top of page

Welcoming wisdom-keepers from a globe-spanning spectrum of wellness traditions, we will celebrate the similarities and explore the idiosyncrasies of Ayurveda, Native American, Chinese, African, Arctic, Nordic approaches to holistic healing on the personal, collective and ancestral level.
This is for you if you're feeling called to:
-
learn ancestral ways of wellness;
-
connect with a community of fellow seekers and Self-healers;
-
sing, dance and play our way towards personal and collective health and wholeness;
-
and spend an inspiring weekend in the beautiful river canyon of Black Hawk, Colorado;
All are welcome!
Humans of any age, gender, orientation, ethnicity or cultural background are enthusiastically invited. The only qualifications required are sincere curiosity and the courage to explore our inextricable interconnectedness.
The conference is designed to be of interest and benefit to:
-
Any health-conscious, Ayurveda-curious individual
-
Folks focused on nature-based ways of knowing and being
-
Holistic health professionals of any persuasion
-
Ayurveda professionals (NAMA PACE credits available)
-
Yogis, singers, dancers, movers, shakers
-
Individuals devoted to justice and dignity for all peoples
-
Anyone interested in cultivating community resilience rooted in an integrative, all-inclusive cosmology — unity in diversity!

Presentation & Practicum themes include:
-
the indigenous roots of Ayurveda;
-
traditional, nature-based healing practices of many traditions;
-
local food as medicine, ancestral nutrition, seasonal rhythms;
-
herbalism, foraging, primitive skills, Earth-based ways of life;
-
mythology, storytelling, poetry, song;
-
ancestral medicine, healing of lineages, generational trauma;
-
the healing power of community in connection with the living Earth.

“Action on behalf of life transforms. Because the relationship between self and the world is reciprocal, it is not a question of first getting enlightened or saved and then acting. As we work to heal the earth, the earth heals us.”
― Robin Wall Kimmerer
bottom of page