Regrowth

Yet another example of how positive change is so powerful.

I first saw this mentioned in a recent update from The Permaculture Research Institute of Australia.  It concerns the wonderful work being done by the town of Todmorden in the UK.  Here’s a recent piece on Daily Mail Online,

Carrots in the car park. Radishes on the roundabout. The deliciously eccentric story of the town growing ALL its own veg

Admittedly, it sounds like the most foolhardy of criminal capers, and one of the cheekiest, too.

Outside the police station in the small Victorian mill town of Todmorden, West Yorkshire, there are three large raised flower beds.

If you’d visited a few months ago, you’d have found them overflowing with curly kale, carrot plants, lettuces, spring onions — all manner of vegetables and salad leaves.

Today the beds are bare. Why? Because people have been wandering up to the police station forecourt in broad daylight and digging up the vegetables. And what are the cops doing about this brazen theft from right under their noses? Nothing.

Now watch this:

Todmorden have a website where all is explained, not unnaturally (sorry) called Incredible Edible Todmorden Unlimited! From there one learns that what they do is as follows:

What we do

We grow and campaign for local food.

Follow the links on the left to see in detail what we’re up to. Or you can get involved yourself. Our growing around town is organised by our community growers’ group: find out about that here.

From our beginnings with herb gardens, we’ve taken to planting and growing veggies and trees round town we’ve planted several orchards and there are more to come, and we’re working with public bodies round town to use their land – like the fire station and the railway station – or to work with them on their own Incredible ideas – like social landlord Pennine Housing.

Every school in the town is now involved in growing with us and we promotefood-based learning for the community as a whole.

We’re reaching back into local memories and knowledge with our History project.

Our campaigns aim to make different futures happen, through local campaigns like Every Egg Matters, and by spreading the word locally, regionally and nationally.

We hope to make a difference with major projects. We now have Lottery funding for our food hub at Tod High School and are just waiting for the final planning permission. That bid included the work of a food-inspirer a position now held by Sally.

We have also branched out to greenfield sites, working on donated land in Walsden to create a major resource for growing and learning, and on donated land in Gorpley to develop ideas about hill-top farming. More about them here

Growing herbs at the Station – of course!

What an absolutely fabulous example to the rest of the world!

8 thoughts on “Regrowth

  1. Tesco must hate these two enterprising ladies. I wouldn’t be at all surprised to find that supermarket legal eagles are having intense discussions behind closed doors to determine what can be done to prevent this flagrant intrusion into their profits…

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    1. Localism and self-sufficiency are the only way out of this mess we have got ourselves in. People must therefore learn to hate Tesco.

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      1. Well said.

        I learnt to hate all monopoly-wannabes such as Tesco quite a long time back. If I were King of the Planet, one of the rules I’d introduce would be: ‘when a business gets so big that it has no effective competition, it will be planetised.’ The last word, of course, being the global equivalent of ‘nationalised’. After all, greed never ceases: those ‘captains of industry’ who have made their fortunes building up their vast empires must be told ‘enough is enough, take your money, and we’ll take the monopoly you’ve created and turn it into something that serves humanity instead of just you.’

        Rant over.

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      2. One thing the Bible got right was this:
        “… for the love of mney is the root of all evil.”

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      3. One thing the Bible got right was this: “… for the love of mney is the root of all evil.”

        Clearly a mistranslation. It’s not the love of ‘mney’, it’s the love of ‘Monet’; obviously meant as a prophetic reference to all french impressionism…

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      4. Ooops! I obviously meant to type “money”. However, so as not to make this humorous exchange redundant, I will leave it as it is. 🙂

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      5. I can’t believe I didn’t “Like” that poem at the time. Oversight now rectified. Thanks for the reminder.

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