5 posts categorized "Environment"

February 01, 2008

Off the production line

**** Bothered, very, very bothered *****

Sorry she's ranting again.... but watch this video below and hopefully you'll understand why.  I wasn't planning to put up a post today but stopped by at one of my favourite daily reads, modern forager and was shocked by this video that it's upset me enough to join in.

Yes, I'm on the paleo diet, so it's quite clear I'm not vegetarian but lately the question of where my meat comes from has been troubling me.  It may be that Jamie Oliver, Britain's favourite chef, has been spearheading a campaign recently on the issue with an excellent program recently 'fowl dinners'  posing the question - why are our chicken and eggs becoming  so cheap? 

Maybe I'm just being a sentimental animal lover, but are we so dissociated from the origins our food that we forget from where and what our burgers and drumsticks actually came from.  We must be, to allow what I see in that video to happen. I don't know, this video is from America and not the UK so I'm not 100% sure that this represents what happens in the UK.  However, wherever we may be, it's to satisfy our ferocious appetites that the raising of meat has moved out of the farmyard and to the production line.  I'm not saying don't eat meat, but by voting with your purse and responsible shopping could help towards a more comfortable life *and ending* for the animals we eat.

Halal or Kosher meat receives criticism - it's cruel.  But what makes meat halal or kosher, is a prayer that's said to God (Halal = 'from God to God') before the animals slaughter and paying respect for the creature that's about to die - hmmmm, I didn't see much respect in that video, just pure out and out cruelty. 

I was bought up in the country and we raised a few animals that, yes, did eventually come back to the pot.  But the lambs and chickens we raised on a small scale had at least frisked and frolicked before we ate them.  Maybe it's this experience that means that I want to know any animal I eat enjoyed it's short life, had been in the sun, spent time with it's mother and most importantly wasn't tortured and was killed quickly and humanely.

December 31, 2007

Goodbye Brighton

05 Images

Firstly I'd like wish anyone passing by best wishes and your very good health for 2008.

This year I resolve not to make any New Year Resolutions.  Voila, nothing to fail. Although, 2008 is going to signify quite a complete lifestyle overhaul that will help my weight loss endeavor.

When you examine your life there comes a time when you may have to admit when you're simply not happy.  I've been thinking about where I am for some time, what I'm achieving (or rather not achieving) and there are areas that need refinement. Now it's time to take action.  Some of those things I won't bore you with right now, what  I'm concentrating on is work and location. 

It's scary as generally things are OK and you could just plod on; I love my job, and I live in a beautiful corner of England (South Coast of England, nr Brighton) and although beautiful it is probably one of the most expensive places in the UK to live.  It's great to be so convenient to be near London - that is - if you need to be and I don't!  Local salaries do not support the cost of living here, so I'M OFF (fingers crossed). 

What's wrong:  I guess the usual stresses - a long, long commute, or camping out during the week, full time job and additional self-employed work most evenings.  This time poverty is my biggest gripe, as I'm sure anyone reading this can relate to. 

TIME POVERTY = STRESS. 

STRESS = CORTISOL = FAT.

ShockAddressing the issue of being time poor can only benefit my weight loss - more time for exercise, be with friends and family, plan meals and eat correctly! 

The solution: Perfectly timed for the New Year last week I was very pleased  to accept an offer on my home.  The plan is to swap the pebbly beaches of the South Coast with the equally beautiful dramatic coastline (and sandy beaches) of North Devon in the not too distant future.   It's still not the cheapest place to swap to but I have family there and can hopefully move on from apartment living and have an outside space of my very own (my green fingers are itching to go).  Once I find a new home there the huge change will be eventually leaving the job that I enjoy, with its security and the camaraderie of a great team. 

Realistically I'm going to be homeless for a while (experience has taught me how difficult it is to search for the right place from a distance), and it may take the rest of the year to complete the move.  The biggest change when I do eventually move will be working alone from home (and this does worry me slightly) but the payoff will be that I'll be able to work my own hours, take advantage of the daylight hours to get out and about, perhaps even learn to surf:) Oh don't laugh... oh well, I guess you may be right , I may be getting ahead of myself there!.   

Well it's not quite goodbye Brighton yet as unfortunately in the England until exchange of contracts nothings certain, but I'm hopeful.  It is really exciting to be able to start 2008 with the prospect of a positive new start.  To keep the weight off one needs to have a lifestyle that supports it. 

October 15, 2007

A world without bees

Even the Caveman was able indulge in the occasional sweetness, and the main source I'm referring to is honey.  Being diabetic I'm avoiding this in my effort to retrain and reign in my sweet tooth, nevertheless when eating Paleolithic if trying to pacify a sweet craving honey can be enjoyed.  Personally I use honey regularly on my skin.  A few years ago my hairdresser mentioned that whenever she saw lads with raging red acne skin she had the urge to tell them to smother their faces in honey, it'd do wonders.  Well, since then anytime I take a bath a pot of honey accompanies me - it has a wonderful soothing and calming effect and settles any inflammation or spots and leaves your skin feeling wonderfully fresh, clean and soft.

The 'Man of Bicor' depicts early man as a honey gatherer and is believed to date back to the end of the Paleolithic period.

Bicor_4 From the earliest days of mankind honey has not only been enjoyed as an edible treat but also a valuable commodity utilized for its medicinal properties, behind Cavemen the Egyptians, Greeks and Romans. 

Honey has again become popular in modern medicine and there's been a return its use for the antimicrobial properties known to speed up the wound healing process.  Additionally bee sting therapy is also claimed to alleviate arthritis. Beekeepers are said by some to be the longest lived professionals and supposedly are less likely to suffer from arthritis and other autoimmune diseases.  This longevity is purported to be down to frequent stings and the consumption of propolis, honey, pollen and royal jelly.

Bees in the Environment:  Have you noticed less buzz in your gardens this year? Have you heard of Colony Collapse Disorder?  Yes, something relatively apocalyptic is happening within the bee world (and therefore to us).  Around the world the bees have been disappearing!

We take our bees for granted and many may have have a romantic notion of the local beekeeper gathering honey from two or three hives in his back garden.  Anyway, sorry to shatter any illusions but bees are 'Big Business', and although exact cause of the disappearing bees is a mystery man is the most likely culprit; by interfering with their natural lives and by farming bees on a massive scale the world's bees population is experiencing this crisis.

Over the last year or so beekeepers have been visiting their hives to discover that entire colonies have disappeared.  However, they're apparently not simply swarming on; any remaining bees found are sick or dead, and the rest of their colony has left and died away from the hive.  Spookily abandoned hives are not utilised by other insects or bees - a phenomenon unheard of in nature and sugesting something toxic actually luked within the colony itself.

Honeybee1_2 Despite our love of their products we do little to assist the nature of bees to promote their health and well being.  In in the name of profit we industrially farm honey bees, and as a result of our manipulation cause stress and make bees susceptible to disease.

  1. Honey isn't the only product we obtain from bees we also use them.  Bees are our pollinators and there's more money to be had from migratory pollination than there is from honey.  Where in some places crops are farmed in huge scales we require bees to pollinate crops so colonies are rented and transported for pollination.  However, transporting bees causes them stress and lowers their immune system.
  2. As with us, bees have nutritional requirements to maintain good health. In nature bees would forage and eat pollen and honey, but because of the decline in natural foraging areas these needs are not being met and beekeepers inadvertently lower the bees immune systems by feeding them a junk food diet full with artificial supplements, protein, syrups, and not being their natural food this can affect their immune systems.
  3. In nature bees ensure their genetic diversity by the swarming process; when the queens leave with a swarm and are replaced by a new queen.  However, again we play with this process and breeding better queens is again profitable. Therefore queens are often killed and replaced and occasionally the Queens wings are clipped to prevent swarming.
  4. Over the last couple of years bees have been badly affected by varroa, a mite that depresses the bees immunity making them vulnerable to viral illness.  Hives that have been left empty often do have evidence of this mite.  However, In a healthy colony varroa is sometimes viewed as healthy culling the weaker members, but if the colony is already weak the mites can develop resistance to pesticides and overwhelm the colony. 
  5. Apparently, pesticides used in other crops can also affect bees inducing a type of intoxication disrupting navigation, feeding, memory learning and egg laying. 

Img_0817 My thoughts about this is that mankind has always been at the mercy of environment for survival but we have become arrogant in our manipulation of it.  Mass production of any natural product without any foresight will have consequences.  So, as we are seeing in world of bees, if we continue to disrespect and exploit nature's resources in order to create unrealistic supplies, there will be a knock on effect on us and nature itself will turn in and withdraw what it provides to us, forcing future generations to live more sustainably (or a full circle back the Paleolithic)?

'If the bee disappeared off the surface of the globe, then man would have only four years of life left. No more bees, no more pollination, no more plants, no more animals, no more man' Albert Einstein

Useful sites:

September 16, 2007

Better fruit n veg please

449pxvineyard_peaches_de_3Fruit and vegetables in the UK don't taste as good as they should.  In fact unless you buy organic, tomatoes in my opinion taste like fish.  I don't mean that I have never acquired a taste for fruit and vegetables, but I have grown up with organic vegetables and travelled enough to know the flavour that we should enjoy!

In the UK we have a reputation of eating absolutely anything. This is exploited in the supermarkets by providing inferior foods that our European neighbours wouldn't dream of consuming.  Even if you are opting for healthier foods they are half as good as the products available on the Continent.  I have it on good authority from Continental friends that even the better quality nuts sold here are often quite stale. 

The French Market came to town yesterday and the peaches I purchased there were half to triple the size of the peaches usually available, and so full of flavour!  So why, if they can be bought over for one day, aren't we enjoying this produce on a day-to-day basis?  Is it that the British just aren't fussy enough, or too passive so we live up to the reputation of eating anything.  It's little wonder that many in the UK don't acquire a taste for fruit and vegetables since what's currently provided in supermarkets doesn't represent the best in the taste.

September 02, 2007

Blog Action Day

I've been trying to put this on the side bar but have given up in fustration.

Action_250x250 On October 15th - Blog Action Day, bloggers around the web will unite to put a single important issue on everyone's mind.

In its inaugural year, Blog Action Day will be co-ordinating bloggers to tackle the issue of the environment.

What Each Blogger Will Do

Bloggers can participate on Blog Action Day in one of two ways:

  1. Publish a post on their blog which relates to an issue of their own choice pertaining to the environment.

    For example: A blog about money might write about how to save around the home by using environmentally friendly ideas. Similarly a blog about politics might examine what weight environmental policy holds in the political arena.

    Posts do not need to have any specific agenda, they simply need to relate to the larger issue in whatever way suits the blogger and readership. Our aim is not to promote one particular viewpoint, only to push the issue to the table for discussion.

  2. Commit to donating their day’s advertising earnings to an environmental charity of their choice. There is a list of "official" Blog Action Day charities on the site, however bloggers are also free to choose an alternate environmental charity to donate to if they wish.

And that’s it.

If they choose bloggers can also promote the initiative itself. However they are also free to simply post on topic on the right day or discreetly donate to a charity without publicizing Blog Action Day.