Produce Swap
Team
Alice Aird
Bruce Hedge
Helen Scott
The Home Produce Swap is a sociable gathering of locals and some not-so-locals, swapping excess home produce and demonstrating seasonal harvests. Now in its eleventh year, members of "the swap" have increased to 180! Everyone is welcome to bring vegetables and fruit from their garden or anything that might represent home gardening, for example eggs, seeds, potted plants and seedlings, flowers, preserves, natural fertilizer, egg cartons etc.
In the Macedon Ranges the Produce Swap operates at the following Farmers’ Markets:
1st Saturday of the month, Woodend Community Farmers’ Market, by the Produce Swap team of Veg Action. Swapping begins at 10am.
2nd Saturday of the month, Kyneton Farmers’ Market, by Kyneton Transition Hub
3rd Sunday of the month, Malmsbury Village Farmers Market 9am-1pm, run by Sustainable Malmsbury
4th Saturday of the month, there is the Lancefield Produce Swap at the Lancefield Farmers’ Market
Events
Come and join us at the Sustainable Malmsbury Community Produce Swap and Recycling Station at the January Malmsbury Village Farmers Market
Come and join us at the Sustainable Malmsbury Community Produce Swap and Recycling Station at the February Malmsbury Village Farmers Market
News
Electrify 3442 is running a Community Survey and we’re on the lookout for households at various stages of electrification ) and happy to share their stories on our website. Read our news >>
This March MRSG Sustainable Homes Action Group is presenting the “Project Showcase”, an exhibition of projects Macedon Ranges householders have undertaken to make their homes more thermally comfortable, cheaper to run and more energy-efficient, and of work-from-home spaces that are reducing the need to commute.
(Image: Sam Clarke via Unsplash)
Malmsbury’s Community Produce Swap will coincide with the monthly Malmsbury Farmers Market.
Malmsbury’s November trifecta! The Community Produce Swap and monthly Malmsbury Farmers Market coincided with the annual Malmsbury Village Fayre. All to the soundtrack of the Zingara music festival!
Volunteers needed for Community food swap - Malmsbury Farmers Market - September 15
Blogs
Not sure what “net zero emissions” means? Want to know how you can impact climate change?
Project Drawdown has produced an excellent series of 6 videos, ranging from 10-25 minutes, explaining where we can have the most impact on climate.
This is a thought-provoking series, highly recommended for anyone starting out on the road to sustainability.
Wow this wintery weather has set back our summer veggies but it is all systems go in the veggie garden. Plant, plant, plant! Read on for this month’s gardening tips for our region…
October is really the start of true spring in the Macedon ranges. Read on for this month’s gardening tips for our region…
The Veg Action group are kickstarting 2021 with a celebration of zucchini at their Zucchini Harvest Brunch. All are invited, but numbers are limited so RSVP now.
In this month’s edition, you will find a planting and sowing guide for our area and ways to manage slugs and other garden pests and our beloved cockies!
Looking for a Christmas meal that is light, inclusive, delicious and more sustainable? Here are a few ideas to get you started.
Veg Action and Cobaw Health, with the help of Tara Murphy, a student on placement from Deakin University, are developing a directory to connect consumers with their local fruit, veg, nut and legume growers. You can help by nominating your favourite grower and go in the draw to win!
Broad beans are a fabulously easy plant to grow in the Ranges, producing copious beans for many delicious dishes. Annie Reeve and Lucy Campbell give the low down on how to grow and eat the plant as part of their weekly Harvest to Table series.
Annie Reeves from the Permaculture Garden and Lucy Campbell from Veg Action share some insights into how to grow rhubarb in the Macedon Ranges, and some of the best ways to eat it.
Once again Lucy Campbell from Veg Action and Annie Reeve from the Woodend community garden have us drooling over delicious food and confident we can grow it. This week taking inspiration from Fabulous Fennel.
In this short blog, Annie Reeve from the permaculture garden shares tips on growing artichokes, a dramatic garden plant which is also a delicious addition to any diet.
Are asparagus tips popping up in your garden? Annie Reeves from the Woodend permaculture garden and Lucy Campbell from Veg Action share their joy for (and knowledge of) growing and cooking asparagus.
Beetroot is such a fabulous vegetable; seriously easy to grow, versatile and tasty. Here Annie Reeves from the Woodend permaculture garden and Lucy Campbell from Veg Action explore growing and eating the delicious plant; leaves and all.
In the second instalment of the ‘From garden to table’ series, Annie Reeve (Woodend Permaculture Garden) and Lucy Campbell (Veg Action) talk about growing and eating the delicious broccoli.
In the first of the ‘From garden to table’ series, Annie Reeve (Woodend Permaculture Garden) and Lucy Campbell (Veg Action) talk about growing and eating the delightful Kale.
Learn about the animals and plants that call the Macedon Ranges home from the monthly series of podcasts produced by the Macedon Ranges Shire Council
Someone once told me when I had just moved to Woodend that, “tomatoes are a Melbourne thing”. Yet, I wasn’t deterred. Like many other home gardeners from Hobart to Darwin, I set myself a personal quest to get the most out of my tomato plants, in spite of the unpromising climate.
Let's take this stressful situation and turn into an opportunity to reset, get back to the basics and create some lasting healthy eating habits that are good for us, other animals and the earth. How do we get started, you ask? Well….
Sowing seed for the vegetable garden in April chiefly is limited to Broad Beans, Smooth Coated Shelling Peas, Summer Leeks, Greens for the Greenhouse and Bulbing Onions.
I don’t need to tell you, Novel Coronavirus is changing the way we live and plan. There are no food shortages in Australia but we have endured distribution failures due to fear and panic which has led to food and other staples being bought up in greater than usual quantities. This has made us face the question of our food security seriously as individuals and a country for what for many of us is the first time.
Need some inspiration to help you eat more veg more often?
In this blog post, MRSG’s president (David) and MRSG’s permaculture garden group’s leader (Sara) share their perfect veg staple: pizza from the garden.
This is a list of Australian seed sources, all of these businesses provide some locally grown seed as a minimum; some franchise the growing of some seed and some will import seed to expand their offerings.