Where the Rivers Meet supports individuals and communities working at the intersection of cultural and ecological regeneration, with a particular focus on those who have been marginalised or excluded from traditional decision-making spaces. Our beneficiaries include artists, community growers, young people, elders, researchers, cultural workers, and land-based practitioners who are seeking space to connect, collaborate, and imagine more regenerative futures. We help by creating public-facing, participatory events such as workshops, exhibitions, and dialogues that centre themes of belonging, ecological repair, ancestral knowledge, and shared histories. Our work supports land-based initiatives - like community gardens - by hosting events in these spaces, helping raise their visibility and viability, and expanding opportunities for inclusive engagement. We also produce accessible resources such as podcasts and publications, while working to remove structural and financial barriers to participation through low-cost and free programming. This matters because many of the challenges we face today - ecological breakdown, social disconnection, and systemic inequality - are deeply intertwined. Dominant worldviews that separate people from nature and from each other hinder meaningful, long-term change. By nurturing spaces of confluence - where diverse knowledge systems, generations, and communities meet - we support collective learning, cultural renewal, and imaginative action. Our work strengthens networks of care, fosters cross-sector collaboration, and empowers local initiatives to thrive, creating ripple effects of transformation in the communities we serve.