Leach field hijinks

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Down in the pit

Finally it was time to be done with aesthetic finishes and get involved in something I was really interested in, the leach field, I’m not your average gal. For me food and water are the keys to sustainability, a super comfortable and pretty stained glass bunker is all very nice, but in temperate Melbourne unnecessary to survival. Wouldn’t you agree? Most people I’ve talked to on the Mesa are more interested in the novelty of food growing with the ubiquitous banana plant and habitually take the 30-40 minute drive to town to stock up at CID’s. It just seems a little strange to me, a eco house with a greenhouse full of tropical ornamentals. It’s just the attitude to food of people everywhere I guess, but I didn’t expect it here. I’ve heard there is a guy called Danny here who is knee deep in humanure production and permaculture so I need to hunt him down.

Just because people don’t, doesn’t mean they can’t though.In the middle of the desert, the earthships can collect enough water and heat to grow year round. The black water system is not dissimilar to the grey water and they’re surprisingly simple so whilst I’ll refer you to the earthship website for particulars I’ll talk you through what we did.


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The leach field is really as long as you can afford as materials and the price of excavation can be limiting. 40 feet long and 3 feet deep below the PVC pipe inlet from the septic system. We used the site level to ensure it sloped 6 inches from one end to another so the black water didn’t just pool at the inlet end.


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We lined the pit with used plastic to prevent the EPDM waterproof membrane from getting holes. the membrane was cut so it was only a foot or so below the top of the hole. (Excuse the imperial, I’m not in metric land anymore.) We folded over an inch of the edge and nailed it to the pit’s earth walls making sure it was not too tight to avoid the nails ripping the membrane when it is weighed down with gravel and earth.


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the inlet brings in the blackwater, the solids have been separated out by the septic. It is very important that the overflow on the other end is lower than the inlet by at lest 4 inches to prevent blackwater flowing back into the building. The holes in the pipe allow the water to enter the leach field. It must be level and the “rock bulb” of river rocks holds the pipe in place.

In the grey water botanical cell the water from the basins and shower are filtered through the inlet by what use to be a woman’s stocking before entering the botanical cell, once it has gone through the rocks and plant roots it’s used to flush toilets, a pump is required for thisat the outlet end.


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The perforated pipe is covered with plastic so the gravel doesn;t block the holes.



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The waterproof membrane must be above the outlet pipe and when the whole is made in the membrane a clamping collar it fitted so water doesn’t leach under the liner.


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Then 2 feet of gravel for the black water to drain through.


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Then straw and sand to weigh it down. Then after this you can pretty much fill it like a no dig garden bed with compost, straw, etc. then when it’s finished they plant deciduous trees due to the harsh climate. It’s funny that if you don’t use enough water this system actually gets into trouble, people really need to know their house to have it working right, as it should be. Don’t flush too much without washing your hands or having a shower! That’s why the system would have to be modified for commercial use. Anyway that’s enough about blackwater, what of the intern shenanigans of the day?


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Do as the weeks wore on the interns got tired of sand and dirt and there was a lot more hijinks on site between wheelbarrows full of mortar. When filling barrows with dirt stopped being fun Joe wheeled Jason around between breaks, Ron knew exactly the right time to deliver donuts to keep up moral and rocks became juggling balls.


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Then after a hard day in the dust we let our hair down at the Alley Cantina. Dancing to a live band and an introduction to shuttleboard; wordplay duels with a cowboy and rocking out to RESPECT by Aretha. Then home in high spirits with a slightly worse for wear Jason coming out of his shell and speaking in an Irish accent he didn’t have before and a penchant for touching people’s faces (how the hell did he keep his fingers so soft in this dry climate, tell me your secret!). It was all a great time, one of our best nights, but all things must be tempered with a little sobriety. Poor old “Minnesota, you betcha” Jason fell asleep in his chair at the Towers and clonked his eyebrow on the floor. Woken by a sheepish Sam we checked him for concussion and then when he checked out left him be too his incoherent grumbling, Good luck Sam. It was funny once we knew it wasn’t going to end in tragedy. Ah youths.



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In Taos Town

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A cruisy day


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The house slowly began to wake up as sun struggled through overcast skies. First the fridge, then the floor slab heating and then joy of joys at 10:30 the lights came on and brought with it the precious Wi-Fi. I never said we were living rough, I saw a meme recently that said if trees produced fast internet we’d have covered the earth in trees, sadly they only produce the oxygen we breath. Ah the world i upside down, no? I spent the rest of the day catching up on posts and I hope that I’m not just wasting the precious energy used to power this blog and that you dear reader are getting something to inspire you in your journey to touching the world more lightly.

While we waited Jason began strumming his guitar working his way into full one man band mode with harmonica and tambourine by mid morning, we slowly slinked back to our warm beds to be rocked by the gentle melodies. I begsn drawing again, my sketchbook has been staring me with blank dissapproval for some weeks and it was a relief to reacquaint myself with my right brain’s wordless depths. a delicious breakfast on a cooking stove, hot tea and we realised how little we needed electricity if we lived a more low key life, and how wonderful it would be.


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Night was laying a blanket over the mountains as Jason drove us into town to meet Sam and his girlfriend at the Taos Inn. The light was soft and warm as it died so I walked around town while they ate nachos and bourbon tasters. I was almost too late for photos, but enjoyed exploring. A deserted plaza, the glow of traffic lights in the dusk, giant metal flowers sprouting from a front garden and snow caped mountains as a backdrop. As the chill set in I returned to the soft couches of the Inn and devoured the leftover nachos, then a shared plate of sweet potato fries and fish tacos. It as not a study in moderation, but as a girl who lives through her taste buds it was some kind of heaven.

Laina had driven 6 hours that should have been 4 in a whiteout with a nervous natured dog. She was super stoked to relax and even more so to hear in detail how it is best to kill a chicken humanly for the table, people will always surprise you. Then the live musician bega to strum and whirled us away with his guitar, fingers impossibly fast and voice low and mellow. Then n the way home we met Sam’s beautiful dog Tyson who would not have a bar of us doing a side eyed bac away whenever we approached unless there were treats involved. Then home with Jason with Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeros singing us into the night.


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First Snow

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A visit to Taos Ski Valley.


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Sleepy on Saturday we almost decided to stay at home, luckily we had the ever-enthused Sam, or we woul have missed out on a perfect day. It looked dreary and verging on drizzle as we ascended out of the Mesa, but as we pulled into the ski valley parking lot little kernels of corn snow began falling. I held out my hands and just starred at it for a while melting on my glove, every now and then catching a few that looked like little stars. It was my first time at the snow, I was a kid again, everything was new, it was a day of grinning.

The towers crew began to hike up the mountain, people we chatted to couldn’t understand why we wouldn’t just take the shuttle to the top, they just didn’t get it. We threw snow and watch it fall, I was ambushed by snowballs and of course Dylan ran and ran. The ground looked reborn, fresh and crisp. We walked in each others footprints and when we veered from the path sank to our knees.

We trekked until the footprints ahead of us began disappearing under powder, then double paced down to the Bavarian where bar wenches wore lace and something akin to lederhosen. The beer steins were as tall as my forearm and we ate mountain priced beer battered chips and trout like we hadn’t seen food before.

Then we bundled out into the snow again. A snow plough passed and left an icy slide in its wake. We slipped and slided, landing hard. The boys began “ice surfing” on their feet down to the valley. Then sleepy, so sleepy we returned to the towers where our Den Mother, Griffin, told us stories about grave robbing and schemes of how to get Sam skiing up the mountain for free which involved hiding in a ski lift hut overnight. Then our lights went out, we’d run out of electricity, and it was time for bed.


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Dust & Desert

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windy weather on the mesa


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The wind whipped up on the Mesa as the excavator started digging the pit for the blackwater leachfield. Wind and dust blew from the west into eyes and ears and noses. The bottle wall grew higher and we found ourselves hanging over parapets and slip sliding down the steep slope with bottles and mortar in hand in fits of giggles.

Exhausted and crusted in cement and dust we couldn’t wait to get showered and on the road again for happy hour pizza, this time with nearly the whole gang of interns. Over dinner the conversation turned to best injury and of course Bris pulled out all the stops including teo broken arms at the same time and a massive gash on the head from friendly grappling. For me Sam won though with his skiing injury inflicted by a wayward grandma that left his spleen on show. Yum yum eat up!

Then with high spirits we drove to the hot springs, with headtorches on high we trekked the fifteen minutes into the gorge over rocks and boulders. Two people and a dog were already there and were unimpressed to share the small pool with seventeen odd extras. The water was perfect and the rocks soft with long silky moss. We chatted and watched out for shooting stars in oh so much sky, each star slowly twinkling out as the clouds rolled over. We didn’t know it then, but snow was waiting for the new day.



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