National Water Center, Eureka Springs, Arkansas
         

National Water Center, Eureka Springs, AR

Updated: April 2014 Contact: Contact: NWC

Contents ©1999-2014 by National Water Center. All rights reserved worldwide.

WaterWorks, volume 5, MM

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  contents












A growing number of people are recognizing that in order to secure the clean air, water and food that we need to healthfully survive, we have to become guardians of the places where we live. People sense the loss in not knowing our neighbors and natural surroundings, and are discovering that the best way to take care of ourselves and to get to know our neighbors, is to protect and restore our region.

Bioregionalism recognizes, nurtures, sustains and celebrates our local connections with:
Land
Plants and Animals
Springs, Rivers, Lakes, Groundwater & Oceans
Air
Families, Friends, Neighbors
Community
Native Traditions
Indigenous Systems of Production & Trade

The bioregional perspective recreates a widely-shared sense of regional identity founded upon a renewed critical awareness of and respect for the integrity of our ecological communities. People are joining with neighbors to discuss ways we can work together to:

1. Learn what our special local resources are
2. Plan how to best protect and use those natural and cultural resources
3. Exchange our time and energy to best meet our daily and long-term needs
4. Enrich our children's local and planetary knowledge

Security begins by acting responsibly at home.

Welcome home!

This statement was adopted by the first North American Bioregional Congress (NABC) in 1984 and reaffirmed at NABC II and III.

Go To: water cycles

It is taking the time to learn the possibilities of place. It is a mindfulness of local environment, history, and community aspirations that leads to a sustainable future. It relies on safe and renewable sources of food and energy. It ensures employment by supplying a rich diversity of services within the community, by recycling our resources, and by exchanging prudent surpluses with other regions. Bioregionalism is working to satisfy basic needs locally, such as education, health care and self-governance.

Page 2

Welcome Home

Issue

Dedicated

to the

Memory of
JIM BERRY


Welcome Home Statement


2

water cycles

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Welcome to “the new” WaterWorks

Michael Flitter and Robert McAfee

5

Bioregionalism: A Positive Solution

Barbara Harmony

6

Heal The Waters


7

Lion Heart for Brotherhood with Earth

David Haenke

8

on the waterfront

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Water and Bioregionalism

David Haenke

11

Talk at Watershed

Peter Berg

14

Natural Systems for the Treatment of Wastewater

Tad Montgomery

18

Clancy’s Cave, Otter Creek Bioregion, Ohio Valley Watershed

Don Boklage

19

The Salmon Circle

Frasier Lang

21

Some North American Bioregional Water Committee Reflections

Barbara Harmony

22

Water Committee Resolutions

N. American Bioregional Council

23

healing the waters

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The Turbid Tap (Water) Dance

Miriam Ella

26

Protecting Watersheds Can Save Billions in Water Treatment

Trust for Public Land

27

here


29

The Task Force to Bring Back the Don . . .

Dalton Shipway

30

Cuernaveca - “City of Eternal Spring” … and Sewage

George Anna Clark

31

Nuclear Power: Hanging in the Balance in Minnesota

George Cocker

33

Webs of truth

Rosemary Zeroth

35

celebrating water

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Present Moment, Wonderful Moment

Thich Nhat Hanh

36

Papermaking as a Vast Reservoir

Coco Gordon

38

Wolfgang Vaatz: Sculpting with Clay and Water

Kerstin Wiederhold

39

Water soul

Rpsemary Zeroth

40

Water and the Human Spirit

Patricia D. Michael & Gayle Borst

41

Livin Water, Urban Vitality

Betsey Damen

41

Water Divine

Susan Dean

42

Chop Wood, Carry Water

Anonymous

43

h 2 oh! the more you know

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An Atlas of Bryant Creek and Its Watershed

Peter Callaway

44

Mapping YOUR Watershed

Aleasha Dees & Michael Flitter

46

the last drop

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Finish Jim’s Work

Herman Greene

48

Memorial Tree Planting Honors

Jim Berry

48

Naming Our Home

Eleanor Rae

50

Inside Back Cover


51