Tuesday, August 31, 2010

September is BIKE COMMUTE CHALLENGE Month



The BTA's 2010 Bike Commute Challenge begins this Wednesday! Are you ready to join the competition of thousands of individuals and workplaces competing to see who can bike to work the most? While the challenge is run out of fellow Oregon city Portland, there are some groups from Ashland and Medford who compete locally. Join them!

How it works:
1) Anyone interested in taking the Challenge looks to see if their workplace is already registered. If it isn't, they register themselves and their workplace team at the same time. They become the Team Captain, by default.

2) Their coworkers register and join that workplace team.

3) Everyone logs their bike trips during the month of September.

4) At the end of the month, the BTA tallies the bike trips and ranks all workplaces in size categories by the percentage of commutes achieved by bike.

5) On October 7th, the BTA announces the winning companies in each category at a big After Party.

Check out the Bike Commute Challenge website for commuter tips, links to bike maps, information about bikes and transit, and to sign up!

http://bikecommutechallenge.com/join/

Thursday, August 26, 2010

Change the Channel to Raider TV this Fall

The student government at ASSOU tells us:

ASSOU's new television network -- headed by Executive Director Hayden Perkins and Vice President Curtis Bartlett -- is on schedule to be released on September 27th of this year. The project is the result of a cooperative student/community effort to bring easy-access news and entertainment to SOU students. It will include video content provided by students, as well as campus-, state-, nation-, and world-wide news, weather, and sports. The network will be available through our local cable TV system and will be publicly displayed in the Stevenson Union and Cascade Dining areas.

This new project is intended to provide not only governmental transparency, but also publicity to those clubs and organizations working to make SOU an even better place to be. Through our new network, student groups will be able to communicate their messages more easily and strengthen our campus community.

Please contact assoucommunications@sou.edu for more information.

Monday, August 23, 2010

Counseling from the Heart in Phoenix


The heartfelt people at Phoenix Counseling share their story:

There are counselors in a little house on Route 99 at the south end of Phoenix who save people’s lives. And they do it affordably, with a program of counseling from the heart.

With love, compassion, and encouragement, the experienced staff at the non-profit Phoenix Counseling Center treats the whole person using a wide range of holistic treatment modalities that strive to make a positive difference in the lives of their clients.

Their cozy home setting serves the community with a variety of counseling, support, and addiction recovery programs for women, men, and families, plus they also offer youth mentoring programs, programs in the schools, and programs in support of the Hispanic community.

To learn more, to volunteer or to get assistance for your self or for someone that you care about, call 541-535-4133, or go to: http://www.phoenixcounseling.org/

Wednesday, August 18, 2010

First Harvest provides Big Harvest for Jackson County

Tracy Goodrich tells us:

First Harvest, a project of Rotary District 5110, works to alleviate hunger by providing fresh food for families and individuals who are struggling. Food is acquired in two ways: 1. through volunteer driven community projects and 2. from corporate donors.

Community projects
include a one acre production garden in Central Point that contributed 22,000 lbs of produce distributed to Jackson County Food pantries through ACCESS, Inc.in 2009. A smaller garden in Ashland contributed 3,200 lbs to the Ashland Emergency Food Bank serving Ashland and Talent in 2009. Rotary Clubs, many partners and even more volunteers work together to create a successful community. First Harvest Past President and Southern Oregon Regional Chair, Rotarian Carol Wythe, is emphatic when she states: "Without the help of the community we could not do projects like this."

The projects are incredible for building a sense of community and providing platforms for nutritional education. For example, the Job Council and Medford Opportunity High School have formed a unique partnership to teach at risk students by providing alternative education opportunities. This year, under the leadership of Kate Giles, the Internship Specialist and Crew Leader, students are being provided with a hands-on, practical learning opportunity by working in the First Harvest garden. First Harvest is also partnering with Experience Works and Job Council programs in the administrative environment to help increase FH's productivity while helping participant's become employable. Yet another way to address hunger in Jackson County.

The majority of our food contributions are from corporate partners such as growers, corporate wholesalers, retailers, and processors. It is food that will never make it onto the commercial market for several reasons. First Harvest works to salvage the viable produce from disposal and acts as a broker to connect the food with transporters and the food banks and pantries who serve families and individuals in need.

For more information http://firstharvestd5110.org,
email: admin@firstharvestd5110.org
and phone: (541)973-5431

Do You Want Peace?

Do you want peace? So asks Marta Gomez of Ashland. She tells us: The Southern Oregon community now has an opportunity to share as well as learn about various personal paths all leading to inner peace. The Ashland Daily Tidings Inner Peace Column began when Sally McKirgan submitted a letter to the editor called “In This Season of Love, give yourself the gift of inner peace.” The letter was published as a guest commentary on Christmas Eve, December 24, 2008.

Sally followed up the letter in 2009 by suggesting a regular column that would feature people of varying paths sharing their practice for a peaceful life. Her goal: If the people of this planet practiced some form of inner peace it would alleviate wars and personal conflicts between neighbors and relatives.

Sally volunteers her time and continually seeks those who will write about their life lessons. When we share the whole community is enriched and lives are touched in ways seen and unseen. The column is printed every Saturday on the back page of the Daily Tidings. To see past articles:
www.dailytidings.com or submit an article of 600 to 700 words to Sally at innerpeace@q.com . Find or share your path to peace today!

Marta Gomez
Ashland

Monday, August 16, 2010

Farmer Incubator = Good Food for Me+You

The Southern Oregon Farmer Incubator helps beginning and limited resource farmers start and sustain their businesses while providing needed fresh produce to area food pantries. Participants can opt to participate in one or both of two program tracks: hands-on farm business courses and access to new markets.

Track 1: Farm / Business Training consists of bi-monthly hands-on agricultural, business management and marketing education over a nine-month season. Participants will receive an on-farm consultation with a small farms instructor and be referred to other experts to address any specific issues arising during the program year.

Track 2: Market Access gives participants an opportunity to sell their produce to area food pantries, made possible by a generous grant from the Cow Creek Umpqua Indian Foundation. Participants in the second track will also sell product through Rogue Valley Local Foods, an online farmers market, and will gain experience by staffing the markets in rotation.

The program is a collaboration between the Oregon State University Small Farms program and Thrive in partnership with Friends of Family Farmers, Rogue Farm Corps and ACCESS. For more information contact Thrive at http://www.buylocalrogue.org/index.php

Saturday, August 14, 2010

100 Trees for Talent


Diana Morley from Talent tells us:

Most residents want their city to look lovely, be ecologically sustainable and promote strong neighborhoods. When Talent’s centennial this year coincided with the work of local activists already promoting community building, we were in luck.

With the city's permission and help from Public Works and community volunteers, Sharon Anderson and Cynthia Care created the 100 Trees for Talent’s Centennial program. With the city’s Steve Olsen they planted 23 trees donated by Dan Bish at Plant Oregon, in the Chuck Roberts Park (more to be planted this fall) and invited the public to plant trees in their own yards. Program organizers also coordinated with American Cancer Society Relay for Life volunteers to plant over 200 donated seedling trees in a memorial grove along the Greenway. At City Hall is a map where residents pinpoint tree-planting addresses and receive a lapel button and centennial ID tags for the trees. The program’s next focus is to encourage the business community to plant trees on their sites.

My husband and I happily joined the program by planting a fuyu persimmon tree, which is flourishing. Through this program we’re all improving air quality, sprucing up our neighborhoods, and building good working relationships with others.

Thursday, August 12, 2010

FOTAS - Our Best Friend's Friends

Friends of the Animal Shelter (FOTAS) and the Jackson County Animal Shelter are working together toward the day when every adoptable cat and dog finds a good home. They come a little closer to this goal with each new volunteer who shares their time, talent, and energy.

FOTAS volunteers help the Shelter search for qualified homes through several Shelter-based and offsite adoption programs. They also help keep the animals healthy until a good home can be found.

FOTAS also recruits foster parents who provide a temporary sanctuary and help find the perfect permanent home for a cat, kitten, dog or puppy.

Contact Information:
Web: If you are interested in getting involved or learning more about general FOTAS programs visit them on the web at http://www.fotas.org/jcas.html

The Shelter hosts a Low Cost Dog and Cat Shot Clinic and nail trims August 21, 2010 from 11am to 2pm.

Monday, August 9, 2010

Lomakatsi is the Hopi word for ‘Life in Balance’


According to the Lomakatsi Restoration Project, a Rogue Valley organization dedicated to the regeneration and rehabilitation of watersheds within the bio-region of Southwestern Oregon, Nature does the real restoration work. Our job is to learn how to do things that help, without causing additional problems.

Here’s what they’ve learned so far:

• Act conservatively. Don’t change things too much at once.
• Respect what is already on site.
• Remember the wildlife.
• Remember the soil.
• Remember people.
• Learn.

Lomakatsi uses the historic and scientific support of Native American traditional ecological knowledge as a reference point to indicate the ultimate conditions for restoring fire to its place in the natural cycle of balanced ecosystem functions. Through their many programs and projects, Lomakatsi is beginning the process of restoring watershed health and fire resiliency to the landscape, for the benefit of people, communities, forests, wildlife, and the next seven generations to come.

Contact Information:
Web: http://www.lomakatsi.org/

Thursday, August 5, 2010

LOCAL GROWING at Ashland-Talent Growers CSA


The Ashland-Talent Growers CSA* is a new and exciting collaboration of small-scale local farmers and food producers in the communities of Ashland and Talent who have combined their resources in order to provide all of us fresh local organic food lovers with an increased variety of local products.

The Farms:

The three main farms – Happy Dirt Veggie Patch, Meadowlark Family Farm, and Village Farm – encompass ten acres on five different sites in the Bear Creek Region. Within their cooperative effort, individual farmers can specialize and grow what is best suited to the micro-climate and soil type of their location. And the group as a whole can take advantage of the diverse skill set of the individual farmers: organic farming, ranching, permaculture, mycology, food preservation, distribution, wildland ecology, and value-added food production.

*CSA stands for Community Supported Agriculture

Sunday, August 1, 2010

FAM JAM is FAM-TASTIC!

On the last Monday of each month, Tease Restaurant hosts the Rogue Fam Jam. This monthly musician's jam session is like no other musical experience in the Valley - it's music with a mission! The music is provided by artists like Vida Girls, Lost Maven, Alcyon Massive, Marko, Frankie Hernandez, Andy Casad, Aaron Reed, Mathew Michael, Ras Cricket, and more.

The mission is provided by local non-profits in need of your support. Rogue Fam Jam is packed to the rafters with musical genius and financial generosity and definitely one of the best nights of music all month

The Fam Jam is the opportunity for guests to 'band together' and support a local cause. This month's cause? Saving local farms, forests, and trails! All proceeds from door admissions, food sales and raffle items will benefit the Southern Oregon Land Conservancy.

Contact Information:
Web: http://www.teaseashland.com/