Election Listening Roadtrip
    The Great Work Of Our Time

    RSS Feed

© COPYRIGHT DIDI PERSHOUSE 2019. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
WEBSITE DESIGN BY FREE VERSE STUDIO