New Local Foods Grant Links B&Bs, Area Agriculture

A new grant awarded through the U.S. Department of Agriculture will encourage bed and breakfast operators to feature locally produced food and agricultural products

, according to a recent announcement by New York State Agriculture Commissioner Darrel J. Aubertine.

Steve Miller, senior executive chef of Cornell University's Cornell Dining, recently outlined the new grant for me, which is designed to increase the number of B&Bs offering locally produced food and agricultural products in meals served to their guests, carrying shelf-stable local products such as jams, maple syrup and sauces, and to measure the economic impact of producers of sales made through this specialized marketing channel.

Funds, Miller said, will be used to organize regional opportunities for B&B owners to meet local producers and sample their products. "Part of the project will be to identify these two groups and make it easier for them to access each other's products and services," he said. The grant doesn't send funds directly to individual B&B operators or farmers, but rather works with producer organizations such as beef producers,

NOFA-NY

, maple producers, small-scale food processors, and B&B owners as a group.

On the other end, farmers who offer tours and other opportunities for tourists will be encouraged to work closely with B&B owners. Regional and statewide promotions will encourage consumers to partake in the foods offered by New York-based producers and B&Bs.

Producer organizations and B&B owners are encouraged to participate in the project, which starts this fall and runs two years.

Where do we sign?

For more information about this grant, e-mail Steve Miller at

sgm6@cornell.edu

or Jonathan Thomson at

jonathan.thomson@agmkt.state.ny.us.

Comment

Nicole Caldwell

Nicole Caldwell is a self-taught environmentalist, green-living savant and sustainability educator with more than a decade of professional writing experience. She is also the co-founder of Better Farm and president of betterArts. Nicole’s work has been featured in Mother Earth News, Reader’s Digest, Time Out New York, and many other publications. Her first book, Better: The Everyday Art of Sustainable Living, is due out this July through New Society Publishers.

'Can't Beet This': Better Farm's 2011 Redwood Field Days Float

It all started simply enough back in the 1960s or early 1970s, when the crew from Better Farm crashed the Fourth of July Parade in Ridgewood, N.J., "Better" banners a-blazin' off the back of 10-wheeler. We picked things up from there in 2009, when Staciemae and I marched in the Redwood Field Days parade and tossed wildflowers to the crowd. "You ladies are lovely, but we don't know who you are!" cried the announcers when we passed that evening.   That all changed last year when a bunch of us piled into the back of Butch's pickup truck, cranked a CCR album, and tossed bags of string beans to people, scoring third place in the parade. We knew we had to turn up the heat this year if we wanted to contend with the other parade floats; and in our planning we brainstormed everything from reviving the old bus on Better Farm's property to riding through town on bicycles dragging a sailboat. Plans got moved around a bit when I had to head to New Jersey for the weekend, but luckily Eric Drasin stepped up as leader with a killer crew (thank you Angelina, Soon Kai, and Tyler!). Here's what they came up with:


The precarious "doors as floor" setup on our sailboat trailer.




Vegetable theme




The crew (Soon Kai as photographer)
Floats lining up in town

No word yet on who this year's parade winners are; stay tuned for results!
Comment

Nicole Caldwell

Nicole Caldwell is a self-taught environmentalist, green-living savant and sustainability educator with more than a decade of professional writing experience. She is also the co-founder of Better Farm and president of betterArts. Nicole’s work has been featured in Mother Earth News, Reader’s Digest, Time Out New York, and many other publications. Her first book, Better: The Everyday Art of Sustainable Living, is due out this July through New Society Publishers.

Ones to Watch: The Food Pantry Farm in Long Island, N.Y.

Nestled deep in East Hampton, Long Island, is a gem of a farm whose sole purpose is to feed the hungry.

The Food Pantry Farm

is a tax-exempt 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization that operates on about two acres of land at EECO Farm.  Run by volunteers John Malafronte, Ira Bezoza,  and Peter Garnham, it donates fresh, organic produce to local food pantries. Between May and November of 2009, the organization donated thousands of pounds of fresh vegetables to the East Hampton Food Pantry. The following year, The Food Pantry Farm more than doubled its output. The group now supplies vegetables every  week to the East Hampton, Springs, and Sag Harbor food pantries.

Because all the food is given away, The Food Pantry Farm relies on donations to buy seeds, growing supplies, tools, and harvesting materials. All donations go 100-percent to support the Food Pantry Farm. For more information or to help out,

click here

.

Get involved locally! Check with your local food pantry to see if you can drop off your extra homegrown produce for distribution.

Comment

Nicole Caldwell

Nicole Caldwell is a self-taught environmentalist, green-living savant and sustainability educator with more than a decade of professional writing experience. She is also the co-founder of Better Farm and president of betterArts. Nicole’s work has been featured in Mother Earth News, Reader’s Digest, Time Out New York, and many other publications. Her first book, Better: The Everyday Art of Sustainable Living, is due out this July through New Society Publishers.

What They Leave Behind


One of our interns in 2010 started a bit of a tradition here at Better Farm when he took his old pair of sneakers and tossed them way up onto the catwalk in the barn before making his departure. Since Joe Pintaudi made that toss, others have joined the ranks; leaving behind their old pairs of treads as they set off into the world.

So when intern Lizzi Musoke came to me the last month week saying she'd be leaving behind some boots and sneakers in order to avoid the obnoxious airline fee for extra suitcase weight, I told her I had a perfect place for her to stow her kicks.



And so it went.
1 Comment

Nicole Caldwell

Nicole Caldwell is a self-taught environmentalist, green-living savant and sustainability educator with more than a decade of professional writing experience. She is also the co-founder of Better Farm and president of betterArts. Nicole’s work has been featured in Mother Earth News, Reader’s Digest, Time Out New York, and many other publications. Her first book, Better: The Everyday Art of Sustainable Living, is due out this July through New Society Publishers.

The Global Village Construction Set


If you took the time to break down our entire modern civilization into the 50 industrial machines required to make this society tick (with plenty of our current creature comforts), which gadgets would make it onto the list? You'd have to go as low on the chain as possible—to things like bulldozers and bakery ovens; that is, the things that you'd need to make the other things that would eventually make things like iPods and bread.

Well, as you might already have guessed, a group of guys got together to make a list just like that. The result, Open Source Ecology, is a network of farmers, engineers, and supporters building the Global Village Construction Set (GVCS). The GVCS is an open source (read: free to access, and "doable" by any person skilled with his or her hands), low-cost, high performance technological platform that allows for the easy, DIY fabrication of the 50 different industrial machines it takes to build a sustainable civilization with modern comforts.

The GVCS lowers the barriers to entry into farming, building, and manufacturing and can be seen as a life-size lego-like set of modular tools that can create entire economies, whether in rural Missouri, where the project was founded, in urban redevelopment, or in the developing world.

A modern, comfortable lifestyle relies on a variety of efficient Industrial Machines. If you eat bread, you rely on an Agricultural Combine. If you live in a wood house, you rely on a Sawmill. Each of these machines relies on other machines in order for it to exist. If you distill this complex web of interdependent machines into a reproduceable, simple, closed-loop system, you get a series of basic items, such as a backhoe and windmill turbine (click here to see a full list with images).

Mind blown yet? Find out more here.

Introducing the 'Poop and Paddle'




Back in May we told you about our friend Adam Katzman and his now-famous Jerko the Gowanus Water Vacuum, a houseboat functioning as a living lab that was moved to Marina 59 in Queens, N.Y., as part of a revitalization effort.

Well, turns out Adam's been pretty busy since then, working on the "Poop and Paddle", a floating toilet that functions as an outhouse and sewage-treatment plant-in-one. The structure, which Adams says is meant to be more inspirational than practical, demonstrates how sewage and rainwater can be converted to cattails and clean water. Science Friday last week produced the above video on the whole operation.

Go, Adam, go.

Music: Apocalypse Five and Dime
1 Comment

Nicole Caldwell

Nicole Caldwell is a self-taught environmentalist, green-living savant and sustainability educator with more than a decade of professional writing experience. She is also the co-founder of Better Farm and president of betterArts. Nicole’s work has been featured in Mother Earth News, Reader’s Digest, Time Out New York, and many other publications. Her first book, Better: The Everyday Art of Sustainable Living, is due out this July through New Society Publishers.

Former Artist-in-Residence Revisits the Better Farm Canvas

Former betterArts resident Erica Hauser stopped by the farm last week for a visit. Never one to let a blank space go to waste (she did, after all, paint the interior walls of the Birdhouse during her June stay here), it wasn't long before she'd grabbed a bunch of leftover cans of paint and set to work.

Noting that Lizzi Musoke's new rainwater catchment system abutted Erica's former beloved birdhouse bedroom, Erica set right to work giving the rain barrel a beautiful facelift:



The next day she caught me upstairs, where I was touching up some trim on doorways. Asking if she could help, I directed her downstairs to a blank patch of wall over the front entranceway...
 It was less than an hour later that her newest creation was completed:


Many thanks to Erica for donating her time and resources to beautifying Better Farm for all who visit here. To learn more about Erica Hauser's betterArts residency, click here. To commission a painting by Erica or see more of her portfolio, visit her website.

How to Make Your Own DIY Mosquito Repellent Device

By Emily Stears, from

Unplggd.com

Summer may be almost over (gasp!), but it's never too late—or early—to work on your anti-mosquito strategy. Courtesy of

Uplggd.com

, here’s a creative, eco-friendly, non-toxic way to keep your home mosquito free! It also doubles up as a pleasant fragrance while keeping those bloodsuckers away...

Instructions

You need never buy refills for your plug-in mosquito killer again, nor worry about what toxins and chemicals are being expelled into the air by sprays or smoke coils.

Tried and tested...the peel of an orange or tangerine, cut into the shape of the refill, does a perfect job as an insect repellent (orange peel extract is used in

spray solutions

). Orange oil is pretty fragrant, as anyone who stands in the same room when someone is peeling citrus may notice. Just place the peel in the slot, plug in the mosquito killer and enjoy a peaceful sleep guarded by a non-chemical solution!

What You'll Need

a plug-in mosquito killer device

an orange


a knife

a used refill to use as a template

How to Do It

  • The first thing you'll do is peel the orange. Try avoid getting too much of the white part. Set aside flesh (or just eat it), as you'll be using the peel.

  • Cut the peel into a rectangle to fit the plug-in device, or, if you’re a perfectionist, use the old refill as a template to cut around.

  • Place your refill-sized piece of orange peel into the slot of the plug-in device and plug it in.

  • Enjoy a peaceful sleep.

As far as I'm concerned, Better Farm is the perfect testing ground for all mosquito-deterrant-related-things. Stay tuned for results!

Comment

Nicole Caldwell

Nicole Caldwell is a self-taught environmentalist, green-living savant and sustainability educator with more than a decade of professional writing experience. She is also the co-founder of Better Farm and president of betterArts. Nicole’s work has been featured in Mother Earth News, Reader’s Digest, Time Out New York, and many other publications. Her first book, Better: The Everyday Art of Sustainable Living, is due out this July through New Society Publishers.

Downstairs Bathroom Fixtures Get Bathed in Light

The downstairs bathroom / washroom has come a long way since the resurrection of Better Farm. Clutter has been removed, broken washers and dryers have been disposed of, and new eye-catching knick-knacks have been dispersed throughout the room. After all that work it, seemed such a shame that we didn't have the proper lighting to take it all in. Single CFL bulbs jutting out from an uncovered fixture in the ceiling and next to the medicine cabinet just don't provide the warmth and clarity our beloved washroom deserves. It was time to get enlightened.

Replacing the ceiling fixture was no big deal. The local 'bulk store' (not Walmart) provided a fixture that diffuses CFL light well and meshes with the existent aesthetic. Technically this fixture was meant to attach to the bottom a pre-existing ceiling fan, but I did a little tinkering with the mount design and now our washroom is not only beautifully decorated but wonderfully lit as well.

But I couldn't stop there...

For as long as I can remember the bathroom sink has been flanked by two less-than-elegant wall mounted fixtures. Also for as long as I can remember only one of these fixtures has been complete and working. Can we all agree that two lights are better than one? Good. Can we all agree that a fixture without a cover looks disastrous. Fantastic.

We've already blown our lighting budget on one fixture. Time to get creative.

I was happy to discover that an empty jam jar that had been kicking around the kitchen for days was a perfect fit for our ailing light. The screw-top jar would make a perfect light cover and allow for easy access when it comes time to replace the bulb.

Ideally. one would use a rotary tool to cut a hole through the jar's lid. I was unable to track one down but a power drill was able to get the job done nearly as well. After compromising the integrity of the jam jar's lid with a circular pattern of holes and some tin-snips I was able to remove just enough of the lid to allow the CFL bulb to fit while maintaining the screw-top functionality. A strong adhesive (PVC pipe glue, superglue would probably work just as well) was then used to affix the lid to the base of the light fixture. After the adhesive was given time to set the jam jar was placed over the CFL and screwed into the lid. Voila! Our fixture was transformed from an eyesore to a DIY beauty.


How Big a Backyard Do You Need to Live off the Land?

One Block Off The Grid's infographic gives an extremely clear picture of exactly what it would take for a family of four to live completely off the land with independent, solar energy. Click on graphic below for larger viewing size:



One Block Off the Grid is a solar business designed to help homeowners go solar. The company negotiates group discounts on panels and installation with local providers and provide individuals with free advice and support throughout the process. To find out if there’s a group discount available in your area, sign up for One Block Off the Grid (it’s totally free). Want to help take solar mainstream? Tell your friends about One Block Off the Grid.
Comment

Nicole Caldwell

Nicole Caldwell is a self-taught environmentalist, green-living savant and sustainability educator with more than a decade of professional writing experience. She is also the co-founder of Better Farm and president of betterArts. Nicole’s work has been featured in Mother Earth News, Reader’s Digest, Time Out New York, and many other publications. Her first book, Better: The Everyday Art of Sustainable Living, is due out this July through New Society Publishers.

Idea Roundup: Divine farmhouse bedroom designs

The fog over the water this morning was a crystal-clear sign that autumn is fast approaching. So even though the garden's still in full swing and the sun is out, I figured this is as good a time as any to start crafting Better Farm's winter plans. Colder weather around here means a break from outside construction projects and a commencement of interior design work. With that in mind, here's a look at some design ideas I've been kicking around for guest bedrooms:

Lots to think about as we consider new design ideas for the intern room, loft, attic loft, and additional bedrooms in the house...

For information on lodging at Better Farm,

click here

.

Comment

Nicole Caldwell

Nicole Caldwell is a self-taught environmentalist, green-living savant and sustainability educator with more than a decade of professional writing experience. She is also the co-founder of Better Farm and president of betterArts. Nicole’s work has been featured in Mother Earth News, Reader’s Digest, Time Out New York, and many other publications. Her first book, Better: The Everyday Art of Sustainable Living, is due out this July through New Society Publishers.

Bill Johnston's Pirate Days: Swashbuckly Pillaging in A Bay Near You

Aaargh!

The lore of Dread Pirate Bill Johnston lives yet again in Alexandria Bay, where we celebrate for the zillionth time the legacy of

this guy:

Thousand Islands' most dreaded pirate was the notorious smuggler and War of 1812 privateerBill Johnston. Dubbed the man the British most wanted to hang, fortunes were blown on the pursuit of Johnston as he was hunted by United States and Canadian authorities.

His most notorious project was the May 30, 1838, attack on the passenger steamer Sir Robert Peel (which was docked at Wellesley Island on the St. Lawrence River). Johnston ordered his men to loot the ship and burn it, which they did while chanting "Remember the Caroline." Johnston eventually surrendered to United States authorities.

So of course it stands to reason that almost 200 years later, we'd create a holiday in honor of this guy.

Hey, it worked for Christopher Columbus.

Events officially started on Friday, but you can get your pirate on any day this week. Here's the full run-down of scheduled outlaw activities, courtesy of the

Alexandria Bay Chamber of Commerce

(feel free to make your own!):

Friday, August 12th:

5:30pm:  Pirate Magic Show by Jason the Entertainer @ the Entertainment Tent

6:30pm:  Balloon sculpting @ Entertainment Tent�

8:00pm: Block Dance by Upper James Street dock…. “Bad Husbands Club”

Saturday, August 13th:

8:00am-1:00pm…Vote for the BEST DECORATED BOAT at the Village Dock

10:00am…Children Boats, Treasure Chest, & Cannon Crafts @ Park Pavilion;

11:30am…Children Parade Lineup @ the Scenic View Park; 11:45am…Children Parade through Village; 1:00pm…Capture of the Pirate Scouting Party @ Uncle Sam Boat Tours;

2:00pm…PIRATE INVASION

;

4:30pm…Balloon Sculpting thoughout the Village

Sunday, August 14th:

12:00pm…Pirate Skit @ Cavallario Bayside;

12:30pm…Buried Treasure @ Scenic View Park Beach;�

3:00pm…Duck Races to benefit Minor Hockey Assn @ Scenic View Park

Monday, August 15th:

10:00am…Little Pirate Adventure Cruise on Uncle Sam Boat Tours;

11:00am…Fight a Pirate @ Scenic View Park;

1:00pm…Tales from Remikreh (archaic weapons demonstration @Scenic View Park;

2:00…Reptile Exhibition @ Entertainment Tent;

3:15pm…Pirate Skit @ Uncle Sam Boat Tours;�

4:15pm…Pirate Skit @ Cavallario Bayside;

5:00pm…Balloon Sculpting throughout Village

Tuesday, August 16th:

10:00am…Little Pirate Adventure Cruise on Uncle Sam Boat Tours;

11:00am…Fight a Pirate @ Scenic View Park Pavilion;

12:00pm..Tales from Remikreh weapon demonstration @ Scenic View Park;

1:00pm…Tales from Remikreh @GO-KART 500

3:15pm…Pirate Skit @ Uncle Sam Boat Tours;

4:15pm…Magic Show w/Obie Obrien @ Entertainment Tent;

5:00pm…Pirate Skit @ Cavallario Bayside;

Wednesday, August 17th:

10:00am…Little Pirate Adventure Cruise on Uncle Sam Boat Tours;

11:00am…Fight a Pirate @ Scenic View Park;

12:00pm…Tales from Remikreh weapons demonstration @ Scenic View Park;

1:00pm…Tales from Remikreh @Mazeland;

3:15pm…Pirate Skit @ Uncle Sam Boat Tours;

4:15pm…Pirate Skit @ Cavallarios Bayside;

5:30pm…Balloon Sculpting throughout Village

7:00pm…Concert in the Park @ Scenic View Park….featuring Double Barrell Blues Band

Thursday, August 18th:

10:00am…Little Pirate Adventure Cruise on Uncle Sam Boat Tours;

11:00am…1st Mate Competition w/Tales From Remikreh @ Scenic View Park;

1:00pm…Tales from Remikreh archaic weapons demonstration @ Scenic View Park;

3:15pm…Pirate Skit @ Uncle Sam Boat Tours;

4:15pm…Magic Show by Obie Obrien @ Entertainment Tent;

5:00pm…Pirate Skit @ Cavallario Bayside

Friday, August 19th:

10:00am…Little Pirate Adventure Cruise on Uncle Sam Boat Tours;

11:00am…Pirate Tournament (Tales of Remikreh) @ Scenic View Park;

12:00pm…Tales from Remikreh weapons demonstration @ Scenic View Park;

1:00pm…Reptile Exhibition @ Entertainment Tent;�

3:15pm…Pirate Skit @ Uncle Sam Boat Tours;

4:15pm…Pirate Skit @ Cavallarios Bayside;

6:00pm…Dancing Bear Puppet Theatre presents “Littlest Pirate”      

www.thepuppets.com

8:00pm…Block Dance on James Street between Skiffs & Downtown @ 11 James….”String of Pearls”

Brockville Infantry Encampment on Casino Island

Saturday, August 20th:

10:00am…Childrens Boat, Treasure Chests, & Cannon Crafts @ Scenic View Park Pavilion;

11:00am…Childrens Parade Lineup at Scenic View Park;

11:30am…Children Parade throughout Village;

1:00pm…Capture of Pirate Scouting Party@ Uncle Sam Boat Tours;

2:00pm: PIRATE INVASION

;

3:30pm…Dancing Bear Puppert Theatre presents “The Littlest Pirate”       

www.thepuppets.com

6:00pm….Melanie Zimmer Storytime    

www.thepuppets.com

Sunday, August 21st:

11:00am…Live Drill & Demonstration by The Brockville Infantry by Upper James Street docks

2:00pm…Bill Johnstons Pirate Days Grand Parade (school, to Walton, to Church, to Market and back to school)

3:00pm…Parade Winners Announced

Comment

Nicole Caldwell

Nicole Caldwell is a self-taught environmentalist, green-living savant and sustainability educator with more than a decade of professional writing experience. She is also the co-founder of Better Farm and president of betterArts. Nicole’s work has been featured in Mother Earth News, Reader’s Digest, Time Out New York, and many other publications. Her first book, Better: The Everyday Art of Sustainable Living, is due out this July through New Society Publishers.

Successful Summer Festival Plays on the Power of Collaborative Art

The North Country Arts Council's annual Summer Arts Festival on Saturday in Watertown featured dozens of artisans and several collaborative art activities, including a community mural hosted by the betterArts division of Better Farm.

All-day events at the festival included Plein Air Artists at work, an instrument petting zoo, Kid at HeART Tent, live demonstrations, art vendor sales, an author tent, and food vendors.  Over at Better Farm's table, we set up a blank canvas, which last summer gained some fish, underwater creatures, and vegetation courtesy of artists Scott Mueller (on betterArts' board) and Mark Dilks (former betterArts resident):
Once the canvas was stretched, the paints were laid out, and our literature on the betterArts residency program and Better Farm sustainability internship were fanned across the table, we were ready to begin.

While visitors stopped in to lend a hand with the mural, others down the block worked on a sidewalk-chalking contest; thereby rounding out collaborative activities throughout the day. The benefits of collaborative art for young children (and adults!) is well-documented. Focusing as part of a whole reduces a sense of competition between artists; while also bringing a group together to focus on a common goal.

These sensibilities tie perfectly in with betterArts' mission, to increase accessibility to the arts in the North Country for all people. Whether a professional painter or toddler who loves to dip his or her hands in paint, we believe art is truly for everyone—and that the simple act of art for art's sake has the power to transform and improve lives.

Here are pictures of progress made on the group mural:












Many thanks to Soon Kai Poh, Tyler Howe, Kristen Caldwell, Jeff Krusel, and Nicole Caldwell for running Better Farm's table at the arts festival. Thanks to Scott Mueller for the canvas, Scott Mueller and Mark Dilks for drawing the outlines on the canvas, and Mike Brown for donating paints and brushes.