Sunday, August 26, 2012

Pt Reyes Tracking School at Abbotts


 

Richard Vacha. co-founder of Pt. Reyes Tracking School

                               Heeeeyyy Abbotts! Lagoon

today was a good day of tracking with Richard Vacha, co-founder of the Pt. Reyes Tracking School here in West Marin. i met Richard through RDNA in a round about way, and ended up moving to a trailer on his property for most of this past winter. i could not be more thankful for this man, his great knowledge of nature and tracking, and his incredible teaching and mentoring. we also have a very similar sense of humor, so it made for some great post RDNA conversations about tracking and nature. he is also craftsman of the wood working trade, and i got to ride along a few times with him for a few jobs. big thanks Richard!

Liam and i woke up early to get to Pt. Reyes Station to catch the meet up for the tracking session. today it was Abbotts Lagoon, located out in the Pt. Reyes National Sea Shore. Abbotts is a two stage lagoon with a fresh water lagoon emptying into a salt water lagoon. it has beautiful rolling dunes nestled amongst the historic cattle ranches, and the very intense pacific ocean just south from Bodega bay. on the ocean side it is still old growth northern coastal scrub, and the lagoon often in the winter will have tidal exchange with the ocean.  the wind was blowing but the sun came out and it was a nice change from the foggy and chilly days we have been having here in Bolinas just south of the sea shore.

Bird prints

Abbotts Dunes and Lagoon
 it was Liam's first time to Abbotts, and it was a great day tracking Skunk, Racoon, some Otter, Coyote, Bush Rabbit, the mice running amongst the dune plants harvesting for the fall, two deer swimming across the lagoon, a few birds of prey- Harriers, red tail, and possible Falcon or Merlin.
itty bitty insect tracks

  
prints in the sand
Richard got down to the nitty gritty of gaits and walks of animals and how their prints look in the different trots, baselines (the "Chill" walk of a relaxed animal), and direct register (the back foot landing in the front foot print). my tracking was minimal, or shall i say limited in the past to "hey thats a dog or cat print", so RNDA as well as Richard have blown the doors off tracking for me in the last year. this is Richards site, the meet up is the last sunday of every month, so if you are in the area come check it out! http://www.prts.me/ 



some tracking of trackers
 One last note: this little spider i almost ruined walking up the path the other night. actually he was about the size of a half dollar coin, and was half way through with his web. so i am glad i didn't interrupt or ruin it for him. he was not there in the morning, but i hope at least he got a meal or two.

Saturday, August 25, 2012

Picture Windows

Accabonac Harbor I
Accabonac Harbor II





The Fall of 2010, just before my first trip out to Marin and the Bay area, i had my first solo photo show (and my last photo show to date) at Smith Clothing in Southampton NY. Big thanks to Alissa Smith, a dear friend and bitchn' stitcher and clothing aficionado.



I have thought to throw together a west coast show, something like what I did back when i was with the Arts 4 and Bonic Tonic art collectives- a  open call art show at either Toby's or the Bolinas community center, to bring community and art together in one show.

 the solo show at Smith was a sort of semi retirement to showing art- the collectives had mostly disbanded or moved in other directions, and i had felt a calling to do something different. 
Permaculture had mostly taken over, but the call to stop showing was mostly a stagnation in how i felt about my own art, and wanting to take some time off to work with what i already had- thousands of negatives and files to put together into a coherent collection that reflected some sort of tangible body of art work. 

Since then i have still shot a TON of film, filled memory cards, and turned to sketching and water colors. so much for taking the time to trudge through the already existing work i have.


Abby on Long Island

 These are just a few of the prints in that  show, titled Picture Windows. some were taken with my phone, some with my digital and 35mm film, and others with 120mm format film.


 photography is an expression of time, a view into a window containing a moment that i feel i might have over looked it, if wasn't for that shutter click.  its the essence of the romantic, the captured moment in time that preserves every nuance of the feeling in the air, light, sound, people, and most of all nature caught off guard in all its beauty and intensity. these and many others from the past 8 years have been trickling back through my field of vision. 

they have been lost in the bowels of my digital mini-universe that swirls around inside this little machine i am sitting at, often forgotten or unseen for years at a time as i click away in the present onto film strips and memory cards. Enjoy.


2 minute Exposure at 1am.

                                             

Oaxaca Plaza in Miniature


Channing Daughters Winery Tree Sculptures
Channing Daughters Winery tree sculptures
 these two wonderful photos are separate from that show i had, but some great sculptures made by a good family friend Walter Channing. his winery is also home to 20 acres or so of sculpture gardens- many of which are created with full standing trees placed all around on their tops, carved into #2 pencils, and all sorts of creative free standing figures walking amongst the meadows.

Sunday, August 19, 2012

Summer Wanning in August

                                                       left the country for the big city,
                                                               concerts in the park,
                                                        city lights, motionless hours.
                                                                 study of the quinoa.
                                              Quail Babies nestled amongst worm wood.
                                                                        Foxy days,
                                                                       quail trains,
                                               disturbing the peace with a public shower.
                                                   great horn perched, screeching  at dusk.
                                                           summer plantings of lettuce
                                                Great natural trellis for cucumbers and beans.
                                                               stick in the ground, grow!

Wednesday, August 15, 2012

Design in Time


 It can be frustrating having all the tools for design, application and execution of permaculture, along with experience of growing food and getting it to where it needs to go, and seeing the waste of our food system and our culture of consumption. It is especially frustrating when you are a dreamer and ideas man as i am... mostly unpaid, living with no car, and dreaming of a piece of land/institute/artist hermitage to cultivate and create a space that will forever teach, sustain and provide to the possible and mostly distant next of kin, friends, family, and most of all strangers.

                      DON'T STOP, LIVE GENUINELY.

Through the RDNA year, a lot moved as an artist/gardener with very little drawing/drafting experience and a whole lot of dreams and ideas. the best way i found to cull the somewhat haunting dreams and ideas that flood my mind on a constant and hourly level, was in drawing out what i saw in my mind for designs. of course this is a good idea- any designer will tell you that. but i reached a second terrible space in looking at these finished drawings- damn i like that, and i want it to happen more then ever... 

I am 28 years old. I have no medical insurance. i have not much in savings. no college degree. I am unmarried, and mostly volunteering and unemployed, socially against most of the cultural norm in this country, and don't often relate to my own generation let alone the lower or above.
 I am a statistic that, in my mind, the US and most of western civilization sees as a drain on its resources (even though in reality i use very little), especially since i am technically not contributing to the GDP- the very heart of our destructive culture that puts value on the exploitation of people, resources, and creates all living things (and often non) into statistical commodities.

thus disconnecting everything from its natural relationship to everything else. we then devalue, and then revalue into false markets and ledger sheets. this locks our self and other into the new human drama- the seperation from what Humans are inextricably a part of- Nature and its natural order.
   
"Man is born free, and everywhere he is in chains. One man thinks himself the master of others, but remains more of a slave than they are."- Jean-Jacques Rousseau, opening from The Social Contract.


 i am a lackluster citizen NOT contributing to the consortium of american consumer culture. i am a Bum, lost soul, and all at once free... sort of.



                                       AND I AM ABSOLUTELY AT PEACE WITH IT.

These two drawings reflect some of those ideals that a growing number (thankfully) of like minded people are moving towards in terms of a self reliance against a hyper-consumer based culture of individualist. we are so driven, and blinded, that we are literally  killing our selves and working even harder to try and counter the very thing that is killing us...  (albeit slowly ill admit and mostly of the usual top 10 diseases related to the very problem i am referring to). 

Between house designs under 1000 square feet, gray water systems, ponds, food forests, passive solar design to heat the buildings, animal husbandry,  medicinal botany, native plant nursery, i have come to realize i have nothing but time on my side...

although most of my plans include succession plantings of some fine plants and animals, many of these reach maturity in 20 years... meaning all the hard labor and work i must accomplish with my own two hands is ticking down a little more every day. 

BUT as i have had in twisting conversations with fellow peers about time- time is a creation of our own existence and consciousness based on our own short life spans and past history (which on the great timeline of time is very very short compared to the rest of the species on this little blue dot).

                                                                           Time. 


Time used to be based on when the sun came up, the seasons changed, the ground could be worked, and the moon was in cycle; not a 9-5 day doing something you most likely don't even love.

 i see time a little differently, finally, in terms of the emphasis we put on how much has been accomplished by a certain age or time, and the expectations that come with it.

we have a life time to do, and not a whole lot of time to spend on thinking about how. application is the best way to spend this said "time". and don't forget to put some time  aside to learn, be in wonder, and share in the curiosity that flows with us in our NATURAL lives.



Where does this leave all of this in the rambling words of this post?

It leaves the fact of the matter that time is always on our side, that accomplishment and success is based on ones own happiness and not that of the status-quo of our toxic culture. its about what YOU want to accomplish, what your dreams are, and designs for a life you are hopefully wanting to be better, and leave behind something others can forever appreciate and wonder at. expectations should be and are only rooted with the self. and DON'T PANIC. living with as little as you need can put into perspective what some of the dreams are that you may want to ultimately leave behind after the short time we all spend on this little blue planet. If you dream and design for a better future, or a future in general, then you may have accomplished more then all the nay sayers of tradition. Permaculture is, after all, about healing what neglect and abuse has been done to both the human, the earth the human relies on indefinitely, and the community in which both (should) exist.  Happy dreaming.

Wednesday, August 8, 2012

events: in technicolor slide form


Sonoma farm

Olives near Petaluma
 some times from the summer past,
     technoicolor codes,     
       summer solstice,
            ocean side,
             Sonoma. 





Clayton Lewis' house

Lairds landing solstice nature table


Friday, August 3, 2012

Harvest of the Herb

Roman Chamomile
Herbs. they are pretty great plants. and they are at their peak right now in the mid-late summer. A really beatufiul, button like German Chamomile, was ready for harvest. see above.  we love it here for teas, and Commonweal Gardens (where RDI resides) always has its own stash of dried Chamomile. thought it would be good to replenish. Its great before bed, in teas, and the plant responds best for the body steeped in natural spring water brought to just under a boil. we are a little spoiled with our spring water here.
Calendula
 Calendula is one of my favorite flowers, and it was one of the first flowers i ordered from a catalog. it was called Flashback Calendula, and it was a sun burst of yellow pedals that faded at the tips and to the center of the head in a hue mix of pink, yellow, and a red center. here at Commonweal we have stunning varieties of both domesticated and wild Calendula, the later being almost twice as small in flower, and a slender creeping weed; we let it be most of the time to be a filler. yellows, oranges, and a few in between populate almost every nook, edge, and disturbed soil spot that we have. This little flower is edible and great in salads, although it is a strong medicinal. tinctures, teas, fresh and dried, this flower is a great healer, and especially vital in salves for topical application.

drying racks ready

Liam and White Coyote Mint, from Ebbet's Pass
 Liam has been adventuring around with a Medicinal Guru named Tellur Fenner http://www.bluewindbmc.com/bios.php and went up to the Sierra ranges and grabbed some fun plants. Tellur will be teaching a 12 month 200 hour medicinal california native botany class here at RDI starting in October-  http://www.regenerativedesign.org/edible-medicinal-plants-ca
Nicociana (wild tobacco) and Mint
 Yarrow (below) is another one of my favorite plants, revered in medieval times and used in beer and to make bitters before hops. an old world plant, its name Achillea Millefolium is referenced from greek culture because Achillies would carry it for his army as a treatment for wounds. much of it has established its self in most of the northern hemisphere. unsure of how we will use it, but drying it is a main priority.
Wonderful Yarrow