Bicycle Treasure Hunt fun

Over 60 people attended our Bicycle Treasure Hunt in Guildford on Sunday to celebrate Cycle Instead Bikeweek. We hope everyone had a fun time riding around Guildford, and that it will inspire people to ride more often, especially to school and for shorts trips around the place.

Bicycle treasure hunt

Congratulations to the winning Adult team ‘Next Stop Paris’, the family category winners ‘Chokoz’ and the ‘Black Swans’, who took out the best decorated bikes award for dressing up as pirates.

Bicycle treasure hunt3

Following the event, participants enjoyed yummy refreshments, including buns provided by the Guildford Bakery. Thanks!

Bikeweek is running until Sunday the 24th of March. To find another free bike event visit www.transport.wa.gov.au/bikeweek

Transition Town Guildford acknowledge the support of this event by the Department of Transport as part of Cycle Instead Bikeweek 2013.

Cycle Instead logo

Dept of Transport

Bicycle treasure hunt4

Bicycle Treasure hunt2

Jetto’s Patch visit in March

If you were ever looking for inspiration, or just wondering what might be possible on an average suburban block, Jetto’s Patch in Maida Vale has much to make you think.

Dario in the front yard, which they converted from lawn only 18 months ago!

Dario in the front yard, which they converted from lawn only 18 months ago!

Starting in 1989, but with the newest parts only 18 months old, Dario and Michelle grow something in the region of 500 edible species on their 1482 sq m block.

The Kitchen Gardeners were delighted to accept an invitation from Dario and Michelle to hold their March workshop at Jetto’s Patch.  Some of us opted for the advertised potting seeds workshop, where we used some of our collected and donated pots, and made some out of newspaper following Debra’s expert instructions.

Most of us wandered about the verdant paradise admiring just how many plants and the amazing variety of edible plants it is possible to grow in Perth.  There are the obvious ones like figs and grapes along with some very interesting ones that you would not expect to find thriving in Perth: arabica coffee, pineapples, cherries, raspberries.

Touring the chook pen and garden

Touring the chook pen and garden

It was a hot day, but the garden was lovely and cool

It was a hot day, but the garden was lovely and cool

Lots of us took home a little piece of Jetto’s – sugarcane, perpetual pumpkin seeds and a renewed zeal for growing our own food.

If you missed out, Dario and Michelle love visitors – you can contact them via their Facebook page – JettosPatch

Dario's raised beds made of left over concrete slabs and a metal frame

Dario’s raised beds made of left over concrete slabs and a metal frame

Calico fruit bags to protect fruit from birds and bugs

Calico fruit bags to protect fruit from birds and bugs

Happy chooks

Happy chooks

Guildford Clean Up Day 2013 Success

A great team effort

A great team effort

Over 50 people took part in the Guildford Clean Up Australia Day hosted by Transition Town Guildford and the Guildford Association Inc.

Guildford Primary School students and local residents picked up litter and recyclable material around the school, Kings Meadows, the Helena and Swan River floodplains and local streets. The participants enjoyed a well-deserved morning tea at the conclusion of the event.

Guildford Primary School students celebrate the result

Guildford Primary School students celebrate the result

It was an even bigger result than last year, with over 28 chaff bags of rubbish and 20 bags of recycling collected, as well as odd items like an ironing board, fire extinguisher, TV, four tyres and five paint cans.

The final haul

The final haul

It was promising to see that there were less bulk items compared to previous years, so we’re having an impact. But there was still way too much recyclable material, like cans and bottles. Ralph even found some steel cans and coke bottles that must be over 30 years old! So there’s still a legacy of material to collect.

The organisers thank the Guildford Primary School and participating students for taking part, and invite people to join our community groups to find out about future clean ups and events (TTG email list and www.guildford.asn.au).

Thanks also to the City of Swan Waste and recycling team for collecting the material.

Rod, Barb and Ralph survey the result

Rod, Barb and Ralph survey the result

Clean Up article in the Echo

Clean Up article in the Echo

The WA State election and our four degree future

As a young adult living in WA I am dismayed to see the vast gulf between the latest climate science and observations, and the decisions being made by our State Government. Certainly, 2012 was a year of extreme climate events: the Arctic sea ice reached a new record low summer melt; the Greenland ice sheet experienced an unprecedented melt with 97% of its surface thawing over four days in July; temperature records tumbled around the world; and prominently, the USA suffered wildfires, drought and super-storm Sandy.

Here in Australia, we just experienced a January with seven consecutive days of national-average maximum temperatures above 39°C. This smashes the previous record of four days in 1972. Perth experienced a record eight heat waves last summer, while Perth metro recorded its 12th driest year on record and the driest July in 137 years, with just 34.6 mm.

Contrast this to the decisions being made in WA. The Barnett government removed all CO2 emission requirements for the Wheatstone and Browse basin projects, the impact will be equivalent to the emissions of 650,000 homes. These two LNG projects alone will increase WA’s emissions by more than 60%! And that’s not even taking into account the emissions caused by burning the fuel – that’s just from processing it.

Add to this, plans to develop unconventional onshore gas through hydraulic fracturing (‘fracking’). In November, the government signed an agreement to facilitate the exploration of the Canning Basin in the Kimberley, which is estimated to be the fifth largest reserve in the world. The development of that field could mean over 100,000 fracking wells across the Kimberley, not only adding to our climate woes, but potentially polluting water and degrading some of the world’s most beautiful landscapes.

Along with the decision to refurbish Muja  power station, which we recently learnt has experienced a cost blow out of over $100 million. Instead of locking in another 30 years of coal, how much renewable energy could have been built for a quarter of a billion dollars? Not to mention the demolition of the state Climate Change Unit and the release, after four years, of a State Climate Change Policy that has been described by prominent Australian scientist Ian Lowe as a ‘ten page picture book’.

Internationally, world governments have agreed that we must stay below a 2°C ‘guardrail’ of warming to avoid the worst impacts of climate change. Although we should note that, given the impacts we are now seeing with only 0.8°C of warming, most scientists now consider even 2°C unsafe.

A key question that faces us is: how much CO2 can we emit before 2050 to stay below 2°C?

Scientific studies have attempted to answer this question, with results suggesting that we can emit a further 550 Giga tonnes of carbon dioxide equivalent (GT CO2), if we are to give ourselves an 80% chance of staying below 2°C. With business-as-usual – that is, on our current emissions path – we’re likely to have used that up by 2026, nearly 25 years ahead of schedule. This is why both the World Bank and accounting firm PricewaterhouseCoopers released reports late last year saying we’re heading for 4°C plus of warming. A catastrophic future to say the least.

Earth Burning

If that’s not scary enough, there’s another important question to ask: how much CO2 is contained within the currently known reserves of oil, coal and gas? The answer is that there are over 2795 GT of COequivalent in known reserves. More than five times what we can ‘safely’ release!

This has massive implications for fossil fuel companies like Chevron and Woodside. What if 80% of your product could never be burnt? Ever. The world’s second largest bank, HSBC, just released a report suggesting oil and gas multinationals could lose 60% of their market value, if we strive to limit climate change, as we must. Hence a recent campaign in the USA by 350.org to get public institutions, especially universities, to divest shares in fossil fuel companies.

It doesn’t much matter that gas emits less CO2 at the point of combustion than coal, as the International Energy Agency has noted that overall emissions associated with a “golden age of gas” would still result in exceeding our greenhouse gas budget in much the same way. All emissions count, and all emissions will push us closer to the edge of tipping points, where natural feedback loops take matters out of our hands.

Given these numbers, the implications for our current direction are huge. The decisions being made in WA have global consequences. So, what about the leaders of our state? Will they break the climate silence of this state election campaign? Will we hear discussion of these numbers? And most important, will there be meaningful action after the election? I hope so, our future depends on it.

February’s preserve and jam workshop

The workshop was great fun and Emma and Kerrin’s house smelt absolutely divine.  We made 20 jars of jam – half plum, other half nectarine and mango, and 20 jars of Emma’s summer pickle.

Master jam stirer

 

If you’d like to make your own jam, here’s how you do it:

Elizabeth’s great-nana’s failsafe jam

Ingredients

  •  Quantity of soft fruit (plums, strawberries, apricots, peaches…)
  •  Equal quantity by mass of sugar.
  •  Juice of a lemon.
  •  Commercial pectin (quantity by weight, one packet of Jam Setta to 1.5kg fruit)

Method

  •  Wash your fruit and cut it into equal-sized pieces, removing any stones, spots or yucky bits.
  •  Weigh your fruit.
  •  Weigh an equal amount of sugar, mix your pectin through this and set it aside.
  • At this point put your jars and lids in the oven at 100 deg to sterilise them.
  •  Put fruit in a large, heavy-bottomed pot on a very low heat.
  •  Let the fruit simmer very slowly until it is cooked.  This step is important, as once you add your sugar the fruit doesn’t cook any further.
  •  Once the fruit is cooked, add your sugar and increase the heat to a rolling boil.
  •  Boil about 10 minutes, then start to test for setting point.
  •  Once your jam has reached setting point, take if off the heat.  Let jam sit for 10 minutes or so, until the fruit no longer rises to the surface.  This will ensure that when you bottle it, the chunks of fruit are evenly distributed through the jar.
  •  Bottle, seal and label.
  •  Stand back and feel pleased with yourself.

Notes

  •  Pectin is the naturally occurring acid in fruit that aids in setting.
  •  Slightly under-ripe fruit is best for jam as it tends to contain more pectin.
  •  I usually guess with the amount of Jam Setta I use, depending on the type of fruit and its degree of ripeness.  It’s forgiving stuff.
  •  This recipe works for just about any soft fruit – the only failure I’ve ever had with it was with custard apple, and that was because it tends to be gritty.
  •  Setting point is the point at which the fruit soup changes its chemical consistency to a gel.
  • To test setting point, put a saucer in the freezer. When the fruit has been boiling for 10 minutes or so, put a smear on the cold saucer, put it back in the freezer to cool down quickly, then run your finger gently through it.   When the jam creases, it’s at setting point. You might need to do this a couple of times.  If you leave it past this you end up with toffee.

Summer Pickle 

If you’d like to try the summer pickle, you can download the recipe here.

Pickle prep

Furious chopping

Successful pickle

Bike week Bicycle Treasure Hunt

As part of Cycle Instead bikeweek 2013, Transition Town Guildford are holding a Bicycle Treasure Hunt.

Participants will cycle around historic Guildford in teams to decipher clues, collect answers and earn points to win prizes. Bike shop vouchers worth $500 will be awarded in the categories of Adults, Families and Best decorated bike.

Children under 16 years of age must be accompanied by a responsible adult to sign a waiver on the day. Individuals participating in these events do so at their own risk.

There will be a maximum of four adults per a team. Make sure you register prior to the event:
http://ttgbikehunt.eventbrite.com.au

Details: Sunday 17th March, 9-11 am, Stirling Square, Guildford

And questions, email ttguildford@gmail.com

Bike Week poster

This event is supported by the Department of Transport as part of Cycle Instead Bikeweek 2013.

Clean Up Australia Day – 2013

Building on the success of previous years, Transition Town Guildford and the Guildford Association will be hosting a Clean Up Australia day site around the Guildford Primary school (125 Helena street).

Come join us to clean up and hang around for morning tea. Children welcome, but must be supervised by parents.

When: Sunday 3rd March

Time: 8:30-10:30 am

Bring: Bring gloves, water, hat, enclosed shoes and a friend!

Sign up on the CUAD website or see you on the day.

E-Waste and Recyclable Goods Days

The East Metropolitan Regional Council are running computer and television recycling days across the member councils (Bayswater, Belmont, Bassendean Kalamunda, Mundaring, Swan).

Bring your e-waste along this weekend (23 and 24 February) to one of the Tech Collect locations to have it recycled for free. All computer equipment and accessories, cables, printers, scanners and TVs accepted.

City of Swan Location – Jack Williamson Oval, Eveline Road, Middle Swan.
When: 9 am to 4 pm all weekend. More info here, all locations here.

And on the 9th of March the City of Swan are having another Recyclable goods drop off day. See the Upcoming Events page for details.

Clean Up day poster