Mayday Sheltermaker
| The EconoSpace in Permaculture mag. |
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| The EconoSpace features in the current edition of Permaculture Magazine |
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| Meanwhile, in central Victoria the mini-EconoSpace is being readied for occupation. Natural paint using locally sourced ochre is being applied both inside and out. Pictures in the next Sheltermaker. |
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| This building has cost only AUD$4000, the equivalent of €3000! |
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| Discover EconoSpaceMaking yourself.
Full details HERE |
| Saturday June 11 |
| Dunolly, Victoria, Australia |
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| Creating space to cater to the intangible aspects of our lives is the theme of this workshop. Whether it is making a meditation space for oneself, creating a miniature temple for a favorite deity or crafting a space where one can simply ‘be’, this workshop will explore the exciting and liberating aspects of creating space that is dedicated to our inner lives. |
| Fee: $75 – Couples $135
Booking Fee: $25 with balance payable at the Workshop |
| The peculiar story of the EconoSpace on RTE’s Nationwide programme |
| The death of natural herbal medicine |
| !!URGENT European ban on natural herbs!! |
| Traditional Herbal Medicine Product Directive |
A new European directive comes into force on 30 April, 2011 making it illegal to grow, dispense, prescribe or use natural herbs used in TCM, Ayurveda etc. The only thing that will be legal is synthetic chemical pharmaceuticals. We can make a difference. Urgent action is needed. Stop the directive from being implemented. Please sign the petition wherever you are and forward this to everyone you know. This is hugely important and urgent – there will be no turning back once this has gone through. Big Pharmas will take your natural products and synthetically produce them, and only they will be able to sell them. Independent health shops will close, key therapies will cease. Bringing the herbs in from another country will be illegal !!!! |
| SIGN THE PETITION HERE |
| Hazards of Energy Efficiency |
By Alanna Moore ![]() |
| In 1989 I studied a course on Building Biology that had just been translated from the German. It warned of the hazards of modern building practices and materials in relation to human health, comfort and wellbeing, as well as any deleterious planetary effects. Penned by architects and health and building professionals in Germany, it’s dictum is that our homes should be healthy spaces where we can relax and rejuvenate. Unlike homes with Sick Building Syndrome, our homes should protect us and foster our wellbeing. |
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| Twenty one years later and I lament that Building Biology has not captured people’s attention as much as other important environmental issues. We do spend a great deal of time indoors, after all. Yet what has become paramount in the current ethos is the Green Spin of energy efficient building that is totally divorced from our own biological needs. |
| These days society has a semi-robotic nature. People don’t seem to ask questions any more. They pretty much just accept the status quo and the spin that goes with it. In terms of Energy Efficiency and the Power Down scenario of Peak Oil, this seems very much the case. But we ignore the tenets of good Building Biology at our own peril! The concept of sustainability should include humans in there too! |
| Technocratic spin doctors chant mantras of their ‘adhering to the national standards’. Meanwhile, in other countries, such as Russia, standards for exposure to electro-magnetic radiation and other environmental hazards can be way more stringent. We really need to take the more precautionary approach. There can be energy efficiency that doesn’t compromise our health. |
| So here is my checklist of potential hazards for the home and home planet. |
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| 1. Compact Fluoro Lightbulbs. They have a ghastly dull light, they flicker – affecting our brainwaves, and they contain mercury!! For good energy efficiency, the best alternative is to replace all your bulbs with low radiation LED bulbs. (And don’t send those compact fluoros to landfill! Get them properly recycled.) |
| 2. The Air Tight House. Trying to keep any fresh air out and all the heat inside, it makes for a good mausoleum. This might save on the heating bill and greenhouse gases, but if the building can’t breathe and outgass naturally how are we to breathe? Our homes need to act as a ‘third skin’ for us. This is the most well known tenet of good Building Biology. As an alternative – put on a wool jumper and long johns instead! |
| 3. Fibreglass Insulation Batts. Fine particles can end up in the lungs. This could be the asbestos of the future. Plenty of alternatives around. |
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| 4. The ‘Smart Meter’. Never was there such a misnomer! Said to be an adjunct to ‘managing’ electricity demand, it doesn’t actually encourage a frugal use of electricity. That requires education and a change in the mainstream ethos that is anti-consumeristic – hardly something on any government’s agenda. What it does do is irradiate us with more electro-smog. To quote the ‘EMR & Health’ (Jan-March ’10, vol 6 no 1, page 3) |
| “The smart meters relay information about electricity consumption through radiofrequency signals similar to the radiation emitted by mobile phones. This radiation will travel through the power lines, through household wiring on top of the 50 Hz signal that is already in place. Information recorded by the meters is transmitted four times a day through power lines to an access point, usually on a light pole, which acts like a mini base station in a mobile phone network. One access point usually serves homes within a wide radius… Because it falls under the category of ‘low impact facilities’ it is legally immune from council control.”
But ‘low impact’ doesn’t necessarily mean low levels of health effects. The low level of power they use could be pathogenic over a lengthy exposure. “Low power signals may even be more biologically active because the body is accustomed to low-power signal and so they may slip through its defence system,” says ‘EMR & Health’. |
| If you want to know more about the prospect of ‘dirty electricity’, which could be soon, or might be already, contaminating your household electrical system from so-called ‘Smart Meters’– read Donna Fisher’s ‘Silent Fields – the growing cancer cluster story’, Lindlahr Books, Qld, 2008. |
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| 5. Wind Farms. They are not reliable enough to replace coal powered stations. And that’s just as well. If you find yourself living within a kilometre or two from one of these, and especially if you are downwind from them, you will be a candidate for Wind Farm Syndrome – headaches, insomnia, irritation…. Niggling symptoms that don’t quite qualify as ‘real’ health impacts, so you might also get accused of hypochondria! Certainly any grazing animals living beneath the turbines will suffer most – milk drying up and dying quickly etc. |
| “Massive wind technology produces a relentless fusillade of pulsating sound, mechanical in pattern, audible to all and intolerable to many, particularly those sensitive to infrasound vibrations.”—Jonathan Boone, Ph.D. Maryland, USA |
| Not only is the noise and altered atmospherics a health hazard, sometimes the very ground in the vicinity is found to be electrically live! (This is due to stray voltage from the high number of underground linkages between the turbines.) |
| See the articles at my website, such as the one that starts off: “One dairy farmer lost 600 cows over some years as stray voltage reduced his cows’ immune system. He had so much stray voltage that when he dug copper wire into his soil it lit up an electric light bulb…” Read here. http://www.geomantica.com/geom28.htm#7 and also http://www.geomantica.com/geom45.htm#3 |
| Also see an American site: www.windturbinesyndrome.com |
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| 6. Concrete floors for heat banking in solar-passive house design. In this regard – they are an over-kill. Concrete homes are damp for years and have terrible ‘feng shui’. You can feel drained of energy if spending time on a concrete floor. The metal mesh in them can be a conduit for stray electricity and any geopathic stress* too, if that is present, so earthing needs to be very good. Concrete has no breathing ability at all. The production of concrete (and also lime) is very high in terms of energy and resource use. In fact it’s probably the most un-eco-friendly building product around. But there are alternatives! |
| There are many more examples, but these are some of the worst examples in my home state of Victoria currently (the Smart Meter is being introduced first to this state), as well as in many other regions worldwide. |
| As a sensible society, we don’t have to take the Techno Trip to Hell. Living in an Over-Developed Country means we need to learn from the ancient wisdom in vernacular, natural buildings and the ecological traditions of our ancestors and less-environmentally -impacting neighbours of today. |
| * Geopathic stress is a natural problem of the geo-biology of a place and it needs to be checked to ensure you are living in a healthy home. The author is a professional consultant in geobiology and geomancy. Email: info@geomantica.com |
| Response to Greenwash Article |
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From Joey Cleary:
I was thinking that Alanna’s article about her experience at Cloughjordan would be an excellent addition to my former village members website at http://www.cloughjordan.net/
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| From Anthony Ashworth:
I wanted to congratulate you on the Green Wash article, well done! |
| Most importantly, I applaud your statement about making what we have more sustainable, rather than merely building new developments and worse still building on green field sites! I live in an established country community one half hours from Sydney and where we are under real pressure from the State Gov’t to expand housing into the environment and into green fields, and due to obsessive and misguided philosophies that “the economy, thus the population must continue to grow”. |
| I became intimately aware of Green Wash myself, after having consulted on so called “Green” developments in conjunction with so called Australian top sustainable Architects. |
| It was all developer driven, to wash council and community objections away from Green Field developments. On one occasion I designed the master site plan only to be told I needed to modify it substantially to radically increase the number of homes planned for the site “it’s got far too much open green space, we can make it sustainable with technology” I felt that I had already really pushed the site coverage, it was now certainly NOT sustainable for the environment, the local eco system, nor the expected residents, perhaps it never was, and I had been green screened and perhaps culpable myself, in helping to design just another awful battery chicken farm for humans over 55, badged as sustainable green living. |
| The saddest thing for me was, apart from my own misgivings about my involvement, was witnessing the highly reputed Eco/Green Architect being just fine with the process, he did not stand up to the developer at all, nor even point out the hypocrisy, thus making him as well as the developer a Hypocrite. |
| Hypocrisy is the state of pretending to have beliefs, opinions, virtues, feelings, qualities, or standards that one does not actually have. Hypocrisy involves the deception of others and is thus a kind of lie. Wikipedia |
| I am much more aware of what projects I agree to be involved and complicate in, lest I should have my soul dirtied by the wash. |
| The editor of The Scavanger magazine was also quick to pick up the story! |
| Living Architecture – Chinese style |
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| Article from Malaysian magazine featuring an article on Living Architecture …. in Chinese. |
| Next Sheltermaker – June 21 |
Solstice Sheltermaker
| No Worries! |
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| No worries! This is the manner in which most Australians terminate business conversations! |
| Is this not a most endearing expression in today’s mad world? |
| I’m won over to this way of relating and find it both charming and effective. |
| Perhaps its time for the Irish and their European partners to adopt this expression? |
| From my perspective in the southern hemisphere (where it is unseasonably cold and wet) the current preoccupations in Europe with economics and weather seem to urgently require a new way of relating to the world and to each other. |
| I myself am adapting a new approach – allowing life to unfold according to its own perspective – rather than forcing things to follow a particular direction. |
| This trajectory has projected me into the midst of the Secrets of Architecture, a place I most happily reside. The 2011 Living Architecture Programme reflects this and signals a shift in emphasis from the more physical to the more abstract aspects of living architecture. |
| The EconoSpace |
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| The mad scramble to complete the latest stage of the Leitrim EconoSpace before I left Ireland felt like the completion of one stage of the Living Architecture story while signaling the commencement of another. |
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| Flyer for the first ‘Be Your Own Architect’ Course in 1989 |
| The 21 year Living Architecture journey began in 1989 with the first ‘Be Your Own Architect’ Course. The foundation for this was laid in 1979 when I shied away from the very idea of mortgaging my future in exchange for a place to live and the crushing monotony of a 9 to 5 existence. |
| They type of house that inspired my rebellion against a mortgaged 9 to 5 life |
| The house that inspired that rebellion was identical to that pictured above – and, as life would have it – I ended up in this street, right in the heart of old Dublin, on the night before my departure for Australia! This was the first time I had seen that street since I set out on my exciting mortgage-free journey through life. |
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Newspaper article about my first home – a VW campervan |
| Rather than static ‘bricks ‘n mortar’ I opted for mobility in my first home. This is an attitude I have remained true to – closing up the lovely Irish EconoSpace to be propelled halfway round the world to another place and another set of circumstances. This belies the normal attitude to ‘home’ as being the place to which one is permanently tied. |
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| A clay plastered and clay painted EconoSpace wall . The clay paint was lovingly mixed by my good friend Gerard Greene |
| Home is inside oneself – this is what I have learned building this EconoSpace |
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| RTE1 Nationwide presenter Mary Kennedy at the EconoSpace before my departure |
| Nationwide returned to carry out some more filming before my departure. The charming Mary Kennedy made this into a most enjoyable experience. The new footage is to be tacked onto what was filmed last year. I have no information regarding when – or if – the programme will be broadcast. |
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| EconoSpace interior |
| 2011 Living Architecture Centre Events Programme |
| Architecture & The Meaning of Life |
| Taking place in central Victoria |
| DOWNLOAD ARCHITECTURE & THE MEANING OF LIFE BROCHURE |
| Expressions of interest or requests for further information may be left HERE |
| Open House Sessions |
| These low-cost sessions will be surprise packages of talk, film, action and insight.
A perfect taster for the 1-day workshops. |
| Gold coin donation |
| Sunday February 6 2 – 4.30pm
Architecture & The Meaning of Life |
| How do buildings affect our lives? What is the connection between buildings and dreams? Can architecture foster higher consciousness? Do buildings have emotions? How can buildings assist us in living more sustainability? Do people posses a ‘sheltermaker’ gene? What are the secrets of architecture? How can invisible space be clearly seen? What is sacred geometry? |
| If you wish to know the answer to any of these questions attending this Open House session is a must! |
| A 1-day workshop on the theme of Architecture & The Meaning of Life will be held on Sunday June 12. See below for further details. |
| Sunday March 6 2 – 4.30pm
Designing and building a mortgage-free sustainable shelter LAC, Yapeen, Castlemaine |
| How does one approach the question of low-cost sustainable building design? What are the realities of owner-building? How can one work and owner-build at the same time? What about planning issues? How easy is it to make one’s own electricity? |
| These and many other questions will be answered in this workshop with participants able to experience a low-cost sustainable shelter that was built for less than $5000! |
| Sunday April 3 2 – 4.30pm
Art Architecture – giving form to feelings LAC, Yapeen, Castlemaine |
| Engaging with the dynamics of space, place, time and consciousness and how these ‘invisible’ aspects of design can be incorporated into physical buildings is the theme of this Open House session. |
| A 1-day workshop on the theme of Art Architecture will be held on Saturday April 9. See below for further details. |
| Sunday May 1 2 – 4.30pm
Spirit House – connecting to the spirit of self and place LAC, Yapeen, Castlemaine |
| Exploring the exciting and liberating aspects of creating space that dedicated to our inner lives is the theme of this session. |
| A 1-day workshop on the theme of Spirit House will be held on Saturday June 11. See below for further details. |
| Sunday June 5 2 – 4.30pm
Architecture & Identity – discovering who we are through the medium of architecture LAC, Yapeen, Castlemaine |
| Can architecture get us in touch with who we really are and facilitate us in discovering what our lives are all about? |
| To be kept informed of Talks, Courses & Workshops join the Sheltermaker eMailing List |
| DOWNLOAD ARCHITECTURE & THE MEANING OF LIFE BROCHURE |
| Expressions of interest or requests for further information on Open House Sessions & Workshops may be left HERE |
| The Secrets of Architecture |
| Daylesford Neignbourhood Centre |
| The Old Courthouse |
| Daylesford, Vic |
| The course will consist of 4 weekly 3 hour sessions. |
| Session 1 March 9 10am-1pm Session 2 March 16 10am-1pm Session 3 March 23 10am-1pm Session 4 March 30 10am-1pm TBC |
| Fee: $150 or $40 per session |
| Are you interested in attending this course?
Expressions of interest may be left HERE |
| The course will introduce students to the inner workings of the design and construction process with a strong emphasis on exploring how buildings impact our consciousness and our day-to-day lives. |
| Some topics that will be covered:
Sacred Geometry Invisible Architecture Exploring Inner & Outer Space Architecture & Emotion |
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| 1-Day Workshops |
| These workshops will combine insight and action and will be held at the LAC, Yapeen, Castlemaine. |
| Comprehensive notes will be provided to students. |
| DOWNLOAD ARCHITECTURE & THE MEANING OF LIFE BROCHURE |
| Expressions of interest or requests for further information may be left HERE |
| All workshops $75 Couples $135 Attend any 2 workshops for $135 or any 3 of them for $200 |
| Students attending 2 workshops on the same weekend can enjoy a communal meal, a film and discussion time on the Saturday night – as well as a discount on fees! |
| Free camping available |
| Saturday February 12 10am – 4.30pm |
| Community Building – creating the architecture of the future .. in the Here & Now |
| Evoking the spirit of traditional barn raising this workshop will explore the potential of people building together as a means of fostering trust, awareness and community as well as creating affordable natural buildings. |
| Sunday February 13 10am – 4.30pm |
| Architecture Playhouse |
| Imagining your Dream House and coaxing it into Reality is the theme of this fascinating 1-day hands-on workshop. Using simple materials and tools plus a generous dash of creative thinking this free-fall into the world of architecture will forever change how you think of houses, jobs, mortgages, sustainabilty and even life itself! This hybrid of instruction and play will encourage a deeper understanding of the role buildings play in our lives and foster the rediscovery of the timeless architecture we create in childhood. |
| Saturday April 9 10am – 4.30pm |
| Art Architecture |
| Architecture, in the world as we know it, is considered to be the mother of the arts – and the reserve of university trained professionals. This workshop will explore the potential that architecture offers as an art form available not only to artists but to anyone wishing to engage with the dynamics of space, place, time and consciousness. |
| Sunday April 10 10am – 4.30pm |
| Inside Zone 0 – awakening the sheltermaker gene |
| Zone 0 is the place we plant our lives in order for them to be nurtured and to reach their full potential. Integrating this idea into the the sustainable shelter design process while abiding by the ethics and principles of permaculture affords one the opportunity to not only dynamically integrate one’s food and sheltermaking activities but also to explore the hidden realms that lie hidden within oneself – and inside Zone 0. |
| Saturday June 11 10am – 4.30pm |
| Spirit House |
| Creating space to cater to the intangible aspects of our lives is the theme of this workshop. Whether it is making a meditation space for oneself, creating a miniature temple for a favorite deity or crafting a space where one can simply ‘be’, this workshop will explore the exciting and liberating aspects of creating space that is dedicated to our inner lives. |
| Sunday June 12 10am – 4.30pm |
| Architecture & The Meaning of Life |
| Drawing on the experience of the summer programme this workshop will draw together the many discoveries which inevitably will be made during these sessions. Combining insight, film, discussion as well as hands-on action, this workshop will be all about pushing the boundaries of our understanding of what architecture is and how it impacts our lives both physical as well as emotional. |
| Expressions of interest or requests for further information on Open House Sessions & Workshops may be left HERE |
| The Run on Paper Money |
| by Maddis Senner |
| Reprinted with permission from Barrons.com. All rights reserved. |
ETF’s to Play the Precious Metals SurgeOrThe Run on Paper MoneyBy Madis Senner
The meteoric price rise of precious metals such as silver and gold to record highs marks the beginning of a larger movement of capital into safe havens. Investors are loosing faith in currencies backed solely by the guarantee of a government whether it is dollars, euros, yen or renminbi. As this outflow out of paper money into hard assets gains momentum precious metals and other money surrogates will continue to rocket higher in price. Like a bank run this outflow out of paper money will create a crisis of confidence that will challenge policy makers and bring with it strong inflationary pressures. The demise of government backed currencies will have serious repercussions, for markets, livelihoods and even how we are governed. The Float Our current monetary regime of Floating exchange rates began in 1973 with the abandonment of Bretton Woods which pegged exchange rates to the dollar which was then convertible into gold. It was the first time in history that currencies were not fixed, or linked to gold or some other commodity. Markets were to determine rates. The Float and the ensuing deregulation opened up markets and spawned financial innovation. This fostered capital mobility and redefined money as new investment vehicles were created. Money markets, credit cards and new mutual fund alternatives changed how individuals managed their money. For institutions and corporations currency trading and derivatives opened up new windows of trading and how business was conducted. Why Now At 37 years of age the Float is well past the 20 to 30 years most monetary regimes last. With many countries mired in debt the talk in the gold market has turned to concern about the viability of governments and their currencies. Even countries like China who are running surpluses are inexorably linked to other countries through trade and their holdings of foreign government bonds. Front page headlines about currency wars show the tension and the inability of world leaders to come to terms over exchange rates. While such banter has been a feature of the Float, no one is flinching. In the 1980’s it took only a few years for countries to agree that the high value of the US dollar was responsible for the large USA trade deficit and we had the Plaza accord in 1985 that let the dollar fall. Today China has been rigidly keeping its currency low and has been for over a decade. Fiscal austerity has become the rage in Britain, the Eurozone and among newly elected Tea Partiers, but is it the right policy at this time? One of the guiding principles that I learned as a global money manager was that timing is as important as policy, in other words, you don’t wear your swimming trunks outside in January. The world needs governments to spend. There is also a multiplier affect between countries as policies feed off each other. The economy in Britain will be slowed by its austerity and by that of other countries. Austerity policies will leave the central banks as the only lever left to stimulate growth and many will pick up the slack and ease as we have seen with the Fed’s quantitative easing. This will increase inflationary pressures. While newly elected conservatives and Tea Partiers want to talk tough to their base they are also talking to a larger global audience that can be easily spooked. The dollar swooned after the last Republican sweep in 1994. Clearly the Mexican peso crisis triggered it, but Republican rhetoric fed it. Financial Innovation Financial innovations and products developed during the Float will facilitate the run on paper money and hamstring policy makers. Prior to 1973 capital was not mobile, markets were closed and investment opportunities limited. Not so today. Now investors can buy physical gold, gold futures, gold ETFs and more. Some of these new products are highly liquid and fungible, making them like money. Not only do such vehicles provide a competing alternative to paper money, they will attract speculative funds causing large inflationary price rises as we have seen in commodities such as oil. Financial innovations such as COLA adjustments on entitlements will increase government expenditures as inflation rises and rises. A New World Order Precious metals will continue to see large price rises. I believe that silver will outperform gold shorter term and take out its old high. Investors should consider buying silver ETF’s such as SLV, SIVR and DBS. I would also recommend buying pre 1965 US silver coins to have physical assets which can be easily purchased on Ebay for around melt value. As the bull market for currency alternatives gathers, investors will look for new vehicles such as stamps the same way that they reach for yield and lower credits in a bull market for bonds. Commodities will appreciate although at a lower rate than silver and gold. Consider ETF’s such as DBC, GSG and GCC. Interest rates will surge because of inflationary pressures from rising commodity prices and the necessity of governments to pay more to retain and attract capital as the run on paper money gains momentum. This will burst the bond bubble and deal a blow to the stock market as well. Deficits will balloon and the fear of default will increase, bringing tension and mayhem. Countries will be forced to find ways to calm markets and citizen concerns. They may be forced to link to gold or some other commodity to restore confidence in their currencies. They may also attempt to implement constraints in the flow of capital. How governments respond will determine whether we have high or hyperinflation. The greatest challenge to governments may come from global corporations, or some commodity cartel that has a commodity component or some other money surrogate that the public has confidence in. They could come up with their own financial instrument and create some sort of alternative to paper money. For example, an IOU backed by gold or oil that is commoditized, tradable and accepted for payment at retail outlets like a credit card. Arguably this money creating ability will give them quasi sovereign status in the world. If this happens they will begin usurping the role of government and its functions. Clearly the times they are a changing |
| Madis Senner is the author of The Way Home—Making Heaven on Earth that details how our individual and collective thinking/consciousness has trapped us and how we can break free.
Sheltermaker is extremely grateful to Maddis Senner for making this article available. |
| Ghost Estates |
| During the summer Alanna was moved to write a beautiful song inspired by the many Ghost Estates we encountered on our travels. Before I left Ireland I shot some footage to accompany her wonderful lyrics. Enjoy and make sure to pass this one on! Here’s the link: Ghost Estates – you can copy and then paste the link into an email … |
| Dan Phillips – half-price homes … |
| A man after my own heart. |
| 2nd International Hemp Building Symposium |
| 27 & 28 APRIL 2011 in GRANADA, SPAIN |
| The symposium will feature presentations from hemp building experts from all over the globe. Day 1 of the event will include a fascinating tour of CANNABRIC’s hemp brick factory in Gaudix and demonstrations of hemp building from the professionals there. Presentations will be given by expert researchers and builders, engineers and promoters from all angles covering the breeding of suitable hemp varieties to the details of use in construction. |
| A little house in Wales |
| Pictures submitted by a reader – who also sent the link to the Dan Phillips piece. Thanks Deirdre! |
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| Nadir Khalili |
| How can we build shelter for people in the world who have no money? |
| Next Sheltermaker – February 2011
I’ll have to change the previous Celtic year naming format now that I have gone global! I’ll stick with the cross-quarter day structure but find a universally appropriate name. |























