our teachers - Julia Quinn, RYT
Julia started practicing yoga ten years ago, which then led her to earn a 200-hour Vinyasa yoga teaching certification, accredited through the Yoga Alliance. Julia received her training through Radiantly Alive Yoga Teacher Training in Bali, Indonesia in 2009. Assisting yoga teacher trainings and yoga retreats, Julia continues to study yoga all over the world. Julia’s ten years in yoga have led her to study and/or practice different styles of yoga: Vinyasa, Jivamukti, Bikram, Ashtanga, Iyengar, Tripsichore, Yoga Synergy, Anusara, and Forrest yoga.
Prior to teaching yoga, Julia worked for government research biology, a mental health office and GlaxoSmithKline pharmaceutical company, where she developed an understanding of western medicine and how illness consumes so many lives in so many countries. Inspired to help educate and empower individuals to improve their own wellbeing, Julia has dedicated her career to yoga therapy and studying nutrition. Studying anatomy and physiology at the University of Alaska Anchorage, mentoring under Psychotherapists in Alaska and Idaho and continuing her 500-hour advanced yoga therapy teacher training in Indonesia/India, Julia combines the scientific approach of Western medicine with the holistic approach from the East. She feels her mission in life is to help others find happiness and peace within themselves, no matter what condition or issue they are facing.

Daniel Quinn, PT
Dan is a licensed physical therapist with over 15 years of clinical experience with a concentration in orthopedic and neurological rehabilitation. He completed his 200 hour yoga teacher training in 2003 through the Inner Dance Yoga Studio in Anchorage, Alaska, and has incorporated elements of yoga in his treatment approach ever since. He believes in a holistic approach to rehabilitation and feels empowering people with the tools to manage their physical impairments themselves is the key to long-term wellness. Through the combination of contemporary therapy techniques with traditional eastern yogic practices, he is able to offer a unique and effective approach to rehabilitation for a variety of impairments. It is his mission to move people as quickly as possible through the ‘clinical’ setting of recovery and into a self-managed, community-based setting, giving clients the power to control their health and wellness on their own.





