Garden Pictures January 2010

The garden is a winter wonderland now.  While we aren’t breaking any records yet, it’s pretty darn cold.  The snow is about a foot (30cm) deep.  The canals are all frozen.

Everything is covered in ice crystals.

Even the cobwebs under the shed roof didn’t escape the ice crystals.

The view in the distance just fades, because the whole area is covered in a winter mist.  No footsteps in the snow, because I’m the only one crazy enough to visit their garden.  Mine were the only human footsteps visible.  Otherwise there were tracks from the hares and birds that live in the area during the winter.

Planning is already underway for a possible Elfstedentocht this year!  We need another few weeks of cold winter to make it possible…

Political Failure

Well, we just witnessed what is probably the most ineffective outcome from the Copenhagen summit possible.  Nothing binding, no real deadlines and no new commitments.  Julieanne has a pretty good analysis on her gardening blog Gwenfar’s Lottie.

When are countries going to include agriculture in these discussions anyway!

The EU has also just finalized their budget next year, with roughly 45% earmarked for agriculture.  As is usual for these kinds of things, there seems to be little concrete information online, but indications are this too was a total failure by most accounts.  No big overhaul that we’ve been promised for years, no new money for small and family run farms, no new money for organic agriculture, no caps on the largest recipients of farm aid and no obvious cuts for the environmentally damaging factory farm industry that provides most of our food.

What we have is a promise for next year, a total overhaul of the budget.  There doesn’t seem like a lot to look forward to here either.  France, Ireland and Poland are promoting business as usual, and other countries are supporting “a shift in spending away from agriculture towards innovation, energy and tackling climate change.”  We’ll have to wait a while anyway for whatever gains are made on these policies, because they don’t come into effect until 2014.

While no one is going to stand up against innovation, without reforms in patent and other intellectual property rights laws, all that’s going to happen is we find ourselves in the middle of another GMO fiasco.  That is we’ll end up with technology and innovation that doesn’t offer any particular benefit to consumers, isn’t wanted, is potentially dangerous and is forced on us regardless.

Who knows what it means to increase spending in ‘energy and tackling climate change’ in the context of all of this.  Important topics for sure, but what exactly does it mean?

Snow

amsterdam_snow1

amsterdam_snow2

It’s snowing today in Amsterdam, following a very cold snap.

Just when I thought weather patterns might be returning to something resembling normal, the weather in the last week or so has been pretty extreme for here.

Of course extreme weather has been hitting most of Europe, among other things leaving 2000 passengers stranded overnight half way between the UK and France in the channel tunnel.  Traffic choas is being reported all over Europe.  Also in the news is a snowstorm hitting the US north east.

Thriving Sustainably

Sustainability Community Event all day Oct. 17th in Oxford, England

The weekend before our Oxford 2009 meeting Michael Soth has organized Thriving Sustainably, a sustainability event also in Oxford.  It sounds great to me, and I wish I could go.  If you live in the area, be sure to put it on your calender.

Michael and I briefly discussed the possibility of combining his event with our meeting, but the scheduling didn’t work out.   It’s clear we have a lot of the same goals in common.

Here’s the Thriving Sustainably leaflet with more details of the events planned, and here’s their website.

If anyone can help with donations as well as promoting the event, Michael would like to hear from you!