Showing posts with label building. Show all posts
Showing posts with label building. Show all posts

Friday, 12 January 2018

Artist as extended family: our year with Jeremy Yau

As you might already know, Jeremy lived with us for the past year, learning and teaching, loving and sharing. This was his house, which we built with him and dubbed The Yause. And this is his story while living at Tree Elbow, told through our eyes and a shared catalogue of pics.


Jeremy arrived in early 2017 and immediately got involved in our everyday processes of living with baskets of skills and knowledges and very little money. He came for a week as a SWAP, and he stayed a year.


From different corners of the world, Connor and Marta had also just recently arrived at Tree Elbow, where they fell in love and (later) got hitched. With all three on deck we had a very productive time.


Food is big at Tree Elbow. It is life, liberty, health, ecology and energy. Jeremy soon understood how serious we take food and energy resources; how these often taken for granted things equate exactly to how each of us touch the earth.


Growing, preserving, fermenting, storing and cooking food became part of Jeremy's day to day. But this was not entirely new to him. Before coming to Tree Elbow he'd been an intern at Milkwood Farm, completed a horticulture certificate and a PDC, he'd volunteered as a community gardener, WWOOFed at various places and established a mini food forest at his parent's house in Sydney.


With so many staying at Tree Elbow, we needed more accommodation. Patrick offered to give Jeremy an informal building apprenticeship like he had with James and Zeph the year before.


The building had to go up fast, but we'd already saved materials from the local skip bins and tip.


Materials were also gifted and found online. Jeremy learnt most of the processes of building right through to putting ends and pops in the reclaimed spouting.


With the colder weather approaching, we needed to get the Yause, as Meg auspiciously named it, completed.


And we also had to get the glasshouse started.


It was a busy time, and a time of great learnings and hard yakka.


And while we were harvesting food, filling the cellar, building the Yause and the glasshouse, we also had to gather firewood for the winter from forests on the edge of town that are prone to fuel-reduction burns,


and waste wood material from a nearby mill for the humanure system.


We were all fairly exhausted by the end of Autumn, and the winter promised gentler labours. Jeremy used his horticulture skills to graft medlar scions onto hawthorn in the nearby commons.


He started carving things, such as this spoon, which he ate most of his meals with.


He learned new skills and passed them on. Woody was an eager student.


Jeremy made this small biochar furnace following our design and material salvaged trips to the tip. It works a treat!


Being an accomplished welder Jeremy made up these lugs for our back bike wheels at the local Men's Shed so we can hitch our trailers to them.


He made this little low-tech rocket stove, modelled on designs from David Holmgren's forthcoming book.


Jeremy starred in the trailer for that forthcoming book. The trailer was produced by Patrick and Anthony Petrucci.


Jeremy also starred in his own video showing the forge he made with scrap material from the tip, while at Tree Elbow. Anthony made the video for him in exchange for bike services Jeremy did on Ant's family's bikes. Participating in the extensive gift economy that exists locally was a revelation for Jeremy, and one he took to wholeheartedly.


One of the many things Woody and Jeremy liked to do was make a 'road train' (with the lugs) and head up to the skatepark for some wheelie good times.


Jeremy also taught Woody how to ride a flaming scooter. Hell yeah!


Jeremy also retrofitted old parts from the tip to make a new bike seat for Woody on the back of Meg's bike.


Over the year we became increasingly impressed with his technical skills.


Making all manners of things with materials that were either wild harvested or came from the tip. Most of these items he gave to people as gifts.


He made a coat rack for the Yause.


As it got colder he learnt from us how to knit with homemade needles made from hawthorn. This little scarf didn't come off him between the months of June and September.


He made a more significant rocket stove at the men's shed.


He learned to tan hides and make other useful things,


assisting at workshops with his friend Josh from the Bush Tannery.


Earlier in the year he attended Claire Dunn's natural fire-making workshop with Zeph and Connor,


and with these two and Patrick walked for three days along the Goldfields track

sleeping rough and eating bush foods along the way.


Jeremy became a regular in the community, often seen flashing around on his bike through the town's streets.



and regularly attending the monthly working bees at the community garden.


By the last month of the year he'd turned out just as every bit odd as everyone else around here. An anthropologist friend calls Daylesford the town of black sheep. Yay for black sheep!


We did a lot of celebrating life this year, and we loved Jeremy's spirit, joining in and relishing the looseness.


We finished the year with strut.


We're going to miss you Jeremy Yau, and all the fun things we did together.

We're going to miss you in a really big way.


Thank you for what you brought to Tree Elbow, Jeremy, and for what you brought to our community. You are always welcome here. With much love,

Artist as Family

Monday, 12 June 2017

The buildings, growings, gatherings and storings of this regenerative age

It's been a busy 6 months of building, producing, gathering and crafting, so busy in fact that we haven't had a moment to blog. Until today.

Teaching younger folk to build has been our focus over the past year, starting with James and Zeph building The Cumquat, then more recently, Connor, Jeremy and Marta helping with the north-facing greenhouse.






We've built a number of other buildings too, including the Yause (named after Jeremy Yau, who came to SWAP with us in February and has been here ever since).


Jeremy moved into the Yause after just 7 weeks of building.


We also built the Cookhouse, the name we gave our low-tech sauna.


We used local cypress timber and discarded sheep's wool to line the inside of Zeph's old cubby, and we found an old wood heater at the tip which we bought for $30 and restored with a lick of stove paint. Thanks Zeph!


It works a treat!


We also installed more water tanks for further veggie production (nearly everything we spend money on is intended to take us away from further requiring it),


To preserve our gifted old timber windows (thanks Vasko!), Connor painted them before the rains set in.


and we started work on the Smithy, where Jeremy and Patrick will be setting up a blacksmith and wood crafting workshop to teach others.


There have been many other smaller projects we have worked on this year, such as completing the cellar – building more storage for our preserves, ferments, booze and cheeses. We are so close to going fridge-less now! Just a cool cupboard to build and a fridge to offload.


Home production has also been extensive with many hands making light work. Buster, who rode her bicycle from Brisbane, came to SWAP with us and hung about with Woody, decking the trampoline with summer fruit to sun-preserve. Thanks Buster!


Our bees have had a remarkable first season, storing food for themselves and for us in the near completed anti-aviary.


We robbed them of a third of their summer production,


obtaining a whopping 15 kgs out of a total of 45 kgs of honey that they produced in just 6 months. Astounding! Thank you beautiful creatures.


The annual veggie production began to ramp up again too,


and not only did we learn more about bees from our friends at Milkwood Permaculture, we learnt a thing or two about intensive veggie production too. We have begun to double dig all our beds.


Home production of perennials has also increased this year with plants such as hops for brewing and for sleepytime tea,


and kiwi fruits, which tease Woody with their unripeness well into early winter.


We have been gathering other perennial crops in the garden too, such as acorns – harvesting them for pancake meal and beer making,


and gathering together for all sorts of events with kin and community. From community garden working bees and free workshops that we've organised,




to fermenting workshops, including Culture Club's wonderful community pickling day,


mushroom and weed foraging workshops that we've led,


and Friday night local food gatherings, which we've hosted weekly at Tree Elbow.


We've had so many remarkable guests stay with us over the past 6 months. David Asher came from Canada to share his passion for wild fermented raw cheeses,


permaculture teacher, Penny Livingston-Stark, came and feasted with our community and shared her remarkable story alongside David Holmgren,


cousin Pepper and Ra were regular visitors,


comedian Lawrence Leung (who slept in the Yause) and independent filmmaker, Celeste Geer, came with a crew to film for Catalyst,


and of course our three long-term SWAPs, Connor and Marta (here stacking a fine compost on the nature strip),


and Jeremy (here working on a forge blower he's making from discarded material), have all been stalwarts at Tree Elbow this year.


Long term resident Zero, a huge personality in a little dog suit, will turn 49 this winter, rendering him the most significant elder of Artist as (extended) Family,


and while Zeph has been extricating himself from Artist as Family collaborations, he still makes regular appearances (often with friend Owen) to Tree Elbow, bringing his zest for disruption, bravado and beautiful independence, and keeping us all on our toes. Onya Zeph!


The way we get around and retrieve resources, or go out to participate in the community is very much about our continued practice of a low carbon consciousness. Bikes are essential for this cultural and economic transition. We've been car-less now for seven years!


Riding and walking into yet another wet and cold season means we are once again hardy to the change of weather. While community friends and other loved ones fall sick around us, colds and flu will be a long time coming into our neo-peasant home.


Walked-for, dug, and directly-picked food, dirt on hands, active and accountable living and mobility, goodly sleep, and generally being outside all gather as the ingredients for a health-filled, resilient and low-carbon life. While this is not THE solution to the many varied problems of industrialisation, it is for us a genuine response to the predicament of our age.


We hope you have found some spirit here, spirit to aid your resolve as we find strength and inspiration in yours. For those interested in a deeper unpacking of our practice and of our cultural fermentations, Patrick has an essay just published in Garland magazine. If you have similar life hacks you would like to share with us or any other Qs related to how we live, please leave a comment or send us a message. (NB: Trolls will be composted.)

Over for now,
much loving and flowing of gifts to you, and from and to the worlds of the world,
Artist as Family