Wednesday, January 21, 2015
Monday, January 19, 2015
Kate Storey Selected to Run Again for the Green Party of Canada in Dauphin – Swan River - Marquette.
Onanole,
MB. by Larry Powell - Green Party of Canada.
“It’s time to end ‘top-down’ politics in this country,” Storey declared, as a group of dedicated supporters voted unanimously to again endorse her this weekend as their party’s choice in the federal election later this year. "Vote Green and give your MPs the ability to actually represent the people for a change,” she declared.
If
elected, Storey promised to dedicate herself to fight against the scourges of
climate change, and for the principles of social justice and democracy.
Kate Storey, candidate, Green Party of Canada.
Dauphin - Swan River - Marquette.
Kate Storey, candidate, Green Party of Canada.
Dauphin - Swan River - Marquette.
She
and her husband, Doug have been operating an organic farm near Grandview for
years. They’ve become living examples of how sustainable agriculture can
succeed in a sea of industrial farms, where genetic modification, pesticides
and monoculture are increasingly compromising the quality of our food and the
very survival of precious pollinators, such as honeybees.
Storey
comes to the candidate’s job with a wealth of political experience, having run
both federally and provincially on previous occasions.
“I
may not win,” she declares, “but I’ll be bringing an important message to you
during the campaign which would otherwise be lost in the now familiar, but
cynical clamor of the ‘old-line parties.'”
Radical Shift in Agriculture Critical to Making Future Food Systems Smarter, More Efficient
UN News
Climate change and increasing competition for natural resources have essentially rendered the agriculture model of the past 40 years unsustainable, the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) has stressed, calling for a ‘paradigm shift’ in food production. Story here.
Combining wheat in Manitoba.
Larry Powell - PinP photo.
Richest 1% to Have More Than Rest Of Humanity Combined
CommonDreams
New Oxfam report shows the scale of global inequality is "simply staggering." Story here.
Sunday, January 18, 2015
The Sale of Monsanto's Toxic Weedkiller is Banned in the Netherlands!
The government of the Netherlands just took a huge step to protect its citizens and banned Monsanto’s super-toxic pesticide Roundup – and it's time more countries did the same. Sign here.
PinP photo.
Join Dr. Vandana Shiva in Telling President Obama to Protect Seed Freedom and Food Democracy
President Obama will be meeting with the Indian Prime Minister on January 25 and 26. In response, activist, author and physicist, Dr. Vandana Shiva has written an open letter to the President and the Prime Minister on seed freedom and food democracy. She urges the two leaders to renounce the patenting of life and to stop pursuing “harmonization” of seed patenting laws which would further extend corporate control of our seeds and food. Click here to sign.
Organic fava beans. Will they be next?
PinP photo.
"CHASING ICE" Captures Largest Glacier Calving Ever Filmed - OFFICIAL VIDEO
PinP - This video is 12 years old. I guess the deniers would have us believe this kind of
shit never happens, or at least hasn't happened since?
Friday, January 16, 2015
Computer Modelling Shows Climate Change Will Affect Wheat Yields
Manitoba Co-Operator
A combination of multiple computer models of weather’s impact on wheat warns of a six per cent dent in world wheat production for every degree Celsius in temperature increase. Story here.Wheatfield.
Larry Powell - PinP photo.
Honeybee Health and Colony Collapse Disorder. A Manitoba Beekeeper Tells it Like it Is.
by Larry Powell
Tim Wendell, above, his wife Isabel and a seasonal staff of about 30 tend to over 3,000 hives in Manitoba and Saskatchewan, south of the Town of Roblin. A PinP photo. |
A veteran Canadian beekeeper whose operations produce almost half-a-million
kilograms of honey per year, Tim Wendell, has
learned the hard way, just how big a threat "neonicotinoids" pose to
operations like his. "Neonics" are now the most widely used group of
insecticides in the world. They are either sprayed on crops such as corn, soybeans and canola, or used to treat their seeds.
On a recent speaking engagement, he told audiences in Neepawa, MB, he lost one "bee yard" himself in 2012. It was next to a field which had been planted 4 or 5 years straight to corn treated with "neonics."
He estimates, of the 40 thousand bees in that colony, perhaps only 5 thousand were left. And they were "very disorganized - no longer a community." He says government tests confirmed the chemical had gotten into the wax and pollen of the colony, along with the nearby soil and water.
He is believed to be one of the few, or perhaps the only beekeeper in Manitoba who has found such direct evidence that the "neonics" have contributed to the "colony collapse" syndrome in this province. Beekeepers in Ontario and Quebec reported huge losses in 2012, due to the same problem.
Wendell gets upset at "greedy" multinational corporations who make such harmful products, and their shareholders.
And he is critical of methods used by commercial pollinators, who truck their bees long distances to pollinate food crops for others. Such methods are used widely in the U.S. Alberta and the Maritimes in Canada. Such practices weaken the bees by subjecting them to poor nutrition and stress.
But Wendell also admits he and his colleagues may, themselves be contributing to the poor state of honeybee health, worldwide. He says he places "miticide" chemical strips in his hives to help combat "Varroa destructor" parasites which have, for years, been attacking honeybees around the world. Otherwise, he believes, his bees would face huge losses. But Wendell also realizes he must use the strips sparingly because they may themselves be harming the bees. And, if they are overused, they may even be making the mites themselves, immune. He has therefore been searching for and trying more natural treatments that won't put his bees at risk but still control the mites.
On a recent speaking engagement, he told audiences in Neepawa, MB, he lost one "bee yard" himself in 2012. It was next to a field which had been planted 4 or 5 years straight to corn treated with "neonics."
He estimates, of the 40 thousand bees in that colony, perhaps only 5 thousand were left. And they were "very disorganized - no longer a community." He says government tests confirmed the chemical had gotten into the wax and pollen of the colony, along with the nearby soil and water.
He is believed to be one of the few, or perhaps the only beekeeper in Manitoba who has found such direct evidence that the "neonics" have contributed to the "colony collapse" syndrome in this province. Beekeepers in Ontario and Quebec reported huge losses in 2012, due to the same problem.
And he is critical of methods used by commercial pollinators, who truck their bees long distances to pollinate food crops for others. Such methods are used widely in the U.S. Alberta and the Maritimes in Canada. Such practices weaken the bees by subjecting them to poor nutrition and stress.
But Wendell also admits he and his colleagues may, themselves be contributing to the poor state of honeybee health, worldwide. He says he places "miticide" chemical strips in his hives to help combat "Varroa destructor" parasites which have, for years, been attacking honeybees around the world. Otherwise, he believes, his bees would face huge losses. But Wendell also realizes he must use the strips sparingly because they may themselves be harming the bees. And, if they are overused, they may even be making the mites themselves, immune. He has therefore been searching for and trying more natural treatments that won't put his bees at risk but still control the mites.
Interviews with Wendell, along with his recent slide presentation to the Neepawa Rotary Club, are now being aired in rotation on NACTV.
Just go to "Schedule and Programs" and check out the next "Coffee
Chat!"
Three Major Oil Companies Give Up On Arctic Exploration
True Activist
As the price of oil continues to drop, oil companies are having less of an incentive to spend their resources extracting oil from new and difficult places. Story here.
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Larry Powell Powell is a veteran, award-winning journalist based in Shoal Lake, Manitoba, Canada. He specialize in stories about agriculture...