Movie – Off the Map

I noticed this post recommending the movie “Off The Map” recently.

We watched it last night and really enjoyed it. We have been talking about it on and off all day today which is the sign of a movie that has gotten under our skin. I particularly liked the understated direction that let the landscape and the story unfold without joining all the dots for the viewer. Fascinating also to see the homesteading life depicted. I was scanning each frame for those small details that give authenticity and was not dissapointed. We already had the Taos region on our destination list as we love native american jewellery, so now we have another motive to visit.

(Via Cage Free Family)

Reviews

Tina Ferguson

Film Critic.com

Some notes from the director Campbell Scott

Seasonal Eating

The way to keep the food miles down is to eat in sync with whats in season for your region. Its a simple idea that would once have been the only option for most people. In modern first world countries it now requires an effort to know what is in season and to track down local producers. If you have a local farmers market then patronise it well so the producers keep going to the trouble of turning up.

Slowfood Sydney has a useful blog that regularly posts information on seasonal produce, here is the latest entry.

Balehaus – an experimental building using prefab straw filled panels

The Ecologist is one of the great journals of the green movement and has recently gone through the transformation from print to online. This makes access to its stimulating content much easier.

Click here to read about an interesting prototype building just opened at Bath university that uses pre-fabricated wall panels filled with straw.

The Bath University Balehaus project site is worth a look.

When will we have access to locally produced building products like this in Australia I wonder ?

Chickens, In season & Zen cooking

Nice post here at Mother Earth News
Stop Putting Off Chickens

In season down in Sydney at the moment (from the Slow Food Sydney newsletter)

  • Strawberries
  • Spinach and watercress
  • Valencia oranges
  • Asparagus

Ethical Eating book reviewed in the Eco Pages of the Sydney Morning Herald

We rented a great DVD – How to Cook Your Life should be very interesting to anyone who still has a yellowing copy of the Tassajara cookbook or bread book as it features Ed Brown who also wrote those books back in the 70′s. Ed has been practising Zen and cooking for over 30 years and the video is full of insights.

Urban Chickens

Eating Locally: Backyard Chickens at Treehugger.com.
Keeping chickens in the urban backyards was commonplace in Australia during the depression and war years and is making a welcome comeback. I wonder how many people are actually able to kill and eat their chickens. I have tried and it takes some getting used to!. Having the chooks for eggs alone is the easier route and very worthwhile as we have posted about before.

More on chicken tractors

Since my post about chickens which mentioned the Linda Woodrow inspired chook dome. I have noticed that people are searching in google for information about chicken tractors. This post provides a few more links to information on this subject.

The Chicken Tractor gallery has over 140 pictures with many different types shown. As the construction skills required are very basic, a good picture will often be enough for you to build your own using materials to hand.

DIY

Chickentractor1

 

 

 

 

 

Commercial Chicken Tractors

(before Permaculture they were generally just known as moveable coops or arks)

General Chook Matters

 

Healing Power of Chooks

This post has been in my mind since I saw a wonderful program ABC TV. The program “Rare Chicken Rescue” has two themes, one is depression and the other is about rescuing rare chicken breeds. Both subjects are interesting however it was the role that keeping chickens played in rescuing Mark Tully from depression that really struck a chord.

When we lived on the North Coast of NSW we kept about 20 odd chickens and 3 ducks. Watching this mob of birds going about their daily activites was a source of endless facination for us. If you slow down and observe with curiosity their individual characters become more apparent. Chickens have an astonishing range of movements and noises when they allowed to follow their natural patterns. I can easily understand how watching the birds can bring someone out of a downward spiral and gradually lead to some relief from symptoms of depression.

As anyone who has allowed chooks to free range around their garden will know, they have an uncanny sense of which beds to head for to disperse carefully mulched delicate plants. Roosters also seem to be able to get over just about any fence and into a vege garden.

One of the experiments we trialled was the use of “Chook Tractors”. This is an idea popularised by Bill Mollison in the Permaculture books. The version we used was a chook dome made of poly pipe and chickenn wire, that was rotated over half a dozen circular vege beds (as described by Linda Woodrow in The Permaculture Home Garden. One additional benefit of the dome was that it was easy to sit next to and watch the chickens go about their business.

Resources

Green Foot – a blog entry describing the building of a chook dome in detail.

Finding Optimism – an award winning blog aimed at helping depression suffers and their helpers, also links to their excellent software package for the Mac that provides an easy way to maintain a daily record of your mental health symptoms and the various triggers that are assoicated with with them.

Organic vs Local

These days we have a reasonable range of organic food available to us locally whether through the supermarket, our local shops and/or box deliveries. However, in common with nearly all modern food, much of it travels substantial distances before it gets to us. In addition it is often out of season for our local environs.

This has created a modern conundrum where shoppers seeking to buy organic must often choose a product with many air and road miles included in its true cost of availability.

From a purity of food perspective the decision is easy, always choose the organic or biodynamic product. But if you are concerned about your carbon debt or eating in season, its sometimes seems that buying locally grown non organic is a better choice.

This dilemma is nicely captured in a cartoon by Mike Adams.

NewImage

The article accompanying the cartoon at www.naturalnews.com is worth reading and goes into some detail to explain the options shown in the cartoon.

Here in Australia we are relatively less affected by this problem than Europe in particular, where a great deal of the fruit and vegetables available seem to have been air freighted from the mediterrean or the US.

The ideal arrangement is to grow some foods yourself (homesteaders may grow nearly all their needs) and also to live near a variety of small farmers who produce the other products that you need. It is then possible to enter into schemes like Community Supported Agriculture where farmers and consumers establish direct trading relationships. The next best thing is a local farmers market, which fortunately are starting to become more common and feature a expanding range of products.

I recently found the web site of the 1466group, two couples who have joined forces to farm biodynamically and to setup a Community Supported Agriculture system on the mid North Coast of NSW. As someone who tried to move away from the city and eventually came back for various reasons, I admire their efforts and wish them every success. Check them out here.

A Very Small Farm

When I considered which of my favourite books to write about for this blog, one of the first to come to mind was William Paul Winchester’s wonderful memoir of life on his 20 acres – A Very Small Farm.

This is a book to pick up over the years and read a few pages, just for the enjoyment of immersing yourself in the manifest simplicity of Winchester’s life. Divided into chapters that are essentialy diary entries, you are drawn into the joy he experiences from being engaged in the world around him. Many entries begin with details of the weather (particularly clouds) and then precede to illustrate his appreciation of the rhythms of life that flow through his farm.

Winchester built his own house, barn, put in a garden and orchard, acquired a milk cow and took up beekeeping. Yet he describes his simple life with a humility that belies these substantial achievements, the size of which will be apparent to those who have taken on a piece of land and made it into their own sanctuary.

This book fits into a cannon of naturalist writing that is often compared to Thoreau’s Walden, and it is for me at least, a book that I turn to with the same anticipation of reward.

It is not a how to book for the “back to the lander”, however there is much in it that will appeal to those readers.

It was published by Council Oak, however they no longer list it on their site, so it may be out of print. Amazon still have copies available.

Another very good publisher of books relevant to this blog is Chelsea Green, I will be reviewing some of their books in future posts.

Slowlane joins Slowfood

This is the first entry of our new blog.

Why blog? It seems to be a way to reach out to a virtual community of people and organisations with similar interests. We’ll see how it goes.

Our latest stimulus to give this a go was joining the Slow Food group (www.slowfood.com).

We have been watching their development with interest and couldn’t agree more with much of the writing and initiatives they sponsor. One of the great foodie journeys in our part of the world is to tour around Victoria’s “gourmet trail”. One of the highlights is a visit to the Milawa Cheese Factory, they make some great cheeses and also have a restaurant that embraces the Slow Food philosophy, serving locally produced foods from around the region. Definitely worth a visit. Anyway when we have been, I usually find copies of the Slow Food magazine scattered about and get drawn into the stories of traditional food and food production from all over the world.

The last words for this entry go to the founder of Slow Food:

It is useless to force the rhythms of life. The art of living is about learning how to give time to each and every thing.

Carlo Petrini, founder of Slow Food