Currently there are less than 1% of us living carbon-positive lifeways in the rich countries. While taking to the streets is of course important,
it is the day-to-day relationships of the home and community economies that will ultimately replace the old paradigm of extractive-consumptive economics driving so much woe. And even as our gardens lie dormant –
and it's time to rest, make music, fool around and play,
celebrate various rites of passage,
give out responsibilities and roles (such as tending wild apples on common land after being shown how to prune for abundance and against disease),
share celebratory cake, in gathered and op-shopped winter colour,
and begin again the prepping and planting for another growing season (while living off the fruits from the last sun-gifted season) – there are many things to do and many to give to.
We have begun to take volunteers again. Our first for the new season the delightful, gutsy 16 year-old self-schooler Ishaa,
who came to us after spending a few weeks protecting sacred trees near Ararat. This is where we met her and where earlier we'd made a few videos to help grow awareness of that struggle.
Because the dominant culture still puts roads before trees we must stand with local mobs. Here is the story explained by Djab Wurrung warrior, Zellenach Djab Mara.
While it's important to rally and blockade, if we only make demands of governments and don't change within ourselves we are just fiddling while Rome burns.
In Melbourne Woody was captured by news media responding to the question of why he was at the largest climate rally in Australia's history:
He knows life is much more-than-human.
Walk for degrowth, indeed. And bicycle and bike-trailer for degrowth too.
This is what degrowth looks like in action after nearly 10 years of being a carless household:
While having the right tools is important for transition, it's the behavioural and biological changes we can make in our daily lives that are key to real transformation. If political power resides in industrial forms of food, energy, education and medicine etc., then our daily divesting from these things is far more powerful than voting once every few years and more empowering than taking to the street.
Teaching kids to use appropriate tools that can be fixed, sharpened and repurposed is just one example of changing behaviour. Keeping kids out of school is another, either for two days a week like Tom or permanently like Woody.
Woody has spent much of the year saving up for a violin by selling foraged kindling. The pre-loved violin he bought came from the Swap Shop in Melbourne where he traded in his walked-for sticks for musical strings.
He is involved in the household's sifting of potash from the char of our home-fire and he routinely returns such wood-promoting fertiliser back to the forest floor from where he gathers the kindling and we carefully handpick our fuel source – a fuel source that requires no grid, is regenerative and requires ecological thinning. This complete approach to economy, including the making of making returns, is at the heart of neopeasant relocalisation.
Woody is also one of a growing community of shepherds farming without farmland on public land to mitigate increasing bushfire risk and reduce weed dominance.
Goathand co-op, which several households contribute to now, has recently got a gig at the local high school where the goats are eating down blackberries, broom, grass and annual weeds ahead of a large-scale carbon sequestration planting project.
As a co-op committed to new and old forms of land custodianship practices we've run into some hurdles, which we explain here in our second Goathand video:
Is Zero related to our Boer goats? He certainly has their agility.
Life in the home and community economies enables us to drop everything when a child is ready to learn something new, and this means learning is magnified and relational. Forced learning may suit institutional life but it doesn't serve children or their futures. Climate change will radically strip our wealth so we'll need to know how to repair things again, like a favourite torn flanny.
Because there's always loads to do, we have to be well in ourselves in order to keep performing the new-old economies. Preventing disease and staying well will be key as the global economy collapses and the climate gives increasingly louder feedback to its toxic culture of hypertechnocivility. Non-monetised community immunity and wellbeing is central to our transition.
Meg makes garlic kraut at Culture Club. Photo by Mara Ripani |
Well, that's enough from us for another post. If you need a little more food for thought here are some recent talks. This one is Meg and Patrick speaking to the transitioning communities of the Yarra Ranges,
and this one is Patrick's defence and praise of pioneering biota and the great gifts they bring in performing ecological restoration in a climate chaos era.
And this one is a talk we organised late last year to promote indigenous, permacultural and post-capital cross pollinations, which we only released recently.
We hope you enjoyed this little offering, Dear Reader. Spending increasingly less time online means our posts are more infrequent. But sharing a little of what we're up to continues to link us into the global spirit of change for people seeking alternatives well beyond taking to the streets.
Thanks for sharing 🙏
ReplyDeleteAlways fantastic to read what you are up to. I do understand the desire to spend less time online, and at the same time see the need for an online presence of people walking the talk so many others can learn and be inspired.
ReplyDeleteI would love to see a video or writings about living in climate crisis with regards to water. Due to ongoing drought in my region (northern NSW) we have not been allowed to even water our vegetable garden and orchard by hand for many months. It is currently being kept going with grey water, but soon it will be too hot for that to be enough - especially as we are not in the habit of taking loads of showers to generate the grey water! As well, the sun is getting hotter and hotter here making it difficult to establish seedlings in the Spring. We wonder what others are doing to ameliorate this.
We have just installed rainwater tanks for when the drought does break, but in the meantime are looking for ideas to keep growing at least some of our food.
Thanks for all that you do :-)
Madeleine
Thanks Madeleine, that's a wonderful idea! We learnt so much in the ten year drought and acted in preparation for the ones to come. Each year since we've saved up and bought another tank and now we have an ensemble of them linked to every possible catchment point, even small roofs 2x2m. Swales for passive rainwater harvest serve the soil radically, as does 100% grey water recycling. Three dry compost toilets and almost no showering or bathing saves 100,000 litres of water a year. We have just swam through out first winter in Lake Daylesford. The coldest morning was -5 degrees. This is not only for soap-free washing 3 mornings a week, but immunity building and general grief and praise therapy. It sounds horrendous but for we adults we long for it now and feel so alive both in the water and afterwards. So, what a good idea to make a little film of all of this. Bonza!
DeleteThanks so much for your reply, the swimming sounds amazing! There are a couple of women up here who might be able to teach us about making swales so if I cannot plant for the Summer I can be learning instead. Do you think that grey water eventually changes the soil biome? We wash with grey water safe products, Dr Bronners soap bar for hands but looking for something more local.
ReplyDeleteThanks again,
Madeleine
Yes, grey water will change soil biome, but there are things we can do to mitigate the impact. Murray from Peace Farm has a similar grey water system to ours which filters the water and separates the grease. This might be helpful: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uZXMOfkrZYA
DeleteThank you. Just...Thank you.
ReplyDeletePatricia/USA
Great video link, thank you. I can feel a project coming on...
ReplyDeleteMadeleine
It is always such a treat to at some point come to this blog and find more postings appear. I resonate so much with this expressed urgency of enacting degrowth in our daily lives. I really enjoyed the interview with Maya Ward; it was such a sweet companion to me as I often feel lonely in my orientation towards living and I appropriately listened to it preparing apples from the local CSA for use in scrap vinegar and dehydrated snacks.
ReplyDeleteThanks Ella!
Delete