3.25.2009

Thinking of home(s)

Over the last few years I've become increasingly interested in sustainable and alternatively designed homes. Low-impact design, permaculture, locally made/found materials---these are all things that are admirable in any home. With the ticky-tacky prefab developments spewing across the suburban landscape, it is about time we start looking at other ways to build homes. Furthermore--with the housing market in the shitter for the time being--there's time to think (or at least dream) of other ways of building.



Before thinking about coming to Korea, I tinkered with the idea of heading to New Mexico as a volunteer intern for a group of architects who practice Earthship Biotecture. These homes are amazing! I went to a screening of the movie Garbage Warrior last year in Madison, and I immediately looked up info on the builders. Basically, these homes are made of old bottles (glass and plastic), aluminum cans, and tires. These materials are made into bricks by filling them with mud and adobe, then these bricks make the foundation for the homes. The materials are predominantly either recycled or naturally indigenous to the area in which the home is to be built. The website doesn't work in Korea, so I can't write on more specifics, but these things are cool! They were originally built in desert areas but I think there are some in other, wetter, colder states now! The construction and situation of the homes makes it possible to heat/cool the homes in due weather. There are also water capture/purification systems and renewable energy systems. All in all, these homes are self-sufficient with very little post-construction costs. Also, the group has gone to disaster areas to help rebuild people's lost homes--think Katrina and tsunamis, where there is a lot of garbage and debris left to work with and very few surviving homes. Very cool.

(First picture is an earthsip built in 2007, the second is a picture of a recycled bottle wall)



I started thinking about housing after I stumbled upon this site for a low-impact woodland home in Wales. In my later college years I thought about how practical it would be to build a home underground. It seemed like it would work better in non-desert places. I asked some architects at a local sustainability fair a little about it who said that this idea had been experimented with in the sixties and seventies but the building often had mildew, mold and humidity problems. The savings associated with climate control (the temperature a few feet beneath the soil is fairly constant) were largely offset by humidity control and mildew removal. Also, these houses have little to no light--which is pretty hard on the ol' biological clock. So, I abondoned that thought, however novel I thought it was.








So, when I came upon this hobbit-like house the other day, I was pretty excited! This house was built in 2005 and it supposedly remains in good shape. It was built with hay bales, materials from the surrounding area and some purchased materials for windows and flooring and the like. It ended up only costing about $6000 for a cool, one of a kind, low-impact, fairly large home. A home which allows the dwellers to practically live in nature, without the creepy crawlies and the elements to bother them.





Finally, these homes are pieces of art--who wouldn't want to live in an original piece, made to suit your own needs, tastes and desires? Well...scratch that. I'm sure there are many who do not, but for those of us who do, look at these. Even if you aren't going to build a new home soon, or ever, they are fun to dream about.

3.10.2009

The Butterfly Effect


I just looked at this BBC In Pictures Article about the risks that deforestation pose on the overwintering monarch butterflies near Mexico City. The captions are fairly sad, but thinking of monarchs stirs up some nostalgia--memories of childhood in Minnetonka.

One summer, we found some eggs on the underside of milkweed plants that grew along the bike trail behind our house. We raised the little eggs into grand monarch butterflies in an aquarium on our deck. We watched them hatch, grow fat eating what was once their home, hang as pupas from the screen cover on the aquarium and finally break free from their dark caccoon, slowly drying and stretching their wings before flying free, on their way to Mexico. I had all but forgotten about this little experiment...Being a child is so great--carefree, watching the miracle and mystery of life unfold in front of your eyes behind the glass of an aquarium in the still, shaded safety of a deck your dad built.

I do miss those days and think of them fondly. Watching children now and trying to expose them to some of those mysteries in life are what make me excited about becoming (and I guess, kind of being) a teacher.

The fact that these endangered butterflies--something that my environmentalist sides wants to protect and give a voice to--remind me of my days of childhood. On the same vein I want to instill that feeling of protection in today's youth through awe and wonder. Strange how thoughts progress, strange how that butterfly affect can produce changes in brain waves too...

I'm in a pseudo-philosophical rambly mood. A good day to teach To Be in the past, present, and future tenses.

3.06.2009

Hemp is good for you and me!

http://store.hempest.com/catalog/default.php

I don't know if my recent re-visiting to all things slightly hippy is a result of the upcoming Phish reunion, the beautiful weather or just an attempt to recollect myself and my ideals. I have been perusing the internet for all things Me and You and Everyone We Know and how our consumption affects the environment a lot more than usual as of late.

I just stumbled upon this store called "The Hempest." It is based in Boston but also sells products on-line. This store is really cool. If you are looking for new digs check it out! I really think that hemp is a material that we need to embrace a little more. While this incredibly utilitarian and versatile material has seen praise in the recent years, I think it still needs to have a further and deeper spread in society!! It can be used for clothing (The clothing has gotten softer too!), paper, housing materials, fuel, food, household products and hygenic materials! The fibers of hemp are the longest and most durable out of any agriculturally grown textile crop in the world! Aka, you're clothes will take forever to wear out! the saying goes: “Hemp doesn’t wear out, it wears in.” The uses can go on and on! AAANNNDDD it's native to so many of the world's geographic areas.

What is there not to love?! I know some conservative folks out there think you can get all loopy and goofy from wearing a hemp sweater...but you can't! Hemp is NOT marijuana! They're just sisters. Mary Jane got nearly all of the THC and Hempy got the brawn.

I, however badly I'd like to break the habit, really enjoy a nice wardrobe and great style. I also like thrifting, but there's something special and crispy about new digs. Instead of feeding the cotton industry that depletes the soil and uses harsh chemicals in it's treatment process, buy some hemp!

Check out this site, and look at the goodies, eco-fashion at its best. Have a good day :)

My mom found this article as well: http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=view_all&address=389x2148805#2148840
it's a great blog with threads that lead in almost every direction.

3.03.2009

Happy Birthday to a very special man...

Not you! you silly willy goon
your birthday's in june
today is the birthday of a most special man
he wrote and he wrote and he wrote like you and i can

he was a dictory doctor of sortity sorts
by the name of seuss, under that name he did wrote
of nonsensical biddies in the lands of the mind
an inspiration to many--but you may have to travel far to find
these loopy goofy whakoooofy balls
who slink in the deserts and scale the walls

Of the world around us he told great tales
for many of us put the wind in our sails

So, to Dr. Seuss I say thank you kind sir! I thank thee!!
for tales a plenty to fill all aged kiddies with gleeful glee.

"I like nonsense, it wakes up the brain cells. Fantasy is a necessary ingredient in living, It's a way of looking at life through the wrong end of a telescope. Which is what I do, And that enables you to laugh at life's realities." ~Dr. Seuss (March 2, 1904 – September 24, 1991)

3.02.2009

Yay for students


Hahahaa, I wish these were a little easier to see, but this comic is hilarious! totally reminds me of my students.