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Cherries and carrots and sweet summer weather
A weekend stop in Duncan is not complete without coffee at Saison Vineyard, and neither can coffee be drunk without something to nibble on from the bakery.
Choices were very tough indeed on my recent visit, but the black cherry upside down cake prevailed. Some nice looking produce on the veg stand as well, but we were heading to the farmers market on a pretty warm day, so we had to leave it all behind.

Spent the afternoon lolling about in good company at Maple Bay, where the breeze subsided to leave an utterly perfect afternoon view of Mount Maxwell, with sailboats and kayakers passing by and an osprey busying itself above.
Meanwhile, back in Victoria, things are well at Haliburton Farm, where the farmstand continues to groan with plenty, and the weekly veg boxes are plumped out with seasonal treats. This week the takings included sui choy and cherries, the plumpest, sweetest sugar snap peas, and bundles of carrots and herbs (Lemon Bergamot, chocolate mint, and tender young cilantro).
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A poetry survey – for readers & writers; LifeCycles local food fun-raiser and Sooke farm & garden tour
Marketing has come to poesie! If you want to make your views known about what you read, where you buy it and what moves you to do so, help yourself to the Literary Press Group’s survey of the poetry market.
A few short days remain for those wishing to RSVP on a mouthwatering invitation from LifeCycles: RSVP by July 30th! It’s holding a summer soiree – the Local Food Fun-raiser – featuring “local food, drinks, music, a silent auction and great fun.” All happens Thursday August 11th, 2011 from 6-9pm @ Sleeping Dog Farm, 1506 Burnside Road West, Victoria BC, with catering by Nourish and Real Food Made Easy. The price is $60 with local alcoholic beverages for sale (charitable tax receipt given for a portion of the ticket). All proceeds will go to support LifeCycles core programs. For tickets (available via Paypal) head to LifeCycles website, or visit The Good Planet Co. located at 764 Fort St. in Victoria.
And if you’re out Sooke way, or would like to be, you can support Sooke Region Food CHI Society by attending its second annual Farm and Food Garden Tour on Sunday, August 14, from 10am-5 pm. This self guided tour will feature 11 unique local farms and gardens in and around the Otter Point area.
If you want to get more involved, you can contact Keeley Nixon if you’d like to volunteer at one of the venues to work with a grower, meet and greet people, and help with any set up/take down. This is a great chance to connect with more people in the community and show you support for our farmers.
Tickets are $10 (free for ages 15 and under) and are on sale now in Sooke at Shoppers Drug Mart, Peoples Drug Mart, Double D Gardens, Westburn Garden Centre, and Sooke Country Market (Saturdays). In Victoria, tickets are available at all Dig This locations and Moss St Market (Saturdays). Free for ages 15 and under. Tickets are also available in Sooke on the tour day at Shoppers Drug Mart and Peoples Drug Mart. Contact the Sooke Food CHI for more information.
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A pair of farms and an old dog
Spent some time at Haliburton Farm this week, collecting my latest CSA basket and seeing what was up with the farmstand and the farmers. “What a beautiful farmstand!” said one woman, visiting for the first time. And she was right: it’s in its glory just now.
And the veg box bounty reflects that too:
While elsewhere on the farm, the bees are buzzing, the weeds are growing, and the potatoes need hilling with a nice bit of straw.
Last night’s COG-VI farm tour was in Metchosin, at Sweet Earth Farms, where farmer Ian King explained how his mobile greenhouses can be pulled on their metal runners to help extend his seasons. We all admired his radicchio which was fortunately too bitter to interest the deer that had just broken into the field, obliging the purchase and installation of new deer fencing.
Then we got a look at the raspberries (thriving) and the strawberries (likewise) and were inspected by a couple of bold and curious ducks
unlike the rest of the flock which were young and skittish. Their duck barn boasts a custom designed water trough which sits on a mesh-covered drainage box so that their wild drinking doesn’t end up soaking the nice thick straw floor. The geese were interested and vocal; they are Pilgrim geese, an endangered species, so Ian is planning to raise goslings to try to safeguard some numbers locally.
And the final farewell goes to old Anton, who passed away today after an extremely long and joyful life, aged 15 and 3/4.
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In her latest collection, Rhona McAdam navigates the dark places of human movement through the earth and the exquisite intricacies lingering in backyard gardens and farmlands populated by insects and pollinators, all the while returning to the body, to the tune of staccato beats and the newly discovered symmetries within the human heart.
“…A beautiful, filling collection, Larder is a set of poems to read at the change of the seasons, to appreciate alongside a good meal, and to remind yourself of the beauty in everything, even the things you may not appreciate before opening McAdam’s collection….”
Rhona McAdam is a writer, poet, editor, and Registered Holistic Nutritionist with a Master’s in Food Culture from Italy and a deep-rooted passion for ecology and urban agriculture. Her work spans corporate and technical writing to poetry and creative nonfiction, often exploring the vital links between what we eat and how we live. Based in Victoria, BC, and available via Zoom, Rhona is always open to new writing commissions, readings, or workshops on nutrition and the culinary arts.































