Spring Forest Bathing 2022
Facilitated by certified Nature & Forest Therapy Guide Duncan Murdoch
Saturday, April 09, 2022
9:30am - 12:00pm Eastern Huntington, Vermont
Location Details
Audubon Vermont's Green Mountain Audubon Center
Just beyond 214 Main Road, Huntington, 05462, VT
We will meet in front of the Audubon Sugarhouse on the Main Road in Huntington.
Park at our Sugarhouse Parking Area.
Map with exact location: http://bit.ly/1kVbEFV
Driving directions: https://vt.audubon.org/visit-us/sugarhouse-parking-area-driving-directions-and-map
Come experience nature in new and deeply familiar ways with the practice of forest bathing. A different act than other nature connection experiences such as hiking, birding, or tree identifying, in forest bathing you are invited to slow down with intentionality and mindfulness to engage your traditional five senses and beyond. Give your body and mind a chance to rest and restore while taking in the subtleties and wonder of nature.
We will walk through the incredibly dynamic, diverse and loved land of the Green Mountain Audubon Center, being sure to visit the hemlock swamp, beaver pond, and babbling brook. The walk will be less than a mile and will conclude with a fire in the winter and a locally foraged tea, sweetened with maple syrup made straight from the trees on the land.
What is forest bathing?
Forest Bathing is a research-based practice for supporting healing and wellness through immersion in forests and other natural environments. The decades old practice originated in Japan and is known as shinrin-yoku, which literally translates to “taking in the forest" or “forest bathing”. Studies have demonstrated a wide array of health benefits, especially in the cardiovascular and immune systems, and for stabilizing and improving mood and cognition. Your Nature & Forest Therapy Guide builds on those benefits and looks beyond to what happens when people remember that we are a part of nature and are intrinsically connected to all other beings in fundamental ways.
Facilitated by certified Nature & Forest Therapy Guide Duncan Murdoch.
Audubon Vermont will be hosting Forest Bathing in every season this coming year. Sign up for all all four to experience the changing of seasons or drop in to any one!
Spring Forest Bathing: Saturday, April 9
Summer Forest Bathing: Saturday, June 25
Fall Forest Bathing: Saturday, October 1
Winter Forest Bathing: Saturday, December 17
Audubon Members: $30 per session
Non-members: $35 per session
Click here to register.
Trail/accessibility information: The walk will be at a slower-than-usual-pace with many pauses and will cover less than 1 mile. The maintained trails are unchallenging, are of bare earth, uneven at times and flat without hills or climbs. There are roots and rocks throughout. The conditions of the trails will vary from season to season and day to day. In the winter expect snow ice, in spring expect some mud, in summer some mosquitos, and in fall a covering of leaves on the ground. An interactive trail map is available here: https://vt.audubon.org/visit-us
If you require accommodations or have questions about accessibility, please contact Audubon Vermont at gcauser@audubon.org.
Photo: Wood anemone. Credit: Gwendolyn Causer / Audubon Vermont