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Darwin ICC Regional CDEP Network Workshop

Darwin ICC Regional CDEP Network Workshop Best practice and new opportunities - Local food gardens, food systems and horticulture. Workshop Aims. To link/support CDEP food garden/hort projects

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Darwin ICC Regional CDEP Network Workshop

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  1. Darwin ICC Regional CDEP Network Workshop Best practice and new opportunities - Local food gardens, food systems and horticulture

  2. Workshop Aims • To link/support CDEP food garden/hort projects • To enable CDEP people & other key stakeholders to share info, experiences, ideas: to help build better outcomes • New conversations, contacts & partnerships • Learn about & access useful resources • Help identify & address challenges & opportunities • Have your say! what practical & strategic actions might we try to carry forward • Have a good time…

  3. Approach to the Workshop DAY 1: What’s underway: CDEP projects, CDEP/Industry • Food garden/horticulture project presentations, Q&A’s • ‘Past projects, future directions’ industry panel discussion, Q&A’s • New tools & strategies to build participation, Q&A’s DAY 2: Effective project planning & partnerships • Food security – issues and connections, Q&A’s • Training issues & options, Q&A’s • Effective project planning: strategies, models, funding… Q&A’s • Garden to plate, Stories, breakout group discussions • Feedback & wrap up PLUS - Write it on the Wall ‘Key Topics: Ideas & Suggestions’ - The ‘Steam Box’

  4. Write it on the Wall – Key Topics: Your ideas, suggestions, questions • Your gardens: type, size, what grown, & why? • Building better participation & ownership – how? • Technical information – gaps, needs, tips? • New partnership ideas & opportunities • Bread & butter advice for new gardens & gardeners • Project & business planning for sustainable outcomes • Food stores & other local market ideas • Garden to plate – how to promote healthy food • Strategic local developments eg. Working Futures • CDEP Community D’Ment Officers & Mentors: new roles • OTHER topics to add?

  5. EAT LOCAL – HUNT, GATHER & GROW LOCAL …Many ways to access & produce more fresh food & use local knowledge & resources • BUT • Possible loss of access to lands & traditional food stocks • Dietary & cultural changes • Impacts on food choices • MEANS NEW APPROACHES can help • ‘FUSION GARDENS’ – bush foods, fruit and veggies….fishing, chickens? And what else?!! Not a new idea… bush foods are great foods…

  6. CDEP led ‘market’ garden & nursery training projects & enterprises Commercial farms - partnerships &/or leases on Aboriginal owned land. Homeland Gardens – extended family activities Different types of food gardens & farms all have an important role to play – different roles, objectives, time frames, investment, & criteria for success. CDEP a key player to build skills & participation, to help create pathways to better livelihoods, enterprise & employment School Gardens – teaching & learning, health & nutrition Home gardens – in communities & towns Life Skills & Demonstration Gardens – Community Programs Landscaping & Landcare - ‘fusion’ plantings, food bearing plants RIG Network

  7. Local food projects - strategic context • AMSANT Fresh Food Summit outcomes • Chronic disease and preventative health programs • NT Govt. new Agribusiness Strategy • Working Futures, Growth Town’s – Local Imp Plans • Indigenous Community Water Facilitator Network • COAG Food Security Strategy & food stores reform • CW Indigenous Economic D’Ment Strategy, 2010-18 • RIG Network & NTHA ‘SCOPE’ project

  8. WHY? PARTICIPANT GOALS Augment income Provide for family Provide for community Skills, jobs, interest, pleasure Cottage Industry Sole trader Small business Social Enterprise Commercial business FOOD GARDENS & HORTICULTURE...food for thought…. • Who is the market? • Self & family • Neighbours & friends • Community services • - Local food stores • Local produce markets • Regional & national • LOCAL ECONOMIES &THE MARKET • Who • How • Options WHY? CDEP PROVIDERS: Engagement, Participation, Community Development, Training, Work Experience, Life skills, Jobs, Pathways to new training choices… • Current & future markets? • What type & structure? • What transitional paths possible? • Local & regional food systems • New market support systems • New approaches, timeframes. • How will produce be used? • Self & family provisioning • Share with community • Trade/barter • Sell informally • Sell formally

  9. WHAT IS RIG NETWORK? RIG Network is an independent project initiative, that involves stakeholders from community, industry, training, research, and government and non-government organisations, to conduct activities in two core program areas: Network development and information sharing - via the RIG Network website, RIG newsletters, discussion groups, and email communications.  Strategic research, advocacy and policy development - via targeted research and outreach projects, to better understand and support more sustainable local food production initiatives in remote communities. Visit: www.remoteindigenousgardens.net

  10. Thank you & grow well…

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