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From YouTube: Regenerati News Hour 10/6/22
Description
Join Regen Network for news updates and ongoings with our team, including discussion around carbon credits, grant projects, and meet & greets in the refi space. The Regenerati News Hour is an opportunity for community engagement for anyone interested in planetary regeneration.
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A
Right
on
well
I
figured.
We
should
just
jump
in
no
time
like
the
present
here,
I'm,
not
sure
I,
think
I'm,
not
sure
if
Gregory
is
going
to
show
up
or
not
I
know
it's
on
his
calendar.
A
But
obviously
we
have
plenty
to
talk
about
given
a
very
intense
and
exciting
past
couple
of
weeks
hold
on
standby
and
Gregory
up
past
couple
of
weeks
as
the
regen
teams,
regen
Network,
regen
Foundation
ourselves
from
lower
Labs
team,
we
all
kind
of
moved
through
various
parts
of
the
world
as
a
really
neat
ecosystem
of
humans,
interacting
together
at
Cosmo
verse
at
Greenhouse
at
the
region,
Network
regen,
Foundation
Retreat,
like
I,
said
so.
B
C
D
A
See
syrup
if
you've
got
some
way,
you'd
like
to
kick
this
off
for
Gregory
I,
think
you've
been
invited
to
co-host
or
maybe
you're
just
listening
today,
but.
D
A
What's
what's
on
your
mind,
how
would
you
like
to
cover
a
lot
of
territory
since
over
the
past
couple
weeks,
and
also
we've
got
some
pretty
big
things
on
the
horizon,
that
it
seems,
like
our
imminent
on
a
product
release
front
that
we
can
talk
about
as
well.
D
This
morning,
Dave
Maybe,
we
take
our
community
just
linearly
through
the
Journey
that
we're
all
kind
of
readjusting
from
being
back
from
and
right
now,
I'm
I'm,
outside
of
my
home
in
Southern,
California
and
I'm,
looking
out
in
the
mountains
and
mountains,
are
filled
with
this
really
extraordinary,
thick
fog
that
blankets,
the
landscape,
all
the
way
to
the
Sea.
So
so
it's
sort
of
a
perfect
morning
to
talk
about
our
journey
across
land,
and
maybe
at
the
end
we,
you
know.
D
A
C
About
to
try
to
tweet
about
our
space
here,
so
my
my
mic
was
hidden
behind
a
layer
of
Twitter
interfaces.
Yeah
that
sounds
good
yeah
excited
to
to
share
all
the
moving
pieces
and
yeah
catch
up
with
the
community
a
little
bit.
It's
been
quite
a
ride
so
and
lots
is
still
moving.
I
just
would
call
out
that
members
of
the
foundation,
team
and
r
d
Inc
are
currently
down
in
body
charter
at
the
refi
body
charter
Gathering-
and
you
know
it's
been
fun-
to
see.
C
Antonio
and
and
Joe
Brewer
sort
of
live
tweeting
the
event.
So
it's
going
to
be
exciting
to
see
what
comes
out
of
that
so
and
then
and
then
some
people
are
even
flowing
further
down
the
river
to
Devcon
and
sustainable
blockchain
Summit
in
Bogota.
So
it's
quite
a
it's
been
quite
a
crazy
September
and
October
I.
C
Think
so
lots
so
much
to
share
and
excited
to
sort
of
you
know,
maybe
start
from
the
beginning
and
and
go
from
there
see
see
what
questions
people
have
too
I'm
gonna
I'm
gonna
go
on
mute
for
a
second
and
just
tweet
out
that
we're
chatting.
A
Here,
right
on,
maybe
Sarah,
you
can
guide
us
at
least
through
the
first
week.
Together,
you
know
the
knowing
you've
spent
a
lot
of
time,
organizing
the
regen
Network
development
team
and
the
regen
Foundation
team
to
convene
at
racebrook
we're
in
or
at
least
in
the
Berkshires,
in
western
Mass,
really
exciting
time
together.
A
I
was
really
honored
to
be
there
as
well,
but
yeah
maybe
give
us
a
little
snapshot
of
what
happened
there
and
I
think
probably
to
make
it
resonant
for
everyone
here,
particularly
some
of
the
takeaways
and
trend
lines
you
saw
after
convening
groups
that
really
either
haven't
met
or
haven't
seen
each
other
in
quite
some
time,
so
kind
of
an
auspicious.
A
few
days
we
had
together
that
I
think
you
know,
are
consequential
for
some
of
the
future
activities
in
the
network.
D
Yeah,
so
our
team
really
are
kind
of
broader
core
ecosystem
went
to
the
great
state
of
Massachusetts,
as
they
said,
I'm
very
fond
of,
because
I
grew
up
there
and
we
we
met
at
a
really
lovely,
interesting,
Lodge
called
race,
brick,
which
has
a
lot
of
historical
history
of
the
Northeast.
It's
very
old
vary
from
the
time
that
Massachusetts
was
first
sort
of
settled
and
we
we
gathered
together
for
the
first
time
really
since
the
pandemic
lockdown
as
many
of
our
people
as
we
could
possibly
get
there.
A
D
Of
the
region
Foundation
board,
including
will
so
I,
think
they
could
bring.
Maybe
will
up
in
this
particular
conversation
as
well.
We
also
had
Austin
from
the
foundation.
We
had
30
something
members
of
Team
r
d,
the
software
development
company,
many
of
whom
came
came
from
across
the
world
and
when.
A
A
A
D
It
was
really
like
I
said
one
of
the
very
first
times
that
many
of
our
humans
had
had
the
privilege
to
be
together
across
different
teams.
People
with
within
individual
teams
had
never
been
in
each
other's
physical
presence
before
and
many
of
us
have
worked
together
for
years.
You
know
we
certainly
gathered
pre-pandemic
and
then
the
pandemic
limited
that,
and
so
it
was
this
really
joyous,
Confluence
of
all
the
different
humans
being
together
for
the
very
first
time.
D
I
was
really
just
this
beautiful
kind
of
past
present
and
future
Human
Experience
in
the
space
that
had
lots
of
lovely
human
moments
like
long
dinners
and
moments,
and
you
know
steam
rooms
and
dance
parties
and
and
things
that
were
really
more
about
the
joy
of
being
together
other
as
humans
and
just
allowing
us
to
connect.
Then,
on
a
programmatic
level,
the
the
programming
kind
of
got
more
serious
throughout
the
week.
D
We
we
met
in
this
tavern
and
we
met
in
this
barn
and
in
big
groups
and
in
small
groups
and
a
lot
of
the
Confluence
that
we
were
starting
to
see
kind
of
followed
on
two
functional
lines.
One
was
the
the
registry
team
that
works
on
the
methodology
and
credit
design,
components
of
the
ecosystem
and
a
Confluence
between
them
and
region
foundation
and
their
CIA
style
program.
Everything
from
you
know:
how
can
they
support
each
other
scientifically
to
what
are
their
shared
communities
and
how
do
they
want
to
be
communicated
with?
D
D
We
had
a
lovely
session
by
Ryan
Christopherson,
our
product
manager
for
Rita
and
Ledger,
who
really
walked
a
lot
of
our
broader
ecosystem
through
what
are
the
technical
functionalities?
Currently,
what's
our
Forward
Thinking
about
the
software
stack
of
return
Ledger,
and
we
had
this
really
lovely
experience
during
the
retreat,
where
we,
as
a
group,
went
on
to
the
test
net,
we
got
ourselves
some
regen
tokens
in
our
wallets.
D
C
D
A
like
a
living
experience
with
the
technologies
that
were
about
to
release
so
that
they
could
make
sure
that
they
could
assist
the
communities
that
are
going
to
be
using
these
tools
in
that
journey
by
having
a
lift
experience
with
that
themselves.
D
So
maybe
I'll
pause
there
and
see
looks
like
they
maybe
lost
Gregory
for
a
minute,
but
I
would
love
to
hear
from
Will
from
just
his
personal
perspective
as
another
Massachusetts
person
and
as
a
human
with
the
foundation
team
about
what
about
that.
Gathering
in
Massachusetts
in
the
woods
really
resonated
with
him
and
with
that
team
in
particular,.
B
Sure
yeah,
thank
you
for
that
run
down
there
Sarah
you
touched
on
a
bunch
of
the
things
that
I
also
really
loved
about
the
Gathering
getting
to
spend
some
time
up
at
the
waterfall
and
the
hills
there
and
and
I've
just
that
this
very
deep
quality
in
person
time
after
many
months
and
in
some
cases,
years
of
of
Zoom
calls
and
Twitter
spaces
in
between
I
think
the
two
kind
of
outside
of
the
kind
of
core
regen
work
that
was
happening
there.
B
I
think
the
two
highlights
of
the
week
for
me
was
getting
to
spend
time
with
some
of
our
partners,
so
we
have
been
working
with
Matthew
pierkowski,
who
is
an
active
inferencing
researcher
and
I.
Think
active
inference
has
come
up
once
or
twice
on
these
Twitter
spaces
in
the
past,
I'm
pretty
sure
that
Gregory
had
featured
Matthew
on
one
of
these,
but
active
inferencing
is
I.
B
Guess
it
really
this
approach
coming
out
of
the
cognitive
Sciences,
but
it
allows
us
we're
applying
it
in
the
in
the
field
of
of
our
methodologies,
and
essentially,
one
of
the
aims
of
active
inference
is
to
ask
the
question:
what
are
the
places
where
we
can
find
information
that
is
most
likely
to
improve
the
model
or
methodology
or
approach
we're
using,
in
other
words,
instead
of
just
kind
of
randomly
sampling,
whether
that's
soil
samples
or
randomly
crunching,
the
numbers
across
thousands
of
different
facets
of
satellite
information?
B
It's
helping
us
to
move
towards
what
is
the
kind
of
the
places
that
we
can
take
data
points
that
are
going
to
give
us
the
most
insight
and
kind
of
result
in
the
most
learning
and
and
be
able
to
quantitatively
compare
kind
of
what
what
we're
learning
across
different
scenarios
and
there's?
Actually
this
great
book
and
just
called
active
inference
that
was
being
passed
around
and
I
have
a
copy
now
sitting
on
my
desk
and
we
were
talking
about
having
a
kind
of
a
bigger
regen
book
club.
B
So
if
anyone
listening
in
on
the
call
here
would
would
like
to
be
in
a
book
club
on
active
inferencing,
it's
a
book
that
came
out
this
year,
published
by
the
MIT
MIT
press,
so
feel
free
to
reach
out,
and
then
the
other
thing
I'll
mention
is
that
there
was.
There
were
actually
Four
mats
at
the
Gathering,
so
sometimes
a
little
confusing,
but
there
was
Matt
barlin
who's.
B
The
the
lead
systems
engineer
at
block
science
and
Gregory
and
I
had
had
co-authored
this
token
economics
paper,
along
with
Kyle
burchard,
an
ecological
Economist
a
few
years
ago,
and
it
the
economics
paper,
ended
up,
focusing
primarily
on
security
and
looking
at
how
what
proof
of
stake,
what
role
it
has
to
play
in
regen's
architecture.
But
the
thing
that
Kyle
and
Gregory
and
I
are
all
most
excited
about
is
how
can
we
actually
have
our
token
economics
reflect
the
regenerative
and
ecological
work
that
is
core
core
to
our
mission
here.
B
So
one
of
the
conversations
with
Matt-
and
that
is
starting
to
emerge
with
block
science
is
how
can
we
have?
Are
the
regen
chain
itself
become
increasingly
ecologically
backed
so
to
essentially
find
some
way
for
some
portion
of
of
newly
minted
tokens
token
emissions
to
go
to
the
purchase
of
some
portion
of
credits
being
produced
and
I
guess
I'll
say
we're
we're
very
early
in
this
process
right
now,
but
we
do
want
to
follow
this
Spirit
of
of
built
in
public.
So
just
kind
of
that!
That's
that's
essentially.
B
All
we
know
so
far
is
that
this
intention
of
having
a
relationship
between
our
token
economics
and
the
Eco
credits
that
are
being
minted
on
regen,
Network
and
I'm
sure
there
will
be
some
Commonwealth
discussions
happening
in
coming
weeks
and
some
other
places
to
discuss,
but
just
giving
people
a
heads
up
that
that
has
that
process
has
begun
and
again,
if
that's
something
exciting
to
you,
please
reach
out
and
I'd
love
to
have
a
conversation
and
I'll
pass
it
back
to
you.
Sarah
Dave,.
A
Right
on
will
yeah
and
I
I'd
say
you
know,
those
were
a
couple
of
the
interesting
areas.
Also,
you
know
hanging
with
the
mats
and.
D
A
You
know
I
also
want
to
just
encourage
people
too,
for
those
interested
in
getting
a
little
sneak.
Peek
the
Redwood
test
net
is
is
live.
You
can
get
your
own
faucet
of
play,
play
regen
internet
money
and
go
buy
and
sell.
Eco
credit
tonight
was
kind
of
a
dreaming
up
this
concept
at
some
point
again,
all
TBD
and
I.
Don't
think
it's
not
anything
urgent.
But
how
do
we?
A
You
know,
knowing
that
the
regen
Marketplace
is
going
to
be
I'd,
say
primarily
B2B
and
it's
nature
early
at
least
early
days?
How
can
we,
maybe,
as
a
community
figure
out
how
to
use
the
a
test
net
or
some
version
of
that
for
playing
around
and
learning
how
to
use
the
marketplace
and
dreaming
up
our
own
kind
of
favorite
Eco
credits
without
having
all
the
requirements
set
out?
Obviously,
to
actually
do
this
in
real
life,
but
we
can
have
this
little
game.
A
Game
area
read
with
her
the
regen
gaming
area
of
playing,
creating
selling
buying
Eco
credits,
so
something
that
we
can
show
you
how
to
do
right
now
today
with
redwood
testnet
and
maybe
something
more
fun
and
interesting
in
the
future
as
like
an
onboarding
tool
with
something
that
was
a
fun
little
discussion
to
have.
But.
C
A
Yeah
so
I
think
from
there
from
the
East
Coast
a
bunch
of
us
hopped
on
a
bus,
actually
a
lot
of
us
hopped
on
a
huge
bus.
We
all
headed
toward
New,
York
City
and
in
New
York
City.
We
parted
ways
with
some
people
and
but
other
most
of
us
ended
up
at
the
at
climate
week
and
Sarah
baxendale
here
on.
A
The
call
did
an
incredible
job
of
putting
together
an
outstanding
event
at
a
at
a
gallery
design
for
the
kind
of
blockchain
nft
ecosystem
Sarah.
Do
you
want
to
kind
of
give
us
the
little
play-by-play
who
showed
up
in
the
nature
of
the
discussion
as
our
kind
of
final
stop
in
the
United
States
before
we
before
we
headed
to
Colombia.
D
Yeah
absolutely
so,
we
went
to
a
play
Ice
on
Friday
night
of
climate
week
in
New,
York
City
called
Arcadia,
Earth
and
Arcadia
Earth.
Is
this
immersive
interactive
like
physical
Art
Gallery
as
well,
as
has
some
virtual
tools
like
VR,
headsets
and
other
cool
metaverse
kind
of
things,
and
it
is
designed
by
this
Israeli
artist
gentleman
who
his
whole
goal
was
really
to
start
a
conversation
around
sort
of
like
what
are
the?
D
What
are
the
opportunities
in
pitfalls
and
feelings
and
spaces
around
you
know,
climate
impact
and
and
what
is
it
doing
to
our
lives
and
and
what
are
the
action
points
that
we
as
humans
can
leverage?
So
it's
just
really
interesting:
Dynamic
Art
Gallery
space
that
we
hosted
in
the
in
this
lovely
room
in
the
basement.
D
A
round
table
style
conversation
with
a
number
of
our
community
members
featured
so
we
were
featuring
Gregory
and
Martine
from
open,
Earth
foundation
and
Anna
Lerner
from
the
climate
collected
in
the
conversation,
but
it
ended
up
that
we
were
really
largely
featuring.
Almost
everyone
in
the
room.
At
least
half
the
people
in
the
room
took
the
mic
and
spoke
in
the
conversation,
which
was
very
much.
D
My
goal
was
that
we
on
a
Friday
night
after
our
busy
week
and
also
the
busy
climate
week,
could
have
a
very
presence,
very
honest,
very
authentic,
very
mature
conversation
around
the
effects
of
climate
change,
the
role
of
blockchain
in
that
work,
sharing
our
different
Community
needs
and
stories,
and
so
there
was
this
really
lovely
palpable
presence
in.
A
D
Room,
you
know
with
about
75
people
of
various
different
kinds.
We
have
a
climate
activist
from
New
York
City's
climate
impact
scene.
We
had
folks
from
blockchain
protocols.
We
had
folks
from
the
UN.
We
had
scientists,
we
had
nature-backed
currency
folks.
It
was
a
really
wide
variety
of
humans
in
the
room
and
we
proceeded
for
two
hours
really
to
have
a
shared
conversation
about
where
we
feel
we're
at
as
an
industry.
What
we
think
the
challenges
are,
what
we
can
do
about
them,
how
we
can
work
together?
D
So
it's
just
a
really
lovely
moment
where
we
really
paused
and
really
leaned
in
as
a
community
and
then
about
a
third
of
the
people
that
came
to
the
event
sort
of
tagged
along
with
our
team
to
go.
You
know,
have
a
drink
afterwards
and
there
were.
C
D
A
lot
of
really
rich
human
conversations,
people
who
had
again
worked
together
on
Zoom
for
years
and
finally
had
the
opportunity
to
you
know
see
each
other
in
person
that
you
know
wanted
to
continue
to
connect
through
the
evening.
So
maybe
I'll
see
if
you
have
something
else
to
add
about
that
Dave.
It
was
just
really
lovely
to
be
in
person
in
presence
with
a
broader
Community
and
the
the
conversation
really
was
held
by
everyone
which
to
me
is
like
a
fundamental.
D
It's
like
a
fundamental
belief
system,
I
care
as
a
person
that
we
can't
talk
at
people.
We
have
to
have
a
conversation
collectively
and
so
I'm,
just
really
proud
of
the
whole
community
and
working
together
in
that
conversation
and
being
brave
and
taking
the
mic
and
being
willing
to
respectfully
descend
to
end
also
agree
and
also
bring
up
new
points.
So
it
just
really
flowed
really
beautifully
and
it
seemed
like
people
had
a
really
good
time
and
everyone
felt
very
present
in
their
work
and
very
present
in
the
conversation
that
evening.
A
Yeah
I
would
agree,
I
mean
I.
Think
probably
one
of
the
themes,
particularly
starting
at
climate
week
and
then
heading
over
into
Colombia,
is
the
kind
of
pre-competitive
or
more
leaning
toward
collaborative
nature
of
this
group.
Where.
B
A
Know
clearly,
there
are
a
number
of
like
l-1s
and
projects
that
are
all
have
similar
goals,
but
just
the
nature
of
the
group
and
I
think
you
know
of
this
moment
in
time.
People
are
understanding
that
we
need
to
be
in
deep
collaboration
and
that,
yes,
we
might
have
some
similar
Target
markets
or
similar
business
objectives,
but
we've
got
a
pretty.
We've
got
to
be
digging
in
pretty
heavily
together
and
finding
ways
to
interoperate
and
collaborate
and
I
think
you
know,
I
got
that
sense.
A
You
know,
as
I've
been
getting
more
so
at
the
climate
week
event
that
we
put
on
and
certainly
as
we
start
heading
into
Columbia,
we
can
dig
into
more
of
what
that
looks
like
so
now
go
with
us.
We
hop
on
a
plane,
we,
you
know
run
into
the
JFK
I
think
we're
at
JFK
and
of
course,
we
run
into
like
half
of
the
us-based
cosmos
ecosystem
from
sunny
at
osmosis
to
Shane,
from
stargaze
from
Dean
from
agoric
all
kinds
of
different
humans,
injective
folks,
all
yeah.
A
Yeah,
it
was
I.
C
D
York
because
it
was
direct
at
Medellin,
so
it
was
really
fun.
There
were
like
a
lot
of
different
people
having
informal,
literally
informal
and
informal
conversations
all
across
the
plane,
which
just
felt
really
electric
from
like
the
moment.
You
started
recognizing
people
in
the
line
in
New
York
like
here
we
go,
it
was
fun.
A
Yeah,
it
was
an
unique
opportunity
and
just
a
reminder,
you
know,
frankly
we're
early.
It's
still
a
small
community,
still
a
small
number
of
players.
You
know
and
we're
all
you
know
kind
of
bumping
around
in
the
night
together
trying
to
sort
out
the
cosmos
ecosystem,
in
particular
at
least
on
this
flight
anyhow.
So
we
all
headed
to
Medellin
Colombia
for
Cosmo
verse
and
for
those
who
are
not
familiar
it's.
This
is
the
second
annual
Cosmo
verse.
A
It
was
this
year,
despite
a
nasty,
bear,
Market
they've,
packed
in
something
north
of
1400.
People
who
attended
very
bullish
sentiments
across
the
ecosystem.
Regen
was
a
sponsor
had
a
nice
Booth
the
venue
was
gorgeous
was
at
the
Intercontinental
in
Medellin,
and
our
team
between
low
labs
and
regen
Network,
regen
Foundation,
were
able
to
due
to
the
incredible
affordability
of
just
Columbia
generally,
were
able
to
rent
out
an
entire
hotel
and
again.
A
This
was
like
a
15
room
hotel,
but
or
something
in
that
range,
but
it
ended
up
being
one
of
the
funnest
kind
of
gathering
places
throughout
Cosmo
versus
different
community
members,
refi
folks
about
each
other
folks.
The
cosmos,
folks
and
and
friends
all
used
our
place
as
a
little
a
camp
and
base
due
to
the
nice
steam
room
in
the
pool
and
all
the
fun
places
to
hang
out
in
an
incredibly
beautiful
city
called
Medellin
and.
A
You
know
when
we
spent
a
couple
of
days,
obviously
navigating
the
cosmos.
You
know
the
heated
Cosmos
excitement
around
the
release
of
atom
2.0
white
paper,
which
you
know
probably
a
whole
nother
conversation
that
was
a
Big
Buzzy
moment
and
just
you
know,
the
continued
explosion
of
the
IBC
gang.
As
you
know,
between
dydx
coming
over
and.
D
A
All
these
bigger
Protocols
are
moving
into
the
cosmos
ecosystem,
for
obvious
reasons:
the
sovereignty,
the
interoperability,
the
scalability.
There
is
just
a
palpable
buzz
and
I
think
throughout
the
conversation
throughout
the
weekend.
Again,
regen
is
still
you
know,
considered
one
of
the
OG
Cosmos
Builders,
given
our
maintenance
of
the
cosmos
SDK,
given
the
really
holding
the
the
torch
for
regenerative,
finance
and
I'd,
say
just
impact
values
being
flushed
through
the
cosmos
ecosystem,
I,
think
people
really
across
you
know
whether
they're
degens
or
dexes,
or
otherwise.
A
They
just
really
appreciate
their
regen
Network
approach,
R
D's
work
to
grow
the
cosmos
ecosystem,
and
it's
it's
just
nice.
A
You
know,
having
been
part
of
this
for
a
handful
of
years
now
and
seeing
cosmos's
explosion
to
know
that
regen
Network
development
is
literally
right
at
the
center
of
so
many
of
the
important
developments
that
a
lot
of
people
don't
know
about,
while
at
the
same
time
you
know
we
are,
you
know,
on
the
brink
of
our
own
product
announcements,
which
was
nice
to
talk
about,
and
and
maybe
you
can
talk
a
bit
a
bit
about
the
full
day
of
programming
Sarah
that
you
put
together
expertly
with
a
whole
group
of
folks
as
a
side
event
in
the
same
building
where,
for
an
entire
day,
we
filled
it
with
refi
projects
in
and
around
Cosmos.
D
Yeah,
absolutely
and
ironically,
when
I'm
not
talking
I'm
gardening,
so
I
keep
having
to
like
stop
cleaning
out
my
garden
beds
to
talk,
which
is
just
very
true
to
our
regen
and
the
nature
is
inside
of
us,
no
matter
what
we're
doing
the
psychology
work
yeah.
So
we
threw
an
event
inside
of
Cosmo
versus
Main
Event
in
the
hotel
in
a
workshop
room
all
day
on
Monday,
and
we
called
it
refiverse.
You
know
a
la
Cosmo,
verse
and
all
areify,
and
really
the
goal
of
the
event
was
to
bring
together
all
the
different.
D
You
know
budding
and
active
sort
of
refi-oriented
community
projects
in
the
cosmos
ecosystem
and
hold
space
for
everyone
to
to
share.
You
know
about
their
Technologies
about
their
progress,
to
get
community
feedback
and
to
create
like
a
shared
container
and
a
shared
learning
space,
and
so
we
we
had
programming
from
10
30
in
the
morning
until
maybe
about
5
30
in
the
evening.
So
quite
quite
a
number
of
hours
of
programming
and
we
amazingly
had
like
a
full
room
all
day,
long
like
people
sitting
on.
D
All
the
snacks
were
eaten,
which
was
fantastic.
We
started
out
in
the
morning
with
a
presentation
on
eons
did
research
which
he
has
been
working
on,
so
we
had
a
really
actually
extremely
Lively
conversation
with
the
community
about
his
research
approach
and
some
feedback,
loops
and
opportunities
for
further
engagement
and
discussion
with
him.
So
folks
are
interested
in
talking
about
decentralized
identity
on
the
blockchain.
Definitely
reach
out
to
yon.
I,
don't
see
him
in
the
audience
this
morning,
so
he's
probably
still
on
the
move
at
refi
barichara
but
reach
out
to
him.
D
His
presentation
was
great.
Then
we
had
a
presentation
from
Austin
about
the
work
of
regen
foundation
and
the
CSL
program
and
rights
of
Nature
and
a
number
of
other
different
examples.
D
We
were
then
joined
by
the
founders
of
chain
for
energy,
which
is
doing
an
alternative
energy
Marketplace
in
the
cosmos
ecosystem.
So
they
were
just
really
excited
because
they're
they're
newer
in
their
Journey
to
get
to
share
with
the
refi
Community
about
you
know
their
Niche
and
what
they
are
focusing
on.
So
it's
very,
very
parallel
to
region,
Network's
work
with
nature
and
natural
ecosystems.
D
We
then
had
an
amazing
presentation
from
Giancarlo
Barrios
who
I
don't
see
in
the
audience
this
morning
on
the
groups
module
of
the
cosmos,
SDK
and
the
group's
modulus
is
really
fantastic.
New
tool,
that's
being
released
in
the
user
interface
as
we're
just
completed
prior
to
Cosmo
verse,
where
you
can,
on
the
cosmos.
Sdk
establish
a
group
with
multiple
different
wallets
and
your
group
can
create
and
evaluate
within
the
group
proposals
of
various
different
kinds
and
then,
as
a
group,
have
sort
of
your
own
autonomous
governance
process
around
those
proposals
and
take
votes.
D
So
it's
really
a
as
a
tool
kit,
an
open
tool
kit
for
for
dowels
and
group
decision
making
built
on
the
cosmos
SDK
and,
unlike
some
of
the
other
Dow
tooling,
being
developed
in
the
cosmos
ecosystem.
It's
not
token
gated.
Anybody
could
use
these
tools
that
has
the
appropriate
wallet,
so
I'm
really
excited
to
see
applications
of
this.
D
Then
we
were
joined
by
Sam
Bennett's,
product
manager
of
the
registry
and
Ryan
Christopherson,
the
product
manager
of
regen
Ledger,
and
we
took
a
journey
through.
You
know
what
is
regen
Network,
what
what
is
the
actual
technology
that
we
are
building?
How
does
the
registry
work?
What
is
the
functionality
of
the
credit
module
and
region
Ledger
blockchain?
D
So
for
the
very
first
time
we
showed
the
community
how
to
utilize
the
return
Marketplace
application
that
will
be
newly
launching
in
just
a
few
weeks.
Now
and
great
green
Sam
really
really
took
us
through
examples
of
okay.
Let's,
let's
buy
your
credit,
let's
transfer
credit,
let's
sell
a
credit,
let's
retire
a
credit,
let's
put
a
credit
in
a
basket
and
move
it.
D
And
then
we
had
two
more
ancillary
moments
on
this
journey
and
you'll
have
to
tell
me
if
I
forgot
anything
in
the
schedule
here
Dave
we
had
a
panel
about
the
cosmo
zero
Campaign,
which
you've
heard
us
probably
talk
about
before.
D
That
is
a
it's
a
campaign
to
partner
with
the
cosmos
ecosystem
protocols
for
them
to
identify
and
offset
them
their
carbon
control
into
sort
of
a
climate,
positive
investment,
and
so
we
spoke
with
Fraser
from
checked,
which
is
a
protocol
that
has
already
come
into
offsetting
and
we
talked
to
dogemos
of
Osmosis
where
we'll
be
launching
the
NCT
regen
pool
after
the
region,
Ledger
polygon,
Bridge
launches
in
just
a
few
weeks
again,
so
we
had
this
lovely
panel
of
just
discussing.
D
You
know
like
what
is
this
program
how's
the
program
work
and
then
we
kind
of
took
a
journey
through.
You
know
what
are
the?
What
are
the
reasons
why
some
of
these
you
know
fairly
significant
scale
protocols
in
the
cosmos
ecosystem?
You
know,
went
through
a
community
governance
process
on
Commonwealth
to
say
yes,
we
as
a
community
think
that
climate
impact
is
important
and
we
want
to
do
something
about
it
and
we're
going
to
do
it
through
the
cosmos
zero
program.
D
So
it's
really
cool
to
you
know
have
some
of
these.
You
know
sort
of
more
famous
older
you.
D
Names
from
the
cosmos
ecosystem
come
up
on
our
stage
and
Dave
and
myself.
You
know
throughout
the
conference,
spent
the
time
talking
to
a
lot
of
different
protocols
and
validators
all
throughout
the
conference,
and
so
we're
anticipating
that
we
could
have
up
to
25
or
30
protocols
offsetting
by
the
time
the
osmosis
NTT
region
pool
launches
in
you
know
a
couple
of
weeks
and
then
we
we
ended
with
a
Bitcoin
sponsored
happy
hour.
D
D
C
C
D
Really
felt
like
by
the
end
of
the
cosmo
verse
experience
we
had
built
a
lot
of
shared
knowledge,
shared
community
and
shared
expectations
around
how
we
could
support
each
other
as
cosmos
ecosystem
protocols
and
then
support
each
other
within
sort
of
the
refi
Enclave
within
Cosmos
itself.
So
maybe,
with
that
I'll
pause
and
I'll
see,
if
maybe
Gregory's
back,
maybe
Gregory
has
some
alliteration
he'd
like
to
add
to
the
cosmos
experience.
A
You
know
and
I'll
say
one
of
the
important
awards
that
was
awarded
out
for
those
who
followed
along.
They
had
cosmos
had
its
first
award
ceremony,
which
was
interesting,
I
wouldn't
say
it
was
the
most.
It
wasn't
the
most
scientific
award
ceremony
per
se,
but
it
certainly
was
entertaining
particularly
when
out
of
the
blue,
the
there
was
an
award
for
the
best
mustache
in
Cosmos,
ecosystem
and
I
think
it
was
a
relatively
slam.
It
was
a
slam,
dunk
decision
and
I.
A
D
A
He
needed
to
run
up
there
error
as
fast
as
possible,
and
so
it
added
some
really
fun
kind
of
levity,
for
you
know
an
end
of
a
really
exceptional
conference
so
with
that
green,
maybe
you
want
to
give
us
your
acceptance
speech
for
your
best
mustache
award
and
any
other
Reflections
on
Cosmo
verse.
C
I'm
being
I
I'd
like
to
accept
this
reward
on
behalf
of
my
mustache.
Thank
you
so.
C
Yeah,
so,
let's
see
actually
what
I,
what
I'm
excited
to
dig
into
and
sort
of
and
and
jam
about,
is
actually
starting
to
move
forward
in
time
to
to
the
greenhouse
event,
but
Cosmo
verse,
the
just
sort
of
to
put
a
bow
on
all
the
great
shareback
that
that
Sarah
was
sharing
I.
Think
gosh.
C
Two
observations,
observation
number
one
Medellin
is
a
really
fantastic
City.
It's
so
beautiful
I
definitely
recommend
that
people
who
are
digital,
nomadizing
consider
Landing
into
Medellin.
They
have
a
very
Progressive
municipal
government
and
I
actually
got
to
jam
with
their
director
of
innovation
and
starting
to
yeah
I,
guess
kind
of
Cosmos
pill
them.
They
have
a
lot
of
Need
for
municipal
transparency
tools
for
governance,
both
at
the
neighborhood
and
the
municipal
level
and
I
actually
think
with
the
group
module
shipping
to
the
cosmos,
SDK
and
some
of
the
other
governance
work.
C
That's
happening
having
just
really
powerful
open
source,
Municipal
governance
tools,
I
think
it's
not
only
possible,
but
also
really
important
and
I
could
kind
of
go
on
a
whole
rant
right
now.
C
You
know:
Democratic,
transparent
governance,
software
on
top
of
a
rent-seeking
tech
stack
that
people
are
paying
fees
and
whatever
the
random,
you
know
token
is
I
think
we
should
really
be
building
out
open
source
tools
so
that
people
can
spin
up
their
own
chains
and
manage
their
own
Affairs
in
an
interoperable
way.
It
just
so
happens
that
Cosmos
makes
that
possible.
I
think
they
got
pretty
excited
about
that.
C
So
there
were
several
people
in
in
the
administration
they're
in
Medellin
who
had
some
significant
free,
open
source
software
experience
and
sort
of
to
be
able
to
take
them
on
a
little
tour
of
the
tech
stack
and
what's
possible
yeah.
There
was
some
some
excitement
there,
so
so
that
was
really
fantastic
and
I
sort
of
started
that
little
rant
with
just
the
observation
of
how
epic
Medellin
is
it's
so
beautiful.
It's
like
walking
through
a
solar,
Punk
dream
where
you
just
have.
C
You
know
all
of
the
most
beautiful
tropical
plants,
taking
up
every
space
possible
on
Terraces
Vines,
going
up
the
side
of
buildings
in
the
right-of-way
between
you
know,
between
roads,
and
you
know,
sidewalks
and
pots,
and
on
patios,
and
so
it's
just
like
every
building
is
just
sort
of
exploding
with
life.
It's
really
exciting
at
some
point:
I'm
gonna,
you
know
make
a
little
yeah
just
assemble.
Some
of
the
photos.
I
took
and
gosh
I
wish.
I
could
have
spent
a
couple
extra
days
and
Medellin.
D
C
To
explore
a
little
bit
more
but
really
beautiful
city
and
as
Sarah
was
mentioning,
we
had
sort
of
stumbled
into
having
our
own
little
Casa
regen
our
own
little
hotel,
where
we
had
rented
the
whole
place
out
for
for
the
I
think
there
were
16
of
us
between
some
of
our
validators
region,
Foundation
and
and
r
d,
Inc,
and
so
just
sort
of
like
being
able
to
host
people.
C
The
other
observation
that
I
want
to
make
just
is
about
conferences
in
general,
where
I
I
think
I
saw
this
getting
a
little
bit
better.
Actually
but
oftentimes.
A
pattern
in
these
conferences
is,
you
know,
you're
conferencing
all
day
you
know
you're
watching
or
giving
presentations.
You
know
hanging
out
at
booths
or
going
to
booths
on
the
the
ever
present
hunt.
For
you
know:
cool
swag.
C
C
You
know
you're
getting
all
of
these
people
from
all
over
the
world
who
are
Twitter
mutuals
or
doing
code
together,
and
you
know
really.
People
want
to
just
dig
in
and
and
sort
of
like
chill
and
and
chat,
but
instead
everybody's
shouting
over
the
music
at
the
party.
This
is
my
biggest
beef
with
how
these
conferences
go,
and
so
you
know
we
really
wanted
to
have
an
antidote
to
that.
D
C
Really
like,
like
dancing,
is
great
right:
I'm
I'm,
a
full
believer
in
you
know
a
good
have
a
good.
Let's,
let's
have
a
good
time:
let's
go
salsa
dancing
or,
let's
you
know,
go
to
go
to
a
club
or
something.
But
when
people
want
to
chat
when
people
want
to
have
conversations,
we
definitely
need
to
work
on
making
spaces
for
that
to
happen
without
people
shouting
at
each
other,
because
that's
just
horrible,
so
I
will
I
will
say
that
it
was
a
lot
better
in
Medellin
and
I.
C
Think
that's
partially,
because
there's
so
many
indoor
outdoor
spaces
and
things
tended
to
be
a
little
bit
more
spacious
than
some
of
the
other
conference
menus.
So
it
wasn't
as
bad
as
maybe
I'm
making
it
out
to
be,
but
we
were
happy
nonetheless
to
be
able
to
host
really
a
chill
Vibe
spot
and
kind
of
like
accept
refugees
from
the
intensity
into
a
nice.
C
You
know
regenerative
Locale
at
Casa
region,
so
yeah,
that's
just
that's
sort
of
my
adding
to
the
layer
there
on
top
of
what
what
you
all
have
been
sharing
about,
Medellin
and
yeah,
and
can.
B
C
Awesome
so
so
Greenhouse
was
an
event
that
was
organized
by
Biko
WG,
the
the
blockchain
infrastructure,
carbon
offsetting
working
group,
which
is
sort
of
like
in
a
way
I
think
it's
the
OG,
refi
org
right
so
regen
and
clima
and
toucan,
and
a
variety
of
other
orgs
have
all
been
kind
of
working,
open
sourcing,
carbon
emissions
calculators
and
you
know,
building
you
know
token
standards
and
thinking
about
things,
and
this
is
really
thanks
in
a
huge
part
to
to
Dave.
Thank
you
and
and
Sarah
B.
C
Thank
you
and
not
present
on
the
call.
Daniel
Huang,
just
like
huge
amount
of
work
to
sort
of
bring
people
together
and
do
do.
Work,
do
open
work
to
try
to
build
the
industry,
and
so
Greenhouse
was
envisioned
as
a
as
a
space
between
Cosmo,
verse
and
Devcon
to
really
get
a
bunch
of
Industry
actors
together
and
gosh.
It
was
beyond
our
I
think
my
wildest
dreams.
C
What
like,
who
came
and
what
we
accomplished
just
so
exciting
and
I,
think
there's
going
to
be
more
and
more
information
about
the
work
streams
that
are
happening.
There's
going
to
be
more
and
more
activity
on
the
the
Biko
WG
Discord,
where
a
lot
of
this
is
going
to
start
taking
place,
and
this
is
really
I
think
the
next
step
in
a
in
a
co-creative
and
collaborative
Arc
that
we're
going
to
see
sort
of
culminate.
C
Probably
you
know
in
a
year
or
so
and
there's
just
a
lot
of
stuff
that
emerged,
but
some
of
the
things
that
I
want
to
flag
that
are
extra,
exciting
and
really
cool
for
kind
of
the
region.
Network
Community
to
start
to
understand,
is
you
know,
sort
of
I'll
take
it
from
the
stop
one
from
the
top.
One
is
interchain.
C
Carbon
two
is
chains
with
benefits,
and
three
is
just
this:
emerging
Block,
Chain,
climate
leadership
group
so,
and,
and
actually
the
fourth
that
I
want
to
call
out
is
Vera
was
present
with
us
Benoit,
who
is
the
director
of
Finance
or
Finance
Innovation
I?
Think
at
at
Vera
came
down
and
we
just
had
a
fantastic
set
of
conversations
with
him.
He
was
super
open
and
really
I
was
so
excited.
C
Just
to
sort
of
you
know
see,
show
and
dig
in
to
where
we
have
commonality,
where
what
we're
doing
can
actually,
you
know
Empower
and
improve
Vera's
capabilities
and
just
yeah,
so
it's
really
lovely
so
taking
it
from
the
top
interchain
carbon.
There's
a
bunch
of
really
exciting
work
on
what
it
looks
like
to
build
the
right
standards
and
approaches
to
have
sort
of
chain
agnostic,
carbon,
where
you
know-
and
there
was
a
commitment
from
a
whole
big
set
of
stakeholders,
including
file
coin
Ripple,
Solana
Cosmos
ecosystem.
C
You
know
regen,
specifically
topple
I'm
missing
somebody
hedera
hashgraph
two
over
the
next
six
months,
work
together
to
establish
common
standards,
originate
a
carbon
asset
on
regen
Ledger
and
move
it
between
all
of
those
different
ecosystems
and
back
to
regen
for
retirement,
which
is
exciting
right
to
get
that
kind
of
buy-in
and
to
get
that
kind
of
buy-in
to
a
pilot.
It's
just
really
exciting,
so
lots
of
work.
C
You
know
geeking
out
on
decentralized
identifiers,
verifiable
credentials,
there's
going
to
be
a
lot
of
work
starting
to
build
on
the
stuff
that
open,
Earth
Foundation
has
done
that
IXO
did
back
in
the
day
and
that
our
community
member
Yan,
who
is
currently
at
refi
battery
Chara,
has
really
taken
the
lead
on
over
the
last
couple
of
months.
So
stay
tuned
for
this.
C
So
moving
on
the
next
thing
that
I
was
especially
excited
about
was
this
concept
of
chains
with
Benefits.
This
was
actually
Peter
from
The
Ripple
team,
who
came
up
with
this
name,
shout
out
to
them
and
they're
doing
some
really
cool
things.
Actually,
I
never
would
have
thought,
and
you
never
know
what
people
are
up
to
until
you
actually
get
to
spend
some
time
with
them.
So
very
excited
about
the
term,
because
it's
just
hilarious
and.
B
C
D
C
Lot
of
this
was
influenced
in
some
way
by
early
participation
from
regen,
in
a
set
of
work
streams
that
the
Lexicon
had
been
doing
three
years
ago.
So
you
have
sort
of
this
set
of
hexagons
and
referring
to
a
bunch
of
sort
of
standardized
practices
and
outcome,
language
that
sort
of
a
taxonomy
of
impact.
That's
been
developed
in
collaboration
with
the
UN
food
program
and
the
FAO,
and
then
this
was
sort
of
the
next
step
to
sort
of
think
Beyond
carbon
to
a
sort
of
standard
lexicon
and
taxonomy
of
benefits.
C
C
What's
what's,
amazing
is
that
Douglas
and
his
team
are
just
fantastic
at
polishing,
so
they
just
did
a
synthesis
of
all
these
different
approaches
and
created
a
beautiful
visual
language
so
and
and
they're
also
inviting
everybody
to
sort
of
move
beyond
the
language
of
ecosystem
Services
right
servitude,
Services,
they
point
out,
comes
from
servitude,
which
is
Latin
From,
Slavery
and
enslavement,
and
the
the
the
concept
of
sort
of
owing
service
to
a
Master,
they're
sort
of
inviting
everybody
to
think
what
what
sort
of
rooted
in
ecological
function
and
the
benefits
that
healthy
ecosystems
are
producing
sort
of
a
different
route.
C
Different
etymology,
different
I,
guess
sort
of
world
view,
so
the
ecological
benefits
Frameworks
was
just
a
part
of
what
influenced
this
commitment
that
took
place
between
in
this
is
a
little
bit
of
a
long
and
winding
story.
So
apologies,
but
but
hopefully
people
are
getting
just
a
glimmer
of
the
context
and
co-creativity
that
was
taking
place.
D
C
This
is
Solana,
this
is
file
coin.
This
is
hedera
hashgraph.
This
is
Ripple.
This
is
region
and
our
Cosmos
ecosystem,
folks
and
cello
and
Beyond,
and
so
you
know,
I
think
that
that
Group
of
Seven
at
the
beginning
that
were
all
present
plus
I,
think
this
is
going
to
be
opening
up
and
really
building
a
lot
of
momentum.
You
know
how
do
we
create
that
pre-competitive
public
infrastructure
very
exciting
and
then
the
next?
C
The
next
point,
on
kind
of
my
my
tour
of
what
I
found
very
exciting
about
the
the
greenhouse
event
was
just
this
evolution
of
you
know
it
region
Network.
We
have
really
I
think
in
a
way
been
struggling
to
land
our
value
proposition
as
everybody
sort
of
splinters
off
and
explores
that
refi
territory.
C
What
is
why
have
we
taken
the
road
that
we
have
at
Region
Network?
Why
do
we
care
about
a
sovereign,
neutral
application,
specific
blockchain?
Why
do
we
think
that
that's
important
and
vastly
different
from
other
approaches,
where
you're
just
sort
of
putting
a
smart
contract
up
on
a
different
layer,
one
blockchain?
Well,
we
we
really
got
to
explore
that
in
a
little
bit
more
depth,
I
was
able
to
articulate
some
of
our
beliefs
to
these
other
layer.
One
folks,
including
Stella,
which
you
know
it's
been
hard.
C
A
C
I
really
found
heartening
was
when
I
started,
to
shift
the
language
from
App
chain,
which
I
think
nobody
really
understands.
What
an
app
chain
is,
except
outside
of
the
cosmos
ecosystem,
to
describing
what
regen
network
is
as
a
multi-chain
layer,
two
that
is
specifically
dedicated
to
originating
ecological
assets.
It
was
amazing
how
the
reception
and
enthusiasm
and
excitement
from
these
layer,
one
ecosystems,
just
sort
of
sprung
forth,
and
so
it's
all
you
know
it's
just
amazing.
What
a
little
bit
of
a
re-languaging
can
do.
C
So
I
did
a
quick,
little
tweet
Thread
about
this,
but
just
you
know,
the
the
thesis
of
region
network
has
always
been.
We
need
a
neutral
origination
system
where
we
can
manage
ecological
data
claims.
We
can
govern
standards
together
so
that
those
assets
can
then
flow
out
into
the
burgeoning
refi
space,
and
we
that
space
needs
to
be
sort
of
neutral
and
pre-competitive
if
everybody
is
deploying
their
token
issuing
smart
contracts
and
standards
across
different
blockchains
in
a
fragmented
way.
C
What
is
going,
what
is
likely
to
happen
is
a
race
to
the
bottom,
where
the
the
applications,
the
the
tokenization
schemes
that
are
able
to
Hype
the
most,
are
going
to
win
in
the
market
dynamics,
and
that's
not
what
we
want.
We
want
to
create
a
scenario
where
quality
transparency,
Community
engagement,
legitimacy
is
really
stewarded
by
the
community
and
we're
going
for
impact
not
just
hype
right
and
in
order
to
create
that
I
think.
C
You
know
activist
groups,
so
that
together
we
can
really
establish
this
pre-competitive
framework
for
ecological
benefit,
accounting
and
I'm,
going
to
use
that
term
ecological
benefit,
accounting
because
I
really
love
it
using
our
Eco
crediting
framework,
and
it
was
really
exciting
to
be
able
to
sort
of
explain
that
to
share
that
to
this
group
of
peers
and
have
people
say
yes,
you're
right.
That
is
what
we
need.
A
C
But
it
felt
like
more
than
any
time
in
in
my
experience
in
of
late,
we
had
this
sort
of
shared
understanding
about
what
what
we're
all
being
asked
to
do
and
sort
of
we're
all
being
asked
to
behave,
and
we
all
have
the
ability
and
can
afford
in
this
moment
to
be
cooperative
to
out
cooperate
the
competition
and
to
invest
in
a
shared
infrastructure.
So
I
I'm,
feeling
pretty
optimistic
coming
out
of
greenhouse
event.
C
I
think
it
was
only
really
possible
that
kind
of
you
know,
through
long-form
conversation
through
sort
of
some
experiences
that
weren't
just
talking
with
or
at
each
other
there's
a
lot
of
different
Dynamic
ways
of
engaging.
We
went
on
some
hikes
together.
We
sat
around
a
fire
with
some
indigenous
elders
and
had
had
them
tell
us
stories.
C
There
was
time
in
hot
tubs
and
steam
rooms
and
cold
plunges,
so
there
was
enough
I.
Think
part
of
what
kind
of
created
the
field
that
allowed
for
this
sort
of
commitment
to
be
arising
was
really
it
not
just
being
a
conference
where
people
are
pitching
each
other,
but
instead
sort
of
substantive
dialogue,
sometimes
even
debate
and
then
getting
out
of
the
conversation
and
just
getting
out
into
nature.
C
So
just
big,
Kudos
and
Applause
to
to
David
to
Mariana,
who,
who
was
on
the
lower
team,
helping
produce
everything
to
the
Biko
crew
and
just
yeah
really
what
the
greenhouse
event
was
just
sort
of
beyond
my
my
expectations,
so
I
think
I
kind
of
covered
more
or
less
what
I?
What
I
was
hoping
to
share.
C
A
Sarah
any
kind
of
tie-ups
you
want
to
bring
around
green
Greenhouse
or
otherwise,
as
we
set
sail
into
the
rest
of
the
week.
D
Before
we
depart,
the
greenhouse
retreat
was
at
a
beautiful
Village,
built
by
hand
by
community
members
that
decided
to
acquire
or
Steward.
This
particular
piece
of
land,
which
is
high
in
the
Magdalena
Watershed,
which
is
one
of,
is
the
only
Watershed
in
all
of
Colombia
That,
Remains,
undammed
and.
C
D
Of
this
Eco
Village
Toyota
agua,
we
were
held
in
this
really
authentic
container
right
on
a
River's
Edge
deep
in
the
jungle
monkeys
in
the
trees,
with
the
most
extraordinarily
gracious
and
generous
staff
in
a
town
called
kakorna,
which
is
the
crossroads
between
Medallion
and
Bogota,
where
there
is
a
lot
of
history
of
socioeconomic
and
cultural
pain
due
to
some
of
the
violent
conflicts
in
the
Colombian
history.
D
D
They
were
super
helpful
and
each
evening
they
created
this
really
ripe
container
in
this
sort
of
indoor
outdoor
building
fire
in
the
middle
of
it,
where
we
were
really
able
to
ground
in
and
hear
their
stories
and
and
tell
our
stories
and
really
it
felt
like.
We
were
becoming
more
and
more
rooted
to
this.
This
extraordinary
piece
of
and
I
said,
probably
the
most
alive
I've
ever
personally
been,
and
you
know
there
was
this.
D
This
one
evening
or
two
evenings
where
there
was
a
staff
member
named
Jefferson
who
started
to
rap
over
the
fire,
telling
the
stories
of
the
land
and
the
people,
and
it
was
really
one
of
the
most
beautiful
things
I've
ever
seen
and
and
just
one
of
the
most
talented
things
I've
ever
seen,
come
out
of
a
human,
so
I
wanna,
I
wanna.
D
That
I
think
we'll
I
know
I
will
carry
with
me
forever.
So
people
place,
that's
the
reason
we
talk
about
tech
and
process
and
interchange
super
chain
other
chain.
World
landia
really
comes
back
down
to
the
ecosystems
and
the
humans
that
have
remarked
multiple
Generations
Steward
these
places
and
who
have
been
very
gracious
to
welcome.
In
our
you
know
our
community
from
the
global
North
to
create
a
Confluence
with
the
global
South
in
ways
that
you
know
we
maybe
weren't,
prepared
to
be
as
beautiful.
D
Their
presence
these
humans
in
this
place
were
a
massive
part
of
that
success,
and
they
definitely
deserve
our
our
shared
gratitude
here
on
Twitter
spaces
this
morning.
So
with
that
there
is
a
video
of
Jefferson
wrapping
on
some
of
our
twitters,
so
I
definitely
recommend
tuning
in
especially
if
you
two
speak
Spanish,
because
they're
beautiful
poetry,
inside
of
all
of
these
relationships
to
this
particular
place.
So
with
that
maybe
I'll
press
back
to
you
Dave,
and
you
can
kind
of
close
this
out
for
this
morning.
A
Yes,
thank
you
for
kind
of
drilling
it
back
into
the
to
the
ground
or
planting
it
back
in
the
ground.
Thank
you.
Sarah.
A
I
think
that
brings
us
to
the
end
of
our
regenerative
NewsHour.
Thank
you.
Everyone,
sorry
I
know
we
did
take
a
bit
of
a
a
Break
and
we'll
try
to
be
better
about
keeping
the
Cadence,
even
while
we're
traveling,
but
it
felt
right
to
drop
some
of
our
respective
obligations
and
responsibilities
just
to
sit
in
sit,
sit
and
circle
and
be
with
each
other
and
felt
really
good.
But
there
are
some
big
things
on
the
horizon
definitely
tune
in
next
week.
A
We
should
be
imminently
announcing
a
hard
date
for
the
launch
of
the
marketplace
and
some
other
developments
related
to
the
bridge
and
osmosis
and
all
kinds
of
things
that
are
coming
down
the
pipeline
in
October
or
November
that
have
been
long
planned
and
long
worked
on,
but
are
really
really
coming
to
fruition.
So
look
forward
to
that,
we
will
see
you
next
week,
Thursday
8,
A.M,
Pacific,
11,
A.M
Eastern.
Everyone
have
a
great
day
take
care
bye-bye.