A healthy fear of power tools

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Earthship carpentry squad


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Day 1 on the earthsip building site, I was excited to get building for once instead of just sitting in an office cerebrating. Dylan and our “Earthship Tower” housemates went off to replace the plastic glazing on Bris’ Simple Survival with double glazing. By the end of the day it was airtight, but someone (*cough* Sam) accidentally cut off the water and power, she was good natured about it, but we owed her showers for the next week.

I volunteered to be on carpentry squad with Enrique under the stern watchful gaze of Mick. At first we thought Mick was a little disgusted with our lack of power tool experience, but after a day realised it was just his quiet, get ‘er dun kind of way. He was the kind of guy whose compliments mean a lot because you know he doesn’t waste words with false praise.

We began making door stops, the drop saw had a piece of timber shoved in where a button used to be, the table saw’s lock didn’t really work…it kept us alert. I enjoyed using the drop saw, but the table saw freaked me out a bit, but as Dylan says it’s good to be afraid of power tools, it’s the guys who have worked with them for twenty years who end up losing a thumb by being complacent. By the end of the day we had both door stops in with weatherstrip and phew on inspection the doors actually closed. It was slow going, but we’d get into our groove eventually, and fun, I can’t wait to build more when I get home, perhaps Chook Mansion 2.


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After knock off we bundled in cars to go to the Taos Mesa Brewery (there is no getting around without one). Our waiter went around the table charming and insulting patrons in turn. On discovering we were Australian he waxed lyrical about how he has a friend n Australian who wants his to manage his nightclub so badly he’d pay for his air fare over, he’d go but he has kids and two ex-wives in the States and there is no way he is flying them over. He plied the table with beer and me with ice tea as he buzzed by, the only waiter in the packed place, he noted that we were in an earthship with tires under the dance floor, repurposed CD racks fro ceiling panels and off cuts for acoustic decoration. We had sweet potato fries an burgers while a jazz duo sang and strummed throaty warbling melodies, a nice night to remind us that the internship was as much about meeting like-minded people as learning to build.


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A simple survival

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comfort in the desert


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There aren’t that many people who would travel across the world to visit the most inhospitable place in the New Mexico desert, but even fewer who would build there. That’s what Michael Reynolds did, he invented the earthship, a house that makes survival in the extremes possible. Rain water is collected from the roof and used for drinking water, is filtered through planters in a greenhouse, then used for showers and flushing toilets, then the black water too is filtered for landscaping. Banana plants are growing where the temperature is -10C outside in winter, they’re off the grid with solar panels on the roof and tires and glass bottles are used as building materials.

Melissa drove from Minnesota and picked up Madalyn in Alburquerque, then us in Santa Fe. We were crammed in buried to our necks in luggage and groceries, but completely merry about it all. I demanded conversation to keep my claustrophobia at bay and Madalyn told us how she had been staying at a place in Albuquerque where they kept a pet pig (the product of a failed realtionship) and the guy who owned it slept with in his bed. She sailed tall ships for a living and was really interested in what people wanted to name their children, I believe she liked Jasper.

We arrived, got the lowdown from Ron and then got separated into groups and thrust into the arms of our “Den Mother” Griffin. He gave us a tour, in a fantastic world weary way that only a Virginian, pot smoking, earthshipper can. We were housed in “the Towers”, some others in the “Simple Survivals”. The other group got shipped 30 minutes away in “the Castle”.


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That night we met for green beans and beer. In a cloud of smoke Griffin happily chattered about Michael Reynold’s book about Wizards and Mike’s penchant for strapping himself in a coffin on top of a pyramid to have the moon burn holes through the back of his head. Perhaps this earthship caper was a little more esoteric than we thought, but Ron had seemed very grounded in the practicalities of septic systems so maybe not. KTAO 101.9 FM was humming Native American tribal chants on loop in the background all night and Griffin had grand plans for being the greatest Den Mother ever by covering a table in tin foil and laying out a hundred different types of salad, a sort of Viking feast for vegetarians. It was all rather delightfully surreal, I’m really not sure what might happen next, but I think it will be fun.



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made by hand

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Wisdom Through Wood with Alex Jerrim


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This all happened a year ago and although rain has fallen and bark split on our lathe, so carefully crafted, these experiences can’t really be forgotten. It’s easy to blame the city for getting in the way, inner city gardens with no supple branches to spin string, no green wood to turn, but what is really stopping me from getting out and escaping the smoke and the traffic light ticking? It’s time to remember why I started this blog, not just to share my love of permaculture, although this is still my passion, but to document life and not let the important things slip away in the drudgery of the everyday. Of late I feel like I have been waiting for something to happen, it’s time to unshackle…


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Let’s go back to November of last year and remember a man who dreamed of a timber cottage made by his own hands, from trees he cut down on land that was his. Alex slowly constructed with every spare moment for over a decade, then with it finished and beautiful, he welcomed in his brother and his wife. He moved back into his studio cabin, where he had stayed whilst he built. He dreamed of another beautiful timber house across the rolling green hills within in sight and sound, a community and share his passion for green woodworking – Wisdom Through Wood.


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From the city we sailed in a ship across the Bass Strait to learn Alex’s craft. Welcomed into his world where platapi swam in a bubbling creek and pink breasted robins darted just out of sight. It’s easy to romantacise a place when you only spend a week there in the height of spring, but it seemed like Eden. We had a tent, but his sister in law, Penny, insisted we use their caravan and that night found it toasty warm with a thoughtful heater and a made up bed, I could have cried from their kindness.


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The course began with mindfulness, planting trees to replacd those we would take and then some. Acacia and eucalyptus to repair erosion around the river. With these tiny, fragile seedlings in our hands it was hard to image they would one day tower above us, and linger long after we become soil.

Our workshop was the bush, a tarp over our heads to stop the rain, but otherwise uninterrupted views. A crackling fire and a constant supply of tea to warm the belly, and homemade cakes to set greedy eyes alight. A step above ‘pat your head and rub your stomach’, working the lathe took some coordination, but watching Alex at work it looked effortless, his soft rhythmic scratching of chisel on damp white wood a soothing constant “crrr crrr crrr”. Our efforts resulted in a song that would require censorship a “crr crr CRRRRRR &%%$^%$!” as a moment of distraction scoured a line across our timorous efforts. But with practice and Alex’s constant and unwavering confidence in our abilities we fell into a meditative pattern, wood shavings falling like snow.


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I felt frustration over my weakness compared to these men when it came time to split logs for turning and even more so when it came to sawing, but Alex was patient, and persistent, he didn’t let me give up and that gave me strength to persevere and I was glad I did as the pride you feel when you finally succeed is so much sweeter the harder it is to get there.


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When we chose our tree to fell we got so caught up in the practicalities of the task, how straight the trunk was, where it would fall and the thrill of it all that mindfulness was forgotten. It was sobering when Cam said he felt we should thank the tree. It had stood their for possibly the same amount of years as I had been on this earth and I was thankful, and felt a twinge at taking its life, but it would live on as beautiful furniture that would outlast us all, a different fate to too much old growth forest that become so much tissues. How easy it is to distance yourself when you are in the comfortable city, so much paper wasted, it’s good to reconnect with nature.


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Working together to cut a tree down by hand creates a bond, a shared excitement as you hear that crack, we all scattered as the mighty tree toppled so slowly and crashed to the ground. Then like butchers we examined the fallen, and carved it up to be turned green. Fresh wood like this is a completely different beast, soft like butter under the knife, rather than brittle; biting your tools. Why do we always struggle so much against nature? Alex’s exclamations at the beauty of every piece of timber, even turned under a novice hand filled us up with joy, and opened our eyes to a childlike delight in texture, grain and beauty of imperfection. You will never meet someone with a more genuine passion than Alex, and it is infectious.


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Cam turned what he learned into such beautiful detailing, it was an inspiration to see. He was staying on a friends boat nearby and further north along the mainland coast he lived his days as a carpenter and slept his nights in his own handcrafted boat, rocked gently by the waves. Another life it was hard not to romantasise, for all the hardships that he must have endured breaking from convention. I wish I had the guts to sail away, metaphorically perhaps, as my seasickness is legend among those who have ever traveled on deck with me sans seasickness tablets.


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We made a lathe and saw horse, that are now waiting for their time to be dusted free of leaves and used again. I long to use them, I can’t look at them. Dylan also made a stool which I contributed one turned leg, a work of love. I turned a rattle for a baby that was waiting to be born, the moment when the rings were released pure joy and relief. Our hearts were full.


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But our hosts weren’t finished with us , Penny and Alex’s brother Pete invited us into their home for a dinner party, and such delights to eat and drink and beautiful conversation I have not had since. The next day we drove away with hearts heavy, Pademelons lazily munching on green hills becoming specks and gone.

Life is too short to not fill with experiences such as these, time to reconnect don’t you think?


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OLD CHAIN SAWS & FLATTENED GRASS

Tree trunks, Hepburn, Australia

Finding evidence of a Kangaroo, Hepburn, Australia

Samples collected during reading the landscape, Hepburn, Australia

Examinging trees, Hepburn, Australia

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Discovering fungus, Hepburn, Australia

Looking through the grass, Hepburn, Australia

 

A motley little herd we straggled through the bush fumbling for the story it was trying to tell. Pete the Permie was told to keep his knowledge to himself and let us stumble along, his eyes bulging at our blank faces. We were perhaps the greenest (as in clueless) of the whole course when it came to knowledge of what weeds mean and although we were quite good at observing (that tree is dead! that one too!) we had no idea why it was so. Animal and human activity was easier to unravel and we were quite pleased with our discovery of old chainsaw marks that we concluded was people pinching fire wood and flattened grass and kangaroo droppings never incited so much enthusiasm before. Steve our benevolent guide perhaps wasn’t blown away by our bush skills, but with his gentle prodding we were perhaps able to get more out of our wander than those who just traipsed through showing off what they already knew, well that’s what we like to believe anyway.

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