October 2013 Calendar of Events


October 2013 Calendar of Events

VILLAGE VANCOUVER CALENDAR OF EVENTS
Village Vancouver and members of the Village Vancouver  community organize dozens of events, including workshops, potlucks, discussion circles, film screenings, work parties and more every month! Find out what’s happening in your neighbourhood – take a look at our complete Events Calendar online. Or why not organize an event of your own? Be it a simple social gathering in your neighbourhood or a workshop in which you share your knowledge and skills with others, Transition is driven by people taking the initiative to do something.

VILLAGE VANCOUVER EVENTS


Our next monthly potluck and workshop is just around the corner! Join us on October 1st at Little Mountain Neighbourhood House (3981 Main St.) from 6:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m. We'll kick-off the evening with a potluck, followed by the Harvest Swap at 7:00 p.m. So bring your excess yield and canned goodies to trade with your neighbour. Not sure how a swap works? Check out this guide for more information.
Visit out Facebook Page for updates leading up to the event.

October 1, 2013 from 6:30pm to 8:30pm – Gordon Neighbourhood House
Every Tuesday and Saturday (Tuesday evenings at Gordon Neighbourhood House) our volunteers receive food scraps from hundreds of the 45,000 residents in the West End. The take each week now totals a few tonnes of food scraps for composting and to be recycled back into growing, and this also reduces greenhouse gas emissions.
Every Saturday from 10 am-noon. Sept/Oct dates: Sept 28, Oct 1, 5, 8, 12, 15, 19, 22, 26, 29

Please join us for a series of seven workshops at Strathcona Community Centre.
Unless noted, all workshops run from 7-9 pm. Subsidies are available. (Details below.)
Thur, Oct 10  Backyard Chickens 101 with Duncan Martin. $15 or $25/household
Mon, Oct  21  Canning and Preserving  (6:30-9:30 pm) with Caitlin Dorward. $30 (includes supplies)  
Thur, Nov 7  Basic Emergency Preparedness with Ann Pacey. FREE
Tues, Nov 19  Extreme Thrift with Joy Jolie. $10.
Tues, Dec 3  Disconnecting from the Matrix with Joy Jolie. $10
Registration/Information: 604.713.1838 or in person at Strahcona Community Centre. Please pre-register in advance.
50% Subsidies are available to low income residents of Vancouver with a Leisure Access Card. For details on how to apply, please contact Strathcona CC or visit http://vancouver.ca/parks/rec/lac/index.htm.
More details to follow.


October 8, 2013 from 6:30pm to 8:30pm – Gordon Neighbourhood House

Neighbour Savour is Village Vancouver's annual zero waste city-wide community potluck for 300+ neighbours.
Live music, community group tabling, kids area, seed library/seed swap, Pay-it-Forward gift exchange, delicious food, and much more!
This year, Neighbour Savour takes place on opening night of the Sustenance Festival.
If you'd like to help with planning or volunteer the evening of, please contact volunteer@villagevanouver.ca. We're also looking for a couple more local musicians or bands to play.
More details to follow soon!

Learn the basics of keeping chickens. Duncan, designer-builder of the "Vancooper" chicken coop will discuss the many benefits of owning your own flock. Learn how to raise, feed and care for your own backyard hens. Discuss coop requirements, city bylaws, chicken breeds, and what to do with an old hen. More details to follow.
Thur, Oct 10  Backyard Chickens 101 with Duncan Martin. $15 or $25/household




Village Vancouver is a proud community partner of 
Living the New Economy, Oct 15 - 20
Performance Works, Granville Island, Vancouver
Come to connect, collaborate and create at the 6-day confluence of people and ideas towards an economy as if people and the planet matter
We're talking about connections.  Increasingly critical connections to make is that of the pedal to the metal, and the rubber to the road. It is no longer enough simply to talk about the things we can do to positively transform our economy; we must get together and DO them. That's what Living the New Economy is all about.
An exciting line up of events includes:
•    Mark Lakeman, founder of Portland's City Repair
•    Ian Mackenzie, new paradigm film director/producer and a screening of his new film, Reactor (Occupy Love, Sacred Economics)
•    Indigenous Leadership and Perspectives on the New Economy
•    Generative Change for a New Economy, with Tam Lundy
•    Ashoka Canada Changemaker Showcase, with Groundswell Grassroots Economic Alternatives
•    Leading by Collaboration: Facing Ecological Contraints Beyond the Here and Now
•    Changemakers' Night Out Volume III: Meshworking the Networks
•    Live crowdfunding
•    Workshops and dialogues on community currencies, financing the new economy, collaborative platforms, shared spaces, storytelling, and more!
Tickets and Passes are now ON SALE!
Click here to get your tickets now and take advantage of early bird offers.

Will you help us build a rogue wave that will give the ideas of living the new economy momentum? Here's what you can do RIGHT NOW:
1.  Take a look at our programme and buy tickets to the events that excite you!
2. Join our Facebook event and follow Living the New Economy on Twitter @LNEyvr - invite your friends!


Mark Lakeman returns to Vancouver!


If you missed Mark Lakeman's (founder of Portland's City Repair) inspiring placemaking workshop in Vancouver in March 2011, here is your chance to make up for it!
Village Vancouver is a proud community sponsor of Mark Lakeman's upcoming workshop on October 15th from 2:30-5pm at Performance Works Theatre, Granville Island - part of the Living the New Economy 6-day confluence of events (Oct 15-20)

October 15, 2013 from 6:30pm to 8:30pm – Gordon Neighbourhood House


We are back! By popular demand after over 25 people attended our lectures in our inaugural Ecological Economics class in the spring of 2013, Michael Barkusky, Jordan Bober, and Randy Chatterjee are again teaching from Herman Daly's unparalleled textbook.
We are starting in September 2013 and running every third Wednesday night from 7 to 9 PM at a downtown Vancouver location, and continuing for "as long as it takes" to spread the teachings of an enlightened economics, where assumptions such as unlimited growth, pollution as a mitigable externality, and free trade face fair and unbiassed scrutiny.
More important than critiquing a field that has likely done more damage to the world than any other academic discipline, we will be constructing new economics models for promoting real wealth, positive yields, just distribution, healthy societies, sustainable resource extraction, stable banking and monetary regulation, and truly fair trade.
Join us, and change the world. All of it.
We encourage all to join at any time, even if an earlier class was missed. Please contact Randy Chatterjee by email to pick up the reading ahead of time so that you will be able to follow the class more effectively. All readings can be emailed.



Marpole Neighbourhood Food Network started last Spring and is co-sponsored by Village Vancouver and Marpole Place Neighbourhood House.
Please join us at our 1st ever potluck and visioning session for an afternoon of good food and stimulating dialogue, and to learn about some of our upcoming workshops and other activities.
This Summer we held Balcony gardening and Worm Composting workshops which were well attended. (Thanks, Jen for your great facilitation!). We harvested veggies and herbs from the demonstration balcony garden for our Thursday night dinners and our summer camp meals.
We held two canning workshops and have been using the jam that was preserved for our community breakfasts. We also tabled information about the Network at Marpole Community Day, Main Street Car Free Day and Connecting Marpole Day, and gave out food, herb and flower seeds and composting information to gardeners.
Hear what’s going on in VV's Neighbourhood Food Networks and in other NFN's, and through Marpole Place Food Programs, and how Village and others are helping start and build new networks in Vancouver.
Then explore how a local, neighbour and community-driven food network could help create a more food just, resilient, sustainable, and healthy Marpole. 
We want MNFN to be broadly inclusive of community food activities in Marpole and invite individuals, families, community groups, community gardens, businesses, service providers, and other involved in food related activities to consider getting involved. 
So let us know what you're up to and how you can contribute to building the Network!
Potluck from 1-2, Visioning from 2-4.
Part of the Sustenance Festival.

Learn how to can preserve some of the fall bounty that surrounds us at this time of the year. This workshop will focus on jam and pickles and participants will be able to take some home at the end. More details to follow.
Mon, Oct  21  Canning and Preserving  (6:30-9:30 pm) with Caitlin Dorward. $30 (includes supplies)  


October 22, 2013 from 6:30pm to 8:30pm – Museum of Vancouver
2013 SUSTENANCE FESTIVAL CLOSING NIGHT EVENT
In partnership with the Vancouver Food Policy Council and Village Vancouver Transition Society, MOV is pleased to host an interactive evening of presentations, discussion, and visioning from local innovators, practitioners, and community members that encourage people to think about our local circumstances and how we can map a course for change here in Vancouver. Focusing on the 'Top 5' biggest potential Footprint-reducing contributions provided by the Greenest City Lighter Footprint "Feet to the Fire" committee, From Here to There 4 will explore effective actions we can take to reduce our ecological footprint, especially as cheap energy sources peak and climate change intensifies.
Moderated by Randy Shore.
Presentations and panel discussion with Jennie Moore and others TBA.
Doors: 6 pm.
Refreshments and mingling afterwards.
Registration and other details to follow.

October 22, 2013 from 6:30pm to 8:30pm – Gordon Neighbourhood House


Details for several upcoming spaghetti nights, including one near 5th and Trafalgar hosted by Russell on Sept 23, and one near 1st and Larch hosted by Karly and Marcy on the 26th (the 26th is now full),  and ones in Kits Point and near Cornwall and Vine in October will be posted soon. 
Share a free meal w/neighbours, prepared by a neighbour. Last year, almost 200 people participated in over a dozen spaghetti nights and at the community-wide celebration. This year we anticipate the number will be close to 250.
This year, a series of several neighbourhood Drop-in "Spaghetti" Nights (DISN's) will be hosted by Kits Villagers and other VVers around Kits and elsewhere on the Westside, followed by a large community-wide DISN celebration at the monthly Kits House potluck at St. Marks on Nov 7. Hosts provide the meal, tracking where ingredients come from, and we'll collate how local our eating habits are and how DISN's are helping connect neighbours at the community celebration. (They’re called Drop-in “Spaghetti” nights, because many of the ones we've held in past years have involved serving spaghetti, but can involve any foods - e.g., Drop-in Rutabaga Night.)
Open to all, DISN's are especially aimed at neighbours living close to one another (w/in 2-3 blocks of a host).
This time 'round, there's an added emphasis on linking different aspects of our food cycle/local food system, including growing, processing, preparing, education, and waste management. Free seeds will be available from the Kits Village Seed Library for hosts wanting to "grow their DISN dinner". In many cases, ingredients will sourced fresh and locally -- oft times from the Kits Village Collaborative Garden and the Thurs Westside Community Food Market at 8th/Vine, where VV tables w/the Seed Library, Plastic Recycling Depot, and other goodies. And hosts will be encouraged to drop their packaged waste at the monthly Recycling Depot and their food scraps at the Collaborative Garden or at one of our weekly Food Scrap Drop Spots.
If you live on the Westside and would like to participate or host a DISN, please RSVP here, send your name and cross-streets to Ross at ross@villagevancouver.ca, or sign-up at the VV table at the Westside Community Food Market. (Hosts receive $5 per person to create the meal.)
The 3rd "spaghetti" night was hosted by Claudia and Mark near 8th and Balsam on Sunday, September 15, with 16 neighbours attending.
Details for other spaghetti nights in September will be posted soon. Times vary, but they're frequently from 6-8 pm.
Supported by a Green Neighbourhood Small Grant from the Vancouver Foundation and the City of Vancouver, administered by Kits Neighbourhood House.


Anyone who participated in AEE 1001 earlier this year and is interested in deepening their understanding of ecological economics, is welcome to participate in AEE 2001.
This will be offered with same once-a-month class meeting format on the fourth Wednesday of the month. We will not be rigid about requiring participation in AEE 1001 as a pre-requisite for participating in AEE 2001, but please note that we will assume participants in AEE 2001 are familiar with the ideas in Daly & Farley's Ecological Economics.
A participant with a bit of spare time on his or her hands, could conceivably undertake AEE 1001 and AEE 2001 concurrently, but it would involve a lot of reading. A participant who at some point did at least a year of post-secondary mathematics and at least two years of mainstream economics, and still remembers a bit of what they did in those courses, might be able to participate effectively in AEE 2001 without first participating in AEE 1001. Anyone who wants to jump straight in to AEE 2001 on the basis of having the math and econ background, but who did not do any post-secondary study in any one of physics, chemistry, biology or ecology, would be well-advised, though, to read Parts I and II of Daly & Farley (the first 7 chapters in the first edition) by the time of the November class meeting.
To the extent that we have a core text for AEE 2001, it is The Economics of Natural Resource Use, by John Hartwick and Nancy Olewiler. This is a textbook written more in the idiom of (neo-classical) environmental economics than that of ecological economics. It makes greater use of mathematics than Daly & Farley, primarily in the interests of precision and logical rigour, but it is not mathematically formidable at all. It also has a faint EE sensibility.
Our course objective will be to develop a commentary and critique of the book, addressing its shortcomings from an EE perspective. Our work on this can then facilitate future more advanced courses in EE, since an obvious EE textbook with which to go on to the next level of depth after Daly & Farley, does not, to my knowledge, exist yet.
There will be a number of other references provided, but one in particular, seems worth mentioning immediately. It is Supply Shock, by Brian Czech. Brian earned his Ph.D in Renewable Natural Resource Studies and has worked primarily in the area Conservation Biology, but he demonstrates in Supply Shock a remarkable grasp of economics in general, and of the history of economic thought as it relates to the mysterious disappearance of concern for natural capital in neo-classical microeconomics and mainstream macroeconomics, in particular. Brian is a keynote speaker, by the way at the CANSEE conference in Toronto, in early November.
We are hoping to prepare a resource kit of material for AEE 2001 so no one reluctant to buy the Hartwick & Olewiler text out of concern for costs, should feel
at a disadvantage. We are also planning to devote the first class to a review of the math we will use (no proofs and no great emphasis on skill in solving mathematically formulated problems - just an outline of the common symbols and constructs, their meaning, and their use in economics), and the second to reviewing conventional microeconomics, and the critique and extensions of it, central to the EE approach.
Please contact Michael Barkusky by email if you wish to take this class, and especially if you would like to attend a session without coming to the first or any earlier meeting.


October 29, 2013 from 6:30pm to 8:30pm – Gordon Neighbourhood House



Other Events Organized by our Friends and Allies

2 workshops: Creams for Beginners & Advanced Creams
What You’ll Learn…
Beginners
To protect, restore and heal your skin with your own Homemade creams
Hands-on, step by step guidance to make a simple cream in 1 hr
. The confidence needed to make it again + Take home the recipe
Make and use medicinally infused oil like Calendula or Lavender
Using Essential Oils effectively and safely
To be excited about nourishing your body in your own creation!
Advanced
To succeed with more complex cream recipes
To treat specific skin conditions such as reducing scars or wrinkles
To effectively use herbs in creams using tinctures & hydrosols
Troubleshooting tips to avoid spoilage and increase longevity
To make something that makes you feel great!
Location …
East Vancouver – near Fraser & Broadway. Exact location shared with registration.
Investment …
$60 each or $100 for both
In response to overwhelming consumer demand in the Valley, the Fraser Valley Food Show is showcasing the magic of food and cooking at the Tradex Exhibition Centre in Abbotsford, BC. Experience food both local and international, celebrity chef demonstrations, cooking competitions, sausage making competitions, cheese and wine seminars, Bite of the Valley participating restaurants and the Grapes and Hops wine/beer/spirits tasting pavilion. NEW!!! Find specialized diet foods in the Gluten Free Living area of the show!

October 5, 2013 from 9am to 1pm – UBC Farm
The UBC Farm is excited to announce the return of our Saturday Markets for the 2013 season! This summer,
discover a farm market like none other in Vancouver. Join us every Saturday from 9am-1pm for a delicious assortment of produce, herbs, eggs and flowers, fresh from our fields. We also host other local vendors, who offer produce, fruit,baked goods, coffee, pasta, local handicrafts, prepared food and more. At our market, you can experience a truly unique urban farm; complete with live music, family activities and a free farm tour at 11am.

October 8, 2013 from 5:30pm to 7:30pm – Steeves Manor, Kitsilano
Join the Vancouver Fruit Tree Project for a demonstration workshop on the basics of canning, by Darlene Tanaka, sponsored by Bernardin Canning.
During the workshop, recipes will be demonstrated, and participants will be able to sample throughout. Each participant will take home a Bernardin cloth bag, recipes, and 1 jar of jam or jelly.
All ticket proceeds will go to benefit the Vancouver Fruit Tree Project, a non-profit organization committed to sharing fruit in our community.
Limited space! Buy tickets here: http://vftp.eventbrite.ca/


October 12, 2013 from 9am to 1pm – UBC Farm


October 13, 2013 from 10am to 4pm – Foxglove Farm




October 19, 2013 from 9am to 1pm – UBC Farm

October 20, 2013 from 5:30pm to 6:30pm – Mary's place


October 26, 2013 from 12:30am to 4:30pm – Kitsilano Community Center

Other Upcoming Events

UFFS Workshop - Planning a Climate Change Resilient Farm


November 5, 2013 from 6pm to 9pm – YWCA Metro Vancouver

Basic Neighbourhood Emergency Preparedness


VV Fall 2013 Cultivating Food, Cultivating Community Series


UFFS Workshop - Solar Greenhouses


November 14, 2013 from 6pm to 9pm – TBA