feral trade couscous
from Association Ennahda Khenifra, Morocco
Couscous from wholeground wheat flour, rolled, sifted, steamed and sun dried by hand - a dying art - in the village of Khoukhate, Morocco. US Peace Corps volunteer Cynthia Berning designed the labels and printed them out in Fez, 5 hours away by public transport. ferally traded since: 28/04/09.
FER-1601
Castlefield Gallery Manchester, UK to Feral Trade Bristol, UK
dispatched 23/10/10 delivered 23/10/10
couscous shipment FER-1601
REMARKS: goods returned from castlefield show for storage
QTY: 2 units at bag each
FROM: Castlefield Gallery in Manchester, UK
http://www.castlefieldgallery.co.uk
TO: Feral Trade in Bristol, UK
http://feraltrade.org
SENDER:kate rich
RECEIVER: kate rich
REQUESTED: to ship between 06/10/10 and 06/10/10
STATUS: delivered Feral Trade 23/10/10
MAP route map
www.feraltrade.org
COURIER: Mr and Mrs Berning  kate rich  Simon Preston  ruth catlow  Rebecca Morrill  Kwong Lee 
TOTAL ROUTE:  Association Ennahda-Marrakesh airport-London Luton airport-London St Pancras station-Manor House tube station-HTTP gallery-M1-Tyneside Cinema-Kirkwhelpington-BALTIC Centre for Contemporary Art-DLI Museum and Gallery-M62-University of Chester-Castlefield Gallery--Feral Trade
couscous Castlefield Gallery to Feral Trade
Shipping Facts
FER-1501 import purchase & freight
15 x couscous baggrossper bag
land and air transport khoukhate to st pancras station courtesy the Bernings £0 £0.00
cash paid for couscous at 1.50 per bag £22.5 £1.50
tube with pystercard to manor house zone 2-3 border £1.6 £0.11
walked to gallery £0 £0.00
total£24.1£1.61
Shipping Report FER-1601
onward transit of FER-1577 from Tyneside Cinema arrived Castlefield Gallery 2010-06-12
Rebecca Morrill Thursday 10 June: Collected goods from Tyneside cinema (AV Festival office) and transported by car to Kirkwhelpington, Northumberland for overnight stay at my partner's house. Friday 11 June: late afternoon, my partner transported by car to BALTIC Centre for Contemporary Art, Gateshead (where I was already work) then we travelled to DLI Museum and Gallery, Durham, to attend the opening of Paul Rooney exhibition before making journey on the M62 (highest motorway in the UK) to University of Chester, Warrington Campus, for overnight stay at house of a friend. Saturday 12 June, continued journey by car to Castlefield Gallery, Manchester. Got a bit lost trying to find the Gallery, but eventually spotted the Director who helped us unload. Then headed off to Manchester Art Gallery for a Contemporary Art Society members event before heading back to North East.
FER-1529 couscous from HTTP gallery arrived Tyneside Cinema 2010-02-03
FER-1501 couscous from Association Ennahda arrived HTTP gallery 2009-07-06
Mr and Mrs Berning Carol & Bill Berning, travelling back from Morocco with their friend Joan, met Feral Trade in the St Pancras station concourse Pain Quotidien cafe, overpriced but relatively easy to locate. They had packed their bags the night before to Ryanair official 15kg per passenger weight limits using Joan's portable luggage scale. Luckily Ryaniar didn't weigh carry-on bags so Carol managed to bring an extra 35lb baggage on the flight. The Bernings & friend had been in Morocco 10 days visiting their US Peace Corps volunteer daughter Cynthia, in the middle Atlas mountains. Carol had couriered over a commercial grade plastic sealer (for the couscous bags), from the US, at Cynthias request, to replace low-quality original bag sealer. She bought the sealer on amazon.com, it also does vaccuum sealing but the Moroccan women aren't familiar with the concept yet. While in Morocco they also rode camels in the high Atlas (touristy but fine) and passed through Casablanca (nightmare traffic). The highlight of the visit though was Khenrifa, Cynthia's host village, where they saw people plant the wheat with horses, mules and ploughs, and themselves learnt to hand-roll couscous (badly). The Moroccan women were rolling most of the couscous but all of them declined to be photographed. Carol has an eeepc for travelling (as does feral trade) & with help of Pain Quotidien's power supply transferred couscous village photos on to feral trade's flash memory stick.
kate rich Secured an outside table at Pain Quotidien with Feral Trade sign displayed to attract couriers, a lot of other people came and read the sign but kept their reactions to themselves. Simon Preston showed up mid-wait. Couriers arrived successfully with giant red rolling suitcases, I offered them tea & coffee from Pain Quot's overpriced menu, plus 72 pounds cash as arranged for the couriered goods. The oil and jelly jars were meticulously rolled in newspaper, plastic etc. After phemononally slow tea service, we repacked our bags, and couriers returned to their train for an overnight rest in Gatwick B&B before flying back to Cincinnati in the AM. Simon & I caught Picadilly line tube to Manor House and rolled luggage along backstreets to HTTP, passing 3 magpies scolding a housecat enroute. At the gallery I unpacked the goods while Simon viewed the exhibition & bought a few items from the Feral Trade store, which due to having no cash at hand he arranged to pay for later via paypal.
couscous transit: HTTP gallery to Tyneside Cinema
freight and handling couscous to Feral Trade sponsored by
     
FERALTRADE products passed by hand. The word 'feral' describes a process that is deliberately wild, as in pigeon, as opposed to nature wild (wolf). Feral Trade freight operates largely outside commercial channels, using the surplus potential of social, cultural and data networks for the distribution of goods. contact kate@feraltrade.org