Whanganui Midweek

Life lessons from this year of change

- By NELSON LEBO Nelson Lebo is a farmer and ecological designer.

In just four months 2020 has delivered more life lessons than most years do in 12. Along with those lessons have come new terms and phrases: social distancing; self-isolation; contact tracing; essential services.

Witnessing the “essential services” lolly scramble has been mildly entertaini­ng as different sectors lobbied for essential status with plenty of selfjustif­ying rationalis­ation.

Ah yes, all services are essential but some services are more essential than others…

From my perspectiv­e I tend to think of the essentials as food, water, shelter and companions­hip.

Of the latter we have been able to provide safe accommodat­ion for a number of adults who otherwise had no place to go for the duration of the lock down.

This has resulted in a large bubble filled with board games, jigsaw puzzles, playing Lego with the kids, and walking bubba up the road to visit a neighbour’s horse. We’ve also enjoyed the regular act of speaking to neighbours “over the fence”, which has brought our rural cluster of homes closer together.

Regarding the other essentials, it’s been business as usual on our farm as would be the case on any permacultu­re property worldwide.

Growing food, storing water and creating energy efficient spaces to live are at the heart of the permacultu­re movement, which provides a ready-made textbook for the type of resilience a wider audience is now clamouring for.

Despite what may be implied by the “Billionair­e Bunkers” of the South Island, resilience (and sustainabi­lity) need not be expensive.

As shown by the 2011 renovation of our home in Castleclif­f, meaningful results can be achieved on a shoestring budget. Here are some reflection­s published in the

Wanganui Chronicle on January 30, 2012.

Big savings in a year of living lightly

‘We are now over the 12-month mark of renovating an abandoned villa in Castleclif­f into a warm, dry energy-efficient home. When we set out on this low budget / high performanc­e retrofit we had no specific numbers in mind for energy savings and waste reduction. We simply wanted to push the envelope and do the best we could. As it turns out, our power bill has averaged $20 per month (this includes the daily line charge) and we have spent a total of $20 in rubbish fees for the entire year. I’ve come to call this our “20-20 hindsight” but there is no reason it could not also be a 20-20 vision for others to work toward by the year 2020.

The first Conservati­on Comment I wrote in July explained the design principles we employed for our passive solar renovation that have helped us achieve low energy bills. There is nothing new or unusual about those principles: solar gain, thermal mass, insulation and draft proofing. Similarly, there is nothing new or unusual about the design principles for our approach to resource conservati­on: reduce, reuse and recycle. The 3 Rs have helped us reduce the cost and impact of the renovation project as well as the cost and impact of our day-to-day lives.

Here are a few examples. While we have followed the New Zealand Building Code and used treated pine, Braceline Gib, building paper, and heaps of insulation, there are also areas where we were able to reduce costs and impacts by reusing materials. Prime examples include the bathtub, vanity, washtub and toilet in the bathroom, and the bench, sink, mixer, drawers, and shelves in the kitchen. Perhaps the most visible example is the vintage Shacklock 501 multi-fuel range that I bought my wife two years ago as a wedding present and we worked with Building Control to find a way to install safely.

Regarding our household waste stream, we compost all of the food scraps and even our fish and chips papers. We save paper to burn in our Shacklock or our outdoor pizza oven (made from an old wood burner) or to mulch our gardens and fruit trees. We reuse plastic bread bags and other small non-recyclable plastic containers. Again, there is nothing special about any of this, other than the fact that we take it seriously and put out one bag of rubbish for every two months. Perhaps the most unusual thing we do at all is emphasise the costs savings rather than simply the environmen­tal benefits. At the end of the day, eco-thrifty living makes dollars and sense.’

Along with the renovation we filled the section with fruit trees and vegetable gardens. Today the home and section are unrecognis­able from a decade ago, and have been included in a recent book written by permacultu­re co-founder David Holmgren: RetroSubur­bia: The downshifte­r’s guide to a resilient future.

In the wake of the Covid-19 lockdown — which has forced almost all of us to downshift for six weeks anyway — this book and the greater RetroSubur­bia movement seem more relevant than ever. Dani and I feel privileged to work with our Australian counterpar­ts in promoting the movement on this side of the Tasman.

As this is my last conservati­on comment, I want to make sure to thank all those who have supported our community projects over the last decade including the major hardware stores and garden centres. I especially want to recognise the dozens of volunteers for the Curtain Bank and the Repair Cafe´ as well as the Whanganui Learning Centre and the Josephite Retreat Centre for their unqualifie­d support.

Kia kaha.

 ??  ?? Nelson and Dani shown in RetroSubur­bia clowning in front of their Castleclif­f home.
Nelson and Dani shown in RetroSubur­bia clowning in front of their Castleclif­f home.

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