"Can I have a ride?" This was the question we heard from lots of children when we brought our pedal-powered sewing machine to the Mangere Bridge Kid's Market in October. The machine is available for people to ride, to generate electricity for our sewing machine as it whips up reusable bags for the community. It's a popular draw-card for people walking past and is a great way to creatively spread our waste minimisation message.
Over the last couple of months, we've also popped up at the Mangere Bridge Library, and we're back there again this Saturday 16 November between 11am and 12pm and at the Mangere Bridge Market on Sunday 17 November between 11am-12:30pm. We'll be making reusable bags for the Mangere Bridge Tote All Recall Bins
Friends of the Farm members will be on-hand to keep Mangere Bridge locals up-to-date on how you can do your bit for the planet. We'll have our oral hygiene collection box for toothbrushes and tubes of toothpaste (any brand) that you'd like to recycle, and our battery box where you can drop off household batteries for recycling.
Come on down and say hello and ask us those hard-to-answer recycling questions. Or just come down to ride the bike! See you there.
Tuesday, 12 November 2019
Sunday, 4 August 2019
Wastewise Clothing Swap- 17th May 2019
About 25 members of the local community
took part in the Friends of the Farm inaugural Clothing Swap Event on 17th
May, 2019 at Ambury Farm. I was very happy to be part of the team organizing
this fun event.
Friends of the Farm promoted this event via
flyers, emails, and social media prior to the Clothes Swap and, on the night, a
team of dedicated volunteers set up the space with changing rooms, fairy
lights, mirrors, flowers, and music.
The idea was simple: we invited registered attendees to come with some second-hand clothing in season and in good condition, and ‘swap’ their items for new items to add to their wardrobe. While attendees enjoyed some drinks and light supper, Friends of the Farm volunteers organized the donated items to look like a ‘swap store.’
Once we opened the store, folks were
speedily sifting through items and trying them on in the newly created changing
rooms. Thanks to the keen volunteers, enthusiastic participants and a great
energy, the swap was a great success; everyone went home with something “new.”
The remaining items were donated to the St
Vincent de Paul shop in Mangere Bridge.
We have them to thank for the loan of the clothing racks and, thanks to
a koha basket, we raised $60 at the end of the night.
This was an entertaining and enjoyable
event that helped raise awareness in the local community of the impact of
over-consumption and offer some ways to combat this mindset. In addition,
Friends of the Farm was able to share details of other initiatives coming up
throughout the year. We had such a good time, we’re hoping to replicate the
event as we approach summer.
Special thanks to all the donations and to
the volunteers that made it happen. I’ll definitely be coming back and
encouraging my friends to do the same!
Written by Rachel Kitchens
Tuesday, 18 June 2019
Sarah’s Street Clean-up- 27th April
Last month, local resident Sarah was feeling very sad about
the amount of rubbish lying in the streets around her house. Friends of the Farm offered to support Sarah
and her family to organise an event; Sarah’s Street Clean-up day.
Our plan was for people to clean up an area around their house,
then bring the rubbish they’d collected to a central location, where Friends of
the Farm volunteers were stationed with bins and a BBQ.
Around 30 families pitched in and arrived with rubbish
they’d collected from neighbouring streets.
A lot of the rubbish collected was recyclable, so Friends of the Farm
member Caroline was on hand to help sort it into the right bins. This also gave us an opportunity to provide
some education on what can and can’t be recycled.
Once again, Māngere Bridge locals Steve and Gemma from We Compost
pitched in and supported our efforts, by delivering bins for us and then taking
all the different waste streams away- such great community support! Fresh Choice kindly donated the sausages and
bread, and Paul from the Fruit Shop made a fruit hamper with Sarah’s help, as a
free raffle for clean-up participants. Māngere Bridge Pharmacy also supported
with a $30 gift voucher.
Feedback from participants showed that people liked this low
key event and found it easy to join in, even if they had younger children. Participants were excited by the opportunity
to contribute to their community, and Friends of the Farm really enjoyed the community
partnership with local rangatahi.
Together, we’re helping to care for our patch!
Easter Clean-up 13th April 2019
It’s been a while since Friends of the Farm has had a
community Easter Clean-up at Ambury Farm.
For the past five years, we’ve supported the Sustainable Coastlines’ ‘Love
your Coast’ Campaign on the Manukau Harbour instead, with a large number of
schools coming through the Farm to collect rubbish from the Ambury foreshore. With ‘Love Your Coast’ coming to an end in
our area, this year we returned to our roots with our traditional Easter Clean-up.
Friends of the Farm co-ordinated the clean-up on the Ambury
foreshore, as well as supporting the Tararata Stream Team to host a clean-up
there. Although it was a small turn-out, it was great to see our regular Easter clean-up supporters returning, as well as some new faces. Some participants commented that there didn’t
seem to be as much rubbish around as on previous clean-ups. However, you do
have to have a keen eye to notice all those tiny pieces of plastic out there.
During the clean-up, we ran a competition to guess how many
rabbit poos were in a jar, and lucky Lenna had the job of counting them! In
total, there were 1409 rabbit poos. The
prize was the jar, and an Ambury Farm hat.
It was a beautiful afternoon, and participants’ efforts were rewarded
with stacks of Easter eggs and a sausage sizzle.
The clean-up was a
simple event for FOF to organise, and participants enjoyed the feeling of
taking action to care for the environment in such a beautiful setting. A small group meant were plenty of Easter
eggs to go around!
Community orchard working bee- 30 March 2019
This year has been a really successful one for our community
orchard, with the feijoa trees producing the biggest fruit we’ve seen yet! We put this down to our thorough pruning and
thinning out of the trees, which created more light for the fruit.
The working bee focused on creating a better bed for our
blueberries, by removing kikuyu and adding some top quality worm castings from
the big worm farm at Ambury farm, as well as mulching. We also took the opportunity to mulch the
other trees, prune our espaliered trees, (which are growing beautifully) and
build a temporary hen enclosure under the feijoas.
We’ve been working hard to reduce the guava
moth in the feijoas this year, by spraying with neem oil, picking up the fruit
from off the ground (where the larvae like to grow) and by trialing the use of chickens
to help clean up the fruit on the ground and eat the grubs. Our orchard neighbours are enjoying the
chickens, although their egg laying is a bit sporadic!
We had a lovely turn-out of locals at the working bee, and
were once again treated to a feijoa cake (thanks Rose!), on
completion of our work. The orchard has
been well used this year, with lots of neighbouring families enjoying the
fruit.
The citrus trees are producing beautifully now, and there’ll be
plenty to share once it’s ripe. We
still have some work to do to improve the shelter belts for some of the younger
trees and extend the orchard further.
Keep your eye on our Facebook page for future working bees in our
community orchard.
Ihumātao reclamation Festival 2nd March 2019
This history-making event was organised by local group SOUL
(Save Our Unique Landscape), who wanted to create a celebration on land at Ihumātao
which is currently under threat from a proposed housing development. Thousands of people turned out on a stunning
Summer’s day to see the many great acts, and to sample the delicious food and workshops that
were on offer.
To show our support for the cause, Friends of the Farm offered
to help by creating a zero waste event, and to feed all the hardworking
volunteers on the day. Prior to the
event, we worked with food vendors to help them source compostable packaging,
and funded Koia Teinakore (ME Family Services) and his awesome team to man bin
stations.
Four bin stations were
dotted around the event, and we were thrilled by how respectful concert attendees
were, with minimal litter left behind to clean up. Everyone truly grasped the
significance of this special place. Friends
of the Farm was pleased to be able to contribute our mahi as a koha to the hard
working SOUL campaigners, who’re tirelessly working to save a very special
place in our community.
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