Restoring our relations with waters, lands and peoples
Do you feel you belong here, with a responsibility to tend to it?
What do you need in order to be a good steward of this place you call home?
Who are the people you most want to share this with?
Stewardship is relational, intimate and reciprocal. Learning to be good stewards is a life-long practice that cultivates knowledge, vision and skills, and a commitment to follow through. We are present, curious and acutely observant, often with much to do to restore a sacred balance. In essence, as stewards, we are entrusted to stay with this web of relations, season after season, year after year, and to respond with our best for the wellbeing of all. Let's become good stewards together.
What do you need in order to be a good steward of this place you call home?
Who are the people you most want to share this with?
Stewardship is relational, intimate and reciprocal. Learning to be good stewards is a life-long practice that cultivates knowledge, vision and skills, and a commitment to follow through. We are present, curious and acutely observant, often with much to do to restore a sacred balance. In essence, as stewards, we are entrusted to stay with this web of relations, season after season, year after year, and to respond with our best for the wellbeing of all. Let's become good stewards together.
Walking Methow Waters
Learning to live with our River, as a Relative not a resource
Imagine visiting Water as a beloved teacher or a dear friend, listening and being present together. Imagine simply walking with an open heart, and a question or a prayer. Not a political march. Not for recreation. Instead a walk for peace, an opportunity for connection, a prayer in action, with the waters that give our home life. Please join us on this ceremonial walk from the confluence of the Methow River and Columbia River on June 20th 2026.
See the Public Invite Flyer and the Invitation to Collaborate Letter.
Learning to live with our River, as a Relative not a resource
Imagine visiting Water as a beloved teacher or a dear friend, listening and being present together. Imagine simply walking with an open heart, and a question or a prayer. Not a political march. Not for recreation. Instead a walk for peace, an opportunity for connection, a prayer in action, with the waters that give our home life. Please join us on this ceremonial walk from the confluence of the Methow River and Columbia River on June 20th 2026.
See the Public Invite Flyer and the Invitation to Collaborate Letter.
The Healing Handyman
Need some help? Let’s do this together.
- Got unfinished projects that need tending?
- Do you have stuff stuck in storage but don't know where to begin?
- Need to meet with neighbors or loved ones but need a facilitator?
- Are you in the midst of big life changes and feeling isolated?
- Struggling to make big decisions but avoiding them instead?
Connect with me for a free 30-minute consultation and for more info. My rates are not fixed. See the Work With Scott page for more info. All are welcome. Let's do it! Let's free what’s stuck to let your vitality flow freely again.
Need some help? Let’s do this together.
- Got unfinished projects that need tending?
- Do you have stuff stuck in storage but don't know where to begin?
- Need to meet with neighbors or loved ones but need a facilitator?
- Are you in the midst of big life changes and feeling isolated?
- Struggling to make big decisions but avoiding them instead?
Connect with me for a free 30-minute consultation and for more info. My rates are not fixed. See the Work With Scott page for more info. All are welcome. Let's do it! Let's free what’s stuck to let your vitality flow freely again.
Walking Water
An invitation, an action, an educational journey and a prayer intended to bring our voices, our stories, our commitment to our local and global watersheds through the act of walking together, following the waterways both natural and human-made. Indigenous-lead prayer walks take place every Spring and Autumn Equinox along the Owens River in Payahuunadü and along the L.A. River in Los Angeles. Since the long walk from Mono Lake, through Payahuunadü and Los Angeles to the confluence of the L.A. River and Pacific Ocean in 2015-2017, diverse walks with diverse peoples continue to restore and build relations.
Past Walks ~ 2017-2026 in Payahuunadü and Los Angeles
Walks of Resilience and Accountability ~ October 23rd-25th 2026 in Los Angeles
Talking Water and Publications
An invitation, an action, an educational journey and a prayer intended to bring our voices, our stories, our commitment to our local and global watersheds through the act of walking together, following the waterways both natural and human-made. Indigenous-lead prayer walks take place every Spring and Autumn Equinox along the Owens River in Payahuunadü and along the L.A. River in Los Angeles. Since the long walk from Mono Lake, through Payahuunadü and Los Angeles to the confluence of the L.A. River and Pacific Ocean in 2015-2017, diverse walks with diverse peoples continue to restore and build relations.
Past Walks ~ 2017-2026 in Payahuunadü and Los Angeles
Walks of Resilience and Accountability ~ October 23rd-25th 2026 in Los Angeles
Talking Water and Publications
Scott makes his home along the Twisp and Methow Rivers in the Methow Valley, Okanogan County, in North Central Washington, stolen lands of the Mətxʷú people and the many other-than-human beings that survive and thrive throughout the watershed.