Can’t wait to bring this film to the Monadnock Region!
Learn more at Inhabit’s Kickstarter Project Page.
Can’t wait to bring this film to the Monadnock Region!
Learn more at Inhabit’s Kickstarter Project Page.


A Sustainable Food Movement Event
Saturday, March 1, 2014 – 10:30 a.m. to 6:30 p.m.
At Antioch University New England in Keene, NH
COST: FREE! Lunch & Snacks Provided – PLEASE RSVP
Join us for a live webcast of the sold-out TEDxManhattan: Changing the Way We Eat Event held in New York City. Food and farming leaders from around the nation will share their insights and expertise on sustainable food movement issues, impacts and innovations.
TEDxManhattan speakers include:
– Tom Colicchio: Chef/Owner, Craft Restaurants; Head Judge, “Top Chef” – Tom appeared in A Place at the Table, Participant Media’s documentary about food insecurity in America.
– Nikki Henderson: Executive Director, The People’s Grocery – Nikki runs a non-profit organization working to improve the health and economy of the West Oakland community.
– Michael Rozyne: Executive Director, Red Tomato – Michael directs a non-profit produce ‘food hub’ based in Plainville, MA.
– David Binkle: Director of Food Services, Los Angeles Unified School District – David oversees a program that provides over 650,000 meals daily by a team of 4,000 employees.
A full list of speakers is available at: http://tedxmanhattan.org/speakers/.
About TEDxManhattan “Changing the Way We Eat”
This annual event is sponsored by Change Food. TEDx events are licensed through TED but are independently organized events: http://tedxmanhattan.org/about/.
Co-Hosted By:
– Monadnock Food Co-op
– Antioch University New England Advocacy Program
– Monadnock Farm & Community Coalition
– Keene Community Garden Connections

The Sustainability Project presents the 9th Annual Seed Celebration and Sustainable Community Fair on Saturday, February 15th, from 9 am – 4 pm; admission by donation. This year we are delighted to be hosting the event at Mole Hill Theatre, 789 Gilsum Mine Road, East Alstead, NH.
Over the years, farmers, gardeners, and activists working for sustainable communities have come to know this event as a great opportunity for networking and day-long fun. Come boost your community’s skills for living well in a changing world. Proceeds help support the Seed Celebration and Sustainable Community Fair, our programming throughout the year, and our work to create wheelchair accessible trails and perennial gardens at the Emerson Brook Forest Center. The Seed Celebration is sponsored in part by W.S. Badger, The Gilsum Recreation Committee, The Monadnock Food Co-op, Green Energy Options, The Mountain, Gem Graphics and Mole Hill Theatre.
Schedule of Events:
9 am ~ Opening
10 – 11:30 am ~ Dave Jacke, noted permaculture designer, teacher and author of Edible Forest Gardens, will present “Ecological Culture Design: A Holistic View”
Noon ~ The Solar Sisters duo will perform songs of farm and garden
1:30 – 3 pm ~ Bill Whyte, founder and CEO of the W.S. Badger company, will present “Visualization – The Art and Practice of Imagining with a purpose”
3:15 pm ~ Last call for the raffle
3:30 pm ~ Raffle Drawing
All Day: Cafe featuring soups from local restaurants and kitchens and Orchard Hill breads, Exhibits & Displays, Demonstrations, Seed Sales & Swap, Raffle, & Children’s Activities
Tablers for the 2014 Seed Celebration & Sustainable Community Fair: Stonewall Farms, WS Badger, Kroka Expeditions, Orchard Hill Breadworks, Valley Green Journal, Green Energy Options, RECLAIM: Original Silk Screen Designs, and Wichland Woods
More about Dave Jacke:
Ecological Culture Design: A Holistic View
Few sane, aware and knowledgeable people would argue that our current culture is ecologically sustainable. Clearly we face an urgent need to redesign the ways we live, work and play or risk the worst. If we are to create ecological and egalitarian societies, we must move beyond the traditional environmentalist focus on resource management and technological solutions. Ecologically speaking, culture is the primary adaptive mechanism of the species Homo sapiens, and it is culture, as a whole system, that we must redesign. What is culture? How might we approach the design of ecological and socially just cultures as whole systems? This talk will address these questions, providing a practical framework for discussion and design practice.
Bio
Dave Jacke is primary author of the award winning two-volume book Edible Forest Gardens, a comprehensive guide to ecological garden design (www.edibleforestgardens.com). A student of ecology and design since the 1970s, he has run his own planning firm-Dynamics Ecological Design-since 1984, designing gardens, homes, farms, and communities throughout the U.S. and overseas. He holds a B.A. in Environmental Studies from Simon’s Rock College and a M.A. in Landscape Design from the Conway School of Landscape Design. In his teaching and his design work, Dave has always explored the interrelationships between people and land as interpenetrating whole systems, grounding his vision and theory in practical and concrete reality as much as possible.
Visualization: “The Art and Practice of Imagining with a purpose”
with Bill Whyte. Whether you are working on a personal plan for living a healthier lifestyle, designing a house, planning a garden or writing a business plan, visualization can be a powerful aid in developing a successful plan. Consider this workshop a brief space and time for you to create a “visualization mandala” on paper – a piece of “spirit art” that you can use as a daily reminder, mentor, guide and friend. Bring some colored pencils if you can!
Bill is founder and CEO of the W.S. Badger Company in Gilsum.
Antioch University New England and Community Garden Connections present
Year-round Urban Gardening Workshop
With Keith Morris, Prospect Rock Permaculture
Wednesday, October 30, 10am to 4pm
Keith Morris will share simple and affordable intensive gardening techniques for renters and those of us with limited space. There will be a special focus on ways to continue growing fresh food through the winter, and explore how permaculture can help us design our gardens and functional spaces.
Facilitator Keith Morris has worked since 2000 as a designer, builder and grower of ecologically regenerative, socially just, and culturally appropriate whole-systems in cities and countries around the world. He teaches at the University of Vermont, Yestermorrow Design Build School, Sterling College, Paul Smiths College, Burlington Permaculture, and has worked for USAID ‘Farmer to Farmer’ in Nigeria and Ghana.
The workshop will be Wednesday, October 30th, from 10am to 4pm, on Antioch’s campus (40 Avon St., Keene). Lunch will be provided. $35 per person; lunch is provided. We have a limited number of free spaces reserved for Community Garden Connections program participants; contact us for more information.
Space is limited! Register now by contacting Monica Pless at mpless@antioch.edu.
Made possible by funding from the Center for Academic Innovation at Antioch University New England and support from the Rashti Foundation.