Category Archives: Health

SOIL: why we need to stop treating it like DIRT

by Kate Patterson

Spring is here. Gardens are being planted, everywhere plants are flowering and the world is once again becoming green, so I thought it would be a fitting time to share some of my favorite things about one of the most dynamic, yet underappreciated systems on Earth, soil.  First, it’s important to have a bit of a background on how and why soils formed and what that has meant to the evolution of modern human civilization.  I’ll then describe some of the not-so good (and the good) news about what we have been doing to our soils in the recent past that is jeopardizing our ability to feed our growing world population and what many amazing soil scientists, farmers, gardeners, and involved citizens are doing about it.

Soil is a complex living, breathing system.  It’s packed with tons of cool organisms and is an extremely complex mixture of inorganic and organic processes, without which life on Earth could not exist.  Through industrial agricultural practices, urbanization and deforestation we are in danger of degrading our healthy soils by stripping off nutrient rich layers that are necessary for functioning ecosystems, and from a more anthropocentric perspective, for our ability to grow food.

To get a sense of just how important soil is we have to backtrack to the to the beginning of the first life on Earth, about 3.8 billion years ago, when the Earth’s average temperature was too hot and anoxic for anything except extreme cyanobacteria to survive.  The presence of bacteria on rock surfaces helped to enhance weathering rates through chemical reactions, which sped up the breakdown of rocks and formation of soils.  Carbon dioxide, an important greenhouse gas, diffused into soils to be used for various reactions, which helped to decrease its warming effect in our atmosphere.  The slow breakdown of rocks and formation of soil minerals also created a suitable nutrient rich substrate necessary for the evolution of land plants.  Through photosynthesis, plants further decreased carbon dioxide and increased oxygen levels in the atmosphere and then died and contributed organic matter to the soil.  It wasn’t until about 400 million years ago that the first land plants appeared, and only a little while before that when soils came to be as we know them today.

Fast forward to about ten thousand years ago, when humans first began transitioning to more stationary, agricultural civilizations.  Without any knowledge of genetics, we bred and domesticated plants to achieve higher yields.  It was no longer necessary for everyone to grow food.  People began to establish urban centers where new professions emerged and food was obtained from surpluses produced by a small subset of the population.  Farmers have always understood that maintaining fertile soils is imperative to successful agricultural practices.  But the advent of the Green Revolution in the 20th century led us astray, convincing us that science and technology were capable of going beyond the limits of traditional farming techniques.

The Haber-Bosch process, discovered in the early 20th century, led to the production of synthetic nitrogen fertilizers and drastically increased crop yields worldwide.  That, along with the introduction of other technologies and the use of higher yielding crops led to the establishment of larger, industrialized agricultural systems.  Our reliance on synthetic fertilizers to increase crop yields has so far allowed us to overlook the exquisitely complex systems in which plants grow best.  Sure, for now we can give them lots of nitrogen and phosphorus and they will grow.  But, without adding other forms of organic matter or manure to supply plants with nutrients and to feed bacteria, fungi and other organisms in the soil that provide essential ecosystem services, we are running a thin line between high yields and an inability to sustain the level of production that we have become accustomed to.

It seems like somehow in our urbanized, fast paced lives we have lost touch with nature and our ability to connect with the very thing that is essential for our survival and ability to feed our growing population.  In a great documentary called DIRT, there was a scene describing an urban school that wanted to convert concrete playgrounds to vegetable gardens, but a journalist reporting on the story was worried that there would be nowhere for the children to play.  I will never forget that twisted feeling I got as I realized just how disillusioned and frightened of the unpredictability of nature we have become.  We often fail to understand how important a resource soil is, and desire to escape rather than embrace and appreciate the presence of soil in our daily lives.

I happen to live in a pretty rare suburban landscape.  I have a natural greenbelt next to the river that runs through my neighborhood.  As a kid, I remember being outside and playing in soil all the time.  But it’s easy to imagine how living in urban landscapes allows many people to disconnect with nature, including more importantly I think, understanding where our food comes from.  The emergence in popularity of farmers markets and community gardens are an indication that more people are making healthy and sustainable food a priority.

Now we must go one step further and make the connection to the bigger picture and understand that soils on a global scale are in danger.  In some places, we are currently disposing of fertile soil to develop big suburban communities, complete with Wal-Marts, fast food chains and vast expanses of paved area that encourage us to forget how and why we got here in the first place.  Soil erosion is a big problem in places where deforestation to make room for agricultural landscapes has destabilized and exposed soil to the elements so that it simply washes away.  Monoculture farms that use large amounts of synthetic fertilizers to maintain high yearly yields contribute to the degradation of nutrients and biotic life in soils.  Without maintaining bacterial and fungal communities that help plant roots to obtain essential nutrients, the food that we eat is not as nutritious.

It took billions of years to establish the delicate blanket of soil covering our planet that has provided us with the ability to develop complex agrarian civilizations.  Yet, in a matter of a few generations we are well on our way to destroying one resource that we really can’t live without.  It is encouraging to see that an awareness and desire for nutritious, organic food is growing in many urban areas.  Permaculture, which designs agricultural systems to maximize efficient nutrient cycling and to maintain healthy ecosystems, is a philosophy for land management that is growing in popularity, particularly among young people looking to try farming or just urban gardening.  However, it isn’t easy.  Gardening takes lots of patience and practice and I’ve failed at it more times than I have succeeded.  Even if you don’t have the room or desire to grow some of your own food, it is possible for everyone to contribute by attending farmers markets and supporting small-scale, local farms, that through grass-roots actions, are going to revolutionize the way we appreciate and value our food, soils and our place on Earth.

Now that spring is here, farmers markets will be starting up soon.  Here’s a link to find farmers markets throughout BC.

http://www.bcfarmersmarket.org

A great website with tons of info and links to other great farming blogs as well:

http://youngagrarians.org

http://www.permaculture.org/nm/index.php/site/index/

You can watch DIRT the movie free online here

http://www.truththeory.org/dirt-the-movie/

A good quick overview on the Green Revolution:

http://www.ifpri.org/sites/default/files/pubs/pubs/ib/ib11.pdf

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Happy International Women’s Day! Less talk, more action to end violence against women

by Sarah Allan

Happy International Women’s Day!

I wish that this day could be spent celebrating the successes and achievements of women around the world, but sadly, though its 2013 and we have come a long way, locally and globally the focus is still on the very real and seemingly ever-present issue of violence against women. While it is variously referred to as ‘domestic violence’ (by the B.C. government), ‘family violence’ (by B.C.’s Family Law Act), ‘violence against women in relationships’ (also by the B.C. government) , and other other vague names, it all boils down to, and should accurately be called, violence against women. When talking about an issue as important as this, it’s important to choose our words carefully and with intention, as the language we use to frame a discussion sets parameters for coming up with solutions, whether we mean it to or not. I among others take issue with the misleading labels commonly used to describe physical, sexual, emotional and psychological violence towards women, as ‘domestic violence’ infers privacy and violence that takes place in the home; as ‘family violence’ and ‘domestic violence’ both obscure the gendered nature of what it is most often describing, violence by a man against a women; and as ‘violence against women in relationships’ glosses over the fact that women’s risk of violence increases once a relationship is over. Call it what you will, but i doesn’t erase the reality of violence against women in this country. It is still true that more than half of all Canadian women have experienced at least one incident of physical or sexual violence since the age of 16 and that women are more likely to be assaulted by someone that they know, than by a stranger.

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If You Can’t Enjoy Quinoa, You’re Dead To Me.

by Melanie Hadida

Rant first; recipe later.

I guess I’ll start by addressing the recent controversy associated with quinoa farming and the ways rich white people’s demand for copious amounts of quinoa has driven up local costs of quinoa for South Americans:

http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2013/jan/16/vegans-stomach-unpalatable-truth-quinoa

The article was making the rounds on Facebook, and I’m pretty sure if your Facebook news feed is as socially and globally conscious as mine is, you’ve already seen this article. As a proud McGill University International Development Studies alum, I am certainly aware of the plight of third world farmers and their disadvantages in the global market, unfair economic policies and the overall exploitation millions of people experience to harvest and produce the foods us greedy fatties love to stuff in our faces. I’m an extremely strong advocate of Fair Trade practices (although the movement itself has its own downfalls). Indeed, quinoa can be farmed in North America so why not support that as well!

But my problem is with trendiness. Caring about quinoa farmers has become just as trendy as quinoa itself. I have a serious issue with thousands of hipsters tweeting and Facebooking “Sorry vegans! Looks like your love of quinoa is evil for poor Bolivians!” from their laptops and smartphones that were also—surprise surprise—BUILT ON THE EXPLOITATION AND OUTRIGHT TORTURE OF OTHER PEOPLE!

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Idle No More – Snowflakes, Drums and Thunder

by Sarah Spence

I’ll be honest, I have never been a very political person and I have struggled with finding my identity as a member of the First Nations. I can confidently say that both of these have been because of the barrier that separates the ‘Indian’ world from the ‘White-Man’s’ world. It’s sad to say that this barrier still exists and continues to shackle my identity in a state of limbo, as I assume it has done to many before me and will do to many after me. However, this is a reality that many Indigenous people throughout the world are faced with when going through the integration process into the non-Indigenous society. There are stereotypes and ignorance regarding these separated societies that get picked up, and the fact that individuals do not follow these stereotypical concepts about being of Indigenous descent can often make them feel fraudulent, ambivalent and confused.

When I first started hearing about Chief Theresa Spence’s hunger strike and the Idle No More movement regarding Bill C-45, I was slightly hesitant and skeptical of what my involvement should be. Then I watched a Youtube video of Chief Theresa Spence explaining the cycles of pain of the people in her community who are living in third-world conditions. One thing she mentioned in the video struck a chord with me: that children can’t even take a shower without the possibility of getting a rash because the water isn’t clean. It wasn’t until I heard those words come out of her mouth that I realized the ignorance that I had been carrying around throughout most of my life.

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Defend Our Coast – We were there, were you?

Thoughts and images from Defend Our Coast actions across BC

Sarah Allan – Burnaby-Deer Lake – October 24, 2012 

The ‘Defend Our Coast’ action ouside of Burnaby – Deer Lake MLA Kathy Corrigan’s office was made up of about 15 or 20 people when we first arrived at noon. It was mostly middle-aged and older people, many on on their lunch break, coming out to support the cause despite the rain. Energized by a few great signs, a skilled drummer and a pump up talk by Kathy Corrigan, we all managed to meet, greet and spread some positivity in opposition to tar sands, pipelines and increased tanker traffic on our beautiful BC coast. It was interesting for me to see what an action such as this looks and feels like outside the downtown core, and outside my highly activist Downtown Eastside neighbourhood. It was smaller in scale, and passersby were definitely much less knowledgeable about the issues, giving us confused or curious glances, but not appearing to care too much about the issue. However, the feeling at this action was the same as at any other demonstration. There was a sense of solidarity and a shared concern for the future of our beautiful coast, and of our country, that left me feeling energized by the enthusiasm of others and calmed by the sense that I’m not alone in my beliefs. A small success in a big fight! 

Defend Our Coast Burnaby-Deer Lake                                 with MLA Kathy Corrigan

No Tankers – No Pipelines – No Tar Sands  (No Harper)

Our Coast Is Not For Sale!

Burnaby – Deer Lake Defends Our Coast!

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Thinking about Grandparent’s Raising Grandchildren this ‘Grandparents’ Day’

by Sarah Allan

Grandparents’ Day is a day to appreciate, recognize and celebrate every grandparent everywhere in the world. Grandparents who share time, wisdom, energy and love with grandchildren and great grandchildren; who provide child care while their children work; who spend their savings making sure their grandchildren have “a better life”; who don’t see their grandchildren and miss them dearly; and those who are raising their grandchildren 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, month after month, year after year.

In Canada, more than 65,000 children are being raised by a grandparent or other relative without any parental involvement. In British Columbia, there are almost 10,000 children who are being raised by their grandparents. This is more children than are in foster care in BC. Many of these children end up being cared for by their grandparents as the result of a crisis situation involving the child’s parents, such as the involvement of the Ministry of Children and Family Development, neglect or abandonment, drug addiction, mental health issues, incarceration or death. These amazing ‘grandparents raising grandchildren’, or ‘GRG’s’, have been referred to as the province’s ‘invisible foster care system’ as without them, the taxpayer funded foster care system would be responsible for the care and well-being of all of these children.

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Shady Sponsorship and Bhopal’s Special Olympics

by Melanie Hadida

Photo Credit: Sanjay Verma

About a week ago I found myself in Cardiff, Wales searching for a place to have a tea and scam some free internet so I could do some work. The best option to meet those specifications (in the city centre of a big UK city) is always Starbucks. It was a rare beautiful and sunny day and I was desperate to get as much time outdoors as possible. When I went up to the counter to order my chai, I asked the barista why their neatly stacked patio furniture had not been placed outside yet. “We’re not allowed,” she told me, “this is the Olympic Park area and no one is allowed to set up outdoors—we could be fined £20,000.” (On account of not giving a crap about the Olympics, I had no idea that Cardiff is apparently one of the event locations.)

Turns out, that since Starbucks isn’t an official sponsor of the 2012 London Olympic games, they could not set up tables and chairs on the lovely sunny cobblestone walkway outside of the café because this would be un-sanctioned advertisement for Starbucks. And this would make Coca Cola and McDonalds angry….and you wouldn’t like them when they’re angry…

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The Finity Project: Shedding Light on MS

via The Finity Project

Finity is the acute awareness of one’s own finite existence. So many people wake up each day with the knowledge that this day could be the last they are given breath, the ability to walk, or the beauty to see; for those who sometimes miss out on this awareness, The Finity Project strives to awaken it.

Five years ago, at opposite ends of the country, Lee-Anne Fava and Kara Byrne both experienced what would be their first symptoms of multiple sclerosis (MS). The onset of temporary blindness in both of their left eyes became the beginning of their journey with MS, and their introduction to each other one year ago became something so much bigger than they could have ever imagined. On that day in May, 2011, when they met for the first time, Kara had no idea she was shaking hands with the Co-Founder of The Finity Project, and neither did Lee-Anne.

In eight episodes that take place around the globe, they will embark on eight charity challenges such as skydiving for cystic fibrosis, adventuring the Great Wall of China for juvenile diabetes, and running the New York City Marathon on the Michael J. Fox Foundation’s team for Parkinson’s research. Every episode is dedicated to a different disease and will prove to test both them and viewers alike while raising funds and awareness. They are on a mission, with multiple sclerosis as their travel companion, not their guide.

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Getting International Development Right in Laos

by Justin Shoub

Paddy Dadson is not the most typical managing director of an NGO. He is not a bookish intellectual.  He didn’t attend an Ivy League university – or any university at all, actually. He doesn’t have a solid grounding in abstract social theory, and he is not particularly well versed in the institutional structure of the international development community, or its donor agencies.

This is exactly why he is so effective.

In 2006, while volunteering in the ecotourism industry in Bokeo province, Paddy came to know and befriend many of the residents of Ban Toup village, a quaint community of several hundred people who belong to the Hmong hill tribe. Ban Toup is largely comprised of subsistence farmers, most of whom live in basic mud floor, grass roofed huts built in the traditional Hmong style.

Paddy began to realize that despite the significant attention that had been given to environmental conservation, agriculture, and resource management by the international development community in Bokeo province, there hadn’t been a real, concrete improvement in the lives of many people. He saw Europeans driving around in their hummers, doing surveys and conducting meetings here and there, but for the most part, it seemed to him that the mammoth NGOs were completely failing in one crucial respect, something that seemed obvious to him: they simply weren’t asking the locals what they needed; they were coming in with an agenda already in mind, and implementing it from the top-down.

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