educational course

World Renowned Health & Nature Researcher Speaking in Portland - Dr. Roger Ulrich presents the Health Benefits of Nearby Nature

Thursday, September 12, 2013 - 7:00pm to 9:00pm
Address: 
1833 SW 11th Ave.
Portland, OR
United States

If you'd like to learn how nearby nature heals, and may even be a matter of life and death, you'll want to be at Portland State University's Hoffmann Hall, 1833 SW 11th Ave., from 7:00 to 9:00 pm on Thursday, Sept. 12. You can register online here at Legacy Health.

Dr. Roger Ulrich, professor of architecture at the Center for Healthcare Building Research at Chalmers University of Technology in Sweden and adjunct professor of architecture at Aalborg University in Denmark, will speak about "How Nature Heals the Human Body." Dr. Geoffrey Donovan, Research Forester with the USDA Forest Service, will address the topic: "Trees don't make our cities livable. They make them survivable."

Following their talks, the two experts will engage in a dialogue on the relationship between trees, gardens, nature and public health. After the dialogue, they will answer questions from the audience.

The groups sponsoring the event encompass a range of fields involved in green and public health infrastructure:  Friends of Trees, J. Frank Schmidt Family Charitable Foundation, Lewis & Clark Graduate School of Education & Counseling Ecopsychology in Counseling Program, Legacy Health Therapeutic Gardens, PSU's Institute for Sustainable Solutions, TKF Foundation, and ZGF Architects LLP.

Dr. Ulrich is the most frequently cited researcher in evidence-based healthcare design. Among other achievements, he was the first to document scientifically the stress-reducing and health-related benefits for hospital patients of viewing nature.

His work has received many awards, directly impacted the design of billions of dollars of hospital construction, and improved the health outcomes and safety of patients around the world. His Theory of Evidence-Based Design offers a "user friendly" guide for creating successful healthcare facilities. Dr. Ulrich has published widely in both scientific and design journals, and his research has received international scientific recognition. This opinion piece in The New York Times describes some of his recent work.

Dr. Donovan has quantified many urban-tree benefits ranging from intuitive ones, such as reduced summertime cooling costs, to less intuitive benefits such as crime reduction. More recently he has focused on the relationship between trees and public health. His studies have found that mothers with trees around their homes are less likely to have underweight babies and that more people die from cardiovascular and lower-respiratory disease in areas where trees have been killed by invasive pests.

His recent studies have been published in journals ranging from the Journal of Forest Economics to Environmental International and the American Journal of Preventive Medicine. You can hear his recent interview on the PBS News Hour.

The doors at Hoffmann Hall will open on Sept. 12 at 6:00 pm for registration, networking, educational displays and refreshments, with the presentations beginning at 7:00 pm. The cost is $10 for early registration until Sept 10 and $15 day of event.

Venue: 
Portland State University’s Hoffmann Hall
Venue Details: 
A map of the PSU campus can be found here: http://www.pdx.edu/campus-map Hoffmann Hall is in the southwestern part of the campus. Free parking (after 5 p.m.) is available in Parking Facility #3, which is the closest to the event. No PSU sticker is required to park there
Cost: 
$10 by 9/10, $15 day of the event

Learn Fire by Friction with Rewild Portland

Sunday, September 22, 2013 - 10:00am to 4:00pm
Rewild Portland
Address: 
United States

Fire is one of the ultimate technologies that separates humans from other animals. Over hundreds of thousands of years humans have learned to master the arts of fire. In our class we will make a bow-drill set, one of the most classic methods for making a fire by "rubbing two sticks together". Participants will each make a set to take home with them at the end of class. We will also go over the proper form for drilling and perhaps get a fire or two before the day is over!
Date: Sunday, September 22nd, 10am - 4pm.
Tuition: $45

Register online at: http://www.rewildportland.com/educational-programs/workshops/earth-skill...

Contact Name: 
Peter Bauer
Contact Phone: 
503.863.8462
Contact Email: 
peter@rewildportland.com
Venue: 
TBD
Venue Details: 
Location will be sent out upon registration.
Cost: 
$45

Rewild Skillshare: Animal Tracking

Sunday, September 29, 2013 - 9:00am to 12:00pm
Rewild Portland, Cascadia Wild
Address: 
Oxbow Regional Park
3010
Gresham, OR 97080
United States
Park/Trail: 

We would love to invite you to Rewild Portland's "Rewild Skillshare", our afternoon social networking event where people make new friends and hang out with friends and family while sharing skills, ideas and strategies for creating new cultures based on humanity's ancestral heritage. We welcome all levels of experience.

What:
Rewild Portland will be Animal Tracking with Cascadia Wild
Cascadia Wild is a non-profit that focuses on citizen science through animal tracking. Every winter they teach several courses on tracking and then take the volunteers on tracking expeditions to look for Wolverine tracks and sign. We are excited to partner with them and have them show us some cool stuff!

Where:
Oxbow Regional Park; Flood Plain Trail parking lot.

When:
Sunday, September 29th
9:00 am - 12:00 pm

Materials to bring:
* Water
* Snacks
* Appropriate clothes
* $5 for vehicle parking pass
* Small Tape Measure
* Notebook/Pen
* NW Tracking Field Guides

Other stuff to bring is your family & friends and a $5-10 sliding scale suggested donation to support our efforts. Remember: "dress to impress". This is a social event after all! You can RSVP at our facebook page here: https://www.facebook.com/events/165677720288434/

See you there!

Contact Name: 
Peter Bauer
Contact Phone: 
503.863.8462
Contact Email: 
peter@rewildportland.com
Venue: 
Oxbow Regional Park, Flood Plain Trail
Venue Details: 
Flood Plain Trail parking lot.
Cost: 
$5.00 Vehicle Fee at Gate

Special Presentation; "Wapato for the People" at the Plankhouse

Sunday, September 8, 2013 - 12:00pm to 4:00pm
Friends of the Ridgefield National Wildlife Refuge
Address: 
28908 NW Main Ave
Ridgefield, WA 98642
United States

12-4PM: Plankhouse Tours and Children's activities available. 

2PM: Presentation begins

Historian and archaeologist Melissa Darby will present "Wapato for the People" on September 8 at 2pm in the Cathlapotle Plankhouse. Darby will explore the use of wapato throughout the world using archaeological evidence. The root of this important plant was a staple food of Native Americans who lived on the Lower Columbia and Fraser Rivers and it was a heavily traded commodity out to the coast and east to the mountains. This root has also been found in archaeological sites in the Great Basin and in sites in Europe and it is now cultivated in Asia.  In addition to this presentation children's activities, and displays highlighting other First Foods of the Columbia River will be included from 12-4pm.  There is a $3.00 entrance fee per vehicle visiting the Refuge.  For more information contact Sarah Hill at Sarah_Hill@fws.gov or call 360-887-4106 or visit www.ridgefieldfriends.org.

This event is part of the Cathlapotle Plankhouse Second Sunday Series.  The Cathlapotle Plankhouse is a full- scale replica Chinookan Plankhouse located on the Carty Unit of the Ridgefield National Wildlife Refuge at 28908 N Main Ave., Ridgefield, WA.  It interprets the village of Cathlapotle that once existed on what is now Refuge property. Lewis and Clark mention Cathlapotle in their journals and noted that there were fourteen of these houses and 900 people living in the village at the time of their encounter in 1805.

Contact Name: 
Sarah Hill
Contact Phone: 
(360) 887-4106
Contact Email: 
sarah_hill@fws.gov
Venue: 
Cathlapotle Plankhouse
Venue Details: 
The Plankhouse is a modern, Chinookan style plankhouse built in 2005 to interprate Chinookan Native American culture of the Lower Columbia River and the village of Cathlapolte.
Cost: 
$3.00/Vehicle

Stream Team Captain Training with SOLVE

Tuesday, September 17, 2013 - 6:00pm to 8:30pm
SOLVE
Address: 
2000 SW 1st Ave. Ste. 400
Portland, OR 97201
United States

Stream Team Captains lead volunteers on stream restoration and enhancement projects throughout the Portland-metro area. They provide leadership, organization and supervision to volunteers for Saturday morning events. Stream Team Captains also instruct volunteers in invasive plant removal techniques and proper planting techniques while working closely with SOLVE staff to fulfill stream restoration and enhancement goals. This is a three-day training on September 17, 19, and 21. YOU MUST ATTEND ALL THREE DAYS! Training Schedule: Tuesday, Sept 17, 6-8:30 pm: stewardship, watershed basics, restoration strategies, and examples. Thursday, Sept 19, 6-8:30 pm: community involvement, working with volunteers, work-party management, and leadership techniques. Saturday, Sept 21, 9am - 3pm: FIELD DAY: project examples, planting techniques, invasive plant removal techniques, and native plant identification. Upon completion of this training, Stream Team Captains commit to lead at least three Team Up volunteer events involving planting native species, invasive plant removal, native plant identification, mulching, and watering.

For more information and to register visit: http://www.solveoregon.org/get-involved/events/stream-team-captain-training

Contact Name: 
Kaleen Boyle
Contact Phone: 
503-844-9571 ext 332
Contact Email: 
info@solveoregon.org

Focus on Nature A festival to celebrate nature through photography

Saturday, October 5, 2013 - 8:00am to Sunday, October 6, 2013 - 5:00pm
Friends of Tualatin River National Wildlife Refuge.
Address: 
19255 SW Pacific Highway
Sherwood, OR 97140
United States

Focus on Nature is a 2-day event featuring nature photography. There will be 16 seminars/workshops at the Tualatin River Wildlife Refuge and a Field Trip led by Stephen Johnson, a nationally acclaimed landscape photographer. The seminars will cover a wide variety of topics related to nature photography including a review of the role photography played in the preservation of our national parks and refuges. Registration is required. See details at www.trphotosociety.org.

Contact Name: 
Norman Penner
Contact Phone: 
503-504-4841
Contact Email: 
info@trphotosociety.org
Cost: 
seminar/workshop fees vary.

Focus on Nature A festival to celebrate nature through photography

Saturday, October 5, 2013 - 8:00am to Sunday, October 6, 2013 - 5:00pm
Address: 
23000 SW Pacific Hwy
Sherwood, OR 97140
United States

Focus on Nature is a 2-day event featuring nature photography. There will be 16 seminars/workshops at the Tualatin River Wildlife Refuge and a Field Trip led by Stephen Johnson, a nationally acclaimed landscape photographer.

The seminars will cover a wide variety of topics related to nature photography including a review of the role photography played in the preservation of our national parks and refuges. Registration is required. See details at www.trphotosociety.org.

Venue: 
Sherwood YMCA
Venue Details: 
http://ymcacw.org/locations/sherwood-regional-family-ymca

Second Sunday Event at the Cathlapotle Plankhouse: Wapato Edition

Sunday, September 8, 2013 - 12:00pm to 4:00pm
Friends of the Ridgefield National Wildlife Refuge
Address: 
28908 NW Main Ave
Ridgefiled, WA 98642
United States

September 8, 2013 

12pm-4pmChildren's activities, Plankhouse tours, and displays highlighting other First Foods of the Columbia River will be available. 2pm: Historian Melissa Darby presents a talk on Wapato, and its use by Native People of the Columbia River and beyond. 

Historian and archeologist Melissa Darby will present "Wapato for the People" on September 8 at 2pm in the Cathlapotle Plankhouse. Darby will explore the use of wapato, Sagittaria latifolia ,  throughout the world using archeological evidence. The root of this important plant was a staple food of Native Americans who lived on the Lower Columbia and Fraser Rivers and it was a heavily traded commodity out to the coast and east to the mountains. This root has also been found in archeological sites in the Great Basin and in sites in Europe and it is now cultivated in Asia.  In addition to this presentation children's activities, and displays highlighting other First Foods of the Columbia River will be included from 12-4pm.  There is a $3.00 entrance fee per vehicle visiting the Refuge.  For more information contact Sarah Hill at

Sarah_Hill@fws.gov or call 360-887-4106 or visit www.ridgefieldfriends.org.

The Cathlapotle Plankhouse on the Carty Unit of the Ridgefield National Wildlife Refuge:  28908 N Main Ave; Ridgefield, WA 98642

This event is part of the Cathlapotle Plankhouse Second Sunday Series.  The Cathlapotle Plankhouse is a full- scale replica Chinookan Plankhouse located on the Carty Unit of the Ridgefield National Wildlife Refuge at 28908 N Main Ave., Ridgefield, WA.  It interprets the village of Cathlapotle that once existed on what is now Refuge property. Lewis and Clark mention Cathlapotle in their journals and noted that there were fourteen of these houses and 900 people living in the village at the time of their encounter in 1805.

 

** If you require wheelchair access, please make sure to call and arrange this ahead of time.**

Contact Name: 
Sarah Hill
Contact Phone: 
(360) 887-4106
Contact Email: 
sarah_hill@fws.gov
Venue: 
Cathlapotle Plankhouse
Venue Details: 
The Plankhouse is located on the Carty Unit of the Ridgefield National Wildlife Refuge.
Cost: 
$3/Vehicle

Introduction to Permaculture workshop with Growing Gardens

Thursday, September 12, 2013 - 6:00pm to 8:00pm
Growing Gardens
Address: 
United States

Date: Thursday, September 12 - 6pm-8pm
Location: TBD
Cost: $10-$30 sliding scale donation (No one turned away for lack of funds)

Permaculture is inspired by observation of natural ecosystems and applying ecological principles to garden design. In this 2-hour workshop, we'll explore the foundations of permaculture, beginning with its history and the ethics and design principles that distinguish permaculture from other related fields. Participants will learn the value of zone and sector analysis, using examples ranging from small urban lots and neighborhoods to more social/organizational realm. The workshop will include a pattern recognition exercise and a resources/needs activity where participants will discover ways to meet some of each others needs in their work lives.

Presenter Information: Matthew Bibeau MSEd, is the Development Director of Mother Earth School, an all-outdoor preschool and kindergarten located at Tryon Life Community Farm. Trained in permaculture design by Toby Hemenway (2006) and in permaculture teaching by Tom Ward and Jude Hobbs (2008), Matt has been generating momentum as a permaculture educator, co-coordinating Toby's PDC and co-teaching TLC Farm's PDC from 2009-2011. He serves as an active board member of the Learning Gardens Institute, represents TLC Farm on the board of the Oregon Sustainable Agriculture Land Trust and is a veteran coordinator of the City Repair Project's Village Building Convergence. (2006-2013).

Contact Name: 
Rodney Bender
Contact Phone: 
503-284-8420
Contact Email: 
rodney@growing-gardens.org
Venue: 
To be determined
Cost: 
$10-$30 sliding scale donation (No one turned away for lack of funds)

Canning Tomatoes, Sauces and Salsas workshop with Growing Gardens and OSU Extension

Wednesday, September 4, 2013 - 6:00pm to 8:00pm
Growing Gardens
Address: 
1137 SE 20th Ave.
Portland, OR 97214
United States

Date: Wednesday, September 4 - 6pm-8pm
Location: Hinson Church (SE Portland)
Cost: $20-$40 sliding scale donation (No one turned away for lack of funds)

Join OSU Extension Service Master Food Preservers for a hands-on food preservation class. Learn about equipment, current resources and safe, healthy methods of food preservation. Spaces limited.  Pre-registration required. Tomatoes are the most preserved item of produce. This class covers options for preserving plain tomatoes, tomato sauces, juice and "The Laws of Salsa."  Make and compare a variety of salsas in class. 

Presenter Information: OSU Extension faculty member Jeanne Brandt has been teaching food safety and preservation for OSU over 20 years.  OSU Extension Master Food Preservers are trained volunteers whose goal is to share up-to-date, research based information with community members.

Contact Name: 
Rodney Bender
Contact Phone: 
503-284-8420
Contact Email: 
rodney@growing-gardens.org
Venue: 
Hinson Church
Cost: 
$20-$40 sliding scale donation (No one turned away for lack of funds)

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