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History & Instructors
Frank and Karen Sherwood founded Earthwalk
Northwest in 1995. Both served as head instructors at Tom
Brown Jr.’s Tracker School on the East Coast for
over 15 years. While there, they not only taught primitive
living skills to thousands of students, but also developed
and taught additional programs which they now continue through
Earthwalk Northwest.
Frank
grew up hunting and fishing in the Northwest. He has a recreational
leadership degree and specializes
in teaching bow making, traditional tanning, and wilderness
survival courses to a diversity of students, including military,
law enforcement agencies, the Boy Scouts, and children.
To keep current with his own level of expertise, Frank has
studied with some of the leading primitive technologists
in this country including Steve Allely, Errett Callahan,
Jack Cresson, Jim Hamm, Dan Stueber, and Charles Worsham.
Frank’s mastery of skills, and his ability to help
others master skills of their own, makes him a unique and
effective professional.
Karen
is a Northwest native who grew up studying the flora of the
Pacific Northwest. While studying
at the University of Washington, she was hired by Tom Brown
Jr. to develop and expand the wild foods curriculum for the
Tracker School. Karen gained a strong understanding of traditional
uses of wild plants while teaching there. Since returning
home to the Northwest, she continues to teach ethnobotany
programs through Earthwalk Northwest and other organizations
such as the Department of Ecology, Washington Outdoor Women,
King County Parks and The Earth Mentoring Institute. In addition
to her botany background, Karen also spent many years in
search and rescue, fine tuning her wilderness survival skills.
To balance her expertise, she also teaches utilitarian uses
of plants, including cordage and natural plant dyes. Her
professionalism and credibility are enhanced by a special
gift for helping
students become confident and comfortable with harvesting
and using plants. Her current passion is teaching about the
vast and wondrous uses of seaweeds, as well as traditional
Northwest basketry.
As founders of Earthwalk Northwest, Frank
and Karen provide internationally known programs where students
feel safe and successful learning primitive skills. The thousands
of students they have taught will
confirm their passionate interest in learning and passing
on the ancient art of living
from, and caretaking for, the earth. Together, they are
a competent and effective team for helping others discover
the excitement of mastering primitive living skills.
Frank and Karen are supportive
of organizations that help promote earth awareness and responsible
stewardship. They are currently on the board of directors
for the Foundation for Funding Nature’s Defenders as
well as supporters of Washington Outdoor Women, Rocky Mountain
Elk Foundation, and the Washington Native Plant Society.
They volunteer their time annually to teach traditional skills
at the American Indian Health Conference in California.
Dan Stueber: Dan Stueber, expert flintknapper and practitioner of primitive skills, joins to teach our lithic technologies courses. He brings with him over 20 years experience and expertise analyzing and replicating lithic materials. A drummer by trade, Dan continues his percussion work in stone to create some of the most stunning arrowheads and stone knives we have seen. We know you will enjoy his vast knowledge, friendly manner, and endless enthusiasm for this craft.
Bart Moody: Bart is a 17 year law enforcement veteran who has been tracking animals and humans for most of that time. He works with the police K-9 Unit and has been called upon by many law enforcement agencies to assist with crime scenes as well as tracking missing persons. To add to his extensive background, Bart has attended numerous tracking institutes throughout the United States and has also studied with South African trackers. He brings with him a great sense of humor and a deep passion for teaching.
Joe Roush: Joe was bitten by the "wild" bug at the tender age of 8 when his father told him he could make a whistle from a willow branch and lemonade out of sumac berries. Joe's pursuit of willow whistles and sumac lemonade sent him on a lifelong journey of nature study that included a Bachelor's degree in forest science and a 20 year career as a naturalist, forester and arborist, all the while never giving up his true interest in wild edible plants and primitive skills. When he's not saving and planting trees as Olympia's urban forester, Joe spends his time hiking in the wilds of Washington, eating wild foods, and teaching grade school students how to make whistles out of willow branches and lemonade out of sumac berries."
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