About the Community

The Year of Rewilding Website is intended to be an interactive community. All humans and more-than-humans are welcome to join. Please join us as we work together to rewild ourselves and our beloved Earth home.

About Me
I am Kathleen McNary Wood. Growing up as a feral child in Miami, Florida, and in the absence of traditional familial and cultural programming, I discovered a deep and enduring kinship and love among the trees, birds, and insects in the backyards, streets, and cracks of pavement of my childhood suburban neighborhood. That love compelled me to want to spend my life healing the mortal wounds Western capitalism and culture have inflicted upon the planet and inspired a profession in environmental science.

Attending Florida International University, I obtained a Bachelor of Science (Magna cum Laude) in Environmental Studies, followed by a Master of Liberal Arts in Sustainability and Environmental Management in Extension Studies from Harvard University. For more than 30 years, I have worked as an environmental consultant, with specific expertise in environmental impact assessment and multicriteria evaluation. My work has focused on environmental systems analyses, specializing in tropical and subtropical ecosystems. Over the course of my career, I have designed and conducted more than 50 research projects, classifying and mapping terrestrial, wetland, coastal, and marine habitats, preparing and overseeing comprehensive environmental impact assessments, conducting socio-economic and cultural analyses, designing and facilitating stakeholder meetings and workshops, developing environmental educational programs, advising on environmentally sustainable development, and working in association with private and public sector entities to develop environmental partnerships, legislation, and policy.

In search of solutions for my communities’ ecological ills, I have also held management positions across public, non-profit, and private sectors. I served as the Director of the Turks and Caicos Islands (TCI) Department of Environment and Maritime Affairs, the TCI government agency charged with the management, oversight, and enforcement of the natural resources within 35 protected areas, a marine exclusive economic zone of 91,025 km2, and 430 km2 of upland, coastal, and wetland habitats. I now serve as the Research Director at the Turks and Caicos Reef Fund, TCI’s only non-profit environmental advocacy organization, and as the Principal at SWA Environmental, a Turks and Caicos Islands-based company, specializing in transformative environmental management through cooperative scientific research, environmental, socioeconomic, and cultural impact assessment, environmental advocacy, and policy development.

Despite the work I have done, across the course of my career, I have been traumatized by intimate experiences of ecological violence and frustrated by an environmental science orthodoxy that demands detached objectification of the more-than-human world, while utterly failing to reverse the trajectory of global ecological cataclysm. My life experiences now culminate in the pursuit of a PhD in Transformative Studies at the California Institute of Integral Studies. My proposed inquiry will employ co-operative action research to work collaboratively and equitably with the beings with whom I share a land base in Asheville, North Carolina to restore a colonized and degraded ecological community and myself to flourishing wildness. By rewilding myself within an ecoregion as a subjective co-researcher, rather than as a detached and objective scientific observer, I hope to radically contest and provide an alternative to the centuries-old assumptions of the dominant scientific paradigm and provide a platform for the suppressed and marginalized voices of the more-than-human world.

I welcome all to join me in this resurrection and rediscovery of wildness.

About You
Tell us about yourselves, and join our community. Your biographies and as much as you would like to share will appear here.
About Our More-than-Human Kin
Se-di and Sowo are two Black Walnut Trees with whom I share a land community. Aged approximately 220 and 280 years, respectively. I presume they are the oldest (and wisest) beings in my land community.

A Year of Rewilding – Coda

On March 20th, 2023, I completed the year of rewilding. Several months have passed since my last post. As the seasons returned the external world back to the womb of Earth, so too my rewilding journey arched inward. As rewilding co-researchers went to sleep, internal...

The Offering

It begins with offering Corn to Squirrels. Otherwise, they pillage things not meant for them. Crows, Blue Jays, and Blackbirds arrive Their impossibly iridescent feathers reflecting morning sunshine and joy. Just outside my bedroom door, under the ancient Black...

Five Months of Becoming Wild

This past week marked five months of rewilding. Almost half the year has slipped into the deep time of history at timescales raging from the flap of a Hummingbird’s wings to the lethargic flow of a sludgy River. Generally, these past five months seem fleeting, not...

100 Days – Rewilding Land and self

Tuesday marked 100 days of rewilding. For the past six weeks or so, writing duties nagged at the back of my mind – I should be writing a blog post and working on dissertation research – but the draw of the outdoors proved irresistible. As the world started to awaken...

Three months of rewilding and lessons in humility from Virginia Creeper and Bumblebee

For the past six weeks or so, writing duties nag at the back of my mind – I should be writing a blog post and working on dissertation research – but the draw of the outdoors has proven irresistible. As the world started to awaken and burst forth with the exuberance of...

One Month of Rewilding – A typical day in the life

Today marks the completion of an entire month of rewilding. Many people have asked me questions about the practical aspects of this project, such as: What do you eat? What do you actually do every day? What about toilet paper? etc. So, I have decided to take a break...

Rewilding Challenges and Reflections – Week 1

The first week of rewilding has come and gone, with many challenges and discoveries. Daily Rituals In rejecting the One-World World (Escobar, 2016) or “a world allegedly made up of a single Word, and that has arrogated for itself to be ‘the’ world, subjecting all...

It Begins – Day One, Spring Equinox 2022

“But when night had fallen, the sorrow of the worshippers was turned to joy. For suddenly a light shone in the darkness: the tomb was opened: the god had risen from the dead; and the priest touched the lips of the weeping mourners with balm, he softly whispered in the...

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