WE HOPE TO BRIDGE-THE-GAP BETWEEN PEOPLE WHO WANT TO CHANGE AND THE RESOURCES AND WAYS IN WHICH TO REALLY DO THIS. BRINGING PEOPLE AND THEIR LOCAL, SUSTAINABLE AND FAIR RESOURCES TOGETHER IS WHAT WE ARE ALL ABOUT. WE NEED TO SHARE OUR KNOWLEDGE AND WISDOM AS WELL AS ENCOURAGE MORE PEOPLE TO THINK, SPEAK AND ACT OUT FOR THE PRESERVATION OF OUR COMMUNITY AND ENVIRONMENT.

Tuesday, April 6, 2010

A Different Kind of Convenience

As you may know I have been traveling with my wife, Terry, for the last little while and have landed in Holland and stayed put for a bit. Holland has been marvelous and I have seen some wonderful things here. It is great seeing things coming alive, the smells and the sights have been breath taking. Some special things I have seen are the flower market and the botanical garden. The flower market just made my mouth water. Imagine being able to purchase 100 bulbs for 10 Euro. I wanted to fill bags and bags with bulbs and roots but I have a backpack.

The Botanical Garden or to be proper, the "Hortus Botanicus" has been around for more then 200 years, Imagine a garden older than Canada is! There were 200 year old specimen and I saw a semi-evergreen oak tree. This oak loses about 1/3 of its leaves in the fall and the rest stay green and on the tree until next years buds break. It is a graft and has a cultivar but I failed to retain it. It was interesting reading descriptions about plants that are suppose to be reacting to spring but seeing nothing. Spring is very late here and there are only a few bulbs that have flowered. It was a wonderful tour none-the-less. Another interesting thing I saw here was the grocery stores.

In North America we are into convenience foods, packaged everything and all kinds of RTS food products. This usually translates out to processed foods containing loads of sugar, salt and modified starches, among other things. Things that are not good for our bodies. You will be surprised to know that Holland is into convenience also but a different kind of convenience. In the grocery stores here you will find all kinds of prepared packaged foods that are fresh. You can find any kind of combination package on the shelf, stir fried vegetables, fresh, cut up and ready to cook. Salads of every description, ready to be mixed and served. Meats pre-portioned and seasoned, ready to go in the oven or on the grill. You can even get meats ready for soup, some small meat balls, some cubed meat and a bone for the stock all in one convenient package. I really cannot describe something that must be seen to be understood, and believed but it seems to me they have a healthy, fresh outlook towards convenience. My intention is to take this idea to my local grocery store when I return home, I'm hoping the idea will be appealing to them. I wonder what might happen if we all did? Enjoying the new things of Holland. Wes



yellow orchards















evergreen oak















Friday, March 5, 2010

Spring in the Air

I smell spring. It smells like wet dirt. Maybe like dirt that earth worms have been crawling through. I know I'm not describing it adequately enough but I'm sure you know what I mean and what I smell.

I'm sure I sound premature to most people, especially those trapped in the throws of a North American winter but I am, after all, in France. It is definitely spring here. The ground is green and brown. Green with blooming winter crops and brown waiting crops. You can see the vineyards are ready to do something but are not quite there, brown on the ground and ready to sprout. You can see it and you can smell it, that damp, almost ready to garden, dirt smell. I am actually on a high speed train between Nice and Paris and I can still smell it. It makes me long for the garden, wonder at what will grow this year, what weeds I will have trouble with and how much rain and sun we will get. It's spring in France. How far away can spring be in Canada? Here's wishing for an early spring and a great season of gardening and harvesting. Wes