Food Waste

Following on from my Bloody Well Smell It post, I want to investigate how food outlets and restaurants in my local area deal with their waste. Here's a professional service for food waste collection and composting, but it's based in Essex. I wonder if anything similar exists in Brent. I need to get a campaign going under the Transition umbrella... and then tie it to free compost for our gardens... Juniper Food Waste Run by a team of dedicated and experienced professionals, our sole purpose at Juniper is to provide a food waste collection service that is cost effective and efficient, that addresses corporate social responsibility and regulatory requirements, in a manner that is environmentally sound.

Getting the Plot...allotment plans!

My name is down for 2 allotments (greedy!) which should be coming up in the next year. Because I am unlikely to be able to tend to them all by myself, let alone eat the produce, I'm planning to turn them into permacultured forest gardens in which my local community can learn to grow  and share food by close observance of nature and how it behaves in order to get the best fruit and veg. Seeing as I only took up gardening in September 08, I've gotta lot to learn! So in fact, I'll be looking for teachers and gardeners ready to come along and show groups what to do and why. I attended a short permaculture course at Naturewise in the Lea Valley in July '09 and there's certainly a lot of fascinating theory to learn about too. Wish I had time to attend the longer courses. http://www.naturewise.org.uk/page.cfm. There is even a Permaculture Picture House in east London devoted to showing films on this topic. The best known is Rebecca Hoskings BBC documentary "A Farm for the Future", which you can probably find a copy of somewhere. I'll be returning to this post to write more about permaculture and to start mapping out how we might plan the plots and if you have any suggestions as to planting combinations you have found successful, I'd love to hear. EG - maize supports the climbing runner beans and squash plants used as ground cover beneath them prevents weeds. On the other hand, I need to get the community involved so I'll leave a lot till then. I'd also like to get a local artist on board to document our plots development.  Also, I'd like to see bikes with trailers selling the produce door to door, all over the community. As always, how to fund it?

Children's books on climate change

I'm interested in how the kids are being taught about climate change through story-telling and tales, so I'm looking out for any books coming out on the market. I haven't got any time to devote to this but I'm going to start collecting a list here when I come across any:(with reviews or synopsises if I find them) 1) "‘Hope and the Super Green Highway’ is Helen Moore’s brilliant page turning sequel to ‘Hope and the Magic Martian’. The author cleverly weaves together evocative facts about Nature from around the world with the web-surfing lifestyle of today’s children. The appearance of an exotic tropical tree frog in a box of bananas sets Hope off on a quest to learn more. The efforts of her internet pen pal, Cloud Boy, to protect his tropical rainforest inspire her and her grandmother to take steps to look after their own local, badly littered and dangerous wood. By setting this gripping story in a time when carbon is traded with ‘Ice Caps’, Helen Moore gives a glimpse of how life could be when fuel is rationed and the cost of food reflects the miles it’s travelled. Warm, intelligent, inspiring and thought provoking, this story is ideal for children from 8 to 12. It should be in every primary school. The meaning of this tale is in the heroine’s name. This is a story that gives hope, something that we all need right now." review by- Eric Maddern, storyteller and children's author 2) a teenage fiction book called 'The Carbon Diaries 2015' by Saci Lloyd. What struck me as a strong point of this book is that it gives a glimpse of what would happen if the government suddenly imposed carbon rationing upon people who had previously not made any of their own journeys into Transition. There are those who believe that carbon reductions should all be done at government level and then implemented downwards (the 'they will solve it' way of thinking). This book really highlights why that will not work, and although the book chronicles hard times as the characters all adapt with having to get by with less of everything, it is ultimately not cynical and hopeless. (Jane - member at Transition Network)