23 January 2009

Okay, ME!!!

I will be presenting Saturday, September 27 from 3 to 4 pm at the Sustainable Living Roadshow (SLR) in the dome. The topic is Urban Agriculture: Growing your own Food in the City since that seems to be my specialty. Of course, being so multi-talented, I had a hard time narrowing it down to one subject. Wink.

Spread the word. Hope to see you all at the SLR fair.

2 comments:

  1. Whew. Glad that's over with, and ready for more. I still get butterflies and feel anxiety for a presentation even with 15+ year's public speaking experience. My biggest challenge yesterday was cramming 4+ hours of presentation material into 50 minutes. Overall, I'm not too pleased with my performance. I left out a lot of information to make the presentation more complete, but I haven't given the presentation in a while and feel rusty. Hell, 50 minutes is just enough time for an introduction. It takes 50 minutes before I feel like I'm getting my grove on and hitting my stride. I can only hope that I sparked enough interest and generated enough information to inspire the twenty or so people who attended to grow their own food.

    I began with the lovely Lettuce from California an Ode to You

    Topics covered:
    What inspired me to start growing my own food: curiosity; my son so he could eat the healthiest food possible, nutritional benefit; and Peak oil

    How I learned: books; talking with other gardeners; and volunteering 1700 hours with AmeriCorps at Beardsley Farm because UT, though an agricultural school, offered nothing in the lines of organic gardening

    Why I'm so adamant on teaching: Katrina and the realization that in times of crisis, the poor will receive no assistance; peak oil; no gas for cars means no gas for trucks which means no food in the grocery (and subsequently, which I didn't mention because I'm rusty, to run farm equipment); and nutritional benefit especially for the poor who need it most

    How to build a garden: growing in 5 gallon buckets for people who don't have a yard; community gardens Beardsley Farm; no till/ sheet mulch (though I didn't use this specific terminology); seeds/plants; buy heirloom not GMO or hybrids; companion and inter planting; square foot gardening concept; keep a gardening journal

    Resources: Beardsley Community Farm; Book The Vegetable Gardener's Bible; Knoxville Permaculture Guild

    The presentation I normally give is a 4 hour class which could easily be a 6 to 8 hour class. I would still consider that an introduction. How does one squish 5 years of gardening experience into 50 minutes? The best she can, that's how.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Since I can't edit my comments after I hit add comment, and unless I want to cut and paste all day long back and forth into Microsoft Word resetting links and underlines each time, I am forced to continue adding comments. That's okay, then I look well read from the front page..."Oh, look, that blog post has 15 comments. Must be a good one. Think I'll go read it." Then when the readers arrive, they realize that all 15 comments are from the author. Is that a little like talking to myself?

    Some other topics I touched on yesterday: the importance of eating seasonally and even organic produce comes from big monoculture farming practices.

    Coming soon: the next installment of What I Forgot to Tell You and Conversations with Myself not to be confused with Hugh Prather's Notes to Myself, but probably not unlike that. either.

    ReplyDelete