Posts Tagged ‘farmers’

Herbal CSAs, a Conversation with Lisa Rose Starner

Posted March 26th, 2012 by Ann Armbrecht

I first came across Lisa Rose Starner on Twitter – which I reluctantly started using while doing outreach for Numen. I was new to the world of social media and blogging and I was impressed with how she brought her love and knowledge of plants to engage with others with similar interests. I was especially interested in Lisa’s herbal CSA as a smaller-scale complement to the larger, farm-based herbal CSA described by William Siff, founder of Goldthread Herbal Apothecary. You can find out more about Lisa at her blog, Burdock and Rose.

Lisa Rose Starner is an urban farmer, backyard herbalist, freelance writer and herbal CSA owner.

Community Supported Medicine: A Conversation with William Siff, Goldthread Herbal Apothecary

Posted February 9th, 2012 by Ann Armbrecht

Goldthread Herbal Apothecary is a fantastic example of grassroots, community based medicine. Like many herb schools, they offer classes, apprentice programs, and herbal medicines for sale. But to me their community supported medicine program (CSM) is the most exciting – and revolutionary – work they are doing. I was thrilled to be able to speak with William Siff about his vision behind this model. Lots more information is available on their website!

Ann: I love the model of herbal CSAs on so many different levels and wondered if you could talk some about how you came to create an herbal CSA. What is your vision is with your CSA? And why do you think it is important?

Resiliency and Health

Posted December 22nd, 2011 by Ann Armbrecht
mushrooms

photo Sandra Lory

Resilience is a word heard that is talked about more and more. David Orr, who says resilience is the chief characteristic of sustainability, defines it as “the capacity of the system to absorb disturbance; to undergo change and still retain essentially the same function, structure, and feedbacks”.

In terms of health and wellness, this means systems of healing and medicine that can endure a breakdown of day-to-day operation: i.e. transportation, power, communication and more are disrupted, and these clinics and hospitals can still keep people well. That’s a tall order and not one our current healthcare systems are capable of managing in an ongoing way.

So we thought we’d generate a list of characteristics of how resiliency looks in medicine. Below is a list suggested by Rosemary Gladstar at the Beaming Bioneers Vermont conference.

  • Availability of medicine
  • Backyard medicine
  • Diversity of practice

Our Vision: Ecological Medicine

Posted December 17th, 2011 by Ann Armbrecht
fractal

Photo by Sandra Lory

Here’s our vision for healthcare in the future, inspired by our conversations with herbalists and healers across the country and beyond while interviewing for Numen:

Households, urban and rural, with pots of medicinal herbs: Thyme, Sage, and Rosemary on their back porch. Echinacea and Garlic grow in their garden. Grown ups and children know where and when to gather St. John’s Wort and Stinging Nettles and more. They know what to do with each.

Through CSAs, local food coops, herb schools and more, herbalists and farmers offer classes and share medicines and resources. These become skills everyone learns to keep themselves and their family well, as important to the sustainability and viability of their communities as growing their own food and producing their own energyy, as important to the education of our children as learning to read and do math.