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  • Join us for the Big Lunch

    Posted on July 7th, 2010 charlotte 1 comment

    Camel CSA members are hosting our own Big Lunch again this year on Sunday 18 July.

    It’s a wonderful opportunity for us to get together in a social setting. Join us on our site at St Kew Highway from 12.30pm onwards.

    Please do come along to the Big Lunch and feel welcome to invite friends and family. All you need to do is bring some seasonal food and drink and something to sit on. Be prepared to share your lunch with the rest of us!

    Last year in spite of the  terrible weather we had a fantastic time at South Penquite Farm, Blisland at the kind invitation of our treasurer Cathy Fairman. We even managed some musical entertainment.

    This year, fingers crossed, we can have this Eden Project-inspired event outdoors beside our vegetable-growing plot, next to St Kew Harvest Farm Shop. We’ll provide a very simple activity for the children (maybe some more straw bales…) And if anyone would like to bring a musical instrument or two, that would be great.

  • Grow-your-own groups must act together

    Posted on March 8th, 2010 charlotte No comments

    The local food movement is too fragmented and can only work if the government puts its full weight behind it.  So Professor Kevin Morgan of Cardiff University, told guests at the Growing Collaboration event at the Eden Project in Cornwall.

    The “quiet revolution” against our industrialised food system is helping more people to understand where their food comes from and how it’s produced.  

    But action is needed at the centre to counteract the hidden health, environmental and economic costs of our cheap food culture, said Professor Morgan, a member of the Food Ethics Council

    “Nothing helps people to reconnect more than food.  Locally, sustainably-produced food is absolutely essential.  

    The biggest weakness of our local food movement is fragmentation and localisation.  It can’t do anything until central government acts in a more strategic way.  The government has to get its act together to be more supportive.”

    The Growing Collaboration conference was organised by Eatsome, an NHS-funded project which aims to improve healthy eating in Cornwall.  The event enabled people who grow, prepare and eat food in a sustainable way to get together, share their experience and strengthen contact.

    The fragmented nature of Cornwall’s own local food projects became evident during the three-minute “soap box” slot at the conference, when we all had a chance to explain what we’re doing. 

    Here’s a selection: - 

    It should now be clear why we all need to be working together in a much more organised way!