Blissed by Nature

Blissed by Nature Offering mindful outdoor experiences to connect with your own true nature of bliss Imagine a walking meditation without having to meditate.

Like yoga, mindfully soaking up a forest’s sensory stimuli - the aroma of damp wood, the sound of crunching leaves, the feeling of plush moss, the gurgling of a stream - has been shown to reduce stress, anxiety, and blood pressure. Let's combine a vigorous hike and off-the-mat yoga to create 90 minutes of well-being for mind, body and soul. In 2021, we also offer 60-minute ZENwalks, a soothing sau

nter that decelerates stress and calms anxiety, while reigniting our senses and reconnecting to nature.

05/30/2026

Feeling uninspired?

Go for a walk in nature.

Not to find answers.
Not to force creativity.

Just wander.

Let the wind untangle your thoughts, the birds interrupt your worries, and the wildflowers remind you that beauty doesn’t try so hard.

Inspiration often finds us when we stop looking for it.

Local YOGAhike coming up in Reno-Tahoe.
Check bio for details.

We alternate hiking, off-the-mat yoga, and mindful moments to create vibrant well-being for your stressed nervous system...
05/28/2026

We alternate hiking, off-the-mat yoga, and mindful moments to create vibrant well-being for your stressed nervous system. Find out how to get Blissed by Nature. On a ​YOGAhike, you leave the predictability of the studio behind to experience vibrant well-being for your body, mind, and nervous system. Your brain doesn’t just enjoy nature, it responds to it.
We are blending hiking, standing yoga, forest bathing invitations, and mindful pauses to reawaken the senses, calm the nervous system, and help you feel present, connected, and alive. An outdoor tea ceremony helps to integrate the experience, so you leave calm, centered, and ready for the weekend.

About Your Guide
Dagmar Bohlmann is an experienced yoga teacher, Kripalu-certified Mindful Outdoor Guide, and the founder of Blissed by Nature Academy. Based in Reno/Tahoe, she has been leading YOGAhikes, ZENwalks, and sit spot practices since 2017—inviting people into a deeper relationship with the natural world.
Her compassionate, joyful style is shaped by her own lived experiences with burnout, anxiety, major life transitions, and healing—making her spaces grounded, inclusive, and deeply human. Dagmar believes that when we fall in love with nature, we naturally want to protect it. We are not apart from nature—we are part of it.

Group size limited to 10. Advanced registration necessary.

A part of the proceeds benefits the Great Basin Institute’s children’s programming.

Signup link in caption. For questions, send a DM.

05/28/2026

I used to get seasonal affective disorder because I didn’t go outside when the weather was “bad”. Then I bought a rain jacket. Problem solved.

Join me Saturday, June 6, for a rain-or-shine YOGAhike. Signup link in bio.

05/15/2026

The woods feel different in the early morning.
Before the trail fills with footsteps.
Before the world asks anything of you.

Just cool air in your lungs, birds waking up one by one, and the soft hush of pine needles under your feet.

I go there for the kind of solitude that doesn’t feel lonely.
The kind that helps me hear myself again.

What would your day look like if you stopped believing that stressed out is an unchangeable state?

05/09/2026

“Meet me at sunset.”
At the hour when the desert exhales.

There’s something about walking at dusk that softens the edges of the day. The nervous system begins to downshift. The mind stops gripping so tightly. Light turns golden, then lavender, then blue.

You notice things you would miss at noon — the glow on the mountains, the scent of blooming chokecherry bushes, the fleeting wildflowers already preparing to close for the night. Ephemeral beauty asking only to be witnessed.

This in-between time matters.
Not fully day. Not yet night.
A transition the body understands deeply.

Maybe that’s why evening walks feel less like exercise and more like returning to yourself.

05/06/2026

Barefoot on the earth this morning. No agenda, just skin to soil and dewy grass.

There’s something quietly regulating about it—like the nervous system remembers a rhythm it never actually forgot. The ground is steady, and in that steadiness, the body softens.

They call it “earthing,” but it feels more like returning. Studies suggest it can help reduce inflammation, support better sleep, and calm stress hormones. I don’t need all the science to notice the shift—slower breath, softer jaw, a little more space between thoughts.

On the mat, we talk about grounding all the time. Off the mat, it can be this simple: take off your shoes, stand still, feel what’s holding you.

Less doing. More sensing.

Woke up to that rare Reno perfume this morning—the earthy, almost sweet smell of wet sagebrush after rain. 🌿If you know,...
05/05/2026

Woke up to that rare Reno perfume this morning—the earthy, almost sweet smell of wet sagebrush after rain. 🌿
If you know, you know. It’s the kind of scent that makes you pause before coffee, step outside, and just breathe a little deeper.

Rain in the desert isn’t just weather—the birds jubilantly announce the morning, the aspens seem a bit greener, the trails soften, the dust settles, and for a moment, everything feels quieter, closer, more connected.

These are the mornings that remind me why I love it here. Less rush, more presence. Less noise, more noticing.

NExt time you see a fallen tree, consider that it still provides habitat for so many species.
05/02/2026

NExt time you see a fallen tree, consider that it still provides habitat for so many species.

A branch fell off your oak last fall. You've been meaning to haul it to the curb. It's been on the ground for six months.

In that time, it became an apartment building.

Year one: Fungi colonize the exposed wood. You can see the first brackets forming on the bark — small, shelf-like growths that are breaking down the lignin and cellulose inside. The branch is getting softer.

By year two or three: Beetle larvae have tunneled into the softened wood. Their galleries — winding channels the width of a pencil lead — aerate the interior. Woodpeckers find the branch and drill into it to extract the larvae.

By year five: A red-backed salamander has moved into one of the beetle galleries. She lives in the damp, rotting wood and hunts pill bugs, mites, and springtails on the surface. The branch is now a hunting ground and a shelter.

By year ten: The branch is mostly soil. The fungi, the beetles, the salamander, the woodpecker — they converted a fallen limb into nutrients that are feeding the tree it fell from.

🌿 A different way to see the branch:

- A fallen branch is not debris — it's a building under construction
- If it's not blocking a path, leave it where it fell
- The fungi that colonize it aren't disease — they're decomposers doing their job
- One fallen branch can support more than thirty species over its lifetime

You almost hauled it to the curb. Thirty species are using it now. 🌿

12/13/2025

Get outside. You won’t regret it.

I’ll be starting YOGAhikes and ZENwalk Tahoe in January 2026. Leave a DM if you want to get on my mailing list.

Also in the works: an online training for yoga teachers on how to use nature as an ally in creating transformative experiences. Are you interested in?

Address

White Hall, MD

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