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Calamity Jane
  • 32, Female
  • Cordova, AK
  • United States
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Subsist/Resist

Latest Activity

Calamity Jane added a discussion to the group Urban Gardeners
we will be moving to New Orleans in the fall and i would love to get a head start on my deep south gardening knowledge (all my previous gardening has been in Alaska!!!) anyone out there garden in the south? can you recommend good books/resources? ...
April 9
April 8
am i too late on this one? i haven't been checking email much lately. yeah! dumpster-growners unite! hey, we should start a group... some of my favorite dumpster preserves: pickled ginger (or candied, yum) yogurt (and yogurt cheese) from cases of...
February 8

Profile Information

What Kind of HOMEGROWN are You?
Earth Mama
A bit about me:
I live with my husband and babe in the remote fishing town of Cordova, Alaska. We have a big garden and put up lots of fish (Copper River Salmon), wild game and berries. Got 8 chickens this summer, of which there are 6 left, not laying yet.
I've been writing a DIY zine for years, but just went virtual. Check my blog out at
http://subsistresist.wordpress.com/
Latest greatest meal cooked at home:
Last night's seafood chowder (halibut, sockeye salmon, scallops, and clams) with homemade sourdough biscuits.
Also wild blueberry crisp for dessert.
I can't be held responsible for all those goodies though, it was a potluck.
Currently reading
The True Cost of Low Prices by Vincent Gallagher, Deep Economy by Bill McKibben, and Player Piano by Kurt Vonegut
Currently listening to:
Ali Farka Toure, Feist, Rodriguez
My latest DIY project:
Turning old shrunken sweaters into baby clothes, makes great xmas gifts, see my blog for directions!
Web site I recommend
http://subsistresist.wordpress.com/

The Latest From subsistresist.wordpress.com

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At 6:29pm on January 20, 2009, Willi said…
Hey! Thanks for the tip!
At 2:03am on January 12, 2009, Rig said…
Haines has been real cold, pretty much. Evan is home from Fairbanks and will be going to New Zealand soon for WWOOF. Jennie is back in public school after a nice long vacation called "homeschooling". Susie still has a hurt knee from falling down blueberry picking and then going snowshoeing up Mt. Ripinski two weeks later. I've been building and fixing up things around here and keeping us in firewood. Miss you lots.
 
 

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Latest from FARM AID

Farmer Veterans

JoelToday is Veterans Day and Farm Aid thanks all the veterans who have served our country. In honor of their service, I want to introduce you to a group of veterans who are beginning new careers as farmers and growers of the Good Food Movement.
Not long after the Farm Aid concert in early October, we received an email from Michael O'Gorman, project director of the Farmer-Veteran Coalition (FVC). The FVC brought a group of veterans to St. Louis and mounted an excellent exhibit in our HOMEGROWN Village at the show. Reflecting on the experience, Michael wrote,

"Our group...included twenty two veterans—twenty of them post-9/11, fifteen who served in Iraq or Afghanistan or both, and fifteen of whom are pursuing careers in farming or the good food movement. It was a very powerful experience for these men and women to meet each other—some for the first time—and to feel part of a very unique group that shares such profound experience in common. Farm Aid was a wonderful experience for them to see young farmers treated as heroes—something they are both searching for and deserving of. And of course they all went absolutely berserk when Willie came on stage with our hat!!"

Willie and Farm Aid are proud to have hosted the Farmer-Veteran Coalition in St. Louis and honored to include the FVC as a member of our Farmer Resource Network. The FVC is a California-based non-profit organization whose long-term goal is creating 10,000 new farmers from the ranks of some two million returning post-9/11 veterans. This goal is not merely a pipe dream: rural Americans disproportionately over-populate the ranks of the military, representing roughly 65% of all service members. Fully committed to growing the good food movement and to the notion that nourishing the land helps nourish the soul, the FVC's mission is "to mobilize our food and farming community to create healthy and viable futures for America's veterans by enlisting their help in 1) building our green economy, 2) rebuilding our rural communities, and 3) securing a safe and healthy food supply".

The FVC, which is explicitly non-political, welcomes all returning vets and connects them with help in employment, training, and replenishing their lives on America's farms. In addition to working with veterans groups all over the country, the FVC is currently expanding its connections to new farmer training programs, building its mentoring program among established farmers and food industry professionals, and gathering resources to help veterans find financing for land or further education.

Click here to read more about the Farmer Veterans Coalition's visit to Farm Aid.
 

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