October 23, 2011-TTO to participate in Valley Wide discussion with Supervisor Bennett at Camp Comfort 2:30-5:00 pm

Transition to Organics was invited to participate in the Ojai Valley Wide Discussion with Supervisor Bennett.  We submitted the following list of accomplishments and recommendations.

Accomplishments toward Making the Ojai Valley a Model Green and Sustainable Community:

Transition to Organics has sponsored two successful, well-attended conferences this year. We also sponsored, along with Denise Ritchie (Malibu Compost), the screening of an important documentary, Queen of the Sun, What Are the Bees Telling Us, at the Ojai Theater, with the filmmaker Taggart Siegel and Ed Begley Jr. hosting the event.  Courtney Cole (Grounded by Nature), and Kim Ainsworth (owner of Redtail Ranch) joined us in sponsoring the after event, which was a memorable community gathering honoring the bees and beekeepers.  Organic and biodynamic farmers donated time, food and energy to prepare delicious dishes and treats for this incredible gathering.

The most notable result of our efforts is that we were instrumental in inspiring a Ventura County orchard to begin the transition to organics!  The orchard manager also manages other orchards, and we are hopeful that the success of this first orchard will spur the manager on to begin transitioning the others!

Our Transition to Organics Team includes Steve Sprinkel (Farmer & the Cook, Gozo Farm),  Matt Boeck (organic horticulturist and pest control advisor), and Gena Nonini (biodynamic expert and land manager for Marian Farms).  They are available for consultation and advice on how to best begin and follow through with transitioning to organics.

Also, because of the Queen of the Sun event, we have a newly formed Beekeepers Club meeting at the community meeting room next to Farmer and the Cook, monthly, as announced.  80 people are signed up in the club and 40 actually showed up for the first meeting.  The room was buzzing with enthusiasm in support of creating bee friendly, sustainable landscaping, backyards, orchards and agriculture in our valley.

Update:  We just got news that one of the attendees of the Queen of the Sun event (an orchard owner in San Diego County) who was inspired by the message of the movie, is in the first steps of transitioning!  Also: a local orchard manager and a golf course manager are seeing results with the biodynamic compost soil amendment, and are moving ahead in testing larger areas on the properties they manage.

Current Efforts or Future Plans in this area:

Transition to Organics is continuing to educate and inspire community members to honor the bees and support our local, sustainable farmers and fruit growers.  Transition to Organics has already spread to Carpinteria, where a community group, Carpinteria Transition 2 Organics, has formed!

We are planning the next Transition to Organics conference, details TBA.   We invite the whole community to participate!

Please visit our website:  www.sustainableojai.org

This website includes a resource page for all local sustainable organizations to send information and events to be posted.

Ojai Valley Wide Discussion Survey

#1   Making the Ojai Valley a model green and sustainable community:

Do you feel that the Ojai Valley is a model green and sustainable community or that there is more work to do in this area?

               Yes, the Ojai Valley is a model green and sustainable community                             _     X       More Effort is Needed

Do you have suggestions for additional steps needed in this area?

1. Encourage and support City, County, and State maintenance departments, landscapers, gardeners, farmers and orchard owners in our valley by offering information about cost effective, nontoxic alternatives to pesticides (which include herbicides).

2. Offer formal education programs, with obligatory participation by certain members of facilities management, including schools and parks.  Learn from local professionals who are already using nontoxic remedies in their landscape management.  Learn from other cities that are successfully using nontoxic alternatives to pesticides and herbicides, such as Arcata, California.

http://greenlivingideas.com/2010/03/31/17-pacific-northwest-cities-feature-pesticidefree-parks-playgrounds/

3. Eliminate spraying of toxic herbicides, using site-specific, efficient and timely use of safe alternatives, such as vinegar, flame torching (in spring, when weeds are just emerging), mulching, sheet mulching, utilizing goats as weed control, and other alternative methods.

4. Support biodiversity and grow healthy soil, thereby allowing the ecosystem to regenerate, and eliminate the need to use toxic pesticides and synthetic fertilizers.  According to a USDA study, researchers show that Organic Farming Enhances Biodiversity and Natural Pest Control:

http://www.csrees.usda.gov/newsroom/news/2010news/07011_organic_study.html

5. Create a dialogue about the weed control issues facing the county and have some community input in the process. Indiscriminate use of pesticides is detrimental to the health of the community.  People are getting spayed in the face (without their knowledge and consent) as they are driving or walking on the bike path where county sprayers are using pesticides along the side of the road.

6. Instead of using fear tactics to discuss the Asian Citrus Psyllid, encourage growers to use mulch and compost to create healthy soil that retains water and supports the citrus trees, instead if expecting the use of pesticides to kill the pests.

7. Encourage local enforcement agencies to police and ticket Pesticide Applicators (landscapers/gardeners) whom do not have current Pesticide Applicator Licenses (either QAL, QAC, or Q) and are transporting unsecured/unlabeled pesticides in their commercial vehicles. A visit to any local landfill will present up to 50 of these unlicensed contractors an hour.

Ojai Valley Beekeeping Club, 1st Meeting Thursday July 21st, 6:00 PM Farmer & Cook annex

Ojai Valley Beekeepers Meeting
Thursday July 21st, 6:00 PM
Farmer and the Cook annex
339 W El Roblar
Park on side street

Last week’s screening of the beautiful, exciting, and inspiring feature length documentary, “Queen of the Sun” has tapped into a large enthusiasm for honey bees and beekeeping in the Ojai Valley. With the help of Renee Roth, a list of around sixty people have added their names to a list of those interested in starting a beekeeping club in Ojai. Farmer and the Cook has generously offered up their annex for a kick off meeting of a new club on Thursday evening, July 21st, at six o’clock. This is a space they normally rent out, so we are asking a suggested donation of $ 5.00 to defray their expense and that we park in the surrounding neighborhood and not jam their parking lot.

A beekeeping club can offer a lot of advantages to prospective, new, and experienced beekeepers. We could offer a beginners course to get people started, sponsor speakers on various topics, and provide a social base for increasing everyone’s base of knowledge, expertise, and appreciation for bees in our lives.  I hope you can come and increase your joy in being with bees.

Glenn Perry
apiperry@wholepropolis.com

TEN things you can do to help Bees

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1.  Plant bee-friendly flowers and flowering herbs in your garden and yard. (California Native plants)

2.  Weeds can be a good thing, they flower, they attract pollinators.

3. Don’t use chemicals and pesticides to treat your lawn or garden.

4. Buy local, raw honey.

5. Bees are thirsty. Put a small basin of fresh water outside your home.

6. Buy local, organic food from a farmer that you know.

7. Learn how to be a beekeeper with sustainable practices.

8. Understand that honeybees aren’t out to get you.

9. Share solutions with others in your community.

10. Let congress know what you think.

Honeybees are vegetarians. They want to forage pollen and nectar from flowers up to three miles from their hive and bring that food back to provide food for themselves and the beehive.  A few tips to avoid getting stung: 1. Stay still and calm if a bee is around you or lands on you. Many bees will land on you and sniff you out. They can smell the pheromones that come with fear and anger which can be a trigger for them to sting you. 2. Don’t stand in front of a hive opening, or a pathway to a concentration of flowers. Bees are busy running back and forth from the hive, and if you don’t get in their way, they won’t be in yours. 3. Learn to differentiate between honeybees and wasps. Honeybees die after they sting humans (but not after they sting other bees!), wasps do not. Wasps are carnivores, so they like your lunch-meats and soda.

Change has to happen from the top-down as well as from the bottom-up so speakup, get involved.

Ojai screening of QUEEN OF THE SUN

This gallery contains 2 photos.

QUEEN OF THE SUN last showing is today July 13th, 2011 at the Ojai Theater -  at 4:30pm **Wednesday’s screening will be discounted to family’s attending. Just $20.00 for the whole crew! To watch the trailer: http://www.queenofthesun.com/about/trailer/ Questions or to … Continue reading

Nitrogen Fixing Trees

Nitrogen Fixing Trees

Begin forwarded message:
nftguide-1.pdf

Matthew Boeck, Organic Horticulturist for Jay’s Landscapes Inc. Carpinteria, CA  Specializing in Large Estate Resource Management, Organic plant protection for fire, frost and pests. Multiple winner of California Landscape Contractors Association Beautification Awards for mid and large size Landscape Maintenance. 35 years experience working with both edible and ornanmental crops organically. Live in the upper Ojai valley on a 5 acre organic farm. 805-708-8383  Email:mkboeck

Robert “BD” Dautch, Owner/Farmer, Earthtrine Farms
BD started gardening and selling things out of his garden in 1974. In 1982
he moved onto Circle I Farm in the Sacramento Valley that was certified
with CCOF. His first inspection was done by Harlan Lundberg of Lundberg
Family Farms, back when CCOF members did expectations. BD did his first
inspection for CCOF at Dick Harter’s 3000 acre rice plantation. He moved
to Southern California in 1984 and started Earthtrine Farm in 1986 with 18
acres of CCOF certified organic fruit and vegetables. BD now lives in Ojai
where he grows an additional 10 acres of mixed vegetables that are CCOF
certified organic. BD started to sell at farmers markets in 1978 and found
that to be the preferred form of marketing, along with word of mouth. He
raised four children on the farm who have been eating out of the fields
(and the soil) for the past 25 years.

Steve Sprinkel, Owner, The Farmer and the Cook
Steve Sprinkel has been farming organically since 1975. A former associate editor at ACRES, USA and a career organic certification and regulatory expert, Steve is active regionally as the president of the Ojai Center for Regenerative Agriculture and nationally as the board president of the Cornucopia Institute. He has a 12 acre organic farm in Ojai and co-owns with his wife, Olivia Chase, The Farmer and The Cook, an all-organic vegetarian bakery/restaurant and grocery in Ojai.

Denise Ritchie, Founder of Malibu Compost   Denise Ritchie co-founded Malibu Compost in 2009 and began changing her life – and that of one very endearing cow named Bu – one bag of Biodynamic compost at a time. A California native, UCLA graduate and longtime screenwriter, Denise unearthed her passion for dirt during a writer’s strike that lead her to a newfound business in landscaping. A deep-rooted desire to protect the planet and instill eco-conscious, mindful practices in her business led Denise to discover Biodynamic farming – an holistic approach to agriculture that considers the farm as its own self-contained organism. A new appreciation and understanding of “living soil” seeded Denise’s development of Malibu Compost and its signature Bu’s Blend, a Biodynamic compost that provides fruits, vegetables, grasses, roses, trees, lawns and herbs a beyond organic, super food. Bu’s Blend is currently in 125 stores nationwide and growing.  In Ojai, you can find the Malibu compost at Flora Gardens on Baldwin Road and soon at Aqua Flo.

Mano Farms Justin & Quin

Ventura County Agriculture Pesticide Use Map 2009

Click on link below for map of pesticide use in Ventura County in 2009

Map of Ventura County Pesticide Use -2009

Source:  This page demonstrates many of the capabilities of the California Environmental Health Tracking Program (CEHTP) Agricultural Pesticide Use Web Map Service(WMS). This implementation is a custom OpenGeospatial Consortium WMS. Originating from the California Department of Pesticide Regulation, County Agricultural Commissioners, Agricultural Growers, and Pesticide Operators, the Pesticide Use Report data has very detailed information across space and time. We attempted to summarize this information flexibly, but without making the interface too complex. Some of the options include:

Multiple years of reporting
Various measures of pesticide application intensity
Various geographic units in which data is displayed
Maps of individual pesticide chemicals or groups of chemicals
Maps of individual application sites (crops) or groups of sites
Statewide maps or maps by individual counties

http://www.ehib.org/tool.jsp?tool_key=18

Organic Weed Management in Orchards and Vineyards

http://www.attra.org/attra-pub/PDF/fruitover.pdf

Tree Fruits: Organic Production Overview

by National Sustainable Agriculture Information Service

excerpt pgs 22-24

Organic Weed Management

Some weed control methods, such as smother crops, are discussed in the Site Preparation section above. This type of cover cropping is an important tool for weed management that also contributes to good soil management, fertility, and pest management.

Mulches

Organic Mulch

Mulching is a powerful weed management strategy that can also contribute to good soil management, if appropriate natural materials are used. After a planting is established, weeds can be suppressed by applying thick layers of mulch. This can also create habitats for beneficial arthopods, including generalist predators such as big-eyed bugs, soft-bodied flower beetles, and spiders. Organic mulches are usually applied in a circle around tree trunks or vines, and down the whole row in blueberries.

Commonly, tree fruit growers keep mulches away from the tree trunks, particularly in winter, to prevent voles or mice from gnawing on the bark and damaging young trees. Keeping mulches 8 to 12 inches away from the trunk also reduces the likelihood of crown rot and other diseases in susceptible species—most notably apples on certain root- stocks.(23)

Mulch materials may include straw, spoiled hay, leaves, yard trimmings, woodchips, and sawdust. Many of these materials are inexpensive. Still, it’s wise to weigh the benefits and risks of each, including hauling costs and the risks of their containing impurities and prohibited materials.

Municipal greenwaste may be available, either raw or from municipal or commercial composting operations. Growers must monitor the incoming product and remove any trash to keep undesirable material out of their fields. Growers should ask compost producers about the sources of their materials and any pesticides that may persist in them. Of particular concern are clopyralid and picloram, herbicides that are extremely resistant to breakdown, even after composting. The sale and use of these materials is restricted in some areas. A Washington State University study showed treated grass clippings to be the primary source of clopyralid entering the organic waste stream. Experience from California, Oregon, and Washington shows that at levels of 1 to 10 parts per billion, clopyralid adversely affects sensitive vegetable crops.(21, 22)

Because organic mulches decompose over time, they require periodic re-applications in order to continue suppressing weeds. However, their decomposition provides other benefits. Mulching with organic matter enhances soil aggregation and water-holding capacity.(4) Researchers from 1937 to the present have consistently found that mulching is the best orchard-floor management system for retaining moisture.(15) In Michigan research, mulching was as effective as irrigation in encouraging tree growth.(24) Organic mulches can have positive effects on tree growth, with improvements in soil quality and shifts toward beneficial nematodes.(27) Mulch can also benefit the crop by moderating soil temperatures, thus reducing plant stress.

Organic mulches provide slow-release nutrients for the long-term health and fertility of the soil. Research indicates that potassium, phosphorus, and nitrogen (primarily from the slow breakdown of the mulch) are more available in mulched systems than in non-mulched systems.(4) Some growers express concern that sawdust may acidify their soil or bind nitrogen in the soil. However, these effects are minimal if the sawdust is not tilled into the soil.

Raising organic matter on the farm is one way to ensure sufficient, clean mulching material. Farm-raised hay grown outside the orchard can provide weed-free mulch. Cover crops may be grown between tree rows, mowed, and gathered around the trees. Some small-scale growers use the biomass from orchard alleyways, cutting cover crops with a sickle-bar mower and hand-raking the material under the trees. Larger-scale operations often use forage wagons, straw-bale spreaders, or specialized equipment to mecha- nize mulching jobs. King Machine Co. (25) offers a small, trailer- or truck-mounted square-bale chopper and blower suitable for most fruit crops. Millcreek Manufacturing Co. (26) has developed a row mulcher especially suitable to blueberry, bramble, and grape culture, but also useful in tree fruit orchards. The Millcreek machines are designed to handle bulk organic materials such as sawdust, wood chips, bark, peat, and compost.

Geotextiles

Geotextile mulches are paper or woven plastic fabrics that suppress weed growth. While they allow some air and water penetration, they may reduce water infiltration, whereas organic mulches increase infiltration.(27) Geotextile mulches do not provide the advantages of adding organic matter and nutrients to the soil, and if synthetic, they must eventually be removed. Geotextiles have a high initial cost, though this may be partially recouped in lower weed-control costs over the material’s expected field-life—5 to 10 years for polyester fabric; 2 to 3 years for paper weed barriers. Still, some growers find them useful for weed suppression in orchards, tree plantations, and cane fruit culture. The ATTRA publication Sustainable Pecan Production provides more detail on the use of geotextiles and outlines additional methods of weed control, including mechanical cultivation, mulches, wood chips, and living mulches.

Sheet Mulch

You can also create weed barriers by sheet mulching: laying down layers of card- board or newspaper and covering them with organic material. Sheet mulching increases the efficacy of organic mulch as a barrier against emerging weeds. Organic growers should avoid cardboard that is waxed or impregnated with fungicide, as well as color print and glossy paper, in order to be compliant with the National Organic Program standards (7 CFR §205.601(b)(2)(i) and 205.601 (c)).

Cultivation

Cultivation—using mechanical tillage and weed harrowing implements—is the most widely used weed-management practice in fruit production. In systems that maintain permanent vegetation between rows, cultivation may be limited to the tree row under the dripline in an orchard, or extended 1 to 3 feet from the edge of the hedgerow in bramble plantings. The reverse is true where mulches are used in the tree row, and cultivation is used to control weeds and incorporate cover crops in the alleyways. In any case, cultivation must be kept shallow to minimize damage to crop roots and to avoid bringing weed seeds to the surface.

Hand cultivation—enhanced with the use of a wheel hoe—can be effective in small-scale plantings. In large-scale plantings of trees or vines, where in-row tillage is desired, “mechanical hoes” such as the Weed Badger (28) or Green Hoe (29) are very useful. These tractor-mounted, PTO-driven cultivators can till right up to the tree or vine without damaging the plant. At- tachment options include powered rotary tillage tools and scraper blades that can move soil either away from or toward the base of the crop plants. Scraper-blade attachments, commonly known as “grape hoes,” have been used in vineyards for decades.

Herbicides Allowed for Use in Organic

Production

A few herbicides currently emerging on the market are allowable for organic production, with restrictions on the location of their use. There is ongoing research on using materials such as vinegar, corn gluten, and citric acid as herbicides, although they are not yet widely used by certified organic growers. Such materials may have applications in organic systems, such as for spot treatment of noxious weeds.

Weeder Geese, Chickens, and Ducks

For many years, farmers have used geese to control weeds in perennial and annual crops, including strawberries, blueberries, bramble fruits, and tree orchards. In Oklahoma, researchers at the Kerr Center for Sustainable Agriculture used weeder geese in commercial-scale blueberry and strawberry production, with portable electric fencing to keep the birds in a specific zone in the plant row.(30) Investigators at Michigan State University studied the impacts of populations of domestic geese and chickens in a non-chemical orchard system. They found that the geese fed heavily on weeds—especially grasses—and also on windfall fruit.(31) In general, geese are more effective against emerging or small grass weeds, and they have a particular preference for Bermuda grass and Johnson grass—weeds that can be especially troublesome in orchards.(32) ATTRA has additional information on weeder geese available on request.

Those who have raised chickens know how enthusiastically they devour fresh vegetation. If the area they inhabit is small, they will strip it to the dirt. Properly managed, however, their foraging characteristics can be used to the grower’s advantage.

Fred Reid is an innovative producer of raspberries and vegetables in Canada who has successfully employed his flocks of chickens in weed management. He uses a system of fencing to keep chickens in certain areas to accomplish a thorough job of weeding and insect control. He notes that if the vegetation has grown too high and the plants become too fibrous, the chickens will not eat them. However, if you mow tall vegetation in advance, the chickens will process it readily. He excludes the chickens from raspberry plots when the new, tender leaves are emerging and, of course, near harvest time.(33)

Flame Weeding

Flame cultivation uses directed heat to kill weeds. It works not by burning the weeds but by searing them and causing the plant cells to rupture. Farmers began using tractor-mounted flamers in orchard and row crops in the 1940s.(34) Tech- nology and technique have both been refined considerably in recent years. Several tools now commercially available, including flame, infrared, and steam weeders, make heat a viable option for some weed management applications. See the ATTRA publication Flame Weeding for more information.

link to map for Conference at Meditation Mount

googlemaps link to Mediation Mount, Ojai

Transition to Organics PDF invite

rrTTO Ojai invitation May 13 ’11.pdf