NEXT COURSE STARTS JULY 2025
Submit the Form to Register Your Interest in the next delivery now.
ADVANCED ECOTHERAPY TRAINING COURSE
Enrol Now for the 2025 delivery!
More people than ever are waking up to the fact that they need a deeper connection with nature. Ecotherapy answers that call. Let Dr Geoff Berry and his team provide you with a robust and clear set of definitions, practices, skills and answers, so that you can offer this service to clients who are looking for a more authentic expression of their inner nature and improved relationships with their kin on this beautiful planet.

Dr Geoff Berry
Australian Representative
International Ecopsychology Society
Submit the form below to register your interest for the next Advanced Ecotherapy Training Course, for practitioners who want to integrate nature into their offerings.
An immersive, interactive training that enables you to incorporate Ecotherapy into your daily life and practice. Certified by the International Ecopsychology Society and delivered by PACFA & ACA Registered Academic Dr Geoff Berry and a team of ecotherapists.
Suitable for:
- Practitioners or therapists who want to incorporate Ecotherapy into their practice;
- People who seek to deepen their connection to nature in a real and ongoing way;
- Those who want to explore the healing and empowering potential of truly belonging to the earth; and
- People who know they are missing deeper relationships with our animal, plant and elemental kin on earth and beyond.
Delivery: Practitioners will learn how to apply Ecotherapy with their clients, online over six months and face-to-face at an immersive retreat on Country, with like-minded practitioners.
Interactive: Participants will be supported to explore their intimate relationship with nature in their own unique and personal way, as they immerse themselves more deeply in the world of Ecotherapy.
Accessible: Online classes discuss core themes, foundational and current ideas in the field of Ecotherapy, as well as the ancestral traditions that inform us today.
Transformational: Guided meditations shift participants into highly receptive states and additional exercises are offered, so that participants can practice by themselves or with others in the natural environment that is available to them.
Become a Certified Ecotherapist in eight months for $5950
Cost includes 5-day ecoretreat!
Advanced Ecotherapy Training Course outline
Module 1
Welcome Back to Nature, Welcome Back to Self
- We all evolved in close contact with nature – getting that sense of belonging back
- Recognising Self as part of a flow, an immersive experience in tune with nature
- Practical Exercise 1: Sit Spot reflections
- Therapeutic Application: reclaiming our birthright to feel at home on earth
Module 2
Deepening Connections with Ancestral Wisdom
- What did our ancestors do differently, that we can get back in everyday life?
- How do we practice and keep deepened nature connection in real ways, every day?
- Practical Exercise 2: Accessing Peripheral Perceptions
- Therapeutic Application: reclaiming ancestral practices that heal, empower and return us to flow
Module 3
Safety, Trauma, Neuroscience and Plasticity
- How do we ensure we and our clients feel safe in nature?
- How this rewires brain and engages the body
- Practical Exercise 3: When do we feel safe or unsafe?
- Therapeutic Application: reducing anxiety to re-establish confidence
Module 4
Depth Psychology and Awakening
- Treating our personal stories and collective myths as part of a changing bigger picture
- Composing improved vehicles for receiving wisdom and awakening practices
- Practical Exercise 4: Amplifying Awareness in Nature
- Therapeutic Application: Tapping into the intelligence of nature for growth
Module 5
The Sacred in Nature
- Revitalising our relationship with the sacred in the material realm
- Religious systems and nature spirituality; animism and the living world
- Practical Exercise 5: Accessing Dimensions of the Sacred in Nature
- Therapeutic Application: Embodying Reverence in the Here and Now
Module 6
Initiation, Ritual, Ceremony
- Making sacred space to mark moments, turning transitions into transformations
- The totemic and teaching qualities of other animals, plants, elements and places
- Practical Exercise 6: creating your own initiation ritual
- Therapeutic Application: cementing states into stages; moving on
Module 7
Group Work – and the Immersive Retreat!
- Eco-anxiety, grief, the Community of Souls
- Communing with each other in nature in deeply meaningful and satisfying ways
- Practical Exercise 7: Dealing with ecological grief for the state of the planet
- Therapeutic Application: rebuilding faith in community
Module 8
Integration and Professional Business Supervision
- Landing it – how we integrate the learning into everyday life and our practice
- Professional Business Supervision session – gaining clientele ethically, networking
- Practical Exercise 8: how do you integrate ecotherapy into your life and practice?
- Therapeutic application: reaching out to prospective clients to offer ecotherapy
Bonus Resources for Participants
- Access to private ecotherapy training videos
- Clinical Supervision – first small group session free and ongoing arrangements provided
- Join the Ecotherapy Alliance and have your growing business promoted to the right clientele
FAQ for the Advanced Ecotherapy Training Course
What is the time commitment for the course?
Geoff suggests you allow for 2-3 hours per week on top of the module sessions (which run for 2-hours, twice per month).
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- Rationale: while the course is self-guided between the module sessions, you are provided with readings, videos, exercises and peer support sessions. A couple of hours per week will allow you to keep up and get what you need out of the course. (However, of course with more time, you can drop in deeper and explore the territory even more.)
- Included in the time commitment will be some prompts towards journaling explorations. These are not assessed, but good ways to ask yourself the questions pertinent to an exploration of the field; the general theme for these is, what deep work are we doing in preparation for guiding others along a similar path?
What is the time commitment for the online course?
The same, but there is no retreat included. Online participants attend all sessions, are given the same practical exercises, and are asked to upload their evidence of engagement with the processes. They get the same level of feedback to support their learning and the same opportunities to work with their peers in breakout groups, both during and between training sessions.
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- NB: because online participants do not attend the retreat, they are given practical exercises to work on at home, which are similar to what we practice together on the retreat. As with the monthly engagement, some evidence of these sessions is requested in order for the participant to graduate from the course.
What are the assessments for the course?
- Journaling/artistic responses: participants are invited to upload something each month that reflects on the theme. These submissions are not assessed, per se (in the sense of pass/fail), but they are read/watched/listened to by an assessor, who will provide feedback to guide you towards further directions for your own exploration into the field of deep nature connection, healing, empowerment and flow.
- After Module 4, there will be a multiple choice quiz to check that participants can answer some general knowledge questions about ecotherapy. These will be the kinds of things that a practitioner should confidently understand in order to offer ecotherapy to clients. This will be a brief assessment and again is ‘competency based’ (not pass/fail, but prompts will be given for any incorrect answers).
- On the retreat, we’ll practice providing ecotherapy to clients with each other. We need to make sure everyone is building a skillset; this is where sharing experiences really helps, as participants bring different realisations to the game and we amplify our learning by digesting this variety.
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How will I be assessed on the retreat?During the retreat, facilitators will be observing and reflecting on your participation, therapeutic skills and feedback provided from the nature dyad sessions. If we have any concerns about your capabilities we will talk to you individually. You will be provided with clear feedback and further opportunity to demonstrate any skills yet to be observed.
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What assessment is needed if I can’t attend the retreat?If you are unable to attend the retreat component of this course you will be required to submit evidence of 2 ecotherapy sessions. This will be in the form of a recorded transcript, written time stamps of certain skills (1000 words minimum) , a client feedback form (provided by us) and a professional reflection on how you felt the session went (1000 words minimum – with references).
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What happens if I don’t meet the assessment requirements?You will be provided with an opportunity to have one-on-one feedback with one of the facilitators. This will include clear direction on what requirements need to be demonstrated in order to pass the assessments and time frames for this to occur. We will work with you and have every intention of ensuring all participants leave with the skills and confidence to practice ecotherapy.
If there are any concerns that a participant is not getting everything they need from the course, they will be supported with extra guidance from the team.
What PD hours can be claimed for the course?
For PACFA:
- Full complement of PACFA CPD (Continuing Professional Development) hours for two years, based on the fact that PACFA count CPD requirements across the financial year, 01/07 – 30/06.
- For the first half of the year, this equates to 20 hours CPD Category A – your full requirement (active participant in online or in-person learning). That is, 5 months x 4 hours per month (2 x 2 hour online sessions, February to June)
- For the second half of the year, this also equates to 20 hours CPD Category A – your full requirement (active participant in online or in-person learning). That is, 5 x 2 hour sessions of online training = 10 hours CPD Category A; plus more than 10 hours CPD Category A in-person training at the retreat
- Source: PACFA CPD and Supervision Standards
- Supervision: tbc
- ACA Ongoing Professional Development policy: 10 points for the online training sessions (duration of 6 hours or more); 10 points for the Retreat (workshop, duration of more than one day). Source here.
Are payment plans available?
- Yes. You can choose to pay the full fee upfront for the advertised price, or pay in four instalments after the deposit (which attracts an admin fee).
- Example: Full price including retreat
- Upfront $5950 in total, or $500 deposit to secure place plus $5450 invoiced with 30 days to pay
- Payment plan: $500 deposit to secure place plus 4 payments of $1400 over 4 months (invoices sent monthly after deposit paid). Total cost $6100
- Example: Online only
- Upfront $3950 in total, or $500 deposit to secure place plus $3450 invoiced with 30 days to pay
- Payment plan: $500 deposit to secure place plus 4 payments of $900 over 4 months (invoices sent monthly after deposit paid). Total cost $4100
- Ikon Graduate with RPL:
- Upfront $2950 in total, or $500 deposit to secure place plus $2450 invoiced with 30 days to pay
- Payment plan: $500 deposit to secure place plus 4 payments of $650 over 4 months (invoices sent monthly after deposit paid). Total cost $3100
Can i practice as an ecotherapist with this qualification?
Yes! As long as you already have adequate counselling and/or coaching skills, which are a prerequisite for joining the course, and you complete all assessments, you can call yourself an ecotherapist at the end of this course.
How the Advanced Ecotherapy Training Course works
Geoff Introduces himself and his Ecotherapy journey
Prerequisites
What differentiates Ecotherapy from Rewilding?
What differentiates Ecotherapy from Deep Ecology?
Structure is at the heart of confidence

Nature Calling's commitment to Aboriginal Australians and Torres Strait Islanders
The Nature Calling commitment to Aboriginal Australians and Torres Strait Islanders has a long and proud history. Respect for First Nations peoples is woven throughout the course and knowledge that Geoff has learned from mob on Country and through his studies is always acknowledged with the story and the people behind it.
Geoff has been a proud ally of First Nations peoples the world over all his life, but it was in the early 2000s, while studying for his Masters in dreams and myth, that Geoff first volunteered at ANTaR, Australians for Native Title and Reconciliation, in Melbourne (Naarm). He raised over 10K through a series of concert events under the title Come Together, which featured Aboriginal artists such as Vika and Linda alongside popular acts like Augie March and Shane Howard, in a celebratory atmosphere that welcomed large crowds of both Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal peoples. A live CD was produced out of these gigs, which was sold as another, ongoing fundraiser by ANTaR. All funds raised supported the successful campaign for the Yorta Yorta peoples to gain co-management of the Barmah-Millewa National Park.
Through his research for this project, Geoff came across the work of anthropologist John Bradley, who was living and working with and for the Yanyuwa people of North-East Arnhem Land. John was recording the Songlines, or more accurately the Country Lines, of the Yanyuwa, at their request, first in a hand drawn atlas and then in animated versions. Designed to bring generations of Yanyuwa together and pass on priceless knowledge of their Country, the stories also expressed a living, breathing, animate world in which humans related to the more-than-human with respect and reciprocity. This is what myth can really do – breath life into consciousness, so that we awaken to the spirit of place as part of a bigger picture, a whole cosmos of potential filled with relationships between beings, places and even elements. Geoff asked John if he could share his interpretations of the Yanyuwa Country Lines (not the stories themselves, which can only be told by traditional owners) with a wider audience and John asked the Yanyuwa elders, who agreed that he could talk about their stories with respect and honour.
More recently, having moved to the far south coast of NSW, Geoff found himself living amongst the Walbanja peoples of the Yuin Nation, and helped set up the South Coast NSW Aboriginal Elders, where he was the inaugural CEO before handing over operations to the Elders. Geoff has many stories of learning from ‘mob’ over the years and worked closely with Aboriginal families on the coast as part of his role in training people to care for traumatised children. He has also learnt from a Hopi spiritual leader and was befriended by Jerome Bernstein, famous for his work with Navajo or Dine people in the great Southwest of America. But that’s another set of stories (amongst others).
Nowadays, in his work training ecotherapists with Nature Calling, Geoff always pays respect to the Aboriginal peoples who cared for the Country they are working on over countless generations. The team at Nature Calling recognise the need for decolonisation, as a way of educating ourselves about Aboriginal land and the special relationship First Nations peoples have with it. Geoff is also quick to point out that we cannot let an Acknowledgement of Country become a token display but should engage in it to help us connect with our feelings for Country and its traditional owners in a real and respectful way. At Nature Calling events, we use a variety of Acknowledgments, which pay respect to Elders past, present and emerging, and celebrate Aboriginal connections to Country that are part of a deep history of identification with nature that is unbroken and unceded.
Geoff engages local Elders to offer a Welcome to Country whenever possible, while reminding participants that when this is not possible, we must remember that Elders have more pressing commitments to their own people and cannot always fit in sharing their priceless culture with non-Aboriginal Australians. In fact, he relates that Elders encourage all Australians to reconcile with the earth, to listen deeply to nature as a way of learning to understand a little of how Aboriginal peoples feel about their Country. This requires us to reconnect with the cultures of our own ancestors, as well as to tune into the land and waters and elements in the here and now, as two ways we can reconnect with Country, alongside paying respect to the traditional owners.
Questions
If you would like to know more about my services, please feel free to contact me at geoff@naturecalling.org
Address: Broulee, far south coast, NSW Australia.
Zoom: Geoff Berry
Availability: online anytime, unless I am out listening to nature calling