Featured Post

New website! New blog!

We are excited to launch a new home on the web for Flux School of Human Movement! Check out our new website right here  (same URL as befor...

Showing posts with label Food. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Food. Show all posts

Monday, July 20, 2015

Flux Community Garden - updates

The Flux Community Garden project is well underway and thriving in the hot weather and sunny days.

We are harvesting a first batch of leafy greens today. Please take some home with you!

Many thanks to our generous partners in this community project:

Burns to Shine Cleaning Service
Savaria Public Relations
TriCor Mechanical
YWCA Regina
Prairie Paleo Meals
Sam Lok Realtor - Century 21
Street Culture Project Inc.
and many helping hands from the Flux community!




Tuesday, June 16, 2015

Grow Food - Micro Change at the Grassroots Level

Our mandate is to think small.

Organize. Grow. Share. Eat.

Let's see what unfolds in our parking lot turned vegetable garden.

Get involved and don't miss out on this wonderful social experiment.

-Darci




THE HISTORY OF THE FLUX GARDEN
The Flux Community Garden has been growing Real Food for our members, friends, neighbours and families since 2010. It started in Charity & Darci's front yard, and this year, it will brighten our little corner of 13th Avenue!

We are installing raised garden boxes in the reformed parking lot of the Flux Annex to build health & community and create Real Food awareness by growing vegetables.
With the help of community-minded businesses and friends, the Flux Community Garden will become a fixture in the neighbourhood, year after year.

If you would like to be a part of the Flux Community Garden, there are many ways you can contribute:

Sponsor a garden box ($200+) - Your cash donation will be recognized with a plaque on one of the boxes.
Funds will be used to build boxes, buy quality soil, fertilizer and plants

Group donation ($100+) - Your cash donation will be recognized on a group plaque on one of the boxes.
Funds will be used to build boxes, buy quality soil, fertilizer and plants

Community donation (up to $100) - Your cash donation will be recognized on the Flux Community plaque on one of the boxes.
Funds will be used to build boxes, buy quality soil, fertilizer and plants

Green Thumb - Lend a hand to the Flux Community Garden project.
Help plant the garden and tend to our mini urban farm through the summer and fall
(first planting date will be announced shortly)

Contact Ariane if you would like to sponsor a garden box or get involved in the Flux Community Garden project.





Tuesday, October 28, 2014

The end of the Heal Your Gut Challenge

Hi everyone!

We are hosting a potluck this Saturday to celebrate the end of the Heal Your Gut Challenge.
There's even an event on Facebook!

Challenge participants:
We need to hear about how you did in the last 6 weeks!

Send me an email (fluxcrossfit.info@gmail.com) with your testimonial; include your points, failures & successes, what was easy/what was hard and what you learned.

You could win some great prizes! (and you don't have to be at the potluck to win, but we'd like to see you!)

Here's a reminder of the Challenge guidelines:

-no sugar; no cheat days
-no alcohol
-no gluten
-no dairy
-eat organ meat once per week
-make bone broth; drink 1 cup per day
-consume 30 different plant matter per week
-sleep in a dark room
-turn off electronics 1 hour before bed
-workout 4 hours per week
-eat fermented food every day
-eat resistant starch every day
-take high quality fish oil
-take magnesium and zinc

Prizes:

-Flux gear
-massage therapy gift certificate with Heidi
-Cool Springs Ranch gift certificate
-Rogue gear
-pair of Innov8

from the Flux archives!
from the Flux archives!

Tuesday, June 17, 2014

What to Eat for Breakfast

Many moons ago, Ido introduced me to the meat and nut breakfast as advocated by Charles Poliquin.
Take a look at it.   

 http://www.strengthsensei.com/the-meat-and-nut-breakfast/

Wednesday, February 6, 2013

Flux Potluck

Hi All,

We will be holding a Flux Potluck THIS SATURDAY, Feb. 9th from 5 to 9 pm at MvTavish. We will be announcing the winners of our food challenge as well.!Please keep sending me your thoughts on our latest challenge. I need to know how things went for you.


Remember Cool Springs pick up is between 4 and 5pm so we will start things going at 5pm.  This potluck is definitely for the whole family so please bring your partner, children!

For all our NEW Flux Members, this is a great opportunity to get to know folks in the Flux community! 

Best,
Coach Darci and Charity


                                  

 


Friday, February 1, 2013

Food Challenge Update

Hi all,
If you would be so kind as to send me as much information as possible regarding your experiences and outcomes for this last food challenge. I am interested in the qualitative and quantitative.  Inches lost, weight lost, etc. Number of points you gained.  Your experiences. Did you find the cooking time consuming? How did the challenge affect your social life? Eating out and drinks with friends. Did your kids get involved? Whatever you think is relevant! Please email me your responses.

Thanks so much. We are looking at having a end of challenge party as well.

Coach D

Wednesday, January 30, 2013

Food Challenge Update


Our latest food challenge has brought us much closer to understanding the origins of the word DIET. For the Greeks, diet simply meant way of life. I believe you folks have once again proven you are part of the vanguard when it comes to a thoughtful meditation on the food we eat.
A nuanced understanding of food begins with how we understand the concept of ECOLOGY.

What is ECOLOGY?  For a working definition of ecology I went to good ol' Wikipedia.

ECOLOGY AS:
The scientific study of the relationships that living organisms have with each other and with their natural environment
For well over 300 years now, the western world has understood the human as having dominion over its ecology. The story goes something like this, humans control and manipulate nature through technology and science.  This way of thinking is coming back to bite us on the ass. Just ask the drought ridden farmers of the American mid west. Or take a look at scientific recordings on soil quality right here in Saskatchewan.
There is another way of thinking about the human animal.  
Humans as part of, rather than outside of, a local ecology. When we start to think of  humans, not as the great manipulator of nature, whereby technology will keep us fat and happy, but as one small and very humble piece of the puzzle, we soon realize that while humans are stewards of the land, their is an internal logic to nature that humans would be wise to wake up to.  A very quick example to illustrate my point. Soil is more than just a chemistry equation. Rich fertile soil is far beyond getting just the right mix of nitrogen, phosphorous and potassium. Fertile soil is the result of hundreds, if not millions of years of decay, of a complex and symbiotic relationship between the human and the non human animal. Please listen to Allen Savory speak on holistic management. In this piece he explains that holistic management begins with some tough questions, What kind of life do I want to live? What kind of community do I want to help foster? 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kQGy0vxeL_k&noredirect=1While Allen is speaking directly to the question of land stewardship we just as easily can ask the same questions about food choices. What kind of life do I want to live and share with others?  If the answer is  to see food as simple fuel for our body, then I really won't care where our food comes from. I will just eat the required amount of protein and vegetables and be done with it.
If workers rights are important to me, I might think about the corporations that are growing and preparing my food.
If food safety is a concern for me, I will be questioning how food is prepared and packaged.
If it is important to me that local businesses thrive, this will be reflected in my food choices.
If I am concerned about wastefulness, I might learn how to get the most nutrients out of an animal carcass.
If I want my children to have a deep appreciation for food, eating out will not be high on my list of priorities.  
If I want my children to be self-sufficient, I will value cooking time as family time.  

You get the idea.
Coach D. 














Thursday, January 10, 2013

PALEO CHALLENGE UPDATE

We are using the point system from the last challenge. If you cheat, you get a point.  If you eat out you get three points.  It seems folks are busy eating organ meat and fermenting various food items. So cool! Share your recipes and experiences please.

Tuesday, January 1, 2013

Flux Food Challenge # ... We've lost count!

Here it is.

1. Eat homemade bone broth once a week.
Use it as stock for soup or drink it after a meal as a digestive aid.
Why bone broth? Super economical way to get the most out of an animal carcass. Bone broth is abundant in important minerals and chondroitin. Make it from fish bones, chicken or beef bones.  Throw some cold water in a big pot, put in a couple tablespoons of apple cidar vinegar (Thanks Kathy Lewis for the tip) and let it sit for half an hour. Then boil it for a good 8 hours with some carrots, onion, a bay leaf or two, perhaps some celery.  Let it cool. Skim the top and discard the 1/4 inch of grey film.  There ya go! Read the article below on bone broth.
http://www.westonaprice.org/food-features/broth-is-beautiful 



2. Try, just try, to eat organ meat once a week.  (Jan's headcheese puts him well in the lead I suspect). It doesn't take you out of the challenge if you don't, but please try! It's so good for you! Trust me - I'm your Coach and wouldn't lead you astray!

3. Don't eat any sugar, including agave, stevia, honey...

4. Don't eat grains. Read about the connection between grains and leaky gut syndrome.

 http://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2012/01/21/grains-causing-gut-leaks.aspx

5. No processed food from a can.  Unless, like the Ekvall/Sapach household, you do your own canning.

6. Make an effort to eat local, pastured meat. Read about the difference between factory farmed, grain fed animals and animals raised on pasture.  http://www.eatwild.com/healthbenefits.htm

7. Make an effort to eat local, non-pesticide treated vegetables. Your stomach, liver and pancreas will thank you!

8. Dairy. You decide. It's a grey area. Read the measured report on raw dairy below. http://chriskresser.com/raw-milk-reality

Read what the Weston Price Foundation has to say about raw versus pasteurized dairy. http://www.realmilk.com/

Talk to the Flux folks who are drinking raw dairy.  Read about animal care and the pasturing practices of raw dairy farmers versus commercial dairy farmers.

9. Get off the booze for a month.  See how you feel at the end of the 30 days.

10. Train a minimum of 3 hours a week no excuses. Get to the gym and enjoy you're time!

11. Sleep in a room as black as midnight.  Sleep 8-9 hours a night.  Get yourself some high quality magnesium and zinc and take it before you go to bed. Keep track of your sleep and how you feel - this will amaze you.

12. BONUS POINTS- Ferment your own food.  As Hippocrate's writes, " All disease begins in the gut" and nothing is better for the gut than fermented food.

What is Paleo? 

I have attached a great article on the concept of eating paleo by Chris Kresser.  




A Note on Our Ecology
I have always said that food choices is one area of our life where each one of us can have a measured impact on the world we live in.  Our eating practices really do matter.  I urge you to take a look at the readings on modern farming practices and consumer habits. Talk to farmers who are learning and applying sustainable farming practices. Anything by Joel Salatin is a good start, as is the international organization, Holistic Management. http://holisticmanagement.org/ . The complexity of polycultural farming will blow you away!  Listen to my podcast to learn from farmers Sam and Janeen Covlin.  http://www.fluxregina.ca/flux/flux_Podcasts/flux_Podcasts.html

Whether we think about it or not, ethics and food choices go hand in hand. I am by no means prescribing a single ethical pathway to righteousness, but we need to recognize and come to terms with the fact that humans are entangled within a multitude of ecologies, not separate and distant from them.  Eating Paleo shouldn't be a license to devour meat with reckless indifference.  We are fools if we don't think that the health of the animal is linked to the health of the human.

Challenge Details
Start Date: 2 choices - today (Jan. 1, 2013) or (Jan. 7, 2013) set yourself up for success!
End Date: January 31st or February 7th (based on when you started)

Winners: Measure everything - your lost/gained inches depending on your individual goals, performance in the gym, sleep, and your food quality based on the stipulations above.

Prizes

Flux 2-month unlimited membership

Cool Springs Ranch Gift Certificates
1-Hour Massage with Heidi Greutzner, RMT
Flux gear

Good Luck! 
Coach Darci









Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Flux Meat

Here is a list of people that haven't picked up their meat yet. Please confirm on the BLOG that this is correct. Thank you!

Heather Barnett 50 lbs
Lee Miller 50 lbs
Scott Dyson  50 lbs
Georgina Barlas 50 lbs
Randy dos Santos 50 lbs
Katryna Smith 50 lbs
Brenda Rozycki 150 lbs
Karen Lucke 50 lbs
Dan Frank 50 lbs

If you are interested in GROUND MEAT ONLY, the price is $4.00/lb.  Let me know. 

Thursday, September 13, 2012

Pastured Animals


This is a repost of a blog I wrote  a couple of years ago.  
Why GrassFed Cattle?

Better Health and Nutrition
The meat from grass fed cattle more closely resemble the hunter-gatherer meat that our ancestors dined on. What is the difference? Cattle that is raised and finished on grass bypasses the entire CAFO system that is part of large scale, industrialized agriculture. CAFO stands for Concentrated Animal Feeding Operation. The health benefits are numerous.

First, the meat from grass fed cattle is higher in Omega 3 Fatty Acids as well as Conjugated Linoleic Acid. Why is this important? One of the problems with the modern western diet is the omega 3 to 6 ratio is out of balance. In the past, it was more like a one to one ratio but our diets today are lacking in fish, flaxseeds, and of course, pastured meat. Compared with grass, grain is very low in omega-3 fatty acids and high in omega-6 fatty acids. We need both, but as always we are looking for balance. Omega -3 fatty acids have anti-inflammatory properties.
Ruminants are also abundant in Conjugated Linoleic Acid. CLA has shown great promise for fighting cancer and cardiovascular disease. The meat from grass fed cattle is also much higher in vitamin E. Vitamin E is a powerful antioxidant and a great immune booster. Grass has way more Vitamin E than grain and soy. We eat what the cattle eat. Grass Fed beef is also higher incarotenoids, another family of antioxidants. Some of you might remember a photo from last year that I posted of a butchered steer. The point of this photo was to show folks how yellow the fat was. The fat is yellow because of the carotenoids in the grass. Some of you have also witnessed this beautiful yellow colour in pastured milk, butter and eggs. Yummy.

Cattle that are raised for CAFOs are injected with hormones.

Which products are approved in Canada?

"There are six hormonal growth promoters approved in Canada for use in beef cattle: three natural - progesterone, testosterone and estradiol-17ß; and three synthetic - trenbolone acetate (TBA), zeranol and melengestrol acetate (MGA). Hormonal growth promoters are not approved for use in any species other than beef cattle" (Health Canada).
Please take a look at the article below published by Health Canada.
Note at the bottom of the article Health Canada's conclusion that hormonal growth promoters do not affect the health of the human population. The EU has banned all growth hormones because of the links to cancer. Decide for yourself.
http://www.oag-bvg.gc.ca/internet/English/pet_203_e_28939.html
The link above was published by the Office of the Auditor General of Canada. It is in response to a petition by concerned Canadians regarding the impact of hormones used in the cattle and hog industry. The concern is that these hormones, which are in the manure, leach into the ground water as well as surface water.
Below is an excerpt from the article that explains hormonal health.
Note that the highest concentrations of manure occur in Southern Ontario and Quebec along the Great Lakes and St Laurence River, in central Alberta between Edmonton and Calgary, around Vancouver, and around Winnipeg. Any hormone pollution due to run-off and leaching of manure from intensive livestock operations would have an impact on millions of Canadians.
  • There are health and environmental concerns about estrogen mimicking chemicals in the environment originating from certain plastics. There are health and environmental concerns about hormones from human pharmaceuticals that survive sewage treatment being discharged into the environment. Hormones released from intensive livestock operations raise the same issues.
Hormones are chemical messengers that provide signals at the cellular level to control normal physical development and many organ functions of living things, as well as the timing of physiological processes such as reproduction. Environmental chemicals that mimic the organism's own hormones interfere with these signals, leading to problems such as birth defects, feminization of males and masculinization of females—leading to reproductive problems, excess weight gain, early or delayed onset of puberty, excessive growth of susceptible cells such as hormone affected prostate cancer and breast cancer, etc. For example, one of the approved livestock hormones is medroxyprogesterone, which is known to cause birth defects in babies if the mother is exposed.
Hormones operate at vanishingly small quantities, so even minute traces of a synthetic hormone, hormone mimicking substance or natural hormone in the environment can have significant biological effects. Timing of exposure in relation to the organism's or cell's development is of great significance. For example: "Identification of low-dose effects that are different from those seen at high doses, the importance of timing of exposure, recognition of the unique effects that can be disrupted during development, and genetic variation in genetically-determined susceptibility, render the overly simplistic assumptions previously used in risk assessment invalid for many environmental chemicals." from page 110, "The Emerging Science of Endocrine Disruption" by J.P. Myers, L.J., Guillette, Jr., P.Palanza, S.Parmigiani, S.H. Swann and F.S. Vom Saal, in the World Scientific Journal, 2004.

Thursday, June 14, 2012

More Paleo Challenge Clarifications

Every 3 days, don't be scared to carb load with some rice or sweet potato or regular potato. Also, if you do a heavy metcon, refuel with the above.

Tuesday, June 12, 2012

Paleo Update

Some clarifications:
Different berries are allowed, but I would rather you stayed away from the gigantic, commercial ones. This really is a no brainer. It is summer and there is ample local, organic fruit.

Cream - Chris brought up a good point that it hardly seems fair that a serving of ice cream and a tbsp of cream both receive a point.  So, if your dairy is pasteurized, cream is ok and will not cost you a point.

Any other questions?


Monday, June 11, 2012

Flux Paleo Challenge

Here it is - our Flux Paleo Challenge!

The Flux Paleo Challenge will begin on Wednesday, June 13th and goes for 6 weeks! There will be fabulous prizes for those with the lowest score (think CF competitions or golf - lower score equals better score)! The score is based on the following: what you eat, Fluxing consistently, and supporting each other (cheering each other on, helping to keep others on track, offering recipes, etc.).

The Parameters are listed below:

1.) Your goal for the next 6 weeks is to eat nutrient dense food and to stay away from anti-nutrients. 

What is nutrient dense food? Meat and fat and vegetables, bone broth, fermented foods, raw dairy.

What are anti-nutrients? Commercially processed food.

Every time you eat grains, alcohol, sugar,  fruit, you get a single point. The exception is saskatoon berries that are not commercially harvested.   One ounce of alcohol = 1 point. One serving of ice cream = 1 point (2 servings = 2 points).  One paleo treat sweetened with agave, maple syrup, honey, etc = One point.  We will include dairy in this as well - eating a serving of milk, cheese, cream = 1 point - unless it is raw and living milk. Pasteurized dairy is dead food. 

2.) You must train at least 3 times a week. (If you miss a session add a point to your score.) Remember to keep good records of where you are at so we can see if your performance improves over the challenge!

3.) Measure your belly. Take a measurement of your belly at the beginning of the challenge and at the end.  Take the measurement directly around the bellybutton. 

This challenge will be 6 weeks long.

If you have any questions about points, please ask Coach Darci or Charity.

Try and stay away from irradiated and pesticide filled vegetables.  

WHAT’S WRONG WITH FOOD IRRADIATION
February 2002

Irradiation damages the quality of food.
•    Irradiation damages food by breaking up molecules and creating free radicals. The free radicals kill some bacteria, but not all! The free radicals bounce around in the food, damage vitamins and enzymes, and combine with existing chemicals (like pesticides) in the food to form new chemicals, called unique radiolytic products (URPs).
•    Some of these URPs are known toxins (e.g., benzene, formaldehyde). Some are unique to irradiated foods and never studied. In the approval of irradiation, the long-term effect of these new chemicals in our diet were never studied.
•    Irradiated foods lose 5%-80% of vitamins A, C, E, K or B complex. That’s a big range, but foods vary greatly. Different foods lose different vitamins. Also, the amount of loss changes when the dose of irradiation or storage time is changed.
•    Most of the food in the American diet is already approved for irradiation by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA): beef, pork, lamb, poultry, wheat, wheat flour, vegetables, fruits, eggs in the shell, seeds for sprouting, spices, herb teas. (Dairy is already pasteurized). The FDA is currently considering a food industry petition to irradiate luncheon meats, salad bar items, sprouts, fresh juices and frozen foods. The USDA is considering irradiation for imported fruits and vegetables.
•    Like cooking, irradiation damages the enzymes found in raw foods. This means our bodies must work harder to digest them.
•    Irradiation by any source--electron beams, x-rays or nuclear gamma rays—has the same effect on the food.

Science has not proved that a diet high in irradiated foods is safe in the long term.
•    The longest human feeding study was 15 weeks, in China. The data is not available in English. No one knows the health effects of a life-long diet that includes a large number of foods that can already be legally irradiated in the U.S., such as meat, chicken, vegetables, fruits, salads, eggs and sprouts.
•    There are no studies on the effects of feeding normal babies or children diets containing irradiated foods. A very small study from India on malnourished children showed health effects.
•    Studies on animals fed irradiated foods have shown increased tumors, reproductive failures and kidney damage. Some possible causes are: irradiation-induced vitamin deficiencies, the inactivity of enzymes in the food, DNA damage, and toxic radiolytic products in the food.
•    The FDA based its approval of irradiation for poultry on only seven of 441 animal-feeding studies submitted. Marcia van Gemert, Ph.D., the toxicologist who chaired the FDA committee that approved irradiation, later said, "These studies reviewed in the 1982 literature from the FDA were not adequate by 1982 standards, and are even less accurate by 1993 standards to evaluate the safety of any product, especially a food product such as irradiated food." The seven studies are not a good basis for approval of irradiation for humans, because they showed health effects on the animals or were conducted using irradiation at lower energies than those the FDA eventually approved.
•    The FDA based its approval of irradiation for fruits and vegetables on a theoretical calculation of the amount of URPs in the diet from one 7.5 oz. serving/day of irradiated food. Considering the different kinds of foods approved for irradiation, this quantity is too small and the calculation is irrelevant.
•    Even with current labeling requirements, people cannot avoid eating irradiated food. That means there is no control group, and epidemiologists will never be able to determine if irradiated food has any health effects.

Irradiation covers up problems that the meat and poultry industry should solve
•    Irradiation covers up the increased fecal contamination that results from speeded up slaughter and decreased federal inspection. Prodded by the industry, the USDA has allowed a transfer of inspection to company inspectors. Where government inspectors remain, they are not allowed to condemn meat and poultry now that they condemned 20 years ago.
•    Because of this deregulation, the meat and poultry industry since the ‘90s has lost money and suffered bad publicity from food-poisoning lawsuits and expensive product recalls. Irradiation is a “magic bullet” that will enable them to say that the product was “clean” when it left the packing plant. (Irradiation, however, does not sterilize food, and any bacteria that remain can multiply to toxic proportions if the food is not properly stored and handled.)

Labeling is necessary to inform people so they can choose to avoid irradiated foods.
•    Because irradiated foods have not been proven safe for human health in the long term, prominent, conspicuous and truthful labels are necessary for all irradiated foods. Consumers should be able to easily determine if their food has been irradiated. Labels should also be required for irradiated ingredients of compound foods, and for restaurant and institutional foods.
•    Because irradiation depletes vitamins, labels should state the amount of vitamin loss after irradiation, especially for fresh foods that are usually eaten fresh. Consumers have the right to know if they are buying nutritionally impaired foods.
•    Current US labels are not sufficient to enable consumers to avoid irradiated food. Foods are labeled only to the first purchaser. Irradiated spices, herb teas and supplement ingredients, foods that are served in restaurants, schools, etc., or receive further processing, do not bear consumer labels. Labels are required only for irradiated foods sold whole (like a piece of fruit) or irradiated in the package (like chicken breasts). A radura is required. The text with the declaration of irradiation can be as small as the type face on the ingredient label. The US Department of Agriculture requirements have one difference: irradiated meat or poultry that is part of another food (like a tv dinner) must be disclosed on the label.
•    The US Food and Drug Administration is currently rewriting the regulation for minimum labeling, and will release it for public comment in 2002. They may eliminate all required text labels. If they do retain the labels, Congress has already told them to use an alternative term instead of “irradiation.”

Electron-beam irradiation today means nuclear irradiation tomorrow.
•    The original sponsor of food irradiation in the US was the Department of Energy, which wanted to create a favorable image of nuclear power as well as dispose of radioactive waste. These goals have not changed.
•    Many foods cannot be irradiated using electron beams. E-beams only penetrate 1-1.5 inches on each side, and are suitable only for flat, evenly sized foods like patties. Large fruits, foods in boxes, and irregularly shaped foods must be irradiated using x-rays or gamma rays from nuclear materials.
•    Countries that lack a cheap and reliable source of electricity for e-beams use nuclear materials. Opening U.S. markets to irradiated food encourages the spread of nuclear irradiation worldwide for export crops.

Irradiation using radioactive materials is an environmental hazard.
•    Nuclear irradiation facilities have already contaminated the environment. For example, in the state of Georgia in 1988, radioactive water escaped from an irradiation facility. The taxpayers were stuck with $47 million in cleanup costs. Radioactivity was tracked into cars and homes. In Hawaii in 1967 and New Jersey in 1982, radioactive water was flushed into the public sewer system. Numerous worker exposures have occurred in food irradiation facilities worldwide.

Irradiation doesn't provide clean food.
•    Because irradiation doesn't sterilize (kill all the bacteria in a food), the ones that survive are by definition radiation-resistant. These bacteria will multiply and eventually work their way back to the 'animal factories'. Eventually, the bacteria that contaminate the meat will no longer be killed by currently approved doses of irradiation. The technology will no longer be usable, while stronger bacteria contaminate our food supply.
•    Irradiation doesn't kill all the bacteria in a food. In a few hours at room temperature, the bacteria remaining in meat or poultry after irradiation can multiply to the level existing before irradiation.
•    Some bacteria, like the one that causes botulism, as well as viruses and prions (which are believed to cause Mad Cow Disease) are not killed by current doses of irradiation or by doses that leave the food palatable.

Irradiation does nothing to change the way food is grown and produced.
•    Irradiated foods can have longer shelf lives than nonirradiated foods, which means they can be shipped further while appearing 'fresh.' Food grown by giant farms far away may last longer than nonirradiated, locally grown food, even if it is inferior in nutrition and taste. Thus, irradiation encourages centralization and hurts small farmers.
•    The use of pesticides, antibiotics, hormones and other agrochemicals, as well as pollution and energy use, are not affected. Irradiation is applied by the packer after harvest or slaughter.
•    Free-market economists say irradiation is 'efficient': it provides the cheapest possible food for the least possible risk. But these economists are not considering the impaired nutritional quality of the food, the environmental effects of large-scale corporate farming, the social costs of centralization of agriculture and loss of family farms, the potential long-term damage to human health, and the possibility of irradiation-resistant super-bacteria. All of these developments should be (but are not) considered when regulators and public health officials evaluate the benefits of food irradiation.

Brought to you by: Organic Consumers Association   
Office: 6114 Highway 61, Little Marais, MN 55614 (218) 226-4164, Fax: (218)  226-4157.
OCA contact: danila@purefood.org



Thursday, June 7, 2012

Flux Paleo Potluck and Food Talk this Saturday


Coach Darci and I want to invite all of our Flux members and their families to our ...

Flux Paleo Potluck and "Food Talk" on Saturday, June 9th! 

This event will take place following the Cool Springs Ranch Pick Up and we're pleased that Sam and Janeen (and the kids) will be joining us for an evening of good real food and conversation!

Food Talk - "Real Food: Bone Broth and Canning" by Coach Darci and Farmer Janeen!

Here are the particulars:
Where: Flux Gym at 2251 McTavish St
Time: 6pm-10pm (Talk begins at 7pm)
What to Bring: Real Food Paleo Eats (If you don't know what this means just ask of us.

We want to especially encourage our new Flux members to come out and meet other Flux folks!

At this event we will also be announcing our next Flux 30-day Paleo Challenge! 


Wednesday, May 30, 2012

Flux Food Talk and Paleo Potluck

Coach Darci and I want to invite all of our Flux members and their families to our ...
Flux Paleo Potluck and "Food Talk" on Saturday, June 9th! 

This event will take place following the Cool Springs Ranch Pick Up and we're pleased that Sam and Janeen (and the kids) will be joining us for an evening of good real food and conversation!

Food Talk - "Real Food: Bone Broth and Canning" by Coach Darci and Farmer Janeen!

Here are the particulars:
Where: Flux Gym at 2251 McTavish St
Time: 6pm-10pm (Talk begins at 7pm)
What to Bring: Real Food Paleo Eats (If you don't know what this means just ask of us.

We want to especially encourage our new Flux members to come out and meet other Flux folks!

At this event we will also be announcing our next Flux 30-day Paleo Challenge! 







Tuesday, May 22, 2012

2012 Flux Garden Progress

After tilling on Saturday, we headed up to Elbow for some much needed R and R. When we came back it was like the little garden elves had visited! Wow! Thank you garden elves Jan and Trudi!







Monday, May 14, 2012

Flux Garden Time

Hey Fine Flux Folks,

It is time to grow some food!

This is our third year of growing food. Theresa has handed over the reins to Jan and he has already been busy doing prep work.

We are looking for committed Fluxers to take part. You would be committing to around 1 to 3 hours/week. Work that needs to be done: prep soil. We have a yard of manure coming in that will have to be worked into the soil. Planting-  this year we are planting: tomatoes, swiss chard, spinach, carrots, beets, onions, herbs, and much more.  Weeding - grunt work that is highly satisfying.

In the last couple of years we have all learned a great deal about growing vegetables. This year, I hope to extend that knowledge into canning.  I know we have some canning experts at our gym so please let us know if you would like to be involved.

Why take part? Growing your own food is really satisfying and it will make your grandma proud!

Plus, you get to walk the talk!  You can't get more local than our front yard.

Please email me if you would like to take part.  Oh, and did you know we are the ONLY CrossFit across the country that grows its own food? If you can find another CrossFit doing this in Canada, let me know.


Sunday, April 15, 2012

Food Talk with Coach Darci this Tuesday!


Reminder!

Coach Darci will be giving a talk on Food and Nutrition for all Flux CrossFit members on Tuesday, April 17th at 7:30pm!

Coach Darci will be discussing the following topics:
paleo, sugar, inflammation, cholesterol, fats, food and mental health, importance of sleep, and supplements

The event will be held at our new location 3424 13th Avenue.

It is open to all Flux CrossFit members.




Wednesday, April 4, 2012

Food Talk with Head Coach Darci - Date Change

We've had a number of members tell us they will be away next week so we've decided to move the Food Talk with Coach Darci to the following Tuesday (after the Spring break)!

Coach Darci will be giving a talk on Food and Nutrition for all Flux CrossFit members on Tuesday, April 17th at 7:30pm!

Coach Darci will be discussing the following topics:
paleo, sugar, inflammation, cholesterol, fats, food and mental health, importance of sleep, and supplements

The event will be held at our new location 3424 13th Avenue.

It is open to all Flux CrossFit members.