The Many Facets of
Anthroposophy in the News
To see a subset of this Article list, you may enter a keyword and/or a
category you are interested in below. Click on the Show Links
button to view your selection. The "Hits" column represents the number
of times users have selected this link. The Links at the top and bottom
of the table will help you navigate through the pages of articles. There
are 20 articles displayed on every page, and the number of pages varies
depending on Category. Click here to see a list of
e.Libd News Items.
Description | Category | Hits |
Several biodynamic farms such as Brambletye Farm, Jacob�s Ladder and Brockmans sell their fruit and vegetables at south west London farmers� markets including Wandsworth and Barnes. ... Ellie Woodcock acknowledges that some biodynamic principles may seem like �voodoo� to some, but many praise the quality of biodynamic farming produce.
(Friday October 30th, 2015 — South West Londoner - UK)
|
Bio Agriculture |
138 |
Red Rock Grill at Zion Lodge in Utah - The lodge's effort to respect the environment is impressive � no plastic straws or even plastic glasses. This was more than a token gesture. Even the wine list reflected producers who are conscious of the environment. Most notably on the list was Parducci, a California winery known for its biodynamic efforts. However noble the restaurant's commitment, Tom was disappointed to find few alternatives to Parducci. It seemed that having an environmentally conscious wine producer on the list was more important than the quality of the wine. And that raised the question: Is a wine made from organically grown grapes necessarily better?
(Wednesday October 21st, 2015 — CapitalGazette.com - Maryland USA)
|
Bio Agriculture |
140 |
Biodynamic farmers, meanwhile, follow an even stricter set of guidelines that limit the use of yeast strains, copper sulfate, and enzymes that conventional winemakers add to further shape the wine as it ferments. The most devout dive into the mystic components as well, going as far as burying cow horns stuffed with manure to, supposedly, promote a balanced ecosystem.
(Sunday October 18th, 2015 — Atlanta Magazine - Atlanta, Georgia USA)
|
Bio Agriculture |
144 |
NASA put up special instruments which recorded electromagnetic vibrations on the Voyager space probe and converted that into actual sound. The recordings include the sounds of Saturn�s rings, Neptune, Jupiter and Uranus as well as what Earth would sound like millions of kilometres away.
(Sunday October 18th, 2015 — DailyKos online)
|
Miscellaneous |
132 |
Alex Weiser, along with Jon Hammond and Nathan Siemens, are among a handful of farmers in the region who are experimenting with growing heritage grains such as Sonora White, Emmer, Red Fife, and Roman rye. The idea as well as the seeds came from none other than renowned seed saver and heirloom advocate, Glenn Roberts of Anson Mill. Roberts donated 4 tons of historic landrace varietals to farmers to grow and to put to the test a long known wisdom: crops that are cultivated for nutrients and flavor are also more pest-resistant and drought-tolerant. What better way to test this theory than to grow heritage grains in drought-stricken California? After two successful plantings on 15 acres, the answers were clear.
(Friday October 16th, 2015 — Mother Earth News - USA)
|
Miscellaneous |
75 |
The land will be used for food growing projects and there will also be a starter farm for young entrant farmers.
(Thursday October 15th, 2015 — Stroud News and Journal - Stroud, Gloucestershire UK)
|
Bio Agriculture |
133 |
The Waldorf class teacher has the unique opportunity to build on this relationship throughout multiple years of a child's schooling. She is the "first among equals" in the child's constellation of teachers (others include: a foreign language teacher, a games teacher, a music teacher, a strings teacher, a handwork teacher and a woodworking teacher).
(Thursday October 15th, 2015 — Conway Daily Sun - North Conway, New Hampshire USA)
|
Waldorf |
136 |
Last week, two federal agencies decided that sustainability concerns didn�t have a place in the government�s determination of what makes a healthy diet, rejecting an advisory panel�s recommendation that the government consider the environmental cost of agriculture in nutrition programs and limit the consumption of meat. But if environmentalists want to sell a plant-based diet to the masses, they may be better off talking about grocery bills instead of animal agriculture�s contribution to climate change: A new study published in the Journal of Hunger & Environmental Nutrition found that eating a vegetarian diet is cheaper.
(Monday October 12th, 2015 — TakeApart.com)
|
Miscellaneous |
130 |
In 2011, the tiny mountain nation of Bhutan announced a lofty goal: make the country�s agricultural system 100 percent organic by the year 2020. If it succeeded, it would be the first country in the world to achieve the feat.
(Sunday October 11th, 2015 — Think Progress- USA)
|
Miscellaneous |
158 |
Earlier today, the Nobel committee awarded its renowned prize for medicine to the discoverers [Satoshi Omura, William Campbell] of two anti-parasitic drugs � one that fights malaria and one that treats two lesser-known devastating diseases. ... Since 1987, the Mectizan Donation Program has given out more than a billion treatments for onchoceriasis and lymphatic filariasis to people in 33 countries (in the late '90s GlaxoSmithKline contributed another drug for lymphatic filariasis to the program).
(Monday October 5th, 2015 — Mother Jones online -)
|
Medicine |
183 |
A few years ago, I stood on a hillside overlooking two adjacent vineyards � biodynamic on the left, nonbiodynamic on the right. It was like being at a drive-in movie theater with two huge screens. On the left was a high-definition film, bursting with lush color. On the right was a sepia-toned still photograph. This, of course, proves nothing except that, in that case, biodynamic farming resulted in healthier-looking crops. But several studies have backed up the actual health of the land and the plants.
(Wednesday September 30th, 2015 — Chicago Tribune - Chicago, Illinois USA)
|
Bio Agriculture |
139 |
Commercial GM crop cultivation has never been allowed in Lithuania, and the majority of previous Biotech company requests for trials for GM maize, GM oilseed rape and GM potatoes in the country were not given permits by the Environment Ministry, however the official opt-out has strengthened Lithuania�s position on this issue even further.
(Wednesday September 30th, 2015 — Sustainable Pulse )
|
Miscellaneous |
140 |
As developed by Moyer and colleagues, there are four basic steps to organic no-till:
1. Protect the soil and keep down the weeds in a farm field by planting a winter-hardy cover crop in the fall, such as vetch, barley, wheat, rye, or oats.
2. When the cover crop reaches maturity in the spring, the farmer knocks it down with a roller-crimper.
3. The farmer plants a cash crop into the crimped cover crop with a no-till drill, usually at the same time as crimping (crimper in front of the tractor, drill pulled behind), and then the cash crop grows up through the crimped cover crop.
4. After harvest in the fall, the organic residue of both crops can be disked into the soil, if the farmer wants, as next year�s cover crop is planted. All together, the use of a cover crop and a roller-crimper creates a dense mat of organic material on the soil surface that smothers weeds while providing nutrients, shade, and moisture to the cash crop.
(Wednesday September 30th, 2015 — Utne Reader )
|
Miscellaneous |
73 |
A school in Saratoga Springs says it�s seeing the impact of a later start time. The Waldorf School moved its start time from 7:50 a.m. to 8:20 a.m. last year. The results, administrators say, are obvious. Tardiness is down 35% from the 2013-2014 school year to the 2014-2015 school year. Teachers say the students are more likely to be prepared to learn. They�re more awake and more of them come to school having eaten breakfast, which educators say makes a huge difference.
(Wednesday September 30th, 2015 — WNYT - Albany, New York USA)
|
Waldorf |
146 |
Having fresh, home-grown salad leaves to hand through the winter requires foresight. But with a little planning at the beginning of autumn, you can ensure a steady supply of cut-and-come-again salad leaves that will become good companions through the colder months.
(Wednesday September 30th, 2015 — The Guardian - UK)
|
Bio Agriculture |
141 |
As the unofficial Oct. 1 deadline approaches, more countries are submitting their intended nationally developed contributions (INDCs) to the United Nations, showing how they will contribute to carbon emission reductions. This week, Brazil, South Africa, and Indonesia all added their plans to the list, offering two different pathways for developing nations.
(Tuesday September 29th, 2015 — Think Progress- USA)
|
Miscellaneous |
145 |
Sam and his wife Carly Malfroy got a Canberra Organic Growers Society plot at O'Connor in March this year. They had been part of the Mitchell community garden for the past three years but were moving to O'Connor and wanted to garden close by. The couple believe in organic and biodynamic produce and have always enjoyed producing their own vegetables in an allotment in a way that is as natural as possible.
(Tuesday September 22nd, 2015 — Good Food - Australia)
|
Bio Agriculture |
141 |
As other schools race toward technology, the Waldorf School is about hands on, one-one learning, without technology including computers and iPads.
(Tuesday September 22nd, 2015 — WKBW-TV - Buffalo, New York USA)
|
Waldorf |
141 |
Northern Ireland has joined Scotland, France, Greece and Latvia in announcing a full ban on GM crops under the new EU opt-out regulations. Environment Minister, Mark H Durkan announced Monday that he is prohibiting the cultivation of genetically modified (GM) crops in Northern Ireland. The Minister�s announcement follows an EU decision earlier in 2015 to permit Member States to opt out of growing approved GM crops within their territories.
(Monday September 21st, 2015 — Organic Consumers Association)
|
Miscellaneous |
134 |
There is now an enormous cache of evidence on both scientific and legal grounds that Monsanto in fact conducted numerous studies in the 1970s and 1980s on glyphosate�s toxicity and health risks and intentionally sealed this research from independent and public review and scrutiny. As with Big Tobacco�s proprietary claims that prevented the FDA from publicly warning Americans about the dangers of smoking, the EPA has sat on Monsanto�s own deleterious data for decades.
(Monday September 14th, 2015 — Organic Consumers Association)
|
Miscellaneous |
155 |
|
|
|