The pigness of the pig – Joel Salatin

If you’ve seen Fresh, Food Inc or any of the recent movies on our failing food system, you’ve probably seen Joel Salatin. He’s the charismatic USA farmer who’s got radical ideas on how to transform the way we produce food, and he’s put it into practice at Polyface farms.

As a self-confessed ‘Christian-Libertarian-Environmentalist-Capitalist-Lunatic Farmer’, he’s an interesting character. I was lucky enough to hear Joel speak in Byford in late 2012 and here are a few of his insights.

Many will be aware that our food system has become unsustainable, nutritionally lacking and actually unhealthy. Modern agriculture has become captured by a ‘fatter, faster, bigger, cheaper’ mentality.  As Joel pointed out

“We’re living in strange times when heritage ideas, like drinking raw milk, are considered hazardous, but it’s OK to drink coke and eat twinkies!”

Key to Joels method of farming is mimicking nature. He asks, “What’s nature’s template? How can we adapt and use it?” For example, all large grazers in nature are mobile and move in herds, followed by birds – think of buffaloes or deer. Therefore, he treats his cattle or ‘sauerkraut vats’ like buffalo. He moves them every day and allows them to feed in only a small area constrained by mobile electric fences. This ensures that they eat all the forage and not just the tasty palatable species. It also means that the grass lays dormant for much of the year and can regrow, recover and seed.

Following the cattle, Joel brings in hens in egg mobiles. The chickens pick through the cow pats and help to sanitize and spread the manure. While this farming method is more labor intensive, that’s actually a positive, it provides more employment. It’s also more financially viable. With multiple products and incomes stacked on top of each other, his farm produces several times the income per acre of his neighbours. Ultimately he’s not just a grazier or a chicken farmer, he’s a “Grass farmer”.

Joel with chickens behind super lite and portable electric fence

Joel with chickens behind super lite and portable electric fence

Following this approach, his pasture has improved considerably. He went from 1% organic matter in the soil to 8%! Therefore his soil has much greater water holding capacity.

While many of the ideas Joel promotes are aligned with Permaculture (e.g. aim to keep water as close to where it falls for as long as possible), he doesn’t call it that. Some more of his principles:

  • Tools must be multi use and ideally cheap
  • Get animals to do the work
  • Value waste (manure)
  • Nature sanitizes in 2 ways: rest and sunshine or compost

He was one of the most authentic and funny presenters I’ve heard, but what I also really liked about his workshop was that it wasn’t just about farming, it was really his philosophy of life. For example, talking about expensive farm equipment, “We capitalise our lives thinking it makes us free, but it enslaves us to that paradigm, financially and mentally”.

He also covered poultry and rabbit sheds, farm hand over, interns, marketing, sales and more. If you’re interested, you can listen to an audio recording of the entire day courtesy of Peter McMullen and Permaculture West (note 5.5 hrs).

Thanks also go to Heenan Doherty who brought him over. If you’re interested, they also sell the light weight electric fences Joel uses.

Would you like to see Guildford, Bassendean and Midland go bottled water free?

Jaap Timmer's avatarCulture Matters

by Jennifer Anayo (Graduate of the Master of Applied Anthropology program at Macquarie University) 
 

Plastic is ‘highly visible’ in food packaging, plastic carry bags at the check-out and the many applications of plastic in the food and beverage service. Due to these consumer experiences, plastic is often linked with notions of disposability, convenience, and low financial cost. Our interactions with them are for short periods of time, and often taken for granted. Similarly, since plastic has found its place in every-day consumer products, and the banal and mundane functions of daily life, plastic often fades into the background, ‘invisible’ until attention is brought to it.

Commonly, we understand the things we buy, use or get given as ‘objects’. Dichter points out that the objects we own reveal a great deal about ourselves, and that studying objects is a useful way to find out about people and gain insight into…

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Celebrating 2012

2012 has been a big year for Transition Town Guildford. Here are some of the highlights.

The final result

It all kicked off in March, with three events in one month. We held another Clean Up Australia day at Guildford Primary, and initial concerns of having collected it all last year were quickly dispelled with a massive hall of rubbish and recycling (thanks to Sharon and the City of Swan waste team for collecting it).

Then there was a powerful talk from International guest speaker Nicole Foss. Over 100 people packed St Matthews church hall on a hot summers night to hear some inconvenient truths on our economic system (thanks also to our co-hosts Permaculture West and Ecoburbia). Luckily, this event was followed by the first Transition of the Heart workshop, giving people a chance to express feelings and fears that may have come up.

Nicole Foss 2

In June Emma, Elizabeth and Debra started the Kitchen Gardeners’ Society, which meets in members’ backyards on the first Sunday of the month to share experiences, plants, tools and participate in garden-related activities. This year included keeping chooksbees, w0rms and compost,  permablitzes and preserving the harvest, it’s been a raging success!

Kitchen Gardeners' founders

During the year we also showed three movies, with In Transition 2.0, Growing Change and Bag It. Growing Change was generously hosted by Debra and Peter G, with farmlet tour and wood-fired pizza’s 🙂

Bag It, probably the funniest environmental movie you’ll find, isn’t just about plastic bags, but all the nasty facets of plastic. This was accompanied by sewing stations and making your own bags, which proved to be a winner.

Happy customers!

Happy customers!

And we also held our first bike maintenance workshop, with 34 people learning how to fix and repair their own bikes.

Bike workshop attendees

So all that remains for 2012 is to celebrate!

Happy Transitioners at the 2012 Christmas picnic, including Guildford ward councillor Ted Williams

Happy Transitioners at the 2012 Christmas picnic, including City of Swan Guildford ward councillor Ted Williams