Showing posts with label Albuquerque. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Albuquerque. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 16, 2015

SeedBroadcasting at the Albuquerque Museum of Art


SeedBroadcast will be parked out in front of the Albuquerque Museum of Art to Celebrate Fathers and Food.

Sunday June 21 from 12 - 4pm
Albuquerque Museum
19th and Mountain Rd NW
Albuquerque, NM

Bring seeds and stories to share!
SeedBroadcast is always free and open source. Come find us out in front of the Museum!

Celebrate Fathers and Food at Community Day

Celebrated Chefs, Seed Sharing, and Music


ALBUQUERQUE, NM –Explore ways to sustain New Mexico’s rich food traditions during Community Day on Sunday June 21st from 12 - 4 p.m. at the Albuquerque Museum. Learn about the ways you can preserve and share the community’s local food culture through a variety of activities throughout the afternoon. Bring your food-loving dad along and he receives free admission to the Museum!

Get inspiration to cook with local, in-season produce from celebrated local chefs, Jason Greene, Executive Chef and Owner The Grove Market and Café (pictured here), and Jonathan Perno, Executive Chef at Los Poblanos and James Beard Nominee. Chef demonstrations are generously sponsored by Edible Santa Fe and La Montanita Co-op.

Swap seeds and stories in the mobile van provided by SeedBroadcast, a nonprofit that encourages communities to keep local food and culture alive. Share recipes and create food-inspired art with participants from Vecinos Collective.

Enjoy the sounds of Sina Soul and Rodney Bowe SWEETLIFE in the amphitheater. Led by Rodney Bowe, (veteran vocalist, master musician, multi-genre, multi-instrumentalist,) alongside multi-lingual, multi-genre vocalist/musician, Sina Soul the band offers a dynamic selection of funk, soul and jazz music. Cash bar available.

Community Days are developed in conjunction with Albuquerque Museum’s new exhibition, Only in Albuquerque. These programs are designed to make connections to the exhibition’s main themes, Spirited, Courageous, Resourceful and Innovative. Community Days take place on the 3rd Sunday of the month through September.

This event is free with general admission....but SeedBroadcast is always free and open source. Come find us out in front of the Museum!

Saturday, March 21, 2015

Juan Tabo Library Spring Seed Fair



 Seed Libraries are springing up all over the place and the first one in Albuquerque, New Mexico opened last year at the Juan Tabo branch library in the North East Heights. The ABC Seed Library was instigated through the passion and tireless efforts of Brita Sauer who is a librarian at the Juan Tabo branch. This year Brita wanted to hold an event to bring people together to share their seeds, their knowledge and to inspire others to plant gardens, save seeds and to make use of the invaluable resource of the seed library.

Collaborative Seed Mural by Jade Leyva

 Seed libraries are places that ‘lend’ or share seeds. They are different from seed banks as their main purpose is to disseminate the seeds to local growers to keep the seeds propagating and adapting. Borrowers are asked to grow the seed and if all goes well at the end of the growing season save the seeds to bring back and replenish the stock. What a simple act of reciprocity! These seed libraries often repurpose there the old card catalogues and offer a wonderful shared public resource. However in 2014 some libraries started to come under attack by their state Departments of Agriculture. One such library is in the small Pennsylvania town of Mechanicsburg. http://www.commondreams.org/news/2014/08/04/agri-terrorism-towns-seed-library-shut-down. This small unassuming library received a letter from the Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture stating that the seed library was in violation of the states Seed Act of 2004. This act focuses on seeds that are sold but they were told that this could be a problem for seeds that were free but mislabeled. This caused a stir through out the national seed library network and has made it even more important to educate the public about the necessary to keep growing out and sharing our local heirloom seeds and the importance of our community seed libraries.

Seed Activist Beata Tsosie-Peña
Seeds: The Yearbook of Agriculture 1961

Education was the core of the intent for the Spring Seed Fair. The daylong event started with a seed swap and then moved into a variety of talks about seed diversity, the importance of saving and recognizing our wild seeds and a seed saving workshop. Seeds and their inherent potential bring a great assortment of people together and this event was no exception. Many took part in the creation of a seed mural with Jade Leyva, https://www.facebook.com/SeedsACollectiveVoice listened to the passion talk by long time seed saver Brett Baker, heard the powerful poetry of seed activist Beata Tsosie-Peña from Tewa Women United, http://tewawomenunited.org/ stayed for a seed saving workshop by Sean Ludden of Bosque Seed Collective http://bosqueseedcollective.weebly.com/ and shared their seed stories with us. Stories and knowledge were shared and the many varieties of heirloom seeds exchanged hands. The talks, experiences and workshops hopefully motivated participants to get their fingers in the warming soil and plant, to remember to save their new found seeds at the end of the growing season and to bring them back and replenish their own community seed library.


Listen to some of the seed stories:



Thursday, March 12, 2015

Bees and Seeds Festival - Albuquerque, NM

Bees and Seeds Festival

March Against Monsanto


May 23, 2015
12 - 2 pm
Tiguex Park
Albuquerque, NM

SeedBroadcast will be there sharing seed resources AND recording and broadcasting Seed Stories!
See you there!

For more information visit GMO-Free New Mexico at:
https://www.facebook.com/gmofreenm?fref=ts




Rescheduled! Albuquerque Spring Seed Fair

ABC Library//Seed Library

Join us for a celebration of seeds!
Sunday, March 15th
12-4
Juan Tabo Library
3407 Juan Tabo NE
Albuquerque, NM

We will start off with a closed seed swap for those who bring seeds from 12-1. And starting at 1, we’ll have plenty of seed giveaways and talks by:
Brett Bakker (NMDA Organic Program)
Beata Tsosie-Pena (Tewa Women United)
Sean Ludden (Bosque Seed Collective), and more!

Seedbroadcast and other community partners will be there too!

Free and open to the public at the Juan Tabo Library in the NE Heights during special library hours.


Saturday, February 28, 2015

Snow days and snow bound!

Snow bound on the farm, Anton Chico, NM
Albuquerque Spring Seed Fair has been cancelled for Feb 28 due to snow....maybe rescheduled?
SeedBroadcasters are snow bound in Anton Chico and Santa Fe.....but these come as many wishes for wintery weather preparing us for spring plantings and summer abundance!

Wednesday, February 25, 2015

SeedBroadcast at Albuquerque Spring Seed Fair

SeedBroadcasting from the ABC Spring Seed Fair!

SeedBroadcast and the Mobile Seed Story Broadcasting Station will be recording and broadcasting Seed Stories and sharing creative seed resources.

Spring Seed Fair!
Saturday, Feb. 28th
10am - 2pm
Main Library
501 Copper Ave NW
Albuquerque, NM
https://www.facebook.com/events/1612527342309581

Join us for a celebration of seeds!
We will start off with a closed seed swap for those who bring seeds from 10-11.
And starting at 11, we’ll have plenty of seed giveaways and talks by:
Brett Bakker (NMDA Organic Program)
Emigdio Ballon (Tesuque Pueblo Seed Bank)
Sean Ludden (Bosque Seed Collective), and more!
 Seedbroadcast and other community partners will be there too!
Free and open to the public in the lower level community room at the Main Library.
Free parking validation for the first 2 hours!


This event is being organized and hosted by the ABC Seed Library: http://abclibrary.org/seeds

Monday, June 30, 2014

SeedBroadcasting at Pollinator Day, Albuquerque BioPark

Young seed researcher.
Pollination is the process by which pollen is transfered from the anther (male part) to the stigma
(female part) of the plant, there by enabling fertilization and reproduction. This takes place in the angiosperms, the flower bearing plants. (Definition taken from Wikipedia http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pollination).  Only about 10% of flowering plants are pollinated without the assistance of animals this is called Abiotic pollination and the most common form is by the wind.  The more common form of pollination is Biotic which requires pollinators. There are about 200,000 species of pollinators most of which are insects.

One of the discovery stations at the BioPark
 On the summer solstice the Albuquerque BioPark http://www.cabq.gov/culturalservices/biopark held its Pollinator Day providing many discovery stations and experiential exhibits to inform visitors of the importance of these pollinators to keep our eco-systems healthy and resilient.

Paika with her seed drawing            The BioPark Pollinator Garden

SeedBroadcast was invited to participate by Tallie Segal the education co-ordinator who shared her time and stories with us.



Tallie explained to us that the BioPark is actively saving the seeds of the Sacramento prickly poppy
http://nmrareplants.unm.edu/rarelist_single.php?SpeciesID=14 which is an endangered species and the New Mexico beardtongue, http://nmrareplants.unm.edu/rarelist_single.php?SpeciesID=137 an important host for rare Sacramento Mountains checkerspot butterflies. The park has a designated seed bank area for this conservation and works in co operation with the U.S. Fish and Wild Life Service, the state of New Mexico and the University of New Mexico to re-seed native habitats.
Exploring how seeds move!

Tallie also provided SeedBroadcast with three enthusiastic interns, who helped to facilitate the running the Mobile Seed Story Broadcasting Station by helping visitors to access the archive of seed stories on the IPads, to looking up and printing seed saving information, helping kids to explore the diversity of seeds and adding to the SeedBroadcast drawing wall, thank you Dominique, Brandon and Renne. Brandon and Renne also shared their own seed stories:

 
As flowers attract the pollinators, SeedBroadcast attracts the people who are willing the share their seeds of wisdom, then we share this wisdom to keep the cycle alive and resilient. The following is one of these wonderful wisdom stories and if you have not visited the Albuquerque BioPark you should.

Monday, April 28, 2014

SeedBroadcasting from Lobo Growers Market and UNM Sustainability Expo

UNM Cornell Mall on Earth Day

SeedBroadcast partnered up with University of New Mexico Lobo Growers Market and Sustainability Expo for a celebration of Earth Day and the seeds that grow Earth. Located on Cornell Mall on the main campus of University of New Mexico, this gathering was organized by the Sustainability Studies Program and brought together the Lobo Growers Market, food trucks, and a variety of local organizations dedicated to healthy and vibrant communities in common with resilient environments.

Spring greens and beets

Farmers and gardeners are just beginning spring harvest and they were at the Lobo Growers Market selling salad and braising greens along with root crops and summer transplants. There was much talk of the season ahead and the gardening optimism for an abundant and successful year to come.

Red Tractor Farm had a dozen varieties of tomatoes for sale
Juan selling greens at Los Jardines Institute growers stand.

Diverse organizations were present to inspire ecologic and caring relationships among people, plants, animals, resources, and wisdom. Implementing art and creativity, healing and learning, empowerment and action, good food and community the Sustainability Expo offered a truly public space for the celebration of Earth Day. As the University commons demonstrated people from all walks of life participated.

Seed Balls
RAICES Remembering Ancestors-Inspiring Culture-Empowering Self
SEEDS: A Collective Voice, Communty Seed Mural

At the Mobile Seed Story Broadcasting Station folks came by to listen to seed stories, copy seed saving information, pick up seeds from our seed library, and talk about seeds and why they matter so much.


A group of elementary students from Monte Vista Elementary showed up to take a closer look at seeds and help draw pictures to add to the seed story bulletin board. One young student demonstrated the goggled eye approach to having fun while learning.


Here are several seed stories from some awesome, inspiring, and gracious growers of the seed revolution.









Saturday, April 19, 2014

UNM EarthDay


EarthDay SeedBroadcasting
Come by SWAP seeds and share your seed stories!

Sustainability Expo and Growers Market
April 22, 2014
10 am - 2pm
UNM Cornell Mall
Albuquerque, New Mexico


Monday, March 31, 2014

SeedBroadcasting from Juan Tabo Seed Library

New Mexico Bolitas in the re-purposed card catalog
Seed Catalog at the Juan Tabo Public Seed Library

SeedBroadcast partnered up with the Juan Tabo Public Library in Albuquerque, New Mexico to celebrate and kick-off Albuquerque's first public seed library. Folks came from near and far, curous about the call for seeds and wondering what a seed library could possibly be. New Mexico Master gardeners, volunteers from ABQ BioPark, Wes Brittenham from Plants of the Southwest, and Noel Chilton with SEEDS: A Collective Voice Community Seed Mural were also there to share, educate, and inspire visitors to get the year growing with seeds.

Getting up close with the ABQ BioPark Seed Exploratorium
Community Seed Mural
Library visitor helps create the seed mural

The celebration did not attract massive crowds, but what it did was situated in the everyday. The seed library engaged people who are already using the library, surprising them with the new card catalog addition of seeds to be grown, saved, shared, and realized year after year. Library patrons walked by, arms loaded down with books and packets of seeds, heading home to spend the beautiful spring day outside planting.

Inspired by the seedy inspiration spreading across the country and her love of gardening, Juan Tabo Branch Manager, Brita Sauer, decided to organize the seed library and bring people together around seeds. You can listen to her seed story here.



Library patrons explore the Mobile Seed Story Broadcasting Station

Monday, March 17, 2014

ABC Seed Library Kickoff


Juan Tabo Public Library is dusting off its card catalog to make room for some very old editions of cultural knowledge...to be shared, grown, passed on, and returned....SEEDS.

Join us for the opening kick-off of the ABC Seed Library. The first public seed library in Albuquerque.

March 22, 2013
ABC Seed Library
Juan Tabo Public Library
3407 Juan Tabo NE
Albuquerque, NM

For more information
Email: juantabo@cabq.gov
Call: 505-291-6260

We invite you to join us in SeedBroadcasting and celebrate the local genius of seeds. Share and listen to stories about seed saving, gardening, farming, and local food desires. Explore the Seedy Resources bulletin board, copy center, library, and interactive multi-media workstation, free and open for everyone to use.

Bring SEEDS To SWAP and share YOUR Seed Stories

SeedBroadcast and the Mobile Seed Story Broadcasting Station is a collaborative project exploring grassroots food action and seed sovereignty. We travel near and far to pollinate the culture of agri-Culture by broadcasting local seed stories through audio interviews, while networking and distributing do-it-together-how-to resources.

Seed Stories: http://soundcloud.com/seedbroadcast

Website: www.seedbroadcast.org

Friday, September 20, 2013

Seeds A Collective Voice at Globalquerque! 2013


Here's a note just in from Jade Leyva and an excellent opportunity to join up with her and Seeds A Collective Voice at Globalquerque! This Saturday, Sept 21 at National Hispanic Cultural Center in Albuquerque, NM

Hi all,

A note to tell you that Seeds A Collective Voice will be a part of the educational day program at Globalquerque! I am so happy!

We will be talking to people about three sisters, giving away seeds for kids and families to experiment next year with this form agriculture.

We will be working on a seed mural where the public will match the seeds colors to a pattern on a very large board to be glued on (see attached) This community mural project is in 4 sections to form an ecosystem. We will be doing the first one at ¡Globalquerque! and will continue with the following ones during different public events.

 I hope you can come by to this amazing event, it only happens once a year and it is off the hook! there will also be international dance lessons, workshops about music & culture with the night time performers, instrument building and lots more!

Have a blessed day,
Jade

Sunday, May 5, 2013

SeedBroadcasting at SEEDS: A Collective Voice

Seedbroadcast partnered up with SEEDS: A Collective Voice during their opening festivities on May 4th, at the Downtown Contemporary Gallery in Albuquerque, New Mexico to share seedy resources, network local seed actions, and shout out seed stories from around the country. These stories echoed up and down 4th Street, while passers-by stopped in to check out the Broadcasting Station and share their stories.



Marijke de Vries visited us outside the gallery and shared her seed story
Street-side SeedBroadcasting with SEEDS: A Collective Voice, visitors and performers.
Local seed saver and forager Peter Callen brought native seeds to the exhibition and had this wisdom to share, [Why do you share seeds?] "It's part of life to share life and give it away, because that is what the plants do."
Inside the Mobile Seed Story Broadcasting Station

The exhibition festivities celebrated the work of many artists, poets, writers, performers, farmers, gardeners, activists and most importantly the seeds that have brought us all together. The gallery was packed with people, art, conversation, and performance. While milkweed seed floated through the air, presentations were underway to share information and rouse the creative compassion and agency in everyone.

Man's Research?, by artist Gene McClain, acrylic, wood carving.

Local farmer and activist Isaura Andaluz discussed the growing concern over chile in New Mexico and the political and corporate pressures to homogenize, industrialize, and genetically modify historic land races, threatening the deep rooted agricultural practices and culture of these lands.  Bubble maps documenting the relationships between multinational corporations and seeds were distributed sharing a sad truth, that almost all seed, agriculture, and food is not controlled by the 99%. Instead, it is controlled through the patent, power and greed of a handful of corporations. Read Seed Freedom, Who Own's the Seed? for more information.

Who Own's the Seed?

Albuquerque farmers Mimi and Sean Ludden of Nepantla Farms were also busy talking to visitors about organizing a local seed cooperative and conversations emerged about joining forces to organize a living seed library. If you or any one you know is interested in this, contact Sean and Mimi and join Albuquerque seed solidarity: nepantlafarms@yahoo.com

Christian Leahy reading "A Seed Cycle"

A gourd rattles, rattles, rattles.....signally another live performance of voices and words, of the poetic story-tellers transforming critical compassion, anger, and beauty in all present. What does this listening build? Are these the stories of the seeds we try so hard to hear? Listen...

Artist and farmer, Amanda Rich from Erda Gardens performs "Amaranth (everlasting), while accompanied by semillaista friends.

Albuquerque poet Mary Oishi reads her poem "When I sing of seeds"

Santa Fe based writer and activist, Christian Leahy performs her story poem, "A Seed Cycle" in five parts

Albuquerque Poet Laureate, Hakim Bellamy performs his new work "Food Sovereignty" and also shared the text for everyone to read.

Food Sovereignty – by hakim bellamy

She said
What if the scientist stuck to science
And let the farmers stick to farming

It’s not rocket science

Global agriculture has changed more in our lifetime
Than the previous 10,000 years

Went from
If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it
To if it works
Whip it into working harder

When the sun
Doesn’t rise fast enough for us
Will we tinker with that?

Will we surrender our Eden
To the machine
Look God in the eye
Point to the third day and say
“Not good enough”
Will we piss in the same pond
We’ve evolved from
Will we turn our back
On the mud in our veins

It’s not rocket science

The chemist are covering the spread
bruising silos with fruit sky high
You think the pesticides are expensive?
Imagine the plane
Gotta push a hell of a lot more acres
To cover the gas bill that gets that thing in the sky

It’s not rocket science

Even the fairy tales prosthelytized
Jack and the Beanstalk was so obviously
Corporate, that they didn’t try to hide it
In the beginning of the story he put three seeds in his pocket
And by the end he turns a profit

It’s surprisingly not surprising
That there is no problem with how he got it
In a country founded on deception and robbery

And there’s NO WAY
A beanstalk gets THAT big without GMO coursing through its body
That’s like watching Major League Baseball
And pretending there is no difference between 1999
And 2005 Jason Giambi

But the script gets flipped
To mess with our conscious
Of course, Jack is hungry and poor
So he’s just like us

Stole the tall man’s gold
And tricked his wife into liking him

Made Jack the bad guy
Even though the beans were free
And the stalk was on his property

But Jack still wins a happy ever after
Though we all know fairy tales aren’t reality

In the end,
The corporation is still giant
And Jack can’t have no beenstalk without’em

It’s not rocket science

They say money doesn’t grow on trees
But there are plenty of companies pumping it into the ground
“Food chain” will get a whole new meaning
As soon as they figure that out

Chemicals invented for world wars
Have no business in our bodies
Fertilizing killing fields with bullshit
Will only yield a barren garden

I suppose it makes perfect sense
If the idea is to wage war on our biology

Monocrop all biodiversity
Til every seed is eugenically perfect
And leave the farming to the Nazis

It’s not rocket science

Putting dope into the soil
Makes the land an addict
Now Mother Earth can’t function without it
While just a few years ago
She used to make miracles out of scratch for our parents.

Years ago our country abolished the ability of rich people to own farmers
But they didn’t want to share crops
So they pulled all the stops
Traded slave for patent holding, full well knowing
That they will always “own” farmers
As long as they can own their seeds

It’s not rocket science

We cannot eat coffee,
Super Insects or Super Weeds

Our crops have become a courtroom
And the lawyers are woefully overdressed
For this kind of work

It’s not rocket science

If your coat is a dirtless shade of white
You are not allowed in this field

Here, brown is holy
Here, life is NOT
An experiment
It is reality

Here, is not simply playing God
Here, is tampering with blessings
Here, is not 20,000 feet
Here, is ground
Zero

Here, is both feet
Both knees
Both hands
Both lips
Kiss

It’s not
Rocket
Science.

© Hakim Bellamy May 4th, 2013

Thank you to artist, Jade Leyva and Tom Frouge with Avakado Artists who organized SEEDS: A Collective Voice and to Sharon Berman who volunteered to help SeedBroadcast during this event. 

Monday, April 29, 2013

SeedBroadcast and SEEDS: A Collective Voice

Join us at SEEDS: A Collective Voice! an exhibition of artists, activists, performers, gardeners, and farmers celebrating and interrogating the current state of seeds as a life force for change.

Listen to the Seed Story shout out from exhibition organizer and seed lover, Jade Levya, who talks more about her inspiration for this gathering of seeds, creativity, and sovereignty.



Sunday, April 21, 2013

Our Actions Matter, Earth Day at the Albuquerque Biopark

 SeedBroadcast was invited by Tallie Segel, Education Coordinator, at the Albuquerque BioPark  www.cabq.gov/culturalservices/biopark to join the Children's Seed Festival for Earth Day 2013. This "Our Actions Matter" festival was created to celebrate the connections between seeds, plants and human beings through various educational experiences. SeedBroadcast parked the Mobile Seed Story Broadcasting Station at the entrance to the park to encourage families to explore the magic of seeds and seed saving.


Many young inquiring minds stopped to share their curiosity, to hold seeds, to examine them under magnifying lenses, to arrange them, to draw them and to ask questions. Many choose seeds to take home to plant in their gardens and to watch them grow. All we asked was that if the plants produced seeds that they passed them on to their neighbors and friends. Tallie made sure we had volunteers all day to help us interact with the crowds that came to visit. The volunteers adeptly learned the technical ins and outs of the Mobile Unit and quickly became experts at guiding visitors to explore our networking system.

Arranging different seeds.



Two of our wonderful volunteers.
Gabriel, who lived in Puerto Rico until the age of five, was one of our young visitors and shared this hopeful and heart felt story about planting a lemon tree and how this tree inspired him to help others to have access to healthy food. Here is Gabriel telling his story:
It was not only the children that became inspired, many of their parents, aunts, uncles, sisters and brothers were encouraged also to share stories. Kalonji told us his story of the mysterious tomato seed. During the day we broadcast some of our audio stories over loud speakers that are mounted on the roof of the SeedBroadcast Mobile Unit and we linked live to "Women's Focus" with Carol Boss http://www.kunm.org/programs/genre/news-talk who interviewed Jade Leyva and Isaura Andaluz, both active seed advocates. Jade is an artist, seed saver and organizer of SEEDS: A Collective Voice, an event and exhibition that was held at the Downtown Contemporary Gallery in Albuquerque and continues through June 8th 2103. (Read our upcoming blog for more details). Isaura, a New Mexican, is the inspiration behind Cuatro Puertas, who's mission is to connect New Mexico's urban economies with rural agricultural economies, and she is an activist for the important issues of chile politics in New Mexico. After their interview with Carol they visited us at the BioPark. You can listen to Jade in our previous SeedBroadcast blog and to Isaura talk about her seed saving work and why people should care.
We should all care, and by allowing our children open access to the magic of seeds, we might have a chance.

Thursday, April 18, 2013

SeedBroadcast and Our Actions Matter!

SeedBroadcast and the Mobile Seed Story Broadcasting Station will be at the front gates of the Albuquerque BioPark during their Earth Day Children's Seed Festival - OUR ACTIONS MATTER!

April 20, 2013
10:00 am - 2:00 pm
ABQ BioPark Botanical Garden
2601 Central Ave NW
Albuquerque, New Mexico

Stop by and explore seeds, seed stories, and our seed resource materials....also participate in a seed story shout out, by sharing your seed story via audio interview, drawing, and writing.