Tuesday, May 3, 2016

The Tao of Hobbit Land



The Tao of Hobbit Land

Hobbit Land is all about the unity of all life and living in cooperation with the universal laws of nature. It is an island of the flowing, the unified and the braided in an ocean of the contained, the distinct and the separate.

Here, opposites are in harmony, not in rebellion. In a world of dynamic change, we go with the flow by cooperating with events rather than fight them. It’s a world where less is more. It's about a dream that was locked inside and flowered by removing the excess dross.

The hobbit house is built into a hill and it’s the shape within that makes it useful. Gaps were left in the walls for a door and windows. It is these holes that make it a home, usefulness goes from what is not there. It was built with intuitive life skills, rather than formal knowledge. 

Transformation and change are essential features of nature. Change is not a force, but rather a tendency innate in all things, it’s about following one’s own intuitive intelligence and handcrafting a life.  Cedar logs became the building’s bones and the dirt excavated filled the bags to become the walls. In time, they too, will melt back into the hillside. By following the natural order, we drift downstream carried by the current of the Tao.

In Hobbit Land we refrain from doing things that are contrary to nature. Everything is allowed to do what it naturally does, so that it’s true nature will be satisfied. Life becomes spontaneous and is spiced with serendipity and synchronicity – chop firewood, draw water, eat when hungry and sleep when tired. We become what we were from the beginning and transcend concepts and categories.
Since the cradle we are taught to divide our world into separate objects and events and this may get us through the day. But, that’s not the way of nature, rather it’s an illusion based on our Western legacy. The oneness of the universe is central to the mystical experience, it is where string theory and the Druid cord come together.  By dancing barefoot on the hobbit house grass roof we slip slide into the universal cosmic dance of energy.

Tuesday, April 5, 2016

A Message from Bilbo



A Message from Bilbo

Here’s a secret from the road. There are three universal languages and no matter where you wander everybody in every village understands them. 

The first language is music. Whenever people gather music happens. Everyone has music in them, a harmonica and a pair of spoons are all you need.

The second language is gardening. You can kneel in the dirt anywhere and with anyone and engage in the timeless pursue of nurturing plants.

The third language is shelter.  Everyone understands four walls and a roof, they are our second skin.
We live in a funny old world. A long, long time ago in the wild wet woods if you built your house in a day you owned it freehold. The building materials where under your feet. Today, with a hobbit-size fist full of dollars you can still build a home that exceeds all building codes for structural strength and coziness using earth bag construction. It’s called a hobbit house.

Today a half of North America's energy and carbon emissions comes from housing and yet owning a home is beyond the beyond for many because a middle class income no longer supports a middle class lifestyle. We’ve been on a crazy shopping spree leaving a debt-ridden economy and climate swinging on their hinges. We have driven ‘old blue’, our planet, into the ditch and to get back on road we need hook the tow chain to nature and keep fingers crossed that she still has the strength to get us back on the trail.

 Dancing barefoot on a grass roof leaves no footprint. A third of the world lives in dirt built houses and their homes last for centuries compared to the sixty-year lifespan of the standard modern house. No matter whether you from the Shire or dark Mordor all buildings are ruled by the four gods of construction: water, earth, air and sun. Water goes where water wants to go, weak foundations and walls wobble, fresh air gives you energy to dance all night and the sun keeps you warm, the lights on and the music playing. Views of distant horizons remind you that great things happen when men, women and mountains meet. Hobbits know housing and they also know that the good life depends upon having a vibrant community. The village provides support for people as they adjust to a kinder world.

Thursday, December 17, 2015

How to Build a Hobbit House for $100


HOW TO BUILD A HOBBIT HOUSE FOR $100 DOLLARS

Low cost housing is one of the cornerstones of civilization and handcrafted building projects have long been one of my passions. The day I discovered earth bag construction was the day that I knew I could turn a dream into a reality. My currency of construction is recycle, barter and goodwill and the results far exceeded my expectations and, I suspect, all building codes relating to insulation and structural integrity.

The end result is a twenty foot diameter building half dug into a south-facing hill. Although unfinished, the inside temperature never went below 0 C despite outside temperatures in the minus twenties – and that was without the woodstove on. Here is how I did it.

A south-facing hill is essential as this allows you to take full advantage of passive solar heat. A steady temperature of 55 F comes from geothermal heat; this is because it is partially underground. An understanding of geology, drainage and soils helps to avoid potential water problems. Ideally, the site will be on the upper 2/3s of the slope; this gives wind protection and avoids the cold air that gathers on low ground. The fill from the digging is dumped around the high side, this makes it easier to fill and position the bags of earth.

I traded backhoe time with my neighbour for hay and he excavated a thirty-foot gouge into the hillside. The front door faces east so the morning sun shines through the round window and two big rectangular windows face south to maximize passive solar heat. I would have preferred the excavation to be eight-feet deep, but we hit limestone bedrock at five feet. No problem, the beauty of handcrafted buildings is you adapt to circumstances. I simply added more earth to the north side and this gave the building a slightly higher profile.

The earth bags could structurally support the roof, however, I prefer to overbuild and the posts of the wood frame are aesthetically pleasing and useful to anchor shelves etc. I used a line to mark a twenty foot diameter circle and divided the circumference into eight sections. Using a digging bar I bust down eighteen inches into the bedrock for the cedar posts. These were then set in concrete. The centre post is 18” diameter and the outer ones 12”diameter. All the posts are braced so that they are stable during construction.

The extended arm of the backhoe is used to lower the 8” diameter cedar logs that connect the outer posts to the centre post. There will be only space for three or four of these logs on top of the centre post. The remainder lay across the first ones. All of them are spiked together using twelve-inch nails. If these nails are not available you can make them by cutting ¼” steel rod to length.

Nail 6” diameter cedar poles to the radial logs. These poles are twelve inches apart. A bird’s eye view of the roof now looks like a spider’s web. The entire roof is now covered with 1” by 6” oak boards; these were recycled from a paddock fence.

The entire roof is first covered with two discarded farm tarpaulins; these protect the good tarp from being punctured by the corners of the oak boards. A trampoline deck and an abandoned inflatable raft were added to cover the peak for good measure. Now place an undamaged good tarp over the entire roof, I was fortunate to buy one at a yard sale. It is necessary to have a wooden edge around the rim to hold the soil which will cover the roof. Rather than nailing this in place and puncturing the tarp I used ‘deadman’ construction technique to hold the timber in place. Place timber around the rim and nail the ends together (I used old cedar fence rails), then add another circle of timber four feet in from the rim. Join the two circles of timber together with timber. The weight of the soil prevents this timber frame from moving. Before adding the soil, I covered the tarp with a thin layer of old hay; this is an added precaution in case a stone in the soil might puncture the tarp. Instead of using regular topsoil, I covered the roof with 18” of ‘black gold’ worm compost. This is easy to handle and greens up in jig time.

Water goes where water wants to go and it can take the poetry out of construction. After the initial excavation I left the site for a year and even after spring run-off there was no trickle of groundwater seeping into the site. Following standard building practice, I dug a small trench around all but the front of the building and laid 6” ‘O’ pipe, this will drain any sub-surface water away from the structure.

Next, the door is fitted between the east-facing section of the wall. Hobbit houses traditionally have round doors, mine is a triangle with rounded sides. The door must be wide enough to allow a 5ft wide mattress through. Deft work with the chainsaw and three curved cedar logs created the door. So far the work has been relatively straightforward, I don’t mind admitting that filling and positioning the bags for the walls is hard work. It takes 900 bags and they weigh up to 110lbs each. I would plan my day so that I would only build the walls for half a day at a time. It takes about four days to do each of the eight sections. Before starting you need to make a pounder. Set a spade handle in an eight-inch tub of concrete; mine weighted 38 lbs and with energetic thumping pounded the bags into rigid rectangles.

My horse farm friends donated the feed bags which otherwise would have gone to the landfill. Each bag is filled with the sub-soil and rubble from the excavation. Wedge the bags between the posts and pound them tight. It is easier to fill the bags in place rather than have to haul them into position. Stagger the joins as you would with a traditional block wall. Two of the east-facing sections of wall and two of the south facing sections will have window frames. The bottom of these frames is about four feet above the ground.  To build the frame for the round, or rather, oval window, I found two tree limbs that had the same curve. Then I cut a grove in them to fit the plate glass (originally it was a glass table top). Fitting and position this window was the only time that I needed a second pair of hands. There is also a 12” square frame for the woodstove pipe and a length of 2” plastic pipe for the electric cable from the solar panel breaker box.

It is easiest to build the back walls first and by the time you get to fit the bags around the door and windows you will be an expert. When the wall is two feet high, pound steel rebar through the bags, three for each section. Continue to do this every two feet in height. This really strengthens the wall. The handle of the pounder is about four feet long which means it gets increasing difficult to pound the bags. The flat side of a sledgehammer does a reasonable job of pounding until the wall is within two feet of the roof. The final two feet I do with straw bale construction. Instead of trying to fit bales, I double bagged loose straw and wedge these bags into position. They are held in place by sandwiching them between 9 gauge wire fasten to the posts. The wire is made taut by drawing it together in two places with bale twine.  Any remaining gaps are filled with smaller bags of straw. The outside of the walls are backfilled with rocks as the walls are built.

The inside of the walls are covered with wire mesh (as used for rabbits etc.), this holds the plaster in place. First, staple the wire mesh to the posts and then fasten it to the bags. I made large washers out of aluminium and hammered  4” nails into the bags at an angle, this worked effectively. I filled the small cavities between the mesh and the ends of the bags with strips of fabric, this saves on the amount of plaster required.

One ton of carbon dioxide is released into the atmosphere for every ton of cement that is manufactured.  I should have used an earth plaster, instead expediency drove me to the dark side, winter was coming and there is no easily accessible clay on site. The plaster was made from a hydrated lime and mortar mix of approximately 2:5 ratio. This worked well and easily adhered to the wire mesh. The first coat just roughly covered the wire and after this had dried I applied a smooth finishing coat. Later this was whitewashed with hydrated lime. Next summer I will apply an earth plaster to the front of the house, in the meantime the bags are protected from the sun with landscape fabric.

The floor was levelled and polythene vapour barrier laid down, this was then covered with four inches of limestone screenings. Eventually a wooden floor will be built over this. A wood cook stove stands on the north side with the chimney going out the wall and AC electricity comes in from a 250 watt solar panel outside. A second smaller solar panel trickle charges a 12 volt marine battery and this powers the satellite radio. So far, I have only built the bed: next will come bookshelves and a table. I plan to move in early January, 2016.

Saturday, October 31, 2015

Third Week Stompin´To Santiago

Astorga. The first week is one of attrition as many are sidelined with injuries. The second week the tribe gels and the evenings vary from crazy spontaneous dinner parties to subdued serentity of monestries and the calming influence of nuns. Then the trail winds into a city and pilgrims are unleached. Too much wine exasperates the blister wobble. It is now week three and walking thiirty km shouldering ten kilos goes almost without thought as one tunes to nature´s frequency.