September 12, 2009
Earth Oven Workshop at Green Valley Village - Sept. 19th-20th
January 7, 2009
Baker’s Alley - a Community Gathering Space in the Sunset
Here is the flyer for our upcoming Bakers Alley in September. We’ll be back in the Bayview districts, Double Rock Community Garden.

Bakers Alley came into being from a feeling, from a memory, a place. A place where you wanted to be, a place that made you feel welcomed, at ease and that you belonged. A place to cook and bake together. A place to eat together. A place filled with conversation and dialogue. A place of storytelling, and sharing of your memories of how your grandma or grandfather used to do things, a place to catch up with someone, spend time with someone. A place where you bring your gift of music, song and instrument. A place to share your skills with the community. A place to learn how to grow plants that can sustain us, feed us, and heal our bodies. A place to sit in a knitting circle, a space to learn fermentation, cheese making and canning. A place to learn pruning and grafting fruit trees, growing your compost, planting a vegetable garden. A place to learn about raising chickens and ducks. A place to learn soap making, weaving, looming, pattern and clothes making. A place to learn about water systems, herbalism, carpentry, bicycle mending. A place to plug into the needs of the community and find ways to meet those needs.
Bakers Alley is about reacquainting ourselves with the need for ‘relationships’. A relationship with one another, a relationship to all the living creatures and a relationship to this precious earth on which we all live upon. We are all related by the common desire to express ourselves, our common need to feel love and compassion, our common need for shelter, clean water and air, and a place to grow nutritious food, and a place where the community freely shares it’s gifts of wisdom, knowledge, experience and skills with one another. Relationships embrace the understanding that each of our lives and actions affect one another. If you are in need then our community is in need, if you are in pain then our community is in pain, if you need support then the community needs to be there to support you. Relationships within our communities go beyond the boundaries of blood or a marriage license.
Bakers Alley is not only a real place to come and participate it is also a symbol of what in the past used to be called “the commons” meaning “equally with or by all”. The commons well before the European history and meaning of the Commons (a tract of land belonging to or used by the community or the name of a political class of people the commoners) was the understanding that no one owns the land, no one owns the air or water, no one owns the seeds that we use to grow our food. No one has the right to take, dispossess or hoard the bounty that is within our communities. It is for no one individual to take. Rather it is for the whole of the community to decide how to wisely and compassionately share the burden and the bounty of our resources and efforts (our skills, our labor)
Dr. Martin Luther King began to explore a new kind of revolution, one that would challenge the systems, values and institutions of our society. He combined the struggle against racism with a struggle against poverty, militarism, and materialism. Dr. King understood and knew in his heart what “a beloved community” really was. Dr. King believed in the power of the community and the power of the individual but in the context that the individual has the responsibility to represent the needs of the whole community.
Bakers Alley is for our community to come and engage in relationship building. Everyone is welcome. Bakers Alley is open once a month either on a Saturday or a Sunday from 10 am-5 pm. The earth oven is stoked all morning and is ready for community baking by noonish~~~~ *we encourage people to bring their baking for the oven and or to bring “pot luck”. Bring a favorite food of yours and share your recipe. We usually have at least 2-3 skill sharing workshops going on throughout the day (usually free), we encourage musicians to come and start a jam! We encourage everyone to sign up to teach a skill share at Bakers Alley. We encourage you to bring your whole family. There are always meaningful and fun things to do for the children. Please get on the Bakers Alley mail list so you will know the date of the next gathering. We hope to soon have a schedule that extends 2-6 months in advance.
* We do encourage bringing food but we never want any one to feel that they cannot attend if they do not have food. Please always know that you are welcome~ just bring your smile
Here are some photos from our first Bread Baking Workshop with Tracy Wolfe.
(L) The earth oven made of a brick hearth floor over an urbanite and mortar base, a brick and mortar archway, a 4 inch thick thermal mass inner layer made of clay and sand, a 4 inch insulating outer layer made of clay and straw, and a rough earthen plaster cover. (R) Professional baker, Tracy Wolfe, shows how to pre-cut bread to allow it to expand while rising.
(L) Loading the freshly formed dough balls into the heat soaked oven. (R) Mmm, fresh baked bread loaves and rolls.
(L) Scones and loaves, together again. (R) Homemade pizzas sizzling up on the hearth floor.
(L) Baker’s Alley is a place for people to come together and meet their neighbors, share skills and experiences, talk about challenges and solutions facing our lives and planet and enjoy the cultural tradition of sharing food and place together. (R) Cracking acorns from a Valley Oak that graciously offered some of its seed for our food.
January 2009 - Hand Build Pottery Workshop with Bea Bloom
(L) The wedge, demonstrated by Renee, is compressing all the air bubbles out of your fresh clay so you can work it with less chance of cracking. (R) Bea Bloom teaching how to get familiar with clay between your fingers, and the specifics of the pinch, coil, and slab hand build pottery methods.
(L) Here Bea is showing how to give texture to a piece by wrapping small cord around a piece of wood used to tap gently against the piece before the clay dries out too much. (R) Davin’s mom came by to work on a nice mug with clay art relief.
(L) Annie brought some of her fine, hand made wool hats and scarves to offer, (R) Music was provided by the political folk group, the Peaceniks.
(L) Some of the finished pieces at the end of the day (R) What’s a community baking day without pizza?
Here is the flyer and photos from our most recent Bakers Alley in April. It was a fermentation festival of sorts with fresh baked vegan delights like scones, cornbread, and taught to us by Chef Alyssa Cox, Home-brewing by Brennan and Max, and pickled sustenance such as sauerkraut, and kimchi with Erin from Bay Area Source. We were also graced with the music of Easy Leaves and local author Alex Hatch stopped by to talk about and sign her new book Cracks in the Asphalt. Annie Katz wowed more folks with her hats and knitting skills but as always, shared them with anyone who needed a break in the living room. Hope to see you next time at the oven!
The Big ONE 2008 Convergence
A community gathering for change
Help build and enjoy a village of engagement
for healthy body, home, family, and community

Saturday & Sunday, June 21–22, 9 am–7 pm
Sharon Meadow, Golden Gate Park
The Big ONE “Village of Engagement” is a gathering of people from Bay Area neighborhoods, schools, coops, nonprofits, foundations, businesses, and municipal agencies. Participants will design, envision, collaborate, and dialog with new friends about the future of their neighborhoods and communities.
Prepare for the challenging times ahead; come, be heard, and engage. You can set up a table or an interactive exhibit to collaborate and share information and/or do a workshop, presentation, forum, art project, or hands-on demonstration of sustainable skills. We provide the space – a large grassy area with open-air tents, a media tent, and a stage for music encircling a larger gathering tent for food and socializing.
Fill the space with your dreams.
The Big ONE movement represents a tectonic shift in thinking toward sustainability awareness and action, civic engagement, and localization of culture, economy, and decision-making. Based on respect for all life and the planet that sustains us, the gathering provides opportunities to build community through dialogue, committed engagement, and trust.
We are using the Wiser Earth platform to organize, plan, and co-create the event. www.beautifulcommunities.org
This first annual convergence will take place in Golden Gate Park, Sharon Meadow, next to the Children’s Playground and Carousel, on Saturday and Sunday, June 21 and 22, 2008. We will set up exhibits and activities on Friday in open-air tents, grouped into areas of community need, such as Greening Neighborhoods and Schoolyards; Food Justice; Peak Oil and Climate Change; Sustainable Environment and Permaculture; Youth Engagement and Empowerment; Local Economy and Green-Collar Jobs; Health; Music, Dance, and Art; Spirituality; and Community Communication.
This is a 100% noncommercial event; nothing will be for sale. Bring picnic food and drink, plates, cups, and utensils for an enormous zero-waste potluck. We will have storytellers and games, and an eclectic mix of live music will be performed throughout each day.
Who we are:
We are Bay Area residents from diverse social and ethnic backgrounds. The seeds of inspiration for this movement were planted in 2005 during the week-long celebration of World Environment Day in San Francisco, which coincided with the 60th anniversary of the founding of the United Nations. A small group of people who felt the need to move beyond a celebration, continued the dialogue about how to develop awareness around sustainability issues.
In 2006 we started gathering every three weeks to discuss community and sustainability. We decided to host an annual “convergence” that would bring together people from all walks of life. In order to reach the full spectrum of the diverse community that inhabits the Bay Area, we focused our vision on the elements needed by all life. We all need clean air to breathe, clean water to drink, and healthy soil to grow food. We all want inspiring education, decent housing, meaningful relationships, and a culture in which all life is respected and all voices are heard.
Over the past three years 110 people have flowed in and out of our gatherings. No one person “owns” this vision. The Big ONE is a collaborative, democratic embodiment of what we, as engaged members of our communities can create. It belongs to all of us.
Come experience and participate~
“The New Me is We.”
Web site: www.beautifulcommunities.org
Contact: ToriJacobs@gmail.com
January 15, 2008
ATTITUDE
The longer I live, the more I realize the impact of attitude on my life. Attitude, to me, is more important than facts. It is more important than the past, than education, than money, than circumstances, than failures, than success, than what other people think or say or do. It is more important than appearance, giftedness or skill. It will make or break a company…a church…a home. The remarkable thing is we have a choice every day regarding the attitude we will embrace for that day. We cannot change the inevitable. The only thing we can do is play the one string we have, and that is attitude…I am convinced that life is 10% what happens to me and 90% how I react to it. And so it is with you…we are in charge of our attitudes.
-Charles Swindoll
May 12, 2007
Check Out San Francisco’s Alemany Farm
Alemany Farm empowers San Francisco residents to grow their own food, and through that process encourages people to become more engaged with their communities. We grow organic food and green jobs for low-income communities, while sowing the seeds for economic and environmental justice
Learn More at www.alemanyfarm.org
