Most of us were taught to learn about nature from books, lectures, or field guides. While those tools are useful, they often leave out the most direct teacher of all, which the the land itself.
My new course Sensory Immersion Ecology invites you to remember how to learn the way our ancestors did: through direct, embodied experience. It’s not about memorizing names or facts, but about building a relationship with the living world through your senses.
In this mini-course, you’ll explore forests, rivers, meadows, and mycelial networks not just with your eyes, but with your whole body. You’ll be guided through sensory meditation practices that heighten awareness and help you listen more deeply to the more-than-human world.
These practices invite you to slow down so you can notice patterns, rhythms, and subtle forms of communication most people overlook. The moss beneath your feet, the birdsong at dawn, the scent of crushed leaves can each become part of the curriculum.
Experiential learning is the heart of this journey. You’ll walk barefoot, sit in silence, forage mindfully, and learn how to feel your way into ecosystems. Flora, fauna, and fungi are not treated as abstract objects to study but as kin to meet.
By engaging your senses fully, you’ll come to understand species not just by what they are, but how they feel, sound, smell, and interact in their native environments.
This approach is both scientific and soulful. It honours traditional ecological knowledge and blends it with modern awareness practices to create a more intuitive, embodied way of learning.
You don’t need a biology degree to connect with nature; you just need curiosity, presence, and a willingness to listen. Each session becomes a kind of ceremony, a moment of reciprocity between you and the more-than-human world.
Whether you’re a nature educator, retreat leader, herbalist, or simply someone who longs to reconnect, this course offers tools for deeper presence and ecological awareness.
Sensory Immersion Ecology is an invitation to come home to the land through your senses, and to remember that you are part of nature, not separate from it.
The forest becomes a classroom, you develop your feeling sense and build a sense of kinship that restores the rich sense of curiosity, awe & wonder you had as a child.
Access the course here in my online community & classroom: Sensory Immersion Ecology
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