Salmon Leaping - photo by Phillip Colla |
Sunday, 19 February 2017
CLEARING
Sunday, 5 February 2017
BIODYNAMICS WORKS
garlic doing well - planted back in december |
chillies and tomatoes sprouting away - it's cool having the propagator in the cottage so we can watch plant power in action |
We planted the garlic in the photo on a good garlic-planting day and, sure enough, up it came beautifully. I was interested to notice, by the way, that Stewart and Helen's saved-from-last-season garlic came up much more strongly than some bought in this year, even though it was top quality. Similarly, the chillies and tomatoes we planted have come up well though it's also interesting to notice that the chillies were planted on the ideal day and have come up better than the tomatoes which we planted the day after. So give it a go, Ruth works with Maria Thun's Biodynamic Calendar, easy to get hold of and just a few £'s. At the end of the day it's simply about working gently and cleverly with Mother Nature rather than trying to bend her to your will with brute force and dumb chemicals - so what's stopping you?
Monday, 16 January 2017
MASANOBU FUKUOKA - "THE ONE-STRAW REVOLUTION"
"Drifting Clouds and the Illusion of Science" |
But I think the even more important revolution that the book describes, in his charming style, is Fukuoka's internal journey. Moments of insight, the alienation from the modern industrial consumerist approach to life, the gradual deeper understanding of natural processes, all leading to a simple life looking after fields and orchards, growing and eating simple natural food.
It's poignant that this book has been around since the 1970's - all my working life. Fukuoka's insights have been influential, widely read and talked about yet here's humankind still entangled in the terrible web of supermarket consumerism, cars and fossil fuel addiction and the shallow information of mass media, internet and TV; the harder we dig ourselves into the industrial way of life the harder it is to escape, the situation now so bad that we are endangering all life on the planet. I've understood all that for years, I helped friends on an organic small-holding way back in 1976, and have been actively looking about and living on ecological projects for ten years. Yet in all that time I've never found people living as naturally as Fukuoka and Ruth and I still use a car and get the bulk of our food from supermarkets...
Here's some of Fukuoka's last words, "There is nowhere better than this world. Years ago I realized that we human beings are good just as we are and I set about to enjoy my life. I took a carefree road back to nature, free from human knowledge and effort."
Monday, 26 December 2016
2017, Your Inner Trump & You, The Triune Brain, Global Consciousness... and more...
It's easy, and such good fun, to ridicule politicians and don't they, mostly, just thoroughly deserve it? What an extraordinary amount of scum seems to have floated to the top in 2016...
But hold on a minute, what do they represent? Don't they actually represent us? At least a part of each of us that we pretend isn't there, fearful, xenophobic, kept hidden deep down, like an embarrassing monster relative. It's well explained by the Triune Brain model,
"Anyone who wants power shouldn't have it." |
Sunday, 21 August 2016
Ten Years After...
It's coming up for ten years since my first post on my original ian's eco blog, though I'd been concerned about environmental issues and followed them since the 1970's I hadn't actually done an awful lot in a practical way. Reports of the sudden loss of ice in Arctic made me suddenly realise that many of the predictions were coming true, and a lot quicker than had been anticipated. So what could anyone do? What was sustainable living exactly? Was anyone doing it?
Looking for the answers to those sorts of questions has led me on a fascinating and fun journey, also challenging at times, through Portugal and the UK, meeting people and working on lots of different projects. Back then, I was living in a terraced house on the busy seafront road that runs from Brighton westwards along the coast. Now I'm living in a timber clad caravan, "the LogCabavan", in an orchard on a hill farm, with another move, back to Scotland, just around the corner...
And here we are, ten years later, with a report in the Guardian today, "Next year or the year after the Arctic will be free of ice." |
Looking for the answers to those sorts of questions has led me on a fascinating and fun journey, also challenging at times, through Portugal and the UK, meeting people and working on lots of different projects. Back then, I was living in a terraced house on the busy seafront road that runs from Brighton westwards along the coast. Now I'm living in a timber clad caravan, "the LogCabavan", in an orchard on a hill farm, with another move, back to Scotland, just around the corner...
Thursday, 21 April 2016
Oak Trees - Ships of the Landscape
We've been planting lots of trees here on the farm, hazels, willows, cherries, rowan, blackthorn, hawthorn and, mixed in here and there with them all, some oaks...
How
amazing to hold in your hand for a moment a baby oak, which might grow into a mature tree and live for anything up to a thousand years, like the old oaks just found on
Churchill's estate. How much human nonsense have they lived through? It also made
me think just how wonderful these oaks are, like ships of the landscape. True
treasure ships, roaring in the wind as they travel through time, sheltering
such rich abundancies of life. True gold, not the vain gold of oligarchs,
bishops and princes. Even after death these golden-hearted oaks go on serving
us with their stout timber, in framework that can last for hundreds more
years...
Thursday, 27 August 2015
Towards a Deeper Reality
I often find myself encouraging people to be a wee bit more open minded.
The accepted, establishment, "scientifically proven" view of the world takes us through life like a train on tracks. We're supposed to sit docilely, like well-behaved children in class, looking out of the window, only seeing what we've been told we can see, so we'll be good little cogs in the establishment machine.
Well I for one sometimes want to get up onto the roof of the train or even get off the train altogether. So how do we do that?
The accepted, establishment, "scientifically proven" view of the world takes us through life like a train on tracks. We're supposed to sit docilely, like well-behaved children in class, looking out of the window, only seeing what we've been told we can see, so we'll be good little cogs in the establishment machine.
Well I for one sometimes want to get up onto the roof of the train or even get off the train altogether. So how do we do that?
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