KAGAWONG—The Park Centre in Kagawong was bustling this past weekend as the annual Green Living Expo drew crowds from across the Island and beyond to sample the wares of green vendors and learn more about life in the green lane.
Organizer Barb Erskine was joined in the opening ceremonies by speakers Billings Mayor Austin Hunt and green activist gardener Ed Burt. Both Ms. Erskine and Mayor Hunt congratulated the volunteers of the Green Expo organizing committee and welcomed the vendors and participants.
Speaker, gardener, and now, officially, author, Ed Burt gave a self-admitted uncharacteristic short address. “I have never spoken for three minutes in my life,” chuckled Mr. Burt as he provided a seven-minute insight into the philosophy and spirituality that lay behind his new book on gardening launched at the Green Living Expo.
“Anybody who worked in the garden for as long as I have without learning a couple of things, well they must be pretty stupid,” said the octogenarian gardener, as he related his life-view of working with the life forces that dwell within the soil.
“Climate change is the biggest issue that exists,” said Mr. Burt, quoting from an article he had recently read, adding that it never ceases to amaze him how many thousands of miles our food must travel to reach our tables. “I never have to travel more than 200 hundred feet,” he laughed. Mr. Burt said “I hope my book will help,” adding, “I grew up in an environment where we had to store things.”
The upstairs hall of the Park Centre was filled with exhibitors and vendors, while in the downstairs hall a series of seminars provided insight into forestry practices, greenhouse and native species gardening and the award-winning restorative work being conducted by Manitoulin Streams.
Forester Lesley Phillips of the Algoma-Manitoulin Forestry Service was handing out small potted Norwegian pine trees to passerbys while explaining the multifaceted impact of invasive species. “To be considered ‘invasive’ a species must be both foreign to the ecosystem and cause some form of harm,” she said. “That harm can take an ecological/environmental form, economic or social.” While the first two harmful impacts are fairly intuitive, Ms. Phillips noted that a social harm takes place when people are forced to avoid an area or lifestyle due to the plants.
A good example of a social harm would be signs warning you not to stray from a forest path due to the presence of invasive species such as the giant hogweed.
Meanwhile, Wind and Wave and Manitoulin Cedar Products proprietor Brad MacKay was taking the opportunity to not only plug his green products, but also do a little community fundraising, selling raffle tickets in support of the Manitoulin Sea Cadets. Those tickets are also available at his new store location on Highway 542 and at ProGas in Mindemoya, as well as The Expositor offices in Little Current.
Meanwhile, the Manitoulin Island Cycling Advocates booth were not only touting the joys of cycling the Island’s many cycling routes (part of the Georgian Bay Cycling Route), but encouraging people to sign a petition calling for paved shoulders on local highways.
From heritage seeds to handpainted postcards, the Green Living Expo had something for just about everyone.