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February 22nd, 2007

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Garbage Warrior - Earthship Documentary

Thanks to Linton for the heads-up at Hugg about Michael Reynolds’ (of Earthship Biotecture) new documentary. The YouTube video features a trailer for the movie.

Some info from the Garbage Warrior site:

Shot over three years in the USA, England, India and New Mexico, Garbage Warrior is a feature- length documentary film telling the epic story of maverick architect Michael Reynolds, his crew of renegade house builders fron New Mexico, and their fight to introduce radically different ways of living. A snapshot of contemporary geo-politics and an inspirational tale of triumph over buereaucracy, Garbage Warrior is above all an intimate portrait of an extraordinary individual and his dream of changing the world!

Sounds pretty cool! There is no indication (on GW site) of when it might be released, but I will certainly make mention on the blog once I hear more.

Related EcoSherpa posts:
Ever Rented an Earthship?
Earthships Revisted

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Written by Bentley on February 22nd, 2007 with no comments.
Read more articles on Waste Management and Green Construction.

Rainwater Recycling Articles

I just received the latest issue of Natural Home Magazine yesterday and am quite pleased with the selection of interesting articles!
Two in particular caught my eye since they focus on rainwater recycling. It was interesting to see that one of them was even written by our ‘Eco-Friend’, Carol Steinfeld.

If all that isn’t cool enough for you, I’m happy to report that both of these articles are available online for your viewing pleasure!

1) Curb Pollution with a Rain Garden: Singing in the Runoff

2) Conserve Water and Reduce Runoff: Raindrops Keep Falling

Enjoy!

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Written by Bentley on February 22nd, 2007 with no comments.
Read more articles on Water Conservation and Gardening.

Interesting Sustainability Internship

Windward - Modeling Sustainability

It certainly didn’t take me long to find something to write about today! I just happened to stumble across an cool looking blog - Adventures In Ecological Design where one of the posts (the one I linked to) makes mention of the “Windward Institute”.

In the words of “J-Dawg” (who wrote the post):

So I’m in rural south easeten Washington, in the mountains of klickitat, at the windward institute. A sustainable community in progress if ever there was one. Some of our projects for the summer include aquaponics, solar ovens, biofuel, and watching the peacocks get rejected time and again.
Feel free to check www.windward.org for stories and info.

Of course, seeing mention of aquaponics certainly got my attention so I decided to follow J-Dawg’s recommendation to check out the site. I’m glad I did!

Here are some short exerpts from the Windward ‘about us’ section:

Windward is an intentional community located just north of the scenic Columbia River Gorge about 80 miles east of Portland, Oregon.
So far, we’ve acquired 131 acres of pasture and forested land, put in basic services and learned a lot in the doing of it all. Some of the lessons weren’t the nice kind, but we’ve made it through the sticky parts and grown.

Windward is guided by the belief that there’s nothing more radical than a working model of a better way. We’re committed to building working models of a variety of sustainable systems in order to show that appropriate technology is viable, affordable and practical.

Sounds like a great place!

There is quite a lot of interesting content on the site, including an online newsletter - but something else that really caught my eye was the mention of 2007 internships.

For 2007, Windward will be offering 12 week internships on an ongoing basis throughout the year.

Interns will participate in the development of the sustainable systems described throughout this website gaining both a theoretical understanding of interconnected sustainable systems and a wide range of practical, hands-on sustainability skills.

Interns will also be part of a program of study that looks at the art of creating sustainable community both in historical practice and in speculative fiction as a way to better understand the challenges inherent in establishing sustainability at the small community level.

The ideal intern candidate would be someone in their mid-20s with a liberal arts degree who is looking for an opportunity to pursue sustainability as a life path. Applicants should be U.S./Canadian residents over the age of 21, but we have waived the age requirement when an applicant’s history showed that an exception was warranted.

Even if the internship isn’t your cup of tea (or you don’t fit the required profile), I highly recommend you check out the Windward site.

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Written by Bentley on February 22nd, 2007 with no comments.
Read more articles on Announcements and Interesting & Notable.