Tag: Hampshire College

  • Friday, August 9 – Sunday, August 11 – NOFA Summer Conference: Nutrition Matters

    Even as Hampshire College is going through a tumultuous period, their summer schedule is business as usual. We at the Northeast Organic Farming Association are grateful that they are sticking it out even while things are rocky and we have constant communication with them as they manage their way forward. We hope they find a solution to their woes that gives them long term stability and allows their cutting edge culture of creativity to continue to thrive.

    We are excited to host our 45th annual NOFA Summer Conference with keynote speaker Sandor Katz for a festive summer weekend August 9 -11, 2019 at Hampshire College in Amherst, MA. Always a family friendly event, you can bring the whole family to enjoy workshops for adults, kids and teens, over 60 vendors, live music, games and amazing food!

    Registration is now open and we hope you’ll join us this summer! Registration and complete schedule can be found at www.nofasummerconference.org.

  • Tuesday, October 9, 5:15 pm – 7:30 pm – Native American Environmental History

    This Massachusetts Historical Society panel on Tuesday, October 9 from 5:15 – 7:30 will explore the intersections of environmental history and indigenous studies—the questions that each field engenders in the other, as well as the perspectives that native and non-native scholars bring to their research as they traverse both fields. Questions of race, gender, geography, and sources enliven this growing body of scholarship. Join us for a stimulating and wide-ranging conversation on these and other topics. The panel participants are Lisa Brooks, Amherst College; Strother Roberts, Bowdoin College; Ashley Smith, Hampshire College; Thomas Wickman, Trinity College.  Moderator: Cedric Woods, Institute for New England Native American Studies, University of Massachusetts Boston. The panel takes place at 1154 Boylston Street in Boston.

    Seminars are free and open to the public; RSVP required.To RSVP: email seminars@masshist.org or call (617) 646-0579.

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  • Friday, August 11 – Sunday, August 13 – NOFA Summer Conference

    NOFA is grateful to have Dr. Don Huber and Michael Phillips as 2017’s keynote speakers at the NOFA Summer Conference, to be held August 11 – 13 at Hampshire College in Amherst. We are also excited to host an amazing collection of organic minded professionals that will enliven our potential to create robust, healthy food systems that provide real food for all. Our three-day conference offers a wide-range of seminars, workshops and other educational opportunities. Immerse yourself in a community of like-minded practitioners and curious learners eager to share inspiration and ideas for organic food, farming, health, activism, and beyond.

    From generations of past cultures that established the sustainable production systems upon which we base our modernized techniques, to our immediate relationship with neighbors and the global community of conscious minded producers and consumers, to the microbial life that supports our bodies and our environment, we exist within a vast web of interconnectedness.

    Simply put, we are better together. We are stronger together. Inseparable, in fact, from each other and the systems that support our lives and our food. If we work to ensure a harmonious relationship with ecological and social systems, we can cultivate fair and thriving production and consumer models to live within.

    Join us to build upon this interconnectedness – from microbial to human communities – on August 11-13! Registration prices range from $70 – $250. Check all the options and register at http://nofasummerconference.org/

  • Thursday, June 4 – Monday, June 8 – Garden Days at the Emily Dickinson Museum

    Take part in one of Emily Dickinson’s favorite pastimes – gardening.  Join the staff of The Emily Dickinson Museum June 4-8 for Garden Days, an annual effort to prepare the Museum’s historic grounds for summer. Volunteers with all levels of experience are welcome to plant, weed, and beautify under the direction of landscape historian Marta McDowell, author of Emily Dickinson’s Gardens.

    Garden Days begins on Thursday, June 4, during the monthly Amherst Art Walk. A Garden Days volunteer meet-up and orientation starts at 5 pm, followed by an “art in the garden” session until 7 pm. At 6:45 pm, a poetry reading by Amherst-area poets Seth Landman and Kelin Loe will be held in the Homestead parlor.

    On Saturday, June 6, at 3 pm, Marta McDowell will lead a free tour of the museum grounds. This event is open to the public, and begins in the Homestead garden.

    As a special thank you, Garden Days volunteers are invited to tour the Museum at no charge on Sunday, June 7. Tours will be held at 12:30 pm, 1:30 pm, 2:30 pm, and 3:30 pm. For more information, or to sign up for a Volunteer Shift below, visit http://www.emilydickinsonmuseum.org/node/473?utm_source=Garden+Days+2015&utm_campaign=Garden+Days+2015&utm_medium=email

    VOLUNTEER SHIFTS
    Friday, June 5
    9 am – noon and 5:30 pm – 7:30 pm
    Saturday, June 6
    9 am – noon and 4 pm – 6 pm
    Sunday, June 7
    9 am – noon
    Monday, June 8
    9 am – noon
    Marta McDowell lives, gardens and writes in Chatham, New Jersey. She teaches landscape history and gardening at the New York Botanical Garden, where she was named “Instructor of the Year” in 2011. Her book, Emily Dickinson’s Gardens, was published by McGraw-Hill in 2005, and she was an advisor for the New York Botanical Garden’s 2010 show.

    Her latest book, Beatrix Potter’s Gardening Life, was published by Timber Press in 2013. Marta is active in the Chatham Community Garden and is on the board of the NJ Historical Foundation at the Cross Estate in Bernardsville. Her husband, Kirke Bent, summarizes her biography as “I am therefore I dig.”

    Seth Landman is the author of four chapbooks and the full-length poetry collections Confidence (Brooklyn Arts Press, 2015) and Sign You Were Mistaken (Factory Hollow Press, 2013). His work can be found in Boston Review, iO, Jellyfish, Lit, and elsewhere. He received his PhD in Creative Writing and Literature from the University of Denver (2013) and an MFA from the University of Massachusetts (2008) where he is currently an Academic Advisor in Humanities and Fine Arts.

    Kelin Loe is the author of These Are The Gloria Stories (Factory Hollow Press 2014) and the chapbook The Motorist (minutesBOOKS 2010). She lives in Northampton, MA, and is working towards a PhD in Rhetoric at UMass Amherst.

    The Emily Dickinson Museum: The Homestead and The Evergreens, opens for 2015 on Wednesday, March 4. Museum hours are 11 am to 4 pm, Wednesday through Sunday. Find out more about visiting here.

    The Emily Dickinson Museum is dedicated to educating diverse audiences about the poet’s life, family, creative work, times, and enduring relevance, and to preserving and interpreting the Homestead and The Evergreens as historical resources for public and academic enrichment.

    The Emily Dickinson Museum is owned by the Trustees of Amherst College and overseen by a separate Board of Governors. The Museum is responsible for raising its own operating and capital funds.

    The Emily Dickinson Museum is a member of Museums10, a collaboration of ten museums linked to the Five Colleges in the Pioneer Valley–Amherst, Hampshire, Mount Holyoke, and Smith Colleges, and the University of Massachusetts Amherst.

  • Sunday, January 12 – Friday, January 17 – Seed School

    Join Bill McDorman (NS/S Executive Director), Joy Hought, MSc (Director of National Seed School), Hampshire College alum Rowen White (co-founder of Sierra Seed Cooperative) and special guests for a 6-day Seed School session at Hampshire College in Amherst, Massachusetts. Seed School is for gardeners, farmers, herbalists, nurseries, CSAs, non-profits, government agencies and everyone concerned with regional, sustainable and diverse agriculture. Click here to learn more about this groundbreaking course.

    Native Seeds/SEARCH is proud to partner with Hampshire College, Massachusetts for its January Term program, January 12th through the 17th. College credit will be available and 12 Hampshire College students will get priority placement for this Seed School session.

    January 12-17, 2014
    Hampshire College
    Amherst, MA

    Tuition: $700
    Deposit to reserve a spot: $200
    Payment can  be made by mailing a check payable to Native Seeds/SEARCH, 3584 E. River Road, Tucson AZ 85718. Indicate “Seed School – January 2014” on your check and include contact information and phone number. For complete information, and to complete your registration following payment, visit http://www.nativeseeds.org/index.php?option=com_rsform&formId=3.

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  • Saturday, April 21, 2:00 pm – The Race for What’s Left: The Global Scramble for the World’s Last Resources

    Visit the Harvard Museum of Natural History on Saturday, April 21 at 2 pm for an author talk and book signing by Michael Klare. In his newest book, The Race for What’s Left, Michael Klare, Five College Professor of peace and world security studies at Hampshire College, describes a world facing an unprecedented crisis of resource depletion—from oil to coal and natural gas, copper and cobalt, water, and arable land.
    Regular admission rates apply. Part of the Cambridge Science Festival.  For more information, visit www.hmnh.harvard.edu.

  • Sunday, August 9, 10 am – Organic Food Conference

    In response to a blight epidemic affecting tomato and potato growers throughout Massachusetts and all Northeast states this season, coordinators of the 2009 Northeast Organic Farming Association (NOFA) Summer Conference will hold an emergency meeting on organic methods for dealing with the disease on Sunday, August 9, at 10:00am at UMass Amherst in the Student Union Ballroom.

    Late blight is a fungal disease whose spores can spread miles from their origin through the wind. Many tomato and potato fields in Massachusetts have already been infected, destroying entire crops. The meeting is being offered free of charge to farmers and gardeners looking for short and long term solutions. There are different points of view about how to manage the disease, even within the organic farming community. The purpose of the meeting is to learn more about the disease and about the different perspectives on organic management options.

    The meeting will be moderated by NOFA/Mass board member and Hampshire College Farm Manager, Leslie Cox, and will feature diverse perspectives on late blight from both growers and extension professionals. Panelists include: UMass Extension Vegetable Specialist, Ruth Hazzard; Farmer and director of the Real Food Campaign — a project of Remineralize the Earth — Dan Kittredge; New York State Integrated Pest Management Program extension educator, Abby Seaman; and owner of Kingbird Farm and organic potato and tomato grower, Michael Glos.

    NOFA Summer Conference Coordinator, Julie Rawson said that for the organic community, dealing with the disease is an urgent priority: “The information we’ll be sharing at this meeting will help growers find means to survive severely wet growing conditions as witnessed this year, which have helped create a perfect storm for the widespread outbreak of late blight. NOFA’s contribution for addressing this problem in the long term is to find creative ways to work with nature to improve the health of our soils and our farming systems. We can’t take on the conventional approach of trying to kill the disease agents, because it won’t work– for certain in the long run, and not very effectively in the short run either.

    Hazzard who has been receiving calls from all over Massachusetts reporting cases of late blight said, “Many organic farms have lost their potato or tomato crop, while others are trying to save fields that are clean or just beginning to be infected. Many have mowed or removed the infected plants so that the fields don’t keep producing spores that travel to other farms. Now we need to look at how we can prevent late blight from occurring in future years. It will take a collective effort among farmers and gardeners to prevent late blight from surviving the winter in potato tubers and re-establishing itself from volunteers next season.”

    Kittredge directs the Real Food Campaign, which focuses its educational work on the role of minerals in the biological system of agricultural soils. He said, “Insufficient soil mineralization is at the heart of our vulnerability to plant diseases. Only through building sufficient mineralogical and biological reserves in the soil to feed the crop through extreme weather years such as this one are we capable of preventing diseases outbreaks on our farms like late blight. This is an opportunity to stand back and look at how we can address the root cause of disease through stepping up our soil management protocols. The basic tools of soil building are relatively inexpensive and not only make our crops more resistant to disease and infestation, but also increase crop quality and yield.”

    Seaman, who manages a listserv where Extension faculty and field staff share information on the outbreak of late blight in New York and surrounding states, said that “an organic farmer can do a lot to prevent the disease most years, but in years like this where there are sources of spores from outside the farm, and wet and cool weather conditions have been extremely favorable for disease development, even farmers who use the best prevention practices are vulnerable. At this point, farmers in areas where late blight is prevalent can choose to either destroy their potato and tomato crops if they get infected, or try to save them with a fungicide.” She said that the only organically approved fungicide shown to be effective against late blight is copper, a product that has been used this year on many different organic farms.

    Michael Glos runs a highly diversified certified organic herb, vegetable, and livestock farm in Richford, NY. He also trials and evaluates various potato varieties, and is looking into options for blight resistant potatoes. “Late blight is one of the most catastrophic diseases that can affect an organic farm,” he said. “We got the blight on our farm this year and we burned our potato plants to the ground. On a diversified farm, however, we can ensure that no one crop failure can bankrupt the whole farm, because other things will do well instead.”

    Even though copper sprays are approved under organic standards and many organic growers use them, Glos refuses to use them. He says they are toxic to the soil once they build up beyond a certain point, which would likely be crossed were he to have followed the recommended copper spray schedule of once per week starting in July. Glos added, “Under circumstances where our survival as a farm were at stake, we’d consider spraying copper, and I understand why many of our fellow farmers are making that choice this year.”

    The NOFA Summer Conference is now in its 35th year, and will take place starting on Friday, August 7 and ending on Sunday, August 9. Information on registering for the conference can be found at (www.nofasummerconference.org). The three day event is an educational and festival extravaganza, featuring over 200 timely workshops for growers, producers, and the general public interested in gathering practical information and finding solutions. Nationally-renowned experts and local New England practitioners will share their knowledge and provide inspiration for attendees interested in urban farming, food safety, organic land care, CSAs, animal husbandry, nutrition, homesteading, and more. A children’s program that runs throughout the weekend makes the event perfect for the whole family.

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