Queen of the Sun: What are the bees telling us?

Submitted by Dick Alton

“Beautifully blends poetry and science to tell the story of what may be the most important co-evolutionary bond on Earth.”  -- Rick Marianetti, The Examiner

Highlighting our historic and sacred relationship with bees

In 1923, Rudolf Steiner, a scientist, philosopher & social innovator, predicted that in 80 to 100 years honeybees would collapse. His prediction appears to be coming true with Colony Collapse Disorder, where bees are disappearing in mass numbers from their hives with no clear single explanation.

Much of our food depends on the pollination of the bees.  One out of three bites of food comes from the pollination of a honey bee, so low numbers of bees means fewer fruits and vegetables.  The documentary, "QUEEN OF THE SUN: What Are the Bees Telling Us?" examines the dire global bee crisis through the eyes of biodynamic beekeepers, scientists, farmers, and philosophers.

The public is invited to attend a showing of Queen of Sun, followed by a conversation on its implications and what we can do to help.  The movie showing will be held on November 17th, 7:30pm, at Euclid Avenue United Methodist Church, 405 South Euclid Avenue in Oak Park, sponsored by Euclid Ave UMC and the Interfaith Green Network.  Don't miss this important documentary film.

Renewing a culture in balance with nature

This engaging, alarming and ultimately uplifting film weaves together a dramatic story that uncovers the problems and solutions in renewing a culture in balance with nature.   Watch the trailer For more about the movie, check out the Queen of the Sun web site.

Permaculture: Fundamentals & Principles - Wed, Oct 26th, 7p.m.

Submitted by Sue Crothers

Learn reasons for applying a permaculture way of thinking to how we live

The Thoughtful Living Series, a series of community discussions sponsored by the River Forest Parks Foundation & the River Forest Public Library, will resume on Wednesday, October 26th, at the River Forest Library, 735 Lathrop Ave in River Forest.  This month, the series will feature a presentation on Permaculture:  Fundamentals & Principles.

Learn the essence of, and reasons for, applying a permaculture way of thinking to how we live.

What permaculturists do:

  • strive to grow food just about anywhere,
  • repair environmentally damaged lands,
  • design lovely and durable green buildings,
  • produce power,
  • run successful, people-oriented businesses
  • and build authentic community.

They accomplish this by using the same fundamental design principles and by applying a fundamental permaculture ethic:  Care of people. Care of the earth. Sharing all surplus.

Presenter for the evening - Jody Luna

The presenter for the evening will be Jody Luna, a 2007 graduate of Midwest Permaculture’s Design Certificate course. She graduated from Illinois Institute of Technology with a Master’s of Architecture in 2006. She runs an environmental design firm, Conscious Designs, and teaches at Illinois Institute of Art in Schaumburg, IL.

For more details and to share with others, see the Thoughtful Living flyer for October.

Growing Power CSA - Pick-up Available in River Forest

Submitted by Sue Crothers

What is Growing Power?

Growing Power transforms communities by supporting people from diverse backgrounds and the environments in which they live through the development of Community Food Systems. These systems provide high-quality, safe, healthy, affordable food for all residents in the community. Growing Power develops Community Food Centers, as a key component of Community Food Systems, through training, active demonstration, outreach, and technical assistance.

Will Allen, our Chief Executive Officer believes, "If people can grow safe, healthy, affordable food, if they have access to land and clean water, this is transformative on every level in a community. I believe we cannot have healthy communities without a healthy food system."

Our goal is a simple one: to grow food, to grow minds, and to grow community.

Growing Power’s Chicago Projects Office officially opened in February of 2002 to manage resource development and the technical assistance needed to assist emerging Community Food Centers and urban and small farm projects in the metropolitan Chicago area.  By bringing together food related activities that are typically dispersed, an urban farm as a community food center allows for an integrated approach to addressing food security, ecological, nutrition and public health issues.

Pick-up for CSA deliveries from Growing Power is available in River Forest

I receive deliveries every other week.from Growing Power in Chicago.  I send out the delivery schedule at the beginning of each month and customers can choose when they would like to receive a produce bag.  The beauty about this system compared to regular CSA, is that the customer has the flexibility to decide when they would like to order and when not.   To participate simply email me and drop off their payment one week prior to delivery, it's very flexible. There is also some choice on the type of produce bag.  Below is a list of the bags available.   All purchases help support Growing Power's mission, small-scale sustainable farmers, local businesses and jobs within the community. Growing Power is a non for profit and the prices are the costs given by Growing Power directly.   I offer this to support GP and the RF and OP community.

  1. The Regular Market Basket @ $17.00 - ideal for 2-4 people for the week. Fill paper grocery bag of 10-12 varieties of fruits and vegetables. Contains a selection of the most popular produce items (mix of conventionally and sustainably grown). Over $10 savings on market price!
  2. The Junior/Senior Basket @ $9.00 - ideal for smaller households. Approximately half the Regular Basket.
  3. The Sustainable Basket @ $28.00 - ideal for 2-4 people for the week. Full paper grocery bag of all organic fruits and vegetable. As locally grown/sourced as possible (varies with season).
  4. The Fruit Basket @ $17.00 - offers the weekly selection of fresh fruit at wholesale cost.
  5. Spring Salad Mix @ $12.00/pound (available in 1/4# increments - contains a variety of tender micro-greens and sprouts)
  6. Pea Shoots @ $16.00/pound (available in 1/4# increments - delicious, crisp green flavor)
  7. Sunflower Sprouts @ $16.00/pound (available in 1/4# increments - sweet, nutty flavor - high in protein!)
  8. Zesty Sprouts @ $16.00/pound (available in 1/4# increments - spicy flavor - mustard, cabbage and radish sprouts)
  9. Hand Rolled Butter @ $5.00/pound (rGHB and antibiotic free local milk)
Please contact me via email (suebillgee@comcast.net) where I can take orders and answer questions.

GreenTown Comes to Downtown Oak Park - October 12th

Submitted by Gary Cuneen On Wednesday, October 12, at Unity Temple in Oak Park, local and regional attendees will envision a future for their communities that includes healthy eating, bike and pedestrian-friendly communities, transit-oriented development, green infrastructure, water conservation, energy efficiency, green businesses, farm to school, residential food scrap composting, and much more.

Hosted by Pioneering Healthy Communities Oak Park, Cook County Department of Public Health's "Communities Putting Prevention to Work" and the Village of Oak Park.  This year's event will feature a keynote address by nationally known Host of "America's Walking"on PBS, Mark Fenton.  Mark is a dynamic speaker that energizes, entertains and educates his audiences.  Don't miss this local opportunity to hear him speak!

Hear from Dr. Damon Arnold, M.D., M.P.H., Director of the Illinois Department of Public Health, on the latest statewide initiatives to combat obesity, and discover how Mia Birk, CEO of Alta Planning and Author of Joyride, worked to change culture and transform Portland into a cycling mecca.

This one-day experience will also feature:15+ sessions on such topics as: - Healthy Eating in the Community - Healthy Eating at Home - Planning for a Physically Active Community - Sustainable Communities Planning and Metrics - Green Infrastructure and The Great Outdoors

 

The full agenda, including pre- and main conference sessions, is now available.

Register now and take advantage of special event pricing for Oak Park and River Forest Residents.

Green Connections Bike Tour - Thanks to Hosts & Participants!

Inaugural Green Connections Bike Tour

In the face of unseasonably cool weather and the threat of rain, the inaugural Green Community Connections Bike Tour took place on Saturday, September 24th.  Several great examples of high efficiency homes, homes where the owners are gardening, raising chickens and using native grasses that support natural flood control and five schools where children are learning ecological principles through gardening and composting, all opened their locations to visitors from the community.

Please give us your feedback on the tour!

There were 124 registered participants and over 50 at the post-tour celebration.  Thanks to all who participated -- including our generous hosts, the great participants, our sponsors and local business partners, and the amazing team that put this event together!!  Please let us know about your experience of the tour -- what you liked and what you would do differently if we should do it again.  Send us your pictures to add to our gallery of photos from the tour.

"Vote" for Change in our Cook County Food System

Submitted by Debbie Hillman

Opportunity to Complete a Food System Survey for Cook County

This is a MOMENTOUS occasion, to have this opportunity to "vote" and express our opinions in a food system survey conducted by one of the largest counties in the country (part of the 3rd largest metropolitan area in the country). This may be the first county-wide survey ever of Cook County residents about food systems and food issues,

Illinois currently imports 95% of the food that we buy

This is especially important because currently we live in a farm state (Illinois) that imports more than 95% of the food that we Cook County residents buy. "Local foods" in Cook County and in Illinois is an economic development strategy of enormous proportion and many facets.

Having a "local" food system means that Cook County residents would be able to EASILY become food entrepreneurs of all kinds -- farmers (producers), processors, distributors, retailers, chefs, composters. This means that our food dollars would stay in Cook County.

Influence local and federal food policy

Taking this survey and working through the county processes that will hopefully result in a county-wide food council will help us all become better educated on the various components of food systems. In turn, we will be better prepared for working on the Farm Bill and other federal policies that have destroyed local food systems in so many communities, nationally and globally.

Take the survey today!

This is a MAJOR opportunity to move our own food system in a positive direction. Here's what you can do: (1) take the survey - How can I complete the survey? You cant.complete the survey online, or to answer this survey in Spanish, please call 708-633-8314; or email jbloyd@ccdph.ne Para contester esta encuesta en espanol, favor de llamar a 708-633-8314; o escriba a jbloyd@ccdph.net. (2) distribute it to your networks, friends, relatives, colleagues -- anyone who LIVES or WORKS in Cook County (Chicago and suburbs).

Green Connections Bike Tour 2011 - Saturday, September 24th

Discovering Sustainable Oak Park & River Forest

On Saturday, September 24, 2011, Green Community Connections will sponsor a self-designed, informational tour of selected green initiatives in Oak Park and River Forest.  The tour will start at 1pm and culminate at 4:00 pm with a post-tour informal gathering.

PlanItGreen Sustainability Plan

The Villages of Oak Park and River Forest have long been recognized for their commitment to ecologically-friendly living, and are currently implementing a joint sustainability plan, known as PlanItGreen.

Examples of low carbon living

The GCC bike tour will offer 15 residential and community sites from which participants can choose – including high-efficiency homes, community and school gardens, composting, homes with geothermal heating and cooling systems, urban chicken farming, and more. “We’ve got so much knowledge and so many great examples of green, low-carbon living right here in our community. We can learn a lot from our neighbors about everything from sustainable landscaping to alternative energy,” says Melanie Weiss, who is a member of the Green Connections Bike Tour planning committee.

Benefit from your neighbors' experience

Each site will feature a tour and/or demonstration to introduce visitors to the initiative(s) at that site and describe how it fosters sustainability in the community.  There will also be opportunities for questions and answers so participants can benefit from the experience of their neighbors. “We’re hoping sustainability-minded individuals will join the ride with their neighbors, friends, families, or co-workers. We want people to participate and feel that they’re a part of something big – that they’ll see this as one great opportunity to get moving on the green initiatives they’ve been considering,” says Ana Garcia-Doyle, also a member of the bike tour planning committee.

Thank you to our sponsors and partners!

Other tour sponsors for the event include the Active Transportation Alliance, Greenline Wheels, the Interfaith Green Network, and Seven Generations Ahead, as well as a host of local business partners.  We encourage you to support our great sponsors and local business partners who are helping make this opportunity possible!

Click here to learn more and to register!

 

Marion Street Cheese Market Chef Shares his Vision & Challenges

Article written by Ellen Lipo, OPRF HS Environmental Club based on an Interview with Marion Street Cheese Market Executive Chef, Leonard Hollander In March, the Marion Street Cheese Market, located at 100 S. Marion Street in Oak Park, became a green-certified restaurant, receiving three out of four stars from the Green Restaurant Association. It is the only green-certified restaurant in Oak Park, and one of only a handful in the Chicago area. The rating is based on 60-70 categories, ranging from floor tile to composting. The rating given then translates to a number of stars.

One of the people responsible for achieving the level of sustainability that led to the certification is Leonard Hollander, the Cheese Market’s Executive Chef.   Mr. Hollander has worked at Marion Street Cheese Market for two years, and together with the owners, Eric Larson and Mary Jo Schuler, has helped create and maintain a green vision for the business. He said that the vision of having a restaurant that operates in as sustainable a manner as possible is something he shares with the owners, and they have since entrusted him to handle many of the food sourcing decisions and day-to-day supply issues of the restaurant.

Prior to Mr. Hollander, the chefs at Marion Street Cheese Market bought produce and other ingredients at local farmers’ markets, but also on occasion from large agribusiness companies. As part of his responsibility for all food procurement and waste management, Mr. Hollander now works with organizations such as the Chicago Resource Center and City Farm to buy fresh produce. Recently he received the first produce from City Farm that was grown from soil made from the Cheese Market’s own compost.

In addition to that unique produce, the restaurant also purchases from various local farms and organic distributors, for instance, buying milk from Kilgus Creamery in southern Illinois, which Mr Hollander believes “tastes like milk ... unlike the soulless variety found at 7-11 and Jewel”. Mr. Hollander also works with companies like Testa Produce, Natural Direct, and Organic Valley. The restaurant is local even down to its coffee syrups.

Mr. Hollander says he is most proud of “our ability to produce the food at the quality we do, for a dining room of this size, from the kitchen we have.” Because of building constraints (the restaurant is located in a residential building) the kitchen does not have access to gas, and only has two electric burners and an electric fryer. “First and foremost, my job is to take ingredients and turn them into delicious things,” he said. “If it’s local and sustainable…but doesn’t taste good, what’s the point?” He asserts that his green-sourced ingredients definitely translate to the food, saying he knows a lot of people who find their cheese, meat and fish only at Marion Street Cheese Market, and nowhere else.

The Cheese Market also incorporates green measures in other areas of the restaurant: the chairs are made from recycled car seat belts, bar counters are built with recycled glass, and sustainable wood is integrated throughout the building. The restaurant serves smaller portion sizes. “We decreased our waste massively by following that one point, mitigating portion sizes,” Hollander said.  This leaves diners room for dessert, he said, (which doesn’t hurt our business, either).

One of his biggest challenges is making green affordable. “We definitely don’t make as much money as we could because we’ve chosen to do things the way we do” (in a way as sustainable and sensitive to the environment as we can).

Mr. Hollander’s advice to other restaurants looking to go green is to “Learn what it means. So few people really know what it means, and I have a little bit of fear about that.” Restaurants have to constantly keep finding a new angle on being green. “People don’t look at it as something you can quantify,” Hollander said, but as more of a feeling. But being green and sustainable can be quantified, as evidenced by the Marion Street Cheese Market.

Related posts and articles:

Marion Street Cheese Market Earns 3-Star Green Rating

Harambee Barter Day - July 31st, 4-7pm

Shared by Seamus Ford I  invite you to spread the word about a unique Barter event that Root-Riot is going to be hosting at Harambee Garden.  “Harambee Barter Day” will bring people together to discover the unique resources possessed by the community around them.

The Event will be held on Sunday July 31st from 4-7PM, Location: Root-Riot Harambee, (Race and Waller 500 N Waller in Chicago). We are inviting anyone from the community to come out that day and join us.  The only thing people need to bring is pot luck dish and an idea of what kind of product or service they can trade with another person.   Here are just a few of the kinds of things that people might barter.

Child Care-Music lessons-gardening-house cleaning-drawing a picture-self defense-peas-VCR programing-canning-preserving-drywall-raising goats-raising chickens-eggs-fermenting-squash-compost-handyman--job search coaching-fung shui-Senior Care-airport pickup-bike repair- security consulting-baking cookies-plant identification-furniture moving-organizing-computer repair-dog walking-snow removal-story telling-reading a book to children-resume writing-kayaking lessons-tomato recipes-grocery shopping-building a website-exercise buddy-meal cooking-carpet installation-flying a kite-

When it comes to the people around us, there is no shortage of talent, knowledge and connections.  This event is designed to celebrate and expand that.  Barter Day Info and Link to Flyer and Trading Form