SAVE THE DATE – CBC’s Bob (Quirks & Quarks) McDonald headlines “Flow & Grow Workshop” (Nov 29)
Note to Reader:
On November 29, at the Capri Hotel in Kelowna, the Partnership for Water Sustainability in British Columbia and the Irrigation Industry Association of British Columbia (IIABC) will co-host the 4th in their “Annual Year-End Water Sustainability Workshop Series”.
Each year the two groups look ahead to anticipate necessary directions for water resource management in the local government and agricultural sectors. The purpose of these events is to start and inform conversations around ‘bold ideas’. A desired outcome is that audiences will be both energized and inspired to make a difference when they leave the room.
FLOW AND GROW! – A workshop on HOW to respect ecosystem and cultural values, ensure food security and build water-resilient communities
Water from a Global Perspective & Beyond
Bob McDonald: Loved by audiences across Canada for making complex scientific issues understandable, meaningful, and fun, Bob McDonald is in high demand. A fixture in radio and television broadcasting for more than 30 years, he is currently the host of Quirks & Quarks–the award-winning science program that is heard by 500,000 people each week. Bob McDonald has authored four bestselling science books.
Chief Aaron Sam: Passionate about protecting and taking care of wild salmon, Aaron Sam has been a practicing lawyer for almost 10 years. As elected Chief, he continues to advocate for sustainable use of lands and waters, for the present and future generations.
Sense of Place: The concept for FLOW AND GROW is both visionary and practical, so constructed to identify solutions regarding water security through a process of consensus, commitment and collaboration. Simply put, the unifying theme is “sense of place”. Whether discussing the economy or ecological challenges, the workshop findings will be of equal importance and applicability to other areas within the province and beyond.
Four Modules: FLOW AND GROW is structured as four modules and is cascading – from high-level visioning to ground-level applications. Each module has a learning objective. Adaptation to a changing climate is a thread that runs through all the modules.
Climate change, water security, population demand and food security issues will be discussed in grounded terms by a team of 11 expert inter-disciplinary presenters. Their objective is to seed a conversation that will ripple through time. Team members will share and reflect on their perspectives of what a balance of the economy, ecology and settlement in the Okanagan Valley (and beyond) might look like.
To Learn More:
Spirit & Science – An Inclusive Journey
Blue Ecology: This concept emerged from interweaving two ways of knowing: 1) a First Nations spiritual and traditional ecological perspective; and 2) a Western science secular and ecological perspective. Michael Blackstock wrote that “Blue Ecology is a means to focus, with new watery eyes, on the arrived crisis of climate change.”
He saw as essential the acknowledgement of water’s central functional and spiritual roles in our world, and urged us to apply both respect and science-based understanding as we develop collaborative climate change mitigation strategies and instill this respect and understanding in younger generations.