Introduction to Wet felting and Needle Felting
Do you have sheep or access to wool? Learn to use wool roving for wet felting and needle felting projects. In this session, you will have the opportunity to create a one of a kind project, while learning needle felting and wet felting techniques.
Cheryl DeWelt
Cheryl DeWelt is an artist, horticulturalist, and environment educator. She has a degree from UW-Madison and a permaculture design certificate. She is the Environmental Education and Garden Manager at Madison Children's Museum and has worked at the museum for 16 years. She plays a critical role in developing curriculum around gardening, permaculture, environmental education, art, and STEM. She is also a working artist whose fiber arts and sculptures have been on display around Wisconsin. She uses felting techniques to build large puppets, small posable creatures, and 2-D installations.
Permaculture Merit Badges
SKIP (SKills to Inherit Property) is a free merit badge program for permaculture and homesteading. It provides structure for aspiring homesteaders to learn, allows them to prove their skills and connects them with older landowners looking for a steward for their property.
Mike Haasl
Mike Haasl promotes permaculture homesteading with an emphasis on high rewards for less effort. He teaches, writes and experiments with ways to homestead with a lighter footprint. He lives in northern Wisconsin and tends a big garden, greenhouse and flock of chickens.
Developing Customized Compost Teas
We will look at the process of testing a variety foods to enhance the growth and diversity of specific microorganisms like beneficial bacteria, protozoa, fungi and nematodes. For example, if your compost is low in fungi you can add fish hydrolysate to a compost extract that will favor the development of fungi.
Erik Harris
Erik is the technical director for Clear View Valley Regenerative Farms & Services. He is a practicing soil scientist and high school science teacher with a Masters degree in Biology, with a focus on plant-insect interactions. He is a certified Soil Food Web Soil Consultant and Lab Technician.
Cookie Tin Biochar
This method of producing char is designed for backyard fire pits, fireplaces or wood stoves. The principles are easily up-sized for agricultural use making biochar and offer a cheap and easy way to double crop production in six easy steps.
Tony C. Saladino
Tony C. Saladino began his ecological journey learning to compost and honor the great outdoors from his grandmothers. This spawned a lifelong commitment to live closer to Mother Earth. In his formative years, he spent many hours with elders from both the Menominee and Oneida Tribes learning to look more deeply and listen to the natural cycles of life. When he was in College, he worked as a Summer Camp Counselor teaching Hobo Cooking and Foraging Skills to young people. In 1987, after saving for a year, working for Citizens for a Better Environment, he rode bicycle around all five Great Lakes teaching about what he called living lightly on the Earth. That was before the name sustainability had been coined. He came back to Green Bay to raise his three children and over twenty years ago, he learned about Biochar aka Terra Preta from his amateur interest in Anthropology and Archaeology. An obscure Portuguese text about Ancient Amazonian Black Earth, piqued his interest. Tony immediately started experimenting with production methods for char and the processes required to turn sterile, lifeless material into healthy soil. His presentations and teaching ever since have been focused on learning about and sharing this most important lost art/science so that others might learn to heal the soil, build the microbiome upon which all life thrives and to give back in significant ways to the greater community. This information has benefited and changed so many lives already, he is amazed that it has not garnered more attention. Making biochar takes time and loving effort. The results are unmistakable. tony would be honored for the chance to share with you some of what he has learned in his quest to learn to live lightly on the planet.
Let's Make Biochar! Hands-On Workshop with Wood, Fire & Cans
Let's get some wood and a fire and some cans and make some biochar together! In this practical, hands-on workshop you’ll learn a simple low-tech method to transform scrap wood into a powerful, long-lasting soil amendment that improves water retention, fertility, and microbial life — perfect for gardens, native plantings, and prairie restoration projects.
William Dickinson
I ran this popular hands-on biochar session last year and participants were excited to go home to make their own biochar. As a certified wildland firefighter and native prairie restoration specialist who runs Wild Inspired Landscapes, I bring real-world experience with safe fire management, biomass utilization, and building healthy soils that support both food gardens and native ecosystems. Biochar is one of my favorite tools for regenerative work because it turns “waste” into a valuable resource, sequesters carbon for centuries, and creates habitat for the soil biology that makes permaculture systems thrive. I’m passionate about sharing this accessible skill in a safe, engaging way so more people can start improving their soil right away.
Panel Session: What Permaculture May Offer in an Uncertain Future.
Panel and group discussion about where we go from here in light of climate uncertainty and a contracting economic future. What might the future look like in different scenarios.
Bryce Ruddock & Permaculture Elders
Long time Permaculture practitioner (1980). Co-author of Integrated Forest Gardening. Author of the Plant Guilds e book. Former researcher and editor at the Natural Capital Plant Database (permacultureplantdata.com). Board member at Great Rivers and Lakes Permaculture Institute. Almost as old as dirt.
Finding Your Permaculture Dream Land
Are you dreaming of owning land to start or expand your permaculture dream life? This session provides clear direction for creating your land buying criteria, methods for searching and how to apply your criteria and find the land that is best for you. Join us for an interactive experience of envisioning, exploring, learning and creating the steps to make your permaculture dream land part of your reality.
David Andrews
David Andrews is the owner operator of Majestic Life Farm near Bruce, Wisconsin. He is pioneering new and innovative farming practices using permaculture principles and a syntropic agroforestry method of growing food. He is also a rural land developer creating new small scale farming parcels for those who intend to build their own permaculture homestead. His vision includes many new neighbors who are creating their own spaces of love, growing food and living in harmony with nature. David also earns off-farm income as a leadership development coach for small business owners in the financial services industry. His mission is building sustainable small scale farming communities that function in harmony with pure principles where families can live in peace, raise children and thrive in abundance with nature.
Beginning horizontal and natural beekeeping methods
Sharing my experiences with horizontal top bar beekeeping, as well as foundationless langstroth. Try out this potentially easier method of beekeeping and see some example hives.
Derek Nedveck
I've been beekeeping with my Dad since I was in middleschool, following his methods that he used in commercial migratory beekeeping for pollination contracts. I'm shifting my focus to honey as an artisianal product, as well as keeping bees more in tune with them as an organism with their own ways of living. To that end I'm investigating methods that allow them to exhibit more of their natural tendencies, as well as hopefully finding methods that are lower input and effort than the commercial methods I grew up with.
Beyond the Veggie Garden
Explore growing, harvesting, processing, and cooking Midwestern staple crops stuch as legumes, nuts, seeds, and gluten-free grains. For the adventurous vegan gardener or cook.
Larisa & Bob Walk & Dahse
Larisa Walk and her husband Bob Dahse live in a solar-powered, straw-bale home they built south of Winona, Minnesota. In their 4+ decades together they've homesteaded entirely “off grid”. They coauthored the book “Feeding Ourselves – The Four-Season Pantry from Plant to Plate.”
Eating Year-Round from the Garden
Strategies for extending the harvest and planning on local food throughout the seasons.
Larisa & Bob Walk & Dahse
Larisa Walk and her husband Bob Dahse live in a solar-powered, straw-bale home they built south of Winona, Minnesota. In their 4+ decades together they've homesteaded entirely “off grid”. They coauthored the book “Feeding Ourselves – The Four-Season Pantry from Plant to Plate.”
Successful environmental activism in the drift less region a fifty year history
summaries of the history of successful grassroots environmental activism
Jack Knight
lifelong driftless region resident following think globally act localy sensibilities 73 years old veteran tree planter and forester, farm worker, including a variety of horticulture landscaping, building salvage, homesteader, retired organic inspector and 20 plus years experience on a wide variety of public and non profit boards of directors on a wide variety of enviromental, economic development , conservation , farming issues. Instrumental in starting food. coops in the midwest. Took permaculture course with Micheal Pularski in 1989.
Permaculture and Bioregionalism: planning for survivable spaces
In this session participants will learn an introduction to Bioregionalism as it relates to permaculture principles and ethics. We then explore how the Design School for Regenerating Earth supports organizing bioregionally through global and regional online meetings, in-person immersions, a PDC, and other learning journeys related to governance, finance and other structures.
Karen Lemke
Dr Karen Lemke, PDC has been organizing bioregionally through the Design School for Regenerating Earth since 2024. An educator and artist, Karen developed the Bog Witch as a futuristic storyteller who uses permaculture to rebogify Milwaukee, harvesting stories of what we are doing today to make a survivable future seven generations hence. Karen's weekly podcast/radio show can be found on RiverwestRadio.com, and Bog Rants appear irregularly on https://substack.com/@bogwitch414. The League of Women Voters for Milwaukee County hosts quarterly walk and talks, where the Bog Witch and others explore local parks/public lands. Karen serves as the Interleague liaison with other Lake Michigan area organizations.