Experience, Training,

and Why Credentials Matter (And Don't)

I'm certified in the things that require it. But the real qualifications come from 20 years of practice, failure, learning, and showing up again.

Permaculture Background

Formal Training

  • Permaculture Design Certificate (PDC), 2005, Peter Bane & Keith Johnson, through Indiana University at the Lazy Black Bear in Paoli, Indiana
  • Advanced Permaculture: Teacher Training, 2006, Peter Bane, Andrew Goodheart Brown, Central Rocky Mountain Permaculture Institute, Basalt, Colorado
  • Regenerative Livelihoods, Gaia University
  • Diploma, Education, Permaculture Institute of North America, 2014
  • Diploma, Site Design, Permaculture Institute of North America, 2016

Facilitating PDCs & Permaculture Workshops

  • Teaching PDCs since 2005 (21 years)
  • Trained ~500 students in permaculture design
  • Guest instructor at Maya Mountain Research Farm, Belize; regular instructor at Indiana University
  • Workshop facilitation at Global Earth Repair Conference, North American Permaculture Convergences, regional permaculture gatherings

Design Experience

  • 20+ years of permaculture design work

  • Projects range from urban yards to 100+ acre farm schools

  • Specialties: Cold-climate design, water systems, food forests, integrated animal systems

  • Focused on Midwest bioregion: intimate knowledge of growing conditions, native plants, regional challenges

  • Notable Projects

    • 100-acre farm school, Arizona - integrated water systems, student and instructor housing, class rooms, orchard, etc.
    • Neighborhood redevelopment, Indiana - participatory design process with 20+ members
    • Homestead & farm redesign, Indiana - from bare land to functioning polyculture in 5 years

    Organizational Development & Facilitation  

    Sociocracy Training

    • Sociocracy training with Sociocracy For All
    • 10 years learning and practicing in Sociocracy For All Network ([2016-present])
    • Daily practice: circle participation, consent decision-making, selection process, feedback and more
    Why Living It Matters: Reading the manual is different from living the practice. I participated in dozens of governance circles, made hundreds of consent decisions, experienced how governance shapes culture (and culture shapes governance), learned where the method works beautifully and where it needs adaptation. This lived experience is what I bring to consulting work.

    Facilitation Training and Organizational Development

    • Certified Facilitator with Sociocracy For All
    • Conflict mediation certificate with Community Justice and Mediation
    • Nonprofit Leadership Certificate Training, O'Neill
    • Nonviolent Communication Training
    • Experience with restorative circles, consensus
    • Experience with founding, developing, and leading formal and informal nonprofits and small businesses

    Facilitation Experience

    • 15+ years facilitating group processes
    • Settings: nonprofits, cooperatives, neighborhoods, land projects, educational institutions, regional institutions
    • Types: strategic planning, board retreats, design charrettes, conflict transformation, governance transitions, vision development
    • Group sizes: 5-150 people
    • Approaches: consent-based decision-making, council circles, Open Space, World Café, design charettes

    Thought Leadership

    Editorial Experience:

    • Editor, Permaculture Design, 2014-2021
    • Published 20+ articles on permaculture, community, governance
    • Interviewed dozens of practitioners worldwide
    • Curated content at the intersection of ecology and social systems

    Writing & Speaking:

    • Conference presentations at Heartwood Forest Council; Global Earth Repair Conference; North American Permaculture Convergences; Regional Permaculture Convergences; Earth Charter conferences; regional Bioneers Conference, and more
    • Podcast guest on the Permaculture Podcast (Scott Mann)
    • Previous academic work in US History and Religious Studies
    Why This Matters: Years of synthesizing practitioner knowledge taught me to see patterns across thousands of projects. I learned what works, what fails, and why—not from one project or one bioregion, but from the accumulated wisdom of global movements. This meta-perspective informs everything I teach and consult on.

    Years of synthesizing practitioner knowledge taught me to see patterns across thousands of projects.

    GERC

    Nature Connection and Ancestral Skills

    Attention and presence are learnable skills, and nature connection is how we develop them

    box turtle in the forest

    Training:

    • Tracking and Awareness + more at Tracker School, New Jersey, 2012 to present
    • Art of Mentoring, 2014

    Personal Practice:

    • Daily sit spot practice since 2017
    • Active tracking practice
    • Ancestral skills: fire by friction, shelter building, plant identification, nature awareness
    • Ancestral skills: weaving, fiber arts, bow making, etc. 

    Integration Into Teaching:

    • Every PDC includes observation, sit spot practice, awareness skills leading into tracking
    • Advanced Program features more in-depth practices
    • All consulting work includes nature connection practices where relevant
    • Belief: Attention and presence are learnable skills, and nature connection is how we develop them

    Other Relevant Experiences

    Professional Background Before Permaculture:

    • Graduate work in US History and Religious Studies
    • Experience community organizing in urban and rural nonprofits including domestic violence work; forest protection work
    • Small Business certifications; nonprofit management certifications 

    Awards/Recognition:

    • Hellbender Award, Heartwood, 2011

    What Matters More than Credentials

    The Real Qualifications

    Milton, Rhonda, William

    20+ Years of showing up

    Credentials tell you I have training. They don't tell you I've failed at projects and learned from them. They don't tell you I've sat through hours of contentious meetings and learned to hold space for conflict. They don't tell you I've watched my own designs succeed and fail and studied why.


    The real qualification is showing up—for students, for clients, for the work itself—for 20 years. Not as an expert who has it figured out, but as a practitioner committed to getting better.

    integration that's lived, not theorized

    I didn't dream up this integration approach in a planning session. I lived it. I spent years designing permaculture projects that failed because of people problems. I spent years facilitating organizations that couldn't connect to their mission.


    The integration I teach comes from necessity, not cleverness. This is what works. This is what I've learned by paying attention.
    tree planting in Indy
    butterfly on echinacea

    Humbled by Nature

    The more you study nature, the more you realize how little you know. I've been observing ecosystems for 20 years and I'm still a beginner. The land humbles you constantly.


    This humility is what I bring to client work. I don't arrive with answers. I arrive with attention, with pattern recognition, with questions, with willingness to be surprised. And that's often more useful than certainty.

    Commitment to practice, not performance

    I sit every morning and pay attention. I track. I participate in peer learning groups. I read constantly. I stay a student.


    Not because it looks good on a credentials page, but because this work demands ongoing practice. I bring my practice to every teaching, every facilitation, every design project. It's the foundation.
    emergent monarch

    Emergent monarch in our forest garden

    Work with Me

    What I'm Well Suited For

    • Integrated design projects: (land + organizational systems)
    • PDC Education with facilitation and nature connection emphasis
    • Advanced practitioner training (filling the gaps most PDCs leave)
    • Nonprofit governance transformation (especially for land-based or mission-driven orgs)
    • Facilitation where both technical skill and deep presence matter
    • Midwest bioregional work (I know the climate, the plants, the culture)

    What I'm Not The Right Person For

    • Quick fixes or surface consulting
    • Organizations that want efficiency over depth
    • Projects that separate land work from people work
    • Tropical or warm-climate design (I'm a temperate-climate specialist)
    • Anyone who thinks permaculture or governance is about implementing templates

    My Approach

    • Observation before action

    • Relationship before design
    • Depth over speed
    • Integration, always integration
    Want to understand my philosophy? 
    Curious about the journey?
    Ready to explore working together?
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