Wednesday, 23 July 2014

Hungry for Change to an Organic PEI: 2014 International Year of Family Farming




Hungry for Change to an Organic Island:
A recent letter I sent to our local paper--


Dear Editor,
Living in a geographically small place, it is easy for us to be culturally dismissive of those who speak out regarding long held ways of doing things. It might be helpful to consider that just because we've always done something a certain way does not necessarily mean it is the most sustainable way of doing things.

We know that while providing limited benefits, the excessive application of  agri-chemicals contaminates the air, soil and waterways of our Island home. In theory, we realize the importance of best agricultural practices which encourage farmers to act as stewards of the land and waters, but we've failed to encourage a deeper cultural understanding of the importance of those best practices which would make enforcement unnecessary.

Each time we make a choice towards better informing ourselves and our families about the ways our food is produced, each time we pause mindfully and consider how we purchase, prepare and consume the foods in our pantries and our refrigerators, we change the cultural climate that allows perpetuation of conventional, large scale farming. In doing so we improve our connection to  each other and the source of our food.

Feeding seven-plus billion people on a warming planet is a concern many leading scientists are considering. How to healthfully, and economically feed ourselves and our families is a growing concern of many Islanders. The fact that there is a connection between both concerns, as well as  common solutions beyond large scale conventional agriculture, is something worth thinking and talking about.  

Fostering a community of understanding, personal commitment, as well as negotiating political will can make viable change in agriculture a reality. The United Nations has named 2014 as the International Year of Family Farming.   Perhaps we would do well to consider 2014 as an opportunity to celebrate small scale and organic agriculture in our home province. In doing so we are acknowledging our vital role as consumers. Supporting those whose aim it is to nurture the land they tend, while growing the food we eat is a step in the right direction.

Jill MacCormack                                                                                                                             


Friday, 18 July 2014

Origami Butterfly--Tanka Series: Yoshizawa Butterfly

                                                                Origami Butterfly-- 


                                Cocoon Tent from Creativity Project Art in the Open 2014


Tall and slender-green
eyed poplar, shimmering in
summer heat. The wind
through you sounds of one thousand
little hands folding paper.  

I listen and dream
of sitting again with you 
beneath a poplar 
stand. A butterfly splays wings,
takes flight. I remain, longing.

Jill MacCormack

Origami Butterfly How To--


Sunday, 6 July 2014

July Storm--Lost Innocence

Tanka Series
July Storm--Lost Innocence

Willful winds forced down 

leaves, left gaping holes in thick
Maple's canopy.
Dwindling light seeps through sunken

sockets, once so full and green.

Now their skeletal
silhouette's are framed, are damned
by overcast sky
heavy with rain-- regrets, tears,
unspoken words-- yet to fall.

In all this I see
fragments of memory--us.
That last, lingering
gaze of your green eyes, bright and
wondering, haunts me still--loss.

The groaning, sighing
wind as it arches through my
woods-- seeking, longing--
calls out our names. Night's still falls
heavy, late, but quiets not.

Jill