Tag archives for Botkyrka

Time to grow your own food

The Easter weekend is on its last day and finally the green buds, swelling on every tree and bush, have started to burst into leaves. For those of us who dream about a garden full of vegetables and other edible stuff, this is the time to get busy.

Rhubarb

One of our rhubarb plants has woken up from its winter sleep.

There can’t really be more locally produced food that the things growing outside your own window, and growing your own veggies has become a bit of a trend – recently even Sweden’s Minister for Finance Anders Borg talked about how satisfied he is to be almost self-supporting on vegetables from his own garden during the summer season.

I live in a flat, but not having my own garden hasn’t stopped me. The last few years, with a rising awareness about sustainability and food production, more and more people have started to grow food between block of flats in Sweden’s cities. Where I live, we are a few neighbours growing things like rhubarb, squash, carrots, lettuce and garlic between the houses. Cultivating the earth together doesn’t only make it easier to get through the summer months, when many go away for holidays just when the plants are in desperate need of water and care – it’s also much more fun than doing it alone.

Others who share this belief and who have taken the idea of collective food production to a higher level, is Folkodlingen (“the people’s cultivation”) in Skarpnäck. Skarpnäck is one of Stockholm’s suburbs,

Garlic

The garlic we planted last September.

and here a group of people have started producing vegetables and fruit both at an allotment and in a “garden park”, a place that will both be a nice place to hang out in and at the same time produce edible plants. Within this group there are some trained gardeners, but it’s open for everyone who wants to join and learn.

Recently I went to the Multicultural centre in Botkyrka here in Stockholm. It’s a cultural centre arranging a lot of interesting exhibitions and seminars. This time the name of the exhibition is Tillsammans (Together), looking at the problems humanity is facing, as climate change, food production, and human rights violations, and investigating how we could solve these problems together instead of confronting them alone.

One section spotlights the Skarpnäck community garden, and in one of the texts a woman called Lena explains why she joined the group.
– I thought it was a brilliant idea, since I think we need to grow food in every backyard and green space in the city. Oil and transport prices get higher and higher. We have to shift into more local production, importing tomatoes from Italy is just insane. And growing food together with others is just so much better than doing it alone.

The garden park fruits and berries will be available for anyone who wants to eat them and now the group is negotiating with the local public administration to get access to more unused public land.

Tillsammans-exhibition-at-Botkyrka-Multicultural-Centre

The exhibition Together, here about the community garden project in Skarpnäck, Stockholm.

Making Christmas more sustainable – and relaxed

christmas-candy

Candy can work as a nice Christmas gift. Photo: Ann Lindberg/Imagebank Sweden.

Christmas preparations are in full swing in Sweden. Since Christmas often means doing what we usually do, only ten times bigger (buying more, eating more, travelling more), there’s no reason not to look like it from a sustainability point of view too.

The municipality of Botkyrka (autotranslated homepage) in the south of Stockholm, has made a campaign about how to celebrate more climate friendly. One way is cutting down on the meat, since the traditional Swedish Christmas buffet is quite loaded with that. Another thing is not to make too much food only to throw away a lot of it in the end. Why not ask the neighbours if they want some?

Then there are of course hundreds of different ways to turn resource-consuming and stress-creating Christmas gift shopping into something better.
Recently I was interviewed by a Swedish radio show about this, and told them what became my personal eye-opener: When I was about 14 years old we used to spend Christmas with my grandmother, aunts, uncles and cousins, alltogether around 15 persons.

marmelade-jellies

Like these - but green. Not every 16 year old's favourite...

As the years went by, the gift-buying, wrapping and opening took more and more of the days we spent together. Until one year, when I and my mother, gathering the gifts to put them under the Christmas tree, suddenly realized we had missed one gift, for my two year older cousin David. Panick-stricken, we took what we had – a box of green marmelade jellies – and wrapped it. I can assure you that green marmelade jellies wasn’t the dream gift for a 16 year old boy, not even in the beginning of the 1990:s…

After this we realized it was time for a change. In the end all we wanted was spending time together. So we decided to concentrate on that and cut the gift business drastically. This year I’m just giving away a few gifts, most of them edible. But no green marmelade jellies…

Here are Botkyrka’s gift suggestions:

  • A punch ticket at the local swimming pool
  • Give away a theatre ticket, or why not two and come along yourself?
  • Give something that makes people in other parts of the world happy too, like a goat to a poor family or financial help for a safe childbirth. Check out what different organisations do.
  • Who would say no to 30 hours of garden work?
  • A massage.
  • Your own kitchen is as good as any shop. Cookies, buns or Christmas sweets are perfect gifts. (recipes for Swedish ginger snaps and saffron buns can be found here)

Last but not least: A great and very exclusive gift can actually be time. The other day I heard of a lady who asks her grown-up daughters and sons to give her their undivided attention as a Christmas gift. One day when they spend time with her, without beeping mobiles or checking their e-mails. Just her and them. That’s a gift money can’t buy.

Love declarations for trees

Tree-and-walks-map

Botkyrka's tree and walks map.

No matter where one lives I think we all get attached to its details and special places after living in the same place for a while.

Now the Stockholm municipality of Botkyrka has taken advantage of this fact. During the last year the local art gallery has collected people’s own favourite walks and, not the least, favourite tree nominations, and have now put together the most adorable map.

Apart from giving ideas about nice walks, the best part about this map is people’s stories about their favourite trees.

Yagmur about his special pine, which stands outside a school: “The tree is crooked, but means a lot for the school. It has been used as playhouse.”

Yagmurs-pine

"Yagmur's pine is pretty crooked."

Tommys-birch

"Tommy's birch looks like a candelabra."

Lena about her “couple tree”: “One beech and one oak tree have made a baby! One of them passes through the other. The oak has grown on both sides of the beech.”

Tommy about his favourite pine, which stands by a district heating station: “It’s a giant pine that I have spoken to every day for 23 years. This tree means so much to me, every time I’m there I give it a hug.”

Botkyrka’s special map isn’t the only one. With theme walks getting more and more popular (such as the Millennium tour, following the trails of the famous Stieg Larsson crime novel) Stockholm has also put together a ”Green Capital Tour” to celebrate its year as Green capital. It is a walk between six places symbolising different parts of the city’s environmental work. For example it shows how people can fish freely in the waters of the central city.

The walk can be done either with a conventional paper map or using a Gowalla service for smartphones.