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Events

Location:
Himalayan Tandoori
969 Gravenstein Ave
Sebastopol, CA
This screening was scheduled for September 30th, but due to a scheduling conflict, we need to postpone this month's movie night to October! Sorry for any inconvenience and we hope to see you at our September 24th event with Vicki Robin!
Come join us at our next Transition Sebastopol Movie Night or the debut of the documentary film about the Transition movement at the French Garden Restaurant!
About the Movie:
In the film you will see the stories of communities creating their own currencies, setting up their own pubs, planting trees, growing food. You’ll see local authorities getting behind their local Transition initiatives, and get a sense of the scale of this emerging movement. It is a story of hope, and it is a call to action.
The film is the work of director Emma Goude, with production by Smith and Watson, and with input from Transition communities around the world.
2-3 miles
Walk from the Plaza through Sebastopol’s Spooky neighborhoods,
including a stop at the Sebastopol Senior Center for hot cider and Halloween treats on the way back to the Plaza. All ages welcome!
Leader: Kathleen Shaffer, member,
Sebastopol City Council.
Download the full 2009 Sebastopol Walks schedule here.
Like to excercise & create community at the same time? The Sebastopol Walks series is a great way of doing both!
You can also visit the iWALK site which lists other scheduled Sonoma County walks and allows you to add to the calendar, too.

Inviting all interested gardeners to join in cultivating a grassroots community seed bank that supports Sonoma County gardeners with free, locally grown, open pollinated, pesticide and GMO-free seed.
Seed and Plant exchange all morning with local food potluck at 12:00 pm.
Class on Garlic from 10:30 - 11:30 am.
We will be having a garlic exchange- please bring any varieties of garlic you would like to share.
West County Community Seed Bank meets monthly on the last Saturday of the month to share seeds, plants, resources and local gardening and food information.
All are welcome, including children.
For more information contact Sara at 829-5234 or saramc@emeraldearth.org
What you could bring:
… Plants or seeds to share
… Coin envelopes
… Books or resources for sharing with others
… Local food potluck item!
Location:
Salmon Creek School Garden
1935 Bohemian HWY
Occidental
West County Community Seed Bank
Vision:
To create a grassroots community seed bank that supports Sonoma County gardeners with locally grown, open pollinated, pesticide and GMO free seeds. Anyone can become a member of the West County Seed Library, we ask for a donation of $5.00-$20.00 and a commitment to grow out and donate back seed following the library's protocol for growing clean seeds. No on is turned away for lack of funds. The West County Seed Library will be housed at the Salmon Creek School Garden and will be open to the public monthly for classes, resource sharing and a seed and plant exchange. The West County Seed Library will have resources available to members on growing and processing seeds.
Why save seed and why a local seed bank?
Our rapidly changing world gives us all the more reason to strengthen our local resources and our ability to be self-sufficient. Local seed saving allows us to cultivate plants that do well in our region, with each generation adapting more to the local environment. It also lets us preserve heirloom seeds that are being lost as the seed industry is being concentrated into fewer and fewer large corporations. Seed banks are a great investment; with some plants one seed can return up to 40.000. The abundance seed savers experience should be shared with the community and helps to model a different economic system. We hope to cultivate a network of seed savers in the region to support each other and the seed library, which will be a resource for the expanding community of gardeners and help strengthen our local food system.
For more information contact Sara McCamant 829-5234 or saramc@emeraldearth.org
The quarterlly neighborhood meeting will be Thursday, November 5. The location will be City Hall. Kathleen Shaffer will greet you at the back, east side door, and the time will be 6:00 - 7:30pm.
This meeting serves as a discussion of both problems or issues you may have in your neighborhoods, and to talk about general interest items and news.
There will also be a representative from the Sebastopol Police Services to discuss Neighborhood Watch, and we will hear about the Neighborhood CERTification program which is our disaster preparedness group.
Time is running out. With each year that passes, our ability to prevent catastrophic climate change diminishes. Voluntary action is great, but we really need a mandatory economy-wide system. Cap and Share is a framework for reducing greenhouse gases fairly, and returning profits back to people if prices go up. You actually get paid as we all reduce emissions, and it’s based on democratic principles: One person – One share. In 1 hour, we’ll discuss the carbon market in California’s AB32 law, the right and wrong way to do cap and trade, the pending bill in Congress, what could happen at the international climate talks in Copenhagen, and how you can get involved.
Mike Sandler is a former Sebastopol resident and a co-founder of the Climate Protection Campaign in Sonoma County. He putting on this presentation and discussion in the run-up to Copenhagen.
Location:
Sebastopol Public Library
7140 Bodega Ave
Sebastopol, CA

