Hello Hamilton!

I’m going to be doing a couple of events on Sunday, January 14. 2007 in Hamilton, Ontario. If you’re in the area do come out to one or both of these events and say hi!

You Grow Girl Book signing at Mixed Media
174 James St. N. (at Cannon) 905-529-2323
11:30am – 12:30

[Note: Store hours on the website do not include Sundays however the store will be opened especially for this event! So no sweat. You will not arrive at a closed store in the middle of winter like that time I went to grade school on a holiday.]

Those who attend will also receive a two-for-one coupon to attend the Royal Botanical Garden’s annual Health and Wellness fair [see below].

And then later that same day:

Royal Botanical Gardens
a part of the Health & Wellness Show’s Green Gardening Expo

Presentation: Learn how to grow food organically in small or difficult spaces. Includes practical and thrifty growing tips and inspiring ideas for growing unusual and gorgeous veggies and herbs.

Two times: 1-1:30pm and 3-3:30pm.

Directions to the RGB by car, train, or bus.

I will also be bringing books, calendars, shirts and a few miscelleneous items and will have a table at the RGB event. If there is anything specific you would like (especially t-shirt sizes) please let me know ahead of time so I can pack it. I can only carry a small amount of merch which means sizes and quantities will be very limited.

    Here’s a photo of a house I took in Hamilton on the hottest day I can remember in a long while.

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Compostable Dishware

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I discovered these compostable cups made of a sugar industry derivative called “bagasse” while partaking in my weekly cup of solar-roasted cacao drink at the Farmer’s Market. That’s my used cup in the photo above.

Online environmental products store Branch carries a complete line of “bagasse” dinnerware, and at $2-4 for a pack of 50 they’re an excellent alternative to the typical woodpulp, plastic, and styrofoam disposable cups and party plates.

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Recycled Garden Contest Winners

The Recycled Garden Contest has come to a close. Myself and a team of impartial judges have voted and decided on two entires that have each won a copy of Tsia Carson’s book, Craftivity.

Just to refresh, here are the details:

This time around the contest has a theme in keeping with the spirit of the prizes. Submit a photo that shows a thoughtful and unique way that you are using recycled materials in your garden.

And now, The Winners:

  • My Serenity Garden: Recycled Cardboard Boxes

    Becky used cardboard boxes rather than the typical newspaper as a mulch to smother weeds and eventually compost her way into a new and imporved weed-free garden bed. We unanimously loved this idea because while it has no aesthetic value, the parts that are recycled literally break down to become a part of the garden. It’s recycling at it’s finest in that the objects being reused never make it to the garbage dump but are disintegrated and contribute to improving the soil along the way.

  • Recycling cardboard boxes in my garden

  • Sk8ordiehard: Birdbath

    We couldn’t resist Renee’s simple, but brilliant birdbath idea made using an old bowl and some pieces of rusted rebar. Renee submitted a bunch of great ideas including this miniature border made of thrifted plates with a flowery pattern.

Photo by Renee Garner

I want to add a special shout-out to Chris Chang who submitted this grow bag contraption that feeds condensation from an air-conditioner through a tube and into a plastic bag holding petunias. Okay so I’m not a big petunia fan since they’ve the Parks & Rec “flower gun” plant of choice for the last 3 decades, but the contraption is a pretty darn awesome idea that demonstrates both the concept of “self-watering” and grey water collection simultaneously.

I have a personal soft-spot for Green Wellies concrete planter made by digging a chunk of concrete out of the ground! It’s kind of like the hypertuffa containers I make although I pour the mix into the ground on purpose and have the benefit of placing all the required holes where I want them.

Don’t forget to join the mailing list (right side, top of homepage) to be notified about the next contest to be announced very soon.

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It Lives

I’ve recently become interested in photographing the decaying garden. It started in the spring when I spent an hour photographing a garden while it was still brown but on the verge of exploding into green. I’m starting to appreciate both the garden and nature’s seasons on the whole. I’ve always had such a block towards winter because of the cold, but photography is bringing me around simply because I need to be out there in it in order to take pictures of it.

And so now that the garden season is over I am turning my attention to the way things look as the plants prepare for dormancy. I love the bare structures; tomato cages, and homemade trellises that are left behind; the look of the plants as they break down to architectural skeletons and stringy vines bearing floppy leaves. I am discovering that I had spent so much time focussing on the garden through the summer months that I had lost sight of the fact that it stays alive in it’s own way through the remaining months of the year. I am starting to see it and appreciate it in new ways.

Here are a few examples:

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The Future of Food

I recently sat down and watched, The Future of Food, a documentary that investigates the problems we face in the industrialization and corporatization of food production. Wow, I can’t say enough about this film and am sorry it took me this long to make a point to watch it. If you have any questions about what is going on in farming in North America including questions about about the history, politics, economy, and science of how your food gets to the table and what it is when it gets there, then I urge you to go out and see this film.*

The film leads carefully and clearly from one point to the next, beginning by outlining the problem of patenting life and the power of patent law over farmer’s rights. This segment makes its’ point by following the lawsuits brought on by Monsanto against several farmers including the well-known case of Percy Schmeiser a Canadian canola farmer who was charged with infringing on Monsanto’s patents by having Round-Up Ready canola in his fields, despite the fact that the seeds got there accidentally and he didn’t want them there in the first place.

The film then goes on to explain the science of genetic engineering in a clear manner that really brought home the process by which GMOs (genetically modified organisms) are made and the problems they present. As an example the film explains that genes are put into the plant by invading the cell wall with bacteria and viruses (ecoli). Antibiotic marker genes are attached as a way to test if all of that “messing about” worked. This use of an antibiotic marker has the medical community concerned as to how this will contribute to the loss of antibiotics. Beyond the unknowns of messing about with life, the film provides concrete examples of several other issues brought on by bioengineering including the threat to diversity and agricultural heritage due to what amounts to the uncontrolled spread of GMOs as we find plants located in remote areas with contaminated gene lines. This poses the further (and rather scary) question of what will happen if and when terminator technology (seeds go sterile in second season) pollutes crops around the world.

The film explains that right now the vast majority of seed farmers plant comes from a clustering of 4 companies and projects that in the next 10 years only 6 retail firms will be controlling all food on a retail level (1 of which is Walmart). This means that in the future not only will we have no control over what’s on the shelf and where it comes from, but that what is available will be dictated not by ethics, a respect for the environment, our health, how much farmers are paid, or what we want, but by what is cheapest to provide and puts the most money into the pockets of a few large corporations.

Despite the heaviness of the information presented the film ends on a positive note and serves as a call to action, presenting alternatives (CSA’s, organic farming, and farmers markets) and illustrating how the choices we make right now can have a positive influence on the future. I would say that learning to grow our own food is another positive step in moving toward fixing the problem. While most of us can’t possibly grow enough to provide for our food needs, we can not only offset the cost, but in the act of growing food gain first-hand knowledge of what food looks like when it isn’t homogenized and packaged for our convenience. It also teaches us a respect and basic understanding of what goes into good food production. An educated consumer is a more demanding consumer. As a gardener my priorities have changed in that I expect my food to have been grown ethically and healthfully but I also accept the beauty and flaws that are natural and normal. My potatoes may not be perfect, scrubed spheres but they taste great!

Before I finish I want to call attention to a panel discussion that is shown in the extras on disk 2. In this clip Michael Pollan addresses the question, Why does better food cost more? or Why is organic food expensive? He makes a great argument in turning back the question, Why is conventional food so cheap? The price is low but the cost is high in terms of the environment, public health, karma, the cost to taxpayers in subsidies, the amount of nitrogen used to fertilize which pollutes water, the obesity epidemic, food poisoning… In making his point he does not discount the fact that there are a lot of people living in poverty who can not afford to spend another cent on food but he adds that:

“We only pay 11% of our disposable income on food in the USA. That is less than anywhere else on earth and less than any other civilization that has ever been on this earth.

We have developed a food system that values quantity over quality. We need to reach into our pockets and elevate the importance of food in our lives.”

And as the film states, with food being one of the most intimate things we do, we can’t afford not to think about the consequences of our food choices and as consumers very literally put our money where our mouth is.

More:

*In Toronto, I rented a copy from Black Dog video on Queen St. W

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