Showing posts with label alternative energy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label alternative energy. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 28, 2015

Dan at DR Blog Now a YouTube Channel

In order to broaden the audience for what's going on at Dancing Rabbit, I'm turning this blog into a YouTube Channel and website, Hardcore Sustainable. My hope is to educate people better about what I'm doing at DR and give them better hands on how-to information on sustainable living. I also would like to give people thinking about moving to DR a better idea of what life is like here.


It is my hope to turn this project into something that can generate income for me and for others in the village. Living in a small town far away from economies and people sympathetic to our mission and goals, it can be a challenge to build an economy.

Looking at how our Mennonite neighbors have built their economy here over the last 40 years or so, we can see the way our cultures differ and the challenges that creates for us here at DR. Mennonites started moving to this area from other parts of the country when their growing populations, and scarcity and increasing price of farmland, drove them to Missouri's much more affordable acreages. Since then the Mennonites have built a self-supporting, thriving economy. They have their religion to set the boundaries of their community and that community is a captive customer base that supports their Mennonite businesses.

They have a culture that values procreation and increasing population through reproduction. Economies depend on people to participate as customers and producers, and if there are abundant resources, the more people, the more the economy thrives. The Mennonite economy has been able to grow and thrive through their hard work and their constantly growing population. Even though there were few families here in the beginning, more were arriving all the time from elsewhere and all of those families were abundant with children.

As their population has grown they have built businesses that produce all the things their community needs to supply itself. There are wholesalers of meat, dairy products, processed foods, all made locally by Mennonites. There are furniture makers and other craft makers. They have retail businesses to sell value added products. They have service businesses in construction, repair, automotive supplies, and farming supplies. All of these things have a value beyond the Mennonite community and the Mennonites are happy to take business from outside their community. This outside market only makes their community economy stronger.

The population factor in building a healthy economy is no different for us at DR. The challenge for us is that the “population” we rely on for a customer base has to come from the internet and new members moving to DR. We can't rely on the locals to support our businesses. Why not? The long and short of it is that mostly they are either not interested in what we have to offer, or they are not willing or able to pay what it's worth.



We also can't rely on procreation to build our customer base. We do have children here and more being born from time to time, but given our concern for the impact of human population on the earth as well as the culture most of us grew up in, we are more comfortable with small families or with having no children at all. In order to get people to move here we have to attract them to a lifestyle that requires giving up a lot of the luxuries of the modern fossil-fueled society. Once they are here, they have to find a way to pay the bills, and that can be difficult.

We also live in a completely different economic paradigm here, one that largely lacks the main engine of all other global economic growth—fossil fuel. Under our covenants and other rules created in the interest of sustainability, we are not able to take advantage of things that most businesses take for granted: abundant cheap fossil fuel used in manufacturing, production, and transportation of products, cheap building materials, and chemical pesticides and fertilizers. Products that we would want to produce here, that value sustainability over affordability, are a hard sell locally.

If we were near a population center that valued the sustainable practices we value, which unfortunately we aren't, we would be able to tap into them as a customer base for the things we might produce here. There are some enterprises, such as Alyssa, Sara, and Teresa's midwifery business that serve the local community beyond DR. (It's ironic that a business we are not as likely to participate in (making babies) is something that we are exporting here). Not long ago we had a chiropractor living here, and she found abundant customers locally. There are some business sectors that have much more demand than supply. There is a deficiency in some of these high dollar services in the area because most people that offer those services would prefer to go where the money is--and it ain't in rural Missouri (our local dentist is in his 80s and it's uncertain who would be interested in taking over his rural practice when he retires).

But many businesses that have been started here that have NOT found their customer base over the internet, have struggled. I tried growing organic produce for part of my income but did not find a local market for it outside DR, and found the market at DR was way too small and in constant flux to support such a business. At local farmer's markets “organic” does not demand a higher price, and you may be competing with someone who just bought what they are selling at Walmart. Unless our population grows, given the lack of local interest in sustainable products and services, we are going to be dependent on the independently wealthy or the internet for the lion's share of our economy.

This is not to say that we can't eventually build a thriving economy mostly independent of unsympathetic local populations. There is nothing wrong with building our economy by trying to attract people with secure and portable incomes here, but it isn't easy.

We are beginning to realize that some of our greatest assets as an ecovillage are our knowledge and skills in sustainable living, and the model we've created for a new economic and social paradigm. There is no other place like Dancing Rabbit, and when people come to visit after seeing other ecovillages they say we are unique in our dedication to hardcore sustainability and practicality. We have over 30 natural buildings, the most of any one location in the entire Midwest, we have the only microgrid of any ecovillage, and the only microgrid in the US powered entirely by renewable energy. We also have the only car sharing group that comprises all vehicle usage of it members of any community in the US. And we have a thriving local currency that accounts for a large proportion of all economic transactions in the village.  Our biggest problem is that most of the country doesn't even know we exist.  I'm trying to help change that with this YouTube channel.

You can help by subscribing to my video updates, sharing links on social media, and by following my videos and implementing what methods and technologies you can in your life.  If  you need any help, don't hesitate to contact me through my website.

Thursday, August 28, 2008

The summer is flying by

It's been a busy season and my camera has been on the fritz for the greater part of it. I've been reluctant to buy a new one because I'd rather not contribute to the creation of another disposable thing made in China. So now I've been handed down a camera second hand and I'm back in business taking pictures for my blog. This season I have been kind of overwhelmed by the amount of stuff I've had to do. It's inevitable in this place where we are trying to build a village that I should get distracted by everyday community activities having to do with helping keep the village running and growing. I've also been consumed by the task of gardening for the Bobolink eating co-op, which has been a struggle with the weather this season.

Fortunately I have been making progress on some things. So far the vineyard, though a little nibbled by deer, seems to be surviving and growing. I've been harvesting black locust trees from out along Woerhle Rd to use as posts for the trellising system the vines will grow up. Black locust is a very rot-resistant tree and makes posts that last as long or longer than treated posts and grows like a weed along the road. Using real tree trunks for posts will also, I think, give the vineyard a more natural look. I will be installing the posts this season and they should be pretty well settled by next spring when the vines will be trained along them.

Some greenwood cuttings of vines to be planted out in the vineyard. I took the cuttings a few weeks ago. They only take a couple weeks to form roots and will be established in the vineyard by the end of the season. This is a much quicker way of multiplying my vines.

Last year when I came here, I brought a bunch of vines from Madison and ended up having many extras which I gave away to others here, creating sort of a boom in the grapevine population here at DR. Rachel planted a few of these vines in her garden and this year one already produced a significant crop of grapes. Since she was away for the harvest, she allowed me to take the grapes, and I'm making a small batch of wine with them. It was inspiring to see such a harvest of beautiful grapes in such a short time from my own vines. Of course mine are not fruiting yet because I had to temporarily store the vines in a nursery row while I waited to get access to land to plant. I expect I should have a small crop next year in the vineyard though and the following year the vines should be close to full bearing.

Another project this season has been researching and buying a power system. Right now, I am typing on my computer powered by my own solar power. I was able to get some of the components for my systems second hand from Tom, another DR member. I also bought some batteries, an inverter, and another solar panel. It's not a huge system, but big enough to power my simple needs in my small house. I should be able to power a stereo, lights, a laptop, and a few other low power items with the current system even during the short days of winter.

The garden has been a mixture of success and failure this season--I guess as it usually is--but maybe more failure than I'm used to. The early and heavy rain delayed planting not just for me, but for most farmers in the region. I planted potatoes three times and still most of them rotted in the ground. Next year I will wait and plant them later to avoid the wet weather and to be able to harvest them closer to winter, when its easier to store them. But the rain here continued through July, so it made things difficult for many crops beyond potatoes. Fortunately, some crops like peppers and eggplant are flourishing in the rain, and are the best I've ever grown. The rain also made establishing the vineyard much easier because it meant I didn't have to irrigate to get the little vines root systems going.

Another efforts this summer has been gathering wood for building. Since all the wood we use if building has to be reclaimed we all have to either buy used wood from local people who take down houses, or we have to do the demolition ourselves. I've been working on scavenging wood from a couple different places. Recently I was getting some barn siding from a local barn. I'm using this to side my garden shed and my house. I also hope to get some posts and beams from the site for use in my future house, the progress of which has been set back slightly by the fact that I've decided to make it bigger than originally planned. I have also completed taking down a small house in nearby Rutledge from which I was able to get many 2x4s, 2xs, and sheets of plywood and OSB.

These are some of the peaches from the Dr orchard. It's been really great to have fresh fruit again this season. These peaches were so delicious.

Last week I started putting siding on my garden shed to cover up the OSB, which looks really ugly and didn't contribute to the quaintness of my garden one bit. I took siding off a barn recently and decided that the wood was a little too crappy to put on my house, so I thought I'd practice on the shed before getting better wood and putting it on my house. Despite the crappiness of the wood, the siding looks really good. I will put some one by two strips on to cover up the gaps between barn boards. I've been asking around and calling up the local radio show to try to find barn boards I can use for siding. I stopped by one house on the way to Kirksville that had a few nice looking outbuildings that weren't being used. An older man with a big cowboy hat answered the door and said that though he didn't use the buildings he didn't want them taken down. I will keep asking around. I've got to get the house sided before winter.

I have a lot of things to do still before it gets cold so I suspect I'll continue to be busy for a while yet.