Archive for the 'Food and agriculture' Category

Tide Mill Farm

Update: Here is a direct link for the MOOMilk organization in addition to the Facebook link below:

http://www.moomilkco.com./

Welcome WERU listeners who heard the Thanksgiving Day special featuring Aaron Bell and Carly DelSignore of Tide Mill Farm in Edmunds. You may listen here or download the program for your iPod or other audio listening device using the link below (yep, for free).

For more information on Tide Mill Farm, please visit HERE.

MOOMilk is beginning to become available. Click HERE for the MOOMilk page. The most up-to-date information probably is on FaceBook.

 
icon for podpress  Tide Mill Farm (WERU) [28:09m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

Maine Fair Trade Campaign’s Sarah Bigney

What does "fair trade" in coffee really mean

This podcast features a talk University of Maine graduate Sarah Bigney gave on Thursday September 25, 2008:

“The Two Fair Trade Movements: Bridging the Divide Between Buying Coffee and Repealing NAFTA”

Sarah Bigney is organizer at the Maine Fair Trade Campaign, a statewide coalition of 50 organizations for building a just, sustainable, and democratic economy. (Check out their site for information on current campaigns, including the one to oppose the Panama Free Trade Agreement.)

This talk was part of the Fall 2008 Thursday controversy series sponsored by the Marxist-Socialist Studies Interdisciplinary Minor, and co-sponsored by the Maine Peace Action Committee (MPAC) and Campus Activities and Events, with support of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences at the University.

Additional photos (described in the talk) are posted below the fold.

 
icon for podpress  Sarah Bigney [71:35m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

Continue reading ‘Maine Fair Trade Campaign’s Sarah Bigney’

Harvest supper 2006: The Nearing legacy

On Saturday October 14, 2006, the Peace and Justice Center of Eastern Maine held its annual Harvest Supper. Bob St. Peter, Resident Steward of the Good Life Center in Harborside, Maine gave the keynote address on the legacy of Helen and Scott Nearing.

The primary purpose of the Good Life Center is to preserve Forest Farm, the Nearing’s last hand-built homestead of. Its mission is to “perpetuate the philosophies and lifeways promoted and exemplified by Helen and Scott Nearing, two of America’s most inspirational practitioners of simple, frugal and purposeful living.”

Bob St. Peter and his family are now charged with the care of Forest Farm. Bob’s talk follows the one given at the Peace and Justice Center’s first Harvest Supper seventeen years ago by Helen Nearing herself.

Bob discusses the incredible journey through life recorded by Helen and Scott in their writings. While many people are familiar with the Good Life and Maple Sugar books, Bob focuses for a bit on Scott’s voluminous but nowadays less-read political work–still vibrant and applicable to today’s world. Bob also raises issues of food consciousness and food justice that are integral to the Nearing legacy.

This program was broadcast on WERU Community Radio on Thanksgiving Day, November 23, 2006.

“Wendell Berry has said that ‘eating is an agricultural act.’ I would agree, and add that it can also be an act of resistance…” -–Bob St. Peter

download mp3

24 min; 8 MB; 48 kbps mp3; download link here ->

Harvest supper 2005: organic agriculture

This excellent program—ORGANIC AGRICULTURE IN MAINE (26 min; 6.1MB; 32kbps mp3)—is a talk by Russ Libby, Executive Director of MOFGA (Maine Organic Farmers and Gardeners Association) given Saturday October 15, 2005 at the Peace & Justice Center of Eastern Maine’s 16th annual Harvest Supper in Bangor, Maine.

Russ covers some interesting ground about the future of world energy resources and why the need for local organic agriculture will grow boundlessly into the future.

download mp3

26 min; 6 MB; 32 kbps mp3; download link here ->