Re-Skilling Series at RDI

Reclaiming the Art of Local Craftsmanship

What is Re-Skilling?

Our ancestors, perhaps only a few generations back, were able to make what they needed for daily life or trade for what they needed with a skilled neighbor.  

In this modern culture, most of us have lost the skills of basic craftsmanship. As we transition away from global consumerism and towards localized, earth-friendly economies, we need to reclaim these skills for ourselves and for our community.

Many of us have already started to re-skill around food — growing fresh vegetables in the backyard or cultivating a plot at a local community garden. This self-sustaining practice is deeply satisfying, and in the Bay Area there is a vibrant local economy around food that supports local farmers, garden teachers, restaurants, and burgeoning new vegetable landscaping businesses.

The Re-Skilling Series

The Re-Skilling Series at RDI was inspired by our greater community's interest in learning more craftsmanship skills. Beyond growing our own vegetables, we can start re-skilling around food preservation, clothing, personal care products, furniture, and other needs of daily life.

Re-skilling requires that we connect more deeply to the natural world. It involves cultivating (or foraging) plants for basketry, building materials, medicine, general body care, dyes, food and clothing. It invites us into a closer relationship with domestic and wild animals, and asks that we pay more attention to the changing of the seasons and the cycles of the natural world. It also fosters a deeper gratitude for all that nature continues to provide us.

Re-skilling is happening all over the world — especially within communities engaged in the Transition Town movement. Now is the time to reclaim these basic skills of local craftsmanship! We believe that joy of reclaiming these skills will increase our self-sufficiency and meet the growing needs for a local, regenerative economy.

We invite you to join us in re-skilling in one or more of the following areas. This is just a start - more topics and more workshops are coming soon! 

  • Fiber Arts: from sheep to shawl — spinning, weaving, knitting, felting, using natural dyes
  • Woodworking: rustic furniture making, basic building skills, timber framing
  • Basketry: cultivation and foraging techniques, traditional basket weaving and bark bucket techniques using local materials
  • Herbal Healing & Body Care: basic medicine making techniques, herbal first aid, lotions and soaps, plant spirit medicine
  • Dairy Arts: making cheese, yogurt and keifer
  • Growing Food & Soil: composting, seed saving, worm bins, basic techniques for growing hearty vegetables
  • Mushroom Cultivation: growing basics for medicinal and gourmet varieties

Upcoming Workshops

 

September 18

Natural Dyes with Rebecca Burgess
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Spinning with a Drop Spindle with Marlie de Swart
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Rustic Furniture Construction with Erin Campbell — September 18-19
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September 19

Nourish Thyself, An Introduction to Herbal Body Care with Rachel Berry
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October 30

Indigo Dyes with Rebecca Burgess
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Introduction to Knitting & Weaving with Charmaine Krieger
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October 31

Growing Gourmet and Medicinal Mushrooms with Tammy Davis
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Introduction to Felting with Patricia Briceño
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Introduction to Machine Sewinng with Susan Hayes
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Soon to be scheduled

Sacred Healing Plants with Kyra Epstein — Date TBA
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