October 8, 2006

First day impressions: food security conference

Filed under: Uncategorized, Environment, Sustainability - A Vagrant Ant @ 9:20 am

First day of the youth part of the food security conference just concluded… I’ve been generously sponsored to attend by BLAST (building local agricultural systems today), and I’m slightly blown away, and intimidated at the same time… So many people have done so much in their lives, to create food security within their communities… this one group from the Hopi in arizona…. they were building irrigation… a 1/2 mile long(!!!) trench was dug, 3 feet deep to put piping in!! i was pickaxing an afternoon, and my ass was kicked from that… And this 14 yr old girl who went to attend a UN conference as a delegate?! i’m trying to remember what i was doing at their age… certainly not going to UN conferences…. geez louise! But there are also people who are older than me, and can serve as someone to learn from, so it’s good to have this spectrum… Lots of thoughts, and I haven’t had time to digest all the information properly yet.

lots of really cool people there… it’s funny, because there’s a few from wisconsin, and one actually from right around blue earth, minnesota, and some from the mississippi… so it was cool actually knowing where these kids were coming from, because of my road trip, and all the places I drove past during that time.
I’ve been finding that being surrounded by such positive energy regarding the “food movement” is really inspiring, and really makes me see how something along these lines could provide some sort of livelihood, which is really cool!

Tommorow, all the youth delegates are going to Strathcona Community Garden, and EYA’s gonna put them to work.. haha. naw, we’re just going to let them know what the garden is all about, and share a little bit of my past 6 months with them… :) but i think i hear rain outside… ahhhh… well, i’ll keep my fingers crossed!!

September 29, 2006

Rant on Food…

Filed under: Environment, Rants, Update - A Vagrant Ant @ 9:59 am

Today was a pretty decent day, I guess…
Woke up much later than I wanted… about 12:15 or so in the afternoon? Ugh, I’ve got to stop the stupid habit of going to bed so late… I’ve been trying to figure out what it is exactly that keeps me up late… During the night when I’m on the computer, I have a sense of, “I’ll just finish doing this”, and I’ll just keep doing things until next thing you know, it’ll be like 3 or 4am… just argh.. I dunno what it is… I think I just feel like I really don’t feel like I have anything to wake up for, being unemployed and living at my parents… so I don’t. But it’s fucking annoying, so I’ve decided to set a schedule to instigate some structure into my life. No more of this drifting through the days business.
Anyways, I had driving lessons in the afternoon… Learning stick shift, so that I can free myself from my house.. muhahaha. I’m making some progress… It’s going to just be a matter of practicing, and getting comfortable with it.
Then I went to see a film playing on the vancouver international film festival. Saw Our Daily Bread, which essentially shows you how the food that you eat gets to your plate. A really powerful documentary that shows one of the things that I hate most about our “industrialized” society.
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July 26, 2006

wow…

Filed under: Environment - A Vagrant Ant @ 7:42 am

I got this in a newsletter I receive, and it’s a bit long, but
this is one of the scariest/most depressing things i’ve read in a while, if it’s true, this is one of the scariest/most depressing things i’ve read in a while… eep. woo, global warming.
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June 14, 2006

Hot Button

Filed under: Environment, Sustainability - A Vagrant Ant @ 8:12 am

I’m part of a flickr group for the World Urban Forum, and someone asked what my “hot button” is… the topic that I respond and relate to most strongly, what drives me, and to post one image that indicates my issue.


Oasis in nature in urbanity

My Hot button right now is food, food security, poverty and urban citizens reconnecting with the earth.
People are so disconnected from the planet these days, especially in the city. For many, especially those in poverty, all they ever see is the street… which to me is unfortunate, because I believe that everyone should have the chance to connect with other life forms on this planet… plants, insects, birds, etc… People should also have access to cheap nutritious food. What better way than to grow it yourself? To provide them with the means to do this is to empower someone to make a difference in the world. And in so many ways, local food is sustainable food!
This is one of the plots in the community gardens where I work. An oasis of nature near the Downtown Eastside, one of the poorest neighbourhoods in Canada. Just behind me, just beyond the blackberry bushes is a strip of industrial warehouses.

June 9, 2006

Busy these days…

Filed under: Environment, Sustainability, Update - A Vagrant Ant @ 1:21 am

June’s been pretty crazy so far, and i think it’ll only continue to get crazier…
The World Urban Forum (WUF) will be happening, from June 19-23, and it was established by the United Nations to examine one of the most pressing issues facing the world today: rapid urbanisation and its impact on communities, cities, economies and policies. It is projected that in the next fifty years, two-thirds of humanity will be living in towns and cities. A major challenge is to minimize burgeoning poverty in cities, improve the urban poor’s access to basic facilities such as shelter, clean water and sanitation and achieve environment-friendly, sustainable urban growth and development.”

In many ways, this is basically my academic wet dream… what I want to do as my life’s work! haha, i’m such a nerd. Because of this event, the whole environmental/social justice movement is going a bit crazy, and there’s definitely a flurry of activity going on. Environmental Youth Alliance (EYA, who i work for) is essentially organizing the World Urban Forum for Youth, the youth session for WUF, and they’ve asked me to help do some facilitation with the youth delegates who are coming from all around the world, and will be a chance for young people involved in exciting youth-led projects around the world to meet, share best practices, connect and collaborate with each other, and to learn how to make their voices heard at WUF, which will unarguably have lots of bureaucracy and protocol. So I’m quite flattered that EYA chose me to help them out, seeing as the other facilitators are my coordinators and managers! It’ll be such an amazing experience as well.
The gardening interns are also involved with an art project for the World Youth Forum. We’re going to be creating a mandala, something that is typically used an artistic meditative aid, made of living plants. And it shows that public city art doesn’t have to be made of dead soulless metal, but can be made with organic and living things. All the plants are also edible, and so not only does it have aesthetic value, but it also has functional value as well. It really is hard to explain what it looks like… I’ll be posting pictures as we are completing it, it should be really cool! We’re also helping grow plants for this living park bench installation at the World Urban Forum. It has a pretty similar concept to our project, but is this example of public space that is being used to grow food. And its circular nature emphasizes that it is aligned with the cycle of life, death and decay… There’s a compartment for compost, and then there is a gradation of herbs that shows the growth of a plant, and there are two smaller beds that will have more plants. It is also a terrific example of sustainability. It is designed to function without constant human intervention. It has a rainwater collection mechanism, as well as a irrigation system. And another cool thing is that it is made entirely of reclaimed or recycled materials (nails and glue excluded)
Lastly, I’m volunteering as a research assistant with Thrive! Guide, Vancouver’s guide to sustainable living… It’s going to be a 200 page book of resources to help people live more sustainably. They gave me a 15-20 page section to write, so I need to keep up on that…
Some other events that will be coming up this month include the World Urban Festival, the official UNESCO arts, music and culture event for WUF. The Car free commercial drive festival is also happening, as is BEST’s Bike Month. There’s going to be at least two conferences in the fields of urban planning and architecture, and a Dialogue speaker series that just came to vancouver. In Victoria, there will be Gaining Ground, the Sustainable Urban Development Leadership Summit.
So yeah, definitely a lot of environmental consciousness hitting the mainstream in Vancouver these days. I’ve told a few people that if I wanted to, I could probably attend workshops, seminars and lectures on something environmental essentially any day of the month… You just gotta choose your battles, I guess. But yeah, this has essentailly been my life as of late. Just being inundated with environmentalness… I’m starting to feel a bit of burnout though, like I need to take a break from it, and just chill out.

February 15, 2006

Squamish Captured, Part II

Filed under: Environment, Photography, Places - A Vagrant Ant @ 10:00 am

Just because this is honestly one of the most beautiful places in the world, I’m posting another set of photos from my hike last week. There’s just something so majestic about this landscape, the way all the trees stand so proud and tall. But it’s not just the trees. All you have to do is look down, and even the rocks will have life growing on them!

Alright, let’s get onto some pictures, but before that, if you haven’t yet, do this NOW!
It’s a little test personality awareness. It’d be great if you followed the link and did the test. click 6 buttons, easy peezy! Yay for self-discovery!

alright picture time!


It’s like a carpet of mossy goodness!


Me frozen in the air. So silly…

6 more photos to see
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February 9, 2006

Oh, my legs…

Filed under: Environment, Update - A Vagrant Ant @ 10:10 am

My legs are burning… I really gave them a workout today…
Went up the the Stawamus Chief in Squamish yesterday, with Joyee and Elise, and it was just the most perfect day for it… Bright blue skies, and the sun was shining on the land. It definitely felt like the earth was in some sort of rebirth. All the snow and ice was melting, the trees shaking off their long winter slumber, shaking off the boughs of accumulated grey-green lichen. Some of the shrubs were starting to bud, as if sensing the fertility in the air… You can just feel the power of nature, as if alive, as it plays out the endless cycles of death and rebirth. Nature slowly turning on the switch to let the world know it’s time to live again, after the long winter.
I woke up that morning, not feeling up to hiking at ALL… but I knew that if i didn’t go, I would definitely regret it, as I would probably just spend my day at the computer job hunting.
I’ll admit that at certain times, I was just about to throw in the towel, like when I saw the chains bolted to the rock, and realized that I would have to grab the chain and basically pull my way up that slippery rock slope. And it was when I grabbed camera, and let my lens cap slip out of my hands that I knew I just had to go on… I watched it hit the rock slope, bounce once, and start to roll faster and faster until it disappeared from my view.



Honestly if you lose your lens cap to your camera, you can’t just give up… you’ve gotta put the pedal to the metal and make sure you have something to show for it…

It was spectacular up there at the top of Second Peak. All you could see was the snow-capped mountains surrounding you, the marauding clouds cresting on the mountain ridge, and the brown square shades of civilization far below.

And on the drive back, was the stunning view of the mountains, layered in fading shades of coniferous island forests, a landscape carved by the glacial forces of long ago. The smell of temperate rainforests crisp and fresh, permeating the inner sanctums of my being.

It’s experiences like this that really makes you feel alive, and make you want to fight to keep this beauty alive in the world, and let the rhythm of nature run its course.

November 13, 2005

Article: Another World Is Here: Knowing Nature Through Technology, Part II

Filed under: Technology, Environment, Science - A Vagrant Ant @ 2:58 am

WorldChanging: Another World Is Here: Knowing Nature Through Technology, Part II

The idea of wiring the planet offends some people’s sensibilities. To some, it betokens a lack of reverance for wild nature. Some even seem to think that knowing more about nature is somehow transgressive. It seems to me that the opposite is true, that destroying things in ignorance is profoundly worse, and that anyone whose sympathy with nature is based on nature’s unknowable-ness has housed their faith in a home of straw, and the wind is picking up.

It is not at all difficult to imagine the day when the entire planet is, to varying degrees, a smart place. When salmon runs and rainforests and the atmosphere itself speak to us, in a sense, through our instruments.

But will we know what to listen for? That strikes me as a whole different question. Science, despite its aspirations to the contrary, is a cultural endeavor. Data are never value-free. How might we develop a culture of planetary science that is most inclined to make wise choices, choices which can then best inform our societal choices about how to best act to preserve, protect, restore and recreate natural systems?

Basically, these people want to hook up real life places with sensors to monitor the environment,so that they’ll be able to better manage and monitor it.
In a way, this technology scares me quite a bit, in terms of what it’s capable of, and to a certain extent, I DO feel like humans are acting irreverently, as if they own the planet. But at the same time, humans have SUCH an impact on the world, and really, they do need to act as stewards of this place we call Earth…

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