Category

Homesteading

Autumn is for Remodeling

By Homesteading
New House in Kentucky

Our new home in Kentucky, very unlike our other homes

Last fall, we traveled back to our former home in Missouri to bring our straw bale & timber frame house to completion. It was six weeks of non-stop work, including finishing the interior clay plaster and exterior lime plaster, wiring the house for electric, loading the living roof with more topsoil to fill in some bare spots, shoring up our custom wood spiral staircase… all for the purposes of making the home more sellable.

This fall, we’re working on something a little bit different. We’re right in the middle of remodeling our new house here in Kentucky, a very different home from the one we had built from the ground up in Missouri. It’s a very conventional stick frame structure, with vinyl siding, an asphalt shingle roof, fiberglass insulation, and very thin walls…

It’s an odd feeling to own such a conventional home after living in my own natural homes for the past seven years. However, we’re taking a lot of time to personalize the space and give it a big boost in the aesthetics and functionality department. Things are shaping up nicely…

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Restoring Vitality into the Land

By Permaculture, Homesteading
east slope into draw_20007536583_l

This land represents so much powerful potential for health

A few weeks ago, I took photos all over our newly acquired land to have good documentation for the future. In the coming years, we will no doubt re-envision this place, build new infrastructure, shape the land, and introduce new plants and animals. It’s exciting to think about tapping into the potential of this land, and restoring more vigor and vitality.

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2015 Permaculture Design Course Highlights

By Homesteading, Permaculture
Walking Around the Pond

Circling the upper pond at the beautiful Moretown homestead site

Three words come to mind when I think about the experience of participating in the Whole Systems Design Permaculture Design Course: full, filling, and fulfilling. It was an intensely packed 10 days of learning, and the long hours were thoroughly nourishing. Exhausting at times, but totally rewarding all the same. There was so much to think about and discuss that it was hard to pull away and find some decent sleep at night. At the closure of the course, I came away deeply satisfied, more confident than ever before in the journey towards establishing a home for myself that’s in alignment with my vision.

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Settling Back In After a Permaculture Whirlwind

By Homesteading, Permaculture
barn - view of pond

An amazing view out to the field & ponds from the barn

Earlier last week, I got back from Vermont after attending a 10 day Permaculture Design Course (PDC) with Whole Systems Design. Let me tell you, it’s taken me a few days to fall back into the groove of things here after a very rich, fulfilling, and thoroughly intense experience. It was a joy to participate. The days were long and full of great conversation and new ideas. It was actually quite moving at times and gave me lots of opportunity to think about what I want not just from the land we’ve recently come into, but from life overall.

I’ve barey begun going through my photos in hopes of writing a summary of my experience. While I do that, I want to at least share a few enticing photos from the journey. Here ya go… stay tuned for more of an in-depth rundown soon.

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A Brief Update & Some Bonus Land Photos

By Permaculture, Homesteading

bottom pasture - looking south

Tomorrow, April and I head east. I’ll be attending a PDC at Whole Systems Research Farm in Vermont for 10 days. I’ve been eagerly anticipating this trip since the spring, and the timing couldn’t be better. This fall, we’ll be moving onto our new land and the next year will be full of visioning and designing and making plans for the land and the future. I suspect a lot of the new knowledge I come home with after the PDC will be very helpful for our design process.

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Why I’m Taking a Permaculture Design Course

By Homesteading, Permaculture
Whole Systems Design Research Farm

The Whole Systems Research Farm, where I’m headed in August 

I’m awfully excited about the upcoming month. In August, I’m headed to the Whole Systems Research Farm in Vermont to take a Permaculture Design Certificate Course (PDC). In this case, it’s an  intensive workshop and immersion in designing and maintaining resilient farms and homesteads, based on the principles and techniques of permaculture design. Basically… it’s 10 days learning about forest gardens, water management, perennial plants, scything, self-sufficiency, and maintaining high yield / low input food landscapes.

Okay, that’s still a lot of words, but you get the idea. This is rich stuff, and I’m thrilled to be able to see Ben Falk and co.’s living examples of permaculture in action. The timing couldn’t be better, as we’ll be moving onto our land this summer/fall, and making grand plans over the winter and in 2016 for turning our own 28 acres in a slice of perma-paradise.

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We’ve Got Land!

By Homesteading
Land: View to the South

Our new homestead site along Clear Creek in the Appalachian foothills

I’ve been greatly anticipating writing this post for a long long time. Today, I can proudly report that we are officially landowners! We’ve finally found and purchased a piece a property outside of Berea, Kentucky, where we’ll begin the exciting and challenging work of building a permaculture homestead community and natural building school. Getting to this point has been a long time in the making.

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Permaculture Film Recommendation: INHABIT

By Homesteading
ben-falk-permaculture-farm

Scything grass on a hillside — a beautiful scene in the film INHABIT

A few weeks ago, I had the opportunity to view a rather poignant and inspiring recent film, INHABIT. INHABIT is a documentary detailing the permaculture model as it has been explored and practiced by a number of farmers and food producers across the US, in a variety of settings and climates. The strength of the film lies in the excellent portrayal of diverse individuals using permaculture design principles to guide their work in a variety of locations, creating more resilient food growing systems, a healthier relationship with the land, and stronger communities in the process.

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A Man Apart: Inside the World of Bill Coperthwaite

By Book Reviews, Homesteading, Design
Bill Coperthwaite

Coperthwaite striking an iconic pose in his canoe

Bill Coperthwaite is an icon among the likes of the Nearings and Harlan and Anna Hubbard, an individual known for his simple living ethos, yurt design and construction, advocacy of craft and creativity, and his 50 year journey living on a remote homestead on the Maine coast. He lived without a telephone, without road access, without many of the physical things we often deem “necessities” in this era, yet he was a highly influential teacher and role model until his untimely death in 2013 at the age of 83.

In A Man Apart, husband and wife Peter Forbes and Helen Whybrow document their two decade relationship with Coperthwaite in his later life, sharing a powerful portrait of a man difficult to categorize. It’s part tribute, part biography, part memoir, and full of meaningful insights and lessons for all of us about what it means to live your life according to your values.

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Where Do Your Morels Lie?

By Photos, Homesteading
Morel Mushrooms 2015

A few paltry (but pretty) morel mushrooms

Well dangnabbit. This year appears to be another bust for morel mushrooms. Last year, resident fungi guru and our friend Tim said (of 2014) “this is the worst year to date, in my experience”. This year he said “this is the worst year to date, in my experience”. Well, humph. Did we bring bad luck with us from Missouri?

At least we found a few… and I mean, a few. Pictured above is a not insignificant percentage of the total haul. I’ve heard firsthand accounts of years where 30 lbs. of morels were plucked out of the woods and carried victoriously home. Granted, that was a rare boom year, but still. The disparity of the prevalence of these morels is rather odd.

Oh well. Maybe next year? Or maybe the other fungi family members will pick up the slack (chicken of the woods, chanterelles, maitake?) Have you had any luck in your neck of the woods?

Oh right, building stuff… I’ve got a big ol’ article in the works, coming at you hopefully within a couple days. It’s been hard to find the time this past week, but my newest post will be about timber framing tools… stay tuned.