The Santa Barbara Organic Garden Club presents
Backyard Food Forests Applying Permaculture principles to your garden
Sat October 20th from 10:00 AM to 12:00 Noon. RSVP to lbsaltzman@aol.com and you will receive directions to the event.
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Sent: Mon, 24 Sep 2007 12:00 pm
Subject: Scpg Digest, Vol 57, Issue 28
Send Scpg mailing list submissions to scpg@arashi.com To subscribe or unsubscribe via the World Wide Web, visit https://www.arashi.com/mailman/listinfo.cgi/scpg or, via email, send a message with subject or body 'help' to scpg-request@arashi.com You can reach the person managing the list at scpg-owner@arashi.com When replying, please edit your Subject line so it is more specific than "Re: Contents of Scpg digest..." Today's Topics: 1. Celebrating the Maya Forest as a Garden Saturday, October 13, 2007 from 11 am to 4 pm, Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History, Farrand Hall (Wesley Roe and Santa Barbara Permaculture Network) 2. City Repair/Mark Lakeman Autumn 2007 Presentation Tour CA &OR (Wesley Roe and Santa Barbara Permaculture Network) ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Message: 1 Date: Sat, 22 Sep 2007 06:59:15 -0700 From: Wesley Roe and Santa Barbara Permaculture Network <lakinroe@silcom.com> Subject: [Scpg] Celebrating the Maya Forest as a Garden Saturday, October 13, 2007 from 11 am to 4 pm, Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History, Farrand Hall To: scpg@arashi.com, sdpg@arashi.com, ccpg@arashi.com, lapg@arashi.com, sbperm2006 <sbperm2006@googlegroups.com> Message-ID: <7.0.1.0.2.20070922065908.0595deb0@silcom.com> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1" ,Celebrating the Maya Forest as a Garden Meet the Mayan Forest Gardeners from El Pilar! Presented by ESP-Maya, a 501c3 non-profit organization, with SBMNH At the Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History, Farrand Hall Saturday, October 13, 2007 from 11 am to 4 pm The Original PermaCulturists The Maya have long been exalted for their architectural and artistic grandeur. Towering temples dominating grand open plazas remain the enduring evidence of their power. Keen observers of natural phenomena, their priests studied the heavens, making accurate celestial predictions with precise mathematics. The Maya were also superb gardeners. They domesticated their wild jungles and tropical landscape and established their cities based on forest gardens. This powerfully effective art, architecture, and agriculture was, amazingly, established without the aid of wheels and plows or the draft animals, or even heavy metals like iron. Rather than being constrained by this, the Maya were able to create a productive landscape that provided thousands of years of growth and development. This is supremely evident in the remarkably diverse and sophisticated development of their landscape. Well-known plants that we rely on today were part of the Maya diet: the sun trilogy of maize, beans, squash; basic vegetables such as tomato and chile; fibers such as cotton; condiments like allspice tree and achiote bush; and the important shaded delicacies of chocolate and vanilla. Tailored to the local geography, the Maya cultivated the forest as a garden for thousands of years. Today the Maya forest is dominated by these useful plants, nurtured by traditional farmers of the region who grow a wide array of food, medicine, and spice as well as materials for construction and home utensils. Their forest gardens provide nourishment for their families, maintain the soil fertility, secure water, and clean the air. Come and meet them! Join Us and Discover the World of the Maya Past and Present ? Where did the ancient Maya live? ? What are we doing to protect the Maya heritage? ? How can we learn from the Maya Forest Garden? These are some of the fascinating question we will cover in our panel discussion At Fiesta El Pilar. ? Beloved local landscape designer Lori Ann David will moderate a celebration of the tropical Maya forest past and present ? Archaeologist Anabel Ford will introduce the Maya world ? A panel of local and international experts will explore traditional landscapes. ? Maya forest gardeners from El Pilar Belize Master Gardener Alfonzo Tzul, Traditional Healer Beatrice Waight, and Young Entrepreneur Lucas Medina will discuss how they conserve and prosper in the Maya forest ? Learn about Chumash landscapes traditional Chumash Healer Adelina Padilla ? Explore how traditional knowledge can contribute to our own lives and landscapes. Music by El Son del Pueblo ? Food and Drinks ? Booths Suggested contribution: $25-$100 Contact info: Anabel Ford 805 893 8191/ford@marc.ucsb.edu www.marc.ucsb.edu/elpilar/brass/phome.shtml -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: https://www.arashi.com/pipermail/scpg/attachments/20070922/6fc4035a/attachment.html ------------------------------ Message: 2 Date: Mon, 24 Sep 2007 08:36:28 -0700 From: Wesley Roe and Santa Barbara Permaculture Network <lakinroe@silcom.com> Subject: [Scpg] City Repair/Mark Lakeman Autumn 2007 Presentation Tour CA &OR To: scpg@arashi.com, sdpg@arashi.com, lapg@arashi.com, ccpg@arashi.com, info@hopedance.org, permaculture@lists.ibiblio.org, eastbaypermaculture@yahoogroups.com Message-ID: <7.0.1.0.2.20070924083128.067516b0@silcom.com> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"; format=flowed City Repair/Mark Lakeman Autumn 2007 Presentation Tour CA &OR Event Calendar: * Saturday, Sept 29, 7:30pm- New College of California, Santa Rosa, North Bay campus * Sunday, Sept 30, Workshop with New College Students, Contact New College for more information. * Monday, October 1st, 6-9pm, for Willits Economic Localization Initiative, Willits Community Center, Willits, CA. * Tuesday, October 2nd, Regenerative Design & Nature Awareness School with Jon Young & Penny Livingston, near San Gregorio, Evening Presentation, at 415-868-9681. * Wednesday, October 3rd, Esalen Institute at Big Sur, Daytime workshop and evening community-wide presentation. * Thursday, October 4th, in Santa Barbara: - Noon-1pm, "Nuts and Bolts of City Repair", Public Library, Faulkner Gallery. - 7:45pm, "The Village Lives" Presentation, Public Library, Faulkner Gallery. * Saturday, October 6th, UCLA Planning School, Graduate Student Conference, Presentation and Workshop in the Field. Call Ava at 818.939.9205 * Tuesday, October 9th, 7-9pm, Soulutioneers 2007 Speaker Series, 1950 Shattuck Avenue, Berkeley. * Wednesday, October 10th, 6:30-8pm, An Architects, Designers, and Planners for Social Responsibility Event, Pacific Energy Center 851 Howard Street. * Thursday, October 11th, Evening Event, in Point Reyes, Time and Location TBD. * Alternate Date: Friday, October 12th, 6-9pm, for Willits Economic Localization Initiative, Willits Community Center, Willits, CA. * Monday, October 15th, 7-9pm, Lost Valley Educational Center, near Eugene, Oregon. From Interstate 5 driving south: Take exit 188A (Highway 58) towards Klamath Falls. After 8.7 miles, turn right onto Rattlesnake Road. After 3.7 miles, turn right onto Lost Valley Lane. Continue .9 mile, then turn right into driveway at LVEC sign. City Repair Project www.cityrepair.org As both an organization and a larger movement, The City Repair Project inspires and guides the transformation of the grid infrastructure of the typical American city into a vital social commons. The multidisciplinary nature of City Repair defies categorization. Similar to Permaculture design, it has become a national movement for social and ecological restoration operating in a landscape characterized by isolation and compartmentalization. The project takes Fritjof Capra's 'Tipping Point' as a model for paradigm change by intentionally focusing upon intersections in space and time. City Repair is directly reclaiming those intersection points, converting spaces of collision into places of convergence, and opening the field for what automatically happens when people reunite with their Place: everything. This presentation compares the historic settlement patterns of village societies with the dominant forces of Western colonization as a context for describing City Repair's work. As revealed through this visually stunning event, the multidisciplinary culture of City Repair combines architecture, urban planning, anthropology, community development, public art, permaculture and ecological design in projects that transform space and transfer power to local levels. The presentation is chronological, proceeding from the most elementary and accessible project scales to enormous visionary collaborations involving thousands of people. Each project restates the same essential principles of localization, community participation and placemaking, but the forms always change and grow. As an overall movement, each project builds upon previous successes to manifest larger and larger impacts. Through a restorative process in which citizens re-imagine and literally re-build their own commons, City Repair is engendering relationships that revitalize the fabric of our local community within the existing context of social isolation. By re-asserting localized village patterns in the city grid, City Repair establishes both the physical and social foundation for sustainable culture. ____________________________________________________________________________________ Looking for a deal? Find great prices on flights and hotels with Yahoo! FareChase. http://farechase.yahoo.com/ ------------------------------ _______________________________________________ Scpg mailing list Scpg@arashi.com https://www.arashi.com/mailman/listinfo.cgi/scpg End of Scpg Digest, Vol 57, Issue 28 ************************************