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KGI Newsletter: April 2006 |
Contents:
Gardening: -Planting asparagus from crowns -Compost: it will make you happy too! -The kitchen garden bug: you know you've got it bad when...
Cooking, recipes, and self-reliance: -Steamed asparagus à la Henry David Thoreau
Food system news and commentary: Whatever:
From KGI's bloggers:
KGI News:
WE DID IT! We met our first ever fundraising goal. Thanks to all those who responded to our call. Calling All Shutterbugs
We've set up a KGI photosharing group at Flickr. If you have digital pictures of yourself, your garden, your dinner or that pesky rodent in your garden who's eating your dinner instead of you, we'd like to see them.
Flickr's a free service and offers another way of connecting with each other.
www.flickr.com
This is a Flickr badge showing photos in a set called
badge photos. Make your own badge
here.
Link Up!
Got a website or a blog? Please consider adding a link or a logo below.
KGI is testing the waters for a group educational trip to Tuscany, Italy in the summer of 2007. We have made contact with a nonprofit group that manages a beautiful Tuscan estate consisting of a fully restored medieval castle surrounded by well-tended vegetable and flower gardens, olive groves, vineyards, pastures and orchards. The Italian nonprofit group rents out rooms in the castle and would help organize a hands-on Italian cooking and gardening educational program for KGI.
We estimate that costs would be approximately $2000 for room and full board for 10 days not including international airfare.
We are not yet taking reservations, but rather are looking to know how many people might be interested. If it seems clear that we could rally a group of at least 10 people, we will take the next steps with the Italian organizers.
Yes, I am interested to know more. Please add my name to your mailing list for this activity. |
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Dear Kitchen Gardener,
Greetings from southern California. Roger invited me into this space on the eve of the day that the world's diverse peoples stop to celebrate their common home. I don't know about you, but Earth Day frightens me. Schoolchildren learn to “save the planet” in umpteen ways, our communities plant trees in inappropriate places regardless of the weather, the media spins the celebratory aspect. Retailers embrace the day by touting “greener” products. Earth Day has become a pre-packaged event, a shopping opportunity. How have we come to this? As a gardener, I feel “Every day is Earth Day.” I worry about the worms and the soil microbes. I try to be careful, to give back: composting, mulching, watering with care rather than to excess, minimizing inputs while hoping to maximize the yield without damaging the fragile soil, the precious groundwater, the environment we live in and depend on every day. In bygone times, before Earth Day was invented, food was directly related to each household’s efforts. Everyone, children included, could see the cause and effect: recycle animal and plant wastes, plow and plant in the spring, hoe endlessly all summer, hope for rain, and with luck, harvest enough to survive another winter. In today’s pre-prepared, instant and fast food world, we’re forgetting that seasonal progression and our immediate, urgent dependency on our natural resources. And our children are losing sight of how we all truly depend on the earth, including how our food grows, and how food can be grown: at home, with love, with care, with respect for the environment.
Another day, different kids, this time planting seeds as an Earth Day project at a nature center. Just for fun, along with the usual veggie seeds, I’d brought an authentic-looking packet labeled “Donut Seeds” (see photo of seeds above..a.k.a. "Cheerios"). This proved irresistible: “Can I really grow donuts?” Truly, they did not understand the joke. I didn’t know whether to laugh or cry. Newly transplanted to Los Angeles, with its famed
freeways and smog, I wonder how many city children ever even see any type
of food being grown? Sure, there are a few community gardens, but they are
small and far between. I did see a pumpkin patch once: they trucked in the
pumpkins and rolled them out on a vacant lot behind a chain link fence.
Now a reluctant apartment dweller, I tend a solitary tomato plant alongside containers of favorite herbs, edible nasturtiums and violets, and a few flowers: my “eye candy” and “soul food.” I grow these in my parking space, next to my car. So I have a renewed appreciation for farmers markets. This sprawling metropolis supports a farmers market somewhere every day of the week! I’m thankful for growers who bring us city dwellers real food – seasonal and fresh from the garden. It takes me back many years to when I drove our vegetables to town two mornings a week. Finally, I understand the true pleasure of the kitchen garden. If only we could teach our children, too. Maybe on Earth Day? Sincerely, Barbara Martin Permalink | Comments | Printer-friendly version
Call for Volunteers:
KGI is looking to get more people involved its work. Please let us know if either of the opportunities interests you by clicking on the link below each one. Be sure to tell us who you are and where you are based. Thanks. Community Organizer Volunteers: In our last member survey, a number of respondents said that they would consider acting as a local organizer. We like to know who and where you are. The work could vary depending on your interests and availability. If you are looking to make a small time commitment, you might consider volunteering to organize an informal garden gathering of friends and neighbors for Kitchen Garden Day. If you are looking for more, we can help give you ideas for organizing a local group of people who would meet on a more regular basis to work on and discuss food and gardening issues. Yes, I think I can help KGI with this.
Computer-technical volunteers: Do you have talents in computer programming and the internet? We're looking for people who can help develop our website into a networking tool so that kitchen gardeners can connect with each other. Some of the ideas we would like to pursue are: 1) creation of moderated discussion forum 2) customized html and java programming so that KGI members can create their own profile page 3) setting up a member/donor database. Yes, I think I can help KGI with this.
Something else: Yes, I have other skills or talents that I'd like to offer to KGI (please specifiy)
Beet Generation Poet
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