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Finca Kosmos: A Living School for the Chorotega Bioregion
On Costa Rica's Gold Coast, between Nosara and Tamarindo, sits one of the last undeveloped stretches of the Chorotega — a Blue Zone bioregion and a critical refuge of the endangered Mesoamerican dry tropical forest. This is Finca Kosmos: a 400-hectare farm with 17 living springs, half its land in forest conserved for over four decades, and a growing community of regenerators turning a former cattle and teak operation into a global epicenter for regeneration.
What Kosmos already is. Since 2022, working with UCI, Suelos Vivos (Savory Institute Hub for Central America), and Costa Rica Regenerativa, Kosmos has transformed its operation: cattle have been concentrated from 120 hectares to 6.5 through holistic grazing, freeing land for biological corridors that connect Diriá National Park to coastal ecosystems. A wetland has been restored, a biological water-treatment garden installed, a food forest and food garden established, a bat hotel and stingless-bee pollinator gardens introduced. Biodiversity baselines have been monitored for two years — in one vegetable plot, 177 insect species emerged within four months, with populations multiplying twentyfold in a year. Over 500 Guanacaste families have already benefited from regenerative food production linked to Kosmos, and partner ranchers have doubled or tripled their incomes through regenerative practice.
What we're activating with Ma Earth. Kosmos is now opening its gates to the children, families, and rural farmers of the surrounding Chorotega — formalizing what has been organic outreach into a structured dual-generation living school. At the heart of this pedagogy is a simple commitment: Mother Nature is the primary teacher. Just as UCI gives Mother Nature a permanent seat on its board, Kosmos gives her a permanent seat in every classroom — the forest, the springs, the soil, the pollinators, and the seasons are not backdrops to learning but active mentors. Students learn to read the land, listen to it, and apprentice themselves to its intelligence. The project funded by this application has three woven threads:
A community greenhouse and demonstrative garden
where local kids from rural and public schools (including Lagarto's technical school) come for learning days with specialists in regenerative agriculture, holistic grazing, agroforestry, syntropic farming, and landscape restoration. The greenhouse becomes a playful garden where children grow food alongside Nature as their co-teacher — observing insect populations, tracking water cycles, noticing what soil wants — then carry seeds, practices, and a way of seeing back to their own school gardens and family farms.
A dual-generation training program
for women, youth, and parents from underprivileged communities — directly inspired by the proven two-generation "Visionary Approach" pioneered by the Uganda Rural Development and Training Programme and African Rural University, both active land nodes in the Mycelium Learning Network. Parents learn alongside their children, and both learn alongside the living landscape. Families take stewardship of the means of production in their own bioregion and move out towards sovereignty together, rooted in a relationship of reciprocity with Mother Earth rather than extraction from her. Costa Rica's stronger infrastructure and more dynamic local economy let this model scale faster than its African counterpart.
A pathway from learner to bioregional ambassador
Once trained, youth become digital ambassadors and regenerative tour operators for their own communities — championing regeneration, connecting to global markets through Kosmos's Digital Lab (anchored by Digital Ninja), and earning not only fiat currency but community-coordinated value through methodologies inspired by Grassroots Economics (another Mycelium node, in Kenya). In exchange for verified impact reports — including biodiversity observations and water-cycle monitoring that make Mother Nature's voice visible in the data — students gain access to micro-credits, blended capital pools, mentorships, and the full Mycelium Learning Network of courses and matchmaking.
Why this matters now
This is not a new idea looking for land — it is a working land node looking to deepen its community programming. UCI brings 32 years of regenerative leadership, 6,000+ graduates across 60+ countries, the Suelos Vivos holistic grazing program, and a 30,000-hectare carbon-to-cattle project already signed. Kosmos has existing facilities, an active team led by President Eduard Müller and Director of Education Tania Moreno, and live partnerships with Buckminster Fuller Institute, NoVo Foundation, Digital Ninja, Savory Institute, Regenerative Communities Network, Doughnut Economics, and the Wellbeing Economy Alliance. As the anchor land node of the Mycelium Learning Network — 36+ active land nodes, 48 practitioners, 200+ in the pipeline — Kosmos turns Ma Earth investment into a node of shared infrastructure: the curriculum, ambassador protocols, and Nature-led pedagogy developed here will be made open-source for the broader network.
This is the first territorial expression of Mycelium for Kids: a school-design movement toward food sovereignty, biocultural resilience, bioregional coordination, and a re-membered relationship with Mother Earth — rooted in Kosmos, scalable across Costa Rica and beyond.
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