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Franchi Seeds

Posted on June 17, 2013 by Leave a comment

Franchi Seeds

Est. since 1783

The World’s oldest family seed company’

Tel: 0208 427 5020 Fax: 5051

‘What you sow, you reap”, is the message Franchi Seeds has sent world leaders at the G8 Summit as they gather in at Lough Erne, Northern Ireland This week .

Franchi seeds has sent each leader a packet of vegetable seeds and called on them to get the world growing by increasing domestic fruit and vegetable production in their own countries.

Franchi believes that space should be set aside in schools, factories, public offices and hospitals so that people could grow their own food.

We believe that Seeds still germinate during a crisis and we all need to eat, but an increase in domestic vegetable production and a shift change in government policy is needed to safeguard the future of our children.

“No part of growing vegetables is bad – the produce is good for you, the plants are good for the environment. To all the leaders on the planet Earth we say ‘what you sow, you reap’.”

Let us grow together

Paolo Arrigo /Andrew Collings
Franchi seeds

CATHEDRAL PRAISES SUNG FOR HEREFORDSHIRE ORCHARDS

Posted on May 15, 2013 by Comments are off

More than 400 guests gathered at Hereford Cathedral on Thursday (9th May) in a dual celebration of the unique role of orchards and the contribution that people with learning disabilities make to the richness of life in Herefordshire.

A  Service celebrating orchards was organised by the Bulmer Foundation and highlighted the work undertaken by the charity’s Orchard Art project.  Into its 3rd year, the project has enabled children and adults with learning disabilities to visit orchards and create artworks inspired by their surroundings.

Hereford Cathedral Orchard Celebration

The Orchard under the Golden Crown in Hereford Cathedral

A  Service celebrating orchards was organised by the Bulmer Foundation and highlighted the work undertaken by the charity’s Orchard Art project.  Into its 3rd year, the project has enabled children and adults with learning disabilities to visit orchards and create artworks inspired by their surroundings.

The Cathedral  Celebration featured a selection of orchard-centric paintings, sculptures, songs, poems and plays produced and performed by groups that participated in the Orchard Art project against the backdrop of an orchard of thirty apple trees in full blossom.

Juliet Stroucken, who leads one of the groups which took part, observed, “The confidence, joy and sheer delight shown by each and every performer was inspiring. Our students have absolutely loved being involved in this project, and they had a brilliant day.”

The Cathedral was filled by a congregation of families, friends, orchard owners and enthusiasts, senior managers from Bulmers and its parent company HEINEKEN, and members of both the Bulmer and Heineken families. The guest of honour was Mrs de Carvalho-Heineken.

Bulmer-Heineken Visit by Michel and Charlene

Core funded by HEINEKEN, the Bulmer Foundation is a charity that supports sustainable development, primarily within Herefordshire.  In addition to Orchard Art, the Bulmer Foundation works in partnership to deliver a range of other projects addressing health, food, education and land use issues in Herefordshire.

Stefan Orlowski, UK Managing Director for HEINEKEN, said, “This remarkable Orchard Service showed that our contributions are being put to considerably good use.  It also demonstrated the significance of orchards to Herefordshire and the people who live there. Not only do they support the rural economy through long term contracts, they are also places of artistic inspiration and provide a natural haven for wildlife.”

Timelapse images show speed of degradation of natural habitats worldwide

Posted on May 13, 2013 by Comments are off

We find it tough to see the consequences of our actions over long time frames and particularly so when they are on a huge scale, such as those captured by satellite imagery – take a look by clicking the link here to the images from google.

Ancient Arctic was warm, wet, and green. What that says about the future.

Posted on May 11, 2013 by Comments are off

A 1,000-foot core sample taken from a lake in Russia’s northeast Arctic documents a period when the region was 14 degrees warmer than today, but with similar atmospheric CO2  levels.

By  / May 9, 2013

A NASA satellite shows the state of Arctic sea ice, seen here September 16, 2008. A 1,000-foot ice core from the Arctic’s Lake E suggests that the Arctic was heavily forested 3.5 million years ago, when carbon dioxide levels were similar to today.

Goddard Space Flight Center Scientific Visualization Studio / NASA / Reuters / File

  • The period the team has analyzed covers the first 1.4 million years of the record, when the region’s climate shifted from warm and wet to conditions that signaled the start of ice ages.

This period is of interest in part because the warmth persisted despite periodic shifts in Earth’s orbit that reduced the intensity of sunlight reaching the region.

Temperatures were high enough – about 14 degrees warmer than today in the warmest month of the summer – to suggest that the climate system is more sensitive to small changes in greenhouse-gas concentrations than the sensitivity estimates included in some climate models.

If that’s the case, as other paleoclimate studies have indicated, the models may be underestimating the amount of warming likely to result from increasing atmospheric COconcentrations, the scientists say.

The period also is of interest because it holds clues about the factors that drove climate from prolonged warmth into a cycle of ice ages – factors that will help researchers understand the role natural variability plays in the region’s climate and where climatic “tipping points” may lie.

The work “identifies for the first time a long, continuous story of that history from the Arctic and what I call the Arctic borderlands,” says Julie Brigham-Grette, a geologist at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst who focuses on the Arctic’s ancient climate, referring to adjacent regions. Dr. Brigham-Grette is the lead author of a formal report of the results, which are being published in Friday’s issue of the journal Science.

The research was conducted by a team of 16 scientists from Russia, the USGermany andSweden.

The evidence is captured in a 1,034-foot core sample the team drew from the bottom of Lake El’gygytgyn, known informally as Lake E. It formed 3.6 billion years ago after a meteor punched a crater in Russia’s northeastern Arctic. The crater filled to form a lake 7 miles across and some 560 feet deep. The area around the lake managed to remain ice free during the ebb and flow of continental ice sheets during the Pleistocene ice ages, allowing sediment layers – and the pollen and other climate indicators they contain – to build up uninterrupted for the last 3.56 million years.

The team published initial results from the Lake E core last year, focusing on the Pleistocene. This latest effort focuses on the climate from the earlier, mid Pliocene through the onset of the glacial cycles.

for more go to http://www.csmonitor.com/Science/2013/0509/Ancient-Arctic-was-warm-wet-and-green.-What-that-says-about-the-future

Australia’s First Earthship

Posted on May 9, 2013 by Comments are off

by Danielle Wolff-Chambers and Shelley Clements

Here we are in Queensland, May 2013, half way through an Earthship build. It is the first one to be built in Australia and has been experimental in many ways. We started the build in January with a very diverse group of about 50 people ranging in experience, age and cultural backgrounds. It was run as a workshop so people could attend and participate in the build to empower those who wish to be involved in Earthships to gain the necessary skills and connect with people who have complementary skills, so as to form Earthship building teams and meet skilled allies and new friends.

 

We experimented with hempcrete — hemp fibers mixed with a lime binder and used as a insulation layer for the roof as well as some reinforced cement footings and extra steel used to strengthen the structure in case of a cyclone. This Earthship build is focused on using a loving intent because to be sustainable, to care about the earth and to care about the people, is to live a lifestyle of loving intent, which is permaculture and therefore is co-creation.

Water

  • The roof has been shaped using concrete to catch rain water with wings to encourage the direction and collection of the water.
  • It flows off the roof, through a storm water drain and into a 22,000 litre water tank. From there it is pumped to its first use – kitchen, drinking and showering water.
  • This ‘gray water’ then passes through a grease trap (a $10 tip bargain!) and into the botanical cell to feed the plants.
  • The water’s third use is to flush the toilet. It is then ‘black water’ which gets appropriate treatment outside the Earthship!

Queensland is a tropical climate having a warm, wet season over summer and a more moderate, drier condition during winter. There is plenty of water falling from the sky during those summer months to be harvested and by adopting this system we are using the water as much as we can to maximise natural resources and minimize waste.

Food Production

The site has been laid out using the permaculture zoning principles. There is a large amount of food being produced, such as the chooks and their eggs, fruit trees, vegetables, medicinal plants and bush foods. The Earthship botanical cell lines the north facing interior wall and enables you to have year round food production in any climate. In this area we are lucky enough to have so much food growing in abundance we can leave it to the birds and the bees to work their magic! The botanical cell will be for a Zone 1 herb garden. This creates instant access to our foods — right in our kitchen!

When the water is washed from our bodies and hands and passed through the garden the plants draw up all the nutrients and information from our skin cells which you are then feeding back into your body. This process is a beautiful natural occurrence and creates perfect harmony and balance in the home.

Site Orientation and Thermal Mass

We have used solar passive design to orientate the Earthship to face north east, to line up to catch the first two hours of light from the winter sun. In summer the sun will be higher in the sky stopping at the green house giving the plants what they need and keeping the heat out of the Earthship. When winter comes around the sun will dive much deeper into the building and the warmth will be held in and slowly released to keep a constant temperature — dramatically reducing, even eliminating, the need for heating and cooling.

The foundation for the 2-domed house is 9 tire courses high, and is made from around 1000 used cars tires rammed full of dirt. This process took us around 7 days with 40 people, plenty of sledge hammers and some great loud music with a timely beat. Collection of the tires came from far and wide with many long car trips to various car yards, tire suppliers and tips. We were denied the old tires on a few occasions with one suggestion that we may only want them to dump them into the ocean! Yeah right!

Ramming these tires with dirt creates an extremely strong structure and impeccable thermal mass. The tires will soon be rendered and will create our interior walls, while the other side has been packed with an earth berm. The berm enables us to use ‘cooling tubes’ to tap into the earth temperature and cool down the house as needed. It has been planted with pumpkins, chokos, gourds and mint for ground cover. The vines create shallow roots to stabilise the soil.

Power

The Earthship is off-grid therefore all of our power comes from the sun, once again, harvesting our natural resources. There is no need to source our energy from the wind as there is so much sun year round here. A fabulous electrician has set up the system so the cables run to all of the outlets in the house making it an easy installation when we find our perfect stand alone solar system.

Sewerage

We are using a conventional flush toilet, flushed with the gray water once the plants have used it. The waste and water flush down into our own onsite sewerage system. It goes into our ‘septic system’ underground which is a deep cell lined with large car tires and gravel and tiny microorganisms which digest and feed off the waste. The water then flows outside through a pipe away from the house to our exterior black water cell which will be planted with citrus trees.

We embarked on our Earthship adventure with open minds and loose plans and have now completed the larger part of the structural components. It grew bigger then we had imagined so there was the need for a 3 month interval. In returning to where we left off we have re grouped and gathered more materials and creative inspiration. We are holding a second workshop and we are inviting 25 new beautiful legends plus 15 returning beautiful legendary Earthshippers to take on the finishing touches.

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