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Claire Ratinon

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Już tłumaczęJuż tłumaczę#211 Lasy i ogrodyHej, hej! Zapraszamy na kolejny odcinek naszego podkastu! Polecamy w nim lektury pozwalające odnaleźć wewnętrzną równowagę i spokój ducha, mimo że ich autorki wcale nie unikają trudnych tematów. Prowadzą nas przez lasy i ogrody, snując rozważania o literaturze, przynależności, trosce i wiedzy. Wszystkie, choć w bardzo różny sposób, zadają pytanie o naszą relację ze światem przyrody, z ziemią i Ziemią, która jest naszym domem. Zachęcamy do wysłuchania naszej rozmowy!Jakie tytuły o lasach i ogrodach zrobiły na Was wrażenie?Ksią...2025-06-1554 minOur Town Has PlentyOur Town Has PlentyWeek 10 - Dinosaurs, Marmalade and other stories...Week 10 – Dinosaurs, Marmalade and other stories…Well well!So much going on and we’ve done our best to give a flavour. Sample the delights of Mike Manners’ Good Manners Marmalade, Stop by an Artisan Spring Fair and let’s find the Mighty Sounds a new keyboard player. Love for Breakfast Zone, Arts on Prescription, The Hero’s Journey, Hastings Adventure Playground, Hastings History House and Old Town Walks. Tip-off from Mike Willis about a Secret Show with Mykki Blanco and a new sewing café arrives courtesy of Ness Newman.Kids activi...2025-04-101h 00As the Season TurnsAs the Season TurnsFound Sound for March: Claire RatinonIn March, Alice meets organic food grower and author Claire Ratinon in her garden in East Sussex. Sheltering from the rain, they plant the first seeds of the year in Claire’s greenhouse and meet some feathered friends - discussing signs of spring, tomatoes and the enormous value of growing. This episode was produced by musician and sound artist Alice Boyd, featuring music by herself and Sam Lee. Thanks go to Claire Ratinon. 'Found Sounds' are back for 2025 with another twelve episodes, each released on the middle Friday of the month. This year, Alice will be travelling across the UK to...2025-03-1421 minNot Too Busy To WriteNot Too Busy To WriteS9 E2. Kerri ni Dochartaigh on finding home in the Irish landscapeKerri ni Dochartaigh is the award winning author of Thin Places and Cacophany of Bone. Kerri's work delves deep into home and belonging, from her childhood in Derry during the troubles, where her family were forced to leave their home, to an adulthood of wrestlessness, unable to find a feeling of home, until she returned to the Irish landscape of her early years. We talk about intergenerational trauma, what it means to our sense of safety and belonging to have a home forcibly removed, as so many are facing in the world today, and finding home in...2024-09-041h 08Create AcademyCreate AcademyGardening: An organic approach to growing food with Claire RatinonSpecialist small-scale food grower, Claire Ratinon explains how organic food growing and the no-dig method support a healthy ecosystem. Extract taken from Claire’s online course, How To Grow Your Own Food exclusively available at Create Academy. For more free lessons, sign up for an account at https://www.createacademy.com/sign_up 2024-08-1306 minThe Climate Book ReviewThe Climate Book ReviewBannerless review and Climate Books for Black History Month reading listWelcome to The Climate Book Review! Episode Notes for March 1, 2024 The Climate Book Review is a radio show and podcast featuring book reviews, author interviews, and reading lists for fiction, nonfiction, and poetry with climate themes. The Climate Book Review airs every Friday at 10:30 a.m. Central on WDBX 91.1 FM: Solar-Powered Community Radio for Southern Illinois. You can also find the show online at WDBX.org, ClimateBookReview.com, and on your favorite podcast app or site. The Climate Book Review is hosted by Treesong. The two main segments of...2024-03-0126 minWhy Women GrowWhy Women GrowClaire Ratinon on growing for reclamationClaire Ratinon is a food-grower, speaker and writer. In 2022, she released Unearthed, a powerful memoir about understanding what it is to become a custodian of the earth as a Black woman, and how the process of doing so helped her gain a sense of belonging in a post-colonial country. In 2012 Claire was working as a documentary producer in New York when she stumbled upon Brooklyn Grange, a rooftop farm in the middle of the city. Having always felt alienated from nature, she embarked upon a journey with growing food that changed her life. Since then, Claire has worked on...2023-02-1327 minWhy Women GrowWhy Women GrowWhy Women Grow: guest reveal trailerIntroducing the line-up for the first season of Why Women Grow: writer Claire Ratinon designer Margaret Howell chef Rukmini Iyer gardening gamechanger Sarah Raven novelist Salley Vickers environmentalist Poppy Okotcha and stylist and influencer Paula Sutton We talk about everything, from motherhood, to gardening for a better planet and finding your place in the world.  The first season kicks off on February 13, with episodes from the gardens and brains of Claire Ratinon and Sarah Raven. Make sure you subscribe to Why Women Grow, from wherever you usually d...2023-01-2302 minGardens, weeds and wordsGardens, weeds and wordsWhere the sun don't shine. With Susanna GrantA blend of slow radio, gardening advice and conversation, and readings from the best garden and wildlife writing.   These notes may contain affiliate links.        Garden soundtrack   The joys of October in the garden.     Reading from A breath from elsewhere, by Mirabel Osler 4:28 Read by Jemma Cooper   A breath from elsewhere, by Mirabel Osler. Bloomsbury, 1997. https://amzn.to/3Stlvr9     06:52 Gardening in the shade       08:10 Interview with Susanna Grant   08:20 First encounters   Wild about Weeds, by Jack Wallington https://amzn.to/3FbVU31   09:17 Sharing weeds (and weeds)   10:48 How the name – and the business – 'Linda' came about   12:35 A Jack of All Trades – Susanna's other work   16:11 A Fair Weather Shop   19:26...2022-10-2650 minIntelligence SquaredIntelligence SquaredReclaiming the Earth: Exploring Race, Heritage and the Natural WorldFor this episode focusing on how craft, creativity and our relationship with the planet can help us rethink established narratives and contribute to addressing historical injustices of the past, we visit the Radical Acts Biennial, an initiative from Harewood House. Joining our host, journalist and author of Africa is Not a Country, Dipo Faloyin, are independent curator Ligaya Salazar and Creative Director of Tiipoi, Spandana Gopal. Plus, Claire Ratinon, organic food grower and author of Unearthed: On Race and Roots, and How the Soil Taught Me I Belong. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit pod...2022-08-011h 08The Wellcome Collection PodcastThe Wellcome Collection PodcastThe Root of the Matter: The GardenGardens are hugely personal, they are an extension of how we see ourselves and how we are in the world. They can also be a strong reminder of what is excluded as much as what is included. In this episode JC asks, what does the Garden reveal about the way we relate to the natural world and to each other? Writer and grower Claire Ratinon explores colonial legacies in the garden, through our use of language and readiness to embrace and celebrate some plants, whilst excluding others. We visit the Bethnal Green Nature Reserve, where...2022-07-2132 minChangeUndergroundChangeUndergroundEpisode 302. Monbiot, Mansplaining & Urban ArroganceLINKS No Dig Quick Start Course https://worldorganicnews.com/courses/no-dig-gardening/ buymeacoffee.com/changeug email: jon@worldorganicnews.com Facebook Page: https://www.facebook.com/groups/1546564598887681 Transcript: https://worldorganicnews.com/episode302/ A Revolution on Food and Farming https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m00180bs Claire Ratinon https://www.claireratinon.com/ Sarah Langford https://www.amazon.co.uk/Rooted-Stories-Life-Farming-Revolution/dp/0241503744 Episode 158. Cows aren’t the enemy & let’s reward those doing the job! 2022-06-1907 minStart the WeekStart the WeekA revolution in food and farmingThe environmentalist George Monbiot argues that farming is the world’s greatest cause of environmental destruction, but few people want to talk about it. In Regenesis: Feeding the World Without Devouring the Planet he presents a vision for the future of food production. He tells Tom Sutcliffe that new ideas and technologies from soil ecology to laboratory-grown food could change the way people eat while regenerating the landscape. But many farmers believe that they have been unfairly accused of ecological mismanagement, and that they are uniquely placed to restore the earth and provide a sustainable future. Sarah La...2022-06-0641 minDownload High-Quality Full Audiobooks in Non-Fiction, Animals & NatureDownload High-Quality Full Audiobooks in Non-Fiction, Animals & NatureUnearthed: On race and roots, and how the soil taught me I belong by Claire RatinonPlease visithttps://thebookvoice.com/podcasts/1/audiobook/551879to listen full audiobooks. Title: Unearthed: On race and roots, and how the soil taught me I belong Author: Claire Ratinon Narrator: Claire Ratinon Format: Unabridged Audiobook Length: 7 hours 32 minutes Release date: June 2, 2022 Ratings: Ratings of Book: 5 of Total 1 Ratings of Narrator: 5 of Total 1 Genres: Animals & Nature Publisher's Summary: Brought to you by Penguin. 'When we speak of our origins, that which made us, we speak of our roots. We acknowledge how our identities are intertwined with land, whether it's the one we are standing on or another we lay claim to.' Unearthed...2022-06-027h 32Download High-Quality Full Audiobooks in Non-Fiction, Animals & NatureDownload High-Quality Full Audiobooks in Non-Fiction, Animals & NatureUnearthed: On race and roots, and how the soil taught me I belong by Claire RatinonPlease visit https://thebookvoice.com/podcasts/1/audiobook/551879 to listen full audiobooks. Title: Unearthed: On race and roots, and how the soil taught me I belong Author: Claire Ratinon Narrator: Claire Ratinon Format: Unabridged Audiobook Length: 7 hours 32 minutes Release date: June 2, 2022 Ratings: Ratings of Book: 5 of Total 1 Ratings of Narrator: 5 of Total 1 Genres: Animals & Nature Publisher's Summary: Brought to you by Penguin. 'When we speak of our origins, that which made us, we speak of our roots. We acknowledge how our identities are intertwined with land, whether it's the one we are standing on or another we lay claim to...2022-06-0205 minFind Best-Selling Full Audiobooks in Biography & Memoir, MemoirsFind Best-Selling Full Audiobooks in Biography & Memoir, MemoirsUnearthed: On race and roots, and how the soil taught me I belong by Claire RatinonPlease visithttps://thebookvoice.com/podcasts/1/audiobook/551879to listen full audiobooks. Title: Unearthed: On race and roots, and how the soil taught me I belong Author: Claire Ratinon Narrator: Claire Ratinon Format: Unabridged Audiobook Length: 7 hours 32 minutes Release date: June 2, 2022 Ratings: Ratings of Book: 5 of Total 1 Ratings of Narrator: 5 of Total 1 Genres: Memoirs Publisher's Summary: Brought to you by Penguin. 'When we speak of our origins, that which made us, we speak of our roots. We acknowledge how our identities are intertwined with land, whether it's the one we are standing on or another we lay claim to.' Unearthed is...2022-06-027h 32Best-Selling Full Audiobooks in Biography & Memoir, MemoirsBest-Selling Full Audiobooks in Biography & Memoir, MemoirsUnearthed: On race and roots, and how the soil taught me I belong by Claire RatinonPlease visit https://thebookvoice.com/podcasts/1/audiobook/551879 to listen full audiobooks. Title: Unearthed: On race and roots, and how the soil taught me I belong Author: Claire Ratinon Narrator: Claire Ratinon Format: Unabridged Audiobook Length: 7 hours 32 minutes Release date: June 2, 2022 Ratings: Ratings of Book: 5 of Total 1 Ratings of Narrator: 5 of Total 1 Genres: Memoirs Publisher's Summary: Brought to you by Penguin. 'When we speak of our origins, that which made us, we speak of our roots. We acknowledge how our identities are intertwined with land, whether it's the one we are standing on or another we lay claim to.' Unearthed...2022-06-0205 minListen, Relax and Enjoy the Wonders of Full AudiobookListen, Relax and Enjoy the Wonders of Full AudiobookUnearthed: On race and roots, and how the soil taught me I belong Audiobook by Claire RatinonListen to this audiobook in full for free onhttps://hotaudiobook.com/freeID: 551879 Title: Unearthed: On race and roots, and how the soil taught me I belong Author: Claire Ratinon Narrator: Claire Ratinon Format: Unabridged Length: 07:32:40 Language: English Release date: 06-02-22 Publisher: Penguin Books LTD Genres: Biography & Memoir, Health & Wellness, Science & Technology, Animals & Nature, Naturopathy & New Age Summary: Brought to you by Penguin. 'When we speak of our origins, that which made us, we speak of our roots. We acknowledge how our identities are intertwined with land, whether it's the one we are standing on or another we lay claim...2022-06-027h 32Arts & IdeasArts & IdeasSoilJohn Gallagher digs deep into the significance of soil with food grower and gardener Claire Ratinon, Dr Jim Scown, who has researched the role of soil in the novels of Charlotte Bronte, Charles Dickens, and George Eliot, and Anna da Silva, Project Director of Northern Roots, the UK’s largest urban farm and eco-park in the heart of Oldham in Greater Manchester. And philosopher and art historian Vid Simoniti reviews two major new exhibitions exploring our relationship with the world around us - Radical Landscapes at Tate Liverpool and Our Time on Earth at the Barbican in London....2022-05-1745 minThe Earth Sea Love PodcastThe Earth Sea Love Podcast042 - For The Love of Food with Claire RatinonToday we're really excited to bring you an episode with Claire Ratinon, commissioned in conjunction with Northumberland National Park Authority's Future Landscapes Festival.  Your host, Dr. Sheree Mack, really enjoyed finally getting to talk with Claire after following her work around organic gardening and decolonising horticulture for a while now. In this episode, they talk about: Situating ourselves in the country Chickens and ruffled feathers! Change of career direction Getting closer to nature Black and brown people growing food and plants Finding our way back to the earth Decolonizing horticulture Thinking about the term...2021-11-121h 01Cultivating PlaceCultivating PlaceOur Hunger, Heartache & Identities Healed In The Vegetable Garden, Claire RatinonClaire Ratinon is a gardener, a writer, and a passionate advocate for the growing a food no matter where you live or how small a space you might live it. She herself first fell in love with growing her own food while living in a one-room flat. Born in Mauritius and raised in England, her horticultural work is deeply interested in how the hunger and heartache of our times, and of re-finding or rooting our own senses of identity starting in the vegetable garden. Listen in! Cultivating Place now has a donate button! We thank you so much for listening...2021-04-2954 minCultivating Place: Conversations on Natural History and the Human Impulse to GardenCultivating Place: Conversations on Natural History and the Human Impulse to GardenOur Hunger, Heartache & Identities Healed In The Vegetable Garden, Claire RatinonClaire Ratinon is a gardener, a writer, and a passionate advocate for the growing a food no matter where you live or how small a space you might live it. She herself first fell in love with growing her own food while living in a one-room flat. Born in Mauritius and raised in England, her horticultural work is deeply interested in how the hunger and heartache of our times, and of re-finding or rooting our own senses of identity starting in the vegetable garden. Listen in! Cultivating Place now has a donate button! We thank you so much for listening...2021-04-2954 minGardening with the RHSGardening with the RHSGardening with pets, our new Editor and crop rotation explainedThis week we're discovering how to garden the pet-friendly way. Whether that's making a dog-proof garden, keeping cats at bay or growing food for small animals such as guinea pigs and rabbits – there's lots you can do to keep plants, people and pets all happy together. Author, dog lover and RHS Senior Horticultural Advisor Helen Bostock explains how. Author and organic veg grower Claire Ratinon shares her love of chicken keeping and offers tips on how to keep birds and plants in happy balance. We meet the new Editor of The Garden magazine, Tom Howard, who offers a sneak peek in...2021-04-2233 minGardening with the RHSGardening with the RHSSecrets of sowing seedsGrowing plants from seed has to be one of gardening’s most profound pleasures, and now is the ideal time to start thinking about what you’re going to grow this year. Today’s programme is jam-packed with great advice, including a surprising rule of thumb you may never have heard of from our resident allotment guru Guy Barter. Plus RHS Gardening Advisor James Lawrence gives tips on growing houseplants from seed and organic grower Claire Ratinon shares her love of tomatoes.2021-02-1829 minBBC Gardeners’ World Magazine PodcastBBC Gardeners’ World Magazine PodcastGrowing your own foodClaire Ratinon, food grower and author of How to Grow Dinner Without Leaving the House, shares her tips for raising your own veg, with plenty of tips for those with just a limited space. She reveals how volunteering on a roof top farm in New York got her hooked on veg growing and changed her life for the better. She examines the effect of growing veg on our wellbeing and why it matters that we play a part in managing where our food comes from.   Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. L...2021-01-2840 minÆCORN Presents SPRITZING HOURÆCORN Presents SPRITZING HOURClaire Ratinon: Food, Love & Double RainbowsClaire RatinonFood, Love & Double RainbowsWhat we eat is one of the most important decisions we make every day. It connects us to each other, our culture, and ultimately to nature, shaping the world we live in. We depend on food to survive, but it goes deeper than that; It gives us pleasure, stirring memories and feeding emotions. Organic urban grower and writer, Claire Ratinon explains why growing food is not only a way to feed ourselves, but also a way to connect more deeply with those around us and the world we...2020-11-2659 minGardens, weeds and wordsGardens, weeds and wordsHome. With Jennie Spears of Lemon Tree TrustHome. With Jennie Spears of the Lemon Tree Trust   A blend of slow radio, gardening advice and conversation, and readings from the best garden and wildlife writing.   These notes may contain affiliate links.      Garden soundtrack   Why do we build gardens? Looking back to the very first episode of the podcast and Tim Massey's garden at RHS Chelsea Flower Show for the Lemon Tree Trust https://www.tommassey.co.uk/the-lemon-tree-trust-garden     Reading  05:21 Extract from How to grow your dinner without leaving the house by Claire Ratinon, published by Laurence King in 2020, read by the author. https://amzn.to/2QrpPtD   A quick catch up w...2020-10-2352 minGardening with the RHSGardening with the RHSGrowing bulbs and organic gardeningIf you love spring bulbs but aren't sure where to start, we've got you covered. RHS Gardening Advisor Jenny Bowden gives her bulb planting 101 with lots of handy hints and tips; plus some lovely recommendations of which varieties to plant. Organic food grower and writer* Claire Ratinon tells the story of how she got into an ecologically-based way of gardening, and why it matters. Claire gives tips for organic growing in small spaces and containers. Plus garden designer Tom Massey's love letter to London's green lung, Richmond Park.2020-09-2423 minOn The LedgeOn The LedgeClaire Ratinon on growing food in small spaces, and racism in horticultureOrganic grower Claire Ratinon joins me to talk about her new book, How To Grow Your Dinner Without Leaving The House and racism in horticulture, and I answer a question about a jade plant with tiny leaves. Please note, this episode includes swear words.  For the full show notes visit https://www.janeperrone.com/on-the-ledge/2020/8/27/episode-1532020-08-281h 06The Dirt: the gardening podcast from Grow Your Own magazineThe Dirt: the gardening podcast from Grow Your Own magazineUse seaweed feed, invest in organic matter and make notes, says Claire RatinonFrom growing produce for one of Ottolenghi’s restaurants to adapting to the clay soil of her new Sussex garden, Claire Ratinon’s varied gardening experiences make for a captivating listen on this week’s episode. Find out the important lessons she’s learned along the way and why she thinks every gardener should take some time to slow down and reflect on their efforts.  🌱 Don’t miss our special offer exclusively for listeners of The Dirt – you can get seven issues of Grow Your Own magazine for just £29.99 (that’s £11.94 off!) by calling 0800 904 7000 and quoting ‘GPOD7’, or visiting http://www.g...2020-07-0948 minGardens, weeds and wordsGardens, weeds and wordsUnearthed. With Claire RatinonA blend of slow radio, gardening advice and conversation, and readings from the best garden and wildlife writing.   These notes may contain affiliate links.        Garden soundtrack   Poem 00:53   Digging by Seamus Heaney   Read by Jemma Mullholland   from Death of a Naturalist, Seamus Heaney, Faber & Faber 1966 (new edition 2006) https://amzn.to/3bwuPpk     A feeling of connection to the land. Taken for granted.     Interview with the Claire Ratinon 03:39    4:50 TV Production in New York: Claire’s Eureka Moment Brooklyn Grange Farm https://www.brooklyngrangefarm.com/   8:14 Career change gardeners   11:15 Early plant memories. Or not!   16:47 Formative food memories.   18:42 Living and growing in Hackney   20:33 Claire’s organic growing training   OrganicL...2020-03-271h 04