District of Sooke Open House this afternoon, 4 to 8 p.m.

Great chance to learn more about what’s happening locally and talk shop with District of Sooke staff and councillors this afternoon and early evening at the Community Hall, 4 p.m. to 8 p.m.  

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“Are you interested in learning what is happening in your community? Then join the District of Sooke Council and staff at the Spring Community Open House. Residents will have an opportunity to talk to Council and staff on current municipal projects and initiatives, including:

•Proposed Sunriver playing fields
•DRAFT Community Energy and Emissions Plan (CEEP)
•Connector Road Project update
•Proposed 2014 – 2018 Five Year Financial Plan
•New Sooke Emergency Plan
•Tsunami Signage
•Boat Launch Management Survey
•RCMP – Citizens on Patrol and Speedwatch
•Sooke Community Health Initiative
•Mayor’s Public Advisory Panel on Arts & Beautification (including Communities in Bloom)
•Town Centre Design Guidelines
•And much more …” 

 

 

In Transition 2.0: Online and free for the viewing

Screened at Sooke’s Awareness Film Night shortly after its release in the fall of 2012, the latest acclaimed documentary from the Transition Network is now available for free viewings online. In Transition 2.0 is director Emma Goude’s inspirational immersion into this global movement back to sanity, sustainability and old-fashioned community fun. As she writes: “The film gathers stories from around the world of ordinary people doing extraordinary things. You’ll hear about communities printing their own money, growing food everywhere, localising their economies and setting up community power stations. It’s an idea that has gone viral, a social experiment that is about responding to uncertain times with solutions and optimism. In a world that is awash with gloom, here is a story of hope, ingenuity and the power of growing vegetables in unexpected places.”

Click on the photo below for anytime presentations of this wonderful 66-minute film.

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(Early) Spring Update: Vernal Equinox Ahoy!

March Calendar

 *  Sat. March 1 – Town Hall Meeting on Liquified Fracked Gas, Mary Winspear Centre in Sidney, 3 p.m. Join the Wilderness Committee, Skeena Watershed Conservation Coalition and Council of Canadians for a town hall discussion about BC’s rush to extract and export fracked gas. https://wildernesscommittee.org/fracking

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* Sunday, March 2 – Transition Café with the Sooke Volunteer Centre’s Marlene Barry, Reading Room Café, 2 to 4 p.m.:  Sooke is proud of its unofficial status as one of Canada’s “volunteer capitals,” and all due credit goes to Marlene Barry (pictured here at Transition’s 2012 Sooke Slow Food Cycle) for her central role in coordinating and promoting  a remarkable 180-plus non-profit organizations in the region. Join Marlene at this month’s café as she tells us about volunteer opportunities in the region and then joins the lively conversation about subjects near and dear to the hearts of Transition Townies. Learn more here: http://www.sookeregionresources.com. Thanks again to the Reading Room’s Kathe Drover and her staff.

* Mon. March 10th and 24th – District of Sooke Council meetings. There’s approx. 80 seats in the council chambers reserved for the public, most of them empty on nights that don’t feature a hot-topic issue. The action can be replayed on the District’s website 24 hours later, yet it’s a worthwhile process to watch the interplay of councillors, staff, media, a handful of dedicated souls who attend nearly every meeting, and the various interested parties awaiting their turn at the mic. Certainly  attending a meeting is a fast-track education about the realpolitik of municipal politics in this election year and an opportunity to develop respect, understanding and empathy for those involved. Two council meetings are scheduled in March along with committees and the ongoing Mayor’s Advisory Panels: http://www.sooke.ca/EN/main/documents/public_meetings.html.

* Wed. March 12 – Awareness Film Night Farming & Gardening Gala, EMCS, 7 p.m. Guest speakers Mary Alice Johnson and Mary Coll from the Sooke Farmland Trust Society, the Farmland Protection Coalition’s Natalie Chambers and Kimi and Kareno from Steveston’s Sweet Digz Farm (the latter two are featured in Hands in the Dirt, one of the evening’s three short films). Arrive early to shop for local food and artisan products in the foyer. Admission, as ever, is by donation. http://awarenessfilmnight.ca.

* Sat. March 15 – Sooke Food CHI workshop, Sooke Harbour House, 1 to 4 p.m.  Cowichan Green Community shares its food action plans, market research and other initiatives at the second of Food CHI’s spring 2014 workshops. $10 http://sookefoodchi.ca/events/strengthening-local-farms-workshop/

– Transition Video Night @ the Little Vienna Bakery, 7 p.m. Stephen Hindrichs will host his third night of short educational/inspirational videos at Susan and Michael Nyikes’ café – this one focused on permaculture and other smart approaches to gardening and farming.

* March 15-23 – School’s out for spring break

 * Sun. March 16 – Market gardening workshop with Jean Martin Fortier, Fernwood Community Centre, Victoria. 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. The Young Agrarians present a daylong intensive with this celebrated micro-farm specialist from Quebec’s Eastern Townships. http://youngagrarians.org/jean-martin-fortier-victoria.

* Thurs. March 20 – Vernal Equinox at 9:57 a.m. PST.

* Sat. March 22 – “Can We Feed the World,” a presentation by American food activist Joel Salatin, Alix Goolden Hall, Victoria. 7 p.m. http://www.pacificrimcollege.ca/joel_salatin.html

* Tues., March 25 – District of Sooke Spring Open House @ the Community Hall, 4 p.m. to 8 p.m.

Random Notes from our email newsletter … 

 

1506998_645825065483714_214113619_n-1* Drastic Plastic: Like everyone who saw Awareness Film Night‘s screening of the documentary Trashed late last year, our fears about plastic use and misuse are back to red-alert levels. What can be done locally? It begins at home (as ever) with personal choices that dramatically reduce our individual contributions to the waste stream. Transition’s Blake Barton produced educational display boards for our Seedy Saturday table, and he along with our reps Yves Boudreau, Carolyn Bateman, Dave Court and Bev England were busy all day talking about alternates and possible solutions (a retail levy of at least .10 cents per bag has proven to be an effective way to remind shoppers to carry their own canvas bags). Thanks to our volunteers, especially Yvonne Court, whose handmade reusable shopping and veggie bags were a great conversation starter at our table. And congratulations to Sooke Food CHI for another sweet soul-and-seed-stirring day that drew a full house despite the snowfall.

* Streetbank: A reminder about the Sooke chapter of this share-and-share-alike collaborative consumption network – a great way to save money and get to know a few more Sookies in the bargain. There are currently 49 “neighbours” (within a 15km radius) sharing 56 items – power drill, books, DVDs, an electric sander, bottles and wine labels, dog-walking  services and (the newest addition) a handy gizmo that makes quick work of invasive scotch broom. The service is free and the registration process a breeze. http://www.streetbank.com.

* Permablitz: Transition’s Stephen Hindrichs is taking the lead role in organizing Sooke’s first “Permablitz,” which is effectively an old-fashioned community work party dedicated to a single, day-long project. The idea is to take a fallow front yard and transform it into an organic food garden utilizing perennial trees, shrubs and herbs. Stephen’s scouting a suitable location for our first such makeover, and we’ll be issuing a call for volunteers later this year. In the meantime you can learn more about the concept here: http://svipermablitz.com.

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* Peak Moment TV: January’s visit to town by videographers Robin Mallgren and Janaia Donaldson has generated several Sooke items in their online magazine/video channel. Check out this item on the food forest growing in a Sooke backyard (http://peakmoment.tv/journal/gardening-in-a-small-space-go-vertical) and this profile of our local sustainable food heroes who “got it” decades ago! (http://peakmoment.tv/journal/serving-local-seasonal-food-for-decades-sooke-harbour-house).

Selections from last month’s Transition Sooke social media postings …

– Salish Sea Marine Sanctuary  – North America’s first international marine sanctuary: http://salishsea.org

– Vancouver Aquarium swoops in to save an ailing Whiffen Spit otter: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fBwthoy80ew#t=65

– Free, widely touted 72-hour online course in permaculture principles for home, garden and community: http://www.permaculturedesigntraining.com

– Save Our Salmon! A petition to the B.C. premier – http://www.change.org/petitions/restore-wild-salmon-ban-salmon-feedlots-in-bc

– Launch of the international Metta Center for Nonviolence: http://mettacenter.org

– World’s largest solar energy plant: http://gizmodo.com/the-worlds-largest-solar-plant-started-creating-electr-1521998493

– What If Winston Churchill was leading the fight against climate change? http://www.yesmagazine.org/issues/how-to-eat-like-our-lives-depend-on-it/winston-churchill-leading-fight-climate-change

– “Certified organic” are the words you’re looking for in B.C. http://www.upworthy.com/a-funny-video-that-makes-you-never-want-to-fall-for-this-natural-lie-again?g=2&c=upw1

– Urban homesteading: http://www.nextworldtv.com/videos/homesteading-skills/self-reliance-in-la-radical-home-ec.html

– Robins and first rhodos everywhere … Spring is right around the corner: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9bOWtkV39Kg

For regularly updated news and items of interest, please join us online:

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/pages/Transition-Sooke/149407388458820

Twitter: https://twitter.com/SookeTransition

Happy trails,

Transition Sooke

February 2014 Update

Transition Sooke Newsletter – February 2014

Get out your daytimers, and off we go …

???????????????????????????????*  Sunday, Feb. 2 from 2 to 4 p.m. – Transition Café with guest Maja Tait:  We’re delighted to report that councillor Maja Tait has accepted an invitation to again join us at the Reading Room Café.  A long-time champion of Transition values, she’s happy to field questions about any matter of civic interest – the connector road, the Sooke Disposal debate, Smart Growth principles, amalgamation with the CRD and/or the tourism upsides of mountain biking. The latter is her current passion, and she’ll likely be arriving at the café with a bright smile and a spattering of mud after navigating Sacred Mountain’s forested runs.

* Mon., Feb. 3 – Committee of the Whole Meeting re: Sooke’s Emergency Plan: The first of the month’s meetings at the Municipal Hall begins at 6 p.m. Check out the full council and committee schedule here: http://www.sooke.ca/EN/main/documents/public_meetings.html.

* Wed., Feb. 5 – Sooke Food CHI’s Annual General Meeting: The society’s sixth AGM and potluck get-together is set for next Wednesday at the Sooke Harbour House starting at 7:30 p.m. Anita Wasiuta and the board will be discussing a draft three-year action plan that evolved from a remarkable strategy session held back in November. Go online to read the plan and provide feedback through a survey: http://sookefoodchi.ca/involved.

* Mon., Feb. 10 in Victoria – Farmland Protection Coalition rally at the BC Legislature starting at noon: A family oriented rally to show support for the Agricultural Land Reserve and increased food security on the Island. https://www.facebook.com/events/767592009936510.

* Wed. Feb. 12 – Awareness Film Night: Halfway through her 19th AFN season, Jo Phillips presents an Island-made documentary about the harsh realities of the residential school system and its lasting impact on First Nations peoples today.  Kuper Island: Return to the Healing Circle will be followed by a post-screening talk with filmmaker Peter Campbell and former residential school students Alex Nelson and Belvie Brebber. Also on hand will be Kwagiulth artist Carey Newman to speak about his Witness blanket art project. EMCS @ 7 p.m. http://awarenessfilmnight.ca.kuperisland_cat12

* Thurs. Feb. 20 – Harbourside Cohousing information session:  Meet some of the members of Sooke’s exciting new strata-title cohousing venture (now more than 2/3rds of the way to a full house) and learn about their vision of consensus community living. Free admission to the 1 p.m. session at Harbourside’s Common House at 6669 Horne Road (look for the new sign above the door). For more information: www.harbourside.ca, and please RSVP to info@harbourside.ca.

* Saturday, Feb. 22 – Seedy Saturday: Mary Alice Johnson, Jessica Boquist and their Sooke Food CHI colleagues are again hosting their annual seed exchange at the Community Hall, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. This year’s theme focuses on family farms, and there will again be a wide array of vendors selling seeds, plant starts and artisanal food. Drop by the Transition Sooke table to say hello to core team members Yvonne Court and Blake Barton along with our volunteers Dave Court and Carolyn Bateman. Pick up seeds from Sofie’s garden, and get inspired about composting and plastic recycling. http://sookefoodchi.ca/events/seedysaturday/seedy saturday 2014

Random Notes

* Sooke spotlight on Peak Moment TV:  Transition’s Stephen and Lee Hindrichs hosted the team from the online, Nextworld TV-style channel Peak Moment last week during their visit to town. Watch for videoclips on the Sooke Harbour House and Steve Unger/Mary Coll’s InishOge Farm in the coming weeks.  http://peakmoment.tv/journal/inishoge-farm-storing-warmth-and-real-wealth.

* Well wishes to the Juan de Fuca Community Land Trust Society: A group of Otter Point notables (Sid Jorna, Heather Phillips, Arnie Campbell and Margo Swinburnson included) are working towards purchasing and preserving the Admiral’s Forest, a 65-acre “made-to-order” seaside park in Otter Point with established trails and mature, second-growth forest. http://www.jdflandtrust.ca.

* Compost Education Centre: Transition Sooke has touched base with the Victoria-based centre about the possibility of bringing a workshop to town later this spring. In addition to a crash course on composting basics, the centre also offers deep-discount prices on essential tools – composter ($35), digester ($35), worm bin with worms ($25) and wingdigger ($7) included. We’ll let you know when and if it happens.

For regularly updated news and items of interest, please join us on social media:

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/pages/Transition-Sooke/149407388458820

Twitter: https://twitter.com/SookeTransition

Happy trails.

T-Town Sooke

Reminder: Members’ Meeting this coming Thursday @ Reading Room

 

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Transition Sooke invites you to an Open Space gathering at the Reading Room Café from 7 to 9 p.m. on Thursday, April 25th. You, our members, have the power and desire to help our town respond to the major concerns of the global Transition Town movement – climate change, fossil fuel dependence and economic instability. The “Open Space” process allows attendees to set the agenda, identify key issues and offer concrete directions. You will have a chance to express your point of view, add your creativity, listen deeply, and vote with your feet as well as with colourful cards. Open Space meetings can result in transformative experiences for the individuals and groups involved. Let’s see what happens! ~ regards, Michael Tacon on behalf of the Sooke Transition Town Core Team (Yvonne, Margaret, Andrew, Lee, Stephen, Erik, Sofie and Jeff)
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Call to Action: Make Vancouver Island a GE-Free Zone

Elected officials of Vancouver Island and the Coastal Communities need to know that we, the people, are against genetically engineered foods being grown on our island. So declare Vancouver Island a GE-free zone!

 

Where: Prestige Hotel, Sooke

When: April 13 from 11:30-12:30

Paint your message on a placard

Wear green as a sign that natural is where it’s at on Vancouver Island

Bring a GE-free seed and a friend

What have you got to lose….clean local food!

Let everyone know and show up!

Take a look at our Event Facebook page!

April Calendar: Spring Showers, May Markets

calendar_april2013Sunday, April 7: Transition Town Café, 2 to 4 p.m. at the Reading Room Café. Transition Sooke founder Michael Tacon will host our monthly mixer on what’s forecast to be a wet weekend – come in from the rain for great conversation and java! (Note: If you’re from Shirley or Otter Point, your time will likely be best spent at the OPSRRA Annual General Meeting, 2 p.m. onwards at the Otter Point Volunteer Fire Department.)

Monday, April 8: District of Sooke Council meeting, 7 p.m. at Municipal Hall. Public input is sought on the town’s Corporate Strategic Plan for 2013/14, the latest draft of which can be read here + Please come out and support Jo Phillips as she asks council (during the early stages of the meeting, i.e. you can make some noise, then get home early) to endorse GE Watch Comox Valley’s campaign to “ban the import, export and growing of plants and seeds containing genetically engineered DNA on Vancouver Island.”

Wednesday, April 10: Awareness Film Night screens Salmon Confidential in the EMCS Theatre, 7 p.m. Special guest: Wild salmon crusader Alexandra Morton … Also that night: Mayor’s Public Advisory Panel on Community Health & Social Issues, 7 p.m. @ the Prestige (all welcome, chaired by Nicky Logins, director of the Sooke Family Resource Society).

Weekend of April 13/14: Rally in support of GE Watch Comox Valley’s campaign to ban GMOs on Vancouver Island as the Association of Vancouver Island and Coastal Communities holds its AGM at the Prestige. Stay tuned for details on day and hour.

Thursday, April 18: Mayor’s Advisory Panel on Economic Development, 7 p.m. at the Prestige, chaired by Royal Roads University’s Steve Grundy, all welcome. Learn more about the upcoming Mountain Bike Tourism Symposium in Sooke (May 26-28), the Mayor’s “Promote Sooke” task force & more.

Thursday, April 25: Sooke Transition Townies are warmly invited to participate in an essential “Open Space” priority setting and planning session at the Reading Room, 7 p.m. Help shape the future of your local Transition Town and participate in a lively “dotmocracy” process led by core team members Andrew Moore and Michael Tacon … also that same night @ the Prestige, 7 p.m., the Mayor’s Advisory Panel on Arts & Beautification chaired by Brenda Parkinson. It will likely focus on spirited plans for an educational arts centre in the former Mulligans Bar & Grill at the edge of John Philips Memorial Park.

Saturday, April 27: Expect a few early-bird vendors to be setting up tables at the Sooke Country Market, which doesn’t open officially until the second Saturday in May.

And while you’ve got the daytimer out …

Saturday, May 4: Sooke Rotary Club’s 23rd annual Auction & Spring Fair at Seaparc Arena, 10 a.m. to 10 p.m.  + Sooke District Lioness Club‘s annual 32km Galloping Goose Walk in support of Camp Shawnigan.

Sunday, June 2: The 5th annual Sooke Secret Garden Tour, a fundraiser for the Sooke Philharmonic Orchestra.

Sunday, August 18: The return of Sooke Food CHI’s delightful Farm Tour

PS For more, regularly check out the Sooke Voice News events board – the definitive article when it comes to what’s happening here in town week in, week out. [Oh, and as Britt Santowski points out, the one in the Sooke News Mirror is pretty fantastic too! ;-)]

Plotting The Course Ahead: Wide Open Spaces @ the Reading Room, April 25

CALLING ALL SOOKE TRANSITION TOWNIES: AN INVITATION TO AN OPEN SPACE GATHERINGImage
 
Sooke Transition Town invites you to an Open Space gathering at the Reading Room Café at 7 p.m. on Thursday, April 25th, 2013.
 
Three years into our evolving history, Sooke Transition Town is again inviting our members and supporters to collectively plot the course for a brighter, more sustainable future right here in Sooke. We’ve done this twice before, and continue to do so informally with our monthly Transition Cafe gatherings. Now with spring busting out all over, your core team again wants your ideas, enthusiasm and input. 
 
You, our members, have the power and desire to help our town respond to the major concerns of the global Transition Town movement – climate change, fossil fuel dependence and economic instability. The “Open Space” process allows attendees to set the agenda, identify key issues and offer concrete directions. You will have a chance to express your point of view, add your creativity, listen deeply, and vote with your feet as well as with colourful cards.

Open Space meetings can result in transformative experiences for the individuals and groups involved. Let’s see what happens!

 
We look forward to seeing you there on April 25th!
Regards,
Sooke Transition Town Core Team
 


Michael, Margaret, Andrew, Jeff, Yvonne, Erik, Stephen, Lee and Sofie.
 
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Creating Sustainable, Affordable Housing Communities in Greater Victoria

To register  for the  March/April/May/June dialogue sessions (details in the link and pasted below): https://www.surveymonkey.com/s/PRWBVCB

Village Building Dialogue Sessions:

Exploring Possibilities for Creating Sustainable,

Affordable Housing Communities in Greater Victoria

Intention

The purpose of this series is to help generate community readiness for creation of sustainable, affordable housing communities in the Capital Region. These facilitated dialogues will bring together the expertise of featured resource people and the creativity of diverse participants.

Upcoming dates, topics and resource people:

Thursday, March 21st – Strategizing to Attract Land and Capital, with Gene Miller, Linda Ross, William Ross & Veronica Doyle

Thursday, April 4th– Developing Co-ops and Co-housing, with Marty Frost, Joy Emmanuel, Margaret Critchlow and Bill McKechnie

Thursday, May 2nd – Designing Living Buildings, with Ann and Gord Baird

Thursday, June 6th – Conserving Water and Using “Waste”, with Anita Wolfe; Ann and Gord Baird

Details

Time: 7:00 – 9:00 pm (doors at 6:45)

Location: Garry Oak Room (1335 Thurlow, off Moss St)

Cost: by donation (suggested $5 – $20) – refreshments provided

Facilitator: James Pratt (for more information, contact james@prattconsulting.ca)

Participants: people interested in learning about, and potentially co-creating, sustainable and affordable housing in this region!