

Full Weekend Tickets are now sold out.
A Limited Number of Special All-Day-Saturday-Only Tickets!
Double Feature Screening of Rebels with a Cause and Igniting the Green Fire
Friday and Saturday Evening Tickets Only
Point Reyes Books presents the 2013 Geography of Hope Conference, “Igniting the Green Fire: Finding Hope in Aldo Leopold’s Land Ethic,” on March 15, 16, and 17, 2013, in Point Reyes Station. It is the first West Coast gathering of the world's foremost Aldo Leopold experts and the only opportunity to meet and hear from the creators and stars of Green Fire, the 2012 Emmy Award-winning film about Aldo Leopold's life and conservation legacy which will be screened at the conference.
In the tradition of past Geography of Hope conferences, the weekend features spirited conversations and presentations by prominent authors, naturalists, and conservation leaders, including: Aldo Leopold biographer Curt Meine; Aldo Leopold Foundation director Buddy Huffaker; former Natural Resources Conservation Service chief Paul Johnson; Center for Humans and Nature president Brooke Hecht; Leopold scholars Susan Flader and J. Baird Callicott; geologist and author Lauret Savoy; U.S. Forest Service Deputy Chief Leslie Weldon; poet Robert Hass; author Gary Nabhan and “Planet Walker” John Francis; and Center for Whole Communities founder Peter Forbes (partial list).
They’ll examine Leopold’s legacy as a foundation for hope and for future conservation ideas and action in working landscapes, wilderness areas, forests, farms, and ranches. Naturalist-led field trips will allow participants to experience Leopold’s land ethic firsthand in Point Reyes National Seashore, and additional field trips will visit privately owned farms and ranches in West Marin to learn about the production of grass-fed beef and handcrafted goat cheese. Meals served during the weekend will feature food from Marin’s farms and ranches.
About Aldo Leopold
A conservationist, forester, philosopher, educator, writer, and outdoor enthusiast, Aldo Leopold is regarded by many as the most influential conservation thinker of the twentieth century. The author of Sand County Almanac, Leopold’s legacy continues to inform and inspire us in West Marin where his themes of community-based conservation and a land ethic are manifest in our preserved parklands and protected farmland.
About the Geography of Hope
Since 2008, the coastal village of Point Reyes Station, California, has been home to one of northern California’s most exceptional literary festivals. Founded and presented by Point Reyes Books, Geography of Hope takes its name from Wallace Stegner’s description of wild landscapes as part of our “geography of hope.” The 2012–13 Geography of Hope events explore the overall theme of Practicing the Wild— not only with respect to the natural world, but also as an inextricable part of human character and culture.
Conference Sponsorship
Attendee fees cover only a portion of the cost of the Geography of Hope Conference. If you or your organization would like to be part of this unique event as a sponsor, please contact Steve Costa for details at stevegcosta@gmail.com
Conference Scholarships
A small number of partial scholarships are available. Contact suzannedconey@gmail.com for details.
Conference Volunteers
To learn how you can volunteer in exchange for admission to certain events, email alexporrata@mac.com.
Lodging in the Point Reyes Area
Make West Marin your home away from home during the Geography of Hope Conference. The area has many attractive lodging options, including inns, bed-and-breakfast establishments, cottages, and a small motel.
http://www.visitmarin.org/index/experience-point-reyes/point-reyes-lodgi...
http://www.pointreyes.org/west_marin_point_reyes_lodging.html
http://www.westmarinnetwork.com
Press Release
Finding Hope in Aldo Leopold’s Land Ethic is presented by Point Reyes Books and co-sponsored by the Aldo Leopold Foundation, the Center for Humans and Nature, and the U.S. Forest Service.
Supporters
Friends
Media Sponsors
Field Trips
Saturday, March 16, 2013
Geography of Hope field trips offer an opportunity to experience Point Reyes National Seashore and the coastal Marin landscape and deepen your understanding of Aldo Leopold and his land ethic. All field trips are led by accomplished naturalists accompanied by GOH authors and experts.
Weather is changeable in West Marin. All field trip participants are advised to dress in layers and bring rain gear, water, and snacks. Binoculars recommended. We carpool to field trips and will organize that on site. Please note that times listed for Hikes include stops for viewing and discussion.
Field trips with too few participants may be cancelled. If that occurs, you would be notified in advance to make another field trip choice.
Endangered Species
For one species to mourn the death of another is a new thing under the sun. —Aldo Leopold
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Tomales Point Elk Preserve at Tomales Point Trail
- View magnificent tule elk and learn about the establishment of their grassy preserve. Hunted to near extinction by 1860, a small protected herd was returned here in 1978. It has rebounded to become one of the largest populations in California.
- http://www.nps.gov/pore/planyourvisit/wildlife_viewing_tuleelk.htm
- Rest rooms: Yes
- Degree of difficulty: Moderate
- Travel time from conference to Pierce Point Ranch parking area: 30 minutes
- Hike: Approximately 90 minutes
- Accessibility: A separate, self-guided tour of the renovated Pierce Point Ranch is wheelchair accessible
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Field Trip Leader
David Press serves as the Wildlife Ecologist for Point Reyes National Seashore. He has worked at the park since 1997 and specializes in the management and monitoring of northern elephant seals, northern spotted owls, western snowy plovers, and tule elk. David received his Bachelor’s degree from UC Santa Cruz and graduated from UC Davis in 2005 with a Master’s degree in Marine Ecology. He resides with his family in his hometown of Inverness, CA.
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Elephant Seal Overlook at Chimney Rock
- Observe a colony of elephant seals during the end of the breeding season from the overlook above beautiful Drakes Bay where you’ll learn all about these noisy and impressive sea creatures and their return to the sandy Point Reyes headlands in 1981.
- http://www.nps.gov/pore/planyourvisit/wildlife_viewing_elephantseals.htm
- Rest rooms: Yes
- Degree of difficulty: Easy
- Travel time from conference to Drakes Beach parking area: 30 minutes
- Hike: Approximately 90 minutes
- Accessibility: Not wheelchair accessible
- Please note: Sir Francis Drake Highway is closed at Drakes Beach at this time of year. A shuttle bus leaves from Drakes Beach parking lot and takes visitors to the lighthouse and the Chimney Rock parking area. Reservations are not required. Adult tickets cost $5.This fee is not included in your registration fee.
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Field Trip Leader
Sarah Allen has studied marine birds and mammals of California for some 30 years and has been affiliated with both PRBO Conservation Science and Point Reyes National Seashore. She has authored scientific papers on harbor seals and other topics and is currently working on climate issues for the Western Region of the National Park Service. She is the co-author of “Field Guide to the Marine Mammals of the Pacific Coast.”
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Sand Dune and Western Snowy Plover Habitat Restoration at Abbott’s Lagoon
- Point Reyes National Seashore’s largest dune restoration project to date will restore natural dune processes and function to an area that is home to at least eleven threatened and endangered species. The National Park Service and PRBO Conservation Science are working jointly to protect the breeding grounds and nests of the western snowy plover, a federally listed threatened species. The tiny shorebird is an important part of the interconnected web of life on the beach.
- http://www.nps.gov/pore/parkmgmt/planning_dunerestoration.htm
- http://www.nps.gov/pore/naturescience/birds_snowyplover.htm
- Rest rooms: Yes
- Degree of difficulty: Easy
- Travel time from conference to Abbotts Lagoon parking lot: 30 minutes
- Hike: Approximately 2 hours
- Accessibility: First quarter mile of the trail is wheelchair accessible
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Field Trip Leaders
Lorraine Parsons is a Vegetation/Wetlands Ecologist for Point Reyes National Seashore, and was the Project Manager for the Giacomini Wetlands Restoration Project and the Abbott’s Lagoon Coastal Dune Restoration Project. She has been with the park since 2001. Prior to that, Lorraine worked for local county agencies and consulting firms managing wetland and riparian mitigation/restoration projects and conducting monitoring of wetland and riparian systems.
Sarah Minnick is a biologist for Point Reyes National Seashore. Over the last five years, she has worked extensively with the Abbott’s Lagoon Coastal Dune Restoration and Giacomini Wetlands Restoration projects. She also surveys for and monitors rare dune plants, such as the endangered Tidestrom’s lupine and beach layia. Sarah received a Bachelor’s degree in mathematics from Sonoma State University and a Masters degree in Wetland Conservation from University of Massachusetts – Amherst. She also enjoys serving on the board of the California Lichen Society.
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Estuarine Habitat Restoration at Limantour Beach
- Learn how the removal of dams has helped restore estuarine habitat and allow passage of the coho salmon and steelhead trout, both listed as threatened species. With its views of Mount Vision, this hike also affords an excellent view of the Bishop pine reforestation since the 1995 Vision Fire.
- http://www.nps.gov/pore/naturescience/fish.htm
- Rest rooms: Yes
- Degree of difficulty: Easy
- Travel time from conference to Limantour Beach parking lot: 30 minutes
- Hike: Approximately 2 hours
- Accessibility: Not wheelchair accessible
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Field Trip Leader
David Lukas started biology studies at Reed College, but left several times to travel around the world working on biological research projects. These travels took him to Borneo as part of a Harvard team, and to the Peruvian Amazon under the auspices of the Smithsonian Institution. He later spent several years working with poet Gary Snyder in the Sierra Nevada. After graduating with a degree in English from Reed, he returned to the Sierra Nevada and devoted himself to writing and teaching about the natural world.
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Giacomini Wetlands Restoration
- From productive pastureland to wildlife haven, this public/private collaboration is in the fifth year of its restoration cycle, with notable increases in avian, fish, and rare plant species. http://www.nps.gov/pore/parkmgmt/planning_giacomini_wrp_restoration.htm
- Rest rooms: No
- Degree of difficulty: Easy
- Travel time from conference: Five-minute walk
- Hike: Approximately 90 minutes
- Accessibility: Mostly wheelchair accessible
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Field Trip Leader
Amelia Ryan is a wetland and plant ecologist who had been with Point Reyes National Seashore for nearly a decade. She has a BS in Botany and an MS in Ecology. Prior to working at Point Reyes, she spent two years as a volunteer science teacher in Namibia. Amelia developed her love for wild spaces growing in rural Sonoma County, California. She has a particular passion for the flora of California.
MaryAnne Flett is a native northern Californian who lives in West Marin. She has been birding and working as a biological consultant for more than thirty years. Recent work includes bird-related aspects of habitat restoration projects in Point Reyes National Seashore, Golden Gate National Recreation Area, and other northern California locations. She conducts surveys for California clapper and black rails in tidal marshes around the San Francisco Bay and Estuary and has conducted research on willow flycatchers and other meadow birds in the Sierra Nevada.
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Mt. Wittenberg via Horse Trail, Z Ranch Trail, and Sky Camp
- This looped trail, which begins at the Visitors’ Center parking lot, is 4.6 miles roundtrip. A steep (1,300 feet) climb to the highest point in the park, it offers views of the Seashore and Olema Valley. Unless the weather is extreme, this field trip will take place rain or shine. Foul weather gear recommended.
- http://www.nps.gov/pore/planyourvisit/hiking_guide.htm
- Rest rooms: Yes
- Degree of difficulty: Strenuous
- Travel time from conference to Visitor Center parking lot: 10 minutes
- Hike: Approximately 2+ hours.
- Accessibility: Not wheelchair accessible
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Field Trip Leader
Todd Plummer has 25 years' experience as a birder and conservationist. He studied population dynamics and endangered species management at the University of Georgia. He has led numerous bird hikes on both U.S. coasts, and worked as a wildlife biologist in the Sierra Nevada. He is also a poet, a tutor, and an author of children's science books. If he could meet one historical figure, it would be Alexander Wilson, pioneer naturalist and father of American ornithology.
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Drakes Estero Trailhead Bird Watching and the Dynamic Processes in the Living World
- This two-mile roundtrip hike through open grassland and past an old Christmas tree farm includes viewing and learning about birds, weather patterns, ocean cycles, and migration seasons.
- http://www.nps.gov/pore/planyourvisit/hiking_guide.htm
- Rest rooms: Yes
- Degree of difficulty: Easy
- Travel time from conference to the Estero Trailhead: 30 minutes
- Hike: Approximately 90 minutes
- Accessibility: Wheelchair accessible for the first .5 mile
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Field Trip Leader
Claire Peaslee is a naturalist, writer, editor, theatre artist, public speaker, and regular guest on “West Coast Live” radio program. Inspired by the living Earth, she leads custom nature tours from Point Reyes and performs and teaches improvisation.
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Black Mountain Ranch
- Climb to the top of Black Mountain (weather permitting), which is protected by a MALT conservation easement. Take in spectacular views of the entire Tomales Bay watershed. Meet Dave Osborn and Mike Giammona who run a grass-fed beef operation on the mountain and learn about their business philosophy and practices. They’ll be the providing beef for one of our conference meals. Sponsored by Marin Agricultural Land Trust.
- http://www.malt.org/Protected/Black-Mountain
- Rest rooms: No
- Degree of difficulty: Strenuous
- Travel time from conference to parking area: 10 minutes.
- Hike: 2+ hours
- Accessibility: Not wheelchair accessible
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Field Trip Leader
Wendell Gilgert is the Working Landscape Program Director for PRBO Conservation Science. Wendell is a Great Valley native and comes to PRBO from the Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) where he had a 34-year career and most recently served as the Western Region Wildlife Biologist and NRCS Partners In Flight (PIF) representative based in Portland, OR. Wendell brings to PRBO an incredible wealth of knowledge on wildlife issues, habitat conditions and how to promote conservation with private landowners.
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Hike / Tour / Cheese Tasting at Toluma Farms
- Located two miles outside the town of Tomales, Toluma Farms is surrounded by a landscape of beautiful coastal agriculture. Owners David Jablons and Tamara Hicks purchased the 160-acre former cow dairy in 2003. They spent the first four years on significant land restoration, then started a goat and sheep dairy and constructed a creamery in 2012. They’ll begin production of their own tasty goat cheese in early 2013, just in time for our visit! Sponsored by Marin Agricultural Land Trust. http://www.tolumafarms.com/
- Rest rooms: Yes
- Degree of difficulty: Easy
- Travel time from conference: 45 minutes
- Hike/Tour/Tasting: Approximately 90 minutes
- Accessibility: Not wheelchair accessible
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Field Trip Leader
David Jablons and Tamara Hicks (along with their daughters Josy and Emmy) purchased the 160-acre property in 2003. They spent four years on land restoration in collaboration with NRCS, the STRAW Project, Marin RCD, Marin Organic, and UC Cooperative Extension. They transitioned the former run-down cow dairy to a goat and sheep dairy in 2007. In 2012 thanks to a grant from USDA Rural Development and capital from Marin Agricultural Land Trust, Toluma Farms began making their own cheese, scheduled to be in production in 2013.
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Birding Limantour Estero, Inverness Ridge, and the Wetlands: An Exploration of Biodiversity at Point Reyes
- With thousand of plants, dozens of mammal species, and more than 470 species of birds, Point Reyes National Seashore has some of the greatest biodiversity of any national park area. This field trip will transect the park from the freshwater wetlands of Olema Marsh through the oak, bay, and Douglas fir woodland of Inverness Ridge to Limantour Estero. On five or six short walks in these varied habitats, we’ll hear bird song, observe bird migration, discover wildflowers, and observe varied animal signs.
- Rest rooms: Yes
- Degree of difficulty: Easy
- Travel time from conference to first short walk at the Olema Marsh: Six minutes
- Travel time between walks varies.
- Accessibility: Some areas are wheelchair accessible
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Field Trip Leader
David Wimpfheimer is a biologist and naturalist who calls Point Reyes home. For 25 years, his seasoned focus and wide expertise have enriched nature excursions in Marin and other parts of the Bay Area. He has guided programs for Point Reyes Field Seminars, Elderhostel, Oceanic Society, California Academy of Sciences, Wild Wings, Marin Agricultural Land Trust, and other groups throughout California, Alaska, Baja, Scotland, and many other locations.
Land Restoration
We abuse land because we regard it as a commodity belonging to us. When we see land as a community to which we all belong, we may begin to use it with love and respect. —Aldo Leopold
Thinking Like a Mountain
Land is not merely soil; it is a fountain of energy flowing through a circuit of soils, plants, and animals. Food chains are the living channels which conduct energy upward; death and decay return it to the soil. —Aldo Leopold
Bird Watching
A March morning is only as drab as he who walks it without a glance skyward, ear cocked for geese. —Aldo Leopold
Foodscape
Bread and beauty grow best together. Their harmonious integration can make farming not only a business but an art; the land not only a food factory but an instrument for self-expression, on which each can play music of his own choosing. —Aldo Leopold
Program
FRIDAY, MARCH 15
| Location: Toby’s Feed Barn | |
| 2:00 p.m. | Registration Opens |
| 5:30 p.m. | Hobnob and supper with live music |
| 7:15 p.m. |
Program
Welcome: Steve Costa and Conference sponsors Keynote: Robert Hass Screening of Green Fire: Aldo Leopold and a Land Ethic for Our Time Panel discussion and Conversation #1: |
SATURDAY, MARCH 16
| Location: West Marin School Gymnasium | |
| 8:30 a.m. | Doors open |
| 9:00 a.m. | Welcome: Curt Meine |
| 9:30 a.m. |
Panel discussion and Conversation #2: Community, Democracy, and the Land Brooke Hecht, Moderator, with Peter Forbes, Michael Howard, Lauret Savoy, Michelle Stevens |
| 10:45–11 | Break |
| 11–12:15 |
Panel discussion and Conversation #3: Hope, Happiness, and Prosperity: Creating a Restorative Economy Buddy Huffaker, Moderator, with John de Graaf, Gary Paul Nabhan, Julianne Warren, Leslie Weldon |
| 12:30 p.m. | Lunch Bag lunch provided for registered participants |
| 1–4 p.m |
Option 1: Field trips Locations: Point Reyes National Seashore and surrounding farms and ranches. Carpooling encouraged. |
| 1–4 p.m. |
Option 2: Mini film festival Location: Dance Palace Community Center 1 p.m. Green Fire: Aldo Leopold and a Land Ethic for Our Time 3 p.m. Rebels with a Cause |
| 5:30 p.m. |
Gather, hobnob, and enjoy live music Location: Toby’s Feed Barn |
| 6:00 p.m. |
Remarks by Jamison Watts Supper featuring food from local farms and ranches sponsored by Marin Agricultural Land Trust |
| 7:15 p.m. |
Lively readings, music, song, and stories Brooke Hecht, host, with Tom Disher (piano), Christina Waldeck (songs), Jim Pfitzer (one-man play), Kathleen Dean Moore (reading), Carlos de la Fuente (guitar), Estella Leopold and Jed Meunier (readings), John Francis (banjo), Curt Meine (songs), Christina Waldeck (Sing-a-long) |
SUNDAY, MARCH 17
| Location: Toby’s Feed Barn | |
| 9:30 a.m. |
Panel discussion and Conversation #4: Toward an Earth Ethic Susan Flader, moderator, with John Francis, Kathleen Dean Moore, Baird Callicott
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| 10:30 a.m. | Break |
| 10:45 a.m. | Testimonials. Bettina Ring, Moderator, with Ken Brower, Huey Johnson, Mary Ellen Hannibal, Wendell Gilgert, and West Marin ranchers |
| 11:45 a.m. | Conclusion: Going Forward in Hope Gary Paul Nabhan, Moderator, with Estella Leopold, Paul Johnson, Peter Forbes, and John Francis |
| 12:30 p.m. | Conference concludes |
J. Baird Callicott
J. Baird Callicott is University Distinguished Research Professor at the University of North Texas. He is the co-Editor-in-Chief of the Encyclopedia of Environmental Ethics and Philosophy and author or editor of a score of books and author of dozens of journal articles, encyclopedia articles, and book chapters in environmental philosophy and ethics. |
John de Graaf
John De Graaf is a documentary filmmaker and is co-author of Affluenza: The All-Consuming Epidemic and What’s The Economy For, Anyway? Why It’s time To Stop Chasing Growth and Start Pursuing Happiness. The De Graaf Environmental Filmmaking Award, named for him, is presented each year at the Wild and Scenic Film Festival in Nevada City, California. He is co-founder of The Happiness Initiative. Lately, he has been working with the government of Bhutan in promoting a new world economic paradigm based on sustainable well-being. |
Ann & Steve Dunsky
Ann & Steve Dunsky have written, directed, and edited films and videos for more than twenty-five years. Green Fire is their most recent feature-length documentary. It tells the story of Aldo Leopold and his influence on modern environmental thought and practice. As producers for the U.S. Forest Service, their projects cover a range of conservation issues around the U.S. and internationally. For the 2005 centennial of the Forest Service, they produced a two-hour history of the agency called The Greatest Good. In 2010, they released an independent documentary called Butterflies & Bulldozers about a nationally and historically significant conservation battle in the San Francisco Bay Area, where they live. |
Susan Flader
Susan Flader is professor emerita of American western and environmental history at the University of Missouri. She has published several books on Aldo Leopold among other works, She has also lectured worldwide, chaired the Aldo Leopold Foundation, and served as president of the American Society of Environmental History and with numerous other professional and conservation organizations. |
Peter Forbes
Peter Forbes is a life-long student and advocate for the relationship between people and the land. He is a social entrepreneur and edgewalker, having created several organizations and places for learning and change. He is a nationally recognized voice for a new land movement integrating land and people and justice for both. He is an artist of imagery, written word, and carved wood who farms with his family in the Mad River valley of Vermont. |
John Francis
John Francis began his environmental work in 1971. After witnessing an oil spill, he stopped using motorized vehicles and took a vow of silence lasting seventeen years. He earned a doctorate in environmental studies during his Planetwalk, a walking journey across the United States and the length of South America. |
Robert Hass
Robert Hass was born in San Francisco and grew up in San Rafael. He is a professor of English at the University of California at Berkeley and the author of many books of poetry and prose, most recently What Light Can Do: Essays on Art, Imagination and the Natural World.
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Brooke Hecht
Brooke Hecht is the President of the Center for Humans and Nature, a non-profit organization that partners with some of the brightest minds in ethical thinking to explore humans and nature relationships. Brooke received her Ph.D. in ecosystem ecology from Yale University’s School of Forestry and Environmental Studies, where her work addressed the feedback loops between human activity and ecosystem resilience. |
Michael Howard
Michael Howard is the founder and executive director of Fuller Park Community Development. Concerned about lead poisoning affecting neighborhood children, he discovered Fuller Park contained the highest lead levels in Chicago. He started his work with the illegal dumpsite across from his home. More than 200 tons of trash were removed from the site, now called Eden Place. Eden Place has been honored by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and Chicago Wilderness with the Conservation and Native Landscaping Award for creative use of natural landscaping to support native plants and animals. |
Buddy Huffaker
Buddy Huffaker is president and executive director of the Aldo Leopold Foundation and served as the executive producer of Green Fire. A leading voice for why and how society must develop an ecological conscience, Buddy speaks to audiences across the country, has participated in three White House gatherings on conservation, and has contributed to two books. |
Paul Johnson
Paul Johnson and his family own and operate Oneota Slopes Farm near Decorah, Iowa. With a BS and MS in forestry, he served in the Peace Corps and later taught forestry in Ghana. He served three terms in the Iowa State Legislature, where he co-authored the 1987 Groundwater Protection Act, which led to establishment of the Leopold Center for Sustainable Agriculture at Iowa State University. He served as chief of the U.S. Soil Conservation Service (now the Natural Resources Conservation Service) from 1993–1997 and then as director of the Iowa Department of Natural Resources. |
Estella Leopold
Estella Leopold, youngest daughter of Aldo Leopold, is Professor Emerita of Botany and past director of the Quaternary Research Center at the University of Washington. Before that she had a distinguished career as a research paleobotanist with the U.S. Geological Survey in Denver. A specialist in fossil pollen and spores of the Cenozoic era, her research interests extend to plant biogeography and climate change over the last 65 million years. Her scientific and conservation interests led her to leadership roles in the establishment of two national monuments, Florissant Fossil Beds in Colorado and Mount St. Helens in Seattle, as well as involvement in numerous national, state and local conservation organizations. Elected to the National Academy of Sciences in 1974, she was honored in 2010 in Osaka, Japan with the International Cosmos Prize for her life work in science and conservation. |
Curt Meine
Curt Meine is a conservation biologist, environmental historian, and writer who serves as Senior Fellow with the Aldo Leopold Foundation and the Center for Humans and Nature, and as Associate Adjunct Professor at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. He has written and edited several books, including the biography Aldo Leopold: His Life and Work and Correction Lines: Essays on Land, Leopold, and Conservation. He is also the on-screen guide for the documentary film Green Fire: Aldo Leopold and a Land Ethic for Our Time. |
Jed Meunier
Jed Meunier grew up along the banks of the Wisconsin River, a landscape with a rich legacy of people and place. His mentors and role models include his grandmother, Nina Leopold Bradley, and her siblings. Jed is a post-doctoral student at the University of Minnesota having just completed his Ph.D. studying issues of land health along the U.S.-Mexico border. |
Kathleen Dean Moore
Kathleen Dean Moore is best known for her award-winning books about our cultural, moral, and spiritual connections to wet, wild places—Riverwalking, Holdfast, Wild Comfort, and The Pine Island Paradox. Her recent book, Moral Ground, gathers calls from the world’s moral leaders to honor our obligations to future generations. Moore is Distinguished Professor of Philosophy at Oregon State University. |
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Stephen Most
Stephen Most wrote the screenplay for Green Fire: Aldo Leopold and a Land Ethic for Our Time, one of five Emmy-winning and four Academy Award-nominated films he has worked on. He also wrote the book River of Renewal, Myth and History in the Klamath Basin; and Forces of Nature, a play whose characters are John Muir, Gifford Pinchot, and Theodore Roosevelt. |
Gary Paul Nabhan
Gary Paul Nabhan is an internationally-celebrated nature writer, food and farming activist, and proponent of conserving the links between biodiversity and cultural diversity. He has helped forge “the radical center” for collaborative conservation among farmers, ranchers, indigenous peoples, and environmentalists in the West. As the W.K. Kellogg Endowed Chair in Sustainable Food Systems at the University of Arizona Southwest Center, he works with students, faculty and nonprofits to build a more just, nutritious, sustainable and climate-resilient foodshed spanning the U.S./Mexico border |
Bettina Ring
Bettina Ring is Senior Vice President of Family Forests at the American Forest Foundation where she oversees the American Tree Farm System®, representing family forest owners sustainably managing 27 million acres of woodlands. She previously served as Executive Director of the Bay Area Open Space Council and as Executive Director of the Colorado Coalition of Land Trusts. At the Virginia Department of Forestry, she served as Deputy Director and Chief of Urban and Community Forester. She co-founded the Virginia Natural Resources Leadership Institute which helps professionals develop leadership skills for collaborative problem solving around environmental issues. Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack recently appointed her to the Forest Resource Coordinating Committee, which provides advice on private forestry and USDA's programs that assist landowners in managing their forests. |
Michelle Stevens
Michelle Stevens is an assistant professor at CSU Sacramento in the Environmental Studies Department. She is also Executive Director of Hima Mesopotamia: Water and Peace in the Middle East. She founded the NGO to nurture the eco-cultural heritage of the Tigris-Euphrates watershed through outreach, coordination and capacity building, synthesis of scientific information, traditional and local knowledge, providing a forum for cultural and environmental information exchange, and to influence just and equitable water policy in the watershed. She works internationally to help develop a framework of hima, or stewardship of the land, throughout the Arabic world. |
Lauret Savoy
Lauret Savoy writes across threads of cultural identity to explore their shaping by relationship with, and dislocation from, the land. A woman of African-American, Euro-American, and Native-American heritage, she is a professor of environmental studies and geology at Mount Holyoke College. Her books include The Colors of Nature: Culture, Identity, and the Natural World (with Alison Deming), Bedrock: Writers on the Wonders of Geology, and Living with the Changing California Coast. |
Julianne Lutz Warren
Julianne Lutz Warren is the author of Aldo Leopold’s Odyssey, a story about Leopold’s ideas evolving into his vision of land health, and other writings about the world-of-life, relations between cultural imagination and reality, and hope. She has a Ph.D. in conservation ecology, teaches at NYU, and is an activist for climate justice. Warren is a recipient of an NYU 2013 Martin Luther King, Jr. Faculty Award. |
Leslie Weldon
Leslie Weldon was named Deputy Chief for National Forest System with the USDA Forest Service in November 2011. In this role, Leslie is the lead executive responsible for policy, oversight and direction for the natural resource programs for managing the 193 million acres of National Forests and Grasslands so they best demonstrate sustainable multiple-use management, using an ecological approach, to provide benefits to citizens. |
Want to know more about Aldo Leopold?
Point Reyes Books can order any of these titles for you:
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Aldo Leopold’s Southwest
Edited by David E. Brown and Neil B. Carmony
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Companion to A Sand County Almanac: Interpretative and Critical Essays
Edited by J. Baird Callicott
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Aldo Leopold: For the Health of the Land
Edited by J. Baird Callicott and Eric T. Freyfogle
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Thinking Like a Mountain: Aldo Leopold and the Evolution of an Ecological Attitude toward Deer, Wolves, and Forests
By Susan Flader
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The River of the Mother of God And Other Essays by Aldo Leopold
Edited by Susan Flader and J. Baird Callicott
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A Sand County Almanac and Sketches Here and There
By Aldo Leopold
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Game Management
By Aldo Leopold
With a new Foreword by Laurence R. Jahn -
A Fierce Green Fire
By Marybeth Lorbiecki
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Things Natural, Wild, and Free: The Life of Aldo Leopold
By Marybeth Lorbiecki
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Aldo Leopold’s Odyssey
By Julianna Lutz Newton
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Aldo Leopold: His Life and Work
By Curt Meine
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Aldo Leopold: A Sand County Almanac Other Writings on Conservation and Ecology
(This new anthology will be available at the GOH Conference prior to national release!)
By Aldo Leopold and Curt Meine -
The Essential Aldo Leopold: Quotations and Commentaries
Edited by Curt D. Meine and Richard L. Knight
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Prairie Time: The Leopold Reserve Revisited
By John Ross and Beth Ross
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Introducing Aldo Leopold
By Curt Meine
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Leopold's Shack and Ricketts's Lab: The Emergence of Environmentalism
By Michael J. Lannoo
Additional bibliographic information at: http://www.aldoleopold.org/AldoLeopold/leopoldpubs.shtml
Learn More about Aldo Leopold
Download a free 45-minute audio driving tour of West Marin’s ranchlands
“An Abundant Land,” produced for Marin Agricultural Land Trust.
Press
Press Release
In the Press
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"PReviving the Ghost of Aldo Leopold in West Marin"
by Jonah Raskin, Bay Nature -
"The Key to Aldo Leopold’s Land Ethic Lies in Human Relationships"
by Cyndi Cady, West Marin Citizen -
"Epicenter: West Marin Issues"
Lyons Fillmer, KWMR kwmr.org
Interview with the makers of the film Green Fire -
"Point Reyes Offers a Living Laboratory to Remake a Conservation Ethic"
by Herb Kutchins, Point Reyes Light -
"Charting the Geographies of Hope"
by Paul Epstein
Bay Nature Magazine -
"A Geography of Hope"
by Paul Johnson
USDA Natural Resources Conservation Services -
Introducing Aldo Leopold
West Marin Citizen, January 3, 2013 -
“A Sand County Almanac Traces the Growth of a Conservation Ethic”
by Herb Kutchins
Point Reyes Light -
“Aldo Leopold’s Observations Help Show Effects of Climate Change”
by Mark Johnson
Milwaukee Wisconsin Journal Sentinel - “Imagining Ecopoetics: An Interview with Robert Hass, Brenda Hillman, Evelyn Reilly, and Jonathan Skinner
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“New Year, New Environmental Agenda”
by Dani Burlison
Pacific Sun -
“Igniting the Green Fire: Finding Hope in Aldo Leopold’s Land Ethic”
by Cyndi Cady
West Marin Citizen -
“A Sand County Almanac”
with Lyons Fillmer and Janet Robbins
KWMR 90.5 FM -
“Green Fire Wins an Emmy!”
aldopeopold.org
November 19, 2013 Watch the trailer
Geography of Hope Registration
Full Weekend Tickets: Sold Out
Special All-Day Saturday Only Tickets!
Includes morning panels; bag lunch; choice of afternoon field trip (or) screenings of Green Fire and Rebels with a Cause; and evening program of music and readings (does not include dinner).
Limited number available. $125
Friday Night Only Tickets
Keynote: Robert Hass
Screening of Green Fire: Aldo Leopold and a Land Ethic for Our Time
Panel discussion and Conversation #1:
Steve Most, Moderator, with filmmakers and featured participants Ann and Steve Dunsky, Susan Flader, Paul Johnson, Estella Leopold, Jed Meunier, and Michael Howard
Limited number available. $20
7:15pm at Toby's Feed Barn
Saturday Night Only Tickets
Lively Readings, Music, Song, and Stories
Brooke Hecht, host, with Tom Disher (piano), Christina Waldeck (songs), Jim Pfitzer (one-man play), Kathleen Dean Moore (reading), Carlos de la Fente (guitar), Estella Leopold and Jed Meunier (readings), John Francis (banjo), Curt Meine (songs)
Limited number available. $20
7:15pm at Toby's Feed Barn
Saturday Movie Tickets!
It’s a double feature!
See Green Fire—Aldo Leopold and a Land Ethic for our Time, PLUS Rebels with a Cause about the saving of Point Reyes National Seashore and Golden Gate National Recreation Area.
Double feature: $20 in advance
Rush tickets: $15 per movie at the door if seats are available
1 P.M.: Green Fire—Aldo Leopold and a Land Ethic for our Time
Screening and conversation with filmmakers
3 P.M.: Rebels with a Cause
Click here for more information



































