Showing posts with label local. Show all posts
Showing posts with label local. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 16, 2012

Growing Food Without a Garden Plot

Wow, it's been a long time since I wrote in here. A lot has happened: Earth Week, Power Shift NY, the end of another semester, and Take It Or Leave It (which is still going on). It's Senior Week now and I should probably write a real entry, but I just wanted to share these tips from the team behind Fresh the movie:

Do you yearn for a bit of your own greenery, but live in an urban area? We've got good news: limited space doesn't have to keep you from watching your garden grow. Planting vegetables and herbs in moveable containers provides a solution around limited land, time, or poor soil. It's a simple way to feed your appetite for fresh produce and add life to a patio, porch, or even a fire escape.

Best of all, growing food in pots is quite easy. All you need are containers with drainage holes, a good soil mix, fertilizer, light, water, and the right plant varieties. Here are a few tips to get your garden growing.

Vegetable Varieties

What you can grow depends on the size of your containers, the amount of sunlight that reaches the plants, and the season you plant in. Leafy vegetables such as lettuce, cabbage, spinach, and radishes are the best bet if you’re working with shallow containers and shadier areas. Give them at least a six-inch wide pot with eight inches of soil depth. Vegetables grown for their fruits, like peppers, tomatoes, squashes, cucumbers, broccoli, and eggplants need more light— six to eight hours of direct sunlight a day—and, in general, more room to grow. Spacing requirements can usually be found on the seed packet or plant tag. If you’re planting seeds, remember to plant more than you’ll need in each container in case some don’t sprout. You can thin crowded young plants later.

Plants with a rapid maturation period are ideal if you’re starting late in the summer, or in order to get several crops from a container. Herbs, small salad greens like oak leaf lettuce and mustard cress, silver beets, radishes, and cherry tomatoes are all quick-growing options. Using vegetable starts instead of seeds shortens the planting to harvest timeline.

Choosing a Vessel

A vegetable container has two basic requirements: holes to allow for adequate drainage and a size large enough to support the mature crop,meaning at least eight inches deep. Clay pots, cement blocks, milk cartons, dish pans, and tin cans all work well for small plants. Larger ceramic pots, half barrels, garbage cans, bushel baskets, and redwood or cedar boxes will house vegetables that require more room. Use potting as an opportunity to be creative and recycle!

Soil, Fertilizer, and Water

Use a lightweight, porous potting soil so that air and nutrients can circulate to the root system. Nurseries and garden centers offer mixes that usually contain peat moss, organic material, sand, and pumice or perlite. Mixing compost or aged manure into commercial soil will give your plants a boost.

Potted vegetables generally require more water than those grown in the ground. Most vegetables and herbs prefer that the soil remain slightly moist. When the soil feels dry to the touch about one or two inches below the surface, it’s usually time to water. You can use an organic liquid or soluble fertilizer every two to four weeks to replenish micronutrients in the soil.

The Harvest

In just a few weeks, you’ll be able to gather bowlfuls of salad or vegetables to grill just by stepping out onto your balcony or deck. You won’t have to worry about unused produce rotting in the refrigerator or whether you remembered to buy the fresh herb a recipe called for. You’ll be eating locally and organically. And, you’ll take pleasure in finding space for a bit of dirt in your life.

Tuesday, April 10, 2012

You're invited...


 ...to EARTH WEEK at Ithaca College! It's all we can talk about these days... we are so excited to bring you a fantastic week of events celebrating the Earth!

Please join ICES (the IC Environmental Society) and REMP (the IC Resource and Environmental Management Program) for our annual Earth Week celebration at Ithaca College! There are TONS of awesome events going on with something for everyone. All events are free and open to the public – please spread the word. Invite friends to the FB event here. We hope to see you there!

Here is the full list of events… and we’re still adding more! For the most up-to-date schedule and event descriptions, check out the page above.

MONDAY, 4/16:
- IC Natural Lands nature walk, 12pm, South Hill Natural Area kiosk behind Terrace 10
- Bike repair clinic, 1-3pm, Academic Quad
- Hempstravaganza/Earth Week kickoff: Live music & hemp jewelry making, 12-5pm, Fitness Center Quad (tentative)
- Sustainability CafĂ©: “Fracking is a Crime!” 4pm, CNS 112
- “Waxing Swidjit: Using Social Media to Facilitate the Collaborative Economy,” 7pm, Textor 101

TUESDAY, 4/17:
- Friction fire kit workshop (tentative)
- Bike repair clinic, 1-3pm, Academic Quad
- Locavore and wild edibles teach-in, 5-7pm, Klingenstein Lounge
- Food justice movie screening and panel discussion, 7pm, Textor 102
- “Standing Silent Nation” screening and Native Americans and Hemp panel discussion, 8-10pm, Textor 101

WEDNESDAY, 4/18:
- IC Natural Lands nature walk, 10am, South Hill Natural Area kiosk behind Terrace 10
- “Body Care Aware” workshop, 10am-2pm, Cayuga Lake Room, Campus Center
- Medicinal plants walk, 4pm, South Hill Natural Area kiosk behind Terrace 10
- Bioneers plenary talks screenings, 6-7:30pm, Textor 101
- Hemp fiber talk with Dr. Netravali, Skype with David Bronner, and screening of WIP reel of “Bringing it Home,” 8-10pm, Textor 101

THURSDAY, 4/19:
- School of Business Sustainability Symposium, 12pm, School of Business 111
- Organic garden tour/planting, 12:10pm, IC community garden (meet at Park bus stop)
- Frack Off demonstration, 12:10pm, Academic Quad
- “Empowered” screening, 6pm, Textor 103
- Bioneers plenary talks screenings, 8-9:30pm, Taughannock Falls Room, Campus Center

FRIDAY, 4/20:
- Take It Or Leave It clothing swap, 10am-3pm, Academic Quad
- Net Impact carrot mob, 3-7pm, Waffle Frolic
- IC Natural Lands nature walk, 12pm, South Hill Natural Area kiosk behind Terrace 10
- Forestry exercises training, 2pm, South Hill Natural Area

SUNDAY, 4/22 (EARTH DAY):
- Permaculture garden workday, 2-4pm, IC permaculture garden (between Williams Hall and Mac’s)
- Earth Day celebration at Farmers’ Market, 12-5pm, Steamboat Landing

This year’s events are co-sponsored by:
ICES (IC Environmental Society)
REMP (Resource and Environmental Management Program)
Sustainability at Ithaca
Organic Growers of IC
IC Natural Lands
IC Net Impact
Bomber Bike Initiative
Primitive Skills Club
Frack Off
Students for Sensible Drug Policy
IC Feminists
Ithaca Dining Services
GreenStar Natural Foods Market
Sustainable Tompkins
Cancer Resource Center of the Finger Lakes
Swidjit
Slow Food Ithaca College
IC Permaculture Research Team

Questions? Please contact Margaret Keating at mkeatin1@ithaca.edu. We ask that inviduals requiring accommodations contact us at ices1970@gmail.com.

Tuesday, April 3, 2012

Finger Lakes ReUse volunteer opoprtunities

On Friday and Saturday April 6 & 7, the Finger Lakes ReUse Deconstruction team will be finishing a project at a site about a 12 minute drive south of the Ithaca Commons, and we will need help denailing. Denailing is a fun and easy project where you will use special pneumatic equipment to remove nails from salvaged lumber.

We are seeking teams of up to 10 volunteers (individuals or groups) who can join us for the following shifts:

   Friday April 6: 9 – 11:30 AM, noon-2:30 PM, 2:30-5:30 PM
   Saturday April  7: 9 – 11:30 AM, noon-2:30 PM, 2:30-5:30 PM

You may choose more than one day/time if you wish. Please RSVP to nina@fingerlakesreuse.org.

Heavy-soled boots are required. Work gloves, safety equipment, and basic tools will be provided. Please bring your own lunch and water bottle. Volunteers must sign in when arriving and complete an orientation with FLR staff before commencing any work at the deconstruction site. Volunteers are asked to provide their own transportation but we may be able to provide assistance with transport for volunteers who can be on site for the full work day.

Deconstruction Services is a program of Finger Lakes ReUse, committed to enhancing community, economy and the environment. Further information about Finger Lakes ReUse programs can be found at our website, www.fingerlakesreuse.org

Thursday, March 29, 2012

Exciting gardening opportunities!

Looking to get your hands dirty? There are a number of ways you can right here on campus and off campus too!

This is the design for the pergola and trellises we will be installing tomorrow! So exciting!

First, tomorrow there will be a workday in the IC Permaculture Garden (formerly the ICES garden), next to Williams Hall just outside of Mac's. It will be from 12-6, so stop by for as long as you want. There will be snacks, power tools, fun, and good people... you definitely don't want to miss this. Our garden will soon be blooming with flowers, medicinal herbs, fruits, and other edibles! Questions? Contact the crew at ICpermaculturegarden12@gmail.com.

If you're interested in other gardening opportunities, join the Organic Growers of IC, who run and maintain the IC Community Garden at the lower end of campus. It's amazing! Come out for a workday, they're lots of fun! Email gardenic@gmail.com to find out when they are.



Next month, Gardens 4 Humanity (G4H) is hosting a couple of community plantings at two different locations! All are welcome, just show up! If you're interested, contact Josh Dolan ASAP via email at sapsquatch7@gmail.com.
  • Wed 4/11 – Northside Ithaca Housing Authority (4th and Morris), 5-7pm
  • Thurs 4/12 – Mutual Housing (1st and Franklin), 5-7pm

A new community garden, Wood's Earth has started up in Ithaca, near Newfield (next to Robert H. Treman State Park). Gardeners can choose any size plot in 250 square foot increments, for $0.25/sq.ft. - and a plot over 1,000 sq.ft. is 20% off!


Take advantage of this fun idea & save money on fresh, healthy food! If you've been thinking of gardening this spring, but have questions, time constraints, or lack of space or resources, then consider a plot in the community gardens at Wood's Earth! We've got everything you need (and a bit more!), including:
  • Deer fence
  • Compost
  • Mulch
  • Drip irrigation
  • Greenhouse
  • Tool Sheds
  • Parking
  • Children's garden & programs
  • Educational workshops on all things gardening, from seed starting to harvesting
So, whether you are a beginning or experienced gardener, we have what you need to get gardening this year.

Located just off Route 13 on Route 327 - next to Newfield, Robert H. Treman State Park, and the Ithaca Beer Company.

For more info or to get a plot, visit www.woodsearth.com or email woodsearthclass@gmail.com.

Tuesday, March 20, 2012

Creek and Lakefront Cleanups

Embrace the Lake!
Spring 2012 ushers in the third year of encouraging community groups to Embrace Cayuga Lake with creek and lakefront cleanups. What better way to show our love for the creeks and lake at the center of our lives?

What: We are embracing and encircling Cayuga Lake with creek and lakefront cleanups, starting this spring and into early summer. Thirty-four major creeks drain to the lake, along with hundreds of small straight streams. The Network organizes a rolling schedule of weekend creek and waterfront cleanups around the lake. We invite individuals, families, schools, churches, Scouts and community groups to commit to a local cleanup. In 2011, twenty groups took part – almost completely encircling the lake!

A Spring Clean for the Network: If you would rather keep your feet dry, hold a garage sale for the benefit of the Cayuga Lake Watershed Network! Garage sales reuse and recycle, keeping waste out of the landfill. It's a great complement to the stream clean-ups. Contact us for suggestions on how to do this.

When: Groups are already scheduling cleanups for mid- and late March. A rolling schedule will keep these cleanups going until the plants grow too high for effective cleanups, in early to mid-May. The first cleanups are in Ithaca on March 31 – watch for the list later this week!

Where: Anywhere in the Cayuga Lake Watershed, where waters are flowing in the direction of Cayuga Lake. Do you have a favorite neighborhood creek or wetland, where trash has built up? Here is your chance to get that cleaned up. Was your picnic spot or shoreline area along the lake marred by garbage, last fall? Let’s get that stuff out of there!

Who: Individuals, families, schools, churches, Scouts, community groups. You! As a group organizes for a cleanup, we’ll help pick a good spot along the chosen creek or waterfront area that is safe for all ages and approved by landowners, and get the word out via email, a press release to local newspapers, radio, etc. We are only asking for a couple of hours of volunteer time to pick up trash and clean up around a carefully-selected area.

You can join a group that is already organized, or start your own.
To start your own group and cleanup event, we’ll help you organize the following details:
  • A coordinator for your group – name, contact information (preferably both phone and email).
  • You might want to come up with a fun name for your group and cleanup!
  • A cleanup location – safe, easy-to-get-to with nearby parking, and landowner permission to be there. We’ll need clear directions to provide to volunteers who want to show up on the date.
  • A time period for the cleanup (two to four hours at most) and raindate.
  • Publicity – a short news release for local newspapers, radio stations, and other places you suggest (we’ll help write that and send it out).
  • Garbage bags to fill, and someone to collect and dispose of them properly afterwards (we’ll help organize the pickup, and will provide garbage bags, and gloves to wear).
  • A sign-in sheet for all participants (we can provide one if needed).
  • Signed safety waivers for all participants (we can provide a template if needed).
  • Adult supervision and permissions for all youngsters.
  • Appropriate clothing and footwear.
  • Refreshments.
  • Someone to take photos and keep notes of what you collect.
Afterwards, we’ll want to know:
How many bags of garbage did you collect?
What was the grossest thing you found?
What was the largest thing you found?
What was the weirdest thing you found?
How would you improve this event for next year?
Awards will be made for Best, Most, Largest, Weirdest, etc!

Business Sponsorships: We are seeking donations from area businesses to help support this project. Please contact steward@ycaugalake.org if you are interested.

How to Get Involved:
Contact the Network at the following email addresses and let us know you want to get involved: abenning@wells.edu or steward@cayugalake.org. You can also leave us a message at 607 319-0475. Watch for information on our Web site www.cayugalake.org and  at our Facebook page by late March – we’ll list groups with contact information and can add yours.

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

Crooked Carrot CSK and The Good Life Farm

Wow, I'm doing a terrible job of keeping this updated. But I do manage the Google Calendar of sustainability events almost every day or at least whenever I get emails about or hear about cool events. So check it out: here (also on the sidebar on the left). Or, if you use Google Calendar I can share the calendar with you so it can appear on your own, and that way you don't have to keep checking back. Just shoot me an email and I can do that for you: mkeatin1@ithaca.edu.



But I did want to share something I saw a poster for at the TC Public Library yesterday: Crooked Carrot, Ithaca's first Community Supported Kitchen (CSK). Just check it out, it looks awesome. I want to join!

Also, just a random shoutout to the Good Life Farm, just up the lake in Interlaken. We visited them on the 2010 Jumpstart Sustainable Community Challenge bus trip around the lake. It's a sweet place. Horse power!

Friday, February 3, 2012

The SEEN Presents: Local Investment for Community Wealth


Has the stock market and corporate big box banking got you down?
Join us on Thursday, February 9 at LaTourelle for four paradigm-shifting presentations that will change the way you think of investing when:
  • Fred Schoeps presents Local Investment Opportunity Network (LION) for Tompkins County
  • Krys Cail presents Slow Money Central New York
  • Kavita Nehemiah, Elaina Dionosopoulos, and Max Shomaecker present BR Microcapital for Local Entrepreneurs
  • Tristram Coffin presents Alternatives Federal Credit Union Sustainability Banking
Learn how these initiatives can help us create community capital, support entrepreneurship and strengthen our local economy- by investing in our neighbors' success.
We'll see you next week.

The SEEN Team
$5 - SEEN members
$10 - non-members
Ithaca Hours accepted
DIRECTIONS
La Tourelle
1150 Danby Rd
Ithaca, NY
Share The Ride
Post ride offers or requests at Zimride.com/Tompkins
Explore Your Options
For more information on transportation options, dial 211 for Info & Referral, or email Way2Go at staff@way2goinfo.org
Public Transit
TCAT Ride Map
Take bus route #65 from Aurora Street side of the Commons at 5:07pm and request to stop at La Tourelle.

About Our Presenters
Krys Cail
Krys Cail is a food systems planning consultant, working independently and with the Center for Agricultural Development and Entrepreneurship (CADE) throughout New York State. She is also the owner of Robinia Redux, a small-scale sustainable forest products business selling black locust wood products. Additionally, Krys is an active civic volunteer, serving on many boards and steering committees in the region.
Tristram Coffin
Tristram Coffin is the Chief Executive Officer of Alternatives Federal Credit Union, a Community Development Financial Institution (CDFI) in Ithaca, New York.  Since his arrival in 2007, he has led Alternatives during a period of growth and increased community involvement while sustaining the organization’s mission of serving the underserved. In 2010 Alternatives was named Small Business of the Year by the Tompkins County Chamber of Commerce, and was runner-up for the NEXT Award for innovation in financial services.
Fred Schoeps
Fred Schoeps has been volunteering with Sustainable Tompkins to help create a local informal investing circle or LION (Local Investment Opportunity Network).  Fred is also a SEEN member, serves as treasurer for EVI, Inc., the local EcoVillage educational non-profit, serves on the Groundswell Center steering committee, is a small business owner, and volunteers as a mentor for CCE.
BR MicroCapital
BR MicroCapital (BRM) is a student-run organization that spurs microenterprise development by assisting self-employed individuals reach their business goals. Launched in January of 2009, BRM seeks to meet a critical need by working with promising, but underserved entrepreneurs in the local community. BRM partners with Alternatives Federal Credit Union (Alternatives), a leading community development credit union, and the Center for Sustainable Global Enterprise to support microbusiness owners.


About the SEEN
The Sustainable Enterprise & Entrepreneur Network (The SEEN) is a growing community of businesses, organizations, and individuals working together to achieve ecological, social, and financial success. The SEEN is a program of the Green Resource Hub, a local non-profit organization that aims to expand the marketplace for sustainable living in the Finger Lakes region.
Together we're building a more sustainable economy.

Thursday, January 26, 2012

Ithaca's Food Web

Just found this blog on news and events featuring local foods: Ithaca's Food Web. Check it out!

Monday, December 5, 2011

Deconstruction Volunteer Opportunity

Hello from the Finger Lakes ReUse Deconstruction Services Team!

The weather has been unexpectedly pleasant for late fall & we’re hoping you’ll take advantage of that and join us in helping preserve materials from a local building. We have opportunities to help with a deconstruction project near Ithaca College. Our team will be on site from 7AM until 5PM for the remainder of this week and Monday-Thursday for the following 2 weeks (December 6 – December 16). Please RSVP to Erich Kruger (erich@fingerlakesreuse.org) if you want to come for part or all of any day.

Heavy-soled boots are required. Work gloves, safety equipment, and basic tools will be provided. Please bring your own lunch and water bottle. Volunteers must sign in when arriving and complete an orientation with FLR staff before commencing any work at the deconstruction site. Volunteers are asked to provide their own transportation but we may be able to provide assistance with transport for volunteers who can be on site for the full work day.

Further information about Finger Lakes ReUse programs can be found at our website, www.fingerlakesreuse.org.

Tuesday, November 29, 2011

Finger Lakes ReUse Volunteer Evenings

Finger Lakes ReUse invites you to participate in our ReUse Center volunteer evenings at the ReUse Center in the Triphammer Marketplace from 5:30 to 8pm every Thursday beginning December 1 throughout the winter months. Meet great people and help make donated items ready for sale: we'll clean, sort and organize loads of really cool stuff! Help us improve retail displays, and other tasks that will help us manage the huge flow of incoming donations.

We'd like to know you're coming, so please RSVP to Louise Henrie at louise@fingerlakesreuse.org, or call (607) 257-9699.

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

Three awesome events tomorrow

There are so many awesome events happening tomorrow... shame they're all scheduled for just about the same time. I wish I could go to all of them. Well, here they are... take your pick.

"Grow the Good Life" lecture

Renowned garden blogger and author Michele Owens will give the Class of 1945 Lecture in the Cornell Plantations 25th Annual Fall Lecture Series entitled "Grow The Good Life." Michele is a joyful, yet serious vegetable gardener of two decades and author of "Grow the Good Life: Why a Vegetable Garden Will Make You Happy, Healthy, Wealthy and Wise." More info here.

In her talk, much like her book, Owens will guide us on a cultural tour of the backyard vegetable garden. She'll consider why most Americans gave up growing food after World War II, and why, in this economic, political, environmental, and epidemiological moment, it makes infinite sense for us to grow food in the backyard again today.

Where: Statler Hall Auditorium, Cornell University
When: Wednesday, Nov. 2, 7:30pm



"Farmageddon" at Cornell Cinema

From Cornell Cinema's website:

"Featuring a panel discussion with documentary subjects Steve & Barb Smith of Meadowsweet Farm and A. Fay Benson, the head of Small Dairy Support with C.U. Extension.

A wake up call for anyone who eats food: this nervy documentary promotes a healthy paranoia about the USDA and FDA's "war" on the small farmers of the local foods movement. Beginning with the controversy over the sale of raw milk, the film repeatedly demonstrates the numerous ways that local farmers are being harassed by government agencies working in the interests of industrial agribusiness. The farmers and consumers interviewed in the film make the persuasive argument that federal and state agencies focus their monitoring on small scale producers when food-related illnesses are historically traceable to genetically modified foods, factory farming, and large-scale livestock facilities. Surveillance footage of raids on Mennonite farms and food co-ops, interviews with FDA officials, and agricultural experts round out this articulate argument for promoting access to local, healthful foods. Cosponsored with Greenstar Cooperative Market. More at farmageddonmovie.com"

Where: Willard Straight Hall, Cornell University
When: Wednesday, Nov. 2, 7pm

"The Green Fire" at the Museum of the Earth (I've already posted about this, so this is a reminder)

The Finger Lakes Land Trust and Museum of the Earth are partnering to show the film "The Green Fire: Aldo Leopold and a Land Ethic for Our Time," the first full-length, documentary ever made about legendary conservationist Aldo Leopold and his environmental legacy. From the website: "Green Fire shares highlights from his extraordinary career, explaining how he shaped conservation and the modern environmental movement. It also illustrates how Leopold's vision of a community that cares about both people and land continues to inform and inspire people across the country and around the world. Leopold’s ideas remain relevant today, continuing to inspire projects nationwide that connect people and land." More info on the movie here.

Where: Museum of the Earth, 1259 Trumansburg Rd, Ithaca
When: 7pm

Thursday, October 27, 2011

Costumes for Cans



Join SWIFT (Stop Wasting Ithaca's Food Today) for trick-or-treating on Halloween - but not for candy! Dress up in your spookiest costume (family-friendly costumes encouraged, but not required) and help go door-to-door to collect cans and boxes of non-perishable foods for the Food Bank of the Southern Tier.

Where: All over Ithaca (meet at Textor Circle)
When: Halloween (Monday, Oct. 31), 4-7pm

To participate, sign up here for a route. Encourage your friends to help, too - the more, the merrier! Before departing for the different routes, the group will meet at the Textor Circle to confirm routes and get some last minute information.

Some FAQs about SWIFT:

Who are we?
SWIFT is a non-profit, student-run organization that aims to combine social responsibility and sustainability.

What do we do?
We salvage food from Towers Dining Hall and special catered events on campus. It is packaged into meal-sized portions and delivered to food pantries and help centers throughout Tompkins County.

How much food do we save?
SWIFT averages 35 meals per week, plus salads and leftover items from Grab-and-Go. Special event packaging greatly varies.

When do we package?
Every Friday! We meet outside at the Towers loading dock (near the TCAT bus stop) at 4:00 PM. New members are always welcome :)


How can I help?
We can always use more packagers and we will be looking for new E-Board members very soon. We’re always willing to take on new ideas and strategies, so send your thoughts to swiftoday@gmail.com and get involved!

Tomorrow: Fracking Rally and Occupy Bikes!


Tomorrow (Friday) Frack Off is holding an anti-fracking rally at 4pm at Free Speech Rock. Come out and show your support (and sign the petitions if you haven't) demanding that Ithaca College bans fracking on its lands, and that NYS officially bans fracking. If you don't know much about fracking (hydraulic fracturing), go to Frack Off's screening of "Gasland" in Textor 101 at 7pm tonight, and then check out Shaleshock's website for tons of information.



After the rally, join the critical mass bike ride around downtown Ithaca in solidarity of the Occupy Wall St. movement. Celebrate Halloween (optional of course) by dressing up as scary Wall St. bankers and corporate CEOs, zombies and vampires, or beautiful revolutionaries and occupiers! We will ride to some of the haunts of Ithaca's 1% and through the neighborhoods of the 99% and do some outreach while we ride. Then descend on the Commons for Friday night festivities!

Let's show the strength of this movement by creating a community movement on two wheels! If anyone is interested in riding down from IC, contact Margaret Keating at mkeatin1@ithaca.edu. We will assemble after the fracking rally at 5pm and head down to the Bank of America ATM on Seneca St.

Thursday, October 20, 2011

"Fresh" Screening and Sustainable Food Teach-in!


In celebration of National Food Day, the Ithaca College Environmental Society (ICES), the Resource and Environmental Management Program (REMP), and Slow Food Ithaca College will be holding a teach-in on sustainable food followed by a screening of the documentary Fresh.

The teach-in will cover various aspects of eating sustainably, including choosing local, organic, vegetarian/vegan, and sustainable carnivorous options. We will be making some delicious examples of these types of foods for your enjoyment!

Fresh celebrates local farmers, advocates, and business people that are working to reinvent our industrial food system and solve its rampant problems, such as pollution, food contamination, and obesity. We will also have snacks during the movie, if all the delicious food we're bringing isn't enough!

Where: Williams 323
When: Monday, October 24, 6-8pm

Free and open to the public; please bring your friends! It's never too late to start thinking about where your food comes from and its impact on you, the environment, and communities around the world.

Food Dignity Panel Discussion


Professors Julia Lapp, Amy Frith, and Alicia Swords, IC Food For Thought, and the IC Nutrition Club will be hosting a Food Dignity panel discussion of local food system activists and program directors. Join in the discussion with local and regional experts about efforts to promote a just, humane, and sustainable food system.

Panelists include:
Where: Textor 102
When: Tuesday, October 25, 7-9pm

This should be a great event, and it's right on campus. You can never talk too much about good, sustainable food!

Reminder: Food Justice Summit this Saturday!


This looks awesome, so I'm reposting!

Ithaca's first annual Food Justice Summit will mobilize the community for food sovereignty and to raise funds to support food justice projects, specifically Ithaca Community Harvest and the work of GreenStar to create a system of regional food sustainability that promotes health, equity, and community control of essential resources.

The event includes a walk-a-thon in the morning and block party celebration in the afternoon. Walk up to 5 miles around Ithaca visiting neighborhood and school gardens, then end at the bock party where the streets will be closed in the Northside neighborhood to celebrate with live music, a local organic BBQ, guest speakers, youth activities and much more. Make a donation or pledge to support GreenStar's walk-a-thon team at a GreenStar register.

Where: Walk-a-Thon begins at The Space, 700 W. Buffalo St.; block party at First and Hancock Sts., Ithaca
When: Saturday, October 22, 10am - 6pm

Check out the event schedule:
  • 9am - Walk-a-Thon registration opens. If you have not yet registered for the Walk-a-Thon, please come to The Space (700 West Buffalo Street, at the corner of Court Street and 13) between 9 and 10am. Those that have already registered may show up closer to 10 for check-in.
  • 10am - Walk begins at The Space (700 West Buffalo Street, at the corner of Court Street and 13). Please arrive 15 minutes early to check-in, get a t-shirt and a route map. Early registration and check-in's available starting at 9am for walkers who plan to walk at a leisurely pace and want to start early.
  • 12pm - Block Party begins (streets are closed in the Northside neighborhood for live music, local organic BBQ, speakers, workshops, vendors, youth activities and more)
  • 1pm - Performance by the talented youth of the Community Unity Music Education Program (CUMEP). Enjoy ABC Groove, Beautiful Colors, All of Us and more! Come celebrate our emerging community leaders and enjoy singing and dancing that will warm your heart!
  • 1:45 - Asya
  • 2pm - Keynote speaker: Malik Yakini, Chairman of the Detroit Black Community Food Security Network
  • 2:45 - Iron Chef Junior Competition
  • 3pm - Tribute to the Bernie Milton Band
  • 4pm - Trece and Earnest Verb
  • 5pm - Thousands of One
  • 6pm - Finale

Tomorrow: "When Home Becomes a Gasfield: A Conversation with Bradford County Landowner Ruth Tonachel"

Ruth, a 6th generation resident of Towanda, will talk about the ways in which the arrival of the shale gas extraction industry in Bradford County has changed daily life for her family and neighbors and about how it has affected their sense of place. Ruth will share both stories and photos, including images of her farm which has been in her family since 1790. Of special interest is the fact that Ruth co-owns and manages one of the largest remaining tracts of unleased land in Bradford County.

Find out what has influenced her decision not to lease and what might change it in the future. Ruth also manages several rental properties and will touch on the issue of skyrocketing rents in Bradford County. After the presentation, there will be ample time for questions and conversation with Ruth.

Where: Danby Town Hall,  1830 Danby Rd.
When: Friday, October 21, 7-9pm
Free and open to the public. Sponsored by the Danby Gas Drilling Task Force.

For more information about the Task Force, please contact Jennifer Tiffany (jst5@cornell.edu), Kathy Halton (607-273-0533 or khalton@twcny.rr.com), or Candace Collmer (607-257-5737).

Center for Environmental Sustainability Reflection/Action Workshop

 
"We are all connected, now let's create the future together": A reflection/action workshop
 
The Center for Environmental Sustainability (CES) and Lifelong Learning Center invite you to spend a day with leaders from United Way, Groundswell, CES, and Compassionate Communication exploring the nature of effective collaboration and action planning for working together toward shared goals. Wally Woods, organizational development consultant and CES co-founder, will facilitate.
 
Collaborative learning and action is a dynamic gateway for shifting consciousness and culture from competition to cooperation, a shift essential for creating a sustainable future. When approached through a systems perspective, it also enables us to access deeper levels of the knowledge, wisdom, creativity and courage required to meet the escalating threats of social, economic and environmental injustice and deprivation.
 
Following Woods' introduction to this natural systems approach, a panel of local leaders will share reflections on their organizations' efforts to build strong, just and sustainable communities through:
  • co-designed projects (United Way)
  • a strong local food system (Groundswell)
  • sharing tangible as well as creative resources (CES)
  • effective communications (Compassionate Communications)
Working in small groups, participants will then examine the values that undergird their organizational missions, and identify common values-based goals. Moving from shared reflection to participatory action planning, they will then develop specific first steps for addressing concrete objectives through collaborative action; and present these visions to the group.
 
Where: Lifelong Learning Center, 119 W. Court St., Ithaca
When: Saturday, November 5, 9:30am - 4pm
Free and open to the public. Light lunch provided. All participants will receive a Bio-Regional Map, two subscriptions to YES Magazine, and applications for CES mini-grants for implementing workshop visions.
 
Pre-registration requested by November 1st. For questions and registration, contact Wally Woods (607) 272-1312 or ces.ithaca@gmail.com.

Crop Mob at Stick and Stone Farm: This Sunday!


Fall is here, and it's time to dig roots!  All summer long beet and carrot plants have been channeling nutrients down their leaves, sending tiny roots into the soil, and collecting energy in their orange and red sweet and crisp roots. Come help Lucy and Chaw of Stick and Stone Farm dig and pull the roots which will be stored and dolled out over the winter to CSA members, local restaurants and grocery stores.  You might even toss one in your cart at Greenstar later this year!


Special note: This mob is an opportunity for you to help raise money to support low-income families, schools, and community centers in our area in getting healthy farm-fresh food. You can get pledges for each pound of root veggies you harvest at Stick and Stone and the money goes straight to Ithaca Community Harvest, which also funds the BJM Fresh Fruit and Vegetable Snack Program. Sign-up here to take the harvest challenge!


Whether you raise money or not, come on out to the farm for some fun and to get reconnected back to the root of local food!


Where: Stick and Stone Farm, 1605 Trumansburg Rd., Ithaca (also known as Buffalo St., Cliff St., Rt. 96) - 4.5 miles from downtown Ithaca
When: Sunday October 23nd, 10am-1pm, followed by lunch
Who: you, your friends and family, your kids, but not your dog
What to bring: place setting: plate, bowl, spoon/fork; dress for the weather, and for mud; full water bottle
Please RSVP so Stick and Stone knows how much lunch to make at: ithacacropmob@gmail.com 


About Ithaca Crop Mob:


We are a group of farmers and community members who love our local farms. Once a month, we assemble and "mob" a local farm, putting our hands to work to accomplish a goal. Afterwards, we share a meal. All are welcome!
Participants in the 2011 Sustainable Community Challenge Jumpstart Program work during a crop mob at West Haven Farm.

Wednesday, October 12, 2011

Wide Awake Bakery


I absolutely love bread. I pretty much live on carbs and bread products are one of my favorite groups of food. I also love making bread (by hand, of course... no bread machine for me). I've been making it with my family for as long as I can remember. So when I first heard about this local bakery and their breadshare, I headed to their website and immediately starting drooling over the descriptions of their breads.

Their bread is made mostly of local flour from a local flour mill, Farmer Ground Flour. It's grown in Newfield, Lansing, and Brooktondale. You can purchase a breadshare as part of a CSA (community supported agriculture) with Sweetland Farm or the Full Plate Collective, or separately. You can also choose to get more than one loaf per week, but either way it comes out to $5 a loaf/week, for 20 weeks, so $100 total. How reasonable is that for local, delicious bread (and although the bakery is not certified organic, they do use organic flours and grains)?