If you had
to pick one feeling that defines our modern world, what would it be? Most
people I know are feeling angrier than they used to, with politics in many
countries growing more polarised and less civil. Most people seem more fearful
than they used to be, despite the fact that they are much safer than most of
their ancestors. Yet the emotion that seems most widespread today, that seems
to come attached to modern life, is helplessness.
You see, almost
everyone I know thinks our modern world is in serious trouble. They know that
pollution is increasing, that the climate is slowly changing, that the rich are
getting richer and the poor poorer. Yet most people I know have no idea what to
do about these problems, other than occasionally voting for someone who seems
like the least awful candidate. Many people I know try to do small things --
recycling, giving to charity -- but they feel like droplets in an ocean. They
feel overwhelmed by the magnitude of the problems we face, and would love to do
their part to improve our situation, but have no idea where to start.
Earlier this
month, I gathered at the village of Cloughjordan, County Tipperary to learn how
to do just that. There the organisation Cultivate held an intensive course in
permaculture, drawing more than two dozen people from eight countries.
Permaculture, strictly speaking, is a system of designing gardens, buildings
and landscapes to re-use as much energy as possible and waste as little as
possible. The courses, though, encompassed far more than gardens or
architecture; they talked about how to local economies; to rebuild communities;
to bury carbon to reverse climate change; to make food at home using everything
from the garden; to skilfully transform waste into soil; and designing
landscapes to work with Nature rather than against it. In short, it was a
course in How Ordinary People Can Save the World.
Cloughjordan
made a perfect venue for such an event, as it contains a community of houses
designed and built to be sustainable. Many use cob walls, straw-bale walls,
steel roofs and other building methods that make the most of natural materials,
generate little waste, re-use as much energy as possible, and will last far
longer than most of today’s houses. Many of the buildings use solar panels or
passive solar design to catch the sun, or have green roofs covered with moss or
grass, giving their homes greenery and insulation.
On the
surrounding lands the members planted 17,000 apple trees of hundreds of
varieties, allowing people to walk around their neighbourhood and harvest an
abundance of food. Nearby fields produce food for the village, beehives
pollinate the area and provide honey, and vegetables are grown in nearby fields.
The “eco-village” has its own bakery, whose owner delivers bread daily to
subscribers, and its members have formed other enterprises as well.
All these
enterprises make the village far more ecological, less wasteful, and more resilient
in the face of crisis, than most of our communities today. It’s still a work in
progress, as is the permaculture philosophy -- but as Davie Phillip of
Cultivate put it, permaculture is an evolving, open-source toolkit, a body of
knowledge that people around the world are constantly adding to.
One word
most often used to describe such places is “sustainable,” but as guest speaker
Albert Bates put it, sustainability is a low goal, as it implies just treading
water. The goal of the organisation is not to sustain the world at its present
levels of consumption and waste, but to reverse the trends of the last century
or two, to return to a world that runs on low levels of energy while giving up
the benefits of modern life.
Most of our
human civilisation right now is based on huge constant inputs of new energy, which
we get from fossil fuels. Burning them is disrupting our normal weather
patterns - all to make products that we often don’t need, that don’t usually
make us happy, and that are quickly thrown away. The Cultivate course brought
together some of the world’s best minds to propose a new way forward for our
civilisation.
Those seem like ambitious goals for people with modest means, but the people who gathered there are like seeds -- we left the course armed with the knowledge and training to improve our small corner of the world, connected to a global network of others doing the same. Movements like this are the cure for feeling helpless.
Over the
next few weeks I’ll be writing more about the course, but first, a request for
help. After the course had ended the village suffered a fire, and their barn
burned down. No one was hurt, but they are asking for help in rebuilding.
Anyone wanting to help this worthy cause can make a donation at: https://gogetfunding.com/cloughjordanfarm/
Photo: Sunset over the Cloughjordan orchards
Photo: Sunset over the Cloughjordan orchards
4 comments:
Yes, individually we’re ineffectual but that’s no reason to not do anything. The very least we can do is write letters to media and politicians and councillors. It’s worth it - a small gesture that helps keep them grounded to those who vote for them. A written/typed letter is more effective in these days of digital avalanches.
“Be the change” etc is really the first step though. If you cannot change yourself or your lifestyle, you have little right to try to change others or complain about their actions.
There’s a pdf on the web called “The Flametree Project” which, while slightly dated now, is still an excellent blueprint for individual action that doesn’t impinge on others’ freedoms.
The basic premise is reduction in energy and resource use by around 10% per annum over 15 years.
David
David,
I'll look up the Flametree Project -- thanks for the tip. I completely agree, we need to be the change we want, and raise our children to go farther down the path home.
Brian, it will be very interesting to see how your encounter with permaculture influences you. In fact, given your writings, I was somewhat surprised to learn that you had NOT taken a PDC yet! Best of luck as you move forward with this new set of tools...
G wizard, I'm surprised it took me this long as well, but I had to save up money and vacation days for it, and until my daughter became a teenager she took up all of them. :-)
Thank you!
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