NewWest.Net Conferences
Designing the New West
The Designing the New West: Architecture and Landscape in the Mountain West Conference is wrapping up here in Bozeman at the historic Gallatin Gateway Inn. Put on by NewWest.Net and sponsored by the Sonoran Institute, the conference brought together designers from all over the country to explore innovative design ideas, identify best practices, and better understand how to bridge the gap between good architectural theory and sometimes-messy building practices in the fastest growing region in the nation.
A mix of presentations and engaging panel discussions tackled pressing Western issues like sustainable development, land design and the special challenges of urban, rural and resort design, historic preservation and affordable housing.
Click on the photo or here for a slideshow of the days' events. Click "more" for a recap of the conference.
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Yoga On & Off the Mat
Lessons from Lino
Last weekend I had the absolute pleasure of meeting Rome’s Lino Miele at a workshop in Bozeman, Montana. Lino is a senior Ashtanga yoga teacher who has been studying the practice for more than 20 years—yet you wouldn’t know it at first glance. He’s as humble as a novice and as excited about the practice as if it were a recent discovery.
The following highlights, based around his teaching of the Full Vinyasa System, can inform and lend context to all students of yoga, Ashtanga or otherwise.
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Missoula Notebook
Going to the Dogs in MissoulaI don’t know why so many dog owners believe that leash laws apply only to someone else, although I guess most of us have at least a law or two we choose to disregard, even if it’s only a speed limit. Arguably one good reason to disobey leash laws is to be able to give your dog more exercise than you’d otherwise have time for, if you don’t live next door to Jacobs Island Park, although another way of looking at this situation would be that, if you don’t have time to drive to Jacobs Island Park on a regular basis, maybe you don’t have time to own a dog. [more]
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Yoga On & Off the Mat
Setting the Stage for a Home PracticeConsidering last week’s “Inspiring Reasons to Practice Yoga at Home,” it’s fair to say that a personal practice is worth exploring. Rolling out your mat at home, on your own schedule and in a way that supports your body/mind, bolsters all aspects of your yoga practice.
Now, it’s just a matter of preparing a place.
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Yoga On & Off the Mat
Inspiring Reasons to Practice Yoga at HomeI cherish my home practice. My body, my energy, my wall clock call the shots. Also, at home the teacher-student ratio shifts, and my monkey mind and body become my primary instructors. Sure, it shouldn’t take a home practice to fully focus on how I feel, but in a studio—where collective energy is paramount and wonderfully powerful—breath and body may move in ways other than what comes most naturally. Other than what flows when I’m flying solo.
With that, I deem a home practice a good, no great, idea because...
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Crème de la crème in Missoula
515 Chef Paul Myers a Finalist for National HonorPaul Myers, executive chef at 515 on the Hip Strip in Missoula, is a semifinalist for a James Beard Foundation Award, one of the nation’s most prestigious honors for culinary professionals.
Thousands of entries were received but Myers made it into the top 20 for Best Chef Northwest. The top five finalists will be announced March 24 and flown to New York City to be honored at the Lincoln Center.
“I’m really honored to be in the listing,” says Myers, 37, a native of Billings. “I feel like what we’re doing is on point with those guys [in bigger cities], but I didn’t expect to get the nod out here because there’s just not as much exposure in an area like this versus a Portland or Seattle market.”
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Yoga On & Off the Mat
Guru Guidance: Teaching is a Fundamental Aspect of Yoga
Yoga has always has been a student-teacher affair. And though many modern yogis practice at home sans guidance, they have likely gleaned some part of their practice, at some point in their life, from a mentor.
This week I consider the role of guru in yoga under the tutelage of modern scholars and modern mother/teacher/fashionista extraordinaire Tane Talalotou.
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Spade & Spoon: Localizing the Way Westerners Eat
Ground Beef Recall a Serious Downer for Montana Schools
On January 30th the Humane Society of the United States released an undercover and extremely graphic video that shows meat packers of the Westland/Hallmark Meat Company kicking sick cows. These animals, referred to as “downers” by the meat industry because they fall down with illness or fatigue, were prodded and pushed with forklifts in order to get them on their feet and pass the USDA inspection. The cows passed the inspection and promptly collapsed. Rather than tell the on-site regulators of the animals' changed condition (as required by law), the Westland/Hallmark employees went ahead slaughtered them.
Such actions are clearly inhumane but the processing of downer cows has also been linked to mad cow disease, making such treatment an issue of human health.
With the release of the year old video, the USDA put a hold on all meat sold through the company, meaning that those with the meat should simply hold onto it rather than cook and eat it. 18 days later, the USDA made the largest meat recall in United States history: 143 million pounds of ground meat.
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April 24-25 in Bozeman
Top Regional Architects, Designers, Planners Gather for “Designing the New West”
We're delighted to announce the initial speaker lineup for our upcoming conference, Designing the New West: Architecture and Landscape in the Mountain West. This new event, produced in cooperation with the Sonoran Institute, will cover a rich array of topics including the economics and politics of green design, urban revitalization, historic preservation, land design and rural development, resort design, and much more.
Among the many prominent professionals joining us for the event are Lori Ryker, author of Off the Grid and founder of the Artemis Institute; Paul Bertelli, who among his many achievements led the reconstruction of the historic conference venue itself, the Gallatin Gateway Inn; James Tuer, lead designer of the proposed Bitterroot Resort project; Ray Calabro of Bohlin Cywinski Jackson, who designed the new Grand Teton National Park visitor center; and Grant Jones, one of the nation's most prominent landscape architects.
Our sponsors include Morrison-Maierle, O'Berry Cavanaugh, WGM Group, and Locati Architects.
Early bird registration ends March 7. Click here for the conference Website, and click here to register now. Email or call 406-829-1725 with any questions or to inquire about sponsorships. We look forward to seeing you in Bozeman!
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