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Vail Symposium’s lineup includes adventure and nutrition programs, film screenings and more

John O’Neill
Special to the Daily
A moment captured by the film “All The Time In The World.” The film features a two parents and their three children as they give up their technology-laden lives to live off the grid in the Yukon Wilderness. A documentary about their experiences, presented in partnership with the Vail Film Festival will be screened outdoors in Minturn on Aug. 26.
Special to the Weekly |

Summer schedule

June 18: “Nightmare in Nepal: A Firsthand Account of the Quake that Shook a Nation” with Dr. Jon Kedrowski

July 13: “The Future of Solar Energy” panel

July 22: “Expanding Consciousness: The Key to Transformation” by Anne Archer Butcher*

July 29: “Energy Medicine and Quantum Self-Healing” with Dr. Sue Morter*

Aug. 3: “The Making of Major Art Exhibitions” with Dr. Timothy J. Standring

Aug. 6: “Nutrition for Peak Performance” panel

Aug. 12: “Are We Part of a Cosmic Design?” with Elizabeth and Neil Carman*

Aug. 17: “Homo Sapiens 2.0: Genetic Enhancement, Ethics and the Future of Humanity” with Jamie Metzl

Aug. 19: “We Are The Ones” film screening

Aug. 26: “This Isn’t Funny” film screening

Sept. 2: “All the Time in the World” film screening

Sept. 10: “Impact of the USDA Forest Service” by Leslie Weldon

*Workshops available

Visit http://www.vailsymposium.org or call 970-476-0954 to learn more about the summer lineup, including times and costs.

Lifelong learning sums up the goals of the Vail Symposium quite succinctly. This summer, curators, best-selling authors, award-winning filmmakers, doctors, nutritionists, physiologists and consciousness experts — among others — will lead programs that cover a variety of topics: adventure, geopolitical hot topic issues, nutrition, film screenings, alternative approaches to health and wellness, arts and culture and more.

“There is a lot to look forward to from the Vail Symposium this summer,” said Executive Director Tracey Flower. “Diverse yet consistently educational, exciting and informative programs are what we strive for, and this summer serves up everything our longtime supporters and future audience members love about our programs.”

The Symposium will present more than 16 programs, including workshops, from June until September.



“Keep the Symposium in mind all summer long when you are looking for a worthwhile way to spend an afternoon or evening,” Flower said. “From our hard-hitting topics to our fun-filled film series, with so much in between, it’s the pleasure of everyone involved with the Symposium to attend, engage and enjoy themselves at all of our programs.”

UNLIMITED ADVENTURE

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June 18: “Nightmare in Nepal: A Firsthand Account of the Quake that Shook a Nation”

On April 25, Jon Kedrowski was at the Everest Base Camp leading an expedition when a magnitude 7.8 earthquake struck Nepal, causing one of the deadliest days ever on the mountain and mass destruction throughout the country.

In this free program, Kedrowski will offer a firsthand account of the events that transpired on that day, the impact the destruction it has had on the country and reparations underway. The program is not a fundraiser, rather an opportunity to keep up-to-date with the ongoing relief efforts in Nepal.

HOT TOPICS

Discussing modern pressing issues, the Hot Topics series presents three informational programs on three very different subjects, including solar energy, genetic engineering and the U.S. Forest Service.

“The Hot Topics programs are the Symposium’s flagship events,” Flower said. “Since 1971, when the Symposium was first presented as a weekend ‘think tank,’ we’ve tackled the contested issues of today. We continue that effort this summer.”

July 13: “The Future of Solar Energy”

John Jimison, managing director of the Energy Future Coalition and former senior council to the Energy and Commerce Committee of the U.S. House of Representatives; Heather Bailey, executive director of Energy Strategy and Electric Utility Development; Mark Simmons, who has been involved in more than 520 solar projects, including one in the town of Breckenridge, Red Robin Restaurants and the Denver Botanic Gardens; and Laura Farris, the climate change coordinator for the Environmental Protection Agency Region 8 in Denver, will discuss Colorado’s solar energy capacity and what communities and individuals can do to embrace this very feasible technology.

Aug. 17: “Homo Sapiens 2.0: Genetic Enhancements, Ethics and the Future of Humanity”

After 250,000 years of evolution, our species is on the verge of taking active control of our genetics. Jamie Metzl, a senior fellow for technology and national security for the Atlantic Council and former U.S. National Security Council, State Department and Senate Foreign Relations Committee member, will discuss the genetics revolution and how it will be both the greatest opportunity of our era but also the greatest challenge.

Sept. 10: “Impact of the USDA Forest Service”

Leslie Weldon is the appointed deputy chief for the National Forest System with the U.S. Forest Service and oversees 193 million acres of forests and grasslands. Weldon will discuss the agency’s recent challenges and initiatives to preserve and restore the treasured 155 national forests and 20 grasslands in the United States. She will also discuss the agency’s goals for local initiatives, such as the restoration of the headwaters of the Eagle River at Camp Hale. This program is presented in partnership with Walking Mountains Science Center.

ARTS AND CULTURE

Aug. 3: “Curatorial Entrepreneur: The Making of Major Art Exhibitions”

Timothy J. Standring will take the audience deep in to the underbelly of the art world, providing rare insight into the making of major art exhibitions, whose brief stints in museums across the globe take years to create. He will reveal the demanding activities that underscore the inception, implementation and assembly of art exhibits talked about around the globe. Standring is the Gates Foundation curator of painting and sculpture at the Denver Art Museum. His exhibitions include the popular “Becoming Van Gogh” exhibit. This program is sponsored by the Claggett/Rey Gallery.

Three films

By popular demand, the Vail Symposium debuts a three-part film series presented in partnership with the Vail Film Festival this August. Each event will be hosted in the outdoor setting of the Little Beach Park in Minturn and feature a film screening hosted by the film’s producers and portions of the cast, as well as beer sales from Crazy Mountain Brewing Co. The film series is free, which provides an affordable, unique and relaxed evening activity.

Aug. 19: “We Are The Ones”

“We Are The Ones” is a documentary that follows three surgeons through a firestorm of tribal violence as they themselves fight to prevent illness and mend wounds in the country of Sudan.

Aug. 26: “This Isn’t Funny”

“This Isn’t Funny” is a hysterical, independently-produced romantic comedy that takes and honest, sharply observed look at what it means to meet the right person at the wrong time and how love never seems to have the right timing.

Sept. 2: “All the Time in the World” “All the Time in the World” is a documentary that follows two parents and their children, ages 10, 8 and 4, as they go off the grid to live in the raw Yukon wilderness with no road access, no electricity, no running water and no clocks or watches. The film explores the theme of disconnecting from our hectic and technology-laden lives in order to reconnect with each other, ourselves and the natural environment.

CONSCIOUSNESS

The fastest growing program series hosted during any season by the Vail Symposium is the Living At Your Peak Consciousness Series, which takes an alternative approach to health and wellness through programs and workshops. Each program will be followed by a workshop led by the speaker. The workshops are designed to provide a deeper education of the subject through participation of activity.

July 22: “Expanding Consciousness The Key to Transformation”

Leading the audience to be more in touch with inner guidance, best-selling author Anne Archer Butcher will explain how expanded consciousness can help overcome daily issues by putting them in to a more spiritual perspective.

July 29: “Energy Medicine and Quantum Self-Healing”

Bridging an “East meets West” approach to the energy of well-being, Sue Morter will reveal the deep connection between learning to still your thinking, train the brain to liberate the heart, enlighten the mind and embody the spirit can reveal an ability to self-heal.

Aug. 12“Are We Part of a Cosmic Design”

Sharing a compilation of stories that investigate pre-birth communication and spiritual amnesia, authors Elizabeth and Neil Carman shed light on how the life of the soul in the human body is only part of our experience and how this increased awareness can fill one’s life with gratitude, purpose and comfort.

LIVING AT YOUR PEAK

Aug. 6: “Nutrition for Peak Performance”

Spilling secrets of years of research in sports nutrition, Dr. Inigo San Millan, the director of the Human Performance Laboratory at the Aschutz Health and Wellness Center; Benjamin Stone, founder of Sigma Human Performance; and Dr. Dennis Lipton from the Vail Valley Medical Center, will detail the profound effects of diet in not only our physical performance but also our performance in daily activities. This program is presented in partnership with the Vail Vitality Center.

John O’Neill is the marketing director for the Vail Symposium. Visit http://www.vailsymposium.org to learn more.


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