Locavore news – Canada by Elbert van Donkersgoed

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Author: Katie Rabinowicz

Posted: February 12, 2010

Categories: Food in the News / News from Sustain Ontario

Perspectives on good food and farming

February 11, 2010

Food author pushes for national food policy in Guelph speech

Canadians are aware of the country’s broken food system and need a national food policy. It was the message delivered by author Margaret Webb at the 2009 Organic Agricultural Conference’s keynote address Saturday. Her book Apples to Oysters won a silver at the 2009 Cuisine Canada/University of Guelph National Culinary Book Awards. Last fall, Webb also wrote an eight-part investigative series for The Toronto Star called Crisis on the Farm. Addressing a packed lecture hall at the University of Guelph, Webb presented the state of today’s food sector. The 29th annual organic conference drew at least 1,000 farmers, distributors, retailers and advocates between Friday and Sunday. Guelph Mercury story.

Home is where the hearty food is

Residents of 100 Mile House have turned local eating into a way of life, with an agricultural co-op and their own Cariboo potatoes.Globe and Mail story.

Quebec Slaughterhouse Gets Fed Loan

The federal government is lending a Quebec company that specialises in the slaugher and processing of milk-fed calves. Ecolait processes more than 1 hundred thousand head of veal a year. The animals come from it’s over 150 producer partners. 50 per cent of it’s products are exported. The 2 point 7 million dollar federal loan will help Ecolait improve it’s storage capacity and upgrade it’s slaughterhouse plant technology. CKNX Radio Wingham story.

Local Market Industry benefits from a Mentorship Program

In September 2009, the Camrose Regional Exhibition, Edmonton Regional Tourism Group, Peace Region Economic Development Alliance, Alberta Agriculture and Rural Development (ARD), and the Learn Agri-Food (LAF) and Country Roads (CR) Networks partnered to bring Jane Eckert of Eckert AgriMarketing to Alberta.  Jane Eckert is an award winning leader in the farm direct/ag tourism industry, and is the founder and CEO of Eckert AgriMarketing. Local market businesses from the Peace, Edmonton and NE regions of Alberta benefited from Eckert’s experience and expertise.  One of the ten participants in the program was Heather Edwards of Pottery by Heather. Heather has been very successful at turning her passion for pottery into a thriving rural business in Bon Accord, Alberta. RTW This Week story.

Canada’s Master of Wild Edibles

The matsutake is just one of many hard-to-find products harvested from the Canadian wilderness and sold by Forbes Wild Foods. Founded by Jonathan Forbes, the business started back in the late 1990s when Forbes realized that no one knew what he was talking about when he told them of the chokecherries he’d picked or the beechnuts he was eating. “If you asked people what are Canadian wild foods, you’d be lucky to get more than wild rice, maple syrup, and blueberries,” he said. The Atlantic story.

First Nations School Gardening Program

The past school year has seen the beginning of a new and promising trend among some First Nations schools in Manitoba. A number of schools have begun planning for, or have already started implementing gardening programs. An integrated school/community gardening program offers potential benefits too numerous to list in a single brief article, such as this. However, some highlights will be explored herein. Development and implementation of a school/community gardening program can help to address a wide range of issues facing schools and communities. First Perspective National Aboriginal News story.

Growing Right

While 100-mile dieters provide a ray of hope, small-scale farmers the world over continue to face intense pressures, and many are still forced out of farming each year. In response, we need to think carefully about our aspirations for the 21st century food system.Peter Andrée essay in Alternatives Journal.

Meet Howard Soon, wine master of the Okanagan

If anyone embodies the quality revolution in B.C. wine that’s taken place since the sip-while-you-slalom era, it’s Mr. Soon. This month he will celebrate his 30th year in the business, overseeing the Western Canada operations of Grimsby, Ont.-based Andrew Peller, which owns the Calona, Sandhill and Red Rooster brands in British Columbia as well as the Peller, Hillebrand and Thirty Bench. And unlike athletes, who tend to peak early in life, Mr. Soon, 57, is at the top of his game. Last fall, Sandhill was named Canadian Winery of the Year by Wine Access magazine for scoring consistently high ratings in a blind tasting by experts from around the country. “It took us 30 years to get winery of the year,” Mr. Soon said. Globe and Mail story.

Ignatieff commits to national food policy during Guelph stop

Federal Liberal Leader Michael Ignatieff appears not only willing to listen to the agricultural grassroots but to incorporate the priorities of rural Canada into the party’s rural policies and the national food policy it is crafting. “I pledge that a national food policy will be part of what we offer to the Canadian people at the next election,” Ignatieff told reporters Friday at the Ignatius Jesuit Centre’s Loyola House in Guelph, adding he is committed to enhancing rural health care and expanding broadband connectivity in rural Canada.Guelph Mercury story.

Call for Articles: Innovation in Environmental Education

Alternatives Journal is looking for articles for the next annual Education issue, and you are invited to submit story ideas that explore every angle of environmental education. How has environmental education changed in today’s increasingly accessible world? What should be a part of every person’s educational background, but currently isn’t? How do applied skills such as farming, gardening, and building complement more theoretical environmental learning methods? Story ideas for this issue could answer these questions, or they could involve a critique of the current education system in Canada, and propose ways to improve it. The deadline for submissions is February 15, 2010. Alternatives Journal for information.

AND if You Have Time

London Skyline Recreated With Fruit and Vegetables

Back in November, Carl Warner (responsible for many of the foodscape photographs you may have come across) was commissioned by the Good Food channel in the UK to make an edible version of the London skyline. The Houses of Parliament, the London Eye, the Tower Bridge, St Paul’s Cathedral, and the Gherkin all get the treatment. The making of video explains how he did it: