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[personal profile] changeling
I've been re-reading Living the Good Life: How one family changed their world from their own backyard, by Linda Cockburn (and her accompanying website) I first heard of Linda back in July–August 2005, when Steph and I were babysitting a beautiful house in Kingsville (I want to say "cottage" – it was pretty small), living out of home together and for the first time, going vegan, and embracing wholefoods ... and losing weight without trying. There was an article on what they were trying to achieve in Gardening Australia's organic gardening magazine. Later, when the book came out (February 2006), I snapped up a copy and wolfed it down as fast as humanly possible.

The book charts Linda and her family's attempt to live for six months without spending a dollar (barring things like medical expenses and rates). And they succeed pretty well, considering they're in Queensland and it was one of the dryest six months on record in their region (and frankly, probably in the whole of Australia). I found it so inspirational, as if someone had just projected my desires into a book. THIS is what I want to do with my life.

I have since found Cauldron Farm and Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall, who've also got pieces of the puzzle. These people are all so inpirational. I can't wait until Steph and I have enough capital built up to take our own step.

I just re-took the Global Footprint test online, and my results were pretty good:
CATEGORYGLOBAL HECTARES
FOOD0.4
MOBILITY0.8
SHELTER0.6
GOODS/SERVICES           1.1
TOTAL FOOTPRINT2.9


IF EVERYONE LIVED LIKE YOU, WE WOULD NEED 1.6 PLANETS.

It's slightly bollocks: it didn't take into account (for example) that I eat organic food (fewer nasties getting into the environment, less water use); that we flush the loo with shower water (and sometimes with discarded laundry water); that we switch our appliances off at the wall to avoid phantom loading; that we only switch the TV on about once or twice a week (to watch Robin Hood), that we source our electricity from Green Power; that S and I try to shower together, and briefly, only every other day and that on alternating days we bathe out of a sink; and so on and so forth. Still, I got markedly below the average for Australia – 7.6 global hectares per person, meaning that if everyone lived like that, we'd need 4.2 planets.

Still, it gives us something to aim at, and we're improving, too. We're going to get rid of the car indefinitely in the next six months (the only difficulty will be intra- and interstate morris trips – there we'll either have to rely on other people's goodwill or V-Line) and replacing it with electric bikes. Mine will have to get another basket affixed to it, as my pushbike has, and possibly a basket in front, so that I can market shop if we move somewhere further away than we currently are from a market & public transport. Once we have our own place and are not renting, we'll be moving towards sourcing most of our food (we'll probably still be buying sugar and flour). We also plan on getting a composting toilet, solar hot water, and solar panels for electricity.

And we plan on moving out of the city. I want to smallhold (just like Hugh ...) The current plan is to move to Marysville (she says, having not yet visited it). It's sub-alpine, has more rainfall than Melbourne (currently a BIG factor), and apparently has four distinct seasons and tends to the COLD. This all makes me extraordinarily happy. I have planned on moving to England for years and years, but Steph was moved around a lot as a child, so the idea of permanently relocating again moves her to tears. This way I get an England-esque climate, not to mention RAINFALL, and we'll only be a bit further away from Melbourne than the distance between our parents' places.

I can't WAIT to get started. In the short term, though, we have a couple more pots that need filling, which we're going to tuck in to this weekend. (Hooray! Finally!) And I just might plant some basil in the backyard to let it grow wild.

Further inspiring links:
A cute mindmap of things you can do to lessen global warming (I've printed it and it's going on our fridge)
A link to an organic gardening how-to site (this is mostly for me)
A website giving tips on how to lessen global warming, based in Tasmania.

Date: 2007-04-26 06:49 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dorukai.livejournal.com
I suspect that the Global Footprint results assume that all of the 6 billion people in the world would suddenly be living as the test-taker does, not taking into account people in poorer countries etc, who'd have to suddenly develop a huge amount to get to the level of waste we can manage . . .

Date: 2007-04-26 10:02 am (UTC)
ext_12944: (thoughtful)
From: [identity profile] delirieuse.livejournal.com
Yes, that's what it says. If everyone lived like you do ...

Which is all you can assume, given the circumstances.

Date: 2007-04-26 10:25 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dorukai.livejournal.com
Not exactly my point, but ok :P

*confused*

Date: 2007-04-27 03:25 am (UTC)
ext_12944: (curious)
From: [identity profile] delirieuse.livejournal.com
I'm not sure what your point was. Is it that it's OK for us to consume more because it would take a lot of time for Uganda (say) to match our consumption rates?

Re: *confused*

Date: 2007-04-27 04:10 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dorukai.livejournal.com
No, my point is that I believe it should be about bringing the world's biggest consumers down to a reasonable level. It's not, after all, about equality, but about the footprint we're leaving on the earth as a race.

Date: 2007-04-26 08:05 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] burningskyfire.livejournal.com
Yay! Marysville is absolutely beautiful. There's also Buxton, which I'm pretty sure is quite near to Marysville, a bit less commercial. Family friends bought a property there (quite a nice size, massive garden... eucalypts! river running through the backyard!) after they looked in Marysville and didn't find anything. Hehe I'll have to ask if they want to sell it anytime in the next 10 years, they have a rain water tank, a nice three bedroom villa with one bathroom, lemon trees.
The neighbour has a massive vegetable garden and I suspect she's pagan.

The link to Linda's website is www.lintrezza.com, no .au on the end.

Date: 2007-04-26 10:06 am (UTC)
ext_12944: (happy)
From: [identity profile] delirieuse.livejournal.com
Awesome. I've heard of Buxton. It's nice to have some sort-of local knowledge. We have a friend who lives in Marysville, and we hope to stay with her for a weekend and check out the area. Buxton, too.

Er, yes. Fixed. *embarrassed*

Date: 2007-04-26 08:07 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] burningskyfire.livejournal.com
Also unfortunately I'm pretty sure the global footprint doesn't take into account animals, ie. it allocates the entirety of the biosphere for humans. In real life I'm pretty sure flora and fauna take up a very significant proportion of the biosphere.
I think it depends which test you did though, but I've gotten similar results on many different tests so I think they all take the biosphere into account.

And they don't take a lot of things into account - they didn't have an option for veganism until some vegans bombarded them with environmental statistics!

Date: 2007-04-26 10:08 am (UTC)
ext_12944: (thoughtful)
From: [identity profile] delirieuse.livejournal.com
They actually say there's 1.8 hectares (or whatever) of arable land. Or an equivalent phrase.

*nods* This one has a vegan option. I have probably got the house size wrong, though. I was only guessing.

Date: 2007-04-27 01:00 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] barrington.livejournal.com
I managed 5.2, with, rather predictably, most of it in food, since I'm a meat eater. Not that there's an option for sourcing free range local meat (which I do when cooking, so I pretty much only cook chicken - not that I have for a long time, though, living with vegetarians and all, making my estimate of how much meat I eat perhaps a little exaggerated).

Annoyingly there's no option for not owning a car - I only ever travel in other people's cars, always as a passenger (so there's always at least two people in any car I'm in) and I travel for the vast majority of the time by foot and/or public transport.

Still, scadloads of room for improvement from me.

Date: 2007-04-27 03:28 am (UTC)
ext_12944: (thoughtful)
From: [identity profile] delirieuse.livejournal.com
*nods* As I think we've all noticed, it's a pretty flawed test, but at least it does highlight places where one might improve. (P.S., tried roo yet? ;)

It's like the road to River Cottage link in the above post (linked at "Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall"), where the final step is to start all over again, so it's a continuing process of refinement.

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