Steve Balogh
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looks great! can't wait to see the updates on building (earthmoving) progress. Signed, A lurker |
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Looks like a fantastic plan guys! I've been working on some similar(although hand tool scale) on-contour drainage ditches here too. It has been raining every day of the new year (and a fair few before that too). So far recorded over 500mm in 17 days. At one point the ground was saturated and everything was becoming run-off. That is a first for us on this sandy site. Earlier in the history of our block there was a machine sized swale dug. It is the spill way for one of our sandy bottom dams (that act more to slow the water movement than store it). We saw it in action for the first time - flooding a good long section of the landscape that is dotted with fruit trees. I wish I could be there to experience the works with you - perhaps down the path a bit there will be a milkwood permaculture short course that matches my free time! Good luck! |
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Great stuff guys . Just did a course in Melbourne with Geoff and Bill and am seeing the words of wisdom transfer directly to your design. I am sending a New Yorker sound guy your way . He just did the course with me and I told him about these very interesting characters that have this place called Milkwood. He will contact you soon. |
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Happy New Year, guys! The plan looks absolutely superb and, with your arty skills, the presentation is world class. We're looking forward to seeing it develop. And, if you still have water problems once it's all done (we doubt it) perhaps we should rig up some sort of pipeline from Brittany, because we've too much. |
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Hi Guys, How long have you been on the site for? Are you familiar with weather patterns in the area, rainfall per year, frost and such. How did you factor these things in to your design? Are you going for a passive solar design with the studio and other living quarters? And what materials will you be building with? Are you planning to implement such systems as gray water filtration through reed beds? I watched the composting videos and thought they were pretty cool. Also, in terms of electricity, do you intend to gather power through wind, solar or other mediums? If you generate more power than you need you can then feed it back into the grid and make money from this to support further developments. Is there a co-op in your local area, or perhaps some form of trade/barter system for acquiring those items that are not so easily grown/made yourself? I think you guys are doing a great job. Keep up the good work. |
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Hi Jason, We've been here for just over 12 months, but our family has owned the property next door for about 10 years, so we have a pretty good idea of the weather around here. We get down to -12c in winter and up to 40c in summer, frost for up to 4 months of the year, occasional snow. Our rainfall is approximately 700mm per year. The design is all about moderating these extremes, creating micro-climates and interacting with the natural forces that flow through our property. Wind, rain, sunshine and frost. The studio is likely to be infill straw-bale with natural earth render, maybe a little rammed earth on the northern wall. It is completely passive solar with the addition of 1.5 million kilograms of thermal mass with a reflective surface directly downslope to the north it.... it's called a dam. The grey water system is still in it's early design stages, but we are planning to incorporate a worm farm prior to the reed bed to act as a living grease trap. Electricity will be solar, but we are still weighing up the options as to whether it will be grid connected or stand alone. I have a great book on DIY wind turbines so id' like to give that a go at some point. Grid connection is not really about making a profit, electricity is so under-valued that you would be crazy to grid connect to try and make a profit. We have a farmers market in mudgee, so we have been thinking about maybe selling excess there, but probably only high value stock... maybe seedling trees. Thanks for taking an interest. Nick |
| Cheers sam, William and Helen arrived late last night after a bit of car trouble and getting lost... we are just about to give them the tour. |
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Hi Nick, I LOVE strawbale construction : ) Sounds like you guys have put heaps of thought into the development of this project. My mother was an organic primary producer in QLD up until a couple of years ago. She had been using wind generators combined with solar panels to power her property for around 10 years and still managed to make enough power to feed back into the grid. Admittedly, it only made her around $20 a month (depending on how much television she watched), but it was still helpful. Is the creek on your property flowing? I understand there are many areas where construction cannot be within a certain distance of a natural creek/river, but, if you are able, perhaps hydroelectricity could be an option? |
There is surely something wonderful about strawbale The creek usually flows, sometimes it drys up in a drought. The local council requires that you can't build within 50 metres of the creek and to build anything within 20 metres requires approval by the state government Department of Natural Resources. We would love to do micro hydro, but the creek only has a relatively gentle fall as it flows past our place and the volume of flow is often quite small... maybe one day we'll try something out. |
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Two city kids quit their jobs, pull up stumps and journey to a remote, empty, block of land to start an ultra low impact lifestyle from scratch