South Bay Art of Hosting

A new South Bay Art of Hosting group has formed, as  a follow up to the Art of Hosting conference in  Petaluma  this month, sponsored by Transition US. If you’re interested in participatory leadership, check out the South Bay Art of Hosting Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/SouthBayArtOfHosting

Here are some pix from the picnic the group held at Full Circle Farm in Sunnyvale June 23.

June Fourth Friday – Summer Potluck Picnic

Help welcome summertime at the June Fourth Friday!picnic

We’ll share summer picnic fair, what’s been happening in our local community, and what’s coming up.

Plus music and more!

Please bring:

  • Food and drink to share with several others
  • Plate, silverware, cup, napkin for yourself
  • A camp or lawn chair
  • Games, musical instruments (optional)
  • We could also use a few extra folding tables, if you have one

Families and friends are welcome!!

Peers Park, Park Blvd, Palo Alto?Friday June 28, 5:30-8:30pm (map)

The Art of Hosting

What kind of leadership helps build resilient communities and create change? Transitioners and others from around Northern California met to explore that question at the Art of Hosting conference in Petaluma June 8-10. Hosted by Transition US, the conference drew 60 activists and professionals from Transition, permaculture, education, health care, youth action, and other disciplines.

The art of hosting is a set of ideas and methods for leadership in the face of challenges that are truly complex. When you’re tackling a problem like coming together on climate change or building resilient communities, a hierarchical leadership model just doesn’t work. Instead, leaders and facilitators need to “host” the stakeholders, inviting them to the conversation and establishing the right conditions for full participation.

Victoria Armigo, William Mutch, Barbara Weinstein, Eitan Fenson, and Alice Gardner all attended the conference. If you’d like to learn more, contact any of us, or check out http://www.artofhosting.org/.

Films of Vision and Hope – Shift Change

shiftchange

Shift Change tells the little known stories of employee owned businesses that compete successfully in today’s economy while providing secure, dignified jobs in democratic workplaces.

With the long decline in US manufacturing and today’s economic crisis, millions have been thrown out of work, and many are losing their homes.

The usual economic solutions are not working, so some citizens and public officials are ready to think outside of the box, to reinvent our failing economy in order to restore long term community stability and a more egalitarian way of life.

Friday, June 14, 2013
7:30 – 9:30 Film and Discussion
World Centric, 2121 Staunton Ct, Palo Alto CA 94306 (map)

May Fourth Friday: Essential Knowledge for Transition with Marco Vangelisti – Part II

Marco

For May Fourth Friday, Marco Vangelisti, who’s been a major force in the Bay Area Slow Money movement, will give the second in his three-part series on Essential Knowledge for Transition. Come whether or not you were able to catch the first part!

From Marco:

In the face of increasing economic instability, building a resilient, enduring and equitable local economy is vital. To achieve this, we need to understand the current economic system, how it affects our communities and ways to transform it. 

At the May Fourth Friday, Marco will help us understand the current economic crisis in its historical context, how we dealt with the last major crisis in the 1930s and how we are (counter productively) dealing with it now. He’ll also explain the economic system and alternative ways of structuring it so that it democratizes and localizes economic activity and anchors wealth and capital formation in our community.

Marco’s a knowledgeable and engaging speaker – you’ll learn and enjoy doing so!

Friday May 24, World Centric, 2121 Staunton Ct, Palo Alto, 7:30pm 7:00p – 7:15pm: Welcome to Transition (for newcomers) 7:30p: Program World Centric, 2121 Staunton Court, Palo Alto Sponsored by Transition Palo Alto, Transition Silicon Valley, and World Centric

Two-Day Introduction to Suburban Permaculture

Saturday & Sunday, April 13 & 14, 2013
Common Ground Organic Garden Supply & Education Center
10:30 – 4:00+
$150
Register online

Learn how to create a sustainable future in your suburban backyard and beyond. A central theme in Permaculture is the design of regenerative and ecological landscapes that produce food. Emphasis is placed on multi-use plants, cultural practices such as sheet mulching and trellising, and the integration of animals to recycle nutrients and graze “weeds.” Permaculture entails more than just food production. Energy-efficient buildings, waste-water treatment, and land stewardship in general are other important components of Permaculture. Design concepts are applicable to urban, suburban, and rural settings, and are appropriate for single households as well as whole farms and villages. In this 2-day course you will learn the ethics, principles and holistic design process practiced in Permaculture. Plus, participants will take part in hands-on Permaculture projects at local sites to put theory into practice.

Drew is an edible-garden and Permaculture consultant, the manager of Jesse Cool’s Seeds of Change Garden and the former Common Ground Garden Manager. Susan is a suburban Permaculturalist who enjoys cultivating her own backyard mini-farm. She is also an avid compost tea brewer whose passion is creating biologically active soil.

April Fourth Friday – Behind the Kitchen Door with Saru Jayaraman

For all who are interested in sustainable food systems, don’t miss the April Fourth Friday.
Friday April 26, World Centric, 2121 Staunton Ct, Palo Alto, 7:30pm
7:30p: Program
Come at 7pm for “Introduction to Transition”Saru Jayaraman

How do restaurant workers live on some of the lowest wages in America? And how do poor working conditions–discrimination, exploitation, and unsanitary kitchens–affect the meals that arrive at our restaurant tables?

In Behind the Kitchen Door, Saru Jayaraman sets out to answer these questions by following the lives of restaurant workers in nine major cities.

Click here for the flyer with more information: Behind the Kitchen Door

Drops in the Bucket – Spring showers on a sunny day

Conductor, scrapophonist, and water lover Herb Moore lead more than 20 intrepid rain orchestra musicians in a simulated spring rain storm at Heritage Park in Palo Alto on Friday March 23.

For more on the rain orchestra idea, see this Palo Alto weekly article: http://www.paloaltoonline.com/news/show_story.php?id=28997

And here are some photos. A fine time was had by all.

Herb plans to continue finding creative ways to bring people together – stay tuned!

Food swap – cooking and sharing

Connie Kwan wants to set up a food swap. She writes:

Is anyone interested in setting up a food swap? 

Basically involves cooking up a large batch of one recipe.  Then bringing it to the swap and exchanging for variety.  For the time invested in one dish, you get to enjoy a variety throughout the week.  Does anyone do this now?  And are folks interested? 

If you’re interested, please post a comment or send email to transitionpaloalto@yahoogroups.com

March Fourth Friday – Blue Vinyl, a “Toxic” Comedy

With humor, chutzpah and a piece of vinyl siding firmly in hand, Peabody Award-Blue vinylwinning filmmaker Judith Helfand and co-director and award-winning cinematographer Daniel B. Gold set out in search of the truth about polyvinyl chloride (PVC), America’s most popular plastic. From Long Island to Louisiana to Italy, they unearth the facts about PVC and its effects on human health and the environment.

Back at the starter ranch, Helfand coaxes her terribly patient parents into replacing their vinyl siding on the condition that she can find a healthy, affordable alternative (and it has to look good!).

A detective story, an eco-activism doc, and a rollicking comedy, BLUE VINYL puts a human face on the dangers posed by PVC at every stage of its life cycle, from factory to incinerator. Consumer consciousness and the “precautionary principle” have never been this much fun.

(Summary from the Bulldog Films website).

7:00p – 7:15p:   Transition for Newcomers
7:30p:  Program

Friday March 22, World Centric, 2121 Staunton Ct, Palo Alto