@hakan_geijer
I love that aspect too, where it talks about how every piece of land is equally important to the health of watersheds, even cities, and that wildness and connection to place is always possible.
The indigeniety and spirituality piece is super interesting. The text is very much speaking to other settlers and discourages them from adopting a nature-based spirituality, since this kind of connection can only emerge over generations. I guess this could be either the kind of appropriative new age type of spirituality or the derrick Jensen talk to the trees kind.
I'm glad you liked it! I wish more projects would pick up where that one left off and continue building ecological knowledge in an antiauthoritarian way. Like the tour they did where they went around doing workshops on contested urban and suburban wild spaces, I'd love to see more of that.