Showing posts with label Nova Scotia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nova Scotia. Show all posts

Monday, November 19, 2012

"Imagine A Thriving Eastern Shore"




Tourism and fishing are Eastern Shore mainstays
The Eastern Shore's Marike Finlay is not known for mincing words. Nor is she known for sitting complacently when self-servicing politics or backroom economics infringe on the rights of those who live along the 300 km stretch of Atlantic coastline framed by Highway 7.

In a recent article published by Halifax's Chronicle Herald (11/17/12) Marike takes aim at the closed pen salmon industry that threatens to destroy the struggling industries that sustain residents of HRM's rural communities.  

Lobster and crab fishing, 'sustainable forestry' and tourism are the mainstay for rural Nova Scotia, says Finlay but with government support and imaginative thinking, the Eastern Shore region can stem the destructive policies wrought by urban decision makers who have exploited it for over a century and turn the tide towards a self-sufficient, attractive and thriving area of the province.

Finlay demands an end to open pen, foreign-owned fish farms and that 'closed' pen non-polluting fish farms be put in place instead, to help create enduring employment. She asks (yet again) that policy makers think out of the box and envision a thriving Eastern Shore that capitalizes on the region's natural coastal beauty and recreational opportunities. Finlay asks everyone, especially provincial urban decision makers to 'imagine' the potential wealth of the rich resource that lies at their doorstep.

As the chair of an ad-hoc econ-dev committee established via the Sheet Harbour Chamber of Commerce, Finlay voices what the rest of the Shore residents have been thinking for decades. At least most are thinking. Stop the rape of our natural resources and help us to be resilient, vital and self-sustaining.

The Eastern Shore Current is an eclectic Blog for Nova Scotia's Highway 7 Online. Visit the website!

Thursday, May 03, 2012

How to Grow Apples from Seed


How To Grow Apples from Seed

(or what you plant is not what you reap)

by Tom Bond

May 3rd, 2012 - I know that apples grown from SEED will not guarantee they will produce or taste like the apple they came from and each tree becomes a 'hybrid', but I am so excited at all my recent apple growing projects. I had more than half a dozen various apple seedlings, but gave one to my grandson. This morning, I brushed the ice from my Gala Seedling (see pic).
Here's how I did it.

 1-Get Pen. Mark Sticks to remember in 6 months what you planted (IE: Gala, McIntosh)

2 - get ground friendly planting medium, I recommend a box of peat pellets (starters)
3 - After carefully removing apple seeds, using mixture of fresh seeds and dried ones to test both, put a seed in each spot. I have used Egg Cartons with potting soil in them, will break down as roots grow through.
4 - Put inside plastic baggie, mark date / description on tag inside. Place in Freezer for about 3 months (less sometimes works too)
5 -Take out, keep moist, place in sun to naturally thaw and sprout. 6-ensure you use something easy to remove them from as seedlings *hence peat pellets*, and transplant. I would give them a year or two start as a houseplant, to get the longer and early start on growing season. 

6 - Wait 5-7 years to see if it produces beautiful, delicious apples 

7 - Smile when you realize they taste nothing like the apples you took the seeds from.  ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 The Eastern Shore Current is an eclectic Blog for Nova Scotia's Highway 7 Online.
 Visit the website!

Friday, January 27, 2012

Government To "Insure No Significant Adverse Effects"

Save the Eastern Shore - Group Opposed to Salmon Farms



In June of 2011, Nova Scotia's Fisheries and Aquaculture approved two new salmon aquaculture sites in the St. Mary's Bay, Digby, stating that the farms "will create good jobs in southwest Nova Scotia, while the license agreements will ensure protection for other marine industries and the coastal environment".

The media announcement went on to state that "the government will ensure there are no significant adverse effects of salmon farming on the marine environment and its associated fisheries, including the valuable lobster fishery".

Residents of the Eastern Shore who are opposed to the establishment of three proposed salmon farms might well question just how the government will guarantee 'no adverse effects' from the following threats to the lobster industry and the economy (not to mention the already decimated wild salmon population) as compiled on the Nova Scotia Salmon Association's website.

Dangers Presented by Aquaculture

General affects of aquaculture include:
loss of coastal habitat;
pesticide pollution;
greasy coatings on beach rocks;
waste deposits on tidal flats; and
increased present of algae in the water.
In Scotland, salmon farmers have been known to use a chemical delousing agent called dichlorpos to reduce infection of salmon by sea lice. Studies show that this chemical can kill oysters, mussels and other shellfish within 25 meters of the salmon cages where it is used.
It requires at least three kilograms of marine protein to produce a single kilogram of domestic salmon. Domestic salmon are fed by fish caught in the world's oceans. Fish used to feed domestic salmon includes:
Herring;
Mackerel;
Anchoveta;
Anchovy; and
Sardinella.
Concerns are currently being raised around the world about the affects of genetically modified foods on human beings. Salmon that are being raised in aquaculture farms today may fall into the category of genetically modified foods.
In 1997, approximately 300,000 Atlantic salmon were accidentally released into Puget Sound, British Columbia.
In Norway, it is estimated that as many as 1.3 million salmon escape from farms every year and one third of salmon spawning in coastal rivers in Norway are escaped domestic salmon.
Escaped domestic salmon compete with wild salmon for food and for spawning habitat. Studies from British Columbia demonstrate that domestic salmon have begun to spawn and colonize in areas formerly occupied by wild Pacific salmon.
In Norway studies indicate that there are areas where escaped domestic salmon have completely engulfed the historic range of wild salmon.
Interbreeding between wild and escaped domestic salmon can result in the creation of "bad genes". Fish with these types of inferior genes may lose the ability to spawn and survive. The fish may not know where to spawn or may try to spawn at the wrong time of the year.
Escaped domestic salmon can carry disease that is spread to wild salmon populations through mixing in the ocean and interbreeding. Diseases that have spread from domestic species to wild species include:
infectious hematopoietic necrosis virus;
bacterial kidney disease;
Whirling Disease;
Parasitic infections including Gyrodactilus; and
Infectious Salmon Anemia ("ISA").
Studies in Scotland have shown that if a river is less than three miles long and flows into the sea in an area where a salmon farm is located, the river's indigenous wild population will be dead.
"

Granted, the issuing of license-leases to operate finfish farms in the province include the following regulatory conditions:

- operating in a sustainable manner over the long term by following a code of containment for Atlantic salmon in marine net pens

- participating in the province's Environmental Monitoring Program audited by department staff and shared with Fisheries and Oceans Canada, and which requires third-party monitoring and analysis of water samples

- submitting annual production and employment reports.

According to Fisheries and Aquaculture Minister Sterling Belliveau, a significant (note the qualifier) breach of any of these, or one of the many other terms and conditions, could result in the cancellation of an aquaculture licence or lease.

Awww, gee. Bad fish farmers. And how will the government insure safety to the lobster industry once the damage is done? The truth is, they can't. 'Domestic' salmon and trout farms, with their promise of 'local jobs', is a political carrot, usually trotted out along with highway paving issues just before an election.

Once the damage is done, it's too late. "Insuring safety" is political rhetoric, one of those loose terms used to throw us off track. Note they didn't say they 'guarantee'.

The real question is, once the virus is out of the bag so to speak, what's to be done about the dead and dying wild salmon population along the Eastern Shore - and the disappearing lobster industry?

Those opposed have set up a website (Save the Eastern Shore) to alert residents of the proposed farms and a series of community discussions will take place to voice their concerns. In Sheet Harbour, the date is February 6th at the Lions Club, 6-9 pm.

http://savetheeasternshore.blogspot.com/

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The Eastern Shore Current is An eclectic Blog for Nova Scotia's Highway 7 Online. Visit the website!

Thursday, November 17, 2011

No More Quonsets - Urban Sprawl Impacts on Cole Harbour, Westphal

A recent regional bylaw forbids the erection of new quonset huts in Cole Harbour and Westphal, two communities on the edge of Greater Halifax/Dartmouth's) urban sprawl. (Dartmouth HRM East Community Herald, November 14, 2011).

It seems the newly arrived commuter types enjoy the peacefulness of the country (not to mention lower cost housing) but they don't like the 6:00 am rooster wake up call, the baa-ing of spring lambs, the smell of new mown hay, or the 'hideousness' of the metal roofed farm storage quonsets on their prim, landscaped 'streets' -- streets that, incidentally used to be simply RR#1 or RR#2.

Do I sound cynical? I guess that's because I am. While I understand that the city has to grow and only has so many directions available that don't stop abruptly at the ocean's edge, the recent bylaw accentuates again the short sited vision (or lack thereof), that has city councillors like Lorelei Nicoll succumbing to a threat of "no votes" unless she 'gets rid of the quonset' during her campaign. Excuse me? And only four people complained?

But that's another matter. The point is, Regional Council okayed the bylaw, without giving much thought to the agricultural need for such storage buildings.

According to the Herald, a 'frustrated' Cole Harbour resident stated that he's not 'interested in viewing them [quonsets] from [his] picture window' and that they 'belong on farms, commercial areas or large bodies of land" . Oh, yes, that's right. Just like the one you obliterated when you built your tidy little landscaped bungalow lots? Got it. So, what was wrong with the 'unsightly premises' bylaw for this 'one' quonset?

Anyway, luckily for small, once rural businesses like Walker's Feed Store at the edge of Cole Harbour-burb, their quonsets are already built (thus grandfathered) and with any vision, they've invested in farm land 'beyond' the reach of the frenzied, latte drinking and texting burbanites who moved to the country to 'breathe fresh air', but don't want to have to actually um, look at it.

Tell you what. Let them have the commuterville burbs. Sell them your farm land (with a quonset), for a hefty price of course, and let them tear it down (or create another used furniture store or whatever). Who cares?

Then, you just take your money and run, don't walk a little further down the Eastern Shore, just beyond the reaches of yuppie councillors and metrosexuals (or whatever they're called now). And just sit back and wait. They'll be along again soon and you can make a tidy profit all over again!
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The Eastern Shore Current is an eclectic Blog for Nova Scotia's Highway 7 Online. Visit the website!

Thursday, November 10, 2011

Heavy Rainfall Warning for Eastern Shore


November 10, 2011 Canada weather office is predicting up to 100 ml of rain to fall in Halifax County, east of Porter's Lake. A low pressure system from the north will move toward the Maritimes tonight, absorbing moisture from tropical storm Sean. The heavy rainfall is currently forecast for mainland Nova Scotia with locally higher amounts possible along parts of the Atlantic coast. Rainfall is expected to continue through Friday.
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View from Quoddy Hill, Nova Scotia
The Eastern Shore Current is an eclectic Blog for Nova Scotia's Highway 7 Online. Visit the website!

Saturday, April 04, 2009

Chezzetcook Company Turning FOG Into Fuel

Chezzetcook Company Turning FOG Into Fuel

Blue Bio was established in Head of Chezzetcook in 2007 to offer environmentally friendly solutions for businesses that have to deal with grease disposal.

FOG2Fuel is BlueBio's first bioWaste-to-bioEnergy program and targets the fats, oil and grease waste generated by food service kitchens.

Under the program, FOG (fat, oil and grease) suppliers are paid 5¢ / liter for source-separated Waste Fryer Oil (WFO) kept free of other grease, kitchen wastes and
water.

This provides an excellent feedstock for production of low-emissions, non-toxic and renewable bioDiesel fuel as an alternative to petroleum-based diesel fuel.


Other Blue Bio products and services include a solvent free washer degreaser for auto shops and machine shops and Grease-Gard, a natural grease trap solution for food service operations, and composters for solid waste.

The bio-fuel produced by Blue Bio processing is used as a No. 2 heating fuel and diesel engine fuel additive.
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BlueBio produces sustainable bioFuels for Nova Scotia
using source-separated bioWastes collected from restaurants in HRM

(In other words, used cooking Fat, Oil and Grease processing)
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The Eastern Shore Current is an eclectic Blog for Nova Scotia's Highway 7 Online. Visit the website!

Friday, March 07, 2008

2008 - Year of the Potato

In 2008, the United Nations honours the potato.

At first, the idea is a bit startling. The UN is well known for its efforts to create awareness of the Oceans and Mountains and other really huge influential things -- but potatoes? Well, that is small potatoes, so to speak.

Or is it?

At a time when people in 34 countries are malnourished and more than 25,000 people a day die of starvation, staple crops are becoming the manna of life. While rice, wheat and corn are the world's three most important food crops, the potato is the fourth, feeding people all over the world. In fact, the 'lowly potato' is in the front lines in the fight against poverty.

According to USC Canada "the potato is playing a major role in strategies aimed at providing nutritious food for the poor and hungry. It is ideally suited to places where land is limited and labour is abundant."

The potato crop produces nutritious food more quickly, on less land, and in harsher climates than any other major crop.

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International Aid - According to the United Nations World Food Program, almost all of the deaths from hunger and disease can be stopped and the cost to do this is about $195 billion a year. Twenty-two developed countries have pledged to work towards each giving 0.7% (a little less than 1%) of their national income in international aid, which would raise the $195 billion.

Some have already met their goals, others 'sort of have a plan' and are working on it for 2013 or 2014, while other countries are slow to meet their pledge.

Do you know where your country is at?:

Find out here:

http://www.poverty.com/internationalaid.html

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Play this Game to Ease World Hunger

Today, over 96,574,940 grains of rice were donated to combat starvation, through
the
UN's Free Rice game. It's easy! Get one word right and donate 20 grains - the bonus is that you improve your vocabulary as you play!

http://www.freerice.com

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Did You Know?


The potato comes from the Andes, in South America, where it has been consumed for about 8,000 years. It was first taken to Europe in the 16th century by Spanish adventurers interested in its medicinal properties.

There are seven recognized potato species and more than 5,000 potato varieties still growing in the Andes. Potatoes play a critical role in the local farming economy there as well as in the cultural life of the Quechua and Aymara communities who grow them. These farmers still take advantage of its medicinal qualities. The juice of their local varieties helps to control nasty coughs, for example.

The nutritional value of these superior indigenous varieties is also impressive. Unlike the fat, white, starch-filled varieties used to make French fries, the small, colourful, and pockmarked types in the Andes are full of protein, vitamin C, and important antioxidants. And they taste a lot better!

So, here in the land of the McCain brothers (NB) and the famous PEI spuds, why aren't we growing more potatoes in Nova Scotia?

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You're reading The Eastern Shore Current, an eclectic Blog from
Nova Scotia's Highway 7.

http://eshore-ns.blogspot.com

Tuesday, March 20, 2007

Keltic & Maple LNG Guysborough Project Approved

March 14th, 2007

Approved with Conditions:
Environment Minister Mark Parent issued an environmental assessment approval for a $4.5-billion liquefied natural gas and petrochemical facility in Goldboro, Guysborough County, that Keltic Petrochemicals Inc. wants to build with partner Maple LNG.

Keltic must address 59 recommendations made by a review panel as part of the environmental assessment before any work can begin. Keltic president Kevin Dunn said "We’re on track" with the requirements although he acknowledged the question of a liquefied gas supply remains an issue for the project.

In Depth: Here is the complete Nova Scotia government process dating from November, 2006. Includes all public input (now closed), to environmental assessment results, ecological research, habitat studies, etc.
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You're reading The Eastern Shore Current, Highway 7 Online's latest BLOG feature!

http://eshore-ns.blogspot.com