Ep 7. Dario our BEATS social media whizz and all-round good guy

Ep 7. Dario our BEATS social media whizz and all-round good guy

Dario in water
The BEATS - Beating the drum for biodiversity
Ep 7. Dario our BEATS social media whizz and all-round good guy
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theBEATS.org volunteer, social media whizz, music lover is also a drone maestro, keep fit king and a Senior Manager in Governance, Risk and Compliance in a global professional services firm. Today he shares how he fits all this into one day. And why he’s passionate about nature.

“I’m just an ordinary kinda guy…” he says. “Oh really?” says I! “Well,” he demurs, “You just do the things you are passionate about,” he explains. “With a little help from nature, your friends and a big bunch of luck.” And “A heap of talent!” I add.

Dario Berzosa Sanchez is our BEATS conversation in this 25” podcast. He has a fabulous 31,000 Insta followers and you’ll see why if you jump online. He’s passionate about the ocean – having grown up on Spain’s Costa Blanca – just 50ks south of the Costa Brava with the renown cities of Valencia and Barcelona. But now calls Tamarama – the beach next to Australia’s iconic Bondi – home.

I was always keen to learn a little more about what makes this smiling Spaniard tick – and was impressed by his humility and his smarts. One of his asks is that whenever we are out and about just pick up three pieces of rubbish. I’ve been doing so ever since! Thanks Dario.

Have a listen and enjoy! And share on your socials to spread the word that we can all help nature in little ways and have fun doing so.

Ep 7. Dario our BEATS social media whizz and all-round good guy

Ep 6. Superhero Teacher Zane Osborn and his kids go Bush

The BEATS - Beating the drum for biodiversity
The BEATS - Beating the drum for biodiversity
Ep 6. Superhero Teacher Zane Osborn and his kids go Bush
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Assistant Principal Zane Osborn and his primary school kids have heaps of fun learning Maths, English, History, and Science in the garden, up trees and in the bush. In this podcast the nature-loving charity – theBEATS.org’s – Louise Denver chats with Zane about his passion for the environment and how Zane factors sustainability into his everyday teaching.

Together his class discover why bees are so important – what pollination is and why it matters when it comes to making a delicious pizza! And the Hamilton PS kids’ chose barking owls for their special project – barking owls? And now up in Armidale, Zane and his new classes are going to explore how to protect the region’s unique long neck turtles.

This podcast is 20 minutes of pure gold! Do yourself a favour and have a listen. I promise you, you will feel really good. P.S. Zane is also working with theBEATS.org to create a step-by-step guide for Teachers so everyone can have fun and discover how Zane and his classes approach their learning. And for a special treat you can see the Hamilton kids YouTube video series here!

Ep 7. Dario our BEATS social media whizz and all-round good guy

Ep 4. Eat Dirt

Connecting with land, circle of natural items with girrwarr-ngaarra written underneath
The BEATS - Beating the drum for biodiversity
Ep 4. Eat Dirt
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A podcast with Educator Melanie Tyas (also Community of Practice Coordinator for Landcare NSW)

In a radical education program at Bellingen High School – Mel transformed how and where a class of Year 8 kids learn one amazing day a week.

One student was overheard saying: “This program’s great – it’s teaching me how to deal with peer pressure.” And another more reluctant, more academically-minded student said in relation to Gumbaynggirr Language: “I’ve learnt more today than I have the whole year at school!”

Says Mel: “It’s a massive learning curve all round. As we look after the land and heal it, we are also helping kids heal and improve their ‘mental health’.”

Mel quotes the NSW Premier on health. He said: ‘We can’t tinker with it – we have to transform it!’ “So too education!” says Mel.

“The reality is that Eat Dirt champions optimism. It gives kids hope – they connect to each other and to the land, and they enjoy learning by doing.”

Known as ‘Integrated Learning’ Eat Dirt develops the 21st Century skills of agility, innovation, and creativity as well as the ability to think on your feet. It builds on basic numeracy and literacy skills – making them fun and memorable.

‘How big is this patch of land? How many plants will we need? What’s the soil quality? What’s the slope?’ Etcetera…

The Outcome: It’s all about connecting. As Mel says, “If we are going to fix the environment, we’ll do it through connecting. Through cooperation not competition.”

Her vision: A Landcare day once a week in every school – from Kindy to year 12.

Think: Feel: Do: Melanie Tyas wants us to:
• Think: That transformational change is possible. When we work together, we can achieve amazing things.

• Feel: Really positive. Feel empowered. Mel says: “My whole career – first as a teacher, then a NSW National Parks and Wildlife Service Ranger for 20 years, and now a Landcare coordinator and educator – has led me to this place.”

• Do: Join your local Landcare, Bushcare or Dune-care group. Get involved.

In this positive, optimistic, transformational podcast we learn that we can save the planet.

Mel thank you for inspiring us at theBEATS.org to continue to do more, learn more and care more.

Ep 7. Dario our BEATS social media whizz and all-round good guy

Ep 3. A Sense of Humus with Kate Spry and Charlotte Drinnan

The BEATS - Beating the drum for biodiversity
The BEATS - Beating the drum for biodiversity
Ep 3. A Sense of Humus with Kate Spry and Charlotte Drinnan
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A Sense of Humus – Educating, Celebrating and Advocating

A podcast with Regenerative Farmers and Educators – Kate Spry and Charlotte Drinnan

Celia Cavanagh gives us a quick SOIL 101 as she sets up the podcast conversation with two courageous women – both traditional turned regenerative farmers and both educators. And both passionate about soil.

Soil – What is it? How have we cultivated it? And how we’ve used and abused it, releasing its rich organic carbon content into the atmosphere to add to emissions.

Kate Spry and Charlotte Drinnan tell us how they are recapturing that carbon. How to do so to regenerate our depleted soils. And how they are doing it in practice on their land. And in sharing their stories how they are changing the curriculum (The Soil Story) to teach ag students and other farmers about it.

The Outcome: Transforming farming into a practice and sharing it as a science that once again supports the soil to act as a superb carbon sink. In this way they are regenerating their own properties from bare dust and dirt or weed infestations to richer paddocks with diverse plants, teeming in bird life.

As they help protect the planet and grow crops – much to our surprise – with livestock that actually helps the soil get rich again.

As Educators
Kate was inspired by The Soil Story – Discovering it back in 2015 she knows that healthy soils foster healthy humans. Inspired by the Soil Story Kate developed an Australian module of Kiss the Ground. It took courage – she went to her supervisor when teaching in her town of Tamworth NSW back in 2016/7 and said she couldn’t teach the existing curriculum – that we would save the planet by getting rid of all livestock. She knew she would be teaching a lie.

Kate was given permission to ‘teach what she knew’ and she did. She captured what she was doing – building on the shoulders of some phenomenal Australians before her including Charles Massy and Bruce Pascoe and others – and turned her course into a curriculum. She was supported to launch it in February 2018 see link. It subsequently spread like a virus – picked up by 50 schools in the first few weeks. The curriculum is now online and accessed internationally!

Think: Feel: Do: Kate Spry wants us to:
• Think: Regeneratively, not sustainably, maintaining the status quo but rejuvenating and rehabilitating to the land. ‘It’s not too late!’
• Feel: Get out into the soil and feel it.
o Is it compacted? Is it friable? What’s happening to it? Start analysing it.
• Do: Get amongst it and get into it. Start growing some veggies.

Influenced by Kate’s work, Charlotte, teaches both music and regenerative agriculture at Greater Shepparton Secondary College in Shepparton, Victoria – a very large secondary college with 2300 students. Kate is a connector. Hailing from a Tasmanian sheep farm, she and her husband now farm near Shepparton. At the same time, she links farming families across Australia with others – nationally and internationally. During lockdown last year she linked her 15-17-year-old students with a farming family in Montana USA. This triggered parents to be in touch to learn more.

Describing herself as a facilitator, this year Charlotte is now also teaching year 11 students agriculture and horticulture in a way to inspire the inquiring mind – to ask What if? How can I be healthier? And create a practical approach to a Living Earth.

Think: Feel: Do: Charlotte Drinnan wants us to:
 Think: How regenerative agriculture can help us reverse climate change and get rid of the legacy load in our atmosphere. “Done the right way it can do that!”
• Feel: I feel hopeful that farmers will continue to be curious and open themselves up to the education and research available to them in their communities.
o In this way they can change their practices so together we can continue to assist getting carbon back down into the soil where it belongs.
• Do: I am going to continue my journey on the farm. I am going to continue educating young people.
o I will do more in my community. I have just completed a ‘Farmers for Climate Action Leadership’ course.
o Listeners in the city areas can support regenerative farmers by buying their produce either directly from the regenerative farmer’s website, the Facebook page or existing outlets.

Kate and Charlotte thank you for inspiring us at theBEATS.org – to also continue to do more, to learn more and where we can to inspire us all to be more.

Ep 7. Dario our BEATS social media whizz and all-round good guy

Ep 2. A Connection with Nature with Guy Williams

The BEATS - Beating the drum for biodiversity
The BEATS - Beating the drum for biodiversity
Ep 2. A Connection with Nature with Guy Williams
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Ecologist, primatologist and director of biodiversity and nature, Guy Michael Williams, connects us to the forest, delights us with stories of nature, and strategies that can work for all of us wanting to save the planet.

A key part of his work is to connect biodiversity and business to understand the immeasurable value of e.g. where your decking timber comes from and how to source it sustainability.

Climate is inextricably linked to biodiversity @GuyMichaelWilliams shows us how.

Commission on Ecosystem Management
A network of professionals whose mission is to act as a source of advice on the environmental, economic, social and cultural factors that affect natural resources and biological diversity.

Science Based Targets Network
We enable companies and cities to play a vital role in creating an equitable, nature positive, net-zero future using science-based targets.

Taskforce on Nature-related Financial Disclosures
Delivering a risk management and disclosure framework for organisations to report and act on nature-related risks.

Restor
Restor is a science-based open data platform to support and connect the global restoration movement

Convention on Biological Diversity
Signed by 150 government leaders at the 1992 Rio Earth Summit, the Convention on Biological Diversity is dedicated to promoting sustainable development. Conceived as a practical tool for translating the principles of Agenda 21 into reality, the Convention recognizes that biological diversity is about more than plants, animals and micro organisms and their ecosystems – it is about people and our need for food security, medicines, fresh air and water, shelter, and a clean and healthy environment in which to live.

The IUCN Red List
Established in 1964, The International Union for Conservation of Nature’s Red List of Threatened Species has evolved to become the world’s most comprehensive information source on the global conservation status of animal, fungi and plant species.

The IUCN Red List is a critical indicator of the health of the world’s biodiversity. Far more than a list of species and their status, it is a powerful tool to inform and catalyze action for biodiversity conservation and policy change, critical to protecting the natural resources we need to survive. It provides information about range, population size, habitat and ecology, use and/or trade, threats, and conservation actions that will help inform necessary conservation decisions.

Re:wild
Re:wild protects and restores the wild. We have a singular and powerful focus: the wild as the most effective solution to the interconnected climate, biodiversity and pandemic crises.

Founded by a group of renowned conservation scientists together with Leonardo DiCaprio, Re:wild is a force multiplier that brings together Indigenous peoples, local communities, influential leaders, nongovernmental organizations, governments, companies and the public to protect and rewild at the scale and speed we need. Our vital work has protected and conserved more than 180 million acres benefitting more than 16,000 species in the world’s most irreplaceable places for biodiversity.