Winner Of The Jack Johnson Registration Promotion!

June 16, 2008 by Jamie S. Dent  
Filed under Cottonwood Institute News

Steven_cordova_jj_winner_2008
We are excited to announce that Steven Cordova is the big winner of the Jack Johnson Registration Promotion! Steven and a lucky guest will receive two tickets to the SOLD OUT Jack Johnson show at Red Rocks on Sunday, August 17th, 2008. Steven is a Denver Zoo Teen Volunteer and he is registered for our Endangered Wolves and Animal Tracking Course with the Denver Zoo in July. Congrats Steven!

Free Change the World Movie Night: The 11th Hour

June 6, 2008 by Ford Church  
Filed under Upcoming Events

Stamped_earth_poster_thumbJoin the Cottonwood Institute at the Fluid Coffee Bar in Denver this Thursday, June 12, 2008 at 6:30pm as we host a free screening of Leonardo DiCaprio’s The 11th Hour. After we watch the movie, we will host a discussion regarding things we can do to reduce our
environmental footprint. We will also l
earn about the Cottonwood Institute and the Fluid Coffee Bar’s environmental commitment and learn about opportunities to take action.  

The 11th Hour is the last moment when change is possible. The film explores how we’ve arrived at this moment — how we live, how we impact the earth’s ecosystems, and what we can do to change our course. Featuring ongoing dialogues of experts from all over the world, we will hear from over 50 leading scientists, thinkers and leaders who discuss the most important issues that face our planet and people.  

 

Help the Cottonwood Institute Win a $2,500 Matching Gift from Jack Johnson!

June 2, 2008 by Ford Church  
Filed under Cottonwood Institute News

Jackjohnsonalbum08 In March, we announced that Jack Johnson had committed to supporting the Cottonwood Institute this year through All At Once and the Johnson Ohana Charitable Foundation. Below are three exciting ways you can help us win a $2,500 matching gift from Jack Johnson to support our Griffith Scholarship Fund, win tickets to his sold out show at Red Rocks this summer, and learn how to volunteer at the Jack Johnson concert:

  1. Register for a Course: If you register for a 2008 Cottonwood Institute course before Monday, June 9, 2008, you will be entered into a drawing to receive two tickets to Jack Johnson’s sold out Red Rocks show on Sunday, August 17th, 2008.
  2. Donate $25 to our Griffith Scholarship Fund: When you make a $25 donation or more to our Griffith Scholarship Fund by Sunday, August 10th, 2008, not only will your donation be matched by Jack Johnson (up to $2,500), but you will be entered into a drawing to receive two tickets to the sold out Red Rocks show on Sunday, August 17th, 2008. Please consider making your donation through the Cottonwood Institute Facebook Cause. If you don’t have a Facebook account, but you would still like to help us reach our goal, please Click Here to make your donation online and enter "All At Once" in the designation section. We also accept checks made payable to: Cottonwood Institute, PO Box 7067, Denver, CO 80207.
  3. Volunteer at the Jack Johnson Concert: Folks that register for a course before June 9, 2008 and/or make a $25 donation or more to the Griffith Scholarship Fund by Sunday, August 10, 2008 are eligible to register on a first come, first serve basis to volunteer at the sold out Jack Johnson Concert on Sunday, August 17th, 2008. Volunteers are needed to to help us with setting up and breaking down the “Village Green” as well as passing out the passports, interacting with the fans, and helping with other general tasks to make the “Village Green” run smoothly.

After you have actively participated in steps 1 and/or 2 listed above, please contact Ford Church via Email or call him directly at 303.447.1076 to register to volunteer at the Jack Johnson concert.

     

Radiating From Her Heart - Honoring A Veteran Of Service: Larry French

“I think it is important to foster an appreciation of nature, no matter how large, or small.” - Molly French

Have you ever taken the initiative to help a stranger? We hope this story inspires you to help those in need, as it has inspired us to tell this story of kindness.

This year, the Cottonwood Institute had an outreach booth at the Green Apple Music Festival in Denver’s City Park. While talking about our exciting Summer Courses for adventurous youth and adults, we met an amazing person, Molly French.

Molly listened as she walked by our booth about the Cottonwood Institute’s need to have proper equipment/gear for our high school aged youth to have during our Community Adventure Program overnights and Summer Course projects. A few weeks later, we received contact from her stating that she wanted to organize a gear drive with her friends (with the help of Kathy Albert and Tracey Roberts), and that she wanted to make a donation to our Griffith Scholarship Fund with her good friend Ilene Bloom in honor of her father’s life. Below are a few words about her father, Larry French:

Larry_french

“My Dad had a keen and subtle appreciation for nature. He spent a large part of his childhood on a lake in Indiana with his family. He took my brothers, sisters and myself camping almost every vacation as children. He wrote a letter to my mother every day he was in Vietnam (he was there for two years), many of the letters describing the beauty of that country in great detail. For as long as I can remember as a child, and into my adulthood, he did volunteer work for the Civitan Club out of Birmingham, Alabama. Part of that volunteer work was helping them prepare a summer camp for kids with disabilities. The few times he was able to visit me in Colorado, I took he and my mom to Steamboat, Durango, and Glenwood Springs. He loved the beauty of this state, and I am so glad he got to see parts of it.

My Dad unexpectedly and sadly died March of 2006. I cherish the times when I had a rare moment alone with my father (I have four siblings). During some of those moments, nature distracted and consumed his attention. For example, one time at the kids camp he came across a grove of birch trees. He tookTrees_birch several pictures of the birches while he was lying on his back at the base of the grove. I can remember the first time I saw the photos of the birch trees and learned about his awe of nature. Another time we were walking on the beach, he saw a crab and followed it around for 20 minutes or so. I followed him; he followed the crab - in silence. I knew why he was distracted. He understood the power of nature, even in the smallest things. It’s important that young people have an opportunity to connect with nature on any level, then hopefully take that connection into adulthood as a catapult to involvement in environmental preservation - for example, from being part of a hands-on crew in restoring trails to taking on leadership positions in environmental organizations.”
- Molly French, May 30, 2008

On behalf of the Cottonwood Institute we would like to thank Molly, Ilene, Kathy and Tracey for taking the initiative to support our students. To learn how you can support the Cottonwood Institute please consider making a Donation, supporting our Griffith Scholarship Fund to help make our courses accessible to students in need, donating an item on our Wish List, or joining us in the field for one of our amazing Summer Courses.

The Omnivore’s Dilemma

June 1, 2008 by Ford Church  
Filed under Environmental Sustainability

Omnivoresdilemma
What should we have for dinner? It may seem like an innocent question, but in today’s America, that single question can be answered in a multitude of ways. Should it be fast food? Organic? Local? Natural? If you have ever found yourself engaged in a personal battle about what and how to eat, I suggest you check out The Omnivore’s Dilemma by Michael Pollan. In his book, Pollan does a fantastic job of researching and supplying (in sometimes grisly detail) the facts about the makeup of our food industry. From an Iowa corn farm to the completely self-sustained organic Polyface farm in Virgina, Pollan describes it all. He also brings to light several important issues about the environmental, health, and cultural effects of choosing one diet over another. Facts such as: one steer requires 35 gallons of oil to raise or 3 in every 5 Americans are considered ‘fat’ forces one to at least begin to think about the implications of what he or she eats. As Pollan states, “Imagine for a moment if we once again knew, strictly as a matter of course, these few unremarkable things: What it is we’re eating. Where it came from. How it found its way to our table. And what, in a true accounting, it really cost.”

Guiding Question: How much thought an intention do you put into what you eat, where it comes from, and its environmental impact?