No fish by 2048? (seems so, unless we do something)
Submitted by John Symond on Thu, 06/05/2010 - 11:50pmThis film is due for release on June 8 in Australia:
We are at The End of the Line as far as fishing goes.
This movie was reviewed on Fran Kelly's Breakfast Show on ABC Radio National
Even NineMSN gave it some publicity and a write-up.
Oil picture coming together - or falling apart
Submitted by Karin Geiselhart on Sun, 02/05/2010 - 9:38amAs horrifying as it is to watch the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico unfold, it would be a mistake to think it is 'over there' somehow and won't have effects on us in Canberra. I'm not wise enough to predict their precise details, but I can see that patterns are emerging in relation to oil and its availability that will surely impact on our way of life in the very near future.
It also seems that our governments are not planning for this adequately, which is why we need to push very hard to make them sit up and take notice.
This oil spill, which may be the biggest environmental catastrophe so far for the US, is just one of the pieces that relate to oil. Taken together, they paint a picture that can help inform our decisions about our future.
To begin with, impacts on fishing industries in the Gulf of Mexico will probably further drive up the cost of fish globally, and further speed up the demise of fisheries. the book The End of the Line, by Charles Clover, is an eyeopener on overfishing. We've passed 'peak fish' long ago.
Useful answers to counter the arguments of Climate Denialists
Submitted by John Symond on Wed, 28/04/2010 - 9:33am
Check out this excellent website produced by Australian physics graduate, John Cook in Queensland
Nobel Prize winning Economist endorses SEE-Change approach
Submitted by Karin Geiselhart on Sat, 24/04/2010 - 9:23amWell, that is a bit hyperbolic, but in principle, she would fully approve of what SC is doing. This article was brought to my attention through the climate action Canberra mailing list, which is just one of many useful communication vehicles dealing with this issue in the ACT. YOu can read it yourself, and it isn't technical:
A Multi-Scale Approach to Coping with Climate Change and Other Collective Action Problems, by Elinor Ostrom.
http://www.thesolutionsjournal.com/node/565
She goes through a clear analysis of why waiting for collective action, like waiting for Godot, is unlikely to provide the best outcomes. Her approach is grounded in complex adaptive systems analysis, which provides mathematical underpinnings for a lot of common sense. Everyday phrases like 'the straw that broke the camel's back' and 'a stitch in time saves nine', are metaphors for real physical processes.
A community campaign for 40% reduction in ACT carbon emissions by 2020
Submitted by Bob Douglas on Fri, 23/04/2010 - 3:27pmIt is now clear that human actions in the next decade will determine the future suitability of planet earth for human habitation. Our world leaders did not get their act together at Copenhagen and there is now a very strong likelihood that unless communities around the world demand very urgent action by our governments, our children will be locked into a very unpleasant future.
The See-Change Library
Submitted by John Symond on Mon, 19/04/2010 - 11:47amThis is an initial record of the current list of books held at The Downer Office of See-Change
Later, when we have more books, we may attempt a more elaborate web page.
Perhaps there are books you could give See-Change, or would be willing to lend on a long term basis, for further lending out, or for browsing at the Office?
Just let us know...
Current holdings:
The Real Wealth of Nations, Riane Eisler, Berrett-Koehler Publishers, 2007
Fostering Sustainable Behaviour, Doug McKenzie-Mohr & William Smith, New Society Publishers, 2006
How to Live a low-carbon Life, Chris Goodall, Earthscan Publishers, 2007
Climate Change What you Can Do About it, Paul Holper and Simon Torok, McMillan / CSIRO Publishing, 2008
The Transition Handbook, Rob Hopkins, Green Books, 2008
To borrow a book please contact Anne Clarke at the Office
Farewell to thee my dearest pumpkin
Submitted by Hannah Parris on Wed, 14/04/2010 - 9:36pmIt’s change over time in our garden. We have fondly bid farewell to the tomatoes a couple of weeks ago and, last weekend, it was the turn of the pumpkins. Our yield happily filled a wheelbarrow load and I felt like an extra from Oklahoma! <!--break-->
The roll call of winter vege is, I have to admit, a lot less exciting than the summer ones but adjusting to the rhythm of the season garden is one of the lessons of what we do – so bring on the brassica, keep the kale coming and welcome the winter but……..oh no we have a pest problem.
As ye sow, so shall ye scrub
Submitted by Karin Geiselhart on Mon, 12/04/2010 - 4:08pmGardening can be a rewarding and peaceful activity. It offers an endless and pleasurable learning curve (unlike cleaning, for a different domestic comparison).
Even mundane activities like weeding and fertilising contribute to the whole, and are therefore part of the meditation of gardening.
But what happens when the time needed to get it even partly right outweighs the time available to tend to those fruit trees and veggies?
A few months ago, visiting an almost unbelievably productive garden in O'Connor, it struck me that harvesting and cooking or preserving all that wonderful vegetation would be nearly a full time task.
The photo I have attached illustrates my dilemma, which is probably echoed by each devoted gardener at some point or another. (you will have to click on it to see.)
I can grow decent carrots. The crop would have been better if I'd thinned them as seedlings, but that step got missed. Now I am harvesting them, and last week made a fine Indian carrot soup from my successful effort.
The embryonic gardener
Submitted by Hannah Parris on Wed, 31/03/2010 - 1:30pmI’ve learnt to fear the words “honey, can you bring me the colander please?” Usually it is from my husband out in the garden and inevitably presages an avalanche of just picked garden produce about to land in my cooking pot. Welcome to the world of the home gardener. Sweet darling little zucchini one day, huge ‘what the bugger do we do with them now’ marrow the next (answer: they actually barbeque up quite nicely).
Really, this whole gardening thing started as a birthday present for my husband who has an urge to nurture things. But on Sunday afternoons I have the urge only for a cuppa tea and a good book, so it seemed that taking the plunge – even hiring a gardener to get the big stuff done – and growing a few veges would satisfy us both.
But the thing is, we are now both hooked. And I now find myself regularly out in the garden marvelling at the tomatoes or greedily coveting the freshly picked raspberries….this is now not a hobby, but a (particularly yummy) part of our lives. (mmmmm, although maybe I DO need to get out more).
Where is my main mulch man?
Submitted by Karin Geiselhart on Sun, 28/03/2010 - 3:44pmBut of course, it could be a woman, too. The point is that my yard generates green waste, and that taking it to the tip where it can be left for free still requires a car, a trailer, time and petrol.
If Canberra is to become a greener city, with new clean green activities displacing our wasteful practices, wouldn't a Mobile Mulcher be a good new service niche?
A smidgeon of research on this issue (that means I called one tree service that offers mulching services) revealed that even at economy rates, getting someone to our house to mulch existing green waste would cost a minimum of $200 for an hour's work. That is a lot of mulching, I guess, but far more than the value/cost of me of a trip to the tip, since I already own a car and trailer.
But what about people who do not have such accoutrements, and isn't one good goal to have fewer unncecssary cars, trailers and car trips?

