A co-worker/friend of mine was on the raw diet. I never knew much about flax seeds except that it was something hip right now. However, come to learn there is a lot of flax seed in her raw foods she would make. She gave me a few of her raw foods she had made in the dehydrator, and truthfully some were really good, and some were - meant to be baked (sorry! you know I love you!!)
Well, she gave me some flax seeds in a container, and when I got home I sprinkled them on the ground.
Some may argue this is my usual face as I'm gardening.
Soooo update on that experiment: The flax flowers are now blooming, and they are beautiful!
(albeit small) and you get to harvest more flax seeds! I've also bought a bag of flaxseeds, and I'm trying to incorporate it into more of the foods I make,
as you cannot deny the high fiber content (among other health benefits) of those teeny little things!
UPDATE: since this blog post was made, the trustees have proposed the seperation of the BYC ordinances from the other sustainable measures to be discussed on 7/25. Therefore, depending on what the trustees decide on 7/23, any of what is posted below may not be discussed at all on the 7/25 planning commission meeting. If you were planning to come to the 7/25 meeting in support of any of these measures, please susbscribe and further notice will be given as it is known. The Village trustees have decided to have open forum on whether the Planning Commission should allow residents of Mundelein several new sustainable city planning ideas. These include: apiaries (bee hives), wind farms, backyard chickens, and urban farming among other sustainability practices.
There has been quite a bit of heated debate among our own trustees on whether to allow some of these measures. I understand their concerns. I'm sure the people who first introduced recycling ran into push back, and push back. The trustees in their ambivalence have decided to allow the public to influence the decisions of the planning commission, and then the end result of what the planning commission compiles will be voted on by the trustees on a future date. I just wanted to touch on the apiaries(bee hives) and backyard chickens for a moment, since they are the ones the trustees couldn't agree on, when I went to observe an earlier meeting. They were split 50-50.
While I am neither for nor against apiaries, I truly do understand the reasoning for them in sustainable city planning. There is a huge problem going on. Just do a quick search for "colony collapse disorder", and the results are more alarming than zombie apocalypse.
Häagen-Dazs ice cream has a "save our bees" campaign
This is a video from 2007, and the narrator says
"you may not have heard much about it, but you will".
It is now 2012, and some still have not heard of colony collapse disorder.
I am unsettled by this very real fact that honeybees are
dying all around the world at a shocking rate,
and without some help on our end, we could be facing some very
Backyard Chickens: As readers of my blog know, I am partial to having backyard chickens.
Listed below are the most common concerns voiced by people against having pet chickens.
I've tried my best to include facts, and sources.
Myth: Chickens are noisy.
Facts: The main rule for keeping urban chickens is “NO ROOSTERS ALLOWED.” Hens do not make a ruckus in the morning like their male counterparts and they are fast asleep in their coop by the
time the sun goes down. (As you probably know, hens do lay eggs
without the aid of a rooster.) Hens make a soft clucking noise
that is less noisy than a barking dog or a leaf blower.
Myth: Chickens are messy and smelly.
Facts: Chickens themselves do not smell. This is a fact. It is only
their feces that has the potential to smell which is also true of feces
from dogs, cats, rabbits or any other animal that is outside.
A 4-pound laying hen produces 0.0035 cu ft of manure per day. According to FDA, an average dog generates ¾ of a pound of manure a day that cannot be composted because of the harmful bacteria and
parasites (hookworms, roundworms and tapeworms) that can infect
The reason people fear an odor problem is because their only experience with chickens, if they have any at all, is on a farm or commercial poultry operation. Under these circumstances, hundreds if not thousands of chickens are sometimes kept in crowded conditions with poor ventilation and without proper cleaning. As a result, ammonia can build up and these facilities can stink. There is a huge difference between these environments and the the very popular and rapidly growing sustainable backyard chicken movement.
Myth: Chickens attract rodents/predators.
Facts: The truth is that rodents already exist everywhere, and are attracted to any unprotected food source like bird seed, dog food, cat food, open trash cans, fruit trees, and even koi ponds. There are preventative measures (chicken feed containers and coop designs) to nearly eliminate this concern.
Myth: Backyard chickens will decrease property value.
Facts: There is absolutely no evidence that keeping pet hens within
the ordinance guidelines would have any affect on property values. This is property rights issue and while it is necessary to protect neighbors from any potential nuisance, homeowners should have as much freedom as possible with minimal government interference. If property values decreased with backyard chicken keeping, why would major cities like Atlanta, New York, Chicago, Los Angeles, Las Vegas, Madison, WI, Denver, support backyard chicken keeping?
Urban chicken keepers, like all good pet owners, are concerned about how their chickens might be affecting their neighborhood. They want their chickens to be a positive experience for everyone and they make
an effort to keep an open dialog with their immediate neighbors to ensure any concerns or issues are addressed. The American Poultry Association advises that the rights of neighbors must be considered
when raising chickens in the city, and that structures and materials used should blend into the neighborhood’s existing structures. Chickens can be kept in a yard so inconspicuously, that it may not be apparent that chickens are even around. There are eggs to share, and a chicken coop in the neighborhood can actually be a conversation starter, and thus it can enhance a neighborhood community.
Myth: Chickens will create a health hazard.
Facts: In the US, there is no need at present to remove a flock of
chickens because of concerns regarding avian influenza. The U.S.
Department of Agriculture monitors potential infection of poultry
and poultry products by avian influenza viruses and other infectious
disease agents.
H5N1 virus (Avian Flu) does not usually infect people, but since November 2003,
nearly 400 cases of human infection with highly pathogenic avian influenza A
(H5N1) viruses have been reported by more than a dozen countries in Asia, Africa,
the Pacific, Europe and the Near East. Highly pathogenic avian influenza A (H5N1)
viruses have NEVER been detected among wild birds, domestic poultry, or people in
Research shows more diseases can be spread from dogs and cats than from chickens.
Dogs and cats can spread parasites, bacteria, fungi and viruses to humans. Rabies,Cat Scratch Fever, ringworm,Roundworm, hookworm, tapeworm and Giardia intestinal are intestinal parasites that can be passed to humans from pet waste. There are also a number of tick-borne diseases that can be brought home from dogs and cats like Lyme disease and Rocky Mountain spotted fever. Chickens can actually keep your yard healthier because they eat ticks and insects.
Myth: Backyard Chicken Keeping is a fad.
Facts: Chickens have been domesticated since 10,000 BC and have
played an important part of life ever since. Many of our grandparents
had victory gardens and knew how to grow vegetables, can food, and
raised their own chickens.
Raising hens in the backyard is a tremendous opportunity for parents to teach their children about the responsibility that comes with caring for a pet and because of their small size and friendly demeanor, young children can easily handle hens without the fear of being bitten.
Backyard chicken keeping requires extensive planning and preparation. You can’t just go to the pet store to get chickens like a dog or cat or any other pet. It takes a great deal of time to conduct all the research, build a coop, acquire all the necessary feeding and watering supplies and then to finally get the chickens themselves.
Now that those concerns are out of the way, why do people want them as pets? To try and keep the answer short and sweet, mankind has always lived with the help of animals. In the chicken's case, they would eat food scraps, produce poop that fertilizes plants, lay eggs, and provide meat (backyard chickens are no-slaughter within the village). Back yard flocks are smaller than the farmers had in the past, but then again - so is the land the people are on. According to the proposed ordinances, the chickens must stay in their coop and runs, so it is the equivalent of having a rabbit in a backyard hutch.
It is an interesting time to be meandering about on this earth. We are understanding the consequences of our actions, and taking measures and planning to stop harming our living conditions. Fear of the unknown could be calmed by knowledge, and facts, but only if there is mutual respect and an environment fostering communication.
My personal belief is: the sustainable city planners that we hired are the experts. If we paid them for expertise, why not listen to them? My hope is that these measures all pass in some way, with regulations and ordinance guidelines. I've always been an advocate for the greater good. Sometimes it's harder to do the right thing than to "do it the way we've always done it".
and a big thank you to the village of Mundelein for even considering these new measures. :-)
My earliest recollection of mulberry eating were at Peterson park in Chicago. It was there where I saw a row of the trees completely littering the ground. Black little things all over the ground. I asked my mother or father if they were edible, and once I got a green light, I never stopped eating them. I've come to know over the years that my grandmother would even make a tea out of the leaves that was supposed to help diabetes to some extent. Koreans have an affinity for the mulberry as a herbal medicinal plant.
I realized over the years where they were mapped around the city, so I could come back to them when it was season. My brother and I would return home with purple stained fingers, clothes,and mouths. Friends or classmates would think we were crazy when we ate out of any trees by the school, and question how sure I was that it's not poisonous. I took mental notes that the berries that turn white/light purple when ripe are way sweeter than the ones that turn black, and they wont stain your clothes!
I pretty much made a pact with myself that whenever I had kids, I would teach them all about all this food that grows all over the place that is barely eaten. In this photo, not only are my children picking from the trees, but our neighbor's daughter as well. I've had the joy of inadvertently teaching the neighborhood children. Some from further down the block were surprised to see me harvest a potato out of the side garden one year. "Potatoes come from the ground?! ewwww!"
... well, they had to learn sometime. It was either going to be then or the back of the bus.
Sometimes I am caught off guard by my daughter being proactive and asking "Mommy, are these poisonous?" as she points to some unfamiliar berry by the sidewalk. My response to most of them is
"I'm not sure, so let's assume yes until we find out". That goes for mushrooms and any foraging, too. Always better to err on the side of caution.
Here we have administered the "lay something on the ground, and shake the branches furiously" technique, which has the kids scrambling for berries as though a pinata had burst. Kel asked me to try making a Jelly/Preserve out of this. I told her I'd give it a try, and currently the mulberries are sitting in my freezer waiting for a day that isn't 100+ degrees.
Our haul. Not much, but the small tree at my friend's house gave the kids enough mulberries to snack on, to take home, and childhood memories for a lifetime.