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A non-profit organization promoting and encouraging the use of locally grown, harvested and produced foods in Sitka and SE Alaska

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« • Thanks for “Growing in Sitka and Southeast Alaska” presentation
• WISEGUYS men’s health group builds a community potato patch in Klukwan »

• Local foods a topic of several Alaska news stories over the past week or so

November 2, 2009 by sitkalocalfoodsnetwork

This has been an interesting couple of weeks, with food security being discussed at the Alaska Federation of Natives convention, subsistence rights and responsibilities in the news and other stories highlighting the local foods market in Alaska.

The Alaska Public Radio Network ran a story about food security being a hot topic at the Alaska Federation of Natives convention. One element of the discussion was a report from former state Sen. Kim Elton, now is the Interior Department’s senior advisor for Alaska Affairs, who said Interior Secretary Ken Salazar plans to upgrade subsistence management for the coming decades.

The Alaska Public Radio Network also ran a story (from KRBD-FM in Ketchikan) about an invasive plant species conference in Ketchikan and how to prevent the spread of noxious and invasive plants in Alaska.

The Fairbanks Daily News-Miner ran an article about how food grown in gardens on the University of Alaska Fairbanks campus is finding its way onto the plates of UAF students at the Lola Tilly Commons.

The Alaska Journal of Commerce had an article about how wild plant seeds from Alaska are being stored at the Kew Gardens Millennium Seed Bank (aka the Royal Botanical Gardens) southwest of London.

The Alaska Journal of Commerce also had an article about Anchorage chef Robert Kineen of Orso Ristorante and how he is incorporating more local foods into his menus.

This week’s issue of the Alaska Journal of Commerce also has several articles about various fisheries, from whitefish to salmon to crab. Included in the issue is an article about how wild-caught Alaska salmon and Pacific cod made the Monterey Bay Aquarium’s recent listing of “super green” seafoods because of their health benefits, the sustainable ways the fish are harvested and lack of contamination. Here is a link to the full list from the Monterey Bay Aquarium’s Consumer’s Guide to Sustainable Seafood.

Former Anchorage Daily News Outdoors Editor Craig Medred, who now writes for the Alaska Dispatch Web site, wrote this column about how some hunters have lost their connection to the culture of hunting.

The Alaska Dispatch also had an article about tough times at the Triple D Farm and Hatchery in Palmer. The turkey farm was made infamous during a KTUU-TV interview of then-Gov. Sarah Palin video last year, when she was pardoning a turkey as a worker in the background was butchering other turkeys (a link to the video is with the story).

The Anchorage Daily News also ran an obituary for Lawrence Clark, 94, aka “The Apple Man,” who was one of the leading apple tree growers in the Anchorage area and a member of the Alaska Pioneer’s Fruit Growers Association. Clark also was able to grow apricots on his land in the Rabbit Creek area south of Anchorage.

The Fairbanks Community Cooperative Market blog posted this essay about sustainable agriculture in Alaska from Mike Emers, the owner of Rosie Creek Farm in the Fairbanks bedroom community of Ester (Rosie Creek Farm is the northernmost certified organic farm in the country). Emers writes about how he wouldn’t have imagined his life’s direction 10-20 years ago, and how becoming a farmer is such a departure for someone who comes from a long line of Jewish tailors. By the way, while you’re done reading Emers’ essay, check out the rest of the Fairbanks Community Cooperative Market site. This is a project to build a market specializing in local foods for the Fairbanks area.

Finally, here is an article from the USDA’s Agricultural Research Service about whether or not there are regions in the country that have lost their ability to feed themselves. The article focuses on a county-by-county study in the northeast part of the U.S. about what local foods currently are available, but it sounds like similar studies are taking place across the country.

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Posted in education, Fish and game, Food choices, Local food in Alaska projects and research, Local food in the news, traditional foods | Tagged Agricultural Research Service, Alaska Dispatch, Alaska Federation of Natives, Alaska Journal of Commerce, Alaska Pioneer's Fruit Growers Association, Alaska Public Radio Network, Alaska wild plant seeds, Anchorage Daily News, community garden, Consumer Guide to Sustainable Seafood, Craig Medred, education, Ex-Gov. Sarah Palin, Fairbanks Community Cooperative Market, Fairbanks Daily News-Miner, fish, food, garden, halibut, invasive plant species, Kew Gardens Millennium Seed Bank, Lawrence Clark, Mike Emers, Monterey Bay Aquarium, Orso Ristorante, produce, projects, Robert Kineen, Rosie Creek Farm, salmon, subsistence, traditional foods, Triple D Farm and Hatchery, turkeys, University of Alaska Fairbanks | 2 Comments

2 Responses

  1. on November 12, 2009 at 4:13 pm Deirdre Helfferich

    The Ester Republic has been running a series for the last three years on food security and agricultural sustainability issues, written by various authors, usually associated with Calypso Farm & Ecology Center. I will be going through them all and posting them online. Some of these are posted on line now, but most are still pending.


    • on November 12, 2009 at 4:31 pm sitkalocalfoodsnetwork

      Deirdre, thanks for the note. E-mail me a direct link to the articles and I can post the link when I do the next local foods news roundup. Charles Bingham, charles@sitkalocalfoodsnetwork.org



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  • Alaska Links

    • • "Common Edible Seaweeds in the Gulf of Alaska" by Dolly Garza, PhD (order info from the Alaska SeaGrant program)
    • • "Teaming With Microbes" site by Anchorage's Jeff Lowenfels, a member of the Garden Writers Association Hall of Fame
    • • "Wild, Edible and Medicinal Plants of Alaska, Canada and the Pacific Northwest Rainforest" pocket field guides order information (guides by Carol Biggs of Juneau)
    • • Alaska Bounty (fish-based fertilizer from Naknek, in Bristol Bay)
    • • Alaska Center for the Environment local food project
    • • Alaska Community Agriculture (social marketing site for Alaska CSA and small-scale farmers)
    • • Alaska Community Agriculture Association (new site)
    • • Alaska Department of Fish & Game (includes regulations and other resources for Sitka hunters and fishers)
    • • Alaska Farm Service Agency site (USDA program)
    • • Alaska Farmers Market Association site
    • • Alaska Food Challenge (group trying to eat only Alaska food during 2011-12)
    • • Alaska Food Coalition (helps provide food to the needy)
    • • Alaska Food Policy Council blog (updates from the Alaska Food Policy Council)
    • • Alaska Food Safety and Sanitation Program
    • • Alaska Food, a site from Susan Beeman Sommer that brings together other local food sites in Alaska
    • • Alaska Granular Fish (organic fish fertilizer from Palmer)
    • • Alaska Grown site (statewide cooperative to promote agriculture)
    • • Alaska Master Gardeners Association
    • • Alaska Native Plant Society
    • • Alaska Permaculture Community social networking site
    • • Alaska Permaculture Guild
    • • Alaska Pioneer Fruit Growers Association
    • • Alaska Sea Grant program (University of Alaska Fairbanks, library has info on fish, seaweeds, seafood safety, etc.)
    • • Alaska Seafood Marketing Institute (site has lots of information for the uses of seafood)
    • • Alaska Seafood Marketing Institute recipe videos
    • • Alaska subsistence halibut regulations from NOAA
    • • Calypso Farm and Ecology Center (a Fairbanks-based community supported agriculture program)
    • • Fairbanks Community Cooperative Market site (a new market in Fairbanks devoted to local foods)
    • • Food Bank of Alaska
    • • Fresh 49 (a site by chef Robert Kinneen about Alaska's local food and its food supply)
    • • Gardening From The Cabbage Patch (collected columns from former Fairbanks Daily News-Miner garden columnist Pat Babcock)
    • • Glacier Valley Farms CSA (a community supported agriculture program that serves Southcentral Alaska)
    • • Good Earth Garden School / Ask Mother Nature: A Conscious Gardener's Guide (site by Palmer organic gardener, teacher and writer Ellen Vande Visse)
    • • HomeGrown Market of Fairbanks
    • • John Evans and his Giant Vegetables (Palmer gardener with several world records)
    • • Kenai Resilience (sustainability group from the Kenai Peninsula)
    • • Meyer's Farm (Bethel, Alaska, community supported agriculture project)
    • • Municipality of Anchorage community garden program
    • • RurAL CAP (Rural Alaska Community Action Program, Inc.)
    • • Seaweeds of Alaska (site sponsored by Cook Inlet Rural Citizens Advisory Council)
    • • Southcentral Alaska Beekeepers Association (SABA)
    • • Sustain Alaska site run by the Bioneers of Alaska (group does some food security projects)
    • • Sustainable Local Alaskan Plants site (connecting locally grown native plants to the people that need them)
    • • The Last Frontier Locavores site (aka, Alaska Locavores)
    • • University of Alaska Fairbanks Cooperative Extension Service site
    • • University of Alaska Fairbanks School of Natural Resources & Agricultural Sciences
    • • USDA Rural Development page for Alaska
  • Blogroll

    • • "AK Root Cellar" blog about local foods in Alaska from the Anchorage Daily News
    • • "Alison's Lunch" blog by Alison Arians, president of the Alaska Farmers Market Association
    • • "Anonymous Bloggers," site about bringing food and fuel to rural Alaska (includes several links on cold-weather gardening)
    • • "DigginFood" blog about vegetable gardens and organic food by Willi Galloway
    • • "Dispatches From The Funky Butte Ranch" blog by former Haines, Alaska, resident Doug Fine, who is living off the grid in New Mexico
    • • "Eat Local Northwest" blog, a blog about local foods by Stephen Nowers in Anchorage and Audrey Young in Seattle
    • • "Feasting in the Skagit Foodshed" blog about local foods in Skagit Valley, Wash.
    • • "Food-G" blog by Ginny Mahar, a chef from Rainbow Foods in Juneau who writes about using local foods
    • • "Hunter Angler Gardener Cook: Finding the Forgotten Feast" blog by Hank Shaw
    • • "Mediterranean Cooking In Alaska" blog by Laurie Constantino of Anchorage (several recipes feature local ingredients)
    • • "Mucking About A Northwest Garden" blog from Rainy Side Gardeners
    • • "Rhubarb or Bust" blog about growing rhubarb in Alaska
    • • "Talk Dirt To Me" blog by Anchorage Daily News photographer/gardener Fran Durner
    • • "The Community Gardener" blog
    • • "The Fireweed" blog by UAF professor Philip Loring on building sustainable communities
    • • "The Locavore Way" blog by Amy Cotler
    • • "The Real Food Revolution" blog
    • • "The Starter Garden" blog from the New York Times (written by Michael Tortorello of Minnesota)
    • • "We Can Grow It" Alaska Community and Neighborhood Garden Web site
    • • Alaska Fishing Recipes
    • • Alaska Food Policy Council blog (updates from the Alaska Food Policy Council)
    • • Anchorage Daily News gardening columns by Jeff Lowenfels, a member of the Garden Writers Association Hall of Fame
    • • Fairbanks Community Cooperative Market blog (project to open a local foods market in Fairbanks)
    • • Fat of the Land blog, Adventures of a 21st Century Forager
    • • Food In Jars blog about canning food in jars
    • • Haines Gardeners and Farmers
    • • Kenley's Alaskan Vegetables and Flowers blog (from the Mat-Su valleys)
    • • Last Frontier Garden blog
    • • Placemaking for Communities blog from the Project for Public Spaces (has local food and market posts)
    • • Real Time Foods blog (stories about where our food comes from)
    • • Sitka Gardening blog (unknown poster who uses the handle Natural History of Sitka Sound)
    • • Sitka Nature blog by Matt Goff (an aspiring naturalist learns his place)
    • • UAF School of Natural Resources & Agricultural Sciences blog
    • • Veggie Gardeners blog
  • Films About Local Food or Local Food Systems

    • • "All Jacked Up," four teenagers look at the food system in America
    • • "America's Heartland," PBS series about agriculture in America
    • • "Asparagus: Stalking the American Life," a film from Michigan
    • • "Dirt! The Movie," a film about the relationships between humans and living dirt
    • • "Eating Alaska," a film by Sitka filmmaker Ellen Frankenstein
    • • "End of the Line," movie about over-fishing
    • • "Food Beware," a film about the French organic revolution
    • • "Food Fight," revolution never tasted this good
    • • "Food, Inc.," you'll never look at food the same way again
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    • • "Good Food," sustainable food and farming in the Pacific Northwest
    • • "Growing Awareness," a Pacific Northwest film about Community Supported Agriculture
    • • "Ingredients," a documentary film from Portland, Ore.
    • • "King Corn," two recent college graduates grow an acre of corn
    • • "Living Lightly," a family lives off the grid in New Brunswick, farming and making scythes
    • • "Mad City Chickens," film about urban poultry
    • • "Media That Matters: Good Food," a series of short films about local food
    • • "Pollen Nation," a film about raising bees so they can pollinate local crops
    • • "The Garden," from the ashes of the L.A. riots rose a 14-acre community garden
    • • "The Organic Opportunity: Small Farms and Economic Development"
    • • "The Real Dirt on Farmer John," an industrial farmer goes organic
    • • "What Will We Eat?"
  • National and International Links

    • • "Animal, Vegetable, Miracle," site from the Barbara Kingsolver book (has good local foods links)
    • • "Chefs A'Field" PBS cooking show that takes chefs to the farm and field to see where our food comes from, includes segments from Alaska
    • • "Plant a Row for the Hungry" site from the Garden Writers Association
    • • American Community Garden Association
    • • American Farmland Trust
    • • American Planning Association's Policy Guide on Community and Regional Food Planning
    • • Cascade Harvest Coalition (local foods group in Washington)
    • • Center for Food Safety's True Food Network promoting a healthy, sustainable food system
    • • City Farmer's Urban Agriculture Notes (Vancouver, B.C., site)
    • • Community Chickens (a site with info about raising chickens)
    • • Community Food Security Coalition
    • • Community Greens, an organization to get more shared parks in urban blocks
    • • Eat Wild (organization promoting pasture-fed meat, eggs and dairy)
    • • Ed Hume Seeds (selected for the Pacific Northwest)
    • • Farmers Market Coalition
    • • Farmers Markets Today magazine article on Alaska farmers markets
    • • Feeding America (formerly known as America's Second Harvest)
    • • Food Routes (Where Does Your Food Come From?)
    • • Food Secure Vancouver (good site about a community's food security)
    • • Food Voices site about worldwide food sovereignty by part-time Sitka resident Andrianna Natsoulas
    • • Foraged and Found Edibles (Seattle business that sells wild mushrooms, greens, etc.)
    • • Garden Guides, Your Guide to Everything Gardening
    • • Gardening Know How site
    • • How-to page for controling slugs and snails from the National Gardening Association's "Edible Gardening with Charlie Nardozzi" page
    • • Hydroponic Vegetable Gardening Secrets
    • • IATP (Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy) Food and Society Fellows
    • • Kids Gardening (helping young minds grow)
    • • Kitchen Gardeners, a global community cultivating change
    • • Local food Web resources from the book "Animal, Vegetable, Miracle," by Barbara Kingsolver
    • • Local Harvest (national organization promoting local foods)
    • • Mad City Chickens (site from Wisconsin promoting urban poultry)
    • • National Bioneers site (go to bottom of page for Food and Farming link)
    • • National Sustainable Agriculture Coalition
    • • National Sustainable Agriculture Information Service
    • • Natural Resources Conservation Service (offers some grants for local foods projects)
    • • New City Farmer site on Urban Agriculture (Vancouver, B.C., site)
    • • Organic Consumers Association
    • • Organic Farming Research Foundation
    • • Permaculture Forums (organic homesteading, natural living)
    • • Permies.com (Goofballs who are nuts about permaculture)
    • • PickYourOwn.org (national directory of u-pick gardens and farms)
    • • Project for Public Spaces program for building public markets (lots of good resources)
    • • Rainy Side Gardeners (a site about gardening in the Pacific Northwest)
    • • Real Time Farms (national site that shows you where your food comes from)
    • • RichSoil.com (site by Paul Wheaton of Montana on horticulture and permaculture)
    • • Rodale Institute (supports organic farming, nutrition and similar causes)
    • • Seattle Tilth: Learn. Grow. Eat. (good education site on urban livestock and gardening from Seattle)
    • • Slow Food International
    • • Slow Food USA
    • • SPIN (Small-Plot INtensive) farming site about how to maximize production from small plots of land
    • • Still Tasty (site about the shelf life of food)
    • • Sustainable Agriculture and Food Systems Funders
    • • Sustainable Connections site for sustainable living in Northwest Washington
    • • Sustainable Table
    • • The Edible Garden Project (community garden project out of Vancouver, B.C.)
    • • The Fresh Loaf (site for amateur bakers and artisan bread enthusiasts)
    • • The Fruit Tree Planting Foundation
    • • The Trust for Public Land (TPL) — conservation and parks for people
    • • The Weston A. Price Foundation for Wise Traditions in Food, Farming and the Healing Arts
    • • U.S. Department of Agriculture
    • • USDA Agricultural Marketing Service page for farmers markets and local food marketing (has national farmers market directory link)
    • • USDA's "Know Your Farmer, Know Your Food" program page
    • • Washington Sustainable Food and Farming Network
    • • West Side Gardener (companion site for Rainy Day Gardeners, but focused on edibles)
    • • Wild Food Plants
    • • Wisconsin Fast Plants (rapid-growing edible plants that are great for gardening with kids)
    • • Yukon Agricultural Association (farming info for the north country)
  • Sitka Commercial Food Producers

    • • Absolute Fresh Seafoods
    • • Alaska Dream Salmon (the Jordan family and the F/V Saturday)
    • • Alaska Hook & Line Seafoods
    • • Alaska Longline Fishermen's Association (Sitka-based commercial fishing industry non-profit group)
    • • Alaskans Own Seafood
    • • Back Bay Botanicals (herbal medicinal products)
    • • Baranof Island Brewing Company (microbrew beer made in Sitka)
    • • Big Blue Fisheries LLC (custom processing, custom smoking, retail sales)
    • • Grandma Tillie's Bakery (locally produced baked goods)
    • • Highliner Coffee Company (gourmet coffee company)
    • • Larkspur Café (Sitka restaurant that uses local food on its menu)
    • • Ludvig's Bistro (Sitka restaurant that uses local seafood and organic veggies)
    • • Pearl of Alaska (Rocky Pass Pacific oysters from Kake)
    • • Rose Fisheries
    • • Sailor's Choice Coffee (locally roasted free trade coffee and nuts)
    • • Seafood Producers Cooperative
    • • Silver Bay Seafoods
    • • Simple Pleasures of Alaska (kelp and wild berry products)
    • • Sitka Sound Seafoods
    • • The Alaskan Kitchen (hand-made sausages and catering using local foods)
    • • Theobroma Chocolate Company
    • • True Alaska Bottling / Alaska Bulk Water
    • • Two Chicks And A Kabob Stick LLC (two sisters sell meals made with local seafood they caught themselves)
  • Sitka Links

    • • City and Borough of Sitka
    • • City of Sitka page about composting in Sitka (click link at bottom for next page)
    • • Eating Alaska (film about food choices by Sitka filmmaker Ellen Frankenstein)
    • • Garden Ventures (Facebook page for Sitka plant nursery)
    • • Kayaaní Commission site for the Sitka Tribe of Alaska group about traditional plant use
    • • Northern Southeast Regional Aquaculture Association (salmon hatcheries)
    • • SEARHC (SouthEast Alaska Regional Health Consortium, one of our sponsor organizations)
    • • Sitka Community Schools page for the Blatchley Community Garden
    • • Sitka Conservation Society (one of our sponsor organizations)
    • • Sitka Farmers Market photo group page on Flickr.com
    • • Sitka Food Co-Op (new group trying to get a food co-op going in Sitka)
    • • Sitka Gardening site run by Sharon Romine
    • • Sitka Global Warming (one of our sponsor organizations)
    • • Sitka Health Summit
    • • Sitka Local Foods Network events calendar
    • • Sitka Local Foods Network group page on Facebook
    • • Sitka Local Foods Network photos on Shutterfly
    • • Sitka Native Education Program (does some traditional foods classes)
    • • Sitka Outdoor Recreation Coalition (Get Out, Sitka!)
    • • Sitka resident Marcel LaPerriere's Southeast Cedar Homes business also is the local dealer for Solexx twin-wall greenhouses
    • • Sitka Seafood Festival fan page on Facebook
    • • Sitka Seafood Festival official site
    • • Sitka Sound Science Center (hatchery, aquarium, learning center)
    • • Sitka weekly sports fishing report from the Alaska Department of Fish & Game
    • • Spenard Builders Supply (sells garden supplies in Sitka)
    • • St. Peter's Fellowship Farm community garden photos (opens as PDF file)
    • • SwampRatt (site by former retired Sitka Pioneer Home gardener Jerry Snelling, with photos from the gardens)
    • • True Value hardware store
    • • United Southeast Alaska Gillnetter's Association (Juneau-based regional commercial salmon fishing industry group)
    • • University of Alaska Fairbanks Cooperative Extension Service page for the Sitka District Office
  • Southeast Alaska Market / Garden Links

    • • Glacier Gardens Rain Forest Adventures (a privately owned botanical garden in Juneau)
    • • Gustavus Farmers Market
    • • Haines Farmers Market
    • • Jensen-Olson Arboretum in Juneau
    • • Jewell Gardens and Glassworks (a CSA garden in Skagway)
    • • Juneau Community Garden Association (new site)
    • • Juneau Community Gardens
    • • Juneau Community Gardens video from 2009
    • • Juneau Farmers Market (new site in 2010)
    • • Juneau Farmers Market and Local Foods Festival
    • • POW Farmers Market (a new Prince of Wales Island farmers market based in Thorne Bay)
    • • Prince of Wales Island Farmers Market
    • • Prince of Wales Island Farmers Market (Facebook page)
    • • Southeast Alaska Master Gardeners site
    • • Wrangell Community Garden
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