GrEnz Stewardship

GrEnz Stewardship ecological stewardship

03/13/2026

these stewards are HEROES

that apex predators matter most to any ecosystem cannot be understated — though it’s also very important to know that al...
03/11/2026

that apex predators matter most to any ecosystem cannot be understated — though it’s also very important to know that all matter.

BREAKING: A permit has been issued allowing an endangered wolf to be killed.

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has issued a controversial lethal permit allowing ranchers in Catron County, New Mexico to shoot a Mexican gray wolf if one is encountered attacking livestock.

This is not just any wolf.

The Mexican gray wolf is the rarest wolf subspecies in North America and one of the most endangered wolves on Earth.

By the late 1970s the species had been virtually wiped out, and the entire recovery program started from just seven remaining wolves captured for breeding.

Today, after decades of conservation work, the wild population is still incredibly fragile. Recent estimates put the number at around 257 wolves in the United States, primarily in Arizona and New Mexico, with roughly 45–50 more in Mexico.

That means the entire wild population is barely around 300 animals worldwide.

Every wolf in the population matters — genetically and socially. Packs rely on breeding pairs to raise pups, and the loss of even one wolf can destabilise an entire family group.

Conservation groups say this permit is particularly troubling because it does not identify a specific problem wolf. Instead, it allows the killing of any wolf encountered under the permit conditions, meaning a breeding animal or genetically valuable individual could be lost.

For a population that took over 40 years of recovery efforts to reach just a few hundred animals, the loss of even a single wolf can set conservation back.

The Mexican gray wolf is still listed as endangered, and many scientists say the population is not yet secure or genetically healthy enough to withstand additional human-caused deaths.

Which is why many people are asking a difficult question tonight:

How can a species still fighting for survival be given a permit to be killed at all?

cut AROUND ANNUAL LUPINES!!!they are VITAL to healing disturbed grasslands, feeding early season nectar to MANY ecosyste...
02/24/2026

cut AROUND ANNUAL LUPINES!!!

they are VITAL to healing disturbed grasslands, feeding early season nectar to MANY ecosystem pollinators, and as a larval host to many butterfly and insect species including certain endangered butterflies such as the mission blue of the San Fran Bay Area (see 2nd photo; wanna lose that?!)

if cut, they mostly do NOT regrow, and then the lineages can get discontinued at great detriment to the land (and loss of beauty just to boot)

if cut, the boogeyman will cut you BACK— true story

This man gives “everyday hero” an entirely new meaning.What an outstanding case of how peace, joy, and a job well done c...
02/11/2026

This man gives “everyday hero” an entirely new meaning.

What an outstanding case of how peace, joy, and a job well done can be reward enough to making stewardship a habit.

He thought it would take two weeks. It took 589 days. And when he was done, an entire canyon was clean.
In May 2019, a twenty-year-old climate activist named Edgar McGregor walked into Eaton Canyon, one of the most popular hiking spots in Los Angeles County, carrying two things: a five-gallon bucket and a pair of gloves.
What he saw stopped him cold. Trash was everywhere. Beer cans. Plastic bottles. Old phones. Lighters. Disposable masks. Car tires. At one point, he would even find a ten-foot-tall patio heater abandoned in the wilderness. Eaton Canyon sat within the Angeles National Forest, drew over 600,000 visitors a year, and had become a dumping ground that no one was taking responsibility for.
Edgar figured he could clean it up in ten to twenty days. Maybe a few sunny weekends. Grab what he could, fill some bags, and move on.
He could not have been more wrong.
The trash just kept appearing. Every trail, every waterfall, every storm drain, every streambed had layers of waste that had been accumulating for years. Edgar quickly realized that a few weekend trips were not going to fix this. If he wanted the canyon clean, he would have to come back every single day.
So that is exactly what he did.
For 589 consecutive days, Edgar McGregor hiked into Eaton Canyon with his buckets and gloves. He went when it was 117 degrees. He went in thunderstorms. He went through snow. He went when wildfire ash was falling from the sky and the hills around him were burning. He went during the pandemic, when the trails were closed to most visitors but the trash remained. He went after work, sometimes for an hour, sometimes for four. He never took a day off.
Over nearly two years, he estimates he picked up between 12,000 and 15,000 pounds of trash. On his biggest single day, he filled an entire dumpster by himself — roughly half a ton of waste pulled out of a place that was supposed to be a nature preserve.
Edgar, who has been open about being autistic, found a rhythm in the work that suited him. He was methodical. He would pick a specific location each day — a particular stretch of trail, a waterfall basin, a storm drain — and search it thoroughly until it was spotless. Then he would move on to the next section. He tracked which areas stayed clean and which ones attracted repeat dumping. He carried two buckets — one for trash, one for recyclables. The recyclables he turned in for cash and donated every cent: some to planting native western sycamore trees in the park, some to climate charities, some to political candidates who pledged to act on environmental policy. Over time, he donated more than four hundred dollars from aluminum cans and plastic bottles that other people had thrown on the ground.
Part of what motivated him was the 2028 Summer Olympics. Los Angeles had won the bid to host the games, and Edgar could not stand the thought of world-class athletes visiting his city's trails and seeing trash everywhere. He called it a potential "global embarrassment." He wanted the canyon to be something Los Angeles could be proud of.
As his streak grew longer, Edgar documented everything on social media with the hashtag . He posted photos of the most extreme conditions he cleaned in. He shared before-and-after shots of sections of trail. He never made it about outrage toward litterers — he had learned early on that anger was counterproductive. "There's always going to be litterbugs," he said. "There's nothing we can do to stop people from throwing stuff onto the ground." Instead, he focused on the joy he found in the work. The animals that started returning. The trails that looked the way they were supposed to. The strangers who saw him out there and grabbed their own buckets.
On March 5, 2021, something remarkable happened. Edgar walked aimlessly around the southern half of the park for four hours, checking every location he could find. He only filled two buckets. The next day, the same thing happened in the northern half. He had checked the entire main trail, all the waterfalls, all the storm drains. There was nothing left to pick up.
For the first time in 589 days, Eaton Canyon was completely free of municipal waste.
Edgar posted a video to Twitter, barely able to contain his excitement. "I AM DONE!!! I DID IT!!!" he wrote. The post exploded. Over a hundred thousand people liked it. Thousands commented. Fellow climate activist Greta Thunberg responded: "Well done and congratulations!!" California's first Latino U.S. Senator, Alex Padilla, called him a "hometown hero." People from Australia, Norway, India, and dozens of other countries sent photos of themselves cleaning up their own local parks, inspired by a twenty-year-old in Los Angeles who had simply refused to stop.
But Edgar did not stop either.
He returned to Eaton Canyon two to three times a week for maintenance and set his sights on other parks that needed the same attention. As of 2022, he had passed 1,000 consecutive days of cleanup. He enrolled at San Jose State University to study meteorology and climatology, determined to turn his passion for the planet into a career.
"Climate action is a group project," Edgar wrote. "There will be no hero that will emerge from the fog to save us from ourselves. To preserve this planet, we'll need a billion climate activists."
He is not wrong. But the truth Edgar McGregor proved is equally important: you do not need a billion people to start. You need one person, one bucket, and the willingness to show up tomorrow, and the day after that, and the day after that, for as long as it takes.
One young man. One canyon. 589 days. Fifteen thousand pounds of trash. And a simple lesson the whole world needed to hear: the mess is never too big if you just keep showing up.

~Weird Wonders and Facts

the fatality of the regen grazing theory is that it takes too much land, *particularly wild lands.* wild animals are mer...
01/24/2026

the fatality of the regen grazing theory is that it takes too much land, *particularly wild lands.* wild animals are merely 4% of the mammalian biomass on earth, decreasing rapidly as ecosystems decline.

granted, 3.2 million was excessive, and environmental groups need to do better on efficiency — but total revocation is abhorrently unjust and selfish

many of Robert F. Kennedy, Jr’s policies are well aligned with ecological stewardship, but the mandate to eat more meat, despite all peer-reviewed literature readily proving that WFPB is the only healthy diet for its fiber and antioxidants, is not. It may be well intended for U.S. citizens *in comparison to their processed food diet,* but this falls quite short of advocating for what they truly need to hear — which is to adopt a WFPB diet — and is going to have severely problematic consequences on ecosystems.

there is no doubt that this abhorrent bison encroachment was motivated to procure more land for cattle grazing; we are rapidly depleting such resources.

what’s the solution ? CALL US
(we’ll also be publishing soon 🤠 )

https://www.facebook.com/100064206362992/posts/1264126385737562/?mibextid=wwXIfrloncntaroupssdtter betrces lg sispon wb

American Prairie permits to graze bison on federal land has been revoked, according to a new decision from Interior Secretary Doug Burgum.

Gavin Newsom, I know it’s tiresome for CA to have to innovate most every piece of environmental policy on behaf of the w...
01/10/2026

Gavin Newsom, I know it’s tiresome for CA to have to innovate most every piece of environmental policy on behaf of the world, BUT for apex predators it is essential to ecosystem health.

frankly, your current policy direction on rodenticides unfortunately isn’t ecologically tolerable — you see,
endangering apex predators along with the entire food web simply isn’t something that an ecosystem can survive by, much less thrive. you WILL set us seriously backwards if you commit such an action .

and *to the contrary,* the anticoagulant rodenticide regulations ought very much to be extended to farmers

what we SHOULD be relying upon for pest control IS WILDLIFE — and how we do that is not only via general IPM but specifically by allowing birds of prey to EXIST by requiring outdoor lights to shine within their non-visible spectrum of 560+nm and 2200-2700K !!! simple and easy to do. and regulations can be light-handed b/c folx won’t even need to be forced to it once the word gets out how well it WORKS to control pests.

for excellent results , the long game must be played — just like your fast food minimum wage law and how it targets the correct economic aggressors, giving small businesses a necessary leg up from greedy corporations by redistributing profits to the workers; shrewdly clever, truly.

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/dec/05/california-pesticides-restrictions-rat-poisonsile get

The anti-coagulant rodenticides also unintentionally harm wildlife across the state, including endangered species

Political misinformation of environmental policies CANNOT BE TOLERATED. This is not to engage in partisan politics; envi...
01/04/2026

Political misinformation of environmental policies CANNOT BE TOLERATED. This is not to engage in partisan politics; environmental issues *transcend partisan politics.

Nuclear energy is mostly clean *but highly vulnerable to bombing attacks,* while wind, solar, and geothermal are ultra-clean, high-efficiency, and high-performance technologies which, when combined with batteries, are the path forward toward energy independence for all.

Corporations can't profit from you if that happens, so no one is being told because there's no profit incentive to get people to do it; this is the policy dilemma of the environmental movement generally: it remains somewhat politically voiceless.

Donald Trump has just single-handedly discovered the tragic plight of birds. A blurry flock doing interpretive dance around a wind turbine, accompanied by the Pulitzer-worthy headline: “Killing birds by the millions!” Wow. Millions. That’s a big number. Very big. Tremendous, really.

Almost as tremendous as the number of brain cells that had to die for someone to think this was the hill to die on. Let’s just pause for a second and bask in the sheer, glistening hypocrisy. Wind turbines: guilty of maybe 140,000 to (if we squint really hard and use the most generous possible estimate) 1.2 million bird deaths per year in the entire United States. That’s the smoking gun. The avian apocalypse. The reason we should clearly abandon clean energy forever.

Meanwhile, the actual bird holocaust is happening in broad daylight and nobody seems to have the energy to type in all caps about it. Industrial agriculture? Oh honey, that’s not killing birds—that’s running an industrial-scale bird woodchipper. Pesticides alone are conservatively credited with 67–90 million direct deaths every single year. We’re talking seeds so toxic that one happy little peck turns Mr. Sparrow into a cautionary tale.

We’re talking entire insect populations nuked so thoroughly that baby birds are basically born with an eating disorder. We’re talking hundreds of millions more birds quietly erased through habitat conversion, casual shotgun target practice on “pest” species, secondary poisoning of every raptor that dares eat a poisoned mouse.

But please, tell me more about how the big white pinwheel is the real monster here. I’m riveted.And then there’s the heavyweight champion nobody wants to talk about: climate change, brought to you by the same fossil-fuel industrial complex that makes wind turbines the bad guy in this tragic opera.

Audubon isn’t doing performance art when they say two-thirds of North American bird species—389 out of 604—are now basically holding a permanent “going out of business” sale thanks to habitat that’s literally ceasing to exist, migration routes turning into death marches, wildfires that barbecue nesting sites, and rising seas that treat coastal wetlands like a bad buffet. But sure. The windmill in the background of one stock photo is clearly the greater existential threat.

The level of cognitive dissonance required to scream “SAVE THE BIRDS!!!” at spinning blades while shrugging at chemical death clouds, bulldozed grasslands, and a planet literally cooking every migratory corridor is honestly kind of impressive. It’s like watching someone cry over a paper cut while they’re simultaneously on fire.

So yes, by all means, keep posting that flock-around-the-turbine picture with the million-bird fan fiction. Keep pretending the occasional unlucky finch meeting a carbon-fiber blade is the moral equivalent of 90 million pesticide casualties and the potential extinction of hundreds of entire species. I’ll just be over here, slowly clapping with one hand, waiting for the moment someone notices the actual math.

Nature’s priorities called. They said, and I quote: “Are you people serious right now?”

excellent and long overdue — may many jurisdictions soon follow suit
12/29/2025

excellent and long overdue — may many jurisdictions soon follow suit

A country chose wildlife over weapons.

Costa Rica made a historic decision by banning sport and trophy hunting nationwide, turning recreational hunting of wild animals into a permanent crime. This bold move wasn’t symbolic—it was legal, enforceable, and final.

By choosing protection over exploitation, Costa Rica reinforced its identity as one of the world’s strongest defenders of biodiversity. Forests became safer, ecosystems more stable, and countless animals gained a future free from recreational harm. It’s a rare example of a nation placing long-term ecological balance above short-term human pleasure—setting a powerful global precedent for conservation.

‘people care’ is a foundational tenet of permaculture doctrine.innovative programs to employ houseless folx remain under...
12/24/2025

‘people care’ is a foundational tenet of permaculture doctrine.
innovative programs to employ houseless folx remain undertapped but are finally on the rise!!!

Portland, Oregon, is addressing its homelessness and sanitation challenges through an innovative program called GLITTER (Ground Score Leading Inclusively Together Through Environmental Recovery), run by the nonprofit Ground Score Association, which is led by and for people who have experienced homelessness. The city and county pay participants, typically earning between $20 and $29 per hour, to pick up trash along designated routes, provide tent-side waste collection for people living outdoors, and help keep public spaces clean. More than 95% of the roughly 55 people hired through the program have been or currently are unhoused, and according to the nonprofit’s data, over 70% of those workers have since secured housing. In addition to employment, Ground Score offers healthcare, addiction support, mental health services, help obtaining ID, and other benefits designed to support workers’ stability and wellbeing.

The initiative was co-founded by Barbra Weber, who saw the potential for more structured and better-paid work for her community while living in a tent encampment. The program’s leadership emphasizes “radical inclusion,” meaning almost anyone can join — gear and training are provided, and sobriety isn’t a condition of employment (only that workers not be under the influence while on the job). Officials overseeing the contract say the program delivers strong outcomes for relatively low cost, and the city has affirmed it won’t cut funding despite broader budget pressures. Beyond trash pickup, Ground Score also runs reuse and repair programs and engages in broader advocacy for waste pickers both locally and globally.

12/15/2025

THIS is the primary reason that grEnz, and most stewards, backed RFK’s presidential campaign —

great to see it getting carried into action.

after the U.S. birthed synthetics and GM that are a scourge to planetary vitality,
it will now conversely turn a new leaf and birth the ecological revolution in agriculture.
very exciting

DM us today for info on how your ag operation can benefit

… & must now clarify from last post: it’s absolutely right to believe that greenhouse gases cause global warming which c...
12/11/2025

… & must now clarify from last post: it’s absolutely right to believe that greenhouse gases cause global warming which causes climate change and that thus, humanity’s lack of stewardship creates both an existential threat to ourselves and an inhumane burden upon the planetary ecosystems broadly (see below ; heartwrenching)

the question is: what are you DOING about it?

lowering carbon emissions is not a satisfactory answer—

anything short of ecological stewardship is inadequate mitigation AND losing you tremendous financial opportunities just to boot — tremendous gains AND cost savings.

DM us today for more info about how to ebb losses and starting making abundant gains, especially *but not only* if you own or manage land

https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=1412710810214031&set=a.240531597431964&type=3&mibextid=wwXIfrosacrtwret

Polar bears are now confronting a crisis that’s pushing them to the brink: as Arctic sea ice disappears, so does their ability to hunt the seals they depend on. With their frozen hunting grounds melting beneath them, these powerful predators are stranded on land, where low-calorie foods like berries and bird eggs can’t come close to meeting their massive energy needs. The result is devastating—bears burning more calories than they can possibly replace, growing weaker by the week, and losing the critical fat reserves they must rely on to survive the long Arctic seasons.

truly, naturally grown food does heal(despite sounding ambiguous, the video's name refers to a GOOD thing!)excellent exa...
12/11/2025

truly, naturally grown food does heal
(despite sounding ambiguous, the video's name refers to a GOOD thing!)

excellent example of internal CSA in practice

do you have a minutely modest amount of space on any of your parcels? you could do this… DM us for info

At the Mountain View Correctional Facility, in Charleston, Maine, incarcerated people don't just eat healthy -- they grow the food themselves. It's part of a...

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