Tag Archive for 'sustainability'

local living economies

» Cross-posted at Our Farm Adventure.

Last night Ben and I heard a talk by Judy Wicks, owner/founder of The White Dog Cafe in Philadelphia. She spoke last night in Raleigh about what she calls “local living economies” which encompasses local food and farming, community energy and organizing, finding more sustainable ways to enhance commerce among people and businesses within a specified region, and integrate these alternative methods into global trade.

It was moving, to say the least.

None of the issues she spoke about were new to me: our overpopulation situation, effects of long distance food distribution, trade issues, loss of local farms and the connections between, etc. But the ways in which this woman has created change in her community (and by starting small) was *very* new to me. I tend to have a pessimistic view of our nation and mostly generalize people into one large group of “idiots” who succumb to the way things seem and don’t strive to make change. This, I realize, is wrong, but it’s difficult for me to snap out of it until I see someone who *has* made change come forward and talk about their experiences. Judy noted that a lot of her success comes simply from talking to people. For the past 25 years she has formed honest relationships through communication of mutual beneficial alternatives to unsustainable living, and fueled her community with information on how changes can be made, starting with the individual. It’s grassroots all around and gave me a lot of ideas.

Hearing Judy speak and feeling her energy last evening left me excited about creating a life in Toccoa. Living and playing mostly in cities my whole life I struggle with the vision of living in a small town on a farm. And I probably have no idea how much actual *work* it’s going to be, at least to get us started, but now, more than I ever imagined, I am looking forward to it. And I say that because I am hoping that Ben and I can make a difference in Toccoa and sort of grab the town by the balls, if you will. There is certainly a huge opportunity there for us to impact locals by setting an example of a more sustainable way of life and I can’t wait to get started!

the trip, the land, the house, the farm

About a month ago I had a conversation with Corman on how to handle the two blogs the BG and I are starting. I haven’t really mentioned it here too much but we are going to be launching two sites; one will be logging our year-long road trip through the US and Canada and the other will be about building the cob house and starting the farm. Here are a few tips we discussed:

Don’t try too hard; our story is unique. I truly believe we have a wonderful dream to share with the cob house and farm. Living off the grid in an earthen home is not what I would call a typical American dream, and it’s been tough to find information regarding the technical aspects of energy-independence (everyone seems to run petroleum-based generators or is hooked into the grid as a backup). This means that a lot of the work is up to us. Since we’ll be getting into the nitty gritty of conservation, self-sufficiency, construction, organic farming and financial responsibility, I believe anyone with an interest in any of those areas could gain something from our articles, even if they have no intention of actually building a house or starting a farm.

Get used to public life. What I find successful in blogs and articles is a sense of honesty and vulnerability in the author. There are no tricks to what we’re going to be doing and since neither of us has *any* experience there are bound to be fuckups. Embrace them and write.

Write often and on a regular basis. In order to attract and maintain consistent traffic we need to offer fresh content several times per week. If the story is compelling enough, people will come and read it, but their interest won’t be limitless. We gotta keep em’ coming back for more!

Start now. It takes a while to come into a writing style, and although the BG and I write personal blogs we do so not necessarily to gain popularity. There will be some adjustment, whether consciously or not, on style, rhythm and story-telling.

Utilize supplemental online tools. Twitter, Flickr and similar online community-based sites can help widen and support our reader base, especially since we will be photo- and video-logging all our adventures.

Most importantly, and this is something we need (and I want) so badly right now: a schedule. There. I said it. We need to have it in our heads that on this day we write this much, or on this other day we edit video and we get it done. It needs to be structured yet flexible. I don’t suspect we’re going to be successful going into it thinking anything else.

I can’t tell you how excited we both are to get started. Currently I’m still designing the house/farm blog and when it’s complete I’ll use it to create the template for the trip blog. My sincere hope is that we do it. Actually, truly do it, because one thing I’ve noticed about the BG and I is that we’re full of ideas and our plans change all the time, but man do we have some attention deficit issues. Our flexibility mostly serves us well but sometimes leads to an endless list of things to do and research and who can get anything done in that state?

It’s time to weed out, organize and focus!

minimalist lifestyle

Both a challenge and a reward.

I claim to live a minimalist life. This is probably only true depending on your idea of minimal. I certainly don’t only live by the bare essentials, as “minimalism” can be defined, but do in fact make a conscious attempt each day to strip further what I own, carry around, “need” and use. And that, people, is the challenge.

I’ve somehow obtained the “thing”, whether by a careful plan or overexcited impulse, and determining if it is worthy enough to stay in my possession (usually if I haven’t used it in a while) takes time and thoughtful consideration. I’ve let go of a lot of things I’ve held onto “just in case”. For years. Stupid little things that I can do without, obviously, because I only had them for some sort of mindless emergency. The challenge is to reach that point of ultimate Yes or No with myself… Is this thing really worth it?

Yesterday, we cleaned out more from our apartment. And by ‘cleaned out’ I mean getting to a point where we can straighten up without just pulling the curtains over everything. By even speaking of cleaning up the apartment, we mean to pull things off the shelves and out from under the bed and go through it.

I am admittedly obsessive about being tidy. A few years ago I’d probably rather have lived in an apartment with not more stuff, but more space, just to see more of the walls and floor, which makes me feel more at ease. Within ample living space, it is so much easier have and keep things in order. But, now that I see all the rewards of living smaller, I *love* this apartment, and I love what we’ve done to it. This place makes me think: Where do I put this? How do I organize these? Will I find that later? Do we really need this crap?… All with the underlying question of Is this logical? testing to be answered each time. With not much space for stuff, I’m kind of forced to keep this up.

Living small wasn’t really a priority for me, and didn’t become one, consciously, until I started my move to Oregon. Getting rid of so much stuff was *refreshing*. It was quite overwhelming when I started, but after it was done I was so excited that I had dwindled everything down to a few boxes plus whatever else could fit in the car. Amazingly, I came back over to North Carolina with even less.

So, what are the rewards?

First, I now save money. Seriously, I don’t spend a dime of my paycheck, everything goes in the bank. This week we’re both about to pay off the last of our student loans and be completely debt free.

Second, I think about transportation more, and all of the downfalls of owning a car. (We’re lucky to have a car for now… and, one that we didn’t actually buy, but the repair and fuel costs are ridiculous, so biking/walking is more commonplace and I take the bus when it works out.)

Third, I am more mobile. I can go anywhere with ease. Moving isn’t nearly a big a deal as when I left Virginia and traveling is much more fun with less shit to deal with.

Fourth, it reinforces (and supports) all of my important values: Sustainability, simplicity, self-awareness (and awareness of one’s place in the universe). I am no longer of the belief that fancy possessions encourage happiness. In fact, for me, they just get in the way.

Fifth, it carries over into everything else in my life. I feel efficient. Smart. Simple. True. I am not held down.

Now that I own less, I have less to lose, more money in the bank and am lucky enough to share the whole thing with someone pretty special who feels the same way I do. The funny thing is, now it’s become a bit of an addiction… to see how little I can live on/carry around/take with me. I find that after I’ve sold, donated or pitched certain things, even the ones I thought I couldn’t say goodbye to, I don’t really miss them that much after all. ;)

the past few weeks and a dream

So, over the past few weeks, since Xmas actually, I’ve been really involved with work. As much as I love getting paid well, putting in 60+ hours a week for the entire month of January confirms for me that I would rather stab my eyes out than do this shit for the rest of my life.

But.

None of that is terribly important. The BG and I are pretty fucking good at devising ideas and making plans. That means all my hard work is for a cause: I’ve been saving every penny so that we will have materials and equipment to build our home in North Georgia.

Georgia? Well, it wouldn’t have been my first pick, but the BG has some family land near Toccoa so that’s where we’re headed. And we have all the freedom to make it what we want, so I’ll be checking off another goal from 43things: Live off the grid.

I moved to Raleigh for several reasons, saving money being one of them. And we don’t live in a 320 sq. foot apartment for the fun of it. $450 a month in rent (all utilities included) sure as hell sounds pretty yummy when you’re trying to save as much as possible.

It’s all we talk about. It’s our dream. :) We’re going to start building a cob house and farm on the family land sometime in 2011*. We’ve got a ton of money saved up already, more than I’ve ever saved for anything. And I can’t explain how excited I am that we’re on a path to something so awesome.

We’ve stocked our library with resources to get us started and we’ll be blogging about our progress every step of the way. :)

Books!

*After, of course, our one year trip to who knows where.