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June 08 2010

planetveganscotland
15:34

bonn voyage!

i had a lot to write, so i’ve just copied-and-pasted what i wrote on my work blog:

I’ve just arrived back from an international meeting in Germany with Young Friends of the Earth Europe (Young FoEE) members from six countries. We were based at a climate camp taking place alongside the UNFCCC Bonn Climate Change Talks. The camp was run by Klimawelle (climate wave) and acted as a meeting point and resource for activists. People from all over the world used it as a base to plan actions, share skills, make activist art, discuss ideas, and live together in a communal, nurturing space for a few days.

The main objectives of the Young FoEE meeting were to discuss the year so far, and to share our plans for the rest of the year. We have lots of exciting campaigns and actions to roll out over the next six months, so watch this space!

On Friday, Young FoEE were part of a coordinated action outside the Hotel Maritim, where the negotiations are taking place, in support of the Cochabamba People’s Agreement, which is not on the agenda for discussion in spite of its widespread support among many country delegations. We also delivered a workshop at the Klimaforum Bonn entitled “Building a youth movement for climate justice: tools, techniques and tactics for a just future” where we sought to build a common understanding of Climate Justice, share activism stories and successes, and feed our outcomes back to the youth movement. We had 20 young people attend from different countries and organisations, and hope that they all benefited from the session in some way. If you would like a copy of the notes from the workshop, please email youngfoe@foeeurope.org

As well as information and skill sharing with other young people, we also contributed to a day of action alongside NGOs and people’s movements from Germany, Europe and beyond.

Beginning with a coal protest coordinated by BUND (Friends of the Earth Germany) and Attac Deutschland (German Attac) outside the Hotel Maritim, we moved onto a march that was more like a carnival procession than any other mass demonstration I’ve been at. This was in large part thanks to Rhythms of Resistance, an eclectic samba band whose mission is to fuse militant and creative forms of resistance. Artists at the climate camp had also spent the entire week trying to motivate campers to produce an array of banners and flags to wave along the way, and many demonstrators wore t-shirts printed with techniques we had shared in the camp’s creative spaces.

A group of organisations arranged a Reclaim the Streets party to follow this colourful demonstration, and a coordinated action resulted in blockading a petrol station and multistorey carpark in central Bonn. Banners saying “Total = Aral = Shell = BP” connecting general fuel consumption to the Deepwater Horizon disaster, while more banners demanded “System Change not Climate Change”. Testament to the success of this message was an announcement from the petrol station owner that he supported our action and was happy not to have any business all day because of it. So, Rhythms of Resistance drummed their hearts out, Food not Bombs Düsseldorf fed us all in their inimitable style, and everyone ate and danced and chatted like sitting on the white lines in the middle of the road was something we do every weekend. Even a senior policeman came over to check we were all having a good time and express public support for our campaign, saying he hoped we would make the national media that day.

So, those were the highlights of my trip to Bonn with Young FoEE. It was all work, and I arrived home from my 18-hour journey by bus and train exhausted, but our work can be creative, noisy, sociable and joyful, too. We are, after all, fighting for everything that is good about our planet.


May 05 2010

planetveganscotland
14:19

awesome, this

“Do not burn yourselves out. Be as I am – a reluctant enthusiast….a part-time crusader, a half-hearted fanatic. Save the other half of yourselves and your lives for pleasure and adventure. It is not enough to fight for the land; it is even more important to enjoy it. While you can. While it’s still here. So get out there…and mess around with your friends, ramble out yonder and explore the forests, climb the mountains, bag the peaks, run the rivers, breath deep of that yet sweet and lucid air, sit quietly for a while and contemplate the precious stillness, the lovely, mysterious, and awesome space. Enjoy yourselves, keep your brain in your head and your head firmly attached to the body, the body active and alive, and I promise you this much; I promise you this one sweet victory over our enemies, over those desk-bound men and women with their hearts in a safe deposit box, and their eyes hypnotized by desk calculators. I promise you this: you will outlive the bastards.”

an edward abbey quote lifted off rob edwards’ homepage. cheers, rob, it’s awesome.


March 04 2010

planetveganscotland
13:58

i ♥ will self!

one of my all-time heroes:

“The car is the sworn enemy of the walker in every shape and form: they stink, they’re noisy, they’re dangerous, and they – or rather their drivers – are responsible for the most egregious and insensitive modifications to the British landscape since its Iron Age deforestation. Driving to take a walk is a solecism on a par with shooting people in the cause of universal peace and harmony. My view is if you can’t take a train or a bus to do a walk, then don’t do it at all.”

read more here.

listening: alela diane and angus & julia stone


January 29 2010

planetveganscotland
22:11

honest scrap awards

so, i just got honest scrapped today by vegan fox. so, to this belle & sebastian-loving newbie blogger, i say thank-you! although, it seems neither of us know what the honest scrap awards are for! but i'm going with the flow, so bear with me here.

it would seem that they're rolling peer-to-peer blog awards, and they have rules. now, i'm not really a stickler for rules - i'm not very good at sticking to them, anyway - but i'll try to do what i can with this...

the rules
1. Thank the person who nominated you and link back to that blog post.
2. Tell ten honest things about yourself and make them interesting, even if you have to dig deep!
3. Pass the award on to ten bloggers you feel embody the spirit of Honest Scrap, and whose blog you find brilliant in design and/or concept.

the scrap
1. my dad's dutch and my mum's malaysian-chinese, but i was born in england and have lived in australia and scotland. i have dutch and british nationality, but only use my dutch passport to travel.
2. new acquaintances frequently check me when i say i'm married. they usually think i'm some exploited child bride, and i have to insist my culpability.
3. i've eaten a vegan diet since mid-2008, mostly due to the devastation wreaked by meat and dairy industries. i don't know many other socio-environmental vegans, so fellow herbivores are usually surprised when i say i stopped eating dairy before fish.
4. i've been knitting for almost a year and my friends still hope i'm pregnant when they see me knitting a pair of socks from the toe up for the first time. strangers on the train ask if they're baby socks.
5. i haven't had a 'proper' job since i left a major NGO 4 years ago. it's getting increasingly hard to explain to my mother-in-law what i do: "activist" and "artist" are not occupations in her book.
6. i love rain. people like to express concern that it rains a lot in glasgow. water off a duck's back, i tell you.
7. my husband and i live in a victorian flat in govan, glasgow. it's the kind of neighbourhood that makes our families concerned, but there's a lot to love here. we have big sash windows and high ceilings, a real wooden floor, open fireplaces and a coal bunker. we can see the river and the old town square from our windows. we can also see the alcoholics and the homeless people who ask for 10p as you're running to catch a bus.
8. my manager was caught off-guard last week when he discovered how much i love sport. i've taken monday off to watch the australian open final. i also devote my life to cricket, cycling, surfing, motor-racing (even though i don't like cars), athletics/olympics, rugby and darts, but my real love is football: scottish league, premier league, spanish league, lower league, champions league, non-league. i even know the offside rule, as much as anyone does these days.
9. i yearn for a garden with a compost heap. every time i throw away a banana peel, i feel bad for it. it will likely never have the opportunity to return to the food chain.
10. my all-time top-five favourite foods are peanut butter, bananas, broccoli, tomatoes, chickpeas and cardamom. oh wait, that's six.

the blogs
vegancraftastic
herbivore knits
sticks and string
affectioknit
a girls' cycling compendium
that crafty fish
the adventures of captain teabot and me
slippedstitch
urban vegan
herbivore dinosaur

hey, i made it! thanks again, vegan fox. this wasn't as tortuous as i thought it would be!

listening: the smittens
reading: blogs, it would seem!

January 15 2010

planetveganscotland
10:59

a good tidy-up

i didn't start that second sock yesterday. i tidied instead. i know sounds trivial, but trust me, this tidying lark is pretty epic around these parts. i tidied 25GB of stuff off our computer. impressive, i know. yes, i did go through every.single.file. i found some cool stuff though:

well, it's not cool that all those TVs got discarded, but i like the photo and the sadness it captures. redundant technology always makes me a little sad. these things that people once loved when they brought them home, and possible borrowed the money to buy, but over time started to look uglier and clunkier until the time came for something shinier and more expensive. and so TVs, computers, cars, mobile phones, food processors, radios, washing machines, they all go the same way.

speaking of washing machines, i did two, yes, two loads of laundry. one was just underwear and socks, and the other was just towels. now, i take the environmental impact of laundry very seriously - to the point where we don't use detergent (soap nuts are the key to this succeeding), wash at 30ºC, and never tumble-dry (if anyone thinks i'm nuts, there's more info on why just here) - so these loads were Full. when you do laundry every two weeks, it's a big deal...

listening: belle and sebastian - if you're feeling sinister (my favourite b&s album and one of my top 5 albums ever!)
reading: rediscovered PDFs

December 01 2009

planetveganscotland
21:22

sunrise over traffic jams

i drove to edinburgh this morning. i had to be there for 9am and we'd borrowed my mother-in-law's car which she needed back, so i'd agreed to drive it through before i started... bad idea.

anyone ever tried to get across the central belt (M8) for 9am in the morning? at least the sunrise was beautiful. it made everything more bearable, and even enjoyable - for a moment:


and you know what? almost every single car i passed was single-occupancy. yep, that's right. 2 hours of traffic jams with one person per vehicle... rock n' roll, yeah? uh-huh.

listening: ballboy, again.
reading: climate sceptics thing from the times this weekend... i'll let you know more when i'm done.

November 16 2009

planetveganscotland
14:16

a time for heroes?

lance corporal joe glenton has hit the headlines recently for leading an anti-war demonstration.


he faces a military judge this week on five counts "of disobeying lawful commands and standing orders in relation to his public opposition of the war" (from the guardian) - and, in spite of the death of his brother last month, he is being held at a former PoW camp away from his family until a decision is made about where he will be jailed until his hearing.

messages of support are piling in from all over the world, and other ex-soldiers have joined him in his protests. it's amazing that people are willing to risk their lives for the country they love, yet more amazing that people are willing to risk everything else for what they believe - and even more so when they have to face their own loyalties head-on and accept punishment and abuse in doing so.

this isn't about army, war and national pride. it's about truth, integrity, and the intangible quality that makes some people better than others at admitting they were wrong. true heroes are those who risk all for what they believe in, not just what we do.

November 13 2009

planetveganscotland
14:51

new vegan shoes

i got new shoes yesterday! i blogged here about some ethletic shoes i bought from a shop in glasgow. they started falling apart really soon after i got them and the shop had closed down, so i didn't know where to turn. after attempting to contact the company that made them and never hearing back, i sort of resigned myself to failure. when people asked me about my shoes, i couldn't tell them what i wanted to: that i loved them and they were so much better than converse. but things have changed:

i saw an ad in the scottish big issue, advertising ethletic sneakers as "ethical manufacture - fairtrade certified cotton - 100% vegan - 0% plastic - arch supports - organic cotton canvas - FSC-certified rubber soles - fairly traded rubber" but with a slightly different email address to the one i'd tried to use before:

so, i gave it another shot and... success! one of the brand founders replied and apologised for the deteriorating rubber, offering me a brand new pair. i cheekily asked for a different colour because, although the other shoes are falling apart, they're still shoes and i'll still wear them - except now i'll have a different story to tell folk who ask about them.

these ones are a better fit than the old ones - and have a wider toe box than converse, which works for my barefoot-shaped feet - they come with fairtrade laces (although i'm a fan of wider laces, so will probably replace them with something colourful), they are guaranteed vegan and sweatshop-free - unlike converse, who are owned and manufactured by nike - and the cotton is organic and fairtrade. they're exactly what i've always been looking for, and now i can endorse their customer service, too!

the perfect pair of shoes to show off my handknit socks.

and, i've just been informed by the person who contacted me that yous can all get 15% off purchases from the ethletic website by entering the code Softly1000 at checkout. so there you go!

listening: more low anthem
reading: the big issue

November 08 2009

planetveganscotland
00:03

watch and learn

we saw age of stupid tonight. it's properly as good as we'd both hoped it would be, and really emphasised to us both the importance of Action! even tiny steps are steps in the right direction:

dates, times and locations of screenings can be found here. in glasgow today, it was shown at an event at the CCA along with a couple of shorts, including a time comes, a film about the kingsnorth six:


there's much to write about both films, and the complex issues they raise without thoroughly exploring - mostly due to the limitations of the media they exist in - but i'm knackered, MOTD is on, and i have a russian BO to finish.

watching: MOTD - i Love football!

November 05 2009

planetveganscotland
08:54

getting giving

i can officially announce the first item to be checked off my holiday knitting list:

fetchings for my wee sister! they're knitted with some wool that my sister-in-law bought for us to make legwarmers out of way back in the summer when we took part in a marathon-relay. yeah, it Was too hot for wool legwarmers.

besides, she bought the yarn when i'd been knitting all of oh, maybe two weeks, and before i knew about vegan knitting, which took some googling to discover. until that point, i'd been uneasy with the idea that i had to use all this wool if i wanted to pursue knitting - either that or use only acrylic, and we know how i feel about the petrochemicals industry!

after my discoveries (mainly kala's blog and vegan knitting), and realising the wealth of non-wool/non-plastic yarn in the world, i was a bit put off by wool yarn. still, waste not want not. if i'm not going to use it for my own knitting, i can at least gift it to those who Enjoy wool.

so, petra, you're not reading this but still, enjoy!

listening: decemberists - crane wife
reading: a pretty book on snakes
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