10 Green Questions With Comedian Eric Lalor

Well thanks God for laughter. I’d be on my knees [or sold them] right now if I really listened to everything I hear.

Regarding Eric Lalor, I could not have met a finer gentleman nor a funnier man. Meet one of Dublins hardest working comics and his thoughts on gardening amongst many other topics….  pure gold!

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The GIY Rathgar Terenure Talk

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I got an email in some time ago from a friend of mine. Séan wanted me to do a talk on growing your own. He is a member of a new movement call GIY – grow it yourself – that seems to be sweeping the nation.

I had heard about GIY but I didn’t really know a vast amount of exact facts about it being honest. The talk I did was Monday, just gone, April 27th

The GIY movement was set up to encourage people to get together to share expertise in food growing.As we have become increasingly urbanised we have lost a lot of the knowledge and skills that our grandparents had in food growing, storing and cooking. GIYIreland aims to tap into our desire to reduce food miles and to produce and consume organic food by organising groups at a local level so that people can learn those old skills from each other and connect with like-minded individuals. GIY Ireland has charitable status.

As regards the group I was to speak to Séan sent me this wee note….

The Rathgar/Terenure GIY group was set up at a meeting in the Rathgar Junior School (RJS), 62 Grosvenor Road in February 2010. We have a mix of allotment growers, garden owners and those with just a balcony to grow on. Most of the group are beginners but there are some experienced members and we hope to bring in experts to share their knowledge and expertise. Our group numbers about 30-40 very enthusiastic amatuers and we would welcome more members.

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In this case [and in short] I spoke about how I used to grow plants under my bed when I was 4 all the way up to today…. and that pretty much not a whole lot has changed if you elminate 20 odd years of decking, cobble and garden design fads. In that same breath horticulture has only changed in how it is presented, packaged and sold…. the way in which it is done, for fun, shall never alter. And in those four/ five lines [compressed] that took an extremely refreshing [one member commented after] a little over 45 minutes ;)

I must admit I had just left the coombe hospital and hadn’t eaten. But the reception I got was amazing. The appreciation shown and the wee gift given and beautifully wrapped left me breathless. Sincerely, it was an absolute honour to speak to such a fine group gentleman and ladies.

The format then is that the group sit in ‘pods’ [a small group] and discuss a specific topic helping each other out with their star bit of advice. The pod I was in ended up discussing composting. I was blown away…. but as I later answered in th Q & A [the final part of the meet] everything, not living anymore must decompose – the only thing that may vary is the preparation and how you do it. As long as your smiling at the end :)

GIY Rathgar/ Terenure meet on the last Monday of the month in the RJS. For more info email: dalysmith [at] iol [dot] ie or phone Sean on [vodafone prefix]6369636

*other images of GIY talk

Irish Seed Savers, Holocaust, Slaves and Comment Removal ?

*** POST UPDATE: 29th April ’10

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Another email that came in a while ago and I almost missed…

Thank you to my source for this. I hadn’t realised, nor bothered to check the seed savers website since…. That aside this is the information I got. The wierd apology to Trevor Sargeant post was posted on my weblog in December. The email maybe was aptly titled odd end for head of anti-GM group in Ireland. I’m inclined to agree.

courtesy of the Irish Seed Savers website (who btw have removed your comment regarding that weird apology to Trevor Sargent) it can be seen that the head of GM-Free Ireland (who recently has a joint press event with Richard Corrigan at his restaurant) is quitting and moving to Geneva. Claims below he was even unable to organize seven people to form a committee (while at the same time claiming his group represents over 1 million people). Also a real classy analogy of GM policy with slavery and the Holocaust…..nice! (not)

I’ll put this entire article [straight from their website] in – just in case it  is deleted. To be honest, I wish they would stick to saving seeds and leave it at that. The [main] bit that gets on my goat is the paragraph in red.

Farewell to GM-free Ireland

Date: 1 April 2010

After 7 years co-ordinating the GM-free Ireland campaign, I will be moving permanently to Geneva on 6 April to resume my Global Vision projects. I recommend Catherine Devitt to replace me as co-ordinator (see below).

My heartfelt thanks to all of you who helped make this campaign possible so far. Keep up the good work, and look me up if every you are in Geneva.

Good luck to you Michael.
WHAT WE ACCOMPLISHED SO FAR

Thanks to our collective efforts we:

  • 2003: Launched the GM-free Ireland web site featuring daily international media coverage of GM issues and more. The site has since attracted millions of hits – including 1.2 million hits and almost 100,000 visits in the past year alone.
  • 2004: Created the GM-free Ireland Network which has since grown to include 131 institutional members representing the greatest number and broadest diversity of stakeholders of any NGO on the island of Ireland.
  • 2005: Declared over 1,000 GMO-free zones including 18 Local Authorities in the Republic and Northern Ireland, representing over 1 million citizens.
  • 2006: Prevented the world’s largest chemicals company BASF from releasing 250,000 GMO potatoes in Co. Meath in 2006. We also organised the Green Ireland Conference at Kilkenny Castle with leading GM experts from around the world.
  • 2007: Caused EU-wide embargo on US animal feed imports after we discovered illegal GM feed entering EU through Dublin port. Persuaded  Government to stop approving new GM crops, feed and food in the EU and to adopt new policy to seek to declare the island of Ireland as a GM-free crop zone.
  • 2008: Exposed Canada’s covert interference in Irish and UK policy making. Lobbied Government to introduce voluntary  GM-free label for animal produce. Lobbied the Commission and EFSA to introduce credible GMO risk assesments based on scientific peer review. Produced a strategic video interview with the former chair of EFSA, Prof Patrick Wall: We cannot force-feed EU citizens with GM food.
  • 2009: Secured new Government policy to (a) ban field trials and cultivation of all GM crops in the Republic, and (b) introduce a voluntary GM-free label to inform consumer choice and enable our farmers and food sectors to compete in the EU’s rapidly growing market for GM-free meat, fish and dairy produce.  Represented Ireland at Food and Democracy – the 5th European Conference on GMO-free Regions. Also published briefing / market survey / video:GM-free production, a unique selling point for Ireland – the food island.
  • 2010: Brought an Irish delegation to the third European conference Non-GMO labels, Quality Production and European Regional Agriculture Strategies, organised by the European GMO-free Regions Network and the EU Committee of the Regions in Brussels.
  • THROUGHOUT: Strategy co-ordination, community meetings, film screenings, workshops, seminars, expert briefings, and press conferences. Participation in Joint Oireachtas Committee meetings; ministerial meetings; lobbying Councillors, TDs, Senators and MEPs: communicating related national, EU and global developments via website and email.

CURRENT SITUATION

Despite three years in office, our current Government has still not implemented its GM-free policies with any legislation. From a European perspective, it’s obvious that Ireland systematically misses most of the opportunities for progress which the other Member States keep taking on this issue. Fine Gael aparently believes all the GM propaganda and intends to reverse the policy if it wins the next election

This is particularly worrying since the new Barroso Commission is determined to weaken EFSA’s GMO risk assessment process, and has proposed a new WTO deal to fast-track the approval of new GM crops. The EC aims to divide and conquer the Member States’ resistance by allowing countries to establish crop-specific bans – in exchange for ending the “zero tolerance” food safety policy that protects our food chain from contamination with unapproved GMOs. This move would enable new GM crops to be commercialy grown in five or six EU countries this year or next. Together with hundreds of field trials currently underway, it would effectively let the GM genie out of its bottle and end up contaminating Irish crops in perpetuity. If we let this happen, the EC will destroy Ireland’s untapped opportunity to secure a unique and extraordinarily lucrative competitive advantage – the most credible safe GM-free food brand in Europe.

The irony is that apart from ICSA, Slow Food Ireland, Euro-Toques, IOFGA and the Organic Trust, all the other organisations that claim to represent the interests of our farm and food communities – Bord Bia, Teagasc, IFA, ICMSA, the Irish Farmers Journal, the Irish Farmers Monthly – along with Fine Gael and most of our universities and media, remain Monsanto’s most vocal propagandists in this country. Can you imagine African people volunteering to board the slave ships to America, or Jews recruiting their families for the train rides to Auschwitz? Yet we Paddies lap up the biotech industry’s propaganda like pints of porter in the pub.

WHAT WE STILL NEED TO DO

We need to keep lobbying the Government and building public awareness until we secure legislation to prohibit all field trials and cultivation of GM crops and to define standards for the voluntary GM-free label. We also need to ensure that the Northern Ireland Assembly does likewise, at least by banning GM crops.

It is now up to you – the 131 institutional members of the GM-free Ireland Network – to take responsibility to achieve these goals.

This requires a co-ordinated strategy and in-depth understanding of the related scientific, health, agronomic, environmental, social, economic, food security and political issues.

I cannot over-emphasise the need for a campaign co-ordinator to hold our campaign together. This is a full-time job involving stakeholder liaison, consumer enquiries, graphic design, website management, fund-raising, public awareness, media outreach, participation in related international conferences, and political lobbying in Dublin and Brussels. This person should be multi-skilled, competent, balsy, pro-active, independent, without ties (or apparent ties) to any particular conventional or organic stakeholder group or to any political party, and be trusted with carte blanche to act on your collective behalf. Our strength lies in our diversity – remember we have by far the greatest number and broadest diversity of stakeholders of any NGO on the island of Ireland! If you were really determined to achieve a final victory, the campaign would require a full-time staff of five or six people to liaise with key stakeholders including consumers, retailers, farmers and food producers, the hospitality industry, local authorities, government and the EC.

FUNDING

In 2008 I proposed that we set up a registered charity to (a) employ and train someone to replace me as co-ordinator, (b) continue funding our networking / public awareness work, and (c) raise funds to hire additional staff. Forming a registered charity in Ireland requires 7 trustees or directors whose minimum commitment is to attend an AGM once a year. They can then open a bank account, and employ others to get on with the job. I found 6 people from our key stakeholder groups who said they were willing to serve (in their personal capacities) on this board of directors, and identified 1 other good prospect.  But unfortunately in 2009, one of them took it upon herself to organise a series of meetings with the others from which I was excluded. They then abandoned our plan to form the charity, and proposed instead to form a GM-free business alliance that, so far, has failed to materialise.

We Irish seem to have a cultural inability to collaborate towards common goals. Many of us fear sticking our head above the parapet, and fail to understand that democracy requires engaged citizens. That’s one reason why I am looking forward to living in Switzerland, where direct democracy ensures a moratorium on GM crops and a GM animal feed-free food chain.

CATHERINE DEVITT

I recommend Catherine Devitt to replace me. She is a young independent social research consultant with a first class honours masters degree in sociology from UCD. Her thesis focussed on Ireland’s organic farming movement. She has collaborated on various projects with UCD, Teagasc, Irish Aid, Transition Towns Ireland, An Tairseach ecology centre, and Grow it Yourself Ireland. She has a keen interest in urban agriculture and has been involved in GM-free Ireland since its inception, helping our successful campaign against the introduction of BASF’s GM potatoes in 2006.  She can be reached on

Catherine would require a salary + expenses to take on this job in collaboration with interested and committed individuals. She is willing, in the meantime, to donate a few hours per week as a contact person for the network.

**** POST UPDATE 29th April 2010:

  • I put this out on twitter to see if I could get a response

  • In fairness… Dan Boyle replied. The first to do so…

  • I replied…

  • And in fairness to Dan he replied back…

  • So I passed the notes on. This is the response I got….

in regards to Dan Boyle not knowing who the Green Party person is, it is clearly written on the GLOBAL VISION website that their director is Neil McCann who ran for the Greens on several occasions.

Also whatever happened the money collected by GMFREEIreland?…..no accounts were ever published and the company collecting the money since 2008 didn’t actually exist? Did An Taisce keep the cash they collected?

In addition, Dan Boyle might want to explain how Global Vision got Irish Government contracts and why the Irish Government are listed as a client on the website of the company? Also did Michael O’Callaghen ever give donations to the Green party? Has he actually skipped the country to Switzerland?

*note this is not a dig at Dan Boyle. I like the guy personally. Twice or more I have asked his time and got. Twice he was the only one to stand up. In the context of the original piece and his [via online] repsonses were going in anyway. That said, A Source decided to respond further to.

Eating Chicken Makes You Gay And Bald

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I almost missed this one….. but just getting around to my emails now.

Bolivian President Evo Morales has claimed that Europeans are bald due to the food they eat while “indigenous peoples are not bald, because they eat other things”. Going further. He also claimed hormones in chicken (never used in the EU) cause homosexuality as men who eat such chickens “have deviations”

One of my sources commented ……seems President Morales has never met a gay bald aboriginal person, what a shame and also queried would Richard Corrigan being going here next…. ?

Who knows maybe Peter Mulryan will send me another email ;)

follow ons:

Irish Daily Mail – Free Seeds Collection

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Friday just passed I got a most welcome press release in my post box. I’ve a lot to be doing at this moment, but I thought this a happy and deserved post.

From April 24th and for 6 days following readers of The Irish Dail Mail will receive a free packet of Suttons seeds. The selection includes pansies, poppies, snapdragons, sweet williams and cornflowers. The press release says they are worth about €20. I would have thought more to be honest.

Apparently some gardener called Gerry Daly :lol: [Hiya Gerry, gardeners banter eh!!] who I know loves to read this weblog….. will write a nice article to explain all the how to do’s. No point in me doing so then….  ;)

Humour aside, it’s a great offer. A happy one and one of the best I’ve seen this year. Well done to The Irish [give me a job ;) ] Daily Mail.

*thanks Deborah

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