Thursday 20 September 2012

Food: Centre of the Local Economy event on September 26, 2012


Not a likely scene in Southwestern Ontario this fall, as much of the apple crop was lost due to spring weather. Photo credit: Muffet (Liz West)

Title:   Food: Centre of the Local Economy
Presenter: Hélène St. Jacques
When:     Wednesday, September 26, 7 pm
Where:   Poplar Hill Baptist Church, Poplar Hill             

We've got another event coming up next Wednesday - one at which group interaction and sharing one’s own food experiences will be strongly encouraged. The event will be part presentation, part working group where participants will be able to explore options such as food hubs, and presently available sectors. A limited number of local snacks will be available (if you have some to share, feel free to bring them!) 

About the Presenter

Our facilitator, Hélène St. Jacques serves in an advisory capacity with the Toronto food co-op, FoodShare (& a former board member). She is also citizen co-chair of Toronto Food Policy Council, and is very active in the development of comprehensive food security policies, programs and principles of healthy public policy. Hélène has conducted extensive research across the entire food value chain from eaters to growers, studying consumer attitudes, purchase, usage and consumption patterns.  This includes consumer packaged goods and processed food companies (international and local/Ontario/Canadian).

Through her firm, Informa Research, Hélène has also provided the following research services:

- to retail (health/organic, independents and chains) including alternative channels (food box programs, farmers' markets and buying clubs)
- to distribution (organic/natural food distributor) and wholesaling
-to producers and marketing boards (beans/legumes, turkey, vegetables, eggs, milk/dairy)
- to farmer owned co-ops  (Gay Lea Foods and OntarBio - Organic Meadow brand)
- to industry organizations (Organic Council of Ontario and Canadian Organic Trade Association)
- to farm owned, value-added products (Mapleton's Organic)

Hélène favours a hands-on collaborative approach when bringing together the corporate and community worlds. She is currently engaged in a variety of volunteer activities and community development initiatives, including Enoch Turner Schoolhouse, Jessie's Centre for Teenagers, Canadian Foundation for Women's Healthcare, Dixon Hall, and Sheridan College School of Crafts and Design.

If you are at all involved with local food (and let's face it, everyone is, whether we are eating it or involved in its production or processing), we hope you can make it out to this event. One hope is that we will have the start of a  Local Food Subcommittee of Transition Middlesex beginning to form by the end of the evening! 

Tuesday 11 September 2012

Forest Garden Tour 7pm Sept 12, 2012

Martin Crawford, a well-known British champion of Forest Gardens. 
Photo by London Permaculture.

This free tour presented by Shantree Kacera for Transition Middlesex takes place at the Living Centre (follow link for directions). 

 Ever since I learned about Forest Gardens, the idea just made sense. Here was an approach where you look at pointers from ecology, and applied them to the growing of food forests where every aspect of the design had been considered and reconsidered.

As I learn more about permaculture, the field modern forest gardens have come out of, I've had to come to terms with their being no easy and fast way to set-up a forest garden - like any forest, we can't expect the sort of turn-around we do with typical buildings being constructed, for instance. It takes time for a forest garden to grow into what it will eventually be: a beautiful and functional landscape that provides food, fuel, and 'farmaceuticals' as well as building and textile materials for humans and animals alike, all while being highly resilient to pests and climate fluctuations, improving the water table, and absorbing CO2.

Shantree Kacera will be giving a tour of his own forest garden, likely the oldest in Canada, but based in a slightly longer tradition from England (see photo above of Martin Crawford, a guru in the field of forest gardens). Shantree will give an introduction to the idea of forest gardens, a bit about how they work, and will be ready to answer your questions.

The Living Centre, where the tour takes place, is run by Shantree and his wife Lorenna. They offer courses in Forest Gardening, permaculture, raw-food cuisine, primordial movement and many other fascinating fields.

(Note that this post previously had a typo saying the tour was on Sept 21 - it's on Sept 12 - sorry for the inconvenience.)