Episode 1 of Flip of the Coyne TV

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Posted on March 30th 2010 in Green, gardening

Another Tote Garden Update

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It has been 11 days since I planted my little garden in the window and I have to tell you I am very happy with the way it is progressing.

Everything has come up now even the few little herbs I planted have started to pop their heads through the soil. The green onions have taken the longest to get going and I have already thinned out some of the carrots I planted.

I am also happy to report that I have had great success with my beans and peas that I planted as a test to check the germination rate. The peas surprised me the most since I did nothing to them last year we left the plants on the wire and I just picked a couple of pods and planted them 100% success. The beans I only had 1 out of 8 that did not come up. All in all it has been pretty successful so far.

Posted on March 30th 2010 in Green, gardening

Tote garden update

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I was able to plant my tote garden on Friday the 19th after leaving the bin in front of the fire for a while.  I wanted to let the soil warm

up before planting my seeds in it.

Shortly before noon on Friday I planted my seeds.  Carrots, spinach, lettuce mix, swiss chard, green onions, basil and parsley and a few radishes mixed in for good measure.

Planting my little inside garden was a greater experience that I had originally thought it would be but not for the reasons I originally thought.  My 6 month old son got to sit beside me in his excuser-saucer and watch me.  I was a great moment we got to plant our first seeds together.

I have been keeping the tote as warm as I can.  I placed it where it gets a good amount of sun light but not so that it takes up the entire window.  I did this on purpose.  I wanted to provide the amount of sunlight that someone in an apartment may have.  So I have just pushed over the kitchen table a bit giving the tote half the window.  At night I close the blind to keep some of the draft off and I have a small lamp that I turn on to provide some light and some heat.

Sunday I came in the house around 3pm and was surprised to see that sometime in the past 24 hours the radishes, lettuce and 1 swiss chard were already coming up.  I couldn’t believe it, I know that it doesn’t take long but with the cool nights you never know if the seeds will sprout fast or take their time.

Monday (Today), even more lettuce, radishes and swiss chard is up. I am excited that things are coming around so fast.  To be honest I almost thought that I may have to start over I have used some seeds that are not exactly new, some may even be a few years old.

More updates in the days to come as I am sure that even more activity is coming soon.

Posted on March 22nd 2010 in 100 Mile Diet, Food Security, Green, Uncategorized, gardening

Jamie Oliver’s Food Revolution – USA

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Tonight I watched part one of Jamie Oliver’s Food Revolution USA.  Jamie has a big task ahead of him by the looks of things the people of Huntington W. Va do not seem to receptive to the British Chef and Food Activist.

Both my wife and I watched in horror as Jamie walked into the schools lunch room where they were serving the children pizza for breakfast then for lunch they had chicken nuggets and flavoured milk.  I was personally outraged when Jamie makes his first fresh lunch and the principal tells him he needs 2 breads with the meal even though he has brown rice.  It really is scary that grains has been turned into breads.  White bread should not count as a grain it should count as a sugar!

The show premiered on ABC tonight at 10 pacific time but you can watch it on A Channel and Access in Canada if you do not want to watch it on the American network.  Check out http://abc.go.com/shows/jamie-olivers-food-revolution for more information about the show or to see clips from the show.  You may be surprised.

Posted on March 21st 2010 in 100 Mile Diet, America, Food Security

Feed the Valley

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www.FeedtheValley.ca

Valley First Credit Union has teamed up with local food banks/cupboards to help keep the shelves full.

Feed the Valley has 3 goals:

  1. Food
  2. Funds
  3. Awareness

Feed the Valley is a great program where you can donate food or money to your local food bank but the best part of this program would have to be that when you make a donation the donation stays within your community.  Many times large organizations will take your donations and bring them to where their head office is.  Not this time.  Feed the Valley has teamed up with food banks across in Kamloops, the North, Central, South Okanagan and the Similkameen to keep the food and money donations at home where they are needed.

Another great thing about this program is that they will be setting up a way for you to make a regular donation.  So if you wanted to donate every payday or once a month you can have it automatically debited or you can make a one time donation.

Visit the website http://www.FeedtheValley.ca for more information the site has information on how to get involved, facts, and more so visit today and find out how you can help out.  I will be following this program as it develops and grows.

Posted on March 20th 2010 in Food Security, Municipal, Regional

Planting inside

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I have been talking the talk for a long time but I have not really been a container gardener. I thought that today I would change that not only to show that it can be done but it can be done cheaply too.

Fresh Food From Small Spaces

Rather than reinvent the wheel I dug out my book Fresh Food From Small Spaces by R.J. Ruppenthal to find a design for a container garden that uses a tote.  So off town to find an affordable tote that I can cut up for my project.  I found myself in the local Fields store where I found exactly what I was looking for a tote for $12.00 but thanks to a 10% off sale I got the bin for $12.10 with taxes.

The next thing I would be a colander and some sort of cloth to cover the water feed tube.  I ended up at Princeton’s Loonie Bin (don’t worry it is just the local dollar store) where I found a plastic colander for $2.00 and a package of cheese cloth for $1.00.  Things were looking up.  The next thing I would need would be some soil but it is the middle of March where would I find a bag of potting mix this time of year.  I decided to check out the local Home Hardware which was the right choice.  Home Hardware had bags of soil for just $3.69 each so I picked up 2 sacks for a total of $7.75.

Soil

I was surprised that my total so far is as low as it is at $23.21.  Now I have not bought seeds yet, to be honest I am not going to I have a big box of seeds sitting in my living room and I really don’t want to buy any more.

I have bought all the parts to this project that I needed and then I looked around my place for the rest.

What I was missing was a couple of pieces of 2×4 roughly 10 inches long and a piece of pipe or a tube 18 inches or longer for the watering tube.  Of course I will need something to hold the tube in place and some tools.

The tools I will need are a jig saw, hack saw, electric drill, marker and tape measure.

mark out where you need to cut

Step 1 to my container garden.

Put your 2×4′s in the bottom of your tote standing on their side.  Measure the dimensions of the inside of the tote from where the 2×4′s sit.

Step 2

Take your maker and mark on the lid of the tote the dimensions that you just measured.  Place the colander in the centre of your lid and trace around with your marker.

Step 3

With your lid on the tote cut the centre out where you traced for the colander cut a little inside the mark so that it will not fall all the way through.  Then cut the rest so you get the bottom of your inside.

Floor to your container garden

Once you have cut your lid to the right size then you need to attach the 2×4′s on their side on the bottom of the new floor.  There is a reason to do this.

Step 4

Take the pipe that you have and put it in one corner of the tote.  This will be for future watering.  On the bottom end of the pipe take some of the cheese cloth or you can use burlap if you have any and cover the end.  Attach it with something that will keep it there, a rubber band, wire, string what ever you have.  You will need to make one last cut to your lid where in the corner where the pipe will go.

When you secure the pipe in it’s corner make sure it is not directly on the bottom of the tote you want to have some room so water can still drain out.

Step 5

Put the floor in place.  Once you have the floor in it’s place put the colander in the hole you cut out.  You may have to cut the handle off it is has one if not carry on.

just before the soil is added

Now that everything is in place dump 1 bag of soil into the tote.  Depending on what you are going to try and grow in your new tote garden will determine how much soil you will need to add.  The bags I used the first one gave me 6 inches of soil I then added another inch from the other bag.  6 inches should be enough but I wanted to make sure since I am going to try carrots in my tote garden.

Now that you have read my really bad directions I bet some of you are still trying to figure out why the false floor, the pipe and the colander.  Well it is really simple and actually pretty ingenious.  The colander is to put dirt all the way into the bottom of the tote.  The false floor provides a reservoir for water and that is why you have the pipe.  The pipe will provide water directly to the reservoir and with the soil being in the water it will allow the soil to draw from the water source as needed so on those hot days when you put your tote garden in the sun you shouldn’t have to worry about it drying out too fast.  The colander should also act as a drain when you are watering from the top down allowing the water to drip out and into the reservoir below.

Well that is part one of this little experiment I will update as progress is made and I will take more time to ensure that it is up to snuff I know this entry is a little poor.

If you want to know more about container gardening or you want a better set of plans than the ones I provided I strongly suggest you get the book Fresh Food From Small Spaces by R.J. Ruppenthal it is packed full of information.

Posted on March 17th 2010 in 100 Mile Diet, Food Security, Green, gardening

The torch relay

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Princeton also hosted the Olympic torch as it made its way to Vancouver. Here is a little video of it coming though Princeton.

Posted on March 7th 2010 in Municipal

Videos we made for GamesTown 2010

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We made a few videos that helped us win the GamesTown 2010 competition and here they are

Posted on March 7th 2010 in Municipal

I have been slacking

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Seems as if I have been slacking in my blog duties not only here but on another blog as well.  Since I have been slacking I thought it would be best if I made a couple of posts with some of the other stuff I have been working on.

First one is a list of some of my articles that have been published.

http://www.bclocalnews.com/okanagan_similkameen/similkameenspotlight/opinion/85888862.html

http://www.bclocalnews.com/okanagan_similkameen/similkameenspotlight/opinion/85009792.html

Posted on March 7th 2010 in Published in Spotlight