Ben Cheah’s half acre garden of peace & plenty
This is a four-part video series of Ben Cheah’s Auckland garden.
This is a four-part video series of Ben Cheah’s Auckland garden.
The Soil & Health Association will provide a grant of up to $100 for the running of any public event led and organised by an association member.
These grants are available to any Soil & Health member
Please complete the grant application form and email it to manager@organicnz.org.nz
Note: the total amount of grant funding available is limited to a total of $1200 over one financial year, the Association will take this limit into account when considering applications.
The 2022 AGM was held in Wellington on September 24th as part of a two-day event with Organics Aotearoa New Zealand (23-24 September)
The AGM began at 9.15am at the Prefab Hall, 14 Jessie Street, Te Aro, Wellington
Virtual attendance (via Zoom) was combined with in-person attendance
The draft minutes of the 2022 AGM re available here: Draft minutes of the 2022 AGM
*Note: the audit report and audited accounts are still pending.
The following nominations were received for four vacant positions on national council.
These candidates were all elected at the AGM
We discussed a process to update our constitution, with a view to developing and then finalising any changes at next year’s AGM (2023). This work is prompted by new regulations set out by government this year
The following remits were agreed upon at the meeting:
Remit 1 (Alison White/Claire Bleakley) – Urge set up of Technology Ethics Council
That the Soil & Health National Council write to appropriate MPs in all the major political parties to urge them to (re-)establish a Technology Ethics Council that would deal with emerging technologies such as gene editing, gene therapies and their various uses, synthetic biology, nanotechnology, geoengineering and artificial intelligence.
Rationale: These new technologies are set to quite possibly negatively impact all aspects of life and the environment, and in particular present new challenges to the principles and values of the organic community. Since the disestablishment of the Bioethics Council, Toi Te Taiao, in 2009, there has been no body of independent experts overseeing the moral or ethical impacts of such technologies in New Zealand. Commercial pressures risk the voices of the organic community, tangata whenua and diverse communities being silenced or misled. We note with concern the immediate global push by powerful interests to deregulate gene editing (such a bill is currently before the UK parliament), with consequences including unlabelled food and a potential threat to organic growing. NZ and overseas organic standards do not permit any GE contamination threshold.
Remit 2 (Alison White/Claire Bleakley) – Climate change & organic agriculture
That the Soil & Health National Council write to appropriate MPs in all the major political parties to emphasise to them how vital a role that carbon cycling in a healthy soil and organic agriculture in particular can play in mitigating New Zealand’s role in climate change.
Rationale: As one of the oldest and leading proponents of organic growing in New Zealand, Soil & Health has a responsibility to raise awareness of the importance of soil health in relation to reducing carbon in the atmosphere. There is a risk that industry sectors will push high tech and profit-making solutions at the expense of a healthy and diverse ecosystem. For too long organic agriculture has been sidelined by the Government, except for exports.
The Soil & Health national council was delighted to nominate Philippa Jamieson for an honorary life membership. Philippa has played a key role in the work of soil and health over many years, including a pivotal contribution as magazine editor. The HLM nomination was confirmed at the AGM.
These are two three-part video series, one for the Waygood Foundation garden and one for the Beck Wheeler garden
A group from Soil & Health Auckland visited two Permaculture Gardens in Piha on Saturday the 12th Feb 2020. We visited the Waygood Foundation Gardens where Claire Inwood guided us on a tour of the property. On a sandy based soil they have created a series of gardens, original, new, terraced and a Kids garden. These mixed gardens of vegetables, herbs, flowers and fruit trees are nestled in a glade of Pohutukawa trees.
Ben Cheah speaks about Small Urban Gardens.
This is a three-part video series
We visit sanctuary gardens and hear from manager Trevor Crosby
This is a two-part video series
A visit to Dee’s home organic garden 27 Oct 2018
Wayne Hill’s top tips
Minette’s minute
Vic Barret talk