Introduces the idea of ‘Food Miles’ – to explain that food miles are the distance food has been transported to reach your table.
Age group: Any
How long it will take: 45 minutes
What materials you will need: An atlas/world map and an assortment of food packages, or examples of food including:
The aim of the activity: To introduce the idea of ‘Food Miles’ – to explain that food miles are the distance food has been transported to reach your table.
What to do:
Get the group to discuss the following questions:
It might be good to bring in a relatively old person (50 should do) and get them to talk about how different it was even when they were young.
Here are some issues that you may want to raise in the discussion:
An alternative approach:
Here is another approach to the food miles activity. At the closing circle of one group night session ask the children to choose one day before next week and keep a note of all the food the family has at home and where it originated from.
Ask half the group to bring with them a label or other evidence they have at home of food that had come from a long way away. Ask the other half to bring evidence of something as local as possible.
Next session have a big map of the world in the middle of the circle or stuck to a wall. Everyone reports back on what they noted. Then the items they’ve brought in are spread around the map or sticky dots are used to represent them to show country of origin.
Lastly, use a tape measure to see how many or how few miles the sample items had travelled. In the closing circle ask the children if they could live on food that has been produced very locally.