Tires & Cans

sam-simple-survival-eve

[mm-insert-title]

Cement from head to toe


fibres-water-mixing-mortar
heather-hand-mixing-mortar


mixing-mortar-sam-reid

sam-laying-cans

dylan-cement-render

retaining-wall

cans-cement-wall

I‘ve been waking with the sunrise, the mountains to the east framed from our beds. I watched a hot air balloon laze across the sky from the comfort of my sleeping bag. Dylan said it meant a still, frosty morning with the promise of a beautiful day.

I don’t like to drift from job to job never quite learning it by heart, so I set my sights on the external retaining walls for the week. In the background tiny Jennifer was getting so much joy out of using jackhammer on the paths that no one could help but smile.

The tires were pounded pull of earth already so we began laying soda can “bricks” and with the cement mixers tied up for the slabs it was time for an upper body workout hand mixing mortar. Using tires that would be otherwise in landfill and compacting them with earth is an amazing building material, it’s slow and hard work, but great thermal mass for the building. The cans and 3:1 cement mortar is concerning quite a few interns. People are still going to use more cans, so mining for more aluminum to make them rather than recycling seems like a misstep. There is also a huge amount of cement in these earthships (even with the cans) which makes them lower maintenance and faster than using say lime or a more natural building material, but as we slide down the Post Peak Oil slope, time is about the only thing we might have excess of. Renewable materials and light maintenance are the building blocks of a more sustainable future, I fear for some cans as walls and rubbish pounded along with earth into tired might be an excuse to make more waste, not less.


joane-an-retining-wall

earthsip-office-eve

brad-cement-mixer

salad-bowl-cistern-lid

tire-pounding-earthship

wheebrrow-concrete

retaining-wall-cans-tires

jennifer-jack-hammer-jason-enrique

tire-tattoo-hard-trowelling

slab-cement-concrete-footpath

sam-shower-shelf

truck-delivering-sand

dan-rendering-walls-rough-coat-mud

I’ve been working with Dan who is a professional concreter and render so although this isn’t the educational holiday he perhaps had imagined, I have learned a lot from him. Even if I choose not to use this much cement and use cans and bottles only for a little decoration (have a look at my last post on EVE to see how gorgeous both can be) the skills he has given me in mixing and trowelling are very valuable.

After knock off I had a head of cement dreads that had to be taken care of before we packed into Sam’s car to make it to Outback Pizza’s happy hour. On the way Bris said the reviews were terrible, with rude and slow service, but the girl who greeted us was a ray of sunshine calling everyone “Hun”. The best part of the night though was the paper tablecloths with crayons on every table. Portraits, sunsets and eyes bloomed between plates topped with huge and delicious pizza slices. After a hard day working on the Mesa a little drawing with friends and chocolate cake for desert was as near to perfection as there could be.


can-walls-soda

concrete-slab-poured-segments

can-retaning-wall-soft-drink-beer

greenhouse-retaining-all-constructipn

Continue Reading

Wild Rivers

down-river-gorge-rio-grqnde

[mm-insert-title]

Red River meets Rio Grande


hiking-down-gorge-flyfishing-rod

gorge-slope

succulent-plant-arid

down-river-gorge-rio-grande

flicking-wrist-fly-fishing

We escaped from the sand and the sage brush to the Wild River state Park. Winding down a gorge spirits lifting as trees, actual trees came into view! After weeks in the desert the sound of running water was like magic rediscovered. We found ourselves laughing with relief at the pleasure of water through our fingertips.

We stalked fish, hiking further up and up the river for our prize. We caught glimpses but the trout waited until our lunch break to come out in force, slipping sinuously under rocks when we gathered up rods again. But the chase is almost as much fun as the capture for the fly fisherman and despite going home with a bag lighter than we came with five flies lost to the river it was one of the most simply enjoyable days we’d had in a while.


fishing-line-river

tying-fishing-line

wild-flowers-new-mexico

hand-driftwood

joanne-river-side

dry-flower-heads

pine-rocks-gorge

rushing-water-wild-river

grasses-flowers

jo-twigs-tangled

river-water-twigs

view-above-river-down-gorge

cacti-pinecone

sm-dylan-river-flyfisherman

wild-red-river

pinecone-rocks

water-rocks-river

flyfishing-new-mexico

girl-down-by-the-river

window-twigs-view-framed

tall-pine-growing-slope
trees-riverside



Continue Reading

Castle & Pyramid

the-road-mountains-taos-sk-valley

[mm-insert-title]

where the wild things are


livestock-field-clouds-mountain

dylan-sam-town

ural-taos-adobe

jerry-castle-greenhouse

The weekend rolled around and we felt like we’d earned it. Relying on the kindness of our truck driving Towers neighbour Sam, we headed into town. The goal was grocery shopping with an underlying agenda of nachos and margaritas at the Taos Inn. While the boys checked out the local fly fishing shop I was greeted by an automated and frighteningly cheery “Good Morning” from the thrift shop door. It was a Johnson street worthy secondhand shop with the added bonus of a ski section. I bought the luxury of a second pair of pants, my only other pair had started giving out clouds of cement dust when I walked, not ideal.

Then we were counting speed bumps on the way to a BBQ at the Castle. It really was more of a large scale tin can, but the inside was awesome, like a kind of large scale cubby house. From the roof we could see the Mesa stretched out until it hit mountains on all sides, below geese were causing a ruckus in the same pen as a world weary rooster, who just looked with a “tell me about it” shrug of his feathers.

Mojitos, a sunken fireplace and beams of light on an 80s interior. It had the same signs we had come to associate with earthship, brilliant ideas then a sudden loss of interest, things never quite finished because another idea, another building takes over. This building and those surrounding were the genesis of an ADD way of building. It was fun, unconventional and innovative, but the people staying in the Pods didn’t have running water for two days and the girls in the castle were freezing at night.


timber-ceiling-round-carved

feet-ladder-roof

pyramid-rooftop-earthship-michael-reynolds

shaft-sunlight-caste-top-floor

rose-mojito-barwench

spiral-stair-steps

bunks-castle-sunlight-timber-interior

staircase-spiral-castle-tiles

garden-edible-greenhouse-castle-earthsip

fireplace-stacked-wood-sunken

While the castle interns organised dinner, we wandered outside, the sun was gone but the light still brushed the plains pale with the pyramid looming alien ahead. It wasn’t “the pyramid” of Mike Reynold’s moonlight excursions in the coffin, but there was something otherworldly about it. this might have been in part due to the interns ensconced in its mezzanine tip beatboxing, the echoes reverberating down the rickety ladder and out into the cool night air.

After dinner a circle of five braved the night chill and played hot coals around the fire. Three catching and passing and under strict instructions from Dylan the two of us dodging to protect out pump jackets. Then later after a good natured scrabble at the door, with Vera and Melissa not wanting anyone to leave we were back in the car counting speed bumps and singing at the top of our lungs to the hits of the 90s.



aluminium-can-wall

buried-house

sunsetting-earthsip-collection

old-yellow-van-caravan-rv

building-sand-covered

the-castle-earthship-original

geese-rooster-hens-chickens-desert

bottle-stainglass-wall

castle-pods-banana-grennhouse

banana-leaves-greenhouse

tree-branches-stucco-plaster-shelves-wall

sunlight-ornamental-timber-door-bottle-wall

bananas-level-change-sunken-greenhouse-pods

view-greenhouse-glass-window

earthship-skylight-weighted-rocks

interns-rooftop-cold-dersert

pyramid-subset-new-mexico-desert-taos

sunset-castle-rooftop-jennifer

Continue Reading

The Towers

photovoltaic-panels-earthship-energy-electricity-system

[mm-insert-title]

This is where we live


rooftop-solar-battery-pv

the-towers-south-greenhouse

second-greenhouse-towers-double

towers-outside-turret

Another day of slabbing, carpentry and bottle wall cleaning. Enrique and I finally got into a sweet rhythm doing what had talen us two days in half a day on the second door. By clean-up time I could still have gone on for hours, and that’s how I knew it was time to try something new. Timber and tools were familiar friends, so it was time to learn a knew skill.

After dinner the interns in walking distance filtered into our humble abode. When we first realised we were staying here Sam and I, perfect stranger, hi-fived one another, it was nice. An experiment in a double storey city dwelling it had radiant slab heating, a double height courtyard and most importantly running water which we were told people in “the Pods” lacked. Ground floor and first both had a bedroom/kitchen and after some tossing of furniture between the levels a little table each. The four of us had leisurely lunches together being only a minute from site and we could here Jason strumming his guitar upstairs most night.

Most importantly there is a double height cistern system that was running low after a dry spell. Important because when a water delivery truck showed up they weren’t familiar with the system. Water began spilling across our kitchen floor and it was then with mop in hand that I got my first and perhaps only encounter with the great man of mystery Michel Reynolds. His first words to me were something like “we F@#$ed up”, then they did some tinkering and the tide receded.


balustrade-rooftop-terrace
aluminium-can-wall-decoration-dobe


balustrade-rooftop-terrace
spiral-stairs


mezzanine-indoor-outdoor-dining
fig-tree-greenhouse-desert


timber-door-earthship-trapezium
dylan-water-cistern


thinking-dylan-light-adobe

Now packed with interns and instruments, the place hummed with random chords. Bris tried to teach us the Saw, but I could never quite get that sweet spot on the S curve. People were shy, but some nice melodies kept floating to the surface, fell to pieces in disharmony then rose up anew. I was beginning to like this place and these people a lot, and was almost missing them already knowing we’d only have a few weeks together.


sunset-glass-bottle-wall-stained-glass

stained-glass-bottles

glass-bottle-wall-greenhouse

bottle-cap-concrete-floor-decoration

towers-sunrise

timber-balcony

light-through-glass-bottle-wall-adobe

green-bottle-glass-infill-wall

outdoor-indoor-living-space

kitchen-bedrom-the-towers

blue-bottle-circle-round-window

Continue Reading