Description
Dates: August 23–26, 2024
Instructor: Nikki Hill
Location: Grand Mesa, Colorado, about 45 minutes from Grand Junction, Colorado. Participants camp at our car-accessible campsite.
Focus:
Foraging at high elevations in Colorado, learning biomes in Colorado to predict where edible and medicinal plants will grow, wild edible and medicinal plant identification, high elevation plant study, topics in critical ethnobotany, wild-tending for ecological and cultural health,
Tuition Includes:
In-depth course with Nikki Hill
Campsite at our group site
All meals – local organic fare!
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Meet the Instructor
Nikki Hill
Nikki is a seasoned tumbleweed who has been engaged in an ongoing, experiential inquiry of the dynamic weavings of ecological relationships for the past 18 years. She can be found in a diversity of habitats throughout the Western U.S., from remote wild places and feral haunts to boardrooms and stakeholder halls where land management protocols are written. Nikki holds a bachelor’s degree in environmental science and botany and started this journey with a focus on ecosystem restoration. Disillusioned with a focus of eradication as healing, (where herbicides are utilized as the primary tool for restoration), she sought solace in fostering direct connection as a small scale farmer.
For the past nine years she has been living semi nomadically, gathering seeds and tending wild plants, with a focus on plants that benefit from or rely on human disturbance. Nikki’s inspiration for teaching comes from a reclaiming a sense of belonging unfolding curiosities that continue to inspire her include reclaiming the role of human seed bearers, cultural landscape awareness, beneficial disturbance theory, assisted plant migration and remembering the ultimate mystery and joy of this dance. Nikki is a certified Wilderness First Responder.