I gave a Powerpoint presentation at
www.wrenchintheworks.org last Saturday evening. Here's the speech I gave, except I shortened it and put it in a Powerpoint presentation:
http://powerdownblog.blogspot.com/
I showed up with 6 friends, and there were about 10 others in the audience. The Powerpoint presentation included a discussion of local resources they could use, such as a brewer supply store that dabbled in cheesemaking and would teach them cheesemaking. I also offered to show them where to get raw milk fresh off a farm for cheap, 2 bucks a gallon.
I also informed them that I know the family that owns a local slaughterhouse (some of the lefty vegan types made a face) and that they are an excellent resource, for example to get free beef suet to make soap, and that I know local farmers who will trade labor for food.
There is a local organic supermarket, but non-rich cannot afford to shop there regularly. I said, "You can have the high quality food like the co-op has in exchange for a few hours of work a week!"
I also laid out several books on the table such as "Stocking Up" by Rodale press and "Wild Fermentation" by Sandor Ellix Katz (krauts, miso soup, pickling, etc), and "Cook for a Day, Eat for a Month."
I explained that local farming, which is our only real food security, failed because the women of the household stopped buying in bulk from local farmers and doing canning/pickling/freezing of the harvest for the long cold winter to come. Instead they started going to teh supermarket and everything's gone down hill since.
I don't think that went over too well with the feminists, though they didn't say anything.
Afterwards I passed around a piece of paper offering to contact people and put them in touch with local farm resources. This was a very lefty, crunchy, hippie crowd, and they seemed like nice enough folks, but I only got two e-mail addresses. One of the e-mails bounced, and the other one replied, "haha what?" I looked at the e-mail I sent and it explained who I was and where this person met me and what I offered. So I said the hell with it.
To be fair, I got the same response at a NOFA conference (see
www.nofa.org ). Most of my local farm resources are not members of NOFA and never heard of it. I tried to put the NOFA people in touch with my local farmer friends. You'd think the "progressive" minded people at NOFA might respond. Nope.
I think it's different out west. But here on the East Coast it's pretty hopeless. I got my family and friends as my lifeboat, but as far as starting a relocalized Peak Oil Preparation, Powerdown community here, it's not happening. You can lead a horse to water, as they say.