Our mission is to operate a community owned enterprise grounded in sustainable living. Our vision is community independence through cultivating sustainability. Welcome to the Durham Food Co-op!

Recruitment for Annual Meeting

It may seem a little early to announce, but our Annual Member Meeting will be here before you know it. Held each April, we convene to elect Board members and collectively address coop business. I’d like to begin recruiting for the Annual Meeting Committee...

New Membership Procedures

We are managing our new member processing a little differently, effective Oct 15th. New members will receive...

Improving Space, Technology, Facility at the Co-op

In addition to recommitting your consumer power to the sustainability of your Durham Food Cooperative, there are other ways to contribute to efforts for improved space, technology, and facility. You can...

New Manager at the Co-op

Welcome our new new store manager! Christina DeCosmo has accepted a position with the DFC and will officially join us November 13th...

Accomplishments, Future Goals at the Co-op

The recent month since Summer’s end has delivered more goods on the shelves and a reorganized store! Many folks have offered feedback and expressed excitement for the changes and upgrades. The Board team is diligently....

Co-op News - Message from the Board Chair

Greetings All! I hope this finds everyone well and continually inspired. Autumn has arrived so very quickly along with many transitions of the coop...

Solar Seminar

Nov 7 2007 - 7:00pm
Nov 7 2007 - 9:00pm
Sponsoring Committee:
sven.rinke
description:

WHERE: Lyon Park Community Center, 1309 Halley Street, Cafeteria – downstairs

TOPICS: Solar Water Heating, Solar Generated Electricity, Top Ten Tips for Greening Your Home, Q&A

PRESENTER: Bob Kingery of Southern Energy Management, www.southernenergymanagement.com

DIRECTIONS: Go north on Kent Street and cross Lakewood Avenue. Go one block and make a right onto Halley Street. The Community Center is on your right and parking on the left.

Sponsored by the Long Meadow Neighborhood Association Energy &
Ecosphere Committee

Co-op Updates, Co-op Upgrades

The Co-op is undergoing a visible change. Old equipment is being replaced, new technology is coming, and we're planning a major upgrade to the store...

Community Health Fair 9-5 Sat 27 Oct 07 @ Lakewood Baptist

Oct 27 2007 - 9:00am
Oct 27 2007 - 5:00pm
description:

Move, learn, and help kickoff local chapters of Y.O.G.A. for Youth and the International Association of Black Yoga Teachers (IABYT) at the free community health fair to be held 9am-5pm Saturday, October 27 at the Lakewood Baptist Church, 2100 Chapel Hill Rd (across from the Y, near Lakewood Shopping Center). The Fair will be bilingual, free, and open to the public, with

  • an appearance by Krishna Kaur, the LA-based founder of Y.O.G.A. for Youth and the IABYT, and a great teacher! (You may recall a workshop she did @ Duke a couple years ago.)
  • adult, child, and family workshops in yoga, meditation, dance, music, nutrition, and stress management
  • health screenings
  • healthy lunch
  • door prizes
  • chair massages
  • a Q&A panel with health professionals @ 3pm
  • lotsa health information

Interested in volunteering on the day of the event? Please contact Regina Smith. If you would be able to disseminate some flyers, posters, or yard signs, please contact

Keval Kaur Khalsa
kevalk@earthlink.net
419-2403

wear clothes you can move in!

Movie @ the Co-op: The Power of Community

Oct 17 2007 - 7:00pm
Oct 17 2007 - 9:15pm
Sponsoring Committee:
sven.rinke
description:

When: Wed, 10/17, 7pm Potluck, 8pm Movie Screening
Where: Durham Food Co-op, 1101 W. Chapel Hill St.

The just released film, The Power of Community: How Cuba Survived Peak Oil, documents Cuba’s emergency transition to local organic agriculture, renewable energy, and large-scale mass transit. The transition occurred following the Soviet collapse in 1990, when their massive subsidies of imported oil and food to Cuba were halted.

In this documentary, ordinary Cubans talk about the immediate hardships they faced. Their GDP dropped by more than one third, transportation nearly stopped and food became scarce - the average Cuban lost 20 pounds during the first years of this economic crisis.

The film visits urban gardens and organic farms, explains the relationship between food and fossil fuels, and shows how a society can change from an industrialized, global focus to a local, community-based one. It is a rare view into this island culture, using firsthand reporting that focuses on what Cubans learned about adapting to living with less.

Cuba’s experience provides a living model for how the rest of the world can respond to the coming world oil production peak and irreversible decline some oil experts say will occur this decade. “Everyone who is concerned about Peak Oil needs to see this film,” said Richard Heinberg, author of The Party's Over and Powerdown. “It is a story not just of individual achievement, but of the collective mobilization of an entire society to meet an enormous challenge.”

The documentary is drawing rave reviews with such comments as,
“…The most uplifting portrayal of a success story coming out of chaos,” and “A must see for survival in the next energy age beyond oil.” Viewer Joshua Lockyer, of Atlanta said, “If we want to know how we as a nation are going to survive the peak oil crisis we need to have models...This film begins to show us how.”

The Community Solution, Executive Producer of the film, is a non-profit organization in Yellow Springs, Ohio dedicated to seeking viable, low-energy options to the coming peak oil crisis. It hosts the annual “U.S. Conference on Peak Oil and Community Solutions,” and offers other programs to increase public awareness about peak oil.

The Power of Community: How Cuba Survived Peak Oil runs for 53 minutes.

When: Wed, 10/17, 7pm Potluck, 8pm Movie Screening

The just released film, The Power of Community: How Cuba Survived Peak Oil, documents Cuba’s emergency transition to local organic agriculture, renewable energy, and large-scale mass transit. The transition occurred following the Soviet collapse in 1990, when their massive subsidies of imported oil and food to Cuba were halted...

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