Are you 15 – 25 and passionate about addressing some of the issues that arise from the intersection of climate change, colonization, and racialized and gender-based inequities?
The Youth Climate Justice Group is a space where like-minded youths can come together to discuss and brainstorm solutions to many of these issues. The panel will consist of weekly conversations held in a range of locations, as well as field trips to engage with food-security based community projects!
How to get involved?
If you’d like to become a core group member (attend the introductory session as well as 1-2 discussions per week), you can sign up using the link below
The first Youth Climate Justice Group session will be taking place on THURSDAY, JUNE 2nd, from 4-5pm at the UVic Garry Oak Meadow (at the corner of Gordon Head Rd. and Cedar Hill Cross Rd.)
This “Introductions and Orientation” session will be a first chance get to know fellow participants and figure out what directions we want to take with the youth panel! There will be snacks, but be sure to bring some of your own, along with a blanket and a journal for notes and ideas!
Check out their website for the orientation package and to sign up for the Group before the meeting! www.youthfoodnetwork.ca/
On May 24, members and friends of QCHCA were treated to an engaging and extremely informative talk by Alistair Knox, the Youth Network Coordinator for the Good Food Network & Capital Region Food & Agriculture Initiatives Roundtable (CRFair). Alistair studied Forest Ecology and Environmental Studies at UVic and, as CRFAIR’s Youth Food Network Coordinator, will be organizing and facilitating a Youth Climate Action Panel where participants will be discussing topics ranging from what kinds of changes we have seen in our food systems as a result of climate change, to some of the actions that other organizations in our area have already taken up to address these systemic issues. Details are below in case you missed the talk or would like to see it again – it was information-rich and so uplifting! Special thanks to Alistair for the talk and for allowing us to record it!
“North Americans have had a longstanding love affair with crisp blades of grass and the perfectly manicured lawns we shape them into. The tidy turf tradition isn’t homegrown though: the concept was hauled across the Atlantic by colonists who maintained lawns in Europe going back to the 17th or 18th century. The growth became a staple of the leisure class who revelled in lawn games like croquet and tennis and turned it into a status symbol, since bringing neatness to nature’s chaos required deep pockets. And so, keeping up with the trim-turfed Joneses began.
If you saw a gaggle of tea-sipping garden enthusiasts spilling out onto Tattersall Drive Mother’s Day morning, you might have wondered what all the buzz was about.

For years Karen Yearsley has raised a bit of money for Habitat Acquisition Trust by collecting donations in exchange for tomato plants, but was wanting “to simplify finding homes for the extra seedlings. Last year she learned about the first “Little Free Seed/Plant Exchange” installed over on Beechwood Ave. and it seemed to her like a possible solution and also fun way to contribute to her neighbourhood. A neighbour constructed the basic box for the seeds from her scrap materials, and she painted and installed it and the shelves. She says, “I love the way some days nothing changes and other days there’s a lot of turnover. You never know what will be out there!”

LifeCycles Project Society hosts online member orientations as an introduction to the Victoria Seed Library. The orientation includes tips on how to save and sign out seeds.
QCHCA’s Climate Action Group : Sher, Susan, David and Geneva (Peter’s behind the camera) admiring Sher’s raised vegetable garden beds. 2022.