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Cuisine communautaire à L'université d'Ottawa

Qu’est-ce qu’une cuisine communautaire? Une cuisine communautaire ou la restauration collective se défini comme le regroupement de gens dans un contexte formel ou non formel pour apprendre à cuisiner et/ou partager ces connaissances de manière structurer ou non. Donc, une cuisine communautaire peut être un souper entre amis à un cours de cuisines que tu dois payer une large somme pour y participer. Pour moi, une cuisine communautaire c’est une façon d’apprendre de nouvelles techniques et de mélanges de saveurs, mais aussi d’apprendre à connaitre de nouvelles personnes et à renforcir des liens avec des amis. Enfin, je crois vraiment qu’une communauté forte peut se développer en passant par des cuisines communautaires et est essentiel à mieux comprendre les impacts et les alternatives à nos systèmes de production et distribution de nourriture. Ottawa est plein de foodies (des fans de nourritures qui aiment découvrir et expérimenter), donc il y a un bon nombre de participants e...

Fruits et légumes frais! En voici

Vous cherchez des fruits et légumes locaux dans la région d’Ottawa-Gatineau, voici quelques choix. Chaque fruits et légumes a sa saison de cueillette par exemple : les asperges sont prête en Juin; les fraises en fin juin jusqu’à environ mi-juillet; les patates, les haricots, les pois mange-tout, les ognons, les carottes, les framboises d’été sont tous prêt en Juillet; les carottes, les poivrons, les concombres, les courges, le mais sucré, les tomates et l’ail sont tous prêt en Août; les framboise d’automne, pommes, les patates d’hiver sont prêt en Septembre; et évidemment les citrouilles sont prêt à cueillir en octobre pour l’halloween. Si vous voulez une liste plus complète des fruits et légumes ainsi que les viandes et fromages, voici la liste produite du Marché de Fermiers d’Ottawa . Vous trouverez souvent des marchés qui en vendent dans la région comme exemple le Marché de Fermiers d’Ottawa qui se situe à quatre localisations : au Parc Brewer, à Ottawa tous les dimanches d...

Sustainable Student Stress Syndrome: Green Moving Guide

Are you a student? Are you stuck doing that thing where you pack your life into boxes and relocate to another place in the near future? Are you stressed and overridden with tonnes of stuff that you realize you don’t really need in your new place? (If you answered yes to any of these questions, you should probably continue reading. If not, maybe read anyways or continue browsing this blog for something more applicable to you.) Moving sucks, the effort that is required to sort through your junk and meticulously wrap your breakables is an arduous task at best. Hopefully some of these tips will help make the process a bit easier. 1. Gather the necessary packing equipment  DOs: Boxes- can be found on campus in “cardboard” recycling bins, be sure to recycle them after/give to others in the moving process! Crates- ask local stores (such as grocery stores) if they have any that you can borrow, some are surprisingly friendly if you offer to put a “deposit” down Grocery Ba...

Top 5 Ways to Save Energy on Campus

When I was an undergraduate student at uOttawa I was really excited when the government of Canada launched the doomed 1 Tonne Challenge program . The program had only good intentions but it completely and utterly failed to be inclusive. As a student there were a bunch of things that were being suggested by the program that I just couldn't do. Buy an efficient furnace or car, insulate my house, purchase offsets?!?!? I didn't own a home, couldn't afford a car, and what the hell was an offset? Since then I have always had a hate on for things marketed to students that students have no control over. If I told you to turn down the heat in your classroom, would you even be able to do it? So here is a list of 5 actual things that you can do on campus to reduce the campuses environmental footprint. Don't use the elevator when you don't have to  I never understood why people didn't get this but elevators suck their fair share of energy. On a floor by floor basis...

Recyclage des meubles - le déchet d’un, le trésor d’un autre…

Avez-vous déjà remarqué, lors des grands déménagements (mai, juillet et septembre) tous les meubles qui sont laissés à ramasser et jeter par la ville? J’en suis certaine! C’est le même cas sur le campus de l'université d'Ottawa; lors de grands déménagements ou rénovations, l’Université se débarrasse presque toujours des meubles. Ces meubles se sont fait jetés; jusqu’au jour où nous avons commencé le programme de recyclage de meubles. Le Programme de recyclage des meubles (PRM) a été instauré en 2008 dans le cadre d’un projet pilote visant à évaluer le potentiel que pouvaient offrir la réutilisation et le recyclage des meubles sur le campus. Après l’acquisition de la propriété située au 200, avenue Lees à la fin de 2007, l’Université s’est retrouvée avec une grande quantité de meubles qui avaient été laissés dans l’immeuble. Au lieu de jeter ces meubles et d’en assumer le coût connexe, le Bureau du développement durable (BDD) et le Service des immeubles (SDI) ont examiné la...

Sustainability Badges for Foursquare

I, Merissa Mueller, am the conqueror of cartography, maker of maps, artist of the atlas, and most recently the foursquare flunky. See, I’m new to foursquare. I have heard of it, mostly because sometimes on Facebook my homepage decides to tell me the locations of my drunken friends. Other than that, the concept is quite familiar because of my work with mapping but I had no experience with it until recently. I had created a foursquare account quite a while back for the office to which I added “lists” entailing where on and off campus you should visit along with a short “tip” about the building/location. Since I have no access to a smart phone (hell, I don’t even have a real calling plan on my crappy phone, just texting) I couldn’t go much further with our profile than that. I could not “check in” to places, upload photos to my profile, become the “mayor” of a spot and most unfortunately, I could not earn a single badge which made me feel horrible. I mean, even if you’re crappy at ...

Composicle: the ultimate way to compost

I was mobbed by a group of onlookers with a bunch of questions at my condo today. My crime?....having discovered the most amazing way to compost. (note to reader, I didn't actually discover it but I fancy myself a pioneer) Let me start this post by saying that I understand that composting is hard. It's not like recycling. Recycling means you put one thing into a container and voila, nice and easy. There are no odours, there are no bugs, and you can recycle almost everywhere. No so for composting, and in my case composting is doubly difficult because condos in Ottawa don't have a standard composting system. These creates three possible solutions. The first is to become a composting ninja. Wake up super early and find a house somewhere in your neighbourhood that composts. Quietly, without waking anybody up or drawing too much attention to yourself, open up their compost bin and depose the goods. Full disclosure, I have been caught doing this once before and I can tell ...

The end of one era is the beginning of another

This past week the University of Ottawa installed new exterior recycling bins on campus. Now I promised myself I wouldn't cry so please bare with me while I pay homage to the old bins before getting on to the new ones. I really liked the old exterior recycling bins that we had on campus. Yeah they had there short-comings; they broke really easily, they were separated bins (I'll talk about that I a minute), and quite frankly they weren't a very good design. But they also represented one of the first real risks that we took to improve recycling on campus. Unlike any bin before it, and unlike the new bins, the old bins were transparent, you could actually see right through them. I know this doesn't seem like anything new today, considering Toronto is littered with transparent bins, but when we installed those old bins on campus, to my knowledge we were the first in Ottawa. Of course the benefit of doing this is that the transparent bin forces people to put things i...

I want to be green at festivals, but....

Summer is an amazing time of the year, complete the sunshine we crave on those cold winter days, ice cream cones, beach days, and music festivals. Every summer I find myself having to carefully budget my finances to allow myself enough disposable income to see my favourite bands play at various different music festivals across this part of the country. Every genre you can imagine finds itself on display in front of heat stroked fans, who in some cases have been camping out in tents in the rain for days taking in the sights and sounds and atmosphere of the music festival scene. Now a days there seems to be a festival every weekend, and at a growing cost to festival goers. Festivals fight to bring in the hottest bands from around the world, they set up stands to sell over priced food, and drinks, whilst preventing you from bringing in your own. They encourage you to drive, bus, train, and fly from wherever you are, to attend the best, biggest, and hippest festival of the summer....

Mobile Community Garden Plots

Let's talk about last summer. Last summer we inaugurated the community garden in its new space at 649 King Edward (that's right, we won the lottery with that space). It replaced the old location which has become the building footprint for the CAPEA building. Thirty five glorious plots to serve the campus community, not bad. But we already knew that we wouldn't have enough space to meet the demand of the campus and the Sandy Hill community. So while discussing the issue with the Director of Physical Resources Service , he mentioned how McGill University was toying around with the idea of having planters that could be moved around when needed. Mobile gardens... brilliant! So the group got together and we talked about want this could look like. We had a few ideas but unfortunately there were so many things to do to get our current community garden off the ground, that we quickly forgot about the mobile gardens idea. That is until an opportunity to look at them again ...