How can we make the most of our restorative time in nature?
Of all our senses, listening can provide the most profound connection with the environment around us. And yet, we're not taught the skills of deeply listening, especially to the diverse voices of the natural world.
Drawing on thirty years of experience, Andrew will get your ears tuned in. With vibrant sound recordings and visual presentations, he will introduce ways of appreciating birdsong, frog calls and insect choruses. His surprising understandings will inspire, giving you skills to listen with both the head and the heart.
You'll hear the world around you in a completely new way.
Mental and emotional wellbeing, nature connection, inspiration.
Read lessWhilst nature is vulnerable, it is also resilient in ways that may not be obvious to the eye.
Over thirty years of sound recording, Andrew has been able to revisit areas he once documented as healthy habitats, that have since been severely compromised, particularly by the 2019 mega fires.
Whilst what he has witnessed tells of ecosystem catastrophe, the soundscapes he’s encountered often speak of a surprisingly different story – one of renewal.
Presenting his own recordings, supported by other research data, Andrew considers the processes by which nature recovers from what may appear ruinous change.
By reflecting on these natural processes, we can develop our own strategies for resilience.
Environment, adaptation, conservation, climate change
Read lessExperience deep listening to nature.
Andrew will guide a small group of participants into a sensitive, auditory perception of the environment around us. In silence, and walking slowly to calm our usually over-active minds, we will immerse ourselves in nature’s soundworld.
Andrew will conclude by offering interpretation of what we’re hearing; identifying species by call, discussing vocal behaviours and why creatures use the sounds they do.
This will be a practical, outdoor workshop, requiring appropriate clothing and precautions, and is suitable for groups of up to 15 participants.
Life skills, mindfulness, lifestyle, nature attunement
Read lessContrary to the premise of western belief, the world is not a mechanism. As we're coming to realise, this thinking is flawed.
Living systems – ecosystems, organisations, markets – are complex; a change in one area may have unanticipated consequences elsewhere.
How can we learn to think in terms of interdependency, so as to recognise and promote healthy systems? How can we develop systems thinking?
Natural systems can be a role model, and by listening to them we can hear how they function. Andrew discusses how, by doing so, we can:
These principles may be applied to our human systems, with thought provoking implications.
Adaptation, climate change, expansive thinking
Read lessWe think of music as a cultural activity. But is it? What if music has biological and ancient origins, and is part of our human evolutionary journey?
By exploring birdsong and the acoustic communications of the natural world, we can get a sense of what music is, and isn't. We can understand where our music making may have come from, and why it has become so deeply embedded in our animal being. The profound mystery of music begins to make sense.
For creative and performing musicians, these understandings offer fresh context for artistic expression, particularly in the development of environmentally inspired art.
Creativity, the arts, culture
Read lessHow can we live sustainably and safely on a planet with limited resources?
Nature has solved this problem, and provides us with a model of sustainability. Because living systems are founded in relationships between organisms, communication underlies the continuance of life.
This is where listening comes in. What can we hear when we listen to the environment around us? What can we learn about how living systems function, and how may we apply that to our human systems?
This isn't mere philosophy. When applying learnings from nature to real world problems, we are practicing biomimicry – finding inspiration in the successes of nature.
Sustainability, co-operation, diversity & inclusion
Read lessOur economic and political systems are based on the virtues of competitive behaviour. Competition is essential to life; it brings out the best in us, punishes laziness, always leads to optimal outcomes and ... it's natural, right?
Well, yes and no. Through fascinating recordings and analysis, Andrew offers a nuanced exploration, contrasting competitive and co-operative behaviour throughout the natural world.
He then asks: what about our species? How may we avoid the costs of conflict by prioritising our own negotiatory processes?
Cooperation, conflict avoidance/resolution, communication
Read lessAcoustic Ecologist - Environmental Thinker - Author.
Andrew Skeoch speaks to our relationship with nature.
Sustainability, adaptation, diversity, resilience – these are all principles that support healthy living systems. What can we learn from nature's successes?
By finding inspiration in nature, Andrew explores how we can all become better listeners, communicators, problem solvers, and healthy humans.
Andrew Skeoch is an acoustic ecologist, professional wildlife sound recordist and author of the best-selling ‘Deep Listening to Nature’.
Over the last thirty years, he has documenting the sounds of environments around the planet, and through his label 'Listening Earth', published over one hundred recordings allowing listeners to immerse themselves in the beauty of the world’s wild soundscapes. His recordings have been heard in documentaries, installations and feature films such as Peter Gabriel's soundtrack to 'Rabbit Proof Fence’.
For the last decade, he has been giving presentations to audiences ranging from local community and naturalist groups to university students, and at festivals including Woodford and WOMADelaide’s Planet Talks.
He has recorded radio features, such as for ABC radio’s ‘Big Ideas’, written for The Conversation, delivered conference keynote addresses and in 2017, gave a TEDx talk in Canberra.
He is the president of the Australian Wildlife Sound Recording Group, and on the board of the Australian Forum for Acoustic Ecology.