Pages

Showing posts with label building resilience. Show all posts
Showing posts with label building resilience. Show all posts

Monday, January 6, 2020

Introducing Apis: natural beekeeping group

Introducing Apis, the newest member of the HRN family - a free informal community group whose aim is to encourage people to learn more about European honey bees and how to care for them.




Natural beekeeping is a bee-first approach that prioritises the health of bees, allowing them to build natural honey comb. The result is happy, immune-robust bees and delicious raw honey that is harvested only when sufficient honey is available.

Rather than focussing on taking from the bees, natural beekeeping is equally about giving back, where bees are given the freedom to:

  • construct natural comb,
  • determine their own cell size, population mix, colony size, 
  • rear their own queens and drones, and
  • swarm

Are you as excited about this as we are?! To kick things off Apis is hosting a potluck dinner and short film night where we will decide where and how often we will meet, and what natural beekeeping methods we'd like to focus on.

The details of the dinner are:

Friday February 7
6.30pm – 9pm
6 Tierneys Lane, Daylesford
No need to RSVP, just come along

BYO dish to share for dinner (with as many local ingredients as possible) plus a plate & cutlery. Please note this is a waste free event so no single use plastic please.

You do not need to have any prior bee-keeping experience or knowledge. If you are thinking about keeping bees, or are simply fascinated by these magical, mythical creatures please come along.

Hope you can bee there!

Tuesday, October 9, 2018

Land for life

HRN, in conjunction with Eva Perroni and Future Feeders, is proud to present LAND FOR LIFE.

Land for Life is the second in a series of talks based on land, economy, indigeneity and social ecology. The first event was Land Cultures: Aboriginal economies and permaculture futures.



About the speakers
Rebecca Phillips is a proud Pangerang and Djaara woman. She believes the preservation and revival of her cultures is important to uphold what her ancestors paved the way for and what we must build on for future generations. Bec was an active and valued member on the Dja Dja Wurrung Negotiation Team, negotiating a Recognition Settlement Agreement with the State of Victoria and her People. She currently sits on the Dhelkunya Dja (Healing land) Land Management Board, setting the direction for the Management of the 6 Parks and reserves to be jointly managed by the State Government and Dja Dja Wurrung Clans Aboriginal Corporation. Bec has been involved in the revival of her traditional language (Dja Dja Wurrung), through Djalli Bunjil (Language Knowledge) and is reviving traditional and modern day, songs and dances.

As the permaculture co-originator, David Holmgren is a leading thinker, writer and teacher on how societies and communities can become more resilient with a lower impact on the planet. Together with his partner Su Dennett, David lives and works at Melliodora, in Hepburn, one of Australia’s best-known permaculture demonstration sites.

David has spent a lifetime developing a sustainable and fulfilling way of living. His latest book, RetroSuburbia, shows how Australian suburbs can be transformed to become productive and resilient in an energy decent future. It focuses on what can be done by an individual at the household level.

Eric Holt-Giménez is an agroecologist, political economist, lecturer and author. As the current Executive Director of Food First, Eric’s work informs and amplifies the voices of social movements fighting for food justice and sovereignty across the globe. Food First’s frontline publishing approach brings researchers, writers, and social movements together in a collective effort to amplify the voices of frontline communities fighting for food systems transformation. Food First generates research and education for action, bringing the perspective of community-based struggles to broader development and policy debates.

In his latest book, A Foodie's Guide to Capitalism, Holt-Giménez asserts that the food system cannot be transformed without addressing the economic system of capitalism. Using the wide-angle lens of political economy, Holt-Giménez delves into the economic and political context of the current corporate food regime, exploring the commoditisation of food and land as well as issues of power, privilege, and exploitation across the food chain.

About the MC

 

Eva Perroni is an Australian-based researcher and writer reporting on the frontline of food and farming issues. Her expertise lies in telling stories that delve into the hidden fabric of our food system: exploring the ways food is produced, distributed, exchanged and consumed and its impacts on the environment, global health, communities and culture.

Eva is committed to food justice and promoting solutions that pave the way for ecologically sustainable and socially just societies, and is an advocate for life-enhancing farming methods and amplifying the voices of community-based movements and organizations working to effect change in the food system.


The event will include an update from Tammi Jonas, the President of the Australian Food Sovereignty Alliance (AFSA).

Former vegetarian academic Tammi Jonas is now the meatsmith at Jonai Farms, where she and her family raise pastured rare-breed pigs and cattle, transforming whole carcasses into a range of fresh cuts, smallgoods, charcuterie and salumi in their on-farm butcher’s shop.

Together with AFSA, Tammi is working towards everyone’s right to nutritious and culturally-appropriate food grown and distributed in ethical and ecologically sound ways, and our right to collectively determine our own food and agriculture systems.

Tickets

Tickets for Land for Life are $5 and available at the door only. Please bring a plate of supper to share.

This exciting event is a fundraiser for Food First.

Wednesday, August 15, 2018

Repair, don't despair!!

Hi everybody, there are two meetings scheduled for Thursday August 16 (sorry for the late notice!) to get the ball rolling on setting up a Daylesford Repair Café. How exciting!

The meeting times are:

  • 1.00pm - 2.30pm at the Daylesford Neighbourhood Centre and 
  • 6.30pm - 7.30pm at the Senior Citizens Room
We all have things that need repairing. How wonderful it will be to have an active space to share skills and tools and materials.



Friday, August 3, 2018

Eating the Earth: why the food movement is unstoppable

Industrial food production and farming are key drivers of environmental destruction, from rainforests to reefs, and water supplies to climate change. Charles Massy, Tammi Jonas and Dr Jonathan Latham discuss how regenerative agriculture can turn Australia's economies around and revitalise rural communities. Refreshments included in the ticket price.


SPEAKERS

Tammi Jonas is resident meatsmith at Jonai Farms, where she and her family of ethicurean farmers raise pastured rare-breed pigs and cattle. Jonai Farms is engaged in the solidarity economy of community supported agriculture-CSA, feeding 80 member households each month. Tammi is president of the Australian Food Sovereignty Alliance, where she advocates for ethical and ecological farming, and everybody's right to determine food systems. She is also chair of the AFSA Legal Defence Fund, which supports farmers dealing with inappropriate regulation and planning. Tammi has been writing about food culture since 2006 at her blog, Tammi Jonas: Food Ethics, and has been widely published in both academic and general texts.

Charles Massy is an author and farmer with a focus on transformative and regenerative agriculture. His latest book, Call of the Reed Warbler, challenges the way we farm and grow food, and puts a lens on the vital connection between soil and our health. Using his personal experience as a touchstone ~ from an unknowing, chemical-driven farmer with dead soils, to a radical ecologist carefully reviving a 2000 hectare property back to biological health ~ Dr Massy tells the real story behind industrial agriculture and the profit-obsessed global corporations driving it. And in a brilliant series of narratives he shows how innovative farmers are finding new and profitable ways, and returning the earth to health.
 
Dr Jonathan Latham is an international food advocate and crop scientist based in New York. He is executive director of the Bioscience Resource Project, and editor of Independent Science News. The Project’s peer reviewed biosafety papers provide critical analysis of new technologies in the public interest. He is also the director of the Poison Papers, which reveals extraordinary collusion between governments and polluters. Dr Latham is author of scientific papers in diverse fields including virology, ecology, genetics and molecular biology. He is a biologist and biopolitical theorist, and talks frequently at scientific and regulatory conferences. He has written for Truthout, Salon, MIT Technology Review, Resilience and the Guardian.

Tickets here.

* * *

In case you missed the memo, there will be no Culture Club this month (tomorrow), but please join us in September where special guest Nicole Azzopardi will be joining us to discuss her new book, The Alchemy Cookbook.

Thursday, September 7, 2017

Cheesemaking workshop wrap up

A HUGE cheesy thank you to Kirsten, Nikki + Rosie for so generously sharing their knowledge, time + cheese with us. Thank you to Alison for the scrumptious bread, to Alex and Mara for welcoming everyone who came along on the day, and again to Mara, for taking these photos that so beautifully preserve the nourishing spirit of the day.



























Wednesday, September 6, 2017

Beeswax wrap workshop

Wrap sandwiches, half an avo, fresh bread, fruit, veggies or cheese.
Cover a bowl, or pack a snack for your kids' lunch boxes.
Beeswax wraps are easy to make, washable, reusable and even compostable.
Plastic? No thanks!

Whether you'd like to use wax wraps or you do already, please join us for this very exciting workshop presented by HRN in conjunction with Plastic Bag Free Daylesford.

Plastic Bag Free Daylesford's raison d'etre is to end the distribution of single use plastic bags in Daylesford. They are a large community of contributors who quietly go about sewing bags, building Boomerang Bag boxes, and strategising ways to help make our town a better place to live.

The ever talented Dora Berenyi will be teaching us how to make the beeswax wraps. Please bring your own 100% cotton fabric to use on the day and everything else will be provided.

Dora is presenting the same workshop twice on September 30th - yes, grand final day!
The first is from 10am - 11am and the second from 11am - 12pm.

Places are limited and bookings are essential. When you email to book your place please write in the subject line whether you'd like to come along to the first or second workshop.


Need some convincing as to why we should be using less plastic? Take it away, Charlie!!
(If you are reading this in your email, you will need to click through to the blog to watch the video.)

Thursday, January 19, 2017

Community Pickling Day

Come and get your pickle on at Culture Club's inaugural Community Pickling Day on Saturday February 4.

We have partnered with Glenlyon's Adsum Farmhouse who are growing gherkins especially for the day. So if you don't have your own homegrown cucumbers to bring along, you can pre-order Adsum Farm organic gherkins which will be freshly picked on the morning of the pickling day:

$6 per kilo
$20 for 4 kilos

Pls email your order to daylesfordcultureclub@gmail.com by Saturday January 28 and pay on the day.

Things to bring along:
  • exact change if you've ordered Adsum Farm gherkins
  • as many clean jars + lids as you'll need for your pickles
  • salt, garlic cloves, black peppercorns, bay leaves, fresh dill or dill seeds, mustard seeds, leaves containing tannin (grape, cherry, oak, horseradish, green or black tea)


Looking forward to seeing you there!

* * *

We have just updated the Vegie Box page of our blog, so please have a read through and email us if you'd like to order a box of Captains Creek Organics' local goodies. Pickle 'em, juice 'em, cook 'em or just munch 'em.



* * *

There are also two workshops coming up in Trentham that you might be interested in:

Traditional Wooden Longbow making with Lars Richter:
https://www.facebook.com/events/1857437941168180/

and

Barefoot Shoe Making with Indrani Perera:
https://www.facebook.com/events/1815171325412725/


That's it from us for now. Hope you're all keeping cool out there...

See you at the Picnic with Penny, if not before. .

Thursday, June 16, 2016

Fermented dairy day

Yoghurt, whey, milk kefir, cultured butter and yummy cheeses... Please join us at our next Culture Club meet-up to learn and share knowledges about fermenting dairy.

Holy cow, we can't wait!



Tuesday, May 17, 2016

Fermented drinks making day

Here is it folks, our first Culture Club workshop. Please put the date in your calendar and come along. It's going to be a fantastic day of sharing, learning and experimentation. We can't wait!


Thursday, April 28, 2016

Culture Club

HRN is extremely excited to be launching Culture Club: for fermenters of all passions and experience. We are hoping it will be a regular get together. We thought a casual dinner was a good start, then we can all decide what we want the group to be.
  • Will we run workshops and have making days? 
  • Will we visit people's homes and businesses to see what they have bubbling away in their crocks?
  • Will we organise crock making classes at Clayspace
  • Or will we just have regular dinners where people bring fermented dishes to share and cultures, scobys and starters to pass around? 
We have no idea what will come of it, but like a wild ferment, we are open to whatever comes in.

Please bring a dish to share made from local produce (and including a fermented ingredient or not, it's up to you), some starter or scoby to swap (if you have any), some fermenting recipe books (if you have favourites), a cushion to sit on and much fermented enthusiasm.