Adaptation, Resiliency, and Navigating a “New Normal”

What a whirlwind of a month it has been!  It goes without saying that the COVID-19 pandemic has changed our lives in pretty dramatic ways.  Many of us are working from home, or not at all. Children are completing their schooling via distance learning.  These social distancing parameters have turned our homes into the hub of our daily activities, and in many ways, have stretched our capabilities to adapt and adjust.

While riding this wave of general discomfort and uncertainty, it is important to recognize the many opportunities to enhance our ability to adapt and build resiliency within our families and communities.  I don’t know about anyone else, but my impulse to garden has never been stronger!

Since January, Cultivate Cochrane has been plugging away at our action plan and are likewise adapting to meet the more immediate needs of our members and the Cochrane community.  We recognize this is uncharted territory for all of us, so we would love to hear your insights to help focus our efforts in ways that will be the most useful to you. We have created a survey that will give you a glimpse of some ideas we have, and the chance to provide your own feedback and suggestions.  We would love it if you would take a few minutes and fill this survey out!    

While our line-up of spring workshops has been put on hold, we won’t leave you in the lurch!  Stay tuned to our website and social media platforms (Facebook, Instagram, Twitter ) for resources geared towards food, sustainability, adaptation and resiliency. 

We recognize this is a challenging time, no matter which way you spin it. We also recognize this is an opportunity to expand our skills and capabilities and to really come together as a community. We look forward to hearing from you and want you to know we’re here to support you every step of the way!

Here’s our team at our last board meeting - just saying hi and that we’re here for you!

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Partnering for Planters

Cultivate Cochrane is happy to announce a new partnership with a small business in town! Mick Gee hand builds a variety of garden planters and unique home accessories for his home-based business Rustic Home & Garden Furnishings. He uses cedar for the planters so they are built to last, and reuses items like wine barrels in some of his other creations. One garden planter we especially love has growing space not only at the top, but also all down one face - we imagine filling the holes with herbs, nasturtiums, and salad greens for a beautiful and edible display!

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Mick is really keen on Cultivate Cochrane’s vision (he remembers tomatoes warm off the plant and eaten on the spot with a pinch of salt in his greenhouse back in the UK) and is especially passionate about seeing kids involved in planting and growing. He has generously offered to donate 10% of any purchase made by a Cultivate Cochrane member back to our organization. So, check out Rustic Home & Garden Furnishings and be sure to mention that you’re a member if you place an order - every little bit helps us make our community greenhouse hub a reality!

A Glimpse of the Year Ahead

After a flurry of outreach, meetings and events in 2019, Cultivate Cochrane is poised for our next stage of progress in 2020. With some new members on our board of directors, we’ve laid out a path for the months ahead that will bring us ever closer to the passive solar community greenhouse hub we’ve all been dreaming of. Though strategic plans aren’t always the most inspired reading material, we think ours is actually pretty exciting! Here are the four main objectives we’ve set out to accomplish this year:

  1. CUSTOMERS: Conduct community engagement to determine the top needs of potential greenhouse customers and develop a program and education plan to meet these needs.

  2. FINANCIALS: Develop capital and operations budgets along with fundraising strategies for both.

  3. BUILDING: Secure a site for the greenhouse and customize a design for the building based on site partnerships and identified community needs.

  4.  MEMBERSHIP: Grow and retain society membership and develop a mature board of directors.

So we have our work cut out for us! We’ve also had some really promising discussions with leaders in our community about mutually beneficial siting of the greenhouse. It seems the concept of an innovative sunny gathering space where sharing and learning can happen around feeding ourselves is something that resonates with a wide range of community members.

The cost of produce is expected to continue to rise this year, the climate continues to shift, and we continue to have a very short growing season. Plus, the loneliness and disconnect people feel in these modern times seems to persist. So a sustainably-designed community hub where we can increase our ability to grow food locally is an idea whose time has come.

There is much to be done and we invite you to join us. It takes a village to raise a community greenhouse hub!

Well Done!

Sometimes you just have to give yourself a pat on the back — toot your own horn, right? At Cultivate Cochrane’s recent AGM we took a look at all of our efforts and accomplishments over the past year and we have to say that we even impressed ourselves with the list. We’ve been busy! And we’ve laid the foundation (metaphorically speaking) for our passive solar community greenhouse hub to come to fruition.

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Some of the highlights of our last 12 months:

  • Incorporated as a non-profit and developed policies, strategic plan and financial plan

  • Held a seat on Tri Site Advisory Group and presented to the group in a bid for inclusion in Tri Site plans

  • Met with numerous community groups, Mayor, councillors, Town administration, local developers, and businesses to explore support and synergies

  • Hosted "coffee chats" to connect with interested community members 

  • Offered Skill Build workshops ranging from tool sharpening to fermenting

  • Launched officially with a very well-attended passive solar greenhouse talk and tour 

  • Hosted a table at several farmers' markets

  • Took part in the Labour Day Parade with a wheelbarrow full of produce, handing out postcards along the way

  • Visited three local greenhouses gleaning pros and cons of each design

  • And much more!

Rob Avis explains features of his front yard on the greenhouse talk & tour

Rob Avis explains features of his front yard on the greenhouse talk & tour


With connections forged and groundwork laid, Cultivate Cochrane has some exciting possibilities to pursue in the year ahead. We’re ready to get busy and propel our plans to the next stage!

Warmth and Shelter

Late frost, early frost, snow in May and June, hail, wild winds, and opportunistic squirrels, rabbits, and deer. Just some of the reasons a greenhouse can make a whole lot of sense for growing food in Cochrane!


While I’ll always be happy to have a garden out of doors, some of those crops are routinely challenged and stunted by weather and animals beyond our control. By contrast, tomatoes, cucumbers, peppers, and basil happily thrive in the warmth and shelter of my greenhouse. And there’s nothing more pleasant than doing a bit of pruning, weeding, and watering in this sunny little structure on a cooler day or first thing in the morning when the air outside is still chilled.

A fledgling tomato in my greenhouse early June

A fledgling tomato in my greenhouse early June

Many people find themselves frustrated by Cochrane’s challenging food-growing climate and figure they’ll leave it up to BC, California, Mexico, or even South Africa to deliver our produce. But we can grow more than we think here if we choose the right plants and innovate ways to extend the season. Anything from a cold frame to my somewhat ramshackle greenhouse will add to how well we can begin to feed ourselves from our own backyard with the healthiest and most sustainable produce possible. The ultimate system for season extension in these parts is, of course, the passive solar greenhouse. 


Once our community greenhouse hub becomes a reality, we can add another layer to those greenhouse benefits - community connection and gathering! Until then, I’ll tend my tomatoes for another season and keep my fingers crossed for a frost-free September for the rest of the garden!

My attempt to shelter an outdoor tomato plant last September

My attempt to shelter an outdoor tomato plant last September

Cultivate Cochrane at the Cochrane Farmers' Market this Summer!

We are thrilled to be part of the Cochrane Farmers’ Market and the Cochrane Street Market this summer. Come and talk with us, fill out our community engagement questions and pick up some free goodies for your garden, window box or planter box or learn about our skill build workshops for the fall.

We are at the Farmers’ Market from 9:30 am to 1:30 pm on June 15, July 6 and 27, August 17 and September 14.

We are at the Cochrane Street Market from 5-9 pm on June 20 and July 18.

We hope to see you there!

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Passive Solar Backyard Greenhouse Information

Rob Avis at the Cochrane Public Library on May 5, 2019

Rob Avis at the Cochrane Public Library on May 5, 2019

On May 5, Cultivate Cochrane Society hosted Rob Avis of Verge Permaculture at the Cochrane Public Library where he spent an hour talking on Backyard Passive Solar Greenhouses to an avid group of 50 people. Following Rob’s amazingly informative talk, 24 of us piled into two tour vans and visited three backyard passive solar greenhouses ranging in size from 100 to 500 sq. feet. Along the way we learned about green building, climate and financial resiliency, alternatives way of growing food and community and of more hopeful paths for the future. We want to thank Rob, our sponsors (see below) and all of our participants who came for a successful and inspiring launch event for Cultivate Cochrane Society.

Below are further readings, information and video links related to the greenhouse talk and tour for anyone interested in the possibility of building, or having built, a functioning backyard greenhouse.

Rob’s backyard greenhouse.

Rob’s backyard greenhouse.

These are the three greenhouses we visited on the tour:

500 sq foot Passive Solar Greenhouse on School grounds.

Rob Avis’ Green House and the Three Mistakes he made on his passive solar greenhouse design.

Jeremy Zoller’s Micro Backyard Greenhouse.

For fun, Rob also has a video on a low cost (less than $1000 Geodesic Dome style greenhouse) that is worth checking for the DYI types out there.


Designing Your Own Backyard Greenhouse

If you’re really keen on learning as much as you can about greenhouses and want to avoid costly design mistakes, then we highly recommend three resources from Rob Avis below:

Verge’s FREE Design Your Own Passive Solar Greenhouse Like a Professional video course.

Verge’s Passive Solar Greenhouse Case Studies package for $97 USD

Verge’s Passive Solar Greenhouse Design DIY package for $247 USD


Partners to Design and Build Your Passive Solar Backyard Greenhouse

The following companies can help you design and build a high functioning greenhouse for your yard.


For anyone who wants a life transforming adventure, we highly recommend taking a two-week Permaculture Design Course (PDC) from Verge Permaculture. Three of the board members of Cultivate Cochrane Society all have PDC’s from Verge and the life knowledge we gained is the inspiration for us to establish a passive solar community greenhouse hub in Cochrane. Highly recommended!


Thanks again to our wonderful sponsors for making our launch event a resounding success!

Verge Permaculture, OnGrowing Works, Cochrane Environmental Action Committee (CEAC), and The Noble Fox Coffee.

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