Sunday, May 06, 2007

Farm shops and food

It was my regular trip to the farm shop today where we are faced with a plethora of good local and organic food with which to fill our cupboards, fridges and freezers. We've graduated form the super market as far as possible with all our fresh produce with the intention that buying locally at the village farmshop and buying organic where possible will enhance our lives and benefit the environment. Lofty goals, but by choosing organic carrots from whiltshire and not large, juicy looking ones from spain, the world will be a better place.



For the casual shopper more used to 2 for 1 and other special offers, the rather dirty looking barn with bags and boxes of veggies all over the place can be a little daunting. There is no clear way in, no trollies and no obvious way to queue at the till. One you get your bearings however, shopping at the Farm shop can be a rewarding experience.



Our Farm Shop does have a problem and a problem that has affected many shops of its ilk. It has an identity crisis. It's shelves are filled with organic, fair trade, free range and local produce. It has cutsie little jam pots, chutneys and pickles. It has frozen roast potatoes, ready meals and blackcurrants and this all looks wonderful. 'Hand made' crisps, 'hand finished' cakes, 'specially selected' potatoes. I tell you, its not fooling me. But if you can see past the products that are an obvious sham - like the 'ready to cook' frozen beef wellingtons (beef from where?) and the 'heat and serve' fish in sauce, you really can begin to feel better about the produce you are buying. Some fantastic jams, great vegetables, tasty local ice cream and really good looking beef and lamb, its just a shame all the sausages seemed to contain about 20% added water. Why rear lovely free range meat and then ruin it with a poor sausage recepie? Its just like the organic burgers I had once from a supermarket. They were organic, from Argentina or somewhere and seemed to be made up largely or organic fat and connective tissue. Easily the worst burgers I have ever had.



My questions to the farm shop is this: Are you local? Are you high quality? Are you organic? Are you about convenience? Why do you sell cute little jam pots with fake cloth lids that declare 'produced and packed in the EU' on them?? What are you!?





The Farm Shop is trying very hard to replace the supermaket up the road, the large succcessful Sainsburies complete with its mother and baby parking, disabled toilet facilities and fruits and vegetables from around the world interspaced with a smattering of TVs DVDs and clothes.



For me, as a new world eco-consmer Sainsburies no longer fits the bill. It too large, has too many things contained in it and too many products that come from all over the world subsequently killing trees and raising the sea levels. My local farm shop however boasts swede from within whiltshire or carrots that have traveled 11 miles, potatoes from the local village - 2 miles. You really can feel good about helping local producers by making your purchase decisions this way.



So I fill my bag with locally grown organic carrots, english onions from the region, some tasty looking garlic and other sundry items.





Furthur into the shop you have the wonderful choice of buying produce with an increasing array of labels and catergories designed to educate the traditional consumer and enthuse and excite the new world eco-consumer - like me.



Organic - free from pesticides and other man made chemicals, most likely from all over the world as we produce only a small fraction of our organic produce in the UK. Chances are its come to the UK in a freezer ship or flown in by air cargo.



Free Range - generally speaking meat that is reared outdoors more than indoors, a good chance of coming from the UK. This label is a weird one. It essentially implies that the meat has not been 'factory farmed' or 'intensively reared'. We get our free range eggs in the village from an old lady with hens.



Fair Trade - produce from the developing world, coffee tea and chocolate in the main where the grower receives a higher price than usual for their hard work - no mark of quality whatsoever.



Ecover - household cleaning products that claim to be kinder to the environment (the toilet cleaner is no replacement for bleach but the washing powder seems to work)



British meat - a label given to meat killed or processed in the UK - mostly from factory farms and highly intensive production systems. This is some of the worst quality meat you can get.



In my experience of trying all these various types of fruit and veg you cannot guarentee any of them will taste better or be of a higher quality. I've had some truly terrible organic beef and some very average fair trade tea. The choice of free range pork sausages is almost non-existant and organic produce comes from all over the world, its often small and incipid looking and can really disappoint.



My new world eco-consumer buying decisions are made like this then with quality being the number one thing. Price for me is not a deciding factor, when it comes to food I am lucky enough to have a good deal of choice and I try to exercise it in the best way possible to obtain the highest level of quality.



1) High quality local organic produce. - top notch artisan foods, very rare to find.

2) High quality local free range produce - as rare as 1), perhaps rarer given farms often try to go the whole hog and convert to organic.

3) High quality Organic world produce - e.g. Green and Blacks Chocolate

4) Local Organic produce  - organic box schemes, can dissapoint in terms of quality ad variety

5) Local Free range produce - free range meats, but watch the quaituy of the finished product

6) Local, UK world battery/factory farming. - really try to avoid this category if I can.



I'll use my farm shop as much as I can and being a well educated eco-consumer I'll do my best to buy ethically and intelligently and keep as much of my money away from the supermarkets as possible.



I'm off to make a wonderful free range beef stew with local vegetables, herbs grown in my garden and top quality red wine (oops from New Zeland - one step at a time!)









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Monday, April 30, 2007

Dirty planes

It occurred to me in a bored moment while I was waiting to be shuffled to the terminal building at Heathrow the other day that I did not know how long it takes to wash an aeroplane the size of a 747. In fact does it even need washing on the outside at all given it flies through clouds and do clouds clean it off as it flies around the world? Could this be the silver lining on the acid raincloud? If it does need a wash, does a plane wash look like a big car wash or do they use a jet wash to get the deed done?



Answers on a postcard..





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Wednesday, September 06, 2006

Running progress

So far so good, 2 days in and today I slightly exceeded my set time. Need to be more strict with myself when it comes to food, but other than that its going well.

Monday, September 04, 2006

Getting fit for life

Its taken a while, in fact its taken about 12 years for me to begin to fulfil the promise I made to myself to increase my fitness level. From now on I am following a schedule of diet and exercise to increase my general level of fitness largely because I do not want to be out of breath walking briskly up stairs any more. Its embarrassing quite frankly and totally unnecessary!

I'm almost 29 years old and I live a pretty sedentary lifestyle currently so I'm not imagining this change will be easy. My company allows me to work from my home office and because I work long hours it's really easy to go from the bed to the office chair to the fridge to the office chair to the bed day after day. This is not a healthy way to live and it means that at the moment I have a resting heart rate of somewhere near 64 bpm and I am about a stone and a half over weight with a waste line that should be about 4 inches smaller that it is.

My fitness program is going to include running, walking and some basic strength exercises. I'm going to alter the way I eat slightly and reduce the amount of dairy and meat products I eat - although the thought of going vegetarian is not an appealing one to be quite honest!

Day one is a run/walk of 1 mile - starting tomorrow and it builds up slowly until after 30 weeks I can run 12 miles.

Wish me luck!

Wednesday, August 30, 2006

Leadership in the corporation

Anyone who has ever worked in a large corporation will recognise the familiar themes portrayed by Dilbert. Each character is recognisable to me for sure. I often think my approach to life it far to pragmatic for a large corporation - not too good at all the bull shit, perhaps one of the reasons why I left to join a smaller company.

One of the people that inspired me to make that move was John Peck. John is extraordinary. John is an outstanding exeutive coach, mentor, adventurer and motivational speaker amongst other things. Not many people have rowed accross the atlantic - John is one of them and he did it at the ripe old age of 59 after decades of outstanding personal and professional achievements.

My advice: If you company has too much Dilbert then it needs more JP to help straighten out the mess. Head on over to http://www.john-peck.com/ for the lowdown.

Thursday, August 17, 2006

WiFi - where will it all end

I want my bandwidth

In a previous life I worked for one of the world's largest telecoms companies, forever referred to as 'Telecom X'. It was while in one of the various roles I had there that I became involved in the wonderful world of WiFi hotspots. It was seen as a great idea by a few of the grand fromage of Telecom X and would be a key revenue opportunity and take the brand into new and exciting places etc. etc. There were a few dissenting voices naturally, along the lines of 'WiFi is crap' and 'WiFi is insecure but the power of corporate ego drove it through and today its one of the many internationally recognised WiFi hotspot services, available to anyone with a bit of cash and laptop. Great, wonderful, everyone is happy right? Well no, not happy actually.

You see there is a growing view among the bandwidth consumers of the world that WiFi should essentially be free - or at last free at the point of delivery. Exhibit 1 is Fon www.fon.com, the self proclaimed 'largest community WiFi network in the world' A grand title to be sure, interestingly its backed by some of the best known names of the Internet age, Skype and Google among them.

At my local pub you can get free WiFi with your burger and pint of beer, walk around any major city in the world and the public at large often have open networks just waiting for people to make better use of - how very kind of them but its sporadic at best, unreliable and the experience is inconsistent.

Naive consumers and generous landlords aside, why has Skype, Google and chums put 30Million USD into giving WiFi away for free to the world? It does not take a genius to see why and if I was Vodafone, T-Mobile, Cingular or any other major mobile operator I would be paying very careful attention to a little startup from Spain with some very ambitious friends.

Free (at the point of delivery) WiFi, free communications. Sign me up.

The Hub.