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Grow the Change

17 October 2008

World Food Day

Celebrate Food Sovereignty, and learn more about La Via Campesina's International Peasant Movement.

"The food crisis is the most dramatic link in the chain of crises generated by the neo-liberal economic system – the climate crisis, the energy crisis, the financial crisis, the biodiversity crisis, etc.. It is time for a change of direction, starting with agriculture itself."
Posted by Freija and Beringian Fritillary
Labels: food sovereignty

1 comment:

Chiot's Run said...

I couldn't agree more!

October 17, 2008 at 12:33 PM

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To reach us contact: growthechange@gmail.com

Syriphid Fly

Syriphid Fly

Blogs we Read

  • AfriGadget
    AfriGadget.com relaunch
  • Am I Bugging You Yet?
    Love Seeing Insect Articles in Major Newspapers!
  • Appropedia Blog
    Politics is why we can’t have nice things. Like the internet
  • arduous blog
    This is The End My Friend
  • Bikejuju
    The Bicycles of Ethiopia – From a Bike-Obsessed Traveler
  • Casaubon's Book
    But What Will We Eat at the Apocalypse Now?
  • Chiot's Run
    NEW Blog!
  • Crunchy Chicken
    Starting a community composting and recycling company
  • Farm Natters
    Of Mice and Various Snakes and new Duck Feed Station
  • fast grow the weeds
    On life in the milk lane
  • Four Green Acres
    Ruby Gold tomato sorbet: Sweet!
  • HAD THE RADISH
    dig
  • Living the Frugal Life
    The New Coop
  • Not Dabbling In Normal
    Loss
  • over the wall
    No Kings
  • seed broadcast
  • Slow Coast
    On vacation
  • Subsistence Pattern
    Small-Scale Agriculture in Russia
  • the irresistible fleet of bicycles
  • The Path Less Pedaled
    A Short and Incomplete History of “Suicide” Shifters
  • The Tangled Nest
    The First Egg: Light, Life, and Gratitude
  • Throwback at Trapper Creek
    Walking the Talk part II. What WAS Wrong with Jane?
  • Totcycle | Family Biking
    Kidical Mass in December ...

Websites we Frequent

  • Appropedia
  • Bikes not Bombs
  • Bikes Without Borders
  • BugGuide.net
  • Considera: Developing Agriculture
  • Fias Co Farm: Goat Information
  • Freedom Gardens Forum: presented by Path to Freedom
  • Global Voices: The world is talking. Are you listening?
  • Homegrown.org
  • Knitty: little purls of wisdom
  • Kusa Seed Society: Ancient Cereal Seeds
  • La Via Campesina: International Peasant Movement
  • Life Cycles: Calculate your food miles
  • Livestock Research for Rural Development: The international Journal for research into sustainable developing world agriculture
  • NASA: Earth Observatory
  • Navdanya
  • North American Insects and Spiders: Identificaiton
  • Organic Seed Alliance
  • Path to Freedom: Urban Homesteaders
  • Practical Action: Technology Challenging Poverty
  • Roger's Mushrooms: Mushroom Identification
  • Slow Food International
  • TED: Ideas worth Spreading
  • The Hunger Project
  • Weston A. Price Foundation
  • What's That Bug
  • Wild Fermentation

Trusty ole frost hardy parsley

Trusty ole frost hardy parsley
The first and the last herb of the season

What we think

My photo
Freija and Beringian Fritillary
We believe that growing our own food is the most radical and effective way to promote social justice, equality and sustainability. Everyone, to some extent, can grow their own food. It makes even more sense for communities to grow their own food, sharing responsibilities and costs. It requires a restructuring of values, the kinds of values that are necessary for a consumer culture to wake up to the exploitation and poverty we perpetuate throughout the world. Our socially and environmentally exploitive food-culture perpetuates the very resource wars and poverty that concern so many of us. Growing food brings our environment sharply into focus; we learn how much we rely on healthy food, healthy soil and an healthy ecosystem. On our homestead, and in this blog, we practice and advocate human-scaled food systems, with an intimate hands on approach, as a way for everyone on this earth to be nutritiously and sustainably fed, from the first world to the third world. Our diverse, closed-loop homestead is to us, a relevant form of protest, as well as a constructive way to build a sustainable future. We are all in this together. Not one of us lives on this earth alone.
View my complete profile

Penelope and Juniper

Penelope and Juniper

The way we live

Just in case you are curious about the way we live... We produce enough income from a half-acre market garden to live a simple, debt-free lifestyle. We are off-grid and produce our power from an 80 Watt solar panel to run the things we need. We hydro-cool our perishables, and can, dry or cellar our food instead of running a fridge or freezer. We cook and heat water with wood, year-round, which means getting a fire going each morning, even in the heat of our two week long summer, and doing all the cooking and washing before the heat of the day. We ride bicycles to get where we need to go, especially to the Community Internet Access Center, and barter for rides into town for shopping a few times a year. In our Northern garden, Zone 4, we produce and preserve our own vegetables, herbs and most of our grains in a half-acre garden and acre grain field. We keep a small herd of goats, and a small flock of hens, to produce our meat, dairy products and eggs. We live seasonally, our daily life in the spring centers on planting and cultivating, our daily life in summer centers on harvesting and preserving, our daily life in fall centers on preparing for winter, and our daily life in winter centers on reading, learning, writing, philosophizing, planning and crafting. We are always looking for ways to innovate the tools and techniques for growing food on a home-scale. And we are always looking for ways to strengthen the effect of our lifestyle choices by connecting what we do with the larger community.

Pressure Canning on the Cookstove

Pressure Canning on the Cookstove
Global Voices: The World is Talking, Are You Listening?

Labels

  • garden (44)
  • kitchen arts (23)
  • grains (19)
  • homesteading (18)
  • agrarian living (17)
  • ecology (17)
  • food sovereignty (15)
  • goats (14)
  • herbs (14)
  • insects (10)
  • climate change (9)
  • fermentation (9)
  • bicycle power (8)
  • agrarian economy (7)
  • alternative power (7)
  • chickens (7)
  • food preservation (7)
  • crafting (6)
  • seeds (6)
  • community activism (5)
  • cooking with wood (5)
  • frost (5)
  • home dairying (5)
  • spring (5)
  • winter (5)
  • barns (3)
  • creative commons (3)
  • poetry (3)
  • compost (2)
  • disease in the garden (2)
  • draft power (2)
  • fruit (2)
  • human rights (2)

Blog Archive

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      • Frosty Blooms
      • New batch of Apple Cider Vinegar
      • A bit slow on the Slow Food scene
      • World Food Day
      • Bringing home the goats
      • A final bloom of color
      • Garlic: the last crop of the year
    • ►  September (8)

Song Sparrow

Song Sparrow

Followers

Comfrey Sore Muscle Salve

Comfrey Sore Muscle Salve

Chesnook Red Garlic

Chesnook Red Garlic

Fermenting Garlic and Dill Green Beans

Fermenting Garlic and Dill Green Beans

White Admiral Butterfly

White Admiral Butterfly

Homemade Tofu

Homemade Tofu

Carmen Sweet Peppers

Carmen Sweet Peppers

Toxic Waste Upstream: Stop the Tar Sands

Toxic Waste Upstream: Stop the Tar Sands

Coalition to Oppose the Arms Trade (COAT)

Coalition to Oppose the Arms Trade (COAT)
Stop the CANSEC Arms Show

Creative Commons

Creative Commons License
Grow the Change is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 2.5 Canada License.