Introduction to Thermophilic Composting:

The Benefits & Management of Living Soil

JOIN US for this LIVE virtual 6-week series

April 1st - May 6th, 2026

Wednesdays 6:00 pm - 7:30 pm

  • An introduction to and the benefits of a healthy Soil Food Web,

  • How to build a compost recipe designed to kick start the biology to break down starting materials and quickly heat up for thermophilic processing,

  • Strategies for sourcing free starting materials used to ensure your compost will support population growth for the “good” guy organisms,

  • Tools and materials for thermophilic compost management,

  • Resource storage and management.

  • Gain tools for promoting personal, community and environmental resilience.

Personal, Plant, Community & Global Resilience

Soil to Soul Regeneration Series

Saturdays, March 14 – April 18, 2026.

11:00 AM  1:00 PM (PST)

Weaving together science, sustainable growing practices, trauma recovery and holistic wellness with practical tools and practices for personal and environmental resilience.

Join us for this interactive, LIVE virtual workshop series where we explore the foundations and tools to build sustainability and resilience in today’s world. Together we’ll examine the connections between soil quality, food security, and personal, community, and environmental health.

Hosted by Rosalinda Noriega, Soil Detective and Anti-Violence Advocate. This series takes an interdisciplinary approach weaving together soil biology, sustainable growing practices, trauma recovery and holistic wellness with practical tools and practices for personal and environmental resilience.

Rooted & Rising

Healing Ourselves, Our Communities, and the Earth

Wednesdays, May 13th - June 17th, 2026.

6:00 pm - 7:30 pm (PST)

This live, 6-week webinar series is designed specifically for anyone who wants deeper, interdisciplinary tools for understanding—and interrupting—the conditions that perpetuate harm while fostering resilience and healing.

Grounded in trauma-informed practice, equity, and environmental justice, this series explores how the same systems that traumatize individuals—structural racism, land dispossession, environmental degradation, and food insecurity—also erode community and ecological health.

Drawing from social science, public health, and regenerative soil practices, participants will examine how nature responds to stress through collaboration and regeneration—and what that teaches us about sustainable pathways to healing and social change.

Through guided discussion, case examples, and applied frameworks, participants will explore:

  • The interconnected roots of complex social issues, including land occupation, food insecurity, and environmental injustice

  • How regenerative soil practices offer powerful metaphors and practical insights for personal, collective, and environmental trauma recovery

  • Parallels between soil regeneration and community organizing strategies used to build resilience and shift power

  • Global food system challenges and their direct relevance to violence prevention, health equity, and community stability

  • The scientifically documented connections between soil health, environmental conditions, and human physical and mental health.

This series invites you to zoom out—without losing sight of lived experience—and to integrate ecological thinking into their advocacy, community, and healing work. Participants will leave with expanded language, frameworks, and strategies for resilience not only as an individual experience, but as a systemic and environmental condition that can be transformed through collaboration, regeneration, and justice.

Continuing Training certification available: up to 12 hours.