Interesting infographic here - the power of buying local
Buy Local Infographic | visualizing.org
The Solihull Transitioneer
A few of us are working to establish a Transition Town group in Solihull. This is a personal blog about what we are doing, about transitioning generally and what it might mean for Solihull as a town and community.
Tuesday 27 December 2011
A Deliciously Resourceful Town Aims For Total Food Self-Sufficiency in 7 Years | Wake Up World
Great to see Todmorden's ambition. Possible in Solihull?
A Deliciously Resourceful Town Aims For Total Food Self-Sufficiency in 7 Years | Wake Up World:
'via Blog this'
A Deliciously Resourceful Town Aims For Total Food Self-Sufficiency in 7 Years | Wake Up World:
'via Blog this'
Tuesday 14 June 2011
And this is why Transition is important
Great animation about the rise and fall of fossil fuels - and what we should be doing to plan for the future. French subtitles too!
Tuesday 7 June 2011
Get composting!
The Council's offering subsidised composters and water butts - details here:
http://www.solihull.getcomposting.com/
http://www.solihull.getcomposting.com/
Monday 6 June 2011
Glad of these times?
I came across this poem by Helen Dunmore recently. I think it holds some important messages for anyone involved in Transition.
We are (at least I am, and I'm guessing I'm not alone) promoting Transition because we see that, in the future, the reduction in oil (and the need to reduce carbon emissions) means we will have to change and the change you choose is always more palatable than the change that is forced on you.
Of course Transition is just one response to the threat and, if I am honest I am also involved because transition because I love the notion of local resilience; of relearning crafts and skills; of wildfires and woodland, food in fields, home baked bread, the gentle chuck of hens in the garden.
Helen Dunmore's paean to:
'tyre music, speed
annulling the peasant graves
of all my ancestors'
is a challenge to all that is unrealistic and misty eye'd about this as well as a reminder of all we have gained through science and technology. It's not negligible. It has been liberating in all sorts of ways and some of it may be hard to sustain through the changes that will come.
Do we take enough account of this? Do we take enough account of the allegiance we feel to the quality of life and freedoms progress and cheap energy have brought us? Anyway, here's the poem:
Glad of these times
Driving along the motorway
swerving the packed lanes
I am glad of these times.
Because I did not die in childbirth
because my children will survive me
I am glad of these times.
I am not hungry, I do not curtsey,
I lock my door with my own key
and I am glad of these times,
glad of central heating and cable TV
glad of email and keyhole surgery
glad of power showers and washing machines,
gals of polio inoculations
glad of three weeks paid holiday
glad of smart cards and cash-back,
glad of twenty types of yoghurt
glad of cheap flights to Prague
glad that I work.
I do not breathe pure air or walk green lanes
see darkness, hear silence,
make music, tell stories,
tend the dead in their dying
tend the newborn in their birthing,
tend the fire in it's breathing,
but I am glad of my times,
these times, the age
we feel in our bones, our rage
of tyre music, speed
annulling the peasant graves
of all my ancestors,
glad of my hands on the wheel
and the cloud of grit as it rises
where JCBs move motherly
widening the packed motorway.
Helen Dunmore
It's a great poem.
We are (at least I am, and I'm guessing I'm not alone) promoting Transition because we see that, in the future, the reduction in oil (and the need to reduce carbon emissions) means we will have to change and the change you choose is always more palatable than the change that is forced on you.
Of course Transition is just one response to the threat and, if I am honest I am also involved because transition because I love the notion of local resilience; of relearning crafts and skills; of wildfires and woodland, food in fields, home baked bread, the gentle chuck of hens in the garden.
Helen Dunmore's paean to:
'tyre music, speed
annulling the peasant graves
of all my ancestors'
is a challenge to all that is unrealistic and misty eye'd about this as well as a reminder of all we have gained through science and technology. It's not negligible. It has been liberating in all sorts of ways and some of it may be hard to sustain through the changes that will come.
Do we take enough account of this? Do we take enough account of the allegiance we feel to the quality of life and freedoms progress and cheap energy have brought us? Anyway, here's the poem:
Glad of these times
Driving along the motorway
swerving the packed lanes
I am glad of these times.
Because I did not die in childbirth
because my children will survive me
I am glad of these times.
I am not hungry, I do not curtsey,
I lock my door with my own key
and I am glad of these times,
glad of central heating and cable TV
glad of email and keyhole surgery
glad of power showers and washing machines,
gals of polio inoculations
glad of three weeks paid holiday
glad of smart cards and cash-back,
glad of twenty types of yoghurt
glad of cheap flights to Prague
glad that I work.
I do not breathe pure air or walk green lanes
see darkness, hear silence,
make music, tell stories,
tend the dead in their dying
tend the newborn in their birthing,
tend the fire in it's breathing,
but I am glad of my times,
these times, the age
we feel in our bones, our rage
of tyre music, speed
annulling the peasant graves
of all my ancestors,
glad of my hands on the wheel
and the cloud of grit as it rises
where JCBs move motherly
widening the packed motorway.
Helen Dunmore
It's a great poem.
Sunday 5 June 2011
The Benefits of Procuring School Meals through the Food for Life Partnership
Nef (always worth watching) has produced a valuable report about the benefits of local and sustainable approaches to the provision of school meals. Headline findings include:
Wonder what the policy is in Solihull? The report can be found here.
In Nottinghamshire, spending for school meals locally within an FFLP framework is calculated to generate over £5 million in value each year. The share of ingredient spend on seasonal, local produce has risen dramatically, by a nominal £1.65 million per year, returning £3.11 in social, economic and environmental value for every £1 spent.
In Plymouth, the change in spending on seasonal, local produce is valued at £384,000 per year as a result of adopting FFLP practices. This spending into the local economy is found to generate £1.2 million of value per year, a return of £3.04 for every £1 spent.
It is important to highlight that this study represents only a partial analysis. It does not take account of any of the health, educational or cultural benefits of a whole school approach to food which are the primary objectives of FFLP. Adding these benefits would result in a substantially larger positive return to investment. Separate from our main outcomes model, we looked at the multiplier effect from procuring a higher share of ingredients for school meals from the local economy. Comparing current spending and re-spending in Nottinghamshire now and prior to a focus on procuring locally and seasonally shows that the total amount of money circulating in the local economy from this source has increased substantially, from £181,418 in 2004 to £3,826,688 currently.
Monday 23 May 2011
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