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invite the wild neighbors to dinner

June 10th, 2008 by jane

INVITE THE WILD NEIGHBORS TO DINNER

Charismatic mega-fauna are really taking it on the chin these days. They look great on posters and t-shirts, but don’t let them walk un-tethered through town!

I was quite upset when, in April, a mountain lion showed up in Chicago, and was shot seven times by the police. I too have always felt a bit conspicuous and unwieldy in the city.

This cougar traveled hundreds of miles to get to Chicago. Perhaps it knocked out a few slow squirrels or stray cats when it touched on the interminable sprawl of Chicago, or Milwaukee, or even Rockford, Illinois, but there were no human attacks. Of course, there could have been – but there wasn’t.

Last year, also in Chicago, a coyote showed up in the refrigerated beverage section of a downtown sandwich shop. After forty-five minutes, and after several people-customers took pictures of it with their cell phones, animal control showed up. The coyote was given an overnight stay at a suburban wildlife rehabilitation center and released – probably back into the suburbs.

Most people around here are asking why these animals show up in huge metropolises. I think a better question to ask is this -- don’t you ever feel like one of these animals?

Mountain lions are both protectors and nurturers. They are loners and independent types. They stand for something quite formidable. Heck, they’re lions! It doesn’t seem like city folk are ready to live with such animals. Most have fear rather than respect for them. Lots of fear. Some reasonable. Some -- not so much.

So, if you feel like you’re a big cat in the big city, how do you protect yourself from being shot?

Is it better to adapt the strategy of a weed?

Weeds are plants that were once valued and cultivated but now have escaped cultivation. Some have been further domesticated into a more mild form now recognized as food. For instance, our lettuces are domesticated variations of wild lettuce.

Weeds are really good at hiding in the open. Their secrets are kept close in their invisibility. Their numbers are always spreading.

Be a weed:
thrive no matter where you are
make your own food and oxygen
make soils better for the next inhabitants
send out a gazillion seeds
reincarnate frequently in unexpected places

I want to introduce you to mugwort – Ms. Artemesia vulgaris. She is widespread in the United States. Mugwort pops up in both our urban and rural settings. She is downright plentiful and ready for you to use. (Note: if pregnant, please do not use this herb. Read more about it first.)

Artemis, the Queen of the Beasts was a wild one. She was an supreme hunter and friend of forest beasts. Artemis found mugwort and delivered it to the centaur. Forever after, the herb has carried her name.

I recommend you look for Artemesia vulgaris. And when you find her, gently trim a piece and dry it (simply burn it in a saucer) and inhale the smoke. This plant is a protector from evil as well as an aide to communication with the plant world.

Native Americans, Asians, and Europeans have used this plant medicinally and as a healthful culinary herb for hundreds of years. In Europe it was used as the main bittering flavor for ales until cultivated hops took over. My friend Tree, just shared some of his herby mugwort ale with me. yummy stuff paired with the homemade raw cheese we were munching on.

Mugwort is used in moxibustion. In acupuncture, this is the smoking punk they hover over your acupuncture points. It draws blood to the skin’s surface and unblocks your body’s meridian points of stuck energies.

Fresh or dried mugwort also repels insects, cleanses your blood of toxins, promotes sweating, and reduces tension. Lastly, you should know it has some of the same properties of its mysterious cousin of a different species (any guesses?).

Mugwort is also used for lucid dreaming. Cut a spring and put it under your pillow or tuck a sprig into your pocket for protection. Burn some before you settle into an evening outside. Smoke some before you go foraging or before you lie down in a meadow for a nap.

Maybe it is time we invite these charismatic mega-fauna and not-so-charismatic weeds to the table. Set a place for them. I am not talking about putting them on the menu at some upscale restaurant so we can create a demand. I am simply proposing we let them walk through town. Let them take up shelter under our porches or feed off the extra bunnies.

Speaking of weeds, please do serve them up, drink them, smoke them, learn about them and love them. Find an overarching but examined respect for them. You should, because the mega-fauna and weeds are already here or on their way.

While riding my bicycle by the train line recently, I saw the ghost image of the big cat out of the corner of my eye. It emerged from the alley and then ducked back in. In other words, the cat’s spirit hasn’t left.

mellow yellows

June 10th, 2008 by jane

mellow yellows

I first tasted dandelion wine when I bought a bottle of it at a folksy gift shop in the Amana Colonies (yes, Amana of the appliance fame). The Amana Colonies is an Amish community dating back to 1854. It was settled by the communally living German pietists then known as: The Community of True Inspiration or The Ebenezer Society. Their tenets included avoiding military service and refusal to take an oath. The Amanas are nestled in the middle of what is now a sea of genetically modified corn and soybeans known as the Midwest, more specifically Iowa.

I had wanted something to drink at my campsite that evening. When I opened the bottle, I anticipated something more magic than what met my tongue. It was cloying yellow syrupy stuff, which resembled soft drink concentrate. I poured it out next to my tent, returning it to the earth where she could compost it. I was sure that I’d never get close to it again.

That was fifteen years ago, and now I have been drinking dandelion wine for about two years. The new stuff is stuff I’ve made myself from dandelion blossoms gathered in Chicago. I’m happy to say that it is divine. I am sure now that the colonists actually keep the good stuff in their private cabinets.

Upon mentioning “dandelion wine”, Ray Bradbury usually comes to mind. However, after I heard a radio interview with him a few years back when he passionately made a case to colonize the moon so we can ditch this trashed planet and survive as a race, I got confused. Enough said.

So the point is, I am going to tell you how to make dandelion wine. I encourage you to do this because dandelions pop up everywhere and every place. They are nearly ubiquitous pioneers in our landscapes of disturbed and deprived soils. Consumed, they are a magnificent digestive, aiding the heath and cleansing of the kidneys and liver. Amongst vitamins A, B, C and D, they have a huge amount of potassium.

As a beyond-perfect diuretic, dandelion has so much potassium that when you digest the plant, no matter how much fluid you lose, your body actually experiences a net gain of the nutrient. In other words, folks – dandelion wine is one alcohol that actually helps your liver and kidneys! Generous, sweet, overlooked dandelion…

When you notice lawns and parks spotting yellow, it’s time to gather. The general rule of thumb is to collect one gallon of flowers for each gallon of wine you want to make.

Enjoy your wandering. People will think you quaintly eccentric for foraging blossoms on your hands and knees. Note: collect blossoms (without the stem) that have just opened and are out of the path of insecticides and pesticides.

So here’s how I make dandelion wine…

I pour one gallon boiling water over one gallon dandelion flowers in a large bowl. When the blossoms rise (wait about twenty-four to forty-eight hours), I strain the yellow liquid out, squeezing the remaining liquid out of the flowers, into a larger ceramic or glass bowl. I compost the spent flowers (thanks dandelion!).

Then I add juice and zest from four lemons and four oranges, and four pounds of sugar (4-4-4 = E.Z.). Okay, now what I think is the best part - I float a piece of stale bread in the mixture sprinkled with bread yeast. This technique is used in Appalachian and some European recipes.

Then I toss a dishtowel over it so the mixture can both breathe and the crud floating around my house stays out. I continue stirring the wine several times a day until it stops fermenting. This takes about two weeks or so.

When I am certain it has stopped “working”, I strain, bottle and cork it up and bid it farewell until months later. In fact I wait until the winter solstice, when I can revisit that sunny spring day by drinking it in.

Transition: as such an effective diuretic, dandelion is also know in French as “pis-en-lit” or “pee-in-the-bed”. Which brings me to YELLOW LIQUID #2 … that’s right, pee!

Pee is 95% water and 5% salts and minerals. When it comes out of the body, it’s sterile. Admittedly, I haven’t drunk my first whizz as part of my yogic practice, however, I habitually save my pee to potentize my compost as well as for making a nitrogen-rich fertilizer for my plants. Our bodies are nutrient factories – let’s value our post-consumption products and offer them back to the Mother.

Us humans pee on average a bit more than a quart a day, at a dilution rate of 1:5 (the recipe). Each one of us are producing more than two gallons of free plant fertilizer a day. Or around 750 gallons a year - which is enough fertilizer to grow 75% of an individual’s food needs for that year.

Did you know that most of the algae blooms - whether in the Los Angeles river, the shore of the Great Lakes, the mouth of the Mississippi and many other waterways - are largely due to agricultural run-off of nitrogen fertilizers applied to our corn-fed nation’s farmlands?

Peeing directly into your compost pile is great. So is collecting it in a jar or a bucket and dumping it into the pile later. Not composting? Then just dilute it fresh (remember the recipe again, 1:5) with some water and use it directly on plants or let it oxidize and turn into a nitrate (i.e. leaving it out until it gets nice and dark) and then apply it undiluted. Not only is this something that has been done for ages around the world, it is still being done. Most people are just hush hush about it.

Why are our municipalities cleaning water so we can flush our toilets with it? The separation of the solid and liquid body waste is an extensive and costly process for the water treatment plant and we pay that cost twice by flushing it all away. We have urine blindness…

Before I sign off, I want to put a bug in your ear – this terrific yellow liquid that our own bodies produce can also produce gunpowder. But maybe I’ll approach that topic in other column – or maybe you’ll just have to do the research yourself.

chicken feet

December 19th, 2007 by jane

From Eli:

:: Next Page >>

Special Feature

Some Articles about the Chicago Chicken Ordinance

December 19th, 2007 by jane

from Chi-Town Daily News
(published Dec. 11, 2007 10:28 AM)

http://www.chitowndailynews.org/Chicago+news/2007/12/11/Opponents_squawk_over_chicken_ordinance

Opponents squawk over chicken ordinance

By JENNIFER SLOSAR

It's an issue that's beginning to ruffle a lot of feathers.

But puns aside, the Chicago City Council's proposed ban on chicken farming has significant implications for the city's immigrant populations and others committed to raising fowl in the city, according to critics of the measure.

The council is set to vote tomorrow on legislation banning ownership of live chickens in residential areas.

The proposal's sponsor, Ald. Lona Lane (D, 18th Ward), did not return repeated calls seeking information about it.

The council's Committee on Health, which passed the amendment Nov. 20, cited concerns relating to noise, debris, and rats. Lane cited concerns that disease could be linked to chickens.

Proponents of urban agriculture see the proposed ban as a hasty and ill-advised measure that flies in the face of the trend toward sustainable local food systems that promote community and help consumers to reduce their carbon footprints.

The Chicago Food Policy Advisory Council (CFPAC), a network of forty organizations that works to promote urban agriculture and green enterprises has asked 28th Ward Ald. Ed Smith, who chairs the health committee, to table the ordinance before the 12th.

Edie Cavanaugh, who provided the sole citizen testimony for the health committee, strongly opposes residential chickens. She said her neighborhood in West Lawn includes at least 10 chickens and several roosters.

"Chickens are dirty and smelly," said Cavanaugh. "If people want to raise chickens they can go buy a farm. If they want eggs they should go to a grocery store. They [the chickens] don't belong in the city."

"My street has a rat problem, big-time," said Cavanaugh, who believes that rats are attracted to the chicken droppings and feed. "And rats spread disease."

Linda Nellett, a proud chicken owner in the 45th Ward, begs to disagree. Nellett, whose three hens produce one egg each on a daily basis, said her chickens lessen environmental stress and provide a healthy alternative to the factory food system.

"I don't feel like I have to worry about where my eggs are coming from," said Nellett. "They don't have to be trucked from far away. Nor are they coming from a factory where they're kept in small cages or dosed with all kinds of antibiotics."

Far from being a nuisance to her neighborhood, said Nellett, the chickens "are really an asset."

"I've had so many neighbors come up to see me and reminisce about memories from being on farms or growing up on farms when they were children. They enjoy bringing their grandchildren over to feed the chickens," said Nellett.

Martha Boyd is director of the Urban Initiative program at Angelic Organics Learning Center and a member of the CFPAC.

"We recognize that the city has legitimate concerns," said Boyd. "But many of these concerns are addressed in other ordinances."

She pointed to exiting city laws that outlaw the slaughter of chickens on residential property and describe proper methods for handling organic matter to prevent the proliferation of rats. There are also nuisance laws on the books that protect neighbors against pets that are not cared for responsibly.

Boyd suggested that this an opportunity for the city to learn from other municipalities. Some U.S. cities allow the raising of chickens on residential property and outline basic best practices and basic requirements that minimize concerns such as noise and pests, she said.

In St. Louis, up to four chickens may be kept without a permit. New York City bans roosters, but allows residents to keep an unlimited number of chickens, as long as they acquire permits and keep their dwelling areas clean.

"There are people who are bad dog owners too, and we don't ban dogs, she said. There is such a thing as responsible chicken ownership," said Boyd.

Nance Klehm, an urban food forager and activist from Little Village, suspects that anti-immigrant sentiment might be fueling the chicken ban in Chicago. Klehm works with residents in her primarily Latino neighborhood on food exchange systems.

"The thing about this ordinance is that it really hits immigrant communities the hardest," said Klehm, who hears and sees free-range hens all the time on her street.

"This is a very land-based and food-based culture," said Klehm, who described her neighborhood as one of wide streets and long-established homeowners . "Most people here own the property they live on," said Klehm. "Everybody that I know on my block has been here since the 1950s. They are people very connected to place, and they are carrying on the traditions of their families, many of them campesinos."

"It's an inexpensive and holistic way of keeping a protein source nearby." Klehm.

Julie Peterson, of the Ravenswood social justice and environmental organization Beyond Today, said the legislation has wider implications for those interested in sustainable agriculture and environmental practices.

"We need to make it a principle to maintain vigilance on our local laws to protect any activity which helps people to be environmentally responsible," said Peterson. She points to ordinances in other cities that prohibit laundry lines. "They see these as a sign of poverty and not energy conservation," she said.

"It looks like I will be an 'outlaw' as of Wednesday," said Nellett. " These chickens are my pets, and I will not just dump them somewhere. It will take time to responsibly re-home them, and it is not possible for me to drop everything and concentrate solely on finding a good home for my hens."

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http://www.worldchanging.com/local/chicago/archives/007677.html

That’s Chicken Sh*&!: A Proposal to Ban Egg-Laying Hens in Chicago

(published December 6, 2007 9:37 AM, also published on www.gapersblock.com)

by Jesse Rutschman and Anna Barnes

When I was growing up in Pilsen, it was common to see hens clucking around the neighbors' front yards. Though the agrarian fantasy to convert Chicago into one big urban farm may not appeal to everyone, growing your own food is an excellent way to limit the impacts of industrial farming and decrease your carbon consumption. And, as New York writer Manny Howard and others have demonstrated, raising chickens is not out of the realm of possibilities for an adventurous urban gardener.

Locavores and groups like MadCity Chickens (based in Madison, WI), are building urban chicken coops to feed themselves and to “educate the urban population on the benefits of raising one’s own food, and to bring to light the misconceptions people might have about the raising of poultry in an urban setting.” In Chicago, however, one’s right to raise chickens is in serious question.

At a Chicago City Council hearing on December 12th, 2007, 18th Ward Alderman Lona Lane’s proposed ban on chickens will be voted on for approval. According to Chicago’s Municipal Code keeping roosters or chickens for slaughter is illegal. However, there are currently no ordinances that would prevent a Chicagoan from having chickens as pets or maintaining a chicken coop to produce eggs.

Alderman Lane is concerned with chickens because of an increased potential for spread of the avian flu virus, chicken waste attracting rats, and the illegal slaughter of chickens on residential property. While her concerns have merit, they do not logically imply the need for a city-wide ban. Avian influenza should be a more serious concern for large industrial farms, and the proliferation of rats in Chicago, unfortunately, cannot be pinned to chickens but is a much broader problem relating to the improper disposal of waste.

Chicken-rearing (for eggs) provides an affordable option for food insecure families, seriously eliminates the food miles eggs normally travel to get from farm to table, and allows families to re-connect to farming traditions in an urban setting.

Alderman Lane and the Chicago City Council need to hear from you. Below is a sample letter to send to your local alderman. Write before the hearing takes place on December 12th, 2007!

Dear Alderman (your alderman’s name here),

As a resident of Ward (Ward Number), I was saddened to hear of the proposed ordinance completely banning the ownership of chickens in Chicago, and I urge you to speak up against it. The problems cited by Alderman Lona Lane and others (noise pollution, rats, and avian flu) are worst-case scenarios that are almost entirely avoidable with good management and appropriate regulations.
While many Chicago residents have made noise complaints related to chickens, the vast majority of these are because of roosters. Backyard roosters have already been banned in Chicago and are not of interest to most residential egg farmers. Hens do not make noise that would bother neighbors. Furthermore, they give communities in need the means to produce their own food.
I appreciate Alderman Lane’s concern regarding the risk of chickens spreading avian flu. While avian influenza has infected some independent farmers, it is in crowded commercial farms that particularly dangerous mutations of the virus are likely to form. The truth is little is known about how the virus spreads. While the response by the USDA and local governments targets chicken owners (as this proposed ordinance does) it does not hold the poultry and egg industry accountable.
Alderman Lane also claims that chicken waste attracts rodents. Rats are sustained by suitable habitat and access to food, which includes garbage and animal droppings. While chicken litter does create this risk, unsecured human food waste is much more likely to attract rats and the answer in this case is for chicken owners to simply do what all residents are obligated to do, which is secure their waste.
While these are valid concerns for the sake of safety and respect, I believe that producing food on residential property is a fundamental right, whether one resides in a city or rural area.
Please do not allow fear and exaggeration to take away my right to produce food for myself and lead a healthier and more sustainable lifestyle.

Thank you for your time, and keep up the good work!

Sincerely, Your Name Here

In the meantime, if you are pondering the idea of building your own mini-chicken coop here is some food for thought:

http://backyardchickens.com/

http://www.ethicurean.com/2007/09/22/chicken-parking/

http://www.madcitychickens.com/

http://www.growing-gardens.org/portland-gardening-resources/chickens.php

photos by Holly and Patrick @ 20:13 from www.henwaller.com

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$1000 Fine, 6 months in jail for feeding pigeons?
http://www.suntimes.com/news/metro/695322,CST-NWS-pigeon13.article

JAIL BIRDS | Aldermen want to clean up 'all of this fecal matter'

December 13, 2007
BY FRAN SPIELMAN City Hall Reporter fspielman@suntimes.com
Mary Poppins once sang about the old woman who exhorted people to "Feed the birds. Tuppence a bag."

That advice wouldn't fly anymore in Chicago, if a pair of aldermen have their way.

» Click to enlarge image

A proposed ordinance will fine anyone feeding city pigeons up to $1000.
(Sun-Times file)

Aldermen Danny Solis (25th) and Helen Shiller (46th) are so serious about cleaning up pigeon droppings caked on monuments, bridges, sidewalks and plazas, they want to throw the book at those who feed the birds -- with fines as high as $1,000 and up to six months in jail.

Solis claimed that every well-fed pigeon dumps 25 pounds of fecal matter each year.

"It doesn't look good to have all of this fecal matter around a very beautiful monument" at 18th and Blue Island, Solis said.

It's "causing damage -- not only to property, but to health. . . . Whenever they overfeed them, rats gather around the statue. That's another health problem."

The ordinance that Solis and Shiller introduced at Wednesday's City Council meeting states, "No person shall purposely provide food -- including, but not limited to grain, seeds, greens, bread crumbs and miscellaneous food scraps -- intended for pigeon ingestion on public property or property subject to the city right-of-way."

Punishment would include fines of "not less than $100 or more than $1,000" and up to six months in jail. Each day pigeons are fed would constitute a separate offense.

Solis stressed that he's not talking about enforcing the law immediately. "We're going to try to have people get informed or get [two or three] warnings before anything happens" he said.

A plan by Southwest Side Ald. Lona Lane (18th) to throw chickens into the same coop was postponed at Wednesday's meeting.

The delay might have something to do with Mayor Daley, who sounds as if he's against the chicken ban.

"Let's be realistic. A lot of ethnic people do keep chickens. If you grew up in Chicago, you know that," he said.

Chicken Missoula

December 19th, 2007 by jane

From Linda:

Those of you at Friday's meeting may have heard me mention that the city of Missoula, Montana was considering changing their ordinance to allow chickens and that a video was produced about it.

Looks like Missoula will pass their ordinance today:

http://www.newwest.net/city/article/urban_chicken_ordinance_passes_committee_heads_to_full_council/C8/L8/

Note that the above article has a link to the ordinance so you can view it if you'd like. It's several paragraphs long. It does require that all feed be stored in predator and pest proof containers. That may be a good clause to add to our proposed ordinance.

The video is nicely done and you can view it here: http://www.newwest.net/city/article/missoulas_urban_chicken_squabble/C8/L8/

chicken feet

December 19th, 2007 by jane

From Eli:

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