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UID:16526-1774288800-1774288800@artsfalmouth.org
SUMMARY:Nature’s Engineers: Partnering with Beavers to Restore Landscapes
DESCRIPTION:The Woods Hole Public Library will welcome scientist\, engineer\, and experimentalist Jordan R. M. Kennedy to speak on Monday\, March 23\, at 6 PM. \nKennedy’s Ph.D thesis in materials science and mechanical engineering\, as well as her recent work\, focuses on how partnering with beavers can help restore North American landscapes. She is passionate about bridging science\, traditional knowledge\, and engineering to restore landscapes and reconnect with tradition and land. A member of the Blackfeet tribe\, Kennedy has worked as the Tribal Partnerships Liaison and Beaver Behaviorist at the Beaver Institute\, promoting the incorporation of tribal knowledge and Indigenous representation in the dissemination of knowledge about best practices concerning beavers in North American waterways. She is currently a ​​Traditional Ecological Knowledge Postdoctoral Researcher in Applied Ocean Physics & Engineering at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute\, and in partnership with the Tlingit Tribe of southeast Alaska\, her research is focused on clam gardens\, a highly productive Indigenous aquaculture technology engineered and stewarded for millennia by many Tribes across the Pacific Northwest. \n\,For her talk at the Woods Hole Public Library\, Kennedy will share her expertise on beaver ingenuity. Beavers are some of the best engineers in North America; they build dams\, dig canals\, and can completely transform a valley. Kennedy has helped to build a new computer tool to simulate that process\, starting with real landscape data (like maps of elevation and water flow) and then adding realistic beaver behavior. The result is a simulation where “virtual beavers” move around\, make choices about where to build\, and slowly reshape the landscape as they go. The goal is to use this tool to support restoration planning\, especially projects designed to work with beavers rather than against them. \nWith her work connecting science and technology with Indigenous knowledge and practices\, Kennedy’s research ties in perfectly with the 2026 Falmouth Reads Together selection – Braiding Sweetgrass by Robin Wall Kimmerer. In the book\, Kimmerer strives to blend scientific knowledge with Indigenous wisdom\, particularly from her Potawatomi heritage\, to explore humanity’s reciprocal relationship with the natural world. \nThis talk will be held in the Library’s lower level Community Room and is free and open to the public.
URL:https://artsfalmouth.org/event/natures-engineers-partnering-with-beavers-to-restore-landscapes/
LOCATION:Woods Hole Public Library\, 581 Woods Hole Road\, Woods Hole\, MA\, 02543\, United States
CATEGORIES:Environment,Falmouth Reads Together,Nature,Talks
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://artsfalmouth.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/JordanKennedyChiefMountain-scaled.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Woods Hole Public Library":MAILTO:whpl_mail@clamsnet.org
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260328T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260328T210000
DTSTAMP:20260423T175422
CREATED:20260318T064508Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260318T064508Z
UID:16573-1774724400-1774731600@artsfalmouth.org
SUMMARY:Woods Hole Film Festival: The Shepherd and the Bear
DESCRIPTION:The Woods Hole Film Festival’s Dinner & A Movie series presents the feature documentary\, The Shepherd and the Bear\, on Saturday\, March 28\, at 7 PM\, in Redfield Auditorium\, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution\, Doors open at 6:30 PM. \nThe film is by Max Keegan\, UK/US/France\, 2025\, 101 minutes\, French with English subtitles. \nTickets: $18 general admission | $14 members | $10 students & military \nSet high in the majestic French Pyrenees\, The Shepherd and the Bear explores a conflict provoked by the reintroduction of brown bears amid a traditional shepherding community. The film follows an aging shepherd who struggles to find a successor as bears prey on his flock\, and a teenage boy who becomes obsessed with tracking the bears. Through its breathtaking cinematography and immersive storytelling\, The Shepherd and the Bear is a modern folktale about tradition\, community and humanity’s relationship with a vanishing natural world. \nThe film was nominated for Cinema Eye Award and British Independent Film Award. \nDirector’s Statement: \nThe French state started releasing Slovenian brown bears into the Pyrénées in 1996 as part of an EU-wide program called LIFE. At this point there were just five Pyrenean brown bears left. The decision to release apex predators into a region whose primary industry is traditional open range sheep farming was immediately controversial. Not just because of the potential dangers this posed\, but also because of who was perceived to have taken this decision–farming communities across Europe have faced increasing economic hardship and political marginalization for decades\, and there was little local consultation for this project legislated for a world away in urban Paris and Brussels. \nOn both sides of the debate\, the bear represents different fears. For the ecological lobby\, it’s the fear that humanity has overreached itself. The bear is a manifestation of mother nature – it’s a powerful figure that can take back the reins from us and manage the environment outside of our corrupting influence. For the anti-bear farmers\, the bear is an aberration foisted on them by distant powers. Something that represents the state’s irreverence of their industry and their culture at a time when both these things are already facing extreme pressures. \nI didn’t want to make an activist film\, a call to arms\, or an exposé. These are complicated issues\, and the truth is\, on some level both sides are right. I wanted to make a film that captured the complexity of this story\, and that humanized both sides of the debate. \nAlthough this film takes place in the Pyrénées\, it speaks to issues that affect rural communities everywhere. We are living through an era of radical and rapid change\, not just environmentally\, but also culturally. Urban spaces account for less than one percent of land use but now house more than half of the global population. Across the world young people are migrating\, leaving villages and towns and moving to cities. The economic stresses of modern life atomize communities\, sever generational relationships to the land\, and threaten the perpetuation of local traditions. Hard won knowledge developed over hundreds of years is lost in the space of one absent generation. \nI chose to take a cinema verité approach to the storytelling\, because I felt that a character driven narrative would be more emotionally engaging and effective in bringing an audience round to understand both perspectives. By eschewing standard documentary techniques\, I hope to present our subjects as sympathetic characters rather than simply as voices ‘for’ and ‘against’. We spent two years living in the Pyrénées to experience and understand this issue first-hand and deliver a human story that transcends its direct subject matter. \nI don’t think that the themes this film deals with could be more urgent. We need to protect and preserve wild species where they are threatened\, but we can only do so in concert with local people. Equally\, we must strive to valorize and defend traditional lifestyles\, which in many cases hold the keys to understanding how to live in better harmony with the natural world. \nABOUT DINNER & A MOVIE \nDinner & A Movie is part of the Woods Hole Film Festival’s Winter/Spring Film Series\, featuring twice-monthly in-person screenings of independent films from September 2025 through June 2026. Screenings are held at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution’s Redfield Auditorium\, located at 45 Water Street in Woods Hole. \nTickets are available in advance at www.woodsholefilmfestival.org and at the door if not sold out. \nBefore the screening\, ticket holders may receive a discount on the meal portion of dinner at Quahog Republic Leeside Pub\, 29 Railroad Avenue\, Woods Hole. \nFor more information\, email info@woodsholefilmfestival.org or call (508) 495-3456.
URL:https://artsfalmouth.org/event/woods-hole-film-festival-the-shepherd-and-the-bear/
LOCATION:Redfield Auditorium\, 45 Water Street\, Woods Hole\, MA\, 02543\, United States
CATEGORIES:Documentaries,Environment,Film
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://artsfalmouth.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/Shepherd-and-the-Bear.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Woods Hole Film Festival":MAILTO:info@woodsholefilmfestival.org
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