Milkwood Timelapses: and so it begins...
Written by Kirsten   
Saturday, 01 December 2007

studio site looking south

 Site of Strawbale studio and middle dam, looking southish - the courtyard will be on this side, along with a few prize deciduous trees.

One of the things that always gets me is seeing old photos of how a place used to be. I have a photo of what the headland at Kiama looked like when it was still a windswept farm - before my parents (and everyone else) put up their brick-veneer houses in the 60's and turned it into prime-real estate, densely packed suburb it is today....

So in light of this, and because we like to document things (incase you hadn't noticed) , Nick and I have committed to a very long-term project: Milkwood Timelapses. Every morning before sunrise, we will walk the boundary of Milkwood, taking photos from 7 different points. We will do this each morning, every morning that we are here, until such a time as we can walk no more... and by then we will have trained monkeys to do it for us. Or some future solar-powered zero-footprint adsl whizz-bang gadget which requires no maintainence and also makes cheese as a byproduct.

Every so often we will compile the daily shots and produce a timelapse movie for each position on Milkwood, and post it here.

Things will grow, things will be built, seasons will pass. The finger on the camera shutter will get gradually older. So will the camera, for that matter. But 40 years from now, I hope to still be getting up before the dawn and shuffling off on my daily timelapse circuit, treading a well-worn path around Milkwood... to both record, and appreciate, the passing of yet another day...

And we started yesterday. Here are some of the views-to-be: 

kitchen garden
Site of kitchen garden, on south side of Strawbale Studio. Garden beds will be on-contour with large trellis structure overhead and on south side.
 
swale looking north
Looking north up the main swale (little white pegs) to be dug in Dec '07. Orchard and food forest will be below swale to the north, nut trees and fodder crops below swale to the south.
 
studio site
Site of Strawbale studio and middle dam (just infront of the coloured bins center-right). Main swale runs left to right - food forest + orchard below.
 
bridge site
Site of bridge looking west over Campbells Creek into Milkwood, with creekflat (maincrop + seasonal soccer field) to right .
 
food forest
Looking south on creekflat to food forest  below main swale and middle dam. Bridge and entry to Milkwood are just off to the middle left.
 
south pano
Panorama of creekflat, looking south. Recently slashed to create mulch to help with moisture retention throughout summer. Eventual main crop with bottom dam centre left, at the base of the ridge.
 
pano north
Panorama of creekflat, looking North. Recently slashed to create mulch to help with moisture retention throughout summer. Eventual main crop with bottom dam on right, at the base of the ridge. Bridge and entry on far right.

 

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Comments (6)add comment

toby *spark said:

really, this is one to cling to. a 40 year timelapse would be quite special indeed.

what would also be cool is an artist's impression of what it would look like in 40 years time. compare and contrast =]

toby
December 06, 2007

mck said:

Sorry, but training monkeys to take time-lapse photos is wrong - plain wrong!
December 06, 2007

Stuart & Gabrielle said:

Hi Nick & Kirsten!
Yet another great idea from you two. Have you seen the film Smoke with Harvey Keitel? His character owns a corner shop and comes out, once a day, puts his camera and tripod in exactly the same spot and snaps. I didn't spot any monkeys though!
Cheers!
December 10, 2007 | url

kirsten said:

yes I loved that film! I think there was even a sequel (which, of course, wasn't as good...) I've always wanted to do some long-range timelapse... both for the ritual and also the result...

and toby, yes I think we'd better do that 'artists impression' of the result... will get onto that... xk
December 11, 2007

Jason said:

Helloooo,

So cool to see that you have branched out (he he...pun!)

I am so happy for you guys. Will definitely be keeping my eyes peeled for new material here.....

Take care.
Jason
December 18, 2007 | url

Robert said:

Good luck...I had the same idea.
Went well for the first few months. Then a 10-year lapse. Oops.
February 04, 2008

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