Saturday, May 10, 2014

Pecha Kucha at the Stonington Opera House

On Tuesday the Stonington Opera House held a Pecha Kucha Night where eight different presenters were given 6,6 minutes to show 20 images x 20 seconds to explain each image.

"Pecha Kucha Night, now in over 700 cities, was devised in Tokyo in February 2003 as an event for young designers to meet, network, and show their work in public" (www.pechakucha.org).

This has now become a widespread format for communities to engage in social, fun and informative nights welcoming different people with many interests.

This is how the Gleaning Initiative's Pecha Kucha went:


 1.   Imagine sitting at an incredibly bountiful table filled with good, healthy, and safe food. Imagine denying hungry people a seat at that table. Imagine, if you can possibly manage, that we then take half of that bounty on that table and just throw it away, right in front of these hungry neighbors. Unfortunately this is not a bad dream, it is very real right here in Downeast Maine!

 
2.   You might recognize this painting by Lhermitte: “The Gleaners”… a bucolic image of people coming in after the harvest to hand pick what was missed by machines. In the Old Testament gleaning shows up as a mandate of the church for farmers to leave the four corners of their fields unharvested to allow the less fortunate to come through and glean. The bible mentions Ruth the gleaner. You might say I am Hannah the gleaner. 


3.  The tradition of gleaning, however, is not merely ancient, it is in fact quite contemporary as well. I ran into this couple in Barcelona Spain at an outdoor community meal, and this gentleman started talking to me. As a boy, he would go out after the almond harvest, where they used the tree shaking technique. He would collect whatever had been left behind and sell it to an old man in the village who was home-bound.

    4. Gleaning is about not letting food nor people fall through the cracks. It is about creating a safety net, about taking out our old blueberry rakes, our old traditions, and going out to make sure we are putting food that we all pay for, with resources and money, and that we all waste, back on the table to support those who are experiencing times of need.



 
5.   This is chard from the Jackson Lab Wellness Program garden, part of University of Maine Cooperative Extension’s Maine Harvest for Hunger program. All gardeners are welcome to participate in this program growing an extra row in their backyard to feed those in our community who are experiencing hunger. We are also exploring ways to introduce nutritious foods such as chard into the diets of those who may not always know how to use it.


 
6.  Why does food go to waste? One reason is cosmetics. It’s not perfect. It’s not pretty. It doesn’t “look good”. Farmers can’t sell it. My grandmother sent me a quote the other day, the title of which read “perfection is the enemy of good”. The Gleaning Initiative works for the common good, to get high quality food such as this imperfect apple to someone who can’t afford it in the store.


 
7.  Our focus is on farms because in this way we are able to complement the work of other partners and focus on increasing the amount of high quality fresh, local produce that reaches pantries and community meal sites. We work alongside other programs like Good Shepherd Food Bank’s “Mainers Feeding Mainers” to build lasting relationships between food pantries and community meal sites and their local farms.
  8. Because a lot of the food that is redistributed to food security organizations is surplus food from the industry, such as canned goods, processed food, and high starch products, these are not always the healthiest options, nor do they meet some of the diet restrictions of the community members we are trying to serve. A lot of people are searching for access to more fruits and vegetables, and gleaning is another way for community members to access this directly. 

 9. Volunteerism is essential to the well-being of our community. For decades food pantries in Hancock County have been serving our community with free food, again surplus from our food industry. But if we are going to serve seconds to struggling sectors of our community, they might as well be the best quality, most nutritious seconds from our very own local farms.
 
10. Here we have King Hill Farm’s Amanda Provencher explaining to volunteers how to harvest… The Gleaning Initiative brings a new form of volunteerism to our community, keeping an aging population active and bringing people who might not otherwise make it out to a local farm into a healthy active environment. They experience a new form of community service that is as fulfilling to the gleaner as it is to the farmer and the recipient of food.
 
11. Homeschooling and working with schools through the Gleaning Initiative can provide an outdoor education opportunity for kids who might have trouble following the traditional model of education. It is an alternative way to understanding the circle of life, nutrient cycles, recycling, and experiencing food first hand. There’s plenty of research about how these types of experiences affect young people’s willingness to eat vegetables and fruit.

12.   The Cooperative Extension’s Maine Harvest for Hunger program, under which the Gleaning Initiative was created, in partnership with Healthy Acadia, is currently partnering with Garden Clubs, Home Growers, and Community Gardnes, to help support the efforts of the food security organizations in Hancock County. The Jackson Lab community garden delivered 600 pounds of food to us last season, all done through their Wellness Program’s employee garden.


 
13. Building work exchange opportunities out of the Gleaning Initiative is key to providing some of our unemployed community members with an opportunity to engage in fulfilling their own needs. But it is important to remember that a lot of the people we are serving through the food pantry and community mealsites are actually working more hours than many will ever work to make ends meet. They don’t always have the time!

 
14.  A subsidized CSA program where people paid $5 to fill their bag with organic locally produced vegetables was a hit last year as pantry patrons experienced top-quality food at reduced prices. They could either pay in advance the $50 that got them $200 worth of vegetables, or they could use the pay as you go system. Farmers and community members were thrilled to be a part of this program, and we hope to follow-up with a new program this Fall 2014.


 
 15. It is important for the Gleaning Initiative to have a back up to deal with the inevitable food that might, despite our efforts, not be able to reach people. We need to compost and we need to feed pigs! This is why we are, together with David’s Folly Farm and the Tree of Life, spearheading a project to have community members help us to buy local farm livestock products for the pantry. The Gleaning Initiative will find ways to feed these pigs food that would otherwise be wasted and in that way attempt to off-set the cost of grain.

 
16. LeanPath Technology is changing the game of food waste prevention by providing a system that tracks food waste as it is produced in kitchens of hospitals, universities, schools, hotels and restaurants. By knowing and measuring what we waste we can better manage and categorize the waste streams either by source or by destination, strategically placing each waste product to become a resource rather than a cost.

17. Just like Steve Jobs revolutionized our culture with Apple products, innovative programs like LeanPath can revolutionize our culture with food waste prevention technologies that drive behavior of employees in the food industry. Together we can build a labor force that is aware, careful and curious about the collective ways in which we can mitigate the negative impact of food waste on our economy, ecology and social equity.

 
18. Our supermarkets are up against a difficult task to provide us with the convenience, abundance and variety that we are now trained to expect when we embark on our shopping experiences. They know and dislike more than anyone the amount of food wasted in their stores. Our Hannafords and Shaws are major supporters of Good Shepherd Food Bank and local food security sites, and yet food still goes to waste every day despite successful gleaning. We are working to improve our systems!
 
19. Our Farmers’ Markets are also producing food waste. There are many things farmers do with this waste, but they are happy when they can give it to an organization that will ensure the quality is upheld and that it gets to community members who can’t otherwise access such food. We are also supporting farmers by tracking their surplus, and helping them place their products in alternative markets when possible.
 
20. Our next step is to build a food processing network to take on the products that we are having a hard time placing and turn them into meals and value-added opportunities. Now imagine a local culinary job training program for at-risk students and adults whose work becomes a social catering business for home-bound community members, seniors suffering from chronic illnesses and families experiencing forms of poverty. This is a dream, let’s make it real!


Thanks to the Stonington Opera House for a great event!

Tuesday, April 1, 2014

St. Brendan's "Dinner is Served" feeds 155 for St.Patrick's Day

On Monday 23rd of March, St. Brendan the Navigator Episcopal Church in North Deer Isle celebrated St. Patrick’s Day by putting on an exquisite dinner of corned beef, potatoes and cabbage. It was the fourth meal of a monthly volunteer-run program called “Dinner is Served.”

St.Patrick's Decorated Dining Room, ready to go!

Delicious Corned Beef, Cabbage and Potatoes

Cheryl Wixon’s kitchen crew served 95 meals in the beautifully decorated church hall, and Skip Greenlaw’s delivery team went door to door attending to 60 people in their homes.  
The Cheryl and Skip Team
Cheryl works for the Maine Organic Farmers and Gardeners Association (MOFGA) and runs a business called Cheryl Wixon’s Kitchen out of Belfast’s Coastal Food and Farms processing and storage facility. Skip Greenlaw owns and runs a wholesale seafood company. Both of them, along with the many volunteers who were helping out on St. Patrick’s Day are committed to improving the lives of their neighbors.

60 meals were delivered to people's homes

Close to 100 showed up for dinner, music and fun
After helping in the kitchen for a couple of hours, Skip Greenlaw, one of the captains leading ¨Dinner is Served,¨ was going out to do deliveries for families who were home-bound or simply couldn’t make it to the church. I asked to go with him. At one point I asked him how old St. Brendan´s the Navigator was. Five years old. And when I asked him why people called it the new one, he answered “well to change things around here seems like it has to be an act of God.” Based on my experience that day, there was at least one thing I felt certain would not change anytime soon: the inspiring commitment of this community to help and support one another and to look out for those in need.

 

Friday, February 14, 2014

Food Waste to Food Security: Spain to Maine

This past visit to Barcelona I spent a lot of time working with Paco Muñoz-Gutiérrez: technician of the Environmental Office at the Autonomous University of Barcelona (UAB), expert on waste characterization methods for the Catalan Government Waste Agency, and a reference for the City of Barcelona in prevention, reduction and separation methods for organic waste. Paco is also co-author of the first Guide to Food Waste Prevention for the Hospitality Sector, and is working with a consulting company Spora Sinergies to implement an Integrated Practical Approach Pilot Project for the City of Barcelona. The goal is to have this pilot prove the potential of public-private partnerships to drive widespread behavioral changes and reduce the ethical, environmental and economic implications of food waste for generations to come.

Paco also recognizes the importance of working with social movements that have gradually become publicly recognized responses to the growing needs for food security organizations. During my visit in Barcelona, Paco asked me to come to a meeting of the Platform for Resourceful Food Use (PAA) to present on my experience leading food waste prevention efforts for Healthy Acadia’s Gleaning Initiative in Maine. The PAA has published a Manifesto Stop Food Waste and will hold a high profile public event in a public space next February 20th, to bring together actors representing the different sectors working on food waste prevention and food security in Barcelona/Catalonia. Using a combination of purchased, donated and gleaned foods, there is clearly a global trend, from Spain to Maine, to unite people to recognize wasteful behaviors and begin teaching resourcefulness as a value with which to approach food insecurity for generations to come.

At the meeting, Alba, one of the organizers of the PAA, invited me to visit “El PLAT de Gràcia”: literally translated as The Plate of Grace, but actually referring to its location in the Barcelona neighborhood of Gràcia. Alba, is the most consistent part of this project, and explained this initiative as a community effort to serve a free Sunday lunch once every two weeks, to bring up the issues of food waste and food security. Apparently Alba never knows who is going to show up, but people always do; they come bearing food, laughter, and music to accompany the cooking and feasting. They come as hungry strangers and leave full-bellied friends. People in the streets stop and ask about the scene, and plates of leftovers are given out, as random passers-by are invited to join in the fun.  





An older couple who saw me with a camera came over to ask me what was happening. I explained it was a food recovery effort aiming to bring attention to the problem of food waste by serving meals cooked with gleaned food from stores and fields. “Oh, yes, gleaning. I used to glean almonds in my father’s hometown, down in Tarragona. They would shake the almond trees and put a blanket down under the tree to catch the almonds. I would go in afterwards and collect the ones they had missed. I got 30 cents for a kilo. A man in the town would buy them.” I can’t put into words how excited I was, as a modern day professional gleaner, to meet a traditional gleaner just walking down the street. I though to myself, how many more traditional gleaners are out there? I would love to capture their stories, and learn from tradition to inform today’s approach to gleaning.

Thursday, January 2, 2014

Letter to the Editor

Healthy Acadia and the University of Maine Cooperative Extension would like to express our deep appreciation to the volunteers, farmers and gardeners that made the 2013 Gleaning Initiative such a success. Together, we delivered more than 10,000 pounds of locally grown fresh food to the meal sites and food pantries serving our Hancock County communities; food that would otherwise have been left lying in the fields.

The gleaning activities enabled community members of all ages to experience a healthy and educational farm activity, further strengthening the local food system’s community ties. The events provided an excellent opportunity for community members, some of whom were experiencing the need for food assistance, to learn more about the local foods available in our communities.

We were honored to have Backstage Farm (Blue Hill), 
Bar Harbor Community Farm (MDI), 
Beech Hill Farm (MDI), 
Clayfield Farm (Blue Hill), 
College of the Atlantic Community Garden (MDI), 
Four Season Farm (Harborside), 
Jackson Lab Community Garden (MDI)
, King Hill Farm (Penobscot), 
North Branch Farm (Monroe), 
Old Ackley Farm (Blue Hill), Star Root Farm (Ellsworth), 
Smith Family Farm (MDI), Tinder Hearth Bakery (Brooksville), and 
White’s Farm (Winterport) choose to serve Healthy Acadia’s Gleaning Initiative by opening their fields up for gleaning, donating food or providing strategic support.

We were equally touched by the support from our community members. We could not have done this without the loyal volunteer hours of Martha Bell (Blue Hill), Mary Hartley (Brooksville), Tina Keagley (Sedgwick), Donna Caldwell (Penobscot), Susan Walsh (Ellsworth), Mollie Heron (Orland) and Mary-Alice Hervitt of Farm Drop who provided the Blue Hill Peninsula Gleaning Team with an operations center at the Wineshop. We could also not have done this without members of the MDI High School Interact Club and the MDI Life Skills Class, as well as COA students, who helped make the October 16th MDI Global Food Day a 400lbs gleaning success. And we extend our deep appreciation to the many other volunteers who participated in the gleaning activities throughout the year. Every bit of support increases our ability to make lasting improvements to health throughout Hancock County and beyond. Thank you again so very much to the volunteers, farms, and gardeners for your participation, dedication and support for healthy living. Together, your efforts help make our communities vibrant places to live.

With appreciation,
Hannah Semler

Happy 2014_NPR on gleaning