Carrots in the car park. Radishes on the roundabout. – Vincent Graff, mail online

The deliciously eccentric story of the town growing ALL its own veg

Admittedly, it sounds like the most foolhardy of criminal capers, and one of the cheekiest, too.

Outside the police station in the small Victorian mill town of Todmorden, West Yorkshire, there are three large raised flower beds.

If you’d visited a few months ago, you’d have found them overflowing with curly kale, carrot plants, lettuces, spring onions — all manner of vegetables and salad leaves.

Today the beds are bare. Why? Because people have been wandering up to the police station forecourt in broad daylight and digging up the vegetables. And what are the cops doing about this brazen theft from right under their noses? Nothing.

Food for thought: Todmorden resident Estelle Brown, a former interior designer, with a basket of home-grown veg

Well, that’s not quite correct.

‘I watch ’em on camera as they come up and pick them,’ says desk officer Janet Scott, with a huge grin. It’s the smile that explains everything.

For the vegetable-swipers are not thieves. The police station carrots — and thousands of vegetables in 70 large beds around the town — are there for the taking. Locals are encouraged to help themselves. A few tomatoes here, a handful of broccoli there. If they’re in season, they’re yours. Free.

So there are (or were) raspberries, apricots and apples on the canal towpath; blackcurrants, redcurrants and strawberries beside the doctor’s surgery; beans and peas outside the college; cherries in the supermarket car park; and mint, rosemary, thyme and fennel by the health centre.

The vegetable plots are the most visible sign of an amazing plan: to make Todmorden the first town in the country that is self-sufficient in food.

‘And we want to do it by 2018,’ says Mary Clear, 56, a grandmother of ten and co-founder of Incredible Edible, as the scheme is called.

‘It’s a very ambitious aim. But if you don’t aim high, you might as well stay in bed, mightn’t you?’

Read more in the Mail Online

Young people shaping the future

‘No decision about us, without us!’

We want to hear your (youth) voice over the priorities for Weymouth’s future.

Think ahead, as you become an adult, with less but more difficult food, at a time period of global warming and cuts in Carbon emissions. This is for young people, concentrating on a different HOT LOCAL TOPIC each month, giving you the power to have your say, and even more importantly to think about what your future might involve….
Come and join in the conversation and action – young people can lead the way.

THE BIG PICTURE – THE EARTH SUMMIT. (2012)

GLOBALLY ‘People under 25 constitute over half of the world’s population and often bear the brunt of the economic, environmental and social crises. Youth must be involved in all decision making, processes that affect our future at all levels’. 2011, UNCSD, Children and Youth (United Nations Commission for Sustainable Development). Young people are poorer than other sectors and more young people use emergency food hand outs.
Principle 21 of the RIO declaration continues that, “the creativity, ideals and courage of the youth of the world should be mobilised to forge a global partnership in order to achieve sustainable development and ensure a better future for all’. Continue reading

Film Night in Dorchester: Pig Business, and an invitation to collaborate

Dear Transition Towns Weymouth and Portland,

I am sending details of an upcoming event we are organising that we think anyone who cares about our local community, human health, the environment and/or animal welfare won’t want to miss!!!

Demonstration against factory farming

'Wire' Actor Dominic West supports campaign against proposed huge pig factory

Please do forward this onto your members and do let us know if you are interested in collaborating with us to hold more screenings in future including of Film Inc and other environmental related films throughout Dorset. We believe that by working together we can not only reduce costs for any licences and venue hire, but we can combine our efforts to spread awareness for the environment and reach far more people : )

Posters can be downloaded from: http://www.compassionatedorset.co.uk/pdf/A4%20Poster%20Pig%20Business%20CD.pdf

NOVEMBER Tuesday 8th, 7pm for a 7.30pm start
FILM NIGHT: PIG BUSINESS Continue reading

Transition in Weymouth and Portland

Featured

We are a group of local people who want to create a more resilient, locally-based life-style. We support and encourage local people to be practical and positive in their response to current issues such as peak oil and climate change. We accept that campaigning can help change attitudes in national or local government and other organisations, but the emphasis of the Transition Towns movement is to provide practical action at a grass-root level.

Some of our community-led projects include; running film shows and informative events, an Centre, a Heart & Soul group, Foraging walks, Food sharing, Plant swapping, Fayres promoting local goods, increasing awareness amongst young people and Autumn apple pressing. Continue reading

PROUT: Progressive economic and spiritual model

Dada Maheshvarananda and Mariah Branch

To envision our future, it is vitally important to ask: what kind of world do we want? Prout (the ) is a socioeconomic model that promotes the welfare and development of every person, physically, mentally, and spiritually. This article provides a brief introduction to some of the economic and social concepts of Prout, including guaranteeing minimum necessities to all, the right to jobs, a three-tiered , including small-scale private enterprises, cooperatives, and large-scale publicly owned key industries, food sovereignty, sustainable agriculture, proper utilization of natural and human resources, and economic democracy. Prout promotes an ecological and spiritual perspective that is universal and nondogmatic. Prout’s holistic model provides an overarching framework to effectively measure and compare policies for the greater good of all people, as well as the planet.

“Another world is possible!” is the theme of the World Social Forum, which began in Brazil in 2001, and which has been growing exponentially ever since, with hundreds of thousands participating in global, regional, national, and local events that democratically educate people and rally to create social, political, and economic changes. At these forums, it is common to proclaim that we are against the unjust global economy, based on profit, selfishness, and greed, which excludes more people than it benefits. However, the Progressive Utilization Theory, Prout, offers the opportunity to champion what we are for and explore how we can achieve our goals. Continue reading

Treasure Islands by Nicholas Shaxson

,
: Treasure Islands by Nicholas Shaxson

5.0 out of 5 stars
Sturdy and Brave Journalism
20 Feb 2011
By Conjunction (Amazon Reviewer)

Shocking, a word that many reviewers have used, is a good one for this book. Terrifying might be another.
I am not an economist by a long shot but am lately reading books like this to understand what is going on.

Shaxson’s book is basically about the modern structure of finance capitalism, and he suggests that the foundation stone of the edifice is the offshore system.
The basis of offshore banking is that a global corporation sidles up to some tiny country and offers it some nice little kickbacks in return for an agreement that they will have to pay little or no tax. Continue reading

invitation to an exceptional event, 20 March

From: Sally Cooke salcooke1@gmail.com
Sent: Sun, 13 Mar 2011 11:24
Subject: invitation to an exceptional event, 20 March

Dear friends, neighbours and colleagues,
I’m writing to invite you to an event that I think will be exceptionally interesting. It is only a week away! ….. I’m sorry I couldn’t give you more advance notice.
It is an evening with ‘’, aka , an international energy and finance expert, formerly a Research Fellow at the Oxford Institute for Energy Studies and director of an agri-energy association in Canada. Her at last year’s international Transition gathering was described by Shaun Chamberlin (author of Transition Timeline) like this: “As she spoke, the room was hushed and fiercely attentive, and you could see people absorbing the implications of what she said ….” 

Nicole Foss Transition Towns Conference 2010

Nicole Foss at Transition Towns Conference 2010

I’ve heard her talk and I’m convinced that her grasp of world energy resources and financial markets is something out of the ordinary. She has some thought-provoking ideas on how we can best help ourselves as the oil era comes to its close. Continue reading