Tag: community

The World’s Fare: The Largest International Roaming Dinner Party

The World’s Fare: The Largest International Roaming Dinner Party

A few weeks ago I backed a project on Kickstarter called The World’s Fare.  The project got funded, and this Fall, the organization The Feast will host an international, roaming dinner party called the World’s Fare that everyone is invited to participate in.

On October 5, 2012 at 7pm local time in cities everywhere, anyone can be a part of the dinner by  bringing together 6-8 people for a feast (dinner) of their own. The purpose is to eat together and decide on one thing each group can collectively start to make the world better.  It can be small –like fixing a fence or large such as supporting an effort to redefine an industry.

All of the groups who participate will be invited to share what they intend to build and change with the world at large online.  These commitments will be shared through The Feast site, social media and showcased in a public art installation that will act as the central piece for a pavilion of innovation in NYC the next day.

This initiative is part of the organization, The Feast, which organizes the Feast Conference which brings entrepreneurs, radicals, doers and thinkers who are revolutionizing the way things work for the betterment of humanity.  This year the conference is from October 3-5, 2012.

I plan to participate, and just put the event in my calendar.  Now – I have to decide what to cook and who to invite.

Image Source:
feastongood.com/worldsfare/

Links:

feastongood.com/worldsfare/

www.kickstarter.com – World’s Fare

 

Workshop Weekend:  Learn to Pick a Lock, Make Ricotta, or Solder

Workshop Weekend: Learn to Pick a Lock, Make Ricotta, or Solder

Want to learn to pick a lock, make your own ricotta or make a camp stove out of two soda cans?  If you live in Oakland, California you might have attended Workshop Weekend this past weekend and now can do some of these things.  The two-day event was organized by two MIT-schooled brothers, Gil and J.D. Zamfirescu who helped organize the weekend of learning and sharing.

Participants paid $30 as an admission fee to take one class or to attend as many as they wanted during the whole weekend.  On the website, the event is described as a “community-centered weekend buffet of low-cost, low-commitment mini classes to discover something that you are passionate about.”. The short, hands-on workshops ranged from crafting to engineering to gardening, and were taught by local, instructors with years of passion and experience in might craft.  Some of the classes from the May workshop weekend included a 10-minute bread workshop, How to solder, a Distillation workshop, PCB layout design, and  Sewing with Electronics.

The event was designed to be as hands-on as possible, and many of the participants tried soldering, making felt, reading astrology, and other skills for the first time.  In total, a few hundred participants attended the Workshop Weekend.

The format of the event seems to be inspired by  “unconferences” or “barcamps,” which have short presentations where anyone can present.   I increasingly am interested in this short workshop/presentaiton model and I plan to see if we can do something like this where I live.   If you are interested in working on creating a open workshop/unconference event in Cleveland,OH that focuses on art, Open source technology, DIY culture, collaboration, and innovation, let me know.

Image Source:
workshopweekend.net

 

Links:
workshopweekend.net

Maple syrup anyone?  The Maple Festival in Geagua County, OH

Maple syrup anyone? The Maple Festival in Geagua County, OH

This weekend I finally made it out to the Maple Festival out in Geagua County, a 4 day festival which celebrates maple syrup.   The festival has been held in Chardon, OH since 1926.

This year due to the unusually warm temperatures, the maple syrup production was stopped earlier than expected and also reduced production.   You couldn’t tell from the festival – there was things related to maple syrup everywhere.   There was a Maple syrup contest, a Geauga County Maple Festival queen walking around with a sash and a tiera, maple syrup barbeque, and pancakes and maple syrup served at the main tent.

We headed to the festival on Sunday morning, and by 12 noon they were out of pancakes.  Around the corner from the festival we found a church that had its own pancake breakfast event in the basement.  For $9 we got all the pancakes we could eat with butter and maple syrup, sausage that I didn’t eat, and coffee, tea, or milk,

After we got our food, we sat down next to a couple who asked us where we were from.  “I knew you weren’t from around here,” she said.  “Otherwise I would know you already.”  It turns out she was the producer of the maple syrup that they were serving at the breakfast.  I have to say – it was the best maple syrup I have had.  Not too sweet, and really good with the butter and chewy pancakes.

There were paddles on the tables labeled COFFEE or PANCAKES.  When you ran out of pancakes or coffee you would hold the paddle in the air until you were served.  Somehow I managed to eat 6 (!) pancakes which is the most pancakes I have ever eaten in my life.

At the festival we ate maple caramel corn, and for $1.00 got a small bowl of warm maple syrup and a popsicle stick.  You use the stick to eat small dabs of syrup that cools ands hardens in the bowl if you don’t eat it quickly.

We planned our visit in time to make the “bathtub race,” which is a race where clawfoot tubs are put on wheels.  Teams from the area compete in races where two team members push a third member who sits in the bathtub.  I’m not sure how they steered it – but they had to roll down the street, make a half-circle – then head back to the finish line.  The teams had matching shirts, and seemed to be from local businesses and other groups.

By 1 pm the finalists of the lumberjack competition were competing in events such as chain saw cutting, cross-cut sawing (where a team of 2 men use a oldtime giant saw with 2 handles to make 2 cross-cuts of wood), and axe flying.  Complementary earplugs were available – which were good to have for the chain saw events.

The event had games and food stands like any festival, and there were lots of fried things on sticks including fried swiss cheese, fried snickers, and fried pizza sticks.  There also was a French fry place that had fries that ranged in size from jumbo to bucket.   Similar to how Starbucks names its sizes – jumbo was the small.

On the grounds there were historical maple syrup equipment on display, including a collection of spigots which are used to collect syrup, several setups that showed how the syrup used to be heated which included a large cauldron over a stove, and a Native American traditional setup of using a split log that would be filled with syrup and put over a log.

 

 

Making a Change in Your Community:  John McKnight and the ABCD Institute

Making a Change in Your Community: John McKnight and the ABCD Institute

This weekend I attended a talk/workshop called The Abundant Community: Shifting from Consumerism to Citizenship given by John McKnight at River’s Edge in Cleveland, OH.  McKnight is emeritus professor of education and social policy and co-director of the Asset-Based Community Development Institute at Northwestern University. With Peter Block, he is coauthor of “The Abundant Community” and author of “The Careless Society.”

I wasn’t sure exactly what I was going to.  I expected a lecture but instead found myself as a part of a dynamic 3 hour session.  In the session, Mcnight  shared stories about individuals making changes in their neighborhoods, presented case study information, and had us do a series of exercises to learn about the  “recipe” to make community change.

Mcknight describes a consumer as a person one has surrendered to others the power to provide what is essential for a full and satisfied life and a citizen is one who chooses to create the life, the neighborhood, and the world from his/her own gifts and the gifts of others.

In the workshop we reviewed some simple questions and things to consider – to help make the shift from being consumers to citizens.

The talk began by Mcknight introducing ideas about abundancy.   Mcknight said, “Abundancy is everywhere and change is made by a citizen having the power to have vision and to work with others to make the vision come true.”

Mcknight and his team did a study where they asked individuals, “Would you tell us what people have done together to make things better locally?”  In the study, they collected 300 stories – and then looked at what stories have in common.

They found that there were 5 “ingredients” for making changes.

Each story had these 5 things in common:

1. Individuals focusing on Assets/Gifts.
The residents focused on the gifts of the individuals – not the “problem, deficits, or needs.”  Looking at the glass as half full and not half empty, focusing on gifts and assets, and the capacities of others.  Mcknight talked about how any successful group that is successful ignores the positive half, and ignores the empty half.

2.  Associations
Change was done by groups who come together to do things and were mostly not paid – associations, clubs, grups of peoples.  Out of the 3000 stories- most of the change started with an association being the trigger to make changes in the community’s well-being.   Some associations include, addiction prevention and recovery groups, block clubs, animals care groups, recreations groups, religious groups, etc.   The associations can come together because they care about the same thing.

3. Institutions
Government, non-profit and profit groups, jobs, parks – are usually part of the process.

4.Land
The groups would meet on land, or make a garden, etc.

5.Exchange
There is a trade/exchange of some kind between the associations and institutions.

In the workshop – McKnight had us focus on #1 and 2 of the list – (which is why there is less information about 3-5 above.)  He said that #1 and #2  are the most important ingredients of the process.

Mcknight shared a story about how Adopt-a –Highway began in Wisconsin (where associations and groups help clean the highways), about a project where churches worked together to make a soup kitchen that turned into a community restaurant, a community library project, and other examples.

We did a series of exercises/ discussions – where we had to answer a question, share our answer with the people at the table we were at, and then to the larger group – with Mcknight mediating the process.

The questions were:

  1. What are your gifts?  (Something you were born with  – and decide on your top one.)
  2. What are your skills? (Something you learned – and decide on your top one.)
  3. What is your passion? What do you care about the most? (and choose the top one.)
  4. What do you know well enough that you feel you could teach it to young people in your neighborhood?

After we answered these questions, McKnight shared a story about a neighborhood where 17/40 households on a street did this exercise, then made a list of the topics people came up with for #4.  They had 40 kids on the street fill out what interested them from the list of topics – and eventually people started teaching workshops to the kids in the neighborhood.

McKnight talked about how many of the topics on the list that the kids wanted: cooking, how to manage a budget, painting, computers, real estate, skating, typing how to grow plants, etc. – are not topics taught in schools.  He also talked about how we rely on schools for education – and that we no longer have a “village” to support the growth of young people.

He talked about how this made the change from being neighbors to citizens – and from being clients and consumers to citizens.

At the end of the session – he shared his email and website – and that if any of us were going to do join this movement in making change in our  neighborhood to contact him and his group.

He ended the session by talking about how gifts are not gifts until they are given, and that care is created in the community – not by institutions.

He shared a quote from a community in Eames, IA that wrote “A great community creates the condition where people can fall in love.  A place we can fuss over one another and ask how did I ever live without you?”  McKnight ended the session by saying, “ We have a great future to do this.”

The session made me feel motivated about working with others where I live to make a community garden in the abandoned school yard near our street, and also to see  if we can move from the annual block party that we have – to doing the community exercise to move to having workshops for the kids on our street.

Want to become a community citizen? Check out the ABCD website, download some of the resources and publications, or contact McKnight at [email protected].

Image Source:

Kaboom Playground Project – Cupertino News

Community Garden Project – Raleigh, NC

 

Links:

ABCD (The Asset-Based Community Development Institute

Resources and Publications to Downlaod – from ABCD Institute

The Abundant Community- the Book

Community Stories