Bullsheet Quarterly
Buffalo Mountain Coop publishes a quarterly newsletter featuring community news and member submitted articles. We maintain an archive of all published Bullsheets in PDF form here on this site for our community members use. If you have an article that you’d like to submit, please contact Robin or Lori at the co-op or use our Online Contact Form.
Fall 2009 (copy)
The New Neighboring Food Cooperative Association And How it Helps!
On our behalf, Annie and Barry helped found a new collaborative effort between regional co-ops. The new Neighboring Food Coop Association (NFCA) works to make it possible for us to meet our needs in a more comprehensive, economical, and sustainable way. Here is a description of what this new group is up to.
Summer 2011
The Yoga of Community
By Tina Ghantous
Living in community is a crucial part of our health and well-being. All species are interconnected in the web of life, and that includes us. In Tantric philosophy, all life is a manifestation of one divine, intelligent source, which is intrinsically good. Yoga is simply one path that can bring our thoughts and actions closer to this true nature.
Fall 2009
The New Neighboring Food Cooperative Association And How it Helps!
On our behalf, Annie and Barry helped found a new collaborative effort between regional co-ops. The new Neighboring Food Coop Association (NFCA) works to make it possible for us to meet our needs in a more comprehensive, economical, and sustainable way. Here is a description of what this new group is up to.
Spring 2009
Tails From The Barnyard; or, Ode To the Mighty Compost Pile - by Olive
I was helping out a friend in her garden recently, when she inadvertently gave me the idea for this article. She had just retired from work that took her all over the globe, and had bought a house close to where she grew up. It came with an extensive garden, overgrown by a couple years of neglect. We were pulling weeds and interlopers right and left, making headway in the garden, but - what to do with the trash tossed on the driveway? Why not create a compost and put the cast-offs to work? So we found a good spot out behind the house, and the start of a compost pile was born. My friend exclaimed, " Now I'm home, I have a compost pile!"