An Organic Conversation Blog

Archive for the ‘Act’ Category

Greening Your Holiday Crafts

by An Organic Conversation | December 12th, 2011

According to a study by Stanford University, if every family used reused materials to wrap gifts rather than single-use paper, it would save enough paper to cover 45,000 football fields.

Wow! When I read that, I felt even better about my choice to make my own
wrapping paper for my family gifts. For years I’ve made my own wrapping
paper out of brown grocery bags and newspaper. Usually I decorate the bag with
drawn or painted images of caricatures or scenes of winter. With the newspapers
I’ll cut out pictures or headlines that I’ll make into funny jokes the recipient will
appreciate. It started as a way to recycle and ended up as something that has
become a favorite tradition for our family.
Here’s a tip – plan your bag around the size of the gift so your artwork
won’t get lost in the cutting.

Another fun thing I’ve done over the years is to make potato prints of
stars, trees, and other festive images. if you haven’t done this before you can get some easy
instructions from this website

One more thing I like to do with my grocery bag wrapping paper is to make leaf
rubbings. All you have to do is take a fresh leaf from your neighborhood or park,
place it under the bag, and rub a crayon over the top. As you can see this can
create a wrapping that would be as much of a gift as the gift itself.

Leaf Rubbing

Apprenticeships on Farms

by Helge Hellberg | April 11th, 2010

Are you thinking about working at a local farm this summer as an apprentice to get your hands dirty and to learn where your food comes from?

Make sure you check all State Department of Labor regulations!

There is nothing new about this legislation, but it is often not entirely known that unpaid apprenticeships at farms – organic or not, may violate existing labor laws in your state.

For example, in California, labor law mandates that if a person provides services of “economic value” to the employer, the employer has to comply with the state’s labor law requirements, which includes allowing breaks and guaranteeing a safe workplace, paying at least minimum wage, workers compensation, and state taxes.

Every state in the United States has their own labor regulations and requirements and may handle farm apprenticeships differently.  However, currently in California, if you want to spend the summer working at an organic farm – even if your intention is to learn and not to “work” – if you provide labor or services that would otherwise require the hiring of a worker, you very likely will need to be treated as a farm worker, and calling it an unpaid apprenticeship would be illegal.

The current labor law was intended to protect farm worker’s right, so the idea behind the current legislation is good. Needless to say though, the local organic food movement is attracting many people, young and old, to find the origin of their food and re-connect to their soil, and a review of the current legislation in California and many other states is much needed to allow some form of apprenticeship programs on small farms throughout the state and nation.

For now, to avoid any unnecessary predicaments and violations and possible fines, please check with your state’s Department of Labor before you reach out to a farm – or before you offer apprenticeship opportunities on your farm or ranch this summer.

Visit the California Department of Industrial Relations website for further information.

(posted under “bummer”)

Did I Love Enough?

by Helge Hellberg | November 15th, 2009

It’s been cold this past week.  The temperature has dropped, the wasps are gone, the apples are in, and my dog suddenly has a white breath in the cold morning air.

How did this happen?  I remember as if it were only the week before; jumping in the pond at a friend’s place to wash off the dust of a beautifully warm late summer day.

And now, at seven in the morning, out in West Marin, the patches of grass that lie in the shade are frozen over.

This will happen to my life too.  Suddenly, before I know it, I will be in my late fall, right before winter, just before darkness covers the season of transformation – a season in which some things will die and new life will be re-born out of their death, out of my death.

So this is it, then, this is the time to reflect on this life and this year. 

It’s fall.  And as I light my first candle of this season, take a hot bath, and all of a sudden find my bed cozier than ever, I look at this year - at my successes and failures, my travels, my new and old friends, and I realize that there is only one question to ask: 

Did I love enough?

Knowing that the answer will likely never be “yes”, I am glad that there are six weeks left before the end of 2009.

I know I can love more, I know many of us can.  May our breath in the cold air these mornings remind us that we are all on borrowed time, and that the one question at the end of the day will be the same. . . for all of us.

Motivated by Love

by Helge Hellberg | November 3rd, 2009

What am I motivated by – my desire for love, or my experience of love?

It’s so easy in this world of melting glaciers, loss of habitat, environmental decline and human aggression to be motivated by our desire for love – by our desire for a healthy planet, a loving relationship, a world full of respect and dignity in which everyone and everything thrives.

Yet, when we are motivated by our desire for love, that world exists only in our imagination, somewhere in the future. It will always exist there, in the future, not yet to be had. It will always be out of reach in our lifelong pursuit to create it. I am almost certain that world will actually never come.

When we stop and realize the beauty of this life and the truth that surrounds us, the amazing full moon last night, the kindness of most people, the fear in others and our strength to be gentle with it, the magic of serendipity every day in our lives – when we are motivated by love, the work to protect this planet and all life on it still remains, but we carry the world that we desire already with us, wherever we go.

You Are Part Of The Mosaic

by Helge Hellberg | May 30th, 2009

“Each of us in our own way, with our own gifts, in our own time, can find a way to be part of this mosaic of a rising consciousness.”
Terry Tempest Williams