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Local Native Americans harvest heirloom corn crucial to their heritage

Posted: November 3rd, 2011, by Lauren

By: Tammy Swift, INFORUM image

KRAGNES, Minn. – The harvesters break off dried corn stalks at the base with a brisk snap.

They twist off the ears and place them in recycled plastic grocery bags. A few of the pickers – anxious to see the corn beneath – peel back the crackly husks to reveal kernels ranging from burnt umber to eggplant to a pale, buttery hue.

Some of the cobs are studded with fat, off-white kernels, lined up like rows of large, crooked teeth.

“This corn is very, very nutritious,” Noreen Thomas tells the group of a dozen or so Native American adults and children. “It’s like a vitamin tablet.”

The corn in question is an heirloom variety called White Flint Hominy. Also known as “Seneca Hominy” or “Ha-Go-Wa,” this 1,000-year-old corn was crucial to the Native American diet for centuries.

Now, through the work of tribal seed-savers and partners like Thomas, this nutrition-packed, culturally important food is enjoying a renaissance.

Thomas worked with Native American activist and environmentalist Winona LaDuke, who lives on the White Earth Reservation, to provide land for the project on her family’s organic farm north of Moorhead.

LaDuke provided heirloom seed through the White Earth Land Recovery Project, which promotes traditional native foods, saves traditional heirloom seeds and shares those seeds with the larger community.

Their ultimate goal was to share the mature corn with the Fargo-based Native American Center Project, which provides referrals, support and educational and cultural programs to the local Native American population.

Thomas and workers helped sow the seed in July. The corn was planted in a high tunnel to extend the hominy’s warm, humid growing season. The tunnel, along with the practice of “hooding” female and male portions, helped to prevent pollen drift from genetically modified corn, which would contaminate the ancient seed bank.

The hominy grew healthy and tall – some stalks brushing the 12-foot-high ceiling of the high tunnel. The indigenous women who bred the corn so long ago knew exactly what they were doing; deer were less likely to pilfer ears from tall stalks, Thomas says.

By last Wednesday, the crop was ready. Prairie Rose Seminole, head of the Native American Center Project, brought a handful

of friends and colleagues to the farm to harvest the corn.

Amid the smell of fresh hay and the rustle of dried stalks, the group worked quickly. Their children helped, too, although they were occasionally distracted by the piles of pumpkins outside the tunnel and by “Sammy,” a friendly pet steer grazing nearby.

Within 10 minutes, the 250 plants inside the high tunnel had been stripped of corn and stacked in piles.

“Look at the Natives go,” Seminole said, laughing softly.

The oldest of the sisters

Corn, beans and squash are often called the “three sisters,” as they formed the backbone of the Native American diet for hundreds of years.

The three foods provided a balanced diet, even at times when bison or other meats were scarce, Seminole says.

Corn was the oldest and most versatile of the crops. While most corn grown today is used to feed livestock or fortify industrial products, the unprocessed heirloom variety is a nearly ideal foundation food for humans, writes John Vivian in Mother Earth News Magazine.

Miraculous maize lacks only two essential amino acids – lysine and tryptophan – as well as riboflavin and niacin. (Conveniently, these missing nutrients are provided by beans, which were trained to climb up the stalks of corn in Native American companion gardens long ago.)

Over time, however, many native people have lost the knowledge of how to grow and prepare these age-old foods. The hominy is nothing like sweet corn; you could crack a molar trying to bite into it, Thomas says.

The Ojibwe helped break down the cast-iron-like kernels by cooking the corn with birch ash; Thomas’s research found that baking soda works almost as well.

But first, the corn had to be thoroughly dried. After all the corn was picked, Thomas led the group of harvesters over to a couple of picnic tables so they could use the husks to braid the ears together, much like their ancestors did. Relaying information she learned at an indigenous foods festival last spring, Thomas showed them how to make a French braid to weave the colorful cobs into a chain.

Once dried, the hominy will be featured in a “shared meal” scheduled for November. Everyone can bring their own hominy-studded stews, soups and casseroles. One woman talked about cooking a traditional, super-healthful Native American dish, hominy and tripe soup.

“They aren’t used to using fresh hominy. They use canned hominy,” Seminole said. “I’m excited about it though.”

But not all of the seeds will be used. Some will be saved for next year. “This is such a valuable relationship. Noreen has the ability to teach us how to grow these foods,” Seminole says. “I’m hoping to work with her on a larger project. We have a ton of seeds we could share with her to even further promote our native foods project.”

Heritage and health

Seminole says preserving these ancient foods is vital for several reasons.

One is biodiversity. She talks of the many varieties of native vegetables, such as wild radishes and prairie turnips, which her ancestors once ate for a healthful, balanced diet. But as our western diets have become more processed and less diverse, nutritional values have deteriorated.

“We don’t even know what we lost,” Seminole says, referring to several regional reservations whose “seed savers” have dwindled to one or two elderly women. “We don’t have the varieties or the knowledge anymore.”

Much of this knowledge died during the era of Indian boarding schools, which punished young people for practicing cultural traditions and eating ancient foods, Seminole said.

As a result, the Native American people lost “that spiritual understanding of who we are,” she said.

Accordingly, the Native American population began eating a refined, overprocessed diet, and is now rife with diabetes and heart disease.

Last week’s harvest is one step toward reintroducing Native American children to their agrarian roots. “We should know where our food comes from. When we’re buying cherry tomatoes from Chile, we’re telling our young people they don’t need to have a connection with their food anymore,” Seminole said.

Deb Dorman, a Fargo woman who helped with the harvest, agrees that projects like these can help preserve her culture.

“We definitely want to teach our children by learning ourselves,” Dorman said. “It just feels right.”

 


 

Readers can reach Forum reporter Tammy Swift at (701) 241-5525

Eco-Farming can double food production in 10 Year

Posted: May 30th, 2011, by Lauren
From the article below: ““Today’s scientific evidence demonstrates that agroecological methods outperform the use of chemical fertilizers in boosting food production where the hungry live — especially in unfavorable environments.”
_________________________________
Header image for news printout
Eco-Farming can double food production in 10 Years, says new UN report

GENEVA (8 March 2011) – Small-scale farmers can double food production within 10 years in critical regions by using ecological methods, a new UN report* shows. Based on an extensive review of the recent scientific literature, the study calls for a fundamental shift towards agroecology as a way to boost food production and improve the situation of the poorest.

“To feed 9 billion people in 2050, we urgently need to adopt the most efficient farming techniques available,” says Olivier De Schutter, UN Special Rapporteur on the right to food and author of the report. “Today’s scientific evidence demonstrates that agroecological methods outperform the use of chemical fertilizers in boosting food production where the hungry live — especially in unfavorable environments.”

Agroecology applies ecological science to the design of agricultural systems that can help put an end to food crises and address climate-change and poverty challenges. It enhances soils productivity and protects the crops against pests by relying on the natural environment such as beneficial trees, plants, animals and insects.

“To date, agroecological projects have shown an average crop yield increase of 80% in 57 developing countries, with an average increase of 116% for all African projects,” De Schutter says. “Recent projects conducted in 20 African countries demonstrated a doubling of crop yields over a period of 3-10 years.”

“Conventional farming relies on expensive inputs, fuels climate change and is not resilient to climatic shocks. It simply is not the best choice anymore today,” De Schutter stresses. “A large segment of the scientific community now acknowledges the positive impacts of agroecology on food production, poverty alleviation and climate change mitigation — and this is what is needed in a world of limited resources. Malawi, a country that launched a massive chemical fertilizer subsidy program a few years ago, is now implementing agroecology, benefiting more than 1.3 million of the poorest people, with maize yields increasing from 1 ton/ha to 2-3 tons/ha.”

The report also points out that projects in Indonesia, Vietnam and Bangladesh recorded up to 92 % reduction in insecticide use for rice, leading to important savings for poor farmers. “Knowledge came to replace pesticides and fertilizers. This was a winning bet, and comparable results abound in other African, Asian and Latin American countries,” the independent expert notes.

“The approach is also gaining ground in developed countries such as United States, Germany or France,” he said. “However, despite its impressive potential in realizing the right to food for all, agroecology is still insufficiently backed by ambitious public policies and consequently hardly goes beyond the experimental stage.”

The report identifies a dozen measures that States should implement to scale up agroecological practices.

“Agroecology is a knowledge-intensive approach. It requires public policies supporting agricultural research and participative extension services,” De Schutter says. “States and donors have a key role to play here. Private companies will not invest time and money in practices that cannot be rewarded by patents and which don’t open markets for chemical products or improved seeds.”

The Special Rapporteur on the right to food also urges States to support small-scale farmer’s organizations, which demonstrated a great ability to disseminate the best agroecological practices among their members. “Strengthening social organization proves to have as much impact as distributing fertilizers. Small-scale farmers and scientists can create innovative practices when they partner”, De Schutter explains.

“We won’t solve hunger and stop climate change with industrial farming on large plantations. The solution lies in supporting small-scale farmers’ knowledge and experimentation, and in raising incomes of smallholders so as to contribute to rural development.”

“If key stakeholders support the measures identified in the report, we can see a doubling of food production within 5 to 10 years in some regions where the hungry live,” De Schutter says. “Whether or not we will succeed in this transition will depend on our ability to learn faster from recent innovations. We need to go fast if we want to avoid repeated food and climate disasters in the 21st century.”

Olivier De Schutter was appointed the Special Rapporteur on the right to food in May 2008 by the United Nations Human Rights Council. He is independent from any government or organization.

(*) The report “Agro-ecology and the right to food” was presented today [March 8, 2011]before the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva. This document is available in Arabic, Chinese, English, French, Russian and Spanish at: http://www2.ohchr.org/english/issues/food/annual.htm

For more information on the mandate and work of the Special Rapporteur, visit: http://www2.ohchr.org/english/issues/food/index.htm or www.srfood.org

 

 

Press contacts:
Olivier De Schutter: Tel. +32 488 48 20 04 / E-mail:
olivier.deschutter@uclouvain.be
Ulrik Halsteen (OHCHR): Tel: +41 22 917 93 23 / E-mail: srfood@ohchr.org

 

Center for Food Safety Seed Sovereignty Campaign

Posted: April 15th, 2011, by Lauren

Save Our Seeds

The Number One threat to Seed Biodiversity: Corporate Takeover of Commercial Seeds by Major Chemical/Biotechnology companies

The top 10 seed companies control 57% of the global seed market. Seed industry concentration has resulted from major pesticide manufacturers like Monsanto, DuPont, Bayer and Dow buying up half the world’s seed supply. This corporate takeover and consolidation of our seed supply has several negative impacts: 1) Use of genetic engineering to make pesticide-promoting GM crops, harming the environment; 2) Reduction/elimination of conventional seeds, giving farmers little choice but to buy GM seeds; 3) Astronomical prices for GM seeds and the pesticides used with them hurt farmers financially; 4) Monsanto’s patents on seeds permit prosecution of farmers for seed-saving; and 5) Monsanto “strong-arm” tactics with ever fewer remaining independent seed companies further reduce farmers’ seed choices and enforce the company’s stranglehold on seeds.

These corporations use several different methods of control over our seed supply.  These methods include patenting; genetic engineering; technology use agreements; and terminator technology designed to make plants sterile so they are unable to reproduce, and so that farmers are unable to save the seed from these crops for future planting.

Halting the Corporate Takeover of Seeds

The Center for Food Safety has been taking actions toward halting this corporate takeover of our seed supply. These actions include, but are not limited to the following: 1) Using anti-trust actions to halt monopolistic takeover of seeds (see Corporate Control and Seed Monopolies); 2) Limiting use of gene banks in favor of in situ seed protection and local seed saving (see Genetic Engineering and Patents); and 3) Re-configuring gene bank agreements to protect against corporate exploitation of collections (see Seed Saving and Seed Banks).

Working in collaboration with other NGOs across the world, CFS is taking action to: pass national and international legislation declaring seeds to be non-patentable subject matter; ensure seed saving is a fundamental right of all farmers; promote local seed saving effort around the world; promote a vibrant public sector/government seed research program; declare a moratorium on any new genetically engineered crops; litigate to nullify Technology Use Contracts and coercive seed selling contracts as violations of public policy; and declare an International Ban on Terminator Technology.

http://www.centerforfoodsafety.org/campaign/save-our-seeds/

 

Native Food Sovereignty Articles grace the page’s of Green Fire Time

Posted: April 7th, 2011, by Lauren

Articles Taken from Green Fire Times

Northern New Mexicans Share Agricultural Knowledge at Terra Madre 2010

Kahneratokwas

Some of northern New Mexico’s most celebrated food activists attended the mother of all Slow Food events, Terra Madre 2010, in Torino, Italy in October. Terra Madre is an international forum that gathers sustainable food producers, farmers, cooks, educators and activists from around the world to share their stories and traditions, as well as innovative solutions for keeping small-scale agriculture and sustainable food production alive and well. The first Terra Madre conference took place in Torino in 2004. Every two years since then, Slow Food International has hosted the conference.

The Traditional Native American Farmers Association (TNAFA) sent four delegates, Clayton and Margaret Brascoupe, Elaine Barazza and Wenona Nutima. Clayton Brascoupe carried the White Earth flag, while Nutima carried the Tesuque Pueblo flag in the opening ceremonies.

 

Read more

Sustainable Rural Economic Development: Which Path to Choose?

An Interview with Winona LaDuke

GFT: You live on the White Earth Reservation in Minnesota, co-founded Honor the Earth, and are the founding director of the White Earth Land Recovery Project.

“My work at White Earth is largely around the question of how you build a sustainable and durable culturally-based economy in a rural community. I’m a rural development economist, actually, by training.

The work we’ve been doing over the past 20 years started with the issue of wild rice. We had a lot of battles similar to the battle in New Mexico over chile; the question of if any corporation, or in this case it was a state university, similar to New Mexico State University at Las Cruces’ interest in the genetic engineering of chile. The University of Minnesota had an interest in genetically engineering wild rice. I believe that “wild” should actually mean something, like not genetically engineered. And the problem is that when you have an open-air experiment of a genetically engineered crop, it’s not sterile. And so there was the potential of contaminating natural wild rice stands throughout Minnesota. It was a huge battle. I was engaged for about 7 years in the legislature. We do now have a full environmental impact statement required before any proposed introduction, which would include all tribal participation.

 

Read More

Proposed Minnesota Bill Critically Changes Wild Rice Sulfate Standard

Posted: March 19th, 2011, by Lauren

Paula Maccabee Esq. of JUST CHANGE LAW OFFICE in St Paul sent out the following statement regarding Minnesota Wild Rice sulfate standards.

The House of Representatives has proposed to change the wild rice sulfate standard from 10 mg/L to 250 mg/L  and to micromanage  the current agency process by which wild rice and sulfates are being studied and rules considered. See the attached HF 1010 bill at pages 36-37, Sections 14 and 15.

The public hearing on this bill will be on Tuesday, March 22 at 8:15 am in Room 5 of the State Office Building. The committee administrator knows that this is a difficult time for anyone who is not from the Metro Area, but would not adjust the hearing time. Anyone who wants to testify should call the committee administrator, Amy Rudolph,  at 296-1774, and ask to be listed for testimony.

The committee administrator admits that the wild rice section of the bill is probably the most controversial. She offered to place in the committee members’ packets any written testimony submitted to her by citizens. The email address is  Amy.Rudolph@house.mn The title line for your email should be  ”wild rice testimony.”

Minnesota’s water quality rule limiting sulfates to 10 milligrams per liter (mg/L) in wild
rice waters was enacted in 1973 in order to protect natural stands of wild rice, not only
irrigation waters for cultivated paddy rice. After a contested case hearing and on the basis
of research from the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources (MDNR) the
Minnesota Pollution Control Agency (MPCA) determined that “sulfate concentrations
above this level are a serious detriment to the growth of wild rice.” -From Water Legacy’s Wild Rice Sulfate Factsheet

 

Read more about Wild Rice and Sulfate Mining Pollution and at waterlegacy.org

Honor the Earth Request for Grant Proposals

Posted: March 18th, 2011, by Lauren

REQUEST FOR PROPOSALS-

Deadline Extended to April 15, 2011

Honor the Earth seeks proposals for its Building Resilience in Indigenous Communities Initiative

The March 30th proposal deadline has been extended to April 15th, 2011 for Honor the Earth’s summer granting cycle which will fund work that builds resilience in Indigenous communities.

Please view Honor the Earth’s application guidelines here. Below is a brief summary of our Building Resilience in Indigenous Communities Initiative, please be sure to read the full description before submitting an application.

Building Resilience in Indigenous Communities Initiative: Overview of Grant Guidelines Resilience Theory is a discussion about how communities and societies will adapt to climate change. We

understand that we must mitigate climate change and adapt, or we will be in a very difficult place as Indigenous peoples. Honor the Earth’s Building Resilience in Indigenous Communities Initiative will grant to organizations working to increase Indigenous communities’ capacity to prevent and adapt to climate change in ways that preserve and restore Indigenous cultures.

Funding for the Building Resilience in Indigenous Communities Initiative will focus on two goals:

1. Development of culturally-based, Indigenous solutions to climate change based on re-localizing food
and energy economies;

2. Restoration of traditional knowledge as a key adaptation and mitigation strategy to ensure a safe and
healthy future for our children and the next seven generations.

Please view the full version of the guidelines, application procedures and download cover sheets at: http://www.honorearth.org/grantmaking/guidelines and forward this message to any other groups that may be interested in Honor’s resilience funding.

Thanks,

Honor the Earth

HonorGrants@honorearth.org

Two Mexican states ban GM corn

Posted: March 15th, 2011, by Lauren

cross posted from foodfreedom.wordpress.com

Two Mexican states ban GM corn

The Mexican States of Tlaxcala and Michoacán each passed legislation banning the planting of genetically modified corn to protect natural plants from further contamination of transgenes.  Together, both states produce about a third of all of Mexico’s corn. Below this story is a detailed timeline of genetic contamination and legislation in Mexico.

By Aleira Lara
Greenpeace

It’s been an exciting couple of months in the debate over Mexican maize with some good news for Mexican agriculture and biodiversity. However, the consequences of recent frosts in northern states and the aggressive propaganda of the industry is still putting at risk Mexican’s basic grain. Here’s the latest:

GM FREE STATES ARISING IN MEXICO:

Because of the lack of interest of federal government to protect the large diversity of Mexican maize against the contamination of GM crop, Michoacán State congress passed by a majority the “Law of Promotion and Protection of Native Maize as Alimentary Patrimony of Michoacán State”, which will allow the protection of 18 of the 59 races of this crop that exist in Mexico. Michoacán is the fourth largest maize producer on a national scale and represents 30 percent of Mexico’s total maize crop area.

Michoacán’s initiative follows the recent approval of the “Law of Promotion and Protection of Native Maize as an original patrimony, in constant diversification, and alimentary for Tlaxcala State”. Both states decided to go ahead with the protection of such an important crop for Mexican society.

This process is directly related to the lack of political will of the federal government to promote local production and the fierce interest of multinational companies such as Monsanto, Syngenta, Pioneer and Dow Agroscience to impose GM maize within Mexican territory. We hope that this process will continue and that more and more states will protect their maizes races, especially the northern states that are currently developing GM maize experimental trials such as “Sinaloa” and “Chihuahua”.

Learn more about the origin and diversity of maize in the American continent, TlaxcalaMichoacán.

ANOTHER DEFEAT FOR MONSANTO

In January, the secretary of agriculture announced his decision to deny pilot trials to Monsanto in the State of Sinaloa – principal producer of white corn for human consumption in Mexico. Pilot trials are the next step after the experimental stage.We have been working hard in this state, facing the will of local authorities that are closely linked to the industry and have distributed GM maize propaganda widely within the region.

Recently we’ve released a new report ““Cultivos transgénicos: cero ganancias” (GM crops,zero profit”) in local meetings. Moreover, in 2007 we made a formal complaint to theProcuraduría General de Protección al Ambiente (Profepa) (Environment Protection Agency).We received additional information in 2010 related to the irregularities in GM trials in Sinaloa state. We published this information and we asked for the suspension of experimental trials in the country. Here is the what the government press release had to say: This is why all Federal Government resolutions are based in scientific principles are decided impartially according to the Law of Biosafety of Genetically Modified Organisms and all the implications it has of official institutions that are concerned”

Full Article Here

 

8th Annual Indigenous Farming Conference

Posted: March 14th, 2011, by Lauren

Maawamji’idiwag Ji Gizhaadaadamowaad Miinkaanan, White  Earth Reservation, March 2011

Winona LaDuke and Lauren Scott

They are gathering to protect the seeds. Indigenous farmers and gardeners from the region and beyond gathered at the 8th annual Great Lakes Indigenous Farming Conference to share knowledge, stories, and of course- their seeds.

More than 100 native people, organic farmers, students, and community members participated in the conference hosted by the White Earth Land Recovery Project held on the White Earth reservation in Northern Minnesota. The Maplelag resort was an ideal venue for the conference, cooking up traditional meals including walleye, manomin (wild rice), squash, buffalo, hominy, and other locally crafted foods. Eating traditional foods together affirmed the importance of the gathering as the dining hall became a place for furthering connections and story telling.

“I had a Hopi Squash run up a tree last year,” Frank Kutka, USDA Sustainable Agriculture representative told a small group. Describing the squash’s prolific vines he explained, “Sometimes that third sister doesn’t hang back, she just moves ahead.” Many farmers like Frank told their stories, finding a collective experience in their efforts to revitalize indigenous seeds; predominantly the three sisters- corn, bean, and squash.

The seeds also told stories, such as how native varieties have been kept alive by only a few farmers. For fourteen years, Caroline Chartrand has been looking for heritage seeds of the Metis people of Canada. It is believed that in the 1800s the Metis grew some 120 distinct seed varieties in the Red River area. Of those, Caroline says, “We ended up finding about twenty so far.”

“We found a few of them through the Canadian Seed Bank.  We found some more through Seeds of Diversity Canada, the Canadian Seed Exchange, and the US Seed Saver’s Exchange. I really miss my seeds, I don’t get to grow out enough of them any year. “

The Canadian seed story is sobering: Three quarters of all the seeds that existed before the 20th century are extinct. And, out of the remaining quarter, only l0% are available commercially from Canadian seed companies. Over 64% of the commercially held seeds are offered by only one company, which means, that if the variety is dropped the seeds may be lost. The rest are held by backyard gardeners and families.

A recent article by a prominent Canadian writer suggested that agriculture in Canada began with the settlement of Europeans. Caroline had to ask her, “ What about all that agriculture before then?” Despite the overwhelming evidence that indigenous peoples established agriculture throughout the world, some still fail to recognize these achievements.

Caroline is one collaborator in the effort to recover northern Ojibwe corn varieties, which once grew l00 miles north of Winnipeg Canada. The Northern most cultivated corn on the continent. “That’s some adaptable corn”, one of the participants said. “And”, Betsy McDougall of Turtle Mountain commented, “Ojibwes, Metis and Crees must have been really good farmers”.

“Those seeds are the old ways. They gave our ancestors life for all those years. I’m totally for preserving the old ways.” Frank Alegria Sr told us. As the son of migrant farm workers, Frank has been gardening since he could walk and farming on the Menominee reservation in Wisconsin since he was sixteen. Now an elder, he continues to grow out native varieties including an 850 year old squash variety found in an archaeological dig near the Wisconsin border.

Deb Echohawk told the story of the sacred corn seeds of the Pawnees. Varieties thought to be lost forever are now finally recovering for her people. By combining efforts with the descendants of settlers who live in the traditional Pawnee homelands in Nebraska, the Pawnee identified keepers of the seeds, including Deb.

Indigenous farmers from Nebraska shared their story of genetically modified organisms (GMOs) encroaching on their fields, threatening to alter and potentially sterilize open-pollinated corn. While native corn varieties are more rich in protein and much more resilient to climate change, they are not immune to GMO contamination. The advice shared amongst farmers was to eat from the edges and save seed from the middle where it is least likely to be affected by cross pollination.

Despite the challenges to maintaining native varieties, organizations such as Seed Savers Exchange have triumphed in maintaining a diverse seed catalog. John Torgrimson, Executive Director of Seed Savers Exchange, talked about the organizations’ humble beginning in 1975 starting as a camp out by a small group of committed individuals in Decorah, Iowa. Over 35 years later, they now preserve and grow out over 25,000 varieties of unique vegetables, fruits, grasses, and even a heritage cow breed at their 890 acre Heritage Farm. They continue to camp out on the farm for their annual conference, this year to be held July 15-17th.

Likewise, the White Earth Land Recovery Project is working with a number of tribal members and local farmers to grow out five or six corn varieties adapted for this region. The North Dakota State University also contributes to this project. The first variety is a Bear Island Flint from nearby Leech Lake reservation and has grown well in the region for the past five years. White, pink, and black varieties are also being grown out. One of the greatest challenges today for heritage corn growers is competing with raccoons, bears, and deer for the fruits of their labor. A farmer at the conference chuckled as he mentioned seeing the animals strut past the more abundant GMO corn to feast on the native variety.

All participants were invited to join a working group that gathered several times throughout the weekend to envision a regional seed library and map out a plan for co-creating the library. At the table were tribal members from White Earth, Red Lake, Leech Lake,  Bad River, Menominee, Standing Rock Lakota, as well as the Winnebago of Nebraska and other reservations. Also involved in the discussion was the keeper of seeds for the Pawnee tribe, and the executive directors of Seed Savers Exchange and Seeds of Diversity (Canada). Many others joined the discussion including a Midwest coordinator for USDA’s Sustainable Agriculture Research and Education Program, local allied growers, representatives from University of Minnesota, and various tribal colleges.

If you are interested in taking part in the ongoing discussion and visioning of a Great Lakes Seed Library, join the Northern Indigenous Seed Sovereignty group by emailing northern-indigenous-seed-sovereignty@googlegroups.com.

 

Conference photos by Edward Gehrke

Save the Bees!

Posted: March 14th, 2011, by admin

As a lifelong beekeeper, I’m worried. Nearly a third of all honeybee colonies in North America are dying every year. ‘Colony Collapse Disorder’ is a major contributor to these deaths, and while there is still no scientific consensus as to the cause, keeping pollinators healthy is crucial not just for our Co-op but also for the health of our environment and the future of our food.


 

Honeybees pollinate many of the foods we eat – from apples to chestnuts to raspberries and squash. That’s why I’m asking you today to join Slow Food USA’s campaign to save the bees, and our food chain:

http://org2.democracyinaction.org/o/5986/p/dia/action/public/?action_KEY=5833

A growing body of scientific evidence points to a certain class of agricultural pesticides (neonicotinoids) as one of the key culprits of CCD. Even the Environmental Protection Agency’s own scientists have spoken out against it. But the EPA isn’t doing enough to prevent more devastating honeybee die-offs in the years to come. Would you join me in asking the EPA to act quickly to save the bees?

http://org2.democracyinaction.org/o/5986/p/dia/action/public/?action_KEY=5833

Let’s keep the pressure on ourselves and on those whose job it is to keep our food and fields healthy, until the origins of this environmental catastrophe are understood and eliminated. Please join me in signing Slow Food USA’s petition to the EPA, before it’s too late to save the bees. You can see their original email below.

I manage a self-sufficient beekeeping cooperative in the city of Chicago that produces more than just honey. Our Co-op also provides healthy food and job training experiences for our neighbors in the community where we are located. Our hives are on an abandoned industrial property in a neighborhood that has seen better days. We also take care of bees on rooftops in downtown Chicago.

For the past several years, we have been losing nearly 50% of our hives each winter. This is an alarming trend I haven’t experienced in a lifetime of keeping bees. The worst thing is, we can’t even identify the cause. That’s why we need the EPA to work quickly to identify the cause of CCD. Will you join me in signing the petition to save the bees?

http://org2.democracyinaction.org/o/5986/p/dia/action/public/?action_KEY=5833

 


Thanks for taking action,
Michael S. Thompson
Chicago Honey Co-Op
www.chicagohoneycoop.com

Forwarded email:

Spring’s going to be a lot quieter this year. Something is killing off almost 40% of North American honeybees each year, and it’s threatening our entire food chain. Mounting scientific evidence suggests agricultural pesticides are one a primary culprit.

The Environmental Protection Agency has the power to investigate and ban the pesticides thought to be responsible but, despite their own scientists’ advice and under pressure from pesticides companies, they’re dragging their feet.

Much of the plant-life we depend on for food exists thanks to honeybees. Now the bees are depending on us to return the favor. Click here to sign our petition calling on the EPA to solve the mystery that’s killing our buzz:

http://org2.democracyinaction.org/o/5986/p/dia/action/public/?action_KEY=5833

Bees don’t just make honey: from apples to lemons, much of the food we eat may disappear with the bees. Even milk and beef production could be threatened: guess what makes the plants that feed the cows? Our friend the honeybee.

What’s more, bees add $15 billion to the annual US economy, and their loss will have a devastating impact on food production and food prices. But the EPA is under pressure to do nothing about it from pesticide companies and the pesticide ‘scientists’ those companies bankroll.

The EPA has already acknowledged it should look into the causes of “Colony Collapse Disorder”. We need to counter the pesticide lobby’s pressure and hold the EPA to that commitment, by sending them a message they can’t ignore:

http://org2.democracyinaction.org/o/5986/p/dia/action/public/?action_KEY=5833

Everyone stands to lose with the threat to our food chain known as CCD. That’s why everyone needs to stand together to counter the pressure the EPA is under not to do its job: protect the things we rely on to survive.

Many Slow Food chapters are also hosting screenings of a new CCD documentary, Vanishing of the Bees. It’s a great way to get together in your community and learn more about what you can do to help solve this problem.

Time and again Slow Food members get together to celebrate the importance of food. It’s now the time to take action to protect that which binds us together, and stand up for the bees that make it all possible.

 

Thanks for spreading the buzz,
The Slow Food USA team

PS – Can you help spread the buzz? For every 100 signatures we collect on our petition to protect the bees we depend on for our food, we’ll send a bee-shaped postcard to the Director of the EPA’s Pesticide Programs. Imagine those on the wall the next time the pesticide lobby pops in!

Seed Sovereignty Declaration

Posted: February 14th, 2011, by admin

Cross-posted from Food Freedom

Watch this inspiring video that features students at Peñasco Middle School and Roots and Wings Charter School reading the Declaration of Seed Sovereignty in 2010. We cannot forget the important role our youth will play in leading us toward a sustainable, socially just, and equitable food future



This video features a reading of the Seed Sovereignty Declaration that was drafted by members of the New Mexico Acequia Association and the Traditional Native American Farmers’ Association. This Alliance was later joined by the organizations Tewa Women United and Honor Our Pueblo Existence. The Declaration was presented and signed by 110 participants at the 1st Annual Tierra, Agua, y Cultura conference held in Alcalde, New Mexico on March 10 & 11, 2006.

This video features a recording of the Declaration read by students of Peñasco Middle School and Roots and Wings Charter School in 2010. The video and imagery depicts northern New Mexican cultural traditions of Indo-Hispano and Native American Pueblo food and agriculture. The images and video were mostly obtained over the years with the support of projects involving Miguel Santistevan that were funded by the McCune and Christensen Foundations and the Kindle Project.

More information on this Declaration and the Alliance can be found at:

http://www.lasacequias.org/programs/s…

More information on the effort to protect farmers from genetic engineering contamination in NM can be found at:

http://www.savenmseeds.org/