Harvest Supper

FREE HARVEST SUPPER of LOCALLY GROWN FOOD
Know Where Your Food Comes From

Sunday, August 17, 2008
5:00 - 7:00 p.m.
Town Common/Court Square, Greenfield MA
(Rain Location: Second Congregational Church)

Home Farms Exhibitors Menu Press Room Resources


2008 Free Harvest Supper

We NEED volunteers (and some organizers too). Email or call us (413-773-5029 x3) to help out.

In 2007, we were selected in the NCGA “Cooperating for Community” contest. See all nominees and their stories on the Cooperative Grocer site.

Thanks to everyone who helped, donated, and attended the 2007 Free Harvest Supper. Over $2000 was raised for the Center for Self-Reliance Farmers’ Market Coupon project!!

Stay tuned for other Eat Local events including the Winter Fare in 2008.

Also visit our resources section for more information on eating local.


Entertainment

  • Roland and Kate Lapierre 4:30-5pm
  • Michael Nix 5:00 pm - 6:00 pm
  • Katie Clarke and Charlie Conant 6:00 pm- 7:00 pm
  • Shenandoah Hoops
  • Vi Walker, clown
  • Face painters

Really, Really Free Market

This market will be a place where gardeners or farmers can donate surplus veggies, fruit, or flowers and those in need of produce can pick it up for free. Garden produce drop off is from 4 to 5:30 pm on August 17th. Pick-up will be from 5 to 7 pm during the dinner. Gardeners donating produce are welcome to stay for the Free Harvest Supper.

Contact Information for Free Harvest Supper
(413) 773-5029 x3
info@freeharvestsupper.org

Contact Information for Greenfield Farmers’ Market Coupon Project
(413) 773-5029

Donations to the coupon project are welcomed. Send checks made out to Center for Self-Reliance to Dino Schnelle, Center for Self-Reliance Food Pantry, 3½ Osgood Street, Greenfield, MA 01301. Please note “Free Harvest Supper” on the check. For more information about the Center for Self-Reliance and the Greenfield Farmers’ Market Coupon project, please call (413) 773-5029.

The 2007 Free Harvest Supper was a great success!! Over $2,000 is available for the Farmer’s Market Coupon Project!!

Photos from 2007 supper.

Photos from 2006 Supper


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Restaurants Serve Up Local Fare This Month

On Thursday August, 21st, talented area chefs will celebrate locally grown foods during the 5th annual Local Hero Restaurant Celebration organized by CISA.

Participating restaurants will showcase dishes featuring locally grown fruits, vegetables, meats and cheeses. Show your support for local agriculture and good food by dining out at one of the 34 Local Hero restaurants on August 21st. A sampling of the restaurant specials include:

  • Steamed Australis barramundi with black bean sauce and local bok choy at The Great Wall in Florence.
  • Local corn chowder with Pekarski Sausage smoked bacon at Sienna.
  • Local Hero pizza topped with basil pesto, Hillside Gardens organic basil, walla walla onions, and tomatoes at Hillside Pizza.
  • Scallops con pesca-pan-seared sea scallops with grilled fresh peaches and a peach, cognac cream sauce served over roasted fresh Hadley corn risotto with fresh basil and parmigiano at Carmelina’s.
  • Steamed Black Sheep Farm haricot verts with olive oil and parmesan cheese to go from The Black Sheep Deli or eat the Black Sheep Farm ratatouille with farm fresh tomatoes, eggplant, peppers and onions from The Black Sheep Deli.
  • Roasted beet and arugula salad with Sangha Farm goat cheese, spiced pecans, and sherry vinaigrette followed by your choice of roasted duck breast with fresh local peach chutney or sautéed ahi tuna nicoise with farm fresh haricot verts, roasted fresh red peppers and baby fingerlings at Butternuts Eatery.
  • Roasted Veggie Platter - vegetables from Riverland Farm including roasted zucchini, summer squash, beets and onions, seasoned with a balsamic dressing and a little goat cheese from Goats Rising Farm served with a baked ricotta cheese spread and grilled foccaccia bread at Bridgeside Grille.
  • Maple Glazed Outlook Farm Pork Chops stuffed with smoked cheddar and apple stuffing, with a side of freestone peach salsa and sides of Hatfield country style mashed potatoes, Native sweet corn, and seasonal vegetables from Union Station Restaurant.

“Our Local Hero restaurants serve the best tasting, freshest foods around. And at the same time, they support the local economy and help our farmers build stronger businesses,” says Local Hero Membership Coordinator Devon Whitney- Deal. “Everyone dining at a Local Hero restaurant will eat well and feel good about supporting one of our area’s most precious resources: our farms.”

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How Local can you Go?

Starting August 15th, Northampton’s River Valley Market will be hosting a month-long “Eat Local America” challenge, along with seventy other co-ops across the country, to encourage community members to utilize more local foods in their diet. The local food celebration will feature sales on local products, recipe cards, and cooking demos throughout the challenge. The Co-op will be featuring local foods beyond the produce department including milk, fresh meat, fish, cheese, wine, and even prepared foods in the Quarry Cafe.

Community members are welcome to sign-up for the challenge at the customer service desk at the Co-op. Participants can choose their level of involvement and the duration of their commitment-from local produce for a particular meal to 100% of their diet for a month. Each day, local prizes will be awarded to challenge participants by raffle, including one final grand prize. The sooner you sign up, the more chances you have to win prizes. So, if you want to challenge your regular purchasing patterns, consider taking this opportunity to test out your local food savy with the Co-op’s support.

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LOCAL FOOD BRINGS FAMILIES TOGETHER

Local Food at the Free Harvest Supper in Deerfield 2007 - (c) Sienna Wildfield

Local Food at the Free Harvest Supper in Deerfield 2007

Last year my family went to the Greenfield Free Harvest Supper and had a wonderful time! This annual dinner is a community celebration of local agriculture where families and friends gather to share a delicious locally grown/produced meal. Last year the community atmosphere was rich as folks gathered together to share and celebrate. They served local produce from farms all around Western Massachusetts; Cape Cod salt from North Falmouth, local ice cream from Greenfield, local goat cheese from Colrain, local turkey from Wendell, organic bread from Haydenville, and much more. And there was even enough for seconds! There was also great entertainment, including music and hula hoops, face painting and a free market. It was truly a special celebration.

The good news is this community event is happening again on Sunday at the Town Common. Dinner is served at 5pm, but I recommend getting there a little earlier if you’re bringing the family. And be sure to bring a place serving to cut back on unnecessary trash. If you want more information visit www.freeharvestsupper.org.

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firewalk to benefit Circles for Peace- Burlington Earth Clock

On August 9th there will be a firewalk seminar to benefit Circles for Peace and the construction of a human sundial inside the (already existing) Earth clock. Info about the Earth clock can be found at: www.circlesforpeace.org.
The firewalk is preceded by a 3 hour prep seminar. Please see attached flyer for registration and contact info. Hope you can make it - please note - attending a firewalk is an incredibly meaningful and transformative experience Regardless of whether or not you walk.

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Circle of All Nations Gatherings

www.circleofallnations.com

GRANDFATHER WILLIAM COMMANDA’S
ANNUAL INTERNATIONAL
CIRCLE OF ALL NATIONS SPIRITUAL GATHERING

AUGUST 1, 2 AND 3, 2008
KITIGAN ZIBI ANISHINABEG

Grandfather William Commanda is pleased to invite you to his annual international spiritual gathering at his home at Bitobi Lake, Kitizan Zibi Reserve, Maniwaki, Quebec.
The key themes that Grandfather advances at the Gathering, through a series of presentations and workshops, are
* Indigenous Wisdom, Respect for Mother Earth and Healing,
* Racial Harmony,
* Social Justice and
* Peace Building.

The Special Focus for 2008 is COMMUNICATIONS!

Come prepared to share your own story about why the gathering is important to you – we really want to document the nature of this transformative experience, and need your help to do this!

The Gathering provides opportunity for community development, networking, individual and communal healing, spiritual growth and creativity. Its key objectives are to
* Share the wisdom, knowledge and sacred teachings of Indigenous Elders, Spiritual leaders and Medicine people
* Promote discussion on a range of topics – justice, poverty, aids, racism, spirituality, peace, leadership, healing
* Raise awareness about our relationship with Mother Earth
* Facilitate individual healing, spiritual growth and creativity
* Foster positive inter personal relationships and harmony
* Celebrate life, and build community

A special priority is the vision for ASINABKA, the Sacred Chaudière Site, including the Healing and Peace Building Centre on Victoria Island.
The daily activity plan is simple and comprehensive:
* Sunrise pipe ceremonies,
* Morning presentations by special guests,
* Afternoon workshops, sweat lodge and other healing ceremonies and creative activities,
* Late afternoon time for personal reflection,
* Evening drumming, dancing and socialization.
On Saturday evening, all participate in a community feast, and on Sunday afternoon, in a traditional Giveaway Ceremony.
Grandfather encourages participants to engage in all the activities; the weekend is an unprecedented blueprint for experiencing the timeless wisdom of the Sacred Medicine Wheel, with extraordinary opportunity for emotional, physical, spiritual and mental development.
The Gathering is a very special event that engenders a spirit of generosity and generates harmony, peace and unity.
ALL ARE WELCOME!
DETAILS:
Date
* 1,2, and 3 August, 2008, commencing at sunrise on Friday, and closing on Sunday afternoon
* Camp set up commences on Thursday

Location
* Grandfather Commanda’s residence, 231 Pitobig Mikan, Kitigan Zibi Anishinabeg, Maniwaki, Quebec, J9E 3B1.
* Camping space is available; there are also hotels and motels in town.
* Please bring your own tents, sleeping bags, personal supplies, equipment and food.
* There are outdoor toilet facilities and bathing at the lakeshore shower

Spaces
* Parking – special parking lot across the road
* Camping – north of homes, alongside the road
* Security – entrance and elsewhere
* Communications and Registration – beside Grandfather’s shop
* Vendor for fast food – beside Grandfather’s shop
* Kitchen, Elders’ Eating Space – North of Grandfather’s home
* Sweat Lodge Ceremonies – East of Grandfather’s home
* Sacred Fire, Sunrise Ceremonies, Meditation – Sacred Point
* Morning presentations – Lakeside Arbor
* Children’s activities, Drumming, Giveaway – Round Arbor
* Workshops – Lodge, Lakeside Arbor, grounds

Ceremonies
* Please respect the expectations of the Fire Keeper, Elders, Lodge Keepers, ceremonial leaders and security, with respect to individual protocols – tobacco offerings, dress (especially for the sweat lodges: cotton, long gowns or loose cotton skirts and t-shirts for women, shorts for men), moon cycles, etc.

Considerations
PLEASE: NO DRUGS; NO ALCOHOL; NO PETS.
* This in an indigenous spiritual gathering, rather than a camping outing, and ALL ARE ASKED TO DRESS WITH RESPECT AND DECORUM THROUGHOUT.
* Please take special care with dress, noise and conduct in the area designated for the sacred ceremonies - East of Grandfather’s home
* Children are welcome and some activities are organized for them; however, THERE IS NO BABYSITTING, AND PARENTS ARE FULLY RESPONSIBLE FOR THEIR CHILDREN AT ALL TIMES.
* NO BOATING is permitted.
* NO SWIMMING into the lake is permitted; PARENTS ARE RESPONSIBLE FOR THE SUPERVISION OF CHILDREN AT THE WATER’S EDGE.
* Donations for the Giveaway and Community Feast are welcomed.
* Please be respectful of the communities at Kitign Zibi and Maniwaki

Volunteers
* Grandfather Commanda hosts this Gathering in its entirety; his friends volunteer to prepare for the Gathering and to clean up afterwards, and to take care of most needs during the Gathering.
* ADDITIONAL VOLUNTEERS ARE NEEDED THROUGHOUT THE GATHERING to help with security duties, food preparation and cleanup, assisting elders, facilities cleanup etc. Please be generous with your support: sign up on the Volunteer List in the Communications Booth upon registration.

Directions:
From Ottawa and points South:
* Go North to Maniwaki
* As you approach Maniwaki and enter the 50 km per hour zone you will see a flashing traffic light in front of a Freshmart Grocery store on the right.
* There is a “T” shaped intersection there, turn left, go down that road, cross a small bridge and continue past a sharp curve until you come to another “T” shaped intersection located just before a children’s playground equipped with colourful plastic slides and castle like structures.
* There is a stop sign there, make your stop and turn left.
* Stay on that road for approximately 4 kilometres.
* You will see the Gathering grounds on your left as you drive along a lake on your left.

From Montreal and points East:
* It is much shorter to come through Grand Remous.
* Approximatly 20 KM past Mont Laurier, there is a small town called Grand Remous.
* Just past the town bridge, there is a flashing traffic light indicating the intersection to Maniwaki.
* Turn left to go to Maniwaki.
* Drive South through Maniwaki until you get to a flashing trafic light in front of a Freshmart grocery store.
* Turn right at that intersection, go down that road, cross a small bridge and continue past a sharp curve until you come to another “T” shaped intersection located just before a children’s playground equipped with colourful plastic slides and castle like structures.
* There is a stop sign there, make your stop and turn left.
* Stay on that road for approximately 4 kilometres.
* You will see the Gathering grounds on you left as you drive along a lake on your left.

From points West:
* It is shortest to come trough Pembrook and cross the Ottawa River to the Province of Quebec.
* Follow direction to Cambell’s Bay and from there turn North West to Kazabazua.
* From Kazabazua, turn left to Maniwaki.
* As you approach Maniwaki and enter the 50 km per hour zone you will traffic light in front of a Freshmart Grocery store on the right.
* There is a “T” shaped intersection there ,turn left, go down that road, cross a small bridge and continue past a sharp curve until you come to another “T” shaped intersection located just before a children’s playground equipped with colourful plastic slides and castle like structures.
* There is a stop sign there, make your stop and turn left.
* Stay on that road for approximately 4 kilometres. You will see the Gathering grounds on your left as you drive along a lake on your left.
MOST PEOPLE CAMP. POSSIBLE ACCOMMODATION OPTIONS WITH RESTAURANTS IN THE TOWN OF MANIWAKI INCLUDE:
CHATEAU LOGUE - 1-818-449-4848;
AUBERGE DU DRAVEUR – www.aubergedraveur.qc.ca; 1-819-449-7022;
AUBERGE DE LA DESERT – 1-819-449-1213
FOR MORE INFORMATION, PLEASE WRITE TO US AT circleofallnations@sympatico.ca or call 819-449-2668 or 613-599-8385

DAILY AGENDA
ELDER WILLIAM COMMANDA’S
CIRCLE OF ALL NATIONS
ANNUAL SPIRITUAL GATHERING
AUGUST 1 - 3, 2008
Special Focus - Communications
A special priority is the vision for ASINABKA, the Sacred Chaudière Site, including the Healing and Peace Building Centre on Victoria Island.
5.30 – 7.30 SUNRISE CEREMONY
7.30 – 9.00 BREAKFAST
9.00 – 12.00 DAILY PRESENTATIONS AND TEACHINGS
12.00 - 1.30 LUNCH
1.30 - 4.00 SMALL TALKING CIRCLES – LIST AT COMMUNICATIONS BOOTH*
SWEAT LODGE CEREMONIES COMMENCE
4.00 - 8.00 INDIVIDUAL ACTIVITIES, DINNER
8.00 - 11.00 DRUMMING, DANCING AND SOCIALIZATION

NOTE SATURDAY 6.00 PM – COMMUNITY FEAST
SUNDAY 1.30 PM - CLOSING CEREMONIES, GIVEAWAY
*Circle of All Nations volunteers and other interested parties will be coordinating small talking circles on various topics of interest: Asinabka, The Sacred Chaudière Site, including the Victoria Island Healing Centre Project, Circle of All Nations, Water Stewardship;women’s issues; French talking circle; conflict resolution; nutrition; health, environmental issues etc. Participants are encouraged to participate, share or coordinate circles on topics of interest to themselves and others on the grounds. You are requested to communicate your interest in this regard to volunteers at the communications booth upon registration .
Circle of All Nations volunteers thank Grandfather William Commanda and his family for sharing their home with us and we commit on behalf of all participants to honour and respect this generosity.

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Wabanaki Confederacy ~ Penobscot History

The Penobscot (Panawahpskek) are a sovereign people indigenous to what is now Maritime Canada and the northeastern United States, particularly Maine. They were and are significant participants in the historical and present Wabanaki Confederacy, along with the Passamaquoddy, Maliseet and Mi’kmaq nations.

The word “Penobscot” originates from a mispronunciation of their name “Penawapskewi.” The word means “rocky part” or “descending ledges” and originally referred to the portion of the Penobscot River between Old Town and Bangor. The tribe has adopted the name Penobscot Indian Nation.

Penobscot is also the name of the dialect of Eastern Abenaki (an Algonquian language) that the Penobscot people speak.

The Penobscot Indian Island Reservation is surrounded by the waters of the Penobscot River, in Penobscot County, Maine. This large river runs from their sacred mountain to the north, Mt. Katahdin, down through the state to Penobscot Bay. It was along this river that they made seasonal relocations to the ocean for seafood, and then back inland for moose, deer, elk and bear hunting, as weather dictated.They lived in wigwams mostly.

Mount Katahdin is a sacred place for these people, and as such travel to the top of the mountain is considered taboo. It is believed that an angry god resides in Pamola Peak. Pamola is a lower god in the spiritual belief system of the Penawapskewi. Pamola was an angry god, and because of his trickster behavior, was sent to Mt. Katahdin for eternity by the power of the highest god, Gluskab.

These people have a prehistoric tie to the river, such that it long ago became a part of their identity. The name of their tribe is the name of a place on the river where they spent most of their time throughout the year, a place “where the white rocks are,” also identified as “where the river widens.”

The insignia of this tribe, evidenced in their art and design, is the fiddlehead, in this case an immature frond of the Ostrich fern (Matteuccia struthiopteris L.) that grows along the banks of the Penobscot River. Fiddleheads of this fern are a delicacy and are one of the first “blooms” appearing after the harsh winters of the region, thus considered a gift from a spiritual higher power: a reward for having survived the winter.

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NEPC Convergance 2008

2008 Northeast Permaculture Summer Gathering: Holyoke,MA

July 4-6th

The Western Massachusetts Permaculture Guild will host the 2008 Summer Permaculture Gathering July 4-6 in Holyoke, MA at Nuestras Raices, Tierra de Opportunidades Farm. Sliding scale of $45 - $100 for camping and meals. For more information as it develops, please refer to this site.
To find out more about our host site, visit: http://www.nuestras-raices.org

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Western Mass Restaraunts Who Buy Local

List and map of WM restaurants who buy locally:

www.farmfresh.org/food/restaurants.php?zip=01373

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CISA link to local product/resources

Link to CISA’s farm product locator:

http://www.farmfresh.org/?zip=01373

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