Friday, 9 May 2008

Lomi Lomi Massage...

We travel to Queensland, to the Gold Coast Hinterland to be precise, to study for one week live-in, Lomi Lomi (Hawaiian Ka-Huna) massage. But before we do so we spend a few days with my Aunt Cathie who lives in the area. Whilst here we use our time to finally fill in, complete and send-off our Sea Shepherd applications - something we've had on the back-burner for six months now (having met Paul Watson and his crew in Fremantle the year before).

We then do our weeks full-time and intensive training to become qualified practitioners of Lomi Lomi Massage.

We then return to Adelaide to find we have made it through the first phase of the Sea Shepherd's application process, and that they now want to phone interview us. A week after notification we then have our interviews - they appear to go well, despite our nerves. A week later again, and we have been accepted into the Sea Shepherd. They want us to start as soon as possible. We dedicate nine months to them, postpone our move to Hobart, I extend my PhD and scholarship suspension a further year, and we head over to Melbourne where the Sea Shepherd's M/Y Steve Irwin is currently docked. Our next big adventure.

Monday, 21 April 2008

Japan...

Next stop, Tokyo. Molly and I spent a month in Japan, starting at her best friend's place in Tokyo. My true motive originally for this trip was to snowboard on some of the planet's best, driest powder, so boards in hand, we set off. As luck would have it though, their season ended early (global warming?), but before it did, we got some good time in at Hakuba. With the snow thinning however, we were free to explore the country; and explore it we did – from to Nagasaki to Niseko, ending our trip staying with an old friend of mine who lives in the Niseko snow fields of Hokkaido.

I will write in detail about this later, when I have my written journal notes in front of me (which probably wont be until after I arrive back in Adelaide around March having completed an Antarctic campaign with the Sea Shepherd - but more on this later).

When we return from Japan we have two things to do: sell Chester (Molly's campervan), and prepare then move to Hobart. But before we do either of those we decide to make use of our 'in-between phases of our life' status, and go to Queensland to do a Lomi Lomi massage course.

Tuesday, 18 March 2008

The Adelaide Fringe...

Adelaide. The Fringe Festival and another work stop. Molly has her regular work for this time of year with MaD Promo doing Fringe posters, as well as a few days work with Allan's stall at WOMADelaide. I will also have work with Allan should I not get any with the Fringe. But I do, and end up doing around two-months work with The Garden Of Unearthly Delights. I am involved with put-up (a circus term), or bump-in as they call it (putting up big-tops is a job that just seams to continually haunt me), front-of-house for one of the venues during the season (I wind up working at Le Casca Deux, the replacement venue for the Spiegletent), and for most of pull-down/bump-out.

I end up working for the Garden right up until the day Molly and I leave for Japan - which means we have no opportunity to learn anything about our destination, to to plan any of our time there. We will literally just arrive and make it up as we go. I think this is a very good thing.

We live at Molly's folk's place for the duration of Fringe, but unfortunately get to see very little of each other due to our conflicting schedules: she works days, I work nights. But due to the kindness (and tolerance no doubt) of Margie and Leon we are both able to save a significant amount of money to fund our travels to and around Japan, and hopefully enough also to make the move to Hobart once we return.

Wednesday, 31 October 2007

Fremantle...

Having completed our community hop and depleted our bank accounts we were now going to Fremantle for a work stop. We tried to get work in Margaret River with one of the wineries, but we had found ourselves there between harvest phases. So despite being almost out of money we chance making it to Fremantle and finding work - quickly.

After living in a caravan park on the outskirts of the city, we soon find work, and with work and an income, a room in a share-house on East Fremantle.

We are now both working in hospitality: Molly works at a restaurant could the Left Bank, and I at the Little Creatures brewery. Our aim is to live frugally and make money fast so as to continue travelling. Our hope is to get to Adelaide by Fringe and hopefully pick up more work there, then onto Japan for a month before returning to Tasmania and, for me, my PhD.

But fate intervenes and, perhaps, has other plans. Whilst in Fremantle we meet Captain Paul Watson from the Sea Shepherd and some of his crew. From our short discussion with him, and later with members of his crew who frequented Little Creatures whilst in port, we are quickly inspired by his work, his passion, and as such, find ourselves wanting to sign up as volunteers to crew for him and the cause. This is activism with real action!

So stay tuned to this blog...

Friday, 31 August 2007

Rosneath...

The final community of our WWOOF travel through WA, and in deed of Molly's whole three-year study, was Rosneath, near Dunsborough. This was clearly an example of intentional community going horribly wrong. I won't bother detailing what we learned and experienced about the pitfalls of setting up and maintaining an intentional community, but to learn more, click on this link to read an article in the Busselton Mail (published well after our stay) about its eventual and somewhat inevitable demise.

Our hosts however, and despite the enormous stress and disappointment they were managing at the time, were very giving and delightful company.

And should it have suceeded it would have been a really interesting and socially accessible (i.e. mainstream) community. It failure really is a shame.

Tuesday, 31 July 2007

Living Waters...

Our next community was Living Waters. We arrived there weeks later than anticipated due to them postponing our arrival several times due to a lack of WWOOF space: apparently there were three Israeli WWOOFers there who liked it so much they weren't leaving, which sounded promising at least, though a little frustrating. Living Waters had a Pagan festival being held on their property coming up which I really wanted to be there for, as I thought the preparation work would be interesting; not to mention the festival itself. Just before we were about to give up and leave Denmark we were told Living Waters could finally take us - despite the Israelis still being there.

Living Waters at first glance appeared a lot more raw and unstructured than the Wolery. And it was. The land was, although near the centre of town, a lot less 'managed' or developed than the Wolery's. There were fewer houses and other infrastructure, and even a few car wrecks for good measure. Though development was in progress.

The centrepiece of the Living Waters was a big building that had originally been built as a big dryer for herbs, but was now housed a flat, meeting and teaching rooms, a workshop and performance space. The building had been built partially with funding from the Government after their application to build a dryer won over another local submission by a consortium of growers. That the building had never been finished or used as a dryer was a sore point amongst many or the town, which still as a result had no commercial drying facility. Members of Living Waters claim the reson the dryer was not completed was not all funding promised was made available.

Of interest was a rift between its members and those of the Wolery. Rather than being bound by the commonality of their both being intentional eco-communities within the same town, they were divided by philosophical and social specifics, and by personalities. Also of interest was a former Wolery communard who had lived there ever since separating from his partner, who still lived in his former community.

Due to the Israeli WWOOFers still being at the community Molly and I have to sleep in our van, which is okay with us, but get to use the flat's kitchen and toilet facilities in the community hall (the building that would be a dryer). Due to all the work going on at the community, both in infrastructure and in prep for the festival, the roads and car-parks are very boggy; so we do our best to find a park for our van on a daily basis that wont see us getting up in the morning and alighting into ankle-deep mud.

Every morning at Living Waters starts with a hot breakfast at our hosts' house, and with the other WWOOFers. Then off to work. The work was varied and most times interesting and rewarding - largely due to the festival. My biggest project was working with a local builder and supporter of the community to build a stone-wall retained earth stage in front of the community hall. The large boulders and earth was moved by excavator (which was bought by one of the new soon-to-be communards for all the upcoming development of the land), but much of the other work was manual and laborious, such as breaking and positioning the rocks for the retaining wall. Other work included, and varied from, cleaning land of industrial and green waste to building or fixing props for the festival's dance party.

Unlike at the Wolery, communards at Living Waters have title ownership of their piece of land. Finally, after many years, the community land was being devided up and allocated to members, many of whom had invested much earlier, but seen no return. Some were receiving land - a spot in the community - instead of their investment returned as there was no money to give. For all spoken to, it appeared that this allocation and development of land and community was very late coming, and even now somewhat adhoc and unfocussed.

Our hosts were great on a personal level, but work allocation and management was very unfocused. Much of it therefore fell into the hands of a would- or soon-to-be communard (the same one who had bought the excavator); who really should have been, or should be in the future should he finally move in, be tasked with the job of managing WWOOFing and WWOOFers at the community.

When the festival time finally came round, major works were taking place right to the very last second and beyond. But all was well and the festival went ahead seamlessly. Except for poor turnout. Members of the wider Denmark community started to trickle in, but once in there was nothing really to keep them there, so they left which in turn made the place look dead and uninspiring for the next visitors - and so it went on. Market spaces were unorganised, dull and few. Entertainment was scarce and disorganised, and relied heavily on buskers and alike. And many stall-holders and musicians whom they 'expected' to be there weren't. And not because they were unreliable but as it turns out, because they weren't invited. Turns out they were just 'expected' to turn up and participate/contribute once they knew the event was on and, moreover, there was genuine disappointment and a sense of being let down expressed by the organisers and hosts at this failure - despite their not having actively sought there involvement. All in all the festival looked to be a disorganised and ill-attended failure. But night finally rolls on and things look better.

At dusk their is a burning man ceremony. At this point the crowd is more numerous and settled. Upon reflection it was the earlier lack of scheduled events that contributed greatly to the festivals inability to hold patrons: if everyone arrived at a single given time for a particular event, the place would be busier and more lively at that time and thus more likely to keep peoples' interest and patronage. But now there was a focusing event, and a critical mass was finally being achieved.

Once the burning man ceremony was complete, the night time festivities (a dance party in the hall, and a bar and bands outside) roll on. Numbers and enthusiasm are up, and this part of the festival looks to be an emotional success, even if not a financial one. My recollections start to get hazy hereon, but the police did ultimately (and rudely and aggressively) shut down the party in the wee hours, and Molly and I woke very sore heads.

Festival over, it was now time for Molly and I to move onto our next WWOOF and community.

Tuesday, 26 June 2007

My First WWOOFing Experience...

The first town we decided to stay at was Esperance, as we had heard many, many good things about how beautiful it was. So here we also hoped we would find our first WWOOF host community for WA, though first we just wanted to spend some time being stationary and getting to know and enjoy the area. We couldn't find any sustainable communities in Esperance, but we did find a really interesting sounding WWOOF host, so it was here we decided that Molly would get back into WWOOFer mode, and I would gain my first WWOOFing experience. Not being a community, and therefore being irrelevant to Molly's research and documentary activities, would also allow us to ease into our work mode and frames-of-mind.

This first WWOOF host was Geoff Tonkin who owns and runs the Permaculture Education & Research Centre (Inc). He had been abroad for three years before returning to Australia and his property about three months ago. As a result his property was a little neglected, but compared to the state a non-permaculture property would be in after three years of no work being done on it, it was looking very healthy in deed.

Geoff is also a state distributor and installer for composting toilets, and as such had one in his house. The house was built of rammed earth, concrete, steel and granite and, as also demonstrated by the toilet, was designed along sustainable building principles that have affected decisions and design features regarding, inter alia, aspect, window placement and design (i.e. passive solar), power sourcing and usage (i.e. wind, solar and 12-volt), and water capture, storage and use. The house is as yet unfinished, with roof insulation and ceiling yet to be started (which made for some cold nights), but the house and the thought that has gone into its design are none-the-less impressive.

The gardens have all been designed around permaculture principles that inform how water will be captured and distributed, where plants will be planted, and which ones to produce what, when. These principles included making sure

that plants always saw enough sun during the day (mature hight/competition considerations), that their root systems wouldn't compete with neighbouring plants, water catchment, mulching and nutrition systems, and use of keyhole garden beds (so that a garden bed never need be trampled on) and swales.

What was particularly interesting however was that already I am being challenged as to what actually constitutes a sustainable technology, or even a technology for that matter. This was exemplified by Geoff (who has also practised aromatherapy and reiki) using Pagan techniques and tools such as dowsing (in his case a pendulum) to help determine plant placement, and having an approximate 1:10 scale Irish Round Tower in his garden to harness paramagnetic/cosmic energy from the sun and to nullify negative energies brought in by underground water streams - all for the betterment of individual plants and greater gardens alike. More on dowsing and Irish Round Towers can be found in Alanna Moore's book 'Stone Age Farming: Eco-agriculture for the 21st century'.

Pictures of this property will be uploaded onto this blog on a later date.

Although interesting, the technologies in use here are however disparate, stand-alone, and do not constitute a formal information system as such. Though there certainly are systems and processes in place that in a holistic sense are interdependent they are manually operated and managed. As for digital technologies used, phone, fax and a laptop used for email (using a dial-up Internet connection) and word processing was all that was present. There was no digital management of significant and/or substantial data, crop management processes, or of domestic/house processes. Technology need and usage (and integration) may however be greater and more sophisticated in intentional communities, the first of which I stay with for one week in Denmark WA on the 27th of June. My quest for a new or modified PhD question continues...

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