Ethical Pulse - from the Ethical Junction membership

Posts Tagged ‘Food’

Habitat Aid Press Release : New range of exotic bee friendly trees

Monday, August 17th, 2009

www.habitataid.co.uk

Habitat Aid is launching a small range of bee friendly non-native trees
to complement the native trees and nectar plants we are already selling.
These trees are recommended by the
British Beekeepers’ Association, except for one specifically for
bumblebees.

This
is part of the continuing expansion of our product line
in support of charities working to protect and promote biodiversity in
the UK. We are donating half of our profit from the sale of these trees to the Laboratory of Apiculture and
Social Insects at the University of Sussex. This is an important cause, and as
a beekeeper myself particularly close to my
heart. 

You can
find the trees at http://www.habitataid.co.uk/acatalog/exotic_trees.html and more information from the contact details
below. 
Nick Mann
Habitat Aid
Phone: 01749 812775
Fax: 01749 812971
 
www.habitataid.co.uk

In the media – Yvonne Bishop-Weston from Foods for Life

Friday, August 14th, 2009

Yvonne has been busy with the media in recent weeks

RADIO
Yvonne did a radio tour last week on healthier eating for safer driving – she appeared on Radio Stations from Moray Firth in Inverness in the north  down to Southampton and Portsmouth – literally coast to coast

BBC
Yvonne appears in one of the later episodes of the current BBC series on bad parenting “Young, dumb and living off mum” – excruciatingly bad masochistic viewing for any parent.

ITV
Yvonne was also recruited to contribute to a Grenada
series on celebrities – each week they take a female celebrity and
politely pull her life apart and put it under a magnifying glass to
dispel the myth that success is just a question of being in the right
place at the right time and a look at the pressures of society on
appearance.

MAGAZINES
Yvonne will be appearing in a
number of magazines in the coming months. Harpers Bazaar are running an
article on the UK’s top therapists that Yvonne features in.

INTERNET
Yvonne
is booked to make a number of guest appearances on high profile
interactive websites as part of a series of webchats on fertility and
parenting.

Other Projects
Yvonne is also part of the talented team on the Fat Attack programme  – www.fatattack.co.uk

Foods for Life www.foodsforlife.org.uk – Tel 08712884642

Seasalt Summer Sale

Monday, August 10th, 2009

Pick-Your-Own

Monday, August 10th, 2009

Having munched their way through the blackcurrants growing in their own tiny back garden, Mr and Mrs Everybody decided to go foraging at a local Pick-your-Own.  As usual, Mrs Everybody likes to relate our behaviour to our evolution.

For the last 2.5 million years human ancestors have collected plant foods, including seeds, flowers, leaves, roots, bark, algae, as well as animals and insects. Hunter-gatherers tend to feast on foods as they become ripe in the season, as well as to a limited extent collect food for preservation for the lean winter months. Since our ancestors began to use fire some 1.7 million years ago, low tech preservation techniques such as drying and smoking were undoubtedly practised. Food could also be sun dried or frozen where the climate allows, and these preservation techniques can also occur naturally as well. Berries and nuts have always remained an important winter food because they are easy to preserve and they are classed among the super foods.

For us urban dwellers, who must for the most part content ourselves
with foraging in shops, 90% of the fresh berries we buy are imported,
although they easily grow in the UK through the summer and autumn.
While the berries in supermarkets may look remarkably fresh after their
several thousand mile air journey, they may have been treated with
radiation, gasses and other undeclared mystery ingredients and
packaging such as MAP – modified atmosphere packaging, to retain the
appearance of freshness.

Once a fruit is picked it continues to
respire as it still lives. The idea is that the tasty and wholesome
fruit containing the living seed is eaten by a hungry animal. The
little seeds pass through the intestinal tract more or less intact. The
fruit eater effectively transports the seed in their body away from the
parent plant, and eventually the still living seed may have a chance to
grow into a new plant elsewhere. In this respect, fruit eaters and
fruiting plants have evolved a symbiotic relationship. The fruits
provide nutrition and the fruit eater helps the plant to spread through
the habitat.

Seeds will not germinate easily nor grow well from
irradiated foods, because many of the enzymes and vitamins are
destroyed. Although irradiated food looks fresh, it has the
impoverished nutritional value of cooked food. By eating irradiated
foods we are breaking our deal with nature and robbing ourselves of
nutrition.

Plants should be eaten while they are still truly
fresh and alive and while they are in season, or naturally preserved.
With so much information placed on food packaging, it is still
surprising that fresh produce is not labelled with something useful -
such as the date it was harvested and with the post harvest treatment
processes. This would allow the consumer to make sensible choices about
the real freshness and authenticity of that food.

When you
pick-your-own, you know that the fruit is ripe, fresh and untreated,
although I have not been able to locate an organic pick-your-own around
here. By picking your own berries you can save about 75% on the cost of
the supermarket prices, gathering enough fruit to enjoy straight away
and some to store for later use. While berries are for most of us
considered a luxury, in the past they were recognised as an essential
food.

We have already frozen about 5kg of red currants,
blackcurrant and tayberries, giving a 100g serving for 50 days. This
will provide a real boon across the darkest winter months, when
fortunately the oranges will also be in season. It was easy to freeze
and bag 5 kilos of fruit on the same day as we picked them.

Fitting
in with our evolution, berries should be part of our minimum 5-a-day.
As fresh berries are available in the UK from June to October, we will
need to store a lot more for the winter – raspberries, tayberries,
blackberries and field strawberries will be available through August
and we will definitely fulfil our foraging needs again next month.
Unfortunately my freezer is pretty full already and I don’t own a chest
freezer, so we won’t be able to store all the fresh fruit we would
like. As I write, millions of berries are dangling on trees waiting to
be picked and eaten.

Going to do pick-you-own for the first
time? First find a local pick-your-own. This website is a good starting
point. Go on click it! http://www.pickyourownfarms.org.uk/

    *  Telephone the pick-your-own site beforehand to check what is in season, opening hours, regulations etc.
    * Take your family, especially children and friends – in the past foraging was a collective activity.
    * Wear sensible shoes because the ground is uneven and either old clothes, or dark clothes to prevent staining.
   
* At some pick-your-owns you can take your own containers, if not you
will need to buy some empty punnets at the site. The containers should
not be too deep or the delicate fruits will be squashed.
    * While
it is normally regarded as acceptable to taste one or two fruits while
picking, please don’t feast in the fields. Pay for everything you pick
first.
    * Be prepared to process your fruit once you arrive home.
Either eat the fruit straight away, or freeze it, sun dry it, or use it
in recipes while the fruit is at its optimum freshness.
    * Take
some volcanically formed alum crystal with you. If you get bitten by an
insect or scratched by thorns, wet the affected area with saliva and
rub the crystal around and over the area for a minute or so to kill
microbes and help the area to return to normal sooner. Click here to
buy 3 alum crystals.

    * Make plans to return later in the year as new produce becomes available.
    * Be prepared for changes in the weather.
    * Your tips for novice gatherers?

Swop2Shop Launches

Tuesday, July 28th, 2009

Swop2Shop is an exciting new website
providing its members with a platform to swop their clothes and
accessories between each other in a safe and trustworthy environment.

Selected brands from High Street to
Designer are listed and ready to swop.

NO AUCTIONS, NO LISTING FEES, NO CASH,
JUST POINTS

With a Swop2Shop account you can collect
points, through transactions, incentives and generous rewards for
leaving feedback.

Using a points based system to value your
items leaves you in complete control.

FREE TO REGISTER, FREE TO VIEW, FREE TO
LIST, FREE TO SWOP

LIST IT:
Photograph and List your item.

SWOP IT:
A member bags your listing, your points are banked once the item is
marked as posted. No need for cash. Your points build up and allow
you to trade on the Swop2Shop site.

WEAR IT:
Get rid of the clothes you don’t wear and replace them for ones
that you do, all for Free!

Swop2Shop allows a constant re-cycling of
clothes and accessories that enables you to have that enviable EVER
CHANGING WARDROBE .If you don’t have enough points for that little
black dress or designer handbag then buy more online. Treat a friend
to a gift voucher and make their day.

Guilt Free Shopping all the way!

FREE TO REGISTER, FREE TO LIST, FREE TO
VIEW, FREE TO SWOP

With NO Auctions you can buy what you
see, no need to wait. If your looking to buy something different for
that Saturday party but have nothing to list, worry not-just buy your
points on the website .

BAG IT, WEAR IT, LIST IT !

THINK SWOP WITH AN ‘O’ BECAUSE
WE’RE ONLINE !

To be part of Swop2Shop or for further
information please go to www.swop2shop.co.uk

Swop2Shop has issued this release. For
further information please contact

Kathryn Jenkins on 07545493841, email
kathryn@swop2shop.co.uk

About Us

Ever increasing listing fees on existing
online sites along with a credit crunch market resulted in the birth
of Swop2Shop. Buying that new dress for a party was just not within
the budget anymore so we began to swop clothes amongst our group of
friends. Sharing a designer handbag or swopping a dress for a pair of
trousers and a top became the solution, eliminating the need for cash
and guilty feelings. Swop2Shop was launched. Swop2Shop has plans to
launch further sites where points can be traded. All points will be
tradable within all Swop2Shop sites.

Swop2Shop Classics, Trends and now
Swop2Shop Kids

Incognito on Dragon's Den

Monday, July 27th, 2009

Howard from Incognito wrote to Ethical Junction last week to alert us to their Dragons Den episode which will be broadcast this Wednesday. Here is what he said…

“I am writing to let you know the date Patricia and I are being broadcast. Please understand that we were cross-examined by the Dragons for over an hour and a half. We both felt that we left the Den with our honesty, dignity and integrity intact. However, under the
professional editing ability of the editors virtually anything is
possible -they even edit mid-sentence! We don’t know how it’s going to
come across, but we do know that in all probability it will be a far
cry from reality, for the most part that is the nature of television.
We are entertainment
fodder and in return we get our message across to millions.

Speaking of which, with all the publicity (in the press as well as
on TV) coupled with this time of the year when there are many insects
around, we will inevitably sell out of most of our products. We are
also moving manufacturing of the spray to the UK where the moisturiser
is already made. We have had too many problems with our existing set
up. So, if you rely on any of our products or are going to need them in
the next couple of months, then do purchase them now before the program
is aired on the this Wednesday at 9 pm on BBC 2 or you can catch it
afterwards on BBC iPlayer. Enjoy!

We have made sizable donations throughout the year to all sorts of
non-profit organisations and for each mosquito net that we sell we
donate one to Africa”

The Gathering – A Protect Our Waves Action

Thursday, June 11th, 2009

Surfers
Against Sewage’s (SAS) new campaign Protect Our Waves (POW) campaign is
having its first action, The Gathering, and we need you to get
involved! Simply turn up to Kimmeridge Bay with your wetsuit and board
at 10am on Saturday the 20th of June, International Surfing Day and
show the MoD how important waves are to surfers and waveriders. This is
your chance to be an active part of a solution-based campaign
protecting waves.

The
Gathering will be a mass paddle out at Kimmeridge to demonstrate how
significant and passionate the UK’s surfing and wave-riding communities
are, not least local Bournemouth and Dorset surfers. Winning this
campaign will set a strong precedent for protection of all waves and
all waveriders’ rights to access them, so all surfers have a vested
interest! The Gathering will form the foundations for the Broadbench
campaign and we need the foundations to be as strong as possible. We
need you to attend!

 

Broadbench is a quality wave in
Kimmeridge Bay, described by many as one of Britain’s best.
Unfortunately it falls right on the outer boundary of a MoD firing
range. Obviously SAS are not asking the MoD to reduce their use of this
important firing range. However, there is a compromise that will ensure
surfers and waveriders can have 100% access to Broadbench without
impacting on the MOD’s full use of the firing range.

We
are calling on the MoD to revert to a previous firing station, changing
where they fire from. This will in turn change the direction of their
firing and leave Broadbench outside the boundary of the firing range.
Leaving surfers and waveriders with 100% access to Broadbench without
it impacting on the MoD in any way.

We are meeting for the
Gathering at Kimmeridge Bay 10am, Saturday the 20th of June at 10am, it
will be finished by 11.30. Please bring your wetsuit and
surfboard/windsurf/kite board/kayak etc… Parking is £4 so please car
share. It will be a fun event and your chance to be an active part of
this solution based Protect Our Waves SAS action in association with
ABBA.

For more information contact Andy Cummins on 01872 555 950 / 07711 767 548 or andy@sas.org.uk

JOIN SAS AND GET A FREE
ORGANIC RIPCURL/SAS T-SHIRT!

We’ve
a bunch of cool organic Ripcurl/SAS t-shirts to give away to new SAS
members, but it’s strictly first come, first served, so don’t miss out,
JOIN NOW.

Membership starts at just £1 a month, which
over a year is less than the cost of a new t-shirt, so what have you
got to lose? You get some new eco-threads AND help protect our waves
and waterways from the all too real threats of pollution.

Just
quote RIPCURL and your preferred 1st and 2nd choice size (S, M, L or
XL) when you order. There are 4 colours of t-shirt, Sky Blue, Optical
White, Blazing Orange and Dark Shadow, however we’re unable to
guarantee sending any particular colour.

This offer is for
new members only, but we have an exclusive competition in the Member’s
Area of the website for current members too! To win one of these
fabulous Ripcurl/SAS tees, email us the answer to the simple question
in the Member’s Area and you’ll be in with a chance of winning!
Competition closes 10am Monday 15th June.

Hull's Arthur St Trading Offers Organic Veg Box Promotion To Encourage Healthy Eating

Wednesday, June 10th, 2009

The
Arthur St Trading Co is giving a free fruit or veg box away when you
try their produce over the summer, to encourage the people of Hull to
eat healthier and feel the difference.

Hull, 5th
June 2009
– Hull based Co-operative, Arthur St Trading
Company, today announced a new incentive to help the people of Hull to
eat healthier and more local, and generate awareness of organic growers
in Yorkshire. The promotion is designed to challenge the often common
belief that organic or local food is no tastier than non-organic, and
promote the fact that people tend to feel better and healthier if they
prepare and eat more fresh fruit and vegetables.

 A promotion is
available now at www.arthursorganics.com
until 31st August 2009. Customers receive a free fourth veg box when
they buy three by 31st August 2009.

The company, that
was among the final candidates at the Outstanding Young Persons Awards
2008 for their achievement in ethical leadership, reinvests all profits
back in to the co-op and has a passion for sustainability. Their
approach supports local and organic farming, which avoids the use of
pesticides, and helps the environment.

Arthur St Trading
Company Director, Graham Brooks said “There is still a lot of news
around at the moment surrounding the credit crunch, and an endless
promotion of cheap food from the supermarkets. Our theory is that
eating healthier is a simple change you can make in your life to feel
better!. Research from the Soil Association has shown people who do buy
some organic produce are not cutting back on un-processed organic food,
but are tending to cut back on leisure spending and ready-meal /
prepared products. This is a strong indicator that they FEEL the
difference by eating organic, and so we believe that your quality of
life can be better with a fresher more organic diet.”

The Soil
Association reported this year that although sales are down overall,
consumers are getting smarter and saving money by cooking from scratch
and cutting waste. Their research shows that over a quarter of
customers that don’t currently buy organic ‘would like to know more
about organic products than they do’.

Alison Wileman,
Interactive Marketer for Arthur St Trading said “To me this statement
illustrates how powerful the media can be. There is so much conflict
and debate about organics, it’s confusing most consumers. The upshot is
that we care about people’s health, local businesses, and how our
customers feel. Many people believe that eating organic food can make
you feel better, and a growing body of research as cited by the Soil
Association shows that organic fruit and vegetables contain higher
levels of vitamin C and essential minerals, as well as cancer fighting
antioxidants and Omega 3. At the end of the day, if you were presented
with two lettuces, one that had been sprayed with pesticides, coated
with chemicals to make it last longer, and travelled quite a few
hundred miles, compared with one that has been grown in Yorkshire using
naturally occurring substances or traditional methods used for
centuries, which one would you choose?. We’re just asking people to
actually taste the food, and see if they can tell the difference”.

Arthur St Trading
Company know from some of their own customer feedback that once
customers start to eat more fresh produce, they are reluctant to
compromise by purchasing fruit and vegetables that could potentially
have been grown in artificial conditions and sprayed with a myriad of
chemicals. However for those that haven’t converted, or indeed for
those that simply cannot afford it, what is the answer?

As Graham told us
“To put it strongly, whilst we recognise that our produce is more
expensive than non-organic we do compare very well with the supermarket
organic ranges and are often much cheaper. You will usually find that
items like our salads are from down the road, whilst Tesco’s lettuces
are from Cambridgeshire. We can source some of our products very
effectively and obtain a lot of seasonal produce from local growers in
places like Rise and Nafferton. We pass those savings on to customers.
When you also add up the free delivery (instead of you taking the car,
we use a solar charged milk float for a proportion of our deliveries
where we can) and the fact that many of our products are simply not
available in the supermarkets, we feel we have a very powerful
offering.

On another note,
we are very mindful of those families that are struggling financially,
and we are hoping to get involved with a funded scheme that will help
certain families obtain produce at a reduced rate”.

The company
itself did see a significant downturn in sales with the onset of the
credit crunch last year, although an online buying shop created in
September 2008 saw a 20% increase in new customers. 

The promotion is
available now at www.arthursorganics.com
until 31st August 2009. Customers receive a free fourth veg box when
they buy three by 31st August 2009.

The Observer Ethical Awards 2009 – Winners Revealed

Wednesday, June 10th, 2009

The
winners of the fourth annual Observer Ethical Awards, in association
with Ecover, were announced on the 3rd June at a ceremony hosted by Colin
Firth at the Kensington Roof Gardens in London. Sir David Attenborough
received a lifetime achievement award from Observer editor, John
Mullholland.

Readers
of The Observer selected leader of the Green Party, Caroline Lucas, as
Politician of the Year; Human rights campaigner, Peter Tatchell, was
awarded Campaigner of the Year. Ethical bed manufacturer, Warren Evans,
won Local Retailer of the Year and the Good Energy Shop collected the
prize for the Best Online Initiative of the Year.  

Lucy
Siegle, Observer columnist and chair of the judging panel, said: “Four
years in and still is a great honour to be the chair of such a valuable
and exciting event. The Observer Ethical Awards are now well
established and celebrate and reward those who to make living in a
sustainable way possible.”

The
Observer Ethical Awards are instrumental in bringing green issues to
the forefront of consumer minds and making businesses reassess their
attitudes towards sustainability.

The
remaining categories were voted for by a celebrity judging panel that
included Ken Livingstone, former Mayor of London; Ben Okri, Author;
Rick Edwards, TV Presenter and Deborah Meaden of Dragon’s Den.

An Ethical Junction Wedding Happened Recently

Wednesday, June 10th, 2009

Ket & Kate immediately after the ceremony

 

Ketan who is technical director of Ethical
Junction and Kate, who is EJ’s administrator, recently got married.
The couple are both vegans so they had an all vegan wedding (everyone
really liked the food!) and they set out to use as many Ethical Junction
companies as possible as part of their wedding. Kate and Ket would like
to give a big Thank You to all of the Ethical Junction companies that
they were able to make use of for their products and services as part
of their wedding.  

They gleaned tips, practical advice and
inspiration from both Green Union and Ethical Weddings. Their rings
were ethically sourced from Fifi Bijoux

Kate, the Bride made her own dress and
jacket using organic fabric from Greenfibres, and wore shoes from Beyond
Skin
, her necklace was from Natural Collection, her handbag was from
Feel Good Handbags, her make up from Beauty Without Cruelty and Inika.
Both the bride and groom used skin care products from Green People and
Simply Soaps
, hair care products used were from both Faith In Nature
and Daniel Field.

Ket, The Groom wore an organic linen
suit (unfortunately not from an EJ, a gap in the marketplace there people!).
Ket’s shoes were from Natural Collection. The beautiful faritrade
roses that were used for the buttonholes and the bride’s bouquet were
from Imogen Stone (Kate kept the fairtrade tags on the rose stems).  

Paper for the invites, place settings,
and table names was from the Exotic Paper Company and envelopes from
Eco-Craft. All the alcohol was from Vintage Roots (organic and vegan).
A Lot of Candles who is part of the company A Lot of Chocolates supplied
organic candles.

Ket’s band played to the guests as part of the evenings entertainment, and is currently having a bass guitar custom built by Simon Lee Guitars .

The couple used gift lists from Greenfibres,
Our Green Wedding List
, Natural Collection and Bishopston Trading. The
honeymoon destination later in the year is to be at Bloomfield House

Kate and Ket would like to say, “Thank
you to you all 22 Ethical Junction members for making our day so wonderful and memorable.” 


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