Archive for July, 2010

Posted

31st
July, 2010

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A Slice of Paradise – Eco Style

While I was completing the final stage of my Pacific row, my mother told me one day during our satphone call, “A very nice man in the Philippines has invited you to spend some time at his eco-resort…” And having been invited, it seemed rude not to accept. Plans quickly evolved, and now I find myself in the province of Palawan, about 270 miles southwest of Manila.

Limestone cliffs en route to El Nido by boat

El Nido is one of the most beautiful places I have ever been to – and the fact that it is an award-winning eco-resort just makes it even better. Visitors are provided with a biodegradable bag into which to place any non-biodegradable rubbish, and are strongly encouraged to pick up any trash that they see while kayaking or snorkelling. On checking in we were provided with a checklist of local birds and marine creatures to look out for and record our observations. Resort staff have to attend a course to obtain their certification of G.R.E.E.N. (Guard, Respect, Educate El Nido). For every passenger being flown to the resort, 6 trees are planted to offset their carbon emissions.

All this is hardly surprising given that the owner, Vince Perez, is CEO of Alternergy Partners, a renewable power company for emerging Asian countries, and is chairman of Merritt Partners, an energy advisory firm to companies doing business in Asia. He is also chairman of WWF-Philippines and member of the WWF-International board. In the same way that David Lambourne (Solicitor General) was my guardian angel in Kiribati , and Sir Peter Barter (former Governor of Madang Province and owner of the Madang Resort) filled a similar role in Papua New Guinea, Vince is fast becoming a good friend and excellent conversation partner.

Planting a tree - one sixth of my carbon offset

This morning he and I went out in sea kayaks to explore the Big Lagoon, a short paddle from the resort. It was like stepping back in time, to a primordial peace and quiet. A shallow lagoon, with corals clearly visible beneath the calm, clear waters. Steep limestone cliffs on every side. Tropical trees and shrubs clinging onto roots in unfeasibly tiny nooks and crannies. I closed my eyes for a few minutes and felt the slight rocking of the kayak beneath me, and listened to birdsong echoing around the acoustic chamber of the cliffs. With no significant stretch of the imagination I could feel myself in a dugout canoe, several thousand years ago.

It turned out to be a very special morning. We saw a baby shark, no more than 18 inches long, swimming swiftly just a few feet from our kayaks. A couple of turtles appeared as large shadows under the water. Then Vince and I returned to the resort for a late breakfast and a hugely productive caffeine-fuelled brainstorming session, the results of which will become apparent in due course.

As so often in my life these days, business and pleasure are inextricably linked…..

Navigating the Big Lagoon by sea kayak

With Vince and the staff of El Nido after my presentation last night

Presentation for the Young Presidents' Organisation in Manila a few days ago

My haul of trash for the morning - even in paradise, plastic intrudes.

Posted

26th
July, 2010

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Phnom Penh – A Rough Guide

I had a feeling I would like Phnom Penh, and I was right. It is hectic, vibrant, exotic and energetic – a bit like an Eastern version of New York. I love the buzz!

Bike a little large - but he'll grow into it...

Here are my top tips:

Budget accommodation: Sokha Heng Guest House – great location close to the river. Rooms clean and spacious. Only drawback is no elevator – bad news when you’re lugging a heavy rucksack up 3 floors within days of climbing Mt Kinabalu! Around $20 a night.

Best coffee shop: Cafe Fresco - quite possibly the best coffee shop I have ever been to, and I’ve been to many. Fantastic coffee, fresh-squeezed juices, smoothies, pastries, breakfasts, and sandwiches – just about anything a Westerner could want.

Best bar: Foreign Correspondents Club – above Cafe Fresco – great views of the river. Happy hour daily. Excellent margaritas.

Best massage: for sheer serenity, try out Bodia Spa, conveniently situated between Sokha Heng Guest House and the FCC. I paid $26 for 90 minutes of bliss.

Silk Island kids hamming it up

Best photography course: yesterday photographer Nathan Horton took me on a trip to Silk Island, a little bit of rural Cambodia just a short boat ride from central Phnom Penh. He runs courses covering the basics of photography, and then takes students on an escorted trip to try out their newfound skills. Cambodians have to be amongst the most photogenic people in the world – especially the children. Show them the results on your camera, and they will happily ham it up for you for hours!

Best way to get around town: today I hired a tuktuk for about 5 hours (at a cost of $15) to take me around the various sights. If you don’t mind taking your life in your hands, it’s an exhilarating experience. Laws relating to which side of the road to drive on are apparently advisory only. But I much preferred to have the freedom of my own schedule rather than being herded around on a tourist bus.

Most moving experience: Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum and Choeung Ek extermination centre. On a par with Hitler’s holocaust in terms of sheer brutality, man’s inhumanity to man never ceases to

Photos of victims of the Khmer Rouge regime

appall me. This is very topical – today one of the key perpetrators received his prison sentence.

Most amazing sight: the Grand Palace? Phnom Wat (temple)? No – what amazed me most was how much stuff can be transported by a 150cc engine and two wheels. Family of 5? Two mattresses? Full-length mirror? No problem! Scooters are definitely the mode of transport of choice, and seem to easily accomplish what requires a 3500cc pickup in the US….

A few facts about Cambodia (source: World Factbook iPhone app):

1. About 1.5 million Cambodians died under the Pol Pot regime. I don’t know what the population was at the time (late 70s) but it is now about 15 million, with a growth rate of 1.777%. So we can safely say that at least 10% of the population was executed. Unimaginable.

2. Land area slightly smaller than Oklahoma. Mostly rice paddies and forests, dominated by the

Scooters photographed from my tuktuk

Mekong River and Tonle Sap. Ethnically 90% Khmer, 5% Vietnamese, 1% Chinese, 4% other. 96% Buddhist.

3. The garment industry employs about 5% of the workforce, and contributes more than 70% of Cambodia’s exports. Oil was discovered here in 2005, and mining is also starting to attract foreign investment. Sigh. Another one.

4. More than 50% of the population is less than 21 years old – a major demographic imbalance. Most of the countryside lacks basic infrastructure – despite its proximity to Phnom Penh, electricity only arrived on Silk Island within the last 5 years.

5. Human trafficking: Cambodia is trying to reduce the trafficking of men, women and children for commercial sexual exploitation and forced labour. It is on the US Government’s Tier 2 watch list, meaning that it “does not fully comply with the minimum standards for the elimination of trafficking but are making significant efforts to do so…”

Tomorrow? Another day, another country. Off to Manila to speak to the Young Presidents’ Organisation, then on to the eco-resort of El Nido….

Posted

24th
July, 2010

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Summer Schedule

Some people have been asking me to post an itinerary online so they can see in advance where my travels will take me. So here is my provisional plan for the next few weeks – and beyond:

Have rucksack, will travel....

ASIA

July 24-26: Phnom Penh

July 27-29: Manila, Phliippines, to give presentation to Young Presidents’ Organisation

July 30-Aug 6: Palawan, Philippines – two presentations at the El Nido Resort, where I will be a guest of Mr Vince Perez, chairman of WWF Philippines

Aug 7-Aug 13 – Probably Hanoi, Vietnam, but still TBC

Aug 14-18: Hong Kong – presentations to Royal Hong Kong Yacht Club and Royal Geographical Society (organised by Doug Woodring of Project Kaisei)

Aug 19: Sail from Hong Kong to Long Beach on board the container ship Hatsu Courage (booked through London agency Cruise People)

NORTH AMERICA

Sept 3: Arrive Long Beach

Sept 8: Arrive Asheville, NC, for start of speaking tour of US/Canada – more details will be published when my schedule is finalised. Check in at this blog around Sept 6.

Sept 8-Sept 21: Asheville, Atlanta, Dallas, Washington DC

Sept 22-25: Climate Ride California from Eureka to San Francisco

Sept 26-Oct 18: Resume speaking tour of US/Canada: San Francisco, Vancouver, San Diego, Minneapolis, New York

Oct 19-24: Coastal Rowing Championships in Istanbul, Turkey

EUROPE

Oct 25: Arrive London for Plastic: Where Do You Think It Goes? events

Until Jan 14: around the UK, possibly also Ireland

2011

AUSTRALIA AND ANTARCTICA

Jan 14-Jan 24: Sydney

Jan 25-Feb 4: Ushuaia and Antarctica (speaking on board National Geographic Explorer cruise ship for Lindblad Expeditions)

Feb 5-15: Brisbane

Feb 16-23: Melbourne

Feb 24-March 31: Fremantle

March 31: launch on Indian Ocean

EUROPE

Sept-Oct: speaking tour of Norway, Germany, France, Belgium, possibly UK

And apart from that, my time is my own….

Posted

22nd
July, 2010

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Ocean Deep, Mountain High – With A Big Yellow Smile

Campaigning in the air....

This morning I found myself dangling from a big yellow parachute with a smiley face on it, about fifty feet above the South China Sea, streaming a banner with the words: SUPPORT CLEAN ENERGY before a boatful of Malaysian media. It was, I have to confess, rather good fun. I know that campaigning isn’t necessarily supposed to be enjoyable, but this certainly beat freezing my backside off on a march in Copenhagen last December. It also heralded my move from environmental campaigning at the high-level/conceptual level into activism at the specific, local level. Okay, so it’s not exactly MY locality, but there again, for a wandering nomad such as myself, anywhere in the world can be “local”.

Initially I had planned to come to Malaysia to climb Mount Kinabalu with an English friend who lives in Singapore. Nick and I met for the first, and in fact only, time in 2005, in a swimming pool in a dodgy part of East London called Tower Hamlets, as we wallowed in and out of liferafts during our RYA (Royal Yachting Association) Sea Survival Course. I had signed up to do the Atlantic Rowing Race, and Nick had signed up to do the Clipper Round The World Yacht Race. Both races required this preliminary safety training. United by the shared indignity of seeing each other in bright orange survival suits, we had stayed in touch, and when Nick said he would like to climb Mount Kinabalu I was quick to invite myself along.

... and on land...

A couple of weeks after we had booked our permits, I received a newsletter from 350.org asking people to sign a petition to the Prime Minister of Malaysia to protest against plans to build Sabah’s first coal-fired power plant. Aha, I thought, as I will be in Sabah anyway, what a perfect opportunity to make the trip doubly worthwhile. Initially I was concerned about coming in as an outsider and trying to tell the Malaysians what to do, but when I heard that there was already major local opposition, which had resulted in the proposed plant site being moved twice already, my mind was made up.

Through my friends at 350.org I was introduced to the very impressive Cynthia Ong of LEAP, one of 5 local organisations who have joined forces to contest the coal-powered plant. She immediately jumped at the chance to use my visit to highlight the issue, and we rapidly evolved a plan to promote a clean energy solution to Sabah’s energy needs. We hit on the concept of campaigning on land, in the air, and under the sea – because dirty energy pollutes all of these. (See today’s press release at the end of this blog.) Photos of this morning’s airborne protest would be issued along with images of me and the banner underwater, and at the top of Mount Kinabalu, to emphasise the extent of coal’s negative environmental impacts.

... and under the sea.

The press conference, held immediately after the parasailing escapade, brought up some interesting questions – and some great answers from my colleagues. There are some aspects of the issue specific to the ecology of Sabah – the location of the proposed power plant lies between the rainforest on one side, home of many endangered species including the orang-utan, and on the other side the Coral Triangle, offering some of the most pristine dive locations in the world. But the Sabah power plant is also a symbol of the key question facing humankind right now. Do we carry on with business as usual, drifting towards disaster? Or do we switch our investment to clean, renewable energies, and steer a course that will meet our energy needs into the future?

Even if you don’t believe that the burning of fossil fuels causes a problem, it is undeniable that one day they will all be used up and we will need to find alternative sources of energy. So why not take the initiative and do it voluntarily – with all the benefits (such as energy independence and better air quality) that renewables bring? It is the way that we answer these questions that will determine our future.

These questions are cropping up the world over. A quick scan of your local newspaper would yield several stories with long-term implications for local flora, fauna, agriculture, and so on. Each and every one of these decisions is crucial. Individually they may seem minor, but cumulatively they affect the air we breathe, the water we drink, the quality of our food and the quality of our lives.

I am excited about teaming up with these Sabahan activists. They are engaged, intelligent, and proactive – real winners. As Cynthia said today, letting the decision-makers know what we want is democracy in action. This was my first foray into specific local action, and – even apart from the parasailing – it felt good. Why not find a local issue that lights your (low carbon) fire, and exercise your democratic right to make YOUR voice heard? It all counts! And remember to share it with our EcoHeroes community and help spread those ripples of change.

Other Stuff:

Today’s stunt was fun, but the Mount Kinabalu episode of the campaign was rather more painful. This afternoon the customer in the next cubicle at the massage salon must have wondered what was going on, as gasps and groans emanated from my side of the curtain while Fe worked energetically on my stiff, sore legs. But gasps and groans aside, today’s massage was one of the best I have ever had. If you ever find yourself in Kota Kinabalu in need of some therapy, look up Fe at Helen Beauty Reflexology in Warisan Square.

Me at sunrise on Mount Kinabalu

If you are interested in climbing Mount Kinabalu, I went with Amazing Borneo on a 3-day, 2-night option. Day 1 involves no strenuous activity, merely taking the 2-hour bus ride from Kota Kinabalu to a lodge on the end of the park. Day 2 involved a reasonably challenging 6-kilometre uphill hike on a well-made path comprised mostly of steps with only occasional stretches of flatter trail. On Day 3 we set out at 2.30am to hike the final 2.5 kilometres to the summit. This ascent started out as a stepped trail as before, but once we reached the rocky approach to Low’s Peak it switched over to ropes. Most of it could be walked (slowly) or scrambled, but a few short stretches we had to use the ropes to haul ourselves up. And then, of course, we had to walk all the way back down. WORK those quads!

Three Things To Know About Sabah:

1. The states of Sabah and Sarawak comprise the Malaysian part of the island of Borneo. Malaysia shares the island with the country of Brunei and the Indonesian province of East Kalimantan.

2. Sabah has a population of around 3.5 million (about the same as Connecticut) in an area of about 76,000 square kilometres (about 3,000 square miles – a bit larger than Delaware).

3. Mount Kinabalu is the highest mountain in South East Asia at a height of 4,095 metres (13,435 feet, a little less than Mount Shasta which is 14,162 feet).

For more information on the proposed power plant, see:

Malaysia Today

30 Reasons Why Sabah Does Not Need A Coal-Fired Power Plant (blog at SaveSandakan.com)

The press release that was issued today by Green SURF:

Cynthia Ong of LEAP

PRESS RELEASE – 23rd July 2010

British rower brings climate message to Sabah

KOTA KINABALU (Sabah, Malaysian Borneo): British ocean rower and environmental campaigner Ms Roz Savage spent the past week in Sabah, spreading her message for clean energy.

Savage who this year became the first woman to row solo across the Pacific Ocean, climbed Mount Kinabalu and dived in waters off here, before ending her trip parasailing in Tanjung Aru.

Throughout her mountain high to ocean deep adventures, she carried a banner sponsored by Green SURF (Sabah Unite to Re-Power the Future) and the international 350.org, calling for clean energy in Sabah.

“We will fight dirty energy on the land. We will fight dirty energy in the air. We will fight dirty energy under the water because dirty energy pollutes all of these,” Savage said.

Green SURF, a coalition of local non-governmental organisations wants the government to scrap a proposal to build a 300 megawatt coal-fired power plant in Lahad Datu.

It has teamed up with 350.org, an international campaign that is building a movement to unite the world on solutions to the climate crisis.

Savage who is an athlete ambassador for 350.org, said she was sure that Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak would do the right thing for Malaysia and the world in pushing for clean energy.

“The intelligent choice for any modern, forward-looking country is clean, renewable energy.

“I took up my oars because I believe in a cleaner, greener future. I urge you to take up your pen, phone, or computer mouse, and let the Prime Minister know how you feel about dirty old energy. Our future depends on it,” she said.

Savage worked as a management consultant for 11 years before it dawned on her that her materialistic lifestyle was not the path to happiness nor fulfillment, and was having an appalling impact on the environment.

After a 10-year break from rowing, she once again took up her oars, this time to spread her message of deep ecological responsibility.

Coupled with her solo row across the Atlantic in 2005 to 2006, Savage has now rowed over 17,702 kilometres (11,000 miles), taken 3.5 million oar strokes, and spent a total of nearly a year of her life at sea in a seven metre rowboat.

Savage is a United Nations Climate Hero and was listed amongst the Top Twenty Great British Adventurers by the Daily Telegraph, and the Top Ten Ultimate Adventurers by National Geographic. Her book, Rowing The Atlantic: Lessons Learned on the Open Ocean, is published by Simon & Schuster.

“My goal is to be happy, healthy and wise, and I can’t achieve this in a world that is diseased, polluted and impoverished.

“So every day I ask myself what I can do to make my world a better place. I urge you to do the same. Let’s look after this planet. It’s the only one we’ve got,” she said.

Green SURF’s Cynthia Ong said Savage received an email from 350.org on the coalition’s efforts to halt the construction of the power plant and asked what she could do to help.

“Roz Savage had just completed rowing solo across the Pacific and was passing through the region. She heard our call and asked what she could do to help our campaign.

“She knows, as we do, that this is both a local and global story of our energy quest and climate change,” Ong said.

Ong, who just returned from the annual gathering of the Association for Tropical Biology and Conservation in Bali, stressed that there is a need for locals to also be concerned about the coal plant.

“Over 850 of the world’s biologists and conservationists gathered in Bali. The graphic simulation based on science of where are planet is headed towards 2100 is catastrophic.

“Life as we know it will be dramatically different. We are talking about our children’s and grandchildren’s generations,” she said.

Green SURF (Sabah Unite to Re-Power the Future) is a coalition of five non-governmental organisations. The NGOs are Worldwide Fund for Nature Malaysia (WWF-Malaysia), Land Empowerment Animals People (LEAP), Sabah Environmental Protection Association (SEPA), Malaysian Nature Society (MNS) and Partners of Community Organisations (Pacos).

350.org is an international campaign that’s building a movement to unite the world around solutions to the climate crisis–the solutions that science and justice demand. Its mission is to inspire the world to rise to the challenge of the climate crisis—to create a new sense of urgency and of possibility for our planet.

Posted

18th
July, 2010

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The Art of Travel: Kuala Lumpur

I firmly subscribe to the view that the best way to travel is with little money and plenty of time. But in this phase of my life both money and time are in short supply. So I had only 2 days in my schedule to spare for Kuala Lumpur before meeting up with a friend to climb 13,500 foot Mount Kinabalu next week.

But it WAS worth it – the 2 days seemed like so much longer – in a good way. Travel, even in haste, definitely broadens the mind and gets me out of my rut (if I was ever in danger of falling into one). In just 48 hours I managed to see and do many things, and made several new friends.

Highlights of KL:

Karen, me and @cheetweets at the Batu Caves

1. Afternoon and evening spent with Chee (Twitter handle @cheetweets, who contacted me when I put out a Tweet-appeal for a local “friend”, works in KL for my old company Accenture) and Karen – visiting Batu Caves (NOT the Bat Cave!), the KL Tower, and enjoying a Malaysian meal so excellent that I ate until I thought my sides (or my jeans) would split. (The restaurant was a real locals’ place, at Stadium Negara, Yap Kwan Seng Road.)

2. Conversations with a new friend in the hostel, who was just embarking on a journey of the little-money-lots-of-time variety. Long conversations over many beers, pondering on the joys of travel and the opportunities it presents for delicious serendipity.

3. View of Petronas Towers at night, lit up like two fairytale crystal castles (although had to force myself to enjoy the sight for what it was, and not to think about the electricity consumption, CO2 footprint, or the fact that Petronas is the huge Malaysian oil company which provides 40% of the government’s revenue).

4. Internet the speed of light (in comparison with Tarawa and Madang, anyway).

Petronas Towers

5. Excellent value and friendly service at the Matahari Lodge. $12 a night for a single room, including breakfast and internet. (If you stay here, try and get a room on the 1st floor rather than the 2nd – shower water pressure MUCH better!)

6. Getting my hair done – at last! And thank heavens they coped okay with my blonde western locks.

7. Massage – full body shiatsu massage for an hour, for about $30. Bliss.

8. Window shopping in the Central Market. I’m usually not a shopper, for just so many reasons (financial, logistical, environmental), but suddenly all that oriental “bling” was just irresistible and I indulged in some very pretty bracelets.

Lowlights of KL:

Seeing shark fin soup on the menu in a Chinatown restaurant. Chee tells me that some shark fin soups have little, if any, actual shark fin in them, but nevertheless it is a symptom of a wasteful mindset that I would love to see change. If you’re going to kill an animal for its flesh, at least have enough respect to eat the whole creature rather than cutting off its fins and tail and throwing the rest of the mutilated but still living animal back into the ocean to die. For more about shark finning, see these images at Alex Hofford Photography (although at least these ones look like the whole creature will be used) - and feel free to voice your displeasure to your local Japanese Consulate.

Bling!

Three things you may not have known about Malaysia – because I didn’t! (Source: iPhone app – The World Factbook)

1. Their king is elected from a pool of nine sultans, who choose a new one every four to five years.

2. The population is 50% Malay, 25% Chinese, 10% indigenous, 7% Indian and 8% others – a real Asian melting pot. About 25 million people live in an area slightly larger than New Mexico.

3. Malaysia lies just north of the Equator, partly on a peninsula bordering Thailand, plus  about one-third of the island of Borneo, which it shares with Brunei and Indonesia….

… which is where I am heading now. Today I meet up with an English friend, Nick, who has been working in Singapore for the last year. He and I first met while taking a Sea Survival course – me in preparation for the 2005 Atlantic Rowing Race, he in preparation for the Clipper Round The World Yacht Race. He is now signed up to do the Atlantic Rowing Race 2011, so we’ll be trading my ocean rowing tips for his Asian travel tips.

Very tall Indian deity at the Batu Caves

New friends

Posted

4th
July, 2010

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Oceanwatching

I’m back on a boat. I’ve got used to spending around 100 sea days each year, so it seems that the mere 46 days it took me to get from Tarawa to Papua New Guinea has left me wanting more. Fortunately this boat is a lot more comfortable than the Brocade (soon to be renamed to her original name of Sedna Solo, now that the Brocade-sponsored Pacific Ocean epic is over).

I am on board the Moksha, a 54 foot Hanse sailboat which is on loan to Oceanswatch, a marine conservation organisation specialising in reef monitoring and liaison with coastal communities to ensure responsible marine stewardship. I met them in Rabaul a couple of days ago (my luggage following on close behind, but not before several nerve-wracking hours had elapsed), and we sailed for about 36 hours across the Bismarck Sea to our current mooring in Walinda.

Gallery of underwater photos at the Walindi Resort

As I write this I am sitting in the breakfast room at the Walindi Resort, goosebumpy from over-enthusiastic aircon, admiring the huge library of diving books and magazines and a gallery of fabulous underwater photographs adorning the walls. For the sparkling Kimbe Bay outside the windows off to my right offers one of the most diverse marine environments in the world. A leading reef scientist, Professor Charlie Vernon, is quoted in the resort brochure as saying: “The coral reefs of Kimbe Bay take me back forty years, to a time when corals grew in lush profusion, untroubled by the problems that beset them today… I am hard pressed to think of anywhere on earth that has this combination of vibrant health, diversity and beauty”. Apparently half the coral species in the world are represented here.

So I’m just itching to get into the water. Hopefully this afternoon, if only for a snorkel, and hopefully again tomorrow for a dive with the local dive centre. It would seem that this year I have truly fallen in love with the sea. It has been a slow-developing relationship, like an arranged marriage, but we’re getting there…

Other Stuff:

There’s a good poster in the reception area of the resort, which at a glance looks like the usual chart of marine creatures, but on closer inspection actually shows the various kinds of trash that end up on reefs, and the damage that they cause. For example:

The Most Dangerous Species of our Coasts and Lagoons

The plastic bottle:

Origin – streets, streams, beaches and boats

Behaviour – can cause fatal intestinal blockages in marine animals that swallow it

Average lifespan – 300 to 500 years

The plastic bag:

Origin – streets, streams, beaches and boats

Behaviour – often mistaken for jellyfish, the favourite food of turtles. It causes severe, potentially fatal, intestinal blockages in marine animals that eat it

Average lifespan – 35 to 60 years

Other, Other Stuff:

I’ve been enjoying some fascinating conversations with Chris Bone, founder of Oceanswatch, during my time aboard. He is a member of an “intentional community” – a small settlement of 6 families living on 160 acres on New Zealand’s North Island. Each family has 2 acres to themselves, and the rest is communal and used for keeping livestock. He showed me photographs of their home, and it looks absolutely idyllic. I can imagine the potential issues that can arise in such communities, but theirs has found a modus operandi that is exceptionally stable. As I understand it, the only rules are around the introduction of new members to the community, and the absolute rule that no non-organic chemicals may be used on the land. Definitely a mode of living that I could contemplate at some point in the future, when I stop being a wandering nomad.

I’ve started reading a book I found on board, “The Deep Ecology Movement: An Introductory Anthology”, edited by Alan Drengson & Yuichi Inoue. Some of it is pretty heavy going with too much academic philosophical terminology, but generally I’m finding it fascinating. If you haven’t come across the concept of deep ecology before, check out the Wikipedia page.

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