Sunday, November 30, 2008

For Chris!! Will the Economy Fall Even More?

A couple of years ago, my old college roommate Chris and I had a furious e-mail discussion on the economy. I had sent him an article by Mike Whitney predicting an economic collapse from the sub-prime market. I talked with him on the phone a few weeks ago...and he sheepishly said: "I hate to admit it, but you were right". That doesn't happen very often!

Here is Chris with his son on a backpacking trip a couple of years ago:

And here are the old Augsburg boys from Room 101 (taken in February of 1981). I'm holding the baby (my nephew). Chris is the one on the right with the glasses. I guess we liked plaid shirts back then:

To continue the motif on the economy, I pass the quote below along to Chris (and everyone else). Mike Whitney again, writing last Friday in Counterpunch:

Regardless of what the new administration does, the stock markets will take another leg down between the end of 2009 to early 2010, finding a bottom on the Dow of 4,500 or thereabouts. 70 per cent plus declines took place on the NASDAQ following the dot.com bust, Japan during the 1990s "lost decade" and the Great Depression. In none of these cases was the bottom reached in the first year. Hedge fund redemptions will force more deleveraging and more wild swings in volatility. The banks, which have accounted for nearly half of their losses, will need to write off another $800 to $900 billion before its all over. No one knows where they'll get the capital. Unemployment will skyrocket, housing will overshoot to the downside, and there will be the first random incidents of political instability in major US cities. The economy will remain flat on its back for some years into the future. How quickly the markets rebound depends on whether Obama's team understands that the system needs deep structural changes and a banking system that is not paralyzed with debt.

Chris, I do hope that Mr. Whitney is wrong this time!

Visits In The Last Seven Days...

This blog has gone international!

It has received visits from the following countries this week: Singapore, Spain (multiple different locations), Portugal, France, Kuwait, Brazil, Canada (several locations), Malaysia, Germany, the United Kingdom, Chile, Switzerland, Mexico, India and Thailand.

Madrid, Spain has the second most visitors of any city to this blog. Actually, this blog has been viewed from nine different cities in Spain. Canada comes in third with seven different cities. Portugal with three and the United Kingdom with three.

Here in the United States, there have been Visitors this week from: Minnesota, North Dakota, Iowa, Pennsylvania, Florida, Texas, Utah, Colorado, Washington, Oregon, California, Arizona, Virginia, New York, Georgia and Connecticut. There are probably more States represented because many of the hits just list the United States as the point of origin.

The blog was viewed in ten different languages in the last seven days--- including Thai, Polish and Arabic!

Whether anybody will come back over the next few months to see if this project ever gets completed remains to be seen. But right now, this last week, (parts of) the whole world was watching.

Saturday, November 29, 2008

Another Hike...

It has been a joy for me to spend time with this daughter of mine...


To see yourself in someone else...


And the pleasant surprises of a young woman doing very well...


How well? What to be proud of? Most everything! But her love for books and libraries stands out. When I asked what she would like to do, her reply was: "Visit the library in Paradise and Oroville. I like libraries." How many twenty year old females answer like that in this digitized and TVized modern life?

This daughter is witty and charming; has Liberal tendencies. She has many gifts. And I am honored to have her here...

Thursday, November 27, 2008

On The Trail...

Spend some time on a trail soon. Any trail. Get out there and walk. Enjoy. Be a creature again! Take off that tie, put on those hiking boots and Explore. For heaven's sake Move! Encounter a Rattlesnake. Look for Mountain Lion scat. Trip. Fall. Get bruised and battered. Get sprayed by a skunk. Look for where a Black Tailed Deer bedded down for the night. Listen to a bird. Watch a Hawk soar. Listen to a running stream. Be natural. Sweat. Pant. Climb uphill.

Get out and walk. I'll see you there...on the trail...


A Thankful Thanksgiving Day Hike...

Jennifer and I hiked down the canyon today.

Pondering...


Laughing.


A workout for me...


The Road Less Travelled...


Wednesday, November 26, 2008

A Mystery Guest!


Frankly, this has been one of the best days of my life! I have a very, very special visitor: Jennifer...not seen by my eyes for ten long years. Can such a vibrant, smart, intelligent, beautiful, mature, charming, pleasant, thoughtful, original and adventurous person really be an offspring of mine? Yes!

The specifics are not worth mentioning; some things are deeply personal. But right now, I am a deeply fulfilled human being. Happy! Content! And Joyous!

This very special Visitor and I will share the next five days. We shall hike. Maybe go to the ocean. San Francisco? We shall talk. Laugh. Share.

Days like this come but once in a lifetime...

Tuesday, November 25, 2008

Comments Are Cool!! Just Ask Ed...


The late great Ed Abbey said: "Better Read Than Dead". Amen.

As noted in the last post, I decided to turn the "comments" section on. I do this with a little trepidation because most writers would like to see something other than the "0 comments" under the post. As I said, that looks ugly to me.

So, I'll turn on the "comments" section for awhile as an experiment.

See something you like? Leave a comment. See something we are doing wrong with our building experiment? For heaven's sake warn us! Disagree with some diatribe I write (and for those who have been to the Mother Earth Forum, I'm certainly used to that)? Go ahead. Vent! Complain! Call me a fool!

If you think this structure will never stand? Go ahead and predict as much. If you are touched by something, let me know. If you think this Primitive Green Experiment is cool? Let me know your thoughts.

"Better Read Than Dead".

Monday, November 24, 2008

Changes to the Solar Compound Blog...

Procrastinating from chores I really should be doing...I added (and reduced) a few things to this blog:

First off, if you look to your right, you will see photos of the Solar Compound's Greatest Hits, which visually documents the construction of this "off grid" Primitive Green Addition.

Secondly, I did away with the polls. Nobody really clicks on them anyway; they are mostly for my amusement.

Thirdly, I reduced the number of posts on the front page. So if you want to see older posts you can click under the "month" icon to your right. Or you can just click on the "older posts' button at the bottom.

Fourthly, I turned on the "Comments" section at the bottom of the posts. Here you can easily leave feedback for me. I hesitate to do such, as blogs that have comments without any comments being there, seem very ugly to me. NO UGLY BLOGS...so go ahead, leave a message. Or two. Or three.

Fifthly, I added a "hit" counter.

So what are the stats for this blog, you might ask? It gets a few dozen unique visitors a day. The hits come from all over: India, the UK, Canada--even Iowa! Some are friends and blood relatives that I arm twist into looking at this thing. Others are complete strangers. It gets around sixty hits a day...sometimes more. Not bad for a Psychiatric Nurse who got a "D" in English.

All I can say is: "Thanks for Visiting!"

And please overlook my punctuation errors, comma splices, sins of grammar, the inability to use an apostrophe correctly, clumsy sentence structure, the inappropriate use of the semi-colon and other errors which I have no clue that I have made (look, my ignorance is showing!).

English Professors Beware: Improper English Ahead!

This blog got a hair cut, of sorts. She looks nice and clean. What do you think?

Do you like it?

Sunday, November 23, 2008

Under Construction: The Wild Paradox

And we also are under construction. Five months now.


We moved up here five months ago. A slow start with all the fires and all. We didn't start on the post and beam until the first week of September. Took us eight weeks to get that done. Most of November we've been building the stem wall.

And then there are the activities of daily living: Work; Walks now and then; Gymnastics; Chores...always chores; Hauling water when the pump was broken; Heating water on the stove, now that we don't get as much sun for our solar shower and hose.

Five months of four people sharing a 320 square foot cabin. Living Large by Living Small.

Joni and I were talking the other day. Yes, we love it! Life elsewhere seems too sanitized and unreal. Too easy. Fake. Artificial. Too many people. Why do they shower so much?

We watch our Stellar Jays play. They like to screech, imitating a hawk---which confuses the crap out of our dog. Then the Stellar Jays cackle and laugh---watching the confused pup take cover. This reflex in our dog Angel must be an instinct left over from her ancient canine ancestors (before dogs discovered they could get a free meal by having a symbiotic relationship with the Cro-Magnons).

Wild.

I wonder what vestiges of the wild remain in our personalities? Certainly not our most awful behavior! The desire to hurt, harm, steal, betray, break, over consume, be selfish and act like hooligans---all that comes from the urban environment.

Eve's apple: Cities.

Wild behavior is more civilized. The untamed is tame. The Wild Paradox.

A New Chicken Coop Under Construction...

Our neighbors are building a new chicken coop...

An Afternoon Walk

We took a walk today, my dog and I. Down our country lane...


With Angel tugging at her tether...


Past the other houses and properties on this "off the grid" ridge.


Past the affordable "fixer-upper".




Until we returned home...






Saturday, November 22, 2008

Our New Water Pump...

Last month our old water pump died. We ordered the new one...and finally got it installed (Joni did it last week). A fine invention the pump. This makes it so that we have water to our cabin. We can flush at will. Get water for coffee. No more hauling five gallon buckets of water around. Darn near civilized are we...


Friday, November 21, 2008

Nine Days that Changed the Kitchen...

Joni and the girls went to Colorado. I dropped them off at the rental car place in Sacramento and wished them a happy trip. For 120 bucks you can rent a car for nine days. Unlimited miles. Makes sense to do that rather than put the miles on our old, tired vehicles.

I drove the Girls there after Joni called and said the Bank in Oroville got our van. No, not repossessed: broken down. The Windstar Van sits in the bank parking lot, while I rescued the tribe, their gear and finished taking them to Sacramento.

So what to do with nine days? Revel in my slothery? Joni is the Mud Master, so I won't do that. And I do have a special visitor coming from Minnesota next week that probably won't be interested in forced labor.

So what do I do to justify my existence over the next nine days?

Finish the Bamboo floor!

This is one of those projects that we said we would do later. It is later. And the kitchen has looked like the floor of an indecent, condemned biker bar for long enough. I shall tackle this project with gusto. Head on. With vigor. Vim. Enthusiasm.

Tomorrow....


It really does look awful.

Horrible.


Don't know why we didn't finish the job when we put the floors down last summer....





A byline in The Guardian (the United Kingdom's second largest national newspaper)

It's sort of fun to see what happens to something after you write it. That Gay Whale thing ended up in a couple of discussion boards; it also made a couple of Socialist sites in Europe. But I'll be dog-goned if it didn't make it into the second largest selling newspaper's website in the United Kingdom. 18 million visits a month to the web-site. Remarkable!

I always wanted to be in the Guardian. Here's the link (I'm on the right towards the bottom):

http://209.85.173.132/search?q=cache:b-GPgAAZchsJ:www.guardian.co.uk/world/barackobama%3Fpage%3D39+Allan+Stellar+Nuke&hl=en&ct=clnk&cd=9&gl=us

Thursday, November 20, 2008

Maasaw...the Savior of the Hopi


While at the library in St. Helena, this book caught my eye. Written in the 1990's--it purports to be a report on the "prophecies, instructions and warnings revealed by the last Hopi elders". A gloomy outlook. The author (a Lutheran Pastor who passed away in 2001) claims to be the person the Hopi elders chose to let their message out to the world. The last Elder was in his waning years, at 102 years of age, who selected Mr. Mails to be the messenger.

The Elder could have done better.

Despite the shortcomings of Mr. Mails, there are a few gems in this book. Specifically, an introduction to Maasaw--who was the man-deity who gave the Hopi their instructions for living 1,000 years ago. Oral tradition passed down this Being's teachings--along with a few sacred etchings in rock. According to Maasaw, things don't look good for us. Watch out for World War III---and the start of a new age.
Apocalyptic.

Maasaw gave specific instructions for how the Hopi shall live. Mr. Mails passes this on as information for all of us to live by. In the dark days ahead, according to the book---these instructions shall help us to survive. The Instructions are worth passing along here (pages 271-273):

1. "Live Simply...as Maasaw himself lives and don't let materialism run your life"
2. "Practice Self-denial".
3. "Make a covenant with the Creator and Maasaw".
4. "Practice Self-Sufficiency".
5. "Change your priorities; make careful choices."
6. "Recognize that it is the Creator's wish to rescue us, and that together with the Hopi we can rescue the world".
7. "Make your attitude regarding life and the environment a reverent one".
8. "Listen to music and dance when you want to".
9. "During the first part of December, say prayers for the well-being of the entire world".
10. "On December 21, do initiations to bring others aboard the Spiritual Ark".

Good advice...a little on the ascetic side...but good advice for any age. The Spiritual Ark is a sort of remnant of civilization that will survive the trials ahead. Led by the Hopi, who are the humble people (sort of like the People of Israel in the Bible) who will lead us out of the coming turmoil.

Part of the reason we bought this Solar Homestead was a paranoid fear that things may not be too cheery ahead. We may have been correct in our outlook, given the news of the day.

Wednesday, November 19, 2008

Mud: Two Days Later...

Two days later and the mud has dried. Tis hard as rock. The job now is to continue adding layers...up, up and up. We also have to set the window bucks in place into the mud.

The nails in the post help the mud adhere to it:

Joni also sanded three posts and treated them with Linseed Oil. The Posts are dry enough to sand and treat now.




First Cob!!

While I was away earning the daily bread, Joni and the girls started on the Cob (sifted clay, pebbles and straw). Here they stomp the mud:

Dancing in the Mud!!

Building the wall with mud.


They said they had fun! There will be a whole lot more of mud work to be done...


A freshly muddy wall...






Neighborhood Reaction

Amen!!

Tragic...

The speed limit where the accident written about below occurred:


In California when there are deaths at a car accident site, friends and family set up shrines as a reminder. These kids were good Adventist kids. They hadn't been drinking alcohol.


Notice the newly paved road--it is easy to speed on such new pavement. Four crosses mark four deaths:


Looking at our hospital sign from the accident site:





Sunday, November 16, 2008

Speed kills...

It's my weekend to work here in the Napa Valley.

I left my monastic-like room at the hospital and went to the unit at 6:30 this morning. Overnight, there had been a nasty car wreck less than a mile from the hospital.

There is a private Adventist College on top of the mountain. Seems that four students were traveling in a car at a high rate of speed down the four mile hill, lost control and drifted into the oncoming lane. A head-on accident. Three cars. Alcohol was involved.

Four students died. Another driver is in a hospital (not ours). And another is in jail with a DUI.

Since this is an Adventist Hospital with a working relationship with the college, and a small community to boot, deaths are taken hard. Especially such tragic deaths. So senseless. It rattles everyone: first responders, nurses, school professors, residents.

Having lived full-time here in the Napa Valley, these lethal accidents happen way too much. Yes, alcohol is often involved (after all, this is the wine growing region). But most often, excessive speed is the culprit. The area where this accident occurred had just been upgraded. A new road. So what's the temptation on a road that has been just upgraded? To speed!

These roads are country roads; not expressways. I'm always amazed at the foolish driving that I see daily in this area. Frankly, I think that there should be prison sentences for speeding. Putting others in danger is an anti-social act. And the consequences should match the crime. This time, for these four college kids, the consequence was death.

Let's add driving to the Slow movement.

Friday, November 14, 2008

Welcome Counterpunchers...

The last entry (Nuke a Gay Whale for the Navy) took all of seven minutes to write. Perhaps that shows.

I sent the bugger off to Jeffrey St. Clair who picked it up for the most excellent Counterpunch. Frankly, I'm just pissed off that the Navy could get away with the wanton destruction of Whales and marine mammals. Knowingly. And that the Supreme Court would back the Navy up.

A sad, sad day.

So if you found yourself here by following the Counterpunch link: Hello! This is a website devoted to the construction of an off-the-grid home. An off-the-grid lifestyle--with various musings and rants thrown in. It's raw. Maybe a little too amateurish and parochial. Juvenile. Self-absorbed, most definitely. Unplugged. A little like watching a family slide show. Yup, it has many faults.

But a few have found entertainment here.

My spouse and I are building this Post and Beam addition which is constructed mostly of recycled products, stone, cob, strawbale and trees that were cut and stripped of bark from our little Homestead. Our heroes are Ed Abbey and the original homesteaders: Scot and Helen Nearing.

Flatter me by dropping me a line. And thanks for the visit!

Allan361@gmail.com

And if you've never read "Counterpunch"--just follow the link for some of the best lefty writing around:


http://www.counterpunch.org/

And the link to my article:

http://www.counterpunch.org/stellar11142008.html

Thursday, November 13, 2008

Nuke a Gay Whale for the Navy

The Supreme Court yesterday ruled that the American Navy has the right to slaughter marine mammals in training exercises off the coast of California. Score one for the Empire. A setback for the progeny of Arne Naess and the Deep Ecology movement.

How sad.

The American Military remains the sacred cow of Empire. With the American economy in a tail-spin not seen since 1929, is there any discussion about closing down the (at least) 703 Foreign Military bases we have?

I think Chalmers Johnson got it right. The arms race and the creation of both the Soviet Empire and the American Empire exacted tolls on both the Soviet Union and the United States. They crumbled first. So will ours.

In the 1980's we used to talk about "Military Madness". Then the anti-war movement got focused on raising kids, mortgages and SUV's. Now the indoctrination continues with "God Bless America" replacing "Take Me Out to the Ballgame" during the 7th inning stretch in the Major Leagues. And always it is sung by some handsome male or female soldier in their finest dress uniforms from some branch of the service. Subtle propaganda during our beloved pastime.

The military budget is bloated. Defense has become Offense. Offensive regarding American power projection across the globe. But also offensive to the environment. After all, how much fossil fuel is consumed by the military? The answer might surprise you.

Is there a better way? Must we remain in this paradigm of Empire forever? Even Obama admits that a strong military cannot be sustained without a strong economy. Since our economy is not sustainable, neither is our bloated military excesses.

Both will fall. It would fall quicker if a person could criticize the military without being accused of peeing on the American Altar. "Be Patriotic! Save a Whale!" should be our cry! Let's hope we have a viable Whale and marine mammal population left off the coast of California when we finally do come to our senses.

Not Bad...

My work from yesterday--it needs to be buffed up a bit.


A very fine corner:



Don't think I'll quit my day job though:




Wednesday, November 12, 2008

Flying Solo...

With Joni working on her resume' and running errands, I worked solo today. First I built up this corner another six inches or so. Did this without forms:

Then I added another layer to the North Stem Wall:

Me in front of my work:


We shall unveil my solo work tomorrow. Suffice it to say that I'm a tad worried. Joni has Helen Nearing sort of precision with this rock work; I don't. So I tried real hard to be more anal. Didn't work. That's just not a part of who, or what, I am.
"A job done sloppily is a job that is done", I say. We await the reveal...

I Love Rock in all it's Forms!

More rock collected:

And another pile:

I set up the Forms...


And get ready to work: