Meet the prof on a mission to revive flax and linen production in Nova Scotia - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 03:48 PM | Calgary | -10.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Nova Scotia

Meet the prof on a mission to revive flax and linen production in Nova Scotia

Jennifer Green is driving to farms across Nova Scotia in a van dubbed the Flaxmobile, teaching farmers to grow flax and turn it into linen. She hopes to create a thriving local linen industry.

Jennifer Green is driving to farms across the province, hoping to drive the growth of an industry

A woman holding a bundle of dried flax stalks stands in front of a cargo van.
Jennifer Green, a textile designer, NSCAD professor and creator of the Flaxmobile, stands in front of the van she drives around the province, teaching farmers how to grow and process flax. (Taryn Grant/CBC)

Jennifer Green makes it look easygrabbing a handful of dried flax stalks and beating away the rough outer casing to reveal long, soft, golden strands of fibre that can be spun and woven into linen.

But when a group of first-timers try to copy her, it becomes apparent that processing flax is a skill that requires deep knowledge and lots of practice. Green has both, and is on a mission to share them across the province.

"My vision is for a local Nova Scotian linen industry," she said.

Last year, Green set out to help local farmers grow and process flax. She's tapped into grants from Research Nova Scotia, Arts Nova Scotia and the provincial governmentto pay for the work, which so far includes21 farms scattered between the South Shore and the Margaree Valley of Cape Breton.

She travels around the province in a cargovan, dubbed the Flaxmobile, to meet farmers on their land and teach them the ins and outs of flax production.

Two men stand behind a pile of dried flax stalks.
Volunteers at The North Grove community farm in Dartmouth, N.S., stand behind a pile of dried flax that's ready to be processed into linen fibre. (Taryn Grant/CBC)

Green was driven to start her project through her experience as a textile designer. She's also an associate professor of textiles and fashion at NSCAD University.

She said the lack of local materials is a roadblock for craftspeople in Nova Scotia because of the cost of importing from abroad.

"Not to mention," she added, "if you're really trying to make objects that evolve from your culture and place, it's hard to be using yarns or materials from elsewhere to be telling those stories."

Farmers on board

She said farmers have been keen to join, hoping to diversify their crops, and participate in the development of a flax and linen industry.

"They're very aware of the local food movement and so the idea of a local textiles movement is really intriguing to them."

One of the farms involved is The North Grove, which is run by a non-profit organization and its volunteers in the north end of Dartmouth.

A woman stands smiling in a green space next to a road.
Katherine Carey, co-ordinator with The North Grove community farm in Dartmouth, N.S. (Galen McRae/CBC)

Katherine Carey, the farm's co-ordinator, said it would not have been possible to start the crop at the urban farm without Green's help.

"There's not a ton of information online," said Carey. "The books that [Green] uses, they're out of print. You can't find them. So a lot of the knowledge is you have to know people, you have to form those relationships."

The North Grove's flax plot measured about three metres by three metres, and Carey said she intends to replant on a similar scale next year.

Craftspeople paired with farms

Some of what The North Grove grew and processedwill go to Frances Dorsey, who has been a textile artist for more than 40 years.

Dorsey said she's "thrilled" to see a revival of flax production in Nova Scotia.

A woman stands in a garden.
Textile artist Frances Dorsey will weave with the flax fibres produced by The North Grove. (Galen McRae/CBC)

"I like the quality of the fibre.I like the strength of the fibre.I like the way that it takes colour.I like the way that something made of linen has a particular kind of weight and gravity and hang," she said. "And I like it because it's environmentally sound."

Dorsey said she'll use some of the fibres for weaving, and some for experimenting with creating coiled baskets.

Green introduced Dorsey to The North Grove.It's something she aims to do with all the farmers she works with connect them with craftspeople who are interested in using the flax.

The idea, she said, is to establish networks across the province, "so that we can try to develop a more flourishing industry."

Revitalizing a Nova Scotia tradition

Green said flax was a common crop in Nova Scotia in the 18th and 19th centuries, used by settlers to make linen clothing, but itdwindled inthe 1900s. Now, Green is trying to create a flax renaissance.

A pair of hands holds a stainless steel bowl full of flaxseeds. Another hand holds some of the seeds over the bowl.
Flaxseeds are a byproduct of linen production. At The North Grove, they fed the seeds to their chickens. (Taryn Grant/CBC)

Some of the hand tools she uses are replicas of those used by local farmers hundreds of years ago. She teaches growers how to extract the flax fibre from the plant using hand tools because, she said, it's the best way to learn.

"We process it by hand so that they really understand was it harvested at the right time?" Greensaid. "Is it giving a good yield and quality in the final product?"

But after the first year, the flax is processed mechanically at a facility in the Annapolis Valley that's run by TapRoot Farms, cutting down on time and labour, and making it possible for thefarmers to scale up.

Green said she hopes to see flax production reach a commercial scale in Nova Scotia within a decade.

Challenges to scaling up

Caitlin Congdon, a field crops specialist withNova Scotia Crown corporation Perennia, said flax as a crop is an "interesting opportunity," but it presents challenges on a commercial scale.

Flax needs acidic soil, unlike many other local crops, making it difficult to include in crop rotations, according toCongdon. Most local farms would also have to make a significant investment in machinery to get started in large-scale flax farming, she said.

Green agreed there are impediments to scaling up, but she did not think they were insurmountable. Overcoming those challenges, she said, is essentially the point of her project.