Friday, April 26, 2013

Farm Fair- Urban Gardening Crash Course: 2013.04.27

Via Fresh Fork Market


FARMFAIRBANNER

4 EXCITING COURSES, KIDS GAMES AND ACTIVITIES, ALL FREE

Please join us this April for a 1-day crash course on how to plant your own garden.  Each course will be taught by real farmers, both English and Amish.  These producers will cover topics in four courses:
Soils – understanding your soil, how to improve it, and what will grow in it
Seeds – selecting the right seeds for your garden, when and how to start them, when and how to plant them
Garden Maintenance – watering and fertilizing, identifying diseases and pests, and treating diseases and pests.
Harvest and Post Harvest Preservation – when to harvest and how to enjoy your garden year round, including canning, fermenting, and freezing recipes from local chefs
Each Course will be taught 4 times throughout the day.  This event is designed for those to come and go; however, we guarantee you’ll have a great time if you stay all day!
There will be lots of kids and family activities, including a farmer photo booth with props, composting demo, seed planting area, butter shaking station, face painting, and even an egg toss competition and seed spitting competition.
This event is free to the public but we do encourage you to register online first.  Anyone who registers is entered into a drawing to win a Free 2013 Fresh Fork Market Summer Share (Small).

SCHEDULE:

 

SOIL

SEEDS & PLANTING

MAINTENANCE

POST HARVEST

9:30 AM to 10:15 AMRegistration
10:15 AM to 11:15 AMJunior Yoder & David Raber, GFFDiane Morgan, Maggie’s FarmDiane Hiener, Peters Creek
Multipurpose Room (192)Cafeteria (162)Science Room (250)Science Room (249)
11:30 AM to 12:30 PMDiane Morgan, Maggie’s FarmRoman YoderMike Hiener, Peters CreekParker Bosley
Multipurpose Room (192)Cafeteria (162)Science Room (250)Science Room (249)
12:30 PM to 1:30 PMLunch Break
1:30 PM to 2:30 PMKay VaughnMike Hiener, Peters CreekHarvey KempfVikki Hamm, Cleveland Crops
Science Room (250)Science Room (249)Multipurpose Room (192)Cafeteria (162)
2:45 PM to 3:45 PMHarvey Kempf, Healthy Harvest FarmKay VaughnJoel Kurtz/Aden KeimKaren Small, Flying Fig
Science Room (250)Science Room (249)Multipurpose Room (192)Cafeteria (162)

ABOUT THE PRESENTERS:

JUNIOR YODER AND DAVID RABER

Greenfield Family Farms, Fredericksburg OH.   Teaching Course 1:  Soil at 10:15 AM in the Multipurpose Room (Room 192).
Junior and David always have dirt under their nails.  In fact, that’s a requirement for soil consultants.  As members of the Greenfield Organic Farms co-op, they work with approximately 30 farmers in Northeast Ohio to manage the nutrient program for those farms, including approximately 400 acres of farm land.
Junior and David will discuss building soils and finding the most healthy balance of air, water, biology, and humus through organic methods, including getting the right PH to make nutrients available to the plant, encouraging biological activity to break down organic matter and release nutrients, and perfecting your tilling and rotation techniques to keep the soil healthy and productive into the future.

DIANE MORGAN

Maggies Farm, W-61st and Storer Ave Cleveland OH
Teaching Course 1:  Soil at 11:30 AM in the Multipurpose Room (Room 192)
Diane is on a crusade to transform empty lots on the near-west side of Cleveland into bountiful, healthy organic farms.  Unlike many of our other presenters today, Diane isn’t fortunate enough to have well manicured and productive agricultural soils.  Instead, she is relying on technology – creative, adaptive soil building techniques and high-density companion planting – to create healthy harvests from her small plots.
Come learn from Diane about how to build raised bed gardens and improve your soils through compost, companion planting, and compost tea.  Diane teaches Course 1 at 11:30 AM in Room 192.
I the morning, Diane will discuss garden maintenance, including proper watering, weeding, and pest control during Course 3:  Garden Maintenance.  This course is in room 250, the Science Room above the gym.

KAY VAUGHN

Maize Valley Farm, Hartville OH
Teaching Course 1:  Soil at 1:30 PM and Course 2:  Seeds at 2:45 PM.
If I haven’t heard it a thousand times, I haven’t heard it once.  ”You can have it good, fast, or cheap.  But you can only pick two.  Now what will it be?,” demands – loudly demands – Kay Vaughn of Maize Valley Farm in Hartville.
Kay has been farming full time since the early 70s.  His experiences are vast – dairying, commercial hog production, field crops (corn and soybeans), wine grapes, and today, specialty produce, including Northeast Ohio’s best sweet corn, beautiful peppers, and exceptional beets and carrots.
In his nearly 50 years of experience, Kay has seen ever trend come and go.  Through this, he has been able separate the bull from the…you know what.  He’s convinced that you don’t need fertilizers.  What you need is biological activity to build healthy soil.  Kay’s understanding of commercial fertilizers and their relationship with the plant is tremendous.  He is also exceptionally knowledgable about seeds, GMOs, and hybrids.

HARVEY KEMPF

E&M Produce and Advancing Eco Agriculture, Middlefield OH
Teaching Course 1:  Soil at 2:45 PM in Room 250 (Science Room) and Course 3:  Maintenance at 1:30 PM in Room 192 (Multipurpose Room)
At the age of 23, Harvey is one of the most experienced organic farmers in Ohio.  His family is a pioneer in nutrient dense farming techniques.  While Harvey focuses on the production on the family farm, his older brother, John, spends his time studying the latest research on organic production and traveling the world (literally) coaching farmers on their soil fertility and nutrient plans.
Harvey’s farm is one of Fresh Fork Market’s largest producers. When I asked him if he could talk about garden maintenance, including how he gets rid of pests on the farm, he chuckled and said “I’m not qualified.”   I asked, “Why not?”  His response:  ”I don’t use pesticides.”  Yep, he’s prefect for Course 3:  Garden Maintenance.
Harvey’s focus across the board is on healthy soils.  With a healthy soil with bustling biological activity, his plants are healthier, more productive, and produce more complete sugars and proteins, therefore becoming more difficult for diseases and pests to attack.  Beyond his understanding of soils, Harvey also has some unusual techniques for controlling insects – weeds.

ROMAN YODER

Yoder Produce Supply, Fredericksburg, OH
Teaching Course 2:  Seeds at 11:30 AM in the Cafeteria, Room 162.
Roman and his family have one of the most popular produce grower supply stores in central Ohio, Yoder’s Produce Supply.  They are the place to go for the commercial growers in the greater Holmes County area.
As a result, Roman understands seeds.  What’s a good seed and a bad seed, where to find them, how to start them.

MIKE AND DIANE HIENER

Peters Creek Farm, South Dorset OH
Teaching Course 2:  Seeds at 1:30 PM in Room 249.   Teaching Course 3:  Garden Maintenance at 11:30 AM in Room 250. Course 4:  Harvest and Post Harvest Preservation at 10:15 AM in Room 249.
Mike grew up on a well drained, sandy river bottom farm in Marietta, Ohio.  He then moved to Ashtabula where the clay is thick and nearly impermeable.  He was eager to talk about soils, but I had to sting back, “Mike, you are eager to wine about your muddy soils.”  ”Dang,” proclaims Mike, “always cracking the whip Clatterbuck.”  Mike’s a good going guy and we joke back and forth pretty hard.  He usually out-wits me and throws in a West Virginia joke (based on my origin).
In Course 2, Seeds, Mike will be discussing seeds, where to buy them, and how to read a seed catalog.  What are days to maturity, degree days, sapling vigor, and soil temperature requirements?  Mike’s presentation will include examples of transplants that he has started throughout the winter and how you can imitate this at home.
For Course 3, Garden Maintenance, Mike admits, “as farmers, we have to continually change our approach to pest and fungal management.”  In short, the diseases and pests change and sometimes adapt to the more conventional applications.  From year to year, farmers face different, often unpredictable challenges.  Mike will help you learn how to identify these diseases and what some possible solutions are.
For Course 4, Diane Hiener will talk about some of the ways that her and Mike enjoy the food they grow year round.  Her presentation will include information about canning and freezing and some of their favorite recipes.

JOEL KURTZ

Wholesome Valley Farm, Wilmot OH
Teaching Course 3:  Garden Maintenance, 2:45 PM in Room 192 (Multipurpose room)
You may say that Joel is a disciple of the Kempf Family’s work.   Nutrient density and chemical free farming are his focus.  Joel’s work includes farm manager at Wholesome Valley Farm, a start-up organic farm and farm attraction in Wilmot OH.  Joel’s vision for the farm, from the begging, has been an education center for consumers and farmers alike to learn about sustainable production methods.  Further, the facility will serve as a hub for the community.  Today, this is all true as Fresh Fork Market works with several farms in relationship to Wholesome Valley Farm.
Joel’s discussion will enforce the importance of healthy soils in making garden maintenance easier, cover crops for fertilization, minerals, and even water quality.

PARKER BOSLEY

Fresh Fork Market, formerly Parkers New American Bistro, Cleveland OH.
Teaching Course 4:  Harvest and Post Harvest Preservation at 11:30 AM in Room 249.
If you have been to any of the Fresh Fork Market events before, you have likely seen Parker around or teaching.  I asked him about instructing this course and he chuckled, “Why me? A lazy old cheater who just freezes his vegetables?”  Me:  ”Yes Parker.  Do you think a family with 4 kids has time to not be lazy?”
Parker’s presentation will focus on selecting the right products to put away for the winter, including peaches, tomatoes, beans, and more.  He’ll then demonstrate blanching and pealing, removing seeds, and freezing. In conclusion, he’ll demonstrate a few of his favorite recipes using frozen produce.

KAREN SMALL

Flying Fig Restaurant, Cleveland OH
Teaching Course 4:  Harvest and Post Harvest Preservation at 2:45 PM in the Cafeteria, Room 162.
If you live in Cleveland and don’t already know about the Flying Fig in Ohio City, then you really don’t get out much.  Karen Small is one of the original local food gurus in Cleveland and today is still as devoted as ever to local. That means that she has to work with an excessive bounty in the summer and put it away for the winter and then turn it into something outstanding for her diners.
Please join Karen Small as she demonstrates some of her favorite recipes for canning vegetables and fruit preserves.

FOOD

VENDORS


Thursday, April 25, 2013

Lakefront Parks Survey

via LANDstudio

lakefront-survey-flyer

Shape the future of Cleveland! Take the Cleveland Metroparks Lakefront Parks Survey!
As you may have heard in the news, Cleveland City Council voted unanimously Monday to transfer management of the state-run lakefront parks (including Edgewater Park, Gordon Park, Euclid Beach, and Villa Angela/Wildwood) to the Cleveland Metroparks! This is exciting news and the Cleveland Metroparks are looking forward to making the Lakefront Parks an even greater asset to the region.

As a part of this transition process, LAND studio has partnered with Cleveland Metroparks to seek the input of the community as to how to make the Lakefront Parks the best they can be for visitors. While the first year of Cleveland Metroparks involvement will largely involve basic amenities like safety and cleanliness, they are also looking for future programming opportunities, in addition to gauging current perceptions.

Please take 10 minutes of your time to take the survey and help shape the future of Cleveland's waterfront! The survey can be found here: http://svy.mk/11a36lf. Thank you!

Wednesday, April 24, 2013

Race, Food and Justice Conference. 2013.04.25 - 04.26

I for one, am disappointed I found out about this too late to go (I'm a busy dude or at least people are always making plans for me. Dang job.)




The Race, Food and Justice Conference will will highlight and explore the grassroots approach behind Growing Power’s Growing Food and Justice for All Initiative. Building on the momentum of the Rid-All Green Partnership Project and the robust local and national food movement, the goals of this conference are simple:
1) to create a space for dialogue and discussion about social justice issues and strategies that seek to disrupt inequity,
2) see how the history of farming, culture and race factor into economics, land use policies, land ownership, health, jobs, and community programs,
3) expose and discuss decisions that impact our most vulnerable communities.
This event is a collaboration between Environmental Health WatchGrowing PowerRid-All Green Partnership, and CWRU Social Justice Institute. The two-day conference will be held at Case Western Reserve University, April 25th-26th, 2013. To register for the event, visit the following link: http://www.brownpapertickets.com/events/331102.

April 25th, 2013 Schedule

Screening of Byron Hurt's 2012 documentary Soul Food Junkies,
Strosacker Auditorium, 7:00pm - 9:00pm
6:00 - 7:00 pm:  Registration and Refreshments
7:00 - 7:10 pm:  Welcome and Acknowledgements
Teleange Thomas
7:15 - 7:20 pm:  Introduction
Jason Eugene-Boarde, FoodStuff Cleveland
Jessica Kayse, Neighborhood Leadership Institute
7:20 - 8:20 pm:  Soul Food Junkies Film
8:20 - 8:25 pm:  5 min break
8:25 - 8:50 pm:  Discussion and Reaction
Jason Eugene-Boarde, FoodStuff Cleveland
Jessica Kayse, Neighborhood Leadership Institute
8:50 - 9:00 pm:  Invitation to Conference, Announcements, and Wrap-up
Randell McShepard, Rid-All Green Partnership, PolicyBridge

April 26th, 2013 Schedule

Race, Food & Justice: Analyzing the Urban Food Movement Through a Social Justice Lens
Allen Memorial Library, Ford Auditorium, 6:00pm - 9:00 pm 
5:00 - 6:00 pm:  Registration and Refreshments
6:05 - 6:15 pm:  Welcome and Acknowledgements
Dr. Rhonda Y. Williams – Founder & Director, CWRU Social Justice Institute
6:15 - 6:35 pm:  Black/Land Project and The Cleveland Connection
6:35 - 6:55 pm:  What's Happening in Detroit and Land Policy Issues
6:55 - 7:25 pm:  Growing Food and Justice for All Initiative
7:25 - 7:30 pm:  5 minute Break
7:30 - 7:40 pm:  Place Matters and Policy/Advocacy Pilot Project
7:40 - 7:50 pm:  True Wealth of Health and Building Blocks
7:50 - 8:05 pm:  Panel Discussion - Moderated by Dr. Rhonda Y. Williams
Erika Allen, Malik Yakini, Mistinguette Smith, Sandy Chappelle, Rev. Tony Minor, Greg Brown, Fred Collier
8:05 - 8:50 pm:  Q&A/Open Discussion
8:50 - 9:00 pm:  Closing Remarks
To learn more about social justice initiatives at Case Western Reserve and how you can be involved, contact the Social Justice Institute at 216.368.2515 orsocialjustice@case.edu.

Monday, April 22, 2013

Mark Schatz : Universe Exhibition Opening - Sculpture Center 2013.04.26


Friday, April 26
Mark Schatz: UNIVERSE

Euclid Avenue Gallery

5:30-8:00 PM    Public Opening   
7:00 PM    The Artist Talks: Mark Schatz in the Euclid Avenue Gallery
1834 E. 123rd Street, Cleveland, Ohio 44106 USA
In UNIVERSE, Mark Schatz maps the world in a sprawling, double-sided landscape model that draws from architects, planners and hobbyists, as well as from obsessive, self-taught artists who have spent years struggling to manifest their interior worlds in basements and backyards. This faceted map could conceivably fold in either direction to form a continuous globe or, more precisely, a cuboctohedron. The structure, which fills the entire Euclid Avenue Gallery, is derived from by the global "Dymaxion" projection maps developed by designer and visionary R. Buckminister Fuller. 













Images: Mark Schatz, UNIVERSE (detail)
2013, found cardboard, found objects, wood, paint, electrical metallic tubing, hardware. 96 x 156 x 270 in. Images courtesy of the arti

Sunday, April 21, 2013

Sculpture Center looking for interviewees for performance piece summer of 2013

via: The Sculpture Center


INVITATION FROM SUSAN BYRNES
Performance artist Susan Byrnes is creating an interactive performance piece, Mending Is Better Than Ending. If you would like to participate, simply record your responses and email them to susanbstudio@gmail.com. Describe specific places and details about Cleveland that make it important/special to you - details you love that make it feel like home to you - particularly ordinary, everyday things you really like or notice about Cleveland. Your interview will be remixed and edited anonymously.
  
It only takes 3 steps to participate!
1.Find somebody with an iPhone or smart phone with a recording function, or somebody with a digital audio recorder. 
  
2.In a quiet spot, record yourself (you can also interview others!) answering the following questions:
(Please answer with specific details important to you, as opposed to general (for example - an  answer of " the exhibit of the whale skeleton in the museum of natural history is my favorite" is more helpful than the response "I love all the great museums we have.")
  • Name and occupation (This is optional and all responses will be used as anonymous voices, but if you would like to be thanked at the exhibition for participating, please include this.)
  • Where is your favorite street corner in the city? Why?
  • Do you have a treasured possession that originated in Cleveland? What is it and where did it come from?
  • What does Cleveland sound like?
  • Where do you go in the city to get revived/restored/revitalized?
  • Do you have a favorite view of Cleveland? Where is it and why is it important to you?
3.Send your recording to Susan.
If you don't have a smartphone or audio recording device, and/or want to arrange for Susan to interview you, email her by May 1st and you can set up a time to meet during the month of May 2013.

As the final performance of the 2013 W2S Performance Series Susan is inviting Clevelanders of all ages to join her at The Sculpture Center on Saturday, July 27 from 2-6 in the afternoon to help her build an audio "house" and to decorate it with painted words and ideas about Cleveland.