Wooly Thyme [pic] http://ff.im/4Qlrj
All posts by Robert
Oh Snap! Peas [pic] http://ff….
Oh Snap! Peas [pic] http://ff.im/4PWzv
Hovercraft [pic] http://ff.im/…
Hovercraft [pic] http://ff.im/4OYqL
Madsu on the Hook [pic] http:/…
Madsu on the Hook [pic] http://ff.im/4OHDI
Moonlit Night in the Anchorage…
Moonlit Night in the Anchorage [pic] http://ff.im/4Ou5G
Off grid * sails up * i smell …
Off grid * sails up * i smell saltwater
RT @jamesglave: RT @ecoshed Co…
RT @jamesglave: RT @ecoshed Could your favorite locavore do with an island getaway? Our tayberries and raspberries are peaking! (Please RT!)
Hey you Torontonians watching …
Hey you Torontonians watching your pennies! Look –> RT @jasonkrogh: Anyone want a 19″ Lacie CRT monitor? Yours for a six-pack!
RT @YukaYoneda: Who says solar…
RT @YukaYoneda: Who says solar panels have to be boring? Check out these fluttering SOLAR IVY LEAVES!!! http://bit.ly/2k678l
Robins aren’t impressed. Twitt…
Robins aren’t impressed. Twitter aims to copyright the word “tweet”. via Blog Herald http://bit.ly/dRyzw
Coastal Renaissance [pic] http…
Coastal Renaissance [pic] http://ff.im/4HjDv
Happy Canada Day [pic] http://…
Happy Canada Day [pic] http://ff.im/4GWnx
Dock’s Eye View [pic] http://f…
Dock’s Eye View [pic] http://ff.im/4EGLo
Question. Why is the Vancouve…
Question. Why is the Vancouver Sun cold-calling me with a ‘promotion’ when I’m on the do not call list. Huh ? Why ?
Eating fresh spinach and green…
Eating fresh spinach and greens from outside my kitchen door. Organic too. Add a little olive oil and some feta cheese – prep time 1 min.
Podcast – Urban Agriculture
I’ve started producing a series of podcasts about Urban Agriculture, hosted by Spring Gillard and David Tracey. The series will run on Spring’s website, CompostDiaries.com, as well as on VanGoGreen.
We recorded the first in the series on Tuesday at the YWCA downtown’s roof garden. It’s an interesting project, and all the food grown in the garden is taken to a women’s group on the downtown east side. You can read more about the rooftop garden / food project on the Y’s website.
Ted Cathcart runs the project, and he was kind enough to spend an hour with us explaining the project and discussing the challenges.
The podcast runs just over 18 minutes.
podcast and photo © Bigsnit Media Consulting Inc.
podcast ISBN 978-0-9809054-9-6
Mehret Mandefro appointed White House Fellow
Dr. Mendefro, who I did a podcast with recently for the Plan Institute, has just been appointed a White House Fellow. Details here.
Dr. Mehret Mandefro Podcast
The PLAN Institute and BC Women’s Hospital recently asked me to record a podcast with Dr. Mehret Mandefro.
She’s an HIV/AIDS educator and activist who’s also the subject of an incredibly moving documentary called All of Us. Dr. Mandefro is the founding director of Truth Aids
You can find out more about her on her website.
In the podcast I think you’ll get a real sense of her inspiration and drive to make a difference – she’s got an incredibly dynamic personality and at the same time, is very down to earth and realistic about the challenges of health education.
It’s on the Plan Institute website here – you have to register on their site first in order to get it.
Or you can also listen to it here:
Thanks to Emily Apt of Pureland Pictures for permission to use clips from the film, All of Us .
Some shocking data (courtesy TruthAids website):
- For African American women ages 15 to 24, AIDS has been the leading cause of death for almost 10 years.
- HIV is the leading cause of death for African American men ages 35-44 (NCHS,2002)
- African American men are disproportionately affected by the HIV epidemic: AIDS diagnosis rate among African American was almost 11 times the rate among whites
** UPDATE **
Dr. Mandefro has just been appointed a White House Fellow. Details here
Always the Compost Lady
Author Spring Gillard has launched her new website with a funny article called Compost At Sea .
… just the other day a friend called to find out what she should do with her compost while at sea with her husband. A few days into the trip, she might also be asking what to do with her husband while at sea with her compost. Coincidentally, the two situations could be resolved in much the same way
It’s great to see her bringing her wit and wisdom to the internet.
She’s well known in British Columbia for her work with City Farmer and her book Diary of a Compost Hotline Operator, Edible Essays on City Farming.
She told me she’ll soon be selling the book online from the website, so check back soon – it’s entertaining and informative.
How Big is a Big Yacht? This Big
Archimedes is apparently one of the 100 largest motor yachts in the world, #75 according to this website.
She was anchored in Mannion Bay, on Bowen Island, late this afternoon. I saw her pull in so I sailed over to get a couple of shots. Note the swimming pool on the upper aft deck. Nice touch.
The yacht has beautiful lines. And she’s big alright. Over 222 feet, and sports two, 2-thousand horsepower Caterpillar engines.
I wonder if they were heading over to the Eco-Shed ?
(cross posted to Madsu.ca)
Hey Kids, Let’s Have Some Recession Fun
When I was growing up, about the same age as my kids are now, I can recall my parents talking about the great depression. ( I actually thought they meant it was, you know, Great ! )
They got through it, but never forgot it.
It coloured their approach to work, spending, savings, credit and risk taking.
Our family lived with 2 golden rules:
- Don’t Spend Money You Don’t Have
- Don’t Buy It If You Can Make It (And 2.a, if it looks like you should be able to make it, learn how)
My father literally made my first 2 wheeler, welding pieces of derelict bikes together, then painting it up and presenting it to me for my birthday. I was the only kid in Grade 2 with a peddle bike that weighed more than I did, and that once underway, could go for blocks on its own momentum. My mom sewed a lot of our clothes, and taking a tip from her mother-in-law, wrapped my lunch sandwiches in the wax paper ‘bag’ from inside the cereal box.
Growing up in the sixties, I couldn’t understand their hesitancy to get the latest and greatest on offer all around us. Even when I finished high-school in 1974 and left home to take a job in another town, my parents still had a black & white TV. “It works – it’s paid for”. To this day, they don’t have voice mail. “Why pay 3 bucks a month ? If it’s so important, they’ll call back”.
It was easy to misconstrue all this as just being cheap. Surrounded by the relative wealth of your average Canadian town in the 60’s, I really couldn’t understand how they could be so stuck in the 30’s. The great! depression – get over it !
The events of the last 8 months have made it painfully clear to me why my parents understood ‘credit’ to really mean ‘debt’, and why they remained vigilant so as never to be caught out again by catostrophic economic events.
The thing is, as a family, we actually had a lot of fun with very little. While I was terribly envious of my pals at school who had summer cottages and power boats and seemingly endless supplies of pop and Old Dutch potato chips, I spent tons of time at the beach with my family.
We’d drive down to Clear Lake or Lake Dauphin for the day, and my mom would haul out her plastic bins filled with home made munchies and Kool-Aid. I can’t recall once eating in a restaurant or even at a concession stand. What I do recall are endless days of playing in the water or on the big lawn by the beach in Wasagaming in Riding Mountain National Park. My dad would haul out a rickety old badminton net and we’d play barefoot for hours.
We didn’t get to curl up in front of a fire at the cabin, but instead would pile back into the Chevy for the drive home. My dad would always find some bizarre back-roads route home to keep things interesting, and evenings were spent playing card games together at the kitchen table.
40 years later, I find myself out in the front yard, setting up a rickety badminton set. My kids, weaned on PSP’s, Gameboy and Wii, are dragging me out to play with them almost every night after dinner.
This evening, we played a new card game together called Word Frenzy that costs half what we’d have to pay to go to a movie, and it had us in stitches for hours. I’ve been told, in no uncertain terms, that we’re playing again tomorrow.
We’re finding that doing with less doesn’t mean DOING less.
In fact, I’m thinking this recession is turning out to be pretty good fun.
And I’m thinking my parents were right all along.
Now if I could only convince them to get voice mail I could call and tell them so.