
Yes, I know, I'm suppose to be posting on how our building is going. We have had our share of luck, both good and bad, with this dream home building adventure business. I'll get into the bad some other time, let's just say we're direly realizing that the cost of building on our beloved Horniman is counteracting our whole intention of moving out here to live out a simpler life (less work, but more real work in terms of growing our own produce, perhaps animals to milk, pursuing other interests, not just me). Anyway, the dream's still on but we're exploring other options just for reality check's sake.
On to the good news! The Kootenay Permaculture Institute selected our property as one of their sample cases for the students of their 2007 summer intensive to study. It rocked. The students all met us at our property and me and Craig talked about the story of our dreams and intentions for the land and all the students (from all over, including the Southern States, a long lost Do Be Clean employee and one girl from Brazil!) hunkered down over the weekend to scheme up designs for our land that will best suit our needs in a permaculture kind of way. I blabbed on about goats, sheep, chickens, yoga studio in the forest, little playground area next to the garden and wouldn't it be cool to have a meditation nook next to the shores of the Horniman Brook (that's how we got the name incase you didn't know)? Craig was a little more stoicly Debbie Downer style and shared how we are confronting expensive issues with septic, water and just generally dealing with the craziness of bureaucracy, new codes and the increasing cost of building. Still, this has been too cool because we have been reading up on permaculture for years, we have even wanted to take this program this year but thought we would be busy building, and it was nice to get some trained eyes on our situation and site potential. Here's some of what they came up with:
Ahhhh, permaculture. Something about the philosophy of the lazy man's approach to gardening and stewarding the land speaks volumes to me. This study embraces working with nature as oppose to wrestling her into dust to reap some Gaia booty (pirate booty, not Beyonce booty). Thanks for visiting the Horniman, you guys and I'll leave you with a quote from Wikipedia: " Renowned environmentalist Dr. David Suzuki has stated: "What permaculturists are doing is the most important activity that any group is doing on the planet.""