Rachel Lovell
@wellyrach
ESG, tech & storytelling
ID: 259201989
01-03-2011 10:45:25
1,1K Tweet
909 Followers
1,1K Following
Which of these is most helpful? A. Co-op telling us about Maltesers UK biscuits. or B. Iceland Foods ❄️ telling us how to get #NHSHealthyStart vouchers, worth £4.25 per week towards milk, fruit & veg for children under 5. I'll start: #ThankYouIceland🙌
So Vogue Magazine think this pub will ‘confuse its fashonista readers who might not be able to differentiate between their favourite glossy magazine full of top models and a proper Cornish boozer’😅 great writing Cornwall Live starinnvogue bad move Vogue cornwalllive.com/news/cornwall-…
My latest piece for BBC Future in case you missed it: There are concerns that in our rush to grow food on ever bigger scales, we have inadvertently caused its nutritional content to wane. What can be done to reverse that? bbc.com/future/bespoke… via BBC Future
“99% of our deforestation risk is from animal feed” - eye opening insight from Tesco Head of Environment Anna Turrell speaking at the brilliant Groundswell with Rosie Boycott about how Big Business is adapting regenerative agriculture…or rather, how difficult it is to do
You should be absolutely ashamed of yourselves McDonald's UK. Funnily enough your plans to Haringey Council showed trees remaining and no mention of plastic carpet. Misleading the Public and Planning Authority!
I have written a book with my brilliant friend Abby Allen of Pipers Farm. It focuses on small scale family farms as a means of creating a resilient food system based on grass, native breeds, and stewardship of the land to farm in harmony with nature. waterstones.com/book/978191423…
We are thrilled to share with you news of our new cookery book ‘The Sustainable Meat Book’ here’s what a few rather lovely people had to say about our first tome. Preorder here: linktr.ee/pipersfarm Thank you Xanthe Clay Melissa Hemsley Dan Saladino
In today’s programme Rachel Lovell heads to Devon to visit a grower offering an alternative to industrially-made dyes - Sophie Holt who grows specialist crops for the textile dye market bbc.in/3We4Pqz