WTF is Bioregionalism (and why AI?)
Stop Scrolling, Start Acting
“The world’s natural division isn’t found on a map of nations, it’s found in bioregions.”
Have you ever looked at a map and realized that most of the lines are completely made up? The real borders of our world aren’t political, they are drawn by mountains, rivers, and watersheds.
This is bioregionalism. It is the realization that the earth has its own natural divisions. It matters because it changes how we see our neighbors and our home.
Even if you live across a national border from someone, if you share the same bioregion, you share deep, fundamental commonalities.
You share the same water, the same soil, and the same ecosystem.
So What’s Phone and AI got to do with Bioregionalism??
Your phone is not just a phone. It is a powerful device equipped with a camera and super intelligence. By combining the device in your pocket with AI chatbots like Grok, Gemini, and ChatGPT, it transforms into an instrument of discovery.
It stops being a screen used to escape your surroundings and becomes a tool that helps you finally “read” the unique ecological and cultural pulse of your environment.
Trust me, it matters, you will start living a more organic, local, and fulfilling life.
What We Covered in the Livestream:
In Part 2 of “How to Bioregion”, I ran a fast mobile AI workflow using Gemini, Grok, and Suno right here in Vancouver’s Cascadia region. I show you exactly how to use everyday AI tools to step outside, decode your landscape, and deeply connect with the bioregion you call home.
In less than 40 minutes we covered and created music, posters, chiller story +++
Snapped a photo of gigantic treetop nests → Gemini instantly identified great blue heron rookeries and unpacked their beautiful “stick ritual” courtship (males offering sticks to females — real lessons in urban wildlife adaptation).
Turned spring flower shots into two vibrant rhododendron posters with Gemini.
Generated a full Suno track — “Pink rain falling slow / Vancouver spring, yeah, it pulls me whole / Blossoms heavy, petals on my soul…” — capturing cherry blossom rains. From lyrics to music in minutes.
Took just three spring pictures and spun them into a complete thriller/horror story where peaceful Stanley Park rhododendrons morph into a monstrous nest with a giant staring human eye.
Why Everyday People Should Know Their Bioregion
You don’t need to be a scientist or an environmentalist to do this. For everyday people, understanding your bioregion is the ultimate antidote to feeling disconnected and overwhelmed. We spend so much time worrying about the whole globe that we forget to look at the ground beneath our feet.
When you know the names of the trees on your street, the birds in your parks, and the soil in your backyard, you stop feeling like a visitor in your own city. It grounds you. It turns a regular neighborhood walk into an active adventure. You can’t protect what you don’t love, and you can’t love what you don’t know. Getting to know your bioregion is how you finally, truly, feel at home.
This is Bioregionalism in Action
This is AI that doesn’t just analyze your local ecosystem—it helps you see it, feel it, celebrate it, and tell new stories about it.
For changemakers building regenerative futures and AI-curious explorers ready to experiment on their phones: this is practical magic you can start using today.
Watch the full unedited livestream below:
Bioregion Media Assets in Minutes on the LiveStream
2 Posters created with Gemini NanoBanana2
prompt: create a cool poster of all the spring flowers that appear in stanley park
prompt: make a cool poster of cariety of rhododenors found at th rhododenorn stanly park garden (yes thats a spelling mistake but AI gets spelling errors)
Song from lyrics to music in minutes with the help of Grok and Suno




