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    Home»Arts and Entertainment»Community Events»KSB Native Plant Workshop Features Sustaining Natural Environment Theme
    Community Events

    KSB Native Plant Workshop Features Sustaining Natural Environment Theme

    March 31, 2013No Comments
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    logo_KSBSedona AZ (March 31, 2013) – Choices abound for local gardeners to explore and apply techniques to enhance their surroundings at the 34th annual Keep Sedona Beautiful Native Plant Workshop Saturday, April 6 at West Sedona School.

    Keynote presentations will be followed by seven workshops. Topics include how bats perform pest control, ways to attract birds to your backyard, advantages of native trees compared with non-native trees in resisting disease infestation, landscaping with native plants, container gardening for vegetables, flowers, herbs and native plants of the high desert.

    20130226_Coryphantha-viviparaParticipants can choose two of the seven workshops. Two workshops will feature walking tours pertinent to the workshop topic –Watershed regeneration from the ground and a wild plant walk to experience medicinal plants firsthand.

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    Opening the day-long event is the Slow Water Team of Marianna Hartsong and Ryan Matson who will cover their vision of planting small green infrastructures to slow, plant and spread water with the goal of transforming the ecosystem to a hydrating rather than a dehydrating system. The team will discuss slowing, planting and harvesting of water so that it becomes a resource that nourishes the area. Harvesting water involves sculpting an area by creating berms, swales and check dams. “The goal,” says Marianna Hartsong, “ is to inspire as many people as possible to work the land to harvest water.”

    The second keynote speaker is Jeff Schalau, Agriculture and Natural Resource and Extension Director for the University of Arizona Cooperative Extension in Yavapai County. Jeff is the information source for Yavapai County residents in the areas of forest health, watershed management, noxious/invasive plants, range management and horticulture. A participant in some 15 KSB Native Plant Workshops, his subject “Balancing Goals: Native Plants, Wildlife, Functional Ecosystems and Your Landscape” will explore conflicting goals faced in creating functioning native landscapes in the real world.

    Advance tickets are $25 for KSB members and $35 for the general public. To register, visit the website http://www.keepsedonabeautiful.org/ or call the office at (928) 282-4938.

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    What Would I Change?
    By Amaya Gayle Gregory

    What would I change if I could? You and I both know I can’t, but it’s a fun exercise anyway. I would have been less of a know-it-all on my spiritual journey. It seems to be a side-effect of the path. Spiritual folks develop an all-knowing buffer to protect against their inevitable surrender to the unknown, but understanding that now didn’t make it gentler on me or those I loved, let alone those that I deemed not capable of getting it 😉 Yeah … I’d have dropped the spiritual snob act. I’d have recognized that spiritual radicals are only different on the outside from radical right Christians, and that the surface doesn’t really matter as much as I thought. We are all doing our couldn’t be otherwise things, playing our perfect roles. I’d have learned to bow down humbly before my fellow man, regardless of whether I agreed with him or not. We’re all in this together and not one of us will get out alive. Read more→
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