
Upcoming activities at our Learning Sites
29 September 2025
Hands-on Engagement
Project partners are planning a range of hands-on activities — such as field visits, workshops, public events, and educational sessions — that connect people with nature and demonstrate nature-based solutions in action.
We collaborate with local stakeholders — farmers, teachers, municipalities, landowners, and more — to ensure the activities are meaningful, relevant, and support long-term engagement.
These activities are being tested and refined throughout the project and will inform the final project output.
Types of Activities
The learning site program includes five main categories:
- Workshops & Seminars – for learning and exchange
- Site Visits & Excursions – see restoration in action
- Events – engage the public and mark milestones
- Citizen Science – everyone can help monitor nature
- Educational Programs – connecting schools and universities with ecosystems
Examples from the Learning sites
- Snorkeling tours at the stone reef – Participants learn about the ecological function of the reef and its restoration through immersive, guided snorkeling trips.
- Restore a stream – join local workshops that blend ecological theory with hands-on tasks like adding spawning gravel, placing dead wood, and rewilding side channels
- Workshops on wetland management – Practical workshops covering restoration techniques and the value of nature-based solutions in agriculture and climate adaptation.
- Public BioBlitz – A biodiversity survey open to all, where participants help catalogue flora and fauna over a set time period
- Take part in public sessions highlighting eelgrass-saving actions and marine biodiversity
- Water quality and ecosystem monitoring for science students – Data-driven fieldwork in restored wetland areas
- University camps – Multi-day educational programs with practical and theoretical components.
- Beach hike to explore shoreline biodiversity – Educational hike showing coastal structures (rocky areas, sandy bottoms, vegetation) and discussing the ecological role of stone reefs and structural variation in the coastal zone.
- Reed cutting and birdwatching tower demonstration – Landowners, residents, and other local stakeholders will be invited to follow wetland restoration actions
Why It Matters
These activities are helping us learn how to use nature to protect nature – and how to bring more people into that process.
They will inspire action and build real-world knowledge about how nature-based solutions can help restore the Baltic Sea. Through hands-on activities, collaboration, and education, the sites promote practical learning and long-term impact.
Learn more in our report Deliverable 1.2 – Program for NBS Learning Site Activities.