Tuesday, November 19, 2024

Alternative building techniques from New Mexico - two

 From my post several years ago when I visited my son and his wife in New Mexico, where we toured Earth Ships.

This was the Earth Ship headquarters, and having slept in one at a B&B for 2 nights, we had a free tour. For more information visit this link https://www.earthshipglobal.com

The tour starts...

We're going inside the largest structure here.


 This earth ship had to stop its construction due to some permit no longer being approved...and the guide said that with the political situation now, it is unlikely to be approved soon. (He didn't give any details.) This was planned to be a dorm for students/workers learning how to build earth ships.






Though the building is incomplete, it can still be used for gardening. This is a compost process.




These windows just have a double layer of plastic on them.



This fig tree had some fruits!

And some other buildings on the site.


There are a dozen or so buildings built here. This was our guide.



The building where students stay while learning how to build earth ships, had a little kitchen area.



My friends, Sue and Geoff Stone, built their own Earth Ship home here in Black Mountain at an intentional community, known as Earth Haven. I've visited it several years ago, and it reminded me so much of what I saw in New Mexico. 

Today's quote:

The earth
laughs in flowers.
- Ralph Waldo Emerson   


I've one more post about these Earth Ships, namely the B&B where we stayed for this adventure.

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This is the big news in Hurricane Helene recovery for Black Mountain NC...

“The City of Asheville has lifted the Boil Water Notice for all water customers as of 11 a.m. today, November 18.

Water Resources lab staff finished sampling the distribution system early Sunday afternoon, and results have confirmed that the water supply is free from contaminants. "

Monday, November 18, 2024

This and that....

 


I hope this doesn't offend anyone. But I figure by now, anyone reading my blog knows I'm not a good Christian, nor anything particularly.



And then there's a new Salvador Dali' that I hadn't seen before.

Dream Caused by the Flight of a Bee Around a Pomegranate a Second Before Waking, 1944

New name of Clingmans Dome is Kuwohi. Parking area at (then) Clingmans Dome in Sevier County in 1939.
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Personal note 11.15.24:
I haven't been out of the apartment for 4 days. Felt really achy after Wed. exercise, but picked up some salad and some hot "Chinese type food" at Ingles (grocery). They massacred the veggies with total salty soy sauce. I ate half my salad and some of the chicken.

The next day I was supposed to meet friends for coffee and snacks at one of our favorite restaurants. But I begged off with my achy body, took some Tylenol, and went back to bed. Was all this because I over-did it on exercises? Then dinnertime and I started feeling chills. Within 2 hours my temp had shot up to 101.8. I took the Tylenol (only second dose). I should have done the nebulizer, though at that point I just wanted to die. A long long night, and the fever did go down by dawn to 99. My regular temp is 97.

Some more bed time on through the night and morning of Saturday. I didn't want to get up. I'd roll over, cough a bit, and keep my eyes closed, and hope I could fall asleep again. There is the bliss of nothingness in sleep. I guess I wanted that. Did I mention that all day Friday, off and on, I'd take a breath and suddenly feel a sharp pain in my back under my left scapula. It would happen without warning and I got really scared, is this my heart? No, it only happens when breathing in. I did try to breathe into other parts of my lungs as much as possible. But I had to cry out the pain was so severe when it happened. Thank heavens it stopped during my hiding from life sleep before Saturday.

I've had this "intermittent" fever, which has no name before. I'm determined to get back on my feet. So tonight I'm aiming to sleep no more than 10 hours. I've got some other goals too, but don't want to tell you in case I chicken out and don't do them.

Next day: Sunday I woke up and felt myself again. No pains anywhere! There had finally been night sweats. That's how I know this bout is really over. 

Heavy frost outside on the car and the plants I left out. I'm sorry to say, I really had to let them go. I just have too many to keep inside all winter. 

So I'm trying to keep track to see if there's any causal factor to this recurring illness. I last had it just before the first storm, because I remember not doing dishes while I was sick, and then no electricity or water and the storms had taken care of my doing them at all. So I'd say maybe Sept. 22 or so, and Helene hit Sept. 27 and I was out of town "evacuated" for 16 days.


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Today's quote:

On writing, The first, of course, is to read. It’s surprising how many people think they want to be writers but they don’t really like to read books… The second is to write, every day, whether you like it or not. Screw inspiration. Octavia E. Butler


Sunday, November 17, 2024

Disaster and calm

 

This probably was the town of Chimney Rock, where the river has been reconfigured into a close approximation of where it was before Hurricane Helene on Sept. 17, 2024. This was an Oct. 30 ABC news story.


A TV interview with a man outside his destroyed home and business.

Yes, many efforts have been made in the last month to bring back some of the order of roads that are connecting us. The biggest benefit remains how people came together with their neighbors (most for the first time) in this catastrophe throughout western North Carolina. Much remains to be done however.

While in my neck of the woods, some pretty leaves still give color around the buildings.


It's nice that these grounds had little damage from the storms. Kind of makes me grateful to live here!


Here is a video of Jennifer Berezan and others as they made her 2- hour long CD 10 years ago. "A Song for All Beings" Video is just six minutes.



In these Arms A Song for all Beings © (p) Jennifer Berezan I cannot turn my eyes, I cannot count the cost Of all that has been broken, all that has been lost I cannot understand, the suffering that life brings War and hate and hunger And a million other things When I've done all that I can And I try to do my part Let sorrow be a doorway Into an open heart And the light on the hills is full of mercy The wind in the trees it comes to save me This silence it will never desert me I long to hold the whole world in these arms May all beings be happy May all beings be safe May all beings everywhere be free



And here's the 2:15 hour concert: Song for All Beings
I listened to the whole concert...admittedly in short bursts. I loved it so much!

Today's quote:

When wealth is passed off as merit, bad luck is seen as bad character. This is how ideologues justify punishing the sick and the poor. But poverty is neither a crime nor a character flaw. Stigmatize those who let people die, not those who struggle to live.
-Sarah Kendzior, journalist and author (b. 1 Sep 1978)


Saturday, November 16, 2024

The woodpecker returned and the Halloween photos (still!)

 The Black Mountain Halloween Pet Parade...better late than never? I wasn't able to attend, it being raining and all. But some brave souls took photos and shared them on Facebook, so I'm passing them along for your enjoyment.

First are some shots by Barbara Holderman Taylor of the kids on Church Street.



Trick or treating was really pushed by various organizations to provide a cheerful time for the kids, many of whom had traumatic changes as a result of the storm Helene which flooded and caused power and water outages at the minimum. Parents who wanted to return to work then had families of kids without any schools being open for weeks.


Town Square also hosted a big Halloween party with many families and young trick-or-treaters!



I believe I already shared the "Chicken Sandwich" meme...yes, a live chicken between slices of fake bread!


And guess who visited me on Sunday last week! This must be the red bellied woodpecker who I saw a few weeks ago. Sorry for the iPhone quality of photos.




Then he took off, which captured a bit of white on wings and tail.

Oh I almost forgot...sharing with Saturday's Critters!





Today's quote:

Gratitude as a discipline involves a conscious choice. I can choose to be grateful even when my emotions and feelings are still steeped in hurt and resentment.

HENRI NOUWEN

Friday, November 15, 2024

Pretty plants on Friday

 


I'm enjoying these mums, which were gifted to me third--hand, after being used 2 times before on last Sunday.

I love how the sun brings out the fuzzy leaves of the violet.


The dear Lavender is growing like crazy in the window. I guess I'll cut it back soon.



Some tiny succulents have survived all my lack of care through the summer, so now I've transplanted them here.




Today's quote:

Normal day, let me be aware of the treasure you are. Let me learn from you, love you, savor you, bless you before you depart. Let me not pass you by in quest of some rare and perfect tomorrow.

MARY JEAN IRION

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And the update on western North Carolina...the roads and bridges.

I'll only quote one paragraph which struck me.

“The amount of work that’s going to have to be done, and is ongoing right now to continue to get everything restored — it’s unprecedented,” said Tim Anderson, an engineer with the DOT division covering Asheville and its surrounding area. “We know that the contract staff we have available to us in the mountains, and even from the eastern part of the state … we still need more folks.”

(Photo by Sean Rayford/Getty Images)


Thursday, November 14, 2024

Let's get surreal!

 I just saw this short (6 min.) video that combines two great artists from entirely different genres' - Salvador Dali' and Walt Disney. They collaborated on this.


It's a long way from those joyful Disneyland characters...with the art by Dali'. And it actually has a pretty melancholy feel throughout, which the Dada artists could embrace. But then there's going through the sadness to finding moments of bliss, which also both these story makers would agree upon.

I was made aware of this short video by Open Culture's newsletter last week...

The sto­ry of Des­ti­no goes way back to 1946 when two very dif­fer­ent cul­tur­al icons, Walt Dis­ney and Sal­vador Dalí, decid­ed to work togeth­er on a car­toon. The film was sto­ry­board­ed by Dalí and John Hench (a Dis­ney stu­dio artist) over the course of eight months. But then, rather abrupt­ly, the project got tabled when The Walt Dis­ney Com­pa­ny ran into finan­cial prob­lems.

Now fast for­ward 53 years, to 1999. While work­ing on Fan­ta­sia 2000, Walt Dis­ney’s nephew redis­cov­ered the project and 17 sec­onds of orig­i­nal ani­ma­tion. Using this clip and the orig­i­nal sto­ry­boards, 25 ani­ma­tors brought the film to com­ple­tion and pre­miered it at The New York Film Fes­ti­val in 2003. Des­ti­no would receive an Oscar nom­i­na­tion for the Best Ani­mat­ed Short Film, among oth­er acco­lades from crit­ics.

The clip runs 6+ min­utes and fea­tures music writ­ten by Mex­i­can song­writer Arman­do Dominguez and per­formed by Dora Luz. In our archive, we also have another version that features a soundtrack by Pink Floyd.

Personally I like the Pink Flyod version (having heard it many times before)...here it is:



NPR has more on the Disney-Dalí collaboration. Listen to their audio report here.

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And a note from North Carolina following the floods...

Dominic Travertini did a drone video on a debris flow in the area of Black Mountain on Oct. 29. THis is an area I had never been to, and it's amazing to see the powerful mud flow that came down from the mountains.


He made several other videos of the area, in case you're interested. I won't post any more here though. Thanks Dominic!


Today's quote:

Truth is not only violated by falsehood; it may be equally outraged by silence. 

-Henri Frederic Amiel, philosopher and writer (1821-1881)

Wednesday, November 13, 2024

Amazing to slowly drive by

Any time you're driving on US 70 through Swannanoa NC, someone will slow down here. Maybe they've not seen the extent of the destruction before, or in my case, I just clicked a bunch of photos this last week. The other drivers (most of them) understand what's happening. See the houses in the distance? There used to be similar ones here where the earth is scraped bare, and the piles of rubbish are all that's left of people's homes, and lives. Yes this is where several people died in Swannanoa NC in the flood from Hurricane Helene.












Here's a YouTube video, one of the best I've seen showing the disaster and recovery.

Hurricane Helene: A Love Letter to Appalachia




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I've got a 2 minute clip from the interview with a father and son who lived in one of those houses. I hope it will load. Maybe I'll have to cut it down into more than one...a new challenge here!

Well that didn't happen. I downloaded it from iCloud to my PC computer, where microsoft said I could edit it in Chimp Chip or something like that. But when I asked for help, it showed a different screen completely which provided editing capabilities, while my screen just seemed a big mess. Yes I could cut. But no "save" was available. Sorry folks.

Basically this is what they shared:  a father and son and partner and dogs quickly went into the attic of their home as the water rose and they had no cell service. But they had no way to get out as the flood waters were almost to the ceiling below. So father and son swam in the cold muddy water to the kitchen window, broke it and pushed the screen out to get outside. Some woman came by on a kayak - it must have been daylight by then - and they asked her for an ax so they could break through the roof to the attic. This done, the son went through the opening and pulled the dogs to safety. (They did leave out how the partner was saved.)

I'll keep the original. It probably is copyrighted by the TV station anyway.

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Today's  quote:

I saved this for the creativity that is needed now:

From Heron Dance's Journal: "The universe is a creative entity. We are both the result of that creative process and participants in it. When we do creative work we express, in our own unique way, our reverence for life, for the holy aspects of the creative forces out there, whatever they may be. And we often then sense that those forces approve, and provide support, provide energy, to our journey.

"But first effort. First dedication. Before entering sacred realms, we need to offer a sacrifice, and that sacrifice is part effort, part courage, part faith. We need to believe in our uniqueness, the value, perhaps even crucial necessity, of what we have to contribute."

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