July Fourth Friday – Gettin’ down with carbon

Come to July Fourth Friday for a taste of the latest developments in carbon farming — how responsible agriculture and land management can result in healthier food, safe fiber, renewable fuels, and healthy carbon-rich soil ecosystems.

John Wick, co-founder of the Marin Carbon Project, will share the latest in research, development, and implementation. If you attended June Fourth Friday, you’ll recall that John appeared in Evolution of Organic and shared a few comments after the film.

Many folks have expressed interest in learning more about carbon sequestration practices — what they are, what works, what doesn’t work — so we’ve invited John back for an in-depth session on the important and exciting work of of the Marin Carbon Project.

marin carbon banner

July 22, 7:30pm
Fireside Room, Unitarian Universalist Church of Palo Alto
505 E Charleston, Palo Alto

 

Organic evolution

June Fourth Friday attendees got a sneak peak at a rough cut of the new “Evolution of Organic” film, which follows the organic movement in California from the 1970s to today. The film profiles the early visionaries who integrated love for the soil, health, and culture; the entrepreneurs who expanded the scale and scope of organic; and the new visionaries of today, who are bringing the next generation into organic farming and grazing and expanding into new areas such as carbon sequestration.

Filmmaker Mark Kitchell introduced the film and led a lively discussion and feedback session afterwards.

Mark is working hard to complete the film in time for the Sundance Film Festival in January 2017, and needs funding to help complete the work. He’d greatly appreciate contributions of any amount. You can check out the crowdfunding campaign at https://www.indiegogo.com/projects/evolution-of-organic–3#/

or the film overview page at http://www.documentary.org/film/california-green-fire

Thanks to all who attended, and to Slow Food South Bay for co-sponsoring the evening.

Pix from the evening…

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Getting creative at the Share Faire

There were lots of ways to get creative at the June Share Faire, from exploring common plants to greywater, to old computers, e-magazines, and social media.

Talented and precocious Sanah Ayyar got so inspired by the session on haikus and limericks, that she went home and dashed off some creations of her own. Go Sanah!

Sanah is pretty in pink
Loves to skate in the ice rink
Her fingers are magical
And makes music that’s classical
Let’s explore her power to think

Click for more of Sanah’s creations

Thanks to Joseah Rosales from Greywater Landscape Design for leading a rousing talk on Greywater 101 and inspiring all of us to reuse water at home.

And some pix from the Share Faire:

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Interdependence Day Potluck Picnic!

 Celebrate our country’s birthday and our interdependence – how we thrive when we care about and support each other.  Meet in the Acterra parking lot at 6pm for a potluck picnic. Later, we can walk or bike out to the bay to see the fireworks.

picnic1

Please bring:

  • Food to share with others
  • Your own dishes, eating utensils, and cup

Monday July 4, 6-9:30pm
Behind the Acterra building, 3921 E Bayshore Rd, Palo Alto
RSVP at EventBrite

Not Quite Trash

Black robed Stanford grads strolled by as I met up with Dawn Kwan along with her sister Nicole Kwan and mother Cindy Chow to scout around for discards from the students who are graduating or moving out for the summer. In her previous life as a Stanford student, Dawn advocated for waste reduction on campus. But she remained troubled by all the items that students dumped when moving out, with many items barely used. Hence the idea of a dumpster rescue mission.

Our mission for the day: Hunt around dorm area dumpsters for usable and recyclable items, and bring them to appropriate drop-off sites. As you can see from the slide show, we dove in a big way. The first dorms we visited had already been cleared out, but we ultimately found a couple of locations with discarded items in excellent condition, from storage containers to clothing to household items and more.
–Barbara Weinstein

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Share Faire June 12 – Creative Communications and Gardens

Don’t miss the June Share Faire, June 12, from 1:00 to 3:00 PM, Cubberley Community Center, rooms A6 and A7. 

Starting in June, our Palo Alto Local Garden Share will be rolled into the Share Faire.  Come and share the produce of your garden.  And plan to spend a few minutes with your fellow gardeners brainstorming about the future of our Garden Share.

Here’s the line-up so far for skill shares.

Creative communications

  • Sharing old computers

    Want to be environmentally responsible with your computer use? Help bridge the digital divide? Learn how to fix your computer? Get a working computer for less than $50? Check out the table and presentation by Free Geek enthusiast Bart Anderson.

  • Fun with haikus and limericks
    From the sublime to the humorous, a haiku or limerick is a delightful way to express yourself about almost anything. Come and create your own!

  • Making an e-magazine
  • Social networking 101

Gardening

  • Greywater 101
  • Use of common plants

Plus share and information booths in the hallway.

2016 June Share Faire flyer

Volunteers wanted!  We continue to have great volunteers at our Share Faires.  We’ll be glad to have help setting up and cleaning up, greeting people and managing goods, and more.  Reply to this e-mail if you are interested.

Thanks to Zero Waste Palo Alto for being an event sponsor!  Reduce, Reuse, Recycle, Compost!

Here’s where you’ll find us at Cubberley – in rooms A6 and A7.Cubberley map for Share Faire

June Fourth Friday/Films of Vision and Hope – Evolution of Organic

NOTE special time! Gather at 7pm, film starts promptly at 7:15pm

We’ve got a real treat for you for June Fourth Friday! Join filmmaker Mark Kitchell for a special rough-cut viewing of Evolution of Organic, a new film that’s scheduled for completion this year.  The film is a project of the team that did A Fierce Green Fire, which we showed to an overflow crowd in 2015.

The film will be followed by Q&A and discussion with the filmmaker, who would like feedback to use in the final editing of the film.

evolution of organic

Evolution of Organic brings us the story of organic agriculture, told by those who built the movement. A motley crew of back-to-the-landers, spiritual seekers and farmers’ sons and daughters rejected modern chemical farming and set out to invent organic alternatives. California was the soil where the movement grew – from a small band of rebels on the fringe to a cultural transformation in the way we grow and eat food. By now organic has gone mainstream — bifurcated into an industry oriented toward bringing organic to all people; and a movement that has matured into a sustainable vision of agriculture.

Evolution of Organic is not just a history, but looks forward to exciting and important futures: the next generation of growers who are broadening and deepening organic; what lies “beyond organic” in terms of a healthy planet with healthy food for all living things; Soil Will Save Us, an earth-shaking scenario of carbon farming as a solution to climate change.

Friday June 24, 7:00 gather, film starts promply at 7:15pm – Q&A/discussion follows
Fireside Room, Palo Alto Unitarian Universalist Church
505 E. Charleston Avenue, Palo Alto

Going Local – the Economics of Happiness

The May Fourth Friday screening of Economics of Happiness triggered a thoughtful conversation about the ills of globalization and the alternative vision of localization as a path to a happier, healther, and more resilient society.

To learn more about the work of the people who made the Economics of Happiness film, check out the localfutures.org website.

And if you’re really interested in going deeper, you can download this paper:  Localisation-Essential Steps to an Economics of Happiness.

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Fun at the May Fete Parade

On Saturday May 7, 2016, Transition Palo Alto volunteers got together and tabled at the Palo Alto May Fete and Parade in spite of the impending rain.  It was a great event and many children enjoyed guessing the vegetable hidden in paper bags using only their sense of touch or smell. Others planted seeds; amaranth, fava or pumpkin, in recyclable containers which would otherwise have gone in the trash. Unfortunately things were cut short by a downpour at noon but we’re happy to say that the skies held out long enough for a fun morning and a very heavily attended community event.
–Trina Lynn

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