Innisfree Sustainable Living
Innisfree is located in the Empty Quarter
of the Kawarthas in central Ontario. It is a ninety-acre farm with a pair of
log cabins dating back to the 1870s. Solar power, woodstoves, sauna and a root
cellar provide the necessities of life. Horse manure is vermicomposted and the
resulting worm castings grow veggies in raised beds. A greenhouse and the
walled garden of a former barn foundation extend the growing season. The
project began one chilly day in January 2010. At first, it was all about
adapting to a lifestyle that mirrored the age of the cabins, the surprise came
at the end of the first summer.
Here is a little secret, sustainable living
makes poor people rich – well sort off. When you make your own electricity, hot
water, heat with wood and grow food you save a chunk of cash. Libraries, free wifi and thrift stores increase one’s
resilience from the uncertainties of climate change and an economy swinging on
its hinges.
On the personal level, holistic living
means firing on all cylinders or having boundless energy – and energy is the
currency of life. Globally, it is like being a worm cast in a meadow,
insignificant until you take into account the millions of other people who are
also saving the planet one wiggle at a time. It also chimes the simplicity and
charm of village life in The Hobbit with
the wizardry of open source technology. It is a handcrafted world of gardeners,
recyclers, improvisers and innovators, where rough readiness and resilience
rule. Dreams and ideas blossom in the garden of the mind and ripen into
reality. It is also a vision of a better world and a daily practical protest
against the forces that lay waste the planet. Sustainable living is the first
step in making these destructive systems obsolete and turning potential chaos
into niches of change.
Books can tell you how, nature shows you
how. Every morning with the rising sun, she unfurls her blueprint. We just need
to slow down to read it. For me, it is a never-ending lesson and not without
its ‘oops moments’ - when I reach for a hammer my inner Mr. Bean screams to get
out. Nature, meanwhile, has had four billion years to iron out the kinks; she
has also almost gone over the edge a few times. Bacteria played a lead role in
her early successes and disasters.
Although, I love my red wriggler worms,
deep down, I am a bacteria kind of guy, not just because I’m ninety percent
bacteria, fungi, yeasts and microbes, but rather, because they learn from their
calamities. The early history of the planet reads like a disaster movie.
Bacteria were one of earliest life forms.
Three times, they almost caused their own extinction through uncontrolled
growth and pollution. Then they became smart, instead of endless growth,
resource depletion and toxic waste, they settled for niches. They gave us the
gift of ecology. The little darlings learnt to downsize and live by a set of
rules.
Here is another secret – sustainable living
makes you optimistic and happy. Gardens flourish, hobbit houses sprout and
Bilbo Baggins steps off the page and strides down the path to another
adventure.
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