Category Archives: Eco-Sense Updates

Tour with Naomi Yamamoto, Minister of State for Building Code Renewal


Here is a quick summary of the meeting with John Horgan, Naomi Yamamoto and her assistant Raechelle Williams.  Jeff Vasey, Executive Director, Building Standards was unable to attend as he was ill.

  • new ministry just created, lots to learn and set up.
  • Likely not too many big changes will happen until the new Liberal leadership is sorted out.
  • Laying groundwork for future changes once the political scene gets established
  • Very impressed that both John (NDP) and Naomi (Liberal) were so willing to work together for common goals leaving any politicking behind. See attached photo.
  • We discussed how useful Alternative Solutions could be now and in the future ESPECIALLY with a less prescriptive code.  Education of all involved parties is critical.  All seemed to agree that moving towards more sustainable building practices does involve less prescriptive codes.  We briefly discussed ASRi.  (Alternative Solutions Resource Initiative)
  • We emphasized that a truly sustainable building is customized to the site to maximize system integration with the available features of the site…like a living building.
  • We also emphasized the benefits of passive solar as the most cost effective way to build greener.
  • We discussed the critical need to allow some innovation.  Discussed the Living Building Challenge and that Clark County is allowing 5 special permits (projects) per year for LBC innovation.  We discussed how this could be a very useful way to advance green building policy here in BC.
  • We put in their hands a number of items.
    • Info sheet on our home
    • Policy/barriers report written by Ann for Cascadia as part of the full case study to be completed on Eco-Sense paid for by the Vancity grant
    • The BCSEA report “Ten Barriers to small scale Renewable Energy Systems” http://www.bcsea.org/solutions/government/policy/ten-barriers-to-small-scale-renewable-energy
    • All the current graphs from our energy monitoring and mass wall performance data
    • David Eisenberg’s card (shared info on DCAT)
    • Building cards for local green building professionals (engineers, designers, builders, etc)
  • Both Raechelle and Naomi seemed very friendly, personable, and they seemed very much to enjoy their tour.

Once again, BIG thanks to MLA John Horgan for organizing this tour.

 

 

John Horgan (MLA), Gord, Ann, Minister Yamamoto

November 2010 Eco-Sense Update


Just Telling StoriesIt was six years ago when Gord set his eyes on a fiery little red head wearing gumboots, a yellow floater suite and driving a boat named ‘Brutus’; she drank scotch…straight, could catch and clean a crab, use a chain saw, and lived off grid with a humanure bucket in her very classy bathroom.

Ann's Car - 'Brutus'

Ann's Wise Island bathroom with 'Humanure toilet'

Within three months they were engaged, and in six months married.  Gord brought two little kids into their family, and not to be outdone, Ann brought her parents.  Another short six months passed, and together this new multigenerational blended family purchased the Eco-Sense land and sold everything to move into two trailers to make this piece of land in the Highlands their home…forever.   It was five years ago that this passionate couple embarked on a journey to create a life that would transition two somewhat sane normal people into living in a mud house and pooping in a bucket and teaching others about how to live sustainably.

Beginning our new Journey...only 5 years ago

This past month (October 2010), our story culminated in being presented an international award where the Eco-Sense home achieved ‘Petal Recognition’ in the Living Building Challenge.  (See next weeks post for full details of the LBC certification)

Just married

The Living Building Challenge is the greenest building rating system on earth, surpassing LEED, Architecture 2030, and Passivehaus standards.  Until the next home is assessed we oddly have the label as “The World’s Greenest Modern house”.  As you can imagine it got a bit busy around here with all the media.  See this link for many of the recent articles.  https://ecosenseliving.wordpress.com/2010/10/16/media-list/

Living Building Challenge Award

BUT… lets put this into perspective.  There are millions more sustainable houses that exist… virtually all indigenous peoples around the planet…   Our family’s story is just a part of a bigger new story that is unfolding as our culture moves towards a more sustainable and just future.

Stories told in the present connect our past to our future

Stories have been at the core of humanity right from the early hominids.  This is how social evolution occurs.  Think back to how our early ancestors told their stories… how First Nations told their stories; then try to think how we tell our current story, of our culture, of our social rights of passage, of our status, of the place we inhabit.  Stories appeal to our common values from our ancestral humanity and NOT to our modern day inhumane culture of over consumption and distraction from our sense of place. Our current consumer culture is probably the only one that has ever excluded the past and the future.  We have become a me-now culture.

Three generation family of six - our new home and life

In today’s realm we are not painting pictures on cave walls, or performing the same dances with song and symbolism… we are not passing culture, values and stories on from one generation to the next;  we are so much more efficient and sterile at getting the distorted message across!  So much more modern!  Hell we have TV, billboards, Youtube, video games, advertisements, corporate lobbyist, and of course email updates from crazy people living in MUD houses.

Family dance party in the house

Special 2nd anniversary treat from the kids

Our Eco-Sense real life story is easily lost in the bombardment of the masses with the fictional news we call reality.  We think happiness comes from a new iphone and that meaningful existence on earth can only come from monetary growth.  Our culture believes money is real wealth; that GDP is more important than millions of years of evolution; and that the earth’s resources only have value in terms of their use to us this second. To hell with our evolutionary past or our descendants of the future…we want, so we take;  This is our right, ‘cause we earned it.  What a crock of SHIT!  Obviously there is no use looking at the facts… else we wouldn’t be in the position we’re in… excuse us as we should clarify that our kids wouldn’t be in the position we put them in.

Solar Kids

Chickens, dogs, kids, trailer and Gord

OK, so your saying “I know where you’re going”.  Really?  How did you come to wear the clothes you do, buy the food you do, throw away the stuff you do, and program your kids for this dysfunctional culture.  What… you grow your own food… why?  Hope you don’t buy local meat because hey that’s dangerous (according to our cultural rules that protect us from the improbable risks while exposing us to the probable risks), and how dare you think of drinking raw milk! ( All those poor babies being malnourished by unpasteurized breast milk… we really need to be milking all moms, healthy and unhealthy, combining all their milk and pasteurizing it because raw milk is dangerous you know).

Obviously most stories come through the media…mostly because we hardly ever bump into each other any more (we’re all in cars or watching TV).  The news has become advertisements selling consumption and fear coupled with celebrated arrogance and ignorance.  You can listen to the radio and hear about bootie; watch TV and envision driving a beautiful car; play a video game like Street Fighter and pretend you can kick the ass of every stranger;  you can even google all the loveless sex out there.  What story do I learn from these messages?  I could do whatever it takes to kick someone’s ass, to get a nice car and get some bootie and have sex in unfulfilling ways and feel that I have reached the penultimate of humanity… twice as much would demonstrate ultimate.  Ah the story of our culture!  I find this reality demented!  I’ll take the mud house and bucket…

This is our story

What stories should we start to tell?  David Eisenberg, a policy guru from Tucson was in town for a lecture and a visit.  He told us many stories, all linking the reconnection of people to the environment and community.  One story in particular differentiates western reality from many indigenous peoples reality.  Our culture sees trees, land, water, and minerals… as resources to be stripped, mined blasted, drained …

Sharing our story with our community

One friend of David’s explained that the earth is their family, that it is no different then a brother, grandmother or sister.  A hard one for our consumptive culture to wrap our head arounds, but if you viewed the place you existed with such reverence would you clear cut your grandmother, would you stuff radioactive waste in your daughter, would you blow up your son?  A different story… a different reality.  We belong to this earth…not the other way around.

All of our scientific study with earth sciences, life sciences, and social sciences tell us conclusively that the earth actually functions with all life, energy and resources… as one.  But our modern culture has strayed so far from this reality to the point that many among us actually won’t accept well supported scientific evidence.

The story of the Frog and the Basil

Some even condemn the science while gladly accepting the benefits that this same science provides in the form of extremely clever technologies.  Our species is clever, but profoundly lacking in wisdom.

Telling Different Stories

Obviously people are not genetically programed to listen to facts when it goes against their social programing…so the only hope is to start telling LOTS of different stories…because we ARE programed to respond to stories.  People won’t listen to facts about climate, our failing unjust monetary system, species extinction, but they will, oddly enough, listen when they visit our home on tours.  They leave inspired, and desiring what we have…you know a MUD house, a bucket, less money, and a lifestyle that uses 90% less water and energy.  I love that people that I otherwise wouldn’t connect with desire a beautiful healthy home like ours… I want them to crave it…  If tours of our home and lifestyle can leave someone who cares not about climate change, human exploitation, or the pillaging our our planet, craving a lifestyle where you work 1/3 of your time, spend a 1/3 of your time in the garden, and spend the last third doing whatever (like being with friends, doing art, or being active in our community), while at the same time having a lower ecological foot print… then bring it on!

We all LOVE zucchini - baked with butter and garlic

For a look inside the human mind from a biological and cultural perspective check out these lectures by Dr. William Reese.  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3F9cDA-R4J8&feature=related

showing the kids how separate the Quinoa

A friend from our first workshop back in 2006 told us that if he could teach his kids just one thing it would be  “When you tell the story of your life, tell a good story as the story you tell, becomes your story”.  So there you go…it’s that easy.  Start telling the story about your life as the life you crave with the values you hold…tell it into reality.

The new story of technology

We watched an interview of Barry Lopez by Bill Moyers.  In the interview Barry Lopez told an old story, but one in which is really significant as a new story, (http://www.pbs.org/moyers/journal/04302010/watch3.html).  It is the story of Zeus and Prometheus.  Prometheus came and stole fire, a symbol of technology.  Here is Barry Lopez’s version of Zeus speaking to Prometheus.

“Okay, you stole fire. Great for you. Now your people have technology. Wonderful. But here’s something you don’t know. You lack two things. And if you don’t take these two things that I will give you, this will be a failure. Technology, you know, fire, all your magic, it will fail completely. It will be your undoing. And the two things that you need to make it work are justice and reverence. And if you have these two things, you won’t get in trouble with this third thing that you thought was the be all and the end all.”

Technology can help our kids...or REALLY mess them up

 

...and frightening

The point of this story… reverence is the ability to have awe and respect for  all things including those that can’t always be known.  Justice combined with reverence will control for the ill effects that technology brings with it.  So Technology will fail without justice and reverence.  Very wise indeed.

Technology can be very messy

The story of Transition. What happens when there is a story that is positive, full of energy, and good news.  Well we only have to look as far as the Chilean Miner rescue.  In our own little world here, it seems this past month that our story is becoming popular once again.  With our enjoyment of our home, our new levels of food self sufficiency, reaching our goal of balancing work/home/volunteering, beginning to understand our role in the wider community, and the final results of the Living Building Challenge.  We have stories  galore that have been written for updates, then left to be forgotten on the solemn hard drive.

But it is important for our stories as well as all the others to be told; these are good ways of living and being, good ways of shifting towards a richer culture, and sharing where and how transition has occurred.  These stories of transition need to permeate and surpass the ass kicking muff nuzzling self indulgent images of our current culture.  Stories filled with justice and reverence that harness our explosive technology will ultimately prevail because down deep we all still crave our genetically programed human values of love, sharing, and community.

A sad political Story

It seems our federal government and their media friendly supporters had been trying to push to idea that climate change and climate science was inaccurate; this has been quietly dropped from the mainstream… except perhaps the national enquirer.  The new story being told in mainstream is how Canada is going to be a “winner” with climate change.  Warmer weather for growing, access to the oil rich arctic… great outcomes from a really shitty reality.  But what is missing in these corporate sponsored stories?  What about the collapse of ocean life; what of the collapse of other countries and cultures; what about the famine, drought, fires, and floods, what of the immense pressures for migration to the only habitable places on earth… and I use the word migration over immigration on purpose.  What of the stories of world unrest while resource wars are fought; and what are the stories of the costs incurred by monsoon patterns, wiping out our food production season after season washing away roads from coast to coast, followed by droughts.  What is the story for the sockeye that have their rivers flooded at the wrong time of year.  What of the story of the Amazon that all but dried up in drought as the great hurricanes pulled the moisture from the Amazon.  What of the story on planning for geo-engineering?  These are all happening…but not in the mainstream news.

Our kids LOVE chard

The mainstream story tellers we rely on don’t have the freedom to tell the whole story, they only tell the piece that fits into a 30 second sound bite, or that can fit between the advertisements on a page written for a grade nine education;  it best not insult the corporate sponsors, or for that matter be muted and diluted from the PMO’s office.

Where to find the stories?

There are places out there where you can get a different fun and inspiring story.  Here are a few:

Peak Moment Television

The Story of Stuff; Story of CosmeticsStory of Electronics

Sir Ken Robinson – Education Paradigm Shift

RSI animate“History of oil”

RSI animate “What motivates us”

We believe that our Western Civilization will be ending its current bad story within this century, in our kids Parker and Emily’s life time.  Changes are underway and we all need to pull together even more to adapt to this changing world.

This painting tells many stories

The future is in our hands

Western Culture is just a story similar to many other cultures before; like the Roman’s, the Mayan’s, the Easter Islander’s… and undoubtedly there will be new authors for the next versions of failed culture.  Our story is Eco-Sense… our family has a story, and the house on the front cover is not glamorous or expensive, but it is beautiful…  its simple… it’s full of good news offering hope and inspiration.

So let’s celebrate all the new stories out there… let the bad ones die out and sit on the history shelf for reference.  What we say and do today is our collective story that will become the past of future generations.

Check out our blog for up to date posts and for the list of recent media on the house.

Update on the Living Building Challenge coming soon.

Gord and Ann Baird

Eco-Sense August 2010


Public tour: The last public tour of the year is scheduled for Sunday August 8th from 10am to 12:30pm.  Only 4 spots left.  Let us know if you would like to reserve a spot.  We are still doing some private tours and these are quite reasonably priced for groups of 10 or more.  Email for rates or check out our website.

Summer Workshops: We offered three workshops this year and had a fantastic time teaching some theory and hands on skills.  All three workshops (Grey water, natural plaster, and earthen floors and counters) were a great success.  Our course notes have been posted on our blog for others to see.  Workshop Notes If any of the students that took our courses have any feedback we are always interested to hear your thoughts…what you liked, where we could improve, or any other suggestions.  We are learning too.  Looking forward to what next year will bring for workshop ideas.

Links: One link we quite enjoyed this month was a lecture by Ecologist Bill Reese from UBC.  This was the guy who first coined the term “ecological footprint”. Excellent presentation to describe the “problem” and why we aren’t doing anything meaningful about it. Has a strong biological approach but also ventures into genetics, sociology, psychology, anthropology, and economics. Very well rounded and logical.  We related to almost everything he said and this lecture really helped us understand why humans are so slow to act on climate change and all the other looming collapses. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3F9cDA-R4J8&feature=related (eight 10 minute clips with a 2 minute intro in the first clip)

And for another funny (but crude) reasoning on our human situation check out this three minute video with George Carlin.  http://www.facebook.com/video/video.php?v=159216125164&ref=mf George Carlin has a very important message to share…funny, but with profoundly serious consequences.

Test plot

Eco-Sense Research: HOBO link data continues to grow…check it out.  Mass walls are performing very well. https://www.hobolink.com/p/a063c25f681d21ba7fc1f0d82dcf86db I LOVE living in a MUD house!!!

Bathroom floor - by 8 year old

Cob bathroom at the local lake: Still not open for the public yet as it is taking forever for the final earth floor to dry.  We have tried leaving the door open during the days (with wet floor signs, no entry signs, and lots of yellow caution tape across the door).  But this has proved useless as a deterrent to keep people out.  They rip down the caution tape, use the bathroom, and one person even left dog poo in a bag on the floor (this person normally leaves it hanging in a tree).  Then there was the incident of the eight year old carving up the bathroom floor (at the entrance), and then bragging to our kids about it.  Two days after this act of vandalism we were at the lake with the kids, and the young offender was there with his whole family.  Gord had a chat with the dad about what the child had done…this didn’t go well at all.

Gord: Gord is spending about 10 days away each month working on two load bearing cob homes up in the Cowichan.  It is very exciting helping and watching the dreams of others literally rise up out of the ground.  Gord hasn’t been too inspired to do much writing lately especially since the “incident” at the lake, but has spewed out a rant about the future that’s coming and are we ready…my job is it to edit it before posting.

Organic Islands Festival:  Earlier the same day of the cob bathroom incident, Gord spoke at the Organic Islands Festival as part of a green building forum.  Other speakers were John Gower (Gower Design), Elke Cole (houses that love you back), Doug Makaroff (Elkington forest), and J.C. Scott (EcoDesign Gallery). Panel was moderated by Brandy Gallagher from OUR EcoVillage.  Check out this link for Gord’s short talk.

Publicity: Two short documentaries filming this year (one next week, and one in Sept.)  Peak Moment was filmed here back in 2006 when we first started building the cob woodworking shop and they are coming back to film our home…kind of a virtual tour.  Check out the first video of us talking about our dreams….(but only if you have nothing to do for half an hour).  We pretty much did everything we said we were going to do…except we built a COB house (not a straw bale house), and we did a grid tie to BC Hydro (rather than going off grid).   http://www.wordpress.peakmoment.tv/conversations/?p=115

Eco-Sense is also going to appear in two US building/architectural magazines.  The articles cover the Living Building Challenge.  Builders News in August and Architectural Record in October.  And finally, the local paper the Goldstream Gazette was here last week to interview us about the energy research on our home…should be out this week or next.

Harrowsmith photo

Harrowsmith: The long anticipated magazine finally landed in libraries and on bookshelves this July.  The PDF/ magazine can be viewed through the library or  check out this link.

Our Gardens: They are finally growing and producing lots of food.  Our quinoa and red fife wheat are also filling out nicely.  We also have our first apple and 5 plums.  Looking forward to canning season.

Veggies

Chicken update: For those who have followed our chicken updates with raising a dozen little feathered friends in our living room in the hopes of getting more laying hens…ten of the twelve are ROOSTERS.  They are 17 weeks old and all learning to cock-doodle-doo.  (No, they are not still in the living room…they moved outside at 3-5 weeks.)

Getting up early these days,

Ann and Gord

June 29, 2010 Update from Ann and Gord


July 4th tour cancelled
The public tour on June 6th was fully booked almost 3 weeks ahead.  Not so with our July 4th tour with no bookings as of today…very strange.  Attendance at tours is always hard to predict…possibly something to do with the long weekend (but this hasn’t been the case in the past).  Anyways, we have decided to take the day off and go kayaking so are going to cancel the tour.  We have not been kayaking since our honeymoon over 5 years ago.  It time for us to take a day off, pack a picnic and go paddling.  Next public tour is August 8th.  Booking has begun for this tour and since the Harrowsmith magazine will finally be out this tour is sure to fill up.  See tour link on our blog for details.  https://ecosenseliving.wordpress.com/tours/
All workshops at Eco-Sense are fully booked for this summer but we do hope to have a work party later this summer to put the upper living roof on the house.  All our workshop booklets have been uploaded to our blog.  https://ecosenseliving.wordpress.com/downloads-brochures/

our boats

Spray Skirt: Anyone have a 100% neoprene sprayskirt to sell. Needs to firmly attach Ann to her solstice kayak…although she has been quite moody lately and I may just drown her.

June has been a very busy month.
Cob Bathroom:
The wet spring has slowed down completion of the cob bathroom, but it is almost done and looking great.  Check out photo on our blog.  https://ecosenseliving.wordpress.com/
Cascadia/Vancity Research Project:  Vancity Grant details
Gord has put in long hours researching equipment, reading manuals, installing sensors, setting up dedicated laptops, installing dataloggers, setting up software, and exploring research options.  We would like to thank Christina Goodvin (mechanical engineer) for all her engineering help through this process, especially with the solar thermal side of the research.  Check out this link to see some data and graphs.  Hobolink
The KD2Pro Thermal Properties Analyzer is also giving some good solid data for the mass wall system.  R-Value for the pumice cob wall is coming in at 0.93 per inch or for our 22 inch walls this means R-20.43 with a standard deviation of 0.013.  This data came from 27 tests of one drilled hole.  Now we need to do this 24 more times to make sure that the testing is bullet proof and statistically significant.   For the first time in our post university lives our statistics courses are proving useful.
Let the experimentation begin.  We are going to make up all kinds of new cob/plaster samples and do the thermal properties testing on them.  Way too much fun for us geeky energy nerds.
All of this is keeping us quite busy as we digest all the goings on in the world.  Here are a few links we found interesting these past couple of months.
http://vimeo.com/11859670 Video link to Charles Eisenstein
http://vimeo.com/10635494 Video link to Vandana Shiva
Link to Environment Canada on the Warmest Spring in Canadian History since records began http://www.ec.gc.ca/adsc-cmda/default.asp?lang=En&n=4CC724DA-1
and finally to depress everyone, the oil spill in the gulf is small potatoes compared to what has been happening off the Nigerian coast.  http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2010/may/30/oil-spills-nigeria-niger-delta-shell
Ann and Gord

Spring 2010 – A quick update from Ann and Gord


As usual, we have been trying to cram too much fun into everyday and we never seem to have time for our passionate updates.  Everyday there is so much we want to share, but we find we seldom have time for more than a quick facebook post.  So here it is…a very quick update with lots of  links and photos.

Earthen Counter Sample

Tours: 3 public tours coming up this summer.  June 6th, July 4th, and August 8th.  Click here for details.  Cost $20 and all tours 10am to noon.

Workshops: 3 one day courses here at Eco-Sense: Grey water; Earthen Floors and Counters; and Natural Plaster.  Click here for full details.

Media:

  • The Harrowsmith article on Eco-Sense is due out for the May/June 2010 issue.
  • Documentary “Powerful” by David Chernushenko is coming out this Fall.  Eco-Sense is included.

Living roof sample

Saturday (April 17) at CanWest Mall in Langford: Yes, Ann is going to spend the entire day at the mall participating in an Earth Day celebration.  Our Highlands community will have 3 full tables.  Eco-Sense will have our full display out…come on down and say hi.  The Highlands is taking Climate change, rising energy prices, and social sustainability seriously and has produced an exceptional “Sustainability Task Force Report”.  View on line here.

Recent tours: We have hosted recent tours with John Horgan, Andrew Weaver, lots of couples and family hoping to build sustainably, school groups, youth groups, Camosun College technology chairs, and many others.

Ann took our BC Property Assessment to the review board.  In  summary, the eco-sense home was appraised at the fair market which includes all of the sustainable energy systems which comprise 22% of the cost of the home.  This 22% represents our FUTURE energy. Essentially this results in extra municipal taxes (before home owner grant) of $400 per year (or $10,000 in a 25 year period).  We are considering taking this to the next level of the review board and have also written a letter to Premier Gordon Campbell.  The BCSEA is working on a Small Scale Renewable energy Barriers Project that has included municipal taxation.  Three possible solutions have been identified.

Gord and Ann have been doing many different presentations around town.  Gord is also doing some teaching on energy systems with a recent 7 hour presentation to the “Sustainable Building Advisor Program” at UVIC.  Ann is jokingly calling him “Professor Baird”…hehe

Grey Water Friendly Cleaning Products: Still trying to source more eco-friendly cleaning products.  Most brands, even the “green” brands have nasty preservatives in them that the manufactures are reluctant to disclose…they claim that they are in such low concentration that they are not harmful.  Our dish soap claims to be…good for the environment…good for our grey water…or so we thought…it has a REALLY nasty preservative in it…but we are told by the company that it is so little…not to worry. 2-bromo-2-nitropropane-1,3-diol.  When we look it up it rates a 10 on the nasty toxicity rating scale. Should we worry, or is this OK?  Sometimes Ann wishes she didn’t stud organic chemistry..ignorance would be easier…but not safer.

New Grey Water worm filter

New grey water worm filter

Water/worm bin filtration It is ideal to use potassium based soaps which are hard to find in Canada and expensive to ship from the USA.  Too much sodium is also bad for plants.  Oasis is a good brand, and we are trying to find someone to make something similar locally or we may just need to buy a whole case.  Here are a couple links to learn more or to look up specific products.

Grey water irrigation of plum tree

Grey water: Gord has improved the “worm bin” for grey water filtration and we have installed another grey water system from our clothes washer.  Check out our grey water course offered this summer if you would like to learn more.


Chickens, Coops and Chicks: 2010 – the year of the Chicken

We built a new Luxury chicken house with some new and used materials complete with living roof, and rain water harvesting to keep the chicken water full at all times.  The site we chose was the unused septic field.  We have deer fenced the area, and are planting smaller walnuts, hazelnuts, and fig trees.  The chickens will fertilize the trees, eat the bugs, and the trees will help protect the chickens from the eagles and hawks.  Since there are grey water pipes already down at the septic field we are able to divert the pipes to create another branched drain irrigation system for the fruit and nut trees. The chickens have a small safe yard/ compound and then access to the large septic field area where we can plant some grains (alfalfa, and wheat) to supplement their diet.  Happy chickens, happy nut/fruit trees, and happy us.

Chicken run, we cleared out the broom and blackberries and lots of green growing now.

Chicken run, we cleared out the broom and blackberries and lots of green growing now.

Chicken coop

New Chicken coop

Baby Chickens: We incubated 14 eggs, 8 of which turned out to be fertilized. What a magical experience it was to be a part of such a process right in our own living room.  6 of the little beauty’s hatched and we are hoping for most of them to be hens.  The roosters may end up being dinner as we are not quite vegetarians.  Our family has been preparing ourselves for this experience over the past year.  Not sure how it will go…as we recently watched food inc. and started to cry as the baby chicks went down the conveyor belt.  At 10 days old they are almost flying around the living room…should be interesting for our next tour.  Lots more chicken photos at the end of this post.

2 day old chicks

2 day old chicks

The Living Building Challenge: Eco-Sense has applied for certification and are waiting for Cascadia to accept our $1000 fee (donated by our community) so that our home can be properly assessed.  There will be three other projects assessed at the same time.  Eco-Sense is positioned to score very high but will not score 100%.  Our home is net zero ELECTRICITY; but not net zero ENERGY as we do use propane for cooking.  Combustion is not allowed under The Living Building Challenge…check out this link to read about our conversation with Jason McLennon from Cascadia regarding combustion.

Gord teaching about Solar Hot Water

And Just for the Energy Nerds: Eco-Sense and Cascadia have successfully obtained a grant from Vancity to study the energy and water systems of the home.  This will be a year long study with our engineers to determine how the mass wall system is performing.  This will include various data loggers for the solar hot water, many sensors embedded into the walls, and flow meters for hot water and domestic water consumption.  After the data has been collected there will be lots of report writing to do.  In addition to the reports available for peer review there will be extensive media outreach with Cascadia for systems, policy, earthen architecture, and overall sustainability.  This is truly a remarkable opportunity to learn from and improve upon the successes and challenges the Eco-Sense living laboratory provides.  We very excited about the doors that this data will open for others dreaming of building more sustainably and affordably.

And to sum up, we continue to try and stay positive in spite of some of the gloomiest science spewing the cold hard facts of climate change.  It seems daily that we read something really bad and observe our species continue to rape and pillage this planet in the name of stuff. But for all of these there continues to be the balance of the good news, and the stories of inspiration.  Here are a few links of interest in the many we have come across.

Gord putting the living roof on the cob bathroom

Ann installing the pine ceiling in the new cob bathroom

And finally here a couple photos of the soon to be complete public cob bathroom with composting toilet.  This has been a volunteer project that we are working hard on to get by the summer.

And this was just a small snippet of the last three months…whew…and… oh yeah…been busy planting the garden.  It’s been a wonderful winter eating kale and potatoes, but we are now ready for the new crops of the season and are celebrating every germinating seed.

Freshly hatched

hours old

Chicken TV

Kids and chickens

Boo (the dog) likes watching too