ABSTRACT As in-service teacher educators, we take concerns about the environmental emergency and the crisis of colonialization seriously. We offer graduate programs in Place and Nature-based Experiential Learning to try and foster cultural change within mainstream schooling, while also preparing teachers for the immense challenge of teaching within the Anthropocene. In this article, we share four vignettes that describe experiences that contributed to important shifts in worldviews and ways of being with land for ourselves and/or our students, and we explore how this has led us to think differently about teaching and learning. Guided by Indigenous and eco-critical scholarship, we identified ecological pedagogical practices across the vignettes that contributed to such shifts, including relational attunement and attending to the un-noticed. We consider how this attending and attuning makes ethical demands that potentially puts us at odds with conventional dominant educational practices and expectations.