Biodynamic Agriculture

Uniting Heaven and Earth through farming

"This is a cosmic issue as well as an earthly issue. Precisely from the example of agriculture, we can see how necessary it is to derive forces from Spirit, forces that are quite yet unknown."~Rudolf SteinerThis group is created to further interest in and education about Biodynamic Agriculture. Biodynamics is truely the earliest organic agriculture movement ...learn more

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Created: Apr 24, 2008

Updated: Oct 23, 2009

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Created: Feb 09, 2007
Updated: Oct 11, 2008
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100 Mile Diet

( Network/ Coalition/ Collective )

Organization Info   [Edit]

Activities: Educational
 
Type: Network/ Coalition/ Collective
 
Scope: international
 
Website: 100milediet.org
 
Main Email: N/A
 
Contact Name: Alisa Smith
 
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When the average North American sits down to eat, each ingredient has typically travelled at least 1,500 miles—call it "the SUV diet." On the first day of spring, 2005, Alisa Smith and James MacKinnon (bios) chose to confront this unsettling statistic with a simple experiment. For one year, they would buy or gather their food and drink from within 100 miles of their apartment in Vancouver, British Columbia.

Since then, James and Alisa have gotten up-close-and-personal with issues ranging from the family-farm crisis to the environmental value of organic pears shipped across the globe. They've reconsidered vegetarianism and sunk their hands into community gardening. They've eaten a lot of potatoes.

Their 100-Mile Diet struck a deeper chord than anyone could have predicted. Within weeks, reprints of their blog at thetyee.ca had appeared on sites across the internet. Then came the media, from BBC Worldwide to Utne magazine. Dozens of individuals and grassroots groups have since launched their own 100-Mile Diet adventures. The need now is clear: a locus where 100-milers can get the information they need to try their own lifestyle experiments, and to exchange ideas and develop campaigns. That locus will be here at 100MileDiet.org—turning an idea into a movement.

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