background preloader

The organic life

Facebook Twitter

Shipping Container Homes. Shared Earth the Largest Community Garden on the Planet! Hyperlocavore. “Food Sovereignty” law passed in small Maine town to allow sale of locally produced food without interference of regulators. Town Hall in Sedgwick Maine Update March, 2013: Brooksville Becomes Ninth Maine Town to Pass Food Sovereignty Law.

“Food Sovereignty” law passed in small Maine town to allow sale of locally produced food without interference of regulators

Neighborhood Cows and Pigs: Real Food Sovereignty. “You don’t actually drink the milk do you?”

Neighborhood Cows and Pigs: Real Food Sovereignty

When acquaintances learn we have dairy cows on our small farm, many ask us that very question with incredulous expressions. We’ve also been asked, too many times to count, if we really eat the eggs from our hens. “Don’t they, like, come out of a chicken’s butt?” A colleague asked my husband. She was accustomed to eggs laid at distant factory farms, comfortably far from her awareness. Separation from the source of our sustenance may be unique to our era.. The oldest folks I know tell me about raising goats and chickens on city lots, growing grapes behind apartment buildings to make wine, gardening anywhere they found land. They’re talking about food sovereignty. It was only a few generations ago that advertisers managed to convince consumers that growing, preserving, and preparing meals should be left to experts.

7 Mega-Cartels That Kill the Free Market and Our Sovereignty. Activist Post Think we have a free market?

7 Mega-Cartels That Kill the Free Market and Our Sovereignty

Think again. Shaping Traditional Oral knowledge: about project. "Observing the food and therefore changing the notion of food preservation, we could find the answer to current situations such as the overuse of energy and food wastage.

Shaping Traditional Oral knowledge: about project

My design is a tool to implement that knowledge in a tangible way and slowly it changes the bigger picture of society. I believe that once people are given a tool that triggers their minds and requires a mental effort to use it, new traditions and new rituals can be introduced into our culture. " 'The Urban Food Revolution' Goes High Rise. Solviva Salad?

'The Urban Food Revolution' Goes High Rise

Five-storey vertical farms? A taste of Peter Ladner's new book on growing food in cities. Asked to create a concept for vertical farming in New York City, the architecture firm WorkAC designed this. The Urban Food Revolution: Changing the Way We Feed Cities Peter Ladner New Society Publishers (2011) [Editor's note: The following chapter, "In Praise of Technology," is excerpted with permission from Peter Ladner's The Urban Food Revolution: Changing the Way We Feed Cities. A week after the wettest September on record, farmer Bill Zylmans called into a local radio show from his tractor on his farm in Richmond, B.C. TED - The Subversive Plot. Re:farm the city. I will share here a low cost solution for the recycling of organic waste, appropriate for apartments and urban housing that do not have a piece of land or an outdoor area.

re:farm the city

This construction is inspired by the Cadico earthworms nice project. Grown in the City. Root Cellars. There are various types of Root Cellars including ones connected and those separate from your home.

Root Cellars

Some made from earth and others made from old freezers, culverts, cement or simple garbage cans. Whatever your choice they are excellent for year around food storage. Remember safety though and make sure your root cellar is well ventilated if its large enough to walk into. 15 houseplants to improve indoor air quality. Who Are The Young Farmers Of 'Generation Organic'? : The Salt. Hide caption Maryland farmer Josie Johnson learns about extending the farming season by growing crops under caterpillar tunnels.

Who Are The Young Farmers Of 'Generation Organic'? : The Salt

The lecture was part of a conference for young farmers held in Tarrytown N.Y., in early December. All photos by Maggie Starbard/NPR Hide caption Young farmers get their hands dirty picking parsnips while singing worksongs during a workshop at the 2011 Young Farmers Conference. Hide caption Jack Algiere demonstrates how to harvest parsnips. He's the farm manager at Stone Barns Center for Food and Agriculture, which hosted the conference. Hide caption From left: Mitra Sticklen, Rachel Fleury and Nate Kraus-Malett learn traditional farming work songs. Hide caption Young farmers let loose during a contra dance, a type of line-dancing. For decades, as young people have been leaving farms behind, the average age of the American farmer has been rising. Some of these young farmers already have their own farms. Urban Permaculture Institute. The Homesteaders Free Library - StumbleUpon.

Whole Earth Catalog Stay Hungry Stay Foolish. To Build Community, an Economy of Gifts by Charles Eisenstein. For a multitude of reasons, we need to need each other. posted Dec 27, 2011 Wherever I go and ask people what is missing from their lives, the most common answer (if they are not impoverished or seriously ill) is "community.

To Build Community, an Economy of Gifts by Charles Eisenstein

" What happened to community, and why don't we have it any more? There are many reasons—the layout of suburbia, the disappearance of public space, the automobile and the television, the high mobility of people and jobs—and, if you trace the "whys" a few levels down, they all implicate the money system. More directly posed: community is nearly impossible in a highly monetized society like our own.

In former times, people depended for all of life's necessities and pleasures on people they knew personally. Rocket stove mass heater.